Chapter 7

A bloody enlisted man—that’s me,

A peg in the officer’s plan—maybe.

Drunk on occasion, Disgrace to a nation

And proper societee.

Yet I’ve a notion the sky—pure blue

Ain’t more essential than I—clear through.

I’m a man. I can think.

In the chain of eternal

Affairs I’m a link,

And the chain ain’t no stronger than me—or you.

 


"That will be the end of Gungadhura!"


It took longer to get the hamper ready than Tess expected, partly because
it did not seem expedient to have the butler Chamu in the secret. By
the time she and her husband were up side by side in the dog-cart there
was already a nearly full moon silvering the sky, and the jackals were
yelping miserably on the hillside. Before they reached the stifling town
a slow breeze had moved the river-mist, until a curtain shut off the whole
of the bazaar and merchants’ quarters from the better residential section
where the palaces stood. It was an ideal night for adventure; an almost
perfect night for crime; one could step from street to street and leave
no clue, because of the drifting vapor.


Here and there a solitary policeman coughed after they had passed,
or slunk into a shadow lest they recognize and report him for sleeping
at his post. All sahibs have unreasonable habits, and not even a constable
can guess which one will not make trouble for him. An occasional stray
dog yapped at the wheels, and more than once heads peered over
roof-tops to try and glimpse them, because gossip—especially about
sahibs who are out after dark—is a coinage of its own that buys welcome
and refreshment almost anywhere. But nothing in particular happened
until the horse struck sparks from the granite flagstones outside Yasmini’s
gate, and a sleepy Rajput sentry brought his rifle to the challenge.


Then it was not exactly obvious what to do next. Tess felt perfectly
confident on the high seat, with the pistol in her husband’s pocket pressing
against her and his reassuring bulk between her and the sentry; but
everywhere else was insecurity and doubt. One does not as a rule
descend from dog-carts after dark and present half-sheets of paper by
way of passports for admission to Rajput palaces. The sentry looked
mildly interested, no more. He had been so thoroughly warned and
threatened in case of efforts to escape from within, that it did not enter
his head that any one might want to enter. However, since the dog-cart
continued to stand still in front of the gate, he turned the guard out as
a matter of routine; one never knew when sahibs will not complain
about discourtesy.


The guard lined up at attention—eight men and a risaldar (officer)—double
the regular number by Gungadhura’s orders. The risaldar stepped
up close to the dog-cart and spoke to the man he imagined was the
sais, using, as was natural, the Rajput tongue. But Dick Blaine only
knew enough of the language for fetch and carry purposes—not enough
to deceive a native as to his nationality after the first two words.


"Now I feel foolish!" said Tess, and the risaldar of the guard thrust his
bearded face closer, supposing she spoke to him. Dick answered her.


"Shall I drive you home again, little woman? Say, the word and we’re off."


"Not yet. I haven’t tried my ammunition."


She pulled out Samson’s scribbled permit and was about to offer it to
the guard. But there was a risk that whatever she did would only arouse
and increase his suspicions, and she offered it nervously.


"What if he won’t give it back to you?" asked her husband.


"Oh, Dick, you’re a regular prophet of evil tonight!"


However, she withdrew the paper before the guard’s fingers, closed
on it. The next moment a figure like a phantom, making no noise, almost
made her scream. Dick produced a repeating pistol with that sudden
swiftness that proves old acquaintance with the things, and the corporal
of the guard sprang back with a shout of warning to his men, imagining
the pistol was intended for himself. Tess recovered presence of mind first.


"It’s all right, Dick. Put the gun out of sight."


She stretched out her hand and a cold nose touched her finger-ends,
sniffing them. A dog’s forefeet were on the shaft, and his eyes gleamed
balefully in the carriage lamp light.


"Good Trotters! Good boy, Trotters!"


She remembered Tom Tripe’s lecture about calling dogs by name,
wondering whether the rule applied to owners only, or whether she,
too, could make the creature "do this own thinking." Before she could
decide what she would like the dog to think about he was gone again
as silently as he had come. The guard was thoroughly on the qui vive
by that time, if not suspicious, then officious. How should one protect
the privacy of a palace gate if unknown memsahibs in dog-carts, with
saises who knew English but did not answer when spoken to in the
native tongue, were to be allowed to draw up in front of the gate at
unseemly hours and remain there indefinitely. The risaldar ordered
Tess away without further ceremony, making his meaning plain by
taking the horse’s head and starting him.


Dick Blaine drew the horse back on his haunches and cursed the man
for that piece of impudence, in language and with mannerisms that
banished forever any delusions as to his nationality; and it occurred to
the officer that his extra complement of men, standing in a row like
dummies at attention, were not there after all for nothing. He despatched
two of them at a run to Gungadhura’s palace, the one to tell the story
of what had happened and the other to add to it whatever the first might
omit. Between them they were likely to produce results of some sort.


"Now we’re done for!" sighed Tess. "No chance tonight, I’m afraid.

If only I’d done what she told me to and consulted with Tom Tripe first.

Better drive home now, Dick, before we make the case worse."

 


The unreasonableness of the attempt convinced and discouraged her.
It was like a nightmare. But as Dick reined the horse about there came
out of the mist the sound of another horse at a walk, and two men
marching in step. Then a man’s voice broke the stillness. Dick reined in,
and a second later Trotters’ huge paws rested on the shaft again.
Tess could see his long, unenthusiastic tail wagging to and fro.


"Tom!" she called. "Tom Tripe!"


"Coming, lady!"


Three figures emerged out of the gloom, one of them mounted and loquacious.


"I’d like to know what these rascally guards are doing off their post!
Give these sons of camp-followers an inch and they’ll take three leagues,
every mother’s son of them! Halt, there, you! Now then, where’s your
officer? Give an account of yourselves!"


There followed an interlude in Rajasthani.* Tom Tripe becoming more

blasphemously vehement as it grew clearer that the risaldar had done

entirely right.

[* The native language of Rajputana.]

 


"Lady," he said presently, riding round to Tess’s side of the dog-cart.
"I’m going to have hard work to convince this man. I’d orders from
Gungadhura to search your house, Krishna knows what for, and I rode
up to ask your leave to do it, hoping you’d be alone after the party.
Chamu told me you and your husband had gone out, and one of the
three beggars gave me a message intended for you that tallied pretty
close with one I knew you’d received already, so I guessed where to
head for, and sent the dog in advance. He came back with his hair on
end reporting trouble, and then as luck would have it I rode into these
two men on their way to Gungadhura. If they’d reached him, we’d all
have had to make new plans tomorrow morning! You want to see the
princess, of course? But what have you got that can get by the guard?"


Tess produced Samson’s scribbled note, and he studied it in the carriage
lamplight. Then she recalled Yasmini’s warning that Tom Tripe had no
brains and must be told what to do. Her own wits began to work desperately.


"I’m the lady doctor, Tom. That is my written order from the burra
sahib." (Commissioner).


Tom scratched his head and swore in a low voice fervently.


"The difficulty’s this, lady: since the escape from the palace across
the river, the maharajah has taken the posting of palace guards out of
my hands entirely. I’ve still the duty to inspect and make sure they’re
on the job—Oh, I see! I have it!"


He turned on the corporal with all the savagery that the white man
generates in contact with Eastern subordinates.


"What do you mean," he demanded in the man’s own language, "by
standing in the way of the maharajah sahib’s orders? Here’s his highness
sending a lady doctor to the princess for an excuse to confine her
elsewhere and have all this trouble off our hands, and you, like a
blockhead, stand in the way to prevent it! See—there’s the letter!"


The Rajput looked perplexed. All the world knows what privileges the
rare American women doctors enjoy in that land of sealed seraglios.


"But it is written in English," he objected. "The maharajah sahib does
not write English."


"Idiot! Of what use would a letter in Persian be to an American lady doctor?’


"But to me? It is I who command the guard and must read the letter.

How can I read the letter?"

 


"I’ll read it to you. What’s more, I’ll explain it. The princess has been
appealing to the commissioner sahib—"


The Rajput nodded. It was all over town that Yasmini had been closeted
with the commissioner on the morning of her recent escape. She
herself had deliberately sown the seeds of that untruth.


"So the commissioner sahib and the maharajah sahib had a conference—"


The Rajput nodded again. It was common knowledge, too that the
commissioner and Gungadhura had had a rather stormy interview the
day before; and it was none of the corporal’s privilege to know that
all they had argued about was the ill-treatment of prisoners in the Sialpore jail.


"—It was agreed at the conference that if the princess can be proved
mad, then the maharajah sahib may do as he’s minded about sending
her away into the hills. If she’s not mad, then he’s to give her her liberty.
Do you understand, you dunderhead?"


"Hah! I understand. But why at night? Why not the maharajah sahib’s
signature in his own writing?"


"Son of incomprehension! Does the maharajah sahib wish still more
scandal than already has been by permitting such a visit in the daytime?
Strike me everlasting dumb if he hasn’t had more than enough already!
Does he want the responsibility? Does he wish the British to say
afterward that it was all the maharajah’s doing? No, you ass! At the
conference be agreed solely on condition that the commissioner sahib
should sign the letter and relieve his highness of all blame in case of
a verdict of madness. And it was decided to send an American, lest
there be too much talk among the British themselves. Now, do
you understand?"


"Hah! I understand. If all this is true the matter is easy. I will send
one of the guard with that letter to the maharajah sahib. He will write
his name on it and send it back, and all is well."


"Suit yourself!" sneered Tom Tripe. "The maharajah sahib is with his
dancing girls this minute. What happened to the last man who interrupted
his amusements?"


The Rajput hesitated. The answer to that question could be seen any
day near the place they call the Old Gate, where beggars sit in rags.


"Shall I offer him money?" whispered Tess.


"For God’s sake, no, lady! The man’s a decent soldier. He’d refuse
it and we’d all be in the apple-cart! Leave him to me."


He turned again on the Rajput.


"You know who I am, don’t you? You know it’s my duty to see that the
palace guards attend to business, eh? That’s why I’m here tonight.
His highness particularly warned me to see that if anything unusual
wanted doing it should get done. If you want to question my authority
you’ll have it out with me before his highness in the morning first thing."


The Rajput obviously wavered. Everybody knew that the first thing in
the morning was no good time to appear on charges before a man
who spent his nights as Gungadhura did.


"Who is to enter? A man and a woman?"


"No, you idiot! A lady doctor only. And nobody’s to know. You’d better
warn your men that if there’s any talk about this night’s business the
palace guard will catch the first blast of the typhoon. Gungadhura’s
anger isn’t mild in these days!"


"Show me the letter again," said the Rajput. "Let me keep it in case

I am brought to book."

 


Tom translated that to Tess and her husband.


"It’s this way, ma’am. If you let him keep the letter I suspect he’ll let
you go in. But he may show it to the maharajah in the morning, and
then there’ll be hot fat in the fire. If you don’t let him keep it, perhaps
he’ll admit you and perhaps he won’t; but if you keep the letter, and
trouble comes of it, he and I’ll both be in the soup! Never mind
about me. Maybe I’m too valuable to be sent packing. I’ll take the
chance. But this man’s a decent soldier, and he’d be helpless."


"Let him keep it," said Tess.


Tom turned on the Rajput again.


"Here’s the letter. Take it. But mark this! What his highness wants
tonight is discretion. There might be promotion for a man who’d say
nothing about this night’s work. If, on top of that, he was soldier enough
to keep his men from talking he’d be reported favorably to his highness
by Tom Tripe. Who got you made risaldar, eh? Who stood up for you,
when you were charged with striking Gullam Singh? Was Tom Tripe’s
friendship worth having then? Now suit yourself! I’ve said all I’m
going to say."


The Rajput muttered something in his beard, stared again at the letter
as if that of itself would justify him, looked sharply at Tess, whose hamper
might or might not be corroborative evidence, folded the letter away
in his tunic pocket, and made a gesture of assent.


"Now, lady, hurry!" said Tom. "And here’s hoping you’re right about
there being no hell! I’ve told lies enough tonight to damn my soul forever!
Once you’re safely through the gate I’ll have a word or two more with
the guard, and then your husband and I will go to a place close by that
I know of and wait for you."


But Tess objected to that. "Please don’t leave me waiting for you in
the dark outside the gate when I return! Why not keep the carriage here;
my husband won’t mind."


"Might make talk, ma’am. I’ll leave Trotters here to watch for you. He’ll
bring word in less than a minute."


Tom Tripe dismounted to help her out of the dog-cart. The Rajput
struck the iron gate as if he expected to have to wake the dead and
take an hour about it. But it opened suspiciously quickly and a bearded
Afridi, of all unlikely people, thrust an expectant face outward, rather
like a tortoise emerging from its shell, blinking as he tried to recognize
the shadowy forms that moved in the confusing lamplight. He seemed
to know whom to expect and admit, for he beckoned Tess with a long
crooked forefinger the moment she approached the gate, and in another
ten seconds the iron clanged behind her, shutting her off from husband
and all present hope of succor. The chance of any rescuer entering
the palace that night, whether by force or subtlety, was infinitesimal.


The strange gateman—he had a little kennel of a place to sleep in just
inside the entrance—snatched the hamper from Tess and led her almost
at a run across an ancient courtyard whose outlines were nearly invisible
except where the yellow light of one ancient oil lantern on an iron bracket
showed a part of the palace wall and a steep flight of stone steps, worn
down the middle by centuries of sandals. Everything else was in gloom
and shadow, and only one chink of light betrayed the whereabouts of
a curtained window. The Afridi led her up the stone steps, and paused
at the top to hammer on a carved door with his clenched fist; but the
door moved while his fist was in mid-air, and the merry-eyed maid who
opened it mocked him for a lunatic. Dumb, apparently, in the presence
of woman, he slunk down the steps again, leaving Tess wondering
whether it were not good manners to remove her shoes before entering.
Natives of the country always removed their shoes before entering
her house, and she supposed it would be only decent to reciprocate.


However, the maid took her by the hand and pulled her inside without
further ceremony, not letting go of the hand even to close the door, but
patting it and making much of her, smiling the welcome that they had
no words in common to express. The little outer hall in which they stood
was shut off by curtains six yards high, all smothered in a needlework
of peacocks that generations of patient fingers must have toiled at.
Pulling these apart the maid led her into an inner hall fifty or sixty feet
long, the first sight of which banished all diffidence about her shoes;
for never had she seen such medley of East and West, such toning
down of Oriental mysticism with the sheer utility of European importations;
and that without incongruity.


The lamps, of which there were dozens, were mostly Russian. Some
of the furniture was Buhl, some French. There were hangings that
looked like loot from the Pekin Summer Palace, and tapestry from
Gobelin. In a place of honor on a side wall was an ikon, framed in gold,
and facing that an image of the Buddha done in greenish bronze,
flanked by a Dutch picture of the Twelve Apostles with laughably Dutch
faces receiving instruction on a mountain from a Christ whose other
name was surely Hans.


Down the center of the hall, leading to a gallery, was a magnificent
stairway of marble and lapis lazuli, carpeted with long Bokhara strips
so well joined end to end that the whole looked like one piece. And
at the top of those stairs Yasmini stood waiting, her golden hair illuminated
by glass lamps on either marble column at the stairhead. She was as
different from the Gunga Singh of riding boots and turban as the morning
is from night—the loveliest, bewitchingest girl in silken gossamer that
Tess had ever set eyes on.


"I knew you would come!" she shouted gleefully. "I knew you would
get in! I knew you are my friend! Oh, I’m glad! I’m glad!"


She pirouetted a dozen times on bare toes at the top of the stairs,
spinning until her silken skirts expanded in a nimbus, then danced
down-stairs into Tess’s arms, where she clung, panting and laughing.


"I’m so hungry! Oh, I’m hungry! Did you bring the food?"


"I’m ashamed!" Tess answered. "The man set it down outside the
door and I left it there."


But Yasmini gave a little shrill of delight, and Tess turned to see that
another maid had brought it.


"How many of you are there?"


"Five."


"Thank heaven! I’ve brought enough for a square meal for a dozen."


"We have eaten a little, little bit each day of the servants’ rice, washing
it first for hours, until today, when two of the servants were taken sick
and we thought perhaps their food was poisoned too. Oh, we’re hungry!"


Hasamurti, Yasmini’s maid, opened the basket on the floor and crowed
aloud. Tess apologized.


"I knew nothing about the caste restrictions, but I’ve put in meat jelly—
and bread—and fruit—and rice—and nuts—and milk—and tea—and wine—
and sugar—"


Yasmini laughed.


"I am as Western as I choose to be, and only pretend to caste when

I see fit. My maids do as I do, or they seek another mistress. Come!"

 


Hasamurti would have spread a banquet there on the floor, but Yasmini
led them up-stairs, holding Tess by the hand, turning to the right at the
stairhead into a room all cream and golden, lighted by hanging lamps
that shone through disks of colored glass. There she pulled Tess
down beside her on to a great soft divan and they all ate together, the
maids munching their share while they served their mistress. They
devoured the milk, and left the wine, eating, all things considered,
astonishingly moderately.


"Now we ought all to go to sleep," announced Yasmini, yawning, and
then bubbling with delighted laughter at the expression of Tess’s face.
"The people outside might wait!"


"Great heavens, child. Do you suppose I can stay here indefinitely?"
Tess demanded. "I must be gone in an hour or my husband will
murder the guard and force an entrance!"


"I will have just such a husband soon," announced Yasmini. "When I
send him one little word, he will cut the throats of thirty men and come
to me through flames! Let us try your husband," she added as an
afterthought—then laughed again at Tess’s expression of dissent,
and nodded.


"I, too, will be careful how I risk my husband! Men are but moths in a
woman’s hands—fragile—but the good ones are precious. Besides,
we have no time tonight for sport. I must escape."


Evidently Tess was causing her exquisite amusement. The thought
of being an accomplice in any such adventure stirred all her Yankee
common sense to its depths, and she had none of the Eastern trick
of not displaying her emotions.


"Nonsense, child! Let me go to the commissioner and warn him that
you are being starved to death in this place. I will threaten him with
public scandal if he doesn’t put an end to it at once."


"Pouf!" laughed Yasmini. "Samson sahib would make a nice clumsy
accomplice! He would send me to Calcutta, where I should be poisoned
sooner or later for a certainty, because Gungadhura would send agents
to attend to that. They would wait months and months for their opportunity,
and I can not always stay awake. Meanwhile Samson sahib would
claim praise from his government, and they would put some more initials
at the end of his name, and promote him to a bigger district with more pay.
No! Samson sahib shall have another district surely, but even he in
his conceit will not consider it promotion! There will not be room for
Samson sahib in Sialpore when I am maharanee!"


"You maharanee? It was you yourself who told me that Gungadhura
has lots of children, who all stand between you and the throne. Do
you mean—?"


Again the bell-like laugh announced utter enjoyment of Tess’s bewilderment.


"No, I will kill nobody. I will not even send snakes in a basket to Gungadhura.
That scorpion shall sting himself to death if he sees fit, with a ring of
the fire of ridicule all about him and no friends to console him, and no
hope—nothing but disappointment and fear and rage! I will kill nobody.
Yet I will be maharanee within the month!"


Suddenly she grew deadly serious, her young face darkening as the
sky does when a quick cloud hides the sun.


"What is your husband’s contract with Gungadhura? May he dig for
gold anywhere? He is digging now, isn’t he, close to the British fort
on the ’island’ in our territory—that fort with the flagstaff on it that can
be seen from Gungadhura’s roof? He is wasting time!"


"He has found a little vein of gold," said Tess, "that will likely lead to a
bigger vein."


"He is wasting time! Sita Ram, who has a compass, and who knows
all that goes on in Samson sahib’s office, sent me word that the little
vein of gold runs nearly due north. In another week at the rate the men
are digging your husband will be under the fort. That is English territory.
The English have nothing to do with Gungadhura’s contract. They will
take the gold your husband finds and give him nothing. Then Samson
sahib would be considered a most excellent commissioner and would
surely get promotion! Pouf!"


"Perhaps my husband can make a separate bargain with the English."


"Pouf! Samson sahib is an idiot, but he is not fool enough to give away
what would be in his hands already! I myself, hidden beneath your
window, heard him give you clear warning on that point! No, there must
be another plan. Your husband must dig elsewhere."


"But, my dear, Gungadhura knows already that my husband has found
a ’leader.’ He is all worked up about it, and goes every day to watch
the progress."


"Surely—knowing as well as I do that the vein is leading toward the fort.
He goes afterward to the priests, and prays that the vein of gold may
turn another way and save him from bankruptcy! Listen? I speak truth!
I speak to you woman to woman—womb to womb! I will count myself
accursed, and will let a cobra bite me if I tell you now one word that is
not true! Do you believe I am going to tell you the truth?"


Tess nodded. Yasmini, by her own admission, would lie deliberately
when that suited her; but the truth tells itself, as it were, and there is
no mistaking it, except by such as lie invariably, of whom there is a
multifarious host.


"If your husband continues digging near the fort he will get nothing,
because the English will take it all. If he digs in a certain other place
he will get a very great fortune!"


"But, my dear, supposing that is quite true, how shall he convince
Gungadhura, after all the outlay and expense of the present operations,
that it’s best to abandon them and begin all over again in another place?"


Yasmini lay back on the cushions, drew something out from under one
of them, and laughed softly, as if enjoying a deep underflow of
secret information.


"Gungadhura himself shall insist on it!"


"What? On starting again in a new place?"


Yasmini nodded.


"Only do as I say, and Gungadhura himself shall insist."


"What do you wish me to do?"


Tess was beginning to feel alarmed again. She knew to a rupee how
much Gungadhura had been obliged to pay out for the digging. To
make herself
responsible even in degree for the abandonment of all that outlay would
be risky, even if no other construction could be placed on it.


"Has Tom Tripe been told to search your house?"


"Yes, so he says."


"Do you know the cellar of your house?"


"Yes."


"It is dark. Are you afraid to go there?"


"No. Why?"


"Is there a flat stone in a corner of the cellar floor that once had a ring
in it but the ring is broken out?"


"Yes."


"Good. Then Sita Ram did not lie to me. Take this." She gave her a
little silver tube, capped at either end and sealed heavily with wax.
"There is a writing inside it—done in Persian. Hide that under the stone,
and let Tom Tripe search the cellar and find it there; but forbid him
to remove it."


"If I only knew what you are driving at!" said Tess with a wry smile.


A clumsier conspirator might have lost the game at that point by
over-emphasis, for Tess was wavering between point-blank refusal
and delay that would give her time to consult her husband. But Yasmini,
even at that age, was adept at feeling her way nicely. Again she lay
back on the cushion, and this time lit a cigarette, smoking lazily.


"The stake that I am playing for—the stake that I shall surely win," she
said after a minute, "is too big to be risked. If you are afraid, let us
forget all that I have said. Let us be friends and nothing more."


Tess did not answer. She recognized the appeal to her own pride,
and ignored it. What she was thinking of was Gungadhura’s beastliness—
his attempts to poison Yasmini—his treatment of women generally—
his cruelty to animals in the arena—his viciousness; and then, of how
much more queenly if nothing else, this girl would likely be than ever
Gungadhura could be kingly. It was tempting enough to have a hand
in substituting Yasmini for Gungadhura on the throne of Sialpore if the
chance of doing it were real.


Yasmini seemed able to read her thoughts, or at all events to guess them.


"When I am maharanee," she said, "there will be an end of Gungadhura’s
swinishness. Moreover, promises will all be kept, unwritten ones as
well as written. Gungadhura’s contracts will be carried out. Do you
believe me?"


"Yes, I think I believe that."


"Let Tom Tripe find that silver tube in your cellar then. But listen! When
Gungadhura comes to your husband and insists on digging elsewhere,
let your husband bargain like a huckster! Let him at first refuse. It may
be that Gungadhura will let him continue where he digs, and will himself
send men to start digging in the other place. In that case, well and good."


"I would prefer that, said Tess. "My husband is a mining engineer.

I think he would hate to abandon a true lead for a whim of some one’s else."

 


Yasmini’s bright eyes gleamed intelligence. She was only learning in
those days to bend people to her own imperious will and to use others’
virtues for own ends as readily as their vices. She recognized the
necessity of yielding to Tess’s compunctions, more than suspecting
that Dick Blaine would color his own views pretty much to suit his wife’s
in any case. And with a lightning ability peculiar to her she saw how to
improve her own plan by yielding.


"That is settled, then," she said lazily. "Your husband shall continue to
dig near the fort, if he so wishes. But let him show Samson sahib some
specimens of the gold—how little it is—how feeble—how uncertain. Be
sure he does that, please. That will be the end of Gungadhura. And
now it is time to escape from here, and for you to help me."


Tess resigned herself to the inevitable. Whatever the consequences,
she was not willing to leave Yasmini to starve or be poisoned.


"I’m ready!" she said. "What’s the plan?"


"I shall leave all the maids behind. They have food enough for the
morning. In the morning, after it is known that I have escaped, word
shall be sent to Samson sahib that the women in this palace have
nothing but poisoned food to eat. He must beard Gungadhura about
that or lose his own standing with the English."


"But how will you escape?"


"Nay, that is not the difficulty. Your husband and Tom Tripe are waiting
with the carriage. My part is easy. This is the problem: how will you
follow me?"


"I don’t understand."


"I must wear your clothes. In the dark I shall get past the guard, making
believe that I am you."


"Then how shall I manage?"


"You must do as I say. I can contrive it. Come, the maids and I will
make a true Rajputni of you. Only I must study how to walk as you do;
please walk along in front of me—that way—follow Hasamurti through
that door into my room. I will study how you move your feet and shoulders."


Looking back as she followed Hasamurti, Tess witnessed a caricature
of herself that made her laugh until the tears came.


"It is well!" said Yasmini. "This night began in hunger, like the young
moon. Now is laughter without malice. In a few hours will be bright
dawn—and after that, success!"



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