Part 30 (1/2)

”This is a fresh crowd,” he cried. ”Those who tackled us first hadn't a gun among them.”

Then, from among the gra.s.s and bushes, dark forms arose, and the spurt of smoke and the 'whigge' of great clumsy missiles accompanied the appearance of each. But there were cool heads and fine shots among those white men, and the dusky barbarian found in a surprisingly short s.p.a.ce of time that even momentary exposure meant almost certain death.

Moreover, from the hurry and flurry of it, all untrained to quick shooting as he was, he could take no aim, and sent his bullet humming away harmlessly to high heaven. Fortunately, too, the outfit had got beyond the valley, and here in the open ground there was no elevated point of vantage whence it could be raked.

Yet the situation was becoming serious. Heartened by their reinforcement, and the moral effect of knowing that they, too, were returning the fire of the Amakiwa, though as yet harmlessly, the original attacking force was pressing forward under cover of the firing and confusion, swarming up stealthily in the bush and long gra.s.s, preparing for a final and decisive rush. But somehow that rush never quite came off. The fire of those cool, experienced whites was too determined, too hot, too deadly. Moving with judgment and rapidity, the mounted men would dart right up to any ma.s.sing of the dark crowd, and pouring their fire literally into their faces would break up any attempt at an organised charge. But they did not come off unscathed. Three were wounded at close quarters, two had their horses stabbed right under them, but with unfailing cool-headedness and magnificent valour these were kept from falling into the hands of the savages.

For half an hour this continued, and indeed it seemed as though some supernatural power was aiding that mere handful of men against swarming odds, as with brain dizzy and the whole world seeming to grow glistening leaping bodies and gleaming blades and great waving s.h.i.+elds, the air to buzz with the vibrating war-hiss--that handful fought its way step by step.

The red sun had just touched the far skyline when the a.s.sailants slackened, then drew off, and there--not half a mile distant--rose the substantial stockade of the Kezane Store. A ringing cheer went up, and even the played-out mules snuffed the air and p.r.i.c.ked up their ears, and pulled forward with a will.

The long, hard, running fight--valiantly fought--was over, and there in front lay rest and safety--for a time.

CHAPTER TWENTY THREE.

THE KEZANE STORE.

The Kezane Store--shop, inn, farm, posting-stables rolled into one--was almost a small fort, in that its buildings were enclosed within a stout stockade of mopani poles. This is exactly as its owner intended it should be; and now the said owner--an elderly German who had served in the Franco-Prussian war--came forth, together with three other white men, to welcome the party.

”_Ach_! dot was very exciting,” he said. ”We was hearing the fight--for the last hour--coming nearer and nearer. We was not able to help outside, only four of us, but we was ready to shoot from here if the Matabele had come near enough.”

The excitement of the men was now fairly let loose, and everybody seemed to be talking at once; fighting the battle over again in bulk, or recounting individual experiences. The surviving half of the handful of police were more subdued--the recollection of five dead comrades left behind on the road having something to do with it.

”Good old Grunberger,” sang out Jim Steele. ”You ought to have been with us, a jolly old soldier like you. You'd have been a tiger.”

”_Ach_! I do not know,” replied the old German quite flattered. ”Now, chentlemen, you will all come and haf some drinks wit me. Wit me, you understand.”

”Good for you, Grunberger,” said Peters. ”But we can't leave everything entirely without a guard. Why, they might come on again at any moment.

Who'll volunteer for first guard?”

There was perforce no actual discipline among this scratch corps, and the speaker, or even Lamont himself, had no power to enforce obedience to any single order they might issue. But these men had gone through a splendid experience together. Quite half of them had never before seen a life taken, or a shot fired in anger, in their lives; yet when put to it they had made a gallant running fight, against tremendous odds, with judgment and pluck such as no similar number of trained soldiers could have excelled them in. They had succeeded in their object, and had succeeded brilliantly, and the glow of satisfaction which this inspired was heightened by the absolute certainty that had they overtaken the mule-waggon ten minutes later their arrival would have been too late.

All this had implanted in them an instinctive soldierly spirit, and not a man there would have dreamed of questioning an order issued by Lamont, or even Peters. Yet the latter now invited some of them to 'volunteer.'

The whole corps responded.

”Half a dozen 'll do,” was the answer, and those who seemed the most willing were duly told off. The while the ladies were being looked after by the storekeeper's wife.

Lamont was helping to look after the wounded. Fortunately, among the three men who found themselves at Kezane when they arrived was a young doctor from Buluwayo; and his services being readily and skilfully given, there was no cause whatever for anxiety on the part of these less lucky ones.

”Where's the captain?” sang out Jim Steele, as the residue of the corps were doing full and jovial justice to the hospitable German's invitation. ”We must have the captain. We want to drink his jolly good health. Here it is. Here's to Captain Lamont, and ripping good luck to him.”

The toast was drunk with a roar of cheering.

”He's helping look after the wounded,” said Peters. ”There's a doctor here luckily, and he's having them seen to all right.”

A sort of compunctious silence fell upon the others at this announcement. Here they were, refres.h.i.+ng and making merry and enjoying themselves, while the man who had led them, and taken a tiger's share in the fight, had gone straight away to care for their wounded comrades.

”Chaps,” said Jim Steele shortly, ”we are sweeps. D'you hear? Sweeps.”

”It's all right, Jim,” said Peters. ”Lamont told me to look after you all, even apart from Grunberger's jolly hospitable invitation. Don't you bother about him.”

”Bother about him?” echoed Jim Steele. ”But that's just what we're going to do. We must have him here and drink his jolly good health.