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"There is no paper, Commander Sahib," the jamadar said, returning from his search of the iron-box.
"There was none such," Ka.s.sim growled; "it was but a Patan lie; the message is yonder," and he pointed to the smear of blood upon the marble floor.
Then he turned to Bootea: "Now, woman, speak what is in thy mind, for this is an affair of action."
"Commander Sahib," Bootea began, "yonder man,"--and she pointed a slim hand toward Barlow--"is not an Afghan, he is a Sahib."
This startling announcement filled the room with cries of astonishment and anger; _tulwars_ flashed. Barlow s.h.i.+vered; not because of the impending danger, for he had accepted the roll of the dice, but at the thought that Bootea was betraying him, that all she had said and done before was nothing--a lie, that she was an accomplice in this murder of the Chief, and was now giving the Pindaris the final convincing proof, the reason.
To deny the revelation was useless; they would torture him, and he was to die anyway; better to die claiming to be a _messenger_ from the British rather than as one sent to murder the Chief.
Ka.s.sim bellowed an order subduing the tumult; then he asked: "What art thou, a Patan, or as the woman says, an Englay?"
"I am a Sahib," Barlow answered; "a Captain in the British service, and came to your Chief with a written message of friends.h.i.+p."
Ka.s.sim pointed to the blood on the floor: "Thou wert a good messenger, infidel; thou hast slain a follower of the Prophet."
But Bootea raised a slim hand, and, her voice trembling with intensity, cried: "Commander, Amir Khan was not slain with the dagger, he was killed by the _towel_. Look you at his throat and you will see the mark."
"Bismillah!" came in a cry of astonishment from the Commander's throat, and the marble walls of the _Surya-Mahal_ (room of audience) echoed gasps and curses. Ka.s.sim himself had knelt by the dead Chief, and now rising, said: "By Allah! it is true. That dog--" his finger was thrusting like a dagger at Barlow.
But Bootea's clear voice hushed the rising clamour: "No, Commander, the sahibs know not the thug trick of the _roomal_, and few thugs could have overcome the Chief."
"Who then killed him--speak quick, and with the truth," Ka.s.sim commanded.
He was interrupted by one of Hunsa's guards, crying: "Here, where go you--you had not leave!" And Hunsa, who had turned to slip away, was jerked back to where he had stood.
"It is that one," Bootea declared, sweeping a hand toward Hunsa.
"About his waist is even now the yellow-and-white _roomal_ that is the weapon of Bhowanee. With that he killed Amir Khan. Take it from him, and see if there be not black hairs from the beard of the Chief in its soft mesh."
"By the grace of Allah it is a truth!" the Commander e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed when the cloth pa.s.sed to him had been examined. "It is a revelation such as came to Mahomet, and out of the mouth of a woman. Great is Allah!"
"Will the Commander have Hunsa searched for the paper the Sahib has spoken of?" Bootea asked.
"In his turban--" Ka.s.sim commanded--"in his turban, the nest of a thief's loot or the hiding-place of the knife of a murderer. Look ye in his turban!"
As the turban was stripped from the head of Hunsa the Pindari gave it a whirling twist that sent its many yards of blue muslin streaming out like a ribbon and the parchment message fell to the floor.
"Ah-ha!" and a man, stooping, thrust it into the hands of the Commander.
The Pindari who held the turban, threw it almost at the feet of Bootea, saying, "Methinks the slayer will need this no more."
Bootea picked up the blue cloth and rolled it into a ball, saying, "If it is permitted I will take this to those who entrusted Hunsa with this foul mission to show them that he is dead."
"A clever woman thou art--it is a wise thought; take it by all means, for indeed that dog's head will need little when they have finished with him," the soldier agreed.
Ka.s.sim had taken the written paper closer to the light. At sight of the thumb blood-stain upon the doc.u.ment, he gave a bellow of rage.
"Look you all!" he cried holding it spread out in the light of the lamp; "here is our Chief's message to us given after he was dead; he sealed it with his thumb in his own blood, after he was dead. A miracle, calling for vengeance. Hunsa, dog, thou shalt die for hours--thou shalt die by inches, for it was thee."
Ka.s.sim held the paper at arm's length toward Barlow, asking: "Is this the message thou brought?"
"It is, Commander."
Ka.s.sim whirled on Hunsa, "Where didst thou get it, dog of an infidel?"
"Without the gate of the palace, my Lord. I found it lying there where the Sahib had dropped it in his flight."
"Allah! thou art a liar of brazenness." He spoke to a Jamadar: "Have brought the leather nosebag of a horse and hot ashes so that we may come by the truth."
Then Ka.s.sim held the parchment close to the lamp and scanned it. He rubbed a hand across his wrinkled brow and pondered. "Beside the seal here is the name, Rana Bhim," and he turned his fierce eyes on Barlow.
"Yes, Commander; the Rana has put his seal upon it that he will join his Rajputs with the British and the Pindaris to drive from Mewar Sindhia--the one whose Dewan sent Hunsa to slay your Chief."
"Thou sayest so, but how know I that Hunsa is not in thy hand, and that thou didst not prepare the way for the killing? Here beside the name of the Rana is drawn a lance; that suggests an order to kill, a secret order." He turned to a sepoy, "Bring the Rajput, Zalim."
While they waited Bootea said: "It was Nana Sahib who sent Hunsa and the decoits to slay Amir Khan, because he feared an alliance between the Chief and the British."
"And thou wert one of them?"
"I came to warn Amir Khan, and--"
"And what, woman--the decoits were your own people?"
"Yonder Sahib had saved my life--saved me from the harem of Nana Sahib, and I came to save his life and your Chief's."
Now there was an eruption into the chamber; men carrying a great pot of hot ashes, and one swinging from his hand the nosebag of a horse; and with them the Rajput.
"Here," Ka.s.sim said, addressing the Hindu, "what means this spear upon this doc.u.ment? Is it a hint to drive it home?"
The Rajput put his fingers reverently upon the Rana's signature.
"That, Commander, is the seal, the sign. I am a Chondawat, and belong to the highest of the thirty-six tribes of Mewar, and that sign of the lance was put upon state doc.u.ments by Chonda; it has been since that time--it is but a seal. Even as that,"--and Zalim proudly swung a long arm toward the wall where a huge yellow sun embossed on gypsum rested--"even that is an emblem of the Children of the Sun, the Sesodias of Mewar, the Rana."
"It is well," Ka.s.sim declared; "as to this that is in the message, to-morrow, with the aid of a mullah, we will consider it. And now as to Hunsa, we would have from him the truth."
He turned to the Gulab; "Go thou in peace, woman, for our dead Chief had high regard for thee; and Captain Sahib, even thou may go to thy abode, not thinking to leave there, however, without coming to pay salaams. Thou wouldst not get far."
CHAPTER XXIII
When the two had gone Ka.s.sim clapped his hands together: "Now then for the ordeal, the search for truth," he declared.
Hot wood-ashes were poured into the horse-bag, and, protesting, cursing, struggling, the powerful Bagree was dragged to the centre of the room.
"Who sent thee to murder Amir Khan?" Ka.s.sim asked.
"Before Bhowanee, Prince, I did not kill him!"