I told him pretty sharp to keep his proverbs to himself; if there's one thing I bar it's croakers disturbing my peace of mind, especially when they're leery coves who know their business. Mind you, I began to wonder if he did, for now, after the terrors and transports of my first weeks in Lahore, there came a long spell in which nothing happened at all. We prosed daily about the Soochet legacy, and damned dull it was. The Inheritance Act of 1833 ain't a patch on the Police Gazette, and after weeks of listening to the drivel of a garlic-breathing dotard in steel spectacles on the precise meaning of "universum jus" and "seisin" I was bored to the point where I almost wrote to Elspeth. Barra choop, indeed.
But if there was no sign of the tempest foretold by Jassa, there was no lack of rumour. As the Dasahra passed, and October lengthened into November, the bazaars were full of talk of British concentration on the river, and Dinanath, of all people, claimed publicly that the Company was preparing to annex Sikh estates on the south bank of the Sutlej; it was also reported that he had said that "the Maharani was willing for war to defend the national honour". Well, we'd heard that before; the latest definite word was that she'd moved from Amritsar to Shalamar, and was rioting the nights away with Lal. I was surprised that he was still staying the course; doubtless Rai and the Python were spelling him.
Then late in November things began to happen which caused me, reluctantly, to sit up straight. The Khalsa began to reassemble on Maian Mir, Lal was confirmed as Wazir and Tej as commander-in-chief, both made proclamations full of fire and fury, and the leading generals took their oaths on the Granth, pledging undying loyalty to young Dalip with their hands on the canopy of Runjeet's tomb. You may be sure I saw none of this; diplomatic immunity or not, I was keeping my head well below the parapet, but Jassa gave me eye-witness accounts, taking cheerful satisfaction at every new alarm, curse him.
"They're just waiting for the astrologers to name the day," says he. "Even the order of march is cut and dried—Tej Singh to Ferozepore with 42,000 foot, while Lal crosses farther north with 20,000 gorracharra. Yes, sir, they're primed and ready to fire."
Not wanting to believe him, I pointed out that strategically the position was no worse than it had been two months earlier.
"Except that there isn't a rupee left in the Pearl Mosque, and nothing to pay 'em with. I tell you, they either march or explode. I just hope Gough's ready. What does Broadfoot say?"
That was the most disquieting thing of all—for two weeks I hadn't had a line from Simla. I'd been cyphering away until Second Thessalonians was dog-eared, without reply. I didn't tell Jassa that, but reminded him that the final word lay with Jeendan; she'd charmed the Khalsa into delay before, and she could do it again.
"I've got ten chips*(*Rupees.) says she can't," says he. `"Once the astrologers say the word, it'd be more than her pretty little hide was worth to hold back. If those stars say `Go', she's bound to give 'em their heads—and God help Ferozepore!"
He lost his bet. "I shall instruct the astrologers," she had told me, and she must have done, for when the wise men took a dekko at the planets, they couldn't make head or tail of them. Finally, they admitted that the propitious day was obvious enough, but unfortunately it had been last week and they hadn't noticed, dammit. The panches weren't having that, and insisted that another date be found, and sharp about it; the astrologers conferred, and admitted that there was a pretty decent-looking day about a fortnight hence, so far as they could tell at this distance. That didn't suit either, and the soldiery were ready to string them up, at which the astrologers took fright and said tomorrow was the day, not a doubt of it; couldn't think how they'd missed it before. Their credit was pretty thin by this time, and although the gorracharra were ordered out of Lahore, Lal took them only a little way beyond Shalamar before hurrying back to the city and the arms of Jeendan, who was once more in residence at the Fort. Tej sent off the infantry by divisions, but stayed at home himself, and the march was petering out, Jassa reported.
I heaved a sigh of relief; plainly Jeendan was being as good as her word. Now that she was back, under the same roof, I considered and instantly dismissed the notion of trying to have a word with her; nothing could have been worse just then than talk spreading in the bazaar and the camp that she'd been colloguing with a British officer. So I sat down to compose a cypher to Broadfoot, describing the confusion caused by the astrologers, and how the Khalsa were marching round in rings without their two leading generals. "In all this (I concluded) I think we may discern a certain lady's fine Punjabi hand." Elegant letter-writers, we politicals were in those days—sometimes too elegant for our own good.
I sent it off by way of the Scriptures, and suggested to Jassa that he might canvass Gardner, who had returned with Jeendan, to find out the state of play, but my faithful orderly demurred, pointing out that he was the last man in whom Gardner would confide at any time, "and if the jealous son-of-a-bitch gets the idea that I'm nosing about right now, he's liable to do me harm. Oh, sure, he's Broadfoot's friend—but it's Dalip's salt he eats—and Mai Jeendan's. Don't forget that. If it comes to war, he can't be on our side."
I wasn't sure about that, but there was nothing to do but wait—for news of the Khalsa's intentions, and word from Broadfoot. Three days went by, and then a week, in which Lahore buzzed with rumours: the Khalsa were marching, the British were invading, Goolab Singh had declared first for one side then for the other, the Raja of Nabla had announced that he was the eleventh incarnation of Vishnu and was raising a holy war to sweep the foreigners out of India -- all the usual twaddle, contradicted as soon as it was uttered, and I could do nothing but endure the Soochet legacy by day, and pace my balcony impatiently in the evening, watching the red dusk die into purple, star-filled night over the fountain court, and listen to the distant murmur of the great city, waiting, like me, for peace or war.
It was nervous work, and lonely, and then on the seventh night, when I had just climbed into bed, who should slip in, all unannounced, but Mangla. News at last, thinks I, and was demanding it as I turned up the lamp, but all the reply she made was to pout reproachfully, cast aside her robe, and hop into bed beside me.
"After six weeks I have not come to talk politics," says she, rubbing her bumpers across my face. "Ah, taste, bahadur—and then eat to your heart's content! Have you missed me?"
"Eh? Oh, damnably!" says I, taking a polite munch. "But hold on … what's the news? Have you a message from your mistress? What's she doing?"
"This—and this—and this," says she, teasing busily. "With Lal Singh. Rousing his manhood—but whether for an assault on herself or on the frontier, who knows? Are you jealous of him, then? Am I so poor a substitute?"
"No, dammit! Hold still, can't you? Look, woman, what's happening, for heaven's sake? One moment I hear the Khalsa's marching, the next that it's been recalled—is it peace or war? She swore she'd give warning—here, don't take 'em away! But I must know, don't you see, so that I can send word —"
"Does it matter?" murmurs the randy little vixen. "At this moment … does it truly matter?"
She was right, of course; there's a time for everything. So for the next hour or so she relieved the tedium of affairs and reminded me that life isn't all policy, as old Runjeet said before expiring blissfully. I was ready for it, too, for since my protracted bout with Jeendan I hadn't seen a skirt except my little maids, and they weren't worth turning to for.