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One Maid's Mischief
He took another step or two forward, and was about to catch her hand in his, but she avoided his touch and fled to the window.
“Come a step nearer to me,” she panted, her face convulsed with dread, “and I will call for help.”
“Nonsense!” he said, with a smile. “Why should you call? Is it for the birds to hear? The tigers will not awaken till ’tis night. Why should you weary yourself and hurt that sweet-tuned throat? Call for help? Who would hear you call?”
“Your people!” she panted, as her dread increased. “They are here below!”
“Yes,” he said, “they are here below and about the place, but they are deaf. You forget that I am not the poor Malay, looked down upon with disdain by your proud English friends, but Prince and Rajah. You would make my servants and my slaves hear, but not one would stir. You do not understand my power, Helen – the power of the man you scorned! Should one of my people dare to come here ere I summoned him, he would die!”
“It is not true!” cried Helen, with spirit. “Knowing who I am, they would come, and if I appealed to them, protect me.”
Murad laughed a contemptuous, cynical laugh.
“You forget where you are,” he said. “This is one of my homes, and this is my land. I am poor Rajah Murad whom you look upon with contempt at Sindang station; but here I am the people’s Lord. Who dare contradict me or disobey commands? No one. For the life or death of my people rests with me. So you may leave that window and accept your lot.”
Helen did not move.
“There, put away all that silly woman’s play!” he cried. “I tell you it is like my foolish native girls behave. You are an English lady, and should be wiser. Come, let us be friends at once, and I will become more English for your sake. You will forgive me for bringing you away; it was the love I bore you made me act as I did. You will forgive me, will you not? Have I not had you made ten times more beautiful than you were before?”
He made a feint, and then a couple of quick strides towards her, and this time caught her by the wrist; but in her dread and horror she wrenched it away, and struck him sharply across the face as she would have struck at some noxious beast; and as he started back in surprise, she bounded to the door, and tried to wrench it open.
Murad’s love appeared to turn in a moment to furious hate; his eyes darkened and seemed to emit a lurid light; his teeth appeared between his lips, which were drawn apart like those of some wild beast, and the man’s savage nature blazed out in a moment under the affront. In an instant his hand sought the hilt of his kris, and tearing the weapon from its sheath, he pursued his prisoner as she fled from him shrieking round the room.
Helen fled from him but for a few moments, and then she stopped short and faced him, offering herself to his blow.
This brave act disarmed him, checking his rage, which seemed to have flashed out, and his English education began to tell. Muttering impatiently, he thrust the kris back into its sheath, and uttered a forced laugh.
“Foolish girl!” he cried, “why did you strike me? It is folly! It makes me angry. A Malay never forgives a blow; but you have made me English, and I forgive you because – because you make me fond. But it was wild and foolish. I give you my love, you play with me and strike me a blow. A woman should not strike the man she loves.”
Helen did not reply, but rushed to and tore furiously at the door.
“Why do you tire yourself?” he cried, with a contemptuous laugh. “What good can you do? I tell you once again my people dare not stir to help you, even if you wished; and I know enough of woman’s nature to tell that, from such a finished coquette as you have always been, this is but a false show of dread.”
Helen’s despair grew deeper as she listened to the Rajah’s words, and reading her thoughts aright, he went on calmly enough:
“I do not mind. You know I love you, and at heart I believe you love me. But what matter if you do not? You will when you are my wife. You will be quite contented here, and very soon forget your own people and their ways. It will be a change for an English beauty to become a Malay princess, and you shall even have a new name. Still angry? There, pray calm down. It is because I had you fetched so suddenly away; for I know you, Helen. You are not weeping for any other lover. Out of so many you could care for none more than for me.”
Still Helen did not reply, but stood at bay, her eyes dilated, and backing from him whenever he made as if to approach her, till, with a scornful laugh, he gave up the pursuit and threw himself carelessly upon one of the divans.
“Why should I weary myself by running after you?” he said, with a mocking laugh. “That is all past, and you must plead to me. Foolish girl, how could you return even if you wished! They think you dead, and who would know Helen Perowne in you?”
She started a little here, and he noted it and smiled.
“I have waited and can wait still, for I know that as soon as this fit is over you will creep to my feet like any other slave I have. I know what you are thinking – that you will escape.”
“And mark my words, I shall!” cried Helen, impetuously.
“Don’t try it,” he said, smiling. “Don’t try it, for your own sake as well as mine. It sounds cruel, but it is a custom of this country to spear a slave who is seen to run away; and if my people fail to take you, and I do not think they would, the tigers would prove less merciful. You must have heard them when the night has come; they roam about this place, and the more I kill them the more they seem to come.
“What!” he said, laughing, “you would rather trust to the tender mercies of the beasts than trust to me! I read it in your scornful eyes, but that is not true, or a time back you would not have looked tenderly in mine and sighed and pressed my hand at parting.”
He laughed aloud as he saw her shrink and cower away in her abasement for very shame. She was reaping now the fruits of her career of folly; and if ever woman bitterly repented her weakness and the trifling of which she had been guilty in her love of admiration, that woman was Helen Perowne, as she stood there shamefaced and crushed as it were by the thoughts of the past.
“That is right,” he said, quietly. “You are thinking of the past. But never mind; that is all gone now. It was English Helen who was so weak; it is Malay Helen who will become strong. My people have done well, and how it becomes you! Your friends would never know you now.”
What should she do?
Helen’s hands closed, and her fingers were tightly enlaced as she tried to find a way out of her difficulties. She knew that threats would be in vain, and supplication to him to set her free like so many wasted words. There was no way out but by gaining the mastery over her enemy once more. Her enemy! But he must be treated like a friend. Only a few brief months back, and this man, at whose mercy she now was, seemed the veriest slave. Well, why not once again? she asked herself. She was as young and beautiful as ever they said. He loved her – he must love her – and why should she not sway him by this love? It was her only hope, and she grasped at it to try.
“Well,” he said, smiling mockingly, “will you not find a place here by my side?”
She was silent for a few moments, and then, making an effort:
“You have done me a cruel injury, Rajah,” she exclaimed, her voice trembling, but becoming firmer with each word she spoke.
“Injury!” he said, smiling; and his eyes glittered at the success that promised to attend his plans. “Oh, no; not injury. It can be no injury to a beautiful woman to make her the wife of a rich Malay prince – one who loves her with all his heart – a rajah who loves your English ways, and who will surround you with everything you wish.”
“You will give me my liberty?” said Helen.
“Yes,” he said; “whatever my beautiful princess can desire.”
She made a gesture full of impatience, and remained silent for a few moments to gather calmness before she spoke again.
“You have spoken of the past, Rajah Murad,” she said at last, in a low musical voice.
“Yes,” he said, smiling; “that happy past.”
“I was very weak and foolish then, Rajah,” she said. “I was but a girl, and I fear I loved admiration. It was that which made me act so foolishly and ill. But when I tell you my sorrow for my acts – when I tell you how bitterly I repent it all – you will forgive me, and will take me back.”
“For your people to seize and shoot me like a dog?” he said, quietly.
“Oh, no, no!” she cried, “they would not do you harm. You will have taken me back, and for this they shall not do you ill.”
“Speak again like that,” he cried with his eyes lighting up. “That makes you look more beautiful than you were before.”
She started and shuddered, but she went on:
“I ask your forgiveness for the wrong I, in my foolish, girlish wilfulness, did you; and now that you have punished me so severely as you have, you will pardon me, Rajah – the weak, helpless woman who prays you to send her back.”
“I punish you!” he cried, with an affectation of surprise. “I would not punish you. To keep you with me it was necessary that you should look like these my people, and I was sorry to give orders that it should be done. I half feared the result; but I do not repent it now that I have seen how it makes you more beautiful than ever.”
“But you will take me back to my father?” she pleaded. “I will forgive everything. I will not breathe a word about this outrage. No one shall know that it was Rajah Murad who took me from my home. Only send me back safely, and I will bless you.”
He laughed softly.
“There are steps some men take,” he said, “that can never be retraced, and this I have done is one of those steps. You are a woman of sense, and know your people. I staked all upon this cast, and I have won. If I give way now, what will the English people, who are so proud of their honour, say to the beauty of their station, who comes back to them darkened like one of us? What will they say to the lady who comes back to them after so many days in Rajah Murad’s harem?”
Helen started as if she had been stung, and her eyes flashed their indignation at this cowardly speech.
But she felt directly after that anger would be useless – that she must gain time; and once more trembling in every limb, she forced herself to plead.
“I have some mastery over him,” she thought, and determining to retain, and if possible strengthen it, she forced back every semblance of anger, and placed her hands together in supplication.
“You told me once that you loved me,” she said softly.
“I told you once? I have told myself I loved you a thousand times,” he cried passionately.
“Then you would not disgrace me in the eyes of my people?” she pleaded.
“No,” he cried. “I would not; I love you far too well.”
“Then set me free – send me back to my home.”
“That would be to disgrace you, foolish girl,” he cried. “Do you not see why I took this step? You made me love you, and when you cast me off, I tell you I made a tow that you should still be mine. I had you brought here. Well, I am as jealous of your honour as you are yourself. You cannot leave here but as my wife.”
A sob of rage and indignation choked Helen’s utterance for the moment, but she mastered it once more and turned upon him.
“Is this your love for me,” she cried, “to cause me this dreadful pain.”
“Pain perhaps now,” he said quietly; “but happiness will come for both. You proud and foolish girl, you do not know what it is to be the wife of a prince such as I am. Let your people go. Mine will do far more honour to their new princess; they will worship you. They must and shall. There, I see you are listening to what I say. You are growing sensible; let this strange feeling wear away. Be gentle to me Helen – love – and be content to stay!”
Helen’s brow grew wrinkled, and her eyes were half-closed as she stood there with clasped hands, asking herself how she should act. She was checked at every double, and the hopelessness of her position had never appeared more strongly to her than it did now. Her eyes wandered to the door, to the window, and then to the Rajah, as he half reclined upon the mats, gazing at her with a smiling, satisfied look, as if watching the feeble efforts made by his captive to escape from his toils.
“Well,” he said, laughing, “has the fit of anger passed away? If not I can wait.”
She did not answer, but stood gazing at him with a piteous look in her eyes – gazing so pleadingly that he sprang to his feet, a change coming over his countenance as he approached her.
Helen’s heart gave one great throb of joy, for she read now in his face the power she had over him still. He really loved her, and it was he who was the slave, not she, and she would yet be able to mould him to her will.
But not by anger and reproach: they would only weaken her position. She had found that he was one who might be moved by her woman’s grief and tears, and acting upon the impulse of the moment, she waited until he was close at hand, and then, before he could stay her, she sank upon her knees, to clasp his hands in hers, and gazing in his face, burst into a passionate flood of tears.
End of Volume TwoVolume Three – Chapter One.
Chumbley’s Idea
“Chumbley,” said Bertie Hilton, “your behaviour towards that woman was sickening – almost disgusting! How you could be even civil to her is more than I can understand!”
“Oh, I’m always civil to a woman,” drawled Chumbley. “See how affable I always was to Helen Perowne, who – ”
“Will you have the goodness to leave Miss Perowne’s name out of the conversation?” said Hilton, with asperity.
“Certainly, if you wish it, and substitute little Stuart’s name. See how civil I always was to her.”
“A merit certainly,” said Hilton, contemptuously. “Who could help being civil to so amiable and good a little body!”
“Here, hang it, Bertie, old man!” cried Chumbley, in mock alarm, “don’t monopolise all the nice women. It was Helen Perowne the other day. Now you seem dead on little Stuart!”
“Confound Helen Perowne!” muttered Hilton, bitterly.
“Just as you like; and confound the Inche Maida too – I shan’t! Sort of sympathetic pity for woman – weaker vessels, you know.”
“Weaker vessel?” laughed Hilton, scornfully; “what, our captor?”
“Well, she isn’t a bad sort of woman,” replied Chumbley.
“Not a bad sort of woman? Why, she’s a modern Jezebel – a Cleopatra – a Semiramis!”
“Think so?” said Chumbley, quietly.
“Think so? Of course! I’m getting terribly tired of this captivity! I must get away somehow. How many days have we been here?”
“Week,” said Chumbley, laconically.
“A week of weeks it seems to me,” said Hilton. “Horrible woman!”
“Well, I don’t know,” said Chumbley, “she seems to possess very great taste.”
“Taste? The savage!”
“Well, great taste in taking a fancy to you. I think you ought to be very proud.”
“Proud? I sicken with disgust! Pah! Don’t let’s talk about her, but try and make some plan to escape.”
“Well, yes, I suppose we must do that; but ’pon my word, old fellow, I don’t see how. I wish old Bolter were here.”
“I wish Mrs Bolter were here to tackle this dreadful woman!” laughed Hilton. “We men can’t manage her; but that clever, sharp little body would bring her to her senses. What do you want Bolter for?”
“Oh, he’d mix up a dose for the guards, and give it to them in their tea, or whatever they drink; then they’d go to sleep, and we could calmly walk back to the fort.”
“I wonder what Harley thinks of our absence?”
“Thinks we’re dead, probably, and reposing happily each of us in a crocodile sarcophagus. Well, Bertie, old man, what’s to be done? The Inche Maida has quite cut us it seems, and we’re all alone, I suppose. Come, what’s to be done to get us out of this plight? You’re quite right, old fellow; it is most absurd!”
“Absurd? It is disgraceful! I feel as if we were not men, but a couple of silly girls!”
“With beards,” said Chumbley.
“And now give me your advice.”
“Well, that’s soon done,” replied Chumbley. “I’ve quite made up my mind what advice I shall give.”
“Well, what?”
“Do you mean what shall we do?”
“Yes; of course.”
“Nothing.”
Hilton uttered an ejaculation that was far from pious, and began to fume and fret, till Chumbley rose in his slow, cumbrous fashion, placed a cigar in his friend’s hand, and bade him smoke it.
“Look here, old fellow,” he said, quietly, “if we are to escape, it can only be when a chance offers itself; and if you will bring your profound wisdom to bear upon the matter, you will see that all we can do is to wait for that chance.”
“And until that chance comes we must put up with this wretched woman’s insults!”
“Yes, if you like to call them so; and I’d do it, old fellow, without getting into a bad temper and calling names, seeing – ”
“Seeing what?”
“That she tries to make up for her rather unladylike conduct by being very civil; while her cooking is good, the dinners excellent, and the breakfasts, the wines well chosen, and the cigars – there, did you ever smoke a better than that?”
“Oh, pish! Everyone can’t take things as quietly as you do, Chumb.”
“Poor fellows, no,” said the latter, with a satisfied air. “It’s the only quality I possess of which I am really proud. You see it makes me perfectly well suited for this climate, for no troubles or worries ever put me in a perspiration. I wish, though, we had a chess-board and men.”
“Chess-board! men!” retorted Hilton, laughing, in a half-amused, half-vexed tone; “who in the world could ever think of playing chess! Really, Chumbley, I believe you are quite happy and contented.”
“Well, not so bad, dear boy – not so bad now the novelty and the unpleasantly of the affair have worn off. You see, a fellow has only so long to live. Well, isn’t it a pity to spoil any of that time by making yourself miserable if you can help it? Take my advice and behave as young Jacob Faithful suggested, ‘Take it coolly;’ and as the sailor in another story I once read said, ‘if you can’t take it coolly, soldier, take it as coolly as you can.’”
Hilton bit the end of his cigar and then bit his lips; lay back thinking of Helen and then of Grey Stuart, the latter obtaining the larger portion of his thoughts.
As for Chumbley, he lay back on his divan and smoked, and thought it was very tiresome to be detained there, but granted that it was better than being detained in hospital from wounds or sickness; and as time wore on, Hilton, removed from the cares and anxieties of being one of Helen’s lovers, settled down more and more into an imitation of his friend’s coolness, his common-sense teaching him that Chumbley was right, and that his best chance of escaping was by waiting for his opportunity – whenever that opportunity should come.
They had not seen anything of the Princess for some days, for she had evidently left them to cool down; but they had been admirably treated, and had grown a little less impatient of their prison, when one day a Malay servant entered their room, and with the most profound respect announced that the Inche Maida awaited the English chiefs in another room.
“Well, that’s not such bad treatment of prisoners, if it don’t mean a polite summons to execution. You first, old fellow; I’m only here as your confidential man.”
As he spoke, Chumbley rose slowly, left his hookah, and prepared to follow the servant; while Hilton frowned, declared that it was all very ridiculous, but smoothing his countenance, he followed the Malay, and was ushered by him into a similar room to that which they had left, to find dinner laid out in a by no means untempting style, the Malay fashion being largely supplemented by additions that the Princess had not been slow to copy from her English friends.
The Inche Maida was elegantly dressed, as Chumbley said, like her table, for her costume was as much European as Malayan, her long sweeping robe, and the delicate lace cap that rested upon her magnificent black hair, having a decidedly Parisian look, while her scarf was the simple sarong of her country, glowing with bright colours.
She smiled as they entered, but her demeanour was full of dignity, as she offered Hilton her hand, that he might lead her to the table.
Hilton drew himself up and was evidently about to refuse. The next moment he relented, and took a step forward, but he was too late to pay his hostess the compliment she asked, for she had turned to Chumbley, who held out his arm and led her to the head of the table, retiring afterwards to the foot, and facing her, while Hilton took the place upon the Princess’s right.
Perfectly unaware of Helen Perowne’s position, the two prisoners, under the genial influences of a good dinner and unexceptionable wine, while granting that their situation was perfectly absurd, were ready to acknowledge that after all it would be nonsense to do otherwise than accept it, make the best of it, and refuse to be angry about a foolish woman’s freak.
“I won’t be disagreeable any more,” thought Hilton, “but take things as they come, and be off at the first opportunity.”
“’Pon my word,” thought Chumbley, “this is better than that hot room at the fort. One always seems to be swallowing hot sunshine like melted butter with everything there one eats.”
The result was that Hilton forgot all about Helen Perowne for the time, and found himself comparing Grey Stuart with the Inche Maida as the two opposite poles of womanly beauty – the acme of the dark, and the acme of the fair. But his thoughts were to a great extent turned from the ladies to the dinner, and following Chumbley’s example, he ate heartily, drank pretty liberally of the wine – to drown care, he said – and by the time that the dessert was commenced he had concluded that life would after all be bearable without the society of Helen Perowne, who was, he told himself, a contemptible coquette.
He recanted from that declaration soon afterwards, the terms being, he thought, too hard; and then he fell into a state of wonderment at his contented frame of mind.
“I shall begin to think soon that the wound is after all not very deep.”
“Your friend seems to be getting resigned to his lot,” said the Princess, in a low voice to Chumbley, as, after dinner, they sat by the open window with a little table covered with fruit by their side, Hilton having kept his place.
“Yes, I suppose so,” said Chumbley, thoughtfully; and then, to turn the conversation into another channel, “How do you manage to get such good claret here?”
“Oh,” she said, laughing, “I am able to get most things here to help out the wants of our country. It is easy to have such things from Singapore. You like it?”
“It is delicious.”
“I am glad,” she said, with a satisfied smile. “I reserve it for my best friends.”
“Then why give it to us, your prisoners – and enemies?” said Chumbley, sharply.
“I was trying to show you that you were my friends, and not my enemies,” said the Princess, quietly.
“But you treat us like prisoners, Princess.”
“Only for your good. You shall both be free and lords of the place whenever you will.”
“But, my dear madam,” said Hilton, from his place by the larger table, “this is the nineteenth century – Chumbley, a little more claret? You seize us as a baron might have seized people three or four hundred years ago, and yet you treat us as an English lady would her guests.”
“It is what I have tried to do – this treatment,” she said, simply. Then with spirit, “What is it to me what people did a long while back? I hope, Mr Chumbley, you are satisfied.”
“With my dinner?” said the latter. “Yes, perfectly, for my part. It only wants a cup of coffee.”
“Not poisoned?” said the Princess, with a laughing, malicious look at her guest, as she thus recalled to him his suspicions at the fête.
As she spoke she clapped her hands, and coffee was brought in little silver cups upon a silver tray.
“Hilton, old man,” said Chumbley, as he took and liberally sugared a cup of coffee, smiling at the Inche Maida as he spoke.
“Well?” said his companion in misfortune.
“I have quite made up my mind, as I before hinted, not to knock the feathers off my noble breast against the bars of my cage.”
The Princess looked puzzled.