The Disputed V.C - The Disputed V.C Part 21
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The Disputed V.C Part 21

Four days after Jim and Ted Russell and Alec Paterson had set out from Aurungpore with the detachment of the Guides, they overtook the head-quarters of their regiment. The rapid rate of marching, the excitement of recent events, and the prospect of taking part in the assault on the capital of Hindustan and in the crushing of the mutiny, had proved sufficiently exhilarating to keep up the spirits and health of the boys in spite of the great heat.

Both Ted and Alec had been provided with horses before leaving Aurungpore, "Tommy Dodd" having been stolen by some budmashes; and they found the march enjoyable at times, especially in the cool of the morning before the sun had mounted high, and on moonlight evenings. Of course their detachment was lightly equipped, and had little impedimenta to carry, whereas the rest of the corps had to drag along and guard their tents, commissariat, baggage, and ammunition, otherwise they would never have been overtaken.

Right across the vast Punjab swept the famous corps of Guides, through shady groves of peach and apricot trees, and over dusty plains destitute of shelter; across the five rivers to which the land owes its name,[10]

each day bringing the stalwart frontiersmen nearer to the goal of their desire. Every man in that band was eager for the fray.

[10] Punjab means "the country of the five rivers".

Afridis, Afghans, and the various Pathan tribesmen of the corps looked forward to the sacking of the wealthy city. For centuries past their forefathers had marched down at frequent intervals to plunder the rich plains of Hindustan, and, as children, they had listened to glowing accounts of the vast wealth of the Mogul capital. The Sikhs of the corps were equally ready to loot, for the Sikh is nearly as rapacious as the Pathan, and much more miserly. They remembered also the bitter enmity between their ancestors and the Mohammedan rulers of Delhi, and their persecution at the hands of the Moslems. The single company of little Gurkhas, though by no means grasping like their comrades, were no less eager to come in contact with the mutinous hordes. The "Irishmen of Asia" these short-legged warriors might be called, from their readiness for battle and love of a fight at all times and seasons.

The Guide Corps consisted of three troops of cavalry and six companies of infantry, about eight hundred men in all, under the command of Captain Daly. The greater part of both infantry and cavalry were Pathans, and they were the best irregular horsemen in the world. The troopers supplied their own horses, and were men of some wealth and standing in their own country. As the fierce borderers rode and marched along, laughing as they spoke of the fun they would have at Delhi, Bahram Khan grimly told of the punishment meted out to the rebels of Aurungpore, and boasted of having played the most important role in the hoax.

"Truly it was all my idea, not Russell Sahib's," he repeated. "But for me all the Sahib-Logue would have been dead ere this."

"Tell us, how did it all happen, cousin?" enquired a duffadar, a relation of the ressaidar's, Nawab Khan by name.

"When Ishar Das brought the news that another rebel regiment had marched into Aurungpore," began the quondam bandit, gratified by the opportunity thus afforded of displaying his triumph, "assuredly we knew not what to do. Russell Sahib called a halt, and there we consulted together. Truly brothers, for a moment even I thought we must give up the attempt. But what is impossible to the true believer? and the idea came into my mind, placed there doubtless by the Prophet. Thereupon I advised our officer to call the men together, that we might instruct them secretly to prepare for mutiny. Then with many oaths we slew Russell Sahib and threw his body into the ditch"--(here the Pathan chieftain chuckled gleefully and his comrades laughed out loudly)--"then we dressed him up as a sepoy, and darkened his face, whilst I robbed him of his watch and his sword and took the command, and we marched along swiftly in great disorder, proclaiming that Bahadur Shah was king in Delhi, and that not a Feringhi should escape our swords. Truly, my brothers, we were fiercer and more bloodthirsty than any of the real rebels. The mutinous dogs, as they heard of our approach, sent out men to meet us, and we rejoiced with them, though we should have greatly loved to slay them. As we entered the courtyard at Aurungpore they greeted us with cheers and great praise, and I spoke scornfully of their methods of fighting. Yea, I laughed in the face of their commandant, for he had no authority, and told him, so that all might hear, that he would never exterminate the infidels. Therefore they placed me in command, as I intended they should, and because I treated them as little better than curs, they became my dogs, and allowed me--the fools!--to place my men, with Sultan Jan and Dayal Singh the Sikh in command, in charge of the guns.

"They watched over them all night, and when morning came--ho! ho!--I made the madmen--surely the Prophet had smitten them all with madness--I made them, I say, empty all their firearms in the air, pretending that we must trust in the bayonet as soon as the cannon had done their work.

"'Aye,' said I, 'if your muskets are still loaded ye will lie down and fire as they escape. Ye must surround them with a ring of steel,' I said. So the madmen delivered themselves into my hands! Then I gave the order, and Sultan Jan of Kohat and Dayal Singh the Sikh cried out, and we let fly into their midst, first destroying the Sikhs, for they are true soldiers, though unbelieving dogs, and the others were but children. Yea, by the beard of the Prophet we destroyed them! Aye, we swept them away, mown down like the yellow corn in the Tirah before the strokes of the sickle.

"So they ran, and we followed; through the streets they ran screaming and throwing down their weapons, and we slew them by scores and by hundreds. But 'twas I, Bahram Khan, who saved Aurungpore. By the Prophet's beard, 'twas I!"

Loudly the Afghan horsemen applauded the strategy of the ressaidar. They laughed and shouted with glee as they listened, and greatly they regretted that they had not been present to participate therein.

Bahram Khan also told his countrymen how the boy-officer riding beside them--younger than any of their own officers, for the Guides required strong men to handle them--had blown up the magazine and miraculously escaped death; and the stern warriors looked approvingly at our hero, and one remarked in English, "Truly, we shall make a Guide of you, sahib!" Officers as well as men treated him as an equal, because of the experience he had gained, and the way in which he had looked death in the face.

For Captain Daly, Ted soon felt an ardent admiration. Said this gallant soldier to the lad on the day that the main body of the regiment was rejoined, "Well, youngster, do you know that you're taking part in what is going to be the best march in Indian history?"

"I'm glad I'm here, sir," replied Ted; and indeed he looked content.

"Yes," continued the commanding officer; "seven hundred and fifty miles is the distance from Murdan to Delhi, and I'll do it in thirty days. We shall probably be the only native regiment that can be trusted to take part in the siege."

Ted had looked in vain for his brother's friend Spencer, until Jim explained that this unlucky officer had been shooting in Kashmir when the outbreak occurred, and so had not yet been able to rejoin his regiment. Ted admired Spencer greatly, and was very sorry to miss him.

He was soon attracted, however, by a new acquaintance, Quintin Battye, the noble and well-loved lieutenant of the Guides, whose name was soon to gain such tragic fame.

Through Attock and Rawal Pindi along the frontier, through the large Sikh capitals of Ludhiana, Amballa, and Kurnaul, had marched the famous corps, and wherever they went the Sikh and Punjabi inhabitants looked on in wonderment. As the great troopers in khaki (for the Guides were the first to wear that uniform), sitting their horses as though born in the saddle, rode haughtily past the gaping countrymen, at whom they hardly deigned to look, or as with firm step the six hundred infantry marched easily through the villages, the knots of men gathered under the shade of the banyan-tree discussing the fall of the English raj,[11] would quickly disperse to their houses, and from that shelter watch the regiment swing past.

[11] Government or dominion.

"Ah! did I not tell thee, Maun Singh, that the English had not all been swept away?" one would say.

"True, brother. Let us mind our own business and look after our fields, it is not safe to meddle with the Feringhis," would be the reply.

"Who were they, Father?" a youngster would ask. "Were not our countrymen amongst them? But many were Afghan dogs!"

"Those are the Guides, my son. They have told us lies who said the English had lost their power. Consider, my brothers. How could the Guides be spared from the frontier unless the Sikhs and the Pathans, the Afghans and the Afridis, were on the side of our white rulers? Let our village have no part in this rebellion, else shall we all suffer."

So province after province was passed, and the people, noticing how proud and confident the Guides looked, thought, "Surely the English are still masters of India."

And old Sikh and Jat soldiers of "John Company",[12] men who had been hesitating, who had been offered bribes to fight against the Feringhi, and who had been told that the whites were all being swept into the sea, hesitated no longer. They cleaned their swords, harnessed their horses, and veterans brought their sons, requesting permission to enlist in the new Punjab regiments which John Lawrence, the mighty commissioner of the Punjab, was raising for the reinforcement of the army before Delhi.

[12] The Honourable East India Company, also called "Koompanie Bahadur", or "The Great Lord Company".

"The Punjab," said the leader of the Guide Corps, "is paying back India all she has cost her, by sending troops stout and firm to her aid."

While still more than a hundred miles from Delhi, the Guides were required to quell a disturbance in a neighbouring district. Captain Daly, impatient at the delay, desired to forward despatches to General Anson, whose army lay some miles to the north of the great city. He consulted Captain Russell.

"Your brother is a plucky youngster," he remarked, "but what is his friend like? He hasn't much to say for himself, but I think he's to be trusted."

"Paterson seems one of the quiet sort you can depend on," Jim replied.

"If you are thinking of sending them on to the commander-in-chief, I think they'd enjoy the job and would carry it through. I suppose you would give them an escort?"

Daly beckoned the two ensigns, and handing the papers to Paterson, he explained the mission, and advised them to ride as much as possible at night.

"You shall have half a dozen troopers as escort," he concluded. "The country will be quiet until you get near Delhi. No monkey tricks, mind, youngsters, and don't stop to blow up any arsenals on the road!"

The boys and their six Pathan troopers hastily provisioned themselves, and, pricking their steeds, dashed joyously away. A ride of a hundred miles with no one to give them orders! They commanded the party, and the general himself was not half so proud of his command as our ensigns of foot were of their half-dozen huge, wild, black-bearded troopers. For a day and two nights they rode without incident, but on the morning of the third, as they drew near to Alipore, and saw the towers and minarets of Delhi glittering in the sun a dozen miles to the south-east, they heard the sound of firing. Proceeding cautiously, they presently perceived a number of rebel horsemen flying before a body of English dragoons, as the eight topped the crest of the slight incline which had hidden them from view. The Carabineers had already given up the pursuit, and were sending a few shots after the galloping rebels, who, seeing the dark-faced, turbaned horsemen, took them for men of the mutinous irregular cavalry, and raised a cheer.

Ted looked hopefully at Alec, who hesitated for an instant. He was as keen as Ted, but ought he to risk his men and the safety of the despatch?

"Now, sahibs!" whispered Nawab Khan, the Pathan duffadar (corporal).

That decided the young commandant.

"Charge, men!" Alec cried, and waved his sword. "Charge!"

Eight blades flashed in the sunlight, as with a wild yell the little band hurled themselves like a thunderbolt into the midst of the bewildered sepoys. Ted, Nawab Khan, and a trooper, their chargers straining to the utmost, rode side by side, the other five close behind, and the rebel rank broke at once. A dozen men of the 3rd Native Cavalry--the regiment that commenced the great mutiny--fell before that charge, the leader being unhorsed and severely wounded by Ted himself, and before they could recover from their confusion the Carabineers were on their heels. Without waiting to take revenge on the insolent handful, the rebel cavalry scattered and galloped away, the ensigns and the Pathans following hard. At Paterson's command five men ceased their pursuit, but the duffadar, engaged in a running fight with two pandies at once, would not turn back. At length one sowar[13] dropped with cloven skull, and the other--a rebel captain--was being disposed of, when a dozen sepoys turned their horses round to help their officer.

Quick as thought the Pathan seized the wounded subadar by the collar and jerked him out of the saddle; then, leaping from his own horse on to the rebel's, he laughed at the sepoys, and quickly rejoined his comrades.

"He had wounded my horse, sahib, and his was the finest steed I've seen, so I prevailed on the dog to exchange, ho! ho!" and Nawab Khan laughed. And well he might; the beast, a beautiful dark chestnut, was indeed a grand charger.

[13] A native trooper or horse-soldier.

"Well, of all the cool cheek!" exclaimed the officer of the 6th Dragoons (known as the "Carabineers"), laughing as he came up. "Anyone hurt?"

"None of us, sir," replied Ted with a grin; "but I fancy some of the rebels are."

"And who on earth are you?" was the next question.

"Guides, sir," was Paterson's laconic but very proud answer.

"Guides! Is this all the regiment?"

"I should think not!" exclaimed Ted indignantly, and Paterson proceeded to explain his errand.

"Well, are the rest like these?" asked the astonished captain, who was but newly from England.

"Quite as good. You'll soon see, sir," Ted confidently assured him, whilst the Pathans slowly looked the Carabineers over from head to foot, and evidently approved of the inspection--a compliment returned by the British troopers. Together they entered the camp.