<h2><SPAN name="chap03"></SPAN>CHAPTER III.<br/> GOOD-BYE</h2>
<p>Rachel was the first to wake, which she did, feeling cold, for the fire had
burnt almost out. She rose and walked from the cave. The dawn was breaking
quietly, for now no wind stirred, and no rain fell. So dense was the mist which
rose from the river and sodden land, however, that she could not see two yards
in front of her, and fearing lest she should stumble on the lions or some other
animals, she did not dare to wander far from the mouth of the cave. Near to it
was a large, hollow-surfaced rock, filled now with water like a bath. From this
she drank, then washed and tidied herself as well as she could without the aid
of soap, comb or towels, which done, she returned to the cave.</p>
<p>As Richard was still sleeping, very quietly she laid a little more wood on the
embers to keep him warm, then sat down by his side and watched him, for now the
grey light of the dawning crept into their place of refuge. To her this
slumbering lad looked beautiful, and as she studied him her childish heart was
filled with a strange, new tenderness, such as she had never felt before.
Somehow he had grown dear to her, and Rachel knew that she would never forget
him while she lived. Then following this wave of affection came a sharp and
sudden pain, for she remembered that presently they must part, and never see
each other any more. At least this seemed certain, for how could they when he
was travelling to the Cape and she to Natal?</p>
<p>And yet, and yet a strange conviction told her otherwise. The power of
prescience which came to her from her mother and her Highland forefathers awoke
in her breast, and she knew that her life and this lad’s life were
interwoven. Perhaps she dozed off again, sitting there by the fire. At any rate
it appeared to her that she dreamed and saw things in her dream. Wild
tumultuous scenes opened themselves before her in a vision; scenes of blood and
terror, sounds, too, of voices crying war. It appeared to her as if she were
mad, and yet ruled a queen, death came near to her a score of times, but always
fled away at her command. Now Richard Darrien was with her, and now she had
lost him and sought—ah! how she sought through dark places of doom and
unnatural night. It was as though he were dead, and she yet living, searched
for him among the habitations of the dead. She found him also, and drew him
towards her. How, she did not know.</p>
<p>Then there was a scene, a last scene, which remained fixed in her mind after
everything else had faded away. She saw the huge trunks of forest trees,
enormous, towering trees, gloomy trees beneath which the darkness could be
felt. Down their avenues shot the level arrows of the dawn. They fell on her,
Rachel, dressed in robes of white skin, turning her long, outspread hair to
gold. They fell upon little people with faces of a dusky pallor, one of them
crouched against the bole of a tree, a wizened monkey of a man who in all that
vastness looked small. They fell upon another man, white-skinned, half-naked,
with a yellow beard, who was lashed by hide ropes to a second tree. It was
Richard Darrien grown older, and at his feet lay a broad-bladed spear!</p>
<p>The vision left her, or she was awakened from her sleep, whichever it might be,
by the pleasant voice of this same Richard, who stood yawning before her, and
said:</p>
<p>“It is time to get up. I say, why do you look so queer? Are you
ill?”</p>
<p>“I have been up, long ago,” she answered, struggling to her feet.
“What do you mean?”</p>
<p>“Nothing, except that you seemed a ghost a minute ago. Now you are a girl
again, it must have been the light.”</p>
<p>“Did I? Well, I dreamed of ghosts, or something of the sort,” and
she told him of the vision of the trees, though of the rest she could remember
little.</p>
<p>“That’s a queer story,” he said when she had finished.
“I wish you had got to the end of it, I should like to know what
happened.”</p>
<p>“We shall find out one day,” she answered solemnly.</p>
<p>“Do you mean to say that you believe it is true, Rachel?”</p>
<p>“Yes, Richard, one day I shall see you tied to that tree.”</p>
<p>“Then I hope you will cut me loose, that is all. What a funny girl you
are,” he added doubtfully. “I know what it is, you want something
to eat. Have the rest of that biltong.”</p>
<p>“No,” she answered. “I could not touch it. There is a pool of
water out there, go and bathe your arm, and I will bind it up again.”</p>
<p>He went, still wondering, and a few minutes later returned, his face and head
dripping, and whispered:</p>
<p>“Give me the gun. There is a reed buck standing close by. I saw it
through the mist; we’ll have a jolly breakfast off him.”</p>
<p>She handed him the <i>roer</i>, and crept after him out of the cave. About
thirty yards away to the right, looming very large through the dense fog, stood
the fat reed buck. Richard wriggled towards it, for he wanted to make sure of
his shot, while Rachel crouched behind a stone. The buck becoming alarmed,
turned its head, and began to sniff at the air, whereon he lifted the gun and
just as it was about to spring away, aimed and fired. Down it went dead,
whereon, rejoicing in his triumph like any other young hunter who thinks not of
the wonderful and happy life that he has destroyed, Richard sprang upon it
exultantly, drawing his knife as he came, while Rachel, who always shrank from
such sights, retreated to the cave. Half an hour later, however, being healthy
and hungry, she had no objection to eating venison toasted upon sticks in the
red embers of their fire.</p>
<p>Their meal finished at length, they reloaded the gun, and although the mist was
still very dense, set out upon a journey of exploration, as by now the sun was
shining brightly above the curtain of low-lying vapour. Stumbling on through
the rocks, they discovered that the water had fallen almost as quickly as it
rose on the previous night. The island was strewn, however, with the trunks of
trees and other debris that it had brought down, amongst which lay the carcases
of bucks and smaller creatures, and with them a number of drowned snakes. The
two lions, however, appeared to have escaped by swimming, at least they saw
nothing of them. Walking cautiously, they came to the edge of the donga, and
sat down upon a stone, since as yet they could not see how wide and deep the
water ran.</p>
<p>Whilst they remained thus, suddenly through the mist they heard a voice
shouting from the other side of the donga.</p>
<p>“Missie,” cried the voice in Dutch, “are you there
missie?”</p>
<p>“That is Tom, our driver,” she said, “come to look for me.
Answer for me, Richard.”</p>
<p>So the lad, who had very good lungs, roared in reply:</p>
<p>“Yes, I’m here, safe, waiting for the mist to lift, and the water
to run down.”</p>
<p>“God be thanked,” yelled the distant Tom. “We thought that
you were surely drowned. But, then, why is your voice changed?”</p>
<p>“Because an English heer is with me,” cried Rachel. “Go and
look for his horse and bring a rope, then wait till the mist rises. Also send
to tell the pastor and my mother that I am safe.”</p>
<p>“I am here, Rachel,” shouted another voice, her father’s.
“I have been looking for you all night, and we have got the
Englishman’s horse. Don’t come into the water yet. Wait till we can
see.”</p>
<p>“That’s good news, any way,” said Richard, “though I
shall have to ride hard to catch up the waggons.”</p>
<p>Rachel’s face fell.</p>
<p>“Yes,” she said; “very good news.”</p>
<p>“Are you glad that I am going, then?” he asked in an offended tone.</p>
<p>“It was you who said the news was good,” she replied gently.</p>
<p>“I meant I was glad that they had caught my horse, not that I had to ride
away on it. Are you sorry, then?” and he glanced at her anxiously.</p>
<p>“Yes, I am sorry, for we have made friends, haven’t we? It
won’t matter to you who will find plenty of people down there at the
Cape, but you see when you are gone I shall have no friend left in this
wilderness, shall I?”</p>
<p>Again Richard looked at her, and saw that her sweet grey eyes were full of
tears. Then there rose within the breast of this lad who, be it remembered, was
verging upon manhood, a sensation strangely similar, had he but known it, to
that which had been experienced an hour or two before by the child at his side
when she watched him sleeping in the cave. He felt as though these tear-laden
grey eyes were drawing his heart as a magnet draws iron. Of love he knew
nothing, it was but a name to him, but this feeling was certainly very new and
queer.</p>
<p>“What have you done to me?” he asked brusquely. “I
don’t want to go away from you at all, which is odd, as I never liked
girls much. I tell you,” he went on with gathering vehemence, “that
if it wasn’t that it would be mean to play such a trick upon my father, I
wouldn’t go. I’d come with you, or follow after—all my life.
Answer me—what have you done?”</p>
<p>“Nothing, nothing at all,” said Rachel with a little sob,
“except tie up your arm.”</p>
<p>“That can’t be it,” he replied. “Anyone could tie up my
arm. Oh! I know it is wrong, but I hope I shan’t be able to overtake the
waggons, for if I can’t I will come back.”</p>
<p>“You mustn’t come back; you must go away, quite away, as soon as
you can. Yes, as soon as you can. Your father will be very anxious,” and
she began to cry outright.</p>
<p>“Stop it,” said Richard. “Do you hear me, stop it. I am not
going to be made to snivel too, just because I shan’t see a little girl
any more whom I never met—till yesterday.”</p>
<p>These last words came out with a gulp, and what is more, two tears came with
them and trickled down his nose.</p>
<p>For a moment they sat thus looking at each other pitifully, and—the truth
must be told—weeping, both of them. Then something got the better of
Richard, let us call it primeval instinct, so that he put his arms about Rachel
and kissed her, after which they continued to weep, their heads resting upon
each other’s shoulders. At length he let her go and stood up, saying
argumentatively:</p>
<p>“You see now we are really friends.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” she answered, again rubbing her eyes with the back of her
hand for lack of a pocket handkerchief in the fashion that on the previous day
had so irritated her father, “but I don’t know why you should kiss
me like that, just because you are my friend, or” she added with an
outburst of truthfulness, “why I should kiss you.”</p>
<p>Richard stood over her frowning and reflecting. Then he gave up the problem as
beyond his powers of interpretation, and said:</p>
<p>“You remember that rubbish you dreamt just now, about my being tied to a
tree and the rest of it? Well, it wasn’t nice, and it gives me the creeps
to think of it, like the lions outside the cave. But I want to tell you that I
hope it is true, for then we shall meet again, if it is only to say
good-night.”</p>
<p>“Yes, Richard,” she answered, placing her slim fingers into his big
brown hand, “we shall meet again, I am sure—I am quite sure. And I
think that it will be to say, not good-night,” and she looked up at him
and smiled, “but good-morning.”</p>
<p>As Rachel spoke a puff of wind blew down the donga, rolling up the mist before
it, and of a sudden shining above them they saw the glorious sun. As though by
magic butterflies appeared basking upon the rain-shattered lily blooms; bright
birds flitted from tree to tree, ringdoves began to coo. The terror of the
tempest and the darkness of night were overpast; the world awoke again to life
and love and joy. Instantly this change reflected itself in their young hearts.
They whose natures had as it were ripened prematurely in the stress of danger
and the shadow of death, became children once again. The very real emotions
that they had experienced were forgotten, or at any rate sank into abeyance.
Now they thought, not of separation or of the dim, mysterious future that
stretched before them, but only of how they should ford the stream and gain its
further side, where Rachel saw her father, Tom, the driver, and the other
Kaffirs, and Richard saw his horse which he had feared was lost.</p>
<p>They ran down to the brink of the water and examined it, but here it was still
too deep for them to attempt its crossing. Then, directed by the shouts and
motions of the Kaffir Tom and Mr. Dove, they proceeded up stream for several
hundred yards, till they came to a rapid where the lessening flood ran thinly
over a ridge of rock, and after investigation, proceeded to try its passage
hand in hand. It proved difficult but not dangerous, for when they came near to
the further side where the current was swift and the water rather deep, Tom
threw them a waggon rope, clinging on to which they were dragged—wet, but
laughing—in safety to the further bank.</p>
<p>“Ow!” exclaimed the Kaffirs, clapping their hands. “She is
alive, the lightnings have turned away from her, she rules the waters, and the
lightnings!” and then and there, after the native fashion, they gave
Rachel a name which was destined to play a great part in her future. That name
was “Lady of the Lightnings,” or, to translate it more accurately,
“of the Heavens.”</p>
<p>“I never thought to see you again,” said her father, looking at
Rachel with a face that was still white and scared. “It was very wrong of
me to send you so far with that storm coming on, and I have had a terrible
night—yes, a terrible night; and so has your poor mother. However, she
knows that you are safe by now, thank God, thank God!” and he took her in
his arms and kissed her.</p>
<p>“Well, father, you said that He would look after me, didn’t you?
And so He did, for He sent Richard here. If it hadn’t been for Richard I
should have been drowned,” she added inconsequently.</p>
<p>“Yes, yes,” said Mr. Dove. “Providence manifests itself in
many ways. But who is your young friend whom you call Richard? I suppose he has
some other name.”</p>
<p>“Of course,” answered that youth himself, “everybody has
except Kaffirs. Mine is Darrien.”</p>
<p>“Darrien?” said Mr. Dove. “I had a friend called Darrien at
school. I never saw him after I left, but I believe that he went into the
Navy.”</p>
<p>“Then he must be my father, sir, for I have heard him say that there had
been no other Darrien in the service for a hundred years.”</p>
<p>“I think so,” answered Mr. Dove, “for now that I look at you,
I can see a likeness. We slept side by side in the same dormitory once
five-and-thirty years ago, so I remember. And now you have saved my daughter;
it is very strange. But tell me the story.”</p>
<p>So between them they told it, although to one scene of it—the
last—neither of them thought it necessary to allude; or perhaps it was
forgotten.</p>
<p>“Truly the Almighty has had you both in His keeping,” exclaimed Mr.
Dove, when their tale was done. “And now, Richard, my boy, what are you
going to do? You see, we caught your horse—it was grazing about a mile
away with the saddle twisted under its stomach—and wondered what white
man could possibly have been riding it in this desolate place. Afterwards,
however, one of my voor-loopers reported that he had seen two waggons yesterday
afternoon trekking through the poort about five miles to the north there. The
white men with them said that they were travelling towards the Cape, and
pushing on to get out of the hills before the storm broke. They bade him, if he
met you, to bid you follow after them as quickly as you could, and to say that
they would wait for you, if you did not arrive before, at the Three Sluit
outspan on this side of the Pondo country, at which you stopped some months
ago.”</p>
<p>“Yes,” answered Richard, “I remember, but that outspan is
thirty miles away, so I must be getting on, or they will come back to hunt for
me.”</p>
<p>“First you will stop and eat with us, will you not?” said Mr. Dove.</p>
<p>“No, no, I have eaten. Also I have saved some meat in my pouch. I must
go, I must indeed, for otherwise my father will be angry with me. You
see,” he added, “I went out shooting without his leave.”</p>
<p>“Ah! my boy,” remarked Mr. Dove, who seldom neglected an
opportunity for a word in season, “now you know what comes of
disobedience.”</p>
<p>“Yes, I know, sir,” he answered looking at Rachel. “I was
just in time to save your daughter’s life here; as you said just now,
Providence sent me. Well, good-bye, and don’t think me wicked if I am
very glad that I was disobedient, as I believe you are, too.”</p>
<p>“Yes, I am. Good comes out of evil sometimes, though that is no reason
why we should do evil,” the missionary added, not knowing what else to
say. Richard did not attempt to argue the point, for at the moment he was
engaged in bidding farewell to Rachel. It was a very silent farewell; neither
of them spoke a word, they only shook each other’s hand and looked into
each other’s eyes. Then muttering something which it was as well that Mr.
Dove did not hear, Richard swung himself into the saddle, for his horse stood
at hand, and, without even looking back, cantered away towards the mountains.</p>
<p>“Oh!” exclaimed Rachel presently, “call him, father.”</p>
<p>“What for?” asked Mr. Dove.</p>
<p>“I want to give him our address, and to get his.”</p>
<p>“We have no address, Rachel. Also he is too far off, and why should you
want the address of a chance acquaintance?”</p>
<p>“Because he saved my life and I do,” replied the child, setting her
face. Then, without another word, she turned and began to walk towards their
camp—a very heavy journey it was to Rachel.</p>
<p class="p2">
When Rachel reached the waggon she found that her mother was more or less
recovered. At any rate the attack of fever had left her so that she felt able
to rise from her bed. Now, although still weak, she was engaged in packing away
the garments of her dead baby in a travelling chest, weeping in a silent,
piteous manner as she worked. It was a very sad sight. When she saw Rachel she
opened her arms without a word, and embraced her.</p>
<p>“You were not frightened about me, mother?” asked the child.</p>
<p>“No, my love,” she answered, “because I knew that no harm
would come to you. I have always known that. It was a mad thing of your father
to send you to such a place at such a time, but no folly of his or of anyone
else can hurt you who are destined to live. Never be afraid of anything,
Rachel, for remember always you will only die in old age.”</p>
<p>“I am not sure that I am glad of that,” answered the girl, as she
pulled off her wet clothes. “Life isn’t a very happy thing, is it,
mother, at least for those who live as we do?”</p>
<p>“There is good and bad in it, dear; we can’t have one without the
other—most of us. At any rate, we must take it as it comes, who have to
walk a path that we did not make, and stop walking when our path comes to an
end, not a step before or after. But, Rachel, you are changed since yesterday.
I see it in your face. What has happened to you?”</p>
<p>“Lots of things, mother. I will tell you the story, all of it, every
word. Would you like to hear it?”</p>
<p>Her mother nodded, and, the baby-clothes being at last packed away, shut the
lid of the box with a sigh, sat down upon it and listened.</p>
<p>Rachel told her of her meeting with Richard Darrien, and of how he saved her
from the flood. She told of the strange night that they had spent together in
the little cave while the lions marched up and down without. She told of her
vigil over the sleeping Richard at the daybreak, and of the dream that she had
dreamed when she seemed to see him grown to manhood, and herself grown to
womanhood, and clad in white skins, watching him lashed to the trunk of a
gigantic tree as the first arrows of sunrise struck down the lanes of some
mysterious forest. She told of how her heart had been stirred, and of how
afterwards in the mist by the water’s brink his heart had been stirred
also, and of how they had kissed each other and wept because they must part.</p>
<p>Then she stopped, expecting that her mother would be angry with her and scold
her for her thoughts and conduct, as she knew well her father would have done.
But she was not angry, and she did not scold. She only stretched out her thin
hands and stroked the child’s fair hair, saying:</p>
<p>“Don’t be frightened, Rachel, and don’t be sad. You think
that you have lost him, but soon or late he will come back to you, perhaps as
you dreamed—perhaps otherwise.”</p>
<p>“If I were sure of that, mother, I would not mind anything,” said
the girl, “though really I don’t know why I should care,” she
added defiantly.</p>
<p>“No, you don’t know now, but you will one day, and when you do,
remember that, however long it seems to wait, you may be quite sure, because I
who have the gift of knowing, told you so. Now tell me again what Richard
Darrien was like while you remember, for perhaps I may never live to see his
face, and I wish to get it into my mind.”</p>
<p>So Rachel told her, and when she had described every detail, asked suddenly:</p>
<p>“Must we really go on, mother, into this awful wilderness? Would not
father turn back if you asked him?”</p>
<p>“Perhaps,” she answered. “But I shall not ask. He would never
forgive me for preventing him from doing what he thinks his duty. It is a
madness when we might be happy in the Cape or in England, but that cannot be
helped, for it is also his destiny and ours. Don’t judge hardly of your
father, Rachel, because he is a saint, and this world is a bad place for saints
and their families, especially their families. You think that he does not feel;
that he is heartless about me and the poor babe, and sacrifices us all, but I
tell you he feels more than either you or I can do. At night when I pretend to
go to sleep I watch him groaning over his loss and for me, and praying for
strength to bear it, and for help to enable him to do his duty. Last night he
was nearly crazed about you, and in all that awful storm, when the Kaffirs
would not stir from the waggon, went alone down to the river guided by the
lightnings, but of course returned half dead, having found nothing. By dawn he
was back there again, for love and fear would not let him rest a minute. Yet he
will never tell you anything of that, lest you should think that his faith in
Providence was shaken. I know that he is strange—it is no use hiding it,
but if I were to thwart him he would go quite mad, and then I should never
forgive myself, who took him for better and for worse, just as he is, and not
as I should like him to be. So, Rachel, be as happy as you can, and make the
best of things, as I try to do, for your life is all before you, whereas mine
lies behind me, and yonder,” and she pointed towards the place where the
infant was buried. “Hush! here he comes. Now, help me with the packing,
for we are to trek to the ford this afternoon.”</p>
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