The Shadow had fallen—but too late, a bare instant too late. And shrinking as we fled from it, still it seemed to strain like some fettered Afreet from Eblis, throbbing with wrath, seeking with every malign power it possessed to break its bonds and pursue. Not until long after were we to know that it had been the dying hand of Serku, groping out of oblivion, that had cast it after us as a fowler upon an escaping bird.
“Snappy work, Rador!” It was Larry speaking. “But they cut the end off your bus all right!”
A full quarter of the hindward whorl was gone, sliced off cleanly. Rador noted it with anxious eyes.
“That is bad,” he said, “but not too bad perhaps. All depends upon how closely Lugur and his men can follow us.”
He raised a hand to O’Keefe in salute.
“But to you, Larree, I owe my life—not even the Keth could have been as swift to save me as that death flame of yours—friend!”