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The captain gave his orders briefly that there was to be no firing unless the blacks attacked them, and then they waited, Rifle suffering all the time as he crouched down in the scrub from an intense desire to answer each "coo-ee" as it came nearer and nearer, and now evidently from the track they had made in their journey that day.
"It is not a large party," whispered the captain to Artemus, who was close to him.
"Only one, I think, uncle, for it's the same man who keeps coo-eeing."
"Impossible to say yet," was whispered back by his uncle. "Feel frightened?"
"Well, I hardly know," said the boy. "I don't feel at all comfortable, and keep on wis.h.i.+ng they'd gone."
"Naturally, my boy. I shall fire a shot or two over their heads when they come close in. That will scare them, I expect."
"Coo-ee!" came from the darkness before them, but they could see nothing now, for all near the ground and among the trees was almost black, though overhead the stars were coming out fast, and eight or ten feet above the bushes it was comparatively light.
"Coo-ee!" came again from apparently a couple of hundred yards away, but not another sound.
"Creeping up very cautiously. Suspicious because of the fire, and receiving no answer," whispered the captain. "They thought it was the camp-fire of their tribe, but now feel sure it is a white man's fire."
"Queer work this," whispered Uncle Jack to Norman, who was with him on the other side of the track, the fire lying between them and the captain.
"Yes, isn't it, uncle?" was whispered back.
"I'm beginning to ask myself why I'm here when I ought to be in London at my club."
"I'm glad you are here, uncle," whispered Norman.
"Can you see any of them, Tim? Your eyes are younger than mine."
"No, uncle," came after a pause.
"They must be crawling up, so as to hurl their spears from close by."
"Coo-ee!" came again from very near now. "Not suspicious, then?" said the captain, wonderingly.
"I can see one now, uncle," whispered Tim. "He's high up."
"In a tree?"
"No: moving; coming nearer; he's on horseback."
"Nonsense! Black fellows don't ride horses out in the scrub."
"But he is mounted, uncle. I can see plainly now."
"You are right," said the captain, after a short pause.
"Coo-ee!"
This was only from a few yards away, and directly after a familiar voice shouted:
"Why baal not call along coo-ee? Hi, white fellow! Hi, boy! Hi, big white Mary!"
"Why, it's Shanter," cried Norman, excitedly. "Hi coo-ee!"
"Coo-ee! coo-ee!" came back, and directly after a black face was seen above the bushes full in the glare of the fire, and then the body came into view, as the black's steed paced very slowly and leisurely forward, and suddenly threw up its head and gave vent to a prolonged "moo," which was answered by first one and then another of the cows and bullocks chewing their cud close to the camp.
"Hooray!" shouted Rifle and Tim together. "Here's a game. Look! he is riding on the little Alderney."
"Hey!" cried the black, drumming the heifer's ribs with his bare legs, and giving her a crack near the tail with his spear to force her right up into the light, where he sat grinning in triumph with his spear now planted on the ground.
"Yes, that's the ord'nary heifer, sure enough," grumbled German.
"Shanter fine along this bull-cow fellow all 'lone. Yabber moo-moo hard!"
He gave so excellent an imitation of the cow's lowing that it was answered again by the others.
"What, you found that heifer?" cried the captain.
"Shanter fine bull-cow fellow all 'lone."
"Where? when?"
The black pointed with his stick.
"Bulla (two) day. Come along bull fellow slow, Big white Mary gib Shanter soff damper; no eat long time. Fine sugar-bag--kill poss? No; Shanter come along bull-cow fellow."
"I can't make out his jargon," said the captain, tetchily.
"He says, father, he found the cow two days ago, and couldn't stop to eat because he wanted to bring it along. He's hungry and wants damper."
"Soff damper," said the black, correctively.
"Soft bread because he's hungry. Isn't that what you mean?" cried Norman.
"Soff damper. Big white Mary gib damper. Marmi gib Shanter tickpence bring bull-cow fellow all along."
"That I will," cried the captain. "Tut, tut! How I am obliged to eat my words. You're a good fellow, Shanter," he cried, clapping the black on the shoulder. "Go and have some damper.--Give him some meat too."
However badly Shanter expressed himself, he pretty well comprehended all that was said; and at the captain's words he began to rub his front, leaped off the heifer, and followed the boys to the fire, round which the party gathered as soon as they found there was no danger, and where Aunt Georgie, in her satisfaction, cut the fellow so big a portion of bread and bacon, that his eyes glistened and his teeth gleamed, as he ran away with it amongst the bushes to lie down and eat.
Half an hour later they found him fast asleep, and the first thing the boys saw the next morning, after a delightful night's rest, was the s.h.i.+ning black face of Shanter where he was squatting down on his heels, watching them and waiting for them to wake.
Norman lay for some minutes, still half asleep, gazing at the black face, which seemed to be somehow connected with his dreams and with the soft sweet piping of the magpie crows, which were apparently practising their scales prior to joining in the morning outburst of song, while the great kingfishers--the laughing jacka.s.ses of the colonists--sat here and there uttering their discordant sounds, like coa.r.s.e, harsh laughter, at the efforts of the crows.
CHAPTER SEVEN.
"I AM SATISFIED."