By TALBOT MUNDY Copyright by the Bobbe-Merrill Company isis jihad or holy war, Rewa Gunga, Yasmini's man, ahead. The Rangar deserts him brother at Ali Masjid fort. Ismail, an Afridi, be- He rescues some of Yasminl's a dangerous time. He meets his He enters Khinjan CHAPTER XIil.—Continued. Ee “Aye! The liar the gave it to him. He swears they send more. Who are the Who is a man who talks of a jihad that Germans will says unbelievers? 1 saw at Nuklao. He ate wed it down with given him by German once, wine, ition and removed “Who an Ik t I think know thee, | hurt me al drawing of a bullet What thou gentle fellon who not at ut of my gahout me? “That I will thee again !™ Artiess statements are as their question the gutle lie deep, that is all, For she ml F 3} 1 foul of her, for all ais Divito knowest dr the wound 088 useful way as artless 18. “Nay, nav! said ng I fal bandage?” the sake temntntion won empialion was terrific to ask but King it occurred » had gi i: » Pathan that his ow it be of n that order and presently n theories on subject mig! inter “She will use thee for a rew: “He who shall win and keeg A Wretched-Looking Beluchi Thrust Forward at a Run, Arms Lashed tec His Sides. Was With favor may have his hurts dressed and his belly dosed. Her enemies may rot.” “Does call mad Anim enemy?’ “Nay, she nae,” she King asked him, never mentions him by CHAPTER XIIL dance went on for fifteen vb min. we arens guards together fired a at the roof, and the dance whispered. “Here in men walt for proof I” He licked his teeth suggestively, as when an afterthought, “I love thee! ‘Thou rt a man after my own heart! But 1 am her man! Wait and gee!” Ti { ah in the ares Lie Alt ¥ meal, Then, as eld hoth arms of a ongregn » great ver conld up the ech i r LE i Instantly they again, “His iz his prophet!” rophet I an- prophet-—is his prophet- sald the stalactites, in lond barks—then in mnrs That then in awestruck whispers id too he nll SEI the relig tolerate. Considering that the mullah must have kil his man in rioht perh in it yas enough "oe There were men vho shadd red. strangers I" 1 af nd Is for what there, bey oration for him : Int was coming. we, and one was “wy It * men ong mullah he his the fir 61 v nan!” the sled 46 ! Al came other two were three witneases swore that “{ man from slaying an unbeliever said he ran from , a8 the custom ia, I let all the Inw, enter “Good I” might “Good I” gald the have been crowd. foaming at the mouth, gome of them-—the dancers ran to their conts nnd set the crowd surging again, rw {f the and crowd whom King recognized recognition brought no joy with it. The mullah without halr or eyelashes, through the mosque Into the eaves, strode out to the middle of the arena all alone! strutting and swaggering, He recalled the man's last words and drew no consolation from them, either, “Many have entered! Some out by a different road!” Cold chills went down his baek, All ant once Ismall’s manner became une: couraging., He ceased to make a fuss over the dancer and began to eye King sidewige, until at last he seemed un- ahle to contain the maliee that would well forth. “At the gate there vere only words!” went were, Yet they licked their lips, “But later, word came to me saying So-—agaln as the cus. is~1 ordered them bound and held! Does nny speak for them?” “Speak for them?" said the roof, There was silence. Then there was a murmur of astonishment, posite to where King sat the muliah up, who the Pathan said “Bull-with-a-beard "Muhammad ind was Anim, “The men are mine!” he growled. His voice was like a bear's at bay: it was low, but it carried strangely. And a3 he gpoke he swung his great head between his shoulders, like a bear that means to charge. “The proof they brought has been stolen! They had I speak for them! pes " men are mine The Pathan nudged King in the ribs with an elbow like a club and tickled his ear with hot breath, “Bull with-a-beard speaks truth!” he grinned, “Truth and a He togothor! Good may it do him and them! They die, they three Baluchis!" “Proof I” howled the muliah who had no hair or eyelashes, “Proof! Show us proof!” yelled the crowd, The Pathan next King leaned over to whisper to him again, but stiffened tn re TE ——— er anni ft —— the act. There was au great gasp the same Instant, as the whole crowd caught its brenth all together. The mullah In the middle froze into im- mobility. Bull-with-a-beard stood mumbling, swaying his great head from side to side, no longer suggestive of a bear about to charge, but of one who hesitates, The crowd was staring at the end of the bridge. King stared, too, and caught his own breath. For Yasminl stood there, smiling on them all as the pew moon smiles down on the Khyber! She had come among them lke a spirit, ull unheralded. So much more beautiful than the one likeness King had seen of her that for a second he doubted who she was, she stood there, human and warm and real, who had begun to seem a myth, clad gauzy silk transparent stuff that made no secret of sylphlike shapeli- ness and looking nearly light enough to blow away. Her feet—and they were the most marvelously things had ever ked and played restlessly on the naked Not part of her still fraction of a second; molded Bel Were n wis the ense, one for yet insolently | fect was of nzy jewels stitched sx, and w hen a to her gossamer man once looked at did find It eusy to in. E Muhammad ned transfixed, like a great nimal., look ven mullah # scot n 15 tn iim ov re two brace sri t) Mii i ler of the two She nodded once: and then all was over in a minute, With a ringing “Ho” and a run, the guards lifted thelr vie. tims shoulder high and bore them for- word. At the river bank they paused for a second to swing them, Then, with another “Ho!” they threw them like ter, went echoing and re-echoing to the roof. There was scarcely a splash, and no extra ripple at ail. No heads came up again to gasp. No fingers clutched at the surface, The fearful speed of the river sucked them under, to grind and churn and pound them through long caverns underground and hurl them at last over the great ecata- ract toward the middie of the world, “Ah-h-h-h-h!” sighed the crowd in ecstasy. “Is there no other stranger?’ asked Yasmini, searching for King again with The skin all turned there and then And ns her eves met his Inughed like a bell at him, She knew! Bhe knew who he was, how he had entered, nnd how he felt, Not a doubt of it! down his back into gooseflesh, she CHAPTER XIV. “Kurram Khan!" the In like a in light, and King stood up. In that grim minute he managed to seem about as much at ease as a native hakis to feel at such an initiation, “Come forward!” and tween men who were shless mullah howled, lone wolf the the mullnh howled, tread hes nx to let be- he obeyed, ing gingerly at Do pd him by, and silently blessing them, he was not really in any nt all, sweet, “Who are his witnesses?" “1! shouted Ismall, Jumping up. “11 eracked the roof. “It It at for a second King slmost belleved crowd of 1 for $ i did all, who rose had a nen to swenr fm an not hear Darya Khgn s from i not very far Ismail fo man clothes lowed wading a gathered arm ready an did not in in cas forward a n len box that Kin seized it way » WN 114 were so ailgke, ex for so exactly like the id given hi name and th A n stolen in of removing stare nent with unimpe he distance was too great. not quit tut wil ew two to search the in nnd then sitting where facing all ail them em ye and of us!” ig felt ten sand burn in his back, but the one pair of : 11 eves v (Hae noeert £2 Rurram Khan! urs i HE gympton sharply and grew flicked thr developed » free of out to bring bid the new recruits, better than nt oa proof for onr to lies for others gate, Nor, recruit, do we send men to hunt 8 head for Mm even those of us who have a lash kar that we call our own, mullah Mu- hammad Anim! own way in!” switing not to stroke his ben gwor, “And Muhammad wandering man eof lashkar has foolishly mullah Anim, that been sent wns a head, and that the head was A le is a lle, Muhammad Anim! Wandering perhaps is good, if in search of the way. Is it good to lose the way, and te lle, thou true fol She smiled, tossing her hair back. him and her chin scorned. The crowd breathed hard and watched, The mul- inh muttered something in his beard, and sat down, and the crowd began to roar applause at her. But she checked it with a regal gesture, and a glance of contempt at the mullah that was alone worth a journey across the “Hills” to see, “Guards!” she sald quietly. And the crowd's sigh then was like the night wind in a forest, “Away with those three of Muham- mad Anim's men!” Twelve of the arena guards threw down their shields with a sudden clat ter and seized the prisoners, four to each. The crowd shivered with de- liclous anticipation. %'he doomed men neither struggled nor Jeried, for fatal ism is an anodyne as dell ax an oxplo- give. King set hie teotV. Yasmin, with both hands behind her Youd, continued to smile down on theth all as sweetly ns the stars shine on § battlefield, he re hin ha 8 man on a spit By the time he ympletely around he Yasmini frightened, bu 1 wh bh Ro meant he shoul he cease together htened and te o than ever. Sab » 10 100K ipenk, Kurram Khan!” marred, her lovellest, thems whom 3 King turned the rafsing himself like 2 roops on parade, otf er hout, is i acing thousan He nearly gave away for habit had him hakim, given India. would shouted in that way. appitin_ Attieystan i. And he nearly n when h 34634 nog Ring !™ jumps i ot YOILOoe of © rat roof over- i% own fling back at him from the “Throw it! Throw it! Throw it!" The crowd wag growing impatient. Many men were standing, waving their arms to draw attention to themselves. Catching Yasmini's eyes, he knew it had not entered her head that he might | disobey, He looked past her toward the river. | There were no guards near enough to prevent what he intended; but he had to bear in mind that the guards had rifles, and if he acted too suddenly one of them might shoot at him unbidden. Holding the head before him with both hands, he began to walk toward the river, edging nll the while a little to- ward the crowd as if meaning to get nearer before he threw, He reached the river and stood there. His next made gavage who watched him gasp because of its very unexpectedness. He held the head in both hands, threw it far out into the riv@® and stood to watch it gink., Then, sible emotion of any kind, he buck stolidiy to face Yasmini bridge end, shoulders n stubborn move every vithout vi walked ut the with little more now too high, for there gh, who could act quite perfectly, “Thou fool!” Yasmini w through lips that did not move. Dever wis a “Throw It! Throw It!” i betrayed a flash of t Smner wel shetiger's, but f : | to lowed it 11 stantly with her lovelies that rps TYP “Riay him!” yelled a lone voice was greeted by an appt The unced in a rising for 1 sur ig a darbar rbar 8 a whipped wi Kurram Khan! enid smiling K the tone HOT. 3 ¥ the cat would It He bowed k very low had to think. | and crowd. w indeed and repeats dd “My brothers” that of iligh, r ahead, was he slain?” asked muliah. “In the Khyber pass.” sald King. “Now give proof!” Without good proof, there is only one way out of here!” “Proof!™ the crowd “Proof I” the roof echoed. There was no need for Darya Khan King's hands were behind and guessed what he had guessed while at him. hair, “Nay, Khan, hy the jawbone! hands I” King obeyed, without looking at the His fingers closed on human it is short! “Take the two ears, or hold it Hold it high in both crowd, rese on tiptoe and filled his lungs for the effort of his life. “The head of Cappitin Attieystan King—infidel — kaffir British cer!” he howled. “Good I” the crowd bellowed. “Good! Throw 11” The erowd’s roar and the roof's echoes combined in pandemonium. “Throw it to them, Kurram Khan!" Yasmini purred from the bridge end, speaking as softly and as sweetly as if she coaxed a child, “It is the cus tom!” “Throw It! thundered, = He turned the ghastly thing until it lay face-upward in his hands, and so at Inst he saw it. He caught his breath, and only the horn-rimmed spectacles, that he had cursed twice that night, saved him from self-betrayal. The cavern seemed to sway as he looked into the dead face of his brother Charles, If Yasmin! detecte) bls nervousness she geve Jp aim, Throw it!” the crowd an Englishman, hat had happened, ye would iamed me ™ Yasmini smiled. Taking its cue from her, the crowd murmured sent, but rather recognition of the ha. kir The game was won * ere lacked a touch to tip the n his favor, and Yasminl sup- plied it with ready genius, “The hakim speaks the truth !™ she laughed. King turned about instantly to face | her, but he salanmed so low that she | could not have seen his expression had {| she tried. {| “If ye wish it, IT will order him | tossed ifto Barth's Drink after those { other three” . i | Mohammad Anim rose, stroking his i scnreely 's adroitness, tl t : genles beard and rocking where he stood. “It iz the law!" King shuddered. “It is the law.” Yasmini answered in fn voice that rang with pride and in- solence, “that none Interrupt me while 1 speak! For such ill-mannered ones Earth's Drink hungers! Will you test my authority, Muhammad Anim? Think ye! If that head had only fallen into Muhammad Anim’s lap, the mullah might have smuggled in another man with it!” A roar of laughter greeted that thrust. Many men who had not laughed at the mullah’s frst discomfiture Joined in now, Muhammad Aning sat and fidgeted, meeting nobody's eye and answering nothing. “So it seems to me good.” Yasmind sald, in a volce that did not echo any more but rang very clear and true (she seemed to know the trick of the roof, and to use the echo or not as she chose), “to let this hakim live! He shall meditate in his eave a while, and perhaps he shall be beaten, lest he dare offend again. He can no more es. he growled, and cape from Khinjen caves thap tho women who are prisoners here, He may therefore live!” There was utter silence, Men looked nt one another and at her, and her blazing eyes searched the crowd swift- ly. It was plain enough that there were at least two parties there, and that none dared oppose Yasmini's will for fear of the others. “To thy seat, Kurramm Khan!” she ordered, when she had waited a full minute and no man spoke, He wasted no time, He hurried out of the arena as fast as he could walk, with Ismall and Darya Khan close at his heels, Ismail overtook him, seized him by the shoulders, hugged him, and dragged him to the empty seat next to the Orakzal Pathan. There he hugged him until his ribs cracked, “Ready o' w» he tongue! Light o Man after mine heart! Hey, 1 love thee! Readily I would be thy man, but for be- ing hers! Turned the joke on Muham- Anim! Turned it inst her enemy and raised a Inug ninst hin ' wit! Allsh it" erowed, “Ready 0’ life! own mad men! ! lucky urely good to thee!” Have they t All Masjid fort?" King whispered “Nav, how She knows more than any man King turned to ask t} tion of his friend the Orakz: but the Pathan would ha shnmeless one aken shonld 1 know? Ask her! knows” ie sun questions, whispers f both with aside, The crowd was very far from } isfied. An had be gun to fill the cavern as ¢ + is filled th the But snt murmur BONE Even Bo, surm FOE not easy 1« [asminl’'s carels Heys In 1) ¢ grown ver) Of the “Heart o gry Wo md bh g e “Heart of the Hills” ian seemed to have 1 He thought of the wrapped In a handk hirt with and told « bout th ite hronge the shate of a ing w on She the owners of busy at hay snd their ox from another wolf-pack in another di rection “far beyond.” She urged them to wait a little while. The ox was big enough and fat enough to nourish ail the wolves in the world Let them wall, about the who thomselves sang ox, were ing all together, overwhelm its pres. ent owners and devour the ox! Sao urged the “Heart of the Hills” speak. ing to the mountain wolves, according to Yasmini's song. The little cubs In the burrows know Are yo grown wolves, who hurry so? She paused, for effect ;: but they gave tongue then because they conld not help it, and the cavern shook to their terrific worship. “Allah! Allah!” They summoned God to come and gee the height and depth and weight of their allegiance to her! And because for their thunder thoge wag no more chance of being heard, she dropped from the shield like a blossom. No sound of falling could have been fvord in all that din, but one could sey =t= made no sound. The shield bearers ran back to the bridge and stood below it, eyes agape. Disguised as he is, King is placed on trial for his life. At a critical moment a human head Is thrust into his hands. When he secu the face, the shook is ter ribie. The victim lp