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of the kind had come to light. And then the first signs of dawn began to show, and I felt relieved, for now at any rate, one could be up and doing. CHAPTER TWENTY NINE. WHAT WE FOUND. I have seen a good many astonished natives in my time but never a more astonished one than my boy Tom that evening after supper, when staggering to my feet and lurching unsteadily I bade him in thick and indistinct accents to go into the store and fetch some new blankets for my two guests to sleep on. When on his return, I cursed him roundly, and threw an empty bottle at his head, taking good care however that it shouldn't hit him, then subsided on to the floor to all outward appearances in the last stage of helpless intoxication, poor Tom must have thought the end of the world had come. This, of course, was part of the programme as drawn up between myself and Jan Boom. In every other particular I had scrupulously observed it even to the severe laming of my unfortunate horse. Poor beast! but then what were the passing sufferings of a mere animal, when issues such as this were in the balance! I had got through the morning joining in the pretended search, and it was while thus engaged that I found an opportunity of imparting to the other two our plan of rescue. "By the Lord!" exclaimed Kendrew, "I never heard such an extraordinary thing in my life." "The thing is, can we swallow it?" was Falkner's remark. "These niggers are such infernal liars." "Well. I'm going to follow it up, even if I go alone," I said. "Who the devil said you were going alone, Glanton?" he answered gruffly. "Look here, we rather hate each other, but you can't say that up there in Zululand, for instance, I ever backed down." "Certainly I can't, Sewin," I said. "What I can say is that in any sort of scrap there's no man I'd rather have alongside than yourself. And as for hating each other, it's only natural you should hate me I suppose, but I've never returned the compliment." "Well we'll knock hell out of someone to-night anyhow," he said. "Now let's have all particulars of the scheme." I gave them, exactly as I had had them from Jan Boom. "The thing is to keep it up," I said. "That'll be the stiffest part of all--to keep it up. We mustn't go about looking as if we had found her already. Native eyes and ears are sharp, and native deductions are swiftly drawn." This was agreed upon, and we continued our mock search more stren
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