登陆注册
15444000000046

第46章 CHAPTER X VROUW PRINSLOO SPEAKS HER MIND(3)

Here the Vrouw Prinsloo was the first to greet us. We found her standing in the game path which we were following, quite a quarter of a mile from the wagons, with her hands set upon her broad hips and her feet apart. Her attitude was so defiant, and had about it such an air of premeditation, that I cannot help thinking she had got wind of our return, perhaps from having seen the smoke of our last fires, and was watching for us. Also, her greeting was warm.

"Ah! here you come, Hernan Pereira," she cried, "riding on an ox, while better men walk. Well, now, I want a chat with you. How came it that you went off in the night, taking the only horse and all the powder?"

"I went to get help for you," he replied sulkily.

"Did you, did you, indeed! Well, it seems that it was you who wanted the help, after all. What do you mean to pay the Heer Allan Quatermain for saving your life, for I am sure he has done so? You have got no goods left, although you were always boasting about your riches; they are now at the bottom of a river, so it will have to be in love and service."

He muttered something about my wanting no payment for a Christian act.

"No, he wants no payment, Hernan Pereira, he is one of the true sort, but you'll pay him all the same and in bad coin if you get the chance.

Oh! I have come out to tell you what I think of you. You are a stinkcat; do you hear that? A thing that no dog would bite if he could help it! You are a traitor also. You brought us to this cursed country, where you said your relatives would give us wealth and land, and then, after famine and fever attacked us, you rode away, and left us to die to save your own dirty skin. And now you come back here for help, saved by him whom you cheated in the Goose Kloof, by him whose true love you have tried to steal. Oh, mein Gott! why does the Almighty leave such fellows alive, while so many that are good and honest and innocent lie beneath the soil because of stinkcats like you?"

So she went on, striding at the side of the pack-ox, and reviling Pereira in a ceaseless stream of language, until at length he thrust his thumbs into his ears and glared at her in speechless wrath.

Thus it was that at last we arrived in the camp, where, having seen us coming, all the Boers were gathered. They are not a particularly humorous people, but this spectacle of the advance of Pereira seated on the pack-ox, a steed that is becoming to few riders, with the furious and portly Vrouw Prinsloo striding at his side and shrieking abuse at him, caused them to burst into laughter. Then Pereira's temper gave out, and he became even more abusive than Vrouw Prinsloo.

"Is this the way you receive me, you veld-hogs, you common Boers, who are not fit to mix with a man of position and learning like myself?" he began.

"Then in God's name why do you mix with us, Hernan Pereira?" asked the saturnine Meyer, thrusting his face forward till the Newgate fringe he wore by way of a beard literally seemed to curl with wrath. "When we were hungry you did not wish it, for you slunk away and left us, taking all the powder. But now that we are full again, thanks to the little Englishman, and you are hungry, you come back. Well, if I had my way I would give you a gun and six days' rations, and turn you out to shift for yourself."

"Don't be afraid, Jan Meyer," shouted Pereira from the back of the pack-ox. "As soon as I am strong enough I will leave you in charge of your English captain here"--and he pointed to me--"and go to tell our people what sort of folk you are."

"That is good news," interrupted Prinsloo, a stolid old Boer, who stood by puffing at his pipe. "Get well, get well as soon as you can, Hernan Pereira."

It was at this juncture that Marais arrived, accompanied by Marie.

Where he came from I do not know, but I think he must have been keeping in the background on purpose to see what kind of a reception Pereira would meet with.

"Silence, brothers," he said. "Is this the way you greet my nephew, who has returned from the gate of death, when you should be on your knees thanking God for his deliverance?"

"Then go on your knees and thank Him yourself, Henri Marais," screamed the irrepressible Vrouw Prinsloo. "I give thanks for the safe return of Allan here, though it is true they would be warmer if he had left this stinkcat behind him. Allemachte! Henri Marais, why do you make so much of this Portuguese fellow? Has he bewitched you? Or is it because he is your sister's son, or because you want to force Marie there to marry him? Or is it, perhaps, that he knows of something bad in your past life, and you have to bribe him to keep his mouth shut?"

Now, whether this last unpleasant suggestion was a mere random arrow drawn from Vrouw Prinsloo's well-stored quiver, or whether the vrouw had got hold of the tail-end of some long-buried truth, I do not know. Of course, however, the latter explanation is possible. Many men have done things in their youth which they do not wish to see dug up in their age; and Pereira may have learned a family secret of the kind from his mother.

At any rate, the effect of the old lady's words upon Marais was quite remarkable. Suddenly he went into one of his violent and constitutional rages. He cursed Vrouw Prinsloo. He cursed everybody else, assuring them severally and collectively that Heaven would come even with them.

He said there was a plot against him and his nephew, and that I was at the bottom of it, I who had made his daughter fond of my ugly little face. So furious were his words, whereof there were many more which I have forgotten, that at length Marie began to cry and ran away.

Presently, too, the Boers strolled off, shrugging their shoulders, one of them saying audibly that Marais had gone quite mad at last, as he always thought he would.

Then Marais followed them, throwing up his arms and still cursing as he went, and, slipping over the tail of the pack-ox, Pereira followed him.

So the Vrouw Prinsloo and I were left alone, for the coloured men had departed, as they always do when white people begin to quarrel.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 逆风而上,逆天而冲

    逆风而上,逆天而冲

    一个男孩从废墟中钻出,一身的泥却挡不住他那锋利的目光!他抬头向天长吼:我,叶铭枫,回来了!!!
  • 轩辕神武

    轩辕神武

    看林轩,如何从一个“灵魂弱者”,变成一个强者。
  • 秘村

    秘村

    一群驴友,一次远行,一个神秘的村庄,一件件离奇的事件,一桩桩灵异的死亡事件,当你踏入秘村,你就踏入了一条不归之路。恐怖的山村之中究竟隐藏着什么?又为什么他们会陷入重重迷局?他们最终又能否逃出生天?每个人的心里都有一个魔鬼,每个人的心里都有一个秘村。究竟是人心可怕,还是未知的事件可怕。你的秘村,在哪里?
  • 神迹之绝代女王

    神迹之绝代女王

    慕伊漫与妹妹在一神秘古墓离奇失踪。慕伊漫却来到了一个奇幻的魔法大陆。是意外还是巧合?天生废体又怎样?没有魔法之力又如何?“哪怕只是为了我的妹妹,我慕伊漫也要站在巅峰。”且看慕伊漫的风云再起。成神之路何漫漫。(作者不定期更新不喜勿入坑)
  • 拽萌丫头的酷帅校草

    拽萌丫头的酷帅校草

    在他们结婚的那天,某男慢慢靠近某女,“彤彤,你说为什么幸运之神这么眷顾我呢?”某女思考了一下,回答道:“一定是上辈子你救过幸运之神。”“。。。”在学校他们两个由意外到交易到冤家到恋爱到磨难最后到结果。他们彼此发过誓,要永远做彼此的天使,无论怎样!誓言是永恒的,他们会幸福的!
  • 离婚不是一件容易的事

    离婚不是一件容易的事

    婚后三年,他们的爱情败给了时间和空间的距离,他出轨了,从此新欢旧爱成了鱼和熊掌。
  • 幻灵纪1

    幻灵纪1

    在数亿年后,有一个地方,被人们称为“灵界”。它在上古时代就被古帝王奥德托斯开辟出,可却被巫师施展禁术而与外界隔绝,为了冲破禁术,闯出灵界。人们与巫师的后代——一群被称为“异灵”的家伙斗争至今。一场残酷的战争由此开始。。。。。
  • 英雄无敌日志

    英雄无敌日志

    关于这部作品,我也酝酿了一段时间了。我欲将她写成一部讲述异世英雄无敌式生活的作品,而且主角会是一个学院法师。书的魔法体系可能会看上去与传统的英雄无敌不太一样,因为他会吸收一些遗忘国度设定的经验。初次写作的原因,可能作品会看上去生疏了些,只要各位读者不吝于意见,我便会尽力改进的。
  • 龙魂斗霸

    龙魂斗霸

    梦想当兵考军校改变命运的吊丝龙天翼,救灾时竟穿越到异世界武魂帝国。他这个原世的吊丝逆袭的将不仅仅是“龙魂斗霸”的名号,而是帝国的皇权!
  • 漫步云端的爱恋

    漫步云端的爱恋

    她是如尘埃一般的平凡女孩,他是如云端上高贵的王子!因为她的努力有了交集,梦想得以实现。但是命运又跟她开了玩笑,她被抛弃了,她的梦碎了……