The Flying Legion
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Title: The Flying Legion
Author: George Allan England
Release Date: May 4, 2004 [EBook #12265]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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[Illustration: A HAIL OF SLUGS BOMBARDED THE VAST-SPREAD WINGS AND
FUSELAGE OF NISSR.]
THE FLYING LEGION
BY GEORGE ALLAN ENGLAND
Published July, 1920
CONTENTS
CHAPTER
I
A Spirit Caged.
II "To Paradise--or Hell!"
III The Gathering of the Legionaries.
IV The Masked Recruit.
V In the Night.
VI The Silent Attack.
VII The Nest of the Great Bird.
VIII The Eagle of the Sky.
IX Eastward Ho.
X "I Am the Master's!"
XI Captain Alden Stands Revealed.
XII The Woman of Adventure.
XIII The Enmeshing of the Master.
XIV Storm Birds.
XV The Battle of Vibrations.
XVI Leclair, Ace of France.
XVII Miracles, Scourge of Flame.
XVIII "Captain Alden" Makes Good.
XIX Hostile Coasts.
XX The Waiting Menace.
XXI Shipwreck and War.
XXII Beleaguered.
XXIII A Mission of Dread.
XXIV Angels of Death.
XXV The Great Pearl Star.
XXVI The Sand-Devils.
XXVII Toil and Pursuit.
XXVIII Onward Toward the Forbidden City.
XXIX "Labbayk!"
XXX Over Mecca.
XXXI East Against West.
XXXII The Battle of the Haram.
XXXIII The Ordeal of Rrisa.
XXXIV The Inner Secret of Islam.
XXXV Into the Valley of Mystery.
XXXVI Journey's End.
XXXVII The Greeting of Warriors.
XXXVIII Bara Miyan, High Priest.
XXXIX On, to the Golden City!
XL Into the Treasure Citadel.
XLI The Master's Price.
XLII "Sons of the Prophet, Slay!"
XLIII War in the Depths.
XLIV Into the Jewel-Crypt.
XLV The Jewel Hoard.
XLVI Bohannan Becomes a Millionaire.
XLVII A Way Out?
XLVIII The River of Night.
XLIX The Desert.
L "Where There Is None but Allah."
LI Torture.
LII "Thálassa! Thálassa!"
LIII The Greater Treasure.
The Flying Legion
CHAPTER I
A SPIRIT CAGED
The room was strange as the man, himself, who dwelt there. It seemed, in a way, the
outward expression of his inner personality. He had ordered it built from his own plans,
to please a whim of his restless mind, on top of the gigantic skyscraper that formed part
of his properties. Windows boldly fronted all four cardinal compass-points--huge,
plate-glass windows that gave a view unequaled in its sweep and power.
The room seemed an eagle's nest perched on the summit of a man-made crag. The Arabic
name that he had given it--Niss'rosh--meant just that. Singular place indeed,
well-harmonized with its master.
Through the westward windows, umbers and pearls of dying day, smudged across a
smoky sky, now shadowed trophy-covered walls. This light, subdued and somber though
it was, slowly fading, verging toward a night of May, disclosed unusual furnishings. It
showed a heavy black table of some rare Oriental wood elaborately carved and inlaid
with still rarer woods; a table covered with a prayer-rug, on which lay various books on
aeronautics and kindred sciences, jostling works on Eastern travel, on theosophy,
mysticism, exploration.
Maps and atlases added their note of research. At one end of the table stood a bronze
faun's head with open lips, with hand cupped at listening ear. Surely that head must have
come from some buried art-find of the very long ago. The faint greenish patina that
covered it could have been painted only by the hand of the greatest artist of them all,
Time.
A book-case occupied the northern space, between the windows. It, too, was crammed
with scientific reports, oddments of out-of-the-way lore, and travels. But here a profusion
of war-books and official documents showed another bent of the owner's mind. Over the
book-case hung two German gasmasks. They seemed, in the half-dusk, to glower down
through their round, empty eyeholes like sinister devil-fish awaiting prey.
The masks were flanked by rifles, bayonets, knives, maces, all bearing scars of battle.
Above them, three fragments of Prussian battle-flags formed a kind of frieze, their color
softened by the fading sunset, even as the fading of the dream of imperial glory had
dulled and dimmed all that for which they had stood.
The southern wall of that strange room--that quiet room to which only a far, vague
murmur of the city's life whispered up, with faint blurs of steamer-whistles from the
river--bore Turkish spoils of battle. Here hung more rifles, there a Kurdish yataghan with
two hand-grenades from Gallipoli, and a blood-red banner with a crescent and one star
worked
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