'I wish you luck,' said Banat ; 'and you'll need it, especially if you succeed in getting into the mountains at all.'

'Why?' I asked.

'The Cloud People,' he replied.

'Who are they?' I demanded. 'I never heard of them.'

'They live in the mountains, always among the clouds. They come down and steal our cattle occasionally and when they do, every portion of their bodies is covered with fur garments, with only holes for their eyes and a hole to breathe through. They cannot stand our dry atmosphere. In olden times people used to think that they were a hairy race of men until our herdsmen killed one of them, when we discovered that their skin was extremely thin and without pores. It is believed that they must perspire through their noses and mouths. When the body of the one who was killed by our herders was exposed to the air the skin shriveled up as though it had been burned.'

'Why should we fear them?' I asked.

'There is a legend that they eat human flesh,' replied Banat . 'Of course, that may be only a legend in which there is no truth. I do not know.'

'They wouldn't stand much chance against the 975,' said Ero Shan.

'You may have to abandon the 975,' suggested Banat ; 'a lantar, you know, is not exactly built for mountain climbing.'

It was well after dark when we approached Hor. Banat importuned us again to come into the city. He said that at the gate it would be revealed whether the Falsans were still occupying Hor.

'As much as I'd like to,' I said, 'I cannot take the chance. If the Falsans are guarding your gates, a single lucky shot might put us out of commission; and you well know that they would never let a strange lantar get away from them without some sort of a fight.'

'I suppose you are right,' he said; and then he thanked me again for aiding in his escape, and bidding us goodby, he started off on foot for the city and was soon lost in the darkness. That, perhaps, is the last time that I shall ever see the yorkokor Banat , the Pangan.

And now we moved slowly through the night toward the south, and our hearts were filled with thankfulness that we had come this far in safety, and our minds with conjecture as to what lay ahead of us in the fastnesses of the mountains which no man had ever crossed, the mountains in which dwelt the Cloud People who were supposed to eat human flesh.

Chapter LIV

WHEN MORNING came we saw the mountains far away to the south of us, their summits hidden in the eternal clouds. Only the lower slopes were visible up to an altitude of some five thousand feet. What lay above that was the mystery which we must solve. As we approached more closely we saw a herd of zaldars the Amtorian beef cattle. Several herders, who had discovered us, were attempting to drive them toward the mountains, with the evident intention of hiding them in a canyon which opened in front of them and where they evidently believe a lantar could not follow.

A zaldar is a most amazing appearing animal. It has a large, foolish-looking head, with big, oval eyes, and two long, pointed ears that stand perpetually upright as though the creature were always listening. It has no neck and its body is all rounded curves. Its hind legs resemble in shape those of a bear; its front legs are similar to an elephant's, though, of course, on a much smaller scale. Along its spine rises a single row of bristles. It has no tail and no neck, and from its snout depends a long tassel of hair. Its upper jaw is equipped with broad, shovel-like teeth, which always protrude beyond its short, tiny lower jaw. Its skin is covered with short hair and a neutral mauve color, with large patches of violet, which, especially when it is lying down, make it almost invisible against the pastel shades of Amtorian scenery. When it feeds it drops down on its knees and scrapes up the turf with its shovel-like teeth, and then draws it into its mouth with a broad tongue. It also has to kneel down when it drinks, for, as I have said before, it has no neck. Notwithstanding its strange and clumsy appearance, it is very fast, and the herders, mounted on the zorats, soon disappeared with the entire herd into the mouth of the canyon, the herders evidently believing us to be raiders.

I should like to have had one of the zaldars for some fresh beef, but although the 975 could have overhauled the herd and I could have shot some of the beasts, I would not do so because I realized that they belonged to the Pangans.

As the canyon into which the herders had driven their charges seemed to be a large one, and as it lay directly south of Hor, I felt that we should explore it; and so I piloted the 975 into it.

We advanced but a short distance into the canyon when we saw fully a hundred herders lined up across the mouth of a narrow side canyon, into which they had evidently driven their herd. The men were all armed with r-ray rifles, and as soon as we came within sight, they dropped down behind the stone wall which served both as a fence to pen their herd and as a breastworks behind which to defend it.

We had been running without colors, as we really didn't know what we were and couldn't have decided until we had been able to see the colors of any potential enemy, when we would immediately have run up his colors on the flagstaff that rises above the pilot's seat.

Positive that these were Pangan herders, and not wishing to get into a fight with them or anyone else, I now ran up the Pangan ensign.

A man stood up behind the breastwork then and shouted, 'Who are you?'

'Friends,' I replied. 'Come over. I want to talk to you.'

'Anyone can run up a Pangan ensign,' he replied. 'What are your names?'

'You don't know us,' I replied, 'but we are friends of the yorkokor Banat , whom we have just left at Hor.'

'He was captured by the Hangors,' replied the man.

'I know it,' I said, 'and so were we. We just escaped with Banat yesterday.'

The herder walked toward us then, but he kept his rifle ready. He was a nice-looking young fellow, with a fine face and a splendid physique. As he approached I opened the door and dropped to the ground. He stopped when he saw me, immediately suspicious.

'You're no Pangan,' he said.

'I didn't say that I was, but I fought with the Pangan fleet when it went to fight Hangor; and I was captured when the fleet was routed.'

'Are you sure that the yorkokor Banat is safe in Hor?' he demanded.

'We let him out last night near the gates,' I said; 'and if Hor is not in the hands of the Falsans, he is safe. It was because of the fear that it might be that we did not go any closer to the city.'

'Then he is safe,' said the young fellow, 'for the Falsans were defeated and sent home on foot.'

'We knew that,' I replied, 'but things turn about so suddenly here in this country that we didn't know but what they had returned and conquered Hor. You knew Banat ?' I asked.

'I am his son, and this is his herd. I am in charge of it.'

Duare and Ero Shan had come out and joined us by this time and the young fellow looked them over curiously. 'May I ask,' he said, 'what you are doing up in these mountains?'

'Our country lies beyond them,' I explained, 'and we are trying to find a pass to the other side.'

He shook his head. 'There is none, and if there were, the Cloud People would get you before you could get through.'

'Your father told me that Pangan herders had sometimes seen a low place in the range when the clouds rose.'

'Yes,' he said. 'That is about ten miles down the valley; but if I were you, I'd turn back. If you are friends of my father, you can go and live in Hor, but if you keep on you will surely die. No man has ever crossed this range.'

'We are going to try it, nevertheless,' I told him; 'but if we find we can't make it, we'll come back to Hor.'

'Then if you live I will see you there,' he said, 'for you will never get through this range. I have been in it a

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