您的位置 : 首页 > 英文著作
People Of The Mist, The
CHAPTER XVIII - SOA SHOWS HER TEETH
H.Rider Haggard
下载:People Of The Mist, The.txt
本书全文检索:
       _ Three months had passed since that day, when Juanna declared her
       unalterable determination to accompany Leonard upon his search for the
       treasures of the People of the Mist.
       It was evening, and a party of travellers were encamped on the side of
       a river that ran through a great and desolate plain. They were a small
       party, three white people, namely, Leonard, Francisco, and Juanna,
       fifteen of the Settlement men under the leadership of Peter--that same
       headman who had been rescued from the slave camp--the dwarf, Otter,
       and Juanna's old nurse, Soa.
       For twelve weeks they had travelled almost without intermission with
       Soa for their guide, steering continually northward and westward.
       First they followed the course of the river in canoes for ten days or
       more; then, leaving the main stream, they paddled for three weeks up
       that of a tributary called Mavuae, which ran for many miles along the
       foot of a great range of mountains named Mang-anja. Here they made but
       slow progress because of the frequent rapids, which necessitated the
       porterage of the canoes over broken ground, and for considerable
       distances. At length they came to a rapid which was so long and so
       continuous that regretfully enough they were obliged to abandon the
       canoes altogether and proceed on foot.
       The dangers of their water journey had been many, but they were
       nothing compared with those that now environed them, and in addition
       to bodily perils, they must face the daily and terrible fatigue of
       long marches through an unknown country, cumbered as they were with
       arms and other absolutely necessary baggage. The country through which
       they were now passing was named Marengi, a land uninhabited by man,
       the home of herds of countless game.
       On they went northward and upward through a measureless waste; plain
       succeeded plain in endless monotony, distance gave place to distance,
       and ever there were more beyond.
       Gradually the climate grew colder: they were traversing a portion of
       the unexplored plateau that separates southern from central Africa.
       Its loneliness was awful, and the bearers began to murmur, saying that
       they had reached the end of the world, and were walking over its edge.
       Indeed they had only two comforts in this part of their undertaking;
       the land lay so high that none of them were stricken by fever, and
       they could not well miss the road, which, if Soa was to be believed,
       ran along the banks of the river that had its source in the
       territories of the People of the Mist.
       The adventures that befell them were endless, but it is not proposed
       to describe them in detail. Once they starved for three days, being
       unable to find game. On another occasion they fell in with a tribe of
       bushmen who harassed them with poisoned arrows, killing two of their
       best men, and were only prevented from annihilating them through the
       terror inspired by their firearms, which they took for magical
       instruments.
       Escaping from the bushmen, they entered a forest country which teemed
       with antelope and also with lions, that night by night they must keep
       at bay as best they could. Then came several days' march through a
       plain strewn with sharp stones which lamed most of the party; and
       after this eighty or a hundred miles of dreary rolling veldt, clothed
       with rank grass just now brown with the winter frosts, that caught
       their feet at every step.
       Now at length they halted on the boundary of the land of the People of
       the Mist. There before them, not more than a mile away, towered a huge
       cliff or wall of rock, stretching across the plain like a giant step,
       far as the eye could reach, and varying from seven hundred to a
       thousand feet in height. Down the surface of this cliff the river
       flowed in a series of beautiful cascades.
       Before they had finished their evening meal of buck's flesh the moon
       was up, and by its light the three white people stared hopelessly at
       this frowning natural fortification, wondering if they could climb it,
       and wondering also what terrors awaited them upon its further side.
       They were silent that night, for a great weariness had overcome them,
       and if the truth must be known, all three of them regretted that they
       had ever undertaken this mad adventure.
       Leonard glanced to the right, where, some fifty paces away, the
       Settlement men were crouched round the fire. They also were silent,
       and it was easy to see that the heart was out of them.
       "Won't somebody say something?" said Juanna at last with a rather
       pathetic attempt at playfulness. How could she be cheerful, poor girl,
       when her feet were sore and her head was aching, and she wished that
       she were dead, almost?
       "Yes," answered Leonard, "I will say that I admire your pluck. I
       should not have thought it possible for any young lady to have gone
       through the last two months, and 'come out smiling' at the end of
       them."
       "Oh, I am quite happy. Don't trouble about me," she said, laughing as
       merrily as though there were no such things as sore feet and headaches
       in the world.
       "Are you?" said Leonard, "then I envy you, that is all. Here comes old
       Soa, and Otter after her. I wonder what is the matter now. Something
       disagreeable, I suppose."
       Soa arrived and squatted down in front of them, her tall spare form
       and somewhat sullen face looking more formidable than usual in the
       moonlight. Otter was beside her, and though he stood and she sat,
       their heads were almost on a level.
       "What is it, Soa?" said Leonard carelessly.
       "Deliverer," she answered, for all the natives knew him now by this
       name, "some months ago, when you were digging for gold yonder, in the
       Place of Graves, I made a bargain with you, and we set the bargain
       down on paper. In that paper I promised that if you rescued my
       mistress I would lead you to the land were precious stones were to be
       won, and I gave you one of those stones in earnest. You saved my
       mistress, Mavoom her father died, and the time came when I must fulfil
       my promise. For my own part I would not have fulfilled it, for I only
       made it that promise hoping to deceive you. But my mistress yonder
       refused to listen to me.
       "'No,' she said, 'that which you have sworn on my behalf and your own
       must be carried out. If you will not carry it out, go away, Soa, for I
       have done with you.'
       "Then, Deliverer, rather than part with her whom I loved, and whom I
       had nursed from a babe, I yielded. And now you stand upon the borders
       of the country of my people. Say, are you minded to cross them,
       Deliverer?"
       "What else did I come for, Soa?" he asked.
       "Nay, I know not. You came out of the folly of your heart, to satisfy
       the desire of your heart. Listen, that tale I told you is true, and
       yet I did not tell you all the truth. Beyond that cliff live a people
       of great stature, and very fierce; a people whose custom it is to
       offer up strangers to their gods. Enter there, and they will kill you
       thus."
       "What do you mean, woman?" asked Leonard.
       "I mean that if you hold your life dear, or her life," and she pointed
       to Juanna, "you will turn with the first light and go back whence you
       came. It is true that the stones are there, but death shall be the
       reward of him who strives to steal them."
       "I must say this is cheerful," replied Leonard. "What did you mean,
       then, by all that story you told me about a plan that you had to win
       the treasures of this people? Are you a liar, Soa?"
       "I have said that all I told you was true," she answered sullenly.
       "Very well, then, I have come a good many hundred miles to put it to
       the proof, nor am I going to turn back now. You can leave me one and
       all if you like, but I shall go on. I will not be made a fool of in
       this way."
       "None of us have any wish to be made fools of, Mr. Outram," said
       Juanna gently; "and, speaking for myself, I would far rather die at
       once than attempt a return journey just at present. So now, Soa,
       perhaps you will stop croaking and tell us definitely what we must do
       to conciliate these charming countrymen of yours, whom we have come so
       far to spoil. Remember," she added with a flash of her grey eyes, "I
       am not to be played with by you, Soa. In this matter the Deliverer's
       interests are my interests, and his ends my ends. Together we stand or
       fall, together we live or die, and that shall be an unhappy hour for
       you, Soa, when you attempt to desert or betray us."
       "It is well, Shepherdess," she answered, "your will is my will, for I
       love you alone in the world, and all the rest I hate," and she glared
       at Leonard and Otter. "You are my father, and my mother, and my child,
       and where you are, in death or in life, there is my home. Let us go
       then among this people of mine, there to perish miserably, so that the
       Deliverer may seek to glut himself with wealth.
       "Listen; this is the law of my people, or this was their law when I
       left them forty years ago: That every stranger who passes through
       their gates should be offered as a sacrifice to Aca the mother if the
       time of his coming should be in summer, and to Jal the son if the time
       of his coming be in winter, for the Mist-dwellers do not love
       strangers. But there is a prophecy among my people which tells, when
       many generations have gone by, that Aca the mother, and Jal the son,
       shall return to the land which once they ruled, clothed in the flesh
       of men. And the shape of Aca shall be such a shape as yours,
       Shepherdess, and the shape of Jal shall be as is the shape of this
       black dog of a dwarf, whom when first I saw him in my folly I deemed
       immortal and divine. Then the mother and the son shall rule in the
       land, and its kings shall cease from kingship, and the priests of the
       Snake shall be their servants, and with them shall come peace and
       prosperity that do not pass away.
       "Shepherdess, you know the tongue of the People of the Mist, for when
       you were little I taught it to you, because to me it is the most
       beautiful of tongues. You know the song also, the holy Song of
       Re-arising, that shall be on the lips of Aca when she comes again, and
       which I, being the daughter of the high-priest, learned, with many
       another secret, before I was doomed to be a bride to the Snake and
       fled, fearing my doom. Now come apart with me, Shepherdess, and you,
       Black One, come also, that I may teach you your lesson of what you
       shall do when we meet the squadrons of the People of the Mist."
       Juanna rose to obey her, followed by Otter, grumbling, for he hated
       the old woman as much as she hated him, and, moreover, he did not take
       kindly to this notion of masquerading as a god, or, indeed, to the
       prospect of a lengthened sojourn amongst his adoring, but from all
       accounts somewhat truculent, worshippers. Before they went, however,
       Leonard spoke.
       "I have heard you, Soa," he said, "and I do not like your words, for
       they show me that your heart is fierce and evil. Yes, though you love
       the Shepherdess, your heart is evil. Now hear me. Should you dare to
       play us false, whatever may befall us, be sure of this, that moment
       you die. Go!"
       "Spare your threats, Deliverer," answered Soa haughtily. "I shall not
       betray you, because to do so would be to betray the Shepherdess. But
       are you then a fool that you think I should fear death at your hands,
       who to-morrow with a word could give you all to torment? Pray,
       Deliverer, that the hour may not be near when you shall rejoice to die
       by the bullet with which you threaten me, so that you may escape worse
       things." And she turned and went.
       "I am not nervous," said Leonard to Francisco, "but that she-devil
       frightens me. If it were not for Juanna, she would cause us to be
       murdered on the first possible opportunity, and if only she can secure
       her safety, I believe that she will do it yet."
       "And I believe that she is a witch, Outram," answered the priest with
       fervour, "a servant of the Evil One, such as are written of in the
       Scriptures. Last night I saw her praying to her gods; she did not know
       that I was near, for the place was lonely, but I saw her and I never
       wish to see anything so horrible again. I will tell you why she hates
       us all so much, Outram. She is jealous, because the senora--does not
       hate us. That woman's heart is wicked, wickedness was born in her,
       yet, as none are altogether evil, she has one virtue, her love of the
       senora. She is husbandless and childless, for even among the black
       people, as I have learnt from the Settlement men, all have feared her
       and shrunk from her notwithstanding her good looks. Therefore,
       everything that is best in her has gone to nourish this love for the
       woman whom she nursed from a babe. It was because of her fierceness
       that the Senor Rodd, who is dead, chose her for his daughter's nurse,
       when he found that her heart was hungry with love for the child, for
       he knew that she would die before she suffered harm to come to her."
       "He showed good judgment there," said Leonard. "Had it not been for
       Soa, Juanna would have been a slave-girl now, or dead."
       "That is so, Outram, but whether we showed good judgment in trusting
       our lives to her tender mercies is quite another matter. Say, friend,
       do you think it well to go on with this business?"
       "Oh, confound it all!" said Leonard with irritation, "how can we turn
       back now? Just think of the journey and how foolish we should look.
       Besides, we have none of us got anything to live upon; it took most of
       the gold that I had to bribe Peter and his men to accompany us. I dare
       say that we shall all be killed, that seems very probable, but for my
       part I really shan't be sorry. I am tired of life, Francisco; it is
       nothing but a struggle and a wretchedness, and I begin to feel that
       peace is all I can hope to win. I have done my best here according to
       my lights, so I don't know why I should be afraid of the future,
       especially as it has been taken out of me pretty well in the present,
       though of course I /am/ afraid for all that, every man is. The only
       thing that troubles me is a doubt whether we ought to take Juanna into
       such a place. But really I do not know but what it would be as
       dangerous to go back as to proceed: those gentlemen with the poisoned
       arrows may have recovered from their fear of firearms by now."
       "I wish we had nothing worse than the Hereafter to fear," said
       Francisco with a sigh. "It is the journey thither that is so terrible.
       As for our expedition, having undertaken it, I think on the whole that
       we had better persevere, especially as the senora wishes it, and she
       is very hard to turn. After all our lives are in the hands of the
       Almighty, and therefore we shall be just as safe, or unsafe, among the
       People of the Mist as in a European city. Those of us who are destined
       to live will live, and those whose hour is at hand must die. And now
       good night, for I am going to sleep."
       Next morning, shortly before dawn, Leonard was awakened by a hubbub
       among the natives, and creeping out of his blankets, he found that
       some of them, who had been to the river to draw water, had captured
       two bushmen belonging to a nomadic tribe that lived by spearing fish.
       These wretched creatures, who notwithstanding the cold only wore a
       piece of bark tied round their shoulders, were screaming with fright,
       and it was not until they had been pacified by gifts of beads and
       empty brass cartridges that anything could be got out of them.
       When confidence had at length been restored, Otter questioned them
       closely as to the country that lay beyond the wall of rock and the
       people who dwelt in it, through one of the Settlement men, who spoke a
       language sufficiently like their own to make himself understood. They
       replied that they had never been in that country themselves, because
       they dared not go there, but they had heard of it from others.
       The land was very cold and foggy, they said, so foggy that sometimes
       people could not see each other for whole days, and in it dwelt a race
       of great men covered with hair, who sacrificed strangers to a snake
       which they worshipped, and married all their fairest maidens to a god.
       That was all they knew of the country and of the great men, for few
       who visited there ever returned to tell tidings. It was certainly a
       haunted land.
       Finding that there was no more to be learnt from the bushmen, Leonard
       suffered them to depart, which they did at considerable speed, and
       ordered the Settlement men to make ready to march. But now a fresh
       difficulty arose. The interpreter had repeated all the bushmen's story
       to his companions, among whom, it is needless to say, it produced no
       small effect. Therefore when the bearers received their orders,
       instead of striking the little tent in which Juanna slept, and
       preparing their loads as usual, after a brief consultation they
       advanced upon Leonard in a body.
       "What is it, Peter?" he asked of the headman.
       "This, Deliverer: we have travelled with you and the Shepherdess for
       three full moons, enduring much hardship and passing many dangers. Now
       we learn that there lies before us a land of cold and darkness,
       inhabited by devils who worship a devil. Deliverer, we have been good
       servants to you, and we are not cowards, as you know, but it is true
       that we fear to enter this land."
       "What do you wish to do then, Peter?" asked Leonard.
       "We wish to return whence we came, Deliverer. Already we have nearly
       earned the money that you gave to us before we started, and we will
       take no more pay if we must win it by crossing yonder wall."
       "The way back is far, Peter," answered Leonard, "and you know its
       perils. How many, think you, will reach their homes alive if I am not
       there to guide them? For know, Peter, I will not turn back now. Desert
       me, if you wish, all of you, and still I will enter this country
       alone, or with Otter only. Alone we took the slave camp and alone we
       will visit the People of the Mist."
       "Your words are true, Deliverer," said Peter, "the homeward way is far
       and its perils are many; mayhap but very few of us will live to see
       their huts again, for this is an ill-fated journey. But if we pass
       yonder," and he pointed to the wall of rock, "then we shall all of us
       certainly die, and be offered to a devil by devils."
       Leonard pulled his beard thoughtfully and said: "It seems there is
       nothing else to say, Peter, except good-bye."
       The headman saluted and was turning away with an abashed countenance
       when Juanna stopped him. Together with Otter and the others she had
       been listening to the colloquy in silence, and now spoke for the first
       time.
       "Peter," she said gently, "when you and your companions were in the
       hands of the Yellow Devil and about to be sold as slaves, who was it
       that rescued you?"
       "The Deliverer, Shepherdess."
       "Yes. And now do my ears betray me, or do I hear you say that you and
       your brethren, who with many another were saved from shame and toil by
       the Deliverer, are about to leave him in his hour of danger?"
       "You have heard aright, Shepherdess," the man answered sadly.
       "It is well, Peter. Go, children of Mavoom, my father, who can desert
       me in my need. For learn, Peter, that where you fear to tread, there
       I, a white woman, will pass alone with the Deliverer. Go, children of
       my father, and may peace go with you. Yet, as you know, I, who
       foretold the doom of the Yellow Devil, am a true prophetess, and I
       tell you this, that but a very few of you shall live to see your kraal
       again, and /you/ will not be of their number, Peter. As for those who
       come home safely, their names shall be a mockery, the little children
       shall call them coward, and traitor and jackal, and one by one they
       shall eat out their hearts and die, because they deserted him who
       saved them from the slave-ship and the scourge. Farewell, children of
       my father: may peace go with you, and may his ghost not come to haunt
       you on your path," and with one indignant glance she turned scornfully
       away.
       "Brethren," said Peter after a moment's pause, "is it to be borne that
       the Shepherdess should mock us thus and tie such ropes of shame about
       our necks?"
       "No," they answered, "we cannot bear it."
       Then for a while they consulted together again, and presently Peter
       stood forward and said: "Deliverer, we will accompany you and the
       Shepherdess into the country of devils, nor need you fear that we
       shall desert or betray you. We know well that we go to our death,
       every one of us; still it is better to die than to live bearing the
       burden of such bitter words as hide within the Shepherdess's lips."
       "Very well," answered Leonard. "Get your loads and let us start."
       "Ay! It is well indeed," put in Otter with a snort of indignation. "I
       tell you this, Peter, that before you left this place the words of the
       Shepherdess had come true for you and one or two others, for I should
       have fought you till I was killed, and though I have little wisdom yet
       I know how to fight."
       Leonard smiled at the dwarf's rage, but his heart was heavy within
       him. He knew that these men had reason on their side, and he feared
       greatly lest their evil forebodings should come true and the lives of
       all of them pay forfeit for his rashness.
       But it was too late to turn back now: things must befall as they were
       fated. _