"The king dead, Hare dead, and his daughter on the throne! How did she

get here? And what the devil is a chap to do?" Bruce stooped and

recovered his pipe and swore softly. "Ali, if this is true, then it's

some devil work; and I'll wager my shooting eye that that sleek scoundrel

Umballa, as they call him, is at the bottom of it. A white woman, good

old Hare's daughter. I'll look into this. It's the nineteenth century,

Ali, and white women are not made rulers over the brown, not of their own

free will. Find out all you can and report to me," and Bruce dismissed

his servant and fell to pacing before his tent.

The native who had spread this astounding news in Bruce's camp was

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already hastening back to the city, some fourteen miles away. He had

been a bheestee (water carrier) to the house of Ramabai up to the young

banker's incarceration. To him, then, he carried the news that a white

hunter had arrived outside the city--"Bruce Sahib has returned!"

Ramabai lost no time in taking this news to Kathlyn.

"Ramabai, I have saved your life; save mine. Go at once to him and tell

him that I am a prisoner but am called a queen; tell him I am Colonel

Hare's daughter, she who traveled with him on the same ship from Hongkong

to Singapore. Go! Tell him all, the death of my father and Umballa's

treachery. Hasten!"

Bruce was eating his simple evening meal when Ramabai arrived.

"Bruce Sahib?"

"Yes. Your face is familiar."

"You have been twice to my bank. I am Ramabai."

"I remember. But what are you doing here?"

"I have come for aid, Sahib, aid for a young woman, white like yourself."

"Then it is true? Go ahead and let me have all the facts. She is Hare

Sahib's daughter; Ali told me that. Precious rigmarole of some sort.

The facts!"

"She is also the young lady who traveled in the same boat from Hongkong

to Singapore." Ramabai paused to see the effect of this information.

Bruce lowered his fork slowly. The din about him dwindled away into

nothing. He was again leaning over the rail, watching the

phosphorescence trail away, a shoulder barely touching his: one of the

few women who had ever stirred him after the first glance. In God's

name, why hadn't she said something? Why hadn't she told him she was

Colonel Hare's daughter? How was he to know? (For Hare, queerly enough,

had never shown his young friend the photographs of his daughters.)

Perhaps he had been at fault; he, too, had scarcely stirred from his

shell. And where was that scoundrel Rao?

"I shall enter the city as soon as I can settle my bungalow. This rather

knocks me out."