FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   141   142   143   144   145   146   147   148   149   150   151   152   153   154   155   156   157   158   159   160   >>  
like a voice crying out in the night that shattered a blissful dream. "Why do you ask that, Gulab?" "Because it was said. And the Missie Baba's heart will be full of the Sahib, for he is like a god." "Is the Gulab jealous of the Missie Baba?" Barlow asked mundanely, almost out of confusion. "No, Sahib, because--because one is not jealous of a princess; because that is to question the ways of the gods. If I had been an Englay and he loved me, and the Missie Baba claimed him, Bootea would kill her." This was said with the simple conviction of a child uttering a weird threat, but Barlow shivered. "And now, Gulab," he persisted, "if you thought I loved you would you kill the Missie Baba?" "No, Sahib, because it is Bootea's fault. It can't be. It is permitted to Bootea to love the Sahib, but at the shrine Omkar will take that sin and all the other sins away when she makes sacrifice--" "What sacrifice, Gulab?" "Such as we make to the gods, Sahib." Then something curious happened. The girl broke, she clung to Barlow convulsively; sobs choked her. He clasped her tight and laid his cheek against hers soothingly, and said, "Gulab, what is it? Don't go to the Shrine of Omkar. Come with me to your people at Chunda, and if you do not want to remain with them I will have it arranged, through the Resident, that the British will reward you with protection. You have done the British Raj a great service." "No, Sahib." The girl drew herself erect, so that her eyes gazed into Barlow's, They were luminous with an intensity of resolve. "Let Bootea speak what is in her heart, and be not offended; it is necessary. There is, at the end of the journey the place that is called _jahannam_ (hell) for Bootea. The Nana Sahib waits like a tiger crouched by a pool at night for the coming of a stag to drink." "The Resident will protect you against the Mahratta," Barlow declared. "Bootea could do that," and in her small hand there gleamed in the moonlight the sheen of her dagger blade. She thrust it back into her belt. "What then do you fear, Gulab?" he queried. "The Sahib." "_Me_, Gulab?" "Yes, Khudawand. To see you and not be permitted to hear your voice, nor feel your hand upon my face, would be worse than sacrifice. Bootea would rather die, slip off into death with the goodness, the sweetness of to-night upon her soul. There, where the Sahib would be, Bootea's heart would be full of evil, the
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   141   142   143   144   145   146   147   148   149   150   151   152   153   154   155   156   157   158   159   160   >>  



Top keywords:

Bootea

 

Barlow

 

Missie

 

sacrifice

 

Resident

 

British

 

permitted

 
jealous
 

called

 

jahannam


journey
 

coming

 

crouched

 

offended

 
service
 
resolve
 

intensity

 

luminous

 

shattered

 

protect


Mahratta

 

Khudawand

 

sweetness

 

queried

 
gleamed
 

moonlight

 

crying

 
declared
 

dagger

 

thrust


goodness

 

shrine

 

mundanely

 

confusion

 

thought

 

question

 

claimed

 

simple

 
conviction
 

shivered


persisted

 

princess

 

threat

 

uttering

 

people

 

Shrine

 

soothingly

 

Because

 
Chunda
 

Englay