One Maid's Mischief - novelonlinefull.com
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"I tell you that is what the scoundrels mean!" replied Hilton. "Not that it matters much," he added gloomily.
"Oh, doesn't it!" said Chumbley, "but it does, a good deal. I don't know that we should make much fuss--soldiers can't; but I know of plenty of people who would cry their eyes out about me."
"If the English rajahs," said a voice, that seemed to the two young men in their bandaged condition to come out of the darkness, and to speak haltingly, as if the utterer were not quite sure of the language in which he spoke--"If the English rajahs will be patient, and not try to escape, no harm shall be done to them."
"There," said Chumbley, "do you hear that, old man! Better have a cigar."
"Rubbish!" cried Hilton, angrily.
"Not a bit of it, old man," said Chumbley; "they are some of old Perowne's best, and I have just finished one, and am going to have another. Here! hi! my lord the Malay chief, Maharajah, Muntri, Tumongong, or whatever you are, stop the boat, and give my friend a cigar. Load us both and fire us old chap, and then we can go off comfortably."
There was no cessation in the rowing; but as Chumbley sat back there he felt his request attended to, the smoked-out cigar being taken from his lips and thrown into the water, where it fell with a loud hiss, the case taken from his breast, opened, and then it seemed that the boats were drawn together, and a cigar was pa.s.sed to Hilton.
"Got it, old man?" said Chumbley, sucking at his own, and biting off the end.
"Yes," said Hilton gruffly, as if he were resenting the attentions of his captors.
Then came the sharp sound of a striking match; and though Chumbley tried hard, he found that his eyes were too well bandaged for him to catch even a gleam of the light, so he contented himself with drawing at his cigar, after which there was the loud hiss of the match thrown into the water, and the boats were once more urged onward at a goodly speed.
A little conversation was kept up; but over their cigars the two prisoners seemed to grow thoughtful, and at last there was a pause, which Chumbley broke at last with the question:
"I say, old chap, don't you think this means ransom?"
There was no reply, and the deep-voiced Malay said, in his own tongue:
"The other boat is far behind."
It must have been towards morning that a few words were uttered in Chumbley's boat; there seemed to him, as he immediately became on the _qui vive_, to be a quickening of the rower's strokes, the rustling of bushes, some twigs of one of which brushed his arm, and then they ascended, as far as he could judge, a narrow stream for a short distance, for the oars kept striking bushes or reeds on either side; and now the boat that held Hilton had evidently come up close behind.
"They mean to hide us away well, at all events," thought Chumbley. "Now I wonder whether we have come up the stream or down."
He had hardly given life to that query, when a gentle check, as if the bows of the boat had run into mud, told that the sh.o.r.e was reached.
A few rapid orders succeeded, and it seemed to Chumbley that now they were about to land he would have his cramped legs unbound; but no. The next minute he was seized by four men, lifted out, and laid upon the soft, mossy ground.
"You there, Hilton?" he said, as he lay upon his side as helpless as a newly-landed fish.
"Yes, I am here," was the reply.
"The English rajahs can talk as they like," said the deep-voiced Malay.
"No one can hear them now."
"Humph! Thanks for the great concession," growled Chumbley; and he was about to take advantage of the permission, when he felt himself again lifted, and laid this time in a kind of hammock that seemed to be slung upon poles, and then for a couple of hours at least, he and Hilton, who was in a similar conveyance behind, were borne along some narrow pathway of the jungle, the leaves, and strands, and thin verdant canes brushing against them constantly, and sweeping their faces at times when they were halted for the bearers to be changed.
"Well," said Chumbley, chuckling softly, "I hope they are enjoying themselves with their job over me. They'll declare that they have had the honour of carrying a very great man."
A final halt at last, when fresh voices were heard. The hammocks were set down upon what seemed to be a framework; then they were lifted, tilted very much at one end, as if a flight of steps were being ascended, and at last the prisoners felt themselves to be landed upon what felt like a bamboo floor.
Next they were lifted out, carried a few steps, and laid upon soft matting; there was the _pad, pad--pad, pad_ of shoeless feet over the floor, and all was perfectly still.
VOLUME TWO, CHAPTER TWELVE.
A BIRD IN A CAGE.
Helen Perowne's horror upon finding herself borne helplessly away was so great that she swooned, remaining insensible for some very considerable time, and when she did recover herself it was only to faint again and again, becoming afterwards so thoroughly prostrate that she took no note of either time or the direction in which she was being taken.
Hours must have elapsed before, in the total darkness caused by the stifling veil thrown over her head, she found that she was being carried in some kind of litter along a forest path, whose leaves and vines brushed her as she pa.s.sed.
This seemed to last a long time, and to be very unreal and dreamy. In fact, more than once she felt that she must be in some terribly troubled dream, out of which she kept awaking to the reality of her position and calling for help.
It was in vain she knew, for her voice seemed to return upon her; and at last, wearied out and exhausted, she lay there pa.s.sive, thinking of the past, and wondering what her future was to be.
She was too much prostrated to be able to think with clearness; but her thoughts kept turning to her career since she left England, and the dark, threatening face of Murad was constantly before her eyes. That he was connected with this outrage she felt no doubt, and as she thought of her weak vanity and the strait to which it had brought her, the tears filled her eyes and trickled slowly down her cheeks.
Then other faces rose before her in the darkness, as if upbraiding her for what she had done. She saw the Rev Arthur Rosebury, calm, patient, and uncomplaining, satisfied if she only gave him a look or word; Chumbley, her very slave at first, but then a rebel, ready to look at her mockingly, as if laughing at his broken chain; Hilton, devoted and tender but exacting, as if he doubted her truth; Murad, again fierce and lurid in his love, so that she shuddered as she saw his dark eyes and white teeth; a dozen others with whom she had trifled; and lastly, the quiet, firm face of Neil Harley, half laughing, half angry with her, but full of determination, as if he were constantly telling her that he was but waiting till she had grown wiser, for she would yet be his.
As these faces seemed to rise before her out of the thick darkness, it was as though she were haunted, and it was in a wild, pa.s.sionate way that she seemed in her dreamy state to be defying them, bidding them go--all but one, whose power was too great even for her angry words to repel. No; Neil Harley merely mocked and laughed, and seemed to say: "I can wait; I shall appeal no more, for some day I know, as I have often said, I shall have you humbled, a suppliant at my feet, begging me to take you, to protect you, to make you mine. Till then I can wait!"
It was all darkness again, and these words but a fancy of her brain; but how real it all seemed--so real that Helen shuddered as she wept.
"I hate him--I detest him!" she panted. "I would sooner die than humble myself as he has said--sooner become the wife of this Indian prince, of Hilton, or of anyone who pleaded for my love. Supplicate! And to him!
What madness! Why do I think such things? Is my brain reeling? Are my senses leaving me? Heaven help me? What shall I do?"
The heat was intense, and the prisoner could hardly breathe, so closely was she veiled; and once more she sank into a dreamy swoon, in which the realities of her condition were so commingled with fancy that she could not separate them, and her efforts to master her reason were growing vain, when she was roused by what she doubted to be real at first, but which proved to be the gruff voices of men speaking by her litter-side.
Soon after she, too, found that she was being carried up a ladder, and rousing herself, she made a feeble effort to get free; but so weak was her straggle, that she was lifted by one man, carried up the steps, and laid upon a couch.
There was a few moments' pause then, and she heard her late companions depart. Then she felt busy hands about her, their touch making her shriek with horror; but as the stifling veil was removed she found it was nearly daylight, and her relief was great as she saw that she was surrounded by women.
She was too much exhausted to speak; but she found strength enough to join her hands together in a mute appeal for help; and one of the women bent over her, and proceeded to smooth back her dark and tangled hair.
"Give me water!" she panted, hoa.r.s.ely. "Water!" but her words were not understood, and it was not until she had made signs, pointing to her mouth, that those in attendance brought her a cup of the refreshing fluid.
Whether it was drugged or not she never knew, but directly after she sank into a sleep that was deep enough to resemble a stupor, though most probably this was the effect of her utter weakness and prostration, her mental agony and excitement having been extreme. From this sleep she did not awaken for many hours, when, upon unclosing her eyes, she found that a couple of young Malay girls were watching her, evidently waiting for her to awaken, for no sooner had Helen unclosed her eyes than they proceeded to attend to her toilet, bringing water, brushes, and other necessaries, bathing her face, and then laughingly dressing her hair, chattering away to each other the while.
Helen plied them well with questions, but they only shook their heads; and feeling that it would be of no avail to resist, she submitted quietly to their attentions, letting them arrange her hair, which they did according to their own national tastes, and afterwards began to solicit her to partake of food.
As this last was placed before her Helen shook her head again and again; but the girls became so urgent with their pressure that she at last essayed to partake of the breakfast; but after a few mouthfuls, each of which seemed as if it would choke her, she broke down and crouched there, humbled and worn out with anxiety, sobbing aloud as if her very heart would break.
She felt that in a few short hours all had been changed. The last night she was Helen Perowne, whose lightest word seemed at the station to be obeyed as if it were law, and at whose look a score of people were ready to exert themselves to obey her wishes would she but indicate them to those who acted as if they were her slaves. To-day she was filled with a shrinking horror, for the terrible suspicion was ever gaining ground, and she shuddered in her misery as she thought of what her fate might be.
The hours went slowly on, but her thoughts were rapid. Her suspicions gathered strength, but her mental and bodily forces appeared to be slumbering, and it was only by a strong effort of will that she was able to keep up some semblance of pride, for she felt that her first display of weakness had lowered her terribly in her attendants' eyes.
By degrees she grew more composed, and in these calmer moments she began thinking of Grey Stuart, and wished for the protection of her company, as she thought more and more of the calm, self-a.s.sured manner of her school companion, and wondered what she was doing now.
Helen could see that she was in a handsomely-decorated room, whose bamboo-barred window looked out upon waving palms and flowering trees.