About eighteen months had gone by, and once again, in the autumn of the

year 1856, I found myself at old Umbezi's kraal, where there seemed to

be an extraordinary market for any kind of gas-pipe that could be called

a gun. Well, as a trader who could not afford to neglect profitable

markets, which are hard things to find, there I was.

Now, in eighteen months many things become a little obscured in one's

memory, especially if they have to do with savages, in whom, after all,

one takes only a philosophical and a business interest. Therefore I may

perhaps be excused if I had more or less forgotten a good many of the

details of what I may call the Mameena affair. These, however, came back

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to me very vividly when the first person that I met--at some distance

from the kraal, where I suppose she had been taking a country walk--was

the beautiful Mameena herself. There she was, looking quite unchanged

and as lovely as ever, sitting under the shade of a wild fig-tree and

fanning herself with a handful of its leaves.

Of course I jumped off my wagon-box and greeted her.

"Siyakubona [that is, good morrow], Macumazahn," she said. "My heart is

glad to see you."

"Siyakubona, Mameena," I answered, leaving out all reference to my

heart. Then I added, looking at her: "Is it true that you have a new

husband?"

"Yes, Macumazahn, an old lover of mine has become a new husband. You

know whom I mean--Saduko. After the death of that evil-doer, Masapo, he

grew very urgent, and the King, also the Inkosazana Nandie, pressed it

on me, and so I yielded. Also, to be honest, Saduko was a good match, or

seemed to be so."

By now we were walking side by side, for the train of wagons had gone

ahead to the old outspan. So I stopped and looked her in the face.

"'Seemed to be,'" I repeated. "What do you mean by 'seemed to be'? Are

you not happy this time?"

"Not altogether, Macumazahn," she answered, with a shrug of her

shoulders. "Saduko is very fond of me--fonder than I like indeed, since

it causes him to neglect Nandie, who, by the way, has another son, and,

although she says little, that makes Nandie cross. In short," she added,

with a burst of truth, "I am the plaything, Nandie is the great lady,

and that place suits me ill."

"If you love Saduko, you should not mind, Mameena."

"Love," she said bitterly. "Piff! What is love? But I have asked you

that question once before."

"Why are you here, Mameena?" I inquired, leaving it unanswered.

"Because Saduko is here, and, of course, Nandie, for she never leaves

him, and he will not leave me; because the Prince Umbelazi is coming;

because there are plots afoot and the great war draws near--that war in

which so many must die."




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