The Winds of the World by Talbot Mundy
page 76 of 231 (32%)
page 76 of 231 (32%)
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Thirty minutes later Warrington found him just emerging from a brown study. "India's all roots-in-the-air an' dancin'!" he remarked cheerfully. "There was a babu sittin' by the barrack gate who offers to eat a German a day, as long as we'll catch 'em for him. He's the same man that was tryin' for a job as clerk the other day." "Fat man?" "Very." "Uh-h-h! No credentials--bad hat! Send him packing?" "The guard did." Food was laid on a small table by a silent servant who had eyes in the back of his head and ears that would have caught and analyzed the lightest whisper; but the colonel and his adjutant ate hurriedly in silence, and the only thing remarkable that the servant was able to report to the regiment afterward was that both drank only water. Since all Sikhs are supposed to be abstainers from strong drink, that was accepted as a favorable omen. The shay arrived on time to the second. It was the only closed carriage the regiment owned--a heavy C-springed landau thing, taken over from the previous mess. The colonel peered through outer darkness at the box seat, but the driver did not look toward him; all he could see was that there was only one man on the box. |
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