The Kopje Garrison: A Story of the Boer War. Fenn George Manville. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Fenn George Manville
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what the colonel said; and he told him that there must be no nonsense – he was fed here and protected so that he should keep up the supply, and that he must start the day after to-morrow at the latest to buy up more and bring it in. Then, in a surly, unwilling way, he consented to go.”

      “Buy up some more?” said Dickenson, with a chuckle. “Yes, he’ll buy a lot. Commando it, he’ll call it.”

      That very day, growing weary of trying to starve out the garrison, the enemy made an attack from the south, and after a furious cannonading began to fall back in disorder, drawing out the mounted men and two troops of lancers in pursuit.

      As they fell back the disorder seemed to become a rout; but Colonel Lindley had grown, through a sharp lesson or two, pretty watchful and ready to meet manoeuvre with manoeuvre. He saw almost directly that the enemy were overdoing their retreat; and he acted accordingly. Suspecting that it was a feint, he held his mounted troops in hand, and then made them fall back upon the village.

      It was none too soon, his men being just in time to fall on the flank of one of the other two commandos, whose leaders had only waited till the first had drawn the British force well out of their entrenchments before one attacked from the east, and the other drove back the defenders of the ford and crossed at once, but only to bring themselves well under the attention of their own captured gun on the kopje, its shells playing havoc amongst them, while the men of the colonel’s regiment stood fast in their entrenchments. The result was that in less than an hour the last two commandos retired in disorder and with heavy loss.

      “There,” said Lennox as the events of the day were being discussed after the mess dinner, “you see, Bob, it doesn’t do to trust the Boers.”

      “Pooh!” replied the young officer. “There are Boers and Boers, and one must trust them when they supply the larder. Good-luck to our lot, I say, and may they bring in another big supply. If they don’t, we shall have to begin on those quadrupedal locomotives of horn, gristle, and skin they call spans. Ugh! how I do loathe trek ox!”

      “Talking of that,” said Lennox, “the cornet and his men ought to have been off to-night.”

      “Why?” said Dickenson, staring.

      “Why? Because the enemy will be in such a state of confusion after the check they had to-day.”

      “To be sure; let’s go and tell them so.”

      “I was nearly suggesting it to the colonel, but he would only have given me one of his looks. You know.”

      “Yes; make you feel as if you’re nine or ten, even if he hadn’t sarcastically hinted that you had not been asked for your advice. But I say, Drew, old fellow, I think you’re right, and if Blackbeard thinks it would be best he’ll go to the old man like a shot. No bashfulness in him.”

      Without further debate the two young men made their way across the market-square to the wagon where the Boers’ dim lantern was swinging, passing two sentries on the way.

      “Not much need for a light,” observed Dickenson; “one might smell one’s way to their den. Hang it all! if tobacco’s poison those fellows ought to have been killed long ago.”

      The cornet was seated on the wagon-box, with his legs inside, talking in a low tone to his fellows who shared the wagon with him, and so intent that he did not hear the young officers’ approach till Lennox spoke, when he sprang forward into the wagon, and his companions began to climb out at the back.

      “Why, what’s the matter with you?” said Dickenson laughingly as he stepped up and looked in. “Think some of your friends were coming to fetch you?”

      “You crept up so quietly,” grumbled the Boer, recovering himself, and calling gently to his companions to return.

      “Quietly? Of course. You didn’t want us to send a trumpeter before us to say we were coming, did you?”

      “H’m! No. What were you doing? Listening to find out whether we were going to run away?”

      “Psh! No!” cried Dickenson. “Here, Mr Lennox wants to say something to you.”

      “What about?” said the man huskily.

      “I have been thinking that, as you are going on a foraging expedition,” said Lennox, “you ought to go at once. It’s a very dark night, and the enemy is completely demoralised by to-day’s fight.”

      “Demoralised?” said the Boer.

      “Well, scared – beaten – all in disorder.”

      “Oh,” said the Boer, nodding his head like an elephant. “But what difference does that make?”

      “They would not be so likely to notice your wagons going through their lines.”

      “Oh?” said the Boer.

      “We think it would be a good chance for you.”

      “Does your general say so?”

      “No; our colonel does not know that we have come.”

      “So! Yes, I see,” said the Boer softly.

      “We think you ought to take advantage of their disorder and get through to-night.”

      “Hah! Yes.”

      “You have only to go and see what the colonel says.”

      “Why don’t you go?” said the Boer suspiciously.

      “Because we think it would be better for you to go.”

      “And fall into the Boers’ hands and be shot?”

      “Bother!” cried Dickenson. “Why, you are as suspicious as – as – well, as some one I know. Now, my good fellow, don’t you know that we’ve eaten the sheep?”

      “Yes, I know that,” said the Boer.

      “Finished the last side of the last ox?”

      “Yes, I know that too,” replied the Boer, nodding his head slowly and sagely.

      “And come down to the last ten sacks of the Indian corn?”

      “Mealies? Yes, I know that too.”

      “Well, in the name of all that’s sensible, why should we want to get you taken by your own people?”

      “To be sure; I see now,” said the cornet. “Better for us to get the wagons full again, and drive in some more sheep and oxen.”

      “Of course.”

      “Well, I don’t know,” said the man thoughtfully. “They will be all on the lookout, thinking that you will attack them in the night, and twice as watchful. I don’t know, though. There is no moon to-night, and it will be black darkness.”

      “It is already,” said Dickenson.

      “Ha! Yes,” said the Boer quietly, and he puffed at his pipe, which, after dropping in his fright, he had picked up, refilled, and relit at the lantern door. “Yes, that is a very good way. I shall go and tell the colonel that we will go to-night. You will come with me?”

      “No,” said Lennox; “the colonel does not like his young officers to interfere. It would be better for you to go.”

      “Your chief is right,” said the Boer firmly. “He thinks and acts for himself. I do the same. I do not let my men tell me what I should do.” He spoke meaningly, as if he were giving a side-blow at some one or other of his companions. “I think much and long, and when I have thought what is best I tell them what to do, and they do it. Yes, I will go to the colonel now and speak to him. Wait here.”

      “No,” said Dickenson quietly. “Go, and we will come back and hear what the colonel thinks.”

      The Boer nodded, thrust his pipe in the folds of the tilt, after tapping out the ashes, and went off, the two officers following him at a distance before stopping short, till they heard him challenged by a sentry, after which they struck off to their left to pass by the corn store, and being challenged again and again as they made a short tour