When Chris went out with Captain
Brookfield and the farmer, the lads had shaken hands with all their friends,
and were standing by the side of their horses ready to mount. Jack and the
two Zulus were standing a few yards behind them. Japhet had brought up the
other spare horse.
"It is a nice piece of horse-flesh,"
the farmer said as he looked at it critically.
"Yes, it was bred by Duncan. We
purchased pretty well the pick of those he brought down the country."
"That accounts for it. They are in
good condition, too."
"Yes; our horses all get two feeds
of mealies a day, or, when it is wet, one feed of mealies and a hot mash
made of mealie flour, besides what they can pick up, for we don't draw horse
rations. Now, sir, we will be off;" and he gave the word "Mount!"
The lads all in a second swung into
their saddles.
"Good-bye, lads, and good luck!"
Captain Brookfield said; and the men standing by broke into a hearty cheer.
There was a strong suspicion that
the party were not going down to Maritzburg. It was felt that they were not
the sort to throw it up before Ladysmith was relieved. And their suspicions
were heightened when they saw the farmer mount and ride by the side of
Chris.
"It is all gammon about their
resigning, is it not, Brookfield?" one of the officers said, as they stood
looking after them. "Why should they have left two of their men here with
some of their traps and stores if they had not been coming back? They would
naturally give them all away. Besides, I noticed that farmer come in on foot
half an hour ago; there was no talk of their leaving before he arrived, and
he has gone off with them on one of their horses."
Captain Brookfield smiled.
"All I know about it officially is
that this morning Mr. King resigned in the name of himself and his party;
and as you know, I told you when they first joined us, they did so on the
explicit understanding that they should be allowed to resign when they
chose, and that provision was inserted when they were sworn in."
"That is all you know officially?"
"Yes. If they are missed, and the
question is asked me what has become of them, that is the answer I shall
give. What else I know I must for the present keep to myself."
"I suppose we shall see them back
soon?"
"Well, I consider that that is
within the limits of possibility."
"I suppose that you have formed no
plan yet, Mr. King?" the farmer said, when they had left the camp.
"No; my present idea is to follow
the line half-way down to Frere. If we were to strike off towards the
country at once, we should, of course, be noticed; so I would rather get
three miles on. You say it is about seventy miles?"
"About that."
"Well, allowing for a halt, we can
do it in twelve hours; that would be just as it is getting dark. Of course
we shall not show ourselves till they begin to attack the house. I hope we
shall find your friends still holding out."
"I hope so indeed. You see, the
Boers were quiet when I started, and I should hardly think that they would
make an attack again after I left. They seemed to have settled down to
starve us out; but it is quite possible that now I have got away they will
grow nervous lest I should bring help up, and are very likely to make
another attempt this evening. They would be pretty sure to succeed this
time, for there are only seven of us left there; and though they could make
a good fight in daylight, they would have no real chance if the Boers went
at them in earnest, which they are sure to do next time. We agreed before I
started that it would not do to try to defend the yard. After I left they
were going to pile everything movable against the doors and windows and
fight hard to keep the Boers out, and would then go upstairs and sell their
lives dearly."
"How far are the Boer horses out?"
"About five hundred yards away, in a
dip. We know they always keep three or four men on guard there, for we have
seen them come out of the hollow sometimes."
"And the cattle, have they driven
them off yet?"
"Yes; four of the Boers and twenty
or thirty natives went straight on with them as soon as they had driven us
into the farmhouse. I am afraid there is no use thinking of getting them
back."
"It depends upon how far they have
gone," Chris said. "The rains have brought the grass up, and as likely as
not they may halt when they get to some good pastures and wait till the
others join them. It is not likely that all that gang came from one place."
"I expect that they have been
gathered up from lonely farmhouses where they have escaped the commandos,
and they will want to divide their plunder between them; they don't trust
each other a bit, and each would cheat his fellows of his share if he could.
So I should think that what you suggest is likely enough, and that it has
been arranged to wait when they come to a good place till the others arrive.
But you are not thinking of rescuing them, are you?"
"If we thrash the Boers at the farm
I shall certainly have a try. We did carry off two or three thousand head
about two months ago from the hands of at least as large a party as this,
and I don't see why we should not do it again. It was near Mount Umhlumba."
"Was it your party that did that?"
the farmer exclaimed. "Why, it was the talk of the whole district, and some
of the cattle belonged to a friend of mine. He told me how he had been saved
from ruin. Well, sir, after that I shall feel more confident than I
acknowledge I have been up to now. Captain Brookfield told me about your
going into the Boer camp in disguise, and to Komati-poort, and how you
surprised a party of Boers looting a farm near Dundee; but he did not
mention that. In fact, he had only just finished telling me the other
affairs when you came in saying that you were ready to start. Well, well, it
is wonderful that a party of young gentlemen like yours should have done
such things!"
They did not hurry their horses, but
for the most part went at the steady canter to which the animals were most
accustomed; occasionally they would walk for a bit.
At Weenan, where they crossed the
Bushman river, they halted for half an hour, and for double that time after
crossing the Mooi at Intembeni; then as the sun began to lose its power they
went fast, until, when they reached one of the farthest spurs of Botha's
Castle, the farmer said:
"When we get over the next rise we
shall see the house."
Chris gave the order to dismount,
and, going forward on foot, they threw themselves down when close to the
crest, and crawled forward until they obtained a fair view. Sankey and Chris
were again provided with glasses, having bought them on the day before
starting at the sale of the effects of several officers who had fallen in a
fight at Vaal Krantz, and all gazed intently for some time at the house.
"Thank God they are all right so far!" Chris said to the farmer. "I can see
the Boers lying all round the house, and that dark clump is their horses; so
our ride has not been in vain. I suppose it is about a mile and a half from
here. I don't see the gate into the yard. Which side is it?"
"That corner of the house hides it.
It is on the eastern side."
"It will be quite dark in an hour;
when it is so, we will move down a bit farther, then we will halt till we
hear them attacking. We must not go nearer, for the moon will be up by that
time. If I had known that we should have got here before dark, we need not
have troubled to bring the Zulus. I intended to send them forward to see how
matters stood, then they could have guided us right up to the gate. However,
as they have all got guns, and can shoot, it will add to the panic our
attack will create, and they will all be pleased at the chance of at last
getting a shot at the Boers. They were complaining to me the other day that
they were very happy in all other respects, but they were very much
disappointed at not having had a fight."
The natives were indeed delighted
when, on Chris rejoining them, he told them that they should take their
share in the attack on the Boers. Chris and his friends all threw themselves
on the ground, after sending up Jack to the crest to keep watch. But the
farmer said, "I dare not lie down; if I did, I should never get up again."
He had, indeed, to be lifted off his
horse when they dismounted.
"I can quite understand that," Chris
said. "I feel stiff and tired myself, and you must be almost made of iron to
have ridden one hundred and forty miles almost without halting."
"If anyone had told me that I could
do it, I should not have believed him. Of course one is on horseback a good
many hours a day. Often, after going round the farm, I start at two or three
o'clock and ride into Greytown and back; but that is only a matter of some
fifteen miles each way. Still, when one has got seven men's lives depending
upon one, one makes a big effort."
"I tell you what, Mr. Searle. The
best thing you can do is to strip and lie down. I will set the two Zulus to
knead you. You will find yourself quite a new man after it."
"That is a good idea, King, and I
will adopt it."
For half an hour the two men rubbed
and kneaded the farmer's muscles from head to foot, exerting themselves
until the perspiration streamed from them. Then one of them brought up one
of the water-skins and poured the contents over him.
"That has certainly done me a world
of good," the farmer said when he had dressed himself. "I don't say the
stiffness has all gone, but I certainly don't feel any worse than I did when
I got to your camp. I should never have thought of it myself."
"It is what is done after a Turkish
bath," Chris said. "I have had them often at Johannesburg. The natives do
something of the same sort. They make a little hut of boughs, and fill a
hole in the middle with hot stones and pour water over them, and steam
themselves, and I believe get rubbed too."
As soon as they considered it dark
enough to be perfectly safe, they led their horses down until they judged
that they were within half a mile of the house, then dismounted and waited.
Chris had already made all arrangements. Carmichael, who was the leader for
the time being of one of the sections of five, was with his party to ride
straight for the Boers' horses directly the attack began. The firing at the
house would act as a guide to the spot where they were placed, and he was,
if possible, to attack them from behind. He was to shoot down the guards,
but not to pursue them if the horses bolted on hearing the attack on the
house.
"What you have to do is to stampede
them," Chris said. "As soon as you have got them on the run, keep them
going, and if they scatter, do you scatter too. The Boers without their
horses will be at our mercy. Don't stop till you have driven them five miles
away. Then you can halt till morning. As you come back, you are likely
enough to hear firing, and can then ride towards it and join us. But don't
get within rifle-shot of the Boers. I don't want any lives thrown away. If
you hear three shots at regular intervals during the night ride towards the
sound. I may want you here."
It was just ten o'clock when there
was a violent outburst of fire at the farmhouse, and all sprung into their
saddles.
"Now, Carmichael, do you gallop on.
Get as close as you can to the horses without being observed. Go at a walk
the last hundred yards or so; the horse guards are not likely to hear you,
they are sure to be up on the edge of the dip watching the farm. Stay quiet
till you hear our yell, and then go straight in to them. In that case you
may manage without their getting a shot at you, for as likely as not they
will have strolled up without their rifles."
As soon as Carmichael's little party
had started, Chris moved on with the rest at a walk.
"There is no occasion to hurry," he
said. "It will take the Boers some time to force their way in, and the
hotter they are at work the less likely they will be to hear us." In two or
three minutes he ordered them to canter. "It is of no use charging; I expect
that they are all inside the yard." It was, however, at a fast pace that
they rode up towards the wall. Chris blew his whistle, and the cheer of the
whites and the warcry of the two Zulus burst out at the top of their voices.
"Give it to them hot, lads!" Chris
shouted, for the benefit of the Boers. "Kill every man-jack of the
scoundrels!" And at once nineteen rifles opened upon the dark figures
clustered round the house. "Use your magazines," Chris shouted again. "Don't
let a man of them get off."
Appalled by the sudden attack,
ignorant of the number of their assailants, and mown down by the terrible
fire, the Boers on the two sides of the house exposed to it did not think of
resistance, but all who could do so made a rush round to the other sides,
and, joining their companions there, clambered over the wall and made for
their horses; but these had already gone. As Chris had anticipated, the four
guards were watching the farmhouse, and did not hear the approach of
Carmichael's party. As Chris's whistle sounded these galloped forward, and
at their volley three of the Boers fell, the other fled. At once with loud
shouts they charged in among the ponies, who were already kicking and
plunging at the sudden sound of firearms. A minute later they were all in
full flight, followed by the five lads shouting and yelling. The firing had
been unnoticed by the Boers round the house, and these, when on arriving at
the hollow they found their horses gone, gave vent to their alarm and rage
in many strange oaths, and then scattered in flight all over the country.
"It is of no use trying to pursue,"
Chris said, as soon as it was found that all the Boers, save those lying
dying or dead, had escaped from the yard. "We should only ruin the horses,
and they have done a big day's work already."
The besieged could be heard hastily
removing the barricades against the door, and in two or three minutes ran
out, almost bewildered at the suddenness of their relief, when they thought
that nothing remained to be done but to sell their lives dearly. A few
hurried words explained the position to them, and their gratitude to Chris
and his party was unbounded. Their first step was to attend to the fallen
Boers. Of these there were eighteen wounded and eleven killed, and as soon
as all in their power had been done for the former, and they had been
carried into the house, a blazing fire was lit in one of the rooms and the
party all gathered there.
"Now, Mr. King," Searle said, "you
are the baas of this party; what do you think had best be done?"
"I think the first thing," Chris
said, "is to post half a dozen men, three or four hundred yards away, round
the house. We must not run the risk of the tables being turned on us by the
Boers crawling up and surprising us; they may still be hanging about in
numbers. Peters, you take Harris, Bryan, and Capper, and the two Zulus, and
post them round the house. The natives' ears are much sharper than yours
are, and if either of them thinks he hears anything let them crawl out in
that direction and reconnoitre. When I whistle, do you come in to me,
leaving the others on guard, then I will tell you what we have decided
upon."
The four named at once went outside,
and, calling the natives, left the yard. Jack had already filled the kettles
the colonists had brought with them, and placed them over the fire.
"While the tea is getting ready,"
Chris said, "we had better give a good feed of mealies to all the horses.
How many of yours are there left?" he asked one of the colonists.
"All the twelve we had at first were
unwounded this evening, but I can't say whether any of them have been hit
since. The wall was too high for bullets to touch them as long as the Boers
were outside, but most likely as we were firing through the window we may
have hit some of them."
"I don't suppose you did so, because
I fancy that directly the Boers began fighting here the horses bunched in
one corner of the yard. Well, will you feed them also, and see how many are
uninjured. That is a matter of importance, for our horses will scarcely be
fit for work in the morning. Do you think yours may be?"
"Yes, I think so; we have only been
shut up three days, and they have had a good deal of pickings, what with the
beds and what was lying about in the yard before; and a good feed now will
certainly set them up. What do you propose to do?"
"Well, I want in the first place to
get enough of the Boer ponies in to mount us all, and in the second to
overtake and cut the Boers off if possible, and lastly to rescue the cattle.
Five of our party are away after the horses, but their object was to scatter
them. They were to halt about five miles away, and if they heard three rifle
shots at regular intervals they were to ride towards them."
"Do you want them in here? if so, I
will go out and give the signal. We have taken it by turns to sleep, so we
are all fairly fresh."
"Yes, I want them in, but I
specially want them to collect and drive in a score of the Boer ponies." "At
daybreak we will all go," another of the farmers said, "and lend a hand."
"With this moon we ought to be able
to find some of the men without waiting for daylight," Chris said. "It would
be an immense thing if we could be after them before they have got too long
a start."
"It would indeed. Well, we will feed
our horses at once, and by the time we have had a cup of tea they will be
ready to start. If we have luck, we ought not to be away more than a couple
of hours."
"It would make our success pretty
well a certainty if we could get the ponies by that time," Chris said.
In less than half an hour the seven
farmers started. Only one of the horses had been killed, and they rode away
at a rate that showed that the others were none the worse for their three
days on somewhat short rations.
"Now," Chris said, after seeing them
off, "we will get a couple of hours' sleep. I wish Peters and his party
could do the same, but it would not do to trust to the Boers not coming back
again."
All were asleep in a few minutes,
but an hour later they heard a shot fired, followed by several others. They
leapt to their feet, seized their rifles, and ran out into the yard. There
was, however, no repetition of the firing, and a few minutes later Peters
came in and reported that the Zulus had discovered a number of Boers making
their way cautiously forward. Both had fired, and some shots had been
returned, but the Boers had at once drawn off.
"I don't suppose we shall hear any
more of them. They hoped they might catch us asleep. Now they find that we
are on watch. I expect they will give up the idea and make off. It is a
nuisance having been disturbed, but I am not sorry for it, for the Boers
will have lost a couple of hours, and even if the horses do not come in we
shall still have a chance of overtaking them. Now, Peters, you had better
get forty winks; I will go out with Brown, Field, and Sankey, and relieve
the three out there. I don't suppose they will come in, but they can take a
nap where they are. You need not send out when the farmers come back; we
shall see them."
Chris had been nearly two hours on
watch when he made out in the bright moonlight a number of horses and
mounted figures going towards the house. He at once woke the sleepers and
called the others in, and by the time they reached the farm some thirty
unmounted ponies, followed by Carmichael's party and the farmers, came up.
"We have been longer than we
expected," one of the latter said as he dismounted, "but we were lucky at
last in finding this lot together in a kloof. Have you seen anything of the
Boers? We thought we heard a few shots."
"Yes, they came here and tried to
turn the tables on us; but we had the Zulus and some of the scouts out. When
they found that we were watchful they decamped. Now, Carmichael, go in with
your party and get a cup of tea."
"What! are we going to start again?"
Carmichael asked rather dismally; "we were only just getting off to sleep
when Willesden, who was on watch, heard three shots."
"Some of us have only had an hour's
sleep, Carmichael. But there is another day's work before us, and after that
you may sleep for twenty- four hours if you like."
"Oh! I suppose I can do it if the
others can; still, after seventy-five miles here, five miles out, and
something like five miles chasing the horses, and five miles back again, I
think we have done a pretty good day's work." "No doubt you have," Chris
said, "a thundering good day's work; but a fellow is not worth calling a
fellow if he can't manage to do two days' work at a stretch for once in a
way. At any rate, the horses will be fresh, which is of much more importance
than our being so; they have had three days' perfect rest. Now, while you
are having your tea we will see about the other arrangements. Of course Mr.
Searle will stop here; he has done double the work that we have. His friends
can do as they like. Naturally we shall be glad to have them with us, but
that is as they choose."
"Of course we will go with you," one
of the colonists said.
"Thank you! At any rate two of you
had better stop with Mr. Searle. There are the wounded Boers to look after.
I see there is a waggon in the yard; I should think they had better be put
in that and carried to Greytown. If we recover the cattle, we will drive
them down there."
None of the farmers was willing to
stay, and at last they had to decide the question by lot.
"Now," Chris said, "you gentlemen
know the country a great deal better than we do, and can tell us which way
they are most likely to take their cattle."
"They are sure to go north, there is
no other way for them to go. If the whole party were together and mounted,
they might go up through Zululand; as it is, they would not venture to do
that. They will cross the Tugela, I should say, between the point where the
Mooi runs into it and its junction with the Buffalo, and go up through
Colsie, and then either through Helpmakaar or Lazarath."
"Well, I hope we shall catch them
long before they get to the Tugela."
"I expect the cattle will be
somewhere near Inadi; there is some good grazing along there, and as all the
loyalists have cleared off long ago they will have no fear of being
disturbed."
The saddles were transferred from
their own horses to the Boer ponies, and it was finally arranged that the
waggon with the wounded should not start until their return. Jack and the
two Zulus were left with them, and even should another party of Boers come
along the six men would be able to defend themselves till the others
returned. Half an hour after the arrival of Carmichael's party they started
in pursuit, and directed their course for Inadi, as it would have been
useless to search for the Boers, and it was certain that these would make
for the point where it had been arranged that the cattle should cross. It
was some fifteen miles away, and they were confident that they would arrive
there before the Boers, who, bad walkers at the best of times, and
disheartened by their failure, at the loss of many of their companions and
of all their horses, would not have got more than half-way by the time they
started.
It was half-past two when they left,
and when they approached Inadi day was breaking. They had put on their Boer
hats, and knew that the men in charge of the herd would take them to be some
of their own party until they were quite close. To their satisfaction they
saw the herd grazing half a mile south of the village, and it was not until
they were within a hundred yards of the spot where the smoke of a fire
showed that the guard were posted, that they saw any movement. Then a man
rose to his feet, and, looking at them earnestly, gave a shout of alarm. The
others leapt up at once and ran towards their ponies; these were fifty yards
away, and before they could reach them Chris and his party dashed up, rifle
in hand. "Surrender," he shouted in Dutch, "or we fire! Down with your
rifles!"
Seeing that resistance was useless
the Boers threw down their weapons, and in a minute were tied hand and foot
with the ropes from their saddles. They were then lashed to bushes at some
little distance from each other, so as to prevent their rolling together and
loosening each other's cords. The natives with them had at the first alarm
fled at full speed, and were already out of sight. Then the whole party rode
to a ridge a quarter of a mile back, dismounted at its foot, and crawled up
to the crest. A mile away some fifty men could be seen wearily making their
way on foot towards them.
"We have done quite enough in the
way of fighting," Chris said, "and I should think that they have had more
than enough; we will get them to surrender if we can. We will wait till they
are within forty or fifty yards and then fire a few shots over their heads,
and see what comes of it. We have good cover here, and they are in the open.
They will know very well that there is not a chance of their getting away,
for, as we have horses and they have none, we could defend any eminence we
chose to occupy, and ride off to another if they were likely to take it.
Besides, they would never be able to cross the river under our fire."
When the Boers were within eighty
yards half a dozen rifles were discharged. They at once threw themselves on
the ground.
"I will give them a chance of
talking it over," Chris said, "then I will hail them."
A pause ensued, and the Boers could
be heard talking excitedly together. When he thought that he had given them
time enough to appreciate their condition, Chris shouted in Dutch:
"Hullo, Boers! We don't want to have
to kill you all, which we could certainly do. You must see that you are at
our mercy. If you choose to surrender you may go home; if you don't, we
shall let you lie there as long as you like, and shoot you down when you get
on your feet. I will give you five minutes to make up your minds."
At the end of that time one of the
Boers held up his rifle with a white flag tied to it.
[Illustration: "ONE OF THE BOERS
HELD UP HIS RIFLE WITH A WHITE FLAG TIED TO IT."]
"That is not good enough for us,"
Chris shouted. "That trick has been tried too often. If you surrender, you
will take off your bandoliers and belts and leave them and your rifles
behind you, and come forward unarmed."
There was a shout of fury among the
Boers as they found that their treacherous design had failed in success.
"I will give you another five
minutes," Chris shouted; "and if you don't do as I tell you we shall open
fire on you."
Before that time was up the Boers
were seen to be taking off their bandoliers, and one by one they rose and
came forward in a body without their rifles. Chris allowed them to come
half-way, so that they could not, when they found themselves in superior
force, run back to their arms again. He gave the word, and his party rose to
their feet.
"Now," he said, as the Boers came
up, "you will turn all your pockets inside out. I have not the least doubt
that you are all taking off mementos of your visit here."
Indeed, the pockets of the prisoners
were all bulging out. Sullenly the Boers obeyed the order. The collection
was a miscellaneous one. They had between them the spoil of a dozen farms.
Women's finery formed a large proportion of their loot, and was evidently
intended for their wives at home. Besides this were spoons, forks, and
cutlery, chimney ornaments, children's clothes, several purses, and packets
of spare cartridges.
"That will do very nicely," Chris
said, when it had been ascertained that all the plunder had been disgorged.
"Now, gentlemen, you are at liberty to go, and I wish you a pleasant walk
home. It is only about a hundred miles. Your friends with the cattle shall
join you at once. I have no doubt that you will be able to obtain food from
your countrymen as you go along. You are sure to find friends at all the
villages, and some of you may get ponies at Helpmakaar."
Then, paying no attention to the
curses and threats of the Boers, the party rode forward and collected the
Boer guns, emptied the bandoliers and belts, and then rode back to the
cattle and released the four Boers with them, and, pointing to their
comrades, told them to rejoin them. Then they collected the cattle, and,
driving them before them, rode off. When they had gone five miles away they
halted, and the farmers undertaking to keep watch by turns, the lads,
throwing themselves down, were in a few minutes fast asleep.
In four hours they were roused, and
continued their course till they reached the farm. Here they rested till the
next morning, then at daybreak the wounded Boers were placed in a waggon;
the ammunition was divided among the farmers; and the rifles taken from the
Boers, and those that belonged to the killed and wounded, amounting in all
to eighty-one, were, after the charges had been carefully drawn, also placed
in the waggon, Chris saying, "They would be useless to us, and they may be
useful to you, for they will arm all the people in Greytown; and with eighty
magazine rifles you ought to be able to beat off any parties you may meet.
As the cattle are all branded you will have no difficulty in returning them
to their owners; as to the Boer ponies and saddles, no doubt there are many
who have lost their horses who will be glad of them."
Then, after renewed expressions of
gratitude from the farmers, the party separated, the colonists going south
to Greytown, while the scouts rode west by the line they had come, and late
that evening arrived at Chieveley. They had intended to halt after crossing
the Bushman's river at Weenan, but they heard the sound of artillery and
knew that Buller was again moving forward.
Their return created quite an
excitement in the camp of the Maritzburg Scouts, and innumerable questions
were asked.
"We have been on a little business
of our own," Chris said. "Beyond the fact that it has been successful we
have nothing to say. You know how strict the orders are against scouting,
and therefore I can only say that we wanted to give our horses a change of
food, and have taken them three days off."
"Your horses don't look any better
for the change, anyhow," one of the troopers said. "They look as if they had
been worked off their legs."
"Yes, they look a little drawn, but
in a couple of days they will feel the benefit of it; they were getting too
fat before. Some day we may be able to tell you more about it, but just at
present we feel that it is as well to keep the matter to ourselves. What has
been doing here? We heard the firing; that brought us in, or we should not
have been back till to-morrow."
"Nothing particular, except that we
have been battering them all along the line. No move has been made yet, but
the general idea is that we shall this time make a try at Hlangwane
to-morrow." "I hope we shall take it," Chris said. "We shall have a good
deal more trouble about it than we should have had at the attack in
December, when it was virtually in our hands, whereas now it looks stronger
than any point along the line."
Chris, however, was much more
communicative to Captain Brookfield, who said as he entered his tent, "Well,
Chris, did you get there in time?"
"Yes, sir; we caught them as they
were attacking the house at ten o'clock that night. They were too busy to
notice us, and we killed eleven and wounded eighteen, and stampeded their
ponies. They bolted on foot, but came back in hopes of surprising us two
hours later, which I need hardly say they failed to do. Then they made off
for the place where the herds they had captured were waiting for them. We
drove their ponies in, as our own were too much done up to go on, and
intercepted the Boers close to Inadi, and made them surrender. We took their
guns, ammunition, and loot from them, and let them go. There were forty-nine
of them altogether, and we did not see what we were to do with them. We
could not have brought them here without the whole thing being made public,
and we were certainly not disposed to escort them down to Maritzburg. They
will have at least a hundred miles to tramp home. We recovered all the
cattle, about two thousand head. We gave them to the farmers to find their
proper owners, and thirty of the Boer horses that we captured. I dare say
they will pick up some more of them; for as we were in a hurry, we only
drove in as many as we wanted. We have no casualties. It could hardly be
called a fight, it was a sudden surprise, and they did not stop to count
us."
"Bravo! bravo, Chris! And now I
suppose you are going to enlist again?" "Yes, sir, if you will take us."
"Certainly I will. Fortunately
Buller was at Frere until they moved on again yesterday, and nobody has
missed your little camp as far as I know, so I don't think that there is any
chance of questions being asked. I will swear you all in again if you will
bring the others round."