PAGE 14
The Secret Service Man
by
Averil looked him suddenly and steadily in the face. It was a very innocent face that Toby Carey presented to a serenely credulous world.
“Because,” said Averil slowly, “he told me to tell you alone. ‘Tell Toby Carey only,’ he said, ‘to watch when the beasts go down to drink.’ They were his last words.”
“Good!” said Toby unconcernedly. “Then he knew you recognized him?”
“Yes,” Averil said; “he knew.” She smiled faintly as she said it. “He told me he was in no danger,” she added.
“Is he a friend of yours?” asked Toby sharply.
“Yes,” said Averil, with pride.
“I’m sorry to hear it,” said Toby bluntly.
“Why?” she asked, with a swift flash of anger.
“Why?” he echoed vehemently. “Ask your brother-in-law, ask Seddon, ask any one! The man is a fiend!”
Averil sprang to her feet in sudden fury.
“How dare you!” she cried passionately. “He is a king!”
Toby stared for a moment, then grew calm. “We are not talking about the same man, Miss Eversley,” he said shortly. “The man I know is a fiend among fiends. The man you know is, no doubt–different.”
But Averil swept from the club-room without a word. She was very angry with Toby Carey.
VII
THE REAL COLONEL CARLYON
Averil rode back to her brother-in-law’s bungalow, vexed with herself, weary at heart, troubled. She had arrived at the station among the mountains on the Frontier two months before, and had spent a very happy time there with the sister whom she had not seen for years. The ladies of the station numbered a very scanty minority, but there was no lack of gaiety and merriment on that account.
That the hills beyond the Great Frontier were peopled by tribes in a seething state of discontent was a matter known, but little recked of, by the majority of the community. Officers went their several ways, fully awake to threatening rumours, but counting them of small importance. They went to their sport; to their polo, their racing, their gymkhanas, with light hearts and in perfect security. They lay down in the dread shadow of a mighty Empire and slept secure in the very jaws of danger.
The fierce and fanatical hatred that raged over the Frontier was less than nothing to most of them. The power that sheltered them was wholly sufficient for their confidence.
The toughness of the good northern breed is of a quality untearable, made to endure in all climates, under all conditions. Ordered to carry revolvers, they stuffed them unloaded into side-pockets, or left them in the hands of syces to bear behind them.
Proof positive of their total failure to realize the danger that threatened from amidst the frowning, grey-cragged mountains was the fact that their womenkind were allowed to remain at the station, and even rode and drove forth unattended on the rocky, mountain roads.
True, they were warned against crossing the Frontier. A few officers, of whom Captain Raymond, who was Averil’s brother-in-law, and Toby Carey, the innocent-faced subaltern, were two, saw the rising wave from afar; but they saw it vaguely as inevitable but not imminent. Captain Raymond planned to himself to send his wife and her sister to Simla before the monsoon broke up the fine weather.
And this was all he accomplished beyond administering a severe reprimand to his young sister-in-law for running into danger among the hills.
“There are always thieves waiting to bag anyone foolish enough to show his nose over the border,” he said. “Isn’t the Indian Empire large enough for you that you must needs go trespassing among savages?”
Averil heard him out with the patience of a slightly wandering attention. She had not recounted the whole of her experience for his benefit, nor did she intend to do so. She was still wondering what the mysterious message she had delivered to Toby Carey might be held to mean.
When Captain Raymond had exhausted himself she went away to her own room and sat for a long while gazing towards the great mountains, thinking, thinking.