[Caves of Terror by Talbot Mundy]@TWC D-Link bookCaves of Terror CHAPTER II 1/16
CHAPTER II. THE PALACE OF YASMINI Nobody saw us walk up to Yasmini's palace gate and knock; for whoever was abroad in the heat was down by the ghat admiring the Mahatma. The bearded giant who had admitted us stood staring at King, his long, strong fingers twitching.
In his own good time King turned and saw fit to recognize him. "Oh, hullo Ismail!" He held a hand out, but the savage flung arms about him that were as strong as the iron gate-clamps, and King had to fight to break free from the embrace. "Now Allah be praised, he is father of mercies! _She_ warned me!" he croaked.
"She knows the smell of dawn at midnight! She said, 'He cometh soon!' and none believed her, save only I.This very dawn said she, 'Thou, Ismail,' she said, 'be asleep at the gate when he cometh and thine eyes shall be thrown to the city dogs!' Aye! Oho!" King nodded to lead on, and Ismail obeyed with a deal of pantomime intended to convey a sense of partnership with roots in the past and its fruition now. The way was down a passage between high, carved walls so old that antiquarians burn friendship in disputes not so much about the century as the very era of that quiet art--under dark arches with latticed windows into unexpected gardens fresh with the smell of sprinkled water--by ancient bronze gateways into other passages that opened into stone-paved courts with fountains in the midst--building joining on to building and court meeting court until, where an old black panther snarled at us between iron bars, an arch and a solid bronze door admitted us at last into the woman's pleasance--a wonderland of jasmine, magnolia and pomegranates set about a marble pool and therein mirrored among rainbow-colored fishes. Beyond the pool a flight of marble steps rose fifty feet until it passed through a many-windowed wall into the _panch mahal_--the quarters of the women.
At their foot Ismail halted. "Go thou up alone! Leave this elephant with me!" he said, nudging me and pointing with his thumb toward a shady bower against the garden wall. Without acknowledging that pleasantry King took my arm and we went straight forward together, our tread resounding strangely on steps that for centuries had felt no sterner shock than that of soft slippers and naked, jeweled feet. We were taking nobody entirely by surprise; that much was obvious. Before we reached the top step two women opened a door and ran to meet us.
One woman threw over King's head such a prodigious garland of jasmine buds that he had to loop it thrice about his shoulders.
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