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      <meta name="dtb:uid" content=""/>
      <meta name="dc:Title" content="Men Burning Brush"/>
      <meta name="Author" content="Lon Williams"/>
      <meta name="Description"
            content="Mystery, Suspense, History, Gothic, Literature, Books, Arts"/>
   </head>
   <book>
      <frontmatter>
         <doctitle>Men Burning Brush</doctitle>
      </frontmatter>
      <bodymatter>
         <level1>
            <h1>Men Burning Brush</h1>
            <level2>
               <h2>Lon Williams</h2>
               <p>This page formatted 2011 Blackmask Online.</p>
               <p>
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         
         http://www.blackmask.com<br/>
			               <br/>
		             </p>
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EText from pulpgen.com

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		<p>
			
<!-- **** No template for element: i **** -->Real Western Stories, February, 1957
            
			
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               <p>
			
<!-- **** No template for element: b **** -->How could anyone be burning so much brush out here on Alkali Flats?
            And these were the strangest-looking men that Lee Winters had seen in a
            long time.
		</p>
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		<p>DEPUTY MARSHAL LEE WINTERS, homeward bound from Rocky Point, emerged
         from dark, jumbled mountains onto Alkali Flat sometime between sundown
         and midnight. Occasional recollection of blazing guns explained that
         ache in his head. Thickness of a hatband represented his margin of
         escape, a thin fabric that saved his skin from being grooved, but not
         his brain from stunning concussion. Intermittently he recalled faces of
         two wanted monkeys Mitt Jargin and Rufe Odderman, who had gunned at him
         with confident insolence, and quickly wilted downward in grotesque
         finality.
      </p>
               <p>For miles he had ridden with only vague awareness that he was headed
         toward Forlorn Gap. One moment, delirious dream had him drinking
         nightcaps with his good friend Doc Bogannon in Bogie's saloon; another
         put him at home with his beautiful wife, Myra. Intervals of clarity had
         continually brought him back to towering cliffs, clatter of hoofs and
         ever-changing patchworks of moonlight and shadow until now upon Alkali
         Flat tormenting dreams receded and left his mind glorified and
         exhilarated by new and other-world illusions of clarity and freedom.
      </p>
               <p>Yet in that new mental state was mystery, as well as glory. Though he
         saw Alkali Flat spreading away in its familiar, vast desolation, and
         felt its sweeping winds against his face, there were cold, quivering
         sensations in his blood which invested this barren region with
         extraordinary strangeness. Where there should have been moonlight and
         starlight, illumination like mist-softened sunlight revealed earth and
         its objects as distinctly as if it had been day.
      </p>
               <p>Then he perceived something he should have seen long before—came
         upon it with inexplicable suddenness, indeed. It was a lively scene in
         which three oddly-attired men were burning brush.
      </p>
               <p>He drew rein sharply, his horse Cannon Ball dug to a stop. “What goes
         on here?” he shouted in neighborly spirit.
      </p>
               <p>Only one man heard him. This one, dressed in tunic and sandals, came
         close and stared upward. He was a fine specimen of half-naked human
         form and strength, somewhat dark, but clean-shaved and about thirty
         years of age. Bow and quiver of arrows were slung upon his back.
      </p>
               <p>“Who are you, that you should ask?” he demanded arrogantly.</p>
               <p>“I am Deputy Marshal Lee Winters of Forlorn Gap; I asked because I
         was curious. Truth is, I never knowed enough brush could be found on
         Alkali Flat to light a pipe, much less build such a huge brushpile.”
      </p>
               <p>“Alkali Flat? Say, now, you must be a stranger in these parts.” He
         turned and yelled at his two companions. “Saltshazzar! Katnep! Come
         here.” Because of crackle and roar of flames, they did not hear him at
         first. He yelled again.
      </p>
               <p>They heard then and came promptly. One asked, “What have we here,
         Chidchad?”
      </p>
               <p>“A queer stranger,” said Chidchad. “Whether messenger or spy, he
         holds as his own secret. He spoke of our country as Alkali Flat; a new
         name for Tigris Valley, eh, what?”
      </p>
               <p>WINTERS gasped. Tigris Valley? Nonsense, of course. Myra had read to
         him about two great rivers of ancient times—Tigris and Euphrates—in a
         land called Mesopotamia, or
<!-- **** No template for element: i **** --> land between rivers. These men were
         armed and dressed alike, by which he figured they were made up to
         represent soldiers.
      </p>
               <p>“You monkeys belong to some playacting outfit?” he asked scornfully.</p>
               <p>One of them unslung his bow and reached for an arrow. He said to his
         companions, “Should captains in an army of Assyria allow themselves to
         be insulted by this inferior person?”
      </p>
               <p>“Stay thy hand, Saltshazzar,” said Chidchad; “it might profit us
         better to take him captive to Nineveh.”
      </p>
               <p>Their companion indicated three horses which stood some distance
         away. “This rider may be an inferior person, but you can't say that of
         his horse.”
      </p>
               <p>“True, indeed, Katnep,” said Chidchad.</p>
               <p>“Then,” said Saltshazzar, “I have a proposition. Let us toss him into
         yon fire and cast lots for his horse. My own is lame and fagged from
         much war and travel; luck says this splendid animal is to be mine.”
      </p>
               <p>“Lucks says you're asking for trouble,” said Winters. “I don't like
         fights, but I don't run from 'em.”
      </p>
               <p>“Brave talk for one without weapons,” observed Saltshazzar.</p>
               <p>Winters let his gun-hand ease down and touch reassuring walnut and
         steel. “Your god Ashur has loaned me a weapon, Salty,” he said. “If you
         bozos don't believe it, just start something.”
      </p>
               <p>They looked at one another in astonishment, then at Winters with
         respect. Chidchad tossed an energetic thumb at his companions. “To your
         task. He who offends our great god Ashur will surely die.”
      </p>
               <p>Saltshazzar and Katnep returned to their mountainous fire and took
         positions, one on each side of it. Chidchad remained near Winters,
         either as guard or as servant in waiting. Of which role he had assumed,
         Winters could not be sure, though he did regard Chidchad as right
         decent.
      </p>
               <p>“What are you bozos burning all that brush for anyhow?” Lee asked.</p>
               <p>Chidchad glanced up, puzzled. “Bozos? You sound Greek.”</p>
               <p>“I am not Greek, however,” said Winters coolly; “I'm a Texan by
         birth. Why don't you answer my question?”
      </p>
               <p>Chidchad halted between anger and fear. “It is a sad story,
         Deputy-marshallee-winters.”
      </p>
               <p>“Just call me Winters.”</p>
               <p>“Verily, Winters,” said Chidchad, much relieved. “We are burning this
         brush-heap because Lobo Lupo is hiding under it.”
      </p>
               <p>“What's sad about Lone Wolf being under a brushpile?”</p>
               <p>“Ah,” said Chidchad, “That is not what is sad. Lobo Lupo has devoured
         Tit-lit, infant son of Eg-ed-nukel-bal, prince of Akbad and satrap of
         mighty king Sorgumsur-up of Nineveh.”
      </p>
               <p>“That
<!-- **** No template for element: i **** --> is sad,” said Winters. “And now, for revenge, you are
         going to burn Lone Wolf alive?”
      </p>
               <p>“No, no, Winters; far from it. For revenge, Eg-ed-nukel-bal has
         beheaded Tit-lit's nurse Tu-lus-ephet. It happens Titlit was wearing a
         priceless Mogok ruby on a golden chain round his tiny neck. What we
         seek is recovery of that ruby.”
      </p>
               <p>“Look out, Chidchad,” yelled Saltshazzar. “Something stirs.”</p>
               <p>Chidchad readied bow and arrow.</p>
               <p>SOMETHING, indeed, was astir. There was a heave of brush attended by
         fierce growls and crackle of sparks. With astounding suddenness a great
         black wolf leaped into view. Instantly he was pierced by three arrows.
         He leaped and roared in agonized rage, but soon collapsed and kicked
         out his last.
      </p>
               <p>His slayers rushed upon him, cut him open and began their eager
         search. Within seconds Chidchad held something high and yelled
         exultantly, “It is found.” They rushed to their horses and mounted.
         Immediately Winters was surrounded and menaced by half-bent bows and
         iron-tipped arrows.
      </p>
               <p>Saltshazzar informed him coldly, “You are our prisoner, Winters. Had
         you been armed with Ashur's weapon you would have destroyed Lobo Lupo.
         Ride, and do not try to escape; as you have observed, our arrows are
         deadly.
      </p>
               <p>“Yeah,” said Winters. “So they are. If I'm your prisoner, where will
         you take me?”
      </p>
               <p>“To Nineveh, of course.”</p>
               <p>“But first,” said Chidchad, “we shall rejoin our forces under
         Eg-ed-nukel-bal, there to deliver his ruby and receive our rewards.”
      </p>
               <p>“Which are,” declared Katnep, “sweeter than honey in its comb.
         Eg-ednukel-bal has promised each of us our choices of two of his most
         beautiful women. Ah, and in his harem there is none who is not
         beautiful beyond belief.”
      </p>
               <p>They rode leisurely for a few miles. When Saltshazzar's horse had
         worked out its lameness, they speeded up. After long, hard riding they
         came within sight of a moving multitude and later within range of its
         weird sounds. To Winters this was something between dream and reality.
         He was sure there was a person named Myra—Myra Winters; but where was
         she? And here was a multitude such as described in books which had
         vague association with this Myra, or with other persons he had known.
         Men with cruel iron rings in their lips were led like beasts behind war
         chariots. Other captives had had their noses, or ears, or hands cut
         off. Ceaseless moans and screams attended tramp of horses, march of
         soldiers and drag of countless captive feet.
      </p>
               <p>Chidchad drew close to Winters. “This is Eg-ed-nukel-bal's army.” His
         arm swept wide. “These are his captives.”
      </p>
               <p>“Your cruelties would make an Apache ashamed of hisself,” said
         Winters.
      </p>
               <p>“Ah,” said Chidchad, “what you hear is music of victory; those groans
         and wails of sorrow are proof of what mighty conquerors we are.”
      </p>
               <p>“Who are these captives?” asked Winters.”</p>
               <p>“People of many kingdoms. Some call themselves Children of Israel.
         Some are Greeks, some Armenians.”
      </p>
               <p>“But no Egyptians,” said Katnep proudly.</p>
               <p>Chidchad's eyes narrowed. “No, not yet.” He turned to Winters.
         “Katnep is an Egyptian necromancer and soldier of fortune; he thinks we
         Assyrians will never conquer Egypt. And Saltshazzar here thinks Babylon
         will rise again and become master of Nineveh; how little they know.”
      </p>
               <p>“How little
<!-- **** No template for element: i **** --> you know,” said Winters. “Sometimes soon—perhaps
         this very night—a hand will write upon a wall. What is written will be
         a message of doom to your mighty king and to your wicked city.”
      </p>
               <p>“Whose hand?” Chidchad demanded angrily.</p>
               <p>“Just a hand,” said Winters.</p>
               <p>“For that talk I should slay you,” raged Chidchad.</p>
               <p>“Never slay one who prophesies,” said Katnep. He turned away his
         face. “Methinks this one may be a true prophet. ”
      </p>
               <p>Saltshazzar was in troubled silence for a time; then, thoughts
         steadied, he looked at Winters. “He is no prophet, Chidchad. No, not
         one so scrawny and unprepossessing as he. Not one with a mere mustache.
         Now, had he a long white beard swinging from his chin like cloth from a
         clothesline, we might put reliance in his words. But not this uncouth
         person who wears not a flowing robe, but outlandish garb of some
         stupid, uncivilized race of men.”
      </p>
               <p>Chidchad grew confidential. “Tell me more, O Winters.”</p>
               <p>“He that lives by a sword shall die by one,” said Winters; “Nineveh's
         streets will run red with blood.”
      </p>
               <p>“And who will spill that blood?”</p>
               <p>“Thine enemies.”</p>
               <p>“Ha!” scoffed Chidchad. “Our enemies tremble in fear of us. Come, you
         shall see what happens to our enemies.”
      </p>
               <p>THEY CAME to a city wall. For a while they watched as army and
         captives passed through a great, arched gateway. Because much time
         would be consumed in that passage, Chidchad led them to another gate
         where he gave proper signals and they were admitted. They rode along
         narrow streets, then onto wide thoroughfares, at last into a great
         square upon which fronted a massive and magnificent palace. A
         tremendous crowd had gathered here to gawk and cheer one of their
         returning armies.
      </p>
               <p>Chidchad drew rein and signaled halt. They pulled aside and stopped
         again in an open space that held a select assemblage of gaily-dressed
         men and women. Over their heads Winters saw a throne and an occupant,
         resplendent in purple and gold.
      </p>
               <p>“Sorgum-sur-up, king of kings,” whispered Saltshazzar. Then, sure
         that Chidchad did not overhear, he whispered again, “Put a chain on the
         tongue about that handwriting upon a wall; say nothing more about
         streets red with blood. Dismount and come with us.”
      </p>
               <p>Winters' three captors dismounted and surrendered their horses to
         slaves to be led promptly away. Winters did not dismount.
      </p>
               <p>“Would you be tortured to death?” Chidchad flung up at him.</p>
               <p>“I would hang onto my means of escape,” said Winters.</p>
               <p>“When you are seized for torture, I shall say you were not my
         prisoner,” said Chidchad; “otherwise I, too, would be tortured.”
      </p>
               <p>“I'm quite pleased to be on my own,” Winters assured him. “Fact is,
         you can forget about my being your prisoner. I'm on my own right now.”
      </p>
               <p>A line was forming on Winters' left. Chidchad and his companions,
         momentarily tired of Winters, stepped into it and moved forward
         promptly. Around a semicircle in front of King Sorgum-sur-up men were
         prostrating themselves. Upon rising, they dropped presents of gold,
         ivory and jewels into receptacles that rested upon low pedestals, then
         backed away, hands thrust into their sleeves. In due course, Chidchad,
         Saltshazzar and Katnep were among those who presented gifts.
      </p>
               <p>Suddenly Sorgum-sur-up grew bored and sprang erect. “Bring me a royal
         captive,” he cried. Beautiful women, most of them attired only in sheer
         veils, stirred with excitement. Sorgum-sur-up cried again, “Wine for my
         wives and women.” When servants had quickly obeyed his commands, he
         stepped down and lifted a sword which had lain upon a convenient altar.
      </p>
               <p>Guards led a captive forward. An officer announced, “O King of Kings
         and Lord of Lords, this swine is It-stan, once proud king of Sakrat,
         city of Armenia.”
      </p>
               <p>He placed a long cord into Sorgumsur-up's left hand. Sorgum-sur-up
         gave it a vicious jerk and a ring in It-stan's lower lip jerked with
         it. It-stan's face twisted in agony and a groan poured from his throat.
         Winters remembered something from Scripture about kings being led away
         captive and tortured to death. For a moment he convinced himself that
         he was not seeing this, actually. He closed his eyes, but snapped them
         open when another angry cry rang out. “Bring me his children.”
      </p>
               <p>HE LOOKED then and saw with his own eyes. It-stan's children were
         brought before Sorgum-sur-up and slain. With his sharp sword,
         Sorgum-sur-up sliced off It-stan's ears, then his nose. When a pointed
         instrument was brought to Sorgum, Winters closed his eyes tightly.
         It-stan was about to be blinded—an atrocity too sickening to watch.
         But he could not avoid hearing. Yet, what he heard was but a minor
         chord in that fearful music of victory which Chidchad had mentioned.
      </p>
               <p>When he looked again, Sorgum was striding along a line of prisoners,
         whacking off head after head. When he had wearied, he returned to his
         throne. However, instead of seating himself upon it, he lolled down
         among his women and filled himself with wine.
      </p>
               <p>Suddenly he glanced toward Winters, and an angry scream tore from his
         drunken throat. He pulled himself up and pointed. “Who is he that
         profanes my sacred presence?”
      </p>
               <p>Eyes turned in horror toward Winters.</p>
               <p>When no one responded to Sorgum's question, he cried again. “Speak
         for thyself, thou who dost not humble thyself before me.”
      </p>
               <p>Winters slacked his body into an easy position. “You talking to me,
         Hot Molasses?”
      </p>
               <p>Sorgum-sur-up lifted distended fingers and pulled his own ears. “Why
         dost thou not dismount?”
      </p>
               <p>“Can't,” answered Winters; “me and my horse is one.”</p>
               <p>Low murmurs raced away. Sorgum's women sat up in open-eyed wonder.</p>
               <p>Sorgum went through something like a fit. When he had calmed, he
         said, “Ah, a centaur.”
      </p>
               <p>Winters knew what a centaur was. Myra—but who was Myra?—had read
         about them. He knew a lot about these murdering monkeys, too, and their
         city of blood. “Yeah,” he said, “a centaur.”
      </p>
               <p>Sorgum distended his finger and distorted his mouth like a drunken
         idiot. “Nobody comes into my presence without bringing presents, not
         even centaurs. What present hast thou brought?”
      </p>
               <p>“Nothing,” said Winters.</p>
               <p>“You have no present?”</p>
               <p>“No.”</p>
               <p>“What is that at thy side?”</p>
               <p>Winters glanced down at his sixgun. “That's part of me, too.”</p>
               <p>Sorgum lowered his head and glared upward furiously. “There is no
         part of thee that cannot be cut off.” He stepped down and again seized
         his sword. Before he could command his guards to bring Winters forward,
         however, a strange hush descended; faces filled with amazement and
         fear.
      </p>
               <p>Against a distant wall, at a point where part seemed to Winters to be
         obscured by a screen or veil, a hand had appeared. Rapidly it wrote a
         message in red stain. Sorgum-sur-up, observing that all eyes had turned
         from him, looked to see what attraction had intruded. His mouth opened.
         His sword dropped from his hand. He beckoned frantically and a servant
         brought him a cup of wine. So nervous were his hands, he had to use
         both of them in order to drink.
      </p>
               <p>“What does it mean?” he screeched. “Somebody tell me what it means.
         Where are my Chaldeans? Where are my interpreters?”
      </p>
               <p>GUARDS rushed forward, dragging an old man in white robe and sandals
         whose long white whiskers seemed to weigh him into a stoop.
      </p>
               <p>Sorgum grabbed those whiskers and gave them a wicked pull. “Speak,
         Chaldean.”
      </p>
               <p>“O King, I am poor Ick-zok, a luckless fisherman upon Tigris bank.
         I'm no Chaldean, hence I cannot interpret yon riddle.”
      </p>
               <p>“Off with his head,” cried Sorgum.</p>
               <p>Guards dragged poor Ick-zok away and presently hushed his entreaties
         with a sword.
      </p>
               <p>A man in resplendent robes was escorted forward.</p>
               <p>“Ah, Zo-hi,” said Sorgum-sur-up, “as chief priest of these wise
         Chaldeans, surely thou canst read yon writing?”
      </p>
               <p>“Forgive me, O King, but I should say it is nothing—mere scribbling
         upon a wall. It is no language at all, hence cannot be read.”
      </p>
               <p>“Off with his head,” yelled Sorgum.</p>
               <p>Zo-hi was dragged away and beheaded.</p>
               <p>Winters straightened in his saddle. “I can read it, Hot Molasses.”</p>
               <p>Sorgum howled in outraged fury, “Oh, thou insolent one!”</p>
               <p>Winters heard mumbling near his left foot. He glanced down and saw
         Chidchad. But Chidchad was alone; Saltshazzar and Katnep had
         disappeared. Winters wondered how much they had had to do with that
         handwriting. Had not Chidchad mentioned that Katnep was a magician? Was
         not Saltshazzar a Babylonian? It was beginning to clear up now. This
         was to be that fateful night when Medes and Babylonians would steal
         into Nineveh and indeed redden its streets with blood.
      </p>
               <p>Only—all of a sudden it came to Lee Winters. This wasn't from one of
         those history books of Myra's; this was from the Bible, the handwriting
         on the wall business. Now he recalled a sermon he'd heard at a Spanish
         mission; that good father had read from the Old Testament about
         Beltazzar and the handwriting on the wall. Only that was written about
         Babylon, and Winters was here before a king of Assyria.
      </p>
               <p>Well, these monkeys, Assyrians or Babylonians, hadn't read the Bible,
         so they didn't know what the words were supposed to be. Just to be on
         the safe side, though, he wouldn't try to read them the way the prophet
         Daniel had. He'd just give a general translation of doom. These ancient
         kingdoms were always being overthrown bloodily, anyhow, whether the
         story came from the Good Book or some other history.
      </p>
               <p>Chidchad was murmuring, “You asked for this, Winters; I'd begun to
         like you, but now I must see you tortured to death.”
      </p>
               <p>“Take my advice, Chid,” said Winters, “and get out of this city.
         Ride, and don't stop until you're halfway to Missouri.”
      </p>
               <p>“Read it,” Sorgum was screaming; “read it, or die.”</p>
               <p>Winters firmed Cannon Ball's reins. “Take my advice, Chidchad.”</p>
               <p>“No, Winters, I cannot. There's a beautiful maid I'm in love with. I
         must
      </p>
               <p>stay and save her from King Sorgum-surup, if I can.”</p>
               <p>“What's her name?”</p>
               <p>“Is-leeti. And she's lovelier than a dream.”</p>
               <p>“Seize her and flee,” said Winters, “or both of you will perish.”</p>
               <p>He rode forward slowly until behind him were those who looked on in
         fear and hope, in front of those who drank of Sorgum's favors. There he
         stopped.
      </p>
               <p>“Read it,” cried Sorgum, “or I shall tear out thy tongue with my own
         hand.”
      </p>
               <p>“Keep your shirt on,” said Winters; “it's not what you want to hear,
         but you asked for it.”
      </p>
               <p>“Read it. Read it.”</p>
               <p>Winters assumed what was his best by way of majestic and fearless
         pose. “What is wrote there is a message of death,” he said. “Your
         murderin' wickedness is about to catch up with you. This message says
         you're about to get a knife stuck in your belly, and everybody in this
         town is going to be butchered.”
      </p>
               <p>“What does it say?” screamed Sorgum. “Read its very words.”</p>
               <p>Winters could only pretend, for that handwriting was as strange to
         him as to anybody else. But he gave out with it.
<!-- **** No template for element: i **** --> This night, King
            Sorgum-sur-up, thou shalt surely die. Thy people will be slaughtered
            and thy city will be laid waste.
		</p>
               <p>A terrible hush was upon all then. Even Sorgum paled and was quiet.
         But he rallied. “Impossible!” he shouted. “Am I not Sorgum-sur-up, king
         of kings and mightiest of all who have ever lived upon earth? Drink,
         drink, my humble subjects; drink and be gay.”
      </p>
               <p>He accepted a refilled cup and lifted it to his lips.</p>
               <p>Chidchad pressed close to Winters. “You dog of gloom, why do you lie
         so glibly. Nineveh can never fall.”
      </p>
               <p>“Fall it will,” said Winters.</p>
               <p>Chidchad would have said something else, but Sorgum raised his
         drunken voice. “Where are those captives? Bring them and let them be
         sold.”
      </p>
               <p>FROM OPPOSITE them, Winters and Chidchad saw women and girls being
         pushed forward to be sold into slavery. Wine cups had appeared
         generally, and prospective buyers were put in extravagant moods.
      </p>
               <p>A young woman was made to step upon a low platform. An auctioneer
         called for bids and shortly made a sale. Another followed. Some were
         young, some middle-aged. All were meagerly clothed. Those who were
         young and had beautiful limbs and faces, brought high prices. Now and
         then Sorgum-sur-up made selections for himself, which excluded
         possibility of sale in their cases.
      </p>
               <p>“Is-leeti,” groaned Chidchad, as one of extraordinary beauty and
         sweetness was put up for auction.
      </p>
               <p>“Oh, no,” shouted Sorgum; “that one is mine.”</p>
               <p>“No,” cried Is-leeti. Before guards could interfere, she sprang down
         and ran—straight toward Winters. She reached him and clutched his
         right foot. “Brave One, save me from a fate worse than death.”
      </p>
               <p>“Let nobody touch her,” shouted Sorgum. Those who had pursued fell
         back; those who had stood near Winters sank away. Winters and Is-leeti
         were left isolated. “Bring me bow and arrows,” Sorgum commanded grimly.
      </p>
               <p>A man in scarlet robe stepped forward from an alcove. He handed
         Sorgum his own bow and quiver of arrows. “A gift from your humble
         servant, Ne-bodzanther-pal.”
      </p>
               <p>Sorgum fixed an arrow and tested his traction arm. He espied a small
         boy in that same alcove from which Ne-bod had come. “That, my king, is
         my favorite son Vash-tan-cek.”
      </p>
               <p>Sorgum drew his bow, his arrow hissed, and Vash-tan-cek clutched at
         his small breast and fell forward, his heart pierced.
      </p>
               <p>Ne-bod bowed low and rose smiling. “An excellent marksman art thou,
         my king.”
      </p>
               <p>Sorgum fitted another arrow. “Next to learn my skill shall be that
         false Chaldean. When he is dead, then I shall slay her who spurned my
         favors. But only with this difference. In her case she shall be
         chained, that I may slay her at leisure, an arrow here, another there,
         until she is pincushioned in all except her vital spots. Then—”
      </p>
               <p>He left his thought unfinished. He stared at Winters, his lips
         smiling crookedly.
      </p>
               <p>Chidchad said low and quickly, “You can escape, Winters. Lift
         Is-leeti into your arms and ride away. Merchants will be leaving at
         Nineveh's south gate. Join them. It is your only chance; it is
         Is-leeti's only chance.”
      </p>
               <p>“That's what you think,” said Winters.</p>
               <p>Sorgum slowly lifted his bow, his face distorted with hate.</p>
               <p>Is-leeti released Winters' foot and covered her eyes. “Oh, save
         yourself, most noble one,” she sobbed.
      </p>
               <p>Winters lifted his sixgun. It spoke with thunder and lightning of
         Ashur. Sorgum's bow and arrow collapsed together and Sorgum fell like
         an empty sack. A dark spot had appeared between his eyes, half an inch
         lower than Winters had intended, though just as deadly as if his bullet
         had gone true.
      </p>
               <p>Immediate silence was followed by groans. “Our king is dead,” some
         cried.
      </p>
               <p>Others said, “Let this strange one— this son of Ashur—be our king.”</p>
               <p>WINTERS reached down and lifted Is-leeti onto Cannon Ball. He turned
         toward Chidchad, who had been as amazed as everybody else. “Horses,
         Chidchad.”
      </p>
               <p>Chidchad replied, “This way, Winters.” He ran ahead and quickly had
         two horses in tow. While clamor mounted behind them for Winters to be
         their king, they rode south. As Chidchad had predicted, a merchant
         caravan was leaving Nineveh. They mingled with it, and escaped out of
         that bloody, fated city.
      </p>
               <p>When they were safe, at least from their most recent perils, Chidchad
         signaled. They stopped, then drew away a short distance. There Chidchad
         thrust an object into Winters' hand. “It is so little, Winters, but it
         is all I have of any consequence this moment.”
      </p>
               <p>Winters opened his hand and looked at Chidchad's gift. It was a
         golden chain and pendant with sparkling ruby. “From Lobo Lupo,” he
         exclaimed.
      </p>
               <p>“Yes,” said Chidchad. “I should have delivered it to Eg-ed-nukel-bal,
         for it was his. But if what you said of Nineveh's fate is true, he
         won't be needing it.”
      </p>
               <p>“Then you should give it to Is-leeti,” said Winters. “Here.” He tried
         to press it into her hands, but she drew them away.
      </p>
               <p>“No, Brave One. You have given me my life. To me, that is more
         precious than rubies and gold. Keep it and treat it as a gift from me,
         also.”
      </p>
               <p>Winters stared at her, for one entrancing moment mistook her for his
         own beautiful Myra. “Fair enough,” he said. When he'd dropped it into a
         vest pocket he said awkwardly, “I reckon I'll go my way. Three's a
         crowd, I've always heard.”
      </p>
               <p>“Farewell, brave, mysterious stranger,” said Chidchad.</p>
               <p>“Farewell, and Ashur be with thee always,” said Is-leeti.</p>
               <p>All three fell silent. Screams and tumult of war had broken loose in
         Nineveh. “We escaped just in time,” said Winters. He turned to Chidchad
         and Isleeti. “In my country, we have a custom of shaking hands in
         parting.”
      </p>
               <p>Chidchad and Is-leeti in turn extended a hand. Winters lingered over
         Is-leeti's for a long moment. There was warm responsiveness in hers, a
         touch of gratefulness he would never forget.
      </p>
               <p>He drew away then, and Cannon Ball lifted himself into a long, easy
         lope which put miles behind him in that desolate, lonely, flat, and
         strange, strange world.
      </p>
               <p>His fast movement, plus birth of cold winds, made Winters seize his
         forehead suddenly and wipe his sweating face. He saw lights ahead—odd
         lights that shimmered and darted like streaks of fire. But as he rode
         on nearer to them, they stilled, and he recognized them at last as
         lights of Forlorn Gap—and home.
      </p>
               <p>IN THIS semi-ghost town, creature of gold-rush days and victim of an
         equally feverish rush to richer fields, there was one spot where lights
         glowed especially bright. That spot was Doc Bogannon's saloon, only
         place of its kind left in a town where they had once existed by scores.
      </p>
               <p>Doc Bogannon himself was a man of mystery, tall, broad, handsome,
         with fine head, dark hair, and intellectual face. He was putting away
         his last glasses and thinking of home and his half-breed Shoshone wife,
         when his batwings swung in.
      </p>
               <p>“Winters!”</p>
               <p>Winters strode to a table and dropped into a chair. “Wine, Doc, and
         two glasses.”
      </p>
               <p>Bogie hurried and sat opposite his old friend. He poured drinks and
         studied Lee's face. “Winters, you look pale; either you caught up with
         those two wanted monkeys and took a beating, or you've seen ghosts.”
      </p>
               <p>Winters drank and backhanded his mustache. “You're at least half
         right, Doc. Those monkeys double-teamed me.” He took off his hat and
         examined its band, which had a ragged tear two inches long. “It was
         that close, Doc.” He put his hat back on and held his glass for more
         wine.
      </p>
               <p>“I'm grateful it was no closer,” said Bogie. He sipped wine and
         continued his scrutinizing study. “Did you also see a ghost, Winters?”
      </p>
               <p>Prompted by hazy recollection, Lee fingered in his vest pocket and
         came up with a gold necklace with pendant lacework that encased a
         magnificent ruby. He puzzled over it for seconds, then laid it down for
         Bogie to see.
      </p>
               <p>“Does that strike you as something right nice, Doc?”</p>
               <p>Bogie picked it up, but promptly laid it down again. “I don't know
         about you and your odd souvenirs. Where did you get this one? Don't
         tell me you've taken to robbing dead bodies?”
      </p>
               <p>Winters picked up his necklace, derived from its touch queer
         sensations of
      </p>
               <p>pleasure, loneliness, too, as one who dreamed of far countries. “In
         some respects your guess was right, Doc. This came from a dead wolf.”
      </p>
               <p>“Ah, indeed. And when did wolves take to wearing necklaces?”</p>
               <p>“He wasn't wearing it, Doc. He'd et it.” Winters put his souvenir
         away and drained his glass; he puzzled his brain, then said, “Doc, what
         is your foreign-language name for wolf?”
      </p>
               <p>“Caninus lupinus,” Bogie responded promptly. “Or, just plain lupus.”</p>
               <p>“And what would Lobo Lupo mean?”</p>
               <p>“Timber wolf,” replied “Bogie. “Why do you ask such crazy questions?”</p>
               <p>Winters got up and snapped his finger in disgust. “I figured I'd got
         it wrong.
<!-- **** No template for element: i **** --> Lone Wolf, I called him. I guess Chidchad thought I
         was pretty ignorant.” He put down a coin and stared amusedly at Bogie.
      </p>
               <p>Bogie stared back. “Chidchad?”</p>
               <p>“Yeah, Chidchad. Also—. Well, good-night, Doc.”</p>
            </level2>
         </level1>
      </bodymatter>
   </book>
</dtbook>