<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXXV" id="CHAPTER_XXXV"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXXV.</h2>
<h3>INTO THE MIST.</h3>
<p><span class="smcap">Our</span> troops had, we found, withdrawn from the burning
city and were encamped about a mile away, taking a
well-earned rest, and watching with satisfaction the
destruction of the once powerful capital of the "Pirate
of the Niger." The presence of Liola, together with the
announcement of the discovery of the treasure of the
Sanoms, that we made to Kona secretly, caused him the
wildest delight. His barbaric instinct overcame him,
and seizing his spear he executed a kind of war-dance
around us, bestowing upon us the most adulatory
phrases of the Dagomba vocabulary. Afterwards he
addressed the assembled soldiers, omitting at my desire<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_304" id="Page_304"></SPAN>[<SPAN href="./images/304.png">304</SPAN>]</span>
all mention of the jewels of Mo, and three days later,
having secured all the gems and golden ornaments,
together with Samory's hidden wealth, we set forth on
our triumphant return to the mysterious far-off land.</p>
<p>Rapidly and pleasantly we accomplished the long
journey, re-crossing the treacherous Way of the Thousand
Steps without a single mishap, and ascended to the lofty
plateau of Omar's kingdom until, high up in the grey
morning mist, we saw looming before us with almost
spectral indistinctness the gigantic battlements and
domes of the City in the Clouds. On ascending the
rope steps at the Gate of Mo a few days previously we
had ascertained that the expedition to the Hombori
Mountains had been entirely successful, for the enemy
had been met in the pass by the defenders and mercilessly
overwhelmed and slaughtered. Against the lightweight
Maxim guns, weighing only about twenty-five
pounds each and firing 600 to 700 shots per minute
with an effective range of two miles, the old-fashioned
rifles and field-pieces of the force under the traitor
Kouaga had been powerless, hence the whole expedition
had been utterly routed, followed up after their flight
and massacred almost to a man, Kouaga himself being
shot dead by Niaro while strenuously endeavouring to
rally his men for a final onslaught. Omar, at the head
of his victorious army, had re-entered the city only the
day before our arrival, therefore on our return we found
ourselves in the midst of feasting and merry-making of
a most enthusiastic character.</p>
<p>Little wonder was it that when the news of the complete
victory we had secured spread through the city the
joy of the people knew no bounds, for especially welcome
was the information that, in addition to utterly<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_305" id="Page_305"></SPAN>[<SPAN href="./images/305.png">305</SPAN>]</span>
destroying Samory's city we had secured the whole of
his treasure. Kona, Liola and myself held back the
fact that we had also recovered the stolen jewels, and
we also took elaborate precautions that the knowledge
of Liola's safety should not be conveyed prematurely to
Omar.</p>
<p>During the formal welcome that the young Naba,
resplendent in his magnificent bejewelled robes of state
and surrounded by his sages and officers, accorded us at
the great palace-gate, now fully restored, Liola held
back, hiding herself. Not until evening, when I was
sitting with Omar in his luxurious private pavilion after
eating a sumptuous meal served on the royal dishes of
chased gold, I told him confidentially of the recovery of
the lost jewels.</p>
<p>"Impossible, Scars!" he cried in English, starting suddenly
to his feet. "Where did you find them? How?"</p>
<p>Brief words were required to explain how I had discovered
them hidden in Samory's secret cavern beyond
the lion's lair.</p>
<p>"I understood that only the wealth of the old Arab's
Kasbah was hidden there," he exclaimed quickly.
"This news is indeed as astounding as it is welcome."</p>
<p>"Your subjects are unaware that your treasure has
ever been removed from Mo, therefore I have not enlightened
them," I answered. "Come with me and see
if you recognize any of the jewels."</p>
<p>Eagerly he followed me into a small adjoining apartment
where the loot had been deposited, and as we
opened pack after pack he uttered ejaculations of
surprise and complete gratification, recognizing in the
recovered gems the wonderful incomparable heirlooms
of his royal house.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_306" id="Page_306"></SPAN>[<SPAN href="./images/306.png">306</SPAN>]</span>
He turned to thank me when we had finished, and as
he did so I placed my hand firmly on his arm, saying in
a serious voice:</p>
<p>"In addition to these, Omar, I have also recovered a
jewel of even far greater worth than all this magnificent
collection; one that will shine as the brightest and most
beautiful gem in the diadem of Mo."</p>
<p>A genuine look of bewilderment crossed his pale refined
features for an instant, as he answered:</p>
<p>"I really don't understand, Scars. No jewel can be
of greater intrinsic value than the Treasure of the Sanoms.
What is it?"</p>
<p>For answer, Liola, a veritable vision of classic beauty
in her loose white robe, gold-embroidered at the hem,
and broad girdle of fiery rubies, stepped from behind
the heavy curtain of blue silk where she had been concealed,
and stood before him.</p>
<p>Rigid in speechless amazement he stood for a moment,
then recognizing that his lost love was actually present,
alive and well, he bounded towards her, and with a loud
cry of joy embraced her, brushing back her soft hair and
covering her white open brow with passionate kisses.</p>
<p>It was indeed a joyous reunion, but as I turned intending
to withdraw discreetly and leave them alone
together to continue their exchange of confidences, my
friend promptly called me back, saying:</p>
<p>"Stay, Scars, old fellow! Let me hear from your
own lips the solution of this mystery of the return of the
dead to life. Truly you have recovered a jewel worth to
me a hundred times all the treasures of Mo."</p>
<p>Crossing again towards him I described briefly the
revolting circumstances in which I had discovered her,
a harem slave of our Arab enemy; how we had both<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_307" id="Page_307"></SPAN>[<SPAN href="./images/307.png">307</SPAN>]</span>
narrowly escaped being burned to death, our subsequent
adventures in the damp subterranean burrow, and the
finding of the secreted treasure.</p>
<p>"Liola herself also made one discovery," I said in
conclusion, laughing and turning towards her.</p>
<p>Gently disengaging herself from her lover's fond arms
she went behind the curtain where she had hidden, and
on coming forth again held in her slim white hands a
round package still securely wrapped in untanned hide,
which she handed to Omar.</p>
<p>"The Rock Diadem of the Naya!" he cried in joy,
when his trembling, eager hands had opened it. "The
most valued of all our possessions!" Then, turning
towards Liola, he tenderly placed upon her head the
historic mark of royalty, saying in his own tongue:</p>
<p>"Now that the days of our sorrow have passed like
the shadow of a cloud upon a sunlit sea, we will be wed
as soon as it is meet for us so to do, and upon thy brow
thus shalt rest the diadem of the first Naya, the upright
queen to whom Mo oweth her magnificence, her power,
and her present prosperity. Thou shalt sit beside me
upon the Emerald Throne; thou shalt be known as the
Naya Liola."</p>
<p>Again he embraced her with ineffable tenderness, and
with her handsome head pillowed heavily upon his
shoulder her breast heaved, and from her deep blue
fathomless eyes there fell tears of joy.</p>
<p>At last, having received the warmest thanks from my
old companion through many misfortunes and from the
woman he loved, I turned and sought the sage Goliba, to
whom I told the good news of his daughter's safety and
betrothal to Omar.</p>
<p>Three days later the marriage took place amid the<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_308" id="Page_308"></SPAN>[<SPAN href="./images/308.png">308</SPAN>]</span>
most gorgeous pomp and the wildest popular rejoicings,
the strange ceremony being performed by the high-priest
of the Temple of Zomara beneath the golden figure of
the Crocodile-god that hung suspended above the
Emerald Throne. Feasts and merry-making continued
throughout a whole moon, and the mystic city, decorated
with flags and flowers, was agog by day and brilliantly
illuminated by night. Never in the long history of the
ancient kingdom had such costly banquets been served;
never had the royal entertainments been on such lavish
scale; never had the sounds of revelry contained such
a true genuine ring, for never before had the people
been so happy and content. Though on the day of the
marriage Liola was solemnly crowned with the wonderful
Rock Diadem of Mo, I, as keeper of the royal treasure,
allowed no word to go forth regarding the theft and recovery
of the Sanom jewels, which had already been deposited
in their original hiding-place beneath the lake.
Samory's treasure was, however, given to Liola by Omar,
and she ordered half of it to be distributed to the poor,
an act of generosity that won for her intense popularity.</p>
<p>Her action was, she told me in confidence, a thank-offering
to Zomara for her timely rescue from a terrible
fate.</p>
<hr class="full" />
<h2><SPAN name="CONCLUSION" id="CONCLUSION"></SPAN>CONCLUSION.</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">Samory</span>, the truculent old Arab, escaped. By some
means he eluded us in the dark intricacies of that subterranean
way, and groping along in a similar manner
to ourselves, he evidently fled to the forest, for he has
since collected the scattered remnant of his nomadic
bands, and although he has never since troubled us, yet<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_309" id="Page_309"></SPAN>[<SPAN href="./images/309.png">309</SPAN>]</span>
he now and then commits depredations on the borders
of the English and French spheres of influence. Ere
long he will overstep the bounds, and one Power or
another will certainly send a punitive expedition to crush
and humiliate him, as they have crushed the arrogant
Prempeh of Ashanti.</p>
<p>During many months the means by which the theft
of the Treasure of the Sanoms had been effected remained
an inscrutable mystery, and it was only on the
day previous to my departure from the mysterious land
for England, or rather more than six months ago,
that the problem was solved and in a manner entirely
unexpected.</p>
<p>In preparation for the annual feast in honour of
the Crocodile-god I had occasion to go secretly and
alone to the submerged Treasure-house, in order to
obtain certain jewels which tradition decreed should
be worn on that day by the reigning sovereign. I had
emptied the lake, unsealed the cover of the well-like
aperture, locked the mechanism fatal to intruders, descended
and obtained what I sought, when on ascending
I was dismayed to find water pouring in upon me in
increasing volumes. Upwards I climbed, struggling desperately
against the inrushing flood thundering down
upon me, and was aghast to find, when I gained the
surface, that the sluice-gates that held back the waters feeding
the lake had been opened, and that it was rapidly refilling.
Instantly it occurred to me to replace the cover,
and in breathless haste I succeeded in screwing it down
and dashing for my life back to the bank, the water being
up to my arm-pits ere I reached it.</p>
<p>When next second I glanced upward to the mound
where the mechanism was concealed, I saw standing<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_310" id="Page_310"></SPAN>[<SPAN href="./images/310.png">310</SPAN>]</span>
thereon the wild-looking figure of a woman with her
soiled, tattered garments fluttering in the wind.</p>
<p>Her long scraggy arms were raised high above her
head, and she was crying aloud to me.</p>
<p>Without a moment's hesitation I dashed forward up
the hill to secure the person who had apparently discovered
the secret of the Treasure-house, but on approaching
her closely I suddenly halted in astonishment.</p>
<p>The wretched, fiendish-looking virago, upon whose
face were the most hideous distortions of insanity I had
ever witnessed, was none other than the once-powerful
tyrannical autocrat, the Great White Queen!</p>
<p>Across her narrow, withered brow, brown almost as a
toad's back, a single wisp of thin grey hair strayed; in
her eyes was the unmistakeable light of madness, while
the nails of her outstretched fingers were as sharp and
long as the talons of some beast of prey. So weird and
repulsive-looking was she that I stood before her dumbfounded.</p>
<p>"Ah!" she shrieked to me exultantly, in a harsh,
rasping voice, "I have killed them—drowned them all,
the accursed spies and renegades! The traitor Kouaga
captured me as I fled for life from the city-gate, and
promising me release and safe escort from this land of
evil spirits in return for the secret of the Treasure-house,
I recklessly gave it to him, on condition that his armed
men should assist me to recover my lost position as
Queen of Mo. I promised to forget the past and take
him back into my favour. But, securing my jewels, he
conveyed them to his Arab master at Koussan, and left
me alone, deposed and ruined. May Zomara crush and
torture him, the traitor!" Then, turning with wild
gesture towards the lake, now a great sheet of placid<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_311" id="Page_311"></SPAN>[<SPAN href="./images/311.png">311</SPAN>]</span>
water, her hands clutched convulsively, her eyes starting
as if she saw, in her disordered imagination, a host of her
enemies, she cried: "This, at last, is the hour of my
revenge! I have drawn the lever, and while they were
below with you they were drowned like rats in a hole!"
And she gave vent to a short, dry laugh, exclaiming:
"They refused to assist me to tear the usurper from the
Emerald Throne, so I have killed them. My work is
finished! I have reigned and have been deposed; I
have striven for the people, and have been rewarded by
their curses; I have——"</p>
<p>At this moment, determined to carry her back to the
city, I sprang forward and gripped her lean, bony arms.
With colossal strength, engendered by insanity, she
fought and bit, shrieking and showering imprecations
upon me, it requiring all my strength to hold her; but
presently she became quiet again, uttering long strings
of rapid incoherent words that plainly showed the hopeless
state of her mind.</p>
<p>Thus walking, we gained the edge of the lake, and
having passed the cascade were skirting the river when,
with a suddenness that took me completely by surprise,
she slipped from my grasp, and with a wild exclamation
dashed towards the warm, oozy bank.</p>
<p>Next second I noticed that the waters were alive with
the sacred reptiles, but ere I could reach her she threw
up her long, thin arms, and uttering an unearthly yell,
plunged in.</p>
<p>A dozen hideous, hungry jaws snapped viciously as
she cast herself amongst them, and an instant later where,
with a shriek of horror, she disappeared for ever beneath
the waters, the swiftly-flowing current was tinged red by
long streaks of human blood.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_312" id="Page_312"></SPAN>[<SPAN href="./images/312.png">312</SPAN>]</span>
In an excess of religious fervour she had sacrificed
herself to her god Zomara.</p>
<hr />
<p>This is no apologue. Little there remains to tell.
Under the beneficent rule of Omar and Liola power,
prosperity and contentment have now returned to the
mysterious ancient realm, within which I have been the
first stranger to set foot. As principal official of the ruler
of the land that, although familiar to me, is still a
mystery to the Royal Geographical Society, I left for
England a few months ago on a mission to the greatest
White Queen, Victoria, offering her assistance in her
effort to crush the cruel sway of our mutual enemies the
Ashantis. Our offer was cordially accepted, and the
successful issue of the campaign which caused the downfall
of Prempeh is now well known. Before returning
to resume my duties as Governor of Mo, the far-off
spectral City in the Clouds, into which no stranger may
enter, I have, however, written down, at the instigation
of the publishers whose name this volume bears upon
its title-page, this plain tale of travel, treason and
treasure as a record of the first successful journey to
the high-up, inaccessible land of the Naya, the once-dreaded
Great White Queen.</p>
<h4>THE END.</h4>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />