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    Shadow of the Moon

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      ‘Surely if her husband were alive he would send word?’ said the women of the Gulab Mahal. ‘It must be that he is dead.’

      That thought was often clear on their faces and in their kind, troubled eyes, and one day it had been too clear to be borne, and Winter had answered it as though it had been spoken aloud:

      ‘No! It is not true. He is not dead. He will come for me some day. I have only to wait …’

      And she had snatched up her son and carried him up to Alex’s roof-top although the sun had not yet set and the heat shimmered on the hot stonework, and had strained her eyes in the direction of Lunjore as though her love and longing could reach beyond the horizon and pierce the distance and the dust-clouds and heat-haze that hid it from her sight.

      The withered leaves of the trees below her rattled drily under the fingers of a little hot wind that blew through the garden. A wind that must have blown over Lunjore. ‘Some day,’ thought Winter. ‘One day …’

      They were words that she had been saying all her life. She had said them as a child at Ware. ‘Some day I shall go back to the Gulab Mahal—’ And she had come back. Surely some day Alex would come back too.

      The sun dipped down towards the horizon and bathed the shattered city in beauty, hiding its blackened, gaping scars, and Winter remembered what Hodson had said to her - Hodson whose star, as the astrologer in Amritsar had prophesied so many years ago, ‘would arise and burn bright among much blood’, and who had died in the battle for the city - ‘I may see him before you do.’ Had he too spoken prophetically ? Had he indeed met Alex?

      Quite suddenly she could bear it no longer, and she turned and ran desperately, as she had run before, to the refuge of the painted room, sobbing and shuddering.

      The reflected glow of the sunset filled it with a warm rosy light, touching the trees and the birds and the flowers into the same enchanted life that lamplight could give them, and the leaves and the petals welcomed her and the birds and the beasts nodded to her and Firishta watched her with a bright, friendly, reassuring eye.

      She pushed the bed to one side and sank down on the matting with the child in her arms, and leaned her head against the cool carved plaster, pressing her cheek against the comforting curve of Firishta’s round green head. Her eyes closed and gradually the helpless trembling of her body lessened as little by little the fear ebbed away from her.

      The baby went to sleep in her lap and the glow faded from the room, taking the gay brightness from it and leaving it as cool and as softly colourful as an opal.

      Outside the windows the birds were settling down to rest with noisy chatterings and cawings and a flutter of wings among the orange trees, and beyond the far wall of the garden the dome of the little whitewashed mosque with its iron emblem of the crescent moon cut a lilac pattern against the evening sky.

      The hum of the city rose up about the Gulab Mahal, washing around it; and through it and above it Winter could hear all the familiar, friendly sounds of the house. The distant chatter of shrill feminine voices, children laughing, a baby crying, the aged gateman clearing his throat and coughing asthmatically, a clatter of cooking-pots and the creak of the well-wheel. The sounds mingled and mixed with the no less dear and familiar scents of water sprinkled on parched ground, of the spicy smell of Eastern cooking and the smoke of dung-fires, the scent of warm dust and sun-soaked stone.

      The sounds and the scents seemed to weave a web about the painted room, isolating it in safety, and Winter drew a long slow sigh and felt the last of the shuddering fear leave her.

      ‘Some day,’ she said, whispering the words against Firishta’s green head. ‘One day—’

      There were footsteps and a murmur of voices in the passage beyond the doorway, and then someone lifted the heavy curtain that hung before it, and she opened her eyes and looked up. And it was Alex.

      GLOSSARY

      Angrezi British; English

      Angrezi-log British people

      Ayah child’s nurse

      Bairagi Hindu holy man

      Bakri goat

      Begum Mohammedan lady

      Belait England

      Beshak assuredly

      Bhil grave dug by the Thugs for their victims

      Bhoosa straw

      Bibi-gurh women’s house

      Bourka one-piece head-to-heels cloak, with small square of coarse net to see through

      Budmarsh rascal; bad man

      Bund irrigation bank

      Bunnia shopkeeper

      Burra-lat-Sahib Great-lord-Sahib (Governor-General)

      Butchas ‘young ones’ (children)

      Charpoy Indian bedstead (usually string or webbing)

      Chatti large earthenware water-pot

      Chik sunblind made of split cane

      Chirag small earthenware oil-lamp, used in festivals

      Chowkidar night-watchman

      Chuddah sheet or shawl

      Chunam a fine, polished plaster

      Chunna roasted gram (a form of grain)

      Chuppatti thin flat cake of unleavened bread

      Chupprassi peon

      Dacoits robbers

      Daffadar sergeant (cavalry)

      Dâk mail; post

      Dâk-bungalow posting-house; rest-house

      Dâk-ghari horse-drawn vehicle carrying mail

      Dazi tailor

      Deputtah head-scarf

      Dhobi washer of clothes; laundryman

      Dhooli litter; palanquin

      Durbar public audience; levee

      Ekka light two-wheeled trap

      Fakir religious mendicant

      Feringhi foreigner

      Ghari any horse-drawn vehicle

      Ghee clarified butter

      Gopi milkmaid

      Gurra earthenware water-pot

      Havildar sergeant (infantry)

      Hookah water-pipe for smoking tobacco

      Howdah seat carried on back of elephant

      Huzoor Your Honour

      Ilaqa district

      Jaghirdar landowner

      Jehad holy war

      Jemadar junior Indian officer promoted from the ranks (cavalry or infantry)

      Jezail long-barrelled musket

      Jheel shallow, marshy lake

      Juggra trouble; quarrel

      Jung-i-lat Sahib Commander-in-Chief

      Kala hirren blackbuck

      Khansamah cook

      Khidmatgar waiter at table

      Khussee short-handled axe, carried by Thugs

      Koss two miles

      Koti house

      Kotwal headman

      Kutcha makeshift

      Lance naik lance corporal

      Lathi long, heavy staff, usually made from bamboo

      Lotah small brass water-pot

      Lughais Thugs who were responsible for the burial of the dead

      Machan small platform built in a tree

      Mahout elephant driver

      Maidan parade-ground

      Manji boatman

      Maro! Strike! or Kill!

      Masala spice

      Maulvi title of a Mohammedan priest

      Mem-log white women

      Mullah Mohammedan priest

      Munshi teacher, writer

      Nani grandmother (diminutive)

      Nauker-log servants (literally, ‘servant-people’) Nautch-girl dancing-girl

      Nullah ravine or dry water-course

      Padishah ruler

      Pan betel-nut rolled in a bayleaf and chewed

      Parao camping-site

      Piara darling

      Puggari turban

      Pulton infantry regiment

      Punkah length of matting or heavy material pulled by a rope to make a breeze

      Purdah seclusion of women (literally, ‘curtain’)

      Pushtu the language of the Pathans

      Resai quilt

      Rissala cavalry (regiment)

      Ruth domed purdah cart, drawn by bullocks

      Sadhu Hindu holy man

      Sahib-log white people

      Saht-bai literally, ‘seven brothers’: small brown birds whic
    h go about in groups, usually of seven

      Sepoy infantry soldier

      Serai caravan hostel

      Shabash! Bravo!

      Shadi wedding; marriage

      Shahin peregrine falcon

      Shamianah large tent; marquee

      Shikar hunting and shooting

      Shikari hunter, finder of game

      Sirdar Indian officer of high rank

      Sowar cavalry trooper

      Subadar chief Indian officer of company of sepoys

      Syce groom

      Taklief trouble

      Talukdar large landholder

      Terai a tract of land running along the foot of the Himalayas north of the Ganges

      Tulwar curved sword

      Zemindar farmer

      Zenana woman’s quarter

      Also by M. M. Kaye

      THE FAR PAVILIONS

      Trade Wind

      About the Author

      M.M. Kaye (1908-2004) was born in India and spent much of her childhood and adult life there. She became world famous with the publication of her monumental bestseller, The Far Pavilions. She is also the author of the bestselling Trade Wind and Shadow of the Moon. She lived in England. You can sign up for author updates here.

      Thank you for buying this

      St. Martin’s Press ebook.

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      For email updates on the author, click here.

      Title Page

      Copyright Notice

      Dedication

      Epigraph

      Family Tree

      BOOK ONE: THE SHADOW BEFORE

      1

      2

      3

      4

      5

      6

      BOOK TWO: KISHAN PRASAD

      7

      8

      9

      10

      11

      12

      13

      14

      15

      16

      17

      18

      19

      BOOK THREE: CONWAY

      20

      21

      22

      23

      24

      25

      26

      27

      BOOK FOUR: MOONRISE

      28

      29

      30

      31

      32

      33

      34

      35

      36

      37

      38

      39

      BOOK FIVE: THE HIRREN MINAR

      40

      41

      42

      43

      44

      45

      46

      BOOK SIX: THE GULAB MAHAL

      47

      48

      49

      50

      51

      GLOSSARY

      Also by M. M. Kaye

      About the Author

      Copyright

      Copyright © 1956, 1979 by M.M. Kaye

      All rights reserved. For information, write:

      St. Martin’s Press, Inc., 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10010.

      Manufactured in the United States of America

      Our eBooks may be purchased in bulk for promotional, educational, or business use. Please contact the Macmillan Corporate and Premium Sales Department at 1-800-221-7945, extension. 5442, or by e-mail at [email protected]

      Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data

      Kaye, Mary Margaret, 1911-

      Shadow of the moon.

      1. India—History—Sepoy Rebellion, 1857–1858—Fiction. I. Title.

      PZ4.K233Sh 1979 [PR6061.A945] 823’.9’14 79-5033

      eISBN: 978-1-250-09076-8

     


     

      M. M. Kaye, Shadow of the Moon

      (Series: # )

     

     


     

     
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