|
CHAPTER 1
During that third week of May the
situation in Baskul had become
much worse and, on the 20th, air force machines arrived by
arrangement from Peshawar to evacuate the white residents. These
numbered about eighty, and most were safely transported across the
mountains in troop carriers. A few miscellaneous aircraft were
also employed, among them being a cabin machine lent by the
maharajah of Chandrapur. In this, about 10 a.m., four passengers
embarked: Miss Roberta Brinklow, of the Eastern Mission; Henry D.
Barnard, an American; Hugh Conway, H.M. Consul; and Captain Charles
Mallinson, H.M. Vice Consul.
These names are as they appeared later in Indian and British
newspapers.
Conway was thirty-seven. He had
been at Baskul for two years, in a
job which now, in the light of events, could be regarded as a
persistent backing of the wrong horse. A stage of his life was
finished; in a few weeks' time, or perhaps after a few months'
leave in England, he would be sent somewhere else. Tokyo or
Teheran, Manila or Muscat; people in his profession never knew what
was coming. He had been ten years in the Consular Service, long
enough to assess his own chances as shrewdly as he was apt to do
those of others. He knew that the plums were not for him; but it
was genuinely consoling, and not merely sour grapes, to reflect
that he had no taste for plums. He preferred the less formal and
more picturesque jobs that were on offer, and as these were often
not good ones, it had doubtless seemed to others that he was
playing his cards rather badly. Actually, he felt he had played
them rather well; he had had a varied and moderately enjoyable
decade.
He was tall, deeply bronzed, with brown short-cropped hair and
slate-blue eyes. He was inclined to look severe and brooding until
he laughed, and then (but it happened not so very often) he looked
boyish. There was a slight nervous twitch near the left eye which
was usually noticeable when he worked too hard or drank too much,
and as he had been packing and destroying documents throughout the
whole of the day and night preceding the evacuation, the twitch was
very conspicuous when he climbed into the aeroplane. He was tired
out, and overwhelmingly glad that he had contrived to be sent in
the maharajah's luxurious airliner instead of in one of the crowded
troop carriers. He spread himself indulgently in the basket seat
as the plane soared aloft. He was the sort of man who, being used
to major hardships, expected minor comforts by way of compensation.
Cheerfully he might endure the rigors of the road to Samarkand, but
from London to Paris he would spend his last tenner on the Golden
Arrow.
It was after the flight had lasted more than an hour that Mallinson
said he thought the pilot wasn't keeping a straight course.
Mallinson sat immediately in front. He was a youngster in his
middle twenties, pink-cheeked, intelligent without being
intellectual, beset with public school limitations, but also with
their excellences. Failure to pass an examination was the chief
cause of his being sent to Baskul, where Conway had had six months
of his company and had grown to like him.
But Conway did not want to make the effort that an aeroplane
conversation demands. He opened his eyes drowsily and replied that
whatever the course taken, the pilot presumably knew best.
Half an hour later, when weariness and the drone of the engine had
lulled him nearly to sleep, Mallinson disturbed him again. "I say,
Conway, I thought Fenner was piloting us?"
"Well, isn't he?"
"The chap turned his head just now and I'll swear it wasn't he."
"It's hard to tell, through that glass panel."
"I'd know Fenner's face anywhere."
"Well, then, it must be someone else. I don't see that it
matters."
"But Fenner told me definitely that he was taking this machine."
"They must have changed their minds and given him one of the
others."
"Well, who is this man, then?"
"My dear boy, how should I know? You don't suppose I've memorized
the face of every flight lieutenant in the air force, do you?"
"I know a good many of them, anyway, but I don't recognize this
fellow."
"Then he must belong to the minority whom you don't know." Conway
smiled and added: "When we arrive in Peshawar very soon you can
make his acquaintance and ask him all about himself."
"At this rate we shan't get to Peshawar at all. The man's right
off his course. And I'm not surprised, either -- flying so damned
high he can't see where he is."
Conway was not bothering. He was used to air travel, and took
things for granted. Besides, there was nothing particular he was
eager to do when he got to Peshawar, and no one particular he was
eager to see; so it was a matter of complete indifference to him
whether the journey took four hours or six. He was unmarried;
there would be no tender greetings on arrival. He had friends, and
a few of them would probably take him to the club and stand him
drinks; it was a pleasant prospect, but not one to sigh for in
anticipation.
Nor did he sigh retrospectively, when he viewed the equally
pleasant, but not wholly satisfying vista of the past decade.
Changeable, fair intervals, becoming rather unsettled; it had been
his own meteorological summary during that time, as well as the
world's. He thought of Baskul, Pekin, Macao, and other places -- he
had moved about pretty often. Remotest of all was Oxford, where he
had had a couple of years of donhood after the war, lecturing on
Oriental history, breathing dust in sunny libraries, cruising down
the High on a push bicycle. The vision attracted, but did not stir
him; there was a sense in which he felt that he was still a part of
all that he might have been.
A familiar gastric lurch informed him that the plane was beginning
to descend. He felt tempted to rag Mallinson about his fidgets,
and would perhaps have done so had not the youth risen abruptly,
bumping his head against the roof and waking Barnard, the American,
who had been dozing in his seat at the other side of the narrow
gangway. "My God!" Mallinson cried, peering through the window.
"Look down there!"
Conway looked. The view was certainly not what he had expected,
if, indeed, he had expected anything. Instead of the trim,
geometrically laid-out cantonments and the larger oblongs of the
hangars, nothing was visible but an opaque mist veiling an immense,
sun-brown desolation. The plane, though descending rapidly, was
still at a height unusual for ordinary flying. Long, corrugated
mountain ridges could be picked out, perhaps a mile or so closer
than the cloudier smudge of the valleys. It was typical frontier
scenery, though Conway had never viewed it before from such an
altitude. It was also, which struck him as odd, nowhere that he
could imagine near Peshawar. "I don't recognize this part of the
world," he commented. Then, more privately, for he did not wish to
alarm the others, he added into Mallinson's ear: "Looks as if
you're right. The man's lost his way."
The plane was swooping down at a tremendous speed, and as it did
so, the air grew hotter; the scorched earth below was like an oven
with the door suddenly opened. One mountaintop after another
lifted itself above the horizon in craggy silhouette; now the
flight was along a curving valley, the base of which was strewn
with rocks and the debris of dried-up watercourses. It looked like
a floor littered with nutshells. The plane bumped and tossed in
air pockets as uncomfortably as a rowboat in a swell. All four
passengers had to hold onto their seats.
"Looks like he wants to land!" shouted the American hoarsely.
"He can't!" Mallinson retorted. "He'd be simply mad if he tried
to! He'll crash and then -- "
But the pilot did land. A small cleared space opened by the side
of a gully, and with considerable skill the machine was jolted and
heaved to a standstill. What happened after that, however, was
more puzzling and less reassuring. A swarm of bearded and turbaned
tribesmen came forward from all directions, surrounding the machine
and effectively preventing anyone from getting out of it except the
pilot. The latter clambered to earth and held excited colloquy
with them, during which proceeding it became clear that, so far
from being Fenner, he was not an Englishman at all, and possibly
not even a European. Meanwhile cans of gasoline were fetched from
a dump close by, and emptied into the exceptionally capacious
tanks. Grins and disregarding silence met the shouts of the four
imprisoned passengers, while the slightest attempt to alight
provoked a menacing movement from a score of rifles. Conway, who
knew a little Pushtu, harangued the tribesmen as well as he could
in that language, but without effect; while the pilot's sole retort
to any remarks addressed to him in any language was a significant
flourish of his revolver. Midday sunlight, blazing on the roof of
the cabin, grilled the air inside till the occupants were almost
fainting with the heat and with the exertion of their protests.
They were quite powerless; it had been a condition of the
evacuation that they should carry no arms.
When the tanks were at last screwed up, a gasoline can filled with
tepid water was handed through one of the cabin windows. No
questions were answered, though it did not appear that the men were
personally hostile. After a further parley the pilot climbed back
into the cockpit, a Pathan clumsily swung the propeller, and the
flight was resumed. The takeoff, in that confined space and with
the extra gasoline load, was even more skillful than the landing.
The plane rose high into the hazy vapors; then turned east, as if
setting a course. It was mid-afternoon.
A most extraordinary and bewildering business! As the cooler air
refreshed them, the passengers could hardly believe that it had
really happened; it was an outrage to which none could recall any
parallel, or suggest any precedent, in all the turbulent records of
the frontier. It would have been incredible, indeed, had they not
been victims of it themselves. It was quite natural that high
indignation should follow incredulity, and anxious speculation only
when indignation had worn itself out. Mallinson then developed the
theory which, in the absence of any other, they found easiest to
accept. They were being kidnaped for ransom. The trick was
by no
means new in itself, though this particular technique must be
regarded as original. It was a little more comforting to feel that
they were not making entirely virgin history; after all, there had
been kidnapings before, and a good many of them had ended up all
right. The tribesmen kept you in some lair in the mountains till
the government paid up and you were released. You were treated
quite decently, and as the money that had to be paid wasn't your
own, the whole business was only unpleasant while it lasted.
Afterwards, of course, the Air people sent a bombing squadron, and
you were left with one good story to tell for the rest of your
life. Mallinson enunciated the proposition a shade nervously; but
Barnard, the American, chose to be heavily facetious. "Well,
gentlemen, I daresay this is a cute idea on somebody's part, but I
can't exactly see that your air force has covered itself with
glory. You Britishers make jokes about the holdups in Chicago and
all that, but I don't recollect any instance of a gunman running
off with one of Uncle Sam's aeroplanes. And I should like to know,
by the way, what this fellow did with the real pilot. Sandbagged
him, I bet." He yawned. He was a large, fleshy man, with a
hard-
bitten face in which good-humored wrinkles were not quite offset by
pessimistic pouches. Nobody in Baskul had known much about him
except that he had arrived from Persia, where it was presumed he
had something to do with oil.
Conway meanwhile was busying himself with a very practical task.
He had collected every scrap of paper that they all had, and was
composing messages in various native languages to be dropped to
earth at intervals. It was a slender chance, in such sparsely
populated country, but worth taking.
The fourth occupant, Miss Brinklow, sat tight-lipped and straight-
backed, with few comments and no complaints. She was a small,
rather leathery woman, with an air of having been compelled to
attend a party at which there were goings-on that she could not
wholly approve.
Conway had talked less than the two other men, for translating SOS
messages into dialects was a mental exercise requiring concentration.
He had, however, answered questions when asked, and had agreed,
tentatively, with Mallinson's kidnaping theory. He had also
agreed, to some extent, with Barnard's strictures on the air force.
"Though one can see, of course, how it may have happened. With the
place in commotion as it was, one man in flying kit would look very
much like another. No one would think of doubting the bona fides
of any man in the proper clothes who looked as if he knew his job.
And this fellow MUST have known it -- the signals, and so forth.
Pretty obvious, too, that he knows how to fly . . . still, I agree
with you that it's the sort of thing that someone ought to get into
hot water about. And somebody will, you may be sure, though I
suspect he won't deserve it."
"Well, sir," responded Barnard, "I certainly do admire the way you
manage to see both sides of the question. It's the right spirit to
have, no doubt, even when you're being taken for a ride."
Americans, Conway reflected, had the knack of being able to say
patronizing things without being offensive. He smiled tolerantly,
but did not continue the conversation. His tiredness was of a kind
that no amount of possible peril could stave off. Towards late
afternoon, when Barnard and Mallinson, who had been arguing,
appealed to him on some point, it appeared that he had fallen
asleep.
"Dead beat," Mallinson commented. "And I don't wonder at it, after
these last few weeks."
"You're his friend?" queried Barnard.
"I've worked with him at the Consulate. I happen to know that he
hasn't been in bed for the last four nights. As a matter of fact,
we're damned lucky in having him with us in a tight corner like
this. Apart from knowing the languages, he's got a sort of way
with him in dealing with people. If anyone can get us out of the
mess, he'll do it. He's pretty cool about most things."
"Well, let him have his sleep, then," agreed Barnard.
Miss Brinklow made one of her rare remarks. "I think he LOOKS like
a very brave man," she said.
Conway was far less certain that he WAS a very brave man. He had
closed his eyes in sheer physical fatigue, but without actually
sleeping. He could hear and feel every movement of the plane, and
he heard also, with mixed feelings, Mallinson's eulogy of himself.
It was then that he had his doubts, recognizing a tight sensation
in his stomach which was his own bodily reaction to a disquieting
mental survey. He was not, as he knew well from experience, one of
those persons who love danger for its own sake. There was an
aspect of it which he sometimes enjoyed, an excitement, a purgative
effect upon sluggish emotions, but he was far from fond of risking
his life. Twelve years earlier he had grown to hate the perils of
trench warfare in France, and had several times avoided death by
declining to attempt valorous impossibilities. Even his D.S.O. had
been won, not so much by physical courage, as by a certain hardly
developed technique of endurance. And since the war, whenever
there had been danger ahead, he had faced it with increasing lack
of relish unless it promised extravagant dividends in thrills.
He still kept his eyes closed. He was touched, and a little
dismayed, by what he had heard Mallinson say. It was his fate in
life to have his equanimity always mistaken for pluck, whereas it
was actually something much more dispassionate and much less
virile. They were all in a damnably awkward situation, it seemed
to him, and so far from being full of bravery about it, he felt
chiefly an enormous distaste for whatever trouble might be in
store. There was Miss Brinklow, for instance. He foresaw
that in
certain circumstances he would have to act on the supposition that
because she was a woman she mattered far more than the rest of them
put together, and he shrank from a situation in which such
disproportionate behavior might be unavoidable.
Nevertheless, when he showed signs of wakefulness, it was to Miss
Brinklow that he spoke first. He realized that she was neither
young nor pretty -- negative virtues, but immensely helpful ones in
such difficulties as those in which they might soon find
themselves. He was also rather sorry for her, because he suspected
that neither Mallinson nor the American liked missionaries,
especially female ones. He himself was unprejudiced, but he was
afraid she would find his open mind a less familiar and therefore
an even more disconcerting phenomenon. "We seem to be in a queer
fix," he said, leaning forward to her ear, "but I'm glad you're
taking it calmly. I don't really think anything dreadful is going
to happen to us."
"I'm certain it won't if you can prevent it," she answered; which
did not console him.
"You must let me know if there is anything we can do to make you
more comfortable."
Barnard caught the word. "Comfortable?" he echoed raucously.
"Why, of course we're comfortable. We're just enjoying the trip.
Pity we haven't a pack of cards -- we could play a rubber of bridge."
Conway welcomed the spirit of the remark, though he disliked
bridge. "I don't suppose Miss Brinklow plays," he said, smiling.
But the missionary turned round briskly to retort: "Indeed I do,
and I could never see any harm in cards at all. There's nothing
against them in the Bible."
They all laughed, and seemed obliged to her for providing an
excuse. At any rate, Conway thought, she wasn't hysterical.
All afternoon the plane had soared through the thin mists of the
upper atmosphere, far too high to give clear sight of what lay
beneath. Sometimes, at longish intervals, the veil was torn for a
moment, to display the jagged outline of a peak, or the glint of
some unknown stream. The direction could be determined roughly
from the sun; it was still east, with occasional twists to the
north; but where it had led depended on the speed of travel, which
Conway could not judge with any accuracy. It seemed likely,
though, that the flight must already have exhausted a good deal of
the gasoline; though that again depended on uncertain factors.
Conway had no technical knowledge of aircraft, but he was sure that
the pilot, whoever he might be, was altogether an expert. That
halt in the rock-strewn valley had demonstrated it, and also other
incidents since. And Conway could not repress a feeling that was
always his in the presence of any superb and indisputable
competence. He was so used to being appealed to for help that mere
awareness of someone who would neither ask nor need it was slightly
tranquilizing, even amidst the greater perplexities of the future.
But he did not expect his companions to share such a tenuous
emotion. He recognized that they were likely to have far more
personal reasons for anxiety than he had himself. Mallinson, for
instance, was engaged to a girl in England; Barnard might be
married; Miss Brinklow had her work, vocation, or however she might
regard it. Mallinson, incidentally, was by far the least composed;
as the hours passed he showed himself increasingly excitable -- apt,
also, to resent to Conway's face the very coolness which he had
praised behind his back. Once, above the roar of the engine, a
sharp storm of argument arose. "Look here," Mallinson shouted
angrily, "are we bound to sit here twiddling our thumbs while this
maniac does everything he damn well wants? What's to prevent us
from smashing that panel and having it out with him?"
"Nothing at all," replied Conway, "except that he's armed and we'renot, and that in any case, none of us would know how to bring the
machine to earth afterwards."
"It can't be very hard, surely. I daresay you could do it."
"My dear Mallinson, why is it always ME you expect to perform these
miracles?"
"Well, anyway, this business is getting hellishly on my nerves.
Can't we MAKE the fellow come down?"
"How do you suggest it should be done?"
Mallinson was becoming more and more agitated. "Well, he's THERE,
isn't he? About six feet away from us, and we're three men to one!
Have we got to stare at his damned back all the time? At least we
might force him to tell us what the game is."
"Very well, we'll see." Conway took a few paces forward to the
partition between the cabin and the pilot's cockpit, which was
situated in front and somewhat above. There was a pane of glass,
about six inches square and made to slide open, through which the
pilot, by turning his head and stooping slightly, could communicate
with his passengers. Conway tapped on this with his knuckles.
The
response was almost comically as he had expected. The glass panel
slid sideways and the barrel of a revolver obtruded. Not a word;
just that. Conway retreated without arguing the point, and the
panel slid back again.
Mallinson, who had watched the incident, was only partly satisfied.
"I don't suppose he'd have dared to shoot," he commented. "It's
probably bluff."
"Quite," agreed Conway, "but I'd rather leave you to make sure."
"Well, I do feel we ought to put up some sort of a fight before
giving in tamely like this."
Conway was sympathetic. He recognized the convention, with all its
associations of red-coated soldiers and school history books, that
Englishmen fear nothing, never surrender, and are never defeated.
He said: "Putting up a fight without a decent chance of winning is
a poor game, and I'm not that sort of hero."
"Good for you, sir," interposed Barnard heartily. "When somebody's
got you by the short hairs you may as well give in pleasantly and
admit it. For my part I'm going to enjoy life while it lasts and
have a cigar. I hope you don't think a little bit of extra danger
matters to us?"
"Not so far as I'm concerned, but it might bother Miss Brinklow."
Barnard was quick to make amends. "Pardon me, madam, but do you
mind if I smoke?"
"Not at all," she answered graciously. "I don't do so myself, but
I just love the smell of a cigar."
Conway felt that of all the women who could possibly have made such
a remark, she was easily the most typical. Anyhow, Mallinson's
excitement had calmed a little, and to show friendliness he offered
him a cigarette, though he did not light one himself. "I know how
you feel," he said gently. "It's a bad outlook, and it's all the
worse, in some ways, because there isn't much we can do about it."
"And all the better, too, in other ways," he could not help adding
to himself. For he was still immensely fatigued. There was
also
in his nature a trait which some people might have called laziness,
though it was not quite that. No one was capable of harder
work, when it had to be done, and few could better shoulder
responsibility; but the facts remained that he was not passionately
fond of activity, and did not enjoy responsibility at all. Both
were included in his job, and he made the best of them, but he was
always ready to give way to anyone else who could function as well
or better. It was partly this, no doubt, that had made his success
in the Service less striking than it might have been. He was not
ambitious enough to shove his way past others, or to make an
important parade of doing nothing when there was really nothing
doing. His dispatches were sometimes laconic to the point of
curtness, and his calm in emergencies, though admired, was often
suspected of being too sincere. Authority likes to feel that a man
is imposing some effort on himself, and that his apparent
nonchalance is only a cloak to disguise an outfit of well-bred
emotions. With Conway the dark suspicion had sometimes been
current that he really was as unruffled as he looked, and that
whatever happened, he did not give a damn. But this, too, like the
laziness, was an imperfect interpretation. What most observers
failed to perceive in him was something quite bafflingly simple -- a
love of quietness, contemplation, and being alone.
Now, since he was so inclined and there was nothing else to do, he
leaned back in the basket chair and went definitely to sleep. When
he woke he noticed that the others, despite their various
anxieties, had likewise succumbed. Miss Brinklow was sitting bolt
upright with her eyes closed, like some rather dingy and outmoded
idol; Mallinson had lolled forward in his place with his chin in
the palm of a hand. The American was even snoring. Very
sensible
of them all, Conway thought; there was no point in wearying
themselves with shouting. But immediately he was aware of certain
physical sensations in himself, slight dizziness and heart-thumping
and a tendency to inhale sharply and with effort. He remembered
similar symptoms once before -- in the Swiss Alps.
Then he turned to the window and gazed out. The surrounding sky
had cleared completely, and in the light of late afternoon there
came to him a vision which, for the instant, snatched the remaining
breath out of his lungs. Far away, at the very limit of distance,
lay range upon range of snow peaks, festooned with glaciers, and
floating, in appearance, upon vast levels of cloud. They compassed
the whole arc of the circle, merging towards the west in a horizon
that was fierce, almost garish in coloring, like an impressionist
backdrop done by some half-mad genius. And meanwhile, the plane,
on that stupendous stage, was droning over an abyss in the face of
a sheer white wall that seemed part of the sky itself until the sun
caught it. Then, like a dozen piled-up Jungfraus seen from Mürren,
it flamed into superb and dazzling incandescence.
Conway was not apt to be easily impressed, and as a rule he did not
care for "views," especially the more famous ones for which
thoughtful municipalities provide garden seats. Once, on being
taken to Tiger Hill, near Darjeeling, to watch the sunrise upon
Everest, he had found the highest mountain in the world a definite
disappointment. But this fearsome spectacle beyond the window-pane
was of different caliber; it had no air of posing to be admired.
There was something raw and monstrous about those uncompromising
ice cliffs, and a certain sublime impertinence in approaching them
thus. He pondered, envisioning maps, calculating distances,
estimating times and speeds. Then he became aware that Mallinson
had wakened also. He touched the youth on the arm.
Go to Next
Page
|