The Return of Imray
By
Rudyard Kipling
The doors were wide, the story saith,
Out of the night came the patient wraith,
He might not speak, and he could not stir
A hair of the Baron's minniver---
Speechless and strengthless, a shadow thin,
He roved the castle to seek his kin.
And oh,'twas a piteous thing to see
The dumb ghost follow his enemy!
THE BARON.
Out of the night came the patient wraith,
He might not speak, and he could not stir
A hair of the Baron's minniver---
Speechless and strengthless, a shadow thin,
He roved the castle to seek his kin.
And oh,'twas a piteous thing to see
The dumb ghost follow his enemy!
THE BARON.
Imray achieved the impossible. Without warning, for
no conceivable motive, in his youth, at the threshold of his career he chose to
disappear from the world---which is to say, the little Indian station where he
lived.
Upon a day he was alive, well, happy, and in great
evidence among the billiard-tables at his Club. Upon a morning, he was not, and
no manner of search could make sure where he might be. He had stepped out of
his place; he had not appeared at his office at the proper time, and his
dogcart was not upon the public roads. For these reasons, and because he was
hampering, in a microscopical degree, the administration of the Indian Empire,
that Empire paused for one microscopical moment to make inquiry into the fate
of Imray. Ponds were dragged, wells were plumbed, telegrams were despatched
down the lines of railways and to the nearest seaport town-twelve hundred miles
away; but Imray was not at the end of the drag-ropes nor the telegraph wires.
He was gone, and his place knew him no more.
Then the work of the great Indian Empire swept
forward, because it could not be delayed, and Imray from being a man became a
mystery--such a thing as men talk over at their tables in the Club for a month,
and then forget utterly. His guns, horses, and carts were sold to the highest
bidder. His superior officer wrote an altogether absurd letter to his mother,
saying that Imray had unaccountably disappeared, and his bungalow stood empty.
After three or four months of the scorching hot
weather had gone by, my friend Strickland, of the Police, saw fit to rent the
bungalow from the native landlord. This was before he was engaged to Miss
Youghal--an affair which has been described in another place--and while he was
pursuing his investigations into native life. His own life was sufficiently
peculiar, and men complained of his manners and customs. There was always food
in his house, but there were no regular times for meals. He ate, standing up
and walking about, whatever he might find at the sideboard, and this is not
good for human beings. His domestic equipment was limited to six rifles, three
shot-guns, five saddles, and a collection of stiff-jointed mahseer-rods, bigger
and stronger than the largest salmon-rods. These occupied one-half of his
bungalow, and the other half was given up to Strickland and his dog Tietjens--an
enormous Rampur mutt who devoured daily the rations of two men. She spoke to
Strickland in a language of her own; and whenever, walking abroad, she saw
things calculated to destroy the peace of Her Majesty the Queen- Empress, she
returned to her master and laid information. Strickland would take steps at
once, and the end of his labours was trouble and fine and imprisonment for
other people. The natives believed that Tietjens was a familiar spirit, and
treated her with the great reverence that is born of hate and fear. One room in
the bungalow was set apart for her special use. She owned a bedstead, a
blanket, and a drinking- trough, and if any one came into Strickland's room at
night her custom was to knock down the invader and give tongue till someone
came with a light. Strickland owed his life to her, when he was on the
Frontier, in search of a local murderer, who came in the grey dawn to send
Strickland much farther than the Andaman Islands. Tietjens caught the man as he
was crawling into Strickland's tent with a dagger between his teeth; and after
his record of iniquity was established in the eyes of the law he was hanged.
From that date Tietjens wore a collar of rough silver, and employed a monogram
on her night-blanket; and the blanket was of double woven Kashmir cloth, for
she was a delicate dog.
Under no circumstances would she be separated from
Strickland; and once, when he was ill with fever, made great trouble for the
doctors, because she did not know how to help her master and would not allow
another creature to attempt aid. Macarnaght, of the Indian Medical Service,
beat her over her head with a gun-butt before she could understand that she
must give room for those who could give quinine.
A short time after Strickland had taken Imray's
bungalow, my business took me through that Station, and naturally, the Club
quarters being full, I quartered myself upon Strickland. It was a desirable
bungalow, eight-roomed and heavily thatched against any chance of leakage from
rain. Under the pitch of the roof ran a ceiling-cloth which looked just as neat
as a white-washed ceiling. The landlord had repainted it when Strickland took
the bungalow. Unless you knew how Indian bungalows were built you would never
have suspected that above the cloth lay the dark three-cornered cavern of the
roof, where the beams and the underside of the thatch harboured all manner of
rats, bats, ants, and foul things.
Tietjens met me in the verandah with a bay like the
boom of the bell of St. Paul's, putting her paws on my shoulder to show she was
glad to see me. Strickland had contrived to claw together a sort of meal which
he called lunch, and immediately after it was finished went out about his
business. I was left alone with Tietjens and my own affairs. The heat of the
summer had broken up and turned to the warm damp of the rains. There was no
motion in the heated air, but the rain fell like ramrods on the earth, and
flung up a blue mist when it splashed back. The bamboos, and the
custard-apples, the poinsettias, and the mango-trees in the garden stood still
while the warm water lashed through them, and the frogs began to sing among the
aloe hedges. A little before the light failed, and when the rain was at its
worst, I sat in the back verandah and heard the water roar from the eaves, and
scratched myself because I was covered with the thing called prickly-heat.
Tietjens came out with me and put her head in my lap and was very sorrowful; so
I gave her biscuits when tea was ready, and I took tea in the back verandah on
account of the little coolness found there. The rooms of the house were dark
behind me. I could smell Strickland's saddlery and the oil on his guns, and I
had no desire to sit among these things. My own servant came to me in the
twilight, the muslin of his clothes clinging tightly to his drenched body, and
told me that a gentleman had called and wished to see someone. Very much against
my will, but only because of the darkness of the rooms, I went into the naked
drawing-room, telling my man to bring the lights. There might or might not have
been a caller waiting---it seemed to me that I saw a figure by one of the
windows---but when the lights came there was nothing save the spikes of the
rain without, and the smell of the drinking earth in my nostrils. I explained
to my servant that he was no wiser than he ought to be, and went back to the
verandah to talk to Tietjens. She had gone out into the wet, and I could hardly
coax her back to me; even with biscuits with sugar tops. Strickland came home,
dripping wet, just before dinner, and the first thing he said was.
'Has any one called?'
I explained, with apologies, that my servant had
summoned me into the drawing-room on a false alarm; or that some loafer had
tried to call on Strickland, and thinking better of it had fled after giving
his name. Strickland ordered dinner, without comment, and since it was a real
dinner with a white tablecloth attached, we sat down.
At nine o'clock Strickland wanted to go to bed, and
I was tired too. Tietjens, who had been lying underneath the table, rose up,
and swung into the least exposed verandah as soon as her master moved to his
own room, which was next to the stately chamber set apart for Tietjens. If a
mere wife had wished to sleep out of doors in that pelting rain it would not
have mattered; but Tietjens was a dog, and therefore the better animal. I
looked at Strickland, expecting to see him flay her with a whip. He smiled
queerly, as a man would smile after telling some unpleasant domestic tragedy.
'She has done this ever since I moved in here,' said he. 'Let her go.'
The dog was Strickland's dog, so I said nothing,
but I felt all that Strickland felt in being thus made light of. Tietjens
encamped outside my bedroom window, and storm after storm came up, thundered on
the thatch, and died away. The lightning spattered the sky as a thrown egg
spatters a barn-door, but the light was pale blue, not yellow; and, looking
through my split bamboo blinds, I could see the great dog standing, not
sleeping, in the verandah, the hackles alift on her back and her feet anchored
as tensely as the drawn wire-rope of a suspension bridge. In the very short
pauses of the thunder I tried to sleep, but it seemed that someone wanted me
very urgently. He, whoever he was, was trying to call me by name, but his voice
was no more than a husky whisper. The thunder ceased, and Tietjens went into
the garden and howled at the low moon. Somebody tried to open my door, walked
about and about through the house and stood breathing heavily in the verandahs,
and just when I was falling asleep I fancied that I heard a wild hammering and
clamouring above my head or on the door.
I ran into Strickland's room and asked him whether
he was ill, and had been calling for me. He was lying on his bed half dressed,
a pipe in his mouth. 'I thought you'd come,' he said. 'Have I been walking
round the house recently?'
I explained that he had been tramping in the
dining-room and the smoking-room and two or three other places, and he laughed
and told me to go back to bed. I went back to bed and slept till the morning,
but through all my mixed dreams I was sure I was doing some one an injustice in
not attending to his wants. What those wants were I could not tell; but a
fluttering, whispering, bolt-fumbling, lurking, loitering Someone was
reproaching me for my slackness, and, half awake, I heard the howling of
Tietjens in the garden and the threshing of the rain.
I lived in that house for two days. Strickland went
to his office daily, leaving me alone for eight or ten hours with Tietjens for
my only companion. As long as the full light lasted I was comfortable, and so
was Tietjens; but in the twilight she and I moved into the back verandah and
cuddled each other for company. We were alone in the house, but none the less
it was much too fully occupied by a tenant with whom I did not wish to
interfere. I never saw him, but I could see the curtains between the rooms quivering
where he had just passed through; I could hear the chairs creaking as the
bamboos sprung under a weight that had just quitted them; and I could feel when
I went to get a book from the dining-room that somebody was waiting in the
shadows of the front verandah till I should have gone away. Tietjens made the
twilight more interesting by glaring into the darkened rooms with every hair
erect, and following the motions of something that I could not see. She never
entered the rooms, but her eyes moved interestedly: that was quite sufficient.
Only when my servant came to trim the lamps and make all light and habitable
she would come in with me and spend her time sitting on her haunches, watching
an invisible extra man as he moved about behind my shoulder. Dogs are cheerful
companions.
I explained to Strickland, gently as might be, that
I would go over to the Club and find for myself quarters there. I admired his
hospitality, was pleased with his guns and rods, but I did not much care for
his house and its atmosphere. He heard me out to the end, and then smiled very
wearily, but without contempt, for he is a man who understands things. 'Stay
on,' he said, 'and see what this thing means. All you have talked about I have
known since I took the bungalow. Stay on and wait. Tietjens has left me. Are
you going too?'
I had seen him through one little affair, connected
with a heathen idol, that had brought me to the doors of a lunatic asylum, and
I had no desire to help him through further experiences. He was a man to whom
unpleasantnesses arrived as do dinners to ordinary people.
Therefore I explained more clearly than ever that I
liked him immensely, and would be happy to see him in the daytime; but that I
did not care to sleep under his roof. This was after dinner, when Tietjens had
gone out to lie in the verandah.
''Upon my soul, I don't wonder,' said Strickland,
with his eyes on the ceiling-cloth. 'Look at that!'
The tails of two brown snakes were hanging between
the cloth and the cornice of the wall. They threw long shadows in the
lamplight.
'If you are afraid of snakes of course--' said
Strickland.
I hate and fear snakes, because if you look into
the eyes of any snake you will see that it knows all and more of the mystery of
man's fall, and that it feels all the contempt that the Devil felt when Adam
was evicted from Eden. Besides which its bite is generally fatal, and it twists
up trouser legs.
'You ought to get your thatch overhauled,' I said.
'Give me a mahseer-rod, and we'll poke 'em down.'
'They'll hide among the roof-beams,' said
Strickland. 'I can't stand snakes overhead. I'm going up into the roof. If I
shake 'em down, stand by with a cleaning-rod and break their backs.'
I was not anxious to assist Strickland in his work,
but I took the cleaning-rod and waited in the dining-room, while Strickland
brought a gardener's ladder from the verandah, and set it against the side of
the room.
The snake-tails drew themselves up and disappeared.
We could hear the dry rushing scuttle of long bodies running over the baggy ceiling-cloth.
Strickland took a lamp with him, while I tried to make clear to him the danger
of hunting roof-snakes between a ceiling-cloth and a thatch, apart from the
deterioration of property caused by ripping out ceiling- cloths.
'Nonsense!' said Strickland. 'They're sure to hide
near the walls by the cloth. The bricks are too cold for 'em, and the heat of
the room is just what they like.' He put his hand to the corner of the stuff
and ripped it from the cornice. It gave with a great sound of tearing, and
Strickland put his head through the opening into the dark of the angle of the
roof-beams. I set my teeth and lifted the rod, for I had not the least
knowledge of what might descend.
'Humph!' said Strickland and his voice rolled and
rumbled in the roof. 'There's room for another set of rooms up here, and, by
Jove, someone is occupying 'em!'
'Snakes?' I said from below.
'No. It's a buffalo. Hand me up the two last joints
of a mahseer-rod, and I'll prod it. It's lying on the main roof-beam.'
I handed up the rod.
'What a nest for owls and serpents! No wonder the
snakes live here,' said Strickland, climbing farther into the roof. I could see
his elbow thrusting with the rod. 'Come out of that, whoever you are! Heads
below there! It's falling.'
I saw the ceiling-cloth nearly in the centre of the
room bag with a shape that was pressing it downwards and downwards towards the
lighted lamp on the table. I snatched the lamp out of danger and stood back.
Then the cloth ripped out from the walls, tore, split, swayed, and shot down
upon the table something that I dared not look at, till Strickland had slid
down the ladder and was standing by my side.
He did not say much, being a man of few words; but
he picked up the loose end of the tablecloth and threw it over the remnants on
the table.
'It strikes me,' said he, putting down the lamp,
'our friend Imray has come back. Oh! You would, would you?'
There was a movement under the cloth, and a little
snake wriggled out, to be back-broken by the butt of the mahseer-rod. I was sufficiently
sick to make no remarks worth recording.
Strickland meditated, and helped himself to drinks.
The arrangement under the cloth made no more signs of life.
'Is it Imray?' I said.
Strickland turned back the cloth for a moment, and
looked.
'It is Imray,' he said.
Then we spoke, both together and to ourselves:
'That's why he whispered about the house.'
Tietjens, in the garden, began to bay furiously. A
little later her great nose heaved open the dining-room door.
She sniffed and was still. The tattered
ceiling-cloth hung down almost to the level of the table, and there was hardly
room to move away from the discovery.
Tietjens came in and sat down; her teeth bared
under her lip and her forepaws planted. She looked at Strickland.
'It's a bad business, old lady,' said he. 'Men
don't climb up into the roofs of their bungalows to die, and they don't fasten
up the ceiling cloth behind 'em. Let's think it out.'
'Let's think it out somewhere else,' I said.
'Excellent idea! Turn the lamps out. We'll get into
my room.'
I did not turn the lamps out. I went into
Strickland's room first, and allowed him to make the darkness. Then he followed
me, and we lit tobacco and thought. Strickland thought. I smoked furiously,
because I was afraid.
'Imray is back,' said Strickland. 'The question
is---who killed Imray? Don't talk; I've a notion of my own. When I took this
bungalow I took over most of Imray's servants. Imray was guileless and
inoffensive, wasn't he?'
I agreed; though the heap under the cloth had
looked neither one thing nor the other.
'If I call in all the servants they will stand fast
in a crowd and lie like Aryans. What do you suggest?'
'Call 'em in one by one,' I said.
'They'll run away and give the news to all their
fellows,' said Strickland. 'We must segregate 'em. Do you suppose your servant
knows anything about it?'
'He may, for aught I know; but I don't think it's
likely. He has only been here two or three days,' I answered. 'What's your
notion?'
'I can't quite tell. How the dickens did the man
get the wrong side of the ceiling-cloth?'
There was a heavy coughing outside Strickland's
bedroom door. This showed that Bahadur Khan, his body-servant, had waked from
sleep and wished to put Strickland to bed.
'Come in,' said Strickland. 'It's a very warm
night, isn't it?'
Bahadur Khan, a great, green-turbaned, six-foot man
said that it was a very warm night; but that there was more rain pending,
which, by his Honour's favour, would bring relief to the country.
'It will be so, if God pleases,' said Strickland,
tugging off his boots. 'It is in my mind, Bahadur Khan, that I have worked thee
remorselessly for many days---ever since that time when thou first earnest into
my service. What time was that?'
'Has the Heaven-born forgotten? It was when Imray
Sahib went secretly to Europe without warning given; and I-even I-came into the
honoured service of the protector of the poor.'
'And Imray Sahib went to Europe?'
'It is so said among those who were his servants.'
'And thou wilt take service with him when he
returns?'
'Assuredly, Sahib. He was a good master, and
cherished his dependants.'
'That is true. I am very tired, but I go
buck-shooting to-morrow. Give me the little sharp rifle that I use for
black-buck; it is in the case yonder.'
The man stooped over the case; handed barrels,
stock, and fore-end to Strickland, who fitted all together, yawning dolefully.
Then he reached down to the gun-case, took a solid-drawn cartridge, and slipped
it into the breech of the '360 Express.
'And Imray Sahib has gone to Europe secretly! That
is very strange, Bahadur Khan, is it not?'
'What do I know of the ways of the white man?
Heaven-born?'
'Very little, truly. But thou shalt know more anon.
It has reached me that Imray Sahib has returned from his so long journeyings,
and that even now he lies in the next room, waiting his servant.'
'Sahib!'
The lamplight slid along the barrels of the rifle
as they levelled themselves at Bahadur Khan's broad breast.
'Go and look!' said Strickland. 'Take a lamp. Thy
master is tired, and he waits thee. Go!'
The man picked up a lamp, and went into the
dining-room, Strickland following, and almost pushing him with the muzzle of
the rifle. He looked for a moment at the black depths behind the ceiling-cloth;
at the writhing snake under foot; and last, a grey glaze settling on his face,
at the thing under the tablecloth.
'Hast thou seen?' said Strickland after a pause.
'I have seen. I am clay in the white man's hands.
What does the Presence do?'
'Hang thee within the month. What else?'
'For killing him? Nay, Sahib, consider. Walking
among us, his servants, he cast his eyes upon my child, who was four years old.
Him he bewitched, and in ten days he died of the fever--my child!'
'What said Imray Sahib?'
'He said he was a handsome child, and patted him on
the head; wherefore my child died. Wherefore I killed Imray Sahib in the
twilight, when he had come back from office, and was sleeping. Wherefore I
dragged him up into the roof-beams and made all fast behind him. The
Heaven-born knows all things. I am the servant of the Heaven-born.'
Strickland looked at me above the rifle, and said,
in the vernacular, 'Thou art witness to this saying? He has killed.'
Bahadur Khan stood ashen grey in the light of the
one lamp. The need for justification came upon him very swiftly. 'I am trapped,'
he said, 'but the offence was that man's. He cast an evil eye upon my child,
and I killed and hid him. Only such as are served by devils,' he glared at
Tietjens, couched stolidly before him, 'only such could know what I did.'
'It was clever. But thou should have lashed him to
the beam with a rope. Now, thou thyself wilt hang by a rope. Orderly!'
A drowsy policeman answered Strickland's call. He
was followed by another, and Tietjens sat wondrous still.
'Take him to the police-station,' said Strickland.
'There is a case toward.'
'Do I hang, then?' said Bahadur Khan, making no
attempt to escape, and keeping his eyes on the ground.
'If the sun shines or the water runs-yes!' said
Strickland.
Bahadur Khan stepped back one long pace, quivered,
and stood still. The two policemen waited further orders.
'Go!' said Strickland.
'Nay; but I go very swiftly,' said Bahadur Khan.
'Look! I am even now a dead man.'
He lifted his foot, and to the little toe there
clung the head of the half-killed snake, firm fixed in the agony of death.
'I come of land-holding stock,' said Bahadur Khan,
rocking where he stood. 'It were a disgrace to me to go to the public scaffold:
therefore I take this way. Be it remembered that the Sahib's shirts are
correctly enumerated, and that there is an extra piece of soap in his
washbasin. My child was bewitched, and I slew the wizard. Why should you seek
to slay me with the rope? My honour is saved, and-and-I die.'
At the end of an hour he died, as they die who are
bitten by the little brown karait, and the policemen bore him and the thing
under the tablecloth to their appointed places. All were needed to make clear
the disappearance of Imray.
'This,' said Strickland, very calmly, as he climbed
into bed, 'is called the nineteenth century. Did you hear what that man said?'
'I heard,' I answered. 'Imray made a mistake.'
'Simply and solely through not knowing the nature
of the Oriental, and the coincidence of a little seasonal fever. Bahadur Khan
had been with him for four years.'
I shuddered. My own servant had been with me for
exactly that length of time. When I went over to my own room I found my man
waiting, impassive as the copper head on a penny, to pull off my boots.
'What has befallen Bahadur Khan?' said I.
'He was bitten by a snake and died. The rest the
Sahib knows,' was the answer.
'And how much of this matter hast thou known?'
'As much as might be gathered from One coming in in
the twilight to seek satisfaction. Gently, Sahib. Let me pull off those boots.'
I had just settled to the sleep of exhaustion when
I heard Strickland shouting from his side of the house--
'Tietjens has come back to her place!'
And so she had. The great deerhound was couched on
her own bedstead on her own blanket, while, in the next room, the idle, empty,
ceiling-cloth waggled as it trailed on the table.
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