"So be it.Give me a light.You took my last match," he said as unconcernedly as if they had merely been talking of the weather.
Indeed, the weather might well have been the subject of their talk.
The earth was baked until it cracked beneath the parching sun and wind.There had been no rain for weeks; but, to-day, the raw wind sent the lead-colored clouds flying over the sky, and the lead-colored clouds were heavy with rain.All the morning and till mid-afternoon, the column had been camping not far away, while their weary, hungry mounts had been turned out on the veldt to graze.For men and mounts, the halt was needed.
The fight about the laager had been no easy victory.Twelve hundred half-starved Britons are no match for fifteen hundred Boers fat with easy living.Weldon's hold on the crest had decided the game; but the game had not played itself out without wounds for some and utter weariness for all.War mad, yet half-dazed in all other respects, Weldon had watched the reinforcements come swarming up the hill to his relief, had heard their cheers mingling themselves with the sound of his name.Then, listless, but with his arm still about Paddy's shoulders, he had seen the fight move to its destined finish.He came down from the hilltop, feeling that something had taken yet one more turn in the evertightening coil of his brain.For one instant, as they were laying Paddy into the narrow grave scooped out of the veldt, the coil relaxed.Then, as the lumps of earth closed over his plucky, loyal little comrade, it tightened again and pressed on him more closely than ever.
And that was a week ago; and the week between had been one long trek in search of errant Boers.Weldon still rode in the front of the column.He had been ordered into hospital; but, bracing himself, he had looked the doctor steadily between the eyes and had refused to obey.The hospital was not for him--as yet."By Jove!" Carew was remarking deliberately."Look at the horses!"Noses in air, tails lashing and eyes staring wildly, the frightened groups had swept together and were rushing down upon them in one mad stampede.Straight towards the two troopers they came dashing along, swerved slightly and went sweeping past them, wrapped in a thick column of dust which parted, just as the horde rushed by, before the fierce impact of the breaking storm.From zenith to horizon, the leaden sky was marked with wavering lines of golden fire; but the shock of the thunder was outborne by the clash of falling hail.Half a mile away, the tents were riddled by the egg-sized lumps of ice;and, out on the open veldt, Carew threw himself on the earth, face downward, and buried his head in his sheltering arms.But Weldon staggered to his feet.In the thick of the flying troop of horses, he had seen the little gray broncho, and now, before she swept on out of hearing, he turned his back to the gale and gave a high, shrill whistle.It was months, now, since Piggie had learned that call.Again and again she had come trotting up to him, to rub her muzzle against his neck in token that she had heard and understood.
There was scant chance that the call would be carried to her by the boisterous wind, scanter chance still that, hearing it now in that mad rout, she would heed.Nevertheless, Weldon took the chance.
Obviously stampeded by the enemy, the missing horses would leave the column powerless to repel the attack which was imminent.If Piggie could be recalled, there was still a chance to regain the other mounts.Yet, even while he was weighing all the chances, he smiled to himself as he recalled the ineffectual little whistle that had gone out on the whistling wind.The chance was gone.Like Carew, he would lie down and seek what shelter he could get from the earth and from his own clasping arms.
The hail, falling thickly, shut down about the troop of horses and took them from his sight.If his eyes could have followed them, he would have seen one little gray head toss itself upward from the heart of the throng, one sturdy little gray back move more and more slowly, turn slightly, then weave its patient way in and out between its frightened companions until, free from the press of the crowd, it stood alone on the hail-lashed plain.Ten minutes later, Weldon felt a soft, wet muzzle poking its way between his tight-locked arms.The rest was ******.It amounted to riding back to the column to give warning of the enemy who rode close in the rear, to summoning Kruger Bobs and The Nig, and then, without stopping for a saddle, to go galloping away to the sky-line to round up the stampeded herd.The first dash of hail over, the rain fell fast upon them; but, above its roar, they could hear the steady firing of the pom pom behind them and the crackle of musketry mingled with the heavier fire.
Four o'clock had brought the stampede and the storm.Seven o'clock brought Weldon and Kruger Bobs, drenched to the skin, back into a demoralized camp.Nine o'clock found Weldon still in the saddle, his teeth chattering, his brown cheeks ablaze and his eyes hot with fever, while he waited for the pitching of his tattered tent.Then, even before its soggy, torn folds were stretched and pegged into position, he turned and rode off in search of a doctor.
"Sorry," he said briefly; "but I think I've a touch of fever.Can you put me to bed somewhere?"The next morning, he greeted Kruger Bobs by the name of a girl cousin who had died, ten years before.