登陆注册
15444000000019

第19章 CHAPTER IV HERNANDO PEREIRA(3)

Still I said nothing, only glanced up at this tall and splendid man standing above me in his fine clothes, for he was richly dressed as the fashion of the time went, with his high colouring, broad shoulders, and face full of health and vigour. Mentally I compared him with myself, as I was after my fever and loss of blood, a poor, white-faced rat of a lad, with stubbly brown hair on my head and only a little down on my chin, with arms like sticks, and a dirty blanket for raiment. How could I compare with him in any way? What chance had I against this opulent bully who hated me and all my race, and in whose hands, even if I were well, I should be nothing but a child?

And yet, and yet as I lay there humiliated and a mock, an answer came into my mind, and I felt that whatever might be the case with my outward form; in spirit, in courage, in determination and in ability, in all, in short, that really makes a man, I was more than Pereira's equal. Yes, and that by the help of these qualities, poor as I was and frail as I seemed to be, I would beat him at the last and keep for myself what I had won, the prize of Marie's love.

Such were the thoughts which passed through me, and I think that something of the tenor of them communicated itself to Marie, who often could read my heart before my lips spoke. At any rate, her demeanour changed. She drew herself up. Her fine nostrils expanded and a proud look came into her dark eyes, as she nodded her head and murmured in a voice so low that I think I alone caught her words:

"Yes, yes, have no fear."

Pereira was speaking again (he had turned aside to strike the steel of his tinder-box, and was now blowing the spark to a glow before lighting his big pipe).

"By the way, Heer Allan," he said, "that is a very good mare of yours.

She seems to have done the distance between the Mission Station and Maraisfontein in wonderful time, as, for the matter of that, the roan did too. I have taken a fancy to her, after a gallop on her back yesterday just to give her some exercise, and although I don't know that she is quite up to my weight, I'll buy her."

"The mare is not for sale, Heer Pereira," I said, speaking for the first time, "and I do not remember giving anyone leave to exercise her."

"No, your father did, or was it that ugly little beast of a Hottentot?

I forget which. As for her not being for sale--why, in this world everything is for sale, at a price. I'll give you--let me see--oh, what does the money matter when one has plenty? I'll give you a hundred English pounds for that mare; and don't you think me a fool. I tell you I mean to get it back, and more, at the great races down in the south.

Now what do you say?"

"I say that the mare is not for sale, Heer Pereira." Then a thought struck me, or an inspiration, and, as has always been my fashion, I acted on it at once. "But," I added slowly, "if you like, when I am a bit stronger I'll shoot you a match for her, you staking your hundred pounds and I staking the mare."

Pereira burst out laughing.

"Here, friends," he called to some of the Boers who were strolling up to the house for their morning coffee. "This little Englishman wants to shoot a match with me, staking that fine mare of his against a hundred pounds British; against me, Hernando Pereira, who have won every prize at shooting that ever I entered for. No, no, friend Allan, I am not a thief, I will not rob you of your mare."

Now among those Boers chanced to be the celebrated Heer Pieter Retief, a very fine man of high character, then in the prime of life, and of Huguenot descent like Heer Marais. He had been appointed by the Government one of the frontier commandants, but owing to some quarrel with the Lieutenant-Governor, Sir Andries Stockenstrom, had recently resigned that office, and at this date was engaged in organizing the trek from the Colony. I now saw Retief for the first time, and ah! then little did I think how and where I should see him for the last. But all that is a matter of history, of which I shall have to tell later.

Now, while Pereira was mocking and bragging of his prowess, Pieter Retief looked at me, and our eyes met.

"Allemachte!" he exclaimed, "is that the young man who, with half a dozen miserable Hottentots and slaves, held this stead for five hours against all the Quabie tribe and kept them out?"

Somebody said that it was, remarking that I had been about to shoot Marie Marais and myself when help came.

"Then, Heer Allan Quatermain," said Retief, "give me your hand," and he took my poor wasted fingers in his big palm, adding, "Your father must be proud of you to-day, as I should be if I had such a son. God in Heaven! where will you stop if you can go so far while you are yet a boy? Friends, since I came here yesterday I have got the whole story for myself from the Kaffirs and from this 'mooi meisje'" (pretty young lady), and he nodded towards Marie. "Also I have gone over the ground and the house, and have seen where each man fell--it is easy by the blood marks--most of them shot by yonder Englishman, except one of the last three, whom he killed with a spear. Well, I tell you that never in all my experience have I known a better arranged or a more finely carried out defence against huge odds. Perhaps the best part of it, too, was the way in which this young lion acted on the information he received and the splendid ride he made from the Mission Station. Again I say that his father should be proud of him."

"Well, if it comes to that, I am, mynheer," said my father, who just then joined us after his morning walk, "although I beg you to say no more lest the lad should grow vain."

"Bah!" replied Retief, "fellows of his stamp are not vain; it is your big talkers who are vain," and he glanced out of the corner of his shrewd eye at Pereira, "your turkey cocks with all their tails spread.

I think this little chap must be such another as that great sailor of yours--what do you call him, Nelson?--who beat the French into frothed eggs and died to live for ever. He was small, too, they say, and weak in the stomach."

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 末世零距离

    末世零距离

    末世来临,异形突起,科技革命陷入第一次大的危机,人类进入神的时代。从末世走来的人们,手握刀剑,劈开了新纪元的曙光,罪与罚的战争,即将拉开序幕!
  • exo之异面少女

    exo之异面少女

    一个出道就大火的女星韩宜恩,感觉有两个人住在一个身体里。平时都以微笑示人,但有时却冷得谁也不敢靠近。当然,"她"一般不会出现。因为"她"不屑与别人接触。可"她"总会在韩宜恩被欺负的时候替她解决掉所有事情。可毕竟,一个身体只能有一个人存在。
  • 佳人如梦望君醉

    佳人如梦望君醉

    被男友劈腿就算了,还穿越!穿越就算了,还穿到青楼!穿到青楼就算了,还遇到一个又一个极品美男子,看我如何欺负你!欺负你还不算,我还要你,爱上我。
  • 尸灵谈判专家

    尸灵谈判专家

    我与玩伴在村头坟林玩耍,掀开棺盖,谁知遇到了一具老疯尸,被邻居家的荒诞老头忽悠误打误撞的进入了阴阳的世界。学道法,斗僵尸,抓厉鬼,下地府!却发现身边的一切都不是那么简单,我们的世界正在潜移默化的改变着。我只想过回平凡人的生活,却为了自己的亲人与信念,不得不前进奋斗。这是一篇关于一个阴阳先生的写实,记住,我就是一个阴阳先生。感谢阅文书评团提供书评支持!
  • 天界告急:妖妃戏邪帝

    天界告急:妖妃戏邪帝

    神界司命神君首次历劫,魂魄落入锋幻国楚家二小姐身上。本着一颗玩世不恭的心,准备开始历劫的楚瑾晴遇到了麻烦。“南云洵!看什么看!”“娘子惊为天人,为夫管不住眼睛。”“不要脸!”楚瑾晴炸毛了,这个男人还要不要脸啊。“无妨,有娘子足矣,要不要脸已经不重要了。”
  • 帝宇灵缘

    帝宇灵缘

    倚剑天涯听风雨,宁负天下不负卿。莫笑少年无为时,登峰绝顶几人何。且看一代灵帝艰辛成长之路。
  • 末世传说录

    末世传说录

    生命不息,欲望不止。人类仍然重复着对金钱与权势的渴望。恶人当道,好人难做。这是历史的悲哀,历史的苍凉与无奈。---------------------------点进来看看,有些字词还是挺不错的~请点一下左边的加入书架~谢谢~哈哈---------------------------大家没事帮我留个言..谢谢
  • 新科神的养成系统

    新科神的养成系统

    一个得到系统的少年(雾)的与美少女们成长史
  • 狂雷帝尊

    狂雷帝尊

    不朽天梯,神之王座。胜天之主,实力一方。传闻,只有走进不朽天梯,踏入神之王座,方可封神,成为这个世界永恒的存在。三百年后的云中仙方云不惜代价打开轮回之眼,重活三百年之前,这一世,他拥有不朽丹田,更得到金雷灌顶……这一世,他手持九天镇魔塔,镇压九天十地各方妖邪恶魔……这一世,他天罡五雷浑然一体,金雷灌顶,木雷禁锢,水雷净身,火雷焚身,土雷无形随心而动……这一世,他手握上古神兵“方天画戟”惩恶锄奸,诛杀万仙……人定胜天,他是时代的天骄,神的宠儿,永恒的存在。
  • 巫庙练气

    巫庙练气

    中土有九鼎,力能扛鼎,是为鼎位强者南蛮有魔神大巫,中土有天神大巫,东夷有妖巫,西狄有原始神巫,天下纷纷攘攘,英雄皆出我辈,看一看褫虎一脉如何重新驰骋天下