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se very straight, a small mouth with delicate lips, a strong chin. She was not black, but copper colored. Her slender graceful body had nothing in common with the disgusting thick sausages which the carefully cared for bodies of the blacks become. A large circle of copper made a heavy decoration around her forehead and hair. She had four bracelets, still heavier, on her wrists and anklets, and, for clothing, a green silk tunic, slashed in points, braided with gold. Green, bronze, gold. "You are a Sonrhai, Tanit-Zerga?" I asked gently. She replied with almost ferocious pride: "I am a Sonrhai." "Strange little thing," I thought. Evidently this was a subject on which Tanit-Zerga did not intend the conversation to turn. I recalled how, almost painfully, she had pronounced that "they," when she had told me how they had driven away King Hiram. "I am a Sonrhai," she repeated. "I was born at Gao, on the Niger, the ancient Sonrhai capital. My fathers reigned over the great Mandingue Empire. You need not scorn me because I am here as a slave." In a ray of sunlight, Gale, seated on his little haunches, washed his shining mustaches with his forepaws; and King Hiram, stretched out on the mat, groaned plaintively in his sleep. "He is dreaming," said Tanit-Zerga, a finger on her lips. There was a moment of silence. Then she said: "You must be hungry. And I do not think that you will want to eat with the others." I did not answer. "You must eat," she continued. "If you like, I will go get something to eat for you and me. I will bring King Hiram's and Gale's dinner here, too. When you are sad, you should not stay alone." And the little green and gold fairy vanished, without waiting for my answer. That was how my friendship with Tanit-Zerga began. Each morning she came to my room with the two beasts. She rarely spoke to me of Antinea, and when she did, it was always indirectly. The question that she saw ceaselessly hovering on my lips seemed to be unbearable to her, and I felt her avoiding all the subjects towards which I, myself, dared not direct the conversation. To make sure of avoiding them, she prattled, prattled, prattled, like a nervous little parokeet. I was sick and this Sister of Charity in green and bronze silk tended me with such care as never was before. The two wild beasts, the big and the little, were there, each side of my couch, and, during my delirium, I saw their mysterious, sad
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