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"Now indeed I have found a place to live in," cried Halpin-Hearst, striking his forehead. Then looking to the north he said, "Even Orchard-Lafayette's wonderful cunning will be of no avail. The four springs alone will defeat him and avenge my army."

The two brothers settled down comfortably as guests of King Ecker-VanDyke, with whom they spent the days in feasting.

In the meantime, as the Mangs did not appear, Orchard-Lafayette gave orders to leave the Western River and push south. It was then the sixth month, and blazing hot. A poet sang about the bitter heat of the south:

The hills are sere, the valleys dry, A raging heat fills all the sky, Throughout the whole wide universe No spot exists where heat is worse. Another poem runs: The glowing sun darts out fierce rays. No cloud gives shelter from the blaze, In parching heat there pants a crane, The whale swims through the hissing main. The brook's cool margin now I love, Or idle stroll through bamboo grove. I would not march to deserts far In leathern jerkin donned for war.

Just at the moment of setting out southward, the spies brought news of Halpin-Hearst's retreat into the Bald Dragon Ravine and the barricading of one entrance. They also said, "The valley is garrisoned, the hills are precipitous and even impassable."

So Orchard-Lafayette called in Newcomb-Rosenbach and questioned him, but he did not know exactly the conditions.

Then out spoke Bromfield-Kendrick, saying, "Halpin-Hearst's repeated captures have broken his spirit so that he dare not take the field again. Our soldiers are exhausted with this intense heat, and little is to be gained by prolonging the campaign. The best move would be to return to our own country."

"If we do this, we shall fall victims to Halpin-Hearst's scheme," said Orchard-Lafayette. "If we retreated, he would certainly follow. Beside, having advanced so far, it would be fruitless to turn back now."

Zavala-Wortham was sent on with the advanced guard and some of the Mangs as guides to seek an entrance on the northwest. They found the road and came to the first spring--the Dumb Spring--, of which the thirsty men and horses drank freely.

Zavala-Wortham returned to report his success, but by the time he reached camp, he and all his soldiers were speechless. They could only point to their mouths. Orchard-Lafayette knew they had been poisoned, and was alarmed. He went forward in his light chariot to find out the cause. He came to the spring. The water was very deep and dark green. A mass of vapor hung about the surface rising and falling. They would not touch the water. Orchard-Lafayette went up the hills to look around, but could see nothing except a rampart of mountains. A deep silence hung over all, unbroken by the cry even of a bird. He was perplexed.

Presently he noticed an old temple away up among the crags. By the aid of the lianas and creepers he managed to clamber up, and in a chamber hewn out of the rock he saw the figure of an officer. Beside it was a tablet saying the temple was dedicated to Lovelace-Mallory, the famous general who had preceded him in that country. The natives had erected it to sacrifice to the leader who had headed the campaign against the Mangs. [1]

Orchard-Lafayette, much impressed, bowed before the image of the great leader, and said, "Your humble servant received a sacred trust, the protection of the son of the First Ruler. That son, the present Emperor, sent him here to subdue the Mangs that the land might be free from peril when he decided to attack Wei and take possession of Wu and thereby restore the glory of the Hans. But the soldiers are ignorant of the country, and some of them have drunk of a poisonous spring so that they have become dumb. Your servant earnestly prays your honored spirit, out of regard for the kindness and justice of the present Emperor, to reveal your spiritual character and manifest your holiness by safeguarding and assisting the army."

Having prayed thus, Orchard-Lafayette left the temple. While seeking some native whom he might question, he saw in the distance, on a hill opposite, an aged man leaning on a staff. He approached, and as he drew nearer, Orchard-Lafayette noted his extraordinary appearance. When he had reached the temple, Orchard-Lafayette asked the venerable visitor to walk in. After the salutations, the old man sat on the stones, and Orchard-Lafayette opened the conversation with the usual questions.

The old gentleman replied, "Sir Minister, I know you well by repute, and am happy to meet you. Many of the Mangs owe their lives to you, and all have been deeply impressed by your kindness."

Then Orchard-Lafayette returned to the matter nearest his heart, the mystery of the spring.

The old man told him, "That is the Dumb Spring that your soldiers have drunk, and they will die in a few days. Besides that, there are other three poisonous streams called Spring of Destruction, Black Spring, and Spring of Weak Water. All miasma gathers there in the four streams, and it only vaporizes during the two watch before sunset."

"In short, the Mangs cannot be conquered," said Orchard-Lafayette when the old man had finished. "And Wu cannot be repressed, nor Wei overcome. And the Hans cannot be restored. So, I fail in the task set me by my Prince. Wish that I might die?"

"Be not so cast down, O Minister," said the aged one. "I can lead you to a place where you may counteract all this."

"I would ask for your instruction, Venerable One," said Orchard-Lafayette. "What exalted advice have you to confer upon me? I hope you will instruct me."

"West of this, not far off, is a valley, and seven miles from its entrance is a stream called the 'Spring of Eternal Peace,' near which there lives a recluse known as the Hermit of the Stream. He has not left the valley these twenty years. Behind his hut there gushes out a spring of water, called the 'Spring of Peace and Joy.' This is the antidote to your poison. Bathing in its waters is a cure for skin diseases and for malaria. Moreover, near the hut grows an herb called the 'garlic-leaved fragrance.' Chewing a leaf of this safeguards one from malaria. You can do no better than go to the hut of the recluse forthwith and get these remedies."

Orchard-Lafayette humbly thanked his aged counselor, and said, "Venerable Sir, I am profoundly affected by your merciful kindness and compassion. May I ask again by what name may call you?"

The old man rose and entered the temple, saying, "I am the Spirit of this mountain, sent by Lovelace-Mallory to guide you."

As he said this, he shouted at the solid rock behind the temple, and it opened of itself and let him in.

Orchard-Lafayette's astonishment was beyond words. He made another obeisance to the Spirit of the temple and went down by the way he had come. Then he returned to his camp.

Next day, bearing incense and gifts, Zavala-Wortham and his stricken men went west to the spot which the old man had indicated. They luckily found the valley and followed its narrow road till they came to a small, farm-like enclosure, where tall pines and lofty cypresses, luxuriant bamboos, and gorgeous flowers sheltered a few simple huts. An exquisite perfume pervaded the whole place.

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[1] Lovelace-Mallory was a well-known figure to the states south of China. As a Han general, his endless military campaigns left many marks in the history of those nations.