CHAPTER XVIi—Continued. snr] (heen “Listen, while I tell you all from the beginning! The sirkar sent me to dis- cover what may be this ‘Heart of the Hills’ men talk about. I found these caves—and this! I told the sirkar a little about the caves, and nothing at all about the sleepers. But even at that they only believed the third of | what I said. And I—back in Delhi I bought books. When I had read enough I came back here to think, I knew enough now to be sure that the sleeper is a Roman and the ‘Heart of the Hills’ a Grecian maid. She is like me. That is why I know she drove him to make an empire, choosing for a be- ginning these 'Hills' where Rome had never penetrated. I have seen it all in dreams. And because I was all alone, 1 saw that I would need skill and much patience. So I began to learn. “Times I would go to Delhi dance there a little, and a little In other places—once indeed before ol viceroy, and once for the king of Eng- land. And all the while 1 kept look- ing for the man—the man who should be like the sleeper, even as I her whom he loved! There was none like the sleeper until you came. And when the world war broke—for It is a world war, a world war, I tell you! I thought at last that I must manage all alone. And then you came! “But there were many I tried—many —especlally after I the thought that the man must resemble the Sleeper. There a prince of Germany who came to India on a hunt- ing trip. You remember?” King pricked his ears and allowed himself to grin, for in common with many hundred other men who had been lieutenants at the time, he would have given an to know the truth of that affair. grin transforced his whol until Yasmint ben “I'm listening, princess!” he remind. ed her. | “Well—he came—the prince of Ger- many. I offered him India first, then Asia, then the world—even as I now offer them to you. The kar sent him to see me dance, and he stayed to hear me talk. When I saw at last that | he has the head and heart of a hyena | spat in his face and threw food at him. “He complained to the sirkar against me, s0 I told the sirkar some—npot much, indeed, but enough—of the things he and his officers had told me. And the sirkar said at once that there was both cholera and bubonic plague, | and he must go His officers | laughed behind his back. Ever since that time there have always been Ger | mans in communication with me, and | I have not once been in the dark about Germany's plans—although they have | always thought I am in “I went on looking for my man. | There came that old Bull-with-a-beard, Muhammad Anim. He thinks he is the and abandoned wns once an ear and eye The ATance, ed on him. dw sr % so! aome | the dark. SALTY AE Wag e— “The Old Gods Who Built These Caves in the ‘Hille’ Are Laughing! They Are Getting Ready! Thou and |=” man, having more strength to hope and more will to will wrongly than any man I ever met, except a German. | have even been sure sometimes that Muliammad Anim is a German; yet now I am not sure, “From all the men 1 met and watched I have learned all they knew! And 1 have never neglected to tell the sirkar sufficient of what men have told me, to keep the sirkar pleased with me! It was fortumate that I knew of a German plot that I could spoil at the Isst minute. A million dynamite bombs was a big haul for the sirkar! My offer to go to Khinjan and keep the ‘Hills’ quiet was accepted that same day! “Rut what o:> a million dyneraite By TALBOT MUNDY Copyright by the Bobbs-Merrill Company bombs! Dynamite bombs have been coming into Khinjan month by month these three years! Bombs and rifles and cartridges! Muhammad Anim’s men, whom he trusts because he must, hid it all in a cave I showed them, that they think, and he thinks, has only one entrance to it, Muhammad Anim sealed it, and he has the key. But I have the ammunition! “There was another way out of that cave, although there Is none now, for I have blocked it. My men, whom 1 trust because I know them, carried ev- erything out by the back way, and I have it all. We, my warrior, when Mu- hammad Anim gets the word from Ger- many and gives the sign, and the ‘Hilly’ are afire, and the whole East roars In the flame of the jihad—we will put our- the head of that jihad, and the East and the world is ours!” King smiled at her. “The East isn't very he objected. selves at well armed,” “Mere numbers—" laughed at him. “The West has the West by the throat! It is tearing itself! America ! ion with its hands those wolves fight, and gods, who ‘Hills,' are laughing! ting ready Thou and I As she coupled him and herself gether in plan she read “Numbers? She free—and while the meat! The steal built these me caves in the ti one the “ey You are his $ head! That wey 7 » did not answer, betrayed looked as if he had struck “Oh, I have needed you these many years! something, for her, so much have come you want to hate me be you think I killed your brother! Listen! “Without my leave, Muhammad Anim sent five hundred a toward the Khyber. needed an Englishman's head, for proof for a spy of his who could not enter Khinjan caves. They trapp~! your brother ¢ All Masjid with fifty of his use men on foray utside en. after a ng a houdred of thelr own in payment. *EBull-with.a-beard was pleased, Bu* he was careless, and I sent my men to steal the head from his men. I needed evidence for you. And I swear to you ~]1 swear to you by my gods who have brought us two together—-that 1 first knew it was your brother's head when long fight, leavi Drink ! anybody “Why | gee then? Then 1 knew it else's head!” bid me throw it to them, he asked her, and he was aware sould not be his lips, She leaned back again and looked at him through eyes, as if she must study him all anew, lowered | i thought so in the commonplace, “What is a head to me, or to you a head with no Hlfe in it—ecarrion!— compared to what shall be? Would you have known it was his head If you you? He understood. Some of her blood was Russian, some Indian. She stood up, and of course he stood up, too, So, she on the footstool of the throne, her eyes and his were on a level, She laid his eyes until he could see his own a long passage, holding his hand all the way, to show him slots cut in the floor for the use of archers. “You entered Khinjan caves by a tunnel under this floor, well-beloved. There is no other entrance!” By this time “well-beloved” was her name for him, although there was no alr of finalliy about it. It was as If she paved the way for use of Athelstan and that was a sacred name, It was amazing how she conveyed that im- pression without using words. “The Sleeper cut these slots for his archers. Then he had another thought and these cauldrons in place, to boil oll to pour down. Could any army force a way through by the route by which you entered?” “No,” he said, marveling at the ton- weight copper cauldrons, one to each hole, “And I have more than a thousand Mauser rifles here, and more than a million rounds of ammunition!” She showed him a were stacked set cave boxes in piles, “Dynamite “How many boxes? high, borubs I" she boasted. I forget! Too “They Will Lay Waste India! They Will Butcher and Plunder and Burn! It Will Be What They Leave of india That We Shall Build Anew and Govern” many to count! Women brought them way from for even Muhammad Anim not make Afridi riflemen carry ads, 1 have wondered what Bull-with-a-beard will say when he misses his precious dyna ill the the sea, could 3 ALE “You've blow mountain up!” King advised her. somebody fired a pistol in here, least would be the collapse of th sor into the tunnel below with a hun- dred thousand tons of rock on top of it. There is no other way out?” “Earth's Drink!” she said, and he ade a grimace that set her to laugh- enough in there to the “1 the 0 jut she looked at him darkly after at and he got the Impression that the pn IROL to wonder began any loophole she had left him for seen, dred Mauser rifles stood in racks in another cave, with boxes of ammuni- ing sunset pools, The heart of all the East seemed to burn in her, rebellious! “Are you believing me?” she asked him. helped believing her. the truth, she was telling it to him, ns surely as she was doing her skill- ful best to mesmerize him. But the gsorvice is made up of men “Come!” she said, down she took his arm. She fed him past the thrones to other leather curtains in a wall, and through them into long hewn passages from cavern to cavern, until even the Rock of Gibraltar seemed like a doil's house in comparison, She showed him and stepping the bronze had been worked, with charcoal still plied up against the wall at one end, There were copper and tin ingots in there of a shape he had never seen, “l know where they came from” she told him. “lI made it my business to know all the ‘Hills.’ I know things the hilimen's grent-great-great-grand- fathers forgot! [ know old workings that would make n modern nation rich! We shall have money when we need it, never fear! We shall conquer In. and the best troops are overseas.” Then she called him her warrior and i cartridge worth its weight in sliver coin—a very rajah’s ransom! “The Germans are generous in some things-—only In some things-—very mean in others!” she told him. “They sent no medical stores, and no blan- kets I” Past caves where provisions of ev- ery imaginable kind were stored, sufli- cient for an army, she led him to where her guards slept together with the thirty special men whom King had “1 have five hundred others whom 1 “but they shall stay outside until I want them. A mystery is a good thing! It is good for them all to wonder what I keep In here! sanctuary; it makes for power!” Pressing very close to him, she guided him down anothor dark tunnel until he and she stood together in the jaws of the round hole above the river, looking down Into (he Cavern of Barth's Drink. Nobody looked up at them. The thousands were too busy working up a frenzy for the great jihad that was to come, Stacks of wood had been piled up, six-man high in the middle, ‘and then fired. The heat came upward like a furnace blast, and the smoke was a great red cloud among the stalactites, Round and round that holocaust the thousands did their sword-dance, yell tng as ihe devils yeriled at Khinjan's They needed no wine to craze them, They were drunk with fanati- din, mingling with the river's volce, made a voleano chord, “They will lay waste India! plunder and burn! It will be what they leave of India that we shall build anew and govern, for India herself will rise to help them lay her own cities waste! It is always so! Conquests always are so! Come!” She tugged at him and led him back tunnels to the throne room, where she made him sit at her feet again, absence, Instead, on the ebony table there were pens and Ink and paper, CHAPTER XVII. “You know where is Dar es Sa- laam?” asked Yasmini. “East Africa,” said King. “And English warships watch the Persian gulf and all the seas from In- dia to Aden?’ King nodded. “Have the English any ships that dive under water, in these waters?” “I think not. I'm not sure, think not.” the rifles and cartridges were sent by the Germans to Dar es Salaam, suppress a rising of African natiyes, friend 7" He smiled as well time, “Muhammad Anim u a hundred on the seashore, What the beach there he as nodded this sed to walt with women at a he made the curry their hea they worked 1 {I know not ng—with { lish watching the seas | wolves comb the valleys.” “What on Khinjan, Is to ¥ how k were the terms stipulations did they ma “With | swore Vere ke?” the wise, tribes? None! A Jihad was decided ; and when thousand cartridges would ly a hundred dead English n times that number busily Why rain when vas no need? A rifle Is what it The ‘Hills' are the ‘Hills !"™ he said. “You burn enough Khinjan caves to light Bombay! loes not oll in That The come in by submar sirkar knows how much of the Khyber, 1 have Laie myself—a ine, goes up printed lists cans of kerosene- seen the fow fn few ther north. There isn't enough oil caves going for a day. all come from? She laughed, as a mother laughs at a finding delicious enjoyment in Instructing him, “There are three villages, not two days’ march from Khabul, where men have lived for by oll for Khinjan caves,” she sald, “The Sleeper fetched his oll thence, The Sleeper left gold In here. Those who kept the Sleeper's secret paid for the afl In gold. No Afghan troubled why oll was needed, so long as gold paid for it. And I know where the Sleeper dug his gold!” They sat In silence for a long while child's questions, centuries her. She felt the pity. As she tossed the hair back over her shoulder her eyes glowed with another meaning-—danger- ous-—like a tiger's glare, “You pity me? You think because I love you, you can feed my love on a plate to the Indian government? You think my love is 2 weapon to use walt for a better time? You are not But he knew he had won. His heart was singing down Inside him as it had not sung since he left India behind. jut he stood quite humbly before her, for had he not kissed her? He knew he had won, Yet if anyone had asked him how he knew that he had won, he never could have told. “If you were to go back to India ex- cept as its conqueror, they would strip the buttons from your uniform and tear your medals off and shoot in the back against a wall! ture I8 known in India and I am known. What I write will be believed. Rewa Gunga shall take a letter, He shall take two-—four-—witnesses, He give them the letter when they reach Khyber and shall send them into India with it. Have fear. with-a-beard shall intercept 8 I have intercepted his men. When Rewa Gunga shall return and tell me he saw my letter on its way down the Khyber, thea we shall talk you and I! Come!” She took his arn had been from her She chin and laughed couraged to greater tude, and hy the tis ebony table and she had dipped it in the chuckling to herself as if th Buli- them, no not agnin— as if her threats Triumph shone tossed her brave at CUresses, eyou, only en taken the pen ink, she e one good joke had grown into a hundred. She in Urdu, with flowing hand, and in two min had thrown {ter and had t to King to rend. It was not ke a woman's letter. It did not waste a word. Was wrote an euasy, utes she sand on the je Your Captain Kin ibie. He } t Germans. He calied himself Kurram 8 Own Urother al These men ed the head to K jan 2 true, for 1. Yasmini, » head for a passport trusted ine TASMINL have better He read it and passed it back to her. “They will tne,” she triumphant as the very devil over They they not disbelieve sald, will be sure you are mad, and will believe the witnesses |” shall start with with more a After that she was still for a moment, watching his eyes, gt a loss to understand his ness, He seemed strangely unabased. His folded arms were not defiant, but neither were they yielding. “1 love you, Athelstan!™ ‘Do you love me?” “l think jou are yrincess ™ “Beautiful? I know I am beautiful. “Rewna Gunga today!” she sald, muse- CANCIONsS she sald. » {Ferd beautiful, very with Its ink and pens and paper, and he thinking. with hands clasped round one knee: for it is wiser to think than to talk, even when a woman Is near vho can read thoughts that are not guarded. “Athelstan yunds like a king's name | "we ghe said at last, What was a name in Rome?” “No.” he sald. “What docs him. “Row of resolution ™ She clapped her hands. “Another sign!” she laughed. “The gods love me! There nlways is a sign when I need one! art thou? I will speed thy resolution, You quick to it mean?" she asked i well-beloved ! were regiment, to Kurrnm Khan, now into my warrior—my dear lord-— my King again!" him. All her dancer's art, tamed poetry, her witchery, were ex- pressed in a movement, Her eyes melt. eye to eye again—almost lip to lip. arms, clinging to him, kissing him. And If any man has felt on his lips the kiss of all the scented glamour of the Easg, let him tell what King's sen- gations were, Let Caesar, who was kissed by Cleopatra, come to life and | talk of it! i stand like an idol. swim, but she, too, tasted the delirium of human passion loosed and given for a mad, swift minute. If his heart swelled to bursting, so must hers have done, “I have been all alone! you!” neither spoke, she, was winning, The human answer to her appeal was full, He gave her all she asked of admiration, kiss for kiss. And then—her arms did not cling so tightly, although his strong right arm was like a stanchion. Be canse he knew that he, not she, was winning, he picked her up in his arms and kissed her as if she were a child, And then, because he knew he had 1 won, he set her on her feet on the foot “Clever!” he added. fhe began to drum with the golden dagger hilt on the table, and to look means that she looked less lovely. “Do you love me?" she asked. “Forgive me, princess, but you for- get, I was born east of Mecca, but my folk were from the West. We are often surrender nt first sight. 1 think you are wonderful I She nodded and tucked the sealed er in her bosom. “It shall go,” she sald darkly, “and another letter with f(t. That will convince! you asked him to destroy! evidence, That will ee be Come He followed her through leather cur ' “Do You Love Me?" She Asked. sage into the outer chamber; and the illusion was of walking behind a gold- en-haired Madonna to some shrine of innocence. Her perfume was like in. censo; her manner perfect reverence. She passed into the eave where the taro dead bodies lay like a high priest ess performing a rite, Walking to the bed, she stood for —— gazing at the Sleeper and his queen, And from the new angle frong which King saw him the Sleeper's likes ness to himself wes actuslly startling. Startiing-—weird-—Illke an incantation were Yasminl's words when at last she spoke, “Mubammad lied! He led in his teeth! His sons have multiplied his He! Siddhattha, whom men lave called Gotama, the Buddha, was before Mu- hammad and he knew more! He told of the wheel of things, and there is a wheel! Yet, what knew the Buddha of the wheel? He who spoke of Dharma (the customs of the law) not knowing Dharma! This is true—of old there was a wish of the gods—of the old gods. And so these two were, There is a wish again now of the old gods, Bo, are we two not as they two were? It is the same wish, and lo! We are ready, this man and I. We will obey, i ye gods—ye old gods | She raised her arms and, going closer to the bed, stood there in an attitude mystic reverence, giving and re~ ceiving blessings, “Dear gods!” she prayed. “Dear gods—older than these ‘Hillg'—show in a vislon what thelr fault wos — why these two were ended before the end! “I know all the other things ye me. I waow creeds have made it ma rend it f, and man self, reap where the nations se old [ee shown the w 4d, and | nt 3 : and hall wd ¥ y i Of ® v thie . a Vherein, ve old dear god ? X we obey wno love me, did these two disobey pray vou, tell me | She shook her Ness seer like a cold f was as if she coul plans foredoowed, and yet hoped on in if It. The fatalism she scorned as Muohamm in its over her J Lael, It her night dimly spite { the + ad's lie held her natural cours nlike, she turned onfided to from he, must | pitied erly < wii To ite and st thoughts, And ; BR to how she ; i nnder armor?” me nearer! kill him? breas ter, and no need i wed him!” fay wl Jarneg she I Khe her eyes, so that | hood to bold h that mis ute she left no { BOX ~~ IT slave eR (her eyes coul flatter a hunts: mystery—she used ever) Yet he stood the tes 1 “Even if you fall i T will love you! “he god you me will know how to love; and lessons are to learn rgive, knowing that the end the gods will You are mine, and earth for the old gods Interd it so!” she knew, t pat i . fail me I will 1 ir 1 fall urs, never jet y me! is o She seemed to expect him to ‘in his arms again: but he { spectfully and made no answer, nor any move, Grim his jowl was, like the Sleeper’s, and the dark hair three days old on it softened noth- ing of its lines. His Roman nose and steady, dark, full eyes suggested no compromise. Yet he was ge look fhe had not lied when said she loved him, and he understood her snd was sorry. But he did not look sorry, nor did he offer any argument to | quench her love. He was a servant of the ral; his life anc his love had been India’s since the day he first buckled on his spurs, and Yasmini would not have understood that. Nor did she understand that, even supposing he had loved her with all his heart, not on any conditions would he have admitted it until absolutely free, any more than that if she crucified him he would love her the same, supposing that he loved her at all. Nor did she trust the “old gods™ too wil, or let them work unaided “Come with me, Athelstan!” she sald. | She took his arm-—found little jeweled | slippers in a closet hewn in the walle take hop stood res and strong od to at. she tains he had entered by. She led down the steps, and at the foot told him to put on his slippers, as if he vere a child, Then, hurrying as if those opal eye: of hers were indifferent to dark or daylight, she picked her way among bowiders that he could feel but not see, along a floor that was only smooth in places, for a distance that was long enough by two or three times to lose him altogether. When he looked back there was no sign of red lights behind him. And when he looked forward, there was a dim outer light in front and a whiff of the cool fresh air that presages the dawn! She led him through a gap on to a ledge of rock that hung thousands of feet above the home of thunder, a ledge less than six feet wide, less than twenty long, tilted back toward the cliff. There they sat, watching the stars. And there they saw the dawn come, 3 {TO BE CONTINUED) 'Arking Back. The Viear--What a dreadful plague of cu erpillars, John! John~Ah; an’ ‘oo let loose the first pale of ‘em? Noh I—Siretch,