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Many, indeed, asked her in marriage, both there and among the Halakazi

people, but ever she shook her head and said, "Nay, I would wed no
man," and it was enough.

For it was the saying among men, that it was better that she should
remain unmarried, and all should look on her, than that she should

pass from their sight into the house of a husband; since they held
that her beauty was given to be a joy to all, like the beauty of the

dawn and of the evening. Yet this beauty of Nada's was a dreadful
thing, and the mother of much death, as shall be told; and because of

her beauty and the great love she bore, she, the Lily herself, must
wither, and the cup of my sorrows must be filled to overflowing, and

the heart of Umslopogaas the Slaughterer, son of Chaka the king, must
become desolate as the black plain when fire has swept it. So it was

ordained, my father, and so it befell, seeing that thus all men, white
and black, seek that which is beautiful, and when at last they find

it, then it passes swiftly away, or, perchance, it is their death. For
great joy and great beauty are winged, nor will they sojourn long upon

the earth. They come down like eagles out of the sky, and into the sky
they return again swiftly.

Thus then it came about, my father, that I, Mopo, believing my
daughter Nada to be dead, little guessed that it was she who was named

the Lily in the kraals of the Halakazi, and whom Dingaan the king
desired for a wife.

Now after I had thwarted him in this matter of the sending of an impi
to pluck the Lily from the gardens of the Halakazi, Dingaan learned to

hate me. Also I was in his secrets, and with me he had killed his
brother Chaka and his brother Umhlangana, and it was I who held him

back from the slaying of his brother Panda also; and, therefore, he
hated me, as is the fashion of small-hearted men with those who have

lifted them up. Yet he did not dare to do away with me, for my voice
was loud in the land, and when I spoke the people listened. Therefore,

in the end, he cast about for some way to be rid of me for a while,
till he should grow strong enough to kill me.

"Mopo," said the king to me one day as I sat before him in council
with others of the indunas and generals, "mindest thou of the last

words of the Great Elephant, who is dead?" This he said meaning Chaka
his brother, only he did not name him, for now the name of Chaka was

blonipa in the land, as is the custom with the names of dead kings--
that is, my father, it was not lawful that it should pass the lips.

"I remember the words, O King," I answered. "They were ominous words,
for this was their burden: that you and your house should not sit long

in the throne of kings, but that the white men should take away your
royalty and divide your territories. Such was the prophecy of the Lion

of the Zulu, why speak of it? Once before I heard him prophecy, and
his words were fulfilled. May the omen be an egg without meat; may it

never become fledged; may that bird never perch upon your roof, O
King!"

Now Dingaan trembled with fear, for the words of Chaka were in his
mind by night and by day; then he grew angry and bit his lip,

saying:--
"Thou fool, Mopo! canst thou not hear a raven croak at the gates of a

kraal but thou must needs go tell those who dwell within that he waits
to pick their eyes? Such criers of ill to come may well find ill at

hand, Mopo." He ceased, looked on me threateningly awhile, and went
on: "I did not speak of those words rolling by chance from a tongue

half loosed by death, but of others that told of a certain Bulalio, of
a Slaughterer who rules the People of the Axe and dwells beneath the

shadow of the Ghost Mountain far away to the north yonder. Surely I
heard them all as I sat beneath the shade of the reed-fence before

ever I came to save him who was my brother from the spear of Masilo,
the murderer, whose spear stole away the life of a king?"

"I remember those words also, O King!" I said. "Is it the will of the
king that an impi should be gathered to eat up this upstart? Such was

the command of the one who is gone, given, as it were, with his last
breath."

"Nay, Mopo, that is not my will. If no impi can be found by thee to
wipe away the Halakazi and bring one whom I desire to delight my eyes,

then surely none can be found to eat up this Slaughterer and his
people. Moreover, Bulalio, chief of the People of the Axe, has not

offended against me, but against an elephant whose trumpetings are
done. Now this is my will, Mopo, my servant: that thou shouldst take

with thee a few men only and go gently to this Bulalio, and say to
him: 'A greater Elephant stalks through the land than he who has gone

to sleep, and it has come to his ears--that thou, Chief of the People
of the Axe, dost pay no tribute, and hast said that, because of the

death of a certain Mopo, thou wilt have nothing to do with him whose
shadow lies upon the land. Now one Mopo is sent to thee, Slaughterer,

to know if this tale is true, for, if it be true, then shalt thou
learn the weight of the hoof of that Elephant who trumpets in the

kraal of Umgugundhlovu. Think, then, and weigh thy words before thou
dost answer, Slaughterer.'"

Now I, Mopo, heard the commands of the king and pondered them in my
mind, for I knew well that it was the design of Dingaan to be rid of

me for a space that he might find time to plot my overthrow, and that
he cared little for this matter of a petty chief, who, living far

away, had dared to defy Chaka. Yet I wished to go, for there had
arisen in me a great desire to see this Bulalio, who spoke of

vengeance to be taken for one Mopo, and whose deeds were such as the
deeds of Umslopogaas would have been, had Umslopogaas lived to look

upon the light. Therefore I answered:--
"I hear the king. The king's word shall be done, though, O King, thou

sendest a big man upon a little errand."
"Not so, Mopo," answered Dingaan. "My heart tells me that this chicken

of a Slaughterer will grow to a great cock if his comb is not cut
presently; and thou, Mopo, art versed in cutting combs, even of the

tallest."
"I hear the king," I answered again.

So, my father, it came about that on the morrow, taking with me but
ten chosen men, I, Mopo, started on my journey towards the Ghost

Mountain, and as I journeyed I thought much of how I had trod that
path in bygone days. Then, Macropha, my wife, and Nada, my daughter,

and Umslopogaas, the son of Chaka, who was thought to be my son,
walked at my side. Now, as I imagined, all were dead and I walked

alone; doubtless I also should soon be dead. Well, people lived few
days and evil in those times, and what did it matter? At the least I

had wreaked vengeance on Chaka and satisfied my heart.
At length I came one night to that lonely spot where we had camped in

the evil hour when Umslopogaas was borne away by the lioness, and once
more I looked upon the cave whence he had dragged the cub, and upon

the awful face of the stone Witch who sits aloft upon the Ghost
Mountain forever and forever. I could sleep little that night, because

of the sorrow at my heart, but sat awake looking, in the brightness of
the moon, upon the grey face of the stone Witch, and on the depths of

the forest that grew about her knees, wondering the while if the bones
of Umslopogaas lay broken in that forest. Now as I journeyed, many

tales had been told to me of this Ghost Mountain, which all swore was
haunted, so said some, by men in the shape of wolves; and so said

some, by the Esemkofu--that is, by men who have died and who have been
brought back again by magic. They have no tongues, the Esemkofu, for

had they tongues they would cry aloud to mortals the awful secrets of
the dead, therefore, they can but utter a wailing like that of a babe.

Surely one may hear them in the forests at night as they wail "Ai!--
ah! Ai--ah!" among the silent trees!

You laugh, my father, but I did not laugh as I thought of these tales;
for, if men have spirits, where do the spirits go when the body is

dead? They must go somewhere, and would it be strange that they should
return to look upon the lands where they were born? Yet I never

thought much of such matters, though I am a doctor, and know something
of the ways of the Amatongo, the people of the ghosts. To speak truth,

my father, I have had so much to do with the loosing of the spirits of
men that I never troubled myself overmuch with them after they were

loosed; there will be time to do this when I myself am of their
number.

So I sat and gazed on the mountain and the forest that grew over it
like hair on the head of a woman, and as I gazed I heard a sound that

came from far away, out of the heart of the forest as it seemed. At
first it was faint and far off, a distant thing like the cry of

children in a kraal across a valley; then it grew louder, but still I
could not say what it might be; now it swelled and swelled, and I knew

it--it was the sound of wild beats at chase. Nearer came the music,
the rocks rang with it, and its voice set the blood beating but to

hearken to it. That pack was great which ran a-hunting through the
silent night; and now it was night, on the other side of the slope

only, and the sound swelled so loud that those who were with me awoke
also and looked forth. Now of a sudden a great koodoo bull appeared

for an instantstanding out against the sky on the crest of the ridge,
then vanished in the shadow. He was running towards us; presently we

saw him again speeding on his path with great bounds. We saw this also
--forms grey and gaunt and galloping, in number countless, that leaped

along his path, appearing on the crest of the rise, disappearing into
the shadow, seen again on the slope, lost in the valley; and with them

two other shapes, the shapes of men.
Now the big buck bounded past us not half a spear's throw away, and

behind him streamed the countless wolves, and from the throats of the
wolves went up that awful music. And who were these two that came with

the wolves, shapes of men great and strong? They ran silently and
swift, wolves' teeth gleamed upon their heads, wolves' hides hung

about their shoulders. In the hands of one was an axe--the moonlight
shone upon it--in the hand of the other a heavy club. Neck and neck

they ran; never before had we seen men travel so fast. See! they sped
down the slope towards us; the wolves were left behind, all except

four of them; we heard the beating of their feet; they came, they
passed, they were gone, and with them their unnumbered company. The

music grew faint, it died, it was dead; the hunt was far away, and the
night was still again!

"Now, my brethren," I asked of those who were with me, "what is this
that we have seen?"

Then one answered, "We have seen the Ghosts who live in the lap of the
old Witch, and those men are the Wolf-Brethren, the wizards who are

kings of the Ghosts."
CHAPTER XXIII

MOPO REVEALS HIMSELF TO THE SLAUGHTERER
All that night we watched, but we neither saw nor heard any more of

the wolves, nor of the men who hunted with them. On the morrow, at
dawn, I sent a runner to Bulalio, chief of the People of the Axe,

saying that a messenger came to him from Dingaan, the king, who
desired to speak with him in peace within the gates of his kraal. I

charged the messenger, however, that he should not tell my name, but
should say only that it was "Mouth of Dingaan." Then I and those with

me followed slowly on the path of the man whom I sent forward, for the
way was still far, and I had bidden him return and meet me bearing the

words of the Slaughterer, Holder of the Axe.
All that day till the sun grew low we talked round the base of the

great Ghost Mountain, following the line of the river. We met no one,
but once we came to the ruins of a kraal, and in it lay the broken

bones of many men, and with the bones rusty assegais and the remains
of ox-hide shields, black and white in colour. Now I examined the

shields, and knew from their colour that they had been carried in the
hands of those soldiers who, years ago, were sent out by Chaka to seek

for Umslopogaas, but who had returned no more.
"Now," I said, "it has fared ill with those soldiers of the Black One

who is gone, for I think that these are the shields they bore, and
that their eyes once looked upon the world through the holes in yonder

skulls."
"These are the shields they bore, and those are the skulls they wore,"

answered one. "See, Mopo, son of Makedama, this is no man's work that
has brought them to their death. Men do not break the bones of their

foes in pieces as these bones are broken. Wow! men do not break them,
but wolves do, and last night we saw wolves a-hunting; nor did they

hunt alone, Mopo. Wow! this is a haunted land!"
Then we went on in silence, and all the way the stone face of the



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