Part 5 (1/2)

Arrived in their bungalow they undressed in their rooms and in pyjamas and slippers came out into the compound, where on either side of a table on which was a lighted lamp stood their bedsteads, the mattress of each covered with a thin strip of soft China matting. For in the hot weather in many parts of India this must be used to lie upon instead of a linen sheet, which would become saturated with perspiration. Looking carefully at the ground over which they pa.s.sed for fear of snakes they reached and lay down on their beds, over each of which a _punkah_ was suspended from a cross-beam supported by two upright posts sunk in the ground. One rope moved both _punkahs_, and the motive power was supplied by a coolie who, salaaming to the sahibs and seating himself on the ground, picked up the end of the rope and began to pull. Raymond put out the lamp.

Wargrave stared up at the moon for a while. Then he said:

”I say, Ray; didn't Mrs. Norton look lovely to-night? Didn't that dress suit her awfully well?”

”Oh, go to sleep, old man. We've got to get up in a few hours for this confoundedly early parade. Goodnight,” growled the adjutant, turning on his side and closing his eyes.

But he listened for some time to his friend humming ”The Love Song of Har Dyal” again! and not until Frank was silent did he doze off. An hour later he woke up suddenly, bathed in perspiration and devoured by mosquitoes; for the _punkahs_ were still--the coolie had gone to sleep.

He called to the man and aroused him, then before shutting his eyes again he looked at his companion. The moon shone full on Wargrave's face. He was sleeping peacefully and smiling. Raymond stared at him for a few minutes. Then he muttered inconsequently:

”Confound the woman!”

And closing his eyes resolutely he fell asleep.

In the days that elapsed before the shoot at Marwa, Wargrave rode every afternoon to the Residency with the _syce_ carrying his violin case, except when tennis was to be played. In their small community this could not escape notice and comment--not that it occurred to him to try to avoid either. The Resident did not object to the frequency of his visits; and Frank saw no harm in his friends.h.i.+p with Mrs. Norton. But others did; and the remarks of the two ladies of his regiment on the subject were venomously spiteful. But their censure was reserved for the one they termed ”that shameless woman”; for like everyone else they were partial to Wargrave and held him less to blame.

His brother officers, although being men they were not so quick to nose out a scandal, could not help noticing his absorption in Mrs. Norton's society. One afternoon his Double Company Commander, Major Hepburn, walked into the compound of Raymond's bungalow and on the verandah shouted the usual Anglo-Indian caller's demand:

”Boy! _Koi hai_?” (Is anyone there?)

A servant hurried out and salaaming answered:

”_Adjitan Sahib hai_.” (The adjutant is here).

”Oh, come in, Major,” cried Raymond, rising from the table at which he was seated drinking his tea.

”Don't get up,” said Hepburn, entering the room. ”Is Wargrave in?”

”No, sir; he went out half an hour ago.”

”Confound it, it seems impossible ever to find him in the afternoon nowadays,” said the major petulantly. ”I wanted him to get up a hockey match against No. 3 Double Company to-day. He used to be very keen on playing with the men; but since he came back from England he never goes near them. Where is he? Poodlefaking at the Residency, as usual?”

This is the term contemptuously applied in India to the paying of calls and other social duties that imply dancing attendance on the fair s.e.x.

”I didn't see him before he went out, sir,” was Raymond's equivocal reply. He loyally evaded a direct answer.

Hepburn shook his head doubtfully.

”I'm sorry about it. I hope the boy doesn't get into mischief. Look here, Raymond, you're his pal. Keep your eye on him. He's a good lad; and it would be a pity if he came to grief.”

The adjutant did not answer. The major put on his hat.

”Well, I suppose I'll have to see to the hockey myself.”

He left the bungalow with a curt nod to Raymond, who watched him pa.s.s out through the compound gate. Then the adjutant walked over to Wargrave's writing-table and stood up again in its place a large photograph of Mrs. Norton which he had hurriedly laid face downwards when he heard Hepburn's voice outside. He looked at it for a minute, then turned away frowning.

When the morning of the shooting party arrived Wargrave and Raymond, having sent their _syces_ on ahead with their guns, rode at dawn to the Residency. In front of the building a group of camels lay on the ground, burbling, blowing bubbles, grumbling incessantly and stretching out their long necks to snap viciously at anyone but their drivers that chanced to come near them. At the hall-door Mrs. Norton stood, dressed in a smart and attractive costume of khaki drill, consisting of a well-cut long frock coat and breeches, with the neatest of cloth gaiters and dainty but serviceable boots. To their surprise her husband was with her and evidently prepared to accompany them. For he wore an old coat, knickerbockers and putties, from a strap over his shoulder hung a specimen box, and he was armed with all the requisite appliances for the capture and slaughter of many insects.

Avoiding the camels' vicious teeth the party mounted after exchanging greetings. Mrs. Norton and Wargrave rode the same animal; and Frank, unused to this form of locomotion, took a tight grip as the long-legged beast rose from the ground in unexpected jerks and set off at a jolting walk that shook its riders painfully. Then it broke into a trot equally disconcerting but finally settled into an easy canter that was as comfortable a motion as its previous paces had been spine-dislocating.