CHAPTER X
An Exciting Night in the
Llamaserai
“There are two points which we
must hold in constant remembrance,” said Nikola. “The first is that
you are not a Chinaman, and the other is that if you go before the
High Priest to–morrow morning and pose as one, he’ll certainly find
you out, and then we shall be ruined completely. If you run away I
had better run too, for all the good I can get by stopping, but
that I am resolved not to do. It has cost me many years’ labour, to
say nothing of some thousands of British sovereigns, to get as far
as I have in this business, and come what may I am determined not
to turn back.”
“But in what way are we to get
out of the difficulty?” I asked dejectedly. “If I can’t come before
them and brazen the matter out, and I can’t remain away for fear of
confirming what they already suspect, and I can’t leave the
monastery without drawing down suspicion on you, I must confess I
don’t see what is to be done. I suppose we couldn’t bribe the man
to withdraw his charge?”
“Not to be thought of,” said
Nikola, with conviction. “Our lives would then be simply dependent
on his reading of the term ‘good faith.’ You ought to know what
sort of trust we could place in that.”
“Could we force him to clear out,
and thus let it be supposed that he had brought a false accusation
against me, and was afraid to stay and face the
consequences?”
“That is not possible either,”
said Nikola. “He would want to bargain with us, and, to be revenged
on us, would turn traitor when we refused his demand. In that case
it would be ‘pull devil, pull baker,’ and the one who could pull
the longest would gain the day. No, you had better leave the
situation to me. Let me tackle it, and see what is to be
done.”
I did as he wished, and for
nearly half an hour could hear him pacing up and down his room. I
did not intrude upon him, or interrupt him in any way. At the end
of the time stated he abandoned his sentry–go and came in to
me.
“I think I see my way,” he said.
“But when all is said and done it is almost as desperate as either
of the other remedies we thought of. You will have to carry it out,
and if you fail— well, Heaven have mercy upon both of us. You have
saved my life before, I am going to trust it to you now; but
remember this, if you do not carry out my plan exactly as I wish,
you will never see me alive again. Give me your best attention, and
endeavour to recollect everything I tell you. It is now close on
midnight; the gong for early service will sound at half–past five,
but it will be daylight an hour before that. By hook or by crook I
must get you out of this place within a quarter of an hour, and,
even if you have to steal a horse to do it, you must be in Pekin
before half–past one. Once there you will find the house of Yoo
Laoyeh, who lives at the rear of Legation Street, near the chief
gate of the Tartar city.”
“But how am I going to get into
the city at all?” I asked, amazed that he should have forgotten
what struck me as a most hopeless barrier—the wall. “The gates are
closed at
sundown and are not opened again
till sunrise.” “You’ll have to climb the wall,” he answered.
“But, as you know very well,
that’s altogether impossible,” I said.
“Not a bit of it,” he replied. “I
will tell you of a place where it is quite practicable. Do you
remember the spot where you proposed to Miss Medwin?”
“Perfectly,” I answered with a
smile. “But how do you know it?”
“My dear fellow, I was within a
hundred yards of you the whole time. No, you need not look at me
like that. I was not spying upon you. After the fashion of the
great Napoleon, I like to be prepared for every emergency, and,
thinking I might some day want to get into the city when the gates
were shut, I utilized some spare time by taking a look at the wall.
You see how useful that chance visit has proved. Well, two bastions
from where you were seated that day the stones are larger and more
uneven than anywhere else along the whole of that side of the city.
To my certain knowledge three men have been in the habit of
climbing that portion of the ramparts for the last three years,
between midnight and sunrise, smuggling in goods to the city in
order to avoid paying the octroi duty, which, as you know, is
levied during daylight. When you have got over you will find a
sentry posted on the other side; to him you will pay three taels,
telling him at the same time that you intend returning in an hour,
and that you will pay him the same amount for the privilege of
getting out. Having passed the sentry you will proceed into the
town, find Yoo Laoyeh, and let him know the fix we are in. You may
promise him the sum of £100 cash if he falls in with your
suggestions, and you must bring him back with you, willy–nilly, as
fast as you can travel. I will meet you at the southern gate. Knock
four times, and as you knock, cough. That shall be the signal, and
as soon as I hear it I will open the gate. All that must be guarded
against inside shall be my care. Everything outside must be yours.
Now let us come along, and discover by what means I can get you
out.”
Together we left the room,
descended the stairs, and, crossing the ante–chamber, entered the
big hall. The wind which, as I have already said, came in through
the narrow windows on either side rustled the long hangings till
the place seemed peopled with a thousand silk– clad ghosts. Nikola
crossed it swiftly and left by the southern door. I followed close
at his heels, and together we passed unobserved through the great
courtyard, keeping well in the shadow of the building until we
reached the first gate. Fortunately for us this also was unguarded,
but we could hear the monk, who was supposed to be watching it,
placidly snoring in the room beside it. Slipping the enormous bar
aside we opened it quietly, passed through, and, crossing an open
strip of green, made for the outer wall. Just, however, as we were
about to turn the corner that separated us from it, a sudden sound
of voices caused us to hesitate.
“This way,” whispered Nikola,
seizing my wrist and dragging me to the left. “I can find you
another exit. I noticed, yesterday, a big tree growing by the side
of the wall.”
Leaving the centre gate we turned
to our left hand, as I have said, and followed the wall we desired
to surmount until we arrived at a large tree whose higher branches
more than overspread it.
“This is the very place for our
purpose,” said Nikola, coming to a halt. “You will have to
climb the tree and crawl along
the branches until you get on to the wall, then you must let
yourself down on the other side and be off to the city as hard as
you can go. Good–bye, and may good luck go with you!”
I shook him by the hand and
sprang into the branches. Hitherto it had seemed as if I had been
acting all this in a wonderfully vivid dream. Now, however, the
rough bark of the tree roused me to the reality of my position. I
climbed until I came to the level of the wall, then, choosing a
thick branch, made my way along it until I stood upon the solid
masonry. Once there, only a drop of about twelve feet remained
between me and freedom. Bidding Nikola, who was watching me,
good–bye, in a whisper, I leant over the wall as far as I was able,
grasped the coping with both hands, and then let myself drop.
Once on the ground I ran across
the open space towards a cluster of small dwellings. In an
enclosure adjoining one of them I could dimly make out a number of
ponies running loose, and knowing that if I could only secure one
of these and find a saddle and bridle in the residence of its
owner, I might be in Pekin in under an hour, I resolved to make the
attempt.
Creeping up to the nearest of the
houses, I approached the door. Inside I could hear the stertorous
breathing of the occupants. A joss–stick burnt before an image near
at hand, and though it was well–nigh exhausted by the time I
secured it, it still gave me sufficient light to look about me. A
moment later I had a saddle and bridle down from a peg and was out
among the ponies again.
Securing the most likely animal I
saddled him, and as soon as I had done so, mounted and set off
towards Pekin as fast as he could take me. The night was dark, but
the track was plain; the little beast was more than willing, and as
I did not spare him, something less than three–quarters of an hour,
counting from the time I had bidden Nikola good–bye, found me
dismounting under the great wall of the city.
Having found a convenient spot, I
tied up my pony, and when he was made secure set to work and hunted
along the wall until I came to the scaling place of which Nikola
had told me.
As I reached it a light wind blew
from over the plain, and sent the dust eddying about me, otherwise
not a sound disturbed the stillness of the night. Then, having made
sure that I was unobserved, and that I had chosen the right spot, I
began to climb. It was no easy task. The stones were large and
uneven. Sometimes I got a good hold, but in many cases I had
veritably to cling by my nails. The strain was almost too much for
my strength, and when I had been climbing for five minutes, and
there still remained as much of the wall ahead, I began to despair
of ever getting to the top. But I was not to be beaten; and
remembering how much depended upon my getting into the city, I
dragged myself wearily on, and at last crawled on to the summit.
When I reached it I could see the city spread out on the other
side. A little to the left of where I stood was the place, to be
for ever sacred in my eyes, where I had proposed to, and been
accepted by, my sweetheart, while away to the right was that
quarter of the town where at that moment she was in all probability
asleep, and, I hoped, dreaming of me. As soon as, I recovered my
breath I crossed the wall and descended by the steps on the other
side.
I had scarcely reached the bottom
before a man rose from a dark corner and confronted
me. In the half light I could see
that he was a Chinese soldier armed with a long spear. Telling him
in a whisper, in answer to his inquiry, that I was a friend, I
pressed the money that Nikola had given me for that purpose into
his not unwilling hand, and as soon as he drew back, astonished at
my munificence, sped past him and darted down the nearest
street.
From the place where I had passed
the sentry to the thoroughfare where Yoo Laoyeh resided was a
distance of about half a mile, and to reach it quickly it was
necessary that I should pass the Benfleets’ abode. You may imagine
what thoughts occupied my brain as I stood in the silent street and
regarded it. Under that roof was sleeping the one woman who was all
the world to me. I would have given anything I possessed for five
minutes’ conversation with her; but as that was impossible I turned
on my heel and made my way through a by–lane into the street I had
been sent to find. The house was not a big one, and at first glance
did not strike me very favourably. But the style of building did
not matter if I found there the man I wanted. I knocked upon the
door—which I discovered was heavily barred—but for some minutes got
no response; then, just as I was beginning to wonder in what way I
could best manage to attract the attention of those inside, I heard
a patter of bare feet on the stone passage, and after much fumbling
the door was opened and a man appeared before me. One glance told
me that he was not the person I wanted. I inquired if Yoo Laoyeh
were at home, but from the answer I received I gathered that he had
gone out earlier in the evening, and that he was probably at a
neighbouring house playing fan–tan.
Having asked the man if he would
take me to him, and at the same time offering him a considerable
bribe to do so, I was immediately conducted into the street again,
down one by–lane, up another, and finally brought to a standstill
before one of the largest houses in that quarter. My guide was
evidently well known, for when the door was opened the keeper did
not attempt to bar our passage, but permitted us to pass through to
a fair–sized room at the back. Here quite thirty Chinamen were
busily engaged upon their favourite pastime, but though we scanned
the rows of faces, the man for whom we were searching was not among
the number. As soon as we were convinced of this fact we left that
room and proceeded to another, where the same game was also being
carried on. Once more, however, we were doomed to disappointment;
Laoyeh was not there either.
Being anxious to obtain some news
of him my guide interrogated one of the players, who remembered
having seen our man about an hour before. He imagined he had then
gone into the room we had first visited. We returned there and made
further inquiries, only to elicit the fact that he had been seen to
leave the house about half an hour before our arrival.
“Have no fear. I will find him
for you,” said my companion, and we thereupon proceeded down the
passage, past the doorkeeper, into the street again. Once more we
took up the chase, trying first one house and then another, to
bring up eventually in an opium den a little behind the English
Legation. The outer room, or that nearest the street, was filled
with customers, but our man was not among them. The inner room was
not quite so crowded, and here, after all our searching, we
discovered the man we wanted. But there was this drawback, he had
smoked his usual number of pipes and was now fast asleep.
By this time it was hard upon two
o’clock, and at most I dared not remain in the city more than
another hour. At the same time it would be a most foolish, if not
dangerous,
proceeding to attempt to travel
with my man in his present condition. If he did nothing else he
would probably fall over the wall and break his neck, and then I
should either have to leave him behind or remain to answer
inconvenient questions; but whatever happened I knew I must carry
him out of this house as quickly as possible to some place where I
could endeavour to bring him back to his senses. I said as much to
the man who had found him for me, and then between us we got him on
to his feet, and taking him by either arm led him off to his home.
By the time we got him there he had in a small measure recovered
from the effects of his smoke. Then we set to work, using every
means known to our experience, to bring him round, and by half–past
two had so far succeeded as to warrant me in thinking I might set
off on my return journey.
“But what does your Excellency
require of me?” asked Laoyeh, who was still a bit mystified, though
fortunately not so far gone as to be unable to recognize me.
“You are to come with me,” I
answered, taking good care before I spoke that the other man was
well out of hearing, “to the Llamaserai, where Nikola wants you.
There is a hundred pounds English to be earned; how, I will tell
you as we go.”
As soon as he heard Nikola’s name
and the amount of the reward, he seemed to become himself again. We
accordingly left the house and set off together for that part of
the wall where I had made my descent into the city. The same
soldier was still on guard, and when I had placed the money I had
promised him in his hand, he immediately allowed us to pass. Within
twenty minutes of leaving Yoo’s house we were ready to descend the
other side of the wall.
If I had found it difficult to
ascend, I discovered that it was doubly difficult to descend. The
night was now very dark, and it was well–nigh impossible to see
what we were doing. The cracks and crannies which were to serve as
resting–places for our feet seemed almost impossible to find, and
right glad I was when the business was accomplished and we stood
together on terra firma at the bottom.