<h2><SPAN name="Ch20" name="Ch20">Chapter 20</SPAN>: The Rescue Of The White Captive.</h2>
<p>After the cavalcade had passed, Hossein rose to his feet and
followed them, allowing them to go some distance ahead. Presently
he was joined by Charlie and Tim, and the three walked quietly
along the road, until within sight of the rajah's palace.</p>
<p>In front stood a great courtyard. Behind, also surrounded by a
high wall, was the garden. As this was always devoted to the
zenana, they had little doubt that the rooms of the ladies were on
this side; and, two hours later, they were delighted at seeing a
small piece of white stuff, thrust through one of the lattices. The
woman had been faithful to her trust. Ada had received the
letter.</p>
<p>They then retired to a distance from the palace, and at once set
to work on the fabrication of a ladder. Hossein, followed by
Charlie, who better enacted the part than Tim, went into a village
and purchased four long bamboo poles, saying he wanted them for the
carrying of burdens. Charlie placed these on his shoulder, and
followed Hossein.</p>
<p>When they arrived at the grove they set to work, having brought
with them all the necessary materials. The bamboos were spliced
together, two and two; and while Charlie and Tim set to, to bore
holes in these, Hossein chopped down a young tree and, cutting it
into lengths, prepared the rungs.</p>
<p>It took them all that evening, and the greater part of the next
day, before they had satisfactorily accomplished their work. They
had, then, a ladder thirty feet long, the height which they judged
the window to be above the terrace below. It was strong, and at the
same time light.</p>
<p>They waited until darkness had completely fallen; and then,
taking their ladder, went round to the back of the garden. They
mounted the wall and, sitting on the top, dragged the ladder after
them, and lowered it on the other side. It was of equal thickness
the whole length; and could, therefore, be used indifferently
either way.</p>
<p>They waited patiently, until they saw the lights in the zenana
windows extinguished. Then they crept quietly up, and placed the
ladder under the window at which the signal had been shown; and
found that their calculations were correct, and that it reached to
a few inches below the sill.</p>
<p>Half an hour later, the lattice above opened. They heard a
murmur of voices, and then all was quiet again. After a few
minutes, Charlie climbed noiselessly up the ladder and, just as he
reached the top, an arm was stretched out above him; and, a moment
afterwards, Ada's face appeared.</p>
<p>"I am here, dear," he said, in a whisper. "Lean out, and I will
take you."</p>
<p>The girl stretched out over the window. Charlie took her in his
arms, and lifted her lightly out, and then slowly descended the
ladder. No sooner did he touch the ground than they hurried away;
Ada sobbing, with excitement and pleasure, on Charlie's shoulder;
Tim and Hossein bearing the ladder; Hossein having already carried
out his promise of concealing the second bracelet under the
window.</p>
<p>In a few minutes they had safely surmounted the wall, and
hurried across the country, with all speed. Before leaving the
town, Hossein had purchased a cart with two bullocks; and had hired
a man who was recommended to him, by one of his co-religionists
there, as one upon whose fidelity he could rely. This cart was
awaiting them at a grove.</p>
<p>Paying them the amount stipulated, Hossein took the ox goad and
started the bullocks, Tim walking beside him, while Charlie and Ada
took their places in the cart. They were sure that a hot pursuit
would be set up. The rage of the nabob at the escape of Charlie and
his servant had been extreme, and the whole country had been
scoured by parties of horsemen; and they were sure that the rajah
would use every possible means to discover Ada, before he ventured
to report to the nabob that the prisoner committed to his charge
had escaped.</p>
<p>"Of course, I can't see you very well," Ada said, "but I should
not have known you, in the least."</p>
<p>"No, I am got up like a peasant," Charlie answered. "We shall
have to dress you so, before morning. We have got things here for
you."</p>
<p>"Oh, how delighted I was," Ada exclaimed, "when I got your note!
I found it so difficult to keep on looking sad and hopeless, when I
could have sung for joy. I had been so miserable. There seemed no
hope, and they said, some day, I should be sent to the nabob's
zenana--wretches! How poor mamma will be grieving for me, and
papa!--</p>
<p>"Ah! Captain Marryat, he is dead, is he not?"</p>
<p>"Yes, my dear," Charlie said gently. "He was killed by my side,
that afternoon. With his last breath, he asked me to take care of
you."</p>
<p>"I thought so," Ada said, crying quietly. "I did not think of it
at the time. Everything was so strange, and so dreadful, that I
scarcely thought at all. But afterwards, on the way here, when I
turned it all over, it seemed to me that it must be so. He did not
come to me, all that afternoon. He was not shut up with us in that
dreadful place, and everyone else was there. So it seemed to me
that he must have been killed, but that you did not like to tell
me."</p>
<p>"It was better for him, dear, than to have died in that terrible
cell. Thank God your mamma is safe, and some day you will join her
again.</p>
<p>"We have news that the English are coming up to attack Calcutta.
A party are already in the Hoogly; and the nabob is going to
start, in a few days, to his army there. I hope, in a very very
short time, you will be safe among your friends."</p>
<p>After travelling for several hours, they stopped. Charlie gave
Ada some native clothes and ornaments, and told her to stain her
face, arms, and legs, to put on the bangles and bracelets, and then
to rejoin them. Half an hour later, Ada took her seat in the cart,
this time transformed into a Hindoo girl, and the party again
proceeded.</p>
<p>They felt sure that Ada's flight would not be discovered until
daybreak. It would be some little time before horsemen could be
sent off in all directions, in pursuit; and they could not be
overtaken until between eleven and twelve.</p>
<p>The waggon was filled with grain, on the top of which Charlie
and Ada were seated. When daylight came, Charlie alighted and
walked by the cart. Unquestioned, they passed through several
villages.</p>
<p>At eleven o'clock, Hossein pointed to a large grove, at some
little distance from the road.</p>
<p>"Go in there," he said, "and stay till nightfall. Do you then
come out, and follow me. I shall go into the next village, and
remain there till after dark. I shall then start, and wait for you
half a mile beyond the village."</p>
<p>An hour after the waggon had disappeared from sight, the party
in the grove saw ten or twelve horsemen galloping rapidly along the
road. An hour passed, and the same party returned, at an equal
speed. They saw no more of them and, after it became dark, they
continued their way; passed through the village, which was three
miles ahead; and found Hossein waiting, a short distance beyond.
Ada climbed into the cart, and they again went forward.</p>
<p>"Did you put the rajah's men on the wrong track, Hossein? We
guessed that you had done so, when we saw them going back."</p>
<p>"Yes," Hossein said. "I had unyoked the bullocks, and had lain
down in the caravanserai, when they arrived. They came in, and
their leader asked who I was. I said that I was taking down a load
of grain, for the use of the army at Calcutta. He asked where were
the two men and the woman who were with me. I replied that I knew
nothing of them. I had overtaken them on the road, and they had
asked leave for the woman to ride in the cart. They said they were
going to visit their mother, who was sick.</p>
<p>"He asked if I was sure they were natives, and I counterfeited
surprise, and said that certainly they were; for which lie Allah
will, I trust, be merciful, since it was told to an enemy. I said
that they had left me, just when we had passed the last village;
and had turned off by the road to the right, saying they had many
miles to go.</p>
<p>"They talked together and decided that, as you were the only
people who had been seen along the road, they must follow and find
you; and so started at once, and I daresay they're searching for
you now, miles away."</p>
<p>Their journey continued without any adventure, until within a
few miles of Calcutta. Hossein then advised them to take up their
abode in a ruined mud hut, at a distance from the road. He had
bought, at the last village, a supply of provisions, sufficient to
last them for some days.</p>
<p>"I shall now," he said, "go into the town, sell my grain,
bullocks, and cart, and find out where the soldiers are."</p>
<p>As soon as the news of the nabob's advance against Calcutta
reached Madras, Mr. Pigot, who was now governor there, despatched a
force of two hundred and thirty men, under the orders of Major
Kilpatrick. The party reached Falta, on the Hoogly, on the 2nd of
August, and there heard of the capture of Calcutta. By detachments,
who came down from some of the Company's minor posts, the force was
increased to nearly four hundred. But sickness broke out among them
and, finding himself unable to advance against so powerful an army
as that of the nabob, Major Kilpatrick sent to Madras for further
assistance.</p>
<p>When the news reached that place, Clive had recently arrived
with a strong force, which was destined to operate against the
French at Hyderabad. The news, however, of the catastrophe at
Calcutta at once altered the destination of the force; and, on the
16th of October, the expedition sailed for Calcutta. The force
consisted of two hundred and fifty men of the 39th Foot, the first
regiment of the regular English army which had been sent out to
India; five hundred and seventy men of the Madras European force;
eighty artillerymen; and twelve hundred Sepoys.</p>
<p>Of the nine hundred Europeans, only six hundred arrived at that
time at the mouth of the Hoogly, the largest ship, the Cumberland,
with three hundred men on board, having grounded on the way. The
remainder of the fleet, consisting of three ships of war, five
transports, and a fire ship, reached Falta between the 11th and 20th
of December.</p>
<p>Hossein had returned from Calcutta, with the news that the party
commanded by Major Kilpatrick had been, for some weeks, at Falta;
and the party at once set off towards that place, which was but
forty miles distant. Travelling by night, and sleeping by day in
the woods, they reached Falta without difficulty; and, learning
that the force was still on board ship, they took possession of a
boat, moored by the bank some miles higher up, and rowed down.</p>
<p>Great was their happiness, indeed, at finding themselves once
more among friends. Here were assembled many of the ships which had
been at Calcutta, at the time it was taken; and, to Ada's delight,
she learned that her mother was on board one of these. They were
soon rowed there, in a boat from the ship which they had first
boarded; and Ada, on gaining the deck, saw her mother sitting among
some other ladies, fugitives like herself.</p>
<p>With a scream of joy she rushed forward, and with a cry of,
"Mamma, Mamma!" threw herself into her mother's arms.</p>
<p>It was a moment or two before Mrs. Haines could realize that
this dark-skinned Hindoo girl was her child, and then her joy
equalled that of her daughter. It was some time before any coherent
conversation could take place; and then Ada, running back to
Charlie, drew him forward to her mother; and presented him to her
as her preserver, the Captain Marryat who had stayed with them at
Calcutta.</p>
<p>Mrs. Haines' gratitude was extreme, and Charlie was soon
surrounded, and congratulated, by the officers on board, to many of
whom, belonging as they did to the Madras army, he was well known.
Foremost among them, and loudest in his expressions of delight, was
his friend Peters.</p>
<p>"You know, Charlie, I suppose," he said presently, "that you are
a major now?"</p>
<p>"No, indeed," Charlie said. "How is that?"</p>
<p>"When the directors at home received the report of Commodore
James, that the fort of Suwarndrug had been captured entirely
through you, they at once sent out your appointment as major.</p>
<p>"You are lucky, old fellow. Here are you a major, while I'm a
lieutenant, still. However, don't think I'm jealous, for I'm not a
bit, and you thoroughly deserve all, and more than you've got."</p>
<p>"And this is Tim," Charlie said. "He has shared all my
adventures with me."</p>
<p>Tim was standing disconsolately by the bulwark, shifting
uneasily from foot to foot, with the feeling of the extreme
shortness of his garments stronger upon him than ever.</p>
<p>Peters seized him heartily by the hand.</p>
<p>"I am glad to see you, Tim, very glad. And so you've been with
Major Marryat, ever since?"</p>
<p>"For the Lord's sake, Mr. Peters," Tim said, in an earnest
whisper, "git me a pair of trousers. I'm that ashamed of myself, in
the presence of the ladies, that I'm like to drop."</p>
<p>"Come along below, Tim. Come along, Charlie. There are lots of
poor fellows have gone down, and uniforms are plentiful. We'll soon
rig you out again."</p>
<p>"There is one more introduction, Peters. This is my man,
Hossein. He calls himself my servant. I call him my friend. He has
saved my life twice, and has been of inestimable service. Had it
not been for him, I should still be in prison at Moorshedabad."</p>
<p>Peters said a few hearty words to Hossein, and they then went
below; returning on deck in half an hour, Charlie in the undress
uniform of an officer, Tim in that of a private in the Madras
infantry.</p>
<p>Mrs. Haines and Ada had gone below, where they could chat,
unrestrained by the presence of others; and where an attempt could
be made to restore Ada to her former appearance. Mrs. Haines had
heard of her husband's death, on the day after the capture of
Calcutta, Mr. Holwell having been permitted to send on board the
ships a list of those who had fallen. She had learned that Ada had
survived the terrible night in the dungeon, and that she had been
sent up country, a captive. She almost despaired of ever hearing of
her again, but had resolved to wait to see the issue of the
approaching campaign.</p>
<p>Now that Ada was restored to her, she determined to leave for
England; in a vessel which was to sail, in the course of a week,
with a large number of fugitives. Mr. Haines was a very wealthy
man, and had intended retiring, altogether, in the course of a few
months; and she would, therefore, be in the enjoyment of an ample
fortune in England.</p>
<p>Among those on board the ships at Falta was Mr. Drake, who at
once, upon hearing of Charlie's arrival, ordered him to be
arrested. Major Kilpatrick, however, firmly refused to allow the
order to be carried out, saying that, as Charlie was under his
orders as an officer in the Madras army, Mr. Drake had no control
or authority over him. He could, however, upon Clive's arrival, lay
the case before him.</p>
<p>A week later, Mrs. Haines and Ada sailed for England, the latter
weeping bitterly at parting from Charlie, who promised them that,
when he came home to England on leave, he would pay them a visit.
He gave them his mother's address; and Mrs. Haines promised to call
upon her, as soon as she reached England, and give her full news of
him; adding that she hoped that his sisters, the youngest of whom
was little older than Ada, would be great friends with her.</p>
<p>Very slowly and wearily the time passed at Falta. The mists from
the river were deadly, and of the two hundred and thirty men whom
Kilpatrick brought with him from Madras, in July, only about thirty
remained alive; and of these, but ten were fit for duty when Clive,
at last, arrived.</p>
<p>The fleet left Falta on the 27th of December, and anchored off
Moiapur on the following day. The fort of Baj-baj, near this place,
was the first object of attack; and it was arranged that, while
Admiral Watson should bombard with the fleet, Clive should attack
it on the land side.</p>
<p>Clive, who now held the rank of lieutenant colonel in the army,
had manifested great pleasure at again meeting the young officer
who had served under him at Arcot; and who had, in his absence,
obtained a fame scarcely inferior to his own, by the defence of
Ambur and the capture of Suwarndrug. A few hours after Clive's
arrival, Mr. Drake had made a formal complaint of the assault which
Charlie had committed; but after hearing, from Charlie, an account
of the circumstances, Clive sent a contemptuous message to Mr.
Drake, to the effect that Charlie had only acted as he should
himself have done, under the same circumstances; and that, at the
present time, he should not think of depriving himself of the
services of one gallant soldier, even if he had maltreated a dozen
civilians.</p>
<p>As Clive had been given paramount authority in Bengal, and as
Mr. Drake had every reason to suppose that he, himself, would be
recalled as soon as the circumstances attending the capture of
Calcutta were known in England, he was unable to do anything
further in the matter, and Charlie landed with Clive on the 28th.
The force consisted of two hundred and fifty Europeans, and twelve
hundred Sepoys, who were forced to drag with them, having no draft
animals, two field pieces and a waggon of ammunition.</p>
<p>The march was an excessively fatiguing one. The country was
swampy in the extreme, and intersected with watercourses; and,
after a terribly fatiguing night march, and fifteen hours of
unintermittent labour, they arrived, at eight o'clock in the
morning, at the hollow bed of a lake, now perfectly dry. It lay
some ten feet below the surrounding country, and was bordered with
jungle. In the wet season it was full of water. On the eastern and
southern banks lay an abandoned village, and it was situated about
a mile and a half from the fort of Baj-baj.</p>
<p>Clive was ill, and unable to see after matters himself. Indeed,
accustomed only to the feeble forces of Southern India, who had
never stood for a moment against him in battle, he had no thought
of danger. Upon the other hand the troops of the nabob, who had had
no experience, whatever, of the superior fighting powers of the
Europeans; and who had effected so easy a conquest at Calcutta,
flushed with victory, regarded their European foes with contempt,
and were preparing to annihilate them at a blow.</p>
<p>Manak Chand, the general commanding the nabob's forces, informed
by spies of the movements of the English troops, moved out with
fifteen hundred horses and two thousand foot. So worn out were the
British upon their arrival at the dried bed of the lake that, after
detaching a small body to occupy a village near the enemy's fort,
from which alone danger was expected; while another took up the
post in some jungles, by the side of the main road, the rest threw
themselves down to sleep. Some lay in the village, some in the
shade of the bushes along the sides of the hollow. Their arms were
all piled in a heap, sixty yards from the eastern bank. The two
field pieces stood deserted, on the north side of the village. Not
a single sentry was posted.</p>
<p>Manak Chand, knowing that, after marching all night, they would
be exhausted, now stole upon them, and surrounded the tank on three
sides. Happily, he did not perceive that their arms were piled at a
distance of sixty yards from the nearest man. Had he done so, the
English would have been helpless in his hands. After waiting an
hour, to be sure that the last of the English were sound asleep, he
ordered a tremendous fire to be opened on the hollow and
village.</p>
<p>Astounded at this sudden attack, the men sprang up from their
deep sleep, and a rush was instantly made to their arms. Clive,
ever coolest in danger, shouted to them to be steady, and his
officers well seconded his attempts. Unfortunately the
artillerymen, in their sudden surprise, instead of rushing to their
cannon, joined the rest of the troops as they ran back to their
arms, and the guns at once fell into the hands of the enemy.</p>
<p>These had now climbed the eastern bank, and a fire from all
sides was poured upon the troops, huddled together in a mass.</p>
<p>"Major Marryat," Clive said, "if we fall back now, fatigued as
the men are, and shaken by this surprise, we are lost. Do you take
a wing of the Sepoy battalion, and clear the right bank. I will
advance, with the main body, directly on the village."</p>
<p>"Come on, my lads," Charlie shouted, in Hindostanee; "show them
how the men of Madras can fight."</p>
<p>The Sepoys replied with a cheer, advanced with a rush against
the bank, drove the defenders at once from the point where they
charged, and then swept round the tank towards the village, which
Clive had already attacked in front.</p>
<p>The loss of Charlie's battalion was small, but the main body,
exposed to the concentrated fire, suffered more heavily. They would
not, however, be denied. Reaching the bank, they poured a volley
into the village, and charged with the bayonet; just as Charlie's
men dashed in at the side. The enemy fled from the village and,
taking shelter in the jungles around, opened fire. The shouts of
their officers could be heard, urging them again to sally out and
fall upon the British; but at this moment, the party which had been
sent forward along the road, hearing the fray, came hurrying up and
poured their fire into the jungle.</p>
<p>Surprised at this reinforcement, the enemy paused as they were
issuing from the wood, and then fell back upon their cavalry. The
British artillerymen ran out, and seized the guns, and opened with
them upon the retiring infantry. Clive now formed up his troops in
line, and advanced against the enemy's cavalry, behind which their
infantry had massed for shelter.</p>
<p>Manak Chand ordered his cavalry to charge, but just as he did
so, a cannonball from one of Clive's field pieces passed close to
his head. The sensation was so unpleasant that he at once changed
his mind. The order for retreat was given, and the beaten army fell
back, in disorder, to Calcutta.</p>
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