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A Veldt Official Part 10

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"And try and make conversation with the _vrouw_?"

"That too."

"Well, don't let's go."

"Mona, are you in command of this expedition, or am I? The course I prescribe is essential to its success. Hallo! Jump off, Musgrave!

There's a shot!"

They had turned off from the open plain now, and were riding through a narrow _poort_, or defile, which opened soon into another hill-encircled hollow. The pa.s.sage was overhung with rugged cliffs, in which ere and there a stray euphorbia or a cactus had found root. Up a well-nigh perpendicular rock-face, sprawling, shambling like a tarantula on a wall, a huge male baboon was making his way. He must have been quite two hundred yards distant, and was looking over his shoulder at his natural enemies, the while straining every muscle to gain the top of the cliff.

Roden's piece was already at his shoulder. There was a crack, then a dull thud. The baboon relaxed his hold, and with one spasmodic clutch toppled heavily to the earth.

"Good shot!" cried Suffield enthusiastically. "It's not worth while going to pick him up. I wonder what he's doing here all alone, though.

You don't often catch an old man baboon napping."

"Don't you feel as if you had committed a murder, Mr Musgrave?" said Mona.

"Not especially. On the other hand, I am gratified to find that this old Snider shoots so true. It's a Government one I borrowed from the store for the occasion."

"Murder be--um!--somethinged!" said Suffield. "These baboons are the most mischievous _schelms_ out. They have discovered that young lamb is good, the brutes! Sympathy wasted, my dear child."

But when they reached Stoffel Van Wyk's farm they found, to Mona's intense relief, that that typical Boer and all his house were away from home. This they elicited with difficulty between the savage bayings of four or five great ugly bullet-headed dogs, which could hardly be restrained from a.s.sailing the new arrivals by the Kaffir servant who gave the information.

"We'll go on at once, then, Musgrave," said Suffield. "Stoffel's a very decent fellow, and won't mind us shooting on his farm; though, of course, we had to call at the house as a matter of civility."

The place for which they were bound was a long, flat-topped mountain, whose summit, belted round with a wall of cliff, was only to be gained here and there where the rock had yawned away into a deep gully. It was along the slopes at the base of the rocks that bucks were likely to be put up.

"We'll leave the horses here with Piet," said Suffield, "and steal up quietly and look over that ridge of rocks under the _krantz_. We'll most likely get a shot."

The ridge indicated sloped away at right angles from the face of a tall cliff. It was the very perfection of a place for a stalk. Dismounting, they turned over their horses to the "after-rider."

"Hold hard, Miss Ridsdale. Don't be in such a hurry," whispered Roden warningly. "If you chance to dislodge so much as a pebble, the bucks down there'll hear it, if there are any."

Mona, who was all eagerness and excitement, took the hint. But a riding habit is not the most adaptable of garments for stalking purposes, and she was conscious of more than one look, half of warning, half of vexation, on the part of her male companions daring the advance.

Lying flat on their faces they peered over the ridge, and their patience was rewarded. The ground sloped abruptly down for about a hundred feet, forming, with the jutting elbow of the cliff, a snug gra.s.sy _hoek_, or corner. Here among boulders and fragments of rock scattered about, were seven rhybok, two rams and five ewes.

They had been grazing; some were so yet, but others had thrown up their heads, and were listening intently.

They were barely two hundred yards distant. Quiet, cautious as had been the advance, their keen ears must have heard something. They stood motionless, gazing in the direction of the threatened peril, their ringed black horns and prominent eyes plainly distinguishable to the stalkers. One, a fine large ram, seemingly the leader of the herd, had already begun to move uneasily.

"Take the two rams as they stand," whispered Suffield.

Cras.h.!.+ Then a long reverberating roar rolls back in thunder from the base of the cliff. Away go the bucks like lightning, leaving one of their number kicking upon the ground. This has fallen to Roden's weapon; the other, the big ram, is apparently unscathed.

"I'll swear he's. .h.i.t!" cried Suffield, in excitement and vexation.

"Look at him, Musgrave. Isn't he going groggily?"

Roden shaded his eyes to look after the leader of the herd, whose bounding form was fast receding into distance.

"Yes, he's. .h.i.t," he said decidedly. "A fine buck too. He may run for miles with a pound of lead in him, though. They're tough as copper-wire. We'd better sing out to Piet to bring on the horses, and try and keep him in sight anyhow."

The fleeing bucks had now become mere specks, as, their stampede in no wise abated, they went bounding down the mountain-side more than half a mile away.

"Look there, Suffield," went on Roden, still shading his eyes; "there are only the five ewes. Your ram's. .h.i.t, and can't keep up, or else has split off of his own accord. Anyway, he's. .h.i.t, and will probably lie up somewhat under the _krantz_."

Away they went, right along the base of the iron wall, which seemed to girdle the mountain for miles. And here Mona's boast about being able to take care of herself was put to a very real and practical test, for the ground was rough and stony and the slope here and there dangerously steep.

Suddenly an animal sprang up, right in front of them, apparently out of the very rocks, at about a hundred yards.

"That's him!" shouted Suffield, skimming past his companions, bent on diminis.h.i.+ng the distance to get in a final shot. But this was not so easy, for a full-grown rhybok ram, even when wounded, is first-rate at; and this one was no exception to the rule, for he went so well and dodged so craftily behind every stone and tuft of gra.s.s that his pursuer would have to shoot him from the saddle, or not at all. Suffield, realising this, opened fire hastily, and of course missed clean.

"We've lost him!" he growled, making no effort to continue the pursuit.

But the quarry here suddenly altered its tactics. Possibly suspecting danger in front, it turned suddenly, and doubling, shot down the steep slope at lightning speed, and at right angles to its former course.

There rang out a heavy report at some little distance behind. The buck leaped high in the air, then, turning a couple of somersaults, rolled a score of yards farther, and lay stone dead.

"By Jove, Musgrave, but you can shoot!" cried Suffield, as they met over the quarry. "Three to four hundred yards, and going like an express train. _Allamaagtag_! I grudge you that shot."

"He's yours, anyhow. First blood, you know."

They examined the animal. Roden's ball had drilled clean through the centre of the heart, but the first wound would have sickened anything less tenacious of life. The bullet had struck far back in the flank, pa.s.sing through the animal's body. Leaving the after-rider to perform the necessary rites and load up the buck upon his horse, together with the first one, which was already there, they moved up to a snug corner under the rocks for lunch.

"We haven't done badly so far," quoth Suffield, with a sandwich in one hand and a flask in the other.

"We must get one more," said Roden, "or rather, you must. That'll exactly 'tie' the shoot; one and a half apiece."

"Well, and have I been so dreadfully in the way, Mr Musgrave?" said Mona.

"I am not aware that I ever predicted that contingency, Miss Ridsdale."

"Not in words, perhaps; but you looked so glum when I announced my intention of coming, that, like the pack of cards instead of the Testament in the wicked conscript's pocket, which turned the fatal bullet, it did just as well."

"Did I? If so, it was inadvertently. But I daresay my conscience was p.r.i.c.king me in advance over that baboon I was destined to murder. That might account for it."

The fact was that, however dubious had been his reception of the said announcement, Roden was in his heart of hearts conscious that the speaker's presence with them that day, so far from being a drawback, had const.i.tuted rather an attraction than otherwise. Indeed, he was surprised to find how much so. When Mona Ridsdale chose to lay herself out to make the most of herself, she did not do it by halves. A good horsewoman, she looked splendidly well in the saddle, the well-fitting riding habit setting off the curves and proportions of her magnificent figure to every advantage. Moreover, she was in bright spirits, and to-day had laid herself out to be thoroughly companionable, and, to do her justice, had well succeeded; and more than once, when the pace had been too great, or the ground too rough, or a dark, haunting terror of her saddle turning had smote her, she had manfully repressed any word or look which might be construed into an appeal for consideration or aid.

She had even been successful beyond her hopes, for Roden, silently observant, had not suffered this to escape him, though manifesting no sign thereof. So the trio, as they sat there under the cliff, lunching upon sandwiches in true sportsmanlike fas.h.i.+on, with a vast panorama of mountain and plain, craggy, turret-like summit, and bold, sweeping, gra.s.sy slope, spread out beneath and around for fifty miles on either hand, and the fresh, bracing breeze of seven thousand feet above sea-level tempering the golden and glowing suns.h.i.+ne which enveloped them, felt on excellent terms with each other and all the world.

"The plan now," said Suffield, when they had taken it easy long enough, "will be to separate and go right round the _berg_. It is lying under the _krantz_ we shall find the bucks, if anywhere."

"Where does my part come in in that little scheme, Charlie?" said Mona.

"Who am I to inflict myself upon?"

"Upon me, of course," said Roden.

She shot a rapid glance at him as though to see if he were in earnest, and her heart beat quick. This time she was sure that no dubiousness lurked beneath his tone.

"Just as you like," she rejoined; for her, quite subduedly. Then Piet, the after-rider, having received his instructions--viz., to start off homeward with the two bucks already slain--they separated accordingly.

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