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<h2> CHAPTER V </h2>
<h3> INEZ </h3>
<p>We had sighted the house from far away shortly after sunrise and by midday
we were there. As we approached I saw that it stood almost immediately
beneath two great baobab trees, babyan trees we call them in South Africa,
perhaps because monkeys eat their fruit. It was a thatched house with
whitewashed walls and a stoep or veranda round it, apparently of the
ordinary Dutch type. Moreover, beyond it, at a little distance were other
houses or rather shanties with waggon sheds, etc., and beyond and mixed up
with these a number of native huts. Further on were considerable fields
green with springing corn; also we saw herds of cattle grazing on the
slopes. Evidently our white man was rich.</p>
<p>Umslopogaas surveyed the place with a soldier's eye and said to me,</p>
<p>"This must be a peaceful country, Macumazahn, where no attack is feared,
since of defences I see none."</p>
<p>"Yes," I answered, "why not, with a wilderness behind it and bush-veld and
a great river in front?"</p>
<p>"Men can cross rivers and travel through bush-veld," he answered, and was
silent.</p>
<p>Up to this time we had seen no one, although it might have been presumed
that a waggon trekking towards the house was a sufficiently unusual sight
to have attracted attention.</p>
<p>"Where can they be?" I asked.</p>
<p>"Asleep, Baas, I think," said Hans, and as a matter of fact he was right.
The whole population of the place was indulging in a noonday siesta.</p>
<p>At last we came so near to the house that I halted the waggon and
descended from the driving-box in order to investigate. At this moment
someone did appear, the sight of whom astonished me not a little, namely,
a very striking-looking young woman. She was tall, handsome, with large
dark eyes, good features, a rather pale complexion, and I think the
saddest face that I ever saw. Evidently she had heard the noise of the
waggon and had come out to see what caused it, for she had nothing on her
head, which was covered with thick hair of a raven blackness. Catching
sight of the great Umslopogaas with his gleaming axe and of his
savage-looking bodyguard, she uttered an exclamation and not unnaturally
turned to fly.</p>
<p>"It's all right," I sang out, emerging from behind the oxen, and in
English, though before the words had left my lips I reflected that there
was not the slightest reason to suppose that she would understand them.
Probably she was Dutch, or Portuguese, although by some instinct I had
addressed her in English.</p>
<p>To my surprise she answered me in the same tongue, spoken, it is true,
with a peculiar accent which I could not place, as it was neither Scotch
nor Irish.</p>
<p>"Thank you," she said. "I, sir, was frightened. Your friends look——"
Here she stumbled for a word, then added, "terrocious."</p>
<p>I laughed at this composite adjective and answered,</p>
<p>"Well, so they are in a way, though they will not harm you or me. But,
young lady, tell me, can we outspan here? Perhaps your husband——"</p>
<p>"I have no husband, I have only a father, sir," and she sighed.</p>
<p>"Well, then, could I speak to your father? My name is Allan Quatermain and
I am making a journey of exploration, to find out about the country
beyond, you know."</p>
<p>"Yes, I will go to wake him. He is asleep. Everyone sleeps here at midday—except
me," she said with another sigh.</p>
<p>"Why do you not follow their example?" I asked jocosely, for this young
woman puzzled me and I wanted to find out about her.</p>
<p>"Because I sleep little, sir, who think too much. There will be plenty of
time to sleep soon for all of us, will there not?"</p>
<p>I stared at her and inquired her name, because I did not know what else to
say.</p>
<p>"My name is Inez Robertson," she answered. "I will go to wake my father.
Meanwhile please unyoke your oxen. They can feed with the others; they
look as though they wanted rest, poor things." Then she turned and went
into the house.</p>
<p>"Inez Robertson," I said to myself, "that's a queer combination. English
father and Portuguese mother, I suppose. But what can an Englishman be
doing in a place like this? If it had been a trek-Boer I should not have
been surprised." Then I began to give directions about out-spanning.</p>
<p>We had just got the oxen out of the yokes, when a big, raw-boned,
red-bearded, blue-eyed, roughly-clad man of about fifty years of age
appeared from the house, yawning. I threw my eye over him as he advanced
with a peculiar rolling gait, and formed certain conclusions. A drunkard
who has once been a gentleman, I reflected to myself, for there was
something peculiarly dissolute in his appearance, also one who has had to
do with the sea, a diagnosis which proved very accurate.</p>
<p>"How do you do, Mr. Allan Quatermain, which I think my daughter said is
your name, unless I dreamed it, for it is one that I seem to have heard
before," he exclaimed with a broad Scotch accent which I do not attempt to
reproduce. "What in the name of blazes brings you here where no real white
man has been for years? Well, I am glad enough to see you any way, for I
am sick of half-breed Portuguese and niggers, and snuff-and-butter girls,
and gin and bad whisky. Leave your people to attend to those oxen and come
in and have a drink."</p>
<p>"Thank you, Mr. Robertson——"</p>
<p>"Captain Robertson," he interrupted. "Man, don't look astonished. You
mightn't guess it, but I commanded a mail-steamer once and should like to
hear myself called rightly again before I die."</p>
<p>"I beg your pardon—Captain Robertson, but myself, I don't drink
anything before sundown. However, if you have something to eat——?"</p>
<p>"Oh yes, Inez—she's my daughter—will find you a bite. Those
men of yours," and he also looked doubtfully at Umslopogaas and his savage
company, "will want food as well. I'll have a beast killed for them; they
look as if they could eat it, horns and all. Where are my people? All
asleep, I suppose, the lazy lubbers. Wait a bit, I'll wake them up."</p>
<p>Going to the house he snatched a great sjambok cut from hippopotamus hide,
from where it hung on a nail in the wall, and ran towards the group of
huts which I have mentioned, roaring out the name Thomaso, also a string
of oaths such as seamen use, mixed with others of a Portuguese variety.
What happened there I could not see because boughs were in the way, but
presently I heard blows and screams, and caught sight of people, all
dark-skinned, flying from the huts.</p>
<p>A little later a fat, half-breed man—I should say from his curling
hair that his mother was a negress and his father a Portuguese—appeared
with some other nondescript fellows and began to give directions in a
competent fashion about our oxen, also as to the killing of a calf. He
spoke in bastard Portuguese, which I could understand, and I heard him
talk of Umslopogaas to whom he pointed, as "that nigger," after the
fashion of such cross-bred people who choose to consider themselves white
men. Also he made uncomplimentary remarks about Hans, who of course
understood every word he said. Evidently Thomaso's temper had been ruffled
by this sudden and violent disturbance of his nap.</p>
<p>Just then our host appeared puffing with his exertions and declaring that
he had stirred up the swine with a vengeance, in proof of which he pointed
to the sjambok that was reddened with blood.</p>
<p>"Captain Robertson," I said, "I wish to give you a hint to be passed on to
Mr. Thomaso, if that is he. He spoke of the Zulu soldier there as a
nigger, etc. Well, he is a chief of a high rank and rather a terrible
fellow if roused. Therefore I recommend Mr. Thomaso not to let him
understand that he is insulting him."</p>
<p>"Oh! that's the way of these 'snuff-and-butters' one of whose grandmothers
once met a white man," replied the Captain, laughing, "but I'll tell him,"
and he did in Portuguese.</p>
<p>His retainer listened in silence, looking at Umslopogaas rather sulkily.
Then we walked into the house. As we went the Captain said,</p>
<p>"Se�or Thomaso—he calls himself Se�or—is my manager here and a
clever man, honest too in his way and attached to me, perhaps because I
saved his life once. But he has a nasty temper, as have all these
cross-breeds, so I hope he won't get wrong with that native who carries a
big axe."</p>
<p>"I hope so too, for his own sake," I replied emphatically.</p>
<p>The Captain led the way into the sitting-room; there was but one in the
house. It proved a queer kind of place with rude furniture seated with
strips of hide after the Boer fashion, and yet bearing a certain air of
refinement which was doubtless due to Inez, who, with the assistance of a
stout native girl, was already engaged in setting the table. Thus there
was a shelf with books, Shakespeare was one of these, I noticed—over
which hung an ivory crucifix, which suggested that Inez was a Catholic. On
the walls, too, were some good portraits, and on the window-ledge a jar
full of flowers. Also the forks and spoons were of silver, as were the
mugs, and engraved with a tremendous coat-of-arms and a Portuguese motto.</p>
<p>Presently the food appeared, which was excellent and plentiful, and the
Captain, his daughter and I sat down and ate. I noted that he drank gin
and water, an innocent-looking beverage but strong as he took it. It was
offered to me, but like Miss Inez, I preferred coffee.</p>
<p>During the meal and afterwards while we smoked upon the veranda, I told
them as much as I thought desirable of my plans. I said that I was engaged
upon a journey of exploration of the country beyond the Zambesi, and that
having heard of this settlement, which, by the way, was called Strathmuir,
as I gathered after a place in far away Scotland where the Captain had
been born and passed his childhood, I had come here to inquire as to how
to cross the great river, and about other things.</p>
<p>The Captain was interested, especially when I informed him that I was that
same "Hunter Quatermain" of whom he had heard in past years, but he told
me that it would be impossible to take the waggon down into the low
bush-veld which we could see beneath us, as there all the oxen would die
of the bite of the tsetse fly. I answered that I was aware of this and
proposed to try to make an arrangement to leave it in his charge till I
returned.</p>
<p>"That might be managed, Mr. Quatermain," he answered. "But, man, will you
ever return? They say there are queer folk living on the other side of the
Zambesi, savage men who are cannibals, Amahagger I think they call them.
It was they who in past years cleaned out all this country, except a few
river tribes who live in floating huts or on islands among the reeds, and
that's why it is so empty. But this happened long ago, much before my
time, and I don't suppose they will ever cross the river again."</p>
<p>"If I might ask, what brought you here, Captain?" I said, for the point
was one on which I felt curious.</p>
<p>"That which brings most men to wild places, Mr. Quatermain—trouble.
If you want to know, I had a misfortune and piled up my ship. There were
some lives lost and, rightly or wrongly, I got the sack. Then I started as
a trader in a God-forsaken hole named Chinde, one of the Zambesi mouths,
you know, and did very well, as we Scotchmen have a way of doing.</p>
<p>"There I married a Portuguese lady, a real lady of high blood, one of the
old sort. When my girl, Inez, was about twelve years old I got into more
trouble, for my wife died and it pleased a certain relative of hers to say
that it was because I had neglected her. This ended in a row and the truth
is that I killed him—in fair fight, mind you. Still, kill him I did
though I scarcely knew that I had done it at the time, after which the
place grew too hot to hold me. So I sold up and swore that I would have no
more to do with what they are pleased to call civilisation on the East
Coast.</p>
<p>"During my trading I had heard that there was fine country up this way,
and here I came and settled years ago, bringing my girl and Thomaso, who
was one of my managers, also a few other people with me. And here I have
been ever since, doing very well as before, for I trade a lot of ivory and
other things and grow stuff and cattle, which I sell to the River natives.
Yes, I am a rich man now and could go to live on my means in Scotland, or
anywhere."</p>
<p>"Why don't you?" I asked.</p>
<p>"Oh! for many reasons. I have lost touch with all that and become half
wild and I like this life and the sunshine and being my own master. Also,
if I did, things might be raked up against me, about that man's death.
Also, though I daresay it will make you think badly of me for it, Mr.
Quatermain, I have ties down there," and he waved is hand towards the
village, if so it could be called, "which it wouldn't be easy for me to
break. A man may be fond of his children, Mr. Quatermain, even if their
skins ain't so white as they ought to be. Lastly I have habits—you
see, I am speaking out to you as man to man—which might get me into
trouble again if I went back to the world," and he nodded his fine,
capable-looking head in the direction of the bottle on the table.</p>
<p>"I see," I said hastily, for this kind of confession bursting out of the
man's lonely heart when what he had drunk took a hold of him, was painful
to hear. "But how about your daughter, Miss Inez?"</p>
<p>"Ah!" he said, with a quiver in his voice, "there you touch it. She ought
to go away. There is no one for her to marry here, where we haven't seen a
white man for years, and she's a lady right enough, like her mother. But
who is she to go to, being a Roman Catholic whom my own dour Presbyterian
folk in Scotland, if any of them are left, would turn their backs on?
Moreover, she loves me in her own fashion, as I love her, and she wouldn't
leave me because she thinks it her duty to stay and knows that if she did,
I should go to the devil altogether. Still—perhaps you might help me
about her, Mr. Quatermain, that is if you live to come back from your
journey," he added doubtfully.</p>
<p>I felt inclined to ask how I could possibly help in such a matter, but
thought it wisest to say nothing. This, however, he did not notice, for he
went on,</p>
<p>"Now I think I will have a nap, as I do my work in the early morning, and
sometimes late at night when my brain seems to clear up again, for you see
I was a sailor for many years and accustomed to keeping watches. You'll
look after yourself, won't you, and treat the place as your own?" Then he
vanished into the house to lie down.</p>
<p>When I had finished my pipe I went for a walk. First I visited the waggon
where I found Umslopogaas and his company engaged in cooking the beast
that had been given them, Zulu fashion; Hans with his usual cunning had
already secured a meal, probably from the servants, or from Inez herself;
at least he left them and followed me. First we went down to the huts,
where we saw a number of good-looking young women of mixed blood, all
decently dressed and engaged about their household duties. Also we saw
four or five boys and girls, to say nothing of a baby in arms, fine young
people, one or two of whom were more white than coloured.</p>
<p>"Those children are very like the Baas with the red beard," remarked Hans
reflectively.</p>
<p>"Yes," I said, and shivered, for now I understood the awfulness of this
poor man's case. He was the father of a number of half-breeds who tied him
to this spot as anchors tie a ship. I went on rather hastily past some
sheds to a long, low building which proved to be a store. Here the
quarter-blood called Thomaso, and some assistants were engaged in trading
with natives from the Zambesi swamps, men of a kind that I had never seen,
but in a way more civilised than many further south. What they were
selling or buying, I did not stop to see, but I noticed that the store was
full of goods of one sort or another, including a great deal of ivory,
which, as I supposed, had come down the river from inland.</p>
<p>Then we walked on to the cultivated fields where we saw corn growing very
well, also tobacco and other crops. Beyond this were cattle kraals and in
the distance we perceived a great number of cattle and goats feeding on
the slopes.</p>
<p>"This red-bearded Baas must be very rich in all things," remarked the
observant Hans when we had completed our investigations.</p>
<p>"Yes," I answered, "rich and yet poor."</p>
<p>"How can a man be both rich and yet poor, Baas?" asked Hans.</p>
<p>Just at that moment some of the half-breed children whom I have mentioned,
ran past us more naked than dressed and whooping like little savages. Hans
contemplated them gravely, then said,</p>
<p>"I think I understand now, Baas. A man may be rich in things he loves and
yet does not want, which makes him poor in other ways."</p>
<p>"Yes," I answered, "as you <i>are</i>, Hans, when you take too much to
drink."</p>
<p>Just then we met the stately Miss Inez returning from the store, carrying
some articles in a basket, soap, I think, and tea in a packet, amongst
them. I told Hans to take the basket and bear it to the house for her. He
went off with it and, walking slowly, we fell into conversation.</p>
<p>"Your father must do very well here," I said, nodding at the store with
the crowd of natives round it.</p>
<p>"Yes," she answered, "he makes much money which he puts in a bank at the
coast, for living costs us nothing and there is great profit in what he
buys and sells, also in the crops he grows and in the cattle. But," she
added pathetically, "what is the use of money in a place like this?"</p>
<p>"You can get things with it," I answered vaguely.</p>
<p>"That is what my father says, but what does he get? Strong stuff to drink;
dresses for those women down there, and sometimes pearls, jewels and other
things for me which I do not want. I have a box full of them set in ugly
gold, or loose which I cannot use, and if I put them on, who is there to
see them? That clever half-breed, Thomaso—for he is clever in his
way, faithful too—or the women down there—no one else."</p>
<p>"You do not seem to be happy, Miss Inez."</p>
<p>"No. I cannot tell how unhappy others are, who have met none, but
sometimes I think that I must be the most miserable woman in the world."</p>
<p>"Oh! no," I replied cheerfully, "plenty are worse off."</p>
<p>"Then, Mr. Quatermain, it must be because they cannot feel. Did you ever
have a father whom you loved?"</p>
<p>"Yes, Miss Inez. He is dead, but he was a very good man, a kind of saint.
Ask my servant, the little Hottentot Hans; he will tell you about him."</p>
<p>"Ah! a very good man. Well, as you may have guessed, mine is not, though
there is much good in him, for he has a kind heart, and a big brain. But
the drink and those women down there, they ruin him," and she wrung her
hands.</p>
<p>"Why don't you go away?" I blurted out.</p>
<p>"Because it is my duty to stop. That is what my religion teaches me,
although of it I know little except through books, who have seen no priest
for years except one who was a missionary, a Baptist, I think, who told me
that my faith was false and would lead me to hell. Yes, not understanding
how I lived, he said that, who did not know that hell is here. No, I
cannot go, who hopes always that still God and the Saints will show me how
to save my father, even though it be with my blood. And now I have said
too much to you who are quite a stranger. Yet, I do not know why, I feel
that you will not betray me, and what is more, that you will help me if
you can, since you are not one of those who drink, or——" and
she waved her hand towards the huts.</p>
<p>"I have my faults, Miss Inez," I answered.</p>
<p>"Yes, no doubt, else you would be a saint, not a man, and even the saints
had their faults, or so I seem to remember, and became saints by
repentance and conquering them. Still, I am sure that you will help me if
you can."</p>
<p>Then with a sudden flash of her dark eyes that said more than all her
words, she turned and left me.</p>
<p>Here's a pretty kettle of fish, thought I to myself as I strolled back to
the waggon to see how things were going on there, and how to get the live
fish out of the kettle before they boil or spoil is more than I know. I
wonder why fate is always finding me such jobs to do.</p>
<p>Even as I thought thus a voice in my heart seemed to echo that poor girl's
words—because it is your duty—and to add others to them—woe
betide him who neglects his duty. I was appointed to try to hook a few
fish out of the vast kettle of human woe, and therefore I must go on
hooking. Meanwhile this particular problem seemed beyond me. Perhaps Fate
would help, I reflected. As a matter of fact, in the end Fate did, if Fate
is the right word to use in this connection.</p>
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