Part 37 (1/2)
He shut up his binoculars and climbed down the rocky pinnacle on which he had been perched, and went to eat a cheerless meal where Badshah grazed a thousand feet below.
In Malpura Noreen was suffering bitterly for her foolish pride and jealous readiness to believe evil of the man she loved. She knew that she was entirely to blame for her estrangement from him. He never came to their garden now; and to her dismay her brother ignored all hints to invite him.
For the boy was divided between loyalty to Chunerb.u.t.ty (whom he had to thank for his chance in life) and the man who had twice saved his sister.
Chunerb.u.t.ty had reproached him with forgetting what he, the now despised Hindu, had done for him in the past, and complained sadly that Miss Daleham looked down on him for the colour of his skin. So Fred felt that he must choose between two friends and that honour demanded his clinging to the older one. Therefore he begged Noreen for his sake not to hurt the engineer's feelings and to treat him kindly. She could not refuse, and Chunerb.u.t.ty took every advantage of her sisterly obedience. Whenever they went to the club he tried to monopolise her, and delighted in exhibiting the terms of friends.h.i.+p on which they appeared to be. The girl felt that even her old friends were beginning at last to look askance at her; consequently she tried to avoid going to the weekly gatherings.
It happened that on the occasion when Dermot, having arrived at Salchini on a visit to Payne, again made his appearance at the club, Daleham had insisted on his sister accompanying him there, much against her will.
Chunerb.u.t.ty was unable to go with them, being confined to his bungalow with a slight touch of fever.
That afternoon Noreen was more than ever conscious of a strained feeling and an unmistakable coldness to her on the part of the men whom she knew best. And worse, it seemed to her that some young fellows who had only recently come to the district and with whom she was little acquainted, were inclined to treat her with less respect than usual. She had seen Dermot arrive with his host; but, although Payne came to sit down beside her and chat, his guest merely greeted her courteously and pa.s.sed on at once.
All that afternoon it seemed to the girl that something in the atmosphere was miserably wrong, but what it was she could not tell. She was bitterly disappointed that Dermot kept away from her. It was not the smart of a hurt pride, but the bewildered pain of a child that finds that the one it values most does not need it. Indeed her best friends, all except Payne, seemed to have agreed to ignore her.
Mrs. Rice, however, was even sweeter in her manner than usual when she spoke to the girl.
”Where is Mr. Chunerb.u.t.ty today, dear?” she asked after lunch from where she sat on the verandah beside Dermot. Noreen was standing further along it with Payne, watching the play on the tennis-court in front of the club house.
”He isn't very well,” replied the girl. ”He's suffering from fever.”
”Oh, really? I am so sorry to hear that,” exclaimed the older woman. ”So sad for you, dear. However did you force yourself to leave him?”
Noreen looked at her in surprise.
”Why not? We could do nothing for him,” she said. ”We sent him soup and jelly made by our cook, and Fred went to see him before we started. But he didn't want to be disturbed.”
Mrs. Rice's manner grew even more sweetly sympathetic.
”I _am_ so sorry,” she said. ”How worried you must be!”
The girl stared at her in astonishment. She had never expected to find Mrs.
Rice seriously concerned about any one, and least of all the Hindu, who was no favourite of hers.
”Oh, there's really nothing to worry about,” she exclaimed impatiently.
”Fred said he hadn't much of a temperature.”
”Yes, I daresay. But you can't help being anxious, I know. I wonder that you were able to bring yourself to come here at all, dear,” said the older woman in honeyed tones.
”But why shouldn't I?”
Noreen's eyebrows were raised in bewilderment. She felt instinctively that there was some hidden unfriendliness at the back of Mrs. Rice's sympathetic words. She felt that Dermot was watching her.
”Oh, forgive me, dear. I am afraid I'm being indiscreet. I forgot,” said the other woman. She rose from her chair and turned to the man beside her.
”Major, do take me out to see how the coolies are getting on with the polo ground. I hope when it's finished you'll come here to play regularly. These boys want someone to show them the game. You military men are the only ones who know how it should be played.”
She put up her green-lined white sun-umbrella and led the way down the verandah steps. With a puckered brow Noreen watched her and her companion until they were out of sight round the corner of the little wooden building.
”What does Mrs. Rice mean?” she demanded. ”I'm sure there's something behind her words. She never pretended to like Mr. Chunerb.u.t.ty. Why should she be concerned about him now? Why does she seem to expect me to stay behind to nurse him? Of course I would, if he were dangerously ill. But he's not.”