cap was almost singed by the
fire. His eyes were still open, but the lids drooped over them, and his
hands hung lower and lower between his knees. There was no picture
left on his brain now, but simply an impress of the blazing logs before
him.
Then, Trooper Peter Halket started. He sat up and listened. The wind
had gone; there was not a sound: but he listened intently. The fire burnt
up into the still air, two clear red tongues of flame.
Then, on the other side of the kopje he heard the sound of footsteps
ascending; the slow even tread of bare feet coming up.
The hair on Trooper Peter Halket's forehead slowly stiffened itself. He
had no thought of escaping; he was paralyzed with dread. He took up
his gun. A deadly coldness crept from his feet to his head. He had
worked a maxim gun in a fight when some hundred natives fell and
only one white man had been wounded; and he had never known fear;
but tonight his fingers were stiff on the lock of his gun. He knelt low,
tending a little to one side of the fire, with his gun ready. A stone half
sheltered him from anyone coming up from the other side of the kopje,
and the instant the figure appeared over the edge he intended to fire.
Then, the thought flashed on him; what, and if it were one of his own
comrades come in search of him, and no bare-footed enemy! The
anguish of suspense wrung his heart; for an instant he hesitated. Then,
in a cold agony of terror, he cried out, "Who is there?"
And a voice replied in clear, slow English, "A friend."
Peter Halket almost let his gun drop, in the revulsion of feeling. The
cold sweat which anguish had restrained burst out in large drops on his
forehead; but he still knelt holding his gun.
"What do you want?" he cried out quiveringly.
From the darkness at the edge of the kopje a figure stepped out into the
full blaze of the firelight.
Trooper Peter Halket looked up at it.
It was the tall figure of a man, clad in one loose linen garment, reaching
lower than his knees, and which clung close about him. His head, arms,
and feet were bare. He carried no weapon of any kind; and on his
shoulders hung heavy locks of dark hair.
Peter Halket looked up at him with astonishment. "Are you alone?" he
asked.
"Yes, I am alone."
Peter Halket lowered his gun and knelt up.
"Lost your way, I suppose?" he said, still holding his weapon loosely.
"No; I have come to ask whether I may sit beside your fire for a while."
"Certainly, certainly!" said Peter, eyeing the stranger's dress carefully,
still holding his gun, but with the hand off the lock. "I'm confoundedly
glad of any company. It's a beastly night for anyone to be out alone.
Wonder you find your way. Sit down! sit down!" Peter looked intently
at the stranger; then he put his gun down at his side.
The stranger sat down on the opposite side of the fire. His complexion
was dark; his arms and feet were bronzed; but his aquiline features, and
the domed forehead, were not of any South African race.
"One of the Soudanese Rhodes brought with him from the north, I
suppose?" said Peter, still eyeing him curiously.
No; Cecil Rhodes has had nothing to do with my coming here," said the
stranger.
"Oh--" said Peter. "You didn't perhaps happen to come across a
company of men today, twelve white men and seven coloured, with
three cart loads of provisions? We were taking them to the big camp,
and I got parted from my troop this morning. I've not been able to find
them, though I've been seeking for them ever since."
The stranger warmed his hands slowly at the fire; then he raised his
head:- -"They are camped at the foot of those hills tonight," he said,
pointing with his hand into the darkness at the left. "Tomorrow early
they will be here, before the sun has risen."
"Oh, you've met them, have you!" said Peter joyfully; "that's why you
weren't surprised at finding me here. Take a drop!" He took the small
flask from his pocket and held it out. "I'm sorry there's so little, but a
drop will keep the cold out."
The stranger bowed his head; but thanked and declined.
Peter raised the flask to his lips and took a small draught; then returned
it to his pocket. The stranger folded his arms about his knees, and
looked into the fire.
"Are you a Jew?" asked Peter, suddenly; as the firelight fell full on the
stranger's face.
"Yes; I am a
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