[Charge! by George Manville Fenn]@TWC D-Link bookCharge! CHAPTER THIRTY ONE 1/12
CHAPTER THIRTY ONE. DENHAM'S BAD LUCK. The men of the corps were in high glee during the following days, the Boers making two or three attempts to cut off our grazing horses and oxen, but smarting terribly for being so venturesome.
In each case they were sent to the right-about, while our cattle were driven back into safety without the loss of a man. The enemy still surrounded us, occupying precisely the same lines; and, thoroughly dissatisfied with a style of fighting which meant taking them into the open to attack our stronghold, they laagered and strengthened their position, waiting for us to attack them.
This could only be done at the risk of terrible loss and disaster, for the Boers were so numerous that any attempt to cut through them might only result in our small force being surrounded and overwhelmed by sheer weight of numbers. Therefore our Colonel decided not to make an attack. "The Colonel says they're ten to one, Val; and as we've plenty of water and provisions, he will leave all `acting on the aggressive' to the Doppies." This remark was made by my companion Denham when we had been in possession of the old fortress for nearly a fortnight. At first, while still suffering a little from the injuries I had received, the confinement was depressing; but as I gradually recovered from my wrenches and bruises, and as there was so much to do, and we were so often called upon to be ready for the enemy, the days and nights passed not unpleasantly.
Discipline was strictly enforced, and everything was carried out in the most orderly way.
Horses and cattle were watered and sent out to graze in charge of escorts, and a troop was drawn up beyond the walls, ready to dash out should the Boers attempt to cut them off; guard was regularly mounted; and the men were set to build stone walls and roofs in parts of the old place, to give protection from the cold nights and the rain that might fall at any time. As for the men, they were as jolly as the proverbial sandboys; and at night the walls echoed with song and chorus.
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