<h2>CHAPTER V</h2>
<div class="blockquote">
<p>“<i>A rose issues from thorns.</i>”—<span class="smcap">Arabic Proverb.</span></p>
</div>
<p>The desert looked like an immense mosque with vast
purple dome inlaid with silvery stars, spread with a
carpet of many colours—grey, amethyst, saffron, fawn—stretching
to Eternity for the feet of worshippers to
tread. It held the peace of great spaces and the prayer
of the everlasting, and changed, in the twinkling of the
stars, to the likeness of a fairy meadow, in which flowers
of every shape nodded and curtsied and bowed to each
other, as far as eye could see; flowers formed by the light
breeze which twisted and turned the sand into little
spirals, until the desert seemed covered with dancing, silvery
poppies across which love came as silently, as unexpectedly
as it comes in country lanes or the city’s
crowded thoroughfares.</p>
<p>Helen Raynor looked over her shoulder towards the
camp, pitched under the isolated palms which formed the
so-called oasis, and smiled at the sound of her “boy’s”
voice raised in what he termed a love song, but which
had all the monotonous ring of a long-drawn-out litany
of personal woes.</p>
<p>She sat on a hummock of sand, dazzlingly fair in the
starlight, with a smile of content on her broad, humorous
mouth, and the expectancy of youth in her great, blue
eyes, whilst the golden sand trickled between her fingers
as she counted the seconds of the hour in which love and
adventure were to come to her.</p>
<p>She thought lazily of the hot-weather months just
passed, spent quite happily in the big, old palace in
Ismailiah bought by her grandfather who, in his wanderings<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</SPAN></span>
in the desert, had acquired some of the attributes of
the salamander and an unconscious thoughtlessness
towards the well-being of his neighbour.</p>
<p>Unattracted by the little she knew of the world, she
had been intensely grateful at the unconventional turn
life had taken three years ago, inaugurating a new mode
of existence with vista of unknown lands and good promise
of great adventure. She had proved herself of the greatest
assistance to her irascible grandfather. There was no
doubt about it, that, although he seldom bit, he certainly
barked furiously, or rather, yapped without ceasing,
driving others almost frantic through the methodical
working of a mind which teased the most infinitesimal
detail to shreds, wore him to fiddle-strings, led him from
success to success and caused his secretaries one after the
other to fold their tents and to steal away to less nerve-wracking
fields of labour.</p>
<p>Since leaving school, Helen had firmly established herself
as his secretary and had accompanied him wherever he
had been sent by the Irrigation Department. She had
made herself responsible for his creature comforts, which
almost amounted to nil, and the good conduct of the
staff which learned to adore her, with the exception of
Pierre Lefort.</p>
<p>Half French, half native, he was of the worst type of
Oriental. Eaten up with the vanity of the superficially educated,
but with a genuine, great knowledge of the Arabian
horse and the obstreperous camel, the young man had
managed to make himself seemingly indispensable to Sir
Richard on his expeditions. Helen became accustomed to
great distances and solitude, and her eyes gained the
steadfast look of those who look upon the sky as the roof
of their dwelling, whilst her unfailing sense of humour
invariably brought her safely through the most trying
ordeals.</p>
<p>Diplomatically feeling her way through the barbed
wire entanglement of her grandfather’s testiness, she<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</SPAN></span>
gained a great influence over the brilliant man and, knowing
how he chafed against the authoritative methods and
manner of the government official, had dropped the suggestion
in his all-willing ear of taking a busman’s holiday—a
holiday expedition with the object of trying to find
out the whereabouts of the legendary water in the great
Red Desert, the discovery of which had become almost
an obsession with him, since the day he had read the
vellum inscribed by the Holy Palladius.</p>
<p>They had spent the hot-weather months in getting
ready for the expedition, helped enthusiastically by every
member of the staff excepting Pierre Lefort who, loving
the dregs of the European society he frequented in the
cities and the corners of the Bazaar to which he rightly
belonged, had made use of every means in his power to
frustrate their endeavours.</p>
<p>He had sworn to an epidemic amongst the camels and
dromedaries in Arabia proper, which was causing them
to die by hundreds; to an absolute dearth of camel
drivers, owing to the terror the men had of the animals’
disease; to the truth of the terrible tales that had lately
come to hand of the activities of a notorious robber gang,
led by a woman, which swooped down from nowhere upon
unwary travellers; that, in consequence of this band of
brigands, neither guide nor servant could be procured for
love or money on the other side, and that last, but not
least, no man had ever been known to penetrate, even a
little way, into the empty desert and to return alive.</p>
<p>Each of his objections had been met; the expedition,
down to the smallest detail, carefully mapped out; the
date for the start fixed and the camp pitched some fifty
miles out of Ismailiah. Pierre Lefort would doubtlessly,
if sullenly, have accompanied the party for the sake of the
monetary gain, if he had not fallen a victim to the wiles of
a dancer in the Bazaar.</p>
<p>Had ensued a heated scene between him and Sir Richard
which had ended by the latter taking him by the collar of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</SPAN></span>
the coat and impelling him, none too gently, back upon
the road towards Ismailiah.</p>
<p>Since then a week had passed, which Sir Richard had
spent in racing, as fast as swiftest camel could take him,
into Ismailiah, there to interview men with a knowledge
of camels and horses, and racing back to tell his granddaughter
of the blanks he had drawn.</p>
<p>There remained another fortnight in which to find
someone endowed with camel and horse sense, and Helen
had just fled the camp after a trying scene with her distracted
and pessimistic relative.</p>
<p>“Grandads,” she had said, after the recital of the latest
failure, “I have an idea, although it’s only a faint-hope
kind of idea.”</p>
<p>“Well!” had snapped Grandads, who was ready to take
his ships of the desert into almost any kind of a port to
protect himself from the storm of failure which threatened
to burst.</p>
<p>“I think you are making a great mountain out of
your mole-hill.”</p>
<p>“Meaning?”</p>
<p>“Lefort. There <i>are</i> others who understand as much
about horses as he does. I do—for one—almost—and
so does Abdul, who did all the spadework under him. Let
me be vet, with Abdul for head groom and——”</p>
<p>“Wh-a-a-t?” Sir Richard had sprung from his canvas
chair with a bound which would have done credit to a
<i>jerboa</i>, or kangaroo rat. “<i>You!</i> In charge of the horses—you—and
what do you know of camels, may I ask?”</p>
<p>“As much, dearest, as anybody, which amounts to
nothing. If it’s sick, it usually makes up its obstinate
mind to die, so there’s no use worrying about <i>that</i>; if you
want to get an extra hour of work out of it, you give it a
most noisome lump of barley-meal and water, and add a
cupful of whisky if you want to make it waltz; if you
want it to go to the right, touch it on the left, and <i>vice
versa</i>, and if it’s out on a non-stop run, hang your coat<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</SPAN></span>
over its head to pull it up. It will go for six days in the
summer and, I believe, ten in the winter without a drink,
and is warranted to eat everything it comes across; in
fact, I saw Mahli making breakfast off your oldest pair
of night slippers this very morning.”</p>
<p>All that she had said was true. She was a magnificent
horsewoman, and there was mighty little she did not
know about horses; in fact, up to her fifteenth birthday
she had unequally divided her time between her lessons and
her horses, to the decided detriment of the former; then,
upon the death of her mother, had entreated to be allowed
to accompany her grandfather to Egypt. He, unpractical
in everything that did not concern the finding of
water in desert places, had consented, and, acting upon
some motherly soul’s advice, offered directly they had
arrived in Cairo, had pushed her promptly under the
sheltering wings of the Misses Cruikshanks.</p>
<p>But she might as well have pleaded with the Great
Pyramid this night of stars as she had sat, just outside
the tent, with her beautiful head against the canvas
whilst her distracted kinsman had figuratively rent his
raiment in wrath.</p>
<p>“You!” he had cried. “What authority would <i>you</i>
have over the pack of rapscallions who look after the
shameless beasts called camels, any one of which, in the
eyes of the average Mohammedan, is of a hundred times
more value than a woman? I know all about woman’s
rights in England, but let me tell you that that means
nothing, absolutely less than nothing out here, where she
is not even allowed to possess a soul of her own, much less
a vote. No! if I can’t find a man to fill the post, I will
resign myself to having failed, throw up my position in
the Irrigation Department, and take to bee-keeping in
England.”</p>
<p>And Helen Raynor, who firmly believed that if a thing
is to happen it happens, and that nothing can prevent it
from happening, also <i>vice versa</i>, had ridden some miles<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</SPAN></span>
out into the silence, where she had hobbled her mare and
sat down upon the hummock to think things over. She
sat facing the direction in which Ismailiah lay, sat quite
still, until the peacefulness of the desert seemed to enfold
her and to wipe out the memory of the past weeks,
which had gone far to disturb the tranquillity she so loved
to bring into the daily life of the camp. She looked all
round in utter content and lifted her face to the stars and
listened to the great silence, unbroken now, even by the
love song, then sat forward and stared in the direction of
Ismailiah.</p>
<p>Great is the solitude of the desert, with no sign of
life in it at all; haunting is its solitude when, in the far
distance, a solitary figure moves slowly across the limitless
sands.</p>
<p>It is the most perfect illustration of the little span
of life granted each of us upon this earth.</p>
<p>Out of seeming nothing, remote, alone, the figure approaches,
growing clearer and clearer to the watching
eye; maybe for a space he stops and raises his head to
the star-strewn sky, or maybe he passes on, heedless of
God’s thoughts about him; even if he stays it will be but
for a brief second before he continues his journey, growing
dimmer and dimmer until he passes out of sight,
alone, into apparent nothingness.</p>
<p>Helen Raynor sat watching a solitary figure as it came
slowly towards her from a far distance, and pressed her
hand upon her heart, troubled by the biblical picture,
the silence, the unknown.</p>
<p>So might Abraham have looked in his youth, or Job
before affliction fell upon him, or Boaz, or David, for the
desert has not changed since their days, nor has the camel
learned to hasten its pace or to alter the insolence of
its gait. The night breeze died away suddenly and the
flowers born of it faded, leaving a path, marked in grey
and silver as though the tide had but just receded from
it, for the passage of the camel’s feet, which were suddenly<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</SPAN></span>
urged to a swift trot by its rider, who rode bare-headed
and wrapped in a burnous.</p>
<p>When about a mile off Ralph Trenchard raised his hand
above his head in salutation to the figure he could see
sitting on the hummock, and urged his camel quicker still,
then pulled it to a halt and sat and stared at the girl,
who looked like some silver statue under the light of the
stars; then slipped to the ground instead of bringing
the beast to its knees, hobbled it, dropped the white cloak,
and followed the beckoning finger of Love, whom he could
not see for the beauty of the girl, along the path which
had been marked for him to tread even before the days
of Abraham.</p>
<p>And Helen Raynor rose and walked towards him, holding
out her hand, so that they neared each other and met
yet again, as those who truly love do meet down the ages,
and will meet, until in perfect understanding they become
one perfect spirit which will not be divided even by
the short-lived dream of death.</p>
<p>“I seem to know you so well,” said Ralph Trenchard
quietly.</p>
<p>“And I you. I have seen you—I recognize the scar
across your temple.” Helen Raynor pressed her hand
against her forehead in an effort to capture the elusive
memory which had suddenly flitted through her mind.
“I cannot remember. I——”</p>
<p>“My name is Ralph Trenchard, and my business in
Egypt one of pleasure. I was riding out into the desert
to be alone at sunrise.”</p>
<p>She shook her head and looked about her and up to the
stars and into the eyes of the man who had come to her
out of the night, and yet not as a stranger; and she looked
frankly at the lean, handsome face with the powerful jaw
and humorous mouth, and smiled into the quiet grey eyes,
and made a movement with her hand towards the oasis.</p>
<p>“I cannot remember where I have seen you, but will
you not come to our camp and have some coffee? I would<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</SPAN></span>
not keep you from your ride, but my grandfather will, I am
sure, be delighted to meet you. I am——”</p>
<p>“Of course!” broke in Ralph Trenchard, as he stooped
to remove the hobble from the mare, who danced sideways
at the smell of camel which permeated the new-comer.
“You must be Miss Raynor. Everybody is talking about
the danger of the expedition you are starting out on;
they don’t seem to see the other side, the privilege of
searching for something which has been lost for centuries,
the joy of adventuring into a new country.”</p>
<p>They walked across to the camel, which stretched its
neck and made a vicious snap at the mare, who immediately
retaliated by lashing out at the contemptuous
face.</p>
<p>“Quiet, you brute!” said Ralph Trenchard, as he removed
the hobble, whereupon the said brute turned its
hideous head and winked at him in hearty friendliness.
“There is one thing I really do pride myself upon, Miss
Raynor, though perhaps I ought not to, as it may only
be the result of a certain brotherhood in sheer mule-headed
obstinacy which I share with the quadruped.”</p>
<p>“And what is it?”</p>
<p>“The way I can manage camels. They seem absolutely
to love me before my face, whatever they feel behind my
back. I can do almost anything I like with them.”</p>
<p>Helen Raynor walked close up to him and laid her hand
upon his sleeve.</p>
<p>“Tell me,” she said eagerly, “where are you going to
after you leave Egypt?”</p>
<p>“Well, I have been trying to make up my mind. I’m
just down from Oxford, and am having a look round the
old places before settling down to manage the estate
which came to me when the dear old governor died a few
months ago. I was born out here, lived here until I was
ten. My people were stationed out here all over the place.
Mother is buried in Khartoum. I love the country, and
speak the language like a native. I don’t mind much<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</SPAN></span>
where I go, but I do wish I could have one jolly good
adventure when I get there.”</p>
<p>“Come,” said Helen, her beautiful teeth flashing in a
delighted smile, “I’m more convinced than ever that my
grandfather will be delighted to meet you.”</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</SPAN></span></p>
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