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<h2> CHAPTER V </h2>
<h3> THE END OF THE LAAGER </h3>
<p>I gasped with wonder and rage. What did that scoundrel Indaba-zimbi mean?
Why had I been drawn out of the laager and seized, and why, being seized,
was I not instantly killed? They called me the "White Spirit." Could it be
that they were keeping me to make me into medicine? I had heard of such
things being done by Zulus and kindred tribes, and my blood ran cold at
the thought. What an end! To be pounded up, made medicine of, and eaten!</p>
<p>However, I had little time for further reflection, for now the whole Impi
was pouring back from the donga and river-banks where it had hidden while
their ruse was carried out, and once more formed up on the side of the
slope. I was taken to the crest of the slope and placed in the centre of
the reserve line in the especial charge of a huge Zulu named Bombyane, the
same man who had come forward as a herald. This brute seemed to regard me
with an affectionate curiosity. Now and again he poked me in the ribs with
the handle of his assegai, as though to assure himself that I was solid,
and several times he asked me to be so good as to prophesy how many Zulus
would be killed before the "Amaboona," as they called the Boers, were
"eaten up."</p>
<p>At first I took no notice of him beyond scowling, but presently, goaded
into anger, I prophesied that he would be dead in an hour!</p>
<p>He only laughed aloud. "Oh! White Spirit," he said, "is it so? Well, I've
walked a long way from Zululand, and shall be glad of a rest."</p>
<p>And he got it shortly, as will be seen.</p>
<p>Now the Zulus began to sing again—</p>
<p>"We have caught the White Spirit, my brother! my brother!<br/>
Iron-Tongue whispered of him, he smelt him out, my brother.<br/>
Now the Maboona are ours—they are already dead, my brother."<br/></p>
<p>So that treacherous villain Indaba-zimbi had betrayed me. Suddenly the
chief of the Impi, a grey-haired man named Sususa, held up his assegai,
and instantly there was silence. Then he spoke to some indunas who stood
near him. Instantly they ran to the right and left down the first line,
saying a word to the captain of each company as they passed him. Presently
they were at the respective ends of the line, and simultaneously held up
their spears. As they did so, with an awful roar of "Bulala Amaboona"—"Slay
the Boers," the entire line, numbering nearly a thousand men, bounded
forward like a buck startled from its form, and rushed down upon the
little laager. It was a splendid sight to see them, their assegais
glittering in the sunlight as they rose and fell above their black
shields, their war-plumes bending back upon the wind, and their fierce
faces set intently on the foe, while the solid earth shook beneath the
thunder of their rushing feet. I thought of my poor friends the Dutchmen,
and trembled. What chance had they against so many?</p>
<p>Now the Zulus, running in the shape of a bow so as to wrap the laager
round on three sides, were within seventy yards, and now from every waggon
broke tongues of fire. Over rolled a number of the Umtetwa, but the rest
cared little. Forward they sped straight to the laager, striving to force
a way in. But the Boers plied them with volley after volley, and, packed
as the Zulus were, the elephant guns loaded with slugs and small shot did
frightful execution. Only one man even got on to a waggon, and as he did
so I saw a Boer woman strike him on the head with an axe. He fell down,
and slowly, amid howls of derision from the two lines on the hill-side,
the Zulus drew back.</p>
<p>"Let us go, father!" shouted the soldiers on the slope, among whom I was,
to their chief, who had come up. "You have sent out the little girls to
fight, and they are frightened. Let us show them the way."</p>
<p>"No, no!" the chief Sususa answered, laughing. "Wait a minute and the
little girls will grow to women, and women are good enough to fight
against Boers!"</p>
<p>The attacking Zulus heard the mockery of their fellows, and rushed forward
again with a roar. But the Boers in the laager had found time to load, and
they met with a warm reception. Reserving their fire till the Zulus were
packed like sheep in a kraal, they loosed into them with the roers, and
the warriors fell in little heaps. But I saw that the blood of the
Umtetwas was up; they did not mean to be beaten back this time, and the
end was near. See! six men had leapt on to a waggon, slain the man behind
it, and sprung into the laager. They were killed there, but others
followed, and then I turned my head. But I could not shut my ears to the
cries of rage and death, and the terrible <i>S'gee! S'gee!</i> of the
savages as they did their work of murder. Once only I looked up and saw
poor Hans Botha standing on a waggon smiting down men with the butt of his
rifle. The assegais shot up towards him like tongues of steel, and when I
looked again he was gone.</p>
<p>I turned sick with fear and rage. But alas! what could I do? They were all
dead now, and probably my own turn was coming, only my death with not be
so swift.</p>
<p>The fight was ended, and the two lines on the slope broke their order, and
moved down to the laager. Presently we were there, and a dreadful sight it
was. Many of the attacking Zulus were dead—quite fifty I should say,
and at least a hundred and fifty were wounded, some of them mortally. The
chief Sususa gave an order, the dead men were picked up and piled in a
heap, while those who were slightly hurt walked off to find some one to
tie up their wounds. But the more serious cases met with a different
treatment. The chief or one of his indunas considered each case, and if it
was in any way bad, the man was taken up and thrown into the river which
ran near. None of them offered any objection, though one poor fellow swam
to shore again. He did not stop there long, however, for they pushed him
back and drowned him by force.</p>
<p>The strangest case of all was that of the chief's own brother. He had been
captain of the line, and his ankle was smashed by a bullet. Sususa came up
to him, and, having examined the wound, rated him soundly for failing in
the first onslaught.</p>
<p>The poor fellow made the excuse that it was not his fault, as the Boers
had hit him in the first rush. His brother admitted the truth of this, and
talked to him amicably.</p>
<p>"Well," he said at length, offering him a pinch of snuff, "you cannot walk
again."</p>
<p>"No, chief," said the wounded man, looking at his ankle.</p>
<p>"And to-morrow we must walk far," went on Sususa.</p>
<p>"Yes, chief."</p>
<p>"Say, then, will you sit here on the veldt, or——" and he
nodded towards the river.</p>
<p>The man dropped his head on his breast for a minute as though in thought.
Presently he lifted it and looked Sususa straight in the face.</p>
<p>"My ankle pains me, my brother," he said; "I think I will go back to
Zululand, for there is the only kraal I wish to see again, even if I creep
about it like a snake."[*]</p>
<p>[*] The Zulus believe that after death their spirits enter<br/>
into the bodies of large green snakes, which glide about the<br/>
kraals. To kill these snakes is sacrilege.<br/></p>
<p>"It is well, my brother," said the chief. "Rest softly," and having shaken
hands with him, he gave an order to one of the indunas, and turned away.</p>
<p>Then men came, and, supporting the wounded man, led him down to the banks
of the stream. Here, at his request, they tied a heavy stone round his
neck, and then threw him into a deep pool. I saw the whole sad scene, and
the victim never even winced. It was impossible not to admire the
extraordinary courage of the man, or to avoid being struck with the
cold-blooded cruelty of his brother the chief. And yet the act was
necessary from his point of view. The man must either die swiftly, or be
left to perish of starvation, for no Zulu force will encumber itself with
wounded men. Years of merciless warfare had so hardened these people that
they looked on death as nothing, and were, to do them justice, as willing
to meet it themselves as to inflict it on others. When this very Impi had
been sent out by the Zulu King Dingaan, it consisted of some nine thousand
men. Now it numbered less than three; all the rest were dead. They, too,
would probably soon be dead. What did it matter? They lived by war to die
in blood. It was their natural end. "Kill till you are killed." That is
the motto of the Zulu soldier. It has the merit of simplicity.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the warriors were looting the waggons, including my own, having
first thrown all the dead Boers into a heap. I looked at the heap; all of
them were there, including the two stout fraus, poor things. But I missed
one body, that of Hans Botha's daughter, little Tota. A wild hope came
into my heart that she might have escaped; but no, it was not possible. I
could only pray that she was already at rest.</p>
<p>Just then the great Zulu, Bombyane, who had left my side to indulge in the
congenial occupation of looting, came out of a waggon crying that he had
got the "little white one." I looked; he was carrying the child Tota,
gripping her frock in one of his huge black hands. He stalked up to where
we were, and held the child before the chief. "Is it dead, father?" he
said, with a laugh.</p>
<p>Now, as I could well see, the child was not dead, but had been hidden
away, and fainted with fear.</p>
<p>The chief glanced at it carelessly, and said—</p>
<p>"Find out with your kerrie."</p>
<p>Acting on this hint the black devil held up the child, and was about to
kill it with his knobstick. This was more than I could bear. I sprang at
him and struck him with all my force in the face, little caring if I was
speared or not. He dropped Tota on the ground.</p>
<p>"Ou!" he said, putting his hand to his nose, "the White Spirit has a hard
fist. Come, Spirit, I will fight you for the child."</p>
<p>The soldiers cheered and laughed. "Yes! yes!" they said, "let Bombyane
fight the White Spirit for the child. Let them fight with assegais."</p>
<p>For a moment I hesitated. What chance had I against this black giant? But
I had promised poor Hans to save the child if I could, and what did it
matter? As well die now as later. However, I had wit enough left to make a
favour of it, and intimated to the chief through Indaba-zimbi that I was
quite willing to condescend to kill Bombyane, on condition that if I did
so the child's life should be given to me. Indaba-zimbi interpreted my
words, but I noticed that he would not look on me as he spoke, but covered
his face with his hands and spoke of me as "the ghost" or the "son of the
spirit." For some reason that I have never quite understood, the chief
consented to the duel. I fancy it was because he believed me to be more
than mortal, and was anxious to see the last of Bombyane.</p>
<p>"Let them fight," he said. "Give them assegais and no shields; the child
shall be to him who conquers."</p>
<p>"Yes! yes!" cried the soldiers. "Let them fight. Don't be afraid,
Bombyane; if he is a spirit, he's a very small one."</p>
<p>"I never was frightened of man or beast, and I am not going to run away
from a White Ghost," answered the redoubtable Bombyane, as he examined the
blade of his great bangwan or stabbing assegai.</p>
<p>Then they made a ring round us, gave me a similar assegai, and set us some
ten paces apart. I kept my face as calm as I could, and tried to show no
signs of fear, though in my heart I was terribly afraid. Humanly speaking,
my doom was on me. The giant warrior before me had used the assegai from a
child—I had no experience of the weapon. Moreover, though I was
quick and active, he must have been at least twice as strong as I am.
However, there was no help for it, so, setting my teeth, I grasped the
great spear, breathed a prayer, and waited.</p>
<p>The giant stood awhile looking at me, and, as he stood, Indaba-zimbi
walked across the ring behind me, muttering as he passed, "Keep cool,
Macumazahn, and wait for him. I will make it all right."</p>
<p>As I had not the slightest intention of commencing the fray, I thought
this good advice, though how Indaba-zimbi could "make it all right" I
failed to see.</p>
<p>Heavens! how long that half-minute seemed! It happened many years ago, but
the whole scene rises up before my eyes as I write. There behind us was
the blood-stained laager, and near it lay the piles of dead; round us was
rank upon rank of plumed savages, standing in silence to wait the issue of
the duel, and in the centre stood the grey-haired chief and general,
Sususa, in all his war finery, a cloak of leopard skin upon his shoulders.
At his feet lay the senseless form of little Tota, to my left squatted
Indaba-zimbi, nodding his white lock and muttering something—probably
spells; while in front was my giant antagonist, his spear aloft and his
plumes wavering in the gentle wind. Then over all, over grassy slope,
river, and koppie, over the waggons of the laager, the piles of dead, the
dense masses of the living, the swooning child, over all shone the bright
impartial sun, looking down like the indifferent eye of Heaven upon the
loveliness of nature and the cruelty of man. Down by the river grew
thorn-trees, and from them floated the sweet scent of the mimosa flower,
and came the sound of cooing turtle-doves. I never smell the one or hear
the other without the scene flashing into my mind again, complete in its
every detail.</p>
<p>Suddenly, without a sound, Bombyane shook his assegai and rushed straight
at me. I saw his huge form come; like a man in a dream, I saw the broad
spear flash on high; now he was on me! Then, prompted to it by some
providential impulse—or had the spells of Indaba-zimbi anything to
do with the matter?—I dropped to my knee, and quick as light
stretched out my spear. He drove at me: the blade passed over my head. I
felt a weight on my assegai; it was wrenched from my hand; his great limbs
knocked against me. I glanced round. Bombyane was staggering along with
head thrown back and outstretched arms from which his spear had fallen.
His spear had fallen, but the blade of mine stood out between his
shoulders—I had transfixed him. He stopped, swung slowly round as
though to look at me: then with a sigh the giant sank down—<i>dead</i>.</p>
<p>For a moment there was silence; then a great cry rose—a cry of
"Bombyane is dead. The White Spirit has slain Bombyane. Kill the wizard,
kill the ghost who has slain Bombyane by witchcraft."</p>
<p>Instantly I was surrounded by fierce faces, and spears flashed before my
eyes. I folded my arms and stood calmly waiting the end. In a moment it
would have come, for the warriors were mad at seeing their champion
overthrown thus easily. But presently through the tumult I heard the high,
cracked voice of Indaba-zimbi.</p>
<p>"Stand back, you fools!" it cried; "can a spirit then be killed?"</p>
<p>"Spear him! spear him!" they roared in fury. "Let us see if he is a
spirit. How did a spirit slay Bombyane with an assegai? Spear him,
rain-maker, and we shall see."</p>
<p>"Stand back," cried Indaba-zimbi again, "and I will show you if he can be
killed. I will kill him myself, and call him back to life again before
your eyes."</p>
<p>"Macumazahn, trust me," he whispered in my ear in the Sisutu tongue, which
the Zulus did not understand. "Trust me; kneel on the grass before me, and
when I strike at you with the spear, roll over like one dead; then, when
you hear my voice again, get up. Trust me—it is your only hope."</p>
<p>Having no choice I nodded my head in assent, though I had not the faintest
idea of what he was about to do. The tumult lessened somewhat, and once
more the warriors drew back.</p>
<p>"Great White Spirit—Spirit of victory," said Indaba-zimbi,
addressing me aloud, and covering his eyes with his hand, "hear me and
forgive me. These children are blind with folly, and think thee mortal
because thou hast dealt death upon a mortal who dared to stand against
thee. Deign to kneel down before me and let me pierce thy heart with this
spear, then when I call upon thee, arise unhurt."</p>
<p>I knelt down, not because I wished to, but because I must. I had not
overmuch faith in Indaba-zimbi, and thought it probable that he was in
truth about to make an end of me. But really I was so worn out with fears,
and the horrors of the night and day had so shaken my nerves, that I did
not greatly care what befell me. When I had been kneeling thus for about
half a minute Indaba-zimbi spoke.</p>
<p>"People of the Umtetwa, children of T'Chaka," he said, "draw back a little
way, lest an evil fall on you, for now the air is thick with ghosts."</p>
<p>They drew back a space, leaving us in a circle about twelve yards in
diameter.</p>
<p>"Look on him who kneels before you," went on Indaba-zimbi, "and listen to
my words, to the words of the witch-finder, the words of the rain-maker,
Indaba-zimbi, whose fame is known to you. He seems to be a young man, does
he not? I tell you, children of the Umtetwa, he is no man. He is the
Spirit who gives victory to the white men, he it is who gave them assegais
that thunder and taught them how to slay. Why were the Impis of Dingaan
rolled back at the Blood River? Because <i>he</i> was there. Why did the
Amaboona slay the people of Mosilikatze by the thousand? Because <i>he</i>
was there. And so I say to you that, had I not drawn him from the laager
by my magic but three hours ago, you would have been conquered—yes,
you would have been blown away like the dust before the wind; you would
have been burnt up like the dry grass in the winter when the fire is awake
among it. Ay, because he had but been there many of your bravest were
slain in overcoming a few—a pinch of men who could be counted on the
fingers. But because I loved you, because your chief Sususa is my
half-brother—for had we not one father?—I came to you, I
warned you. Then you prayed me and I drew the Spirit forth. But you were
not satisfied when the victory was yours, when the Spirit, of all you had
taken asked but one little thing—a white child to take away and
sacrifice to himself, to make the medicine of his magic of——"</p>
<p>Here I could hardly restrain myself from interrupting, but thought better
of it.</p>
<p>"You said him nay; you said, 'Let him fight with our bravest man, let him
fight with Bombyane the giant for the child.' And he deigned to slay
Bombyane as you have seen, and now you say, 'Slay him; he is no spirit.'
Now I will show you if he is a spirit, for I will slay him before your
eyes, and call him to life again. But you have brought this upon
yourselves. Had you believed, had you offered no insult to the Spirit, he
would have stayed with you, and you should have become unconquerable. Now
he will arise and leave you, and woe be on you if you try to stay him.</p>
<p>"Now all men," he went on, "look for a space upon this assegai that I hold
up," and he lifted the bangwan of the deceased Bombyane high above his
head so that all the multitude could see it. Every eye was fixed upon the
broad bright spear. For a while he held it still, then he moved it round
and round in a circle, muttering as he did so, and still their gaze
followed it. For my part, I watched his movements with the greatest
anxiety. That assegai had already been nearer my person than I found at
all pleasant, and I had no desire to make a further acquaintance with it.
Nor, indeed, was I sure that Indaba-zimbi was not really going to kill me.
I could not understand his proceedings at all, and at the best I did not
relish playing the <i>corpus vile</i> to his magical experiments.</p>
<p>"<i>Look! look! look!</i>" he screamed.</p>
<p>Then suddenly the great spear flashed down towards my breast. I felt
nothing, but, to my sight, it seemed as though it had passed through me.</p>
<p>"See!" roared the Zulus. "Indaba-zimbi has speared him; the red assegai
stands out behind his back."</p>
<p>"Roll over, Macumazahn," Indaba-zimbi hissed in my ear, "roll over and
pretend to die—quick! quick!"</p>
<p>I lost no time in following these strange instructions, but falling on to
my side, threw my arms wide, kicked my legs about, and died as
artistically as I could. Presently I gave a stage shiver and lay still.</p>
<p>"See!" said the Zulus, "he is dead, the Spirit is dead. Look at the blood
upon the assegai!"</p>
<p>"Stand back! stand back!" cried Indaba-zimbi, "or the ghost will haunt
you. Yes, he is dead, and now I will call him back to life again. Look!"
and putting down his hand, he plucked the spear from wherever it was
fixed, and held it aloft. "The spear is red, is it not? Watch, men, watch!
<i>it grows white!</i>"</p>
<p>"Yes, it grows white," they said. "Ou! it grows white."</p>
<p>"It grows white because the blood returns to whence it came," said
Indaba-zimbi. "Now, great Spirit, hear me. Thou art dead, the breath has
gone out of thy mouth. Yet hear me and arise. Awake, White Spirit, awake
and show thy power. Awake! arise unhurt!"</p>
<p>I began to respond cheerfully to this imposing invocation.</p>
<p>"Not so fast, Macumazahn," whispered Indaba-zimbi.</p>
<p>I took the hint, and first held up my arm, then lifted my head and let it
fall again.</p>
<p>"He lives! by the head of T'Chaka he lives!" roared the soldiers, stricken
with mortal fear.</p>
<p>Then slowly and with the greatest dignity I gradually arose, stretched my
arms, yawned like one awaking from heavy sleep, turned and looked upon
them unconcernedly. While I did so, I noticed that old Indaba-zimbi was
almost fainting from exhaustion. Beads of perspiration stood upon his
brow, his limbs trembled, and his breast heaved.</p>
<p>As for the Zulus, they waited for no more. With a howl of terror the whole
regiment turned and fled across the rise, so that presently we were left
alone with the dead, and the swooning child.</p>
<p>"How on earth did you do that, Indaba-zimbi?" I asked in amaze.</p>
<p>"Do not ask me, Macumazahn," he gasped. "You white men are very clever,
but you don't quite know everything. There are men in the world who can
make people believe they see things which they do not see. Let us be going
while we may, for when those Umtetwas have got over their fright, they
will come back to loot the waggons, and then perhaps <i>they</i> will
begin asking questions that I can't answer."</p>
<p>And here I may as well state that I never got any further information on
this matter from old Indaba-zimbi. But I have my theory, and here it is
for whatever it may be worth. I believe that Indaba-zimbi <i>mesmerized</i>
the whole crowd of onlookers, myself included, making them believe that
they saw the assegai in my heart, and the blood upon the blade. The reader
may smile and say, "Impossible;" but I would ask him how the Indian
jugglers do their tricks unless it is by mesmerism. The spectators <i>seem</i>
to see the boy go under the basket and there pierced with daggers, they <i>seem</i>
to see women in a trance supported in mid-air upon the point of a single
sword. In themselves these things are not possible, they violate the laws
of nature, as those laws are known to us, and therefore must surely be
illusion. And so through the glamour thrown upon them by Indaba-zimbi's
will, that Zulu Impi seemed to see me transfixed with an assegai which
never touched me. At least, that is my theory; if any one has a better,
let him adopt it. The explanation lies between illusion and magic of a
most imposing character, and I prefer to accept the first alternative.</p>
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