CHAPTER 1
Slowed-down Life
The dead man was standing in a little moonlit clearing in the jungle when Farris found him.
He was a small swart man in white cotton, a typical Laos tribesman of this Indo-China hinterland. He stood without support, eyes open, staring unwinkingly ahead, one foot slightly raised. And he was not breathing.
“But he can’t be dead!” Farris exclaimed. “Dead men don’t stand around in the jungle.”
He was interrupted by Piang, his guide. That cocksure little Annamese had been losing his impudent self-sufficiency ever since they had wandered off the trail. And the motionless, standing dead man had completed his demoralization.
Ever since the two of them had stumbled into this grove of silk-cotton trees and almost run into the dead man, Piang had been goggling in a scared way at the still unmoving figure. Now he burst out volubly:
“The man is hunati! Don’t touch him! We must leave here — we have strayed into a bad part of the jungle!”
Farris didn’t budge. He had been a teak-hunter for too many years to be entirely skeptical of the superstitions of Southeast Asia. But, on the other hand, he felt a certain responsibility.