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.

So they pushed on.

All that morning did they canter forward wherever the ground was smooth enough to allow them to do so, and notwithstanding the increasing lameness of Mr. Clifford’s mare, made such good progress that by midday they reached the place where they had passed the first night after leaving Bambatse.  Here sheer fatigue and want of water forced them to stop a little while.  They dismounted and drank greedily from the spring, after which they allowed the horses to drink also; indeed it was impossible to keep them away from the water.  Then they ate a little, not because they desired food, but to keep up their strength, and while they did so examined the mare.  By now her hind leg was much swollen, and blood still ran from the gash made by the assegai.  Moreover, the limb was drawn up so that the point of the hoof only rested on the ground.

“We must get on before it sets fast,” said Mr. Clifford, and they mounted again.

Great heavens! what was this?  The mare would not stir.  In his despair Mr. Clifford beat it cruelly, whereupon the poor brute hobbled forward a few paces on three legs, and again came to a standstill.  Either an injured sinew had given or the inflammation was now so intense that it could not bend its knee.  Understanding what this meant to them, Benita’s nerve gave out at last, and she burst into weeping.

“Don’t cry, love,” he said.  “God’s will be done.  Perhaps they have given up the hunt by now; at any rate, my legs are left, and Bambatse is not more than sixteen miles away.  Forward now,” and holding to her saddle-strap they went up the long, long slope which led to the poort in the hills around Bambatse.

They would have liked to shoot the mare, but being afraid to fire a rifle, could not do so.  So they left the unhappy beast to its fate, and with it everything it carried, except a few of the cartridges.  Before they went, however, at Benita’s prayer, her father devoted a few seconds to unbuckling the girths and pulling off the bridle, so that it might have a chance of life.  For a little way it hobbled after them on three legs, then, the saddle still upon its back, stood whinnying piteously, till at last, to Benita’s intense relief, a turn in their path hid it from their sight.

Half a mile further on she looked round in the faint hope that it might have recovered itself and followed.  But no mare was to be seen.  Something else was to be seen, however, for there, three or four miles away upon the plain behind them, easy to be distinguished in that dazzling air, were a number of black spots that occasionally seemed to sparkle.

“What are they?” she asked faintly, as one who feared the answer.

“The Matabele who follow us,” answered her father, “or rather a company of their swiftest runners.  It is their spears that glitter so.  Now, my love, this is the position,” he went on, as they struggled forward:  “those men will catch us before ever we can get to Bambatse; they are trained to run like that, for fifty miles, if need be.  But with this start they cannot catch your horse, you must go on and leave me to look after myself.”

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