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CHAPTER XXI. RETIRED.

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percy had felt hungry when he rode into the fortress, but although he saw his uncle eat as heartily as usual, his appetite seemed to desert him, and he ate very sparingly of each dish placed before him. his uncle smiled.

"you are not such a good trencher-man as you were, percy."

"oh, i am all right, uncle; but just at first the thought that any of these dishes may be poisoned is an unpleasant one."

"you will get over it in time. frankly, i do not think that there is any ground for uneasiness. from the day gough crossed the sutlej i felt safe; from the day gujerat was won i have felt absolutely at my ease. i have no longer the slightest fear of ghoolab. this district is part of the punjaub, and the punjaub will assuredly be annexed to british india."

"yes, uncle, they say the proclamation will be out in another fortnight or so."

"that being so, lad, ghoolab's game is finally up. did i die to-morrow, surely no nominee of his would obtain the appointment of governor, or whatever your people call him, of a district adjoining cashmere. he may not like me, he may owe me a grudge for thwarting him so long, but he has no longer the slightest interest in my death; and although ghoolab would without scruple remove a hundred men who stood in his way, he would not run the slightest risk—and there is always a certain risk of a tool turning traitor—when there was nothing whatever to be gained by it."

"i hear that you rode into rawal-pindee to meet general gilbert's column, as it came through."

"yes, i took all my cavalry over, but by the time we got there all opposition had ceased, and the sirdars were pouring in to make their submission, and beg for forgiveness. so there was no occasion for their services. of course he thanked me, and said that he would report my offer."

"i almost thought you might come down and join us, uncle."

"i thought it over, lad, but there might have been trouble here in my absence; but i thought i would keep my force together, so that if there should be any tough fighting in the north, i should be able to march away horse and foot to join our men. i did not calculate upon so complete and sudden a collapse of the sikhs. now we have talked enough about myself; it is time that you tell me the story of your adventures, of which as yet i know nothing, and how you came by that desperately ugly wound on your head."

it was late before percy finished the story of his adventures.

"you have had great luck, lad, to have got so well out of your scrapes," the colonel said. "well, it is late now, and we must be off to bed; we shall have plenty of time to talk matters over in the morning."

"i should think, uncle," percy said, when they had lighted their cigars after breakfast, "that the government will recognize your position, and either grant you the same power over your district that the sirdars have over their estates, or else that they will appoint you as their official over the district."

"i have no doubt they would do so, percy, were i willing to accept it; but i have quite made up my mind to give it all up and go home."

"you have, uncle!" percy exclaimed in surprise.

"yes, i have stuck here all these years for three reasons: first, because i am an obstinate beggar, and would not be turned out; secondly, because my wife would not have liked to leave her native land, and would never have been happy in england; thirdly, because the people of my district have been rich and prosperous under me, and i was not going to hand them over to be pillaged and robbed by one of these sikh harpies. now, however, the case is altogether changed. if i go, i go of my own free will and choosing. mahtab has gone, and there is no longer anything to tie me to india. lastly, i can with confidence hand over the district to english administrators, secure that the people will not be taxed unfairly, and will be safe from all oppression and extortion. during the last two years i have reduced my force here considerably. i was certain that after the lesson we gave them, there was no fear of their ever again making an open assault on the place. i began by not filling up vacancies caused by death or from men being superannuated. fortunately, there is a good deal of cultivable land down this valley, and, indeed, in other parts of the district, and i have given grants of small holdings to all who were willing to take their discharge."

"i noticed that there was a great change in the valley below, since i went away, uncle, that fields have been marked out, and that there was quite a village down where the sikhs were encamped when they besieged us."

"yes, over two hundred holdings have been taken up there. i granted them free of all taxes for the first three years, gave those men who had no savings a little assistance in the way of a loan, and in time there will be a large and, i hope, thriving village there. i have urged the men to keep up a certain organization among themselves,—to form, in fact, a kind of military colony, so as to be in a position to resist dacoits or attacks by the marauding hill tribes. i have similarly settled that other valley three miles to the north; altogether i have given a start to nearly a thousand of the men. they have served me faithfully, and nothing would induce me to go away and abandon them. i think that it is very likely a force may be formed by our people for the protection of the frontier; and, as you and mr. fullarton, with whom i have had a good deal of correspondence, and the lawrences, are all aware that the men have behaved most faithfully and can be trusted, i hope i shall be able to get all those who wish to continue soldiering to be mustered into the service."

"i should think you might manage that, uncle; one or other of the lawrences, perhaps both, are certain to be appointed commissioners of the punjaub. of course, i am not in a position to speak to them on such a subject, but i am sure mr. fullarton would do so. i did not see him after i was wounded, as before i was about he had been taken down to lahore. i heard that he was recovering fast, and was expected to rejoin the head-quarters camp in a short time. having been so long on the frontier, i should think probably he will get a large district here, but at any rate he would, i am sure, bring your matter before the lawrences."

"i should think it by no means improbable, percy, that they may appoint you district magistrate, or collector, or whatever they call it, of this district; that is, if they keep it as a district."

"i should think they are not likely to do that, uncle. rawal-pindee will be made, i should say, the centre of a district of which this will form part. still, possibly i may be appointed an assistant in this district, as i know the country and the people so well; and if so, i will follow up the methods that have made it in your hands the most flourishing little corner of the punjaub, in spite of the greater part of it being merely hill country."

"well, percy, i don't think you can do better than stick to it. you have got a splendid start in the service, and have every chance of rising in it rapidly. it is good for you to work, and the exciting scenes you have passed through during the last four years have been a good preparation for making you an active and efficient officer. but what i want to say is this: if your health fails, or if, sooner or later, you marry and would like to settle down at home, or if from any other cause you want to leave the service, remember there is no occasion for you to work for your living. i am a rich man, and, thank god, i do not owe my wealth to grinding the last penny out of the natives. i could have retired and lived more than comfortably in england had i chosen to do so when runjeet singh died, for the old lion, with all his faults, was the most liberal of masters to those who served him well. since then i have, of course, largely increased my means. i had but to pay a fixed sum annually to lahore, and the revenue of the district has multiplied itself by ten since i took charge of it. i could, therefore, give you an income sufficient to keep you comfortably at home during my lifetime, and it will, of course, all come to you at my death. still, much as i should like to have you with me, i think that, at any rate, it would be better for you to remain in the service of the company for some years. it is a bad thing for any man to have nothing to do, and there is no better training than that afforded by the civil service of the company."

"thank you very much, uncle. i like the service greatly, so far as i have seen of it; and i should certainly wish to remain in it. even if i did not like india, i should do so. i think that a man with health and strength ought to have a career, and not to owe everything to another, however close a relation he may be. i certainly hope to be appointed to the punjaub, and i should think there would always be a spice of excitement here. there are sure to be constant troubles with the afghans and hill tribes all round it. i have been awfully lucky in getting noticed so young, and so gaining at least eight or ten years' start of fresh comers of my own age from england; and i feel, above all things, how indebted to you i am for this."

"you are indebted to me that you came out to india, percy, but almost everything else is due to yourself. the turning-point in your career was when you sat down on board ship to take your first lesson in punjaubi. it was the steadfastness with which you stuck to your studies during your voyage which won for you the liking and patronage of mr. fullarton, and so enabled you to take part in the sutlej campaign. there you showed pluck and presence of mind, and so gained the attention of sir henry hardinge and of the commander-in-chief. after that it was the fact that you had got up pathan, which procured for you your early appointment and your nomination to accompany agnew. had it not been for that you would have been out of all this last business. i have done what little i could in the way of teaching you to ride well and use your weapons, and have given you the best advice i could; but beyond that everything has depended on yourself. i feel proud of you, lad, very proud of you, and i only wish mahtab had been here to share my satisfaction. she was as fond of you, lad, as if she had been your mother. life here has been altogether different since i lost her; and the sorest point of all is the thought that the blow that struck her was aimed at me."

"i know that you must feel that, uncle. i can quite understand your wanting to get away from here now."

percy did not take the whole of his leave. his uncle was restless and unsettled, and when, a week later, the news came of the annexation of the punjaub, percy said:

"why should you stop, uncle? the sooner you are away the better, and i do not care to stay here longer. the place is not the same as it was; besides, i cannot help feeling that just at the present time it would be better for me to be at head-quarters. there is nothing like being on the spot when changes are being made."

"i think you are right there, lad. i have been telling my officers what you said about trying to get them into the company's employment, and all have expressed their willingness to remain in the district and hold themselves in readiness to join should they receive a message from you. i have but eight hundred men left now, and have given it to be understood that i shall give them fifty rupees each when they are disbanded, and a grant of land large enough to keep them. i have no doubt the grant will be confirmed, as the authorities will be glad enough to see a body of men, who might be troublesome if turned adrift, settle down as cultivators, so adding to the revenue. well, there is nothing to stay for. i will put it in orders this evening, that as the whole country has now been taken over by the british government, the force will be disbanded to-morrow."

the next day the troops paraded for the last time. the colonel made them a little speech, thanking them for the fidelity they had shown, and expressing his deep regret at leaving them. he told them that if a force should be raised by the british for service on the frontier, his nephew would endeavour to procure enrolment in its ranks for such of them as desired it; that he had set aside a tract of land for them, and that nand chund had his authority to divide it fairly among them; and that he himself, as a token of his appreciation of their faithful services, had directed fifty rupees to be given to each man in addition to the pay due to him, and that his vakeel was writing for each a paper testifying to his services, which he himself would sign, and which they would find useful in their dealings with british officials.

when he had finished the men broke their ranks and crowded round him, tears flowing down most of their faces, calling down blessings upon him, and pouring out their regret at leaving the service of so good and kind a master. it was with some difficulty that the colonel, who was himself deeply affected, extricated himself from them and returned to his residence. the next morning he and percy started. the colonel had made a very handsome present to bhop lal and akram chunder, and they of course accompanied them; but in addition the whole of the cavalry mounted and formed a voluntary escort to them as far as rawal-pindee.

travelling quietly they reached head-quarters on the day when the proclamation was read to the troops, amid the booming of cannon, announcing to the punjaub that it was now an integral portion of british india. percy introduced his uncle to mr. fullarton, and the latter took him to sir henry lawrence, with whom, during a stay of a week in the british camp, he had several long conversations, the chief-commissioner being desirous of ascertaining the views of one of such long experience in the country.

colonel groves was strongly of opinion that henceforth there would be no more trouble in the punjaub. "the sikh power is altogether broken," he said; "the former danger to india existed in the fact that hitherto they had been so successful in war that they had come to consider themselves almost invincible, and that the great army runjeet had got together was demoralized by inactivity, and each man thirsted for an opportunity to distinguish himself, and dreamt of a share in the plunder of india. the population in general were, in his opinion, peace-loving and industrious; they had suffered terribly under the exactions of the grasping sirdars, who amassed fortunes out of their toil, and of the tax-gatherers, who had to collect vast sums for the maintenance of the army. that army had ceased to exist—gujerat and chillianwalla had accounted for the greater part of those who had escaped ferozeshah and sobraon. i believe," he said, "that in the course of a generation there will be no more orderly or loyal province than the punjaub. there will be always a certain number of restless and adventurous spirits, but for these there will in time, i presume, be an opening in the regiments which, when you feel that you can trust them, will be raised here as in other parts of india. there is no finer fighting material to be found than among the sikhs, and the fidelity with which they have fought to the last for their country is an earnest of that which they will show to our colours when they once take a pride in them."

he then instanced the conduct of his own men, who had proved faithful to him throughout, and had fought as bravely against the sikh forces as they had formerly done under the sikh flag. "they were for the most part," he said, "men of hill tribes, and pathan rather than sikh by blood, and should you be raising a force for the defence of the frontier against afghans or hill men, you would find them admirably suited to the service. they are already well drilled and accustomed to discipline, and i promised them, when i disbanded them the other day, that i would speak to you in their favour, and would guarantee their fidelity should they be admitted into the company's service."

"i will think the matter over," sir henry lawrence said; "a force of that kind, if it could be relied upon, would be of immense service."

"well, sir henry, there is one ready at hand. if i might venture to suggest, i should say, if my nephew happens to have an appointment in the punjaub, it would be useful he should go for a week or two to the district with the officer charged to raise the force; in a few days he would produce a squadron two hundred strong of well-drilled cavalry, and four or five hundred infantry, with a complement of native officers thoroughly up to their work."

"your nephew will certainly have an appointment in the punjaub, colonel groves. he has proved himself a most efficient and zealous officer, and his knowledge of punjaubi and pathan, and of the country, would be thrown away in any other province. i had his early record in my hands when i was resident at lahore. major edwardes has written very strongly of the valuable assistance mr. groves rendered him, and he has been very useful during the late campaign. i can promise you that his appointment will show that his services have been thoroughly appreciated. i consider him an exceedingly promising young officer, and shall be glad to have an assistant on whom i can so thoroughly rely in any emergency."

"there is one thing i want to say to you, sir, and that is, that, when i disbanded my regiments, i gave to each man a grant of an acre or two of land in a valley so far untilled, but good land, and capable of irrigation. i had previously planted a thousand of them in two similar colonies, both of which are doing well. i hope that the grants may be confirmed."

"that they certainly would in any case, colonel groves; it is a great thing to have so many men, who might otherwise be troublesome, settled on the land; but, indeed, as your grants were made previous to the formal annexation, they would in any case remain good."

at the end of the week colonel groves left the camp and took a boat to go down the indus. the short stay among his countrymen, from whom he had been for many years separated, had done him good, and dispelled the melancholy thoughts with which he had ridden down from the fortress, which had been for some twelve years his home. he had met with great hospitality during his stay in camp, for all were interested in the talk and adventures of one who had been among the best known of runjeet singh's officers, and his hearty and genial manner had won for him the liking of all who met him.

ten days later percy, who was getting somewhat tired of idleness, received a message saying that he was to appear before the commissioners on the following day. sir henry, as president, addressed him when he appeared.

"mr. groves, i am happy to say that my brother and mr. mansell thoroughly agree with me that at the present moment experience rather than age must guide us in the distribution of our appointments. although you have been but a short time in the company's service, you have a wide experience in the country, and your knowledge of its languages is invaluable at the present juncture. we feel that you are naturally specially acquainted with the wants and necessities of that portion of the country in which you have lived for upwards of two years, and have therefore determined to appoint you to the charge of the strip of country lying north of dhangah and running along by the side of the jhelum. it will be about twenty miles wide, and will extend to the end of the narrow projection of country running up into cashmere. the line will run to the east of rawal-pindee, and will include all the hill country, and will touch torbeylah on the eastern branch of the indus. it will therefore be about a hundred and twenty miles long, and will of course include your uncle's former district. your appointment will be that of a deputy-commissioner. it will be a sub-district, either of the district of rawal-pindee or of peshawar; that is not settled yet, but at any rate you will communicate direct with me. it is an important appointment for so young a civil servant, but i am sure that you will justify our choice. i congratulate you, mr. groves, upon having worthily earned an appointment such as this. you will start within two days for your post, and we think that it will be advantageous for you to make djarma your head-quarters; there are, of course, several much more important places in the district; but in the first place it is, i believe, strongly fortified, it is distant about midway between the northern and southern points, and it possesses the advantage that in case of need you might collect a force from among the men who served under your uncle, and who are personally known to you. lieutenant purchas will accompany you; he is commissioned to raise a police force of a hundred mounted men; he will be stationed at djarma, and will, of course, be subject to your orders, and responsible for the maintenance of order in the district. we have also decided upon raising a frontier force, and shall, as a beginning, raise two troops of cavalry and six companies of infantry. major mellish, who will have the command, will follow you to djarma in a few days, and i shall be obliged if you will assist him in raising half that number in your neighbourhood. no doubt the force will be considerably increased later; at present it is but an experiment, and while it is desirable that the corps should start with a number of trained men, we have decided that it would be better to have an admixture of recruits from pathan tribes on the other side of the indus, both because they will know the country there, and because it is undesirable that the whole force should be composed of men acquainted with each other."

percy expressed his thanks to the commissioners for the honour they had done him in the appointment, and especially for having selected him to the post he should have preferred to all others. "i can answer, sir," he said, "that should any emergency ever occur, i could in the course of a couple of days raise a thousand men for any service required."

ten years later percy was able to fulfil the promise. he had three years before been removed to a more important appointment, that of the district between the jhelum and chenab rivers, when the news of the outbreak of the mutiny sent a thrill through india, and it was evident that it would extend over the whole of the bengal army. he received a message from mr. montgomery, commissioner at lahore—sir john lawrence, who had succeeded his brother as chief-commissioner of the punjaub, being at the time at rawal-pindee—saying, "come to me at once." ten minutes later he was on horseback, and, accompanied by his two faithful servants, rode to lahore, and on his arrival was at once received by the commissioner.

"mr. groves," he said, "i fear there is no doubt that the sepoys throughout the punjaub will go with the rest. we have a few days' respite, but i fear that it is certain they will rise. they must be disarmed if possible, crushed if necessary. i think that the sikhs as a whole will be true to us. they have experienced ten years of good government, and i believe they appreciate it. if they are faithful, we may not only hold this province, but help the north-west; if they are against us, india is lost for a time. my intention is, as soon as the sepoys have been dealt with, to raise regiments among the sikhs, and march them south. what do you think?"

"it will depend a great deal on their chiefs, sir; if they are faithful, i believe the people in general will at any rate not take part against us."

"i have received assurances of fidelity from the rajah of putiala and many others; some have offered to place their troops at our disposal, others not only troops but money."

"then i have no doubt of the population sir; they have always looked to their chiefs, and if they are staunch the people will follow their lead."

"why i have specially sent for you is this, mr. groves. you know your old district thoroughly, and have personal influence there; would you undertake to raise a force at once, whom you could trust to fight against the sepoys? there are the garrisons at peshawur, nowshera, rawal-pindee, and other places."

"i think i can undertake that, sir."

"then, in heaven's name, start at once. take a fresh horse from my stable, get remounts wherever you can, and ride as if for your life. the troops at meerut and delhi have both risen and massacred the officers and all the europeans; and although it may be a few days before the news is generally known, you are aware how strangely fast news travels in india, and assuredly this will be the signal for the rising of the sepoys everywhere. i hope to be able to deal with those here and at mean meer."

feeling half-stupefied at the intelligence of the risings at meerut and delhi, percy hurried off.

"i have to ride with all speed to djarma," he said to his followers; "it is a matter of life and death, and i have not a moment to lose. the commissioner has ordered one of his own horses to be brought round for me to start with, and i shall change as often as i can on the road. do you follow on as quickly as you can."

five minutes later he dashed out through the northern gate, of lahore. he had already performed a long and rapid ride, and had nearly two hundred miles before him; but he made the journey without rest, save to eat something whenever a fresh horse was being procured for him, and in twenty hours from his leaving lahore he rode into djarma. the force there had, he heard, been summoned six hours previously by a messenger from sir john lawrence to join him instantly at rawal-pindee. in half an hour after his arrival he had despatched a dozen messengers to the valleys where his uncle's men had been settled; then he threw himself down on a couch, and ordered that he should not be disturbed for four hours.

at the end of that time he was aroused, and going out found that some four hundred men from the valley below had already come in; the greater portion were old soldiers, but some had brought their sons in with them, and all were equally ready to serve. three hours more, and the force had swelled to twelve hundred men, and included many of the colonel's old officers, among them nand chund, who had saved money and settled down quietly after the troops had been disbanded. the old soldiers had all brought their arms with them, and the new recruits had also for the most part arms of some kind; others were found, and distributed among them. the old officers naturally fell into their positions, and the vacancies were filled up by men who had been under-officers.

there were two hundred cavalry-men among them, but of these not more than half had horses of any kind; but messengers had also been sent off to many of the land-owners in that part of the district, begging them to lend horses for the service of the government, and assuring them of payment for them on a fair scale should they not be returned; and a sufficient number for the unmounted men were now forthcoming. eight hours after his arrival at djarma, percy rode out at the head of two hundred cavalry and one thousand infantry. nand chund was left behind, with directions to raise instantly another regiment of infantry and as many horsemen as he could engage in the whole district, and to join him as speedily as possible.

"i could raise five regiments if it were necessary," nand chund said; "when the people know that you are to be their leader, every man who can bear arms will be ready to follow you."

"a regiment will be enough for the present, nand chund. no one can say how many will be required afterwards. choose young and active men; we shall have long marches and much to go through. you can say that i have no doubt that all who do faithful duty will be permanently retained in the service if they choose."

percy did not go to rawal-pindee, for he knew that there were european troops there, and the place was safe, and he feared that his force might be detained there. his corps made a tremendous day's march, and placed themselves on the main northern road, where, three hours later, the sepoys came along from the attock and nusserabad. warned of their approach by the clouds of dust, percy placed his troops in a grove, and when they came along, with the drums beating and colours flying, poured in a volley and attacked them. taken by surprise, great numbers were killed, and the rest fled and were pursued by him at the head of the cavalry, and very few of them succeeded in effecting their escape.

the next morning percy marched his infantry as far as attock, and leaving them there to prevent the passage of any mutineers, pushed forward with the cavalry to peshawur. here he aided the irregular cavalry under colonel nicholson in cutting up the sepoys who had mutinied at the frontier stations. for the next fortnight he scoured the northern district, dispersing bodies of the mutineers and keeping order. his infantry he had sent down to lahore to be employed as required. at the end of that time he received an order to report himself there with his cavalry.

"you have been doing good service again, mr. groves," sir john lawrence said; "the prompt punishment you inflicted on the mutineers has had an excellent effect in the north, but you are wanted back in your district; we must carry on things as before, for this will impress the natives more with the fact that we have no fear and anxiety about the future, than if we were ourselves to go south. a tranquil and assured front, a quiet continuance in our usual routine work, will impress them more than anything. now, as to these men you have raised: first as to the cavalry, i will muster them into the service if they are willing, and the same thing with the infantry. i am raising regiments here as fast as i can, in order to enable the commander-in-chief to take the offensive. hitherto the population in general seems to have stood aloof, and it is most desirable to show them that we are confident. do you think your men will all engage?"

"that i cannot say, sir; they all joined me at once from their affection for my uncle and from their personal knowledge of myself. some of them are well-to-do men; a good many of them are getting past the age for soldiering. they would all be willing, i have no doubt, to serve here in the punjaub, but many would not care to enlist for regular service. most of the younger men would, of course, be delighted to do so."

eventually three strong companies were raised from the infantry and a troop of horse from the cavalry. these were enrolled in the company's service. both were at once furnished with officers belonging to the sepoy regiments that had mutinied, and marched away to join the force assembling for an advance against delhi another troop of a hundred men, willing to serve for a year, was officered and sent up to djarma, together with two hundred infantry, to be in readiness to put down any trouble that might arise with the hill tribes. the rest received two months' pay and returned to their homes, with the understanding that they would, if called upon to do so, rejoin the ranks.

the month that followed was full of anxiety to all. until delhi fell the strain was very great, for although the punjaub was quiet and apparently loyal, the eyes of every native in india were fixed upon the desperate struggle round the city which had for so long been the seat of empire, and it was not until the british flag again floated over the blood-stained city, that india recognized that the british would assuredly emerge victorious from the struggle with the great army it had raised and disciplined.

when at length the strength of the mutiny was crushed by the final capture of lucknow, and there remained but the work of pursuit and punishment to be carried out, percy groves took his leave and went home. he had been fifteen years absent, and was now thirty. he did not go alone, for he took with him a wife and two children, having five years before married the sister of a young civilian in his own district. she had many relatives in the service, and some of these had been among the early victims of the mutiny, and a married sister had been among those so long besieged in lucknow. the anxiety had told so much upon his wife, that percy was strongly advised to take her to england directly he could get away from his work, and as soon as he felt that he could be spared he sent in his application, which was at once acceded to. his name had been included by sir john lawrence in the lists of those to whose efforts it was chiefly due that the punjaub had been saved, and when the list of honours came out his name was included in those on whom the honour of c.b. had been bestowed.

before leaving he had the satisfaction of seeing his two faithful followers settled down near each other. he had purchased for them of a sirdar, who had impoverished himself by his extravagance, the rights over several villages, and although they lamented percy's departure deeply, they were both of an age when men view with satisfaction the prospect of a life of ease and comfort.

he embarked this time at bombay, and returned via egypt. he was received with delight by his uncle, who had established himself at southsea, and who looked, percy thought, but little older than when he had seen him last. when the end of his two years' leave of absence was approaching, his uncle for the first time asked him whether he meant to go back.

"i can only say, percy, that i shall consider you a downright fool if you do. if you had kept yourself single, it would be a different thing; and if you had an ambition to become some day one of the top-sawyers in the service, a chief-commissioner, and all that, there is no reason that i know of, except that i want you here, why you should not stick to it to the end of your life. now it is altogether different. you know the doctor has advised that though annie is perfectly well, she should not return to india. even if she did, you would not want to take these three little children out with you, and she would not like to go without them. that breaking up of families is the great drawback to the indian service. of course, in many cases men must put up with it, because they cannot afford to leave till they have served long enough to get their full pension. that is not so in your case. you will get a fair pension, of course, because you have held much more important appointments than often fall to the lot of men of your standing; then, too, you were seriously wounded at chillianwalla. you have been specially reported, and have been made a c.b., all of which will count in the way of pension. however, fortunately that makes very little difference to you; as i told you twelve years ago i have an ample fortune for us both, and i want you at home. it has been dull work for me since i came back, without anyone to care for here. i am nearly sixty now, and i want a comfortable home for the remainder of my life, and if you go away again i shall be doing something rash, marrying again, or something of that sort. of course, it is for you to choose; but if you go back to india alone, when you can live here with your wife and children, i shall consider you to be a greater fool than i took you to be."

"well, you need not consider that, uncle," percy laughed. "i have been thinking it over myself, and had pretty well come to the conclusion to retire. i have no particular ambition to become a lieutenant-governor, or even a governor; certainly none to be working out there alone, with annie and the children in england; and the thought that you would like me at home has had its full share in deciding me. to tell you the truth, i have already sent in my request to be allowed to retire, but i had intended to say nothing about it until i could surprise you with the news that it was all settled. i used to think that, did i return, i should have no one i knew in england except you; but annie's friends and relations, and there are any number of them, have naturally become mine, and i am now thoroughly equipped that way."

"i am glad to hear it, percy; heartily glad. i reckoned on your good sense as well as upon your affection for me, and i am indeed glad that it is settled. i have had two or three talks on the subject with annie. she says she hoped and thought you would retire, but that she would not say a word to influence you one way or the other. you are very fortunate in your wife, lad."

"i have been very fortunate all round, uncle; no man has more reason for being thankful and grateful than i have, to god in the first place for all the blessings i have received, and next to him to you."

"tut, tut, percy, you have brought as much pleasure into my life as i have into yours. now, lad, you must consult your wife, and look about and decide where you would like to establish yourself. we will have a house in london, which i shall call mine, and you shall have a place in the country, with an estate big enough to be an amusement without being a trouble; or if you have no fancy for an estate, we will buy a place here, or anywhere else you and your wife wish to fix on.

"thank you, uncle; we shall have plenty of time to talk that over. my present idea is that i have no desire whatever to become the possessor of an estate. the life is vastly more cheerful in a town like this, where we have any number of acquaintances, military and indian, a good club, and something always going on, than it would be in the country, where, as i found while staying with some of annie's relations, eight miles is considered a reasonable drive to a dinner party."

and so, a month later, percy groves retired from the service. his wife, having so many friends in the army, and having been brought up among military men, cordially agreed with him in preferring life near a large garrison town like portsmouth to settling on an estate in the country, and three months later they were established in a large and comfortable house standing in its own grounds at southsea. colonel groves proposed to percy to go into parliament, and to take a prominent part in questions connected with india. percy would not listen to the proposal; his indian duties had, however, made him an adept with his pen; and beginning by writing occasional articles upon indian subjects in which he felt a special interest, he became a regular contributor to one or two of the leading reviews, while his articles on indian topics in the times, signed "p.g.," attracted much attention.

this work kept up his connection with india, and afforded just that amount of pleasant occupation that is so necessary to men who, having led a busy and active life, have nothing but their family duties and pleasures and the ordinary routine of daily life to occupy their minds. colonel groves died some five years since, enjoying life to the last, and deeply regretted by his great-nephews and -nieces. percy groves is one of the best-known figures at southsea and at the oriental club, and his grandchildren consider it the greatest of treats when they can persuade him to tell them stories of his experiences and adventures in the two campaigns that resulted in the conquest of the punjaub.

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