"Well!" said Umballa, who understood that she was here from no idle

whim.

"Highness, you must hide with me this night."

"Indeed?"

"Or die," coolly.

Umballa sprang forward and seized her roughly.

"What has happened?"

"I was in the zenana, Highness, visiting my sister, whom you had

transferred from the palace. All at once we heard shouting and

trampling of feet, and a moment later your house was overrun with men.

They had found the king in the hut and had taken him to the palace.

That they did not find you is because you came here."

"Tell me all."

"It seems that the majordomo gave the poison to Ramabai, but the white

goddess . . ."

"The white goddess!" cried Umballa, as if stung by a cobra's fang.

"Ay, Highness. She did not die on that roof. Nothing can harm her.

It is written."

"And I was never told!"

She lived, lived, and all the terrors he had evoked for her were as

naught! Umballa was not above superstition himself for all his

European training. Surely this girl of the white people was imbued

with something more than mortal. She lived!

"Go on!" he said, his voice subdued as was his soul.

"The white goddess by mistake took Ramabai's goblet and was about to

drink when the majordomo seized the goblet and drained the poison

himself. He confessed everything, where the king was, where you were.

They are again hunting through the city for you. For the present you

must hide with me."

"The white woman must die," said Umballa in a voice like one being

strangled.

To this the priests agreed without hesitation. This white woman whom

the people were calling a goddess was a deadly menace to that scepter

of theirs, superstition.

"What has gone is a pact?"

"A pact, Durga Ram," said the chief priest. With Ramabai spreading

Christianity, the abhorred creed which gave people liberty of person

and thought, the future of his own religion stood in imminent danger.

"A pact," he reflected. "To you, Durga Ram, the throne; to us half the

treasury and all the ancient rites of our creed restored."

"I have said it."

Umballa followed the dancing girl into the square before the temple.

He turned and smiled ironically. The bald fools!

"Lead on, thou flower of the jasmine!" lightly.

And the two of them disappeared into the night.

But the priests smiled, too, for Durga Ram should always be more in

their power than they in his.

There was tremendous excitement in the city the next morning. It

seemed that the city would never be permitted to resume its old

careless indolence. Swift as the wind the news flew that the old king

was alive, that he had been held prisoner all these months by Durga Ram

and the now deposed council of three. No more the old rut of dulness.

Never had they known such fetes. Since the arrival of the white

goddess not a day had passed without some thrilling excitement, which

had cost them nothing but shouts.




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