<h2><SPAN name="Ch17" name="Ch17">Chapter 17</SPAN>: Back At Tripataly.</h2>
<p>Annie's lips moved, as Dick announced that they had crossed the
Mysore boundary, but no sound came from them. He saw her eyes
close, and she reeled in the saddle.</p>
<p>"Hold her, Surajah," Dick exclaimed, "or she will fall."</p>
<p>Leaning over, Surajah caught her by the shoulder; and Dick,
leaping to the ground, stopped her horse, and, lifting her from the
saddle, seated her upon a bank and supported her.</p>
<p>"Some water, Surajah!" he exclaimed.</p>
<p>Surajah poured a little water from the skin into the hollow of
Dick's hand, and the latter sprinkled the girl's face with it.</p>
<p>"I have not fainted," she murmured, opening her eyes, "but I
turned giddy. I shall be better, directly."</p>
<p>"Drink a little wine," Dick said.</p>
<p>Surajah poured some into a cup, but with an effort she sat up,
and pushed it from her.</p>
<p>"There is nothing the matter," she said. "Only, only" and she
burst suddenly into a passion of sobbing.</p>
<p>The spirit that she had shown, so long as there was danger, had
deserted her now that the peril had passed, and she was safe.</p>
<p>Dick looked at her, helplessly. A girl in tears was a creature
wholly beyond his experience, and he had no idea what he ought to
do in such an emergency. He therefore adopted what was, doubtless,
the best course, had he but known it, of letting her alone. After a
time, the violence of her crying abated, and only short sobs broke
from her, as she sat with her face hidden in her hands.</p>
<p>"That is right, Annie," he said, putting his hand on her
shoulder. "It is quite natural for you to cry, after the excitement
and fatigue you have gone through. You have been very brave, and
have not said a word of complaint today about your fatigue,
although you must be desperately tired. Now, try and pull yourself
together. It is getting dark already, and we ought to be moving on
to Ryacotta, which cannot be much more than a mile away. You shall
ride in front of me, when we get there."</p>
<p>"I would rather not," she said, getting up with a painful
effort. "I am awfully foolish, and I am so sorry that I broke down,
but I felt so delighted that I could not help it. You said we could
camp, safely, when we once got across the frontier. Would you mind
doing so? For I don't think I could go much farther."</p>
<p>"Certainly we can camp," Dick said cheerfully. "But we must get
a little bit farther from that post we passed. If they were to see
a fire, here, they would be sure to suspect something. I see a
clump of trees a quarter of a mile on. We can make our camp there,
and I would rather do that, myself, than go on to Ryacotta, where
our appearance in the Mysore uniform would excite a stir, and we
should have no end of questions to answer.</p>
<p>"But I am sure that you are not fit to walk, even that distance.
Now, I will lift you on my saddle, and you can sit sideways. There,
I will walk by your side, and you can put your hand to my shoulder
to steady yourself. Surajah can lead your horse and his own, and
Ibrahim can take mine."</p>
<p>In this way they performed the journey to the trees, and then
halted. Annie was lifted down, and laid on a rug. Dick insisted on
her drinking some wine, and then, covering her with another rug,
they left her and lighted a fire, fifty yards away.</p>
<p>"Look here, Ibrahim, put that whole chicken into the pan, cover
it with water, and let it stew. Don't let it boil fast, but just
simmer until it falls all to pieces. Then I will wake her, if she
has gone to sleep, and make her drink the broth. It will do her
ever so much more good than wine, and she will be all right in the
morning, though no doubt she will be desperately stiff again.
Still, it has not been a longer ride than she had yesterday. I
expect it is the excitement, more than the fatigue, that has upset
her. Tomorrow she must ride in front of me, again."</p>
<p>An hour and a half later, Dick went across with the cup full of
strong broth.</p>
<p>"Are you asleep, Annie?" he said, when he reached her side.</p>
<p>"No, I am not asleep. There is so much to think of, and it is
such happiness to know that I am free, that I feel quite wide
awake. Besides, you know, I have been asleep for hours today, and I
slept all night, as I was riding before you."</p>
<p>"Then sit up, and drink this hot broth. It will do you good. And
after that, I hope you will go off. You won't be fit for anything,
tomorrow, if you don't have a good night. You will have plenty of
time to think, as we ride along."</p>
<p>The girl did as she was told.</p>
<p>"It is very nice," she said, as she handed the cup back to him.
"Oh, Dick, I do hope that we shall find my father and mother. I
don't want to, for some things, but I do for others, and most of
all that they may thank you for all your goodness to me, which I
shall never be able to do, myself."</p>
<p>"Nonsense, child!" he said cheerfully. "I have done what every
one would do, if they found a little countrywoman in distress. I
should have gone away from Seringapatam anyhow, if I had not met
you, and getting you down is a good excuse for me to go back and
spend a fortnight with my mother.</p>
<p>"Now get off to sleep, as quickly as you can. We will see what
we can do to make things comfortable for your ride, tomorrow."</p>
<p>It was late when Annie awoke. The sun was some distance above
the horizon, and she saw her companions occupied with the horses.
In a few minutes she joined them.</p>
<p>"I am ashamed at sleeping so long," she said.</p>
<p>"We were glad to find that you did," Dick replied. "If you went
to sleep soon after I brought you the broth, you have had ten hours
of it, and ought to feel all the better."</p>
<p>"I do," she said. "I am very stiff, but not so stiff as I was
yesterday morning. How you are both altered!"</p>
<p>"Yes. It would never have done to have gone on in our gay
dresses, and Tippoo's badges. These are the clothes we came up in,
and we shall attract no attention whatever. You won't have to ride
far, today. It will be as well for you to keep to your own horse,
until we have passed through Ryacotta, which is not much more than
half a mile away. After that, you must sit on this pad I have
fastened behind my saddle. You can sit sideways, you know, and put
your arm around me, just as ladies used to ride in England, a
couple of hundred years ago."</p>
<p>As soon as they had eaten something they started, and rode at a
good pace to the little town. People looked at them somewhat
curiously as they passed through the street, wondering that they
should have come from Mysore; but as they did not halt, no one
asked any questions. The population were, at present, a good deal
divided. The great majority by no means regretted their change of
masters. Some of the Mohammedans had left, when the place was taken
over by the English, and had crossed into Mysore. Others had
remained, and hoped that, ere long, Tippoo would drive back the
British, and regain his former dominions.</p>
<p>Before mounting, the rich housings and the silver work on the
bridles had been removed, and hidden among the rugs, and there was
nothing beyond the excellence of two of the horses, and the
direction from which they came, to attract attention.</p>
<p>When well beyond the town, they halted. The saddlebags were all
packed upon Annie's horse. Dick lifted the girl on to the pad
behind his saddle, and then mounted.</p>
<p>"Now hold tight by me," he said, "and mind, whenever you are
tired, we will halt for an hour's rest. We will not go more than
twenty miles today, and then it will only be as much more down to
Tripataly, tomorrow. We will walk for a bit, until you get quite
accustomed to your seat."</p>
<p>After a while, the horses broke into a gentle canter. For a
time, Annie felt very doubtful as to whether she could retain her
seat, and so held tight with one arm to Dick, while with the other
hand she kept a firm hold of the crupper. Presently, however, she
was able to release her hold of the latter, and it was not long
before she was able, honestly, to assure Dick that she felt quite
comfortable, and had no fear of falling off.</p>
<p>In two hours they passed near the hill on which stood the
fortress of Kistnagherry, which had successfully resisted the
attack of the English, but above which now flew the British flag.
Skirting round the foot, they came, in the course of an hour and a
half's ride, on to the direct road which they had left at Anicull,
in order to avoid passing through the town of Oussoor. Here they
came upon a large village, and Dick found no difficulty in hiring a
light native cart to take Annie, who was, as he felt by the
relaxation of her hold, unable to proceed farther on horseback, or
continue straight through to Tripataly.</p>
<p>A thick layer of straw was placed at the bottom of the cart, a
couple of rugs spread over it, and on this Annie was enabled to lie
down at her ease. The horses were fed and watered, and had an
hour's rest, and then they started for the last twenty miles of
their journey.</p>
<p>Annie had, while the horses were resting, a chat with a native
woman, and had gone into her house with her. When they were ready
for the start, she returned, dressed in the costume she had worn in
the Palace. It had originally been intended to get rid of the
clothes, after starting, but Annie had asked for them to be taken
on.</p>
<p>"I can change again, before I get to Tripataly," she said. "I
should not like to appear before your mother, for the first time,
dressed as a boy."</p>
<p>And Dick had at once fallen in with her wishes.</p>
<p>The turban was gone, and her head was covered in the fashion of
native women, with a long cotton cloth of a deep red colour.</p>
<p>Where the road was good, the cart proceeded at a fair pace, but
in the pass down the ghauts they could go only at a walk, and the
sun had set before they reached Tripataly. Dick, seeing that Annie
was growing very nervous, as they neared their destination, had
ridden all the way by the side of the cart, chatting cheerfully
with her.</p>
<p>"Why, Annie," he said, "you look as solemn as if you were just
going into slavery, instead of having escaped from it."</p>
<p>"It is not that I feel solemn, Dick. It is that everything is so
new and strange. Of course, after your saving my life, I have never
felt that you were a stranger, and as long as there were only you
and Surajah, I did not mind, and I have felt quite at home with
you. But now that I am going to a new place, where I don't know
anyone, I can't help feeling desolate."</p>
<p>"You will feel quite as much at home with them, in twenty-four
hours, as you have done with me, Annie. You are tired now, and
quite worn out with your journey, and so you take a gloomy view of
things. I will guarantee that, before I go away again, you will be
good friends with everyone, and will wonder how you could have
thought it to be anything dreadful to come among them."</p>
<p>When they got within a mile of Tripataly, Dick said:</p>
<p>"Now I will ride on ahead, Annie, and prepare my mother for your
coming. It will be pleasant to have no questions or explanations
when you arrive, and I am sure she will carry you straight off to
bed, and keep you there, until you have quite got over the effects
of your journey."</p>
<p>He did not wait to hear Annie's faint protest against his
leaving her, but telling Surajah to take his place beside the cart,
and to keep talking to the girl, he galloped on ahead. He sprang
from his horse in the courtyard, threw the reins to a servant, and
ran in. The party had just sat down to their evening meal, and as
he entered he was greeted by exclamations of astonishment and
welcome.</p>
<p>His mother had received two letters, sent through Pertaub by
traders going down from Seringapatam. In these he had told her,
first, of his arrival and of the adventure with the tiger, and of
his obtaining the post in the Palace; and in the second of the
non-success that had attended his visits to the hill forts. He had
told her that he should probably leave Seringapatam shortly, and
continue the search, but that she must not anticipate any result,
for a long time.</p>
<p>"Well, Mother," he said, after the first embrace and greetings
were over, "I have left Tippoo's service, you see, and am no longer
a colonel, or an officer of the Palace. I have come down to spend a
fortnight with you, before I set out again on my travels."</p>
<p>"Has Surajah come back with you, Dick?" the Rajah asked.</p>
<p>"Yes. He will be here in a few minutes, with a cart. That is one
of the reasons why I came down here. I found, among the slaves of
the harem, a white girl about fourteen years old. She is the
daughter of a British officer named Mansfield, and was carried away
from her parents, eight years ago. She was the only white captive
left in the Palace. There have been other girls, in a similar
position, but they have all, at about fourteen or fifteen, been
given by Tippoo to his officers; as would have been her fate,
before long, so I determined to carry her off with me, and bring
her to you, until we could find her parents. She is a very plucky
girl, and, although she had never been on a horse before, rode all
the way down, until we got this side of Kistnagherry. But as you
may imagine, the poor little thing is completely knocked up, so we
brought her down from there in a cart.</p>
<p>"It is something, Mother, to have saved one captive from
Tippoo's grasp, even though it is not the dear one that I was
looking for; and I promised that you would be a mother to her,
until we could restore her to her friends."</p>
<p>"Certainly I will, Dick," Mrs. Holland said warmly.</p>
<p>"Will you tell the girls, Gholla," she said to her
sister-in-law, "to have a bed made up for her, in my room?"</p>
<p>"I will do so at once," the ranee said. "Poor little thing, she
must have had a journey, indeed."</p>
<p>"She will be here directly, Mother," Dick said, as his aunt gave
the necessary directions for the bed to be prepared, and a dish of
rice and strong gravy. "She is very nervous, and I am sure it will
be best if you will meet her, when she arrives, and take her
straight to her room."</p>
<p>"That is what I was going to do, Dick," his mother said, with a
smile. "Well, I will go down with you, at once."</p>
<p>Two or three minutes later, the cart entered the courtyard. Mrs.
Holland was on the steps. Dick ran down, and helped Annie from the
cart. The girl was trembling violently.</p>
<p>"Don't be afraid, Annie," Dick whispered, as he lifted her down.
"Here is my mother, waiting to receive you.</p>
<p>"This is the young lady," he went on cheerfully, as he turned to
his mother. "I promised her a warm welcome, in your name."</p>
<p>Mrs. Holland had already come down the steps, and as the girl
turned towards her, she took her in her arms, and kissed her in
motherly fashion.</p>
<p>"Welcome, indeed," she said. "I will be a mother to you, poor
child, till I can hand you over to your own. I thank God for
sending you to me. It will be a comfort to me to know that, even if
my son should never bring my husband back to me, he has at least
succeeded in rescuing one victim from Tippoo, and in making one
family happy."</p>
<p>The girl clung to her, crying softly.</p>
<p>"Oh, how good you all are!" she sobbed. "It seems too much
happiness to be true."</p>
<p>"It is quite true, dear. Come with me. We will go up the private
stairs, and I will put you straight to bed in my room, and no one
else shall see you, or question you, until you are quite recovered
from your fatigue."</p>
<p>"I am afraid," Annie began faintly.</p>
<p>She did not need to say more. Mrs. Holland interrupted her.</p>
<p>"Dick, you must lift her up, and carry her into my room. Poor
child, she is utterly exhausted, and no wonder."</p>
<p>A couple of minutes later, Dick returned to the dining room. He
had run down, first, to tell Surajah to come up with him, but found
that he had already gone to his father's apartments.</p>
<p>"Well, Dick," the Rajah said, as he entered, "I was prepared,
after hearing of that tiger adventure, and of you and Surajah being
colonels in Tippoo's household, for almost anything; but I
certainly never dreamt of your returning here with an English
girl."</p>
<p>"I suppose not, Uncle. Such a thing certainly never entered into
my calculations. I did not even know there was a white girl in the
Palace, until one day she stopped me, as I was passing along the
corridor near the harem, to thank me for saving her life--for it
was this girl that the tiger had struck down, and was standing
upon, when I fired at him. Of course, she had no idea that I was
English. We only said a few words then, for if I had been seen
talking to a slave girl belonging to the harem, I might have got
into a scrape. However, I saw her afterwards, and she told me about
herself, and how she was afraid that she would be given away to one
of Tippoo's officers. Of course, I could not leave her to such a
fate as that.</p>
<p>"There was really no difficulty in getting her away. She was
dressed as a boy, and only had to ride, with our servant, after us.
We had arranged so that our absence would not be noticed, until we
had been away for at least twenty-four hours, and of course, as
officers of the Palace, no one questioned us on the journey, so
that it is a very simple affair altogether, and the only difficulty
there was, rose from her being completely tired out and exhausted
by the journey, as she was utterly unaccustomed to travelling. I
had to carry her one night, in front of me on my saddle, for she
was scarce able to stand."</p>
<p>"I am not surprised at that. A journey of a hundred and fifty
miles, to anyone who has never been on horseback, would be a
terrible trial, especially to a young girl. I really wonder that
she did not break down altogether. Why, you can remember how stiff
you were, yourself, the first day or two you were here, and that
after riding only an hour or two."</p>
<p>"I know, Uncle, and I should not have been in the least
surprised, if she had collapsed. I talked it over with Surajah, and
we agreed that, if she could not go on, we must hire a vehicle of
some sort, and let her travel, every day, in front of us with
Ibrahim, and that if it delayed us so much that there was any
possibility of our being overtaken, we would have put on our
peasant's dresses, got rid of our horses, and have gone forward on
foot.</p>
<p>"However, she kept up wonderfully well, and always made the best
of things."</p>
<p>"We won't ask you to tell us anything more, Dick, till your
mother joins us, or you will have to go over the story twice."</p>
<p>"No, Uncle; and I can assure you I don't want to tell the story
until I have had my supper, for our meals have not been very
comfortable on the road, and I have not eaten anything since early
this morning."</p>
<p>"What is Tippoo doing, Dick?"</p>
<p>"Well, as far as I can see, Uncle, he is preparing for war
again. He is strengthening all his forts, building fresh defences
to Seringapatam, and drilling numbers of fresh troops."</p>
<p>"The English general made a great mistake, in not finishing with
him when he was there. We ought to have taken the city, sent Tippoo
down a prisoner to Madras, and there tried him for the murder of
scores of Englishmen, and hung him over the ramparts. We shall have
all our work to do over again, in another four or five years.
However, it will not be such a difficult business as it was last
time, now that we have the passes in our hands."</p>
<p>"There is no doubt, Uncle, that a considerable part of the
population will be heartily glad when Tippoo's power is at an end.
You see, he and Hyder were both usurpers, and had no more right to
the throne than you had."</p>
<p>"Quite so, Dick, and that makes our letting him off, when we
could have taken the capital easily, all the more foolish. If he
had been the lawful ruler of Mysore, it might not have been good
policy to push him too hard, for he would have had sympathy from
all the native princes of India. But, as being only the son of an
adventurer, who had deposed and ill-treated the lawful ruler of
Mysore, it would seem to them but a mere act of justice, if the
English had dethroned him and punished him--provided, of course,
they put a native prince on the throne, and did not annex all his
dominions.</p>
<p>"It has all got to come some day. I can see that, in time, the
English will be the rulers of all India, but at present they are
not strong enough to face a general coalition of the native states
against them; and any very high-handed action, in Mysore, might
well alarm the native princes, throughout India, into laying aside
their quarrels with each other, and combining in an attempt to
drive them out."</p>
<p>Just as they had finished their meal, Mrs. Holland entered.</p>
<p>"The poor child is asleep," she said. "She wanted to talk at
first, and to tell me how grateful she was to you, Dick; but of
course I insisted on her being quiet, and said that she should tell
me all about it, in the morning. She ate a few mouthfuls of the
rice, and not long after she lay down, she fell asleep. I have left
Sundra sitting there, in case she should wake up again, but I don't
think it is likely that she will do so.</p>
<p>"Now, Dick, you must tell us all about it."</p>
<p>Dick was not a great hand at writing letters, so he had not
entered, with any fullness, into the details of what he was doing,
the principal point being to let his mother know that he was alive
and well.</p>
<p>"Before he begins," the Rajah said, "I will send for Rajbullub
and Surajah. Master Dick is rather fond of cutting his stories
short, and we must have Surajah here to fill up details."</p>
<p>Surajah and his father soon appeared. The former was warmly
greeted by the Rajah, and when they had seated themselves on a
divan, Dick proceeded to tell the story. He was not interrupted,
until he came to the incident of the killing of the tiger, and here
Surajah was called upon to supplement the story, which he did,
doing full credit to the quickness with which Dick had, without a
moment's loss of time, cut the netting and ascended to the
window.</p>
<p>When Dick came to the incident of the ladies of the harem
presenting them, in Tippoo's presence, with the two caskets, Mrs.
Holland broke in:</p>
<p>"You did not say anything about that in your letter, Dick. Let
me see your casket. Where is it?"</p>
<p>"It is in one of the saddlebags," Dick said.</p>
<p>"They are in my room," Rajbullub corrected. "Surajah brought
them up at once."</p>
<p>"Then he had better get them," the Rajah said.</p>
<p>"What do they contain, Dick?" he asked, as Surajah left the
room.</p>
<p>"All sorts of things--necklaces and rings. Some of them are
stones, as if they had been taken out of their settings. Pertaub
said they had done this because they thought, perhaps, that Tippoo
would not allow the jewels they had worn to be sold, or worn by
anyone else."</p>
<p>"Then I should think that they must be valuable," the ranee
said.</p>
<p>"Pertaub said they were worth a good deal, but I don't know
whether he really knew about the cost of precious stones. Some of
the things were of small value, being, I suppose, the trinkets of
the slave girls. All gave something, and there is a little cross
there that belonged to Annie. It has her initials on it, and she
had it on her neck, when she was captured. It was the thing she
valued most, and therefore she gave it. I don't suppose she had
anything else, except the usual trinkets she would wear, when she
went out on special occasions with the ladies of the harem. I
thought it would be useful to us, to prove who she was."</p>
<p>Surajah now returned with the casket.</p>
<p>"You had better look at Surajah's first," Dick said. "I don't
know anything about it, but it looks as if mine were the more
valuable. I wanted Surajah to put them all together, and divide
fairly, but he would not."</p>
<p>"My son was perfectly right," Rajbullub said. "If it had not
been for the young lord, the deed would never have been done at
all. Surajah aided in killing the tiger, but that was nothing more
than he has done on the hills, here. It is to you the merit is
entirely due. The purse that the Sultan gave my son was, in itself,
an ample reward for the share he took in it.</p>
<p>"Now, Surajah, open your casket. The ladies are waiting to see
the contents."</p>
<p>The whole of the little packets, some fifty in number, were
opened and examined; many of them eliciting exclamations of
admiration from the ranee and Mrs. Holland.</p>
<p>"There is no doubt that many of them are worth a good deal of
money," the Rajah said. "It is certain that Tippoo's treasuries are
full of the spoils he has carried off, from the states he has
overrun, and the ladies of the harem, no doubt, possess a store of
the jewels, and could afford to be liberal to those whom they
considered had saved their lives. Those seven, which you put
together as the best, must alone be worth a large sum. I should
think that the total value of the whole cannot be less than forty
or fifty thousand rupees, so that, if those in your casket are
handsomer than these, Dick, they must be valuable, indeed."</p>
<p>Dick's casket was next examined.</p>
<p>"Some of these stones are magnificent, Dick. Those three great
diamonds could only be valued by a jeweller accustomed to such
things, for their value depends upon their being of good lustre,
and free from all flaws; but, according to my judgment, I should
say that, at the very least, they must be worth ten thousand rupees
each. That pearl necklace is worth at least as much. Those rubies
are superb. I should say, lad, that the value of the whole cannot
be less than fifteen thousand pounds.</p>
<p>"The harem must be rich in jewels, indeed, to be able to make
such gifts. Not that I am surprised at that. Tippoo had all the
jewels belonging to the lawful rulers of Mysore. He has captured
all those of Coorg, Travancore, and the other states on the Malabar
coast. He and his father have looted all the Carnatic, from Cape
Comorin to the north of Madras. He has captured many of the Nizam's
cities, and several Mahratta provinces.</p>
<p>"In fact, he has accumulated, at Seringapatam, the spoils of the
whole of southern India, and those of the Hindoo portion of his own
people. The value of the jewels, alone, must be millions of pounds;
and as he himself, as they say, dresses simply, and only wears one
or two gems, of immense value, he may well have bestowed large
quantities upon his harem, especially as these would be, in fact,
only loans, as at the death of their wearers they would revert to
him, or, indeed, could be reclaimed at any moment, in a freak of
bad temper.</p>
<p>"I have no doubt they had to ask his permission to give you the
presents, and as you, at the moment, were in high favour with him,
I daresay he suffered them to give what they chose, without
inquiring at all into their value. The gold he gave you was simply
to procure your outfits, and he left it to the harem to reward you,
as they chose, for the service you had rendered.</p>
<p>"Well, Dick, I congratulate you heartily. It places your future
beyond doubt, and leaves you free to choose any mode of life that
you may prefer.</p>
<p>"I congratulate you, too, Margaret, on the lad's good fortune;
which he has well deserved by his conduct.</p>
<p>"See this, my sons. Here you have a proof of the advantages of
the training your cousin has had. The quickness and coolness he has
acquired, by it, enabled him to make his way down through the fort
at the top of the pass, and to defend the ruined hut against fifty
enemies. Now it has enabled him to seize the opportunity, opened by
the attack of the tiger on Tippoo's harem, thereby gaining the
Sultan's favour, his appointment to the rank of colonel in the
Mysore army, a post in his Palace, and this magnificent collection
of gems. Without that quickness and decision, his courage alone
would have done little for him. We in India have courage; but it is
because our princes and nobles are brought up in indolence and
luxury that the English, though but a handful in point of numbers,
have become masters of such wide territories. Surajah is as brave
as Dick, but he would be the first to tell you that it is to Dick
he owes it that, on their first excursion together, he escaped with
his life; and that, in this last adventure, he attained rank and
position, and has returned with these valuable gifts."</p>
<p>"It is indeed, my lord," Surajah said. "The young lord has been
my leader, and I have tried to carry out his orders. Alone, I could
never have got through the gate in the fort, and should no more
have thought of going to the assistance of the ladies of the
Sultan's harem than did any other of the thousands of men who were
there, looking on."</p>
<p>"So you see, boys," the Rajah went on, "that though, when he
came out here, your cousin was able neither to shoot nor to ride,
and can neither shoot nor ride as well, now, as can tens of
thousands of natives; he has acquired, from his training in rough
exercises, qualities of infinitely greater value than these
accomplishments; and I do hope that his example will stir you up to
take much greater interest than, in spite of my advice, you have
hitherto done in active sports and exercises. Your grandmother was
an Englishwoman, and I want to see that, with the white blood in
your veins, you have some of the vigour and energy of
Englishmen."</p>
<p>It was some days before Annie Mansfield left her room. For the
first two she had been completely prostrated. After that, she
rapidly gained strength; but Mrs. Holland thought it best to insist
upon her remaining perfectly quiet, until she had quite recovered.
Either she or the ranee were constantly with her, so that when, at
the end of a week, she made her first appearance at the breakfast
table, she was already at home with three of the party.</p>
<p>Before long her shyness completely wore off, and she seemed to
have become really a member of the family. Mrs. Holland had altered
two of her own dresses to fit her, but she preferred, for a time,
to dress in Indian costume, to which she was accustomed; and which
was, indeed, much better suited to the climate than the more
closely-fitting European dress. Mrs. Holland, however, bargained
that she should, of an evening, wear the frocks she had made for
her.</p>
<p>"You must get accustomed to them, my dear, so that when you find
your own people, you will not be stiff and awkward; as you
certainly will be, when you dress in English fashion for the first
time."</p>
<p>The day after his arrival, Dick had written to the military
secretary of the governor of Madras, with whom he was well
acquainted, to tell him that, having gone up in disguise to
Seringapatam, to endeavour to ascertain the fate of his father, he
had discovered a young English girl, detained as a slave in
Tippoo's harem, and that he had enabled her to effect her escape,
and had placed her in the charge of his mother. He then repeated
the account Annie had given of her capture, and asked if the
circumstances could be identified, and if the officer, of the name
of Mansfield, concerned in it was still alive; and if so, was he
still in India?</p>
<p>Annie was secretly dreading the arrival of the answer. After her
life as a slave, her present existence seemed to her so perfectly
happy that she shrank from the idea of any fresh change. She had no
memory, whatever, of her parents, and had already a very strong
affection for Mrs. Holland. She liked the ranee very much also, and
the absence of all state and ceremony, in the household of the
Rajah, was to her delightful. She was already on good terms with
the boys; and as to Dick, she was always ready to go out with him,
if he would take her, to run messages for him, or to do anything in
her power; and, indeed, watched him anxiously, as if she would
discover and forestall his slightest wish.</p>
<p>"One would think, Annie," he said one day, "that you were still
a slave, and that I was your master. I don't want you to wait on
me, child, as you waited on the ladies of the harem. However, as I
shall be going away in a few days now, it does not matter; but I
should grow as lazy as a young rajah, if this were to go on
long."</p>
<p>"What shall I do when you go away, Dick?"</p>
<p>"Well, I hope that you will set to work, hard, to learn to read
and write, and other things my mother will teach you. You would not
like, when you find your own people, to be regarded by girls of
your own age as an ignorant little savage; and I want you to set
to, and make up for lost time; so that, if you are still here when
I come back, I shall find you have made wonderful progress."</p>
<p>"Oh, I do hope I sha'n't be gone before that, Dick!"</p>
<p>"I am afraid you must make up your mind to it, Annie, for there
is no saying how long I may be away next time. You see, there is
not much chance of my lighting upon another white slave girl, and
having to bring her down here; and I shall go in for a long, steady
search for my father."</p>
<p>"I don't want you to find another slave girl, Dick," she said
earnestly, "not even if it brought you down here again. I should
not like that at all."</p>
<p>"Why not, Annie?"</p>
<p>"Oh, you might like her ever so much better than me. I should
like you to do all sorts of brave things, Dick, and to save people
as you have saved me, but I would rather there was not another
girl."</p>
<p>Dick laughed.</p>
<p>"Well, I don't suppose that there is much chance of it. Besides,
I can't turn my uncle's palace into a Home for Lost Girls."</p>
<p>Two days before Dick and Surajah started again, the reply from
the military secretary arrived. It stated that the time and
circumstances pointed out that the place besieged and forced to
surrender, eight years before, was Corsepan; and this was indeed
rendered a certainty, by the fact that the officer in command was
Captain Mansfield. He had with him a half company of Europeans, and
three companies of Sepoys. On looking through the official papers
at the time, he had found Captain Mansfield's report, in which he
stated that, on the night after leaving the fort, the troops, which
had been reduced to half their original strength, had been attacked
by a party either of dacoits or irregular troops. Fearing that some
such act of treachery might be attempted, he had told his men to
conceal a few cartridges under their clothes, when they marched out
with empty cartridge pouches. They had, on arriving at their
halting place, loaded; and, when the dacoits fell upon them, had
opened fire.</p>
<p>The robbers doubtless expected to find them defenceless, and
speedily fled. In the confusion, some of them had penetrated far
into the camp, and had carried off the captain's daughter, a child
of six years old. When peace was signed with Tippoo, three weeks
afterwards, the commissioners were ordered to make special
inquiries as to this child, and to demand her restoration. They
reported that Tippoo denied all knowledge of the affair, and
neither she, nor any of the other girls there, were ever given up.
The letter went on:</p>
<p>"There can be no doubt that the young lady you rescued is the
child who was carried off, and the initials you speak of, on the
cross, may certainly be taken as proof of her identity. Her father
retired from the Service last year, with the rank of colonel. I am,
of course, ignorant of his address. As you say that Mrs. Holland
will gladly continue in charge of her, I would suggest that you
should write a letter to Colonel Mansfield, stating the
circumstances of the case, and saying that, as soon as you are
informed of his address, the young lady will be sent to England. I
will enclose the letter in one to the Board of Directors, briefly
stating the circumstances, and requesting them to forward the
enclosure to Colonel Mansfield."</p>
<p>To Annie, the letter came as a relief. It would be nearly a year
before a letter could be received from her father. Until then she
would be able to remain in her new home.</p>
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