Marie eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 371 pages of information about Marie.

Marie eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 371 pages of information about Marie.

“No,” answered the old gentleman, “I should not.  Go, and God be with you, Allan, and me also, for I never expect to see you again.”  And he turned his head aside for a while.

Then we went into matters.  The smous was summoned and asked about the ship which brought the letter from Delagoa.  It seemed that she was an English-owned brig known as the Seven Stars, and that her captain, one Richardson, proposed to sail back to the Bay on the morrow, that was the third of July, or in other words, within twenty-four hours.

Twenty-four hours!  And Port Elizabeth was one hundred and eighteen miles away, and the Seven Stars might leave earlier if she had completed her cargo and wind and weather served.  Moreover, if she did leave, it might be weeks or months before any other ship sailed for Delagoa Bay, for in those days, of course, there were no mail boats.

I looked at my watch.  It was four o’clock in the afternoon, and from a calendar we had, which gave the tides at Port Elizabeth and other South African harbours, it did not seem probable that the Seven Stars would sail, if she kept to her date, before about eight on the morrow.  One hundred and twenty miles to be covered in, say, fourteen hours over rough country with some hills!  Well, on the other hand, the roads were fairly good and dry, with no flooded rivers to cross, although there might be one to swim, and there was a full moon.  It could be done—­barely, and now I was glad indeed that Hernan Pereira had not won my swift mare in that shooting match.

I called to Hans, who was loafing about outside, and said quietly: 

“I ride to Port Elizabeth, and must be there by eight o’clock to-morrow morning.”

“Allemachte!” exclaimed Hans, who had been that road several times.

“You will go with me, and from Port Elizabeth on to Delagoa Bay.  Saddle the mare and the roan horse, and put a headstall on the chestnut to lead with you as a spare.  Give them all a feed, but no water.  We start in half an hour.”  Then I added certain directions as to the guns we would take, saddle-bags, clothes, blankets and other details, and bade him start about the business.

Hans never hesitated.  He had been with me through my recent campaign, and was accustomed to sudden orders.  Moreover, I think that if I had told him I was riding to the moon, beyond his customary exclamation of “Allemachte!” he would have made no objection to accompanying me thither.

The next half-hour was a busy time for me.  Henri Marais’s money had to be got out of the strong box and arranged in a belt of buck’s hide that I had strapped about me.  A letter had to be written by my father to the manager of the Port Elizabeth bank, identifying me as the owner of the sum lodged there in my name.  A meal must be eaten and some food prepared for us to carry.  The horses’ shoes had to be seen to, and a few clothes packed in the saddle-bags.  Also there were other things

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Project Gutenberg
Marie from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.