The month was over before Linforth
at last steamed out of the harbour at Marseilles.
He was as impatient to reach Bombay as a year before
Shere Ali had been reluctant. To Shere Ali the
boat had flown with wings of swiftness, to Linforth
she was a laggard. The steamer passed Stromboli
on a wild night of storm and moonlight. The wrack
of clouds scurrying overhead, now obscured, now let
the moonlight through, and the great cone rising sheer
from a tempestuous sea glowed angrily. Linforth,
in the shelter of a canvas screen, watched the glow
suddenly expand, and a stream of bright sparkling
red flow swiftly along the shoulder of the mountain,
turn at a right angle, and plunge down towards the
sea. The bright red would become dull, the dull
red grow black, the glare of light above the cone
contract for a little while and then burst out again.
Yet men lived upon the slope of Stromboli, even as
Englishmen the thought flashed into his
mind lived in India, recognising the peril
and going quietly about their work. There was
always that glare of menacing light over the hill-districts
of India as above the crater of Stromboli, now contracting,
now expanding and casting its molten stream down towards
the plains.
At the moment when Linforth watched
the crown of light above Stromboli, the glare was
widening over the hill country of Chiltistan.
Ralston so far away as Peshawur saw it reddening the
sky and was the more troubled in that he could not
discover why just at this moment the menace should
glow red. The son of Abdulla Mohammed was apparently
quiet and Shere Ali had not left Calcutta. The
Resident at Kohara admitted the danger. Every
despatch he sent to Peshawur pointed to the likelihood
of trouble. But he too was at fault. Unrest
was evident, the cause of it quite obscure. But
what was hidden from Government House in Peshawur and
the Old Mission House at Kohara was already whispered
in the bazaars. There among the thatched booths
which have their backs upon the brink of the water-channel
in the great square, men knew very well that Shere
Ali was the cause, though Shere Ali knew nothing of
it himself. One of those queer little accidents
possible in the East had happened within the last
few weeks. A trifling gift had been magnified
into a symbol and a message, and the message had run
through Chiltistan like fire through a dry field of
stubble. And then two events occurred in Peshawur
which gave to Ralston the key of the mystery.
The first was the arrival in that
city of a Hindu lady from Gujerat who had lately come
to the conclusion that she was a reincarnation of the
Goddess Devi. She arrived in great pomp, and there
was some trouble in the streets as the procession
passed through to the temple which she had chosen
as her residence. For the Hindus, on the one hand,
firmly believed in her divinity. The lady came
of a class which, held in dishonour in the West, had
its social position and prestige in India. There
was no reason in the eyes of the faithful why she
should say she was the Goddess Devi if she were not.
Therefore they lined the streets to acclaim her coming.
The Mohammedans, on the other hand, Afghans from the
far side of the Khyber, men of the Hassan and the
Aka and the Adam Khel tribes, Afridis from Kohat and
Tirah and the Araksai country, any who happened to
be in that wild and crowded town, turned out, too to
keep order, as they pleasantly termed it, when their
leaders were subsequently asked for explanations.
In the end a good many heads were broken before the
lady was safely lodged in her temple. Nor did
the trouble end there. The presence of a reincarnated
Devi at once kindled the Hindus to fervour and stimulated
to hostility against them the fanatical Mohammedans.
Futteh Ali Shah, a merchant, a municipal councillor
and a landowner of some importance, headed a deputation
of elderly gentlemen who begged Ralston to remove
the danger from the city.
Danger there was, as Ralston on his
morning rides through the streets could not but understand.
The temple was built in the corner of an open space,
and upon that open space a noisy and excited crowd
surged all day; while from the countryside around
pilgrims in a mood of frenzied piety and Pathans spoiling
for a fight trooped daily in through the gates of
Peshawur. Ralston understood that the time had
come for definite steps to be taken; and he took them
with that unconcerned half-weary air which was at
once natural to him and impressive to these particular
people with whom he had to deal.
He summoned two of his native levies
and mounted his horse.
“But you will take a guard,”
said Colonel Ward, of the Oxfordshires, who had been
lunching with Ralston. “I’ll send
a company down with you.”
“No, thank you,” said
Ralston listlessly, “I think my two men will
do.”
The Colonel stared and expostulated.
“You know, Ralston, you are
very rash. Your predecessor never rode into the
City without an escort.”
“I do every morning.”
“I know,” returned the
Colonel, “and that’s where you are wrong.
Some day something will happen. To go down with
two of your levies to-day is madness. I speak
seriously. The place is in a ferment.”
“Oh, I think I’ll be all
right,” said Ralston, and he rode at a trot
down from Government House into the road which leads
past the gaol and the Fort to the gate of Peshawur.
At the gate he reduced the trot to a walk, and so,
with his two levies behind him, passed up along the
streets like a man utterly undisturbed. It was
not bravado which had made him refuse an escort.
On the contrary, it was policy. To assume that
no one questioned his authority was in Ralston’s
view the best way and the quickest to establish it.
He pushed forward through the crowd right up to the
walls of the temple, seemingly indifferent to every
cry or threat which was uttered as he passed.
The throng closed in behind him, and he came to a
halt in front of a low door set in the whitewashed
wall which enclosed the temple and its precincts.
Upon this door he beat with the butt of his crop and
a little wicket in the door was opened. At the
bars of the wicket an old man’s face showed for
a moment and then drew back in fear.
“Open!” cried Ralston peremptorily.
The face appeared again.
“Your Excellency, the goddess
is meditating. Besides, this is holy ground.
Your Excellency would not wish to set foot on it.
Moreover, the courtyard is full of worshippers.
It would not be safe.”
Ralston broke in upon the old man’s
fluttering protestations. “Open the door,
or my men will break it in.”
A murmur of indignation arose from
the crowd which thronged about him. Ralston paid
no heed to it. He called to his two levies:
“Quick! Break that door in!”
As they advanced the door was opened.
Ralston dismounted, and bade one of his men do likewise
and follow him. To the second man he said,
“Hold the horses!”
He strode into the courtyard and stood still.
“It will be touch and go,” he said to
himself, as he looked about him.
The courtyard was as thronged as the
open space without, and four strong walls enclosed
it. The worshippers were strangely silent.
It seemed to Ralston that suspense had struck them
dumb. They looked at the intruder with set faces
and impassive eyes. At the far end of the courtyard
there was a raised stone platform, and this part was
roofed. At the back in the gloom he could see
a great idol of the goddess, and in front, facing the
courtyard, stood the lady from Gujerat. She was
what Ralston expected to see a dancing
girl of Northern India, a girl with a good figure,
small hands and feet, and a complexion of an olive
tint. Her eyes were large and lustrous, with
a line of black pencilled upon the edges of the eyelids,
her eyebrows arched and regular, her face oval, her
forehead high. The dress was richly embroidered
with gold, and she had anklets with silver bells upon
her feet.
Ralston pushed his way through the
courtyard until he reached the wall of the platform.
“Come down and speak to me,”
he cried peremptorily to the lady, but she took no
notice of his presence. She did not move so much
as an eyelid. She gazed over his head as one
lost in meditation. From the side an old priest
advanced to the edge of the platform.
“Go away,” he cried insolently.
“You have no place here. The goddess does
not speak to any but her priests,” and through
the throng there ran a murmur of approval. There,
was a movement, too a movement towards
Ralston. It was as yet a hesitating movement those
behind pushed, those in front and within Ralston’s
vision held back. But at any moment the movement
might become a rush.
Ralston spoke to the priest.
“Come down, you dog!” he said quite quietly.
The priest was silent. He hesitated.
He looked for help to the crowd below, which in turn
looked for leadership to him. “Come down,”
once more cried Ralston, and he moved towards the
steps as though he would mount on to the platform
and tear the fellow down.
“I come, I come,” said
the priest, and he went down and stood before Ralston.
Ralston turned to the Pathan who accompanied
him. “Turn the fellow into the street.”
Protests rose from the crowd; the
protests became cries of anger; the throng swayed
and jostled. But the Pathan led the priest to
the door and thrust him out.
Again Ralston turned to the platform.
“Listen to me,” he called
out to the lady from Gujerat. “You must
leave Peshawur. You are a trouble to the town.
I will not let you stay.”
But the lady paid no heed. Her
mind floated above the earth, and with every moment
the danger grew. Closer and closer the throng
pressed in upon Ralston and his attendant. The
clamour rose shrill and menacing. Ralston cried
out to his Pathan in a voice which rang clear and audible
even above the clamour:
“Bring handcuffs!”
The words were heard and silence fell
upon all that crowd, the sudden silence of stupefaction.
That such an outrage, such a defilement of a holy
place, could be contemplated came upon the worshippers
with a shock. But the Pathan levy was seen to
be moving towards the door to obey the order, and
as he went the cries and threats rose with redoubled
ardour. For a moment it seemed to Ralston that
the day would go against him, so fierce were the faces
which shouted in his ears, so turbulent the movement
of the crowd. It needed just one hand to be laid
upon the Pathan’s shoulder as he forced his
way towards the door, just one blow to be struck,
and the ugly rush would come. But the hand was
not stretched out, nor the blow struck; and the Pathan
was seen actually at the threshold of the door.
Then the Goddess Devi came down to earth and spoke
to another of her priests quickly and urgently.
The priest went swiftly down the steps.
“The goddess will leave Peshawur,
since your Excellency so wills it,” he said
to Ralston. “She will shake the dust of
this city from her feet. She will not bring trouble
upon its people.” So far he had got when
the goddess became violently agitated. She beckoned
to the priest and when he came to her side she spoke
quickly to him in an undertone. For the last
second or two the goddess had grown quite human and
even feminine. She was rating the priest well
and she did it spitefully. It was a crestfallen
priest who returned to Ralston.
“The goddess, however, makes
a condition,” said he. “If she goes
there must be a procession.”
The goddess nodded her head emphatically.
She was clearly adamant upon that point.
Ralston smiled.
“By all means. The lady
shall have a show, since she wants one,” said
he, and turning towards the door, he signalled to
the Pathan to stop.
“But it must be this afternoon,”
said he. “For she must go this afternoon.”
And he made his way out of the courtyard
into the street. The lady from Gujerat left Peshawur
three hours later. The streets were lined with
levies, although the Mohammedans assured his Excellency
that there was no need for troops.
“We ourselves will keep order,”
they urged. Ralston smiled, and ordered up a
company of Regulars. He himself rode out from
Government House, and at the bend of the road he met
the procession, with the lady from Gujerat at its
head in a litter with drawn curtains of tawdry gold.
As the procession came abreast of
him a little brown hand was thrust out from the curtains,
and the bearers and the rabble behind came to a halt.
A man in a rough brown homespun cloak, with a beggar’s
bowl attached to his girdle, came to the side of the
litter, and thence went across to Ralston.
“Your Highness, the Goddess
Devi has a word for your ear alone.” Ralston,
with a shrug of his shoulders, walked his horse up
to the side of the litter and bent down his head.
The lady spoke through the curtains in a whisper.
“Your Excellency has been very
kind to me, and allowed me to leave Peshawur with
a procession, guarding the streets so that I might
pass in safety and with great honour. Therefore
I make a return. There is a matter which troubles
your Excellency. You ask yourself the why and
the wherefore, and there is no answer. But the
danger grows.”
Ralston’s thoughts flew out
towards Chiltistan. Was it of that country she
was speaking?
“Well?” he asked. “Why does
the danger grow?”
“Because bags of grain and melons
were sent,” she replied, “and the message
was understood.”
She waved her hand again, and the
bearers of the litter stepped forward on their march
through the cantonment. Ralston rode up the hill
to his home, wondering what in the world was the meaning
of her oracular words. It might be that she had
no meaning that was certainly a possibility.
She might merely be keeping up her pose as a divinity.
On the other hand, she had been so careful to speak
in a low whisper, lest any should overhear.
“Some melons and bags of grain,”
he said to himself. “What message could
they convey? And who sent them? And to whom?”
He wrote that night to the Resident
at Kohara, on the chance that he might be able to
throw some light upon the problem.
“Have you heard anything of
a melon and a bag of grain?” he wrote. “It
seems an absurd question, but please make inquiries.
Find out what it all means.”
The messenger carried the letter over
the Malakand Pass and up the road by Dir, and
in due time an answer was returned. Ralston received
the answer late one afternoon, when the light was
failing, and, taking it over to the window, read it
through. Its contents fairly startled him.
“I have made inquiries,”
wrote Captain Phillips, the Resident, “as you
wished, and I have found out that some melons and bags
of grain were sent by Shere Ali’s orders a few
weeks ago as a present to one of the chief Mullahs
in the town.”
Ralston was brought to a stop.
So it was Shere Ali, after all, who was at the bottom
of the trouble. It was Shere Ali who had sent
the present, and had sent it to one of the Mullahs.
Ralston looked back upon the little dinner party,
whereby he had brought Hatch and Shere Ali together.
Had that party been too successful, he wondered?
Had it achieved more than he had wished to bring about?
He turned in doubt to the letter which he held.
“It seems,” he read, “that
there had been some trouble between this man and Shere
Ali. There is a story that Shere Ali set him to
work for a day upon a bridge just below Kohara.
But I do not know whether there is any truth in the
story. Nor can I find that any particular meaning
is attached to the present. I imagine that Shere
Ali realised that it would be wise as undoubtedly
it was for him to make his peace with the
Mullah, and sent him accordingly the melons and the
bags of grain as an earnest of his good-will.”
There the letter ended, and Ralston
stood by the window as the light failed more and more
from off the earth, pondering with a heavy heart upon
its contents. He had to make his choice between
the Resident at Kohara and the lady of Gujerat.
Captain Phillips held that the present was not interpreted
in any symbolic sense. But the lady of Gujerat
had known of the present. It was matter of talk,
then, in the bazaars, and it would hardly have been
that had it meant no more than an earnest of good-will.
She had heard of the present; she knew what it was
held to convey. It was a message. There
was that glare broadening over Chiltistan. Surely
the lady of Gujerat was right.
So far his thoughts had carried him
when across the window there fell a shadow, and a
young officer of the Khyber Rifles passed by to the
door. Captain Singleton was announced, and a
boy or so he looked dark-haired
and sunburnt, entered the office. For eighteen
months he had been stationed in the fort at Landi
Kotal, whence the road dips down between the bare
brown cliffs towards the plains and mountains of Afghanistan.
With two other English officers he had taken his share
in the difficult task of ruling that regiment of wild
tribesmen which, twice a week, perched in threes on
some rocky promontory, or looking down from a machicolated
tower, keeps open the Khyber Pass from dawn to dusk
and protects the caravans. The eighteen months
had written their history upon his face; he stood
before Ralston, for all his youthful looks, a quiet,
self-reliant man.
“I have come down on leave,
sir,” he said. “On the way I fetched
Rahat Mian out of his house and brought him in to
Peshawur.”
Ralston looked up with interest.
“Any trouble?” he asked.
“I took care there should be none.”
Ralston nodded.
“He had better be safely lodged. Where
is he?”
“I have him outside.”
Ralston rang for lights, and then
said to Singleton: “Then, I’ll see
him now.”
And in a few minutes an elderly white-bearded
man, dressed from head to foot in his best white robes,
was shown into the room.
“This is his Excellency,”
said Captain Singleton, and Rahat Mian bowed with
dignity and stood waiting. But while he stood
his eyes roamed inquisitively about the room.
“All this is strange to you,
Rahat Mian,” said Ralston. “How long
is it since you left your house in the Khyber Pass?”
“Five years, your Highness,”
said Rahat Mian, quietly, as though there were nothing
very strange in so long a confinement within his doors.
“Have you never crossed your
threshold for five years?” asked Ralston.
“No, your Highness. I should
not have stepped back over it again, had I been so
foolish. Before, yes. There was a deep trench
dug between my house and the road, and I used to crawl
along the trench when no-one was about. But after
a little my enemies saw me walking in the road, and
watched the trench.”
Rahat Mian lived in one of the square
mud windowless houses, each with a tower at a corner
which dot the green wheat fields in the Khyber Pass
wherever the hills fall back and leave a level space.
His house was fifty yards from the road, and the trench
stretched to it from his very door. But not two
hundred yards away there were other houses, and one
of these held Rahat Mian’s enemies. The
feud went back many years to the date when Rahat Mian,
without asking anyone’s leave or paying a single
farthing of money, secretly married the widowed mother
of Futteh Ali Shah. Now Futteh Ali Shah was a
boy of fourteen who had the right to dispose of his
mother in second marriage as he saw fit, and for the
best price he could obtain. And this deprivation
of his rights kindled in him a great anger against
Rahat Mian. He nursed it until he became a man
and was able to buy for a couple of hundred rupees
a good pedigree rifle a rifle which had
belonged to a soldier killed in a hill-campaign and
for which inquiries would not be made. Armed
with his pedigree rifle, Futteh Ali Shah lay in wait
vainly for Rahat Mian, until an unexpected bequest
caused a revolution in his fortunes. He went down
to Bombay, added to his bequest by becoming a money-lender,
and finally returned to Peshawur, in the neighbourhood
of which city he had become a landowner of some importance.
Meanwhile, however, he had not been forgetful of Rahat
Mian. He left relations behind to carry on the
feud, and in addition he set a price on Rahat Mian’s
head. It was this feud which Ralston had it in
his mind to settle.
He turned to Rahat Mian.
“You are willing to make peace?”
“Yes,” said the old man.
“You will take your most solemn
oath that the feud shall end. You will swear
to divorce your wife, if you break your word?”
For a moment Rahat Mian hesitated.
There was no oath more binding, more sacred, than
that which he was called upon to take. In the
end he consented.
“Then come here at eight to-morrow
morning,” said Ralston, and, dismissing the
man, he gave instructions that he should be safely
lodged. He sent word at the same time to Futteh
Ali Shah, with whom, not for the first time, he had
had trouble.
Futteh Ali Shah arrived late the next
morning in order to show his independence. But
he was not so late as Ralston, who replied by keeping
him waiting for an hour. When Ralston entered
the room he saw that Futteh Ali Shah had dressed himself
for the occasion. His tall high-shouldered frame
was buttoned up in a grey frock coat, grey trousers
clothed his legs, and he wore patent-leather shoes
upon his feet.
“I hope you have not been waiting
very long. They should have told me you were
here,” said Ralston, and though he spoke politely,
there was just a suggestion that it was not really
of importance whether Futteh Ali Shah was kept waiting
or not.
“I have brought you here that
together we may put an end to your dispute with Rahat
Mian,” said Ralston, and, taking no notice of
the exclamation of surprise which broke from the Pathan’s
lips, he rang the bell and ordered Rahat Mian to be
shown in.
“Now let us see if we cannot
come to an understanding,” said Ralston, and
he seated himself between the two antagonists.
But though they talked for an hour,
they came no nearer to a settlement. Futteh Ali
Shah was obdurate; Rahat Mian’s temper and pride
rose in their turn. At the sight of each other
the old grievance became fresh as a thing of yesterday
in both their minds. Their dark faces, with the
high cheek-bones and the beaked noses of the Afridi,
became passionate and fierce. Finally Futteh
Ali Shah forgot all his Bombay manners; he leaned
across Ralston, and cried to Rahat Mian:
“Do you know what I would like
to do with you? I would like to string my bedstead
with your skin and lie on it.”
And upon that Ralston arrived at the
conclusion that the meeting might as well come to
an end.
He dismissed Rahat Mian, promising
him a safe conveyance to his home. But he had
not yet done with Futteh Ali Shah.
“I am going out,” he said
suavely. “Shall we walk a little way together?”
Futteh Ali Shah smiled. Landowner
of importance that he was, the opportunity to ride
side by side through Peshawur with the Chief Commissioner
did not come every day. The two men went out into
the porch. Ralston’s horse was waiting,
with a scarlet-clad syce at its head. Ralston
walked on down the steps and took a step or two along
the drive. Futteh Ali Shah lagged behind.
“Your Excellency is forgetting your horse.”
“No,” said Ralston.
“The horse can follow. Let us walk a little.
It is a good thing to walk.”
It was nine o’clock in the morning,
and the weather was getting hot. And it is said
that the heat of Peshawur is beyond the heat of any
other city from the hills to Cape Comorin. Futteh
Ali Shah, however, could not refuse. Regretfully
he signalled to his own groom who stood apart in charge
of a fine dark bay stallion from the Kirghiz Steppes.
The two men walked out from the garden and down the
road towards Peshawur city, with their horses following
behind them.
“We will go this way,”
said Ralston, and he turned to the left and walked
along a mud-walled lane between rich orchards heavy
with fruit. For a mile they thus walked, and
then Futteh Ali Shah stopped and said:
“I am very anxious to have your
Excellency’s opinion of my horse. I am
very proud of it.”
“Later on,” said Ralston,
carelessly. “I want to walk for a little”;
and, conversing upon indifferent topics, they skirted
the city and came out upon the broad open road which
runs to Jamrud and the Khyber Pass.
It was here that Futteh Ali Shah once
more pressingly invited Ralston to try the paces of
his stallion. But Ralston again refused.
“I will with pleasure later
on,” he said. “But a little exercise
will be good for both of us; and they continued to
walk along the road. The heat was overpowering;
Futteh Ali Shah was soft from too much good living;
his thin patent-leather shoes began to draw his feet
and gall his heels; his frock coat was tight; the
perspiration poured down his face. Ralston was
hot, too. But he strode on with apparent unconcern,
and talked with the utmost friendliness on the municipal
affairs of Peshawur.”
“It is very hot,” said
Futteh Ali Shah, “and I am afraid for your Excellency’s
health. For myself, of course, I am not troubled,
but so much walking will be dangerous to you”;
and he halted and looked longingly back to his horse.
“Thank you,” said Ralston.
“But my horse is fresh, and I should not be
able to talk to you so well. I do not feel that
I am in danger.”
Futteh Ali Shah mopped his face and
walked on. His feet blistered; he began to limp,
and he had nothing but a riding-switch in his hand.
Now across the plain he saw in the distance the round
fort of Jamrud, and he suddenly halted:
“I must sit down,” he
said. “I cannot help it, your Excellency,
I must stop and sit down.”
Ralston turned to him with a look of cold surprise.
“Before me, Futteh Ali Shah?
You will sit down in my presence before I sit down?
I think you will not.”
Futteh Ali Shah gazed up the road
and down the road, and saw no help anywhere.
Only this devilish Chief Commissioner stood threateningly
before him. With a gesture of despair he wiped
his face and walked on. For a mile more he limped
on by Ralston’s side, the while Ralston discoursed
upon the great question of Agricultural Banks.
Then he stopped again and blurted out:
“I will give you no more trouble.
If your Excellency will let me go, never again will
I give you trouble. I swear it.”
Ralston smiled. He had had enough of the walk
himself.
“And Rahat Mian?” he asked.
There was a momentary struggle in
the zemindar’s mind. But his fatigue and
exhaustion were too heavy upon him.
“He, too, shall go his own way. Neither
I nor mine shall molest him.”
Ralston turned at once and mounted
his horse. With a sigh of relief Futteh Ali Shah
followed his example.
“Shall we ride back together?”
said Ralston, pleasantly. And as on the way out
he had made no mention of any trouble between the landowner
and himself, so he did not refer to it by a single
word on his way back.
But close to the city their ways parted
and Futteh Ali Shah, as he took his leave, said hesitatingly,
“If this story goes abroad,
your Excellency this story of how we walked
together towards Jamrud there will be much
laughter and ridicule.”
The fear of ridicule there
was the weak point of the Afridi, as Ralston very
well knew. To be laughed at Futteh
Ali Shah, who was wont to lord it among his friends,
writhed under the mere possibility. And how they
would laugh in and round about Peshawur! A fine
figure he would cut as he rode through the streets
with every ragged bystander jeering at the man who
was walked into docility and submission by his Excellency
the Chief Commissioner.
“My life would be intolerable,”
he said, “were the story to get about.”
Ralston shrugged his shoulders.
“But why should it get about?”
“I do not know, but it surely
will. It may be that the trees have ears and
eyes and a mouth to speak.” He edged a little
nearer to the Commissioner. “It may be,
too,” he said cunningly, “that your Excellency
loves to tell a good story after dinner. Now there
is one way to stop that story.”
Ralston laughed. “If I could hold my tongue,
you mean,” he replied.
Futteh Ali Shah came nearer still.
He rode up close and leaned a little over towards
Ralston.
“Your Excellency would lose
the story,” he said, “but on the other
hand there would be a gain a gain of many
hours of sleep passed otherwise in guessing.”
He spoke in an insinuating fashion,
which made Ralston disinclined to strike a bargain and
he nodded his head like one who wishes to convey that
he could tell much if only he would. But Ralston
paused before he answered, and when he answered it
was only to put a question.
“What do you mean?” he asked.
And the reply came in a low quick voice.
“There was a message sent through Chiltistan.”
Ralston started. Was it in this
strange way the truth was to come to him? He
sat his horse carelessly. “I know,”
he said. “Some melons and some bags of
grain.”
Futteh Ali Shah was disappointed.
This devilish Chief Commissioner knew everything.
Yet the story of the walk must not get abroad in Peshawur,
and surely it would unless the Chief Commissioner were
pledged to silence. He drew a bow at a venture.
“Can your Excellency interpret
the message? As they interpret it in Chiltistan?”
and it seemed to him that he had this time struck true.
“It is a little thing I ask of your Excellency.”
“It is not a great thing, to
be sure,” Ralston admitted. He looked at
the zemindar and laughed. “But I could
tell the story rather well,” he said doubtfully.
“It would be an amusing story as I should tell
it. Yet well, we will see,”
and he changed his tone suddenly. “Interpret
to me that present as it is interpreted in the villages
of Chiltistan.”
Futteh Ali Shah looked about him fearfully,
making sure that there was no one within earshot.
Then in a whisper he said: “The grain is
the army which will rise up from the hills and descend
from the heavens to destroy the power of the Government.
The melons are the forces of the Government; for as
easily as melons they will be cut into pieces.”
He rode off quickly when he had ended,
like a man who understands that he has said too much,
and then halted and returned.
“You will not tell that story?” he said.
“No,” answered Ralston abstractedly.
“I shall never tell that story.”
He understood the truth at last.
So that was the message which Shere Ali had sent.
No wonder, he thought, that the glare broadened over
Chiltistan.