Part 23 (1/2)

I wanted her to protest, but she did not. She got up calmly and went with him out onto the rock spit. I was between them and the mainland.

They could not go away by river. No harm would come to her, it seemed.

”Some tribal custom to be attended to,” I thought. It is best not to be too curious about such matters up among the hills of Burma and Siam, ma'am. If you are, your wife suffers, not you.

For a long time I could hear them talking out there in the dark, with the river talking in between whiles. Once I heard a sound like a great sigh or sobbing moan. ”The whirlpool at the river's bed,” I thought, ”taking in a great tree or raft.”

Soon after that the back mat of the house lifted, and I thought they had come in by that way. I sat, peering into the gloom inside, ready to greet them, when something crashed on to the back of my head and I forgot for a time.

I came back to memory in a daze and feeling much pain in my head. The brazier flared beside me. Bending over me was Pra Oom Bwaht, with a knife in his hand.

”Son of a pig!” he said.

”Where is Nagy N'Yang?” I asked.

He smiled at me-his cursed twisty smile.

”On the river's brink she waits, bound to a great teak log lodged at the end of the spit,” he cried hoa.r.s.ely. ”When the flood comes to its full, she will float away-”

I spat full into his face. I thought it would make him slay me.

He wiped the spittle from his chops calmly. When an Oriental takes an insult calmly, beware! There is more to come.

”She was my wife,” he said, as if that explained everything.

”Was or is, it makes no difference to me,” I stormed. ”She is mine now.”

”She is Siva's,” he jeered. ”Think you that as she swirls down into the whirlpool at the river's bend the great river python, mother of all the pythons, will not take her? Placed I the yellow scale of Nagy in her hand for naught?”

I shuddered. The legend of the great river python at Kalgai Gorge had been told to me oft. It slept in the great pool where the whirlpool formed in flood-time and only came out for prey when the depths were stirred by a monstrous flood such as this one, the natives said.

”Why did you tell me she was your sister?” I demanded.

”We made it up, she and I. She was wedded, as the priest told you, but to me. I was listening in the bamboos when you planned your trip here from Karen that night after the priest cursed you from the door of Siva's temple. I heard him curse you and saw you turn down the path to our hut. If you had slain the python in the temple, without me helping, she would have been freed. We planned that you should make love, a little. Enough so you would kill the great snake and win her from it; I to come after and take her. But you won her whole heart, curse you-”

Up went his hand to slay. While he had raved and chattered at me, my head had been clearing. As he stiffened for the death stroke, I reached for the down-coming hand and caught his wrist-the wrist whose sinewy muscles were driving the knife home. I held his arm back. He clutched for my throat with his other hand. We strove, and I rolled him and came on top. Up I surged, dragging him with me. With one awful thrust I sent him cras.h.i.+ng against the wall.

He had barely come to rest against the teak beams before his hand went up and I dodged-just as his knife whizzed past my ear. Plucking the great dagger of Ali Beg from my bosom, I cast it, in the manner of the Inner Mongolian Mohammedans. The great blade plunged forward. I had pinned him to the wall as a b.u.t.terfly collector pins a specimen to a card in his collecting box.

I stepped forward to get my dagger. Pra Oom Bwaht, his throat full of blood, his heart seared with black hatred, glared at me.

”The Curse of Siva remain on you and yours....”

So he died.

Plucking my dagger from him, I kicked over the glowing brazier and raced for the rock spit's end as he crashed down-mere battered clay.

As I came to it, the last of the rain for the night whipped my face, reviving me. The moon peeped forth. There was no teak log there!

Another rift in the clouds made plain my error. The flood was over all former flood-marks. The teak log, as the moon's second peep showed, was on the point of rocks, but they were now in the stream, many paces from the present sh.o.r.e-line. The log, caught on the jagged stones, hung and swayed. It was just on the point of going out. I could see a dark ma.s.s, midway of the log. ”It is Nagy N'Yang,” I thought. The hut was blazing now from the brazier's scattered coals, giving me plenty of light.