Finished eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 433 pages of information about Finished.

Finished eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 433 pages of information about Finished.

“Look!” and pointed in the direction whence we came.  Far away a sheet of flame shot upwards.

“The house is burning,” she exclaimed.

“Yes,” I said, “it can be nothing else;” adding to myself, “a good job too, for now there will be no postmortem on old Marnham.”

Who fired the place I never learnt.  It may have been the Basutos, or Marnham’s body-servant, or Footsack, or a spark from the kitchen fire.  At any rate it blazed merrily enough notwithstanding the marble walls, as a wood-lined and thatched building of course would do.  On the whole I suspected the boy, who may very well have feared lest he should be accused of having had a hand in his master’s death.  At least it was gone, and watching the distant flames I bethought me that with it went all Heda’s past.  Twenty-four hours before her father was alive, the bondservant of Rodd and a criminal.  Now he was ashes and Rodd was dead, while she and the man she loved were free, with all the world before them.  I wished that I could have added that they were safe.  Afterwards she told me that much the same ideas passed through her own mind.

Dismounting I led the horses into the old kraal through the gap in the wall which once had been the gateway.  It was a large kraal that probably in bygone days had held the cattle of some forgotten head chief whose town would have stood on the brow of the rise; so large that notwithstanding the trees I have mentioned, there was plenty of room for the cart and horses in its centre.  Moreover, on such soil the grass grew so richly that after we had slipped their bits, the horses were able to fill themselves without being unharnessed.  Also a little stream from a spring on the brow ran within a few yards whence, with the help of Kaatje, a strong woman, I watered them with the bucket which hung underneath the cart.  Next we drank ourselves and ate some food in the darkness that was now complete.  Then leaving Kaatje to stand at the head of the horses in case they should attempt any sudden movement, I climbed into the cart, and we discussed things in low whispers.

It was a curious debate in that intense gloom which, close as our faces were together, prevented us from seeing anything of each other, except once when a sudden flare of summer lightning revealed them, white and unnatural as those of ghosts.  On our present dangers I did not dwell, putting them aside lightly, though I knew they were not light.  But of the alternative as to whether we should try to escape to Lydenburg and civilization, or to Zululand and savagery, I felt it to be my duty to speak.

“To put it plainly,” said Anscombe in his slow way when I had finished, “you mean that in the Transvaal I might be tried as a murderer and perhaps convicted, whereas if we vanish into Zululand the probability is that this would not happen.”

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