Since the fierce raging of the battle, all throughout the cold hours of night, we had lain where we had stood, without fire or without covering, and showing never a light. But away in the West the pale moon began to sink at last in a cloudy haze, and at daylight nothing could be seen for the grey mists that covered hills and plain.
Master came round and I rose to meet him. He asked Jock McNab as he smoked and patted my head, whether I had shown any fear during the fight.
"Never a morsel, sir," said Jock; "any more than yourself, sir."
Master went back to his place smiling at Jock"s way of paying a compliment.
The firing of the enemy had by this time slackened, and it was greatly feared by our fine soldier lads that they had drawn off, and not waited "to get their licks," as Jock phrased it.
Breakfast was now hastily served out, I sharing with master, who had come round and sat down beside Jock and me.
Then by degrees the morning mists gathered up and up, till they lay only like a grey cloud on the snow-clad mountain peaks, and we beheld the Persian army drawn up in battle array ready and waiting for us.
It was a grand sight, Cracker, for the sun now shone gaily down on their soldiers, in serried ranks of horse and foot.
They had not long to wait for us, children. But there was a lot of marching and counter-marching of regiments and brigades, that I could not understand, unless it was that our fellows were just showing off their fine clothes.
But the tulzie soon commenced, and as I stuck to my seat on brave Jock"s back, my ears were deafened with the yelling and shouting and rattling of musketry, and with the awful roar of the enemy"s dread artillery.
On we marched, or rushed, and soon the fight was almost hand to hand, and so horrible!
But the enemy could not stand the onslaught of our forces. They began to give way and retire, and soon the battle became a rout. The Persians left nearly a thousand dead on the field, and many more bodies lay in every conceivable position along the route they had taken towards the hills.
After our cavalry had chased them afar they returned, and the march was commenced back towards Bushire.
It was a long, cold, wet, and weary one, but we saw the sea at last, and never did soldiers stretch their tired limbs in camp, or make their tea with greater pleasure, than did our poor fellows when they found themselves once more in their entrenched position.
Some of our officers were buried next day, but I was so glad to think that neither my dear master, nor Jock, nor I, were among the wounded.
Jock McNab was loud in his praises of what he was kind enough to call my pluck and coolness in the presence of the foe.
"I wadna gie p.u.s.s.y for onything," he said, "and I"m sure enough she brought us luck, for never a man fell near me, either dead or wounded."
This was my first battle then, Cracker, but it wasn"t my last by any means.
As master said, the enemy was beaten, but being beaten doesn"t by any means signify that they were conquered.
We remained quiet enough in camp now for many long monotonous days, during which the enemy did not think of disturbing us.
More troops began to arrive from India. The ships lay out yonder at anchor, but a high tumbling sea rolled in upon the beach, and it was difficult indeed to communicate with the vessels, so that the poor horses in camp began to suffer from hunger, and our own rations were sometimes scant enough.
The north-west wind too, blew loud and fierce, and brought with it clouds of dust, and a fine sort of sand that nothing on earth could keep out of camp. The cold at night was still bitter, but we had tents now, and I was cosy enough in master"s arms.
They tell me that British soldiers and sailors are born grumblers.
Well, I suppose there is some truth in this; but I must say, Cracker, our men never grumbled at the scantiness of their own rations, though they pitied the horses, but they did grumble a little because the time was pa.s.sing on so monotonously, and there seemed no early chance of having another fight with the Persian foe.
In fact, Cracker, the foe was getting insolent. By night we now began to see his fires on the hills around, and, although he had not the courage to attack us, he fired upon our outposts.
My master, I knew, was getting impatient as well as his men.
"I want to get farther on up country, p.u.s.s.y," he whispered to me one evening; "up nearer the bonnie woods and bills where your heart and mine dwell, Shireen, with your dear mistress Beebee."
I purred and sang, and that seemed to give him heart.
But soon after this Britain"s great hero Havelock arrived, and we all hoped then for a speedy change, and we weren"t disappointed either, Cracker.
"More fur was going to fly, Shireen?"
Yes, dear Cracker, more fur was going to fly, for in a week or two we were embarked in a transport, and sailing up the Euphrates river to attack the Shah"s great army at Mohammerah.
This stronghold was said to be occupied by the very pink and pith of the Persian forces, in number about fifteen thousand in all.
Among the chief regiments behind the formidable earthworks were seven of the Shah"s best and bravest including his guards, and the very flower of his army. Some of these were commanded by a Prince of the blood royal, and somehow or other my master found out that Beebee"s father was there also.
When my dear master told me this his eyes were sparkling with joy.
"It is just possible, Shireen," he said, "that Beebee herself may be there, if so--"
He did not finish the sentence, but I knew what he meant.
And now, said Shireen, here come the children, so my little story must end for a time. But you"ll come again, won"t you, Cracker?
"Oh, like a shot, Shireen," said Cracker, "you bet."
"Oh!" cried Tom, running up. "Come quick, Lizzie. Here is Cracker, the dog that saved Shireen"s life, and gave the butcher"s bull-terrier such a shaking. Poor doggie Cracker. Poor dear doggie, you won"t bite, will you?"
The towsy tyke looked up into the boy"s face and wagged his thick, short stump of a tail at a terrible rate, and there was so much kindness and affection in those brown eyes of his, that Tom at once bent down and threw his arms about his rough and grizzled neck.
Then Lizzie, who had been to fetch some milk, came and placed it down before Cracker.
Cracker really didn"t want it, but he drank it rather than anybody should think him ungrateful.
"Mind," said Tom, "you must come to the Castle to-morrow afternoon. It is Shireen"s birthday, and we are going to give a party."
Once more Cracker wagged his tail, then he went trotting away to the gate, gave one kindly look behind, and so disappeared.
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN.
AND CHAMMY NEVER CAME AGAIN.
As the weather grew colder, Chammy hugged the fire more, so to speak, and was less and less inclined to run away.
Perhaps to talk of Chammy"s pedal progression as "running" is slightly to exaggerate. But, nevertheless, when Chammy made up his mind to go anywhere, whether it were on an expedition to the top of a curtain, or the extreme point of a poplar tree, he got there all the same. He would probably take a considerable time to make up his mind about it, however, and he would focus the spot he meant to reach with one eye for an hour or two to begin with. Probably, during this survey, his other eye would be wandering all round the room at Shireen, at Warlock, or at Lizzie and Tom. With one eye he was calculating the height of his ambition, as it were, with the other he was counting the chances there were against his ever reaching it at all. These chances had to be reckoned with, for first and foremost he had to descend from his perch or the branch in the ingle-nook. Having reached the floor, he would have to make for the wall of the room and creep along by the foot of the dado, perhaps changing colour once or twice so as to match the hue of the carpet, and thus do his best to escape observation. For Tabby might be there, and might sing out to Warlock:
"Oh, Warlock, here is Chammy just racing off as fast as lightning. Let us have some fun with him, and turn him over and over a few times."
And they would do it too. And, although the cat and dog meant no harm, their attentions were somewhat disconcerting, to say the very least of it.