正文 CHAPTER SIX

SHASTA AMONG THE TOMBS SHASTA ran lightly along the roof on tiptoes. It felt hot to his bare feet. He was only a few seds scrambling up the wall at the far end and whe to the er he found himself looking down into a narrow, smelly street, and there was a rubbish heap against the outside of the wall just as had told him. Before jumping dowook a rapid glance round him to get his bearings. Apparently he had now e over the of the island-hill on which Tashbaan is built. Everything sloped away before him, flat roofs below flat roofs, down to the towers and battlements of the citys Northern wall. Beyond that was the river and beyond the river a short slope covered with gardens. But beyond that again there was something he had never seen the like of - a great yellowish-grey thing, flat as a calm sea, and stretg for miles. On the far side of it were huge blue things, lumpy but with jagged edges, and some of them with white tops. "The desert! the mountains!" thought Shasta.

He jumped down on to the rubbish and began trotting along downhill as fast as he could in the narrow lane, which soht him into a wider street where there were more people. No ohered to look at a little ragged boy running along on bare feet. Still, he was anxious and uneasy till he turned a er and there saw the city gate in front of him.

Here he ressed and jostled a bit, food many other people were also going out; and on the bridge beyond the gate the crowd became quite a slow procession, more like a queue than a crowd. Out there, with clear running water on each side, it was deliciously fresh after the smell a and noise of Tashbaan.

When once Shasta had reached the far end of the bridge he found the crowd melting away; everyone seemed to be goiher to the left ht along the river bank. He went straight ahead up a road that did not appear to be much used, between gardens. In a few paces he was alone, and a few more brought him to the top of the slope. There he stood and stared. It was like ing to the end of the world for all the grass stopped quite suddenly a few feet before him and the sand began: endless level sand like on a sea shore but a bit rougher because it was never wet. The mountains, whiow looked further off than before, loomed ahead. Greatly to his relief he saw, about five minutes walk away on his left, what must certainly be the Tombs, just as Bree had described them; great masses of mouldering stone shaped like gigantic bee-hive, but a little narrower. They looked very blad grim, for the sun was now setting right behind them.

He turned his face West and trotted towards the Tombs. He could not help looking out very hard for any sign of his friends, though the setting sun shone in his face so that he could see hardly anything. "And anyway," he thought, "of course theyll be round on the far side of the farthest Tomb, not this side where anyone might see them from the city.」

There were about twelve Tombs, each with a low arched doorway that opened into absolute blaess. They were dotted about in no kind of order, so that it took a long time, going round this one and going round that one, before you could be sure that you had looked round every side of every tomb. This was what Shasta had to do. There was nobody there.

It was very quiet here out on the edge of the desert; and now the sun had really set.

Suddenly from somewhere behind him there came a terrible sound. Shastas heart gave a

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