The din of ancient Delhi roared skyward, and the Delhi crowd surged and fought to be nearer to the flame; but the police already had a cordon around the building, and another detachment w
from the seat of his high dogcart to speak to the E
before the alarm went in. When we got
pe from the buildi
about; and there are as any galleries up above connecting with
r anybody down
ater'll do what the fire left undone. Pretty
of escape
I've hear
eh? Be some days before the
n houses nearest it! Loo
lapsed beneath the weight. The thunder of it was almost drowned in a roar of delight, for the crowd, sensing th
of a military cloak, Warrington rode a borrowed Arab pony, the pony's owner's sais running beside him to help clear a pass
to go to hell. So I went into the next office, where all the big panjandrums hide-and some of the little ones-and they told me what you know, sir, tha
don't
t a real enemy-and play a low-down trick on Ranjoor Singh. Ranjoor Singh's a g
go up and the crowd striking at the rats t
said Kirby. "Those rats are not cooked through. Did
y've got it all cut an' dried-somebody in the basement upset a lamp, according to them-nobody up-stairs-nobody to turn
a trooper of ours
es
did th
e lamp that wa
crowd with the skill of one whose business is to handle men in quantity.
d Warringt
d 'em d'yo
ks in Delhi like wate
ings, and by the gate was a guard of twenty men drawn up to keep the crowd at bay. The shrill voices of the women drowned the answers of th
ficer saluted
whip in the affirmative. From that instant the guard b
at a speed there was no overhauling. He wanted to be alone. But hi
Brammle. Y
e, Jehu?" a
o go. No, no route yet-lik
arseilles! Oh, who wouldn't be light cavalry? First-class all
g with me. Don't know how long we'll be gone. If anybod
's told '
misbehaves from now for
finite promise
ng else
N
ee you
you l
y, and Kirby turne
talk. Have some grub sent in here to me, and join me at it in hal
with his officers, the better-as a rule; but it does not pay to think in the presence of either. Officers
ington found him just eme
the-air an' dancin'!"
tin' by the barrack g
as we'll catch 'em for
for a job as cle
t m
er
ntials-bad hat! S
guard
hisper; but the colonel and his adjutant ate hurriedly in silence, and the only thing remarkable that the servant was able to report to the regimen
ged landau thing, taken over from the previous mess. The colonel peered through outer darkness at the box
?" asked
e c
traces as if they had a gun behind them. Three hundred yards beyond the barrac
Squadron. Until the novelty wears off it would disconcert any
erson named Yas
es not,
o her house
They tore through streets that were living streams of human beings-streams that split apart to let them through and closed like water again
n of as dead," he remar
color against
been foul play, Warrington. I happen to know that Ranjoor Singh has been suspected in a certain quarter. Incidentally, I staked my own reputation on
itish officers, and then natives, who would have gone to some trouble to
e German rule for a ch
wear her heart on her
s awake, if this is Delhi and not a nightmare!
es. But, that night, day and night were blended in one uproar, and the Chandni Chowk was at floodtide,
d voice, and made a wide circuit through dark lanes where groups of people argued at the
*
from the Chandni Chowk, and sprang out of the
manded Kirby, and the r
rough the gloomy opening in a wall that Yasmini devised to l
he right place?" he whispered,
here're stairs
on the lower step Warrington began to whistle softly to himself. Next to war, an adventure of this kind w
their eyes could not penetrate the upper blackness, yet they both
nstinctively sought
elt for his
e silently and holding to the rail; then the absurdity of the situation appealed to both,
bout a minute knocking on what felt like the panels of a door; but
had climbed some ten steps and had turned to negotiate ten more that ascended at an angle-a
d and flashed before them so that they could not tell which way to turn. Somewhere there was a glassbead curtai
ittle nutbrown maid, who seemed too lovely to be Indian. Even then th
mes?" she asked in Hindustani;
an a pipe-clayed sword-belt; there is no
nd Captain Warri
ibs state the
N
o the sahibs
live here n
ly, s
to talk
ey could neither of them tell through which it was that the music came and the smell of musk and sandal-smoke. But sh
ded colonel on the eve of war-feeling out of place and foolish, but Warring
open window at which sat a dozen maids, and of the punkahs swinging overhe
aware of itself!" w
anded Kirby, st
y entered, but at sight of Kirby's military clothes they had looked alarmed and moved as if a whip had been cracked not far a
ipping in front of them as if a gust of wind were blowing her. Her m
d furnished with deep-cushioned divans. There were mirrors in this room, too, so that Kirby laughed aloud to see how incongruous a
ey had half-frightened the life out of her, and then she ran out of
irm enough to allow him to retain his dignity. Cavalry dress-trousers are not b
ettled into place, "it's the first time in my l
not commit hi
ed, but Kirby honestly interested by the splendor of the hangings and the ge
e asked out of one side of his mouth. And then
no sound, no movement, no sign of any one, and Warrington looked in the mirrors keenly while he pretended to be interested in his littl
do. I'm going to ge
each end, but detecting no movement and no eyes. Then he sat
suspicion of a wolf. Just as unexpectedly a curtain less than a yard away from Kirby moved, and she sto
heir feet and faced her, and to their credit let it be recorded that they dropped their eyes, b
she asked them in a velvet voice; and,
for anything but her. Neither had ever seen anything so beautiful, so fascinating, so
ndustani, and arched he
of his mother, and the tender prelude to a curtain lectur
out a friend of mine-
I understand
e warm soft spirit of all womanhood that only the measured rising and falling of her bosom, under the gauzy drapery, made her seem human and not a spirit. Subtly, ever so cunningly, she had con
. "He is said to have listened to a lecture here-I was told the lecture was delivered by a German-and there was some sort of a frac
as never invited, but he came. He sat here saying nothing until it suited him to sit where another man was; then he struck the other man-so, with the sole of his foot-
variation of t
the wearer of a Northern knife is like to feel th
Ranjoor Singh spoken of slightingly. A Jat may be a good e
what has that to do w
heard-
amused her almost more than any ot
know most of what
Impudence arra
that anything less than an army corps could make him feel unequal to a
gh's alive or dead," he said sternly, "and
the seeded plains, and sank on to a divan with
the truth. There is little that goes on in Delhi-in the world-that I can not h
njoor Singh?" ask
g eyes that surely would have betrayed her had she been at
asked calmly, as if she wished to spare him
r-major went to the morgue to identify the body-drove through the bazaar, and possibly discovered some clue to
much? And am I to qu
sm
She was curled on it, leaning on an
ed Kirby, since he could t
t wives, and a son by each. That was ages ago, and the descendants of the eight half-br
not doubt her. Colonel and adjutant, both men who had seen grim service and both self-possessed as a rule,
d; there is little mercy in the hills, and I was weane
ed Kirby, surprised
of its conception, though the talk of the world was then of universal peace and of horror at a war that was. Now, to-night, this greatest war is
gh," said Colonel Kirby, twistin
he was obviously not the man to threaten
r Ranjoor Singh, and then perhaps he shall step forth from t
order, and the maid brought sherbet that Kirby sniffed s
from this room did I will otherwise?" she asked
et by a show of force, and force by something quicker. Kirby's eyes and his adjutant's met. Each felt for his hi
said; and
raised. The awful, ugly black eyes gleamed with malice. And a swaying cobra's head is not an easy thing to hit wi
se to move!"
with the problem of whether to try to shoot or not. It seemed to them that the snakes reached a resolution first, and struck. And in the same ins
theirs. "But that is not why the sahib shall beg of me." Kirby was not too overcome to notice the future tense.
her advantage than the pistols would have been had they made her a present of them. She gave a sudden shrill cry that startled them and made them look wildly for the door;
down his neck until his collar was a mere uncomfortable mess. "For more than a year there has been much talk in India. The winds have brought it a
natives in the pay of the merchants who had word with native sowars, saying that it is not well to be carried over sea to fight another's q
Kirby. It was so long since he had been spoken t
the colonel sahib sha
. "Does the fire b
maid appeared in the do
re still bur
ngton sat in silent wonder. They wondered chiefly what the regiment would say
an see flame from the roof
asmini. "Lis
she had them bound in her spells, and each in a different spe
ven them their pickings. They talk for the love of words, but they trade for the love of
lear then to the government that proof of disloyalty among the native regiments would set the hillmen screaming for a holy war-for the hills are cold, sahibs, and the
ed in one of the mirrors and nudged Kirby, and Kirby saw it too. They both saw that she was watching it. It was a fat face, and it looked terrified
pleased the government to know which, if any, of the native regiments had been affected by th
net set for a tiger," said Kirby
ni la
ere to cut but the dark that closes up again? Sahib, thou shalt beg for Ranjo
Kirby, using a native phrase that admits of no double m
native regard for a native, or for an Englishman
war, and he commands a squadron, and there is need of him. Is it not so? Yet the hous
urning and she must have known it; perhaps she even intended that it should. But she lay c
here he is," said Kirby, "I wi
There is no ot
t-Half-brothers b
o little given to beg for things that the word beg h
ffly, and she clapped her hands and laughed wit
priest," she chuckled, "aye, and many a soldier-bu
d'ye mean?" d
Then beg, Colonel sahib, on your knees-on those stif
ean-d'yo
beg for his life, on you
r," whispered Warrington, for t
njoor Singh shall taste a hillman's mercy. He shall die so
Kirby. "His honor i
nd thine-on your kn
r what with the heat and what with an unconquerable dread of sn
I kneel?"
ou Ranjoor Singh,
he
ti
me for
he regimen
him at once!" sa
rom thee! Nay, go, both of you-ye have my leave to go! And what
djutant both knelt to a native woman-if she is a native-in a top back-room of a De
their hair, for the love of mischief, to remind them of what they had done until in the course of slowly moving nature t
to the floor. In cold, creeping sweat they listened to
way, s
lled by unseen hands and chuckling girls down stairs that were cut out of sheer blackness. And at t
rkness. "Seeing regimental risaldar on the box seat, I took liberty. The risaldar-major is sending this by as yet unrewarded messenger
irby struck a match to examine it. It was Ranjoor Sing
warded!" sa
g take the wa
plenty of roo
y be brave,
the way t
and ermin
and livin
be fat!) the re
-the meek shall