BY R-DY D K-PL G
I
FOR SIMLA REASONS
Some people say that improbable things
don’t necessarily happen in India but
these people never find improbabilities anywhere.
This sounds clever, but you will at once perceive
that it really means the opposite of what I intended
to say. So we’ll drop it. What I
am trying to tell you is that after Sparkley had that
affair with Miss Millikens a singular change came
over him. He grew abstracted and solitary, holding
dark séances with himself, which was odd,
as everybody knew he never cared a rap for the Millikens
girl. It was even said that he was off his head which
is rhyme. But his reason was undoubtedly affected,
for he had been heard to mutter incoherently at the
Club, and, strangest of all, to answer questions that
were never asked! This was so
awkward in that Branch of the Civil Department of
which he was a high official where the rule
was exactly the reverse that he was presently
invalided on full pay! Then he disappeared.
Clever people said it was because the Department was
afraid he had still much to answer for; stupid people
simply envied him.
Mrs. Awksby, whom everybody knew had
been the cause of breaking off the match, was now
wild to know the reason of Sparkley’s retirement.
She attacked heaven and earth, and even went a step
higher to the Viceroy. At the vice-regal
ball I saw, behind the curtains of a window, her rolling
violet-blue eyes with a singular glitter in them.
It was the reflection of the Viceroy’s star,
although the rest of his Excellency was hidden in
the curtain. I heard him saying, “Come
now! really, now, you are you know you
are!” in reply to her cooing questioning.
Then she made a dash at me and captured me.
“What did you hear?”
“Nothing I should not have heard.”
“Don’t be like all the
other men you silly boy!” she answered.
“I was only trying to find out something about
Sparkley. And I will find it out too,”
she said, clinching her thin little hand. “And
what’s more,” she added, turning on me
suddenly, “You shall help me!”
“I?” I said in surprise.
“Don’t pretend!”
she said poutingly. “You’re too clever
to believe he’s cut up over the Millikens.
No it’s something awful or another
woman! Now, if I knew as much of India as you
do and wasn’t a woman, and could
go where I liked I’d go to Bungloore
and find him.”
“Oh! You have his address?” I said.
“Certainly! What did you
expect I was behind the curtain with the Viceroy for?”
she said, opening her violet eyes innocently.
“It’s Bungloore First Turning
to the Right At the End of the passage.”
Bungloore near Ghouli Pass in
the Jungle! I knew the place, a spot of dank
pestilence and mystery. “You never could
have gone there,” I said.
“You do not know what I
could do for a friend,” she said sweetly,
veiling her eyes in demure significance.
“Oh, come off the roof!” I said bluntly.
She could be obedient when it was
necessary. She came off. Not without her
revenge. “Try to remember you are not at
school with the Stalkies,” she said, and turned
away.
I went to Bungloore, not
on her account, but my own. If you don’t
know India, you won’t know Bungloore. It’s
all that and more. An egg dropped by a vulture,
sat upon and addled by the Department. But I knew
the house and walked boldly in. A lion walked
out of one door as I came in at another. We
did this two or three times and found it
amusing. A large cobra in the hall rose up, bowed
as I passed, and respectfully removed his hood.
I found the poor old boy at the end
of the passage. It might have been the passage
between Calais and Dover, he looked so green,
so limp and dejected. I affected not to notice
it, and threw myself in a chair.
He gazed at me for a moment and then
said, “Did you hear what the chair was saying?”
It was an ordinary bamboo armchair,
and had creaked after the usual fashion of bamboo
chairs. I said so.
He cast his eyes to the ceiling.
“He calls it ‘creaking,’”
he murmured. “No matter,” he continued
aloud, “its remark was not of a complimentary
nature. It’s very difficult to get really
polite furniture.”
The man was evidently stark, staring
mad. I still affected not to observe it, and
asked him if that was why he left Simla.
“There were Simla reasons, certainly,”
he replied. “But you think I came here
for solitude! Solitude!” he repeated,
with a laugh. “Why, I hold daily conversations
with any blessed thing in this house, from the veranda
to the chimney-stack, with any stick of furniture,
from the footstool to the towel-horse. I get
more out of it than the gabble at the Club.
You look surprised. Listen! I took this
thing up in my leisure hours in the Department.
I had read much about the conversation of animals.
I argued that if animals conversed, why shouldn’t
inanimate things communicate with each other?
You cannot prove that animals don’t converse neither
can you prove that inanimate objects do not.
See?”
I was thunderstruck with the force of his logic.
“Of course,” he continued,
“there are degrees of intelligence, and that
makes it difficult. For instance, a mahogany
table would not talk like a rush-bottomed kitchen
chair.” He stopped suddenly, listened,
and replied, “I really couldn’t say.”
“I didn’t speak,” I said.
“I know you didn’t.
But your chair asked me ’how long that fool
was going to stay.’ I replied as you heard.
Pray don’t move I intend to change
that chair for one more accustomed to polite society.
To continue: I perfected myself in the language,
and it was awfully jolly at first. Whenever
I went by train, I heard not only all the engines
said, but what every blessed carriage thought, that
joined in the conversation. If you chaps only
knew what rot those whistles can get off! And
as for the brakes, they can beat any mule driver in
cursing. Then, after a time, it got rather monotonous,
and I took a short sea trip for my health. But,
by Jove, every blessed inch of the whole ship from
the screw to the bowsprit had something
to say, and the bad language used by the garboard
strake when the ship rolled was something too awful!
You don’t happen to know what the garboard strake
is, do you?”
“No,” I replied.
“No more do I. That’s
the dreadful thing about it. You’ve got
to listen to chaps that you don’t know.
Why, coming home on my bicycle the other day there
was an awful row between some infernal ‘sprocket’
and the ‘ball bearings’ of the machine,
and I never knew before there were such things in
the whole concern.”
I thought I had got at his secret,
and said carelessly: “Then I suppose this
was the reason why you broke off your engagement with
Miss Millikens?”
“Not at all,” he said
coolly. “Nothing to do with it. That
is quite another affair. It’s a very queer
story; would you like to hear it?”
“By all means.” I took out my notebook.
“You remember that night of
the Amateur Theatricals, got up by the White Hussars,
when the lights suddenly went out all over the house?”
“Yes,” I replied, “I heard about
it.”
“Well, I had gone down there
that evening with the determination of proposing to
Mary Millikens the first chance that offered.
She sat just in front of me, her sister Jane next,
and her mother, smart Widow Millikens, who
was a bit larky on her own account, you remember, the
next on the bench. When the lights went out and
the panic and tittering began, I saw my chance!
I leaned forward, and in a voice that would just
reach Mary’s ear I said, ’I have long wished
to tell you how my life is bound up with you, dear,
and I never, never can be happy without you’ when
just then there was a mighty big shove down my bench
from the fellows beyond me, who were trying to get
out. But I held on like grim death, and struggled
back again into position, and went on: ’You’ll
forgive my taking a chance like this, but I felt I
could no longer conceal my love for you,’ when
I’m blest if there wasn’t another shove,
and though I’d got hold of her little hand and
had a kind of squeeze in return, I was drifted away
again and had to fight my way back. But I managed
to finish, and said, ’If the devotion of a lifetime
will atone for this hurried avowal of my love for you,
let me hope for a response,’ and just then the
infernal lights were turned on, and there I was holding
the widow’s hand and she nestling on my shoulder,
and the two girls in hysterics on the other side.
You see, I never knew that they were shoved down
on their bench every time, just as I was, and of course
when I got back to where I was I’d just skipped
one of them each time! Yes, sir! I had
made that proposal in three sections a
part to each girl, winding up with the mother!
No explanation was possible, and I left Simla next
day. Naturally, it wasn’t a thing they
could talk about, either!”
“Then you think Mrs. Awksby
had nothing to do with it?” I said.
“Nothing absolutely
nothing. By the way, if you see that lady, you
might tell her that I have possession of that brocade
easy-chair which used to stand in the corner of her
boudoir. You remember it, faded white
and yellow, with one of the casters off and a little
frayed at the back, but rather soft-spoken and amiable?
But of course you don’t understand that.
I bought it after she moved into her new bungalow.”
“But why should I tell her that?” I asked
in wonder.
“Nothing except that
I find it very amusing with its reminiscences of the
company she used to entertain, and her confidences
generally. Good-by take care of the
lion in the hall. He always couches on the left
for a spring. Ta-ta!”
I hurried away. When I returned
to Simla I told Mrs. Awksby of my discoveries, and
spoke of the armchair.
I fancied she colored slightly, but quickly recovered.
“Dear old Sparkley,” she said sweetly;
“he was a champion liar!”
II.
A PRIVATE’S HONOR
I had not seen Mulledwiney for several
days. Knowing the man this looked
bad. So I dropped in on the Colonel. I
found him in deep thought. This looked bad,
too, for old Cockey Wax as he was known
to everybody in the Hill districts but himself wasn’t
given to thinking. I guessed the cause and told
him so.
“Yes,” he said wearily,
“you are right! It’s the old story.
Mulledwiney, Bleareyed, and Otherwise are at it again, drink
followed by Clink. Even now two corporals and
a private are sitting on Mulledwiney’s head
to keep him quiet, and Bleareyed is chained to an
elephant.”
“Perhaps,” I suggested, “you are
unnecessarily severe.”
“Do you really think so?
Thank you so much! I am always glad to have
a civilian’s opinion on military matters and
vice versa it broadens one so! And
yet am I severe? I am willing, for
instance, to overlook their raid upon a native village,
and the ransom they demanded for a native inspector!
I have overlooked their taking the horses out of my
carriage for their own use. I am content also
to believe that my fowls meekly succumb to jungle
fever and cholera. But there are some things
I cannot ignore. The carrying off of the great
god Vishnu from the Sacred Shrine at Ducidbad by The
Three for the sake of the priceless opals in its eyes”
“But I never heard of that,”
I interrupted eagerly. “Tell me.”
“Ah!” said the Colonel
playfully, “that as you so often and
so amusingly say is ‘Another Story’!
Yet I would have overlooked the theft of the opals
if they had not substituted two of the Queen’s
regimental buttons for the eyes of the god. This,
while it did not deceive the ignorant priests, had
a deep political and racial significance. You
are aware, of course, that the great mutiny was occasioned
by the issue of cartridges to the native troops greased
with hog’s fat forbidden by their
religion.”
“But these three men could themselves
alone quell a mutiny,” I replied.
The Colonel grasped my hand warmly.
“Thank you. So they could. I never
thought of that.” He looked relieved.
For all that, he presently passed his hand over his
forehead and nervously chewed his cheroot.
“There is something else,” I said.
“You are right. There
is. It is a secret. Promise me it shall
go no further than the Press? Nay,
swear that you will keep it for the Press!”
“I promise.”
“Thank you so much.
It is a matter of my own and Mulledwiney’s.
The fact is, we have had a personal difficulty.”
He paused, glanced around him, and continued in a
low, agitated voice: “Yesterday I came upon
him as he was sitting leaning against the barrack
wall. In a spirit of playfulness mere
playfulness, I assure you, sir I poked him
lightly in the shoulder with my stick, saying ‘Boo!’
He turned and I shall never forget the
look he gave me.”
“Good heavens!” I gasped,
“you touched absolutely touched Mulledwiney?”
“Yes,” he said hurriedly,
“I knew what you would say; it was against the
Queen’s Regulations and there
was his sensitive nature which shrinks from even a
harsh word; but I did it, and of course he has me
in his power.”
“And you have touched him?”
I repeated, “touched his private honor!”
“Yes! But I shall atone
for it! I have already arranged with him that
we shall have it out between ourselves alone, in the
jungle, stripped to the buff, with our fists Queensberry
rules! I haven’t fought since I stood
up against Spinks Major you remember old
Spinks, now of the Bombay Offensibles? at
Eton.” And the old boy pluckily bared his
skinny arm.
“It may be serious,” I said.
“I have thought of that.
I have a wife, several children, and an aged parent
in England. If I fall, they must never know.
You must invent a story for them. I have thought
of cholera, but that is played out; you know we have
already tried it on The Boy who was Thrown Away.
Invent something quiet, peaceable and respectable as
far removed from fighting as possible. What
do you say to measles?”
“Not half bad,” I returned.
“Measles let it be, then!
Say I caught it from Wee Willie Winkie. You
do not think it too incredible?” he added timidly.
“Not more than your story,” I said.
He grasped my hand, struggling violently
with his emotion. Then he struggled with me and
I left hurriedly. Poor old boy! The funeral
was well attended, however, and no one knew the truth,
not even myself.
III
JUNGLE FOLK
It was high noon of a warm summer’s
day when Moo Kow came down to the watering-place.
Miaow, otherwise known as “Puskat” the
warmth-loving one was crouching on a limb
that overhung the pool, sunning herself. Brer
Rabbit but that is Another Story by Another
Person.
Three or four Gee Gees, already at
the pool, moved away on the approach of Moo Kow.
“Why do ye stand aside?” said the Moo
Kow.
“Why do you say ’ye’?” said
the Gee Gees together.
“Because it’s more impressive
than ‘you.’ Don’t you know
that all animals talk that way in English?”
said the Moo Kow.
“And they also say ‘thou,’
and don’t you forget it!” interrupted Miaow
from the tree. “I learnt that from a Man
Cub.”
The animals were silent. They
did not like Miaow’s slang, and were jealous
of her occasionally sitting on a Man Cub’s lap.
Once Dunkee, a poor relation of the Gee Gees, had
tried it on, disastrously but that is also
Another and a more Aged Story.
“We are ridden by The English please
to observe the Capital letters,” said Pi
Bol, the leader of the Gee Gees, proudly.
“They are a mighty race who ride anything and
everybody. D’ye mind that I
mean, look ye well to it!”
“What should they know of England
who only England know?” said Miaow.
“Is that a conundrum?” asked the Moo Kow.
“No; it’s poetry,” said the Miaow.
“I know England,” said
Pi Bol prancingly. “I used to
go from the Bank to Islington three times a day I
mean,” he added hurriedly, “before I became
a screw I should say, a screw-gun horse.”
“And I,” said the Moo
Kow, “am terrible. When the young women
and children in the village see me approach they fly
shriekingly. My presence alone has scattered
their sacred festival The Sundes Kool Piknik.
I strike terror to their inmost souls, and am more
feared by them than even Kreep-mows, the insidious!
And yet, behold! I have taken the place of
the mothers of men, and I have nourished the mighty
ones of the earth! But that,” said the
Moo Kow, turning her head aside bashfully, “that
is Anudder Story.”
A dead silence fell on the pool.
“And I,” said Miaow, lifting
up her voice, “I am the horror and haunter of
the night season. When I pass like the night
wind over the roofs of the houses men shudder in their
beds and tremble. When they hear my voice as
I creep stealthily along their balconies they cry to
their gods for succor. They arise, and from
their windows they offer me their priceless household
treasures the sacred vessels dedicated to
their great god Shiv which they call ’Shivin
Mugs’ the Kloes Brosh, the Boo-jak,
urging me to fly them! And yet,” said Miaow
mournfully, “it is but my love-song! Think
ye what they would do if I were on the war-path.”
Another dead silence fell on the pool.
Then arose that strange, mysterious, indefinable
Thing, known as “The Scent.” The
animals sniffed.
“It heralds the approach of
the Stalkies the most famous of British
Skool Boaz,” said the Moo Kow. “They
have just placed a decaying guinea-pig, two white
mice in an advanced state of decomposition, and a
single slice of Limburger cheese in the bed of their
tutor. They had previously skillfully diverted
the drains so that they emptied into the drawing-room
of the head-master. They have just burned down
his house in an access of noble zeal, and are fighting
among themselves for the spoil. Hark! do ye
hear them?”
A wild medley of shrieks and howls
had arisen, and an irregular mob of strange creatures
swept out of the distance toward the pool. Some
were like pygmies, some had bloody noses. Their
talk consisted of feverish, breathless ejaculations, a
gibberish in which the words “rot,” “oach,”
and “giddy” were preeminent. Some
were exciting themselves by chewing a kind of “bhang”
made from the plant called pappahmint; others had
their faces streaked with djam.
“But who is this they are ducking
in the pool?” asked Pi Bol.
“It is one who has foolishly
and wantonly conceived that his parents have sent
him here to study,” said the Moo Kow; “but
that is against the rules of the Stalkies, who accept
study only as a punishment.”
“Then these be surely the ’Bander
Log’ the monkey folk of
whom the good Rhuddyidd has told us,” said a
Gee Gee “the ones who have no purpose and
forget everything.”
“Fool!” said the Moo Kow.
“Know ye not that the great Rhuddyidd has said
that the Stalkies become Major-Generals, V. C.’s,
and C. B’s of the English? Truly, they
are great. Look now; ye shall see one of the
greatest traits of the English Stalky.”
One of the pygmy Stalkies was offering
a bun to a larger one, who hesitated, but took it
coldly.
“Behold! it is one of the greatest
traits of this mighty race not to show any emotion.
He would take the bun he has
taken it! He is pleased but he may
not show it. Observe him eat.”
The taller Stalky, after eating the
bun, quietly kicked the giver, knocked off his hat,
and turned away with a calm, immovable face.
“Good!” said the Moo Kow.
“Ye would not dream that he was absolutely
choking with grateful emotion?”
“We would not,” said the animals.
“But why are they all running back the way they
came?” asked Pi Bol.
“They are going back to punishment.
Great is its power. Have ye not heard the gospel
of Rhuddyidd the mighty? ’Force is everything!
Gentleness won’t wash, courtesy is deceitful.
Politeness is foreign. Be ye beaten that ye may
beat. Pass the kick on.’”
But here he was interrupted by the
appearance of three soldiers who were approaching
the watering-place.
“Ye are now,” said the
Moo Kow, “with the main guard. The first
is Bleareyed, who carries a raven in a cage, which
he has stolen from the wife of a deputy commissioner.
He will paint the bird snow white and sell it as
a dove to the same lady. The second is Otherwise,
who is dragging a small garden engine, of which he
has despoiled a native gardener, whom he has felled
with a single blow. The third is Mulledwiney,
swinging a cut-glass decanter of sherry which he has
just snatched from the table of his colonel.
Mulledwiney and Otherwise will play the engine upon
Bleareyed, who is suffering from heat apoplexy and
djim-djams.”
The three soldiers seated themselves in the pool.
“They are going to tell awful
war stories now,” said the Moo Kow, “stories
that are large and strong! Some people are shocked others
like ’em.”
Then he that was called Mulledwiney
told a story. In the middle of it Miaow got
up from the limb of the tree, coughed slightly, and
put her paw delicately over her mouth. “You
must excuse me,” she said faintly. “I
am taken this way sometimes and I have left
my salts at home. Thanks! I can get down
myself!” The next moment she had disappeared,
but was heard coughing in the distance.
Mulledwiney winked at his companions
and continued his story:
“Wid that we wor in the thick
av the foight. Whin I say ‘thick’
I mane it, sorr! We wor that jammed together,
divil a bit cud we shoot or cut! At fur-rest,
I had lashed two mushkits together wid the baynits
out so, like a hay fork, and getting the haymaker’s
lift on thim, I just lifted two Paythians out one
an aych baynit and passed ’em, aisy-like,
over me head to the rear rank for them to finish.
But what wid the blud gettin’ into me ois,
I was blinded, and the pressure kept incraysin’
until me arrums was thrussed like a fowl to me sides,
and sorra a bit cud I move but me jaws!”
“And bloomin’ well you
knew how to use them,” said Otherwise.
“Thrue for you though
ye don’t mane it!” said Mulledwiney, playfully
tapping Otherwise on the head with a decanter till
the cut glass slowly shivered. “So, begorra!
there wor nothing left for me to do but to ate
thim! Wirra! but it was the crooel worruk.”
“Excuse me, my lord,”
interrupted the gasping voice of Pi Bol as
he began to back from the pool, “I am but a
horse, I know, and being built in that way naturally
have the stomach of one yet, really, my
lord, this er” And his
voice was gone.
The next moment he had disappeared.
Mulledwiney looked around with affected concern.
“Save us! But we’ve
cleaned out the Jungle! Sure, there’s not
a baste left but ourselves!”
It was true. The watering-place
was empty. Moo Kow, Miaow, and the Gee Gees
had disappeared. Presently there was a booming
crash and a long, deep rumbling among the distant
hills. Then they knew they were near the old
Moulmein Pagoda, and the dawn had come up like thunder
out of China ’cross the bay. It always
came up that way there. The strain was too great,
and day was actually breaking.