<h2>CHAPTER IV</h2>
<div class="blockquote">
<p>“<i>Him who goodness will not mend, evil will not mend.</i>”—<span class="smcap">Arabic Proverb.</span></p>
</div>
<p>Zarah stood at the point of the great V which cleft the
outer ring of the mountains, and from which started the
path leading down to the plateau.</p>
<p>That the dying Sheikh’s daughter was expected there
was no doubt, as showed the bonfires upon the mountain’s
highest peaks, streaking the purple, starlit sky with
orange flames; yet, save for the Arab who stood patiently
near the spear which marked the beginning of the hidden
path, with the camels which had brought them safely and
at full speed across the desert and the quicksands, there
was neither sign of life nor shout of greeting nor firing
of rifles in salutation.</p>
<p>She looked back across the limitless, billowing desert,
showing under the stars like a great ocean of endless,
unbroken waves frozen into immobility as they surged
from north to south, by some magician’s hand. She
laughed softly at the thought of the civilization she had
dropped, as one drops an outworn cloak from about the
shoulders, and had left for ever upon the outskirts of
the great desert of which she was the child. She looked
ahead into the future and down the narrow path dividing
her from the dying man, over whose kingdom in the heart
of the mountains she would so shortly rule.</p>
<p>Giving no thought to her father in her utter selfishness,
she laughed aloud in sheer delight at the picture
conjured up by her ambition, laughed until the sweet, soft
notes were flung against the rocks by the hot wind from
the south and carried through the cleft down to the open<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</SPAN></span>
space where they were thrown in echo, from this side to
that side over the sparkling waters until they broke and
were lost in the baying of the great dogs which, eyes red
with hate and ruffs upstanding, fought to get out of the
kennels so as to reach the woman they hated.</p>
<p>She shivered at the sound, although the hot wind from
the south enfolded her like a blanket, and, suddenly overwhelmed
with a desire to see some living creature in
the place of death and shadows, took a quick step forward,
then shrank behind a rock.</p>
<p>Upon a ledge, high up on the mountainside, to which
it seemed that only a goat could possibly have climbed,
sat blind Yussuf, singing to himself: “‘The corn passeth
from hand to hand, but it cometh at last to the mill.’”</p>
<p>He sang the words of the proverb as he sat staring
down at Zarah the Cruel as though he had eyes in the
scarred face with which to see her.</p>
<p>“It cometh at last to the mill! It cometh at last to
the mill!”</p>
<p>He repeated the words over and over again whilst the
rosary of Mecca slipped between his sensitive fingers, and
the girl, steeped in the superstition of her race, spread
hers in the gesture to ward off misfortune and touched
an amulet of good luck which hung about her neck.</p>
<p>Did he know she was there? Had he come, ironically,
to welcome her and to bid her hasten to her father’s side,
as had bidden the man who had awaited her at Hutah
with swiftest camels? Or had he, dire figure of ill omen,
been set upon her path by Fate this night, when the
scorching wind blew from the south heralding the storm?
There was no time to ponder the question; there was only
just time enough in which to register a vow to lay some
cunning trap into which the blind man should set his
feet and find his death as though by dire mischance. No!
there was no time, for she suddenly fathomed the meaning
of the intense silence and stillness, and, gathering her
draperies about her, slipped as noiselessly as some tiger<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</SPAN></span>
cat under the ledge upon which the blind man sat, and
down the steep path.</p>
<p>She did not look up, she did not look back, else might
she have seen the face of Yussuf the blind turned in her
direction, with the scarred mouth twisted in a smile. She
sped as quickly as the path would allow her, spurred by
the thought of the men who, gathered round their dying
chief, only waited for the failing heart to cease beating
to acclaim one of themselves as his successor in her place.</p>
<p>She knew full well the man who would be chosen if she
failed to reach her father in time. Even Al-Asad, half-caste,
bloodthirsty, ambitious, as physically powerful as
the lion after which he had been named, outcast from the
Benoo-Harb tribe, but more through the fact that his
father had been a Nubian slave than for the crimes he
had committed in the light-heartedness of youth.</p>
<p>As she ran she conjured up a picture of the man who
had taken blind Yussuf’s place at her father’s right hand
and who had dared to look at her with something more
than the respect due to the Sheikh’s daughter in his handsome
eyes.</p>
<p>There was no sign of any man as she fled across the
plateau, neither—the hour for sleep having come for the
women and children—was there sound of life, but a
great light shone through the barred windows of the Hall
of Judgment far up on the mountainside. She raced
up the steps and stood, breathless, in the doorway, unseen
by the men gathered about the man whom they loved
and who lay dying of the wounds received in the last
great fight with the Bedouins, who had fallen upon the
brigands as they peacefully returned, with much spoil,
from raiding a caravan journeying towards Oman.</p>
<p>Knowing the effect of mystery upon her race, she
wrapped herself in her great white cloak, pulled the veils
about her face and a yashmak beneath her eyes, which
flashed with no soft light. She cursed beneath her breath
when the men rose and spoke together, looking towards<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</SPAN></span>
Al-Asad, who stared down at the Sheikh lying so quietly
at his feet.</p>
<p>She had arrived too late; her father had died without
blessing her and proclaiming her his successor.</p>
<p>She cared nothing about the blessing, but she knew
that without the proclamation she stood no earthly chance
against the claim Al-Asad would enforce through sheer
brute force.</p>
<p>Superstition helped her in her need.</p>
<p>She believed that the soul lingered in the body for
three days after the heart had ceased to beat, and she
acted unhesitatingly, fearlessly, upon the belief.</p>
<p>She bent and picked up a lance lying upon the ground,
and raised it above her head just as, without seeing her
in the shadows, the men moved in a body towards Al-Asad.</p>
<p>She pitted her indomitable will against the mighty
power of death, she flung it across the space which divided
her from her father, and, for a fraction of time, pulled
him back to the world he had loved exceeding well.</p>
<p>“Hail! father!” she shouted.</p>
<p>“Hail! father!” she shouted again as the men turned
swiftly in her direction, then moved hastily backwards
when the right hand of the man whom they supposed dead,
moved.</p>
<p>Motionless from fear, they stared at, without recognizing,
Zarah as she stood, tall and straight, in the
shadows, wrapped in white from head to foot, her eyes
half closed under the supreme effort she was making, her
right hand raised, holding a spear ready for throwing.</p>
<p>She bent a little forward as she made one last bid for
power, and at the sonorousness of her voice, which
sounded like the calling of the evil one in the mountains,
the men touched the amulets around their necks.</p>
<p>“Hail! father!” she shouted once again, until her
words seemed to beat like wings against the walls, which
had been built by holy hands. “Speak, father, ere thou
passeth on. Speak! Speak! Speak!”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Al-Asad, the lion-hearted, backed against the wall as
the Sheikh, his feet upon the edge of the world to come,
slowly turned his head towards his daughter; the others
flung the end of their cloaks across their eyes, touching
their amulets. The girl stood quite still, her face dead
white, her nostrils pinched, her breath whistling between
her closed teeth.</p>
<p>“Farewell, daughter. Rule wisely in my stead. Take
only from those who have more than is necessary for
life. Lift up the fallen, help the needy, spare not in
charity towards my brother Yussuf, with whose safekeeping
I charge thee lest evil befall thee. Throw thou
the spear ere I close my eyes, as a sign that thou steppest
into my shoes, O my daughter.”</p>
<p>The Sheikh’s words rang clear as a bell but as though
from a long distance; his eyes did not waver as the spear,
thrown with unerring aim, flashed across the room; he
whispered “Mercedes,” and closed them for ever as it
buried itself in the cushions at his feet.</p>
<p>Zarah the Cruel had triumphed for a moment over
death, but she had caught the look of dismay on Al-Asad’s
face and the stealthy movement of the men’s hands
towards their cummerbunds. Without hesitating, with no
intention of allowing a second to elapse before driving
her victory home, she passed slowly up the room towards
the dais, unarmed, fearless in the strength of her tremendous
personality.</p>
<p>She took no notice of the men as, wrapped in her cloak
and veils, she slowly ascended the steps of the dais and
knelt to kiss her father; she looked down upon him for a
moment, then taking a massive gold ring from the first
finger of his right hand, slipped it on her own, and rose to
her feet.</p>
<p>“’Tis she,” whispered Bowlegs. “’Tis Zarah the
Cruel!”</p>
<p>“Nay, brother, it cannot be; she was a child bordering
upon womanhood. This is a woman grown, who is as the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</SPAN></span>
gazelle in her walk and as the jasmine in her perfume.
Maybe ’tis the spirit of her mother, who has come to meet
her lord, or perchance——”</p>
<p>They stopped speaking, and took a step nearer the
centre of the dais as Zarah played her trump card.</p>
<p>She dropped the veils from her head, the yashmak
from before her face, and the cloak from her shoulders,
standing revealed in the garments she had donned at
Hutah in the oasis of Hareek.</p>
<p>She was ravenous from hunger and almost dead with
fatigue, but she stood without a tremor, glittering from
head to foot in the jewels which embroidered the voluminous
orange-satin trousers, the golden, travel-stained
sandals, and the bolero, which allowed the satin skin to
show at the waist. Her face was white, her crimson mouth
parted in a slight smile; her yellow eyes passed slowly
from one face to the other and on to the next of those
fierce, unscrupulous men, who watched her for a while
and then, with all the inconstancy of the Arab, reverted,
with the exception of Al-Asad, to their former allegiance as
they succumbed to the call of her beauty.</p>
<p>A sudden, tremendous shout of reception and of welcome
went up:</p>
<p>“<i>Ahlan wasahlan! Ahlan wasahlan!</i>”</p>
<p>They shouted the words over and over again, until
the women and children wakened on the far side of the
mountains and the birds, which inhabited the secluded
spot, rose twittering and screaming in clouds, to be whirled
this way and that way by the wind from the south, which
seemed, in its suffocating heat, to have swept across the
open mouth of hell.</p>
<p>Slowly Zarah the beautiful, the relentless, raised her
right hand, upon which shone her father’s ring, above her
head to quell the tumult, and, as a great silence fell,
stretched it out to the men, who, with the exception of
Al-Asad, rushed forward and, kneeling, touched her sandalled
foot, acknowledging her as chief.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>She had won.</p>
<p>There was no tenderness, no love, in her eyes as she
looked down upon them, neither was there softness in her
heart as she looked into the future. She would rule the
men with an iron hand and drive them with a whip of steel,
favouring those who did her bidding, treading beneath
her heel those who rebelled until she ground them in
the dust. She would be their <i>hadeeyah</i>, the woman to
lead them into battle, even as had led Ayesha, the wife
of Mohammed, the Prophet of Allah, the one and only
God; she would make the mountain home a corner of
paradise and her dwelling a place of gold and precious
stones, as a frame to her beauty.</p>
<p>“I stand in my father’s place, O men!” she cried.
“I have taken the reigns of government from the Sheikh’s
fingers, which are locked in those of death. Obey me and
I will raise you to heights you—nay, not one of you—have
dreamed of; rebel, and I will set your bodies upon
the highest peak as food for vultures. I will go forth
with you, lead you—nay, give ear until I have come to
the end of my words, for I will not speak again. Yea!
I will lead you forth and bring you back with gold and
cattle and fair women, until the fame of these rocks is
spread from the north to the south and from the east
to the west. I will have none but the beautiful, none
but the brave, about me to do my bidding. I——”</p>
<p>She stopped short at a sound from the far end of the
hall and raised her head. Yussuf, blind, scarred, terrible
to behold, stared back at her from the shadows of the
door, challenging her proud statement with his empty
orbits, repudiating her words without a sound or movement.</p>
<p>“ ... save for Yussuf the Blind,” she concluded
slowly, as she raged inwardly at the man’s temerity,
“whom I must needs take to my heart in obedience to
my father’s dying wish.”</p>
<p>She gave no outward sign of the rage which swept her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</SPAN></span>
as she finished speaking, but she looked round for someone
upon whom to vent her wrath and found him in Al-Asad,
who leant against the wall, watching her from out the
corner of his eyes.</p>
<p>“Thou!” she said, her voice cutting across the silence
like a whip. “Whyfore standest thou when others kneel?”</p>
<p>“The lion does not flee before the gazelle!” replied Al-Asad,
who had loved her from the first moment he had seen
her.</p>
<p>Zarah made a little motion of her hand which brought
the men to their feet, then beckoned Al-Asad, who walked
slowly towards her and into the trap she had set for him.
She had more than one weapon in her armoury and more
than one form of punishment in her mind.</p>
<p>That the man loved her, in his savage way, she had
always known; that he had worked to succeed the dead
Sheikh and thereby to force her into becoming his own
woman if she wished to rule, she had guessed intuitively,
and in a second of time had thought out a plan in which,
through his humiliation, she could revenge herself for the
insult.</p>
<p>She was well above medium height, but seemed
small beside Al-Asad as he towered above her, mighty
arms folded across his breast, looking down upon her
beauty.</p>
<p>He was a magnificent animal, with all an animal’s
instincts and a dog’s fidelity, but she feared him not a
bit. She looked up at the handsome face with the
almost negroid lips and into the flashing eyes and down
into the heart, as childish as it was vain, and smiled
and raised her hand when he made a quick step
forward.</p>
<p>“I am footsore,” she said softly. “I have cut my sandals
upon the rocky path.”</p>
<p>She may have heard the sharp intake of breath, but
she took no notice when the men turned, the one to the
other, as Al-Asad knelt. His fingers trembled in the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</SPAN></span>
tumult of his love for the beautiful woman as he unfastened
the knotted ribbons of her sandals, his heart leapt
as he bent and kissed the little foot, leaving his manhood
in the dust beneath it. He sprang to his feet, holding
the golden sandal against his breast, shrinking back
against the wall at the men’s laughter, in which the woman
he loved joined.</p>
<p>“Neither does the gazelle fear the dead lion,” she
mocked as he fled from the hall out into the night and up
to his dwelling upon the mountainside, where he flung
himself full length upon the ground with the golden sandal
against his lips.</p>
<p>“I love thee, love thee, love thee!” he whispered, “and
will serve thee to my last hour and with all my strength.
If I cannot be thy king, thy master, I will be thy slave.
One day perchance, thou too wilt waken to love and learn
what suffering means.”</p>
<p>If he had but known, love had come to her, love for
the white man, causing her to suffer through the chafe
of the chains which bound her.</p>
<p>Zarah watched the great figure as he fled past blind
Yussuf and through the doorway out into the night,
then smiled, and stooping, lifted her cloak and spread it
across the dead Sheikh.</p>
<p>“I will sleep in the bed of my fathers,” she said curtly.
“Bring me meat and wine to my bedchamber. To-morrow
I will commit my dead father to the sands and will then
make choice, amongst the slaves, for those who will attend
me both night and day. Obey me, and it will be well with
all of you; resist me, and your lives will be even darker
than this night of storm.”</p>
<p>The men, so long held upon the leash by the dead
Sheikh, so long baffled in their fierce desires, shouted
their praises as they made a way for her. She passed
them without looking at them, glittering with jewels,
superb in her strength.</p>
<p>She climbed the steps leading to the dwelling wherein<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</SPAN></span>
her father had slept, and up to the roof, and, leaning on
the balustrade, raised her face to the sky which showed
sullen and starless.</p>
<p>Great sandstorms do not sweep the deserts of Arabia
bringing devastation in their path, but the hot wind from
the south will lift the topmost layer of sand hundreds of
feet into the air, where it hangs like a pall across the
heavens, causing men to hide their faces and cattle to
flee for shelter from the terrific heat which descends from
it, scorching the earth.</p>
<p>She walked to the corner of the roof from which,
through the cleft in the rocks, the red sands of the desert
could be seen stretching in great waves away to the
south. She stared down and drew her hands across her
eyes, and stared again; drew back with a half-uttered
cry of fear, then moved forward, leaning far over the
coping, looking down.</p>
<p>At the very edge of the quicksands and as far out
across the great waste as eye could see, white shapes
danced, and whirled, and bowed, retreating, advancing,
whirling hand in hand, flinging their white raiment up to
the sky, which hung, like a dun-coloured ceiling, low down
above their caperings.</p>
<p>The scorching, sand-laden wind blew against her lips
and through her hair and seemed to press like a great bar
of red-hot iron against the satin skin which showed
beneath her bodice, and yet she stood looking down, watching
the light flicker this way and that way over the
quicksands, and the ghostly forms running up in pairs,
in ones, in twos, in files up and down and over the sand-waves
until they melted into the far distance.</p>
<p>She had heard the tale of the half-starved, half-witted,
degenerate races which are supposed to inhabit the mysterious,
unexplored depths of the great desert; living like
lizards, worshipping the elements, inter-marrying until
brain and body are sapped of strength, and for the first
time she felt grateful for the ring of quaking sand which<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</SPAN></span>
kept her safe from robbers, beasts, and such foul creatures
as those which danced so merrily under the lowering sky.</p>
<p>She loved beauty, she loved strength, and watched
with a shudder until the last white figure, leaping and
bounding, had followed its fellows back to the unexplored
regions of the desert, then knelt and bowed her beautiful
head almost to the ground.</p>
<p>But she knelt before the scorching flames of the love
which had sprung up in her heart for Ralph Trenchard
as she had lain in his arms. Not for a day, nor for an
hour of a day, had he been out of her thoughts since the
morning of the accident. She lay awake at night thinking
of the handsome face bent down to hers; she thrilled at
the thought of his arms about her; she had thought of
him unceasingly as she raced death to reach her father;
she had sworn by the beard of the Prophet, which being
a soulless woman she had no right to do, to bring him
some day to her mountain home and for ever to her feet.</p>
<p>She stretched out her arms and called him by name,
scorched by the hot wind which had twisted the sand into
dancing shapes, sending them capering and leaping this
way and that way, in the cross-eddies from the east,
a ghostly phenomenon seen once in a lifetime, if that.</p>
<p>She ran to the side and looked out across the desert,
which lay silent, foreboding, empty, and shivered under
a sudden premonition of evil.</p>
<p>“Where are you?” she cried, beating her hands upon
the burning stones. “Where are you? I love you, love
you, love you, and I am calling you.”</p>
<p>There was no answer.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>At that very moment Ralph Trenchard rode into the
holiday camp pitched by Helen Raynor and her grandfather—Egypt’s
Water Finder. They had pitched it
some fifty miles west of Ismailiah whilst they waited to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</SPAN></span>
start upon an expedition into Arabia, which had for its
object the discovery of water hidden in the heart of a
range of mountains, as described upon vellum inscribed
by the Holy Palladius.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />