<h2><SPAN name="Ch14" name="Ch14">Chapter 14</SPAN>: A Surprise.</h2>
<p>Dick was much pleased with the governor. He was evidently an
outspoken old soldier and, though rough, his bearded face had an
honest and kindly expression, and he thought to himself, "If my
father fell into his hands, I don't think he would be treated with
any unnecessary hardship, though no doubt the sultan's orders would
be obeyed."</p>
<p>When a soldier came in, to say that the horses were at the door,
they went out. An officer was standing beside them, and the
governor presented him as his chief artillery officer.</p>
<p>"You have not brought your horse," he said.</p>
<p>"No, your Excellency. The distance is not great, and we should
need to dismount so many times, to get a view from the walls, that
it would not be worthwhile to ride."</p>
<p>"In that case, we may as well walk, also," Dick said.</p>
<p>"I would rather do so, too," the governor said. "I proposed
riding, because I thought you might be tired. As Bakir Meeram says,
the distance is not great. The walls themselves, with the exception
of those of the two forts, are not more than half a mile in extent;
for in most places the rocks go sheer down, and there defences are,
of course, unnecessary. We will inspect this fort, first."</p>
<p>They went the round of the walls, Dick and his companion
listening to the suggestions of the two officers. The principal one
was that a wall should be raised, inside the gate.</p>
<p>"The English, last time, got in here by rushing in at the tail
of the fugitives from below. They were in before the gates could be
closed, and took our men so completely by surprise that they were
seized with a panic. Were we to raise a semicircular wall behind
the gateway, such a thing could not occur again," the governor
said. "Of course, there would be a gate in the inner wall, but not
immediately behind the outer gateway as, if so placed, it might be
destroyed by the cannon shots that battered the outer gate in. I
should, therefore, put it at one end of the inner wall. This gate
would be generally open, but in case of a siege I should have it
blocked up with stones piled behind it, placing a number of ladders
by which men, running in, could get on to the walls, and, however
closely they were pursued, could make a stand there until the
ladders were pulled up."</p>
<p>"That would be an excellent idea," Surajah said gravely, "and I
will certainly lay it before the sultan. I suppose you would
propose the same for the other fort?"</p>
<p>"Just the same."</p>
<p>"The only thing that I would observe," Dick said, "is that, if
an enemy once got a footing on the top here, you could not hope to
make a long defence of these forts."</p>
<p>"That is so," the governor agreed. "The strength of the defence
is not here, but on the upward road, and if the English once gained
the top the forts must fall; but at least it shall not be said, as
long as I am governor, that Savandroog fell almost bloodlessly. In
these forts we can at least die bravely, and sell our lives to the
last. It is for that reason I desire that they shall be so defended
that they cannot be carried, as they were before, by a sudden
rush."</p>
<p>The other fort was then visited, and a tour made round the
walls. The suggestions offered by the governor and the officers
were all noted down and approved.</p>
<p>Then they made what was, to Dick, the most important part of the
inspection; namely, an examination of the undefended portion of the
rock. The result showed him that the builders of the defences had
not acted unwisely in trusting solely to nature. At many points the
rock fell away in precipices, hundreds of feet deep. At other
points, although the descent was less steep, it was, as far as he
could see from above, altogether unclimbable; but this he thought
he would be able to judge better, from below.</p>
<p>"Do you have sentries round here at night?" he asked the
governor.</p>
<p>"No. It would not be necessary, even if an enemy were encamped
below. If you will ride round the foot of the hill when you leave,
you will see for yourself that, save from the side you came up, the
place is absolutely inaccessible."</p>
<p>The view from the top of the hill was superb. Away to the
northeast, the governor pointed out the pagodas of Bangalore,
twenty-two miles away; the distance, in the clear air, seeming
comparatively trifling.</p>
<p>"Are there many troops there?" Dick asked.</p>
<p>"There are about five battalions of the regular troops, and
three Chelah battalions. These can hardly be counted as troops.
They have never been of the slightest use. In the last war they ran
like sheep. It is a fancy of the sultan's. But, indeed, he can
hardly expect men to fight who have been forced into the ranks, and
made to accept Mohammedanism against their will. Naturally they
regard an invader, not as an enemy, but as a deliverer.</p>
<p>"Of course the sultan's idea was, that since the native troops,
drilled and led by Englishmen, fought so well; the Chelahs, who
were also drilled and led by Englishmen, would do the same. But the
Company's troops are willing soldiers, and it is the English
leading, more than the English drill, that makes them fight. If the
Chelahs were divided among the hill fortresses they might do good
service; and I could, as far as fighting goes, do with a battalion
of them here; for, mixed up with my men, they would have to do
their duty. But, of course, they will never be placed in the hill
forts, for one would never be safe from treachery. Even if all the
lower walls were in the hands of my own men, some of the Chelahs
would be sure to manage to desert, and give information as to all
the defences."</p>
<p>A considerable portion of the upper plateau of the rock was
occupied by the huts of the troops, for the forts were much too
small to contain them and their families. On their way back, they
passed through these. Dick looked anxiously about for white faces,
but could see none, nor any building that seemed to him likely to
be used as a prison.</p>
<p>When they returned to the governor's quarters, they found that a
room had been placed at their disposal, and they presently sat down
to dinner with him.</p>
<p>"I suppose you have no English prisoners here?" Dick said
carelessly, when the meal was over.</p>
<p>The governor paused a moment, before he replied.</p>
<p>"I don't want any of them here," he said shortly. "Batches are
sent up, sometimes, from Bangalore; but it is only for execution. I
am a loyal subject of the sultan, but I would that this work could
be done elsewhere. Almost all the executions take place in the hill
forts; in order, I suppose, that they may be done secretly. I obey
orders, but I never see them carried out. I never even see the
captives. They have done no harm, or, at most, one of their number
has tried to escape, for which they are not to be blamed. I always
have them shot, whether that is the mode of execution ordered or
not. It is a soldier's death, and the one I should choose myself,
and so that they are dead it can matter little to the sultan how
they die. If they were all shot, as soon as they were taken, I
should not think so much of it; but after being held captive for
years, and compelled to work, it seems to me that their lives
should be spared. As far as giving up my own life is concerned, I
would willingly do it at the orders of the sultan, but these
executions make me ill. I lose my appetite for weeks afterwards.
Let us talk of something else."</p>
<p>And the governor puffed furiously away at the hookah he had just
lighted. Then the conversation turned to the forts again.</p>
<p>"No, I do not find the life dull," he said, in answer to a
remark of Dick's. "I did so at first, but one soon becomes
accustomed to it. I have my wife and two daughters, and there are
ten officers, so that I can have company when I choose. All the
officers are married, and that gives society. Up here, we do not
observe strictly the rules of the plains, and although the ladies,
of course, wear veils when they go beyond the house, they put them
aside indoors, and the families mix freely with each other, so that
we get on very well. You see, there are very few changes ever made,
and as many of the ladies are, like my wife, no longer young, we
treat them as comrades."</p>
<p>In the morning Dick and Surajah mounted their horses, took a
hearty farewell of the governor, and rode down to the gate. A
soldier had been sent down, half an hour before, and they found
their escort in readiness to move. They had decided that, before
going to the next fort, they would ride round the foot of the hill
of Savandroog. This they did, going at a foot pace, and scanning
the cliffs and slopes as they passed. Sometimes they reined up
their horses and rode a little farther back, so as to have a view
to the very summit.</p>
<p>When they completed the round, they agreed that there were but
two spots where it seemed to them that an ascent was barely
possible, and they were very doubtful whether the difficulties,
when examined more closely, would not prove to be absolutely
insurmountable.</p>
<p>"That is not a satisfactory outlook," Dick said, "but
fortunately there is, now, no motive for climbing the precipice.
Certainly those places would be of no use to a party wanting to
make an attack. In the first place, though you and I might get up,
with soft shoes on, I am sure that English soldiers, with muskets
and ammunition pouches, could never do it, especially at night; and
in the daytime, even if a body of troops strong enough to be of any
use could get up, those who first arrived at the top would be
killed before the others could come to their assistance, and a few
stones rolled down would sweep all behind them to the bottom.</p>
<p>"I don't like turning my back on the place," he went on, as they
turned their horses' heads to the south; for Savandroog was the
farthest north of the forts they were to visit. "It seems to me
that, even now, my father may be there."</p>
<p>"How can that be, Dick?" Surajah said in surprise. "Nothing
could be more straightforward than the governor seemed to be. I
thought that he was even rash, in speaking as frankly as he did to
us."</p>
<p>"I think he saw there was no fear of our repeating what he said,
Surajah. He is a frank, outspoken old soldier, and has evidently
been so disgusted at the treatment of the prisoners that he could
not mince his words; and yet, you know, he did not absolutely say
that he had no prisoners."</p>
<p>"No; I noticed that he did not reply directly to your
question."</p>
<p>"On the contrary, he distinctly hesitated before he spoke. Now,
why should he have done that? He might just as well have said, 'No,
I have no prisoners. They are only sent up here for execution.'
That would have been his natural answer. Instead of that he
hesitated, and then began, 'I don't want any of them here; batches
are sent up sometimes from Bangalore.' Now, why did he shirk the
question? If it had been any other subject, I might not have
noticed that he had not really answered it, but of course, as it
was so important a one, I was listening most anxiously for his
reply, and noticed his hesitation at once, and that he gave no
direct answer at all.</p>
<p>"Now, think it over, Surajah. Why should he have hesitated, and
why should he have turned the question off without answering it,
unless there had been some reason? And if so, what could the reason
be?"</p>
<p>Surajah had no suggestion to make, and they rode on for some
distance in silence.</p>
<p>"It is quite evident," Dick went on, after a long pause, "that
he is a kind-hearted man, and that he objects altogether to
Tippoo's cruelty to the prisoners. Therefore, if he had any
captives, his reason for not answering was most likely a kindly
one."</p>
<p>"Yes, I should think so."</p>
<p>"You see, he would consider that we should report, to the
sultan, all particulars we had gathered about the fortress. His
remarks about the execution of the prisoners, and the worthlessness
of the Chelah battalions, and so on, was a private conversation,
and was only a matter of opinion. But, supposing he had had some
prisoners, and had said so, we might, for anything he knew, have
had orders to inspect them, and to report about them, as well as
about the garrisons and defences."</p>
<p>"Yes, he might have thought that," Surajah agreed; "but after
all, why should he mind that?"</p>
<p>Dick did not answer for some time. He was trying to think it
out. Presently, he reined in his horse suddenly.</p>
<p>"This might be the reason," he said, excitedly. This governor
may be the very one who we heard had taken my father with him, when
he was moved from that fort up in the north. He was in command at
Kistnagherry before he came here, after the war, and he may have
gone to Kistnagherry from that fort in the north. You see there
have been executions, but they have been those of fresh batches
sent up, and the governor would not include the captive he had
brought with him. In time, his very existence may have been
forgotten, and he may still be living there. That would account for
the governor's objection to answering the question, as he would be
sure that, did Tippoo hear there was a prisoner there, he would
send orders for him to be executed at once.</p>
<p>"This may be all fancy, Surajah, but I cannot think of any other
reason why he should have shirked my question."</p>
<p>He took up the reins again, and the horse at once started
forward. They rode for some little time in silence, Dick thinking
the matter over, again and again, and becoming more and more
convinced he was right; except that, as he admitted to himself, the
prisoner whom the governor wished to shield might not be his
father.</p>
<p>He was roused, at last, by Surajah asking the question, "Is
there anything that you would like us to do?"</p>
<p>"Not now," Dick replied. "We could not go back again. We must
visit the other forts on our list, and see what we can find out
there. When we have quite assured ourselves that my father is not
in any of them, we can think this over again; but at present we
must put it aside. However, I sha'n't rest until I get to the
bottom of it."</p>
<p>During the next ten days, they inspected the forts of
Navandroog, Sundradroog, Outradroog, and Chitteldroog. Few of these
were as extensive, and none so strong, as Savandroog. They did the
official part of their business, and assured themselves that no
English captives were contained in any of them. The governors all
said that prisoners were never kept there many days, and that it
was only when Tippoo wished to get rid of them that they were sent
there. None of the governors made any objection to answering Dick's
questions on the subject, generally adding an expression of
satisfaction that prisoners were never left long under their
charge.</p>
<p>"It entails a lot of trouble," the governor of Outradroog said.
"They have to be watched incessantly, and one never feels certain
they may not slip away. Look at this place. You would think that no
one could make his escape; and yet, some ten years ago, fourteen of
them got away from here. They slid down a precipice, where no one
would have thought a human being could have got down alive. They
were all of them retaken, except one, and executed the following
day; but the sultan was so furious that, although it was no fault
of the governor, who had sentries placed everywhere, he sent for
him to Seringapatam, and threw him to the tigers, declaring that
there must have been treachery at work. You may be sure that I have
no desire to hold English prisoners, after that; and when they have
been sent here have been glad, indeed, when orders came for their
execution.</p>
<p>"A good many were ordered to be starved to death. But I never
waited for that. It took too long. Do what I could, the guards
would smuggle in pieces of bread, and they lingered on for weeks;
so that it was more merciful to finish with them at once, besides
making me feel comfortable at the knowledge that there was no
chance of their making their escape. There were sentries at their
doors, as well as on the walls, when the fourteen I have told you
about escaped; but they dug a passage out at the back of their hut,
chose a very dark night, and it was only when the sound of some
stones, that they dislodged as they scrambled down the precipice,
gave the alarm to the sentries, that their escape was
discovered.</p>
<p>"No, I do not want any prisoners up here, and when they do come,
there is no sleep for me until I get the order to execute them. But
they do not often come now. Most of the prisoners who were not
given up have been killed since, and there are not many of them
left."</p>
<p>Upon finishing their round, they returned to Seringapatam, where
Dick drew up a full report of the result of their investigations.
The sultan himself went through it with them, questioned them
closely, cut off a good many of the items, and gave orders that the
other demands should be complied with, and the guns and ammunition
sent off at once to the various forts, from the great arsenal at
the capital.</p>
<p>Dick was depressed at the result of their journey. His hopes had
fallen lower and lower, as, at each fort they visited, he heard the
same story--that all prisoners sent up to the mountain fortresses
had, in a short time, been put to death. It was possible, of
course, that his father might still be at one of the towns where
new levies had been drilled; but he had not, from the first,
thought it likely that a merchant sailor would be put to this work;
and had it not been that he clung to the belief that there was a
prisoner at Savandroog, and that that prisoner was his father, he
would have begun to despair.</p>
<p>It was true that there were still many hill forts scattered
about the country, unvisited, but there seemed no reason why any of
the prisoners should have been allowed to survive in these forts,
when they had all been put to death in those they had visited,
among which were the places that had been most used as prisons.</p>
<p>"I would give it up," he said to Surajah, "were it not that, in
the first place, it would almost break my mother's heart. Her
conviction that my father is still alive has never been shaken. It
has supported her all these years, and I believe that, were I to
return and tell her that it was no longer possible to hope, her
faith would still be unshaken. She would still think of him as
pining in some dungeon, and would consider that I had given up the
search from faint heartedness. That is my chief reason. But I own
that I am almost as much influenced by my own conviction that he is
in Savandroog. I quite admit that I can give no reason whatever
why, if there is a prisoner there, it should be my father, and yet
I cannot get it out of my mind that it is he. I suppose it is
because I have the conviction that I believe in it. Why should I
have that impression so strongly, if it were not a true one? I tell
myself that it is absurd, that I have no real grounds to go upon,
and yet that does not shake my faith in the slightest. It is
perhaps because we have been so fortunate. Altogether everything
has turned out so favourably, that I can't help thinking he is
alive, and that I shall find him.</p>
<p>"What do you think, Surajah? Ought we to give it up?"</p>
<p>"Why should we?" Surajah replied stoutly. "I think you are
right, and that we are destined to find your father. There is no
hurry. We have not been anything like so long a time as we expected
to be, and Fortune has, as you say, befriended us wonderfully. We
are well off here. We have positions of honour. For myself, I could
wish for nothing better."</p>
<p>"Well, at any rate we will wait for a time," Dick said. "We may
be sent to Savandroog again, and if so, I will not leave the place
until I find out from the governor whether he has still a prisoner;
and if so, manage to obtain a sight of him."</p>
<p>The next day, Dick was informed by the chamberlain that the
officer who was in charge of the wild beasts had fallen into
disgrace, and that the sultan had appointed him to the charge. Dick
was well pleased, in some respects. The work would suit him much
better than examining stores, and seeing that the servants of the
Palace did their duty; but, on the other hand, it lessened his
chance of being sent to Savandroog again. However, there was no
choice in the matter, and Surajah cheered him by saying:</p>
<p>"You must not mind, Dick. Has not everything turned out for the
best? And you may be sure that this will turn out so, also."</p>
<p>It was, indeed, but two days later that Dick congratulated
himself upon the change, for Surajah was sent by Tippoo with an
order for the execution of four English prisoners. Dick knew
nothing of the matter until Surajah, on his return, told him that
he had been obliged to stop and see the orders carried out, by
poison being forced down the unfortunate officers' throats.</p>
<p>"It was horrible," he said, with tears in his eyes.</p>
<p>"Horrible!" Dick repeated. "Thank God I have been put to other
work, for I feel that I could not have done it. And yet, to have
refused to carry out the tyrant's orders would have meant death to
us both, while it would not have saved the lives of these poor
fellows. Anyhow, I would not have done it. As soon as I had
received the order I would have come to you, and we would have
mounted and ridden off together, and taken our chance."</p>
<p>"Let us talk of something else," Surajah said. "Are the beasts
all in good health?"</p>
<p>"As well as they can be, when they are fed so badly, and so
miserably cooped up. I made a great row this morning, and have kept
the men at work all day in cleaning out the places. They were all
in a horrible state, and before I could get the work done, I had to
threaten to report the whole of them to Tippoo, and they knew what
would come of that. I told Fazli, last night, that the beasts must
have more flesh, and got an order from him that all the bones from
the kitchens should be given to them."</p>
<SPAN name="PicG" />
<center>
<ANTIMG src="images/g.jpg" alt= "The white slave girl thanks Dick for saving her life" /> </center>
<p>That evening when Dick, on his way to the apartments of one of
the officers, was going along a corridor that skirted the portion
of the Palace occupied by the zenana; a figure came out suddenly
from behind the drapery of a door, dropped on her knees beside him,
and, seizing his hand, pressed it to her forehead. It was, to all
appearance, an Indian girl in the dress of one of the attendants of
the zenana.</p>
<p>"What is it, child?" he said. "You must have mistaken me for
someone else."</p>
<p>"No, Bahador," she said, "it is yourself I wanted to thank. One
of the other attendants saw you go along this corridor, some time
ago, and ever since I have watched here of an evening, whenever I
could get away unobserved, in hopes of seeing you. It was I, my
lord, whom the tiger was standing over when you came to our rescue.
I was not greatly hurt, for I was pushed down when the tiger burst
in, and, save that it seized me with one of its paws, and tore my
shoulder, I was unhurt. Ever since I have been hoping that the time
would come when I could thank you for saving my life."</p>
<p>"I am glad to have done so, child. But you had best retire into
the zenana. It would not be good for you, or me, were I found
talking to you."</p>
<p>The girl rose to her feet submissively, and he now saw her face,
which, in the dim light that burnt in the corridor, he had not
hitherto noticed.</p>
<p>"Why," he exclaimed, with a start, "you are English!"</p>
<p>"Yes, Sahib. I was brought here eight years ago. I am fourteen
now. There were other English girls here then, but they were all
older than me, and have been given away to officers of the sultan.
I am afraid I shall be, too, ere long. I have dreaded it so much!
But oh, Sahib, you are a favourite of the sultan. If he would but
give me to you, I should not mind so much."</p>
<p>Dick was about to reply, when he heard a distant footfall.</p>
<p>"Go in," he exclaimed. "Someone is coming. I will speak to you
again, in a day or two."</p>
<p>When he returned to his room, he told Surajah what had
happened.</p>
<p>"It will, at any rate, give me a fresh interest here," he said.
"It is terrible to think that a young English girl should be in
Tippoo's power, and that he can give her, whenever he likes, to one
of his creatures. Of course, according to our English notions, she
is still but a young girl, but as your people out here marry when
the girls are but of the age of this child, it is different
altogether."</p>
<p>"She does not suspect that you are English?"</p>
<p>"No. As I told you, I had only just discovered that she was so,
when I heard a footstep in the distance. But I shall see her again,
tomorrow or next day."</p>
<p>"You will be running a great risk," Surajah said gravely.</p>
<p>"Not much risk, I think," Dick replied. "She is only a little
slave girl, and as the tiger was standing over her when I fired, no
doubt I did save her life, and it would be natural enough that she
would, on meeting me, speak to me and express her thanks."</p>
<p>"That would be a good excuse," Surajah agreed. "But a suspicious
tyrant, like Tippoo, might well insist that this was only a
pretence, and that the girl was really giving you a letter or
message from one of the inmates of the zenana."</p>
<p>Dick was silent for a time.</p>
<p>"I will be very careful," he said. "I must certainly see her
again, and it seems to me, at present, that whatever risk there may
be, I must try to save this poor girl from the fate that awaits
her. I cannot conceal from myself that, however much I may refuse
to admit it, the hopes of my finding and saving my father are faint
indeed; and although this girl is nothing to me, I should feel that
my mission had not been an entire failure, if we could take her
home with us and restore her to her friends.</p>
<p>"No, I don't think," he went on, in answer to a grave shake of
Surajah's head, "that it would add to our danger in getting away.
We know that, if we try to escape and are caught, our lives will be
forfeited in any case; and if she were disguised as a boy, we could
travel with her without attracting any more observation than we
should alone. She would not be missed for hours after she had left,
and there would be no reason, whatever, for connecting her
departure with ours. I don't say, Surajah, that I have made up my
mind about it--of course it has all come fresh to me, and I have
not had time to think it over in any way. Still, it does seem to me
that when the time for our leaving comes, whether we ride off
openly as Tippoo's officers, or whether we go off in disguise,
there ought to be no very great difficulty in taking her away with
us. You see that yourself, don't you?"</p>
<p>"I can't give any opinion about it, at present," Surajah
replied. "I do think that it will add to our difficulties, however
we may go, but I don't say it cannot be managed."</p>
<p>"I should think not, Surajah, and it would be worth doing,
however great the difficulties might be. Just think of the grief
that her parents must feel, at her loss, and the joy when she is
restored to them. You see, it would be no great loss of time, if we
were obliged to take her down to Tripataly first, and then come
back again to renew our search. It would take but a week, going and
returning, and now that the passes are all open to us, the
difficulties would be nothing to what they were when we went back
after our scouting expedition. Besides, at that time they were more
vigilant, all along the frontier, than they will be now, because
there was war between the two countries, and Tippoo was anxious
that no news of his movements should be taken down. There is no
talk of war now, for though Tippoo makes no disguise of his fury at
his losses, especially at Coorg being taken from him, and is
evidently bent upon fighting again, it will take a very long time
to get his army into an efficient state, to repair his fortresses,
to complete all the new works of defence he is getting up here, and
to restore the confidence of his soldiers.</p>
<p>"I should think it will be fully four or five years before he is
ready to fight again. At any rate, if we once get well away from
here with the girl, we ought to have no difficulty in getting
across the frontier. It would mean but a fortnight lost in the
search for my father, and, anyhow, we are not making any progress
that way as long as we stop here. The only drawback would be, so
far as I can see, that we should lose the benefit of our official
positions, but unless we happen to be sent off with orders to other
hill forts, that position will only hamper our movements. Besides,
we should still have our badges of office, and Tippoo's official
orders to the governors. Possibly, the news that we had disappeared
might reach the governors of some of the forts in this
neighbourhood, but it would not be likely to travel very far. His
officers so frequently fall into disgrace, and are either killed or
thrown to the tigers, that the fact of our being missing would
scarce excite a remark, and those who heard of it would suppose
that we had either been secretly made away with, or that, having
learned that Tippoo was displeased with us, we had fled."</p>
<p>Surajah nodded. His confidence in his leader was complete, and
he was always ready to follow unquestioningly.</p>
<p>"There is one thing, Surajah," Dick concluded. "This state of
things cannot last much longer, anyhow, for next time it might be
me he ordered to see to the execution of an English prisoner, and
that would mean that I should, as soon as I received the command,
make a bolt for it. So you see our stay here, in any case, may not
last many days. I would rather run any risks than carry out such an
order."</p>
<p>Two evenings later, Dick went down the corridor at the same hour
as that on which he had before met the English girl. She came out
from behind the hangings at once, when he passed.</p>
<p>"I knew you would come, Bahador!" she said joyfully. "I could
see that you were as kind as you were brave, and would have pity
upon a poor little white slave!"</p>
<p>"I have much that I want to say to you, child. This is not a
good place for speaking. Someone might come along at any moment.
How long can you be away, without fear of your absence being
noticed?"</p>
<p>"Not long now," she said. "In the morning I am sent out on
messages, and could meet you anywhere."</p>
<p>"Very well. I will remain in my room all the morning, tomorrow,
and if you do not come then, I will stay in next day."</p>
<p>"I will come," the girl said unhesitatingly.</p>
<p>He then gave her full instructions how to find his room, and
made her repeat them to him, in order to be sure that she had them
correctly.</p>
<p>"Do you know my companion by sight?" he asked.</p>
<p>"Oh, yes. I have seen him often."</p>
<p>"Well, either he or I will be standing at my door. It is as well
that you should look carefully round, before you enter, so as to be
sure there is no one in the corridor, and that you can slip in
unobserved. You may be sure that I am asking you to come for no
idle freak, but because I have something very important to say to
you.</p>
<p>"I fancy I hear footsteps. Good night."</p>
<p>Dick was sure that he and Surajah would both be at liberty next
day, for Tippoo had that morning started for Bangalore, where a
large number of men were at work, repairing the fortifications and
removing all signs of the British occupation from the fort and
palace. He was likely to be away for at least a fortnight. As soon
as Ibrahim had swept the room, after their early breakfast, Dick
gave him a number of small commissions to be executed in the town,
and told him that he should not require him again until it was time
to bring up their meal from the kitchen. Then he and Surajah, by
turns, watched at the door.</p>
<p>An hour later Surajah, who was upon the watch, said:</p>
<p>"The girl is coming."</p>
<p>There was no one else in sight, and when Surajah beckoned to
her, she hurried on, and, passing through the curtains at the door,
entered the room. It had been arranged that Surajah should remain
on watch, so that should, by any chance, one of the officials of
their acquaintance come along, he might go out and talk with him in
the corridor, and, on some excuse or other, prevent his entering
the room, if he showed any intention of doing so.</p>
<p>"Now, in the first place," Dick said, as he led the girl to the
divan and seated her there, "what is your name?"</p>
<p>"My name is Goorla."</p>
<p>"No; I mean your proper name?"</p>
<p>"My name used to be Annie--Annie Mansfield, Bahador."</p>
<p>"And my name is Dick Holland," he said, in English.</p>
<p>She gave a start of surprise.</p>
<p>"Yes, Annie, I am a countryman of yours."</p>
<p>She looked at him almost incredulously, and then an expression
of aversion succeeded that of confidence in her face. She sprang
from the divan, and drew herself up indignantly.</p>
<p>"Please let me go," she said haughtily. "You have saved my life,
but if you had saved it twenty times, I could not like a man who is
a deserter!"</p>
<p>Dick had at first been speechless with astonishment at the
girl's change of manner, and at her reception of the news he had
thought would have been very pleasant to her. As her last words
threw a light upon the matter, he burst into a merry laugh.</p>
<p>"I am no deserter, Annie. Save my friend at the door and
yourself, there is no one here who knows that I am English. Sit
down again, and I will tell you how I come to be here.</p>
<p>"My father was the captain of an English ship. She was wrecked
on the west coast, and he was seized and brought up here a
prisoner, eight years ago. My mother, who is a daughter of the late
Rajah of Tripataly, who married an English lady, taught me to speak
Hindustani, so that when I got old enough I could come out here and
try to find out if my father was still alive, and if so, to help
him to escape. I had only just come up here, with my friend, who is
an officer of the Rajah's, when that affair with the tiger took
place. Then, as you know, Tippoo made us both officers in the
Palace. Of course, while we are here we can do nothing towards
finding out about my father, and we should not have remained here
much longer anyway, and may have to leave at any moment. Since you
met me, and I found that there was an English girl captive here, it
has of course changed my plans, and I feel that I could not go away
and leave you to the fate you told me of, and that if possible, I
must take you away with me. That is, of course, if you are willing
to go with us, and prepared to run a certain amount of risk.</p>
<p>"Do not take on so," he continued, as the girl threw herself on
her knees, and, clinging to him, burst into a passion of tears. "Do
not cry like that;" and, stooping down, he lifted her, and placed
her in a corner of the divan. "There," he said, patting her on the
shoulder, as she sobbed almost convulsively; "try and compose
yourself. We may be disturbed at any moment, and may not have an
opportunity of talking again, so we must make our arrangements, in
readiness to leave suddenly. I may find it necessary to go at an
hour's notice. You may, as you said, be given by Tippoo to one of
his favourites at any time. Fortunately he has gone away for a
fortnight, so we have, at any rate, that time before us to make our
plans. Still, it is better that we should arrange, now, as much as
we can."</p>
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