He was a traveller in the
East, he said—they never talked about “globe-trotters” in those days, when
the P. & O. fleet was young and small—and had come from Dehra Dun to
hunt for plants and butterflies among the Simla hills. No one at Simla,
therefore, knew anything about him. He fancied he must have fallen over
the cliff while stalking a fern on a rotten tree-trunk, and that his
coolies must have stolen his baggage and fled. He thought he would go back
to Simla when he was a little stronger. He desired no more
mountaineering.
He made small haste to go away, and recovered his strength slowly.
Lispeth objected to being advised either by the Chaplain or his wife; so
the latter spoke to the Englishman, and told him how matters stood in
Lispeth’s heart. He laughed a good deal, and said it was very pretty and
romantic, a perfect idyl of the Himalayas; but, as he was engaged to a
girl at Home, he fancied that nothing would happen. Certainly he would
behave with discretion. He did that. Still he found it very pleasant to
talk to Lispeth, and walk with Lispeth, and say nice things to her, and
call her pet names while he was getting strong enough to go away. It meant
nothing at all to him, and everything in the world to Lispeth. She was
very happy while the fortnight lasted, because she had found a man to
love.
Being a savage by birth, she took no trouble to hide her feelings, and
the Englishman was amused. When he went away, Lispeth walked with him, up
the Hill as far as Narkunda, very troubled and very miserable. The
Chaplain’s wife, being a good Christian and disliking anything in the
shape of fuss or scandal—Lispeth was beyond her management entirely—had
told the Englishman to tell Lispeth that he was coming back to marry her.
“She is but a child, you know, and, I fear, at heart a heathen,” said the
Chaplain’s wife. So all the twelve miles up the hill the Englishman, with
his arm around Lispeth’s waist, was assuring the girl that he would come
back and marry her; and Lispeth made him promise over and over again. She
wept on the Narkunda Ridge till he had passed out of sight along the
Muttiani path.
Then she dried her tears and went in to Kotgarth again, and said to the
Chaplain’s wife: “He will come back and marry me. He has gone to his own
people to tell them so.” And the Chaplain’s wife soothed Lispeth and said:
“He will come back.” At the end of two months, Lispeth grew impatient, and
was told that the Englishman had gone over the seas to England. She knew
where England was, because she had read little geography primers; but, of
course, she had no conception of the nature of the sea, being a Hill girl.
There was an old puzzle-map of the World in the House. Lispeth had played
with it when she was a child. She unearthed it again, and put it together
of evenings, and cried to herself, and tried to imagine where her
Englishman was. As she had no ideas of distance or steamboats, her notions
were somewhat erroneous. It would not have made the least difference had
she been perfectly correct; for the Englishman had no intention of coming
back to marry a Hill girl. He forgot all about her by the time he was
butterfly-hunting in Assam. He wrote a book on the East afterwards.
Lispeth’s name did not appear.
At the end of three months, Lispeth made daily pilgrimage to Narkunda
to see if her Englishman was coming along the road. It gave her comfort,
and the Chaplain’s wife, finding her happier, thought that she was getting
over her “barbarous and most indelicate folly.” A little later the walks
ceased to help Lispeth and her temper grew very bad. The Chaplain’s wife
thought this a profitable time to let her know the real state of
affairs—that the Englishman had only promised his love to keep her
quiet—that he had never meant anything, and that it was “wrong and
improper” of Lispeth to think of marriage with an Englishman, who was of a
superior clay, besides being promised in marriage to a girl of his own
people. Lispeth said that all this was clearly impossible, because he had
said he loved her, and the Chaplain’s wife had, with her own lips,
asserted that the Englishman was coming back.
“How can what he and you said be untrue?” asked Lispeth.
“We said it as an excuse to keep you quiet, child,” said the Chaplain’s
wife.
“Then you have lied to me,” said Lispeth, “you and he?”
The Chaplain’s wife bowed her head, and said nothing. Lispeth was
silent, too for a little time; then she went out down the valley, and
returned in the dress of a Hill girl—infamously dirty, but without the
nose and ear rings. She had her hair braided into the long pig-tail,
helped out with black thread, that Hill women wear.
“I am going back to my own people,” said she.
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