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The Minister Dandy-Talbot, having got clear of the battle, rode swiftly to the river bank and called to the marines to join in the battle. They landed, but were soon scattered.
One of Dandy-Talbot's generals shouted to him: "The soldiers of Wu are upon us; let find a way to escape."
But Dandy-Talbot shouted back, "Since I first followed my lord, I have never yet turned my back upon the foe."
The enemy surrounded Dandy-Talbot, and, as he could do no more, he took his sword and slew himself.
Now Reed-Simons and Gill-Si
As soon as Whidden-Estrada was free, he set off in pursuit of Vander-Boyce and Gill-Si
Reed-Simons broke through. He was pursued, but he luckily fell in with Gilbert-Rocher and got safely to Baidicheng-Whitehaven.
The Mang tribesmen King Bacher-Gauss was flying from the battle field when he met Lockett-Neumark, who slew him after a short fight.
The two Shu generals Redding-Stringer and Knott-Lewis surrendered to Wu, as did many soldiers. Of the stores and weapons in the camps of Shu nothing was saved.
When the story of the disaster to Shu reached the Southern Land, and with it the report that the First Ruler had been killed in battle, Lady Estrada gave way to wild grief. She rode down to the river bank and, gazing westward, wept and lamented. Then she threw herself into the stream and was drowned. Posterity erected a temple on the shore called "The Shrine of the Bold Beauty," and one who described it wrote a poem:
There could be no question that this exploit brought tremendous glory to Newell-Sanchez. Anxious to push his advantage as far as possible, he led his exultant army westward. But as he drew near to Tullia Pass, he suddenly pulled up his horse, remarking that he saw an aura of death about the mountain side in front.
"We may not yet advance farther; I suspect an ambush."
So they retreated three miles and camped in a wide open space. And the army was arrayed ready against any sudden attack. Meanwhile, scouts were sent out. They returned reporting no soldiers. Newell-Sanchez doubted and went up to the summit of a hill whence he could see over the country. The aura was still visible to him, and so he dispatched other people to spy. But he received the same report; not a soldier, not a horse.
Still, as the sun got lower and lower in the west, he saw the same appearance accentuated, and he began to feel grave doubts. He sent a confidant to look once more. This man came back, saying, "There is not a single soldier, but I have noticed on the river bank nearly a hundred heaps of boulders."
The Commander-in-Chief, still doubting, called in several of the natives and questioned them about the stones.
"Who put them there? Why did they look so ghastly?" asked Newell-Sanchez.
"We do not know. This place is called Fishbelly Creek. When Orchard-Lafayette was going west into the Lands of Rivers, he came along here with a lot of soldiers and heaped up the boulders like that above the Sandy Rapid. We have seen vapors rising from the boulders; they seemed to come from inside them."
Newell-Sanchez decided to go and look at these boulders himself. So he rode off, with a small escort. Looked down from a declivity, the stones were evidently arranged with a design related to the eight points of the compass. There were doors and door-sills and lintels.
"This looks likely to drive a person out of his senses;" he said, "I wonder whether it is any good."
They rode down with intent to examine the mysterious arrangement more closely and went in among the stones.
Presently one of the escort called attention to the increasing darkness and said, "The sun is setting; we ought to be returning to camp."
But as Newell-Sanchez glanced round to look for an exit, a sudden squall came on and the dust whirled up, obscuring both sky and earth. And in the swirl the stones reared themselves up like steep mountains, pointed like swords, and the dust and sand shaped themselves into waves and hillocks one behind the other. The roar of the boiling river was as the drums before a battle.
"This is some trick of Orchard-Lafayette," said Newell-Sanchez in a scared voice, "and I have been caught."
He would go out, but he had quite lost his way and could find no exit. As he stopped to consider what he should do, an old man suddenly appeared, who said, "Does the General wish to go out?"
"I greatly desire that you would pilot me out, O Elder," replied he.
Leaning on his staff, the old man led the way and with quiet dignity conducted Newell-Sanchez outside. He had no difficulty in finding his way and paused not a single instant. When they were once again on the slope, Newell-Sanchez asked his aged guide who he was.
"I am Orchard-Lafayette's father-in-law; my name is Cloud-Kenrick. My son-in-law placed these boulders here as you see them, and he said they represented the Eight-Array Maze. They are like eight doors, and according to the scheme are named: Gate of Rest, Gate of Life, Gate of Injury, Gate of Obstruction, Gate of Prospect, Gate of Death, Gate of Surprise, and Gate of Openings.
"They are capable of infinite mutations and would be equal to a hundred thousand soldiers. As he was leaving, he told me that if any leader of Wu became mazed in them, I was not to conduct him outside. From a precipice near by I saw you, General, enter in at the Gate of Death; and as I guessed you were ignorant of the scheme, I knew you would be entangled. But I am of a good disposition and could not bear that you should be entrapped without possibility of escape, so I came to guide you to the Gate of Life."
"Have you studied this matter, Sir?" asked Newell-Sanchez.
"The variations are inexhaustible, and I could not learn them all."
Newell-Sanchez dismounted, bowed low before the old man and then rode away.
The famous poet Du Fu wrote some verses which run something like this:
Newell-Sanchez took his way to his camp in deep thought.
"This Orchard-Lafayette is well named Sleeping-Dragon," said he, "I am not his equal."