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<h2> CHAPTER VIII </h2>
<h3> THE MARBLE KRAALS </h3>
<p>At length the last platform, or terrace, was reached, and we pulled up
outside the wall surrounding the central group of marble huts—for so
I must call them, for want of a better name. Our approach had been
observed by a crowd of natives, whose race I have never been able to
determine accurately; they belonged to the Basutu and peaceful section of
the Bantu peoples rather than to the Zulu and warlike. Several of these
ran up to take the horses, gazing on us with astonishment, not unmixed
with awe. We dismounted—speaking for myself, not without difficulty—indeed,
had it not been for Stella's support I should have fallen.</p>
<p>"Now you must come and see my father," she said. "I wonder what he will
think of it, it is all so strange. Hendrika, take the child to my hut and
give her milk, then put her into my bed; I will come presently."</p>
<p>Hendrika went off with a somewhat ugly grin to do her mistress's bidding,
and Stella led the way through the narrow gateway in the marble wall,
which may have enclosed nearly half an "erf," or three-quarters of an acre
of ground in all. It was beautifully planted as a garden, many European
vegetables and flowers were growing in it, besides others with which I was
not acquainted. Presently we came to the centre hut, and it was then that
I noticed the extraordinary beauty and finish of the marble masonry. In
the hut, and facing the gateway, was a modern door, rather rudely
fashioned of Buckenhout, a beautiful reddish wood that has the appearance
of having been sedulously pricked with a pin. Stella opened it, and we
entered. The interior of the hut was the size of a large and lofty room,
the walls being formed of plain polished marble. It was lighted somewhat
dimly, but quite effectively, by peculiar openings in the roof, from which
the rain was excluded by overhanging eaves. The marble floor was strewn
with native mats and skins of animals. Bookcases filled with books were
placed against the walls, there was a table in the centre, chairs seated
with rimpi or strips of hide stood about, and beyond the table was a couch
on which a man was lying reading.</p>
<p>"Is that you, Stella?" said a voice, that even after so many years seemed
familiar to me. "Where have you been, my dear? I began to think that you
had lost yourself again."</p>
<p>"No, father, dear, I have not lost myself, but I have found somebody
else."</p>
<p>At that moment I stepped forward so that the light fell on me. The old
gentleman on the couch rose with some difficulty and bowed with much
courtesy. He was a fine-looking old man, with deep-set dark eyes, a pale
face that bore many traces of physical and mental suffering, and a long
white beard.</p>
<p>"Be welcome, sir," he said. "It is long since we have seen a white face in
these wilds, and yours, if I am not mistaken, is that of an Englishman.
There has been but one Englishman here for twelve years, and he, I grieve
to say, was an outcast flying from justice," and he bowed again and
stretched out his hand.</p>
<p>I looked at him, and then of a sudden his name flashed back into my mind.
I took his hand.</p>
<p>"How do you do, Mr. Carson?" I said.</p>
<p>He started as though he had been stung.</p>
<p>"Who told you that name?" he cried. "It is a dead name. Stella, is it you?
I forbade you to let it pass your lips."</p>
<p>"I did not speak it, father. I have never spoken it," she answered.</p>
<p>"Sir," I broke in, "if you will allow me I will show you how I came to
know your name. Do you remember many years ago coming into the study of a
clergyman in Oxfordshire and telling him that you were going to leave
England for ever?"</p>
<p>He bowed his head.</p>
<p>"And do you remember a little boy who sat upon the hearthrug writing with
a pencil?"</p>
<p>"I do," he said.</p>
<p>"Sir, I was that boy, and my name is Allan Quatermain. Those children who
lay sick are all dead, their mother is dead, and my father, your old
friend, is dead also. Like you he emigrated, and last year he died in the
Cape. But that is not all the story. After many adventures, I, one Kaffir,
and a little girl, lay senseless and dying in the Bad Lands, where we had
wandered for days without water, and there we should have perished, but
your daughter, Miss——"</p>
<p>"Call her Stella," he broke in, hastily. "I cannot bear to hear that name.
I have forsworn it."</p>
<p>"Miss Stella found us by chance and saved our lives."</p>
<p>"By chance, did you say, Allan Quatermain?" he answered. "There is little
chance in all this; such chances spring from another will than ours.
Welcome, Allan, son of my old friend. Here we live as it were in a
hermitage, with Nature as our only friend, but such as we have is yours,
and for as long as you will take it. But you must be starving; talk no
more now. Stella, it is time to eat. To-morrow we will talk."</p>
<p>To tell the truth I can recall very little of the events of that evening.
A kind of dizzy weariness overmastered me. I remember sitting at a table
next to Stella, and eating heartily, and then I remember nothing more.</p>
<p>I awoke to find myself lying on a comfortable bed in a hut built and
fashioned on the same model as the centre one. While I was wondering what
time it was, a native came bringing some clean clothes on his arm, and,
luxury of luxuries, produced a bath hollowed from wood. I rose, feeling a
very different man, my strength had come back again to me; I dressed, and
following a covered passage found myself in the centre hut. Here the table
was set for breakfast with all manner of good things, such as I had not
seen for many a month, which I contemplated with healthy satisfaction.
Presently I looked up, and there before me was a more delightful sight,
for standing in one of the doorways which led to the sleeping huts was
Stella, leading little Tota by the hand.</p>
<p>She was very simply dressed in a loose blue gown, with a wide collar, and
girdled in at the waist by a little leather belt. In the bosom of her robe
was a bunch of orange blooms, and her rippling hair was tied in a single
knot behind her shapely head. She greeted me with a smile, asking how I
had slept, and then held Tota up for me to kiss. Under her loving care the
child had been quite transformed. She was neatly dressed in a garment of
the same blue stuff that Stella wore, her fair hair was brushed; indeed,
had it not been for the sun blisters on her face and hands, one would
scarcely have believed that this was the same child whom Indaba-zimbi and
I had dragged for hour after hour through the burning, waterless desert.</p>
<p>"We must breakfast alone, Mr. Allan," she said; "my father is so upset by
your arrival that he will not get up yet. Oh, you cannot tell how thankful
I am that you have come. I have been so anxious about him of late. He
grows weaker and weaker; it seems to me as though the strength were ebbing
away from him. Now he scarcely leaves the kraal, I have to manage
everything about the farm; he does nothing but read and think."</p>
<p>Just then Hendrika entered, bearing a jug of coffee in one hand and of
milk in the other, which she set down upon the table, casting a look of
little love at me as she did so.</p>
<p>"Be careful, Hendrika; you are spilling the coffee," said Stella. "Don't
you wonder how we come to have coffee here, Mr. Allan? I will tell you—we
grow it. That was my idea. Oh, I have lots of things to show you. You
don't know what we have managed to do in the time that we have been here.
You see we have plenty of labour, for the people about look upon my father
as their chief."</p>
<p>"Yes," I said, "but how do you get all these luxuries of civilization?"
and I pointed to the books, the crockery, and the knives and forks.</p>
<p>"Very simply. Most of the books my father brought with him when we first
trekked into the wilds; there was nearly a waggon load of them. But every
few years we have sent an expedition of three waggons right down to Port
Natal. The waggons are loaded with ivory and other goods, and come back
with all kinds of things that been sent out from England for us. So you
see, although we live in this wild place, we are not altogether cut off.
We can send runners to Natal and back in three months, and the waggons get
there and back in a year. The last lot arrived quite safe about three
months ago. Our servants are very faithful, and some of them speak Dutch
well."</p>
<p>"Have you ever been with the waggons?" I asked.</p>
<p>"Since I was a child I have never been more than thirty miles from
Babyan's Peak," she answered. "Do you know, Mr. Allan, that you are, with
one exception, the first Englishman that I have known out of a book. I
suppose that I must seem very wild and savage to you, but I have had one
advantage—a good education. My father has taught me everything, and
perhaps I know some things that you don't. I can read French and German,
for instance. I think that my father's first idea was to let me run wild
altogether, but he gave it up."</p>
<p>"And don't you wish to go into the world?" I asked.</p>
<p>"Sometimes," she said, "when I get lonely. But perhaps my father is right—perhaps
it would frighten and bewilder me. At any rate he would never return to
civilization; it is his idea, you know, although I am sure I do not know
where he got it from, nor why he cannot bear that our name should be
spoken. In short, Mr. Quatermain, we do not make our lives, we must take
them as we find them. Have you done your breakfast? Let us go out, and I
will show you our home."</p>
<p>I rose and went to my sleeping-place to fetch my hat. When I returned, Mr.
Carson—for after all that was his name, though he would never allow
it to be spoken—had come into the hut. He felt better now, he said,
and would accompany us on our walk if Stella would give him an arm.</p>
<p>So we started, and after us came Hendrika with Tota and old Indaba-zimbi
whom I found sitting outside as fresh as paint. Nothing could tire that
old man.</p>
<p>The view from the platform was almost as beautiful as that from the lower
ground looking up to the peak. The marble kraals, as I have said, faced
west, consequently all the upper terrace lay in the shadow of the great
peak till nearly eleven o'clock in the morning—a great advantage in
that warm latitude. First we walked through the garden, which was
beautifully cultivated, and one of the most productive that I ever saw.
There were three or four natives working in it, and they all saluted my
host as "Baba," or father. Then we visited the other two groups of marble
huts. One of these was used for stables and outbuildings, the other as
storehouses, the centre hut having been, however, turned into a chapel.
Mr. Carson was not ordained, but he earnestly tried to convert the
natives, most of whom were refugees who had come to him for shelter, and
he had practised the more elementary rites of the church for so long that
I think he began to believe that he really was a clergyman. For instance,
he always married those of his people who would consent to a monogamous
existence, and baptized their children.</p>
<p>When we had examined those wonderful remains of antiquity, the marble
huts, and admired the orange trees, the vines and fruits which thrive like
weeds in this marvellous soil and climate, we descended to the next
platform, and saw the farming operations in full swing. I think that it
was the best farm I have ever seen in Africa. There was ample water for
purposes of irrigation, the grass lands below gave pasturage for hundreds
of head of cattle and horses, and, for natives, the people were most
industrious. Moreover, the whole place was managed by Mr. Carson on the
co-operative system; he only took a tithe of the produce—indeed, in
this land of teeming plenty, what was he to do with more? Consequently the
tribesmen, who, by the way, called themselves the "Children of Thomas,"
were able to accumulate considerable wealth. All their disputes were
referred to their "father," and he also was judge of offences and crimes.
Some were punished by imprisonment, whipping, and loss of goods, other and
graver transgressions by expulsion from the community, a fiat which to one
of these favoured natives must have seemed as heavy as the decree that
drove Adam from the Garden of Eden.</p>
<p>Old Mr. Carson leaned upon his daughter's arm and contemplated the scene
with pride.</p>
<p>"I have done all this, Allan Quatermain," he said. "When renouncing
civilization, I wandered here by chance; seeking a home in the remotest
places of the world, I found this lonely spot a wilderness. Nothing was to
be seen except the site, the domes of the marble huts, and the waterfalls.
I took possession of the huts. I cleared the path of garden land and
planted the orange grove. I had only six natives then, but by degrees
others joined me, now my tribe is a thousand strong. Here we live in
profound peace and plenty. I have all I need, and I seek no more. Heaven
has prospered me so far—may it do so to the end, which for me draws
nigh. And now I am tired and will go back. If you wish to see the old
quarry and the mouth of the ancient mines, Stella will show them to you.
No, my love, you need not trouble to come, I can manage. Look! some of the
headmen are waiting to see me."</p>
<p>So he went; but still followed by Hendrika and Indaba-zimbi, we turned,
and, walking along the bank of one of the rivers, passed up behind the
marble kraals, and came to the quarry, whence the material of which they
were built had been cut in some remote age. The pit opened up a very thick
seam of the whitest and most beautiful marble. I know another like it in
Natal. But by whom it had been worked I cannot say; not by natives, that
is certain, though the builders of these kraals had condescended to borrow
the shape of native huts for their model. By the way, the only relic of
those builders that I ever saw was a highly finished bronze pick-axe which
Stella had found one day in the quarry.</p>
<p>After we had examined this quarry we climbed the slope of the hill till we
came to the mouth of the ancient mines which were situated in a gorge. I
believe them to have been silver mines. The gorge was long and narrow, and
the moment we entered it there rose from every side a sound of groaning
and barking that was almost enough to deafen us. I knew what it was at
once: the whole place was filled with baboons, which clambered down the
rocks towards us from every direction, and in a manner that struck me as
being unnaturally fearless. Stella turned a little pale and clung to my
arm.</p>
<p>"It is very silly of me," she whispered. "I am not at all nervous, but
ever since they killed Hendrik I cannot bear the sight of those animals. I
always think that there is something human about them."</p>
<p>Meanwhile the baboons drew nearer, talking to each other as they came.
Tota began to cry, and clung to Stella. Stella clung to me, while I and
Indaba-zimbi put as bold a front on the matter as we could. Only Hendrika
stood looking at the brutes with an unconcerned smile on her monkey face.
When the great apes were quite near, she suddenly called aloud. Instantly
they stopped their hideous clamour as though at a word of command. Then
Hendrika addressed them: I can only describe it so. That is to say, she
began to make a noise such as baboons do when they converse with each
other. I have known Hottentots and Bushmen who said that they could talk
with the baboons and understand their language, but I confess I never
heard it done before or since.</p>
<p>From the mouth of Hendrika came a succession of grunts, groans, squeals,
clicks, and every other abominable noise that can be conceived, conveying
to my mind a general idea of expostulation. At any rate the baboons
listened. One of them grunted back some answer, and then the whole mob
drew off to the rocks.</p>
<p>I stood astonished, and without a word we turned back to the kraal, for
Hendrika was too close to allow me to speak. When we reached the dining
hut Stella went in, followed by Hendrika. But Indaba-zimbi plucked me by
the sleeve, and I stopped outside.</p>
<p>"Macumazahn," he said. "Baboon-woman—devil-woman. Be careful,
Macumazahn. She loves that Star (the natives aptly enough called Stella
the Star), and is jealous. Be careful, Macumazahn, or the Star will set!"</p>
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