[The Ancient Allan by H. Rider Haggard]@TWC D-Link book
The Ancient Allan

CHAPTER XVII
2/41

Perhaps they had not yet arrived, or perhaps they had miscarried.

At least the fleet seemed very quiet.

None were alarmed there and no sentry challenged.
At length it grew near to dawn and behind me I heard the gentle stir of the Ethiopians arising and eating as they had been bidden, whereon I too ate and drank a little, though never had I less wished for food.

The East brightened and far up the Nile of a sudden there appeared what at first I took to be a meteor or a lantern waving in the wind that now was blowing its strongest, as it does at this season of the year just at the time of dawn.

Yet that lantern seemed to travel fast and lo! now I saw that it was fire running up the rigging of a ship.
It leapt from rope to rope and from sail to sail till they blazed fiercely, and in other ships also nearer to us, flame appeared that grew to a great red sheet.


<<Back  Index  Next>>

D-Link book Top

TWC mobile books