Terence O'Rourke, Gentleman Adventurer
drawn a revolver and was looking from one to another of the Tawareks. "The infernal daredivvle!" murmured O'Rourke, conscious of a slight constriction in his throat. For he loved the boy as only an Irishman can love a loyal servant.
But he was right; Danny's action, which he had been prompted to take by the instinct of self-preservation alone, was folly, being open to misinterpretation by the Tawareks. One—he who had fired—called aloud to his companion: an odd, thin, wailing cry, the first that had come from the impassive natives. It shrilled uncannily in the ears of the foreigners.
And it produced an immediate effect, sealing the fate of Danny. The second Tawarek swung his rifle to his shoulder, and fired.
Danny staggered and cursed the fellow—the syllables indistinguishable because of the distance. He seemed to try to raise his weapon and return the fire, but his arm would not move from his side. He took a step or two forward, faltering, and then, amid a breathless silence, reeled and fell prone.
O'Rourke was swept off his feet in a gust of rage.
"Fire!" he thundered. "Fire!"
A lean ex-Spahi was the first to respond—a sharpshooter he had been in the French Army. Hardly had the command passed O'Rourke's lips than, with his Mauser still at his hip, this fellow fired.
The rifle snapped venomously, like the crack of a blacksnake whip. The Tawarek who had been the last to fire lurched in the saddle, dropping his rifle, and slid listlessly forward upon the neck of his camel.
Then night came as a dark mantle cast upon the face of the earth—night, deep and softly black, the invading party's worst enemy, since it left them lost in the midst of deso-
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