<h2><SPAN name="Ch6" name="Ch6">Chapter 6</SPAN>: A Perilous Adventure.</h2>
<p>They retraced their steps, without adventure, until they reached
the village they had first stopped at.</p>
<p>"There are soldiers here," Surajah exclaimed, as they
entered.</p>
<p>"We can't help it, now," Dick said. "There is nothing for it,
but to go on boldly. I suppose that Tippoo has sent troops into all
these frontier villages, to prevent any chance of news of his
movements being taken to the plains.</p>
<p>"Ah! There is the old chap who spoke to us last time. Let us
stop at once, and talk with him."</p>
<p>"So you are back again," the peasant said, as they came up to
him.</p>
<p>"Yes," Surajah replied. "We told you we should come back here,
unless we got news of some tiger being marked down near one of the
other villages. We have been as far as the edge of the jungle, and
although we have heard of several, not one of them seems to be in
the habit of coming back regularly to the same spot; so we thought
we could not do better than return here, at once, and make it our
headquarters.</p>
<p>"I see you have got some soldiers here."</p>
<p>"Yes," the old man said, discontentedly, "and a rough lot they
are. They demand food, and instead of paying for it in money, their
officer gives us bits of paper with some writing on them. He says
that, when they go, we are to take them to him, and he will give us
an order equal to the whole of them, for which we can receive money
from the treasury at Seringapatam.</p>
<p>"A nice thing, that! None of us have ever been to Seringapatam,
and should not know what to do when we got there. Moreover, there
would be no saying whether one would ever come back again. It is
terrible. Besides, we have only grain enough for ourselves, and
shall have to send down to the plains to buy more; and where the
money is to come from, nobody can tell."</p>
<p>"I think I could tell you how you had better proceed, if you
will take us into your house," Surajah said. "This is not a place
for talking. There are four or five soldiers there, watching
us."</p>
<p>The old man entered the house, and closed the door behind
them.</p>
<p>"How would you counsel us to proceed?" he asked, as soon as they
had seated themselves on a divan, formed of a low bank of beaten
earth, with a thick covering of straw.</p>
<p>"It is simple enough," Surajah said. "One of you would take the
order, on the sultan's treasury, to a large village down in the
plain. You would go to a trader, and say that you wished to
purchase so much grain and other goods, and would pay for them with
an order on the sultan's treasury. It would probably be accepted as
readily as cash, for the trader would send it to a merchant, or
banker, at Seringapatam to get it cashed for him, to pay for goods
he had obtained there; and either to send him any balance there
might be, or to retain it for further purchases. An order of that
kind is better than money, for trading purposes, for there would be
no fear of its being stolen on the way, as it could be hidden in
the hair, or shoe, or anywhere among the clothes of the
messenger."</p>
<p>"Wonderful!" the old peasant said. "Your words are a relief,
indeed, to me, and will be to all the village, when they hear
them."</p>
<p>"And now," Dick broke in, "let us talk about tigers. While you
have been speaking, those soldiers have passed the door twice, and
have been looking suspiciously at the house. If they take it into
their heads to come here, and to ask who we are and what is our
business, it would not do to tell them that we have been discussing
the value of the orders on the sultan's treasury.</p>
<p>"Now, if our advice has been of any assistance to you in this
matter, you, in turn, can render us aid in our business of killing
tigers. We want you to find out, for us, when a tiger was last seen
near the village; where its lair is supposed to be; and whether,
according to its situation, we should have the best chance of
killing it by digging a pitfall, on the path by which it usually
comes from the jungle; or by getting a kid and tying it up, to
attract the tiger to a spot where we shall be stationed in a
tree."</p>
<p>"I will assuredly do that, and every one here will be glad to
assist, when I tell them the advice I have received from you--and
would, indeed, do so in any case, for it will be a blessing to the
village, if you can kill the tiger that so often carries off some
of our sheep and goats."</p>
<p>At this moment, there was a loud knocking at the door. On the
peasant opening it, a group of soldiers demanded to see the men who
had entered.</p>
<p>"We are here," Surajah said, coming forward. "What do you
want?"</p>
<p>"We want to know who you are, and where you come from."</p>
<p>"Any one in the village could have told you that," Surajah said.
"We are shikarees, and have come here to destroy tigers. We were
arranging, with this old man, to find us guides who can point out
the tracks of the one which has, for some time, been preying on
their animals."</p>
<p>"Yes, and our children," the old man put in; "for three of them
were carried off, from the street here, within the last month."</p>
<p>The soldiers looked doubtful, but one of them said:</p>
<p>"This is for our officer to inquire about. The men are strangers
to the village, and he will want to question them."</p>
<p>"We are quite ready to be questioned," Surajah said. "Our host,
here, will bear me out in what I say, and there are others in the
village who will tell you that we have been arranging, with them,
to kill tigers in this neighbourhood; though as yet we have not
settled what they will pay us for each beast we destroy."</p>
<p>Accompanied by the peasant, they went with the soldiers to the
guard house, with which each of the frontier villages was provided.
It consisted of a group of huts, surrounded by a thick wall of
sunburnt bricks. They were taken into the largest hut, where the
officer of the party was seated on a rough divan.</p>
<p>"Who have you here?" he asked irritably, for he had been
awakened from a doze by their entry.</p>
<p>"They are two young fellows, who are strangers here. They say
they are shikarees, who have come into the village to gain a reward
for killing a tiger that has been troublesome."</p>
<p>"They were here three days ago, Sahib," the villager said, "and
asked us many questions about the tigers, and were, when the
soldiers came to the door, questioning me as to the tiger's place
of retreat, and whether a pitfall, or a kid as a decoy, would be
most suitable."</p>
<p>"Where do you come from?" the officer asked Surajah.</p>
<p>"We live in a little village, some distance down the ghauts. We
heard that tigers were more abundant, in the jungle country up
here, than they are below; and thought that we would, for a time,
follow our calling here. We can get good prices for the skins, down
below; and with that, and what we get from the villages for freeing
them from the tigers, we hope, in a few months, to take back a good
store of money."</p>
<p>"Your story is a doubtful one," the officer said, harshly. "You
may be what you say, and you may be spies."</p>
<p>"If we had been spies," Surajah said, "we should not be here,
but at Bangalore or Seringapatam. These villages are not the places
where news is to be gained."</p>
<p>This was so self evident that the officer had nothing to say
against it.</p>
<p>"At any rate," he said, after a pause, "there is no confirmation
to your story, and, as I have orders to put all suspicious persons
under arrest, I shall detain you."</p>
<p>"It is very hard--" Surajah began; but the officer made an
impatient gesture, while two of the soldiers put their hands on the
shoulders of the prisoners, and led them from the hut.</p>
<p>"You need not look so downcast," one of them said good
naturedly. "I don't suppose you will be kept here long; and will,
no doubt, be released when the sultan has gone down the passes,
with his army. A week or two here will do you no harm--the tigers
can wait for a bit.</p>
<p>"There, give us your weapons. I daresay you will get them back
again, when we go on; as I hope we shall do, for there is nothing
to eat and nothing to do in this miserable place."</p>
<p>The arms were taken into the officer's hut, and as there was a
sentry at the gate, no further attention was paid to them.</p>
<p>"I will get you some provisions, and bring them in," the old man
said. "It is hard, indeed, that men cannot go about their business
without being interfered with."</p>
<p>"Thank you, but we have enough for two or three days. When that
is gone, we will give you some money to buy more; for we have a few
rupees with us, as we knew it might be some time before we should
be able to kill a tiger."</p>
<p>As soon as the old man had left them, they seated themselves on
a large faggot of wood that had been brought in by the villagers,
for fuel.</p>
<p>"We cannot stay here, Surajah. It is most important that we
should get back with the news, and I have no doubt that pig-headed
brute in there will do as he says, and will hold us prisoners until
Tippoo has gone down the passes. We must get off tonight, if
possible. We are not likely to be looked after very sharply. I
don't think that fellow really suspects us, but is simply keeping
us to show his authority. There ought to be no difficulty in
getting out. I suppose we shall be put into one of the soldiers'
huts tonight, and if we crawl out when they are asleep, we have
only to make our way up those narrow steps to the top of the wall,
and then let ourselves down the other side. It is not above fifteen
feet high, and even if we dropped, we should not be likely to hurt
ourselves."</p>
<p>"There will, most likely, be a sentry at the gate," Surajah
observed, "and there is a moon tonight."</p>
<p>"There ought to be no difficulty in pouncing on him suddenly,
gagging him before he can give the alarm, and then tying him. We
will walk round and see if there is any rope lying about. If not, I
will tear my sash into strips. We can use yours to lower ourselves
over the wall. I should like to get our weapons, if we could. The
guns do not matter, but the pistols are good ones. And, if there is
an alarm given, we may have to fight. Besides, it is not impossible
that we may come across a tiger, as we go along. I vote that, when
we have secured the sentry, we pay the officer a visit."</p>
<p>Surajah nodded. He was quite ready to agree to anything that
Dick might suggest, and felt a strong desire to repossess himself
of his arms, for it seemed to him that it would be a humiliation to
go back without them.</p>
<p>"Of course," Dick went on, "if the sentry gives the alarm,
before we can secure him, we must give up part of our plan; for, in
that case, we should have to bolt. Once over the wall, we should be
all right. They may fire away at us as we run, but there is no fear
of their hitting us, half asleep as they will be, and not quite
sure what it is all about. If we get a fair start of them, we need
not have much fear of their catching us."</p>
<p>"Not as long as it is straight running, Sahib; but if they
follow us far, they may come up within range of us as we are making
our way down some of those nasty places, where we came up the face
of the ghaut."</p>
<p>"If we once get well away from them, we will hide up somewhere,
and then strike off on another line."</p>
<p>"We might do that," Surajah agreed; "but you know, the place
where we came up was the only one that seemed to us climbable, and
it would be certainly better to make for it again, if we can find
our way."</p>
<p>"I quite agree with you there, Surajah. It would never do to go
and find ourselves on the edge of a precipice that we could not get
down, with the soldiers anywhere near us. Besides, it is of the
greatest importance that we should take the news back as soon as
possible, as every hour may be of importance. I only wish we could
find out which pass Tippoo means to go by, but I don't suppose that
will be known until he starts for it. Anyhow, our news will be very
valuable, for at present he is supposed to be over on the other
side, and he would have taken our troops entirely by surprise, if
he had suddenly poured out onto the plain. So we must give up my
idea of hiding up, for if we did so we should have to lie there all
day, and it would mean the loss of twenty-four hours; for I would
not go down those ghauts for any money, except in daylight. It is a
very different thing going downhill to going up, and if we were to
attempt it in the dark, we should break our necks for a certainty.
If we can get away early, tonight, we shall be at the edge of that
steep place by nine o'clock in the morning, and if we strike the
right point, we might be back to the Rajah by nightfall."</p>
<p>"It will be difficult to find our way back in the dark," Surajah
said.</p>
<p>"No doubt. Still, we can keep in the general direction, and even
if we do not hit upon the stream tonight, we shall find it in the
morning."</p>
<p>It was late in the afternoon when they reached the village, and
it was now growing dark. Two soldiers came up to them, and bade
them follow them into one of the huts, and there pointed to the
farther corner as their place. They wrapped themselves in their
blankets, and at once lay down.</p>
<p>"If they take it into their heads," Dick whispered to Surajah,
"to put a sentry on guard at the door, it will upset all our plans.
It would not be very difficult to cut our way through the mud wall
behind us, but in the first place they have taken away our knives;
and, even if we had them, it would be risky work trying it.</p>
<p>"The chances are that they will sit and talk all night. Of
course, we might surprise the sentry, but it would be a great risk
with those fellows close at hand, and we should have to run
straight for the steps, and might get a dozen balls after us,
before we were over the wall."</p>
<p>"I don't think there would be much chance of their hitting us,"
Surajah said. "Jumping up from their sleep in confusion, they would
be a minute or so before they could find out what had happened, and
we should be at the foot of the steps before they saw us, and then
they would fire almost at random.</p>
<p>"But, in that case, we should lose our weapons," he added
regretfully.</p>
<p>"We cannot help that. The arms are of no consequence at all,
compared to our getting away--unless, of course, any of them happen
to overtake us."</p>
<p>For three or four hours, the soldiers, of whom there were ten in
the hut, sat eating, talking, and smoking round the fire, which
they kept burning on the earthen floor. One by one, however, they
left it and lay down. When but three remained, one of them got up,
with a grumble of discontent, took his musket, which was leaning
against the wall, and went out of the hut.</p>
<p>"What a nuisance!" Dick whispered. "He is evidently going on
sentry duty."</p>
<p>"Perhaps he has gone to the gate?" Surajah suggested.</p>
<p>"I am afraid not. I expect the other hut is furnishing the
sentry there. Listen!"</p>
<p>During the pauses of the low conversation of the two men still
sitting by the fire, they could hear a footfall outside.</p>
<p>"That settles the question," Dick said. "Now, the sooner those
fellows go to sleep, the better."</p>
<p>"We had better wait for some time, after they do," Surajah
replied. "One or two of the men, who lay down first, are sure to
get up and go to the door and look out. They always do that, once
or twice during the night. The sentry will soon get accustomed to
the door being opened, and won't look round sharp."</p>
<p>"That is a good idea," Dick agreed. "The moon is at the back of
the hut, so we shall be in the shadow. I will spring upon him, and
will try and grip him by the throat, so that he can't holloa. You
wrench the musket from his hands, and snatch his belt of
cartridges. That will give us a weapon, anyhow. As soon as you have
got it, I will give him one sharp squeeze, and throw him down. It
will be some time before he gets breath enough to holloa."</p>
<p>In half an hour, the two men by the fire lay down. It was not
long before, as Surajah predicted, one of the sleepers sat up and
stretched himself; then he rose and walked to the door, opened it,
and stood at the entrance; a moment later he was joined by another
figure, and for a few minutes they stood, talking together. Then he
came in again, shut the door, and lay down.</p>
<p>During the next hour, three of the others followed his example,
the last of them leaving the door ajar behind him, when he came
in.</p>
<p>"Now is our chance, Surajah. We must give him ten minutes to
fall asleep again. Then we will move. Should one of them be lying
awake, and notice us--which is not likely, for it is too dark in
here to see figures distinctly--and ask where we are going, say,
'To the door, to get cool.' They won't imagine that we are thinking
of escape, with one sentry at the door, and another at the
gate."</p>
<p>"Don't you think, Sahib, that it would be safer to kill the
sentries?"</p>
<p>"Safer or not, Surajah, we will not do it. At present, they have
done us no harm. They are only acting as their officer ordered, and
we have no grudge against them. When they take to shooting at us,
we must shoot at them; but to kill this sentry would be nothing
short of murder."</p>
<p>After waiting a few minutes longer, Dick said:</p>
<p>"We had better be off, now. If we were to wait longer, we should
have another fellow getting up."</p>
<p>They rose quietly to their feet, made their way to the door, and
opened it noiselessly. The sentry was standing, leaning on his long
matchlock, a few feet away. Suddenly a voice behind exclaimed, "Who
is that?"</p>
<p>The sentry was in the act of turning round, when Dick sprang
upon him, and grasped him by the throat. No cry came from the man's
lips, but the gun fell from his grasp, as he clutched convulsively
at Dick's wrists, and went off as it fell.</p>
<p>"Pick it up," Dick shouted, "and run."</p>
<p>He released his grip from the man's throat, snatched the
bandolier from his shoulder, and, tripping his feet from under him,
threw him heavily to the ground, and then turned to run.</p>
<p>The whole had occupied but a few seconds, but as he started a
soldier ran out from the hut, shouting loudly. He had a gun in his
hand. Dick changed his mind, turned, threw himself upon him,
wrenched the gun from his hold, and, as the man staggered back,
struck him with his right hand under the chin.</p>
<p>The man fell back through the open door, as if shot. Dick seized
the handle and closed it, and then ran, at full speed, towards the
foot of the steps. They were but some twenty yards away.</p>
<p>"Up you go, Surajah. We have not a moment to lose!"</p>
<SPAN name="PicD" />
<center>
<ANTIMG src="images/d.jpg" alt= "Dick and Surajah make their escape" /> </center>
<p>Dick sprang up the steps, Surajah following. As they reached the
top of the wall, a shot was discharged at them by the sentry at the
gate, who, ignorant of the cause of the sudden uproar, had been
standing in readiness to fire. He was, however, too excited to take
aim, and the bullet flew harmlessly over their heads. In another
instant, they sprang over the parapet.</p>
<p>"Lower yourself by your arms, and then drop."</p>
<p>The wall, like many others of its sort, was thicker at the base
than on the top, and the foot projected two feet beyond the upper
line, so that it was a sharp slide, rather than an absolute fall.
It was well that it was so, for although only some twelve feet high
inside, it was eight feet higher on its outer face, as a dry ditch
encircled it. Both came down in a heap on the sand that had
crumbled from the face of the wall.</p>
<p>As soon as they picked themselves up, Dick exclaimed, "Keep
along the foot of the wall, Surajah," and they dashed along until
they reached the angle. As they turned the corner, they heard a
burst of voices from the wall where they had slid down, and several
shots were fired. Dick led the way along the ditch to the next
angle, then left it and entered the village, and dashed along the
street.</p>
<p>The sound of firing had roused many of the peasants. Doors were
opening, and men coming out. Exclamations of surprise were heard,
as the two figures rushed past, but no one thought of interfering
with them. As they left the houses behind them, Surajah said:</p>
<p>"You are going the wrong way, Sahib. You are going right away
from the ghauts."</p>
<p>"I know that well enough," Dick panted; "but I did it on
purpose. We will turn and work round again. They will hear, from
the villagers, that we have come this way, and will be following us
down the road while we are making our way back to the ghauts."</p>
<p>They ran for another hundred yards, then quitted the path, and
made across the fields. From the fort and village they could hear a
great hubbub, and above it could make out the voice of the officer,
shouting orders. They continued to run, for another quarter of a
mile, and then turned.</p>
<p>"Now we can go quietly," Dick said, breaking into a walk. "This
line will take us clear of the fort and village, and we have only
to make straight for the ghauts. I think we have thrown them well
off the scent, and unless the officer suspects that we have only
gone the other way to deceive him, and that we are really making
for the ghauts, we shall hear nothing more of them."</p>
<p>"It is capital," Surajah said. "I could not think what you were
doing, when you turned round the corner of the fort and made for
the village, instead of going the other way. But where did you get
that gun from?"</p>
<p>Dick told him how it had come into his possession.</p>
<p>"It was not so much that I cared for the gun," he said, "as that
I wanted to prevent the man from using it. If he had followed me
closely, he could hardly have helped hitting one of us, as we went
up the steps. By shutting the door, we gained a few moments, for
they were all in confusion in the dim light inside, and would
certainly not learn anything, either from the man I pitched in
among them, or from the sentry outside.</p>
<p>"I don't suppose any of them had an idea of what had happened,
until the sentry shouted to them that we had got over the wall.
Then they rushed up, and fired at random from the top, thinking
that we should be running straight from it."</p>
<p>They walked along for a short distance, and then Dick said:</p>
<p>"I have got my wind again, now. We will go on at a jog trot. I
mistrust that officer. He had a crafty face, and as we said we
belonged to a village down the ghauts, he may have a suspicion that
we have been trying to throw him off our scent, and think we should
be sure to double back and make for home."</p>
<p>They kept on their way, sometimes dropping into a walk, but
generally going at an easy trot, until day broke.</p>
<p>"As soon as it gets a little lighter, Surajah, we will go up on
to one of these rises, so as to have a good look down over the line
we have come. If they are following us, we must go on at the top of
our speed. If we see nothing of them, we can take it quietly. Of
course, they can't have been following our steps, but it is quite
likely that some of the villagers may know that the ghauts can be
climbed at the point where we came up. You know we noticed signs of
a path, two or three times, on the way up. In that case, if the
officer really did think of pursuing us, he would take one of the
villagers as guide."</p>
<p>Half an hour later, they ascended a sharp rise, and threw
themselves down on its crest.</p>
<p>"I don't think that there is the least chance of their coming,"
Surajah said, carelessly. "When they had gone some distance,
without overtaking us on the road, they may possibly have suspected
that we had turned and made this way; but by the time they got back
to the village, they would know, well enough, that there was no
chance of overtaking us."</p>
<p>Dick made no answer. He had a sort of uneasy conviction that the
officer would at once suspect their plan, and that pursuit would
have commenced very shortly after they had re-passed the fort. For
some minutes, no words were spoken. No sign of life was to be seen;
but in so broken a country, covered in many places with jungle or
wood, a considerable body of men might be coming up,
unperceived.</p>
<p>Suddenly, Dick grasped Surajah's arm.</p>
<p>"There they are. You see that I was right. Look at that clump of
bush, half a mile away, well to the left of the line we came by.
They have just come out from there. There are ten or twelve of
them."</p>
<p>"I see them," Surajah said. "They are running, too, but not very
fast."</p>
<p>"We will crawl back, till we are out of their sight, and then
make a run for it. They must have got a guide, and are, no doubt,
taking a more direct line than we are, for we may be a good bit off
the stream we followed as we came along. I have not seen anything I
recognise, since it got light, though I am sure we have been going
somewhere near the right direction. Now, we have got to run for
it."</p>
<p>They dashed off, at a rate of speed much higher than that at
which they had before been travelling; keeping, as much as
possible, in ground covered from the sight of their pursuers; and
bearing somewhat to the left, so as to place the latter directly
behind them, and to strike the path Dick had no doubt their
pursuers were keeping.</p>
<p>"It is no use running too fast," he said, a few minutes later.
"There is a good long way to go yet--another ten miles, I should
think; and anyhow, I don't think we can get down that steep place,
before they come to the edge of the cliff above. You see, we are
not certain as to where it is. We might strike the cliffs a mile or
two on either side of it, and I have no doubt they will go straight
to the spot. I expect the man they have got as a guide has been in
the habit of going down the ghauts, and knows his way.</p>
<p>"If it were not that we are in such a hurry to get to Uncle with
the news about Tippoo, it would be much better to turn off,
altogether, and stay in a wood for a day or two. They would not
stop very long at the top of the ghauts, for they cannot be sure
that we are going that way, at all, and when a few hours passed,
and we didn't come, the officer would suppose that he was mistaken,
and that we really kept on in the line on which we started."</p>
<p>They trotted along for some time in silence, and then Surajah
said:</p>
<p>"Do you not think that it would be better for us to make for the
pass to the left? It is twenty miles off, but we should be there by
the evening, and we should surely find some way of getting into it,
below where the fort stands."</p>
<p>Dick stopped running.</p>
<p>"Why not go the other way, and make for the pass we know?" he
said. "It can't be more than fifteen miles, at the outside, and
once below the fort we know our way, and should get down to the
village twelve hours sooner than if we went round by the other
pass."</p>
<p>"It would be the right plan, if we could do it," Surajah agreed;
"but you know the rocks rise straight up on both sides of the fort,
and the road passes up through a narrow cleft, with the fort
standing at its mouth. That is why I proposed the other pass."</p>
<p>"I think we had better try it, nevertheless, Surajah. We should
not be more than three hours in going straight there, and shall
have ample time to follow the edge of the precipice for the last
five miles. We may discover some break, where we can get down. If
we should find it impossible to descend anywhere, we must sleep
till sunset, then strike the road above the fort, go down at night,
and manage to slip past the sentry."</p>
<p>"The only thing is, Sahib, that it seemed as if the fort lay
right across the entrance to the gorge, and the road went through
it."</p>
<p>"It did look like that, Surajah. Certainly the road went through
a gateway. But there must be a break somewhere. We could see that,
in the wet season, a lot of water comes down there, so there must
be some sort of passage for it; and if the passage is big enough
for the storm water to go through, it must be big enough for
us."</p>
<p>Surajah agreed, and they turned off from the line that they had
before been following; no longer hurrying, but walking at a
leisurely pace. They were not pressed for time. There was no
chance, whatever, of pursuit; and as they had been going, for some
six hours, at the top of their speed, they were both feeling
exhausted.</p>
<p>After proceeding for two miles, they came upon a small stream.
Here they sat down, lighted a fire, mixed some flour and water--for
although the ghee had been taken from them, when they were
disarmed, they had been allowed to retain their supply of flour,
for their sustenance in prison--and made some small cakes. These
they cooked in the glowing embers. They could not be termed a
success, for the outside was burned black, while the centre was a
pasty mass. However, they sufficed to satisfy their hunger, and
after an hour's rest, they again went forward.</p>
<p>It was not very long before they stood on the edge of the rock
wall. They followed this along, but could nowhere find a spot where
a descent seemed at all possible. After walking for an hour, they
saw a road winding up a long valley below them.</p>
<p>"That is our road," Dick exclaimed. "That clump of houses,
Surajah, must be the one where we generally turned. I know that,
from below, these rocks looked as steep as walls, so there is no
chance of our finding a way down anywhere, between this and the
fort."</p>
<p>Surajah nodded. To him, also, the ascent of the ghauts had
seemed impracticable.</p>
<p>"It is no use following this line any more," Dick went on. "We
may as well strike across, until we come onto the edge of the pass,
somewhere above the fort; find a place where we can descend easily,
and then lie down and sleep, till it is time to make our
attempt."</p>
<p>In another hour, they were looking down on the road, a mile or
so above the fort. The slopes here were gradual, and could be
descended without the least difficulty, even in the dark.</p>
<p>"There! Do you see, Surajah? The water course runs along by the
side of the road. There is a little water in it now. You know we
used to meet with it, down below, and water our horses at a pool
close to that ruined village. When we start, we can follow the road
until we get close to the fort, and then crawl along in the water
course, and take our chances. If we should find it so blocked up
that we can't get through, we must then see how we can get past the
place in some other way. If the gate is only barred, no doubt we
should be able to overpower the sentry, and get the gate open
before any alarm is given. If it is locked, we must do the best we
can. We may calculate upon taking the sentry by surprise, as we did
in the prison, and on silencing him at once; then we should have
time to break up some cartridges, and pour the powder into the
keyhole, which is sure to be a big one, make a slow match, and blow
the lock open. We could make the slow match before we start, if we
had some water."</p>
<p>"Shall I go down to the stream, and get some?"</p>
<p>"You have nothing to carry it up in, Surajah; and besides,
someone might come along the valley."</p>
<p>"We shall only want a little water. I will take off my sash, and
dip it in the stream; that will give us plenty, when it is wrung
out."</p>
<p>"At any rate, Surajah, we will do nothing until it is getting
dusk. See! There are some peasants, with three bullocks, coming
down the valley, and there are four armed horsemen riding behind
them. We will go back to those bushes, a hundred yards behind us,
and sleep there until sunset; then we will make our way down to
that heap of boulders close to the stream, manufacture our slow
match, and hide up there until it is time to start. We want a rest,
badly. We did not sleep last night, and if we get through, we must
push on tonight without a stop, so we must have a good sleep,
now."</p>
<p>The sun was low when they woke. They watched it dip below the
hills, and then, after waiting until it began to get dusk, started
for the valley. No one was to be seen on the road, and they ran
rapidly down the slope, until they reached the heap of boulders.
Surajah tore off a strip of cotton, six inches long by an inch
wide, from the bottom of his dress, went forward to the stream, and
wetted it. When he came back, they squeezed the moisture from it,
broke up a cartridge, rubbed the powder into the cotton, and then
rolled it up longways.</p>
<p>"That will be dry enough, by the time we want to start," Dick
said. "I hope we sha'n't have to use it, but if there is no other
way, we must do so."</p>
<p>They remained where they were, until they thought that the
garrison of the fort would be, for the most part, asleep. Then they
crossed the stream, and walked along by the side of the road,
taking care not to show themselves upon it, as their figures would
be seen for a long distance, on its white, dusty surface.
Presently, the sides of the valley approached more closely to each
other; and, just where they narrowed, they could make out a number
of dark objects, which were, they doubted not, the houses occupied
by the garrison. They at once took to the bed of the stream,
stooping low as they went, so that their bodies would be
indistinguishable among the rocks.</p>
<p>They could hear the murmur of voices, as they passed through the
village. Once beyond it, they entered the gorge. Here there was but
room enough for the road and the stream, whose bed was several feet
below the causeway. A few hundred yards farther, the gorge widened
out a bit, and in the moonlight they could see the wall of the fort
stretching before them, and a square building standing close to
it.</p>
<p>"That is the guard house, no doubt," Dick said, in low tones.
"It is too close to be pleasant, if we have to attack the
sentry."</p>
<p>Very carefully, they picked their way among the rocks, until
close to the wall; then Dick gave a low exclamation of
disappointment. The stream ran through a culvert, some twelve feet
wide and ten feet high, but this was closed by iron bars, crossing
each other at intervals of only five or six inches, the lower ends
of the perpendicular bars being fixed in a stone dam, extending
across the bed of the stream. Dick waded across the pool formed by
the dam, and felt the bars, but found them perfectly solid and
strong.</p>
<p>"It is no good, Surajah," he said, when he returned. "There is
no getting through there. There is nothing for it but the gate,
unless we can find the steps up to the top of the wall, and get up
unnoticed. Then we might tear up our sashes longways, knot them
together, and slip down.</p>
<p>"The first thing to do is to have a look round. I will get up
close to the wall. It is in shadow there."</p>
<p>Entering the pool again, he climbed up the steep bank, which was
here faced with stones. He stopped when his eyes were above the
level, and looked round. There was the gate, twelve feet away, and
to his delight no sentry was to be seen. He was about to whisper
Surajah to join him, when he heard voices. They came from above,
and he at once understood that, instead of a man being posted
behind the gate, two were on guard on the wall above it. He
beckoned to Surajah to join him, and when he did so, whispered what
he had discovered.</p>
<p>"If the gate is only barred, we are all right now, Surajah;
except that we shall have to run the risk of being shot by those
fellows on the wall. We shall be a pretty easy mark, on that white
road by moonlight. Our only plan will be to keep close to the wall,
when we are through the gate, get down into the bed of the stream
again, and then crawl along among the rocks. The bottom will be in
shadow, and we may get off without being noticed. The only fear is
that we shall make a noise in opening the gate.</p>
<p>"Now, let us try it."</p>
<p>Keeping close to the wall, they crept to the gateway. This
projected two feet beyond the gate itself, and standing against the
latter they could not be seen, even in the unlikely event of one of
the sentries looking down. The only risk was of anyone in the guard
house coming out. This, however, could not be avoided, and they at
once began to examine the fastenings of the gate, which consisted
of two massive bars of wood, running across it. These, by their
united strength, they removed one after another. But when they
tried it, they found the gate still immovable.</p>
<p>"The beastly thing is locked," Dick said. "There is nothing to
do, but to blow it open."</p>
<p>He broke off the ends of three cartridges, poured the powder in
at the keyhole, and then inserted the slow match.</p>
<p>"Stand in the corner there, Surajah. I will go down to the
stream again, to light the tinder. The noise is less likely to be
heard there."</p>
<p>He stole back again, sat down at the edge of the water, placed
his tinder box in his lap, took his turban off and put it over his
hands, so as to deaden the sound, and then struck the steel sharply
against the flint. The first blow was successful. The spark fell on
the tinder, and at once began to extend.</p>
<p>He listened intently. The men on the wall were still talking,
and the sound had evidently not reached their ears.</p>
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