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E-Med the dwar?โ€ he asked.

โ€œYes,โ€ replied Tara, โ€œhe was here some time ago.โ€

The man glanced quickly about the bare chamber and then searchingly first at Tara of Helium and then at the slave girl, Lan-O. The puzzled expression upon his face increased. He scratched his head. โ€œIt is strange,โ€ he said. โ€œA score of men saw him ascend into this tower; and though there is but a single exit, and that well guarded, no man has seen him pass out.โ€

Tara of Helium hid a yawn with the back of a shapely hand. โ€œThe Princess of Helium is hungry, fellow,โ€ she drawled; โ€œtell your master that she would eat.โ€

It was an hour later that food was brought, an officer and several warriors accompanying the bearer. The former examined the room carefully, but there was no sign that aught amiss had occurred there. The wound that had sent E-Med the dwar to his ancestors had not bled, fortunately for Tara of Helium.

โ€œWoman,โ€ cried the officer, turning upon Tara, โ€œyou were the last to see E-Med the dwar. Answer me now and answer me truthfully. Did you see him leave this room?โ€

โ€œI did,โ€ answered Tara of Helium.

โ€œWhere did he go from here?โ€

โ€œHow should I know? Think you that I can pass through a locked door of skeel?โ€ the girlโ€™s tone was scornful.

โ€œOf that we do not know,โ€ said the officer. โ€œStrange things have happened in the cell of your companion in the pits of Manator. Perhaps you could pass through a locked door of skeel as easily as he performs seemingly more impossible feats.โ€

โ€œWhom do you mean,โ€ she cried; โ€œTuran the panthan? He lives, then? Tell me, is he here in Manator unharmed?โ€

โ€œI speak of that thing which calls itself Ghek the kaldane,โ€ replied the officer.

โ€œBut Turan! Tell me, padwar, have you heard aught of him?โ€ Taraโ€™s tone was insistent and she leaned a little forward toward the officer, her lips slightly parted in expectancy.

Into the eyes of the slave girl, Lan-O, who was watching her, there crept a soft light of understanding; but the officer ignored Taraโ€™s questionโ โ€”what was the fate of another slave to him? โ€œMen do not disappear into thin air,โ€ he growled, โ€œand if E-Med be not found soon O-Tar himself may take a hand in this. I warn you, woman, if you be one of those horrid Corphals that by commanding the spirits of the wicked dead gains evil mastery over the living, as many now believe the thing called Ghek to be, that lest you return E-Med, O-Tar will have no mercy on you.โ€

โ€œWhat foolishness is this?โ€ cried the girl. โ€œI am a princess of Helium, as I have told you all a score of times. Even if the fabled Corphals existed, as none but the most ignorant now believes, the lore of the ancients tells us that they entered only into the bodies of wicked criminals of the lowest class. Man of Manator, thou art a fool, and thy jeddak and all his people,โ€ and she turned her royal back upon the padwar, and gazed through the window across the Field of Jetan and the roofs of Manator through the low hills and the rolling country and freedom.

โ€œAnd you know so much of Corphals, then,โ€ he cried, โ€œyou know that while no common man dare harm them they may be slain by the hand of a jeddak with impunity!โ€

The girl did not reply, nor would she speak again, for all his threats and rage, for she knew now that none in all Manator dared harm her save O-Tar, the jeddak, and after a while the padwar left, taking his men with him. And after they had gone Tara stood for long looking out upon the city of Manator, and wondering what more of cruel wrongs Fate held in store for her. She was standing thus in silent meditation when there rose to her the strains of martial music from the city belowโ โ€”the deep, mellow tones of the long war trumpets of mounted troops, the clear, ringing notes of foot-soldiersโ€™ music. The girl raised her head and looked about, listening, and Lan-O, standing at an opposite window, looking toward the west, motioned Tara to join her. Now they could see across roofs and avenues to The Gate of Enemies, through which troops were marching into the city.

โ€œThe Great Jed is coming,โ€ said Lan-O, โ€œnone other dares enter thus, with blaring trumpets, the city of Manator. It is U-Thor, Jed of Manatos, second city of Manator. They call him The Great Jed the length and breadth of Manator, and because the people love him, O-Tar hates him. They say, who know, that it would need but slight provocation to inflame the two to war. How such a war would end no one could guess; for the people of Manator worship the great O-Tar, though they do not love him. U-Thor they love, but he is not the jeddak,โ€ and Tara understood, as only a Martian may, how much that simple statement encompassed.

The loyalty of a Martian to his jeddak is almost an instinct, and second not even to the instinct of self-preservation at that. Nor is this strange in a race whose religion includes ancestor worship, and where families trace their origin back into remote ages and a jeddak sits upon the same throne that his direct progenitors have occupied for, perhaps, hundreds of thousands of years, and rules the descendants of the same people that his forebears ruled. Wicked jeddaks have been dethroned, but seldom are they replaced by other than members of the imperial house, even though the law gives to the jeds the right to select whom they please.

โ€œU-Thor is a just man and good, then?โ€ asked Tara of Helium.

โ€œThere be

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