girl emerged from this tent, Raghunath Jafar arose and approached her. He smiled an oily smile as he spoke to her, but the girl did not smile as she replied. She spoke civilly, but she did not pause, continuing her way toward the four men at cards.

As she approached their table they looked up; and upon the face of each was reflected some pleasurable emotion, but whether it was the same in each, the masks that we call faces, and which are trained to conceal our true thoughts, did not divulge. Evident it was, however, that the girl was popular.

'Hello, Zora!' cried a large, smooth-faced fellow. 'Have a good nap?' 'Yes, Comrade,' replied the girl; 'but I am tired of napping. This inactivity is getting on my nerves.'

'Mine, too,' agreed the man.

'How much longer will you wait for the American, Comrade Zveri?' asked Raghunath Jafar.

The big man shrugged. 'I need him,' he replied. 'We might easily carry on without him, but for the moral effect upon the world of having a rich and high-born American identified actively with the affair it is worth waiting.'

'Are you quite sure of this gringo, Zveri?' asked a swarthy young Mexican sitting next to the big, smooth- faced man, who was evidently the leader of the expedition.

'I met him in New York and again in San Francisco ,' replied Zveri. 'He has been very carefully checked and favorably recommended.'

'I am always suspicious of these fellows who owe everything they have to capitalism,' declared Romero. 'It is in their blood-at heart they hate the proletariat, just as we hate them.'

'This fellow is different, Miguel,' insisted Zveri. 'He has been won over so completely that he would betray his own father for the good of the cause and already he is betraying his country.'

A slight, involuntary sneer, that passed unnoticed by the others, curled the lip of Zora Drinov as she heard this description of the remaining member of the party, who had not yet reached the rendezvous.

Miguel Romero, the Mexican, was still unconvinced. 'I have no use for gringos of any sort,' he said.

Zveri shrugged his heavy shoulders. 'Our personal animosities are of no importance,' he said, 'as against the interests of the workers of the world. When Colt arrives we must accept him as one of us; nor must we forget that however much we may detest America and Americans nothing of any moment may be accomplished in the world of today without them and their filthy wealth.'

'Wealth ground out of the blood and sweat of the working class,' growled Romero.

'Exactly,' agreed Raghunath Jafar, 'but how appropriate that this same wealth should be used to undermine and overthrow capitalistic America and bring the workers eventually into their own.'

'That is precisely the way I feel about it,' said Zveri. 'I would rather use American gold in furthering the cause than any other-and after that British.'

'But what do the puny resources of this single American mean to us?' demanded Zora. 'A mere nothing compared to what America is already pouring into Soviet Russia. What is his treason compared with the treason of those others who are already doing more to hasten the day of world communism than the Third Internationale itself-it is nothing, not a drop in the bucket.'

'What do you mean, Zora?' asked Miguel.

'I mean the bankers, and manufacturers, and engineers of America, who are selling their own country and the world to us in the hope of adding more gold to their already bursting coffers. One of their most pious and lauded citizens is building great factories for us in Russia, where we may turn out tractors and tanks; their manufacturers are vying with one another to furnish us with engines for countless thousands of airplanes; their engineers are selling us their brains and their skill to build a great modern manufacturing city, in which ammunitions and engines of war may be produced. These are the traitors, these are the men who are hastening the day when Moscow shall dictate the policies of a world.'

'You speak as though you regretted it,' said a dry voice at her shoulder.

The girl turned quickly. 'Oh, it is you, Sheykh Abu Batn?' she said, as she recognized the swart Arab who had strolled over from his coffee. 'Our own good fortune does not blind me to the perfidiousness of the enemy, nor cause me to admire treason in anyone, even though I profit by it.'

'Does that include me?' demanded Romero, suspiciously.

Zora laughed. 'You know better than that, Miguel,' she said. 'You are of the working class-you are loyal to the workers of your own country-but these others are of the capitalistic class; their government is a capitalistic government that is so opposed to our beliefs that it has never recognized our government; yet, in their greed, these swine are selling out their own kind and their own country for a few more rotten dollars. I loathe them.'

Zveri laughed. 'You are a good Red, Zora,' he cried; 'you hate the enemy as much when he helps us as when he hinders.'

'But hating and talking accomplish so little,' said the girl. 'I wish we might do something. Sitting here in idleness seems so futile.'

'And what would you have us do?' demanded Zveri, good naturedly.

'We might at least make a try for the gold of Opar,' she said. 'If Kitembo is right, there should be enough there to finance a dozen expeditions such as you are planning, and we do not need this American-what do they call them, cake eaters?-to assist us in that venture.'

'I have been thinking along similar lines,' said Raghunath Jafar.

Zveri scowled. 'Perhaps some of the rest of you would like to run this expedition,' he said, crustily. 'I know what I am doing and I don't have to discuss all my plans with anyone. When I have orders to give, I'll give them. Kitembo has already received his, and preparations have been under way for several days for the expedition to Opar.'

'The rest of us are as much interested and are risking as much as you, Zveri,' snapped Romero. 'We were to work together-not as master and slaves.'

'You'll soon learn that I am master,' snarled Zveri in an ugly tone.

'Yes,' sneered Romeo, 'the czar was master, too, and Obregon. You know what happened to them?'

Zveri leaped to his feet and whipped out a revolver, but as he levelled it at Romero the girl struck his arm up and stepped between them. 'Are you mad, Zveri?' she cried.

'Do not interfere, Zora; this is my affair and it might as well be settled now as later. I am chief here and I am not going to have any traitors in my camp. Stand aside.'

'No!' said the girl with finality. 'Miguel was wrong and so were you, but to shed blood-our own blood-now would utterly ruin any chance we have of success. It would sow the seed of fear and suspicion and cost us the respect of the blacks, for they would know that there was dissension among us. Furthermore, Miguel is not armed; to shoot him would be cowardly murder that would lose you the respect of every decent man in the expedition.' She had spoken rapidly in Russian, a language that was understood by only Zveri and herself, of those who were present; then she turned again to Miguel and addressed him in English. 'You were wrong, Miguel,' she said gently. 'There must be one responsible head, and Comrade Zveri was chosen for the responsibility. He regrets that he acted hastily. Tell him that you are sorry for what you said, and then the two of you shake hands and let us all forget the matter.'

For an instant Romero hesitated; then he extended his hand toward Zveri. 'I am sorry,' he said.

The Russian took the proffered hand in his and bowed stiffly. 'Let us forget it, Comrade,' he said; but the scowl was still upon his face, though no darker than that which clouded the Mexican's.

Little Nkima yawned and swung by his tail from a branch far overhead. His curiosity concerning these enemies was sated. They no longer afforded him entertainment, but he knew that his master should know about their presence; and that thought, entering his little head, recalled his sorrow and his great yearning for Tarzan, to the end that he was again imbued with a grim determination to continue his search for the ape-man. Perhaps in half an hour some trivial occurrence might again distract his attention, but for the moment it was his life work. Swinging through the forest, little Nkima held the fate of Europe in his pink palm, but he did not know it.

The afternoon was waning. In the distance a lion roared. An instinctive shiver ran up Nkima's spine. In reality, however, he was not much afraid, knowing, as he did, that no lion could reach him in the tree tops.

A young man marching near the head of a safari cocked his head and listened. 'Not so very far away, Tony,' he said.

'No, sir; much too close,' replied the Filipino.

'You'll have to learn to cut out that 'sir' stuff, Tony, before we join the others,' admonished the young

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