unloaded, as you say - tucked into my belt, would make me feel more secure.
He sighed.
Joe knew hed been tricked but he recognized that the crushing fear the boy was living under was genuine, the threat real, his plea heartfelt.
He took a deep breath. He heard his own voice saying with what he thought might just be the formality and pride appropriate to a Rajput warrior, I would be honoured, Bahadur, if you would keep the gun.
They smiled at each other in complete understanding and Bahadur and his Browning disappeared as suddenly as they had arrived.
Soaking in his bath, Joe was torn between rage and amusement. He was angry to have lost his gun though luckily he had had the forethought to pack his old service revolver along with ammunition. Ammunition! A sudden cold thought sent him dripping, naked, from the bath to his trunk. He tried to recollect the weight of the little gun in his hand when he had wrested it from Bahadur and could not. Cursing his carelessness, he dug around and, with a sigh of relief, found the spare clips for the Browning still where hed placed them, wrapped up in a waistcoat. He counted them. There was one missing.
Chapter Seven
Ť ^ ť
Joe groaned. A nervous twelve-year-old was loose about the palace armed with the police commanders own gun. Not unloaded as he had thought but with eight lethal bullets up the spout. Joe imagined Sir Georges comments if he ever found out. Suppose the lad went straight back to the zenana with his new toy to exact retribution from the maharanees for the attempts on his mothers life? Like a fox in a hen-coop hed be able to kill at will.
Joe tried to put these horrifying but fanciful ideas out of his mind. There had been something about the boy that had earned his confidence. He didnt doubt his courage and hed been impressed by his cleverness and quick thinking. Perhaps Bahadur had presented him with a true bill - he genuinely wanted to keep the gun as personal protection. Well, so be it. He reasoned that Bahadur could trust no one; he could be in genuine danger of death from an unknown quarter and, ultimately, his only defence might well be the Browning. And then, though heaven forbid, hed be damned glad hed given it to him. He told himself to relax and finish dressing. He had left himself only an hour in which to complete his report for Claude.
Feeling rather foolish sitting at his desk in evening gear and the promised white tie, all pressed at a moments notice by the palace staff, Joe found supplies of writing paper and an excellent fountain pen, already loaded with black ink, and set to work. The words flowed easily, no detail was missed and he was happy with his account. He folded it in two, slipped it into his pocket and, after a guilty look at the Cartier watch, he tucked that into his other pocket, not knowing what else to do with it and acknowledging that the security of his room was nonexistent. He pulled the bell and waited for his escort to the dining room. He had left a perfect ten minutes to spare.
While he waited he went to stand in front of the cheval glass to make a last check on his appearance. The evening suit, tailored for him in Calcutta, fitted well, the narrow, waist-long jacket flattered his slim figure and long legs. His spanking white shirt and tie emphasized a face darkened by almost a year of living an outdoor life in the sun. More of this and Ill be able to pass for a native, he thought, tugging at his tie. But not, perhaps, with these eyes. Light grey was not an Indian colour. Huh! Fighting elephant, indeed!
He was confused to find himself wondering briefly what Madeleine would make of him with all the layers of dust and perspiration washed away and reminded himself guiltily that she would, of course, not be expected in any society to come down to dinner mere hours after her husbands death.
The reassuring figure of Govind appeared in the mirror behind him. The waistcoat, Govind, said