well as from a possible spirit of vengeance which might animate The Cid.

As the dirigible glided almost silently over the city of Korsar , the streets and courtyards filled with people staring upward in awe-struck wonder.

Three thousand feet above the city the ship stopped and Tarzan sent for the three Korsar prisoners. 'As you know,' he said to them, 'we are in a position to destroy Korsar. You have seen the great fleet coming to the rescue of the Emperor of Pellucidar. You know that every warrior manning those ships is armed with a weapon far more effective than your best; even with their knives and spears and their bows and arrows they might take Korsar without their rifles, but they have the rifles and they have better ammunition than yours and in each ship of the fleet cannons are mounted. Alone the fleet could reduce Korsar, but in addition to the fleet there is this airship. Your shots could never reach it as it sailed back and forth above Korsar, dropping bombs upon the city. Do you think, Lajo, that we can take Korsar?'

'I know it,' replied the Korsar.

'Very well,' said Tarzan. 'I am going to send you with a message to the Cid. Will you tell him the truth?'

'I will,' replied Lajo.

'The message is simple,' continued Tarzan. 'You may tell him that we have come to effect the release of the Emperor of Pellucidar. You may explain to him that the means that we have to enforce our demands, and then you may say to him that if he will place the Emperor upon a ship and take him out to our fleet and deliver him unharmed to Ja of Anoroc, we will return to Sari without firing a shot. Do you understand?'

'I do,' said Lajo.

'Very well, then,' said Tarzan. He turned to Dorf, 'Lieutenant, will you take him now?' he asked.

Dorf approached with a bundle in his hand. 'Slip into this,' he said.

'What is it?' asked Lajo.

'It is a parachute,' said Dorf.

'What is that?' demanded Lajo.

'Here,' said Dorf, 'put your arms through here.' A moment later he had the parachute adjusted upon the Korsar.

'Now,' said Jason, 'a great distinction is going to be conferred upon you—you are going to make the first parachute jump that has ever been witnessed in Pellucidar.'

'I don't understand what you mean,' said Lajo.

'You will presently,' said Jason. 'You are going to take Lord Greystoke's message to The Cid.'

'But you will have to bring the ship down to the ground before I can,' objected Lajo.

'On the contrary we are going to stay right where we are,' said Jason; 'you are going to jump overboard.'

'What?' exclaimed Lajo. 'You are going to kill me?'

'No,' said Jason with a laugh. 'Listen carefully to what I tell you and you will land safely. You have seen some wonderful things on board this ship so you must have some conception of what we of the outer world can do. Now you are going to have a demonstration of another very wonderful invention and you may take my word for it that no harm will befall you if you do precisely as I tell you to. Here is an iron ring,' and he touched the ring opposite Lajo's left breast; 'take hold of it with your right hand. After you jump from the ship, pull it; give it a good jerk and you will float down to the ground as lightly as a feather.'

'I will be killed,' objected Lajo.

'If you are a coward,' said Jason, 'perhaps one of these other men is braver than you. I tell you that you will not be hurt.'

'I am not afraid,' said Lajo. 'I will jump.'

'Tell The Cid,' said Tarzan, 'that if we do not presently see a ship sail out alone to meet the fleet, we shall start dropping bombs upon the city.'

Dorf led Lajo to a door in the cabin and flung it open. The man hesitated.

'Do not forget to jerk the ring,' said Dorf, and at the same time he gave Lajo a violent push that sent him headlong through the doorway and a moment later the watchers in the cabin saw the white folds of the parachute streaming in the air. They saw it open and they knew the message of Tarzan would be delivered to The Cid.

What went on in the city below we may not know, but presently a great crowd was seen to move from the palace down toward the river, where the ships were anchored, and a little later one of the ships weighed anchor and as it drifted slowly with the current its sails were set and presently it was moving directly out to sea toward the fleet from Sari.

The O-220 followed above it and Ja's flagship moved forward to meet it, and thus David Innes, Emperor of Pellucidar, was returned to his people.

As the Korsar ship turned back to port the dirigible dropped low above the flagship of the Sarian fleet and greetings were exchanged between David and his rescuers—men from another world whom he had never seen.

The Emperor was half starved and very thin and weak from his long period of confinement, but otherwise he had been unharmed, and great was the rejoicing aboard the ships of Sari as they turned back to cross the Korsar Az toward their own land.

Tarzan was afraid to accompany the fleet back to Sari for fear that their rapidly diminishing store of fuel would not be sufficient to complete the trip and carry them back to the outer world. He followed the fleet only long enough to obtain from David explicit directions for reaching the polar opening from the city of Korsar .

'We have another errand to fulfill first,' said Jason to Tarzan. 'We must return Thoar and Jana to Zoram.'

'Yes,' said the ape-man, 'and drop these two Korsars off near their city. I have thought of all that and we shall have fuel enough for that purpose.'

'I am not going to return with you,' said Jason. 'I wish to be put aboard Ja's flagship.'

'What?' exclaimed Tarzan. 'You are going to remain here?'

'This expedition was undertaken at my suggestion. I feel responsible for the life and safety of every man in it and I shall never return to the outer world while the fate of Lieutenant Von Horst remains a mystery.'

'But how can you find Von Horst if you go back to Sari with the fleet?' asked Tarzan.

'I shall ask David Innes to equip an expedition to go in search of him,' replied Jason, 'and with such an expedition made up of native Pellucidarians I shall stand a very much better chance of finding him than we would in the O-220.'

'I quite agree with you,' said Tarzan, 'and if you are unalterably determined to carry out your project, we will lower you to Ja's ship immediately.'

As the O-220 dropped toward Ja's flagship and signalled it to heave to, Jason gathered what belongings he wished to take with him, including rifles and revolvers and plenty of ammunition. These were lowered first to Ja's ship, while Jason bid farewell to his companions of the expedition.

'Good-bye, Jana,' he said, after he had shaken hands with the others.

The girl made no reply, but instead turned to her brother.

'Good-bye, Thoar,' she said.

'Good-bye?' he asked. 'What do you mean?'

'I am going to Sari with the man I love,' replied The Red Flower of Zoram.

THE END

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