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"The camel which carries your baggage belongs to you as much as does

your own mehari," I answered coldly.

We stood there several minutes without speaking. Morhange maintained

an uneasy silence; I was examining my map. All over it in greater or

less degree, but particularly towards the south, the unexplored

portions of Ahaggar stood out as far too numerous white patches in the

tan area of supposed mountains.

I finally said: "You give me your word that when you have seen these famous grottos,

you will make straight for Timissao by Tit and Silet?"

He looked at me uncomprehendingly.

"Why do you ask that?"

"Because, if you promise me that,--provided, of course, that my

company is not unwelcome to you--I will go with you. Either way, I

shall have two hundred kilometers to go. I shall strike for

Shikh-Salah from the south, instead of from the west--that is the only

difference."

Morhange looked at me with emotion.

"Why do you do this?" he murmured.

"My dear fellow," I said (it was the first time that I had addressed

Morhange in this familiar way), "my dear fellow, I have a sense which

becomes marvellously acute in the desert, the sense of danger. I gave

you a slight proof of it yesterday morning, at the coming of the

storm. With all your knowledge of rock inscriptions, you seem to me to

have no very exact idea of what kind of place Ahaggar is, nor what may

be in store for you there. On that account, I should be just as well

pleased not to let you run sure risks alone."

"I have a guide," he said with his adorable naiveté.

Eg-Anteouen, in the same squatting position, kept on patching his old

slipper.

I took a step toward him.

"You heard what I said to the Captain?"

"Yes," the Targa answered calmly.

"I am going with him. We leave you at Tit, to which place you must

bring us. Where is the place you proposed to show the Captain?"

"I did not propose to show it to him; it was his own idea," said the

Targa coldly. "The grottos with the inscriptions are three-days' march

southward in the mountains. At first, the road is rather rough. But

farther on, it turns, and you gain Timissao very easily. There are

good wells where the Tuareg Taitoqs, who are friendly to the French,

come to water their camels."

"And you know the road well?"

He shrugged his shoulders. His eyes had a scornful smile.

"I have taken it twenty times," he said.

"In that case, let's get started."

We rode for two hours. I did not exchange a word with Morhange. I had

a clear intuition of the folly we were committing in risking ourselves

so unconcernedly in that least known and most dangerous part of the

Sahara. Every blow which had been struck in the last twenty years to

undermine the French advance had come from this redoubtable Ahaggar.

But what of it? It was of my own will that I had joined in this mad

scheme. No need of going over it again. What was the use of spoiling

my action by a continual exhibition of disapproval? And, furthermore,

I may as well admit that I rather liked the turn that our trip was

beginning to take. I had, at that instant, the sensation of journeying

toward something incredible, toward some tremendous adventure. You do

not live with impunity for months and years as the guest of the

desert. Sooner or later, it has its way with you, annihilates the good

officer, the timid executive, overthrows his solicitude for his

responsibilities. What is there behind those mysterious rocks, those

dim solitudes, which have held at bay the most illustrious pursuers of

mystery? You follow, I tell you, you follow.