I turned aside into an alley, and sought shelter in a small archway.
In the mouth of it I stopped, and looked out at the moonlight which
filled the alley. The same instant a woman came gliding in after
me, turned, trembling, and looked out also. A few seconds passed;
then a huge leopard, its white skin dappled with many blots, darted
across the archway. The woman pressed close to me, and my heart
filled with pity. I put my arm round her.
"If the brute come here, I will lay hold of it," I said, "and you
must run."
"Several times," she answered, still trembling. "She is a pet of
the princess's. You are a stranger, or you would know her!"
"I am a stranger," I answered. "But is she, then, allowed to run
loose?"
"She is kept in a cage, her mouth muzzled, and her feet in gloves
of crocodile leather. Chained she is too; but she gets out often,
and sucks the blood of any child she can lay hold of. Happily there
are not many mothers in Bulika!"
"I wish I were at home!" she sobbed. "The princess returned only
last night, and there is the leopardess out already! How am I to
get into the house? It is me she is after, I know! She will be
lying at my own door, watching for me!--But I am a fool to talk to
a stranger!"
"All strangers are not bad!" I said. "The beast shall not touch
you till she has done with me, and by that time you will be in. You
are happy to have a house to go to! What a terrible wind it is!"
"Take me home safe, and I will give you shelter from it," she
rejoined. "But we must wait a little!"
I asked her many questions. She told me the people never did
anything except dig for precious stones in their cellars. They
were rich, and had everything made for them in other towns.
"Because it is a disgrace to work," she answered. "Everybody in
Bulika knows that!"
I asked how they were rich if none of them earned money. She replied
that their ancestors had saved for them, and they never spent. When
they wanted money they sold a few of their gems.
"Is there no place in the city for the taking in of strangers?"
"Such a place would be pulled down, and its owner burned. How is
purity to be preserved except by keeping low people at a proper
distance? Dignity is such a delicate thing!"
She told me that their princess had reigned for thousands of years;
that she had power over the air and the water as well as the earth--
and, she believed, over the fire too; that she could do what she
pleased, and was answerable to nobody.
When at length she was willing to risk the attempt, we took our way
through lanes and narrow passages, and reached her door without
having met a single live creature. It was in a wider street, between
two tall houses, at the top of a narrow, steep stair, up which she
climbed slowly, and I followed. Ere we reached the top, however,
she seemed to take fright, and darted up the rest of the steps: I
arrived just in time to have the door closed in my face, and stood
confounded on the landing, where was about length enough, between
the opposite doors of the two houses, for a man to lie down.
Weary, and not scrupling to defile Bulika with my presence, I took
advantage of the shelter, poor as it was.