Part 14 (1/2)
”It was revealed to the council of the doctors, Lady.”
”Then that was revealed which is not true. I was born as other women are, and my name of 'Lady of the Heavens' came to me by chance, as by chance I resemble the Spirit of your people.”
”We hear you,” answered the ”Mouth” politely. ”You were born as other women are, by chance you had your high name, by chance you are tall and fair and golden-haired like the Spirit of our people. We hear you.”
Then Rachel gave it up.
”Bear my words to the King,” she said, and they rose, saluted her with a Bayete, that royal salute which never before had been given to woman, and departed.
When they had gone Rachel went into supper and told her parents all the story. Mr. Dove, now that she seemed to take a serious view of the matter, affected to treat it as absurd, although when she had laughed, his att.i.tude, it may be remembered, was different. He talked of the silly Zulu superst.i.tions, showed how they had twisted up the story of the death of her baby brother, and her escape from the flood in the Umtavuna river, into that which they had narrated to her. He even suggested that the whole thing was nonsense, part of some political move to enable the King, or a party in the state, to declare that they had with them the word of their traditional spirit and oracle.
Mrs. Dove, however, who that night was strangely depressed and uneasy, thought far otherwise. She pointed out that they were playing with vast and cruel forces, and that whatever these people exactly believed about Rachel, it was a dreadful thing for a girl to be put in a position in which the lives of hundreds might hang upon her nod.
”Yes, and,” she added hysterically, ”perhaps our own lives also--perhaps our own lives also!”
To change the conversation, which was growing painful, Rachel asked if anyone had seen Noie. Her father answered that two hours ago, just before the emba.s.sy arrived, he had met her going down to the banks of the stream, as he supposed, to gather flowers for the table. Then he began to talk about the girl, saying what a sweet creature she was, and how strange it seemed to him that although she appeared to accept all the doctrines of the Christian faith, as yet she had never consented to be baptised.
It was while he was speaking thus that Rachel suddenly observed her mother fall forward, so that her body rested on the table, as though a kind of fit had seized her. Rachel sprang towards her, but before she reached her she appeared to have quite recovered, only her face looked very white.
”What on earth is the matter, mother?”
”Oh! don't ask me,” she answered, ”a terrible thing, a sort of fancy that came to me from talking about those Zulus. I thought I saw this place all red with blood and tongues of fire licking it up. It went as quickly as it came, and of course I know that it is nonsense.”
CHAPTER IX
THE TAKING OF NOIE
Presently Mrs. Dove, who seemed to have quite recovered from, her curious seizure, went to bed.
”I don't like it, father,” said Rachel when the door had closed behind her. ”Of course it is contrary to experience and all that, but I believe that mother is fore-sighted.”
”Nonsense, dear, nonsense,” said her father. ”It is her Scotch superst.i.tion, that is all. We have been married for five-and-twenty years now, and I have heard this sort of thing again and again, but although we have lived in wild places where anything might happen to us, nothing out of the way ever has happened; in fact, we have always been most mercifully preserved.”
”That's true, father, still I am not sure; perhaps because I am rather that way myself, sometimes. Thus I _know_ that she is right about me; no harm will happen to me, at least no permanent harm. I feel that I shall live out my life, as I feel something else.”
”What else, Rachel?”
”Do you remember the lad, Richard Darrien?” she asked, colouring a little.
”What? The boy who was with you that night on the island? Yes, I remember him, although I have not thought of him for years.”
”Well, I feel that I shall see him again.”
Mr. Dove laughed. ”Is that all?” he said. ”If he is still alive and in Africa, it wouldn't be very wonderful if you did, would it? And at any rate, of course, you will one day when we all cease to be alive. Really,”
he added with irritation, ”there are enough bothers in life without rubbish of this kind, which comes from living among savages and absorbing their ideas. I am beginning to think that I shall have to give way and leave Africa, though it will break my heart just when, after all the striving, my efforts are being crowned with success.”
”I have always told you, father, that I don't want to leave Africa, still, there is mother to be considered. Her health is not what it was.”