here, Allan, my boy," said the vrouw in triumph, "I have found the
sore place on the mule's back, and didn't I make him squeal and kick,
although on most days of the week he seems to be such a good and quiet
mule--at any rate, of late."
"I dare say you did, vrouw," I said wrathfully, "but I wish you would
leave Mynheer Marais's sore places alone, seeing that if the squeals are
for you, the kicks are for me."
"What does that matter, Allan?" she asked. "He always was your enemy,
so that it is just as well you should see his heels when you are out
of reach of them. My poor boy, I think you will have a bad time of it
between the stinkcat and the mule, although you have done so much for
both of them. Well, there is one thing--Marie has a true heart. She will
never marry any man except yourself, Allan--even if you are not here to
marry," she added by an afterthought.
The old lady paused a little, staring at the ground. Then she looked up
and said:
"Allan, my dear" (for she was really fond of me, and called me thus
at times), "you didn't take the advice I gave you, namely, to look for
Pereira and not to find him. Well, I will give you some more, which you
_will_ take if you are wise."
"What is it?" I asked doubtfully; for, although she was upright enough
in her own way, the Vrouw Prinsloo could bring herself to look at things
in strange lights. Like many other women, she judged of moral codes by
the impulses of her heart, and was quite prepared to stretch them
to suit circumstances or to gain an end which she considered good in
itself.
"Just this, lad. Do you make a two days' march with Marie into the bush.
I want a little change, so I will come, too, and marry you there; for I
have got a prayer-book, and can spell out the service if we go through
it once or twice first."
Now, the vision of Marie and myself being married by the Vrouw Prinsloo
in the vast and untrodden veld, although attractive, was so absurd that
I laughed.
"Why do you laugh, Allan? Anyone can marry people if there is no one
else there; indeed, I believe that they can marry themselves."
"I dare say," I answered, not wishing to enter into a legal argument
with the vrouw. "But you see, Tante, I solemnly promised her father that
I would not marry her until she was of age, and if I broke my word I
should not be an honest man."
"An honest man!" she exclaimed with the utmost contempt; "an honest man!
Well, are Marais and Hernan Pereira honest
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