Caravans By Night Part 7
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From the next room came a series of thuds; bare feet on the floor.
"d.a.m.n you--"
She leaped out of bed.
A ripping sound. A groan. Another thud, heavier this time.
Dana reached the communicating door in a few steps. A quick intake of breath. Her hands closed upon the door-frame, tightened convulsively.
Dimness swam visibly before her. Through the dark mist she saw a figure dart out upon the stone terrace and disappear.
Beside the bed, stretched full length upon the floor, was a white form.
She screamed. The dimness dissolved and she rushed to the body.
"Alan! Alan!"
She grasped his shoulders, dizzy, cold with horror. Involuntarily she drew one hand away and saw a dark stain upon her fingers. It seemed to glare out and strike her eyes. She fought against a gathering weakness; forced herself to feel his heart. Beating. But that white face! And how could she lift him to the bed, how--
Footsteps rang from the hall. Came a knock at the door; a voice penetrated the panels.
Dana rose, found the light-switch and turned it. The flood of yellow gave warmth and strength to her--showed her a blue coil in the middle of the room. Dimly she realized it was a turban cloth--probably torn from the intruder's head. She did not touch it, but unlocked the door.
The Eurasian proprietor stood outside, in a dressing-gown. Behind him was a dark-skinned porter. A door opened further along the hall.
"My brother!" she gasped, motioning toward the white form.
The Eurasian spoke to the porter. They entered and placed the unconscious man upon the bed. Oblivious of the fact that she was clad only in a nightdress, Dana stood by, trying to collect her scattered faculties.
"If you will call a doctor," she said, "I'll attend to him now."
"Yes, madam. I'll have the boy fetch some water and smelling-salts from my wife's room. How did this happen?"
"I--I can't think--now," she returned dazedly. "Later...."
The Eurasian said something, but she did not remember what it was; remembered only that he and the porter went out. A moment after the door closed she heard voices in the hall.
"O Alan!" she pleaded, bending over her brother. "Can't you hear me?"
Several minutes pa.s.sed before he showed any symptoms of reviving; then he mumbled a few unintelligible words, and the lids drew back from his eyes.
"Dana!"--weakly. "He--took it--"
"What, Alan, dear?"
"The scarf--confounded imitation." He closed his eyes; opened them an instant later. "I'll be all right,"--with a smile. "Nothing serious.
Don't mention the scarf, or anything about it. Just say--thief...." The lids sank over his eyes. "Imitation," he muttered. And fainted again.
... The Eurasian returned shortly, with the porter at his heels. The latter carried a basin of water and several bottles.
"If you'll allow me to attend to him," offered the proprietor, "it will spare you much unpleasantness."
Dana nodded and sank into a chair, s.h.i.+vering.
Nearly an hour pa.s.sed before the doctor arrived. Alan had regained consciousness, but fainted during the examination. Dana, standing beside the bed in her negligee, waited nervously to hear the decision.
"I don't think you have any cause to be uneasy," said the doctor, after what seemed an interminable time. "The wound isn't serious--only the muscles and tissues punctured--nothing internal. But I'm going to suggest, rather, insist, that he go to a hospital."
"By all means," agreed Dana, very close to tears. "I want everything possible done for him."
The doctor smiled sympathetically. "Be sure we'll do all we can," he a.s.sured her. "Now, if you'll have some one fetch a basin of water, boiled, I'll get at this dressing."
Close to dawn, after the doctor had departed and Alan was conscious, Dana went to her room to dress. At the doorway she paused--for the blue turban-cloth lay coiled upon the threshold where she had tossed it.
Incidents of greater importance had crowded the remembrance of it from her brain. Now she stooped and picked it up, rather gingerly. Queer. For imitation pearls!
She lowered her eyes, suddenly, involuntarily--as though in obedience to a subconscious command.
On the spot where the turban-cloth had lain was a small sc.r.a.p of paper.
Thus, having jested with a puppet at Indore and given a thread into the hands of Dana Charteris, Destiny, capricious as the winds, turned toward the officer of the empire upon whom a chalk-mark had previously been placed.
CHAPTER III
A PIECE OF CORAL
Sunset was spreading a fan of flamingo plumes above Meera, a native village to the northward of Gaya, when Arnold Trent (unaware that Destiny had been hovering over him since Dana Charteris found the sc.r.a.p of paper, in Delhi, three days before) clattered out of the jungle and along the nearly deserted main street. At the council-tree, where the headman of the village sat and chewed betel-leaf, he drew rein, listening to a low, eerie wailing that came from one of the whitewashed houses.
"It is Chatterjee," volunteered the headman. "His Ratanamma is dead, Dakktar Sahib."
Trent swung down from his saddle. "When did it happen, Ranjeet Singh?"
"Not an hour past, Dakktar Sahib."
Trent's eyes roved up and down the street. "Where's everybody? Meera looks as if a plague had struck it."
Ranjeet Singh, who was a Jain, spat contemptuously.
"Some vermin-ridden priests from Tibet are at the Sacred Bo-tree," he explained, "and the wors.h.i.+ppers of Gaudama have swarmed thither, like flies to a dung-feast!"
Trent smiled slightly and moved toward one of the whitewashed houses, swinging along with the leisurely, easy stride of one poised on well-controlled muscles. At the door he paused. It was dark within, and a breath of offal and man-reek greeted him. After a moment he saw, against the darkness, the pale silhouette of a white-clad figure. From this figure came the eerie wails.
"Chatterjee!" Trent called.
Caravans By Night Part 7
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Caravans By Night Part 7 summary
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