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The city, that night, duly enjoyed its 'holy rumpus.' But on Monday morning shops were open again; everything as normal as you please; and the cheerful prophets congratulated themselves that the explosion had proved a damp squib after all.
Foremost among these was Mr Talbot Hayes, whose ineffable air of being in the confidence of the Almighty--not to mention the whole Hindu Pantheon--was balm to Mrs Elton at this terrifying juncture. For her mountain of flesh hid a mouse of a soul, and her childhood had been shadowed by tales of Mutiny horrors. With her it was almost an obsession. The least unusual uproar at a railway station, or holiday excitement in the bazaar, sufficed to convince her that the hour had struck for which, subconsciously, she had been waiting all her life.
So, throughout Sunday morning, she had been a quivering jelly of fear; positively annoyed with Rose for her serene a.s.surance that 'the Pater would pull it off all right.' She had never quite fathomed her daughter's faith in the shy, undistinguished man for whom she cherished an affection secretly tinged with contempt. In this case it was justified. He had returned to tiffin quite unruffled; had vouchsafed no details; simply a.s.sured her she need not worry. Thank G.o.d, they had a strong L.G. That was all.
But authority, in the person of Talbot Hayes, was more communicative--in a flatteringly confidential undertone. A long talk with him had cheered her considerably; and on Monday she was still further cheered by a piece of news her daughter casually let fall at breakfast, between the poached eggs and the marmalade.
Rose--at last! And even Gladys' achievement thrown into the shade! Here was compensation for all she had suffered from the girl's distracting habit of going just so far with the wrong man as to give her palpitations. She had felt downright nervous about Major Desmond. For Rose never gave one her confidence. And she had suffered qualms about this new unknown young man. But what matter now? To your right-minded mother, all's well that ends in the Wedding March--and Debrett! Most satisfactory to find that the father _was_ a Baronet; and Mr Sinclair _was_ the eldest son! Could anything be more gratifying to her maternal pride in this beautiful, difficult daughter of hers?
Consequently, when the eldest son came in to report himself, all that inner complacency welled up and flowed over him in a volume of maternal effusion, trying enough in any case; and to Roy intolerable, almost, in view of that enforced reservation that might altogether change her tone.
After nearly an hour of it, he felt so battered internally that he reached the haven of his own room feeling thoroughly out of tune with the whole affair. Yet--there it was. And no man could lightly break with a girl of that quality. Besides, his feeling for her--infatuation apart--had received a distinct stimulus from their talk about his mother and the impression made on her by the photograph he had brought with him, as promised. And if Mrs Elton was a Brobdingnagian thorn on the stem of his Rose, the D.C.'s patent pleasure and affectionate allusions to the girl atoned for a good deal.
So, instead of executing a 'wobble' of the first magnitude, he proceeded to clinch matters by writing first to his father, then to a Calcutta firm of jewellers for a selection of rings.
But he wavered badly over facing the ordeal of wholesale congratulations--the chaff of the men, the reiterate inanities of the women.
On Tuesday, Rose warned him that her mother was dying to give a dinner, to invite certain rival mothers, and announce her news with due eclat.
"Hand us round, in fact," she added serenely, "with the chocs and Elvas plums!--No! Don't flare up!" Her fingers caressed the back of his hand.
"In mercy to you, I diplomatically sat down upon the idea, and remained seated till it was extinct. So you're saved--by your affianced wife, whom you don't seem in a frantic hurry to acknowledge...!"
He caught her to him, and kissed her pa.s.sionately. "You _know_ it's not that----"
"Yes, _I_ know ... you're just terror-struck of all those women. But if you will do these things, you must stand up to the consequences--like a man."
He jerked up his head. "No fear. We'll say to-morrow, or Thursday."
"I'll be merciful, and say Thursday. It's to be announced this afternoon. Have you mentioned it--to any one?"
"Only to Lance."
A small sound between her teeth made him turn quickly.
"Anything hurt you?"
"You've quick ears! Only a pin-p.r.i.c.k." She explored her blouse for the offending pin. "Do you tell each other everything--you two?"
"Pretty well--as men go."
"You're a wonderful pair."
She sighed and was silent a moment. Then, "Shall it be a ride on Thursday?" she asked, giving his arm a small squeeze.
"Rather. There are Brigade Sports; but I could cry off. We'll take our tea out to Shadera, have a peaceful time there, and finish up at the Hall."
So it was arranged, and so it befell, though not exactly according to design.
On Thursday they rode leisurely out through the heat and dusty haze, away from bungalows and the watered Mall, through a village alive with shrill women, naked babies, and officious pariahs, who kept Terry furiously occupied: on past the city, over the bridge of boats that spans the Ravi, till they came to the green secluded garden where the Emperor Jehangir sleeps, heedless of infidels who, generation after generation, have picnicked and made love in the sacred precincts of his tomb.
Arrived at the gardens, they tethered the horses, drank thermos tea and ate sugared cakes, sitting on the wide wall that looked across the river and the plain to the dim huddled city beyond. And Roy talked of Bramleigh Beeches in April, till he felt home-sick for primroses and the cuckoo and the smell of mown gra.s.s; while, before his actual eyes, the terrible sun of India hung suspended in the haze, like a platter of molten bra.s.s, till the turning earth, settling to sleep, shouldered it almost out of sight.
That brought them back to realities.
"We must scoot," said Roy. "It'll be dark, and there's only a slip of a moon."
"It's been delicious!" she sighed; and they kissed mutually--a lingering kiss.
Then they were off, racing the swift-footed dusk....
Skirting the city, they noticed scurrying groups of figures, shouting to each other as they ran; and the next instant, Roy's ear caught the ominous hum of Sunday morning.
"Good G.o.d! They're out again. Hi--You! What's the _tamasha_?" he called to the nearest group.
They responded with wild gestures, and fled on. But one lagged a little, being fat and scant of breath; and Roy shouted again. This time the note of command took effect.
"Where are you all running? Is there trouble?" he asked.
"Big trouble, Sahib--Amritsar," answered the fleshly one, wiping the dusty sweat from his forehead, and shaking it unceremoniously from his finger-tips. "Word comes that our leaders are taken. Mahatma Ghandi, also. The people are burning and looting; Bank-_ghar_,[29] Town Hall-_ghar_; killing many Sahibs and one Mem-sahib. _Hai! hai_! Now there will be _hartal_ again; Committee _ki raj_. No food; no work.
_Hai! hai!_[30] Ghandi _ki jai_!"
"Confound the man!" muttered Roy, not referring to the woebegone one.
"Look here, Rose, if they're wedged up near Anarkali, we must change our route. I expect the squadron's out; and I ought to be with it----"
"Thank G.o.d, you're _not_. It's quite bad enough----" She set her teeth.
"Oh, _come_ on."
Back they sped, at a hand-gallop, past the Fort and the Badshahi Mosque; then, neck and neck down the long straight road, that vibrant roar growing louder with every stride.
Near the Church they slackened speed. The noise had become terrific, like a hundred electric engines; and there was more than excitement in it--there was fury.
"Sunday was a treat to this," remarked Roy. "We shan't get on to the Mall."
"We can go through Mozung," said Rose coolly. "But I want to _see_--as far as one can. The Pater's bound to be there."
Roy, while admiring her coolness, detected beneath it a repressed intensity, very unlike her. But his own urgent sensations left no room for curiosity; and round the next swerve they drew rein in full view of a sight that neither would forget while they lived.
The wide road, stretching away to the Lahori gate, was thronged with a shouting, gesticulating human barrier; bobbing heads and lifted arms, hurling any missile that came to hand--stones, bricks, lumps of refuse--at the courageous few who held them in check.
Cavalry and police, as on Sunday, blocked the turning into the Mall; and Roy instantly recognised the silhouette of Lance, sitting erect and rigid, doubtless thinking unutterable things.
Low roofs of buildings, near the road, were alive with shadowy figures, running, yelling, hurling bricks and mud from a half-demolished shop near by. Two mounted police officers made abortive attempts to get a hearing; and a solitary Indian, perched on an electric standard, well above the congested ma.s.s, vainly harangued and fluttered a white scarf as signal of pacific intentions. Doubtless one of their 'leaders,' again making frantic, belated efforts to stem the torrent that he and his kind had let loose.
And the nightmare effect of the scene was intensified by the oncoming dusk, by the flare of a single torch hoisted on a pole. It waved purposefully; and its objective was clear to Roy--the electric supply wires.
"That brute there's trying to cut off the light!" he exclaimed, turning sharply in the saddle, only to find that Rose had not even heard him.