Caravans By Night Part 34
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Death in a hundred guises waits for the unwary; death in the poison swamps, in the bush; death everywhere!" She straightened up, and her hand closed over his. "There will be times when you will curse me for having sent you! Yet in the end there is reward! Glory! Honor! Your name will sweep from one end of the empire to the other!" Then she drew a sharp breath, for she divined what was in his mind. "You believe I lie?
But I speak the truth, before all the G.o.ds! Yonder"--with a wave of her hand--"beyond the moon, it lies, this city where the Falcon nests with the treasures of Ind!"
"You mean the jewels pa.s.sed through Myitkyina?" he questioned, trying to speak casually, as though it were a spontaneous query rather than a studied interrogation.
"Ah! Did I say so?" she fenced. "Nay! I will not answer that! Perhaps they did; perhaps they did not." (Trent was more inclined to believe the latter.) "However, they are there, beyond the moon, and every one shall be returned, down to the smallest pearl!"
It sounded rather preposterous to him. How could this thing be accomplished by two people? Was she playing with him? She'd hardly dare.
She might risk it, were he alone, but with the Government of India behind him a false move on her part would be her own defeat. Yet he could not disa.s.sociate her from some hidden, not altogether pleasant, purpose.
"Aye!" she resumed. "You and I"--and her fingers tightened about his hand--"shall do what the Secret Service could never do! We shall go where they could never go! We shall understand things that they could never understand! We are blessed of the G.o.ds, you and I! We shall pluck the Falcon's pinions; rob his nest. And, oh, it will be a great jest, a very great jest! If you only knew, you would laugh with me! But not yet.
It would spoil the secret to tell it now."
"Yet you can tell me now," he suggested, "how far this Falcon's nest is?"
She inclined her head. "Yes, I can tell you that now." And her answer was as fantastic as the city itself: "It is nearly eight hundred miles."
Inwardly, he started. A moment pa.s.sed before he spoke.
"Nearly eight hundred miles," he repeated, picturing as accurately as possible a map. "Traveling west of Myitkyina that would take us beyond the Brahmaputra; east, into China--about upper Yunnan or Kweichow; and north--well, the Tibetan _border_ is three hundred miles from Myitkyina.
Which is it: north, east or west?"
"Which seems the most likely? In which of the three regions would the Falcon's nest be in less danger of discovery by blundering British agents?"
He had guessed, but he did not wish to commit himself. He deliberately chose--
"Beyond the Brahmaputra?"
She laughed. "You are no fool. The moment I said nearly eight hundred miles you knew I meant Tibet."
He considered for some time. Then: "That's impossible." Subconsciously, he was thinking of the coral pendant.... Janesseron, a Tibetan G.o.d. Nor had he forgotten what Kerth told him in Rangoon.
"What is impossible?"
"Tibet."
She chose to smile at that. Apparently she enjoyed the astonishment that he made no effort to conceal.
"There is a way and a means for everything! Whither goes the elephant when his time is come? Does man know?" She shrugged. "Oh, it is a strange planet, this!"
She drew something white from beneath her jacket--something that crackled as she unfolded it and spread it upon her knees. The moonlight showed him the faint tracery of a map.
"Bend closer," she directed. "See, here is Myitkyina"--her finger rested on a tiny dot. "Above is the confluence of the Irrawaddi. The Mali-hka flows northeast, the 'Nmai-hka northwest. You will follow a route in the triangular s.p.a.ce between the two rivers, in a territory where Government surveyors have never been. At the edge of the Duleng country you cross the 'Nmai-hka and go eastward to a town across the Chinese border, in Yunnan. It is called Tali-fang, and is under the administration of a military governor, the _Tchentai_. Just beyond Tali-fang is the Yolon-noi Pa.s.s into Tibet. And there"--she touched a blank s.p.a.ce in Tibet, in the northwest corner of Kham--"is the City of the Falcon. Its name is s.h.i.+ngtse-lunpo."
That conveyed nothing to Trent. But its situation did. In Tibet, between the sources of the Brahmaputra and the Mekong! It was as incredible as if she had informed him he was to go to the moon. Her figure of speech was not amiss--"Beyond the moon." That territory was as nebulous as the regions of the moon, as weirdly unreal. It was the country toward which Mohut, the explorer, had striven, which Prince Henri d'Orleans had skirted.
"From Myitkyina," he heard Sarojini Nanjee saying, "to Tali-fang, you will be guided by a Lisu; there will be porters, of course. At Tali-fang you must call at the _Yamen_ of the _Tchentai_, who will furnish fresh mules and supplies. There you will also exchange your porters and guide for Tibetan caravaneers. A pa.s.sport is necessary to enter s.h.i.+ngtse-lunpo, but that will be provided. Once inside, you will be upon your own resources."
"As whom does the Falcon know me?" he inserted.
"I am coming to that. He knows you as Tavernake, the jeweler--a childhood friend of mine. The work he expects you to do is to oversee the cutting and resetting of the jewels--a work that you will never do.
He will no doubt see you before I do, so guard your tongue. Trust no one unless he comes in my name and has proof."
"Then I shall see you there?"
A nod. "I start to-night, as I must reach s.h.i.+ngtse-lunpo in advance of you. Oh, as I said, I come and go as the wind, when and where I will, and depending upon no man! But I do not go as Sarojini Nanjee.... Just before you reach Tali-fang--it will not be necessary until then--Masein, your Lisu guide, will help you effect a transformation from a white man to a Hindu merchant from Mandalay. White skins are not popular in that region. You speak Hindustani as well as some Hindus, better than others.
Avoid the natives as much as possible, for they are not over-fond of any one who is not of their race. If asked whither you go, say to a holy city in Tibet."
Silence settled for a moment after that. They were more than a mile from Myitkyina, and the silver coins still glittered and danced in midstream.
"D'you think," he began at length, "if the Government knew I was going into Tibet, it would approve?"
She shrugged. "Why not? It was understood at Delhi that you were to do as I directed; go wherever I willed."
"Suppose--" But he halted.
"Yes?"
"Suppose I am killed in Tibet?"
"But you will not be."
"You said there would be dangers."
"Yes--but you are a resourceful man."
"Frequently resourceful men are killed. Let us suppose I were murdered in Tibet--by robbers, we'll say. It would place my Government in an awkward position. Could Tibet explain satisfactorily; or would there be a British expedition, resulting in death for hundreds, because of one indiscreet Englishman?"
"Is it indiscreet," she countered, "to recover the jewels?"
He appeared to be considering that. Finally:
"If it were made known that the gems are there, the Government could demand action from the ruling powers of Tibet--or send an expedition."
She laughed. "Do you call that logic? And answer me, impossible one, who _are_ the 'ruling powers' of Tibet, as you choose to call them? The Dalai Lama? Or the British Raj? Answer me that! And as for the expedition: _we_ are the expedition. In this case the wits of two are worth more than a hundred Lee-Metfords. Guile! Guile is the stronger weapon--and it does not attract so much attention as guns!"
Again silence. They were still drifting with the current. Behind, in the moon's path, was a tiny blotch--another boat. He watched it curiously.
Seeing his inquisitive look, the woman spoke.
"No doubt it is Tambusami with your luggage; I instructed him to fetch it from the Inspection Bungalow and follow. Yonder," she explained, with a gesture downstream, "is your camp. There you will remain until dawn. I shall accompany you to the camp, as I have further instructions to give your guide."
Questions bred in Trent's brain and clamored for utterance, but he pressed them back. For her to know he was anxious was the surest way to learn nothing. Therefore he held his tongue, reflecting upon what she had told him.
He was suspicious of her promises. She was not a type to volunteer service to a government without some personal motive. And of her motives he was doubtful. There was a scheme of her own interrelated and under the surface. Too, he felt that by this latest move, in having his luggage brought from the Inspection Bungalow, she had thrown Kerth off the trail.
He extracted cigarettes from his pocket, for he felt that a smoke would clarify his thoughts; pa.s.sed the case to her. She took one with languorous grace and bent nearer for him to light it. As the match flared, he saw her eyes, again like black opals, close to his. But he learned no secrets from them; they were as baffling, as crowded with mysteries, as the black jungles ahead of him.
"There is much more to be explained," she said, tilting her head and expelling smoke from her nostrils; "certain things to be ignorant of which would surely lead to trouble...."
As they drifted on she talked, cigarette in one hand, the other resting upon the map. Before long Da-yak plied his paddle, sending little ripples over the stars that lay reflected like silver pebbles in the river. The moon rode high above the hills, a phantom dugout, and the collar of silver coins spread in extravagant display. The boatman in the rear crooned a song of ancient Hkamti--of a Sawbwa who loved a Maru maiden and forsook his kingdom for the dark-eyed daughter of delight.
Caravans By Night Part 34
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Caravans By Night Part 34 summary
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