Allan Quatermain by H. Rider Haggard

Umslopogaas pulled up beside the carcase, and I looked at him in dismay. There were still more than twenty miles to do by dawn, and how were we to do it with one horse? It seemed hopeless, but I had forgotten the old Zulu’s extraordinary running powers.

Without a single word he sprang from the saddle and began to hoist me into it.

‘What wilt thou do?’ I asked.

‘Run,’ he answered, seizing my stirrup-leather.

Then off we went again, almost as fast as before; and oh, the relief it was to me to get that change of horses! Anybody who has ever ridden against time will know what it meant.

Daylight sped along at a long stretching hand-gallop, giving the gaunt Zulu a lift at every stride. It was a wonderful thing to see old Umslopogaas run mile after mile, his lips slightly parted and his nostrils agape like the horse’s. Every five miles or so we stopped for a few minutes to let him get his breath, and then flew on again.

‘Canst thou go farther,’ I said at the third of these stoppages, ‘or shall I leave thee to follow me?’

He pointed with his axe to a dim mass before us. It was the Temple of the Sun, now not more than five miles away.

‘I reach it or I die,’ he gasped.

Oh, that last five miles! The skin was rubbed from the inside of my legs, and every movement of my horse gave me anguish. Nor was that all. I was exhausted with toil, want of food and sleep, and also suffering very much from the blow I had received on my left side; it seemed as though a piece of bone or something was slowly piercing into my lung. Poor Daylight, too, was pretty nearly finished, and no wonder. But there was a smell of dawn in the air, and we might not stay; better that all three of us should die upon the road than that we should linger while there was life in us. The air was thick and heavy, as it sometimes is before the dawn breaks, and — another infallible sign in certain parts of Zu-Vendis that sunrise is at hand — hundreds of little spiders pendant on the end of long tough webs were floating about in it. These early-rising creatures, or rather their webs, caught upon the horse’s and our own forms by scores, and, as we had neither the time nor the energy to brush them off, we rushed along covered with hundreds of long grey threads that streamed out a yard or more behind us — and a very strange appearance they must have given us.

And now before us are the huge brazen gates of the outer wall of the Frowning City, and a new and horrible doubt strikes me: What if they will not let us in?

‘Open! open!’ I shout imperiously, at the same time giving the royal password. ‘Open! open! a messenger, a messenger with tidings of the war!’

‘What news?’ cried the guard. ‘And who art thou that ridest so madly, and who is that whose tongue lolls out’ — and it actually did — ‘and who runs by thee like a dog by a chariot?’

‘It is the Lord Macumazahn, and with him is his dog, his black dog. Open! open! I bring tidings.’

The great gates ran back on their rollers, and the drawbridge fell with a rattling crash, and we dashed on through the one and over the other.

‘What news, my lord, what news?’ cried the guard.

‘Incubu rolls Sorais back, as the wind a cloud,’ I answered, and was gone.

One more effort, gallant horse, and yet more gallant man!

So, fall not now, Daylight, and hold thy life in thee for fifteen short minutes more, old Zulu war-dog, and ye shall both live for ever in the annals of the land.

On, clattering through the sleeping streets. We are passing the Flower Temple now — one mile more, only one little mile — hold on, keep your life in thee, see the houses run past of themselves. Up, good horse, up, there — but fifty yards now. Ah! you see your stables and stagger on gallantly.’Thank God, the palace at last!’ and see, the first arrows of the dawn are striking on the Temple’s golden dome. {Endnote 21} But shall I get in here, or is the deed done and the way barred?

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