<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1>ZARAH THE CRUEL</h1>
<h2><span class="smaller">BY</span><br/>
JOAN CONQUEST</h2>
<p class="dedication">TO<br/>
BETTY C—— OF C——<br/>
<span class="smaller">TO WHOM I AM INDEBTED FOR SO MUCH OF THIS BOOK</span></p>
<hr class="chap" />
<h2>PROLOGUE</h2>
<div class="blockquote">
<p>“<i>Narrower than the ear of a needle.</i>”—<span class="smcap">Arabic Proverb.</span></p>
</div>
<p>The Holy Man, motionless, gaunt, his eyes filled with
the peace of Allah, the one and only God, stood afar off,
outlined against the moonlight, watching two horsemen
fleeing for their lives across the desert.</p>
<p>Pursued by a band of Arabs which hunted them for
murder done in the far, fair City of Damascus and had
hunted them throughout the Peninsula, they headed for
the Mountains of Death towering in the limitless sands
of the burning desert and cut off from the world by
the silvery belt of quicksands which surround them
completely.</p>
<p>Uninhabited by beast or human being within the memory
of man and the memory of his fathers, and his fathers’
fathers, yet did the wandering story-teller, as he flitted
from town to village, from Bedouin camp to verdant oasis,
make song or story of the legend which has clung to the
pile of volcanic rock throughout the centuries.</p>
<p>A story which either moved the listener to shouts of
derisive, unbelieving laughter or held him still, lost in
wonderment and dreams.</p>
<p>A legend recounted in this day of grace by the Arabian
story-teller to Bedouins, sitting entranced under the stars
or the moon, yet which had been inscribed upon a highly
decorated vellum by the Holy Palladius in the fifth century
of our Lord, which record of early holy church<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</SPAN></span>
was lost in the burning and sacking of a famous library
in the more Christian times of the last ten turbulent
years.</p>
<p>The story of a miraculous light, which, so read the
vellum, led the Holy Fathers across the sands of death,
over which they did most safely pass, to find within the
mountains the further miracle of fresh, sparkling water,
palm groves of luscious <i>kholas</i> dates, stretches of <i>durra</i>
and grass, coarse enough to be woven into shirts, with
which to replace, in the passing of the years, the shirts
of hair which covered the attenuated bodies of the thirty-odd
early Christian Fathers.</p>
<p>There, within the secret oasis, so went the legend, the
holy men who fled the temptations and persecutions of
the world and sought safety and salvation in penance and
pilgrimage, built a monastery to the glory of God, and
there, so it was to be supposed, they must have died,
with the exception of one, who, following the casting of
lots, had been sent forth from the miraculous oasis upon a
mission to acquaint the Holy Palladius of the community’s
whereabouts.</p>
<p>The vellum had witnessed the Holy Father’s safe arrival
at his journey’s end, but of his return to the Sanctuary,
as was the poetical name given the place by the renowned
Palladius, there had been no mention.</p>
<p>A fair legend to endure throughout the passing of the
centuries, a sweet story in a land of thirst and death and
dire privation, a tantalizing word-picture to those who
knew the shifting sands to be impassable.</p>
<p>The Holy Man pondered upon the legend as he watched
the horsemen tearing towards the quicksands and certain
death, then, with the beads of Mecca slipping between
his fingers, turned and continued his pilgrimage due
south, the south where the wind blows hottest and the
sands burn the sandal from off even holy feet.</p>
<p>And Mohammed-Abd, accused of the murder of a
wealthy, flint-hearted usurer in the fair, far City of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</SPAN></span>
Damascus, turned to the handsome youth who, loving him
as a brother, had helped him to escape, so far, from the
vengeance of the flint-hearted usurer’s relatives.</p>
<p>“The mare faileth, Boy of the Wondrous Eyes! I
fear a spear or a bullet shall find its home in her body,
or in mine, before she reaches yonder mass of rocks.”</p>
<p>Yussuf laughed and turned in his seat and looked back,
shading the beautiful, almond-shaped, long-lashed eyes
which had earned him his nickname and had got him into
more trouble even than usually befalls a handsome youth
in the Arabian Peninsula.</p>
<p>“There is the length of many spears yet between us,
brother. Lie upon the neck of Lulah, the mare, so that
the wind of her great speed be not counted against her.
The swiftest mare in all Nejd, yet in endurance of but
little count. Behold is there a light at the foot of the
mountains moving this way and that way? Perchance ’tis
one who lives amongst the rocks and who watches with
intent to succour us. Allah be praised that the sands
lie flat under our horses’ feet, though by the wool! would
He be thrice praised if, in His mercy and compassion, He
were to twist the feet of the horses which follow us and
so break their riders’ necks.”</p>
<p>The mountains seemed within spear-length, the quicksands
showed one with the desert, silvery, smooth, when
the mare stumbled just as a bullet whistled past, singeing
the streaming mane.</p>
<p>She was up on her dainty, unshod feet upon the instant,
racing for safety with the last effort of her gallant
heart, when Mohammed-Abd turned and yelled defiance
at his pursuers.</p>
<p>“<i>Ista’jil!</i>” he yelled, “<i>Ista’jil!</i>”</p>
<p>Everyday words, which merely mean “make haste,”
but destined to become a battle cry which, in after years,
struck terror in the hearts of those who heard it, from
Oman to Hajaz.</p>
<p>In reply came a volley of firing, mixed with derisive<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</SPAN></span>
and insulting words, lost in the din of shouting and hoofs
upon the sand.</p>
<p>“Follow me, brother!” shouted Yussuf, as he pressed
his mare with his knees.</p>
<p>Ahead a greenish light danced this way and that, backwards
and forwards, and to it Yussuf rode his mare, with
Mohammed-Abd close upon his heels.</p>
<p>They followed the will-o’-the-wispish light formed by
the gas floating above the quicksands, mixing with the
wind when it blew from the south, and fled upon the narrow
path over which it danced. A path formed perchance
by the top of some mountain chain thrusting
through the desert; hidden throughout the centuries
by the inch or so, not more, of sand which overlapped
it from the treacherous, seething, ever-moving sea of
death; a way to safety discovered to the Holy Fathers
and the fugitives before the law by Allah the merciful,
the one and only God.</p>
<p>Over it they passed safely, with, if they had but known
it, barely the breadth of a hand to spare, upon either
side of the exhausted mare; they slipped from the saddle
and pulled the panting beasts back into the shadows just
as, with much triumphant shouting and firing of rifles,
the pursuing Arabs, riding in a straight line, plunged,
yelling, screaming, down into the quicksands’ suffocating
depths.</p>
<p>The miracle of the fifth century had been explained
at last.</p>
<p>An hour later, when the stars shone down upon a scene
of perfect peace, Yussuf laughed and pulled at the spear
hurled by an Arab in one last effort of revenge before
sinking to his death.</p>
<p>It did not move. Stuck fast between two rocks it remained
for all time, a sign to mark the commencement
of the only means of communication between the Sanctuary
and the pitiless, burning desert.</p>
<p>“Methinks we are no better off, brother. If, by the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</SPAN></span>
grace of Allah, we find again the hidden path by which we
crossed this sea of death, yet have we neither drop of
water nor date-stone left with which to stifle the pangs of
hunger and thirst, of which we surely die if we move
not from this ledge of rock.”</p>
<p>He looked up to the top width of a great V which
cleft the mountains half-way down the side, and from the
narrowest point of which there seemed to stretch a path
to where the spear marked the beginning of the secret
path.</p>
<p>Then he stretched his hand and touched the rock behind
the spear, and with finger upon cracked lips softly
called Mohammed-Abd, who came quickly upon tiptoe.</p>
<p>“Let us go warily, brother, yet let us go in search of
those who inhabit the heart of the mountains, so that
they help us in our need.”</p>
<p>They passed their fingers over the rough cross hacked
in the rock as a sign of his return by the Christian who,
in the fifth century, had been sent upon a mission to the
Holy Palladius; then, hobbling the mares, crept in the
shadows from rock to rock, up the path leading to the
narrowest point of the great cleft, which made the one
opening in the mountains, slitting them to a spot midway
between the foot and crest.</p>
<p>Famished and almost crazed with thirst, the two men
hid in blackest shadow, listening for a sound, peering
for a sight of those who had marked the way up with
rough crosses cut upon the rocks; then, alert, apprehensive,
stopping to listen at every yard, crept noiselessly
to the opening of the cleft. Through it they passed like
shadows, and on down a steeper, broader path to a
great plateau, on the edge of which they stopped, staring
in amazement.</p>
<p>“A mirage!” whispered Mohammed-Abd in hoarse tones,
then, crouching, ran across the plateau and fell upon his
knees and to his full length upon the bank of a sparkling,
rushing river.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Whence came the unknown, miraculous water? It
flowed from the eastern side of the mountains; it twisted
in the shape of a big S in the middle of the fertile plain;
it disappeared through a narrow cleft in the western side
with the thundering, rushing sound of water falling into
space.</p>
<p>The waters of the Wadi Hanifa which flow through
Woshim and Ared more or less abundantly, according to
the season, have so far not been traced after they disappear
in the fertile district of Yemama. Do they flow
below the surface to the Persian Gulf? or on into the
terrible desert, to be absorbed in the ever greedy sand?
Are these the waters which show above ground for a few
blessed yards in the secret heart of the Mountains of
Death, cut off by the quicksands from the needy sons
of the desert who depend upon the scanty, brackish water
of deep wells, and vapours carried uncertainly on certain
winds from the Persian Gulf, and which are lost
once they pass above the <i>hamads</i>, those red-hot, dust-laden,
scorching, terrible limestone plains?</p>
<p>Or does a subterranean river flow through the bowels
of some chain of mountains stretching below the surface
of the Peninsula from sea to sea, wrapped in the desert
sand?</p>
<p>Maybe!</p>
<p>And may not the short mountain ranges dotted throughout
Arabia’s deserts be the topmost peaks of that great
hidden chain, and the miraculous waters hidden in the
Mountains of Death be part of that lost river, escaping
through its prison walls in the one spot where the rocks
have been worn, during the centuries, by the rush and the
fret of the waters below and the wind and the storm above?</p>
<p>Fantastic theory. And yet who knows? Who will
ever know?</p>
<p>But there it is, and doubtlessly there it always will
be, forming an inaccessible oasis, with sweet water and
groves of date palms, and stretches of wheat and barley<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</SPAN></span>
descended from the grain sown from the Holy Fathers’
scanty store centuries ago; a quiet spot, with cotton
shrubs and vines, coffee plants and <i>durra</i>, climbing gentle
slopes covered in rich, coarse grass, and herbs and flowers
of every kind which spring from the seeds blown upon
the wind or carried by the birds which swarm where water
is to be found.</p>
<p>“No mirage, brother,” whispered Yussuf. “Yet must
we go warily, with eyes in our heads and hands upon our
weapons, for methinks the inhabitants hide and spy upon
us from the rocks, waiting the fortunate moment to fall
upon us.”</p>
<p>He passed his hand over the first of a short flight of
steps leading down to the water and worn smooth by the
passage of holy feet. “By the marks upon the steps
there is much going and coming, and a good harvest about
us. Food for the eating and for the drinking, water,
the beverage prescribed for man by Mohammed the
prophet of Allah, the one and only God.” He touched the
amulet of good luck which hung about his neck and lay
quite still, his hand upon his friend’s arm, looking about
him in the shadows and up at the birds of all sizes which,
disturbed by the intrusion, flew distractedly in every direction.
“Stay thou here, brother. I will drink a while,
then will I go and fetch thee dates, and if I meet the inhabitants
of this corner of Paradise, set in the midst of
suffering, will ask of them hospitality—if they be friendly—or
the way back across the hidden path by which we
entered if they prove otherwise, quickening their tongues,
if there be hesitation, with this.”</p>
<p>He loosened the broad, crooked dagger in his cummerbund,
and, descending the rough steps, threw himself
down to drink until he came wellnigh to bursting. Replete,
he rose and walked apart some feet and looked around
him and stood amazed, overcome by a strange awe, then,
beckoning Mohammed-Abd who drank at the river’s edge,
crept like a shadow across the plateau and up a steep<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</SPAN></span>
flight of steps made by the laying of boulders one upon
the other.</p>
<p>The ruins of the monastery, which had been hidden
from the fugitives by a great mass of jutting rock which
swept down almost to the water’s edge, lay silent, forsaken,
upon the natural terraces of the mountainside.
In the strong black-and-white shadow and moonlight the
rough walls showed no sign of the devastating hand of
time, and hid the remains of roofs which, from want of
repair, had at last caved in and fallen upon the rock
floors. The windows of the cells, thirty in all, showed
like black patches painted upon a grey background; thirty
doorways gaped desolate; the dust of ages covered stones
worn by the passing to and fro of bare feet, some more,
some less, according to the span of years allotted to each
holy man.</p>
<p>How had the holy men worked? How had they built
to the glory of God with no other implements than their
hands and the strength of their muscles and their vows?</p>
<p>The walls of the cells, the chapel and the refectory
were two feet thick and built of pieces of granite of various
sizes, fitted together in rough, mosaic fashion; they
had stood throughout the centuries just as they had been
put together, without loss of a single stone, just as the
trunks of palms, rough-hewn by patience and sharpened
stones, had stood, in ones or in columns, to support the
roofs composed of other trunks of palms, laid crosswise
and covered in laced leaves.</p>
<p>Later was discovered a place, high upon the mountainside,
to the edge of which boulders, both great and small,
had evidently been pushed and hurled to the rocks below,
to be smashed to bits, out of which bits doubtlessly had
been picked the pieces necessary to the task of building.</p>
<p>How many years had it taken to build the chapel?
How much strength to carry the square slab, which had
formed the altar, up the mountainside and to prop it
upon four supports? How much patience to build up<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</SPAN></span>
the pointed <i>façade</i> and to pluck out the stones from the
middle until a clear cross, formed by space, showed against
the blazing sky or the star-studded velvet of the night?</p>
<p>Why had they built? For joy? For penance? The
latter probably, for the buildings, which spread terrace
above terrace, must have far outreached the need of the
holy men.</p>
<p>For many minutes Yussuf stood staring up at this
mystery of the desert, and then, slowly, step by step,
pulled by the strength of the unknown, halting to listen,
hastening to gain the shadows, climbed the rough steps
and reached the chapel door.</p>
<p>He stood staring down at the floor littered with stones
and across to the altar, before which lay a skull, gleaming
in a shaft of moonlight. Making the sign to scare
away evil spirits, he stepped across the holy place, though
not for a king’s ransom would he have touched the white
bones of Father Augustine, the last of the holy men, who
had laid himself down to die before the altar, upon which
had been roughly chipped a cross.</p>
<p>“Christians!” whispered Yussuf, slipping the rosary
of Mecca between his fingers. “Infidels!”</p>
<p>Like a great cat he crept out of the place and up the
steps leading to the thirty cells, where, upon the stone
floors, showed the marks made by the holy men who had
fled the world and the luxury of soft beds. He climbed
yet twelve steps more to the refectory, where thirty
stones, more or less flat, stood in the circle the holy men
had formed for meals or recreation; and up again to
other buildings, both great and small, built to what purpose
it will never be known; then fled the silent, deserted
place, slipping, stumbling down the steps to the plateau,
where waited his friend.</p>
<p>Side by side, warily, noiselessly, they climbed to the
tombs, high up upon the western flank, natural caves,
upon the floors of which twenty-nine holy men slept the
long sleep, each underneath a mound of stone.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>They lay there now, for all that is known, waiting for
the last trump to call them back across the quicksands
of time.</p>
<p>They sleep peacefully, undisturbed, for ruthless, savage
as were the men who ultimately threw in their lot with
Mohammed-Abd, criminals and outlaws every one, from
every province and every tribe in the Peninsula, yet they
respected the solemnity of that Christian burial ground
and left the sleeping forms in peace.</p>
<p>And just as the first sunbeam slid over the mountaintops,
filling the rocky bowl with golden light, the two
men adopted the place as home.</p>
<p>An impregnable stronghold; a natural fortress in a
waste place; a land of dates and water, upon which a
man or many men could subsist for lack of better or more
tasty nutriment; a citadel surrounded by a sea of death,
yet connected with <i>terra firma</i> by a path of rock, which
as a foundation cannot be bettered.</p>
<p>“ ... for if we have safely followed in the path of
the thirty who sleep yonder,” argued Mohammed-Abd,
looking up to the tombs in the rocks bathed in the glory
of the sunrise; “why should not yet another thirty, fleeing
before the law, and even thrice times thirty, come
safely through the hungry sands? If two horses escaped
the death, why should not two camels, with their feet as
big and soft as the heart of one who leans unduly to the
affections, cross that path, and, with violent lamentations
and much urging, make their way down yon rocky
road? And if two, why should not thirty of their
brothers and sisters follow as safely, with thirty Nejdeen
stallions and mares, as nimble as goats upon their dainty
feet, behind them? And are we so weak that we could
not carry sheep and goats, in young, across our saddle
bows, so that they multiply in this place of plenty?”
He looked up and around, stretching wide his arms.
“Is there not place for man and beast and many of
each? And are we not, O my brother, bidden by the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</SPAN></span>
Great Prophet to succour those in distress, are we
not?”</p>
<p>In such-wise did Mohammed-Abd, the ambitious outlaw,
with Yussuf as his right hand, become the head of
as daring a gang of brigands as had ever swept the highways
of the desert.</p>
<p>And all went well with him, his harvests yielding abundantly,
his wealth accumulating, his people and cattle waxing
fat and multiplying throughout the years, until he
took unto himself a wife, who died on bearing him a
daughter.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</SPAN></span></p>
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