t to Cloomber
preceded it by three weeks or more.
During all this time I was in sore distress of mind, for I had never
seen anything either of Gabriel or of her brother since the interview
in which the general had discovered the communication which was kept up
between us. I had no doubt that some sort of restraint had been placed
upon them; and the thought that we had brought trouble on their heads
was a bitter one both to my sister and myself.
Our anxiety, however, was considerably mitigated by the receipt, a
couple of days after my last talk with the general, of a note from
Mordaunt Heatherstone. This was brought us by a little, ragged urchin,
the son of one of the fishermen, who informed us that it had been handed
to him at the avenue gate by an old woman--who, I expect, must have been
the Cloomber cook.
"MY DEAREST FRIENDS," it ran, "Gabriel and I have grieved to think how
concerned you must be at having neither heard from nor seen us. The fact
is that we are compelled to remain in the house. And this compulsion is
not physical but moral.
"Our poor father, who gets more and more nervous every day, has
entreated us to promise him that we will not go out until after the
fifth of October, and to allay his fears we have given him the desired
pledge. On the other hand, he has promised us that after the fifth--that
is, in less than a week--we shall be as free as air to come or go as we
please, so we have something to look forward to.
"Gabriel says that she has explained to you that the governor is always
a changed man after this particular date, on which his fears reach a
crisis. He apparently has more reason than usual this year to anticipate
that trouble is brewing for this unfortunate family, for I have never
known him to take so many elaborate precautions or appear so thoroughly
unnerved. Who would ever think, to see his bent form and his shaking
hands, that he is the same man who used some few short years ago to
shoot tigers on foot among the jungles of the Terai, and would laugh at
the more timid sportsmen who sought the protection of their elephant's
howdah?
"You know that he has the Victoria Cross, which he won in the streets
of Delhi, and yet here he is shivering with terror and starting at every
noise, in the most peaceful corner of the world. Oh, the pity of it.
West! Remember what I have already told you--that it is no fanciful or
imaginary peril, but one which we have every reason to suppose to b
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