“GOLDEN JOYS.”
The voyage to the Cape was long and
tedious. On the whole way out, Guy made but few
friends, and talked very little to his fellow passengers.
That unhappy recognition by Granville Kelmscott the
evening he went on board the Cetewayo poisoned the
fugitive’s mind for the entire passage.
He felt himself, in fact, a moral outcast; he slunk
away from his kind; he hardly dared to meet Kelmscott’s
eyes for shame, whenever he passed him. But for
one thing at least he was truly grateful. Though
Kelmscott had evidently discovered from the papers
the nature of Guy’s crime, and knew his real
name well, it was clear he had said nothing of any
sort on the subject to the other passengers.
Only one man on board was aware of his guilt, Guy
believed, and that one man he shunned accordingly as
far as was possible within the narrow limits of the
saloon and the quarter-deck.
Granville Kelmscott, of course, took
a very different view of Guy Waring’s position.
He had read in the paper he bought at Plymouth that
Guy was the murderer of Montague Nevitt. Regarding
him, therefore, as a criminal of the deepest dye now
flying from justice, he wasn’t at all surprised
at Guy’s shrinking and shunning him; what astonished
him rather was the man’s occasional and incredible
fits of effrontery. How that fellow could ever
laugh and talk at all among the ladies on deck—with
the hangman at his back—simply appalled
and horrified the proud soul of a Kelmscott. Granville
had hard work to keep from expressing his horror openly
at times. But still, with an effort, he kept
his peace. With the picture of his father and
Lady Emily now strong before his mind, he couldn’t
find it in his heart to bring his own half-brother,
however guilty and criminal the man might be, to the
foot of the gallows.
So they voyaged on together without
once interchanging a single word, all the way from
Plymouth to the Cape Colony. And the day they
landed at Port Elizabeth, it was an infinite relief
indeed to Guy to think he could now get well away
for ever from that fellow Kelmscott. Not being
by any means over-burdened with ready cash, however,
Guy determined to waste no time in the coastwise towns,
but to make his way at once boldly up country towards
Kimberley. The railway ran then only as far as
Grahamstown; the rest of his journey to the South
African Golconda was accomplished by road, in a two-wheeled
cart, drawn by four small horses, which rattled along
with a will, up hill and down dale, over the precarious
highways of that semi-civilized upland.
To Guy, just fresh from England and
the monotonous sea, there was a certain exhilaration
in this first hasty glimpse of the infinite luxuriance
of sub-tropical nature. At times he almost forgot
Montague Nevitt and the forgery in the boundless sense
of freedom and novelty given him by those vast wastes
of rolling tableland, thickly covered with grass or
low thorny acacias, and stretching illimitably away
in low range after range to the blue mountains in
the distance. It was strange indeed to him on
the wide plains through which they scurried in wild
haste to see the springbok rush away from the doubtful
track at the first whirr of their wheels, or the bolder
bustard stand and gaze among the long grass, with his
wary eye turned sideways to look at them. Guy
felt for the moment he had left Europe and its reminiscences
now fairly behind him; in this free new world, he
was free once more himself; his shame was cast aside;
he could revel like the antelopes in the immensity
of a land where nobody knew him and he knew nobody.
What added most of all, however, to
this quaint new sense of vastness and freedom was
the occasional appearance of naked blacks, roaming
at large through the burnt-up fields of which till
lately they had been undisputed possessors. Day
after day Guy drove on along the uncertain roads,
past queer outlying towns of white wooden houses—Cradock,
and Middelburg, and Colesberg, and others—till
they crossed at last the boundary of Orange River into
the Free State, and halted for a while in the main
street of Philippolis.
It was a dreary place; Guy began now
to see the other side of South Africa. Though
he had left England in autumn, it was spring-time
at the Cape, and the winter drought had parched up
all the grass, leaving the bare red dust in the roads
or streets as dry and desolate as the sand of the
desert. The town itself consisted of some sixty
melancholy and distressful houses, bare, square, and
flat-roofed, standing unenclosed along a dismal high-road,
and with that congenitally shabby look, in spite of
their newness, which seems to belong by nature to
all southern buildings. Some stagnant pools
alone remained to attest the presence after rain of
a roaring brook, the pits in whose dried-up channel
they now occupied; over their tops hung the faded
foliage of a few dust-laden trees, struggling hard
for life with the energy of despair against depressing
circumstances. It was a picture that gave Guy
a sudden attack of pessimism; if this was the
El Dorado towards which he was going, he earnestly
wished himself back again once more, forgery or no
forgery, among the breezy green fields of dear old
England.
On to Fauresmith he travelled with
less comfort than before in a rickety buggy of most
primitive construction, designed to meet the needs
of rough mountain roads, and as innocent of springs
as Guy himself of the murder of Montague Nevitt.
It was a wretched drive. The drought had now
broken; the wet season had begun; rain fell heavily.
A piercing cold wind blew down from the nearer mountains;
and Guy began to feel still more acutely than ever
that South Africa was by no means an earthly paradise.
As he drove on and on this feeling deepened upon him.
Huge blocks of stone obstructed the rough road, intersected
as it was by deep cart-wheel ruts, down which the
rain-water now flowed in impromptu torrents. The
Dutch driver, too, anxious to show the mettle of his
coarse-limbed steeds, persisted in dashing over the
hummocky ground at a break-neck pace, while Guy balanced
himself with difficulty on the narrow seat, hanging
on to his portmanteau for dear life among the jerks
and jolts, till his ringers were numbed with cold
and exposure.
They held out against it all, before
the pelting rain, till man and beast were well-nigh
exhausted. At last, about three-quarters of the
way to Fauresmith, on the bleak bare hill-tops, sleety
snow began to fall in big flakes, and the barking
of a dog to be heard in the distance. The Boer
driver pricked up his ears at the sound.
“That must a house be,”
he remarked in his Dutch pigeon-English to Guy; and
Guy felt in his soul that the most miserable and filthy
of Kaffir huts would just then be a welcome sight
to his weary eyes. He would have given a sovereign,
indeed, from the scanty store he possessed, for a
night’s lodging in a convenient dog-kennel.
He was agreeably surprised, therefore, to find it
was a comfortable farmhouse, where the lights in the
casement beamed forth a cheery welcome on the wet
and draggled wayfarers from real glass windows.
The farmer within received them hospitably. Business
was brisk to-day. Another traveller, he said,
had just gone on towards Fauresmith.
“A young man like yourself,
fresh from England,” the farmer observed, scanning
Guy closely. “He’s off for the diamond
diggings. I think to Dutoitspan.”
Guy rested the right there, thinking
nothing of the stranger, and went on next day more
quietly to Fauresmith. Thence to the diamond
fields, the country became at each step more sombre
and more monotonous than ever. In the afternoon
they rested at Jacobsdal, another dusty, dreary, comfortless
place, consisting of about five and twenty bankrupt
houses scattered in bare clumps over a scorched-up
desert. Then on again next day, over a drearier
and ever drearier expanse of landscape. It was
ghastly. It was horrible. At last, on the
top of a dismal hill range, looking down on a deep
dale, the driver halted. In the vast flat below,
a dull dense fog seemed to envelop the world with
inscrutable mists. The driver pointed to it with
his demonstrative whip.
“Down yonder,” he said
encouragingly, as he put the skid on his wheel, “down
yonder’s the diamond fields—that’s
Dutoitspan before you.”
“What makes it so grey?”
Guy asked, looking in front of him with a sinking
heart. This first view of his future home was
by no means encouraging.
“Oh, the sand make it be like
that,” the driver answered unconcernedly.
“Diamond fields all make up of fine red sand;
and diggers pile it about around their own claims.
Then the wind comes and blow, and make sandstorm always
around Dutoitspan.”
Guy groaned inwardly. This was
certainly not the El Dorado of his fancy.
They descended the hill, at the same break-neck pace
as before, and entered the miserable mushroom town
of diamond-grubbers. Amidst the huts in the diggings
great heaps of red earth lay piled up everywhere.
Dust and sand rose high on the hot breeze into the
stifling air. As they reached the encampment—for
Dutoitspan then was little more than a camp—the
blinding mists of solid red particles drove so thick
in their eyes that Guy could hardly see a few yards
before him. Their clothes and faces were literally
encrusted in thick coats of dust. The fine red
mist seemed to pervade everything. It filled
their eyes, their nostrils, their ears, their mouths.
They breathed solid dust. The air was laden deep
with it.
And this was the diamond fields!
This was the Golconda where Guy was to find six thousand
pounds ready made to recover his losses and to repay
Cyril. Oh, horrible, horrible. His heart
sank low at it.
And still they went on, and on, and
on, and on, through the mist of dust to the place
for out-spanning. Guy only shared the common
fate of all new-comers to “the fields”
in feeling much distressed and really ill. The
very horses in the cart snorted and sneezed and showed
their high displeasure by trying every now and then
to jib and turn back again. Here and there, on
either side, to right and left, where the gloom permitted
it, Guy made out dimly a few round or oblong tents,
with occasional rude huts of corrugated iron.
A few uncertain figures lounged vaguely in the background.
On closer inspection they proved to be much-grimed
and half-naked natives, resting their weary limbs
on piles of dry dust after their toil in the diggings.
It was an unearthly scene. Guy’s
heart sank lower and lower still at every step the
horses took into that howling wilderness.
At last the driver drew up with a
jolt in front of a long low hut of corrugated iron,
somewhat larger than the rest, but no less dull and
dreary. “The hotel,” he said briefly;
and Guy jumped out to secure himself a night’s
lodging or so at this place of entertainment, till
he could negotiate for a hut and a decent claim, and
commence his digging.
At the bar of the primitive saloon
where he found himself landed, a man in a grey tweed
suit was already seated. He was drinking something
fizzy from a tall soda-water glass. With a sudden
start of horror Guy recognised him at once. Oh,
great heavens, what was this? It was Granville
Kelmscott!
Then Granville, too, was bound for
the diamond fields like himself. What an incredible
coincidence! How strange! How inexplicable!
That rich man’s son, the pampered heir to Tilgate!
what could he be doing here, in this out-of-the-way
spot, this last resort of poor broken-down men, this
miserable haunt of wretched gambling money-grubbers?
Here curiosity, surely, must have
drawn him to the spot. He couldn’t have
come to dig! Guy gazed in amazement at that
grey tweed suit. He must be staying for a day
or two in search of adventure. No more than just
that! He couldn’t mean to stop here.
As he gazed and stood open-mouthed
in the shadow of the door, Granville Kelmscott, who
hadn’t seen him enter, laid down his glass,
wiped his lips with gusto, and continued his conversation
with the complacent barman.
“Yes, I want a hut here,”
he said, “and to buy a good claim. I’ve
been looking over the kopje down by Watson’s
spare land, and I think I’ve seen a lot that’s
likely to suit me.”
Guy sould hardly restrain his astonishment
and surprise. He had come, then, to dig!
Oh, incredible! impossible!
But at any rate this settled his own
immediate movements. Guy’s mind was made
up at once. If Granville Kelmscott was going to
dig at Dutoitspan—why, clearly Dutoitspan
was no place for him. He could never stand
the continual presence of the one man in South Africa
who knew his deadly secret. Come what might he
must leave the neighbourhood without a moment’s
delay. He must strike out at once for the far
interior. As he paused, Granville Kelmscott turned
round and saw him. Their eyes met with a start.
Each was equally astonished. Then Granville rose
slowly from his seat, and murmured in a low voice,
as he regarded him fixedly—
“You here again, Mr. Billington!
This is once too often. I hardly expected this.
There’s no room here for both of us.”
And he strode from the saloon, with
a very black brow, leaving Guy for the moment alone
with the barman.