sleep
there--I bring horses." This good advice was followed, and when they
had gained the summit of the rising ground they again laid down and
slept till daylight.
When they awoke, they found themselves much refreshed; but they now
felt,--what they had not done during their extreme suffering from
thirst--the craving pangs of hunger. Omrah was fast asleep, and the
horses picking among the herbage, about two hundred yards off.
"We have much to thank God for," said Alexander to the Major.
"We have indeed, and, next to divine aid, we have to thank that poor
boy. We have been as children in his hands, and we are indebted to him
and his resources for our lives this night. I could not speak
yesterday, nor could you; but his courage in remaining with the horse as
an offering to the lion, I shall not forget."
"He is a child of the desert," replied Alexander; "he has been brought
up among lions, and where there is scarcity of water, and he has most
wonderfully guided us in our path; but we are still in the desert, and
have lost our companions. What must we do? Shall we attempt to regain
the caravan, or push off to the westward, to fall in with the river
again?"
"We will talk of that an hour hence," replied the Major; "let us now go
down to the pool, and as soon as I have had a drink I will try if I
cannot kill something for a meal. My hunger is now almost as great as
was my thirst."
"And mine too, so I will go with you; but we must be careful how we
approach the water, as we may fall in with some animal to make a meal
of."
"Or with a lion, ready to make a meal of us," replied the Major; "so in
either instance we must approach it cautiously."
As they walked to the pool, they discovered the head of an antelope just
above a rock. The Major fired, and the animal fell. The report of the
rifle was answered by a roar; three lions bounded away from the rock,
and went at a quick canter over the plain.
"Both our suppositions have proved correct," observed Alexander, as they
walked up to where the antelope lay dead; "but now how are we to cook
the animal?"
"Any dry stuff will serve for a fire, if we can only get enough, and a
very little cooking will serve me just now. Here comes Omrah. Let us
carry the game up to where we slept last night, as soon as we have had a
drink."
They went to the pool, and were surprised to behold the filthy puddle
which had appeared to them so like nectar the night before. T
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