The Earth gave up her dead
that tide,
Into our camp
he came,
And said his say, and went
his way,
And left our hearts
aflame.
Keep tally on the
gun-butt score
The vengeance
we must take,
When God shall bring full
reckoning,
For our dead comrade’s
sake.
Ballad.
Let it be clearly understood that
the Russian is a delightful person till he tucks in
his shirt. As an Oriental he is charming.
It is only when he insists upon being treated as the
most easterly of western peoples instead of the most
westerly of easterns that he becomes a racial anomaly
extremely difficult to handle. The host never
knows which side of his nature is going to turn up
next.
Dirkovitch was a Russian a
Russian of the Russians who appeared to
get his bread by serving the Czar as an officer in
a Cossack regiment, and corresponding for a Russian
newspaper with a name that was never twice alike.
He was a handsome young Oriental, fond of wandering
through unexplored portions of the earth, and he arrived
in India from nowhere in particular. At least
no living man could ascertain whether it was by way
of Balkh, Badakshan, Chitral, Beluchistan, or Nepaul,
or anywhere else. The Indian Government, being
in an unusually affable mood, gave orders that he
was to be civilly treated and shown everything that
was to be seen. So he drifted, talking bad English
and worse French, from one city to another, till he
foregathered with Her Majesty’s White Hussars
in the city of Peshawur, which stands at the mouth
of that narrow swordcut in the hills that men call
the Khyber Pass. He was undoubtedly an officer,
and he was decorated after the manner of the Russians
with little enamelled crosses, and he could talk,
and (though this has nothing to do with his merits)
he had been given up as a hopeless task, or cask,
by the Black Tyrone, who individually and collectively,
with hot whisky and honey, mulled brandy, and mixed
spirits of every kind, had striven in all hospitality
to make him drunk. And when the Black Tyrone,
who are exclusively Irish, fail to disturb the peace
of head of a foreigner that foreigner is
certain to be a superior man.
The White Hussars were as conscientious
in choosing their wine as in charging the enemy.
All that they possessed, including some wondrous brandy,
was placed at the absolute disposition of Dirkovitch,
and he enjoyed himself hugely even more
than among the Black Tyrones.
But he remained distressingly European
through it all. The White Hussars were ‘My
dear true friends,’ ‘Fellow-soldiers glorious,’
and ‘Brothers inseparable.’ He would
unburden himself by the hour on the glorious future
that awaited the combined arms of England and Russia
when their hearts and their territories should run
side by side and the great mission of civilising Asia
should begin. That was unsatisfactory, because
Asia is not going to be civilised after the methods
of the West. There is too much Asia and she is
too old. You cannot reform a lady of many lovers,
and Asia has been insatiable in her flirtations aforetime.
She will never attend Sunday school or learn to vote
save with swords for tickets.
Dirkovitch knew this as well as any
one else, but it suited him to talk special-correspondently
and to make himself as genial as he could. Now
and then he volunteered a little, a very little, information
about his own sotnia of Cossacks, left apparently to
look after themselves somewhere at the back of beyond.
He had done rough work in Central Asia, and had seen
rather more help-your-self fighting than most men
of his years. But he was careful never to betray
his superiority, and more than careful to praise on
all occasions the appearance, drill, uniform, and
organisation of Her Majesty’s White Hussars.
And indeed they were a regiment to be admired.
When Lady Durgan, widow of the late Sir John Durgan,
arrived in their station, and after a short time had
been proposed to by every single man at mess, she
put the public sentiment very neatly when she explained
that they were all so nice that unless she could marry
them all, including the Colonel and some majors already
married, she was not going to content herself with
one hussar. Wherefore she wedded a little man
in a rifle regiment, being by nature contradictious;
and the White Hussars were going to wear crape on
their arms, but compromised by attending the wedding
in full force, and lining the aisle with unutterable
reproach. She had jilted them all from
Basset-Holmer the senior captain to little Mildred
the junior subaltern, who could have given her four
thousand a year and a title.
The only person who did not share
the general regard for the White Hussars were a few
thousand gentlemen of Jewish extraction who lived
across the border, and answered to the name of Paythan.
They had once met the regiment officially and for
something less than twenty minutes, but the interview,
which was complicated with many casualties, had filled
them with prejudice. They even called the White
Hussars children of the devil and sons of persons whom
it would be perfectly impossible to meet in decent
society. Yet they were not above making their
aversion fill their money-belts. The regiment
possessed carbines beautiful Martini-Henri
carbines that would lop a bullet into an enemy’s
camp at one thousand yards, and were even handier
than the long rifle. Therefore they were coveted
all along the border, and since demand inevitably
breeds supply, they were supplied at the risk of life
and limb for exactly their weight in coined silver seven
and one-half pounds weight of rupees, or sixteen pounds
sterling reckoning the rupee at par. They were
stolen at night by snaky-haired thieves who crawled
on their stomachs under the nose of the sentries;
they disappeared mysteriously from locked arm-racks,
and in the hot weather when all the barrack doors
and windows were open, they vanished like puffs of
their own smoke. The border people desired them
for family vendettas and contingencies. But
in the long cold nights of the northern Indian winter
they were stolen most extensively. The traffic
of murder was liveliest among the hills at that season,
and prices ruled high. The regimental guards were
first doubled and then trebled. A trooper does
not much care if he loses a weapon Government
must make it good but he deeply resents
the loss of his sleep. The regiment grew very
angry, and one rifle-thief bears the visible marks
of their anger upon him to this hour. That incident
stopped the burglaries for a time, and the guards were
reduced accordingly, and the regiment devoted itself
to polo with unexpected results; for it beat by two
goals to one that very terrible polo corps the Lushkar
Light Horse, though the latter had four ponies apiece
for a short hour’s fight, as well as a native
officer who played like a lambent flame across the
ground.
They gave a dinner to celebrate the
event. The Lushkar team came, and Dirkovitch
came, in the fullest full uniform of a Cossack officer,
which is as full as a dressing-gown, and was introduced
to the Lushkars, and opened his eyes as he regarded.
They were lighter men than the Hussars, and they carried
themselves with the swing that is the peculiar right
of the Punjab Frontier Force and all Irregular Horse.
Like everything else in the Service it has to be learnt,
but, unlike many things, it is never forgotten, and
remains on the body till death.
The great beam-roofed mess-room of
the White Hussars was a sight to be remembered.
All the mess plate was out on the long table the
same table that had served up the bodies of five officers
after a forgotten fight long and long ago the
dingy, battered standards faced the door of entrance,
clumps of winter-roses lay between the silver candlesticks,
and the portraits of eminent officers deceased looked
down on their successors from between the heads of
sambhur, nilghai, markhor, and, pride of all the mess,
two grinning snow-leopards that had cost Basset-Holmer
four months’ leave that he might have spent in
England, instead of on the road to Thibet and the daily
risk of his life by ledge, snow-slide, and grassy
slope.
The servants in spotless white muslin
and the crest of their regiments on the brow of their
turbans waited behind their masters, who were clad
in the scarlet and gold of the White Hussars, and the
cream and silver of the Lushkar Light Horse.
Dirkovitch’s dull green uniform was the only
dark spot at the board, but his big onyx eyes made
up for it. He was fraternising effusively with
the Captain of the Lushkar team, who was wondering
how many of Dirkovitch’s Cossacks his own dark
wiry down-country-men could account for in a fair
charge. But one does not speak of these things
openly.
The talk rose higher and higher, and
the regimental band played between the courses, as
is the immemorial custom, till all tongues ceased
for a moment with the removal of the dinner-slips and
the first toast of obligation, when an officer rising
said, ’Mr. Vice, the Queen,’ and little
Mildred from the bottom of the table answered, ’The
Queen, God bless her,’ and the big spurs clanked
as the big men heaved themselves up and drank the
Queen upon whose pay they were falsely supposed to
settle their mess-bills. That Sacrament of the
Mess never grows old, and never ceases to bring a lump
into the throat of the listener wherever he be by
sea or by land. Dirkovitch rose with his ‘brothers
glorious,’ but he could not understand.
No one but an officer can tell what the toast means;
and the bulk have more sentiment than comprehension.
Immediately after the little silence that follows
on the ceremony there entered the native officer who
had played for the Lushkar team. He could not,
of course, eat with the mess, but he came in at dessert,
all six feet of him, with the blue and silver turban
atop, and the big black boots below. The mess
rose joyously as he thrust forward the hilt of his
sabre in token of fealty for the Colonel of the White
Hussars to touch, and dropped in a vacant chair amid
shouts of: ‘Rung ho, Hira Singh’
(which being translated means ’Go in and win’).
‘Did I whack you over the knee, old man?’
’Ressaidar Sahib, what the devil made you play
that kicking pig of a pony in the last ten minutes?’
‘Shabash, Ressaidar Sahib!’ Then
the voice of the Colonel, ‘The health of Ressaidar
Hira Singh!’
After the shouting had died away Hira
Singh rose to reply, for he was the cadet of a royal
house, the son of a king’s son, and knew what
was due on these occasions. Thus he spoke in the
vernacular: ’Colonel Sahib and officers
of this regiment. Much honour have you done me.
This will I remember. We came down from afar to
play you. But we were beaten’ (’No
fault of yours, Ressaidar Sahib. Played on our
own ground y’ know. Your ponies were cramped
from the railway. Don’t apologise!’)
‘Therefore perhaps we will come again if it be
so ordained.’ (’Hear! Hear!
Hear, indeed! Bravo! Hsh!’) ‘Then
we will play you afresh’ (’Happy to meet
you.’) ’till there are left no feet upon
our ponies. Thus far for sport.’ He
dropped one hand on his sword-hilt and his eye wandered
to Dirkovitch lolling back in his chair. ’But
if by the will of God there arises any other game
which is not the polo game, then be assured, Colonel
Sahib and officers, that we will play it out side by
side, though they,’ again his eye sought
Dirkovitch, ’though they I say have fifty
ponies to our one horse.’ And with a deep-mouthed
Rung ho! that sounded like a musket-butt on
flagstones he sat down amid leaping glasses.
Dirkovitch, who had devoted himself
steadily to the brandy, the terrible brandy
aforementioned, did not understand, nor
did the expurgated translations offered to him at
all convey the point. Decidedly Hira Singh’s
was the speech of the evening, and the clamour might
have continued to the dawn had it not been broken by
the noise of a shot without that sent every man feeling
at his defenceless left side. Then there was
a scuffle and a yell of pain.
‘Carbine-stealing again!’
said the Adjutant, calmly sinking back in his chair.
’This comes of reducing the guards. I hope
the sentries have killed him.’
The feet of armed men pounded on the
veranda flags, and it was as though something was
being dragged.
‘Why don’t they put him
in the cells till the morning?’ said the Colonel
testily. ‘See if they’ve damaged him,
Sergeant.’
The mess-sergeant fled out into the
darkness and returned with two troopers and a Corporal,
all very much perplexed.
‘Caught a man stealin’
carbines, Sir,’ said the Corporal. ’Leastways
‘e was crawlin’ towards the barricks, Sir,
past the main road sentries, an’ the sentry
‘e sez, Sir ’
The limp heap of rags upheld by the
three men groaned. Never was seen so destitute
and demoralised an Afghan. He was turbanless,
shoeless, caked with dirt, and all but dead with rough
handling. Hira Singh started slightly at the
sound of the man’s pain. Dirkovitch took
another glass of brandy.
‘What does the sentry say?’ said
the Colonel.
’Sez ‘e speaks English, Sir,’
said the Corporal.
’So you brought him into mess
instead of handing him over to the sergeant!
If he spoke all the Tongues of the Pentecost you’ve
no business ’
Again the bundle groaned and muttered.
Little Mildred had risen from his place to inspect.
He jumped back as though he had been shot.
‘Perhaps it would be better,
Sir, to send the men away,’ said he to the Colonel,
for he was a much privileged subaltern. He put
his arms round the rag-bound horror as he spoke, and
dropped him into a chair. It may not have been
explained that the littleness of Mildred lay in his
being six feet four and big in proportion. The
Corporal, seeing that an officer was disposed to look
after the capture, and that the Colonel’s eye
was beginning to blaze, promptly removed himself and
his men. The mess was left alone with the carbine-thief,
who laid his head on the table and wept bitterly,
hopelessly, and inconsolably, as little children weep.
Hira Singh leapt to his feet.
‘Colonel Sahib,’ said he, ’that man
is no Afghan, for they weep Ai! Ai! Nor
is he of Hindustan, for they weep Oh! Ho!
He weeps after the fashion of the white men, who say
Ow! Ow!’
‘Now where the dickens did you
get that knowledge, Hira Singh?’ said the Captain
of the Lushkar team.
‘Hear him!’ said Hira
Singh simply, pointing at the crumpled figure that
wept as though it would never cease.
‘He said, “My God!"’
said little Mildred. ‘I heard him say it.’
The Colonel and the mess-room looked
at the man in silence. It is a horrible thing
to hear a man cry. A woman can sob from the top
of her palate, or her lips, or anywhere else, but
a man must cry from his diaphragm, and it rends him
to pieces.
‘Poor devil!’ said the
Colonel, coughing tremendously. ’We ought
to send him to hospital. He’s been man-handled.’
Now the Adjutant loved his carbines.
They were to him as his grandchildren, the men standing
in the first place. He grunted rebelliously:
’I can understand an Afghan stealing, because
he’s built that way. But I can’t
understand his crying. That makes it worse.’
The brandy must have affected Dirkovitch,
for he lay back in his chair and stared at the ceiling.
There was nothing special in the ceiling beyond a
shadow as of a huge black coffin. Owing to some
peculiarity in the construction of the mess-room this
shadow was always thrown when the candles were lighted.
It never disturbed the digestion of the White Hussars.
They were in fact rather proud of it.
‘Is he going to cry all night?’
said the Colonel, ’or are we supposed to sit
up with little Mildred’s guest until he feels
better?’
The man in the chair threw up his
head and stared at the mess. ’Oh, my God!’
he said, and every soul in the mess rose to his feet.
Then the Lushkar Captain did a deed for which he ought
to have been given the Victoria Cross distinguished
gallantry in a fight against overwhelming curiosity.
He picked up his team with his eyes as the hostess
picks up the ladies at the opportune moment, and pausing
only by the Colonel’s chair to say, ’This
isn’t our affair, you know, Sir,’
led them into the veranda and the gardens. Hira
Singh was the last to go, and he looked at Dirkovitch.
But Dirkovitch had departed into a brandy-paradise
of his own. His lips moved without sound and he
was studying the coffin on the ceiling.
‘White white all
over,’ said Basset-Holmer, the Adjutant.
’What a pernicious renegade he must be!
I wonder where he came from?’
The Colonel shook the man gently by
the arm, and ‘Who are you?’ said he.
There was no answer. The man
stared round the mess-room and smiled in the Colonel’s
face. Little Mildred, who was always more of a
woman than a man till ‘Boot and saddle’
was sounded, repeated the question in a voice that
would have drawn confidences from a geyser. The
man only smiled. Dirkovitch at the far end of
the table slid gently from his chair to the floor.
No son of Adam in this present imperfect world can
mix the Hussars’ champagne with the Hussars’
brandy by five and eight glasses of each without remembering
the pit whence he was digged and descending thither.
The band began to play the tune with which the White
Hussars from the date of their formation have concluded
all their functions. They would sooner be disbanded
than abandon that tune; it is a part of their system.
The man straightened himself in his chair and drummed
on the table with his fingers.
‘I don’t see why we should
entertain lunatics,’ said the Colonel.
’Call a guard and send him off to the cells.
We’ll look into the business in the morning.
Give him a glass of wine first though.’
Little Mildred filled a sherry-glass
with the brandy and thrust it over to the man.
He drank, and the tune rose louder, and he straightened
himself yet more. Then he put out his long-taloned
hands to a piece of plate opposite and fingered it
lovingly. There was a mystery connected with
that piece of plate, in the shape of a spring which
converted what was a seven-branched candlestick, three
springs on each side and one in the middle, into a
sort of wheel-spoke candelabrum. He found the
spring, pressed it, and laughed weakly. He rose
from his chair and inspected a picture on the wall,
then moved on to another picture, the mess watching
him without a word. When he came to the mantelpiece
he shook his head and seemed distressed. A piece
of plate representing a mounted hussar in full uniform
caught his eye. He pointed to it, and then to
the mantelpiece with inquiry in his eyes.
‘What is it oh what
is it?’ said little Mildred. Then as a mother
might speak to a child, ‘That is a horse.
Yes, a horse.’
Very slowly came the answer in a thick,
passionless guttural ’Yes, I have
seen. But where is the horse?’
You could have heard the hearts of
the mess beating as the men drew back to give the
stranger full room in his wanderings. There was
no question of calling the guard.
Again he spoke very slowly, ‘Where
is our horse?’
There is but one horse in the White
Hussars, and his portrait hangs outside the door of
the mess-room. He is the piebald drum-horse, the
king of the regimental band, that served the regiment
for seven-and-thirty years, and in the end was shot
for old age. Half the mess tore the thing down
from its place and thrust it into the man’s
hands. He placed it above the mantelpiece, it
clattered on the ledge as his poor hands dropped it,
and he staggered towards the bottom of the table,
falling into Mildred’s chair. Then all the
men spoke to one another something after this fashion,
’The drum-horse hasn’t hung over the mantelpiece
since ‘67.’ ‘How does he know?’
’Mildred, go and speak to him again.’
‘Colonel, what are you going to do?’ ’Oh,
dry up, and give the poor devil a chance to pull himself
together.’ ’It isn’t possible
anyhow. The man’s a lunatic.’
Little Mildred stood at the Colonel’s
side talking in his ear. ’Will you be good
enough to take your seats, please, gentlemen!’
he said, and the mess dropped into the chairs.
Only Dirkovitch’s seat, next to little Mildred’s,
was blank, and little Mildred himself had found Hira
Singh’s place. The wide-eyed mess-sergeant
filled the glasses in dead silence. Once more
the Colonel rose, but his hand shook, and the port
spilled on the table as he looked straight at the man
in little Mildred’s chair and said hoarsely,
‘Mr. Vice, the Queen.’ There was a
little pause, but the man sprung to his feet and answered
without hesitation, ‘The Queen, God bless her!’
and as he emptied the thin glass he snapped the shank
between his fingers.
Long and long ago, when the Empress
of India was a young woman and there were no unclean
ideals in the land, it was the custom of a few messes
to drink the Queen’s toast in broken glass, to
the vast delight of the mess-contractors. The
custom is now dead, because there is nothing to break
anything for, except now and again the word of a Government,
and that has been broken already.
‘That settles it,’ said
the Colonel, with a gasp. ’He’s not
a sergeant. What in the world is he?’
The entire mess echoed the word, and
the volley of questions would have scared any man.
It was no wonder that the ragged, filthy invader could
only smile and shake his head.
From under the table, calm and smiling,
rose Dirkovitch, who had been roused from healthful
slumber by feet upon his body. By the side of
the man he rose, and the man shrieked and grovelled.
It was a horrible sight coming so swiftly upon the
pride and glory of the toast that had brought the
strayed wits together.
Dirkovitch made no offer to raise
him, but little Mildred heaved him up in an instant.
It is not good that a gentleman who can answer to
the Queen’s toast should lie at the feet of a
subaltern of Cossacks.
The hasty action tore the wretch’s
upper clothing nearly to the waist, and his body was
seamed with dry black scars. There is only one
weapon in the world that cuts in parallel lines, and
it is neither the cane nor the cat. Dirkovitch
saw the marks, and the pupils of his eyes dilated.
Also his face changed. He said something that
sounded like Shto ve takete, and the man fawning
answered, Chetyre.
‘What’s that?’ said everybody together.
‘His number. That is number
four, you know,’ Dirkovitch spoke very thickly.
‘What has a Queen’s officer
to do with a qualified number?’ said the Colonel,
and an unpleasant growl ran round the table.
‘How can I tell?’ said
the affable Oriental with a sweet smile. ’He
is a how you have it? escape run-a-way,
from over there.’ He nodded towards the
darkness of the night.
‘Speak to him if he’ll
answer you, and speak to him gently,’ said little
Mildred, settling the man in a chair. It seemed
most improper to all present that Dirkovitch should
sip brandy as he talked in purring, spitting Russian
to the creature who answered so feebly and with such
evident dread. But since Dirkovitch appeared to
understand no one said a word. All breathed heavily,
leaning forward, in the long gaps of the conversation.
The next time that they have no engagements on hand
the White Hussars intend to go to St. Petersburg in
a body to learn Russian.
‘He does not know how many years
ago,’ said Dirkovitch facing the mess, ’but
he says it was very long ago in the war. I think
that there was an accident. He says he was of
this glorious and distinguished regiment in the war.’
‘The rolls! The rolls!
Holmer, get the rolls!’ said little Mildred,
and the Adjutant dashed off bareheaded to the orderly-room,
where the muster-rolls of the regiment were kept.
He returned just in time to hear Dirkovitch conclude,
’Therefore, my dear friends, I am most sorry
to say there was an accident which would have been
reparable if he had apologised to that our colonel,
which he had insulted.’
Then followed another growl which
the Colonel tried to beat down. The mess was
in no mood just then to weigh insults to Russian colonels.
’He does not remember, but I
think that there was an accident, and so he was not
exchanged among the prisoners, but he was sent to another
place how do you say? the country.
So, he says, he came here. He does not
know how he came. Eh? He was at Chepany’ the
man caught the word, nodded, and shivered ’at
Zhigansk and Irkutsk. I cannot understand how
he escaped. He says, too, that he was in the forests
for many years, but how many years he has forgotten that
with many things. It was an accident; done because
he did not apologise to that our colonel. Ah!’
Instead of echoing Dirkovitch’s
sigh of regret, it is sad to record that the White
Hussars livelily exhibited un-Christian delight and
other emotions, hardly restrained by their sense of
hospitality. Holmer flung the frayed and yellow
regimental rolls on the table, and the men flung themselves
at these.
‘Steady! Fifty-six fifty-five fifty-four,’
said Holmer. ’Here we are. “Lieutenant
Austin Limmason. Missing.” That was before
Sebastopol. What an infernal shame! Insulted
one of their colonels, and was quietly shipped off.
Thirty years of his life wiped out.’
‘But he never apologised.
Said he’d see him damned first,’ chorussed
the mess.
’Poor chap! I suppose he
never had the chance afterwards. How did he come
here?’ said the Colonel.
The dingy heap in the chair could give no answer.
‘Do you know who you are?’
It laughed weakly.
’Do you know that you are Limmason Lieutenant
Limmason of the White Hussars?’
Swiftly as a shot came the answer,
in a slightly surprised tone, ’Yes, I’m
Limmason, of course.’ The light died out
in his eyes, and the man collapsed, watching every
motion of Dirkovitch with terror. A flight from
Siberia may fix a few elementary facts in the mind,
but it does not seem to lead to continuity of thought.
The man could not explain how, like a homing pigeon,
he had found his way to his own old mess again.
Of what he had suffered or seen he knew nothing.
He cringed before Dirkovitch as instinctively as he
had pressed the spring of the candlestick, sought
the picture of the drum-horse, and answered to the
toast of the Queen. The rest was a blank that
the dreaded Russian tongue could only in part remove.
His head bowed on his breast, and he giggled and cowered
alternately.
The devil that lived in the brandy
prompted Dirkovitch at this extremely inopportune
moment to make a speech. He rose, swaying slightly,
gripped the table-edge, while his eyes glowed like
opals, and began:
’Fellow-soldiers glorious true
friends and hospitables. It was an accident,
and deplorable most deplorable.’
Here he smiled sweetly all round the mess. ’But
you will think of this little, little thing. So
little, is it not? The Czar! Posh! I
slap my fingers I snap my fingers at him.
Do I believe in him? No! But in us Slav who
has done nothing, him I believe. Seventy how
much millions peoples that have done nothing not
one thing. Posh! Napoleon was an episode.’
He banged a hand on the table. ’Hear you,
old peoples, we have done nothing in the world out
here. All our work is to do; and it shall be
done, old peoples. Get a-way!’ He waved
his hand imperiously, and pointed to the man.
’You see him. He is no good to see.
He was just one little oh, so little accident,
that no one remembered. Now he is That!
So will you be, brother soldiers so brave so
will you be. But you will never come back.
You will all go where he is gone, or’ he
pointed to the great coffin-shadow on the ceiling,
and muttering, ‘Seventy millions get
a-way, you old peoples,’ fell asleep.
‘Sweet, and to the point,’
said little Mildred. ’What’s the use
of getting wroth? Let’s make this poor
devil comfortable.’
But that was a matter suddenly and
swiftly taken from the loving hands of the White Hussars.
The lieutenant had returned only to go away again
three days later, when the wail of the Dead March,
and the tramp of the squadrons, told the wondering
Station, who saw no gap in the mess-table, that an
officer of the regiment had resigned his new-found
commission.
And Dirkovitch, bland, supple, and
always genial, went away too, by a night train.
Little Mildred and another man saw him off, for he
was the guest of the mess, and even had he smitten
the Colonel with the open hand, the law of that mess
allowed no relaxation of hospitality.
‘Good-bye, Dirkovitch, and a
pleasant journey,’ said little Mildred.
‘Au revoir,’ said the Russian.
‘Indeed! But we thought you were going
home?’
‘Yes, but I will come again.
My dear friends, is that road shut?’ He pointed
to where the North Star burned over the Khyber Pass.
’By Jove! I forgot.
Of course. Happy to meet you, old man, any time
you like. Got everything you want? Cheroots,
ice, bedding? That’s all right. Well,
au revoir, Dirkovitch.’
‘Um,’ said the other man,
as the tail-lights of the train grew small. ‘Of all the unmitigated !’
Little Mildred answered nothing, but
watched the North Star and hummed a selection from
a recent Simla burlesque that had much delighted the
White Hussars. It ran:
I’m sorry for Mister
Bluebeard,
I’m sorry to cause him
pain;
But a terrible spree there’s
sure to be
When he comes back again.