Now I remember comrades —
Old playmates on new seas —
Whenas we traded orpiment
Among the savages.
Ten thousand leagues to southward,
And thirty years removed —
They knew not noble Valdez,
But me they knew and loved.
Song of Diego Valdez.
Very early in the morning the white
tents came down and disappeared as the Mavericks took
a side-road to Umballa. It did not skirt the
resting-place, and Kim, trudging beside a baggage-cart
under fire of comments from soldiers’ wives,
was not so confident as overnight. He discovered
that he was closely watched — Father Victor
on the one side, and Mr Bennett on the other.
In the forenoon the column checked.
A camel-orderly handed the Colonel a letter.
He read it, and spoke to a Major. Half a mile
in the rear, Kim heard a hoarse and joyful clamour
rolling down on him through the thick dust.
Then someone beat him on the back, crying: ’Tell
us how ye knew, ye little limb of Satan? Father
dear, see if ye can make him tell.’
A pony ranged alongside, and he was
hauled on to the priest’s saddlebow.
’Now, my son, your prophecy
of last night has come true. Our orders are
to entrain at Umballa for the Front tomorrow.’
‘What is thatt?’ said
Kim, for ‘front’ and ‘entrain’
were newish words to him.
‘We are going to “thee War,” as
you called it.’
‘Of course you are going to thee War.
I said last night.’
‘Ye did; but, Powers o’ Darkness, how
did ye know?’
Kim’s eyes sparkled. He
shut his lips, nodded his head, and looked unspeakable
things. The Chaplain moved on through the dust,
and privates, sergeants, and subalterns called one
another’s attention to the boy. The Colonel,
at the head of the column, stared at him curiously.
‘It was probably some bazar rumour.’
he said; ’but even then -’ He referred
to the paper in his hand. ’Hang it all,
the thing was only decided within the last forty-eight
hours.’
‘Are there many more like you
in India?’ said Father Victor, ’or are
you by way o’ being a lusus naturae?’
‘Now I have told you,’
said the boy, ’will you let me go back to my
old man? If he has not stayed with that woman
from Kulu, I am afraid he will die.’
’By what I saw of him he’s
as well able to take care of himself as you.
No. Ye’ve brought us luck, an’ we’re
goin’ to make a man of you. I’ll
take ye back to your baggage-cart and ye’ll come
to me this evening.’
For the rest of the day Kim found
himself an object of distinguished consideration among
a few hundred white men. The story of his appearance
in camp, the discovery of his parentage, and his prophecy,
had lost nothing in the telling. A big, shapeless
white woman on a pile of bedding asked him mysteriously
whether he thought her husband would come back from
the war. Kim reflected gravely, and said that
he would, and the woman gave him food. In many
respects, this big procession that played music at
intervals — this crowd that talked and laughed
so easily — resembled a festival in Lahore city.
So far, there was no sign of hard work, and he resolved
to lend the spectacle his patronage. At evening
there came out to meet them bands of music, and played
the Mavericks into camp near Umballa railway station.
That was an interesting night. Men of other
regiments came to visit the Mavericks. The Mavericks
went visiting on their own account. Their pickets
hurried forth to bring them back, met pickets of strange
regiments on the same duty; and, after a while, the
bugles blew madly for more pickets with officers to
control the tumult. The Mavericks had a reputation
for liveliness to live up to. But they fell
in on the platform next morning in perfect shape and
condition; and Kim, left behind with the sick, women,
and boys, found himself shouting farewells excitedly
as the trains drew away. Life as a Sahib was
amusing so far; but he touched it with a cautious
hand. Then they marched him back in charge of
a drummer-boy to empty, lime-washed barracks, whose
floors were covered with rubbish and string and paper,
and whose ceilings gave back his lonely footfall.
Native-fashion, he curled himself up on a stripped
cot and went to sleep. An angry man stumped
down the veranda, woke him up, and said he was a schoolmaster.
This was enough for Kim, and he retired into his
shell. He could just puzzle out the various English
Police notices in Lahore city, because they affected
his comfort; and among the many guests of the woman
who looked after him had been a queer German who painted
scenery for the Parsee travelling theatre. He
told Kim that he had been ’on the barricades
in ‘Forty-eight,’ and therefore —
at least that was how it struck Kim — he would
teach the boy to write in return for food. Kim
had been kicked as far as single letters, but did
not think well of them.
‘I do not know anything.
Go away!’ said Kim, scenting evil. Hereupon
the man caught him by the ear, dragged him to a room
in a far-off wing where a dozen drummer-boys were
sitting on forms, and told him to be still if he could
do nothing else. This he managed very successfully.
The man explained something or other with white lines
on a black board for at least half an hour, and Kim
continued his interrupted nap. He much disapproved
of the present aspect of affairs, for this was the
very school and discipline he had spent two-thirds
of his young life in avoiding. Suddenly a beautiful
idea occurred to him, and he wondered that he had
not thought of it before.
The man dismissed them, and first
to spring through the veranda into the open sunshine
was Kim.
’ ’Ere, you! ‘Alt!
Stop!’ said a high voice at his heels.
’I’ve got to look after you. My
orders are not to let you out of my sight. Where
are you goin’?’
It was the drummer-boy who had been
hanging round him all the forenoon — a fat and
freckled person of about fourteen, and Kim loathed
him from the soles of his boots to his cap-ribbons.
‘To the bazar — to get
sweets — for you,’ said Kim, after thought.
‘Well, the bazar’s out
o’ bounds. If we go there we’ll get
a dressing-down. You come back.’
‘How near can we go?’
Kim did not know what bounds meant, but he wished
to be polite — for the present.
’ ’Ow near? ’Ow
far, you mean! We can go as far as that tree
down the road.’
‘Then I will go there.’
‘All right. I ain’t
goin’. It’s too ’ot.
I can watch you from ’ere. It’s no
good your runnin’ away. If you did, they’d
spot you by your clothes. That’s regimental
stuff you’re wearin’. There ain’t
a picket in Umballa wouldn’t ’ead you
back quicker than you started out.’
This did not impress Kim as much as
the knowledge that his raiment would tire him out
if he tried to run. He slouched to the tree at
the corner of a bare road leading towards the bazar,
and eyed the natives passing. Most of them were
barrack-servants of the lowest caste. Kim hailed
a sweeper, who promptly retorted with a piece of unnecessary
insolence, in the natural belief that the European
boy could not follow it. The low, quick answer
undeceived him. Kim put his fettered soul into
it, thankful for the late chance to abuse somebody
in the tongue he knew best. ’And now, go
to the nearest letter-writer in the bazar and tell
him to come here. I would write a letter.’
’But — but what manner
of white man’s son art thou to need a bazar
letter-writer? Is there not a schoolmaster in
the barracks?’
’Ay; and Hell is full of the
same sort. Do my order, you — you Od!
Thy mother was married under a basket! Servant
of Lal Beg’ (Kim knew the God of the sweepers),
’run on my business or we will talk again.’
The sweeper shuffled off in haste.
’There is a white boy by the barracks waiting
under a tree who is not a white boy,’ he stammered
to the first bazar letter-writer he came across.
‘He needs thee.’
‘Will he pay?’ said the
spruce scribe, gathering up his desk and pens and
sealing-wax all in order.
’I do not know. He is
not like other boys. Go and see. It is
well worth.’
Kim danced with impatience when the
slim young Kayeth hove in sight. As soon as
his voice could carry he cursed him volubly.
‘First I will take my pay,’
the letter-writer said. ’Bad words have
made the price higher. But who art thou, dressed
in that fashion, to speak in this fashion?’
’Aha! That is in the letter
which thou shalt write. Never was such a tale.
But I am in no haste. Another writer will serve
me. Umballa city is as full of them as is Lahore.’
‘Four annas,’ said the
writer, sitting down and spreading his cloth in the
shade of a deserted barrack-wing.
Mechanically Kim squatted beside him
— squatted as only the natives can — in
spite of the abominable clinging trousers.
The writer regarded him sideways.
‘That is the price to ask of
Sahibs,’ said Kim. ’Now fix me a
true one.’
’An anna and a half. How
do I know, having written the letter, that thou wilt
not run away?’
I must not go beyond this tree, and
there is also the stamp to be considered.’
’I get no commission on the
price of the stamp. Once more, what manner of
white boy art thou?’
’That shall be said in the letter,
which is to Mahbub Ali, the horse-dealer in the Kashmir
Serai, at Lahore. He is my friend.’
‘Wonder on wonder!’ murmured
the letter-writer, dipping a reed in the inkstand.
‘To be written in Hindi?’
’Assuredly. To Mahbub
Ali then. Begin! I have come down with
the old man as far as Umballa in the train.
At Umballa I carried the news of the bay mare’s
pedigree.’ After what he had seen in the
garden, he was not going to write of white stallions.
’Slower a little. What
has a bay mare to do … Is it Mahbub Ali, the
great dealer?’
’Who else? I have been
in his service. Take more ink. Again.
As the order was, so I did it. We then went
on foot towards Benares, but on the third day we found
a certain regiment. Is that down?’
‘Ay, pulton,’ murmured the writer, all
ears.
’I went into their camp and
was caught, and by means of the charm about my neck,
which thou knowest, it was established that I was
the son of some man in the regiment: according
to the prophecy of the Red Bull, which thou knowest
was common talk of our bazar.’ Kim waited
for this shaft to sink into the letter-writer’s
heart, cleared his throat, and continued: ’A
priest clothed me and gave me a new name …
One priest, however, was a fool. The clothes
are very heavy, but I am a Sahib and my heart is heavy
too. They send me to a school and beat me.
I do not like the air and water here. Come then
and help me, Mahbub Ali, or send me some money, for
I have not sufficient to pay the writer who writes
this.’
’ “Who writes this.”
It is my own fault that I was tricked. Thou
art as clever as Husain Bux that forged the Treasury
stamps at Nucklao. But what a tale! What
a tale! Is it true by any chance?’
’It does not profit to tell
lies to Mahbub Ali. It is better to help his
friends by lending them a stamp. When the money
comes I will repay.’
The writer grunted doubtfully, but
took a stamp out of his desk, sealed the letter, handed
it over to Kim, and departed. Mahbub Ali’s
was a name of power in Umballa.
‘That is the way to win a good
account with the Gods,’ Kim shouted after him.
‘Pay me twice over when the
money comes,’ the man cried over his shoulder.
‘What was you bukkin’
to that nigger about?’ said the drummer-boy
when Kim returned to the veranda. ‘I was
watch-in’ you.’
‘I was only talkin’ to him.’
‘You talk the same as a nigger, don’t
you?’
‘No-ah! No-ah! I onlee speak a little.
What shall we do now?’
’The bugles’ll go for
dinner in arf a minute. My Gawd! I wish
I’d gone up to the Front with the Regiment.
It’s awful doin’ nothin’ but school
down ’ere. Don’t you ‘ate it?’
‘Oah yess!’
I’d run away if I knew where
to go to, but, as the men say, in this bloomin’
Injia you’re only a prisoner at large.
You can’t desert without bein’ took back
at once. I’m fair sick of it.’
‘You have been in Be — England?’
‘W’y, I only come out
last troopin’ season with my mother. I
should think I ’ave been in England. What
a ignorant little beggar you are! You was brought
up in the gutter, wasn’t you?’
’Oah yess. Tell me something
about England. My father he came from there.’
Though he would not say so, Kim of
course disbelieved every word the drummer-boy spoke
about the Liverpool suburb which was his England.
It passed the heavy time till dinner — a most
unappetizing meal served to the boys and a few invalids
in a corner of a barrack-room. But that he had
written to Mahbub Ali, Kim would have been almost
depressed. The indifference of native crowds
he was used to; but this strong loneliness among white
men preyed on him. He was grateful when, in the
course of the afternoon, a big soldier took him over
to Father Victor, who lived in another wing across
another dusty parade-ground. The priest was reading
an English letter written in purple ink. He
looked at Kim more curiously than ever.
‘An’ how do you like it,
my son, as far as you’ve gone? Not much,
eh? It must be hard — very hard on a wild
animal. Listen now. I’ve an amazin’
epistle from your friend.’
’Where is he? Is he well?
Oah! If he knows to write me letters, it is
all right.’
‘You’re fond of him then?’
‘Of course I am fond of him. He was fond
of me.’
‘It seems so by the look of this. He can’t
write English, can he?’
’Oah no. Not that I know,
but of course he found a letter-writer who can write
English verree well, and so he wrote. I do hope
you understand.’
’That accounts for it.
D’you know anything about his money affairs?’
Kim’s face showed that he did not.
‘How can I tell?’
‘That’s what I’m
askin’. Now listen if you can make head
or tail o’ this. We’ll skip the
first part … It’s written from Jagadhir
Road … “Sitting on wayside in grave meditation,
trusting to be favoured with your Honour’s applause
of present step, which recommend your Honour to execute
for Almighty God’s sake. Education is
greatest blessing if of best sorts. Otherwise
no earthly use.” Faith, the old man’s
hit the bull’s-eye that time! “If
your Honour condescending giving my boy best educations
Xavier” (I suppose that’s St Xavier’s
in Partibus) “in terms of our conversation dated
in your tent 15th instant” (a business-like touch
there!) “then Almighty God blessing your Honour’s
succeedings to third an’ fourth generation and”
— now listen! -“confide in your Honour’s
humble servant for adequate remuneration per hoondi
per annum three hundred rupees a year to one expensive
education St Xavier, Lucknow, and allow small time
to forward same per hoondi sent to any part of India
as your Honour shall address yourself. This
servant of your Honour has presently no place to lay
crown of his head, but going to Benares by train on
account of persecution of old woman talking so much
and unanxious residing Saharunpore in any domestic
capacity.” Now what in the world does that
mean?’
’She has asked him to be her
puro — her clergyman — at Saharunpore,
I think. He would not do that on account of his
River. She did talk.’
’It’s clear to you, is
it? It beats me altogether. “So going
to Benares, where will find address and forward rupees
for boy who is apple of eye, and for Almighty God’s
sake execute this education, and your petitioner as
in duty bound shall ever awfully pray. Written
by Sobrao Satai, Failed Entrance Allahabad University,
for Venerable Teshoo Lama the priest of Such-zen looking
for a River, address care of Tirthankars’ Temple,
Benares. P. M. -Please note boy is apple of
eye, and rupees shall be sent per hoondi three hundred
per annum. For God Almighty’s sake.”
Now, is that ravin’ lunacy or a business proposition?
I ask you, because I’m fairly at my wits’
end.’
’He says he will give me three
hundred rupees a year? So he will give me them.’
‘Oh, that’s the way you look at it, is
it?’
‘Of course. If he says so!’
The priest whistled; then he addressed
Kim as an equal. ’I don’t believe
it; but we’ll see. You were goin’
off today to the Military Orphanage at Sanawar, where
the Regiment would keep you till you were old enough
to enlist. Ye’d be brought up to the Church
of England. Bennett arranged for that.
On the other hand, if ye go to St Xavier’s ye’ll
get a better education an — an can have the
religion. D’ye see my dilemma? Kim
saw nothing save a vision of the lama going south
in a train with none to beg for him.
’Like most people, I’m
going to temporize. If your friend sends the
money from Benares — Powers of Darkness below,
where’s a street-beggar to raise three hundred
rupees? — ye’ll go down to Lucknow and
I’ll pay your fare, because I can’t touch
the subscription-money if I intend, as I do, to make
ye a Catholic. If he doesn’t, ye’ll
go to the Military Orphanage at the Regiment’s
expense. I’ll allow him three days’
grace, though I don’t believe it at all.
Even then, if he fails in his payments later on …
but it’s beyond me. We can only walk
one step at a time in this world, praise God!
An’ they sent Bennett to the Front an’
left me behind. Bennett can’t expect everything.’
‘Oah yess,’ said Kim vaguely.
The priest leaned forward. ’I’d
give a month’s pay to find what’s goin’
on inside that little round head of yours.’
‘There is nothing,’ said
Kim, and scratched it. He was wondering whether
Mahbub Ali would send him as much as a whole rupee.
Then he could pay the letter-writer and write letters
to the lama at Benares. Perhaps Mahbub Ali would
visit him next time he came south with horses.
Surely he must know that Kim’s delivery of the
letter to the officer at Umballa had caused the great
war which the men and boys had discussed so loudly
over the barrack dinner-tables. But if Mahbub
Ali did not know this, it would be very unsafe to
tell him so. Mahbub Ali was hard upon boys who
knew, or thought they knew, too much.
‘Well, till I get further news’
— Father Victor’s voice interrupted the
reverie. ’Ye can run along now and play
with the other boys. They’ll teach ye something
— but I don’t think ye’ll like it.’
The day dragged to its weary end.
When he wished to sleep he was instructed how to
fold up his clothes and set out his boots; the other
boys deriding. Bugles waked him in the dawn;
the schoolmaster caught him after breakfast, thrust
a page of meaningless characters under his nose, gave
them senseless names and whacked him without reason.
Kim meditated poisoning him with opium borrowed from
a barrack-sweeper, but reflected that, as they all
ate at one table in public (this was peculiarly revolting
to Kim, who preferred to turn his back on the world
at meals), the stroke might be dangerous. Then
he attempted running off to the village where the priest
had tried to drug the lama — the village
where the old soldier lived. But far-seeing
sentries at every exit headed back the little scarlet
figure. Trousers and jacket crippled body and
mind alike so he abandoned the project and fell back,
Oriental-fashion, on time and chance. Three
days of torment passed in the big, echoing white rooms.
He walked out of afternoons under escort of the drummer-boy,
and all he heard from his companions were the few
useless words which seemed to make two-thirds of the
white man’s abuse. Kim knew and despised
them all long ago. The boy resented his silence
and lack of interest by beating him, as was only natural.
He did not care for any of the bazars which were in
bounds. He styled all natives ‘niggers’;
yet servants and sweepers called him abominable names
to his face, and, misled by their deferential attitude,
he never understood. This somewhat consoled
Kim for the beatings.
On the morning of the fourth day a
judgement overtook that drummer. They had gone
out together towards Umballa racecourse. He returned
alone, weeping, with news that young O’Hara,
to whom he had been doing nothing in particular, had
hailed a scarlet-bearded nigger on horseback; that
the nigger had then and there laid into him with a
peculiarly adhesive quirt, picked up young O’Hara,
and borne him off at full gallop. These tidings
came to Father Victor, and he drew down his long upper
lip. He was already sufficiently startled by
a letter from the Temple of the Tirthankars at Benares,
enclosing a native banker’s note of hand for
three hundred rupees, and an amazing prayer to ‘Almighty
God’. The lama would have been more annoyed
than the priest had he known how the bazar letter-writer
had translated his phrase ‘to acquire merit.’
‘Powers of Darkness below!’
Father Victor fumbled with the note. ‘An’
now he’s off with another of his peep-o’-day
friends. I don’t know whether it will
be a greater relief to me to get him back or to have
him lost. He’s beyond my comprehension.
How the Divil — yes, he’s the man I mean
-can a street-beggar raise money to educate white
boys?’
Three miles off, on Umballa racecourse,
Mahbub Ali, reining a grey Kabuli stallion with Kim
in front of him, was saying:
’But, Little Friend of all the
World, there is my honour and reputation to be considered.
All the officer-Sahibs in all the regiments, and
all Umballa, know Mahbub Ali. Men saw me pick
thee up and chastise that boy. We are seen now
from far across this plain. How can I take thee
away, or account for thy disappearing if I set thee
down and let thee run off into the crops? They
would put me in jail. Be patient. Once
a Sahib, always a Sahib. When thou art a man
— who knows? — thou wilt be grateful to
Mahbub Ali.’
’Take me beyond their sentries
where I can change this red. Give me money and
I will go to Benares and be with my lama again.
I do not want to be a Sahib, and remember I did deliver
that message.’
The stallion bounded wildly.
Mahbub Ali had incautiously driven home the sharp-edged
stirrup. (He was not the new sort of fluent horse-dealer
who wears English boots and spurs.) Kim drew his own
conclusions from that betrayal.
’That was a small matter.
It lay on the straight road to Benares. I and
the Sahib have by this time forgotten it. I send
so many letters and messages to men who ask questions
about horses, I cannot well remember one from the
other. Was it some matter of a bay mare that
Peters Sahib wished the pedigree of?’
Kim saw the trap at once. If
he had said ‘bay mare’ Mahbub would have
known by his very readiness to fall in with the amendment
that the boy suspected something. Kim replied
therefore:
’Bay mare. No. I
do not forget my messages thus. It was a white
stallion.’
’Ay, so it was. A white
Arab stallion. But thou didst write “bay
mare” to me.’
‘Who cares to tell truth to
a letter-writer?’ Kim answered, feeling Mahbub’s
palm on his heart.
‘Hi! Mahbub, you old villain,
pull up!’ cried a voice, and an Englishman
raced alongside on a little polo-pony. ’I’ve
been chasing you half over the country. That
Kabuli of yours can go. For sale, I suppose?’
’I have some young stuff coming
on made by Heaven for the delicate and difficult polo-game.
He has no equal. He — ’
’Plays polo and waits at table.
Yes. We know all that. What the deuce
have you got there?’
‘A. boy,’ said Mahbub
gravely. ’He was being beaten by another
boy. His father was once a white soldier in the
big war. The boy was a child in Lahore city.
He played with my horses when he was a babe.
Now I think they will make him a soldier. He
has been newly caught by his father’s Regiment
that went up to the war last week. But I do
not think he wants to be a soldier. I take him
for a ride. Tell me where thy barracks are and
I will set thee there.’
‘Let me go. I can find the barracks alone.’
‘And if thou runnest away who will say it is
not my fault?’
‘He’ll run back to his
dinner. Where has he to run to?’ the
Englishman asked.
’He was born in the land.
He has friends. He goes where he chooses.
He is a chabuk sawai [a sharp chap]. It needs
only to change his clothing, and in a twinkling he
would be a low-caste Hindu boy.’
‘The deuce he would!’
The Englishman looked critically at the boy as Mahbub
headed towards the barracks. Kim ground his teeth.
Mahbub was mocking him, as faithless Afghans will;
for he went on:
’They will send him to a school
and put heavy boots on his feet and swaddle him in
these clothes. Then he will forget all he knows.
Now, which of the barracks is thine?’
Kim pointed — he could not speak
— to Father Victor’s wing, all staring
white near by.
‘Perhaps he will make a good
soldier,’ said Mahbub reflectively.
’He will make a good orderly
at least. I sent him to deliver a message once
from Lahore. A message concerning the pedigree
of a white stallion.’
Here was deadly insult on deadlier
injury — and the Sahib to whom he had so craftily
given that war-waking letter heard it all. Kim
beheld Mahbub Ali frying in flame for his treachery,
but for himself he saw one long grey vista of barracks,
schools, and barracks again. He gazed imploringly
at the clear-cut face in which there was no glimmer
of recognition; but even at this extremity it never
occurred to him to throw himself on the white man’s
mercy or to denounce the Afghan. And Mahbub
stared deliberately at the Englishman, who stared
as deliberately at Kim, quivering and tongue-tied.
‘My horse is well trained,’
said the dealer. ’Others would have kicked,
Sahib.’
‘Ah,’ said the Englishman
at last, rubbing his pony’s damp withers with
his whip-butt. ‘Who makes the boy a soldier?’
’He says the Regiment that found
him, and especially the Padre-sahib of that regiment.
‘There is the Padre!’
Kim choked as bare-headed Father Victor sailed down
upon them from the veranda.
‘Powers O’ Darkness below,
O’Hara! How many more mixed friends do
you keep in Asia?’ he cried, as Kim slid down
and stood helplessly before him.
‘Good morning, Padre,’
the Englishman said cheerily. ’I know you
by reputation well enough. Meant to have come
over and called before this. I’m Creighton.’
‘Of the Ethnological Survey?’
said Father Victor. The Englishman nodded.
‘Faith, I’m glad to meet ye then; an’
I owe you some thanks for bringing back the boy.’
’No thanks to me, Padre.
Besides, the boy wasn’t going away. You
don’t know old Mahbub Ali.’ The horse-dealer
sat impassive in the sunlight. ’You will
when you have been in the station a month. He
sells us all our crocks. That boy is rather a
curiosity. Can you tell me anything about him?’
‘Can I tell you?’ puffed
Father Victor. ’You’ll be the one
man that could help me in my quandaries. Tell
you! Powers o’ Darkness, I’m bursting
to tell someone who knows something o’ the native!’
A groom came round the corner.
Colonel Creighton raised his voice, speaking in Urdu.
’Very good, Mahbub Ali, but what is the use
of telling me all those stories about the pony?
Not one pice more than three hundred and fifty rupees
will I give.’
‘The Sahib is a little hot and
angry after riding,’ the horse-dealer returned,
with the leer of a privileged jester. ’Presently,
he will see my horse’s points more clearly.
I will wait till he has finished his talk with the
Padre. I will wait under that tree.’
‘Confound you!’ The Colonel
laughed. ’That comes of looking at one
of Mahbub’s horses. He’s a regular
old leech, Padre. Wait, then, if thou hast so
much time to spare, Mahbub. Now I’m at
your service, Padre. Where is the boy?
Oh, he’s gone off to collogue with Mahbub.
Queer sort of boy. Might I ask you to send my
mare round under cover?’
He dropped into a chair which commanded
a clear view of Kim and Mahbub Ali in conference beneath
the tree. The Padre went indoors for cheroots.
Creighton heard Kim say bitterly:
’Trust a Brahmin before a snake, and a snake
before an harlot, and an harlot before a Pathan, Mahbub
Ali.’
‘That is all one.’
The great red beard wagged solemnly. ’Children
should not see a carpet on the loom till the pattern
is made plain. Believe me, Friend of all the
World, I do thee great service. They will not
make a soldier of thee.’
‘You crafty old sinner!’
thought Creighton. ’But you’re not
far wrong. That boy mustn’t be wasted
if he is as advertised.’
‘Excuse me half a minute,’
cried the Padre from within, ’but I’m
gettin’ the documents in the case.’
’If through me the favour of
this bold and wise Colonel Sahib comes to thee, and
thou art raised to honour, what thanks wilt thou give
Mahbub Ali when thou art a man?’
’Nay, nay! I begged thee
to let me take the Road again, where I should have
been safe; and thou hast sold me back to the English.
What will they give thee for blood-money?’
‘A cheerful young demon!’
The Colonel bit his cigar, and turned politely to
Father Victor.
’What are the letters that the
fat priest is waving before the Colonel? Stand
behind the stallion as though looking at my bridle!’
said Mahbub Ali.
’A letter from my lama which
he wrote from Jagadhir Road, saying that he will pay
three hundred rupees by the year for my schooling.’
‘Oho! Is old Red Hat of that sort?
At which school?’
‘God knows. I think in Nucklao.’
’Yes. There is a big school
there for the sons of Sahibs — and half-Sahibs.
I have seen it when I sell horses there. So
the lama also loved the Friend of all the World?’
‘Ay; and he did not tell lies, or return me
to captivity.’
’Small wonder the Padre does
not know how to unravel the thread. How fast
he talks to the Colonel Sahib!’ Mahbub Ali chuckled.
’By Allah!’ the keen eyes swept the
veranda for an Instant — ’thy lama has
sent what to me looks like a note of hand. I
have had some few dealings in hoondis. The Colonel
Sahib is looking at it.’
‘What good is all this to me?’
said Kim wearily. ’Thou wilt go away,
and they will return me to those empty rooms where
there is no good place to sleep and where the boys
beat me.’
’I do not think that.
Have patience, child. All Pathans are not faithless
— except in horseflesh.’
Five — ten — fifteen minutes
passed, Father Victor talking energetically or asking
questions which the Colonel answered.
’Now I’ve told you everything
that I know about the boy from beginnin to end; and
it’s a blessed relief to me. Did ye ever
hear the like?’
’At any rate, the old man has
sent the money. Gobind Sahai’s notes of
hand are good from here to China,’ said the Colonel.
’The more one knows about natives the less
can one say what they will or won’t do.’
‘That’s consolin’
— from the head of the Ethnological Survey.
It’s this mixture of Red Bulls and Rivers of
Healing (poor heathen, God help him!) an’ notes
of hand and Masonic certificates. Are you a
Mason, by any chance?’
’By Jove, I am, now I come to
think of it. That’s an additional reason,’
said the Colonel absently.
’I’m glad ye see a reason
in it. But as I said, it’s the mixture
o’ things that’s beyond me. An’
his prophesyin’ to our Colonel, sitting on my
bed with his little shimmy torn open showing his white
skin; an’ the prophecy comin’ true!
They’ll cure all that nonsense at St Xavier’s,
eh?’
‘Sprinkle him with holy water,’ the Colonel
laughed.
’On my word, I fancy I ought
to sometimes. But I’m hoping he’ll
be brought up as a good Catholic. All that troubles
me is what’ll happen if the old beggar-man -’
’Lama, lama, my dear sir; and
some of them are gentlemen in their own country.’
’The lama, then, fails to pay
next year. He’s a fine business head to
plan on the spur of the moment, but he’s bound
to die some day. An’ takin’ a heathen’s
money to give a child a Christian education -’
’But he said explicitly what
he wanted. As soon as he knew the boy was white
he seems to have made his arrangements accordingly.
I’d give a month’s pay to hear how he
explained it all at the Tirthankars’ Temple
at Benares. Look here, Padre, I don’t pretend
to know much about natives, but if he says he’ll
pay, he’ll pay — dead or alive.
I mean, his heirs will assume the debt. My advice
to you is, send the boy down to Lucknow. If
your Anglican Chaplain thinks you’ve stolen
a march on him -’
‘Bad luck to Bennett!
He was sent to the Front instead o’ me.
Doughty certified me medically unfit. I’ll
excommunicate Doughty if he comes back alive!
Surely Bennett ought to be content with -’
’Glory, leaving you the religion.
Quite so! As a matter of fact I don’t
think Bennett will mind. Put the blame on me.
I — er — strongly recommend sending the
boy to St Xavier’s. He can go down on
pass as a soldier’s orphan, so the railway fare
will be saved. You can buy him an outfit from
the Regimental subscription. The Lodge will
be saved the expense of his education, and that will
put the Lodge in a good temper. It’s perfectly
easy. I’ve got to go down to Lucknow next
week. I’ll look after the boy on the way
— give him in charge of my servants, and so
on.’
‘You’re a good man.’
’Not in the least. Don’t
make that mistake. The lama has sent us money
for a definite end. We can’t very well
return it. We shall have to do as he says.
Well, that’s settled, isn’t it?
Shall we say that, Tuesday next, you’ll hand
him over to me at the night train south? That’s
only three days. He can’t do much harm
in three days.’
‘It’s a weight off my
mind, but — this thing here?’ —
he waved the note of hand — ’I don’t
know Gobind Sahai: or his bank, which may be
a hole in a wall.’
’You’ve never been a subaltern
in debt. I’ll cash it if you like, and
send you the vouchers in proper order.’
‘But with all your own work too! It’s
askin’ -’
’It’s not the least trouble
indeed. You see, as an ethnologist, the thing’s
very interesting to me. I’d like to make
a note of it for some Government work that I’m
doing. The transformation of a regimental badge
like your Red Bull into a sort of fetish that the
boy follows is very interesting.’
‘But I can’t thank you enough.’
’There’s one thing you
can do. All we Ethnological men are as jealous
as jackdaws of one another’s discoveries.
They’re of no interest to anyone but ourselves,
of course, but you know what book-collectors are like.
Well, don’t say a word, directly or indirectly,
about the Asiatic side of the boy’s character
— his adventures and his prophecy, and so on.
I’ll worm them out of the boy later on and
— you see?’
’I do. Ye’ll make
a wonderful account of it. Never a word will
I say to anyone till I see it in print.’
’Thank you. That goes
straight to an ethnologist’s heart. Well,
I must be getting back to my breakfast. Good
Heavens! Old Mahbub here still?’ He raised
his voice, and the horse-dealer came out from under
the shadow of the tree, ‘Well, what is it?’
‘As regards that young horse,’
said Mahbub, ’I say that when a colt is born
to be a polo-pony, closely following the ball without
teaching — when such a colt knows the game by
divination — then I say it is a great wrong
to break that colt to a heavy cart, Sahib!’
’So say I also, Mahbub.
The colt will be entered for polo only. (These
fellows think of nothing in the world but horses, Padre.)
I’ll see you tomorrow, Mahbub, if you’ve
anything likely for sale.’
The dealer saluted, horseman-fashion,
with a sweep of the off hand. ‘Be patient
a little, Friend of all the World,’ he whispered
to the agonized Kim. ’Thy fortune is made.
In a little while thou goest to Nucklao, and —
here is something to pay the letter-writer. I
shall see thee again, I think, many times,’ and
he cantered off down the road.
‘Listen to me,’ said the
Colonel from the veranda, speaking in the vernacular.
’In three days thou wilt go with me to Lucknow,
seeing and hearing new things all the while.
Therefore sit still for three days and do not run
away. Thou wilt go to school at Lucknow.’
‘Shall I meet my Holy One there?’ Kim
whimpered.
’At least Lucknow is nearer
to Benares than Umballa. It may be thou wilt
go under my protection. Mahbub Ali knows this,
and he will be angry if thou returnest to the Road
now. Remember — much has been told me
which I do not forget.’
‘I will wait,’ said Kim, ‘but the
boys will beat me.’
Then the bugles blew for dinner.