icon 0
icon TOP UP
rightIcon
icon Reading History
rightIcon
icon Sign out
rightIcon
icon Get the APP
rightIcon

The People of the Mist

Chapter 6 THE TALE OF SOA

Word Count: 2883    |    Released on: 29/11/2017

o lives on the banks of the Zambesi some four days' march fr

ite man named?

, married a white woman, a Portuguese whose father dwelt at Delagoa Bay, and who was beautiful, ah! beautiful. Then he settled on the banks of the Zambesi and became a trader, building the house

several times he has collected ivory and feathers and gold worth much money, and also has bred cattle by hundreds. Then he would say

g drunk he gambled away all his money in a month, and once he lost it in a river, the boat being overset by a river-horse and the ivory and gold sinking out of sight. Still, the last time that he started he left his daughter, the Shepherdess, at Durban, and there she s

which is called Home. He listened to her, for Mavoom loves his daughter, and said that it should be so. But he said this also: that first he would go on a trading journey up the river to buy a

, and the lady Juanna his daughter wept, for though she is fearless, it was not fitting that she should be left thus

of that Great-Great whom she worships. On the thirteenth morning, therefore, she sat beneath the verandah of the house, reading in the book according to her custom, and I went about my work making food ready. Suddenly I heard a tumult, and looking over the wal

y and that. Some of the people fell, and more were made captive, but others of them

being still in her hand. But as she reached it, the man mounted on the mule overtook her, and she turned about and faced him, setting he

n the terror of this country for many years. He is named the Yellow Devil by the black people, but his Portuguese name is Pereira, and he has his place in a sec

ne trading up the river, has he not? Ah! I knew it, or perhaps I should not have ventured here. But it was wrong of him to leave one so pretty all alone. Well, well, he is about his business, and I must be about mine, for I am a merchant also, my dove, a m

ared at him with frightened eyes, and the slave-traders his servants laughed aloud at his evil words. Prese

wilds, it is the custom of my mistress to carry a portion of this poison hidden in her hair, since a time might come when she must use it to save herself from worse than death. Now it seemed to her that this hour was upon her, and I knew that she was about to take the poison. Then in my fear I whispere

bow her head slightly, and her hand fel

s' journey to my little Nest on the coast, and who can tell when the dhows wil

t your wickedness shall bring your own death upon you;' and she glanced round at the bodies of those whom the slave-traders had murdered, at the captives u

after the fashion of his people as a protection against the curse, 'What! you prophesy, do you, my dove, and

such of the captives as they thought to be of no value, the drivers flogged the slaves with their

rescue the Shepherdess whom they loved. But they would not do this, for the heart was out of them, they were cowed by fear, and most of the head-men had been taken captive. No, they would do nothing except weep over

of them, till at length the meat was done and my strength left me. On the morning of the fifth day I could go no farther, so I crept to the top of a koppie and watched their lon

in these mountains, and next day I travelled on in search of them, thinking perchance they would help me, for I know well that the English hate the slave-drivers. And here, my lord, I am come at last with much toil, and now I pray you deliver my mistress the Shepherdess from the hands of the Yellow D

s head and stared at her, thinking that her sorrows had made her mad. There was no look of madness upon the woman's fierce face, ho

d you, are dead through fever, and I myself am smitten with it. And yet you ask me, alone as I am, to travel to this slave-trader's camp that is you

ow also that you Englishmen can do great things when you are well paid. Strive to help me and you shall have your rewar

for the veiled sarcasm of Soa's speech had stung him, "unless

ered quietly; "to-morrow

look for your mistress, to say nothing of rescuing her, when I do not know whither she has been taken?

he Nest, it is secret; that I have discovered

, who had been sitting by listening to all that was said in stolid si

ou not once ta

once, ten

was

chief, as I was born to be. Then the Yellow Devil, that same man of whom the woman speaks, fell upon us with Arabs, and took us to his place, there to await the slave-dhows.

our way to that p

s slaves were blindfolded during the last day's march. But I worked up my bandage with my nose-ah! my big nose served me well that day-a

ind the spot

ow Luabo. Then I should follow the river down a day's journey. Afterwards two or more days through the swamps and we come to the p

aster's settlement, so your mistress has been there some three or four days if she ever reached it. Now, from what I know of the habits of slave-traders on this coast, the dhows will not begin to take in their car

that I will tell you to-morrow, after I have cured you of your fever. And no

Claim Your Bonus at the APP

Open
The People of the Mist
The People of the Mist
“First published in 1894, The People of the Mist is the tale of a British adventurer, Leonard Outram, who seeks wealth in the wilds of Africa, finds an unlikely romance, and discovers a lost race that possesses fabulous jewels. But before our hero can achieve his worldly goals, he becomes ensnared in a power-struggle between a monarch and the priesthood of a giant crocodile god of this mysterious land.”
1 Chapter 1 THE SINS OF THE FATHER ARE VISITED ON THE CHILDREN2 Chapter 2 THE SWEARING OF THE OATH3 Chapter 3 AFTER SEVEN YEARS4 Chapter 4 THE LAST VIGIL5 Chapter 5 OTTER GIVES COUNSEL6 Chapter 6 THE TALE OF SOA7 Chapter 7 LEONARD SWEARS ON THE BLOOD OF ACA8 Chapter 8 THE START9 Chapter 9 THE YELLOW DEVIL'S NEST10 Chapter 10 LEONARD MAKES A PLAN11 Chapter 11 THAT HERO OTTER12 Chapter 12 A CHOICE LOT13 Chapter 13 A MIDNIGHT MARRIAGE14 Chapter 14 VENGEANCE15 Chapter 15 DISILLUSION16 Chapter 16 MISUNDERSTANDINGS17 Chapter 17 THE DEATH OF MAVOOM18 Chapter 18 SOA SHOWS HER TEETH19 Chapter 19 THE END OF THE JOURNEY20 Chapter 20 THE COMING OF ACA21 Chapter 21 THE FOLLY OF OTTER22 Chapter 22 THE TEMPLE OF JAL23 Chapter 23 HOW JUANNA CONQUERED NAM24 Chapter 24 OLFAN TELLS OF THE RUBIES25 Chapter 25 THE SACRIFICE AFTER THE NEW ORDER26 Chapter 26 THE LAST OF THE SETTLEMENT MEN27 Chapter 27 FATHER AND DAUGHTER28 Chapter 28 JUANNA PREVARICATES29 Chapter 29 THE TRIAL OF THE GODS30 Chapter 30 FRANCISCO'S EXPIATION31 Chapter 31 THE WHITE DAWN32 Chapter 32 HOW OTTER FOUGHT THE WATER DWELLER33 Chapter 33 TRAPPED34 Chapter 34 NAM'S LAST ARGUMENT35 Chapter 35 BE NOBLE OR BE BASE36 Chapter 36 HOW OTTER CAME BACK37 Chapter 37 "I AM REPAID, QUEEN"38 Chapter 38 THE TRIUMPH OF NAM39 Chapter 39 THE PASSING OF THE BRIDGE40 Chapter 40 OTTER'S FAREWELL