Page:Kim - Rudyard Kipling (1912).djvu/337

Rh 'We cannot wander! I can hardly walk,' groaned Kim's victim.

'Perhaps the holy man will be merciful in loving-kindness, Sar, otherwise'

'I promise myself a peculiar pleasure in emptying my revolver into that young bonze when next we meet,' was the unchristian answer.

'Revolvers! Vengeance! Bonzes!' Hurree crouched lower. The war was breaking out afresh. 'Have you no consideration for our loss? The baggage! The baggage!' He could hear the speaker literally dancing on the grass. 'Everything we bore! Everything we have secured! Our gains! Eight months' work! Do you know what that means? Decidedly. It is we who can deal with Orientals. Oh, you have done well.'

They fell to it in several tongues, and Hurree smiled. Kim was with the kiltas. There was no means of communicating with the boy, but he could be trusted. For the rest, he could so stage-manage the journey through the hills that Hilás, Bunár, and four hundred miles of hill-roads should tell the tale for a generation. Men who cannot control their own coolies are little respected in the Hills, and the Pahari has a very keen sense of humour.

'If I had done it myself,' thought Hurree, 'it would not have been better; and, by Jove, now I think of it, of course I arranged it myself. How quick I have been! Just when I ran down hill I thought it! Thee outrage was accidental, but onlee me could have—worked it—ah—for all it was damn well worth. Consider the moral effect upon these ignorant peoples! No treaties—no papers—no written documents at all and me to interpret for them. How I shall laugh with the Colonel! I wish I had their papers also, but you cannot occupy two places in space simultaneously. That is axiomatic.'