Part 13 (1/2)
”Well, what of Jemalee!” asked Considine.
”You know dat him's a slave--a _real_ slave?”
”Yes, I know that, poor fellow.”
”You never hear how him was brought up here?”
”No, never--tell me about it.”
Hereupon the Hottentot related the following brief story.
Abdul Jemalee, a year or two before, had lived in Capetown, where his owner was a man of some substance. Jemalee had a wife and several children, who were also the property of his owner. Being an expert waggon-driver, the Malay was a valuable piece of human goods. On one occasion Jan Smit happened to be in Capetown, and, hearing of the Malay's qualities, offered his master a high price for him. The offer was accepted, but in order to avoid a scene, the bargain was kept secret from the piece of property, and he was given to understand that he was going up country on his old master's business. When poor Jemalee bade his pretty wife and little ones goodbye, he comforted them with the a.s.surance that he should be back in a few months. On arriving at Smit's place, however, the truth was told, and he found that he had been separated for ever from those he most loved on earth. For some time Abdul Jemalee gave way to sullen despair, and took every sort of abuse and cruel treatment with apparent indifference, but, as time went on, a change came over him. He became more like his former self, and did his work so well, that even the savage Jan Smit seldom had any excuse for finding fault. On his last journey to the Cape, Smit took the Malay with him only part of the way. He left him in charge of a friend, who agreed to look well after him until his return.
Even this crus.h.i.+ng of Jemalee's hope that he might meet his wife and children once more did not appear to oppress him much, and when his master returned from Capetown he resumed charge of one of the waggons, and went quietly back to his home in the karroo.
”And can you tell what brought about this change?” asked Considine.
”Oh ja, I knows,” replied Ruyter, with a decided nod and a deep chuckle; ”Jemalee him's got a powerful glitter in him's eye now and den--bery powerful an' strange!”
”And what may that have to do with it?” asked Considine.
Ruyter's visage changed from a look of deep cunning to one of childlike simplicity as he replied--”Can't go for to say what de glitter of him's eye got to do wid it. Snakes' eyes glitter sometimes--s'pose 'cause he can't help it, or he's wicked p'raps.”
Considine smiled, but, seeing that the Hottentot did not choose to be communicative on the point, he forbore further question.
”What a funny man Jerry Goldboy is!” said Jessie McTavish, as she sat that same evening sipping a pannikin of tea in her father's tent.
From the opening of the tent the fire was visible.
Jerry was busy preparing his supper, while he kept up an incessant run of small-chat with b.o.o.by and Jemalee. The latter replied to him chiefly with grave smiles, the former with shouts of appreciative laughter.
”He _is_ funny,” a.s.serted Mrs McTavish, ”and uncommonly noisy. I doubt if there is much good in him.”
”More than you think, Mopsy,” said Kenneth (by this irreverent name did the Highlander call his better-half); ”Jerry Goldboy is a small package, but he's made of good stuff, depend upon it. No doubt he's a little nervous, but I've observed that his nerves are tried more by the suddenness with which he may be surprised than by the actual danger he may chance to encounter. On our first night out, when he roused the camp and smashed the stock of his blunderbuss, no doubt I as well as others thought he showed the white feather, but there was no lack of courage in him when he went last week straight under the tree where the tiger was growling, and shot it so dead that when it fell it was not far from his feet.”
”I heard some of the men, papa,” observed Jessie, ”say that it was Dutch courage that made him do that. What did they mean by Dutch courage?”
Jessie, being little more than eight, was ignorant of much of the world's slang.
”Cape-smoke, my dear,” answered her father, with a laugh.
”Cape-smoke?” exclaimed Jessie, ”what is that?”
”Brandy, child, peach-brandy, much loved by some of the boers, I'm told, and still more so by the Hottentots; but there was no more Cape-smoke in Jerry that day than in you. It was true English pluck. No doubt he could hardly fail to make a dead shot at so close a range, with such an awful weapon, loaded, as it usually is, with handfuls of slugs, buckshot, and gravel; but it was none the less plucky for all that. The old flint-lock might have missed fire, or he mightn't have killed the brute outright, and in either case he knew well enough it would have been all up with Jerry Goldboy.”
”Who's that taking my name in vain?” said Jerry himself, pa.s.sing the tent at the moment, in company with Sandy Black.
”We were only praising you, Jerry,” cried Jessie, with a laugh, ”for the way in which you shot that tiger the other day.”
”It wasn't a teeger, Miss Jessie,” interposed Sandy Black, ”it was only a leopard--ane o' thae wee spott.i.t beasts that they're sae prood o' in this country as to _ca'_ them teegers.”