Part 38 (1/2)

”I quite see that, Bathurst.”

”My proposal is, Major, that we should begin at once to mine; that is, to drive a gallery from the cellar, and to carry it on steadily as far as we can. I should say that we have ten days or a fortnight before us before matters get to an extremity, and in that time we ought to be able to get, working night and day, from fifty to a hundred yards beyond the wall, aiming at a clump of bushes. There is a large one in Farquharson's compound, about a hundred yards off. Then, when things get to the worst, we can work upwards, and come out on a dark night. We might leave a long fuse burning in the magazine, so that there should be an explosion an hour or two after we had left. There is enough powder there to bring the house down, and the Sepoys might suppose that we had all been buried in the ruins.”

”I think the idea is a very good one, Bathurst. What do you think, Doctor?”

”Capital,” the Doctor said. ”It is a light sandy soil, and we should be able to get through it at a pretty good rate. How many can work together, do you think, Bathurst?”

”I should say two of us in each s.h.i.+ft, to drive, and, if necessary, prop the roof, with some of the natives to carry out the earth. If we have three s.h.i.+fts, each s.h.i.+ft would go on twice in the twenty-four hours; that would be four hours on and eight hours off.”

”Will you take charge of the operation, Bathurst?”

”With pleasure, Major.”

”Very well then. You shall have with you Wilson and Richards and the three youngest of the civilians, Saunderson, Austin, and Herbert. You six will be relieved from other duty except when the enemy threaten an attack. I will put down Saunderson and Austin together. Which of the others would you like to have with you?”

”I will take Wilson, sir.”

”Very well, then, Richards and Herbert will make the third party. After breakfast we can pick out the twelve strongest of the natives. I will tell them that they have to work, but that they will be each paid half a rupee a day in addition to their ordinary wages. Then you will give a general supervision to the work, Bathurst, in addition to your own share in it?”

”Certainly, Major, I will take general charge of it.”

So at breakfast the Major explained the plan agreed upon. The five men chosen at once expressed their willingness to undertake the work, and the offer of half a rupee extra a day was sufficient to induce twelve of the servants to volunteer for it. The Major went down to the cellars and fixed upon the spot at which the work should begin; and Bathurst and Wilson, taking some of the intrenching tools from the storeroom, began to break through the wall without delay.

”I like this,” Wilson said. ”It is a thousand times better than sitting up there waiting till they choose to make an attack. How wide shall we make it?”

”As narrow as we can for one to pa.s.s along at a time,” Bathurst said.

”The narrower it is, the less trouble we shall have with the roof.”

”But only one will be able to work at a time in that case.”

”That will be quite enough,”. Bathurst said. ”It will be hot work and hard. We will relieve each other every five minutes or so.”

A very short time sufficed to break through the wall.

”Thank goodness, it is earth,” Wilson said, thrusting a crowbar through the opening as soon as it was made.

”I had no fear of its being rock, Wilson. If it had been, they would not have taken the trouble to have walled the sides of the cellar. The soil is very deep all over here. The natives have to line their wells thirty or forty feet down.”

The enemy were quiet all day, but the garrison thought it likely that, warned by the lesson of the night before, they were erecting a battery some distance farther back, masked by the trees, and that until it was ready to open fire they would know nothing about it.

”So you have turned miner, Mr. Wilson?” Isobel Hannay said to him as, after a change and a bath, he came in to get his lunch.

”I calculate I have lost half a stone in weight, Miss Hannay. If I were to go on at this for a month or two there would be nothing left of me.”

”And how far did you drive the hole?”

”Gallery, Miss Hannay; please call it a gallery, it sounds so much better. We got in five yards. I should hardly have believed it possible, but Bathurst is a tremendous fellow to work. He uses a pick as if he had been a sapper all his life. We kept the men pretty hard at work, I can tell you, carrying up the earth. Richards is at work now, and I bet him five rupees that he and Herbert don't drive as far as we did.”

”There is not much use in betting now, Mr. Wilson,” Isobel said sadly.

”No, I suppose not, Miss Hannay; but it gives a sort of interest to one's work. I have blistered my hands horribly, but I suppose they will get hard in a day or two.”