[The Flying Legion by George Allan England]@TWC D-Link bookThe Flying Legion CHAPTER XXXII 1/17
THE BATTLE OF THE HARAM The raiding-party, beside its two leaders, consisted of Lombardo, Rennes, Emilio, Wallace, and three others, including Lebon.
The lieutenant's orderly, now having recovered strength, had pleaded so hard for an opportunity to avenge himself on the hated Moslems that Leclair had taken him. As for Lombardo, he had downright insisted on going.
His life, he knew, was already forfeited to the expedition--by reason of his having let the stowaway escape--and, this being so, he had begged and been granted the favor of risking it in this perilous undertaking. Such was the party now swiftly dropping toward the Haram where never yet in the history of the world two English-speaking men had at one time gathered; where never yet the speech of the heretic had been heard; where so many intruders had been beheaded or crucified for having dared profane the ground sacred to Allah and his Prophet. To the major, peering over the side of the nacelle, it seemed as if the Haram--central spot of pilgrimage and fanatic devotion for one-seventh of the human race--were leaping up to meet him.
With dizzying rapidity the broad square, the grim black Ka'aba, the prostrate white throngs all sprang up at the basket.
Fascinated, the major watched; his eyes, above all, sought the mysterious Ka'aba. Excitement thrilled his romantic soul at thought that he was one of the very first white men in the world ever to behold that strange, ancient building. Clearly he could see the stone slabs cemented with gypsum, the few stricken pigeons lying there, the cords holding the huge _kiswah_, or brocaded cloth, covering "Mecca's bride," (the Ka'aba).
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