EDITH’S ADVENTURES
It was a long time before the two
lovers were sufficiently composed to explain to each
other fully the almost fabulous events that had lately
occurred.
Heideck, of course, wanted to know,
first of all, how Edith had contrived to escape without
making a disturbance and calling for the aid of those
about her. What she told him was the most touching
proof of her affection for him. The Maharajah’s
creatures must have heard, somehow or other, of Heideck’s
imprisonment and condemnation, and they had reckoned
correctly on Edith’s attachment to the man who
had saved her life.
She had been told that a single word
from the Maharajah would be sufficient to destroy
the foolhardy German, and that her only hope of saving
him from death lay in a personal appeal to His Highness’s
clemency. Although she knew perfectly well the
shameful purpose this suggestion concealed, she had
not hesitated, in her anxiety for her dear one’s
safety, to follow the men who promised to conduct her
to the Maharajah, full of hypocritical assurances
that she would come to no harm. She had had so
many proofs of the revengeful cruelty of this Indian
despot that she feared the worst for Heideck, and resolved,
in the last extremity, to sacrifice her life if
she could not preserve her honour to save
him.
The Maharajah had received her with
great courtesy and promised to use his influence in
favour of the German who had been seized as a spy and
traitor by the Russians. But he had at the same
time thrown out fairly broad hints what his price
would be, and, from the moment she had delivered herself
into his hands, he had treated her as a prisoner,
although with great respect. All communication,
except with persons of the Maharajah’s household,
was completely cut off; and she was under no delusion
as to the lot which awaited her, as soon as the Prince
again felt himself completely secure in some mountain
fastness unaffected by the events of the war.
Feeling certain of this, she had continually
contemplated the idea of flight; but the fear of sealing
the fate of her unhappy friend, even more than the
ever-watchful suspicion of her guards, had prevented
her from making the attempt.
Her joy had been all the greater when,
the same evening, Morar Gopal appeared in the women’s
tent with the Circassian, to relieve her from the
almost unendurable tortures of uncertainty as to Heideck’s
fate.
The cunning Hindu had managed to gain
access to the carefully guarded prisoners for himself
and his companion by pretending that the Maharajah
had chosen the Circassian girl to be the English lady’s
servant. He had whispered a few words to Edith,
telling her what was necessary for her to know for
the moment.
After he had retired, it roused no
suspicion when she asked to be left alone for a few
moments with the new servant. With her assistance,
she made use of the opportunity to put on the light
Indian man’s clothes which the Circassian had
brought with her in a parcel. The guards, who
were by this time intoxicated, had allowed the slender
young rajah, into whom she had transformed herself,
to depart unmolested, and Morar Gopal, who was waiting
for her at a place agreed upon close at hand, had
conducted her to Heideck’s tent, where she might,
for the moment at least, consider herself to be safe.
“But Georgi?” asked the
Captain with some anxiety. “She remained
in the women’s tent? What will happen to
her when her share in your flight is discovered?”
“The idea also tormented me.
But the heroic girl repeatedly assured me that she
would find a way to escape, and that in any case she
would have nothing to fear, as soon as she appealed
to Prince Tchajawadse.”
“That may be so; but that hardly
agrees with her wish to keep the fact of her presence
in the camp a secret from the Prince. The girl’s
behaviour is a complete riddle to me. I do not
understand what can have induced her to sacrifice
herself with such wonderful unselfishness for us,
who are really only strangers to her, in whom she can
feel no interest. Certainly she was not actuated
by any thought of a reward. She has the pride
of her race, and I am certain that she would consider
any offer of one as an insult.”
“I think the same. But
perhaps I can guess her real motives.”
“And won’t you tell me what you think?”
Edith hesitated a little; but she
was not one of those women who allow any petty emotion
to master them.
“I think, my friend, that she
loves you,” she said, with a slight, enchanting
smile. “Some unguarded expressions and the
fire that kindled in her eyes as soon as we mentioned
your name, made me feel almost certain of it.
The fact that, notwithstanding, she helped to set me
free, is certainly, in the circumstances, only a stronger
proof of her magnanimity. But I understand it
perfectly. A woman in love, if of noble character,
is capable of any act of self-denial.”
Heideck shook his head.
“I think your shrewdness has
played you false on this occasion. I am firmly
convinced that she is Prince Tchajawadse’s mistress,
and, from all I have seen of their relations, it seems
to me inconceivable that she would be unfaithful to
him for the sake of a stranger, with whom she has
only interchanged a few casual words.”
“Well, perhaps we may have an
opportunity of settling whether I am wrong or not.
But now, my friend, I should first of all like to know
what you have decided about me.”
Heideck was in some embarrassment
how to answer, and spoke hesitatingly of his intention
to send her to Ambala with Morar Gopal. But Edith
would not allow him to finish. She interrupted
him with a decided gesture of dissent.
“Ask of me what you like except
to leave you again. What shall I do in Ambala
without you? I have suffered so unutterably since
you were carried off before my eyes at Anar Kali,
that I will die a thousand times rather than again
expose myself to the torture of such uncertainty.”
A noise behind him made Heideck turn
his head. He saw the curtain before the door
of the tent slightly lifted, and that it was Morar
Gopal who had attempted to draw his attention by coughing
discreetly.
He called to the loyal fellow to come
in, and thanked him, not condescendingly, as a master
recognises the cleverness of his servant, but as one
friend thanks another.
The Hindu’s features showed
how delighted he was by the kindness of his idolised
master, although there was no alteration in his humble
and modest demeanour even for a moment. As respectful
as ever, he said: “I bring good news, sahib.
One of the Maharajah’s retinue, whose tongue
I loosened with some of your rupees, has told me that
the Maharajah of Sabathu is going to give the Russians
forty horsemen to show them the best roads to Simla.
The country here is under his rule, and his people
know every inch of ground to the top of the mountains.
If the lady joins these horsemen to-morrow in the
dress of a rajah, she will be sure to get away from
here unmolested.”
The excellence and practicability
of this plan was obvious, and Heideck again recognised
what a treasure a lucky accident had bestowed upon
him in the shape of this Indian boy. Edith also
agreed, since she saw how joyfully Heideck welcomed
the proposal, although the prospect of being obliged
to show herself in broad daylight before everybody
in man’s dress was painful to her feelings as
a woman.
She asked Morar Gopal whether he had
heard anything of Georgi in the meantime. He
nodded assent.
“I was talking to her half an
hour ago. She had escaped from the women’s
tent and was on the point of leaving the camp.”
“What?” cried Heideck.
“Where in the world did she intend to go?”
“I don’t know, sahib.
She was very sad, but when I asked her to accompany
me to the sahib, she said she did not want to see him
and the lady again; she sent her respects to the sahib,
and begged him to remember his promise that he would
say nothing to Prince Tchajawadse of her having been
here.”
Heideck and Edith exchanged a significant
look. This singular girl’s behaviour set
them riddles which for the moment they were unable
to solve. But it was only natural and human that
in their own affairs they very soon forgot the Circassian.
Edith had to consent to Heideck leaving
his tent at her disposal for the rest of the night,
while he himself spent the few hours before daybreak
at one of the bivouac fires. But Morar Gopal was
to take up his quarters before the entrance to the
tent, and Heideck felt confident that he could not
entrust his valuable treasure to a more loyal keeper.
Fortune, which had reunited the lovers
in so wonderful a manner, still continued favourable
to them. Very early on the following day, Heideck
had purchased a neat little bay horse, already saddled
and bridled, for Edith’s use. When the
troop of Indian horsemen, who were to serve as guides
and spies for the Russians, started on their way, the
boyish young rajah joined them, and no one made his
strange appearance the subject of obtrusive questions.
The Indians probably at first thought he was a very
youthful Russian officer, who wore the native dress
for special reasons, and on that account preserved
a most respectful demeanour. Tchajawadse, who
accidentally found himself close to Edith before starting,
said nothing, although he certainly looked keenly at
her for a moment.
The bad reports of the health of the
Maharajah of Chanidigot, which spread through the
camp, were sufficient explanation why he made no attempt
to regain possession of the beautiful fugitive.
He was said to be suffering from such violent pain
and fever, caused by his wounds, that he had practically
lost all interest in the outside world.
Having taken a hearty leave of their
Indian hosts, the Russian detachment advanced further
into the hilly country, and at noon spies reported
to Prince Tchajawadse that the English had completely
evacuated Ambala and had set out on the march to Delhi.
Probably the strength of the Russian division, whose
advance had been reported, had been greatly exaggerated
at Ambala, and the English had preferred to avoid a
probably hopeless engagement.
With a woman’s cleverness, Edith
managed, without attracting observation, to keep near
Heideck, so that they often had the opportunity of
conversing. Her tender, fair skin must have appeared
striking amongst all the brown faces, but the will
and caprice of Russian officers demanded respect,
and so no one appeared to know that there was an English
lady in the troop wearing the costume of a rajah.
Besides, the march was not a long one. The hunting-camp
was only about 150 miles from Simla, situated below
Kalka. On the next morning the column arrived
before Simla and found that Jutogh, the high-lying
British cantonment to the west of the far-extended
hill city, had been evacuated.
Prince Tchajawadse quartered his infantry
and artillery in the English barracks, and marched
with the horsemen into the crescent-shaped bazaar,
the town proper, surrounded by numerous villas, scattered
over the hills and in the midst of pleasure-gardens.
He at once sent off patrols of officers to the town
hall, the offices of the Government and Commander-in-Chief,
while he himself made his way to Government House,
a beautiful palace on Observatory Hill.
Although it was spring, Simla still
lay in its winter sleep. It had been deserted
by the lively, brilliant society which, when the intolerable,
moist heat of summer drove the Viceroy from Calcutta,
enlivened the magnificent valleys and heights with
its horses and carriages, its games, parties, and
elegant dresses. Only the resident population,
and the servants who had been left to look after the
buildings and keep them in good order, remained, English
Society being kept away by the war.
The hills were about a mile and three-quarters
above the level of the Indian Ocean, and frequent
showers of rain made the climate so raw that Heideck
rode with his cloak on, and Edith flung a dragoon’s
long cloak over her shoulders to protect herself against
the cold.
The officers were commissioned to
search the Government buildings for important legal
documents and papers, which the English Government
might have left behind in Simla, and which were of
importance to the Russian Government.
Heideck had to examine the seven handsome
blocks of Government offices, especially the buildings
set apart for the Commander-in-Chief, the Quartermaster-General,
the general railway management, and the post and telegraph
offices.
He found none but subordinate officials
anywhere until he came to the office of the Judge
Advocate General. Here he found a dignified old
gentleman, sitting so quietly in his armchair that
Heideck was involuntarily reminded of Archimedes when
the Roman soldiers surprised him at his calculations.
As the officer entered, accompanied
by the soldiers, the old gentleman looked at them
keenly out of his large, yellowish eyes. But he
neither asked what they wanted, nor even attempted
to prevent their entrance. Heideck bowed politely,
and apologised for the intrusion necessitated by his
duty. This courteous behaviour appeared to surprise
the old gentleman, who returned his greeting, and
said that there was nothing left for him but to submit
to the orders of the conqueror.
“As there seems nothing to be
found in these rooms but legal books and documents,”
said Heideck, “I need not make any investigation,
for we are simply concerned with military matters.
I should be glad if I could meet any personal wishes
of yours, for I do not think I am mistaken in assuming
that I have the honour of speaking to a higher official,
whom special reasons have obliged to remain in Simla.”
“As a matter of fact, my physicians
were of opinion that it would be beneficial to my
health to spend the winter in the mountains. You
can imagine how greatly I regret that I took their
advice I am Judge-Advocate-General Kennedy.”
“Is your family also in Simla?” asked
Heideck.
“My wife and daughter are here.”
“Sir, there is an English lady
with our column, the widow of an officer who was killed
at Lahore. Would you be disposed to let her join
your family?”
“An English lady?”
“She is the victim of a series
of adventurous experiences, as to which she can best
inform you herself. Her name is Mrs. Irwin.
Would you be disposed to grant her your protection?
If so, I should certainly be the bearer of welcome
news to her.”
“My protection?” repeated
the old gentleman in surprise. “My family
and I need protection ourselves, and how can we, in
the present circumstances, undertake such a responsibility?”
“You and your family have nothing
to fear from us, sir. On the contrary, we intend
to maintain quietness and order.”
“Well, sir, your behaviour is
that of a gentleman, and if the lady wishes to come
to us we will offer no objection. Can I speak
to her, that we may come to an understanding?”
“I will make haste and fetch her.”
In fact, he did not hesitate for a
moment. As he expected, Edith was very grateful
to him for his friendly proposition.
Mr. Kennedy was extremely astonished
to see a young rajah enter the room, and did not seem
quite agreeably impressed by the masquerade.
“Is this the lady of whom you
spoke?” he asked in surprise. But his serious
face visibly cleared when Edith said, in her sweet,
gentle voice
“A countrywoman, who owes her
life to this gentleman here, and who has only escaped
death and dishonour by the aid of this disguise.”
“Mrs. Irwin, if you decide to
join Mrs. Kennedy,” said Heideck, “I will
send your belongings to Mr. Kennedy’s house.
I must now leave you for the present. I have
other official duties to perform, but I will return
later.”
“In any case I am glad to welcome
my countrywoman,” protested the old gentleman.
“You can see my house from the window here, and
I beg you will call upon me when your duties are over.”
It was not till after sunset that
Heideck called at Mr. Kennedy’s house.
He stood for a moment at the garden-gate and saw the
snow-clad heights glowing in the fire of the evening
light. Long chains of blue hills rose higher
and higher towards the north, till at last the highest
range on the distant horizon, bristling with eternal
glaciers, mounted towards the sky in wondrous brilliancy.
Mr. Kennedy lived in a very imposing
villa. Heideck was received with such friendliness
by the master of the house and the ladies that he
recognised only too clearly that Edith must have spoken
warmly in his favour. She must also certainly
have told them that he was a German. She was
dressed as a woman again, and had already won the hearts
of all by her frankness. Mrs. Kennedy was a matron
with fine, pleasant features, and evidently of high
social standing. Her daughter, about the same
age as Edith, appeared to have taken a great fancy
to the visitor.
Heideck sat with the family by the
fire, and all tried to forget that he wore the uniform
of the enemy.
“I wish we could manage to leave
India and get back to England,” said Mrs. Kennedy.
“My husband wants to remain in Calcutta to perform
his duties, but he cannot stand the climate.
Besides, how could we get to Calcutta? Our only
chance would be to obtain a Russian passport, enabling
us to travel without interference.”
“My dearest Beatrice,”
objected her husband. “I know that you,
like myself, no longer care what happens to us, at
a time when such misfortune has overtaken our country.
Amidst the general misfortune, what matters our own
fate?”
“I should think,” interposed
Heideck politely, “that the individual, however
deeply he feels the general misfortune, ought not to
give way to despair, but should always be thinking
of his family as in time of peace.”
“No!” cried Mr. Kennedy.
“An Englishmen cannot understand this international
wisdom. A German’s character is different;
he can easily change his country, the Englishman cannot.
But you must excuse me,” he continued, recollecting
himself. “You wounded my national honour,
and I forgot the situation in which we are. Of
course, I had no intention of insulting you.”
“There is some truth in what
you say,” replied Heideck, seriously, “but
allow me to explain. Our German fatherland, in
past centuries, was always the theatre of the battles
of all the peoples of Europe. At that time few
of the German princes were conscious of any German
national feeling; they were the representatives of
narrow-minded dynastic interests. Thus our German
people grew up without the consciousness of a great
and common fatherland. Our German self-consciousness
is no older than Bismarck. But we have become
large-hearted, generous-minded, by having had to submit
to foreign peoples and customs. Our religious
feeling and our patriotism are of wider scope than
those of others. Hence, I believe that, now that
we have been for a generation occupied with our material
strength and are politically united, our universal
culture summons us to undertake the further development
of civilisation, which hitherto has been chiefly indebted
to the French and English.”
The old gentleman did not answer at
once. He sat immersed in thought, and a considerable
time elapsed before he spoke.
“Anyone can keep raising the
standpoint of his view of things. It is like
ascending the mountains there. From each higher
range the view becomes more comprehensive, while the
details of the panorama gradually disappear.
Naturally, to one looking down from so lofty a standpoint,
all political interests shrivel up to insignificant
nothings, and then patriotism no longer exists.
But I think that we are first of all bound to work
in the sphere in which we have once been placed.
A man who neglects his wife and children in the desire
to benefit the world by his ideas, neglects the narrowest
sphere of his duties. But in that case the welfare
of his own people, of his own state, must be for every
man the highest objects of his efforts; then only,
starting from his own nation, may his wishes have
a higher aim. I cannot respect anyone who abandons
the soil of patriotism in order to waste his time on
visionary schemes in the domain of politics, to wax
enthusiastic over universal peace and to call all
men brothers.”
“And yet,” said Edith,
“this is the doctrine of Christianity.”
“Of theoretical, not practical
Christianity,” eagerly rejoined the Englishman.
“I esteem the old Roman Cato, who took his life
when he saw his country’s freedom disappearing,
and England would never have grown great had not many
of her sons been Catos.”
“Mr. Kennedy, you are proclaiming
the old Greek idea of the state,” said Heideck.
“But I do not believe that the old Greeks had
such a conception of the state as modern professors
assert, and as ancient Rome practically carried out.
Professors are in the habit of quoting Plato, but
Plato was too highly gifted not to understand that
the state after all consists merely of men. Plato
regarded the state not as an idol on whose altar the
citizen was obliged to sacrifice himself, but as an
educational institution. He says that really virtuous
citizens could only be reared by an intelligently
organised state, and for this reason he attached such
importance to the state. A state is in its origin
only the outer form, which the inner life of the nation
has naturally created for itself, and this conception
should not be upset. The state should educate
the masses, in order that not only justice, but also
external and internal prosperity may be realised.
The Romans certainly do not appear to have made the
rearing of capable citizens, in accordance with Plato’s
idea, the aim of the state; they were modern, like
the great Powers of to-day, whose aim it is to grow
as rich and powerful as possible. We Germans
also desire this, and that is why we are waging this
war; but at the same time I assert that something higher
dwells in the German national character the
idea of humanity. With us also our ideals are
being destroyed, and therefore we are fighting for
our ’place under the sun,’ in order to
protect and secure our ideals together with our national
greatness.”
At this point a servant entered and announced dinner.
At table the conversation shifted
from philosophy and politics to art. The ladies
tried to cheer the old gentleman and banish his despair.
Elizabeth talked of the concerts in Simla and Calcutta,
mentioning the great technical difficulties which
beset music in India, owing to the instruments being
so soon injured by the climate. The moist air
of the towns on the coast made the wood swell; the
dry air of Central India, on the other hand, made
it shrink, which was very injurious to pianos, but
especially to violins and cellos. Pianos, with
metal instead of wood inside, were made for the tropics;
but they had a shrill tone and were equally affected
by abrupt changes of temperature.
After dinner Elizabeth seated herself
at the piano, and it did Heideck good to find that
Edith had a pleasant and well-trained alto voice.
She sang some melancholy English and Scotch songs.
“I have never sung since I left
England,” she said, greatly moved.
Heideck had listened to the music
with rapture. After the fearful scenes of recent
times the melodies affected him so deeply that his
eyes filled with tears. It was not only the music
that affected him, but Edith’s soul, which spoke
through it.
“What are you thinking of doing,
Mr. Kennedy?” he asked the old gentleman.
“Shall you remain in Simla and keep Mrs. Irwin
with you?”
“I have thought it over,”
he replied. “I shall not stay here.
I shall go to Calcutta, if I can. It is my duty
to be at my post there.”
“But how do you intend to travel?
The railways still in existence have been seized for
the exclusive use of the army. Remember that you
would have to pass both armies, the Russian and the
English. You would have to go from Kalka to Ambala,
and thence to Delhi.”
“If I could get a passport,
I could travel post to Delhi, where I should be with
the English army. Can you get me a passport?”
“I will try. Possibly Prince
Tchajawadse may be persuaded to let me have one.
I will point out to him that you are civilian officials.”
Prince Tchajawadse most emphatically
refused to make out the passport for Mr. Kennedy and
his family.
“I am very sorry, my friend,”
said he, “but it is simply impossible. The
Judge-Advocate-General is a very high official; I cannot
allow him to go to the English headquarters and give
information as to what is going on here. The
authorities would justly put a very bad construction
upon such ill-timed amiability, and I should not like
to obliterate the good impression which the success
of the expedition to Simla has made upon my superiors
by an unpardonable act of folly on my own part.”
Heideck saw that any attempt at persuasion
would be useless in the face of the Prince’s
determination. He therefore acquainted Mr. Kennedy
with the failure of his efforts, at the same expressing
his sincere regret.
“Then I shall try to return
to England,” said the old gentleman, with a
sigh. “Please ask the Prince if he has any
objection to my making my way by the shortest road
to Karachi? Perhaps he will let me have a passport
for this route.”
Prince Tchajawadse was quite ready
to accede to this request.
“The ladies and gentlemen can
travel where they please in the rear of the Russian
army, for all I care,” he declared. “There
is not the least occasion for me to treat the worthy
old gentleman as a prisoner.”
On the same day Heideck had a serious
conversation with Edith about her immediate future.
He inquired what her wishes and plans were, but she
clung to him tenderly and whispered, “My only
wish is to stay with you, my only plan is to make
you happy.”
Kissing her tender lips, which could
utter such entrancing words, he said, deeply moved:
“Well, then, I propose that we travel together
to Karachi. I am resolved to quit the Russian
service and endeavour to return to Germany. But
could you induce yourself to follow me to my country,
the land of your present enemies?”
“My home is with you. Suppose
that we were to make a home here in Simla, I should
be ready, and only too glad to live here for the rest
of my life. Take me to Germany or Siberia, and
I will follow you it is all the same to
me, if only I am not obliged to leave you.”
For a moment Heideck was pained to
think that she had no word of attachment for her country;
but he had already learnt not to measure her by the
standard of the other women whom he had hitherto met
on his life’s journey, and it ill became him
to reproach her for this want of patriotism.
“Mr. Kennedy has assured me
that he is ready to take you under his protection
during the journey,” said he. “I will
speak to the Prince again to-day, and, as he has no
right to detain me, it will be possible for me, as
I confidently hope, to start with you for Karachi.”
“But I shall only accept the
Kennedys’ offer if you go with us,” declared
Edith in a tone of decision, which left no doubt as
to her unshakable resolution.
As a matter of fact, Prince Tchajawadse
put no difficulties in his way.
“I sincerely regret to lose
you again so soon,” he declared, “but it
is for you alone to decide whether you go or stay.
It was arranged beforehand that you could leave the
Russian service as soon as it became worth your while.
Women are, after all, the controlling spirits of our
lives.”
Of course the Prince had long since
been aware that the Kennedys’ visitor was Edith
Irwin, but this was the first time he had alluded to
his German friend’s love affair.
As if he felt bound to defend himself
against a humiliating reproach, Heideck hastened to
reply.
“You misunderstand my motives.
It is my duty as a soldier which summons me first
of all. Hitherto I have had no prospect of getting
a passage on an English steamer. But, in the
company of Mr. Kennedy, and on his recommendation,
I have hopes that it will not be refused me.”
“Pardon me. I never for
a moment doubted your patriotic sense of duty, and
I wish you from my heart a happy voyage home.
Of course, notwithstanding the alliance of our nations,
it is not the same to you, whether you fight in the
ranks of the Russian or the German army. And if
the prospect of travelling in such pleasant society
has finally decided you, you have, in my opinion,
no reason at all to be ashamed of it. Certainly,
for my own part, I am convinced that it is better,
for a soldier to make the female element play as subordinate
a rôle as possible in his life. He ought to do
like most of my countrymen, and get a wife who will
not resent being thrashed, with or without cause.
It may be that I am mistaken on this point, and I
have been severely punished for it.”
His countenance had suddenly become
very grave, and as he could only be alluding to his
lost page, Heideck thought he might at last venture
to ask a question as to the whereabouts of the Circassian.
But the Prince shook his head deprecatingly.
“Do not ask me about her.
It is a painful story, which I do not care to mention,
since it recalls one of the worst hours of my life.
It is bad enough that we poor, weak creatures cannot
atone for the mistakes of a moment.”
Then, as if desirous of summarily
cutting short an inconvenient discussion, he returned
to the original subject of conversation.
“From my point of view, for
purely practical reasons I must regard it as a mistake
that you should so soon give up your career in the
Russian army, which has begun under the most favourable
auspices. A brilliant career is open to capable
men of your stamp amongst us, for there is more elbow-room
in our army than in yours. But I know that it
is useless to say anything further about it.
One word more! You need not at once take off
the uniform to which you do honour before you leave
Simla. To-morrow I am returning to Lahore, and
during the march I beg you will still remain at the
head of your squadron. It will be safest for your
English friends to travel with our column. At
Lahore you can do as you please. Since the course
of the campaign is in a south-easterly direction,
the west is free, and you may possibly be able to travel
by train for a considerable portion of the journey
to Karachi.”
In this proposal Heideck recognised
a fresh proof of the friendly disposition which the
Prince had already so often shown towards him, and
he was not slow to thank him most heartily.
The idea of being obliged to travel
under the enemy’s protection was, of course,
not a very pleasant one to Mr. Kennedy; but in the
interests of the females who accompanied him he was
bound to acquiesce in the arrangement, since there
was really no better chance of reaching Karachi quickly
and safely.
“You cannot imagine,”
he said to Heideck, “how hard it is for me to
leave India, so dearly purchased. I have devoted
twenty years of my life to it, years of hard, unremitting
toil. And now my work, like that of so many better
men, is rendered useless at a single stroke.”
“You have spent two whole decades
in India without a break?”
“Yes; I could not make up my
mind to accompany my wife and daughter on their occasional
visits to Europe for a few months’ relaxation.
I was passionately fond of my work, and I can hardly
get over the idea that all is lost. And it is
lost; I am under no illusion as to that. After
the Russians have once set foot here, they will never
give up the country again. Their rule will be
more firmly established than ours, since they are
at heart much closer to the Indians than we are.”
On the following day they set out.
Mr. Kennedy and the ladies rode in
a mail-coach drawn by four Australian horses, which
had been originally intended for driving to the Anandale
races. He had brought with him his own English
coachman, an English servant, and an English maid;
he had paid off and discharged his numerous Indian
servants before starting.
The march proceeded by way of Kalka,
the last station on the railway to Simla, without
any incidents, as far as Lahore. Here Prince Tchajawadse
was informed that the Russian army had started on the
previous day for Delhi, and that he was to follow
as rapidly as possible with his detachment.
During the entry into the streets
of Lahore, the sight of which awoke in him so many
painful recollections, Heideck was suddenly roused
from his reverie. Behind the pillars supporting
the balcony of a house he thought he caught sight
of the form of a woman, who followed with staring eyes
the march of the glittering, rattling troop of horsemen
with their clattering swords. Although her face
was almost entirely hidden by a veil, he felt instinctively
that she was no other than his own and Edith’s
preserver the page Georgi. He turned
his horse and rode up to the house. But the vision
disappeared as he drew near, as if the earth had swallowed
it up. He accordingly was driven to assume that
it was merely a delusion of his senses.
He took leave of Prince Tchajawadse
with a heartiness corresponding to their previous
relations. The Prince embraced him several times,
and his eyes were moist as he again wished his comrade
a prosperous journey and the laurels of a victorious
warrior. Nor was Heideck ashamed of his emotion,
when he clasped the Prince’s hand for the last
time.
“If you see your page again,
please give him my own and Mrs. Irwin’s farewell
greeting.”
The Prince’s face clouded over.
“I would do it with all my heart,
my friend, but I shall never see my page again.
Let us speak of him no more. There are wounds
of which a man cannot feel proud.”
With this they parted.
Heideck, who had resumed his civilian
attire, slept at the hotel, and then took the place
Mr. Kennedy offered him in his carriage. He had
found out that the railway between Lahore and Mooltan
from Montgomery Station was still available for travelling.
The English, with their peculiar tenacity,
still continued the regular service in the parts of
India that were not affected by the war. The
enormous extent of the country confined the struggle
between the two armies in some degree to a strictly
limited area. In the west, the east, and the
interior of India there were few traces of the conflict.
Only the troop trains between Bombay and Calcutta
revealed a state of war.
Since the retirement of the English
army from Lahore, no more troops were to be seen on
the western railway, and this section was again perfectly
free for ordinary traffic.
Even the Indian population of this
district showed no particular signs of excitement.
Only the actual presence of the Russian troops had
disturbed the patient and peaceful people. The
travellers even passed through Chanidigot without
any interruption of their occupations or meeting with
any unexpected delay.
The weather was not too hot; the stormy
season had begun, and travelling in the roomy, comfortable
railway carriages would have been in other circumstances
a real pleasure.
The travellers safely reached Karachi,
the seaport town on the mouths of the Indus with its
numerous tributaries, where Mr. Kennedy’s high
position procured them admission to the select Sind
Club, where the attendance and lodging were all that
could be desired. The club was almost entirely
deserted by its regular visitors, since, in addition
to the officers, all officials who could be dispensed
with had joined the army. But neither the Kennedys
nor Edith and Heideck had any taste for interesting
society. Their only wish was to leave the country
as soon as possible, and to see the end of the present
painful condition of affairs. As the result of
inquiries at the shipping agency, they had decided
to travel to Bombay by one of the steamers of the British
India Company, and to proceed thence to Europe by
the Caledonia, the best vessel belonging to the P.
and O. line.
In the afternoon, before going on
board, Heideck hired a comfortable little one-horsed
carriage and drove to Napier mole, where an elegant
sailing-boat, manned by four lascars, was
placed at their disposal at the Sind Club boathouse.
They sailed through the harbour protected by three
powerful forts, past Manora Point, the furthest extremity
of the fortified mole, into the Arabian Sea.
“Really, it is hard to leave
this wonderful land,” said Heideck seriously.
“It is hard to take leave for ever of this brilliant
sun, this glittering sea, and these mighty works of
men’s hands, which have introduced luxury and
the comforts of a refined civilisation into a natural
paradise. I have never understood Mr. Kennedy’s
sorrow better than at this moment. And I can
sympathise with the feeling of bitterness which makes
him shut himself up in his room, to avoid the further
sight of all this enchanting and splendid magnificence.”
Edith, clinging to his arm and looking
up fondly into his face only answered, “I only
see the world as it is reflected in your eyes.
And there its beauty is always the same to me.”