"That is why we are here and that is why these men are enemies. And on the morrow we shall attack them and put them all to instant death!"
It was reason enough and they were satisfied. Such intrigues were common in Ammad; several of the six had served more than one n.o.bleman during their lifetimes.
"One thing bothers me," Ekbar was whispering. "It was believed Jotan took fifty men with him to Sephar, also two friends who are sons of n.o.blemen. These last two must be overcome and spirited away without learning our ident.i.ty. When Jotan and the rest are dead, we will release the pair of them and let them find their way to Ammad. I want a suggestion on how that can be done."
No one spoke for a while. The sentries continued to move among the fires a few feet away, and the sounds of a nocturnal jungle rose and fell about them.
It was Ekbar himself who hit on a plan, as befitted one of a captain"s rank.
"We shall need one of those sleeping men," he said. "I will take two of you and circle the camp to the opposite side. After we have time enough to reach that point, the rest of you will make a noise of some kind to attract the guards" attention. Be careful not to make them too suspicious lest they rouse the camp. While they are looking in your direction, we will creep up and grab the first man we come to."
The men signified that they understood, and Ekbar, Otar and a warrior named Kopan set out to take up their arranged positions. Hardly were they ready when a low moaning sound rose from among the bushes across the clearing and the foliage there began to shake violently.
Instantly the five guards grouped behind that section of the burning circle nearest the disturbance. They raised their spears ready for casting and one of the five hurled a burning branch across the narrow ribbon of open ground.
"Now!" Ekbar grated.
Stooping, the three men raced for the encampment. They cleared the burning barrier at a bound, s.n.a.t.c.hed up the nearest of the sleeping figures, m.u.f.fling his face with his own sleeping furs before he could awaken, then turned and vanished into the jungle. So quickly had they acted, so swift and sure their motions, that none of the other sleepers so much as stirred and the guards never noticed.
The instant the abductors had disappeared the moans stopped and the shaking foliage stilled. For a long time the guards continued to stand there waiting, but when no other disturbance materialized they sighed with relief and went back to the restless patrolling.
Meanwhile Ekbar and his men were returning to their own camp, their captive with them. They drew him into a sheltered place under the trees, lighted a small fire that his expression might tell them if he answered their questions with lies and went to work on him.
He was a young man, clear-eyed, intelligent and not at all frightened.
He stared at his captors without recognition, obviously puzzled to find they were men of his own nationality.
"What is your name?" rasped Ekbar, scowling menacingly.
"Tykol--if that helps you any! What is the meaning of this? Who are you?"
"I will ask the questions here!" Ekbar snapped. "And you will answer them if you wish to see Dyta, the sun, again! Do you understand?"
"I understand well enough, but that does not mean I will tell you anything!"
Without the slightest change of expression Ekbar whipped out the knife at his belt and sank three inches of the cold flint into one of the man"s thighs. Tykol cried out involuntarily and struggled to free his arms from the vines binding them to his sides.
Ekbar waited until his struggles ceased. A small stream of blood welled from the knife wound and began to drip against the leaves beneath.
"What," said Ekbar, "are the names of the two young n.o.blemen accompanying Jotan?"
Tykol, his active mind racing, did not at once reply. It was clear these men meant no good to any of Jotan"s followers. His cue was to simulate a certain amount of fear to satisfy them his answers were the truth until he could discover exactly what was afoot.
Ekbar leaned forward and lifted his knife again. "Shall I give you a second taste of this?" he growled.
Tykol appeared to flinch. "No," he mumbled. "I will tell you. Their names are Javan and Tamar."
"How many men are with them?"
"Thirty-seven."
"You lie!" Ekbar snarled. "Fifty were in the party when it left Ammad."
The young captive digested this information quickly. It proved these men were Ammadians like himself; how else could they have known that?
"I am not lying," he said sullenly. "Three nights ago lions attacked our camp and killed and ate the others, wounding many of the rest of us."
Ekbar, remembering the bandages he had glimpsed while spying on the camp, nodded to himself. It would make his task of wiping out the balance of them that much easier.
"What positions do these two men hold in the line of march during the day?" he demanded.
"Javan now marches at the head of the column."
The captain"s head jerked up sharply. "Don"t lie to me, you son of Gubo!
Jotan marches there; he is in charge of his men. There is no need for you to attempt to shield him--he will be dead in a few hours!"
It was all Tykol needed. He knew now that he himself would not live to see tomorrow"s sun; and while the thought was sobering enough it did not dim his determination to save the life of his beloved master.
And so Tykol threw back his head and laughed--laughed until a heavy blow from the fist of Ekbar sent him sprawling. The captain gestured angrily to the others to drag the youth upright again, then said:
"You laugh, fool. Does the thought of Jotan"s death mean so little to you?"
"That is not why I laugh," Tykol told him, grinning. "I laugh because no act of yours can take his life--for he no longer has a life to take!"
Strong fingers twisted into the front of his tunic and jerked him forward. "What do you mean? The truth, jackal, or I cut you in bits!"
Tykol appeared properly cowed. "The lions got him--as they got the n.o.ble Tamar. It was terrible, I tell you! For hours they crouched just outside the circle of fires while their roars filled the night. We tried to drive----"
"Enough!" growled the captain. "We shall soon find out if you are lying.
If our scouts learn Jotan is still with his men I promise you a slow and horrible death."
"And when you find I am telling the truth," Tykol said, feigning eagerness, "will you then let me go?"
Ekbar sat there fingering his knife, thinking. If this man spoke true words there would be no need for ma.s.sacring Jotan"s warriors. It would be far better to permit them to reach Ammad and tell of his death under Sadu"s rending fangs. Thus the last threat to Vokal"s plans would have been accomplished without an air of mystery behind it that some one, becoming curious, might dig into.
But he would need more than this man"s word. On the morrow he would send scouts who could recognize Jotan, back to spy on the column. If Jotan was not there, then Tykol"s story would be proved true; Ekbar would withdraw his men and return to Ammad, leaving the remnants of Jotan"s troops to straggle back unmolested by him.
Either way he no longer had use of Tykol. His attention came back to the bound man in front of him. "Yes," he said, replying to the young man"s last question, "you shall have your freedom. In fact I shall give it to you now."
With those words he lunged forward and drove his knife into Tykol"s heart!
Thus died a true warrior--loyal unto death to the man he served, knowing his heroism would lie with his bones unknown, yet making his supreme sacrifice without hesitation and without self-pity.
Ekbar wiped clean his stone blade on the dead man"s tunic and rose to his feet. "Haul this carrion deeper within the jungle," he told his sober-faced men, "and rouse the camp. We start back to Ammad at once."