The Half-Hearted eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 341 pages of information about The Half-Hearted.

The Half-Hearted eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 341 pages of information about The Half-Hearted.

“Who sent the telegrams?”

“Haystoun and Winterham.”

“Then they’re alone at Nazri?”

“Except for the Khautmi men.”

“Will they try to hold it?”

“I should think so.  They’re all sportsmen.  Gad, there won’t be a soul left alive.”

Logan galloped off with a long face.  It would be a great ending, but what a waste of heroic stuff!  And as he remembered Lewis’s frank good-fellowship he shut his lips, as if in pain.

The telegrams were sent, and reply messages began to pour in, which kept one man at the end of the telephone.  About half-past ten a blue light burned in the window across the river.  There seemed something to do in the native town of narrow streets and evil-smelling lanes, for the sound of shouting and desultory firing rose above the stir of the fort.  The telegraph office abutted on the far end of the bridge, and Thwaite had taken the precaution of bidding the native officer he had sent across keep his men posted around the end of the passage.  Now he himself took thirty men, for the native town was the most dangerous point he had to fear.  The wires must not be cut till the last moment, and, as they passed over the bridge and then through the English quarter, there was small danger if the office was held.  He found, as he expected, that the place was being maintained against considerable odds.  A huge mixed crowd, drawn in the main from the navvies who had been employed on the new road, armed with knives and a few rifles, and encouraged by certain wild, dancing figures which had the look of priests, was surging around the gate.  The fighting stuff was Afridi or Chitrali, but there was abundance of yelling from this rabble of fakirs and beggars who accompanied them.  Order there was none, and it was clear to Thwaite that this rising had been arranged for but not organized.  His men had small difficulty in forcing a way to the office, where they served to complete the cordon of defence and the garrison of the bridge-end.  Two men had been killed and some half-dozen of the rioters.  He pushed into the building, and found a terrified Kashmir clerk sternly watched by his servant and the Sikh orderly.  The man, with tears streaming down his face, was attempting to read the messages which the wires brought.

Thwaite picked up and read the latest, which was a scrawl in quavering characters over three telegraph forms.  It was from Ladcock at Gilgit, saying that he was having a row of his own with the navvies there, and that he could send no reinforcements at present.  If he quieted the trouble in time he would try and hold the Mazeno Pass, and meanwhile he had done his best to wake the Punjab.  As the wires would be probably cut within the next hour there would be no more communications, but he besought Thwaite to keep the invader in the passes, as the whole south country was a magazine waiting for a spark to explode.  The message ran in short violent words, and Thwaite had a vision of Ladcock, short, ruddy, and utterly out of temper, stirred up from his easy life to hold a frontier.

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The Half-Hearted from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.