The Moghul - LightNovelsOnl.com
You're reading novel online at LightNovelsOnl.com. Please use the follow button to get notifications about your favorite novels and its latest chapters so you can come back anytime and won't miss anything.
"Not at all. If Vasant Rao and his men hadn't appeared in time to help us, we'd both be dead now."
Nadir Sharifs eyes darkened and he looked away for a moment. "I must tell you that shocks even me." He turned back and smiled. "But I'm pleased to see you're still very much alive."
Hawksworth studied Nadir Sharif for a moment. "Do you have any idea who might have ordered it?"
"This world of ours is fraught with evil, Amba.s.sador." Nadir Sharif shook his head in resignation. "I sometimes marvel any of us survive it." Then he looked back at Hawksworth and beamed. "But then I've always found you to be a man blessed with rare fortune, Amba.s.sador. I think Allah must truly stand watch over you night and day. You seem to live on coincidences. I was always amazed that just when His Majesty ordered you out of Agra, the Portuguese decided to seize one of His Majesty's personal cargo vessels and by that imprudent folly restored you to favor. Now I hear you were attacked in the Fatehpur camp by some scurrilous hirelings . . . at the very moment the prince's Rajputs just happened to be nearby to protect you. I only wish I enjoyed a small portion of your luck." He smiled. "But what will you be doing now? Will you be joining with us or will you stay with the prince?"
"What do you mean?"
"I understand His Highness is striking camp tomorrow and marching west for the Rajput city of Udaipur. The new _maharana _there, a distinguished if somewhat renegade Rajput prince named Karan Singh, apparently has offered his lake palace as a refuge for the prince."
"I don't seem to have much choice. I'm probably no more welcome in Agra right now than you are."
Nadir Sharif examined him quizzically for a moment. "I'm not sure I understand exactly what you mean." Then he broke into laughter.
"Amba.s.sador, surely you don't a.s.sume I had anything to do with the tragedy today. The honest truth is I used every means at my command to dissuade the Rajput cavalry from their insidious treachery. They absolutely refused to heed anything I said. In fact, I actually tried to forewarn Her Majesty something just like this might happen."
"What are you talking about!"
"Their betrayal was astonis.h.i.+ng, and I must tell you frankly, entirely unaccountable. I intend to prepare a complete report for Her Majesty.
But this is merely a temporary setback for us, never fear." He turned and bowed lightly to s.h.i.+rin, acknowledging her for the first time. "I really must be leaving for the Imperial camp now. We've scheduled a war council tonight to plan our next strategy." He smiled. "I feel I should counsel you once again that you've chosen very unsavory company. Prince Jadar is a thorough disgrace to the empire." He bowed lightly once more to Hawksworth, then to s.h.i.+rin, and turned to remount his elephant.
"Good night, Amba.s.sador. Perhaps someday soon we'll drink _sharbat _together again in Agra."
Even as he spoke, his elephant rose and began to move out. His last words were drowned by cheering Rajputs.
"He'll never get away with it." Hawksworth watched incredulously as the elephant began delicately picking its way through the shattered camp.
"Oh yes he will. You don't know Nadir Sharif as I do."
Hawksworth turned to stare in bewilderment at Jadar. The prince was standing next to Mumtaz, their faces expressionless. As Nadir Sharif's elephant disappeared into the dark, Mumtaz said something in Persian and gestured toward s.h.i.+rin. She replied in the same language and they moved together, embracing.
"Your face is still fresh as the dawn, though your _kohl _is the dust of war." Mumtaz's Persian was delicate and laced with poetic allusions.
She kissed s.h.i.+rin, then looked down and noticed her right hand. "And what happened to your thumb?"
"I had no bow ring. You know we aren't supposed to shoot."
"Or do anything else except bear sons." Mumtaz flashed a mock frown in the direction of Jadar. "If I would let him, His Highness would treat me like some stupid Arab wet nurse instead of a Persian." She embraced s.h.i.+rin again and kissed her once more. "I also know you learned to fire a matchlock today."
"How did you find out?"
"Some of the Rajputs saw you shoot a Bundella horseman who had breached their lines and reached His Highness' elephant. One of them told my eunuchs." Her voice dropped. "He said you saved His Highness' life. I want to thank you."
"It was my duty."
"No, it was your love. I'm sorry I dare not tell His Highness what you did. He must never find out. He's already worried about too many obligations. You saw what just happened tonight with father. I think he's very troubled about what price he may be asked to pay someday for what happened today."
"I must tell you the English _feringhi _also shot the Bundella who had mounted His Highness' elephant."
"Is he the one there?" Mumtaz nodded discreetly toward Hawksworth, who stood uncomprehending, his haggard face and jerkin smeared with smoke.
Her voice had risen slightly and now her Persian was lilting again.
"He's the one."
Mumtaz scrutinized Hawksworth with a quick flick of her eyes, never looking up. "He's interesting. Truly as striking as I'd heard."
"I love him more than my life. I wish you could know him." s.h.i.+rin's Persian was equally as genteel as that of Mumtaz.
"But is he yet a worthy lover in your bed?" Mumtaz's smile was almost hidden. "I sent your message to father about the Hindu _devadasi_."
s.h.i.+rin smiled and said nothing.
"Then you must bring him with us to Udaipur."
"If His Highness will have us there."
"/ will have you there." She laughed and looked again at Hawksworth.
"If you'll tell me sometime what it's like to share your pillow with a _feringhi_."
"Captain Hawksworth." Jadar's martial voice rose above the a.s.sembled crowd of congratulating Rajputs. "Didn't I notice you on the field today? I thought I had a.s.signed you to guard my _zenana_. Are you aware the punishment for disobeying orders in an army in India is immediate beheading? Of if you like, I can have you shot from a cannon, as is sometimes done. Which would you prefer?"
"Your cannon were mostly overrun. I guess you'll have to behead me, if you can find anyone left with a sword sharp enough."
Jadar roared and pulled out his own sword. There was a deep nick in the blade.
"By tomorrow I'm sure we can find one. In the meantime I'll have to confine you in the _gulal bar _to prevent your escape." He slipped the sword back into his belt. "Tell me, did you manage to hit anything today with your matchlocks?"
"Possibly. There were so many in the Imperial infantry I may have succeeded in hitting someone."
Jadar laughed again. "From the looks of her thumb, it would seem the woman in your _howdah _did most of the shooting. I'm astounded you'd permit her such liberty."
"She has a mind of her own."
"Like all Persians." Jadar reached and lowered Mumtaz's veil over her face. She let it hang for a moment, then shoved it back again. "Allah protect us." He turned and stared a moment into the dark, toward the direction Nadir Sharif had departed. "Yes, Allah protect us from all Persians and from all Persian ambition." Then he suddenly remembered himself and glanced back at Hawksworth. "So tonight we may eat lamb together after all, if there's one still to be found. But not yet in Paradise. For that you will have to wait a few days longer."
Hawksworth s.h.i.+fted uncomfortably. "What exactly do you mean?"
"Udaipur, Captain, tomorrow we strike camp and march for Udaipur. It's a Rajput paradise." He turned and beckoned toward the Rajput commander who had ridden from Fatehpur with them. "It's time you met my friend Mahdu Singh, brother of His Highness, Rana Karan Singh, the Maharana of Udaipur. The _maharana _has generously offered us his new guest palace, on his island of Jagmandir. It's on Pichola Lake, in the Rajput capital of Udaipur. He was only just building the palace when I was there before, but I seem to remember it's designed in a very interesting new style." He glanced at Mumtaz. "I think Her Highness will approve." Then he continued. "Rajputana, Captain, is beautiful. What's more, its mountains are impregnable. I led the only Moghul army ever to escape defeat by the Rajputs who live in those mountains. But today I have many loyal friends there." Mahdu Singh bowed lightly to Hawksworth while Jadar watched in satisfaction. "His Highness, the Maharana, may decide to make a Rajput out of you and keep you there, if you seem worth the trouble. Who can tell?"
He turned and dismissed Mumtaz and her eunuchs with a wave. He watched fondly as she disappeared into the _gulal bar_, then turned and joined the waiting Rajputs. Together they moved out through the camp, embracing and consoling.
"Did you hear what he said?" Hawksworth turned to s.h.i.+rin, who stood waiting, a light smile erasing some of the fatigue in her face. "He's planning to recruit another army of Rajputs. This war is only beginning. Good Christ, when will it end?"
"When he's Moghul. Nothing will stop him now." She took his hand, and together they pushed through the shattered gulal bar toward the remains of their tent.
CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE