w said.
And then to the monotonous pat-pat-pat of trotting feet the mail-carrier
emerged from the grey wall of night.
"Here, you, what comes?" the Captain queried, checking the grey.
The postie stopped in terror at the English voice.
"Salaam, Bahadur Sahib; it is war."
"Thou art a tree owl," and Barlow laughed. "A war does not spring up
like a drift of driven dust. Is it some raja's elephants and carts with
his harem going to a _durbar_?"
"Sahib, it is, as I have said, war. The big brass cannon that is called
'The Humbler of Cities,' goes forth to speak its order, and with it are
sepoys to feed it the food of destruction. Beyond that I know not,
Sahib, for I am a man of peace, being but a runner of the post."
Then he salaamed and sifted into the night gloom like a thrown handful of
white sand, echoing back the clamp-clamp-clamp of his staff's iron ring,
which was a signal to all cobras to move from the path of him who ran,
slip their chilled folds from the warm dust of the road.
And on in front what had been sounds of mystery was now a turmoil of
noises. The hissing screech, the wails, were the expostulations of
tortured axles; the rumbling boom was unexplainable; but the jungle of
the hillside was possessed of screaming devils. Black-faced,
white-whiskered monkeys roused by the din, screamed cries of hate and
alarm as they scurried in volplaning leaps from tree to tree. And
peacocks, awakened when they should have slept, called with their harsh
voices from lofty perches.
A party of villagers hurried by, shifting their cheap turbans to hide
faces as they scurried along.
The Gulab was trembling; perhaps the decoits, led by Hunsa, had come by a
shorter way; for they were like beasts of the jungle in this art of
silent, swift travel.
"Sahib," she pleaded, "go from the road."
"Why, Bootea?"
"The one with the staff spoke of soldiers."
He laughed and patted her shoulder. "Don't fear, little lady," he said,
"an army doesn't make war upon one, even if they are soldiers. It will
be but a wedding party who now take the wife to the village of her
husband."
"Not at night; and a Sahib who carries a woman upon his saddle will hear
words of offence."
Though Barlow laughed he was troubled. What if the smouldering fire of
sedition had flared up, and that even now men of Sindhia's were slipping
on a night march toward some massing of rebels. The resonant, heavy
moaning of massive wheels was
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