Complete works of talbot.., p.44

Complete Works of Talbot Mundy, page 44

 

Complete Works of Talbot Mundy
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  “What was the first message that the babu brought this evening?” he asked, still being very careful not to look into the sergeant’s eyes. He spoke as comrade to comrade — servant of the “Salt” to servant of the “Salt.”

  “Which babu, sahib?” asked Arjan Singh, unblinking.

  Now, in all probability, this man — since he had been asleep — knew nothing about the message to groom Bagh. To have answered, “The babu who spoke about the charger,” might have been a serious mistake.

  “Arjan Singh, look me in the eyes!” he ordered, and the Sikh obeyed. He was taller than Warrington, and looked down on him.

  “Are you a true friend of the risaldar-major?”

  “May I die, sahib, if I am not!”

  “And I? What of me? Am I his friend or his enemy?”

  The sergeant hesitated.

  “Can I read men’s hearts?” he asked.

  “Yes!” said Warrington. “And so can I. That is why I had you called from your sleep. I sent for you to learn the truth. What was the message given by the fat babu to one of the guard by the outer gate this evening, and delivered by him or by some other man to D Squadron?”

  “Sahib, it was not a written message.”

  “Repeat it to me.”

  “Sahib, it was verbal. I can not remember it.”

  “Arjan Singh, you lie! Did I ever lie to you? Did I ever threaten you and not carry out my threats — promise you and not keep my promise? I am a soldier! Are you a cur?”

  “God forbid, sahib! I—”

  “Arjan Singh! Repeat that message to me word for word, please, not as a favor, nor as obeying an order, but as a friend of Ranjoor Singh to a friend of Ranjoor Singh!”

  “The message was to the squadron, not to me, sahib.”

  “Are you not of the squadron?”

  “Make it an order, sahib!”

  “Certainly not — nor a favor either!”

  “Sahib, I—”

  “Nor will I threaten you! I guarantee you absolute immunity if you refuse to repeat it. My word on it! I am Ranjoor Singh’s friend, and I ask of his friend!”

  “The babu said: ‘Says Ranjoor Singh, “Let the squadron be on its best behavior! Let the squadron know that surely before the blood runs he will be there to lead it, wherever it is! Meanwhile, let the squadron be worthy of its salt and of its officers!”’“

  “Was that all?” asked Warrington.

  “All, sahib. May my tongue rot if I lie!”

  “Thank you, Arjan Singh. That’s all. You needn’t mention our conversation. Good night.”

  “Fooled,” chuckled Warrington. “She’s fooled us to the limit of our special bent, and I take it that’s stiff-neckedness!”

  He hurried away toward Colonel Kirby’s quarters, swinging his lantern and humming to himself.

  “And this isn’t the Arabian Nights!” he told himself. “It’s Delhi — Twentieth Century A.D.! Gad! Wouldn’t the whole confounded army rock with laughter!”

  Then he stopped chuckling, to hurry faster, for a giant horn had rooted chunks out of the blackness by the barrack gate, and now what sounded like a racing car was tearing up the drive. The head-lights dazzled him, but he ran and reached the colonel’s porch breathless. He was admitted at once, and found the colonel and Brammle together, facing an aide-de-camp. In the colonel’s hand was a medium-sized, sealed envelope.

  “Shall I repeat it, sir?” asked the aide-de-camp.

  “Yes, if you think it necessary” answered Kirby.

  “The sealed orders are not to be opened until out at sea. You are expected to parade at dawn the day after tomorrow, and there will be somebody from headquarters to act as guide for the occasion. In fact, you will be guided at each point until it is time to open your orders. No explanations will be given about anything until later on. That’s all. Good night, sir — and good luck!”

  The aide-de-camp held out his hand, and Colonel Kirby shook it a trifle perfunctorily; he was not much given to display of sentiment. The aide-de-camp saluted, and a minute later the giant car spurned the gravel out from under its rear wheels as it started off to warn another regiment.

  “So we’ve got our route!” said Kirby.

  “And, thank God, we take our own horses!” said Brammle fervently.

  “Bet you a thousand the other end’s Marseilles!” said Warrington. “We’re in luck. They’d have mounted us on bus-horses if we hadn’t brought our own; we’d have had to ring a bell to start and stop a squadron. Who wouldn’t be light cavalry?”

  Kirby put the sealed letter in an inside pocket.

  “I’m going to sleep,” said Brammle, yawning. “Night, sir!”

  “Night!” said Kirby; but Warrington stayed on. He went and stood near the window, and when Kirby had seen Brammle to the door, he joined him there.

  “What now, Warrington?”

  “Caught ’em grooming Ranjoor Singh’s charger in the dark!”

  “Why?”

  “Said it was an order from Ranjoor Singh!”

  “I’m getting tired of this. I don’t know what to make of it.”

  “That isn’t nearly the worst, sir. Listen to this! Long before Yasmini promised us — before we knelt to save his life and honor — Ranjoor Singh had sent a message to his squadron guaranteein’ to be with ’em before the blood runs! Specific guarantee, and no conditions!”

  “Then—”

  “Exactly, sir!”

  “She fooled us, eh?”

  “D’you suppose she’s for or against the government, sir?”

  “I don’t know. Thank God we’ve got our marching orders! Go and wash your head! And, Warrington — hold your tongue!”

  Warrington held up his right hand.

  “So help me, sir!” he grinned, “But will she hold hers?”

  CHAPTER 9

  Westward, into the hungry West,

  (Oh, listen, wise men, listen ye!)

  Whirls the East Wind on his quest,

  Whimpering, worrying, hurrying, lest

  The light o’ertake him. Listen ye!

  Mark ye the burden of his sigh:

  “Westward sinks the sun to die!

  Westward wing the vultures!” — Aye,

  (Listen, wise men, listen ye!)

  The East must lose — the West must gain,

  For none come back to the East again,

  Though widows call them! Listen ye!

  — from Yasmini’s Song.

  NOW, India is unlike every other country in the world in all particulars, and Delhi is in some respects the very heart through which India’s unusualness flows. Delhi has five railway stations with which to cope with latter-day floods of paradoxical necessity; and nobody knew from which railway station troops might be expected to entrain or whither, although Delhi knew that there was war.

  There did not seem to be anything very much out of the ordinary at any of the stations. In India one or two sidings are nearly always full of empty trains; there did not seem to be more of them than usual.

  At the British barracks there was more or less commotion, because Thomas Atkins likes to voice his joy when the long peace breaks at last and he may justify himself; but in the native lines, where dignity is differently understood, the only men who really seemed unusually busy were the farriers, and the armorers who sharpened swords.

  The government offices appeared to be undisturbed, and certainly no more messengers ran about than usual, the only difference was that one or two of them were open at a very early hour. But even in them — and Englishmen were busy in them — there seemed no excitement. Delhi had found time in a night to catch her breath and continue listening; for, unlike most big cities that brag with or without good reason, Delhi is listening nearly all the time.

  A man was listening in the dingiest of all the offices on the ground floor of a big building on the side away from the street — a man in a drab silk suit, who twisted a leather watch-guard around his thumb and untwisted it incessantly. There was a telephone beside him, and a fair-sized pile of telegraph forms, but beyond that not much to show what his particular business might be. He did not look aggressive, but he seemed nervous, for he jumped perceptibly when the telephone-bell rang; and being a government telephone, with no commercial aims, it did not ring loud.

  “Yes,” he said, with the receiver at his ear. “Yes, yes. Who else? Oh, I forgot for the moment. Four, three, two, nine, two. Give yours! Very well, I’m listening.”

  Whoever was speaking at the other end had a lot to say, and none of it can have been expected, for the man in the drab silk suit twisted his wrinkled face and worked his eyes in a hundred expressions that began with displeasure and passed through different stages of surprise to acquiescence.

  “I want you to know,” he said, “that I got my information at first hand. I got it from Yasmini herself, from three of the hill-men who were present, and from the Afridi who was kicked and beaten. All except the Afridi, who wasn’t there by that time, agreed that Ranjoor Singh had words with the German afterward. Eh? What’s that?”

  He listened again for about five minutes, and then hung up the receiver with an expression of mixed irritation and amusement.

  “Caught me hopping on the wrong leg this time!” he muttered, beginning to twist at his watch-guard again.

  Presently he sat up and looked bored, for he heard the fast trot of a big, long-striding horse. A minute later a high dogcart drew up in the street, and he heard a man’s long — striding footsteps coming round the corner.

  “Like horse, like man, like regiment!” he muttered. “Pick his stride or his horse’s out of a hundred, and” — he pulled out his nickel watch— “he’s ten minutes earlier than I expected him! Morning, Colonel Kirby!” he said pleasantly, as Kirby strode in, helmet in hand. “Take a seat.”

  He noticed Kirby’s scalp was red and that he smelt more than faintly of carbolic.

  “Morning!” said Kirby.

  “I’m wondering what’s brought you,” said the man in drab.

  “I’ve come about Ranjoor Singh,” said Kirby; and the man in drab tried to look surprised.

  “What about him? Reconsidered yesterday’s decision?”

  “No,” said Kirby. “I’ve come to ask what news you have of him.” And Kirby’s eye, that some men seemed to think so like a bird’s, transfixed the man in drab, so that he squirmed as if he had been impaled.

  “You must understand, Colonel Kirby — in fact, I’m sure you do understand — that my business doesn’t admit of confidences. Even if I wanted to divulge information, I’m not allowed to. I stretched a point yesterday when I confided in you my suspicions regarding Ranjoor Singh, but that doesn’t imply that I’m going to tell you all I know. I asked you what you knew, you may remember.”

  “I told you!” snapped Kirby. “Is Ranjoor Singh still under suspicion?”

  That was a straight question of the true Kirby type that admitted of no evasion, and the man in drab pulled his watch out, knocking it on the desk absent-mindedly, as if it were an egg that he wished to crack. He must either answer or not, it seemed, so he did neither.

  “Why do you ask?” he parried.

  “I’ve a right to know! Ranjoor Singh’s my wing commander, and a better officer or a more loyal gentleman doesn’t exist. I want him! I want to know where he is! And if he’s under a cloud, I want to know why! Where is he?”

  “I don’t know where he is,” said the man in drab. “Is he — ah — absent without leave?”

  “Certainly not!” said Kirby. “I’ve seen to that!”

  “Then you’ve communicated with him?”

  “No.”

  “Then if his regiment were to march without him—”

  “It won’t if I can help it!” said Kirby.

  “And if you can’t help it, Colonel Kirby?”

  “In that case he has got what he asked for, and there can be no charge against him until he shows up.”

  “I understand you have your marching orders?”

  “I have sealed orders!” snapped Kirby.

  “To be opened at sea?”

  “To be opened when I see fit!”

  “Oh!”

  “Yes,” said Kirby. “I asked you is Ranjoor Singh still under suspicion!”

  “My good sir, I am not the arbiter of Ranjoor Singh’s destiny! How should I know?”

  “I intend to know!” vowed Kirby, rising.

  “I’m prepared to state that Ranjoor Singh is not in danger of arrest. I don’t see that you have right to ask more than that, Colonel Kirby. Martial law has been declared this morning, and things don’t take their ordinary course any longer, you know.”

  Kirby paced once across the office floor, and once back again. Then he faced the man in drab as a duelist faces his antagonist.

  “I don’t like to go over men’s heads,” he said, “as you threatened to do to me, for instance, yesterday. If you will give me satisfactory assurance that Ranjoor Singh is being treated as a loyal officer should be, I will ask no more. If not, I shall go now to the general commanding. As you say, there’s martial law now, he’s the man to see.”

  “Colonel Kirby,” said the man in drab, twisting at his watch-guard furiously, “if you’ll tell me what’s in your sealed orders — open them and see — I’ll tell you what I know about Ranjoor Singh, and we’ll call it a bargain!”

  “I wasn’t joking,” said Kirby, turning red as his scalp from the roots of his hair to his collar.

  “I’m in deadly earnest!” said the man in drab.

  So, without a word more, Colonel Kirby hurried out again, carrying his saber in his left hand at an angle that was peculiar to him, and that illustrated determination better than words could have done.

  His huge horse plunged away almost before he had gained the seat, and, saber and all, he gained the seat at a step-and-a-jump. But the sais was not up behind, and Kirby had scarcely settled down to drive before the man in drab had the telephone mouthpiece to his lips and had given his mysterious number again — 4-3-2-9-2.

  “He’s coming, sir!” he said curtly.

  Somebody at the other end apparently asked, “Who is coming?” for the man in drab answered:

  “Kirby.”

  Five minutes later Kirby caught a general at breakfast, and was received with courtesy and feigned surprise.

  “D’you happen to know anything about my risaldar-major, Ranjoor Singh?” asked Kirby, after a hasty apology for bursting in.

  “Why?”

  “He was under suspicion yesterday — I was told so. Next he disappeared. Then I received a message from him asking me to assign him to special duty; that was after I’d more than half believed him burned to death in a place called the ‘House of the Eight Half-Brothers.’ He has sent some most extraordinary messages to his squadron by the hand of a mysterious babu, but not a word of explanation of any kind. Can you tell me anything about him, sir?”

  “Wasn’t a trooper of yours murdered yesterday?” the general asked.

  “Yes,” said Kirby.

  “And another missing?”

  “Yes, sir.”

  “Did Ranjoor Singh go off to search for the missing man?”

  “I was told so.”

  “H-rrrr-ump! Well, I’m glad you came; you’ve saved me trouble! Did you put Ranjoor Singh in Orders as assigned to special duty?”

  “Yes.”

  “What is the missing trooper’s name?”

  “Jagut Singh.”

  “Well, please enter him in Orders, too.”

  “Special service?”

  “Special service,” said the general. “How about Ranjoor Singh’s charger?”

  “I understand that he’s been kept well groomed by Ranjoor Singh’s orders, and my adjutant tells me he has the horse in care in his own stable.”

  The general made a note.

  “Whose stable?” lie asked.

  “Warrington’s.”

  “Warrington, of Outram’s Own, eh? Captain Warrington?”

  The general wrote that down, while Kirby watched him bewildered.

  “Well now, Kirby, that’ll be all right Have the horse left there, will you? I hope you’ve been able to dispose of your own horses to advantage. Two chargers don’t seem a large allowance for a commanding officer of a cavalry regiment, but that’s all you can take with you. You’ll have to leave the rest behind.”

  “Haven’t given it a thought, sir! Too busy thinking about Ranjoor Singh. Worried about him.”

  “Shouldn’t worry!” said the general. “Ranjoor Singh’s all right.”

  “That’s the first assurance I’ve had of it, except by way of a mysterious note,” said Kirby.

  “By all right, I mean that he isn’t in disgrace. But now about your horses and private effects. You’ve done nothing about them?”

  “I’ll have time to attend to that this afternoon, sir.”

  “Oh, no, you won’t. That’s why I’m glad you came! These” — he gave him a sealed envelope— “are supplementary orders, to be opened when you get back to barracks. I want you out of the way by noon if possible. We’ll send a man down this morning to take charge of whatever any of you want kept, and you’d better tell him to sell the rest and pay the money to your bankers; he’ll be a responsible officer. That’s all. Good-by, Kirby, and good luck!”

  The general held out his hand.

  “One more minute, sir,” said Kirby. “About Ranjoor Singh!”

  “What about him?”

  “Well, sir — what about him?”

  “What have you heard?”

  “That — I’ve heard a sort of promise that he’ll be with his squadron, to lead it, before the blood runs.”

  “Won’t that be time enough?” asked the general, smiling. He was looking at Kirby very closely. “Not sick, are you?” he asked. “No? I thought your scalp looked rather redder than usual.”

  Kirby flushed to the top of his collar instantly, and the general pretended to arrange a sheaf of papers on the table.

 

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