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"Yes," said Bracy quickly, "come what may."
"We're going to learn the art of war in earnest now, old chap," said Roberts as soon as they were alone again.
"Seems like it."
"Yes. I wonder whether we shall take it as coolly as this young Drummond."
"I wonder," said Bracy; "he's an odd fish."
"But I think I like him," said Roberts.
"Like him?" replied Bracy. "I'm sure I do."
CHAPTER NINE.
WARM CORNERS AND COLD.
It was a glorious day, with the air so bright, elastic, and inspiriting that the young officers of the garrison felt their position irksome in the extreme. For the Colonel's orders were stringent. The limits allowed to officer or man outside the walls were very narrow, and all the time hill, mountain, forest, and valley were wooing them to come and investigate their depths.
It was afternoon when Roberts, Bracy, and Drummond, being off duty, had strolled for a short distance along the farther side of the main stream, and paused at last in a lovely spot where a side gorge came down from the hills, to end suddenly some hundred feet above their heads; and from the scarped rock the stream it brought down made a sudden leap, spread out at first into drops, which broke again into fine ruin, and reached the bottom like a thick veil of mist spanned by a lovely rainbow. The walls of rock, bedewed by the ever-falling water, were a series of the most brilliant greens supplied by the luxuriant ferns and mosses, while here and there, where their seeds had found nourishment in cleft and chasm, huge cedars, perfect in their pyramidal symmetry, rose spiring up to arrow-like points a hundred, two hundred feet in the pure air.
Flowers dotted the gra.s.sy bottom; birds flitted here and there, and sang. There was the delicious lemony odour emitted by the deodars, and a dreamy feeling of its being good to live there always amidst so much beauty; for other music beside that of birds added to the enhancement-- music supplied by the falling waters, sweet, silvery, tinkling, rising and falling, mingling with the deep ba.s.s of a low, humming roar.
The three young men had wandered on and on along a steep track, more than once sending the half-wild, goat-like sheep bounding away, and a feeling of annoyance was strong upon them, which state of feeling found vent in words, Drummond being the chief speaker.
"I don't care," he said; "it's just jolly rot of your old man. Wrayford was bad enough, but old Graves is a tyrant. He has no business to tie us down so."
"There's the enemy still in the hills," said Roberts.
"Yes, but whacked, and all the other tribes ready to follow the example of those fellows who have come down to make peace and fight against the rest who hold out. They're not fools."
"Not a bit of it," said Bracy. "They're as keen as men can be; but I shouldn't like to trust them."
"Nor I," said Roberts. "They're too keen."
"There you are," said Drummond petulantly. "That's the Englishman all over. You fellows keep the poor beggars at a distance, and that makes them wild when they want to be friends. If every one had acted in that spirit, where should we have been all through India?"
"Same place as we are now," said Bracy, laughing.
"Right, old fellow," said Roberts. "We've conquered the nation, and the people feel that they're a conquered race, and will never feel quite reconciled to our rule."
"Well, I don't know," said Bracy. "I'm not very well up in these matters, but I think there are hundreds of thousands in India who do like our rule; for it is firm and just, and keeps down the constant fighting of the past."
"Bother!" cried Drummond pettishly: "there's no arguing against you two beggars. You're so pig-headed. Never mind all that. These thingamy Dwats have come down to make peace--haven't they?"
"You thought otherwise," said Bracy, laughing. "But, by the way, if we two are pig-headed, aren't you rather hoggish--hedge-hoggish? I never met such a spiky young Scot before."
"Scotland for ever!" cried Drummond, tossing his pith helmet in the air and catching it again.
"By all means," said Bracy. "Scotland for ever! and if the snow-peaks were out of sight wouldn't this be just like a Scottish glen?"
"Just," said Roberts, and Drummond looked pleased.
"Here, how am I to speak if you boys keep on interrupting?" he said.
"Speak on, my son," said Bracy.
"Well, I was going to say these fellows have come down like a deputation to see if we will be friends; and if we show that we will, I think now that all the rest will follow in the course of a few weeks, and there will be peace."
"And plenty?" said Bracy.
"Of course."
"No, my boy; you're too sanguine, and don't understand the hill-man's character."
"Seen more of it than you have," said Drummond.
"Possibly; but I think you're wrong."
"Oh, very well, then, we'll say I'm wrong. But never mind that. We've done the fighting; the n.i.g.g.e.rs are whopped, and here we are with the streams whispering to us to come and fish, the hills to go and shoot, and the forests and mountains begging us to up and bag deer, bear, and leopard. I shouldn't be at all surprised even if we came upon a tiger.
They say there is one here and there."
"It is tempting," said Bracy. "I long for a day or two's try at something."
"Even if it's only a bit of a climb up the ice and snow," put in Roberts.
"All in turn," said Drummond. "Well, then, when we go back to mess this evening, let's get some of the other fellows to back us up and pet.i.tion Graves to give us leave."
"No good," said Roberts; "I know him too well. I have asked him."
"And what did he say?" cried Drummond eagerly.
"As soon as ever I can feel that it is safe," said Bracy. "I was there."
"Oh!" cried Drummond.
"He's right," said Roberts. "I don't believe that we can count upon these people yet."
"Then let's have a thoroughly good fight, and whack them into their senses. We're sent up here to pacify these tribes, and I want to see it done."
"So do we," said Bracy; "but it must take time."
"Don't believe that any one else thinks as you do," said Drummond sulkily; and they toiled on in silence till they came near the side of the falling water, whose rush was loud enough to drown their approach; and here they all seated themselves on the edge of the mere shelf of rock, trampled by many generations of sheep, dangled their legs over the perpendicular side, and listened to the music of the waters, as they let their eyes wander over the lovely landscape of tree, rock, and fall.
The scene was so peaceful that it was hard to believe that they were in the valley through whose rugged mazes the warlike tribes had streamed to besiege the fort; and Bracy was just bending forward to pick a lovely alpine primula, when he sniffed softly and turned to whisper to his companions.
"Do you smell that?" he said.