Come back.’
‘I will come back,’ said Athira.
‘Say rather that WE will come back,’ said Suket Singh.
‘Ai; but when?’ said Athira’s brother.
‘Upon a day very early in the morning,’ said Suket Singh; and he
tramped off to apply to the Colonel Sahib Bahadur for one week’s
leave.
‘I am withering away like a barked tree in the spring,’ moaned
Athira.
‘You will be better soon,’ said Suket Singh; and he told her what was
in his heart, and the two laughed together softly, for they loved each
other. But Athira grew better from that hour.
They went away together, travelling third-class by train as the
regulations provided, and then in a cart to the low hills, and on foot to
the high ones. Athira sniffed the scent of the pines of her own hills, the
wet Himalayan hills. ‘It is good to be alive,’ said Athira.
‘Hah!’ said Suket Singh. ‘Where is the Kodru road and where is the
Forest Ranger’s house?’...
‘It cost forty rupees twelve years ago,’ said the Forest Ranger,
handing the gun.
‘Here are twenty,’ said Suket Singh, ‘and you must give me the best
bullets.’
‘It is very good to be alive,’ said Athira wistfully, sniffing the
scent of the pine-mould; and they waited till the night had fallen upon
Kodru and the Donga Pa. Madu had stacked the dry wood for the next day’s
charcoal-burning on the spur above his house. ‘It is courteous in Madu to
save us this trouble,’ said Suket Singh as he stumbled on the pile, which
was twelve foot square and four high. ‘We must wait till the moon
rises.’
When the moon rose, Athira knelt upon the pile. ‘If it were only a
Government Snider,’ said Suket Singh ruefully, squinting down the
wire-bound barrel of the Forest Ranger’s gun.
‘Be quick,’ said Athira; and Suket Singh was quick; but Athira was
quick no longer. Then he lit the pile at the four corners and climbed on
to it, re-loading the gun.
The little flames began to peer up between the big logs atop of the
brushwood. ‘The Government should teach us to pull the triggers with our
toes,’ said Suket Singh grimly to the moon. That was the last public
observation of Sepoy Suket Singh.
Upon a day, early in the morning, Madu came to the pyre and shrieked
very grievously, and ran away to catch the Policeman who was on tour in
the district.
‘The base-born has ruined four rupees’ worth of charcoal wood,’ Madu
gasped. ‘He has also killed my wife, and he has left a letter which I
cannot read, tied to a pine bough.’
In the stiff, formal hand taught in the regimental school, Sepoy Suket
Singh had written—
‘Let us be burned together, if anything remain over, for we have made
the necessary prayers. We have also cursed Madu, and Malak the brother of
Athira—both evil men. Send my service to the Colonel Sahib Bahadur.’
The Policeman looked long and curiously at the marriage bed of red and
white ashes on which lay, dull black, the barrel of the Ranger’s gun. He
drove his spurred heel absently into a half-charred log, and the
chattering sparks flew upwards. ‘Most extraordinary people,’ said the
Policeman.
‘WHE-W, WHEW, OUIOU,’ said the little flames.
The Policeman entered the dry bones of the case, for the Punjab
Government does not approve of romancing, in his Diary.
‘But who will pay me those four rupees?’ said Madu.
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Rudyard Kipling
Life's Handicap
The Finances of the Gods
The evening meal was ended in Dhunni Bhagat’s Chubara and the old
priests were smoking or counting their beads. A little naked child
pattered in, with its mouth wide open, a handful of marigold flowers in
one hand, and a lump of conserved tobacco in the other. It tried to kneel
and make obeisance to Gobind, but it was so fat that it fell forward on
its shaven head, and rolled on its side, kicking and gasping, while the
marigolds tumbled one way and the tobacco the other. Gobind laughed, set
it up again, and blessed the marigold flowers as he received the
tobacco.
‘From my father,’ said the child. ‘He has the fever, and cannot come.
Wilt thou pray for him, father?’
‘Surely, littlest; but the smoke is on the ground, and the night-chill
is in the airs, and it is not good to go abroad naked in the autumn.’
‘I have no clothes,’ said the child, ‘and all today I have been
carrying cow-dung cakes to the bazar. It was very hot, and I am very
tired.’ It shivered a little, for the twilight was cool.
Gobind lifted an arm under his vast tattered quilt of many colours, and
made an inviting little nest by his side. The child crept in, and Gobind
filled his brass-studded leather waterpipe with the new tobacco. When I
came to the Chubara the shaven head with the tuft atop, and the beady
black eyes looked out of the folds of the quilt as a squirrel looks out
from his nest, and Gobind was smiling while the child played with his
beard.
I would have said something friendly, but remembered in time that if
the child fell ill afterwards I should be credited with the Evil Eye, and
that is a horrible possession.
‘Sit thou still, Thumbling,’ I said as it made to get up and run away.
‘Where is thy slate, and why has the teacher let such an evil character
loose on the streets when there are no police to protect us weaklings? In
which ward dost thou try to break thy neck with flying kites from the
house-tops?’
‘Nay, Sahib, nay,’ said the child, burrowing its face into Gobind’s
beard, and twisting uneasily. ‘There was a holiday today among the
schools, and I do not always fly kites. I play ker-li-kit like the
rest.’
Cricket is the national game among the schoolboys of the Punjab, from
the naked hedge-school children, who use an old kerosene-tin for wicket,
to the B.A.‘s of the University, who compete for the Championship
belt.
‘Thou play kerlikit! Thou art half the height of the bat!’ I said.
The child nodded resolutely. ‘Yea, I DO play. PERLAYBALL OW-AT! RAN,
RAN, RAN! I know it all.’
‘But thou must not forget with all this to pray to the Gods according
to custom,’ said Gobind, who did not altogether approve of cricket and
western innovations.
‘I do not forget,’ said the child in a hushed voice.
‘Also to give reverence to thy teacher, and’—Gobind’s voice softened—’
to abstain from pulling holy men by the beard, little badling. Eh, eh,
eh?’
The child’s face was altogether hidden in the great white beard, and it
began to whimper till Gobind soothed it as children are soothed all the
world over, with the promise of a story.
‘I did not think to frighten thee, senseless little one. Look up! Am I
angry? Are, are, are! Shall I weep too, and of our tears make a great pond
and drown us both, and then thy father will never get well, lacking thee
to pull his beard? Peace, peace, and I will tell thee of the Gods.
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