"
"What do you mean by that?" Ajeet queried.
"Just that you are not going on this mission, Ajeet;" then he laughed
disagreeably.
"If you are afraid to go Sookdee will be well without you," Ajeet
retorted.
Before more could be said in this way, and as they approached the camp,
the lowing of a cow was heard.
"Dost hear that, Guru?" Hunsa queried. "In a decoity is not the lowing
of a cow in a village held to be an evil omen?"
"Not so, Hunsa," the Priest declared. "It is an evil omen if the
decoity is to be made on the village in which the cow raises her voice,
but we are going to our own camp in peace, and it is a voice of
approval."
"As to that," Ajeet commented, "if Hunsa is right, it is written in our
code of omens that hearing a cow call thus simply means that one of the
party making the decoity will be killed; perhaps as he was the one to
notice it, the evil will fall upon him."
"You'd like that," Hunsa growled.
"Not being given to lies, it would not displease me, for, as the
hangman said, you would be better dead."
But they were now at their camp, and the jamadars, standing together
for a little, settled it that the omens being favourable, and the wrath
of the Dewan feared, they would take the way to the Pindari camp next
day.
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