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She and Allan by Haggard, H. Rider - Chapter 11

CHAPTER XI

THROUGH THE MOUNTAIN WALL

"These do not seem to be friends of yours," I said, pointing to the
fallen. "And yet," I added, nodding towards the spearmen who were now
emerging from the gully, "they are very like your friends."

"Puppies from the same litter are often alike, yet when they grow up
sometimes they fight each other," replied Father Christmas blandly.
"At least these come to save and not to kill you. Look! they kill the
others!" and he pointed to them making an end of some of the wounded
men. "But who are these?" and he glanced with evident astonishment,
first at the fearsome-looking Umslopogaas and then at the grotesque
Hans. "Nay, answer not, you must be weary and need rest. Afterwards we
can talk."

"Well, as a matter of fact we have not yet breakfasted," I replied.
"Also I have business to attend to here," and I glanced at our
wounded.

The old fellow nodded and went to speak to the captains of his force,
doubtless as to the pursuit of the enemy, for presently I saw a
company spring forward on their tracks. Then, assisted by Hans and the
remaining Zulus, of whom one was Goroko, I turned to attend to our own
people. The task proved lighter than I expected, since the badly
injured man was dead or dying and the hurts of the two others were in
their legs and comparatively slight, such as Goroko could doctor in
his own native fashion.

After this, taking Hans to guard my back, I went down to the stream
and washed myself. Then I returned and ate, wondering the while that I
could do so with appetite after the terrible dangers which we had
passed. Still, we had passed them, and Robertson, Umslopogaas with
three of his men, I and Hans were quite unharmed, a fact for which I
returned thanks in silence but sincerely enough to Providence.

Hans also returned thanks in his own fashion, after he had filled
himself, not before, and lit his corn-cob pipe. But Robertson made no
remark; indeed, when he had satisfied his natural cravings, he rose
and walking a few paces forward, stood staring at the cleft in the
mountain cliff into which he had seen the litter vanish that bore his
daughter to some fate unknown.

Even the great fight that we had fought and the victory we had won
against overpowering odds did not appear to impress him. He only
glared at the mountain into the heart of which Inez had been raped
away, and shook his fist. Since she was gone all else went for
nothing, so much so that he did not offer to assist with the wounded
Zulus or show curiosity about the strange old man by whom we had been
rescued.

"The Great Medicine, Baas," said Hans in a bewildered way, "is even
more powerful than I thought. Not only has it brought us safely
through the fighting and without a scratch, for those Zulus there do
not matter and there will be less cooking for me to do now that they
are gone; it has also brought down your reverend father the Predikant
from the Place of Fires in Heaven, somewhat changed from what I
remember him, it is true, but still without doubt the same. When I
make my report to him presently, if he can understand my talk, I
shall----"

"Stop your infernal nonsense, you son of a donkey," I broke in, for at
this moment old Father Christmas, smiling more benignly than before,
re-appeared from the kloof into which he had vanished and advanced
towards us bowing with much politeness.

Having seated himself upon the little wall that we had built up, he
contemplated us, stroking his beautiful white beard, then said,
addressing me,

"Of a certainty you should be proud who with a few have defeated so
many. Still, had I not been ordered to come at speed, I think that by
now you would have been as those are," and he looked towards the dead
Zulus who were laid out at a distance like men asleep, while their
companions sought for a place to bury them.

"Ordered by whom?" I asked.

"There is only one who can order," he answered with mild astonishment.
"'She-who-commands, She-who-is-everlasting'!"

It occurred to me that this must be some Arabic idiom for the Eternal
Feminine, but I only looked vague and said,

"It would appear that there are some whom this exalted everlasting She
cannot command; those who attacked us; also those who have fled away
yonder," and I waved my hand towards the mountain.

"No command is absolute; in every country there are rebels, even, as I
have heard, in Heaven above us. But, Wanderer, what is your name?"

"Watcher-by-Night," I answered.

"Ah! a good name for one who must have watched well by night, and by
day too, to reach this country living where She-who-commands says that
no man of your colour has set foot for many generations. Indeed, I
think she told me once that two thousand years had gone by since she
spoke to a white man in the City of Kôr."

"Did she indeed?" I exclaimed, stifling a cough.

"You do not believe me," he went on, smiling. "Well, She-who-commands
can explain matters for herself better than I who was not alive two
thousand years ago, so far as I remember. But what must I call him
with the Axe?"

"Warrior is his name."

"Again a good name, as to judge by the wounds on them, certain of
those rebels I think are now telling each other in Hell. And this man,
if indeed he be a man----" he added, looking doubtfully at Hans.

"Light-in-Darkness is his name."

"I see, doubtless because his colour is that of the winter sun in
thick fog, or a bad egg broken into milk. And the other white man who
mutters and whose brow is like a storm?"

"He is called Avenger; you will learn why later on," I answered
impatiently, for I grew tired of this catechism, adding, "And what are
you called and, if you are pleased to tell it to us, upon what errand
do you visit us in so fortunate an hour?"

"I am named Billali," he answered, "the servant and messenger of She-
who-commands, and I was sent to save you and to bring you safely to
her."

"How can this be, Billali, seeing that none knew of our coming?"

"Yet She-who-commands knew," he said with his benignant smile.
"Indeed, I think that she learned of it some moons ago through a
message that was sent to her and so arranged all things that you
should be guided safely to her secret home; since otherwise how would
you have passed a great pathless swamp with the loss, I think she
said, of but one man whom a snake bit?"

Now I stared at the old fellow, for how could he know of the death of
this man, but thought it useless to pursue the conversation further.

"When you are rested and ready," he went on, "we will start. Meanwhile
I leave you that I may prepare litters to carry those wounded men, and
you also, Watcher-by-Night, if you wish." Then with a dignified bow,
for everything about this old fellow was stately, he turned and
vanished into the kloof.

The next hour or so was occupied in the burial of the dead Zulus, a
ceremony in which I took no part beyond standing up and raising my hat
as they were borne away, for as I have said somewhere, it is best to
leave natives alone on these occasions. Indeed, I lay down, reflecting
that strangely enough there seemed to be something in old Zikali's
tale of a wonderful white Queen who lived in a mountain fastness,
since there was the mountain as he had drawn it on the ashes, and the
servants of that Queen who, apparently, had knowledge of our coming,
appeared in the nick of time to rescue us from one of the tightest
fixes in which ever I found myself.

Moreover, the antique and courteous individual called Billali, spoke
of her as "She-who-is-everlasting." What the deuce could he mean by
that, I wondered? Probably that she was very old and therefore
disagreeable to look on, which I confessed to myself would be a
disappointment.

And how did she know that we were coming? I could not guess and when I
asked Robertson, he merely shrugged his shoulders and intimated that
he took no interest in the matter. The truth is that nothing moved the
man, whose whole soul was wrapped in one desire, namely to rescue, or
avenge, the daughter against whom he knew he had so sorely sinned.

In fact, this loose-living but reformed seaman was becoming a
monomaniac, and what is more, one of the religious type. He had a
Bible with him that had been given to him by his mother when he was a
boy, and in this he read constantly; also he was always on his knees
and at night I could hear him groaning and praying aloud. Doubtless
now that the chains of drink had fallen off him, the instincts and the
blood of the dour old Covenanters from whom he was descended, were
asserting themselves. In a way this was a good thing though for some
time past I had feared lest it should end in his going mad, and
certainly as a companion he was more cheerful in his unregenerate
days.

Abandoning speculation as useless and taking my chance of being
murdered where I lay, for after all Billali's followers were
singularly like the men with whom we had been fighting and for aught I
knew might be animated by identical objects--I just went to sleep, as
I can do at any time, to wake up an hour or so later feeling
wonderfully refreshed. Hans, who when I closed my eyes was already
asleep slumbering at my feet curled up like a dog on a spot where the
sun struck hotly, roused me by saying:

"Awake, Baas, they are here!"

I sprang up, snatching at my rifle, for I thought that he meant that
we were being attacked again, to see Billali advancing at the head of
a train of four litters made of bamboo with grass mats for curtains
and coverings, each of which was carried by stalwart Amahagger, as I
supposed that they must be. Two of these, the finest, Billali
indicated were for Robertson and myself, and the two others for the
wounded. Umslopogaas and the remaining Zulus evidently were expected
to walk, as was Hans.

"How did you make these so quickly," I asked, surveying their elegant
and indeed artistic workmanship.

"We did not make them, Watcher-by-Night, we brought them with us
folded up. She-who-commands looked in her glass and said that four
would be needed, besides my own which is yonder, two for white lords
and two for wounded black men, which you see is the number required."

"Yes," I answered vaguely, marvelling what kind of a glass it was that
gave the lady this information.

Before I could inquire upon the point Billali added,

"You will be glad to learn that my men caught some of those rebels who
dared to attack you, eight or ten of them who had been hurt by your
missiles or axe-cuts, and put them to death in the proper fashion--
yes, quite the proper fashion," and he smiled a little. "The rest had
gone too far where it would have been dangerous to follow them among
the rocks. Enter now, my lord Watcher-by-Night, for the road is steep
and we must travel fast if we would reach the place where She-who-
commands is camped in the ancient holy city, before the moon sinks
behind the cliffs to-night."

So having explained matters to Robertson and Umslopogaas, who
announced that nothing would induce /him/ to be carried like an old
woman, or a corpse upon a shield, and seen that the hurt Zulus were
comfortably accommodated, Robertson and I got into our litters, which
proved to be delightfully easy and restful.

Then when our gear was collected by the hook-nosed bearers to whom we
were obliged to trust, though we kept with us our rifles and a certain
amount of ammunition, we started. First went a number of Billali's
spearmen, then came the litters with the wounded alongside of which
Umslopogaas and his three uninjured Zulus talked or trotted, then
another litter containing Billali, then my own by which ran Hans, and
Robertson's, and lastly the rest of the Amahagger and the relief
bearers.

"I see now, Baas," said Hans, thrusting his head between my curtains,
"that yonder Whitebeard cannot be your reverend father, the Predikant,
after all."

"Why not?" I asked, though the fact was fairly obvious.

"Because, Baas, if he were, he would not have left Hans, of whom he
always thought so well, to run in the sun like a dog, while he and
others travel in carriages like great white ladies."

"You had better save your breath instead of talking nonsense, Hans," I
said, "since I believe that you have a long way to go."

In fact, it proved to be a very long way indeed, especially as after
we began to breast the mountain, we must travel slowly. We started
about ten o'clock in the morning, for the fight which after all did
not take long--had, it will be remembered, begun shortly after dawn,
and it was three in the afternoon before we reached the base of the
towering cliff which I have mentioned.

Here, at the foot of a remarkable, isolated column of rock, on which I
was destined to see a strange sight in the after days, we halted and
ate of the remaining food which we had brought with us, while the
Amahagger consumed their own, that seemed to consist largely of
curdled milk, such as the Zulus call /maas/, and lumps of a kind of
bread.

I noted that they were a very curious people who fed in silence and on
whose handsome, solemn faces one never saw a smile. Somehow it gave me
the creeps to look at them. Robertson was affected in the same way,
for in one of the rare intervals of his abstraction he remarked that
they were "no canny." Then he added,

"Ask yon old wizard who might be one of the Bible prophets come to
life--what those man-eating devils have done with my daughter."

I did so, and Billali answered,

"Say that they have taken her away to make a queen of her, since
having rebelled against their own queen, they must have another who is
white. Say too that She-who-commands will wage war on them and perhaps
win her back, unless they kill her first."

"Ah!" Robertson repeated when I had translated, "unless they kill her
first--or worse." Then he relapsed into his usual silence.

Presently we started on again, heading straight for what looked like a
sheer wall of black rock a thousand feet or more in height, up a path
so steep that Robertson and I got out and walked, or rather scrambled,
in order to ease the bearers. Billali, I noticed, remained in his
litter. The convenience of the bearers did not trouble him; he only
ordered an extra gang to the poles. I could not imagine how we were to
negotiate this precipice. Nor could Umslopogaas, who looked at it and
said,

"If we are to climb that, Macumazahn, I think that the only one who
will live to get to the top will be that little yellow monkey of
yours," and he pointed with his axe at Hans.

"If I do," replied that worthy, much nettled, for he hated to be
called a "yellow monkey" by the Zulus, "be sure that I will roll down
stones upon any black butcher whom I see sprawling upon the cliff
below."

Umslopogaas smiled grimly, for he had a sense of humour and could
appreciate a repartee even when it hit him hard. Then we stopped
talking for the climb took all our breath.

At length we came to the cliff face where, to all appearance, our
journey must end. Suddenly, however, out of the blind black wall in
front of us started the apparition of a tall man armed with a great
spear and wearing a white robe, who challenged us hoarsely.

Suddenly he stood before us, as a ghost might do, though whence he
came we could not see. Presently the mystery was explained. Here in
the cliff face there was a cleft, though one invisible even from a few
paces away, since its outer edge projected over the inner wall of
rock. Moreover, this opening was not above four feet in width, a mere
split in the huge mountain mass caused by some titanic convulsion in
past ages. For it was a definite split since, once entered, far, far
above could be traced a faint line of light coming from the sky,
although the gloom of the passage was such that torches, which were
stored at hand, must be used by those who threaded it. One man could
have held the place against a hundred--until he was killed. Still, it
was guarded, not only at the mouth where the warrior had appeared, but
further along at every turn in the jagged chasm, and these were many.

Into this grim place we went. The Zulus did not like it at all, for
they are a light-loving people and I noted that even Umslopogaas
seemed scared and hung back a little. Nor did Hans, who with his usual
suspicion, feared some trap; nor, for the matter of that, did I,
though I thought it well to appear much interested. Only Robertson
seemed quite indifferent and trudged along stolidly after a man
carrying a torch.

Old Billali put his head out of the litter and shouted back to me to
fear nothing, since there were no pitfalls in the path, his voice
echoing strangely between those narrow walls of measureless height.

For half an hour or more we pursued this dreary, winding path round
the corners of which the draught tore in gusts so fierce that more
than once the litters with the wounded men and those who bore them
were nearly blown over. It was safe enough, however, since on either
side of us, smooth and without break, rose the sheer walls of rock
over which lay the tiny ribbon of blue sky. At length the cleft
widened somewhat and the light grew stronger, making the torches
unnecessary.

Then of a sudden we came to its end and found ourselves upon a little
plateau in the mountainside. Behind us for a thousand feet or so rose
the sheer rock wall as it did upon the outer face, while in front and
beneath, far beneath, was a beautiful plain circular in shape and of
great extent, which plain was everywhere surrounded, so far as I could
see, by the same wall of rock. In short, notwithstanding its enormous
size, without doubt it was neither more nor less than the crater of a
vast extinct volcano. Lastly, not far from the centre of this plain
was what appeared to be a city, since through my glasses I could see
great walls built of stone, and what I thought were houses, all of
them of a character more substantial than any that I had discovered in
the wilds of Africa.

I went to Billali's litter and asked him who lived in the city.

"No one," he answered, "it has been dead for thousands of years, but
She-who-commands is camped there at present with an army, and thither
we go at once. Forward, bearers."

So, Robertson and I having re-entered our litters, we started on down
hill at a rapid pace, for the road, though steep, was safe and kept in
good order. All the rest of that afternoon we travelled and by sunset
reached the edge of the plain, where we halted a while to rest and
eat, till the light of the growing moon grew strong enough to enable
us to proceed. Umslopogaas came up and spoke to me.

"Here is a fortress indeed, Macumazahn," he said, "since none can
climb that fence of rock in which the holes seem to be few and small."

"Yes," I answered, "but it is one out of which those who are in, would
find it difficult to get out. We are buffaloes in a pit, Umslopogaas."

"That is so," he answered, "I have thought it already. But if any
would meddle with us we still have our horns and can toss for a
while."

Then he went back to his men.

The sunset in that great solemn place was a wonderful thing to see.
First of all the measureless crater was filled with light like a bowl
with fire. Then as the great orb sank behind the western cliff, half
of the plain became quite dark while shadows seemed to rush forward
over the eastern part of its surface, till that too was swallowed up
in gloom and for a little while there remained only a glow reflected
from the cliff face and from the sky above, while on the crest of the
parapet of rock played strange and glorious fires. Presently these too
vanished and the world was dark.

Then the half moon broke from behind a bank of clouds and by its
silver, uncertain light we struggled forward across the flat plain,
rather slowly now, for even the iron muscles of those bearers grew
tired. I could not see much of it, but I gathered that we were passing
through crops, very fine crops to judge by their height, as doubtless
they would be upon this lava soil; also once or twice we splashed
through streams.

At length, being tired and lulled by the swaying of the litter and by
the sound of a weird, low chant that the bearers had set up now that
they neared home and were afraid of no attack, I sank into a doze.
When I awoke again it was to find that the litter had halted and to
hear the voice of Billali say,

"Descend, White Lords, and come with your companions, the black
Warrior and the yellow man who is named Light-in-Darkness. She-who-
commands desires to see you at once before you eat and sleep, and must
not be kept waiting. Fear not for the others, they will be cared for
till you return."