'Tween Snow and Fire by Bertram Mitford (world best books to read txt) đ
- Author: Bertram Mitford
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Eanswyth laughed.
âWhat strange ideas you have got, Eustace. Now I wonder to how many people any such notion as that would have occurred.â
âHave I? I am often told so, so I suppose I must have. But the grand majority of people never think themselves, consequently when they happen upon anybody who does they gaze upon him with unmitigated astonishment as a strange and startling product of some unknown state of existence.â
âThank you,â retorted Eanswyth with a laugh. âThatâs a little hard on me. As I made the remark, of course I am included in the grand majority which doesnât think.â
âI have a very great mind to treat that observation with the silence it deserves. It is a ridiculous observation. Isnât it?â
âPerhaps it is,â she acquiesced softly, in a tone that was half a sigh, not so much on account of the actual burden of the conversation, as an involuntary outburst of the dangerous, because too tender, undercurrent of her thoughts. And of those two walking there side by side in the radiant sunshineâoutwardly so tranquilly, so peacefully, inwardly so blissfullyâit was hard to say which was the most fully alive to the peril of the situation. Each was conscious of the mass of molten fires raging within the thin eggshell crust; each was rigidly on guard; the one with the feminine instinct of self-preservation superadded to the sense of rectitude of a strong character; the other striving to rely upon the necessity of caution and patience enjoined by a far-seeing and habitually self-contained nature. So far, both forces were evenly matchedâso far both could play into each otherâs hands, for mutual aid, mutual support against each other. Had there been aught of selfishnessâof the mere unholy desire of possessionâin this manâs love, things would have been otherwise. His cool brain and consummate judgment would have given him immeasurably the advantageâin fact, the key of the whole situation. But it was not so. As we have said, that love was chivalrously pureâeven nobleâwould have been rather elevating but for the circumstance that its indulgence meant the discounting of another manâs life.
Thus they walked, side by side, in the soft and sensuous sunshine. A shimmer of heat rose from the ground. Far away over the rolling plains a few cattle and horses, dotted here and there grazing, constituted the only sign of life, and the range of wooded hills against the sky line loomed purple and misty in the golden summer haze. If ever a land seemed to enjoy the blessings of peace assuredly it was this fair land here spread out around them.
They had reached another of the ostrich camps, wherein were domiciled some eight or ten pairs of eighteen-month-old birds, which not having yet learned the extent of their power, were as tame and docile as the four-year-old male was savage and combative. Eustace had scattered the contents of his colander among them, and now the two were leaning over the gate, listlessly watching the birds feed.
âTalking of people never thinking,â continued Eustace, âI donât so much wonder at that. They havenât time, I suppose, and so lose the faculty. They have enough to do to steer ahead in their own narrow little groves. But what does astonish me is that if you state an obvious factâso obvious as to amount to a platitudeâit seems to burst upon them as a kind of wild surprise, as a kind of practical joke on wheels, ready to start away down-hill and drag them with it to utter crash unless they edge away from it as far as possible. You see them turn and stare at each other, and open an amazed and gaping mouth into which you might insert a pumpkin without them being in the least aware of it.â
âAs for instance?â queried Eanswyth, with a smile.
âWellâas for instance. I wonder what the effect would be upon an ordinary dozen of sane people were I suddenly to propound the perfectly obvious truism that life is full of surprises. I donât wonder, at least, for I ought to know by this time. They would start by scouting the idea; ten to one they would deny the premise, and retort that life was just what we chose to make it; which is a fallacy, in that it assumes that any one atom in the human scheme is absolutely independentâfirstly, of the rest of the crowd; secondly, of circumstancesâin fact, is competent to boss the former and direct the latter. Which, in the words of the immortal Euclid, is absurd.â
âYet if any man is thus competent, it is yourself, Eustace.â
âNo,â he said, shaking his head meditatively. âYou are mistaken. I am certainly not independent of the action of anyone who may elect to do me a good or an ill turn. He, she, or it, has me at a disadvantage all round, for I possess the gift of foresight in a degree so limited as to be practically nil. As for circumstancesâso far from pretending to direct them I am the mere creature of them. So are we all.â
âWhat has started you upon this train of thought?â she asked suddenly.
âSeveral things. But Iâll give you an instance of what I was saying just now. This morning I was surprised and surrounded by a gang of Kafirs, all armed to the teeth. Nearly all of them were on the very verge of shying their assegais bang through me, and if Ncandukuâyou know himâNteyaâs brotherâhadnât appeared on the scene just in the very nick of time, I should have been a dead man. As it was, we sat down, had an indaba and a friendly smoke, and parted on the best of terms. Now, wasnât I helplessly, abjectly, the creature of circumstancesâfirst in being molested at allâsecond in NcandĂșkuâs lucky arrival?â
âEustace! And you never told me this!â
âI told Tomâjust as he was startingâand he laughed. He didnât seem to think much of it. To tell the truth, neither did I. Whyâwhatâs the matter, Eanswyth?â
Her face was deathly white. Her eyes, wide open, were dilated with horror; then they filled with tears. The next moment she was sobbing wildlyâlocked in his close embrace.
âEanswyth, darlingâmy darling. What is it? Do not give way so! There is nothing to be alarmed about nowânothing.â
His tones had sunk to a murmur of thrilling tenderness. He was showering kisses upon her lips, her brow, her eyesâupon stray tresses of soft hair which escaped beneath her hat. What had become of their attitude of guarded self-control now? Broken down, swept away at one stroke as the swollen mountain stream sweeps away the frail barricade of timber and stones which thought to dam its courseâbroken down before the passionate outburst of a strong nature awakened to the knowledge of itselfâstartled into life by the magic touch, by the full force and fury of a consciousness of real love.
âYou are right,â she said at last. âWe must go away from here. I cannot bear that you should be exposed to such frightful peril. O Eustace! Why did we ever meet!â
Why, indeed! he thought. And the fierce, wild thrill of exultation which fan through him at the consciousness that her love was hisâthat for good or for ill she belonged to himâbelonged to him absolutelyâwas dashed by the thought: How was it going to end? His clear-sighted, disciplined nature could not altogether get rid of that consideration. But clear-sighted, disciplined as it was, he could not forego that which constituted the whole joy and sweetness of living. âSufficient for the dayâ must be his motto. Let the morrow take care of itself.
âWhy did we ever meet?â he echoed. âAh, does not that precisely exemplify what I was saying just now? Life is full of surprises. Surprise Number 1, when I first found you here at all. Number 2, when I awoke to the fact that you were stealing away my very self. And I soon did awake to that consciousness.â
âYou did?â
âI did. And I have been battling hard against itâagainst myselfâagainst youâand your insidiously enthralling influence ever since.â
His tone had become indescribably sweet and winning. If the power of the man invariably made itself felt by all with whom he was brought into contact in the affairs of everyday life, how much more was it manifested now as he poured the revelation of his long pent-up loveâthe love of a strong, self-contained nature which had broken bounds at lastâinto the ears of this woman whom he had subjugatedâyes, subjugated, utterly, completely.
And what of her?
It was as though all heaven had opened before her eyes. She stood there tightly clasped in that embrace, drinking in the entrancing tenderness of those tonesâhungrily devouring the straight glance of those magnetic eyes, glowing into hers. She had yieldedâutterly, completely, for she was not one to do things by halves. Ah, the rapture of it!
But every medal has its obverse side. Like the stab of a sword it came home to Eanswyth. This wonderful, enthralling, beautiful love which had thrown a mystic glamour as of a radiant Paradise upon her life, had come just a trifle too late.
âO Eustace,â she cried, tearing herself away from him, and yet keeping his hands clenched tightly in hers as though she would hold him at armâs length but could not. âO Eustace! my darling! How is it going to end? How?â
The very thought which had passed unspoken through his own mind.
âDearest, think only of the present. For the futureâwho knows! Did we not agree just nowâlife is full of surprises?â
âAu!â
Both started. Eanswyth could not repress a little scream, while even Eustace realised that he was taken at a disadvantage, as he turned to confront the owner of the deep bass voice which had fired off the above ejaculation.
It proceeded from a tall, athletic Kafir, who, barely ten yards off, stood calmly surveying the pair. His grim and massive countenance was wreathed into an amused smile. His nearly naked body was anointed with the usual red ochre, and round the upper part of his left arm he wore a splendid ivory ring. He carried a heavy knob-kerrie and several assegais, one of which he was twisting about in easy, listless fashion in his right hand.
At sight of this extremely unwelcome, not to say formidable, apparition, Eustaceâs hand instinctively and with a quick movement sought the back of his hipâa movement which a Western man would thoroughly have understood. But he withdrew itâempty. For his eye, familiar with every change of the native countenance, noted that the expression of this manâs face was good-humoured rather than aggressive. And withal it seemed partly familiar to him.
âWho are youâand what do you want?â he said shortly. Then as his glance fell upon a bandage wrapped round the barbarianâs shoulder: âAh. I know youâHlangani.â
âKeep your âlittle gunâ in your pocket, Ixeshane,â said the Kafir, speaking in a tone of good-humoured banter. âI am not the man to be shot at twice. Besides, I am not your enemy. If I were, I could have killed you many times over already, before you saw me; could have killed you both, you and the Inkosikazi.â
This was self-evident. Eustace, recognising it, felt rather small. He to be taken thus at a disadvantage, he, who had constituted himself Eanswythâs special protector against this very man! Yes. He felt decidedly small, but he was not going to show it.
âYou speak the truth, Hlangani,â he answered calmly. âYou are not my enemy. No man of the race of Xosa is. But why do you come here? There is bad blood between you and the owner of this place. Surely the land is wide enough for both. Why should your pathways cross?â
âHa! You say truly, Ixeshane.
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