Chapter Two
bharangpur, west bengal,
india
wednesday, June 24, 1857
It’s all gone wrong. Every
bleeding thing gone wrong!
Captain Sir Albert Westphalen of the Bengal
European Fusiliers stood in the shade of an awning between two
market stalls and sipped cool water from a jug freshly drawn from a
well. It was a glorious relief to be shielded from direct attack by
the Indian sun, but there was no escaping the glare. It bounced off
the sand in the street, off the white stucco walls of the
buildings, even off the pale hides of those nasty humpbacked bulls
roaming freely through the marketplace. The glare drove the heat
through his eyes to the very center of his brain. He dearly wished
he could pour the contents of the jug over his head and let the
water trickle down the length of his body.
But no. He was a gentleman in the uniform of
Her Majesty’s army and surrounded by heathens. He couldn’t do
anything so undignified. So he stood here in the shade, his
high-domed pith helmet square upon his head, his buff uniform
smelly and sopping in the armpits and buttoned up tight at the
throat, and pretended the heat didn’t bother him. He ignored the
sweat soaking the thin hair under his helmet, oozing down over his
face, clinging to the dark moustache he had so carefully trimmed
and waxed this morning, gathering in drops at his chin to fall off
onto his tunic.
Oh, for a breeze. Or better still, rain. But
neither was due for another month. He had heard that when the
summer monsoon started blowing from the southwest in July there
would be plenty of rain. Until then, he and his men would have to
fry.
It could be worse.
He could have been sent with the others to
retake Meerut and Delhi from the rebels… forced marches along the
Ganges basin in full uniform and kit, rushing to face hordes of
crazed Sepoys waving their bloody talwars and shouting “Din! Din! Din!”
He shuddered. Not for me, thank you very
much.
Luckily, the rebellion had not spread this
far east, at least not to any appreciable extent. That was fine
with Westphalen. He intended to stay as far away from the pandies
as he could. He knew from regimental records that there were a
total of 20,000 British troops on the subcontinent. What if all of
India’s untold millions decided to rise up and end the British Raj?
It was a recurrent nightmare. There would be no more Raj.
And no more East India Company. Which,
Westphalen knew, was the real reason the army was here—to protect
“John Company’s” interests. He had sworn to fight for the Crown and
he was willing—up to a point—to do that, but he’d be damned if he
was going to die fighting for a bunch of tea traders. After all, he
was a gentleman and had only accepted a commission out here to
forestall the financial catastrophe threatening his estate. And
perhaps to make some contacts during his term of service. He had
arranged for a purely administrative job: no danger. All part of a
simple plan to allow him time to find a way to recoup his
considerable gambling losses—one might even say incredible losses
for a man just forty years of age—and then go home and straighten
out his debts. He grimaced at the enormous amount of money he had
squandered since his father had died and the baronetcy had passed
to him.
But his luck had run true here on the far
side of the world—it stayed bad. There had been years of peace in
India before he had come—a little trouble here and there, but
nothing serious. The Raj had seemed totally secure. But now he knew
that dissension and discontent among the native recruits had been
bubbling beneath the surface, waiting, it seemed, for his arrival.
He had been here not even a year, and what happened? The Sepoys go
on a rampage!
It wasn’t fair.
But it could be worse, Albert, old boy, he
told himself for the thousandth time that day. It could be
worse.
And it most certainly could be far better.
Better to be back in Calcutta at Fort William. Not much cooler, but
closer to the sea there. If India explodes, it’s just a hop and a
skip to a boat on the Hoogly River and then off to the safety of
the Bay of Bengal.
He took another sip and leaned his back
against the wall. It wasn’t an officerly posture but he really
didn’t give a bloody damn at this point. His office was like a
freshly stoked furnace. The only sane thing to do was to stay here
under the awning with a water jug until the sun got lower in the
sky. Three o’clock now. It should be cooling down soon.
He waved his hand through the air around his
face. If he ever got out of India alive, the one thing he would
remember more vividly than the heat and humidity were the flies.
They were everywhere, encrusting everything in the marketplace— the
pineapples, the oranges, the lemons, the piles of rice—all were
covered with black dots that moved and flew and hovered, and lit
again. Bold, arrogant flies that landed on your face and darted
away just before you could slap them.
That incessant buzz—was it shoppers busy
haggling with the merchants, or was it hordes of flies?
The smell of hot bread wafted by his nose.
The couple in the stall across the alley to his left sold chupattis, little disks of unleavened bread that
were a dietary staple of everyone in India, rich and poor alike. He
remembered trying them on a couple of occasions and finding them
tasteless. For the last hour the woman had been leaning over a dung
fire cooking an endless stream of chupattis
on flat iron plates. The temperature of the air around that fire
had to be a hundred and thirty degrees.
How do these people stand it?
He closed his eyes and wished for a world
free of heat, drought, avaricious creditors, senior officers, and
rebellious Sepoys. He kept them closed, enjoying the relative
darkness behind the lids. It would be nice to spend the rest of the
day like this, just leaning here and—
It wasn’t a sound that snapped his eyes open;
it was the lack of it. The street had gone utterly silent. As he
straightened from the wall, he could see the shoppers who had been
busy inspecting goods and haggling over prices now disappearing
into alleys and side streets and doorways—no rush, no panic, but
moving with deliberate swiftness, as if they had all suddenly
remembered somewhere else they had to be.
Only the merchants remained… the merchants
and their flies.
Wary and uneasy, Westphalen gripped the
handle of the sabre slung at his left hip. He had been trained in
its use but had never actually had to defend himself with it. He
hoped he wouldn’t have to now.
He sensed movement off to his left and
turned.
A squat little toad of a man swathed in the
orange dhoti of a holy man was leading a train of six mules on a
leisurely course down the middle of the street.
Westphalen allowed himself to relax. Just a
svamin of some sort. There was always one
or another of them about.
As he watched, the priest veered to the far
side of the street and stopped his mules before a cheese stand. He
did not move from his place at the head of the train, did not even
look left or right. He simply stood and waited. The cheese maker
quickly gathered up some of his biggest blocks and wheels and
brought them out to the little man, who inclined his head a few
degrees after an instant’s glance at the offering. The merchant put
these in a sack tied to the back of one of the mules, then
retreated to the rear of his stall.
Not a rupee had changed hands.
Westphalen watched with growing
amazement.
Next stop was on Westphalen’s side of the
street, the chupatti stall next door. The
husband brought a basketful out for inspection. Another nod, and
these too were deposited on the back of a mule.
Again, no money changed hands—and no
questions about quality. Westphalen had never seen anything like it
since his arrival in India. These merchants would haggle with their
mothers over the price of breakfast.
He could imagine only one thing that could
wring such cooperation from them: fear.
The priest moved on without stopping at the
water stand.
“Something wrong with your water?” Westphalen
said to the vendor squatting on the ground beside him. He spoke in
English. He saw no reason to learn an Indian tongue, and had never
tried. There were fourteen major languages on this Godforsaken
subcontinent and something like two hundred and fifty dialects. An
absurd situation. What few words he had picked up had been through
osmosis rather than conscious effort. After all, it was the
natives’ responsibility to learn to understand him. And most of
them did, especially the merchants.
“The temple has its own water,” the vendor
said without looking up.
“Which temple is that?”
Westphalen wanted to know what the priest
held over these merchants’ heads to make them so compliant. It was
information that might prove useful in the future.
“The Temple-in-the-Hills.”
“I didn’t know there was a temple in the
hills.”
This time the water vendor raised his
turbaned head and stared at him. The dark eyes held a disbelieving
look, as if to say, How could you not know?
“And to which one of your heathen gods is
this particular temple dedicated?” His words seemed to echo in the
surrounding silence.
The water vendor whispered, “Kali, The Black
Goddess.”
Oh, yes. He had heard that name before. She
was supposedly popular in the Bengal region. These Hindus had more
gods than you could shake a stick at. A strange religion, Hinduism.
He had heard that it had little or no dogma, no founder, and no
leader. Really—what kind of a religion was that?
“I thought her big temple was down near
Calcutta, at Dakshinesvar.”
“There are many temples to Kali,” the water
vendor said. “But none like the Temple-in-the-Hills.”
“Really? And what’s so special about this
one?”
“Rakoshi.”
“What’s that?”
But the water vendor lowered his head and
refused to respond any further. It was as if he thought he had said
too much already.
Six weeks ago, Westphalen would not have
tolerated such insolence. But six weeks ago a rebellion by the
Sepoys had been unthinkable.
He took a final sip of the water, tossed a
coin into the silent vendor’s lap, and stepped out into the full
ferocity of the sun. The air in the open was like a blast from a
burning house. He felt the dust that perpetually overhung the
street mix with the beads of perspiration on his face, leaving him
coated with a fine layer of salty mud.
He followed the svamin through the rest of the marketplace, watching
the chosen merchants donate the best of their wares without a
grumble or a whimper, as if glad of the opportunity. Westphalen
tracked him through most of Bharangpur, along its widest
thoroughfares, down its narrowest alleys. And everywhere the priest
and his mule train went, the people faded away at his approach and
reappeared in his wake.
Finally, as the sun was drifting down the
western sky, the priest came to the north gate.
Now we’ve got him, Westphalen thought.
All pack animals were to be inspected for
contraband before allowed exit from Bharangpur or any other
garrisoned town. The fact that there was no known rebel activity
anywhere in Bengal did not matter; it was a general order and as
such had to be enforced.
Westphalen watched from a distance of about
two hundred yards. He would wait until the lone British sentry had
begun the inspection, then he would stroll over as if on a routine
patrol of the gate and learn a little more about this svamin and his temple in the hills.
He saw the priest stop at the gate and speak
to a sentry with an Enfield casually slung across his back. They
seemed like old friends. After a few moments, without inspection or
detention, the priest resumed his path through the gate—but not
before Westphalen had seen him press something into the sentry’s
palm. It was a flash of movement. If Westphalen had blinked he
would have missed it.
The priest and his mules were beyond the wall
and on their way toward the hills in the northwest by the time
Westphalen reached the gate.
“Give me your rifle, soldier!”
The sentry saluted, then shrugged the Enfield
off his shoulder and handed it to Westphalen without question.
Westphalen knew him. His name was MacDougal, an enlisted man
—young, red-faced, hard-fighting, hard-drinking, like most of his
fellow Bengal European Fusiliers. In his three weeks as commander
of the Bharangpur garrison, Westphalen had come to think of him as
a good soldier.
“I’m placing you under arrest for dereliction
of duty!”
MacDougal blanched. “Sir, I—”
“And for taking a bribe!”
“I tried to give it back to ’im, sir!”
Westphalen laughed. This soldier must think
him blind as well as stupid!
“Of course you did! Just like you gave his
mules a thorough inspection.”
“Old Jaggernath’s only bringing supplies to
the temple, sir. I’ve been here two years, Captain, and ’e’s come
by every month, like clockwork, every new moon. Only brings food
out to the hills, ’e does, sir.”
“He must be inspected like everybody
else.”
MacDougal glanced after the retreating mule
train. “Jaggernath said they don’t like their food touched, sir.
Only by their own kind.”
“Well, isn’t that a pity! And I suppose you
let him pass uninspected out of the goodness of your heart?”
Westphalen was steadily growing angrier at this soldier’s
insolence. “Empty your pockets and let’s see how many pieces of
silver it took to get you to betray your fellow soldiers.”
Color suddenly flooded back into MacDougal’s
face. “I’d never betray me mates!”
For some reason, Westphalen believed him. But
he couldn’t drop the matter now.
“Empty your pockets!”
MacDougal emptied only one: From his
right-hand pocket he withdrew a small, rough stone, clear, dull red
in color.
Westphalen withheld a gasp.
“Give it to me.”
He held it up to the light of the setting
sun. He had seen his share of uncut stones as he had gradually
turned the family valuables into cash to appease his more insistent
creditors. This was an uncut ruby. A tiny thing, but polished up it
could bring an easy hundred pounds. His hand trembled. If this is
what the priest gave to a sentry as a casual reward for leaving his
temple’s food untouched…
“Where is this temple?”
“Don’t know, sir.” MacDougal was watching him
eagerly, probably looking for a way out of dereliction charges.
“And I’ve never been able to find out. The locals don’t know and
don’t seem to want to know. The Temple-in-the-Hills is supposed to
be full of jewels but guarded by demons.”
Westphalen grunted. More heathen rubbish. But
the stone in his hand was genuine enough. And the casual manner in
which it had been given to MacDougal indicated that there could be
many more where that came from. With the utmost reluctance, he
handed the ruby back to MacDougal. He would play for bigger stakes.
And to do so he had to appear completely unconcerned about
money.
“I guess no harm has been done. Sell that for
what you can and divide it up between the men. And divide it
equally, hear?”
MacDougal appeared about to faint with
surprise and relief, but he managed a sharp salute. “Yes
sir!”
Westphalen tossed the Enfield back at him and
walked away, knowing that in MacDougal’s eyes he was the fairest,
most generous commanding officer he had ever known. Westphalen
wanted the enlisted man to feel that way. He had use for MacDougal,
and for any other soldier who had been in Bharangpur for a few
years.
Westphalen had decided to find this
Temple-in-the-Hills. It might well hold the answer to all his
financial problems.