Unto whose use the pregnant suns are poised
With idiot moons and stars retracing stars?
Creep thou betweene — thy coming’s all
unnoised.
Heaven hath her high, as Earth her baser, wars.
Heir to these tumults, this affright, that fraye
(By Adam’s, fathers’, own, sin bound alway);
Peer up, draw out thy horoscope and say
Which planet mends thy threadbare fate or mars?
Sir John Christie.
In the afternoon the red-faced schoolmaster
told Kim that he had been ‘struck off the strength’,
which conveyed no meaning to him till he was ordered
to go away and play. Then he ran to the bazar,
and found the young letter-writer to whom he owed a
stamp.
‘Now I pay,’ said Kim
royally, ’and now I need another letter to be
written.’
‘Mahbub Ali is in Umballa,’
said the writer jauntily. He was, by virtue
of his office, a bureau of general misinformation.
’This is not to Mahbub, but
to a priest. Take thy pen and write quickly.
To Teshoo Lama, the Holy One from Bhotiyal seeking
for a River, who is now in the Temple of the Tirthankars
at Benares. Take more ink! In three days
I am to go down to Nucklao to the school at Nucklao.
The name of the school is Xavier. I do not know
where that school is, but it is at Nucklao.’
‘But I know Nucklao,’
the writer interrupted. ‘I know the school.’
‘Tell him where it is, and I give half an anna.’
The reed pen scratched busily.
‘He cannot mistake.’ The man lifted
his head. ‘Who watches us across the street?’
Kim looked up hurriedly and saw Colonel
Creighton in tennis-flannels.
’Oh, that is some Sahib who
knows the fat priest in the barracks. He is beckoning
me.’
‘What dost thou?’ said
the Colonel, when Kim trotted up.
’I — I am not running
away. I send a letter to my Holy One at Benares.’
’I had not thought of that.
Hast thou said that I take thee to Lucknow?’
‘Nay, I have not. Read
the letter, if there be a doubt.’
‘Then why hast thou left out
my name in writing to that Holy One?’ The Colonel
smiled a queer smile. Kim took his courage in
both hands.
’It was said once to me that
it is inexpedient to write the names of strangers
concerned in any matter, because by the naming of
names many good plans are brought to confusion.’
‘Thou hast been well taught,’
the Colonel replied, and Kim flushed. ’I
have left my cheroot-case in the Padre’s veranda.
Bring it to my house this even.’
‘Where is the house?’
said Kim. His quick wit told him that he was
being tested in some fashion or another, and he stood
on guard.
‘Ask anyone in the big bazar.’ The
Colonel walked on.
‘He has forgotten his cheroot-case,’
said Kim, returning. ’I must bring it
to him this evening. That is all my letter except,
thrice over, Come to me! Come to me! Come
to me! Now I will pay for a stamp and put it
in the post. He rose to go, and as an afterthought
asked: ‘Who is that angry-faced Sahib who
lost the cheroot-case?’
’Oh, he is only Creighton Sahib
— a very foolish Sahib, who is a Colonel Sahib
without a regiment.’
‘What is his business?’
’God knows. He is always
buying horses which he cannot ride, and asking riddles
about the works of God — such as plants and stones
and the customs of people. The dealers call him
the father of fools, because he is so easily cheated
about a horse. Mahbub Ali says he is madder
than most other Sahibs.’
‘Oh!’ said Kim, and departed.
His training had given him some small knowledge of
character, and he argued that fools are not given
information which leads to calling out eight thousand
men besides guns. The Commander-in-Chief of
all India does not talk, as Kim had heard him talk,
to fools. Nor would Mahbub Ali’s tone have
changed, as it did every time he mentioned the Colonel’s
name, if the Colonel had been a fool. Consequently
— and this set Kim to skipping — there
was a mystery somewhere, and Mahbub Ali probably spied
for the Colonel much as Kim had spied for Mahbub.
And, like the horse-dealer, the Colonel evidently
respected people who did not show themselves to be
too clever.
He rejoiced that he had not betrayed
his knowledge of the Colonel’s house; and when,
on his return to barracks, he discovered that no cheroot-case
had been left behind, he beamed with delight.
Here was a man after his own heart — a tortuous
and indirect person playing a hidden game. Well,
if he could be a fool, so could Kim.
He showed nothing of his mind when
Father Victor, for three long mornings, discoursed
to him of an entirely new set of Gods and Godlings
— notably of a Goddess called Mary, who, he gathered,
was one with Bibi Miriam of Mahbub Ali’s theology.
He betrayed no emotion when, after the lecture, Father
Victor dragged him from shop to shop buying articles
of outfit, nor when envious drummer-boys kicked him
because he was going to a superior school did he complain,
but awaited the play of circumstances with an interested
soul. Father Victor, good man, took him to the
station, put him into an empty second-class next to
Colonel Creighton’s first, and bade him farewell
with genuine feeling.
‘They’ll make a man o’
you, O’Hara, at St Xavier’s — a white
man, an’, I hope, a good man. They know
all about your comin’, an’ the Colonel
will see that ye’re not lost or mislaid anywhere
on the road. I’ve given you a notion of
religious matters, — at least I hope so, —
and you’ll remember, when they ask you your religion,
that you’re a Cath’lic. Better say
Roman Cath’lic, tho’ I’m not fond
of the word.’
Kim lit a rank cigarette — he
had been careful to buy a stock in the bazar —
and lay down to think. This solitary passage
was very different from that joyful down-journey in
the third-class with the lama. ‘Sahibs
get little pleasure of travel,’ he reflected.
’Hai mai! I go from one
place to another as it might be a kickball. It
is my Kismet. No man can escape his Kismet.
But I am to pray to Bibi Miriam, and I am a Sahib.’
He looked at his boots ruefully. ’No;
I am Kim. This is the great world, and I am only
Kim. Who is Kim?’ He considered his own
identity, a thing he had never done before, till his
head swam. He was one insignificant person in
all this roaring whirl of India, going southward to
he knew not what fate.
Presently the Colonel sent for him,
and talked for a long time. So far as Kim could
gather, he was to be diligent and enter the Survey
of India as a chain-man. If he were very good,
and passed the proper examinations, he would be earning
thirty rupees a month at seventeen years old, and
Colonel Creighton would see that he found suitable
employment.
Kim pretended at first to understand
perhaps one word in three of this talk. Then
the Colonel, seeing his mistake, turned to fluent
and picturesque Urdu and Kim was contented. No
man could be a fool who knew the language so intimately,
who moved so gently and silently, and whose eyes were
so different from the dull fat eyes of other Sahibs.
’Yes, and thou must learn how
to make pictures of roads and mountains and rivers,
to carry these pictures in thine eye till a suitable
time comes to set them upon paper. Perhaps some
day, when thou art a chain-man, I may say to thee
when we are working together: “Go across
those hills and see what lies beyond.”
Then one will say: “There are bad people
living in those hills who will slay the chain-man
if he be seen to look like a Sahib.” What
then?’
Kim thought. Would it be safe
to return the Colonel’s lead?
‘I would tell what that other man had said.’
’But if I answered: “I
will give thee a hundred rupees for knowledge of what
is behind those hills — for a picture of a river
and a little news of what the people say in the villages
there”?’
‘How can I tell? I am
only a boy. Wait till I am a man.’
Then, seeing the Colonel’s brow clouded, he
went on: ’But I think I should in a few
days earn the hundred rupees.’
‘By what road?’
Kim shook his head resolutely.
’If I said how I would earn them, another man
might hear and forestall me. It is not good to
sell knowledge for nothing.’
‘Tell now.’ The
Colonel held up a rupee. Kim’s hand half
reached towards it, and dropped.
’Nay, Sahib; nay. I know
the price that will be paid for the answer, but I
do not know why the question is asked.’
‘Take it for a gift, then,’
said Creighton, tossing it over. ’There
is a good spirit in thee. Do not let it be blunted
at St Xavier’s. There are many boys there
who despise the black men.’
‘Their mothers were bazar-women,’
said Kim. He knew well there is no hatred like
that of the half-caste for his brother-in-law.
’True; but thou art a Sahib
and the son of a Sahib. Therefore, do not at
any time be led to contemn the black men. I have
known boys newly entered into the service of the Government
who feigned not to understand the talk or the customs
of black men. Their pay was cut for ignorance.
There is no sin so great as ignorance. Remember
this.’
Several times in the course of the
long twenty-four hours’ run south did the Colonel
send for Kim, always developing this latter text.
‘We be all on one lead-rope,
then,’ said Kim at last, ’the Colonel,
Mahbub Ali, and I — when I become a chain-man.
He will use me as Mahbub Ali employed me, I think.
That is good, if it allows me to return to the Road
again. This clothing grows no easier by wear.’
When they came to the crowded Lucknow
station there was no sign of the lama. He swallowed
his disappointment, while the Colonel bundled him
into a ticca-gharri with his neat belongings and despatched
him alone to St Xavier’s.
‘I do not say farewell, because
we shall meet again,’ he cried. ’Again,
and many times, if thou art one of good spirit.
But thou art not yet tried.’
‘Not when I brought thee’
— Kim actually dared to use the turn of equals
— ‘a white stallion’s pedigree that
night?’
‘Much is gained by forgetting,
little brother,’ said the Colonel, with a look
that pierced through Kim’s shoulder-blades as
he scuttled into the carriage.
It took him nearly five minutes to
recover. Then he sniffed the new air appreciatively.
‘A rich city,’ he said. ’Richer
than Lahore. How good the bazars must be!
Coachman, drive me a little through the bazars here.’
‘My order is to take thee to
the school.’ The driver used the ‘thou’,
which is rudeness when applied to a white man.
In the clearest and most fluent vernacular Kim pointed
out his error, climbed on to the box-seat, and, perfect
understanding established, drove for a couple of hours
up and down, estimating, comparing, and enjoying.
There is no city — except Bombay, the queen
of all — more beautiful in her garish style
than Lucknow, whether you see her from the bridge
over the river, or from the top of the Imambara looking
down on the gilt umbrellas of the Chutter Munzil, and
the trees in which the town is bedded. Kings
have adorned her with fantastic buildings, endowed
her with charities, crammed her with pensioners, and
drenched her with blood. She is the centre of
all idleness, intrigue, and luxury, and shares with
Delhi the claim to talk the only pure Urdu.
‘A fair city — a beautiful
city.’ The driver, as a Lucknow man, was
pleased with the compliment, and told Kim many astounding
things where an English guide would have talked of
the Mutiny.
‘Now we will go to the school,’
said Kim at last. The great old school of St
Xavier’s in Partibus, block on block of low white
buildings, stands in vast grounds over against the
Gumti River, at some distance from the city.
‘What like of folk are they within?’
said Kim.
’Young Sahibs — all devils.
But to speak truth, and I drive many of them to and
fro from the railway station, I have never seen one
that had in him the making of a more perfect devil
than thou — this young Sahib whom I am now driving.’
Naturally, for he was never trained
to consider them in any way improper, Kim had passed
the time of day with one or two frivolous ladies at
upper windows in a certain street, and naturally, in
the exchange of compliments, had acquitted himself
well. He was about to acknowledge the driver’s
last insolence, when his eye — it was growing
dusk — caught a figure sitting by one of the
white plaster gate-pillars in the long sweep of wall.
‘Stop!’ he cried.
‘Stay here. I do not go to the school
at once.’
‘But what is to pay me for this
coming and re-coming?’ said the driver petulantly.
’Is the boy mad? Last time it was a dancing-girl.
This time it is a priest.’
Kim was in the road headlong, patting
the dusty feet beneath the dirty yellow robe.
‘I have waited here a day and
a half,’ the lama’s level voice began.
’Nay, I had a disciple with me. He that
was my friend at the Temple of the Tirthankars gave
me a guide for this journey. I came from Benares
in the te-rain, when thy letter was given me.
Yes, I am well fed. I need nothing.’
’But why didst thou not stay
with the Kulu woman, O Holy One? In what way
didst thou get to Benares? My heart has been
heavy since we parted.’
’The woman wearied me by constant
flux of talk and requiring charms for children.
I separated myself from that company, permitting her
to acquire merit by gifts. She is at least a
woman of open hands, and I made a promise to return
to her house if need arose. Then, perceiving
myself alone in this great and terrible world, I bethought
me of the te-rain to Benares, where I knew one abode
in the Tirthankars’ Temple who was a Seeker,
even as I.’
‘Ah! Thy River,’
said Kim. ‘I had forgotten the River.’
’So soon, my chela? I
have never forgotten it. But when I had left
thee it seemed better that I should go to the Temple
and take counsel, for, look you, India is very large,
and it may be that wise men before us, some two or
three, have left a record of the place of our River.
There is debate in the Temple of the Tirthankars
on this matter; some saying one thing, and some another.
They are courteous folk.’
‘So be it; but what dost thou do now?’
’I acquire merit in that I help
thee, my chela, to wisdom. The priest of that
body of men who serve the Red Bull wrote me that all
should be as I desired for thee. I sent the money
to suffice for one year, and then I came, as thou
seest me, to watch for thee going up into the Gates
of Learning. A day and a half have I waited,
not because I was led by any affection towards thee
— that is no part of the Way — but, as
they said at the Tirthankars’ Temple, because,
money having been paid for learning, it was right that
I should oversee the end of the matter. They
resolved my doubts most clearly. I had a fear
that, perhaps, I came because I wished to see thee
— misguided by the Red Mist of affection.
It is not so … Moreover, I am troubled by
a dream.’
’But surely, Holy One, thou
hast not forgotten the Road and all that befell on
it. Surely it was a little to see me that thou
didst come?’
‘The horses are cold, and it
is past their feeding-time,’ whined the driver.
‘Go to Jehannum and abide there
with thy reputationless aunt!’ Kim snarled
over his shoulder. ’I am all alone in this
land; I know not where I go nor what shall befall
me. My heart was in that letter I sent thee.
Except for Mahbub Ali, and he is a Pathan, I have
no friend save thee, Holy One. Do not altogether
go away.’
‘I have considered that also,’
the lama replied, in a shaking voice. ’It
is manifest that from time to time I shall acquire
merit if before that I have not found my River —
by assuring myself that thy feet are set on wisdom.
What they will teach thee I do not know, but the
priest wrote me that no son of a Sahib in all India
will be better taught than thou. So from time
to time, therefore, I will come again. Maybe
thou wilt be such a Sahib as he who gave me these
spectacles’ — the lama wiped them elaborately
— ’in the Wonder House at Lahore.
That is my hope, for he was a Fountain of Wisdom
— wiser than many abbots …. Again, maybe
thou wilt forget me and our meetings.’
‘If I eat thy bread,’
cried Kim passionately, ’how shall I ever forget
thee?’
‘No — no.’
He put the boy aside. ’I must go back
to Benares. From time to time, now that I know
the customs of letter-writers in this land, I will
send thee a letter, and from time to time I will come
and see thee.’
‘But whither shall I send my
letters?’ wailed Kim, clutching at the robe,
all forgetful that he was a Sahib.
’To the Temple of the Tirthankars
at Benares. That is the place I have chosen
till I find my River. Do not weep; for, look
you, all Desire is Illusion and a new binding upon
the Wheel. Go up to the Gates of Learning.
Let me see thee go … Dost thou love me?
Then go, or my heart cracks … I will come
again. Surely I will come again.
The lama watched the ticca-gharri
rumble into the compound, and strode off, snuffing
between each long stride.
‘The Gates of Learning’ shut with a clang.
The country born and bred boy has
his own manners and customs, which do not resemble
those of any other land; and his teachers approach
him by roads which an English master would not understand.
Therefore, you would scarcely be interested in Kim’s
experiences as a St Xavier’s boy among two or
three hundred precocious youths, most of whom had
never seen the sea. He suffered the usual penalties
for breaking out of bounds when there was cholera in
the city. This was before he had learned to
write fair English, and so was obliged to find a bazar
letter-writer. He was, of course, indicted for
smoking and for the use of abuse more full-flavoured
than even St Xavier’s had ever heard. He
learned to wash himself with the Levitical scrupulosity
of the native-born, who in his heart considers the
Englishman rather dirty. He played the usual
tricks on the patient coolies pulling the punkahs in
the sleeping-rooms where the boys threshed through
the hot nights telling tales till the dawn; and quietly
he measured himself against his self-reliant mates.
They were sons of subordinate officials
in the Railway, Telegraph, and Canal Services; of
warrant-officers, sometimes retired and sometimes
acting as commanders-in-chief to a feudatory Rajah’s
army; of captains of the Indian Marine Government pensioners,
planters, Presidency shopkeepers, and missionaries.
A few were cadets of the old Eurasian houses that
have taken strong root in Dhurrumtollah — Pereiras,
De Souzas, and D’Silvas. Their parents
could well have educated them in England, but they
loved the school that had served their own youth,
and generation followed sallow-hued generation at
St Xavier’s. Their homes ranged from Howrah
of the railway people to abandoned cantonments like
Monghyr and Chunar; lost tea-gardens Shillong-way;
villages where their fathers were large landholders
in Oudh or the Deccan; Mission-stations a week from
the nearest railway line; seaports a thousand miles
south, facing the brazen Indian surf; and cinchona-plantations
south of all. The mere story of their adventures,
which to them were no adventures, on their road to
and from school would have crisped a Western boy’s
hair. They were used to jogging off alone through
a hundred miles of jungle, where there was always the
delightful chance of being delayed by tigers; but they
would no more have bathed in the English Channel in
an English August than their brothers across the world
would have lain still while a leopard snuffed at their
palanquin. There were boys of fifteen who had
spent a day and a half on an islet in the middle of
a flooded river, taking charge, as by right, of a
camp of frantic pilgrims returning from a shrine.
There were seniors who had requisitioned a chance-met
Rajah’s elephant, in the name of St Francis Xavier,
when the Rains once blotted out the cart-track that
led to their father’s estate, and had all but
lost the huge beast in a quicksand. There was
a boy who, he said, and none doubted, had helped his
father to beat off with rifles from the veranda a rush
of Akas in the days when those head-hunters were bold
against lonely plantations.
And every tale was told in the even,
passionless voice of the native-born, mixed with quaint
reflections, borrowed unconsciously from native foster-mothers,
and turns of speech that showed they had been that
instant translated from the vernacular. Kim watched,
listened, and approved. This was not insipid,
single-word talk of drummer-boys. It dealt with
a life he knew and in part understood. The atmosphere
suited him, and he throve by inches. They gave
him a white drill suit as the weather warmed, and
he rejoiced in the new-found bodily comforts as he
rejoiced to use his sharpened mind over the tasks
they set him. His quickness would have delighted
an English master; but at St Xavier’s they know
the first rush of minds developed by sun and surroundings,
as they know the half-collapse that sets in at twenty-two
or twenty-three.
None the less he remembered to hold
himself lowly. When tales were told of hot nights,
Kim did not sweep the board with his reminiscences;
for St Xavier’s looks down on boys who ’go
native all-together.’ One must never forget
that one is a Sahib, and that some day, when examinations
are passed, one will command natives. Kim made
a note of this, for he began to understand where examinations
led.
Then came the holidays from August
to October — the long holidays imposed by the
heat and the Rains. Kim was informed that he
would go north to some station in the hills behind
Umballa, where Father Victor would arrange for him.
‘A barrack-school?’ said
Kim, who had asked many questions and thought more.
‘Yes, I suppose so,’ said
the master. ’It will not do you any harm
to keep you out of mischief. You can go up with
young De Castro as far as Delhi.’
Kim considered it in every possible
light. He had been diligent, even as the Colonel
advised. A boy’s holiday was his own property
— of so much the talk of his companions had
advised him, — and a barrack-school would be
torment after St Xavier’s. Moreover —
this was magic worth anything else — he could
write. In three months he had discovered how
men can speak to each other without a third party,
at the cost of half an anna and a little knowledge.
No word had come from the lama, but there remained
the Road. Kim yearned for the caress of soft
mud squishing up between the toes, as his mouth watered
for mutton stewed with butter and cabbages, for rice
speckled with strong scented cardamoms, for the saffron-tinted
rice, garlic and onions, and the forbidden greasy sweetmeats
of the bazars. They would feed him raw beef
on a platter at the barrack-school, and he must smoke
by stealth. But again, he was a Sahib and was
at St Xavier’s, and that pig Mahbub Ali …
No, he would not test Mahbub’s hospitality
— and yet … He thought it out alone
in the dormitory, and came to the conclusion he had
been unjust to Mahbub.
The school was empty; nearly all the
masters had gone away; Colonel Creighton ’s
railway pass lay in his hand, and Kim puffed himself
that he had not spent Colonel Creighton’s or
Mahbub’s money in riotous living. He was
still lord of two rupees seven annas. His new
bullock-trunk, marked ‘K. O’H.’,
and bedding-roll lay in the empty sleeping-room.
‘Sahibs are always tied to their
baggage,’ said Kim, nodding at them. ‘You
will stay here’ He went out into the warm rain,
smiling sinfully, and sought a certain house whose
outside he had noted down some time before…
‘Arre’! Dost thou
know what manner of women we be in this quarter?
Oh, shame!’
‘Was I born yesterday?’
Kim squatted native-fashion on the cushions of that
upper room. ’A little dyestuff and three
yards of cloth to help out a jest. Is it much
to ask?’
‘Who is she? Thou art
full young, as Sahibs go, for this devilry.’
’Oh, she? She is the daughter
of a certain schoolmaster of a regiment in the cantonments.
He has beaten me twice because I went over their
wall in these clothes. Now I would go as a gardener’s
boy. Old men are very jealous.’
‘That is true. Hold thy
face still while I dab on the juice.’
’Not too black, Naikan.
I would not appear to her as a hubshi (nigger).’
‘Oh, love makes nought of these
things. And how old is she?’
‘Twelve years, I think,’
said the shameless Kim. ’Spread it also
on the breast. It may be her father will tear
my clothes off me, and if I am piebald -’ he
laughed.
The girl worked busily, dabbing a
twist of cloth into a little saucer of brown dye that
holds longer than any walnut-juice.
’Now send out and get me a cloth
for the turban. Woe is me, my head is all unshaved!
And he will surely knock off my turban.’
’I am not a barber, but I will
make shift. Thou wast born to be a breaker of
hearts! All this disguise for one evening?
Remember, the stuff does not wash away.’
She shook with laughter till her bracelets and anklets
jingled. ’But who is to pay me for this?
Huneefa herself could not have given thee better stuff.’
‘Trust in the Gods, my sister,’
said Kim gravely, screwing his face round as the stain
dried. ’Besides, hast thou ever helped
to paint a Sahib thus before?’
‘Never indeed. But a jest is not money.’
‘It is worth much more.’
’Child, thou art beyond all
dispute the most shameless son of Shaitan that I have
ever known to take up a poor girl’s time with
this play, and then to say: “Is not the
jest enough?” Thou wilt go very far in this
world.’ She gave the dancing-girls’
salutation in mockery.
‘All one. Make haste and
rough-cut my head.’ Kim shifted from foot
to foot, his eyes ablaze with mirth as he thought of
the fat days before him. He gave the girl four
annas, and ran down the stairs in the likeness of
a low-caste Hindu boy — perfect in every detail.
A cookshop was his next point of call, where he feasted
in extravagance and greasy luxury.
On Lucknow station platform he watched
young De Castro, all covered with prickly-heat, get
into a second-class compartment. Kim patronized
a third, and was the life and soul of it. He
explained to the company that he was assistant to
a juggler who had left him behind sick with fever,
and that he would pick up his master at Umballa.
As the occupants of the carriage changed, he varied
this tale, or adorned it with all the shoots of a
budding fancy, the more rampant for being held off
native speech so long. In all India that night
was no human being so joyful as Kim. At Umballa
he got out and headed eastward, plashing over the
sodden fields to the village where the old soldier
lived.
About this time Colonel Creighton
at Simla was advised from Lucknow by wire that young
O’Hara had disappeared. Mahbub Ali was
in town selling horses, and to him the Colonel confided
the affair one morning cantering round Annandale racecourse.
‘Oh, that is nothing,’
said the horse-dealer. ’Men are like horses.
At certain times they need salt, and if that salt is
not in the mangers they will lick it up from the earth.
He has gone back to the Road again for a while.
The madrissak wearied him. I knew it would.
Another time, I will take him upon the Road myself.
Do not be troubled, Creighton Sahib. It is
as though a polo-pony, breaking loose, ran out to
learn the game alone.’
‘Then he is not dead, think you?’
’Fever might kill him.
I do not fear for the boy otherwise. A monkey
does not fall among trees.’
Next morning, on the same course,
Mahbub’s stallion ranged alongside the Colonel.
‘It is as I had thought,’
said the horse-dealer. ’He has come through
Umballa at least, and there he has written a letter
to me, having learned in the bazar that I was here.’
‘Read,’ said the Colonel,
with a sigh of relief. It was absurd that a
man of his position should take an interest in a little
country-bred vagabond; but the Colonel remembered
the conversation in the train, and often in the past
few months had caught himself thinking of the queer,
silent, self-possessed boy. His evasion, of course,
was the height of insolence, but it argued some resource
and nerve.
Mahbub’s eyes twinkled as he
reined out into the centre of the cramped little plain,
where none could come near unseen.
‘”The Friend of the Stars, who
is the Friend of all the World -”’
‘What is this?’
’A name we give him in Lahore
city. “The Friend of all the World takes
leave to go to his own places. He will come back
upon the appointed day. Let the box and the
bedding-roll be sent for; and if there has been a
fault, let the Hand of Friendship turn aside the Whip
of Calamity.” There is yet a little more,
but -’
‘No matter, read.’
’”Certain things are not known
to those who eat with forks. It is better to
eat with both hands for a while. Speak soft words
to those who do not understand this that the return
may be propitious.” Now the manner in
which that was cast is, of course, the work of the
letter-writer, but see how wisely the boy has devised
the matter of it so that no hint is given except to
those who know!’
‘Is this the Hand of Friendship
to avert the Whip of Calamity?’ laughed the
Colonel.
’See how wise is the boy.
He would go back to the Road again, as I said.
Not knowing yet thy trade -’
‘I am not at all sure of that,’ the Colonel
muttered.
’He turns to me to make a peace
between you. Is he not wise? He says he
will return. He is but perfecting his knowledge.
Think, Sahib! He has been three months at the
school. And he is not mouthed to that bit.
For my part, I rejoice. The pony learns the
game.’
‘Ay, but another time he must not go alone.’
’Why? He went alone before
he came under the Colonel Sahib’s protection.
When he comes to the Great Game he must go alone —
alone, and at peril of his head. Then, if he
spits, or sneezes, or sits down other than as the
people do whom he watches, he may be slain.
Why hinder him now? Remember how the Persians
say: The jackal that lives in the wilds of Mazanderan
can only be caught by the hounds of Mazanderan.’
’True. It is true, Mahbub
Ali. And if he comes to no harm, I do not desire
anything better. But it is great insolence on
his part.’
‘He does not tell me, even,
whither he goes,’ said Mahbub. ’He
is no fool. When his time is accomplished he
will come to me. It is time the healer of pearls
took him in hand. He ripens too quickly —
as Sahibs reckon.’
This prophecy was fulfilled to the
letter a month later. Mahbub had gone down to
Umballa to bring up a fresh consignment of horses,
and Kim met him on the Kalka road at dusk riding alone,
begged an alms of him, was sworn at, and replied in
English. There was nobody within earshot to
hear Mahbub’s gasp of amazement.
‘Oho! And where hast thou been?’
‘Up and down — down and up.’
‘Come under a tree, out of the wet, and tell.’
’I stayed for a while with
an old man near Umballa; anon with a household of my
acquaintance in Umballa. With one of these I
went as far as Delhi to the southward. That
is a wondrous city. Then I drove a bullock for
a teli [an oilman] coming north; but I heard of a great
feast forward in Patiala, and thither went I in the
company of a firework-maker. It was a great
feast’ (Kim rubbed his stomach). ’I
saw Rajahs, and elephants with gold and silver trappings;
and they lit all the fireworks at once, whereby eleven
men were killed, my fire-work-maker among them, and
I was blown across a tent but took no harm.
Then I came back to the rel with a Sikh horseman, to
whom I was groom for my bread; and so here.’
‘Shabash!’ said Mahbub Ali.
‘But what does the Colonel Sahib say?
I do not wish to be beaten.’
’The Hand of Friendship has
averted the Whip of Calamity; but another time, when
thou takest the Road it will be with me. This
is too early.’
’Late enough for me. I
have learned to read and to write English a little
at the madrissah. I shall soon be altogether
a Sahib.’
‘Hear him!’ laughed Mahbub,
looking at the little drenched figure dancing in the
wet. ‘Salaam — Sahib,’ and
he saluted ironically.
’Well, art tired of the Road,
or wilt thou come on to Umballa with me and work back
with the horses?’
‘I come with thee, Mahbub Ali.’