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20
Next morning
there was great excitement in Kyauktada, for the long-
rumoured rebellion had at last broken out. Flory heard only a
vague report of it at the time. He had gone back to camp as soon
as he felt fit to march after the drunken night, and it was not
until several days later that he learned the true history of the
rebellion, in a long, indignant letter from Dr Veraswami.
The doctor's
epistolary style was queer. His syntax was shaky and
he was as free with capital letters as a seventeenth-century
divine, while in the use of italics he rivalled Queen Victoria.
There were eight pages of his small but sprawling handwriting.
MY DEAR FRIEND [the letter ran],--You will much regret to hear that
the WILES OF THE CROCODILE have matured. The rebellion--the SO-
CALLED rebellion--is all over and finished. And it has been, alas!
a more Bloody affair than I had hoped should have been the case.
All has fallen
out as I have prophesied to you it would be. On the
day when you came back to Kyauktada U Po Kyin's SPIES have informed
him that the poor unfortunate men whom he have Deluded are
assembling in the jungle near Thongwa. The same night he sets out
secretly with U Lugale, the Police Inspector, who is as great a
Rogue as he, if that could be, and twelve constables. They make a
swift raid upon Thongwa and surprise the rebels, of whom they are
only Seven!! in a ruined field hut in the jungle. Also Mr Maxwell,
who have heard rumours of the rebellion, came across from his camp
bringing his Rifle and was in time to join U Po Kyin and the police
in their attack on the hut. The next morning the clerk Ba Sein,
who is U Po Kyin's JACKALL and DIRTY WORKER, have orders to raise
the cry of rebellion as Sensationally as possible, which was done,
and Mr Macgregor, Mr Westfield and Lieutenant Verrall all rush out
to Thongwa carrying fifty sepoys armed with rifles besides Civil
Police. But they arrive to find it is all over and U Po Kyin was
sitting under a big teak tree in the middle of the village and
PUTTING ON AIRS and lecturing the villages, whereat they are all
bowing very frightened and touching the ground with their foreheads
and swearing they will be forever loyal to the Government, and the
rebellion is already at an end. The SO-CALLED weiksa, who is no
other than a circus conjurer and the MINION of U Po Kyin, have
vanished for parts unknown, but six rebels have been Caught. So
there is an end.
Also I should
inform you that there was most regrettably a Death.
Mr Maxwell was I think TOO ANXIOUS to use his Rifle and when one of
the rebels try to run away he fired and shoot him in the abdomen,
at which he died. I think the villagers have some BAD FEELING
towards Mr Maxwell because of it. But from the point of view legal
all is well for Mr Maxwell, because the men were undoubtedly
conspiring against the Government.
Ah, but, my
Friend, I trust that you understand how disastrous may
all this be for me! You will realise, I think, what is its bearing
upon the Contest between U Po Kyin and myself, and the supreme LEG-
UP it must give to him. It is the TRIUMPH OF THE CROCODILE. U Po
Kyin is now the Hero of the district. He is the PET of the
Europeans. I am told that even Mr Ellis has praised his conduct.
If you could witness the abominable Conceitedness and the LIES he
is now telling as to how there were not seven rebels but Two
Hundred!! and how he crushed upon them revolver in hand--he who
only directing operations from a SAFE DISTANCE while the police and
Mr Maxwell creep up upon the hut--you would find is veritably
Nauseous I assure you. He has had the effrontery to send in an
official report of the matter which started, 'By my loyal
promptitude and reckless daring', and I hear that positively he had
had this Conglomeration of lies written out in readiness days
BEFORE THE OCCURRENCE. It is Disgusting. And to think that now
when he is at the Height of his triumph he will again begin to
calumniate me with all the venom at his disposal etc. etc.
The rebels' entire stock of weapons had been captured. The armoury
with which, when their followers were assembled, they had proposed
to march upon Kyauktada, consisted of the following:
Item, one shotgun
with a damaged left barrel, stolen from a Forest
Officer three years earlier.
Item, six home-made
guns with barrels of zinc piping stolen from
the railway. These could be fired, after a fashion, by thrusting a
nail through the touch-hole and striking it with a stone.
Item, thirty-nine twelve-bore cartridges.
Item, eleven dummy guns carved out of teakwood.
Item, some large
Chinese crackers which were to have been fired in
terrorem.
Later, two of
the rebels were sentenced to fifteen years'
transportation, three to three years' imprisonment and twenty-five
lashes, and one to two years' imprisonment.
The whole miserable
rebellion was so obviously at an end that the
Europeans were not considered to be in any danger, and Maxwell had
gone back to his camp unguarded. Flory intended to stay in camp
until the rains broke, or at least until the general meeting at the
Club. He had promised to be in for that, to propose the doctor's
election; though now, with his own trouble to think of, the whole
business of the intrigue between U Po Kyin and the doctor sickened
him.
More weeks crawled
by. The heat was dreadful now. The overdue
rain seemed to have bred a fever in the air. Flory was out of
health, and worked incessantly, worrying over petty jobs that
should have been left to the overseer, and making the coolies and
even the servants hate him. He drank gin at all hours, but not
even drinking could distract him now. The vision of Elizabeth in
Verrall's arms haunted him like a neuralgia or an earache. At any
moment it would come upon him, vivid and disgusting, scattering his
thoughts, wrenching him back from the brink of sleep, turning his
food to dust in his mouth. At times he flew into savage rages, and
once even struck Ko S'la. What was worse than all was the DETAIL--
the always filthy detail--in which the imagined scene appeared.
The very perfection of the detail seemed to prove that it was true.
Is there anything
in the world more graceless, more dishonouring,
than to desire a woman whom you will never have? Throughout all
these weeks Flory's mind held hardly a thought which was not
murderous or obscene. It is the common effect of jealousy. Once
he had loved Elizabeth spiritually, sentimentally indeed, desiring
her sympathy more than her caresses; now, when he had lost her, he
was tormented by the basest physical longing. He did not even
idealize her any longer. He saw her now almost as she was--silly,
snobbish, heartless--and it made no difference to his longing for
her. Does it ever make any difference? At nights when he lay
awake, his bed dragged outside the tent for coolness, looking at
the velvet dark from which the barking of a gyi sometimes sounded,
he hated himself for the images that inhabited his mind. It was so
base, this envying of the better man who had beaten him. For it
was only envy--even jealousy was too good a name for it. What
right had he to be jealous? He had offered himself to a girl who
was too young and pretty for him, and she had turned him down--
rightly. He had got the snub he deserved. Nor was there any
appeal from that decision; nothing would ever make him young again,
or take away his birthmark and his decade of lonely debaucheries.
He could only stand and look on while the better man took her, and
envy him, like--but the simile was not even mentionable. Envy is a
horrible thing. It is unlike all other kinds of suffering in that
there is no disguising it, no elevating it into tragedy. It is
more than merely painful, it is disgusting.
But meanwhile,
was it true, what he suspected? Had Verrall really
become Elizabeth's lover? There is no knowing, but on the whole
the chances were against it, for, had it been so, there would have
been no concealing it in such a place as Kyauktada. Mrs Lackersteen
would probably have guessed it, even if the others had not. One
thing was certain, however, and that was that Verrall had as yet
made no proposal of marriage. A week went by, two weeks, three
weeks; three weeks is a very long time in a small Indian station.
Verrall and Elizabeth rode together every evening, danced together
every night; yet Verrall had never so much as entered the
Lackersteens' house. There was endless scandal about Elizabeth, of
course. All the Orientals of the town had taken it for granted that
she was Verrall's mistress. U Po Kyin's version (he had a way of
being essentially right even when he was wrong in detail) was that
Elizabeth had been Flory's concubine and had deserted him for
Verrall because Verrall paid her more. Ellis, too, was inventing
tales about Elizabeth that made Mr Macgregor squirm. Mrs
Lackersteen, as a relative, did not hear these scandals, but she was
growing nervous. Every evening when Elizabeth came home from her
ride she would meet her hopefully, expecting the 'Oh, aunt! What DO
you think!'--and then the glorious news. But the news never came,
and however carefully she studied Elizabeth's face, she could divine
nothing.
When three weeks
had passed Mrs Lackersteen became fretful and
finally half angry. The thought of her husband, alone--or rather,
not alone--in his camp, was troubling her. After all, she had sent
him back to camp in order to give Elizabeth her chance with Verrall
(not that Mrs Lackersteen would have put it so vulgarly as that).
One evening she began lecturing and threatening Elizabeth in her
oblique way. The conversation consisted of a sighing monologue
with very long pauses--for Elizabeth made no answer whatever.
Mrs Lackersteen
began with some general remarks, apropos of a
photograph in the Tatler, about these fast MODERN girls who went
about in beach pyjamas and all that and made themselves so
dreadfully CHEAP with men. A girl, Mrs Lackersteen said, should
NEVER make herself too cheap with a man; she should make herself--
but the opposite of 'cheap' seemed to be 'expensive', and that did
not sound at all right, so Mrs Lackersteen changed her tack. She
went on to tell Elizabeth about a letter she had had from home with
further news of that poor, POOR dear girl who was out in Burma for
a while and had so foolishly neglected to get married. Her
sufferings had been quite heartrending, and it just showed how glad
a girl ought to be to marry anyone, literally ANYONE. It appeared
that the poor, poor dear girl had lost her job and been practically
STARVING for a long time, and now she had actually had to take a
job as a common kitchen maid under a horrid, vulgar cook who
bullied her most shockingly. And it seemed that the black beetles
in the kitchen were simply beyond belief! Didn't Elizabeth think
it too absolutely dreadful? BLACK BEETLES!
Mrs Lackersteen
remained silent for some time, to allow the black
beetles to sink in, before adding:
'SUCH a pity
that Mr Verrall will be leaving us when the rains
break. Kyauktada will seem quite EMPTY without him!'
'When do the
rains break, usually?' said Elizabeth as indifferently
as she could manage.
'About the beginning
of June, up here. Only a week or two now. . . .
My dear, it seems absurd to mention it again, but I cannot get out
of my head the thought of that poor, poor dear girl in the kitchen
among the BLACK BEETLES!'
Black beetles
recurred more than once in Mrs Lackersteen's
conversation during the rest of the evening. It was not until the
following day that she remarked in the tone of someone dropping an
unimportant piece of gossip:
'By the way,
I believe Flory is coming back to Kyauktada at the
beginning of June. He said he was going to be in for the general
meeting at the Club. Perhaps we might invite him to dinner some
time.'
It was the first
time that either of them had mentioned Flory since
the day when he had brought Elizabeth the leopard-skin. After
being virtually forgotten for several weeks, he had returned to
each woman's mind, a depressing pis aller.
Three days later
Mrs Lackersteen sent word to her husband to come
back to Kyauktada. He had been in camp long enough to earn a short
spell in headquarters. He came back, more florid than ever--
sunburn, he explained--and having acquired such a trembling of the
hands that he could barely light a cigarette. Nevertheless, that
evening he celebrated his return by manoeuvring Mrs Lackersteen out
of the house, coming into Elizabeth's bedroom and making a spirited
attempt to rape her.
During all this
time, unknown to anyone of importance, further
sedition was afoot. The 'weiksa' (now far away, peddling the
philosopher's stone to innocent villagers in Martaban) had perhaps
done his job a little better than he intended. At any rate, there
was a possibility of fresh trouble--some isolated, futile outrage,
probably. Even U Po Kyin knew nothing of this yet. But as usual
the gods were fighting on his side, for any further rebellion would
make the first seem more serious than it had been, and so add to
his glory.
21
O western wind, when wilt thou blow, that the small rain down can
rain? It was the first of June, the day of the general meeting,
and there had not been a drop of rain yet. As Flory came up the
Club path the sun of afternoon, slanting beneath his hat-brim, was
still savage enough to scorch his neck uncomfortably. The mali
staggered along the path, his breast-muscles slippery with sweat,
carrying two kerosene-tins of water on a yoke. He dumped them
down, slopping a little water over his lank brown feet, and
salaamed to Flory.
'Well, mali, is the rain coming?'
The man gestured
vaguely towards the west. 'The hills have
captured it, sahib.'
Kyauktada was
ringed almost round by hills, and these caught the
earlier showers, so that sometimes no rain fell till almost the end
of June. The earth of the flower-beds, hoed into large untidy
lumps, looked grey and hard as concrete. Flory went into the
lounge and found Westfield loafing by the veranda, looking out over
the river, for the chicks had been rolled up. At the foot of the
veranda a chokra lay on his back in the sun, pulling the punkah
rope with his heel and shading his face with a broad strip of
banana leaf.
'Hullo, Flory! You've got thin as a rake.'
'So've you.'
'H'm, yes. Bloody
weather. No appetite except for booze. Christ,
won't I be glad when I hear the frogs start croaking. Let's have a
spot before the others come. Butler!'
'Do you know
who's coming to the meeting?' Flory said, when the
butler had brought whisky and tepid soda.
'Whole crowd,
I believe. Lackersteen got back from camp three days
ago. By God, that man's been having the time of his life away from
his missus! My inspector was telling me about the goings-on at his
camp. Tarts by the score. Must have imported 'em specially from
Kyauktada. He'll catch it all right when the old woman sees his
Club bill. Eleven bottles of whisky sent out to his camp in a
fortnight.'
'Is young Verrall coming?'
'No, he's only
a temporary member. Not that he'd trouble to come
anyway, young tick. Maxwell won't be here either. Can't leave
camp just yet, he says. He sent word Ellis was to speak for him if
there's any voting to be done. Don't suppose there'll be anything
to vote about, though eh?' he added, looking at Flory obliquely,
for both of them remembered their previous quarrel on this subject.
'I suppose it lies with Macgregor.'
'What I mean
is, Macgregor'll have dropped that bloody rot about
electing a native member, eh? Not the moment for it just now.
After the rebellion and all that.'
'What about
the rebellion, by the way?' said Flory. He did not
want to start wrangling about the doctor's election yet. There was
going to be trouble and to spare in a few minutes. 'Any more news--
are they going to have another try, do you think?'
'No. All over,
I'm afraid. They caved in like the funks they are.
The whole district's as quiet as a bloody girls' school. Most
disappointing.'
Flory's heart
missed a beat. He had heard Elizabeth's voice in the
next room. Mr Macgregor came in at this moment, Ellis and Mr
Lackersteen following. This made up the full quota, for the women
members of the Club had no votes. Mr Macgregor was already dressed
in a silk suit, and was carrying the Club account books under his
arm. He managed to bring a sub-official air even into such petty
business as a Club meeting.
'As we seem
to be all here,' he said after the usual greetings,
'shall we--ah--proceed with our labours?'
'Lead on, Macduff,' said Westfield, sitting down.
'Call the butler,
someone, for Christ's sake,' said Mr Lackersteen.
'I daren't let my missus hear me calling him.'
'Before we apply
ourselves to the agenda,' said Mr Macgregor when
he had refused a drink and the others had taken one, 'I expect you
will want me to run through the accounts for the half-year?'
They did not
want it particularly, but Mr Macgregor, who enjoyed
this kind of thing, ran through the accounts with great thoroughness.
Flory's thoughts were wandering. There was going to be such a row
in a moment--oh, such a devil of a row! They would be furious when
they found that he was proposing the doctor after all. And
Elizabeth was in the next room. God send she didn't hear the noise
of the row when it came. It would make her despise him all the more
to see the others baiting him. Would he see her this evening?
Would she speak to him? He gazed across the quarter-mile of
gleaming river. By the far bank a knot of men, one of them wearing
a green gaungbaung, were waiting beside a sampan. In the channel,
by the nearer bank, a huge, clumsy Indian barge struggled with
desperate slowness against the racing current. At each stroke the
ten rowers, Dravidian starvelings, ran forward and plunged their
long primitive oars, with heart-shaped blades, into the water. They
braced their meagre bodies, then tugged, writhed, strained backwards
like agonized creatures of black rubber, and the ponderous hull
crept onwards a yard or two. Then the rowers sprang forward,
panting, to plunge their oars again before the current should check
her.
'And now,' said
Mr Macgregor more gravely, 'we come to the main
point of the agenda. That, of course, is this--ah--distasteful
question, which I am afraid must be faced, of electing a native
member to this Club. When we discussed the matter before--'
'What the hell!'
It was Ellis
who had interrupted. He was so excited that he had
sprung to his feet.
'What the hell!
Surely we aren't starting THAT over again? Talk
about electing a damned nigger so this Club, after everything
that's happened! Good God, I thought even Flory had dropped it by
this time!'
'Our friend
Ellis appears surprised. The matter has been discussed
before, I believe.'
'I should think
it damned well was discussed before! And we all
said what we thought of it. By God--'
'If our friend
Ellis will sit down for a few moments--' said Mr
Macgregor tolerantly.
Ellis threw
himself into his chair again, exclaiming, 'Bloody
rubbish!' Beyond the river Flory could see the group of Burmans
embarking. They were lifting a long, awkward-shaped bundle into
the sampan. Mr Macregor had produced a letter from his file of
papers.
'Perhaps I had
better explain how this question arose in the first
place. The Commissioner tells me that a circular has been sent
round by the Government, suggesting that in those Clubs where there
are no native members, one at least shall be co-opted; that is,
admitted automatically. The circular says--ah yes! here it is:
"It is mistaken policy to offer social affronts to native officials
of high standing." I may say that I disagree most emphatically.
No doubt we all do. We who have to do the actual work of
government see things very differently from these--ah--Paget M.P.s
who interfere with us from above. The Commissioner quite agrees
with me. However--'
'But it's all
bloody rot!' broke in Ellis. 'What's it got to do
with the Commissioner or anyone else? Surely we can do as we like
in our own bloody Club? They've no right to dictate to us when
we're off duty.'
'Quite,' said Westfield.
'You anticipate
me. I told the Commissioner that I should have to
put the matter before the other members. And the course he
suggests is this. If the idea finds any support in the Club, he
thinks it would be better if we co-opted our native member. On the
other hand, if the entire Club is against it, it can be dropped.
That is, if opinion is quite unanimous.'
'Well, it damned well is unanimous,' said Ellis.
'D'you mean,'
said Westfield, 'that it depends on ourselves whether
we have 'em in here or no?'
'I fancy we can take it as meaning that.'
'Well, then, let's say we're against it to a man.'
'And say it
bloody firmly, by God. We want to put our foot down on
this idea once and for all.'
'Hear, hear!'
said Mr Lackersteen gruffly. 'Keep the black swabs
out of it. Esprit de corps and all that.'
Mr Lackersteen
could always be relied upon for sound sentiments in
a case like this. In his heart he did not care and never had cared
a damn for the British Raj, and he was as happy drinking with an
Oriental as with a white man; but he was always ready with a loud
'Hear, hear!' when anyone suggested the bamboo for disrespectful
servants or boiling oil for Nationalists. He prided himself that
though he might booze a bit and all that, dammit, he WAS loyal. It
was his form of respectability. Mr Macgregor was secretly rather
relieved by the general agreement. If any Oriental member were co-
opted, that member would have to be Dr Veraswami, and he had had
the deepest distrust of the doctor ever since Nga Shwe O's
suspicious escape from the jail.
'Then I take
it that you are all agreed?' he said. 'If so, I will
inform the Commissioner. Otherwise, we must begin discussing the
candidate for election.'
Flory stood
up. He had got to say his say. His heart seemed to
have risen into his throat and to be choking him. From what Mr
Macgregor had said, it was clear that it was in his power to secure
the doctor's election by speaking the word. But oh, what a bore,
what a nuisance it was! What an infernal uproar there would be!
How he wished he had never given the doctor that promise! No
matter, he had given it, and he could not break it. So short a
time ago he would have broken it, en bon pukka sahib, how easily!
But not now. He had got to see this thing through. He turned
himself sidelong so that his birthmark was away from the others.
Already he could feel his voice going flat and guilty.
'Our friend Flory has something to suggest?'
'Yes. I propose Dr Veraswami as a member of this Club.'
There was such
a yell of dismay from three of the others that Mr
Macgregor had to rap sharply on the table and remind them that the
ladies were in the next room. Ellis took not the smallest notice.
He had sprung to his feet again, and the skin round his nose had
gone quite grey. He and Flory remained facing one another, as
though on the point of blows.
'Now, you damned swab, will you take that back?'
'No, I will not.'
'You oily swine!
You nigger's Nancy Boy! You crawling, sneaking,--
bloody bastard!'
'Order!' exclaimed Mr Macgregor.
'But look at
him, look at him!' cried Ellis almost tearfully.
'Letting us all down for the sake of a pot-bellied nigger! After
all we've said to him! When we've only got to hang together and we
can keep the stink of garlic out of this Club for ever. My God,
wouldn't it make you spew your guts up to see anyone behaving like
such a--?'
'Take it back,
Flory, old man!' said Westfield. 'Don't be a bloody
fool!'
'Downright Bolshevism, dammit!' said Mr Lackersteen.
'Do you think
I care what you say? What business is it of yours?
It's for Macgregor to decide.'
'Then do you--ah--adhere
to your decision?' said Mr Macgregor
gloomily.
'Yes.'
Mr Macgregor
sighed. 'A pity! Well, in that case I suppose I have
no choice--'
'No, no, no!'
cried Ellis, dancing about in his rage. 'Don't give
in to him! Put it to the vote. And if that son of a bitch doesn't
put in a black ball like the rest of us, we'll first turf him out
of the Club himself, and then--well! Butler!'
'Sahib!' said the butler, appearing.
'Bring the ballot
box and the balls. Now clear out!' he added
roughly when the butler had obeyed.
The air had
gone very stagnant; for some reason the punkah had
stopped working. Mr Macgregor stood up with a disapproving but
judicial mien, taking the two drawers of black and white balls out
of the ballot box.
'We must proceed
in order. Mr Flory proposes Dr Veraswami, the
Civil Surgeon, as a member of this Club. Mistaken, in my opinion,
greatly mistaken; however--! Before putting the matter to the
vote--'
'Oh, why make
a song and dance about it?' said Ellis. 'Here's my
contribution! And another for Maxwell.' He plumped two black
balls into the box. Then one of his sudden spasms of rage seized
him, and he took the drawer of white balls and pitched them across
the floor. They went flying in all directions. 'There! Now pick
one up if you want to use it!'
'You damned fool! What good do you think that does?'
'Sahib!'
They all started
and looked round. The chokra was goggling at them
over the veranda rail, having climbed up from below. With one
skinny arm he clung to the rail and with the other gesticulated
towards the river.
'Sahib! Sahib!'
'What's up?' said Westfield.
They all moved
for the window. The sampan that Flory had seen
across the river was lying under the bank at the foot of the lawn,
one of the men clinging to a bush to steady it. The Burman in the
green gaungbaung was climbing out.
'That's one
of Maxwell's Forest Rangers!' said Ellis in quite a
different voice. 'By God! something's happened!'
The Forest Ranger
saw Mr Macgregor, shikoed in a hurried,
preoccupied way and turned back to the sampan. Four other men,
peasants, climbed out after him, and with difficulty lifted ashore
the strange bundle that Flory had seen in the distance. It was six
feet long, swathed in cloths, like a mummy. Something happened in
everybody's entrails. The Forest Ranger glanced at the veranda,
saw that there was no way up, and led the peasants round the path
to the front of the Club. They had hoisted the bundle on to their
shoulders as funeral bearers hoist a coffin. The butler had
flitted into the lounge again, and even his face was pale after its
fashion--that is, grey.
'Butler!' said Mr Macgregor sharply.
'Sir!'
'Go quickly
and shut the door of the card-room. Keep it shut.
Don't let the memsahibs see.'
'Yes, sir!'
The Burmans,
with their burden, came heavily down the passage. As
they entered the leading man staggered and almost fell; he had
trodden on one of the white balls that were scattered about the
floor. The Burmans knelt down, lowered their burden to the floor
and stood over it with a strange reverent air, slightly bowing,
their hands together in a shiko. Westfield had fallen on his
knees, and he pulled back the cloth.
'Christ! Just
look at him!' he said, but without much surprise.
'Just look at the poor little b--!'
Mr Lackersteen
had retreated to the other end of the room, with a
bleating noise. From the moment when the bundle was lifted ashore
they had all known what it contained. It was the body of Maxwell,
cut almost to pieces with dahs by two relatives of the man whom he
had shot.
22
Maxwell's death had caused a profound shock in Kyauktada. It would
cause a shock throughout the whole of Burma, and the case--'the
Kyauktada case, do you remember?'--would still be talked of years
after the wretched youth's name was forgotten. But in a purely
personal way no one was much distressed. Maxwell had been almost a
nonentity--just a 'good fellow' like any other of the ten thousand
ex colore good fellows of Burma--and with no close friends. No one
among the Europeans genuinely mourned for him. But that is not to
say that they were not angry. On the contrary, for the moment they
were almost mad with rage. For the unforgivable had happened--A
WHITE MAN had been killed. When that happens, a sort of shudder
runs through the English of the East. Eight hundred people,
possibly, are murdered every year in Burma; they matter nothing;
but the murder of A WHITE MAN is a monstrosity, a sacrilege. Poor
Maxwell would be avenged, that was certain. But only a servant or
two, and the Forest Ranger who had brought in his body and who had
been fond of him, shed any tears for his death.
On the other hand, no one was actually pleased, except U Po Kyin.
'This is a positive
gift from heaven!' he told Ma Kin. 'I could
not have arranged it better myself. The one thing I needed to make
them take my rebellion seriously was a little bloodshed. And here
it is! I tell you, Ma Kin, every day I grow more certain that some
higher power is working on my behalf.'
'Ko Po Kyin,
truly you are without shame! I do not know how you
dare to say such things. Do you not shudder to have murder upon
your soul?'
'What! I? Murder
upon my soul? What are you talking about? I
have never killed so much as a chicken in my life.'
'But you are profiting by this poor boy's death.'
'Profiting by
it! Of course I am profiting by it! And why not,
indeed? Am I to blame if somebody else choose to commit murder?
The fisherman catches fish, and he is damned for it. But are we
damned for eating the fish? Certainly not. Why NOT eat the fish,
once it is dead? You should study the Scriptures more carefully,
my dear Kin Kin.'
The funeral
took place next morning, before breakfast. All the
Europeans were present, except Verrall, who was careering about the
maidan quite as usual, almost opposite the cemetery. Mr Macgregor
read the burial service. The little group of Englishmen stood
round the grave, their topis in their hands, sweating into the dark
suits that they had dug out from the bottom of their boxes. The
harsh morning light beat without mercy upon their faces, yellower
than ever against the ugly, shabby clothes. Every face except
Elizabeth's looked lined and old. Dr Veraswami and half a dozen
other Orientals were present, but they kept themselves decently in
the background. There were sixteen gravestones in the little
cemetery; assistants of timber firms, officials, soldiers killed in
forgotten skirmishes.
'Sacred to the
memory of John Henry Spagnall, late of the Indian
Imperial Police, who was cut down by cholera while in the unremitting
exercise of' etc., etc., etc.
Flory remembered
Spagnall dimly. He had died very suddenly in camp
after his second go of delirium tremens. In a corner there were
some graves of Eurasians, with wooden crosses. The creeping
jasmine, with tiny orange-hearted flowers, had overgrown
everything. Among the jasmine, large rat-holes led down into the
graves.
Mr Macgregor
concluded the burial service in a ripe, reverent
voice, and led the way out of the cemetery, holding his grey topi--
the Eastern equivalent of a top hat--against his stomach. Flory
lingered by the gate, hoping that Elizabeth would speak to him, but
she passed him without a glance. Everyone had shunned him this
morning. He was in disgrace; the murder had made his disloyalty of
last night seem somehow horrible. Ellis had caught Westfield by
the arm, and they halted at the grave-side, taking out their
cigarette-cases. Flory could hear their slangy voices coming
across the open grave.
'My God, Westfield,
my God, when I think of that poor little b--
lying down there--oh, my God, how my blood does boil! I couldn't
sleep all night, I was so furious.'
'Pretty bloody,
I grant. Never mind, promise you a couple of chaps
shall swing for it. Two corpses against their one--best we can
do.'
'Two! It ought
to be fifty! We've got to raise heaven and hell to
get these fellows hanged. Have you got their names yet?'
'Yes, rather!!
Whole blooming district knows who did it. We
always do know who's done it in these cases. Getting the bloody
villagers to talk--that's the only trouble.'
'Well, for God's
sake get them to talk this time. Never mind the
bloody law. Whack it out of them. Torture them--anything. If you
want to bribe any witnesses, I'm good for a couple of hundred
chips.'
Westfield sighed.
'Can't do that sort of thing, I'm afraid. Wish
we could. My chaps'd know how to put the screw on a witness if you
gave 'em the word. Tie 'em down on an ant-hill. Red peppers. But
that won't do nowadays. Got to keep our own bloody silly laws.
But never mind, those fellows'll swing all right. We've got all
the evidence we want.'
'Good! And when
you've arrested them, if you aren't sure of
getting a conviction, shoot them, jolly well shoot them! Fake up
an escape or something. Anything sooner than let those b--s go
free.'
'They won't
go free, don't you fear. We'll get 'em. Get SOMEBODY,
anyhow. Much better hang wrong fellow than no fellow,' he added,
unconsciously quoting.
'That's the
stuff! I'll never sleep easy again till I've seen them
swinging,' said Ellis as they moved away from the grave. 'Christ!
Let's get out of this sun! I'm about perishing with thirst.'
Everyone was
perishing, more or less, but it seemed hardly decent
to go down to the Club for drinks immediately after the funeral.
The Europeans scattered for their houses, while four sweepers with
mamooties flung the grey, cement-like earth back into the grave,
and shaped it into a rough mound.
After breakfast,
Ellis was walking down to his office, cane in
hand. It was blinding hot. Ellis had bathed and changed back into
shirt and shorts, but wearing a thick suit even for an hour had
brought on his prickly heat abominably. Westfield had gone out
already, in his motor launch, with an inspector and half a dozen
men, to arrest the murderers. He had ordered Verrall to accompany
him--not that Verrall was needed, but, as Westfield said, it would
do the young swab good to have a spot of work.
Ellis wriggled
his shoulders--his prickly heat was almost beyond
bearing. The rage was stewing in his body like a bitter juice. He
had brooded all night over what had happened. They had killed a
white man, killed A WHITE MAN, the bloody sods, the sneaking,
cowardly hounds! Oh, the swine, the swine, how they ought to be
made to suffer for it! Why did we make these cursed kid-glove laws?
Why did we take everything lying down? Just suppose this had
happened in a German colony, before the War! The good old Germans!
They knew how to treat the niggers. Reprisals! Rhinoceros hide
whips! Raid their villages, kill their cattle, burn their crops,
decimate them, blow them from the guns.
Ellis gazed
into the horrible cascades of light that poured through
the gaps in the trees. His greenish eyes were large and mournful.
A mild, middle-aged Burman came by, balancing a huge bamboo, which
he shifted from one shoulder to the other with a grunt as he passed
Ellis. Ellis's grip tightened on his stick. If that swine, now,
would only attack you! Or even insult you--anything, so that you
had the right to smash him! If only these gutless curs would ever
show fight in any conceivable way! Instead of just sneaking past
you, keeping within the law so that you never had a chance to get
back at them. Ah, for a real rebellion--martial law proclaimed and
no quarter given! Lovely, sanguinary images moved through his
mind. Shrieking mounds of natives, soldiers slaughtering them.
Shoot them, ride them down, horses' hooves trample their guts out,
whips cut their faces in slices!
Five High School
boys came down the road abreast. Ellis saw them
coming, a row of yellow, malicious faces--epicene faces, horribly
smooth and young, grinning at him with deliberate insolence. It
was in their minds to bait him, as a white man. Probably they had
heard of the murder, and--being Nationalists, like all schoolboys--
regarded it as a victory. They grinned full in Ellis's face as
they passed him. They were trying openly to provoke him, and they
knew that the law was on their side. Ellis felt his breast swell.
The look of their faces, jeering at him like a row of yellow
images, was maddening. He stopped short.
'Here! What are you laughing at, you young ticks?'
The boys turned.
'I said what the bloody hell are you laughing at?'
One of the boys
answered, insolently--but perhaps his bad English
made him seem more insolent than he intended.
'Not your business.'
There was about
a second during which Ellis did not know what he
was doing. In that second he had hit out with all his strength,
and the cane landed, crack! right across the boy's eyes. The boy
recoiled with a shriek, and in the same instant the other four had
thrown themselves upon Ellis. But he was too strong for them. He
flung them aside and sprang back, lashing out with his stick so
furiously that none of them dared come near.
'Keep your distance,
you --s! Keep off, or by God I'll smash
another of you!' Though they were four to one he was so formidable
that they surged back in fright. The boy who was hurt had fallen
on his knees with his arms across his face, and was screaming 'I am
blinded! I am blinded!' Suddenly the other four turned and darted
for a pile of laterite, used for road-mending, which was twenty
yards away. One of Ellis's clerks had appeared on the veranda of
the office and was leaping up and down in agitation.
'Come up, sir come up at once. They will murder you!'
Ellis disdained
to run, but he moved for the veranda steps. A lump
of laterite came sailing through the air and shattered itself
against a pillar, whereat the clerk scooted indoors. But Ellis
turned on the veranda to face the boys, who were below, each
carrying an armful of laterite. He was cackling with delight.
'You damned,
dirty little niggers!' he shouted down at them. 'You
got a surprise that time, didn't you? Come up on this veranda and
fight me, all four of you! You daren't. Four to one and you
daren't face me! Do you call yourselves men? You sneaking, mangy
little rats!'
He broke into
Burmese, calling them the incestuous children of
pigs. All the while they were pelting him with lumps of laterite,
but their arms were feeble and they threw ineptly. He dodged the
stones, and as each one missed him he cackled in triumph.
Presently there was a sound of shouts up the road, for the noise
had been heard at the police station, and some constables were
emerging to see what was the matter. The boys took fright and
bolted, leaving Ellis a complete victor.
Ellis had heartily
enjoyed the affray, but he was furiously angry
as soon as it was over. He wrote a violent note to Mr Macgregor,
telling him that he had been wantonly assaulted and demanding
vengeance. Two clerks who had witnessed the scene, and a chaprassi,
were sent along to Mr Macgregor's office to corroborate the story.
They lied in perfect unison. 'The boys had attacked Mr Ellis
without any provocation whatever, he had defended himself,' etc.,
etc. Ellis, to do him justice, probably believed this to be a
truthful version of the story. Mr Macgregor was somewhat disturbed,
and ordered the police to find the four schoolboys and interrogate
them. The boys, however, had been expecting something of the kind,
and were lying very low; the police searched the bazaar all day
without finding them. In the evening the wounded boy was taken to
a Burmese doctor, who, by applying some poisonous concoction of
crushed leaves to his left eye, succeeded in blinding him.
The Europeans
met at the Club as usual that evening, except for
Westfield and Verrall, who had not yet returned. Everyone was in a
bad mood. Coming on top of the murder, the unprovoked attack on
Ellis (for that was the accepted description of it) had scared them
as well as angered them. Mrs Lackersteen was twittering to the
tune of 'We shall all be murdered in our beds'. Mr Macgregor, to
reassure her, told her in cases of riot the European ladies were
always locked inside the jail until everything was over; but she
did not seem much comforted. Ellis was offensive to Flory, and
Elizabeth cut him almost dead. He had come down to the Club in the
insane hope of making up their quarrel, and her demeanour made him
so miserable that for the greater part of the evening he skulked in
the library. It was not till eight o'clock when everyone had
swallowed a number of drinks, that the atmosphere grew a little
more friendly, and Ellis said:
'What about
sending a couple of chokras up to our houses and
getting our dinners sent down here? We might as well have a few
rubbers of bridge. Better than mooning about at home.'
Mrs Lackersteen,
who was in dread of going home, jumped at the
suggestion. The Europeans occasionally dined at the Club when they
wanted to stay late. Two of the chokras were sent for, and on
being told what was wanted of them, immediately burst into tears.
It appeared that if they went up the hill they were certain of
encountering Maxwell's ghost. The mali was sent instead. As the
man set out Flory noticed that it was again the night of the full
moon--four weeks to a day since that evening, now unutterably
remote, when he had kissed Elizabeth under the frangipani tree.
They had just
sat down at the bridge table, and Mrs Lackersteen had
just revoked out of pure nervousness, when there was a heavy thump
on the roof. Everyone started and look up.
'A coco-nut falling!' said Mr Macgregor.
'There aren't any coco-nut trees here,' said Ellis.
The next moment
a number of things happened all together. There
was another and much louder bang, one of the petrol lamps broke
from its hook and crashed to the ground, narrowly missing Mr
Lackersteen, who jumped aside with a yelp, Mrs Lackersteen began
screaming, and the butler rushed into the room, bareheaded, his
face the colour of bad coffee.
'Sir, sir! Bad men come! Going to murder us all, sir!'
'What? Bad men? What do you mean?'
'Sir, all the
villagers are outside! Big stick and dah in their
hands, and all dancing about! Going to cut master's throat, sir!'
Mrs Lackersteen
threw herself backwards in her chair. She was
setting up such a din of screams as to drown the butler's voice.
'Oh, be quiet!'
said Ellis sharply, turning on her. 'Listen, all
of you! Listen to that!'
There was a
deep, murmurous, dangerous sound outside, like the
humming of an angry giant. Mr Macgregor, who had stood up,
stiffened as he heard it, and settled his spectacles pugnaciously
on his nose.
'This is some
kind of disturbance! Butler, pick that lamp up.
Miss Lackersteen, look to your aunt. See if she is hurt. The rest
of you come with me!'
They all made
for the front door, which someone, presumably the
butler, had closed. A fusillade of small pebbles was rattling
against it like hail. Mr Lackersteen wavered at the sound and
retreated behind the others.
'I say, dammit, bolt that bloody door, someone!' he said.
'No, no!' said
Mr Macgregor. 'We must go outside. It's fatal not
to face them!'
He opened the
door and presented himself boldly at the top of the
steps. There were about twenty Burmans on the path, with dahs or
sticks in their hands. Outside the fence, stretching up the road
in either direction and far out on to the maidan, was an enormous
crowd of people. It was like a sea of people, two thousand at the
least, black and white in the moon, with here and there a curved
dah glittering. Ellis had coolly placed himself beside Mr
Macgregor, with his hands in his pockets. Mr Lackersteen had
disappeared.
Mr Macgregor
raised his hand for silence. 'What is the meaning of
this?' he shouted sternly.
There were yells,
and some lumps of laterite the size of cricket
balls came sailing from the road, but fortunately hit no one. One
of the men on the path turned and waved his arms to the others,
shouting that they were not to begin throwing yet. Then he stepped
forward to address the Europeans. He was a strong debonair fellow
of about thirty, with down-curving moustaches, wearing a singlet,
with his longyi kilted to the knee.
'What is the meaning of this?' Mr Macgregor repeated.
The man spoke up with a cheerful grin, and not very insolently.
'We have no
quarrel with you, min gyi. We have come for the timber
merchant, Ellis.' (He pronounced it Ellit.) 'The boy whom he
struck this morning has gone blind. You must send Ellit out to us
here, so that we can punish him. The rest of you will not be
hurt.'
'Just remember
that fellow's face,' said Ellis over his shoulder to
Flory. 'We'll get him seven years for this afterwards.'
Mr Macgregor
had turned temporarily quite purple. His rage was so
great that it almost choked him. For several moments he could not
speak, and when he did so it was in English.
'Whom do you
think you are speaking to? In twenty years I have
never heard such insolence! Go away this instant, or I shall call
out the Military Police!'
'You'd better
be quick, min gyi. We know that there is no justice
for us in your courts, so we must punish Ellit ourselves. Send him
out to us here. Otherwise, all of you will weep for it.'
Mr Macgregor
made a furious motion with his fist, as though
hammering in a nail, 'Go away, son of a dog!' he cried, using his
first oath in many years.
There was a
thunderous roar from the road, and such a shower of
stones, that everyone was hit, including the Burmans on the path.
One stone took Mr Macgregor full in the face, almost knocking him
down. The Europeans bolted hastily inside and barred the door. Mr
Macgregor's spectacles were smashed and his nose streaming blood.
They got back to the lounge to find Mrs Lackersteen looping about
in one of the long chairs like a hysterical snake, Mr Lackersteen
standing irresolutely in the middle of the room, holding an empty
bottle, the butler on his knees in the corner, crossing himself (he
was a Roman Catholic), the chokras crying, and only Elizabeth calm,
though she was very pale.
'What's happened?' she exclaimed.
'We're in the
soup, that's what's happened!' said Ellis angrily,
feeling at the back of his neck where a stone had hit him. 'The
Burmans are all round, shying rocks. But keep calm! They haven't
the guts to break the doors in.'
'Call out the
police at once!' said Mr Macgregor indistinctly, for
he was stanching his nose with his handkerchief.
'Can't!' said
Ellis. 'I was looking round while you were talking
to them. They've cut us off, rot their damned souls! No one could
possibly get to the police lines. Veraswami's compound is full of
men.'
'Then we must
wait. We can trust them to turn out of their own
accord. Calm yourself, my dear Mrs Lackersteen, PLEASE calm
yourself! The danger is very small.'
It did not sound
small. There were no gaps in the noise now, and
the Burmans seemed to be pouring into the compounds by hundreds.
The din swelled suddenly to such a volume that no one could make
himself heard except by shouting. All the windows in the lounge
had been shut, and some perforated zinc shutters within, which were
sometimes used for keeping out insects, pulled to and bolted.
There was a series of crashes as the windows were broken, and then
a ceaseless thudding of stones from all sides, that shook the thin
wooden walls and seemed likely to split them. Ellis opened a
shutter and flung a bottle viciously among the crowd, but a dozen
stones came hurtling in and he had to close the shutter hurriedly.
The Burmans seemed to have no plan beyond flinging stones, yelling
and hammering at the walls, but the mere volume of noise was
unnerving. The Europeans were half dazed by it at first. None of
them thought to blame Ellis, the sole cause of this affair; their
common peril seemed, indeed, to draw them closer together for the
while. Mr Macgregor, half-blind without his spectacles, stood
distractedly in the middle of the room, yielding his right hand to
Mrs Lackersteen, who was caressing it, while a weeping chokra clung
to his left leg. Mr Lackersteen had vanished again. Ellis was
stamping furiously up and down, shaking his fist in the direction
of the police lines.
'Where are the
police, the f-- cowardly sods?' he yelled, heedless
of the women. 'Why don't they turn out? My God, we won't get
another chance like this in a hundred years! If we'd only ten
rifles here, how we could slosh these b--s!'
'They'll be
here presently!' Mr Macgregor shouted back. 'It will
take them some minutes to penetrate that crowd.'
'But why don't
they use their rifles, the miserable sons of
bitches? They could slaughter them in bloody heaps if they'd only
open fire. Oh, God, to think of missing a chance like this!'
A lump of rock
burst one of the zinc shutters. Another followed
through the hole it had made, stove in a 'Bonzo' picture, bounced
off, cut Elizabeth's elbow, and finally landed on the table. There
was a roar of triumph from outside, and then a succession of
tremendous thumps on the roof. Some children had climbed into the
trees and were having the time of their lives sliding down the roof
on their bottoms. Mrs Lackersteen outdid all previous efforts with
a shriek that rose easily above the din outside.
'Choke that
bloody hag, somebody!' cried Ellis. 'Anyone'd think a
pig was being killed. We've got to do something. Flory, Macgregor,
come here! Think of a way out of this mess, someone!'
Elizabeth had
suddenly lost her nerve and begun crying. The blow
from the stone had hurt her. To Flory's astonishment, he found her
clinging tightly to his arm. Even in that moment it made his heart
turn over. He had been watching the scene almost with detachment--
dazed by the noise, indeed, but not much frightened. He always
found it difficult to believe Orientals could be really dangerous.
Only when he felt Elizabeth's hand on his arm did he grasp the
seriousness of the situation.
'Oh, Mr Flory,
please, please think of something! You can, you
can! Anything sooner than let those dreadful men get in here!'
'If only one
of us could get to the police lines!' groaned Mr
Macgregor. 'A British officer to lead them! At the worst I must
try and go myself.'
'Don't be a
fool! Only get your throat cut!' yelled Ellis. '_I_'ll
go if they really look like breaking in. But, oh, to be killed by
swine like that! How furious it'd make me! And to think we could
murder the whole bloody crowd if only we could get the police
here!'
'Couldn't someone
get along the river bank?' Flory shouted
despairingly.
'Hopeless! Hundreds
of them prowling up and down. We're cut off--
Burmans on three sides and the river on the other!'
'The river!'
One of those
startling ideas that are overlooked simply because
they are so obvious had sprung into Flory's mind.
'The river!
Of course! We can get to the police lines as easy as
winking. Don't you see?'
'How?'
'Why, down the river--in the water! Swim!'
'Oh, good man!'
cried Ellis, and smacked Flory on the shoulder.
Elizabeth squeezed his arm and actually danced a step or two in
glee. 'I'll go if you like!' Ellis shouted, but Flory shook his
head. He had already begun slipping his shoes off. There was
obviously no time to be lost. The Burmans had behaved like fools
hitherto, but there was no saying what might happen if they
succeeded in breaking in. The butler, who had got over his first
fright, prepared to open the window that gave on the lawn, and
glanced obliquely out. There were barely a score of Burmans on the
lawn. They had left the back of the Club unguarded, supposing that
the river cut off retreat.
'Rush down the
lawn like hell!' Ellis shouted in Flory's ear.
'They'll scatter all right when they see you.'
'Order the police
to open fire at once!' shouted Mr Macgregor from
the other side. 'You have my authority.'
'And tell them
to aim low! No firing over their heads. Shoot to
kill. In the guts for choice!'
Flory leapt
down from the veranda, hurting his feet on the hard
earth, and was at the river bank in six paces. As Ellis had said,
the Burmans recoiled for a moment when they saw him leaping down.
A few stones followed him, but no one pursued--they thought, no
doubt, that he was only attempting to escape, and in the clear
moonlight they could see that it was not Ellis. In another moment
he had pushed his way through the bushes and was in the water.
He sank deep
down, and the horrible river ooze received him,
sucking him knee-deep so that it was several seconds before he
could free himself. When he came to the surface a tepid froth,
like the froth on stout, was lapping round his lips, and some
spongy thing had floated into his throat and was choking him. It
was a sprig of water hyacinth. He managed to spit it out, and
found that the swift current had floated him twenty yards already.
Burmans were rushing rather aimlessly up and down the bank,
yelling. With his eye at the level of the water, Flory could not
see the crowd besieging the Club; but he could hear their deep,
devilish roaring, which sounded even louder than it had sounded on
shore. By the time he was opposite the Military Police lines the
bank seemed almost bare of men. He managed to struggle out of the
current and flounder through the mud, which sucked off his left
sock. A little way down the bank two old men were sitting beside a
fence, sharpening fence-posts, as though there had not been a riot
within a hundred miles of them. Flory crawled ashore, clambered
over the fence and ran heavily across the moonwhite parade-ground,
his wet trousers sagging. As far as he could tell in the noise,
the lines were quite empty. In some stalls over to the right
Verrall's horses were plunging about in a panic. Flory ran out on
to the road, and saw what had happened.
The whole body
of policemen, military and civil, about a hundred
and fifty men in all, had attacked the crowd from the rear, armed
only with sticks. They had been utterly engulfed. The crowd was
so dense that it was like an enormous swarm of bees seething and
rotating. Everywhere one could see policemen wedged helplessly
among the hordes of Burmans, struggling furiously but uselessly,
and too cramped even to use their sticks. Whole knots of men were
tangled Laocoon-like in the folds of unrolled pagris. There was a
terrific bellowing of oaths in three or four languages, clouds of
dust, and a suffocating stench of sweat and marigolds--but no one
seemed to have been seriously hurt. Probably the Burmans had not
used their daks for fear of provoking rifle-fire. Flory pushed his
way into the crowd and was immediately swallowed up like the
others. A sea of bodies closed in upon him and flung him from side
to side, bumping his ribs and choking him with their animal heat.
He struggled onwards with an almost dreamlike feeling, so absurd
and unreal was the situation. The whole riot had been ludicrous
from the start, and what was most ludicrous of all was that the
Burmans, who might have killed him, did not know what to do with
him now he was among them. Some yelled insults in his face, some
jostled him and stamped on his feet, some even tried to make way
for him, as a white man. He was not certain whether he was
fighting for his life, or merely pushing his way through the crowd.
For quite a long time he was jammed, helpless, with his arms pinned
against his sides, then he found himself wrestling with a stumpy
Burman much stronger than himself, then a dozen men rolled against
him like a wave and drove him deeper into the heart of the crowd.
Suddenly he felt an agonizing pain in his right big toe--someone in
boots had trodden on it. It was the Military Police subahdar, a
Rajput, very fat, moustachioed, with his pagri gone. He was
grasping a Burman by the throat and trying to hammer his face,
while the sweat rolled off his bare, bald crown. Flory threw his
arm round the subahdar's neck and managed to tear him away from his
adversary and shout in his ear. His Urdu deserted him, and he
bellowed in Burmese:
'Why did you not open fire?'
For a long time
he could not hear the man's answer. Then he caught
it:
'Hukm ne aya'--'I have had no order!'
'Idiot!'
At this moment
another bunch of men drove against them, and for a
minute or two they were pinned and quite unable to move. Flory
realized that the subabdar had a whistle in his pocket and was
trying to get at it. Finally he got it loose and blew piercing
blasts, but there was no hope of rallying any men until they could
get into a clear space. It was a fearful labour to struggle our of
the crowd--it was like wading neck-deep through a viscous sea. At
times the exhaustion of Flory's limbs was so complete that he stood
passive, letting the crowd hold him and even drive him backwards.
At last, more from the natural eddying of the crowd than by his own
effort, he found himself flung out into the open. The subahdar had
also emerged, ten or fifteen sepoys, and a Burmese Inspector of
Police. Most of the sepoys collapsed on their haunches almost
falling with fatigue, and limping, their feet having been trampled
on.
'Come on, get
up! Run like hell for the lines! Get some rifles
and a clip of ammunition each.'
He was too overcome
even to speak in Burmese, but the men understood
him and lopped heavily towards the police lines. Flory followed
them, to get away from the crowd before they turned on him again.
When he reached the gate the sepoys were returning with their rifles
and already preparing to fire.
'The sahib will give the order!' the subahdar panted.
'Here you!'
cried Flory to the Inspector. 'Can you speak
Hindustani?'
'Yes, sir.'
'Then tell them
to fire high, right over the people's heads. And
above all, to fire all together. Make them understand that.'
The fat Inspector,
whose Hindustani was even worse than Flory's,
explained what was wanted, chiefly by leaping up and down and
gesticulating. The sepoys raised their rifles, there was a roar,
and a rolling echo from the hillside. For a moment Flory thought
that his order had been disregarded, for almost the entire section
of the crowd nearest them had fallen like a swath of hay. However,
they had only flung themselves down in panic. The sepoys fired a
second volley, but it was not needed. The crowd had immediately
begun to surge outwards from the Club like a river changing its
course. They came pouring down the road, saw the armed men barring
their way, and tried to recoil, whereupon there was a fresh battle
between those in front and those behind; finally the whole crowd
bulged outwards and began to roll slowly up the maidan. Flory and
the sepoys moved slowly towards the Club on the heels of the
retreating crowd. The policemen who had been engulfed were
straggling back by ones and twos. Their pagris were gone and their
puttees trailing yards behind them, but they had no damage worse
than bruises. The Civil Policemen were dragging a very few
prisoners among them. When they reached the Club compound the
Burmans were still pouring out, an endless line of young men
leaping gracefully through a gap in the hedge like a procession of
gazelles. It seemed to Flory that it was getting very dark. A
small white-clad figure extricated itself from the last of the
crowd and tumbled limply into Flory's arms. It was Dr Veraswami,
with his tie torn off but his spectacles miraculously unbroken.
'Doctor!'
'Ach, my friend! Ach, how I am exhausted!'
'What are you
doing here? Were you right in the middle of that
crowd?'
'I was trying
to restrain them, my friend. It was hopeless until
you came. But there is at least one man who bears the mark of
this, I think!'
He held out
a small fist for Flory to see the damaged knuckles.
But it was certainly quite dark now. At the same moment Flory
heard a nasal voice behind him.
'Well, Mr Flory,
so it's all over already! A mere flash in the pan
as usual. You and I together were a little too much for them--
ha, ha!'
It was U Po
Kyin. He came towards them with a martial air,
carrying a huge stick, and with a revolver thrust into his belt.
His dress was a studious negligee--singlet and Shan trousers--to
give the impression that he had rushed out of his house post-haste.
He had been lying low until the danger should be over, and was now
hurrying forth to grab a share of any credit that might be going.
'A smart piece
of work, sir!' he said enthusiastically. 'Look how
they are flying up the hillside! We have routed them most
satisfactory.'
'WE!' panted the doctor indignantly.
'Ah, my dear
doctor! I did not perceive that you were there. It
is possible that YOU also have been in the fighting? YOU--risking
your most valuable life! Who would have believed such a thing?'
'You've taken your time getting here yourself!' said Flory angrily.
'Well, well
sir, it is enough that we have dispersed them.
Although,' he added with a touch of satisfaction, for he had
noticed Flory's tone, 'they are going in the direction of the
European houses, you will observe. I fancy that it will occur to
them to do a little plundering on their way.'
One had to admire
the man's impudence. He tucked his great stick
under his arm and strolled beside Flory in an almost patronizing
manner, while the doctor dropped behind, abashed in spite of
himself. At the Club gate all three men halted. It was now
extraordinarily dark, and the moon had vanished. Low overhead,
just visible, black clouds were streaming eastward like a pack of
hounds. A wind, almost cold, blew down the hillside and swept a
cloud of dust and fine water-vapour before it. There was a sudden
intensely rich scent of damp. The wind quickened, the trees
rustled, then began beating themselves furiously together, the big
frangipani tree by the tennis court flinging out a nebula of dimly
seen blossom. All three men turned and hurried for shelter, the
Orientals to their houses, Flory to the Club. It had begun
raining.
23
Next day the town was quieter than a cathedral city on Monday
morning. It is usually the case after a riot. Except for the
handful of prisoners, everyone who could possibly have been
concerned in the attack on the Club had a watertight alibi. The
Club garden looked as though a herd of bison had stampeded across
it, but the houses had not been plundered, and there were no new
casualties among the Europeans, except that after everything was
over Mr Lackersteen had been found very drunk under the billiard-
table, where he had retired with a bottle of whisky. Westfield and
Verrall came back early in the morning, bringing Maxwell's
murderers under arrest; or at any rate, bringing two people who
would presently be hanged for Maxwell's murder. Westfield, when he
heard the news of the riot, was gloomy but resigned. AGAIN it
happened--a veritable riot, and he not there to quell it! It
seemed fated that he should never kill a man. Depressing,
depressing. Verrall's only comment was that it had been 'damned
lip' on the part of Flory (a civilian) to give orders to the
Military Police.
Meanwhile, it
was raining almost without cease. As soon as he woke
up and heard the rain hammering on the roof Flory dressed and
hurried out, Flo following. Out of sight of the houses he took off
his clothes and let the rain sluice down on his bare body. To his
surprise, he found that he was covered with bruises from last
night; but the rain had washed away every trace of his prickly heat
within three minutes. It is wonderful, the healing power of
rainwater. Flory walked down to Dr Veraswami's house, with his
shoes squelching and periodical jets of water flowing down his neck
from the brim of his Terai hat. The sky was leaden, and
innumerable whirling storms chased one another across the maidan
like squadrons of cavalry. Burmans passed, under vast wooden hats
in spite of which their bodies streamed water like the bronze gods
in the fountains. A network of rivulets was already washing the
stones of the road bare. The doctor had just got home when Flory
arrived, and was shaking a wet umbrella over the veranda rail. He
hailed Flory excitedly.
'Come up, Mr
Flory, come up at once! You are just apropos. I was
on the point of opening a bottle of Old Tommy Gin. Come up and let
me drink to your health, ass the saviour of Kyauktada!'
They had a long
talk together. The doctor was in a triumphant
mood. It appeared that what had happened last night had righted
his troubles almost miraculously. U Po Kyin's schemes were undone.
The doctor was no longer at his mercy--in fact, it was the other
way about. The doctor explained to Flory:
'You see, my
friend, this riot--or rather, your most noble
behaviour in it--wass quite outside U Po Kyin's programme. He had
started the SO-CALLED rebellion and had the glory of crushing it,
and he calculated that any further outbreak would simply mean more
glory still. I am told that when he heard of Mr Maxwell's death,
hiss joy was positively'--the doctor nipped his thumb and forefinger
together--'what iss the word I want?'
'Obscene?'
'Ah yes. Obscene.
It iss said that actually he attempted to
dance--can you imagine such a disgusting spectacle?--and exclaimed,
"Now at least they will take my rebellion seriously!" Such iss his
regard for human life. But now hiss triumph iss at an end. The
riot hass tripped up in mid-career.'
'How?'
'Because, do
you not see, the honours of the riot are not hiss, but
yours! And I am known to be your friend. I stand, so to speak, in
the reflection of your glory. Are you not the hero of the hour?
Did not your European friends receive you with open arms when you
returned to the Club last night?'
'They did, I
must admit. It was quite a new experience for me.
Mrs Lackersteen was all over me. "DEAR Mr Flory", she calls me now.
And she's got her knife properly in Ellis. She hasn't forgotten
that he called her a bloody hag and told her to stop squealing like
a pig.'
'Ah, Mr Ellis
iss sometimes over-emphatic in hiss expressions. I
have noticed it.'
'The only fly
in the ointment is that I told the police to fire
over the crowd's heads instead of straight at them. It seems
that's against all the Government regulations. Ellis was a little
vexed about it. "Why didn't you plug some of the b--s when you had
the chance?" he said. I pointed out that it would have meant
hitting the police who were in the middle of the crowd; but as he
said, they were only niggers anyway. However, all my sins are
forgiven me. And Macgregor quoted something in Latin--Horace, I
believe.'
It was half
an hour later when Flory walked along to the Club. He
had promised to see Mr Macgregor and settle the business of the
doctor's election. But there would be no difficulty about it now.
The others would eat out of his hand until the absurd riot was
forgotten; he could have gone into the Club and made a speech in
favour of Lenin, and they would have put up with it. The lovely
rain streamed down, drenching him from head to foot, and filling
his nostrils with the scent of earth, forgotten during the bitter
months of drought. He walked up the wrecked garden, where the
mali, bending down with the rain splashing on his bare back, was
trowelling holes for zinnias. Nearly all the flowers had been
trampled out of existence. Elizabeth was there, on the side
veranda, almost as though she were waiting for him. He took off
his hat, spilling a pool of water from the brim, and went round to
join her.
'Good morning!'
he said, raising his voice because of the rain that
beat noisily on the low roof.
'Good morning! ISN'T it coming down? Simply PELTING!'
'Oh, this isn't
real rain. You wait till July. The whole Bay of
Bengal is going to pour itself on us, by instalments.'
It seemed that
they must never meet without talking of the weather.
Nevertheless, her face said something very different from the banal
words. Her demeanour had changed utterly since last night. He
took courage.
'How is the place where that stone hit you?'
She held her
arm out to him and let him take it. Her air was
gentle, even submissive. He realized that his exploit of last
night had made him almost a hero in her eyes. She could not know
how small the danger had really been, and she forgave him
everything, even Ma Hla May, because he had shown courage at the
right moment. It was the buffalo and the leopard over again. His
heart thumped in his breast. He slipped his hand down her arm and
clasped her fingers in his own.
'Elizabeth--'
'Someone will
see us!' she said, and she withdrew her hand, but not
angrily.
'Elizabeth,
I've something I want to say to you. Do you remember a
letter I wrote you from the jungle, after our--some weeks ago?'
'Yes.'
'You remember what I said in it?'
'Yes. I'm sorry I didn't answer it. Only--'
'I couldn't
expect you to answer it, then. But I just wanted to
remind you of what I said.'
In the letter,
of course, he had only said, and feebly enough, that
he loved her--would always love her, no matter what happened. They
were standing face to face, very close together. On an impulse--
and it was so swiftly done that afterwards he had difficulty in
believing that it had ever happened--he took her in his arms and
drew her towards him. For a moment she yielded and let him lift up
her face and kiss her; then suddenly she recoiled and shook her
head. Perhaps she was frightened that someone would see them,
perhaps it was only because his moustache was so wet from the rain.
Without saying anything more she broke from him and hurried away
into the Club. There was a look of distress or compunction in her
face; but she did not seem angry.
He followed
her more slowly into the Club, and ran into Mr
Macgregor, who was in a very good humour. As soon as he saw Flory
he boomed genially, 'Aha! The conquering hero comes!' and then, in
a more serious vein, offered him fresh congratulations. Flory
improved the occasion by saying a few words on behalf of the
doctor. He painted quite a lively picture of the doctor's heroism
in the riot. 'He was right in the middle of the crowd, fighting
like a tiger,' etc., etc. It was not too much exaggerated--for the
doctor had certainly risked his life. Mr Macgregor was impressed,
and so were the others when they heard of it. At all times the
testimony of one European can do an Oriental more good than that of
a thousand of his fellow countrymen; and at this moment Flory's
opinion carried weight. Practically, the doctor's good name was
restored. His election to the Club could be taken as assured.
However, it
was not finally agreed upon yet, because Flory was
returning to camp. He set out the same evening, marching by night,
and he did not see Elizabeth again before leaving. It was quite
safe to travel in the jungle now, for the futile rebellion was
obviously finished. There is seldom any talk of rebellion after
the rains have started--the Burmans are too busy ploughing, and in
any case the waterlogged fields are impassable for large bodies of
men. Flory was to return to Kyauktada in ten days, when the
padre's six-weekly visit fell due. The truth was that he did not
care to be in Kyauktada while both Elizabeth and Verrall were
there. And yet, it was strange, but all the bitterness--all the
obscene, crawling envy that had tormented him before--was gone now
that he knew she had forgiven him. It was only Verrall who stood
between them now. And even the thought of her in Verrall's arms
could hardly move him, because he knew that at the worst the affair
must have an end. Verrall, it was quite certain, would never marry
Elizabeth; young men of Verrall's stamp do not marry penniless
girls met casually at obscure Indian stations. He was only amusing
himself with Elizabeth. Presently he would desert her, and she
would return to him--to Flory. It was enough--it was far better
than he had hoped. There is a humility about genuine love that is
rather horrible in some ways.
U Po Kyin was
furiously angry. The miserable riot had taken him
unawares, so far as anything ever took him unawares, and it was
like a handful of grit thrown into the machinery of his plans. The
business of disgracing the doctor had got to be begun all over
again. Begun it was, sure enough, with such a spate of anonymous
letters that Hla Pe had to absent himself from office for two whole
days--it was bronchitis this time--to get them written. The doctor
was accused of every crime from pederasty to stealing Government
postage stamps. The prison warder who had let Nga Shwe O escape
had now come up for trial. He was triumphantly acquitted, U Po
Kyin having spent as much as two hundred rupees in bribing the
witnesses. More letters showered up on Mr Macgregor, proving in
detail that Dr Veraswami, the real author of the escape, had tried
to shift the blame on to a helpless subordinate. Nevertheless, the
results were disappointing. The confidential letter which Mr
Macgregor wrote to the Commissioner, reporting on the riot, was
steamed open, and its tone was so alarming--Mr Macgregor had spoken
of the doctor as 'behaving most creditably' on the night of the
riot--that U Po Kyin called a council of war.
'The time has
come for a vigorous move,' he said to the others--
they were in conclave on the front veranda, before breakfast. Ma
Kin was there, and Ba Sein and Hla Pe--the latter a bright-faced,
promising boy of eighteen, with the manner of one who will
certainly succeed in life.
'We are hammering
against a brick wall,' U Po Kyin continued; 'and
that wall is Flory. Who could have foreseen that that miserable
coward would stand by his friend? However, there it is. So long
as Veraswami has his backing, we are helpless.'
'I have been
talking to the Club butler, sir,' said Ba Sein. 'He
tells me that Mr Ellis and Mr Westfield still do not want the
doctor to be elected to the Club. Do you not think they will
quarrel with Flory again as soon as this business of the riot is
forgotten?'
'Of course they
will quarrel, they always quarrel. But in the
meantime the harm is done. Just suppose that man WERE elected! I
believe I should die of rage if it happened. No, there is only one
move left. We must strike at Flory himself!'
'At Flory, sir! But he is a white man!'
'What do I care?
I have ruined white men before now. Once let
Flory be disgraced, and there is an end of the doctor. And he
shall be disgraced! I will shame him so that he will never dare
show his face in that Club again!'
'But, sir! A
white man! What are we to accuse him of? Who would
believe anything against a white man?'
'You have no
strategy, Ko Ba Sein. One does not ACCUSE a white
man; one has got to catch him in the act. Public disgrace, in
flagrante delicto. I shall know how to set about it. Now be
silent while I think.'
There was a
pause. U Po Kyin stood gazing out into the rain with
his small hands clasped behind him and resting on the natural
plateau of his posterior. The other three watched him from the end
of the veranda, almost frightened by this talk of attacking a white
man, and waiting for some masterstroke to cope with a situation
that was beyond them. It was a little like the familiar picture
(is it Meissonier's?) of Napoleon at Moscow, poring over his maps
while his marshals wait in silence, with their cocked hats in their
hands. But of course U Po Kyin was more equal to the situation
than Napoleon. His plan was ready within two minutes. When he
turned round his vast face was suffused with excessive joy. The
doctor had been mistaken when he described U Po Kyin as attempting
to dance; U Po Kyin's figure was not designed for dancing; but, had
it been so designed, he would have danced at this moment. He
beckoned to Ba Sein and whispered in his ear for a few seconds.
'That is the correct move, I think?' he concluded.
A broad, unwilling,
incredulous grin stole slowly across Ba Sein's
face.
'Fifty rupees
ought to cover all the expenses,' added U Po Kyin,
beaming.
The plan was
unfolded in detail. And when the others had taken it
in, all of them, even Ba Sein, who seldom laughed, even Ma Kin, who
disapproved from the bottom of her soul, burst into irrepressible
peals of laughter. The plan was really too good to be resisted.
It was genius.
All the while
it was raining, raining. The day after Flory went
back to camp it rained for thirty-eight hours at a stretch,
sometimes slowing to the pace of English rain, sometimes pouring
down in such cataracts that one thought the whole ocean must by now
have been sucked up into the clouds. The rattling on the roof
became maddening after a few hours. In the intervals between the
rain the sun glared as fiercely as ever, the mud began to crack and
steam, and patches of prickly heat sprang out all over one's body.
Hordes of flying beetles had emerged from their cocoons as soon as
the rain started; there was a plague of loathly creatures known as
stink-bugs, which invaded the houses in incredible numbers,
littered themselves over the dining-table and made one's food
uneatable. Verrall and Elizabeth still went out riding in the
evenings, when the rain was not too fierce. To Verrall, all
climates were alike, but he did not like to see his ponies
plastered with mud. Nearly a week went by. Nothing was changed
between them--they were neither less nor more intimate than they
had been before. The proposal of marriage, still confidently
expected, was still unuttered. Then an alarming thing happened.
The news filtered to the Club, through Mr Macgregor, that Verrall
was leaving Kyauktada; the Military Police were to be kept at
Kyauktada, but another officer was coming in Verrall's place, no
one was certain when. Elizabeth was in horrible suspense. Surely,
if he was going away, he must say something definite soon? She
could not question him--dared not even ask him whether he was
really going; she could only wait for him to speak. He said
nothing. Then one evening, without warning, he failed to turn up
at the Club. And two whole days passed during which Elizabeth did
not see him at all.
It was dreadful,
but there was nothing that could be done. Verrall
and Elizabeth had been inseparable for weeks, and yet in a way they
were almost strangers. He had kept himself so aloof from them all--
had never even seen the inside of the Lackersteens' house. They
did not know him well enough to seek him out at the dakbungalow, or
write to him; nor did he reappear at morning parade on the maidan.
There was nothing to do except wait until he chose to present
himself again. And when he did, would he ask her to marry him?
Surely, surely he must! Both Elizabeth and her aunt (but neither
of them had even spoken of it openly) held it as an article of
faith that he must ask her. Elizabeth looked forward to their next
meeting with a hope that was almost painful. Please God it would
be a week at least before he went! If she rode with him four times
more, or three times--even if it were only twice, all might yet be
well. Please God he would come back to her soon! It was
unthinkable that when he came, it would only be to say good-bye!
The two women went down to the Club each evening and sat there
until quite late, listening for Verrall's footsteps outside while
seeming not to listen; but he never appeared. Ellis, who
understood the situation perfectly, watched Elizabeth with spiteful
amusement. What made it worst of all was that Mr Lackersteen was
now pestering Elizabeth unceasingly. He had become quite reckless.
Almost under the eyes of the servants he would waylay her, catch
hold of her and begin pinching and fondling her in the most
revolting way. Her sole defence was to threaten that she would
tell her aunt; happily he was too stupid to realize that she would
never dare do it.
On the third
morning Elizabeth and her aunt arrived at the Club
just in time to escape a violent storm of rain. They had been
sitting in the lounge for a few minutes when they heard the sound
of someone stamping the water off his shoes in the passage. Each
woman's heart stirred, for this might be Verrall. Then a young man
entered the lounge, unbuttoning a long raincoat as he came. He was
a stout, rollicking, chuckle-headed youth of about twenty-five,
with fat fresh cheeks, butter-coloured hair, no forehead, and, as
it turned out afterwards, a deafening laugh.
Mrs Lackersteen
made some inarticulate sound--it was jerked out of
her by her disappointment. The youth, however, hailed them with
immediate bonhomie, being one of those who are on terms of slangy
intimacy with everyone from the moment of meeting them.
'Hullo, hullo!'
he said 'Enter the fairy prince! Hope I don't sort
of intrude and all that? Not shoving in on any family gatherings
or anything?'
'Not at all!' said Mrs Lackersteen in surprise.
'What I mean
to say--thought I'd just pop in at the Club and have
a glance round, don't you know. Just to get acclimatized to the
local brand of whisky. I only got here last night.'
'Are you STATIONED
here?' said Mrs Lackersteen, mystified--for they
had not been expecting any newcomers.
'Yes, rather. Pleasure's mine, entirely.'
'But we hadn't
heard. . . . Oh, of course! I suppose you're from
the Forest Department? In place of poor Mr Maxwell?'
'What? Forest
Department? No fear! I'm the new Military Police
bloke, you know.'
'The--what?'
'New Military
Police bloke. Taking over from dear ole Verrall.
The dear ole chap got orders to go back to his regiment. Going off
in a fearful hurry. And a nice mess he's left everything in for
yours truly, too.'
The Military
Policeman was a crass youth, but even he noticed that
Elizabeth's face turned suddenly sickly. She found herself quite
unable to speak. It was several seconds before Mrs Lackersteen
managed to exclaim:
'Mr Verrall--going? Surely he isn't going away YET?'
'Going? He's gone!'
'GONE?'
'Well, what
I mean to say--train's due to start in about half an
hour. He'll be along at the station now. I sent a fatigue party
to look after him. Got to get his ponies aboard and all that.'
There were probably
further explanations, but neither Elizabeth nor
her aunt heard a word of them. In any case, without even a good-
bye to the Military Policeman, they were out on the front steps
within fifteen seconds. Mrs Lackersteen called sharply for the
butler.
'Butler! Send
my rickshaw round to the front at once! To the
station, jaldi!' she added as the rickshaw-man appeared, and,
having settled herself in the rickshaw, poked him in the back with
the ferrule of her umbrella to start him.
Elizabeth had
put on her raincoat and Mrs Lackersteen was cowering
in the rickshaw behind her umbrella, but neither was much use
against the rain. It came driving towards them in such sheets that
Elizabeth's frock was soaked before they had reached the gate, and
the rickshaw almost overturned in the wind. The rickshaw-wallah
put his head down and struggled into it, groaning. Elizabeth was
in agony. It was a mistake, SURELY it was a mistake. He had
written to her and the letter had gone astray. That was it, that
MUST be it! It could not be that he had meant to leave her without
even saying good-bye! And if it were so--no, not even then would
she give up hope! When he saw her on the platform, for the last
time, he could not be so brutal as to forsake her! As they neared
the station she fell behind the rickshaw and pinched her cheeks to
bring the blood into them. A squad of Military Police sepoys
shuffled hurriedly by, their thin uniforms sodden into rags,
pushing a handcart among them. Those would be Verrall's fatigue
party. Thank God, there was a quarter of an hour yet. The train
was not due to leave for another quarter of an hour. Thank God, at
least, for this last chance of seeing him!
They arrived
on the platform just in time to see the train draw out
of the station and gather speed with a series of deafening snorts.
The stationmaster, a little round, black man, was standing on the
line looking ruefully after the train, and holding his waterproof-
covered topi on to his head with one hand, while with the other he
fended off two clamorous Indians who were bobbing at him and trying
to thrust something upon his attention. Mrs Lackersteen leaned out
of the rickshaw and called agitatedly through the rain.
'Stationmaster!'
'Madam!'
'What train is that?'
'That is the Mandalay train, madam.'
'The Mandalay train! It can't be!'
'But I assure
you, madam! It is precisely the Mandalay train.' He
came towards them, removing his topi.
'But Mr Verrall--the Police officer? Surely he's not on it?'
'Yes, madam,
he have departed.' He waved his hand towards the
train, now receding rapidly in a cloud of rain and steam.
'But the train wasn't due to start yet!'
'No, madam. Not due to start for another ten minutes.'
'Then why has it gone?'
The stationmaster
waved his topi apologetically from side to side.
His dark, squabby face looked quite distressed.
'I know, madam,
I know! MOST unprecedented! But the young Military
Police officer have positively COMMANDED me to start the train! He
declare that all is ready and he do not wish to be kept waiting.
I point out the irregularity. He say he do not care about
irregularity. I expostulate. He insist. And in short--'
He made another
gesture. It meant that Verrall was the kind of man
who would have his way, even when it came to starting a train ten
minutes early. There was a pause. The two Indians, imagining that
they saw their chance, suddenly rushed forward, wailing, and
offered some grubby notebooks for Mrs Lackersteen's inspection.
'What DO these men want?' cried Mrs Lackersteen distractedly.
'They are grass-wallahs,
madam. They say that Lieutenant Verrall
have departed owing them large sums of money. One for hay, the
other for corn. Of mine it is no affair.'
There was a
hoot from the distant train. It rolled round the bend,
like a black-behinded caterpillar that looks over its shoulder as
it goes, and vanished. The stationmaster's wet white trousers
flapped forlornly about his legs. Whether Verrall had started the
train early to escape Elizabeth, or to escape the grass-wallahs,
was an interesting question that was never cleared up.
They made their
way back along the road, and then struggled up the
hill in such a wind that sometimes they were driven several paces
backwards. When they gained the veranda they were quite out of
breath. The servants took their streaming raincoats, and Elizabeth
shook some of the water from her hair. Mrs Lackersteen broke her
silence for the first time since they had left the station:
'WELL! Of all the unmannerly--of the simply ABOMINABLE. . . !'
Elizabeth looked
pale and sickly, in spite of the rain and wind
that had beaten into her face. But she would betray nothing.
'I think he
might have waited to say good-bye to us,' she said
coldly.
'Take my word
for it, dear, you are thoroughly well rid of him! . . .
As I said from the start, a most ODIOUS young man!'
Some time later,
when they were sitting down to breakfast, having
bathed and got into dry clothes, and feeling better, she remarked:
'Let me see, what day is this?'
'Saturday, Aunt.'
'Ah, Saturday.
Then the dear padre will be arriving this evening.
How many shall we be for the service tomorrow? Why, I think we
shall ALL be here! How very nice! Mr Flory will be here too. I
think he said he was coming back from the jungle tomorrow.' She
added almost lovingly, 'DEAR Mr Flory!'
24
It was nearly six o'clock in the evening, and the absurd bell in
the six-foot tin steeple of the church went clank-clank, clank-
clank! as old Mattu pulled the rope within. The rays of the
setting sun, refracted by distant rainstorms, flooded the maidan
with a beautiful, lurid light. It had been raining earlier in the
day, and would rain again. The Christian community of Kyauktada,
fifteen in number, were gathering at the church door for the
evening service.
Flory was already
there, and Mr Macgregor, grey topi and all, and
Mr Francis and Mr Samuel, frisking about in freshly laundered drill
suits--for the six-weekly church service was the great social event
of their lives. The padre, a tall man with grey hair and a
refined, discoloured face, wearing pince-nez, was standing on the
church steps in his cassock and surplice, which he had put on in Mr
Macgregor's house. He was smiling in an amiable but rather
helpless way at four pink-cheeked Karen Christians who had come to
make their bows to him; for he did not speak a word of their
language nor they of his. There was one other Oriental Christian,
a mournful, dark Indian of uncertain race, who stood humbly in the
background. He was always present at the church services, but no
one knew who he was or why he was a Christian. Doubtless he had
been captured and baptized in infancy by the missionaries, for
Indians who are converted when adults almost invariably lapse.
Flory could
see Elizabeth coming down the hill, dressed in lilac-
colour, with her aunt and uncle. He had seen her that morning at
the Club--they had had just a minute alone together before the
others came in. He had only asked her one question.
'Has Verrall gone--for good?'
'Yes.'
There had been
no need to say any more. He had simply taken her by
the arms and drawn her towards him. She came willingly, even
gladly--there in the clear daylight, merciless to his disfigured
face. For a moment she had clung to him almost like a child. It
was a though he had saved her or protected her from something. He
raised her face to kiss her, and found with surprise that she was
crying. There had been no time to talk then, not even to say,
'Will you marry me?' No matter, after the service there would be
time enough. Perhaps at his next visit, only six weeks hence, the
padre would marry them.
Ellis and Westfield
and the new Military Policeman were approaching
from the Club, where they had been having a couple of quick ones to
last them through the service. The Forest Officer who had been
sent to take Maxwell's place, a sallow, tall man, completely bald
except for two whisker-like tufts in front of his ears, was
following them. Flory had not time to say more than 'Good evening'
to Elizabeth when she arrived. Mattu, seeing that everyone was
present, stopped ringing the bell, and the clergyman led the way
inside, followed by Mr Macgregor, with his topi against his
stomach, and the Lackersteens and the native Christians. Ellis
pinched Flory's elbow and whispered boozily in his ear:
'Come on, line up. Time for the snivel-parade. Quick march!'
He and the Military
Policeman went in behind the others, arm-in-
arm, with a dancing step--the policeman, till they got inside,
wagging his fat behind in imitation of a pwe-dancer. Flory sat
down in the same pew as these two, opposite Elizabeth, on her
right. It was the first time that he had ever risked sitting with
his birthmark towards her. 'Shut your eyes and count twenty-five',
whispered Ellis as they sat down, drawing a snigger from the
policeman. Mrs Lackersteen had already taken her place at the
harmonium, which was no bigger than a writing-desk. Mattu
stationed himself by the door and began to pull the punkah--it was
so arranged that it only flapped over the front pews, where the
Europeans sat. Flo came nosing up the aisle, found Flory's pew and
settled down underneath it. The service began.
Flory was only
attending intermittently. He was dimly aware of
standing and kneeling and muttering 'Amen' to interminable prayers,
and of Ellis nudging him and whispering blasphemies behind his hymn
book. But he was too happy to collect his thoughts. Hell was
yielding up Eurydice. The yellow light flooded in through the open
door, gilding the broad back of Mr Macgregor's silk coat like
cloth-of-gold. Elizabeth, across the narrow aisle, was so close to
Flory that he could hear every rustle of her dress and feel, as it
seemed to him, the warmth of her body; yet he would not look at her
even once, lest the others should notice it. The harmonium
quavered bronchitically as Mrs Lackersteen struggled to pump
sufficient air into it with the sole pedal that worked. The
singing was a queer, ragged noise--an earnest booming from Mr
Macgregor, a kind of shamefaced muttering from the other Europeans,
and from the back a loud, wordless lowing, for the Karen Christians
knew the tunes of the hymns but not the words.
They were kneeling
down again. 'More bloody knee-drill,' Ellis
whispered. The air darkened, and there was a light patter of rain
on the roof; the trees outside rustled, and a cloud of yellow
leaves whirled past the window. Flory watched them through the
chinks of his fingers. Twenty years ago, on winter Sundays in his
pew in the parish church at home, he used to watch the yellow
leaves, as at this moment, drifting and fluttering against leaden
skies. Was it not possible, now, to begin over again as though
those grimy years had never touched him? Through his fingers he
glanced sidelong at Elizabeth, kneeling with her head bent and her
face hidden in her youthful, mottled hands. When they were
married, when they were married! What fun they would have together
in this alien yet kindly land! He saw Elizabeth in his camp,
greeting him as he came home tired from work and Ko S'la hurried
from the tent with a bottle of beer; he saw her walking in the
forest with him, watching the hornbills in the peepul trees and
picking nameless flowers, and in the marshy grazing-grounds,
tramping through the cold-weather mist after snipe and teal. He
saw his home as she would remake it. He saw his drawing-room,
sluttish and bachelor-like no longer, with new furniture from
Rangoon, and a bowl of pink balsams like rosebuds on the table, and
books and water-colours and a black piano. Above all the piano!
His mind lingered upon the piano--symbol, perhaps because he was
unmusical, of civilized and settled life. He was delivered for
ever from the sub-life of the past decade--the debaucheries, the
lies, the pain of exile and solitude, the dealings with whores and
moneylenders and pukka sahibs.
The clergyman
stepped to the small wooden lectern that also served
as a pulpit, slipped the band from a roll of sermon paper, coughed,
and announced a text. 'In the name of the Father, the Son and the
Holy Ghost. Amen.'
'Cut it short, for Christ's sake,' murmured Ellis.
Flory did not
notice how many minutes passed. The words of the
sermon flowed peacefully through his head, an indistinct burbling
sound, almost unheard. When they were married, he was still
thinking, when they were married--
Hullo! What was happening?
The clergyman
had stopped short in the middle of a word. He had
taken off his pince-nez and was shaking them with a distressed air
at someone in the doorway. There was a fearful, raucous scream.
'Pike-san pay-like! Pike-san pay-like!'
Everyone jumped
in their seats and turned round. It was Ma Hla
May. As they turned she stepped inside the church and shoved old
Mattu violently aside. She shook her fist at Flory.
'Pike-san pay-like!
Pike-san pay-like! Yes, THAT'S the one I
mean--Flory, Flory! (She pronounced it Porley.) That one sitting
in front there, with the black hair! Turn round and face me, you
coward! Where is the money you promised me?'
She was shrieking
like a maniac. The people gaped at her, too
astounded to move or speak. Her face was grey with powder, her
greasy hair was tumbling down, her longyi was ragged at the bottom.
She looked like a screaming hag of the bazaar. Flory's bowels
seemed to have turned to ice. Oh God, God! Must they know--must
Elizabeth know--that THAT was the woman who had been his mistress?
But there was not a hope, not the vestige of a hope, of any
mistake. She had screamed his name over and over again. Flo,
hearing the familiar voice, wriggled from under the pew, walked
down the aisle and wagged her tail at Ma Hla May. The wretched
woman was yelling out a detailed account of what Flory had done to
her.
'Look at me,
you white men, and you women, too, look at me! Look
how he has ruined me! Look at these rags I am wearing! And he is
sitting there, the liar, the coward, pretending not to see me! He
would let me starve at his gate like a pariah dog. Ah, but I will
shame you! Turn round and look at me! Look at this body that you
have kissed a thousand times--look--look--'
She began actually
to tear her clothes open--the last insult of a
base-born Burmese woman. The harmonium squeaked as Mrs Lackersteen
made a convulsive movement. People had at last found their wits
and began to stir. The clergyman, who had been bleating
ineffectually, recovered his voice, 'Take that woman outside!' he
said sharply.
Flory's face
was ghastly. After the first moment he had turned his
head away from the door and set his teeth in a desperate effort to
look unconcerned. But it was useless, quite useless. His face was
as yellow as bone, and the sweat glistened on his forehead.
Francis and Samuel, doing perhaps the first useful deed of their
lives, suddenly sprang from their pew, grabbed Ma Hla May by the
arms and hauled her outside, still screaming.
It seemed very
silent in the church when they had finally dragged
her out of hearing. The scene had been so violent, so squalid,
that everyone was upset by it. Even Ellis looked disgusted. Flory
could neither speak nor stir. He sat staring fixedly at the altar,
his face rigid and so bloodless that the birth-mark seemed to glow
upon it like a streak of blue paint. Elizabeth glanced across the
aisle at him, and her revulsion made her almost physically sick.
She had not understood a word of what Ma Hla May was saying, but
the meaning of the scene was perfectly clear. The thought that he
had been the lover of that grey-faced, maniacal creature made her
shudder in her bones. But worse than that, worse than anything,
was his ugliness at this moment. His face appalled her, it was so
ghastly, rigid and old. It was like a skull. Only the birthmark
seemed alive in it. She hated him now for his birthmark. She had
never known till this moment how dishonouring, how unforgivable a
thing it was.
Like the crocodile,
U Po Kyin had struck at the weakest spot. For,
needless to say, this scene was U Po Kyin's doing. He had seen his
chance, as usual, and tutored Ma Hla May for her part with
considerable care. The clergyman brought his sermon to an end
almost at once. As soon as it was over Flory hurried outside, not
looking at any of the others. It was getting dark, thank God. At
fifty yards from the church he halted, and watched the others
making in couples for the Club. It seemed to him that they were
hurrying. Ah, they would, of course! There would be something to
talk about at the Club tonight! Flo rolled belly-upwards against
his ankles, asking for a game. 'Get out, you bloody brute!' he
said, and kicked her. Elizabeth had stopped at the church door.
Mr Macgregor, happy chance, seemed to be introducing her to the
clergyman. In a moment the two men went on in the direction of Mr
Macgregor's house, where the clergyman was to stay for the night,
and Elizabeth followed the others, thirty yards behind them. Flory
ran after her and caught up with her almost at the Club gate.
'Elizabeth!'
She looked round,
saw him, turned white, and would have hurried on
without a word. But his anxiety was too great, and he caught her
by the wrist.
'Elizabeth! I must--I've got to speak to you!'
'Let me go, will you!'
They began to
struggle, and then stopped abruptly. Two of the
Karens who had come out of the church were standing fifty yards
away, gazing at them through the half-darkness with deep interest.
Flory began again in a lower tone:
'Elizabeth,
I know I've no right to stop you like this. But I must
speak to you, I must! Please hear what I've got to say. Please
don't run away from me!'
'What are you
doing? Why are you holding on to my arm? Let me go
this instant!'
'I'll let you
go--there, look! But do listen to me, please!
Answer me this one thing. After what's happened, can you ever
forgive me?'
'Forgive you? What do you mean, FORGIVE you?'
'I know I'm
disgraced. It was the vilest thing to happen! Only,
in a sense it wasn't my fault. You'll see that when you're calmer.
Do you think--not now, it was too bad, but later--do you think you
can forget it?'
'I really don't
know what you're talking about. Forget it? What
has it got to do with ME? I thought it was very disgusting, but
it's not MY business. I can't think why you're questioning me like
this at all.'
He almost despaired
at that. Her tone and even her words were the
very ones she had used in that earlier quarrel of theirs. It was
the same move over again. Instead of hearing him out she was going
to evade him and put him off--snub him by pretending that he had no
claim upon her.
'Elizabeth!
Please answer me. Please be fair to me! It's serious
this time. I don't expect you to take me back all at once. You
couldn't, when I'm publicly disgraced like this. But, after all,
you virtually promised to marry me--'
'What! Promised to marry you? WHEN did I promise to marry you?'
'Not in words, I know. But it was understood between us.'
'Nothing of
the kind was understood between us! I think you are
behaving in the most horrible way. I'm going along to the Club at
once. Good evening!'
'Elizabeth!
Elizabeth! Listen. It's not fair to condemn me
unheard. You knew before what I'd done, and you knew that I'd
lived a different life since I met you. What happened this evening
was only an accident. That wretched woman, who, I admit, was once
my--well--'
'I won't listen, I won't listen to such things! I'm going!'
He caught her
by the wrists again, and this time held her. The
Karens had disappeared, fortunately.
'No, no, you
shall hear me! I'd rather offend you to the heart
than have this uncertainty. It's gone on week after week, month
after month, and I've never once been able to speak straight out to
you. You don't seem to know or care how much you make me suffer.
But this time you've got to answer me.'
She struggled
in his grip, and she was surprisingly strong. Her
face was more bitterly angry than he had ever seen or imagined it.
She hated him so that she would have struck him if her hands were
free.
'Let me go! Oh, you beast, you beast, let me go!'
'My God, my
God, that we should fight like this! But what else can
I do? I can't let you go without even hearing me. Elizabeth, you
MUST listen to me!'
'I will not!
I will not discuss it! What right have you to
question me? Let me go!'
'Forgive me,
forgive me! This one question. Will you--not now,
but later, when this vile business is forgotten--will you marry
me?'
'No, never, never!'
'Don't say it
like that! Don't make it final. Say no for the
present if you like--but in a month, a year, five years--'
'Haven't I said no? Why must you keep on and on?'
'Elizabeth,
listen to me. I've tried again and again to tell you
what you mean to me--oh, it's so useless talking about it! But do
try and understand. Haven't I told you something of the life we
live here? The sort of horrible death-in-life! The decay, the
loneliness, the self-pity? Try and realize what it means, and that
you're the sole person on earth who could save me from it.'
'Will you let me go? Why do you have to make this dreadful scene?'
'Does it mean
nothing to you when I say that I love you? I don't
believe you've ever realized what it is that I want from you. If
you like, I'd marry you and promise never even touch you with my
finger. I wouldn't mind even that, so long as you were with me.
But I can't go on with my life alone, always alone. Can't you
bring yourself ever to forgive me?'
'Never, never!
I wouldn't marry you if you were the last man on
earth. I'd as soon marry the--the sweeper!'
She had begun
crying now. He saw that she meant what she said.
The tears came into his own eyes. He said again:
'For the last
time. Remember that it's something to have one
person in the world who loves you. Remember that though you'll
find men who are richer, and younger, and better in every way than
I, you'll never find one who cares for you so much. And though I'm
not rich, at least I could make you a home. There's a way of
living--civilized, decent--'
'Haven't we
said enough?' she said more calmly. 'Will you let me
go before somebody comes?'
He relaxed his
grip on her wrists. He had lost her, that was
certain. Like a hallucination, painfully clear, he saw again their
home as he had imagined it; he saw their garden, and Elizabeth
feeding Nero and the pigeons on the drive by the sulphur-yellow
phloxes that grew as high as her shoulder; and the drawing-room,
with the water-colours on the walls, and the balsams in the china
bowl mirrored by the table, and the book-shelves, and the black
piano. The impossible, mythical piano--symbol of everything that
that futile accident had wrecked!
'You should have a piano,' he said despairingly.
'I don't play the piano.'
He let her go.
It was no use continuing. She was no sooner free
of him than she took to her heels and actually ran into the Club
garden, so hateful was his presence to her. Among the trees she
stopped to take off her spectacles and remove the signs of tears
from her face. Oh, the beast, the beast! He had hurt her wrists
abominably. Oh, what an unspeakable beast he was! When she
thought of his face as it had looked in church, yellow and
glistening with the hideous birthmark upon it, she could have
wished him dead. It was not what he had done that horrified her.
He might have committed a thousand abominations and she could have
forgiven him. But not after that shameful, squalid scene, and the
devilish ugliness of his disfigured face in that moment. It was,
finally, the birthmark that had damned him.
Her aunt would
be furious when she heard that she had refused
Flory. And there was her uncle and his leg-pinching--between the
two of them, life here would become impossible. Perhaps she would
have to go Home unmarried after all. Black beetles! No matter.
Anything--spinsterhood, drudgery, anything--sooner than the
alternative. Never, never, would she yield to a man who had been
so disgraced! Death sooner, far sooner. If there had been
mercenary thoughts in her mind an hour ago, she had forgotten them.
She did not even remember that Verrall had jilted her and that to
have married Flory would have saved her face. She knew only that
he was dishonoured and less than a man, and that she hated him as
she would have hated a leper or a lunatic. The instinct was deeper
than reason or even self-interest, and she could no more have
disobeyed it than she could have stopped breathing.
Flory, as he
turned up the hill, did not run, but he walked as fast
as he could. What he had to do must be done quickly. It was
getting very dark. The wretched Flo, who even now had not grasped
that anything serious was the matter, trotted close to his heels,
whimpering in a self-pitying manner to reproach him for the kick he
had given her. As he came up the path a wind blew through the
plaintain trees, rattling the tattered leaves and bringing a scent
of damp. It was going to rain again. Ko S'la had laid the dinner-
table and was removing some flying beetles that had committed
suicide against the petrol-lamp. Evidently he had not heard about
the scene in church yet.
'The holy one's dinner is ready. Will the holy one dine now?'
'No, not yet. Give me that lamp.'
He took the
lamp, went into the bedroom and shut the door, The
stale scent of dust and cigarette-smoke met him, and in the white,
unsteady glare of the lamp he could see the mildewed books and the
lizards on the wall. So he was back again to this--to the old,
secret life--after everything, back where he had been before.
Was it not possible
to endure it! He had endured it before. There
were palliatives--books, his garden, drink, work, whoring, shooting,
conversations with the doctor.
No, it was not
endurable any longer. Since Elizabeth's coming the
power to suffer and above all to hope, which he had thought dead in
him, had sprung to new life. The half-comfortable lethargy in
which he had lived was broken. And if he suffered now, there was
far worse to come. In a little while someone else would marry her.
How he could picture it--the moment when he heard the news!--'Did
you hear the Lackersteen kid's got off at last? Poor old So-and-
so--booked for the altar, God help him,' etc., etc. And the casual
question--'Oh, really? When is it to be?'--stiffening one's face,
pretending to be uninterested. And then her wedding day approaching,
her bridal night--ah, not that! Obscene, obscene. Keep your eyes
fixed on that. Obscene. He dragged his tin uniform-case from under
the bed, took out his automatic pistol, slid a clip of cartridges
into the magazine, and pulled one into the breech.
Ko S'la was
remembered in his will. There remained Flo. He laid
his pistol on the table and went outside. Flo was playing with Ba
Shin, Ko S'la's youngest son, under the lee of the cookhouse, where
the servants had left the remains of a woodfire. She was dancing
round him with her small teeth bared, pretending to bite him, while
the tiny boy, his belly red in the glow of the embers, smacked
weakly at her, laughing, and yet half frightened.
'Flo! Come here, Flo!'
She heard him
and came obediently, and then stopped short at the
bedroom door. She seemed to have grasped now that there was
something wrong. She backed a little and stood looking timorously
up at him, unwilling to enter the bedroom.
'Come in here!'
She wagged her tail, but did not move.
'Come on, Flo! Good old Flo! Come on!'
Flo was suddenly
stricken with terror. She whined, her tail went
down, and she shrank back. 'Come here, blast you!' he cried, and
he took her by the collar and flung her into the room, shutting the
door behind her. He went to the table for the pistol.
'No come here! Do as you're told!'
She crouched
down and whined for forgiveness. It hurt him to hear
it. 'Come on, old girl! Dear old Flo! Master wouldn't hurt you.
Come here!' She crawled very slowly towards his feet, flat on her
belly, whining, her head down as though afraid to look at him.
When she was a yard away he fired, blowing her skull to fragments.
Her shattered
brain looked like red velvet. Was that what he would
look like? The heart, then, not the head. He could hear the
servants running out of their quarters and shouting--they must have
heard the sound of the shot. He hurriedly tore open his coat and
pressed the muzzle of the pistol against his shirt. A tiny lizard,
translucent like a creature of gelatine, was stalking a white moth
along the edge of the table. Flory pulled the trigger with his
thumb.
As Ko S'la burst
into the room, for a moment he saw nothing but the
dead body of the dog. Then he saw his master's feet, heels
upwards, projecting from beyond the bed. He yelled to the others
to keep the children out of the room, and all of them surged back
from the doorway with screams. Ko S'la fell on his knees behind
Flory's body, at the same moment as Ba Pe came running through the
veranda.
'Has he shot himself?'
'I think so.
Turn him over on his back. Ah, look at that! Run
for the Indian doctor! Run for your life!'
There was a
neat hole, no bigger than that made by a pencil passing
through a sheet of blotting-paper, in Flory's shirt. He was
obviously quite dead. With great difficulty Ko S'la managed to
drag him on to the bed, for the other servants refused to touch the
body. It was only twenty minutes before the doctor arrived. He
had heard only a vague report that Flory was hurt, and had bicycled
up the hill at top speed through a storm of rain. He threw his
bicycle down in the flower-bed and hurried in through the veranda.
He was out of breath, and could not see through his spectacles. He
took them off, peering myopically at the bed. 'What iss it, my
friend?' he said anxiously. 'Where are you hurt?' Then, coming
closer, he saw what was on the bed, and uttered a harsh sound.
'Ach, what is this? What has happened to him?'
The doctor fell
on his knees, tore Flory's shirt open and put his
ear to his chest. An expression of agony came into his face, and
he seized the dead man by the shoulders and shook him as though
mere violence could bring him to life. One arm fell limply over
the edge of the bed. The doctor lifted it back again, and then,
with the dead hand between his own, suddenly burst into tears. Ko
S'la was standing at the foot of the bed, his brown face full of
lines. The doctor stood up, and then losing control of himself for
a moment, leaned against the bedpost and wept noisily and
grotesquely his back turned on Ko S'la. His fat shoulders were
quivering. Presently he recovered himself and turned round again.
'How did this happen?'
'We heard two
shots. He did it himself, that is certain. I do not
know why.'
'How did you
know that he did it on purpose? How do you know that
it was not an accident?'
For answer,
Ko S'la pointed silently to Flo's corpse. The doctor
thought for a moment, and then, with gentle, practised hands,
swathed the dead man in the sheet and knotted it at foot and head.
With death, the birthmark had faded immediately, so that it was no
more than a faint grey stain.
'Bury the dog
at once. I will tell Mr Macgregor that this happened
accidentally while he was cleaning his revolver. Be sure that you
bury the dog. Your master was my friend. It shall not be written
on his tombstone that he committed suicide.'
25
It was lucky that the padre should have been at Kyauktada, for he
was able, before catching the train on the following evening, to
read the burial service in due form and even to deliver a short
address on the virtues of the dead man. All Englishmen are
virtuous when they are dead. 'Accidental death' was the official
verdict (Dr Veraswami had proved with all his medico-legal skill
that the circumstances pointed to accident) and it was duly
inscribed upon the tombstone. Not that anyone believed it, of
course. Flory's real epitaph was the remark, very occasionally
uttered--for an Englishman who dies in Burma is so soon forgotten--
'Flory? Oh yes, he was a dark chap, with a birthmark. He shot
himself in Kyauktada in 1926. Over a girl, people said. Bloody
fool.' Probably no one, except Elizabeth, was much surprised at
what had happened. There is a rather large number of suicides
among the Europeans in Burma, and they occasion very little
surprise.
Flory's death
had several results. The first and most important of
them was that Dr Veraswami was ruined, even as he had foreseen.
The glory of being a white man's friend--the one thing that had
saved him before--had vanished. Flory's standing with the other
Europeans had never been good, it is true; but he was after all a
white man, and his friendship conferred a certain prestige. Once
he was dead, the doctor's ruin was assured. U Po Kyin waited the
necessary time, and then struck again, harder than ever. It was
barely three months before he had fixed it in the head of every
European in Kyauktada that the doctor was an unmitigated scoundrel.
No public accusation was ever made against him--U Po Kyin was most
careful of that. Even Ellis would have been puzzled to say just
what scoundrelism the doctor had been guilty of; but still, it was
agreed that he was a scoundrel. By degrees, the general suspicion
of him crystallized in a single Burmese phrase--'shok de'.
Veraswami, it was said, was quite a clever little chap in his way--
quite a good doctor for a native--but he was THOROUGHLY shok de.
Shok de means, approximately, untrustworthy, and when a 'native'
official comes to be known as shok de, there is an end of him.
The dreaded
nod and wink passed somewhere in high places, and
the doctor was reverted to the rank of Assistant Surgeon and
transferred to Mandalay General Hospital. He is still there, and
is likely to remain. Mandalay is rather a disagreeable town--it
is dusty and intolerably hot, and it is said to have five main
products all beginning with P, namely, pagodas, pariahs, pigs,
priests and prostitutes--and the routine-work of the hospital is a
dreary business. The doctor lives just outside the hospital
grounds in a little bake-house of a bungalow with a corrugated iron
fence round its tiny compound, and in the evenings he runs a
private clinic to supplement his reduced pay. He has joined a
second-rate club frequented by Indian pleaders. Its chief glory is
a single European member--a Glasgow electrician named Macdougall,
sacked from the Irrawaddy Flotilla Company for drunkenness, and now
making a precarious living out of a garage. Macdougall is a dull
lout, only interested in whisky and magnetos. The doctor, who will
never believe that a white man can be a fool, tries almost every
night to engage him in what he still calls 'cultured conversation';
but the results are very unsatisfying.
Ko S'la inherited
four hundred rupees under Flory's will, and with
his family he set up a tea-shop in the bazaar. But the shop
failed, as it was bound to do with the two women fighting in it at
all hours, and Ko S'la and Ba Pe were obliged to go back to
service. Ko S'la was an accomplished servant. Besides the useful
arts of pimping, dealing with money-lenders, carrying master to bed
when drunk and making pick-me-ups known as prairie oysters on the
following morning, he could sew, darn, refill cartridges, attend to
a horse, press a suit, and decorate a dinner-table with wonderful,
intricate patterns of chopped leaves and dyed rice-grains. He was
worth fifty rupees a month. But he and Ba Pe had fallen into lazy
ways in Flory's service, and, they were sacked from one job after
another. They had a bad year of poverty, and little Ba Shin
developed a cough, and finally coughed himself to death one
stifling hot-weather night. Ko S'la is now a second boy to a
Rangoon rice-broker with a neurotic wife who makes unending kit-
kit, and Ba Pe is pani-wallah in the same house at sixteen rupees a
month. Ma Hla May is in a brothel in Mandalay. Her good looks are
all but gone, and her clients pay her only four annas and sometimes
kick her and beat her. Perhaps more bitterly than any of the
others, she regrets the good time when Flory was alive, and when
she had not the wisdom to put aside any of the money she extracted
from him.
U Po Kyin realized
all his dreams except one. After the doctor's
disgrace, it was inevitable that U Po Kyin should be elected to the
Club, and elected he was, in spite of bitter protests from Ellis.
In the end the other Europeans came to be rather glad that they had
elected him, for he was a bearable addition to the Club. He did
not come too often, was ingratiating in his manner, stood drinks
freely, and developed almost at once into a brilliant bridge-
player. A few months later he was transferred from Kyauktada and
promoted. For a whole year, before his retirement, he officiated
as Deputy Commissioner, and during that year alone he made twenty
thousand rupees in bribes. A month after his retirement he was
summoned to a durbar in Rangoon, to receive the decoration that had
been awarded to him by the Indian Government.
It was an impressive
scene, that durbar. On the platform, hung
with flags and flowers, sat the Governor, frock-coated, upon a
species of throne, with a bevy of aides-de-camp and secretaries
behind him. All round the hall, like glittering waxworks, stood
the tall, bearded sowars of the Governor's bodyguard, with pennoned
lances in their hands. Outside, a band was blaring at intervals.
The gallery was gay with the white ingyis and pink scarves of
Burmese ladies, and in the body of the hall a hundred men or more
were waiting to receive their decorations. There were Burmese
officials in blazing Mandalay pasos, and Indians in cloth-of-gold
pagris, and British officers in full-dress uniform with clanking
sword-scabbards, and old thugyis with their grey hair knotted
behind their heads and silver-hilted dahs slung from their
shoulders. In a high, clear voice a secretary was reading out the
list of awards, which varied from the C.I.E. to certificates of
honour in embossed silver cases. Presently U Po Kyin's turn came
and the secretary read from his scroll:
'To U Po Kyin,
Deputy Assistant Commissioner, retired, for long and
loyal service and especially for his timely aid in crushing a most
dangerous rebellion in Kyauktada district'--and so on and so on.
Then two henchmen,
placed there for the purpose hoisted U Po Kyin
upright, and he waddled to the platform, bowed as low as his belly
would permit, and was duly decorated and felicitated, while Ma Kin
and other supporters clapped wildly and fluttered their scarves
from the gallery.
U Po Kyin had
done all that mortal man could do. It was time now
to be making ready for the next world--in short, to begin building
pagodas. But unfortunately, this was the very point at which his
plans went wrong. Only three days after the Governor's durbar,
before so much as a brick of those atoning pagodas had been laid, U
Po Kyin was stricken with apoplexy and died without speaking again.
There is no armour against fate. Ma Kin was heartbroken at the
disaster. Even if she had built the pagodas herself, it would have
availed U Po Kyin nothing; no merit can be acquired save by one's
own act. She suffers greatly to think of U Po Kyin where he must
be now--wandering in God knows what dreadful subterranean hell of
fire, and darkness, and serpents, and genii. Or even if he has
escaped the worst, his other fear has been realized, and he has
returned to the earth in the shape of a rat or a frog. Perhaps at
this very moment a snake is devouring him.
As to Elizabeth,
things fell out better than she had expected.
After Flory's death Mrs Lackersteen, dropping all pretences for
once, said openly that there were no men in this dreadful place and
the only hope was to go and stay several months in Rangoon or
Maymyo. But she could not very well send Elizabeth to Rangoon or
Maymyo alone, and to go with her practically meant condemning Mr
Lackersteen to death from delirium tremens. Months passed, and the
rains reached their climax, and Elizabeth had just made up her mind
that she must go home after all, penniless and unmarried, when--Mr
Macgregor proposed to her. He had had it in his mind for a long
time; indeed, he had only been waiting for a decent interval to
elapse after Flory's death.
Elizabeth accepted
him gladly. He was rather old, perhaps, but a
Deputy Commissioner is not to be despised--certainly he was a far
better match than Flory. They are very happy. Mr Macgregor was
always a good-hearted man, but he has grown more human and likeable
since his marriage. His voice booms less, and he has given up his
morning exercises. Elizabeth has grown mature surprisingly
quickly, and a certain hardness of manner that always belonged to
her has become accentuated. Her servants live in terror of her,
though she speaks no Burmese. She has an exhaustive knowledge of
the Civil List, gives charming little dinner-parties and knows how
to put the wives of subordinate officials in their places--in
short, she fills with complete success the position for which
Nature had designed her from the first, that of a burra memsahib.
End of this
Project Gutenberg of Australia eBook
Burmese Days by George Orwell