y bow, my arrows and my knife, and Bes took two spears, one light for
throwing and the other short, broad and heavy for stabbing. Thus armed
we passed back before the Easterns who stared at us, and advanced to the
edge of the thicket of tall reeds that was full of lions.
Here Bes took dust and threw it into the air that we might learn from
which quarter the light wind blew.
"We will go against the breeze, Lord," he said, "that I may smell the
lions before they smell us."
I nodded, and answered,
"Hearken, Bes. Well may it be that we kill no lions in this place where
it is hard to shoot. Yet I would not return to be thrown to wild beasts
by yonder evil king. Therefore if we fail in this or in any other way,
do you kill me, if you still live."
He rolled his eyes and grinned.
"Not so, Master. Then we will win through the reeds and lie hid in their
edge till darkness comes, for in them those half-men will never dare to
seek for us. Afterwards we will swim the water and disguise ourselves
as jugglers and try to reach the coast, and so back to Egypt, having
learned much. Never stretch out your hand to Death till he stretches out
his to you, which he will do soon enough, Master."
Again I nodded and said,
"And if a lion should kill me, Bes, what then?"
"Then, Master, I will kill that lion if I can and go report the matter
to the King."
"And if he should wish to throw you to the beasts, Bes, what then?"
"Then, first I will drag him down to the greatest of all beasts, he who
waits to devour evil-doers in the Under-world, be they kings or slaves,"
and he stretched out his long arms and made a motion as of clutching
a man by the throat. "Oh! have no fear, Master, I can break him like a
stick, and afterwards we will talk the matter over among the dead, for I
shall swallow my tongue and die also. It is a good trick, Master, which
I wish you would learn."
Then he took my hand and kissed it and we entered the reeds, I, who was
a hunter, feeling more happy than I had done since we set foot in the
East.
Yet the quest was desperate for the reeds were tall and often I could
not see more than a bow's length in front of me. Presently, however,
we found a path made perchance by game coming down to drink, or by
crocodiles coming up to sleep, and followed it, I with an arrow on
my string and Bes with the throwing spear in his right hand and the
stabbing spear in his left, half a pace ahead of me. On we crept, Bes
dr
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