Benita, an African romance eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 282 pages of information about Benita, an African romance.

Benita, an African romance eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 282 pages of information about Benita, an African romance.

On they plodded, they knew not whither.  Benita fell asleep upon her saddle, and was awakened once by a hyena howling quite close to them, and once by her horse falling to its knees.

“What is the time?” she said at last.

Her father struck a match and looked at his watch.  It was ten o’clock; they had been fifteen hours away from the waggon and without food.  At intervals Mr. Clifford, who had remounted, fired his rifle.  Now there was but one cartridge left, and having caught sight of his daughter’s exhausted face by the light of the match, he fired this also, though in that desperate wilderness there was little hope of its bringing succour.

“Shall we stop or go on?” he asked.

“I do not care,” she answered.  “Only if I stop I think it will be for ever.  Let us go on.”

Now the rain had ceased, but the mist was as dense as before.  Also they seemed to have got among bush, for wet leaves brushed their faces.  Utterly exhausted they stumbled forward, till suddenly Benita felt her horse stop as though a hand had seized its bridle, and heard a man’s voice, speaking with a foreign accent, say: 

“Mein Gott!  Where are you going?”

“I wish I knew,” she answered, like one in a dream.

At this instant the moon rose above the mists, and Benita saw Jacob Meyer for the first time.

In that light his appearance was not unpleasing.  A man of about forty years of age, not over tall, slight and active in build, with a pointed black beard, regular, Semitic features, a complexion of an ivory pallor which even the African sun did not seem to tan, and dark, lustrous eyes that appeared, now to sleep, and now to catch the fire of the thoughts within.  Yet, weary though she was, there was something in the man’s personality which repelled and alarmed Benita, something wild and cruel.  She felt that he was filled with unsatisfied ambitions and desires, and that to attain to them he would shrink at nothing.  In a moment he was speaking again in tones that compelled her attention.

“It was a good thought that brought me here to look for you.  No; not a thought—­what do you call it?—­an instinct.  I think your mind must have spoken to my mind, and called me to save you.  See now, Clifford, my friend, where you have led your daughter.  See, see!” And he pointed downwards.

They leaned forward and stared.  There, immediately beneath them, was a mighty gulf whereof the moonlight did not reveal the bottom.

“You are no good veld traveller, Clifford, my friend; one more step of those silly beasts, and down below there would have been two red heaps with bits of bones sticking out of them—­yes, there on the rocks five hundred feet beneath.  Ah! you would have slept soundly to-night, both of you.”

“Where is the place?” asked Mr. Clifford in a dazed fashion.  “Leopard’s Kloof?”

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Benita, an African romance from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.