<h2>CHAPTER VI</h2>
<div class="blockquote">
<p>“<i>Neither with thine eyes hast thou seen, nor with thine
heart hast thou loved.</i>”—<span class="smcap">Arabic Proverb.</span></p>
</div>
<p>Zarah the Cruel leaned back in her ivory chair, staring unseeingly
at the men she ruled. She frowned and stretched
her arms and played with the crystal knobs until her
jewelled fingers looked like the claws of some great cat,
whilst the men glanced at each other as they watched the
movement which, they knew, heralded the conception of
some new idea or plan in the girl’s masterly, unscrupulous
brain.</p>
<p>She had reigned for a year in her father’s stead, and
the tales of her cruelty, her infamy and treachery had
spread from Damascus to Hadramut, from Oman to the
Red Sea. In the days of her father the wealthy only
had been in danger of the gang’s predatory attacks; the
humbler caravan had been certain of a safe journey and
a sure arrival at its destination; the needy, just as sure
of help in money or in kind from the man who quietened
his conscience by robbing the one to assist the other, whilst
keeping the best part of the spoil for himself and his men.</p>
<p>His daughter attacked all and sundry, and as much for
the love of the fight as in the hope of gain, meting out
dire punishment to those who fought to the last, and, if
taken prisoner, lacked deep enough purse or strong enough
sinew to pay or work their way back to freedom.</p>
<p>With the exception of Yussuf the men obeyed her and
literally fought for the place of honour at her right
hand when she led them to the attack.</p>
<p>The whole Peninsula rang with the tales of the mysterious,
beautiful woman of the desert. Women used her name
as a bogy with which to frighten their children, men looked<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</SPAN></span>
at each other before they spoke of their affairs and then
said but little. Her spies were everywhere, from Damascus
to Cairo, from Jiddah to Bagdad, watching the movements
and learning the whereabouts of wealthy people.
The cities made great effort to discover the channels
through which the almost legendary woman gained her
information, sending out spy to counter spy, with the
result that some were found in the holes and corners of
the Bazaars at dawn, knifed through the back, and others,
who had been sent to find out the lay of the land round
and about the Sanctuary, buried up to their necks in the
sands, dead, with the letter Z cut upon their foreheads.</p>
<p>With a view to spreading reports of her beauty, her
riches, and her power, she allowed some of the prisoners
to return to their homes without payment of ransom;
others disappeared leaving no trace, whilst many, wholeheartedly,
threw in their lot with the band, working as
grooms to the horses and dogs, as tenders to the cattle,
as servants or labourers, marrying the women who
looked after the comforts of the strange community;
all of them happy in a freedom they could not have
realized elsewhere, yet terror-stricken by their mistress,
who ordered the severest punishments for the most trifling
mistake.</p>
<p>Built in terraces as had been the ancient monastery,
the servants’ quarters stretched up the eastern side of the
mountains, hidden by the jutting wall of rock from the
western side where Zarah lived, alone. The walls of the
monastery remained, but the interior of the buildings
had been changed out of all recognition. Where once
her father had lived, with his friend Yussuf, in all the
simplicity of those who belong to the desert, the girl
lived in barbaric luxury, the presence of Yussuf the
only cloud upon what seemed otherwise to be a clear
horizon.</p>
<p>Of love she would have none.</p>
<p>Those who had succumbed to the tales of her beauty,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</SPAN></span>
her wealth and her power, and who were willing to risk
much through greed, sent emissaries, laden with many
gifts, to negotiate for her hand in marriage. They would
be met far out in the desert, and, blindfolded, led across
the quicksands and into the presence of the mysterious
woman. She received them right royally, fêted them,
laughed at them in secret, and sent them back to their
masters, with her own gifts added to those she had rejected.</p>
<p>She did not attempt to conquer her love for Ralph
Trenchard; she did not want to; she hugged close the
pain it caused her pride, and had sent spies to Egypt in
an endeavour to trace him. A report came that he had
landed at Port Said. After that, silence.</p>
<p>She was thinking of him as she lay back in the chair
watching the men, gathered at her command, in the Hall
of Judgment. Upon the first of every three months she
called a council, with the object of making plans for the
months succeeding. Those of the men who could, hurried
from every part of the Peninsula to the gathering. A
week of festival invariably followed the great day, during
which sports were held and much wine drunk, in direct
disobedience to the law laid down by Mohammed, the
Prophet of Allah the one and only God. Those of the
men who could not attend, and who were mostly those
who had failed in the task set them, sent in reports of
their work by safe messenger.</p>
<p>The spy who had reported the arrival of Ralph
Trenchard at Port Said had not appeared in person,
nor sent in further report, so that Zarah sat a prey to
a great anger, which increased every moment under the
goad of suspense and uncertainty, and craved for a victim
upon which to vent herself.</p>
<p>The business of the hour, with its reports and reprimands,
suggestions, punishments and rewards, had been
concluded, and the men waited, eager to draw out a
programme for the week of festival; they looked at their<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</SPAN></span>
despotic ruler, raised above them on a dais, as she lay
back in her chair sullenly regarding them out of half-closed
eyes; they murmured amongst themselves but, under
the spell of her beauty, murmured only.</p>
<p>She made an arresting Eastern picture outlined against
an enormous fan of peacocks’ feathers, which spread on
each side and above her. It glowed vividly against the
south wall of the hall, which had been covered in Byzantine
gold leaf, outlined by an arabesque design carved out
in rough lumps of turquoise matrix, agate, jasper, onyx,
and different coloured marble.</p>
<p>Seven jewelled lamps, hanging above her head by golden
chains, were reflected in the polished surface of the huge
dais hewn out of one great block of black granite, up
which she ascended by seven steps carved to represent
seven crouching lions.</p>
<p>Skins of wild beasts were thrown upon a mosaic floor
which replaced the rough stones laid down by the Holy
Fathers. It had been set by skilled Italian workmen, taken
prisoners as they returned from Bagdad, where they had
been sent to set the famous mosaic floor in the house of
the Eastern potentate, who is almost as famous as his
flooring.</p>
<p>The Italians had won back their freedom by promising
to outrival the beauty of this floor in Bagdad, and, having
fulfilled the promise, had returned, laden with gifts
and well content, to their own country. The pillars
of palm trees had been removed and replaced by others
of stone, inlaid roughly with uncut turquoise matrix,
jasper and agate, which reflected the light of the jewelled
lamps hanging from the roof. The flat roof, which the
dead Sheikh had considered good enough as a covering,
had been removed and replaced by another, vaulted,
painted the colour of the night sky and powdered with
silvery stars. It showed misty, this night, above the
smoke of torches held above their heads by thirty prisoners
who stood upon the stools once used as seats by the Holy<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</SPAN></span>
Fathers, pushed back against the walls hung with curtains
of purple velvet.</p>
<p>Informed that one movement meant instant death,
prisoners awaiting sentence would be ordered to hold
lighted torches above their heads whilst the Arabian
girl sat discussing the events of the day or merely idling
away time watching the men wrestling or gambling, in
which last pastime she frequently joined.</p>
<p>Men meant nothing to her, but her overwhelming vanity
caused her to change her raiment many times a day and
to smother herself in jewels.</p>
<p>This night her slender limbs showed through voluminous
trousers made of some semi-transparent material,
woven by her women slaves, and caught at the ankles by
bands of gold inlaid with precious stones; her body, save
for breast-plates blazing in jewels, was bare, and showed
like white satin in the light of the torches and the
lamps above her head; her hands glittered with precious
stones, her arms were bare, and a broad gold band set
in diamonds bound her head, confining the thick, red
curls.</p>
<p>She sat alone, furious, tortured, her sandalled feet
upon an ivory footstool, her strange eyes flashing from
one side of the hall to the other in an endeavour to find
an outlet for her wrath.</p>
<p>She scrutinized the twenty men and ten women of
Damascus who had been captured on their way to Bagdad
with a precious load of steel weapons, and smiled as she
glanced from their leader, a fine old man with white hair
and beard and flowing robes, to the girl, his granddaughter,
at his side, and on to the young men and women
who had gained a world-wide reputation through their
work of inlaying steel with gold.</p>
<p>With the fear of death, the one for the other, they had
stood throughout the whole evening, motionless, save when
slaves replaced the burnt-out torches; but a shiver swept
them, and a smile of satisfaction lit the faces of the men<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</SPAN></span>
in the body of the hall when the old man swayed, then
crashed to the ground with a cry.</p>
<p>Zarah sat upright, her eyes gleaming, her jewels flashing,
whilst the men looked from her to the prostrate
man and back.</p>
<p>“Get up!” she cried, too intent upon her enjoyment
of the moment to notice that her enemy Yussuf had entered
the hall, standing, a menacing figure, against the
wall. “Get up!” she repeated, “lest I give orders to have
thee thrown from the rocks so that thou standest for
eternity upon thy head in the quicksands.”</p>
<p>A shout of laughter rang out at the words, and ceased
as Zarah sprang up, white with rage.</p>
<p>The old man’s granddaughter, flinging her torch to
the far end of the hall, where it fell at Yussuf’s feet, sprang
to the floor and, kneeling, gathered the old man into her
arms.</p>
<p>“He shall not be touched! He shall not be touched!”
she cried, looking fearlessly up at Zarah, who stood at
the edge of the dais, looking down. “Shameless art thou,
woman, in thy cruelty! Shameless in thy nakedness!
Shameless in all thy ways! If this old man, my father’s
father, be thrown from the rocks, then thou must throw
me also, for naught but death shall unclasp my arms
from about him. Nay! thou shalt not touch him, thou
shalt <i>not</i>, I say.”</p>
<p>She bent down over the old man as Zarah ran down
the steps and caught her by the shoulder. The men
gathered in a circle round the two women, watching the
one who shook with rage and the other who looked up fearlessly,
strong in her protecting love.</p>
<p>“Seize them, all of them!” commanded Zarah, “and——”
She stopped dead and looked towards the door, through
which a man came, running at full speed. Zarah turned
and, mounting the steps, sat down in the ivory chair,
holding up her hand until silence reigned.</p>
<p>“Hither,” she said curtly, and watched the spy, who<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</SPAN></span>
had reported upon Ralph Trenchard’s doings, with no
gentle look in her eyes as he hastened across the floor.</p>
<p>“’Tis well indeed, O my brother, that thou hasteneth
thy feet at last. Perchance the delights of the great city
prevented thee from keeping the hour of council to which
thou wast summoned.”</p>
<p>The man flung himself upon his knees before the dais,
then sprang to his feet.</p>
<p>“Thy servant tarried so as to bring good news.”</p>
<p>“Good news! ’Tis indeed well for thee that the news
is good. Speak!”</p>
<p>“The white man with a scar upon his forehead is even
now upon his way—here!”</p>
<p>“<i>Here!</i>”</p>
<p>“Yea! Here! He crosses the water in the company
of another man, white, but of great age. They travel,
O my mistress, they travel, O my brethren, in search of
the miraculous water which, so ’tis said, is hidden in the
heart of certain mountains in the Red Desert.”</p>
<p>Laughter rang out, in which Zarah joined, the sweet
sound mingling with the men’s deep voices as they shouted
grim suggestions and coarse pleasantries the one to the
other.</p>
<p>Zarah leant forward, her eyes gleaming.</p>
<p>“They come alone, the two white men, in search of
this miraculous water?”</p>
<p>“Nay, O mistress! They travel in a good company
of men and camels, led by a woman——”</p>
<p>“Led by a <i>woman</i>! O my brethren, is there one of thee
in need of a wife or yet another wife?”</p>
<p>Ribald laughter and obscene jest followed close upon
her question.</p>
<p>“What is she like? this woman who dares lead men and
camels across the empty desert.”</p>
<p>“She is as the heavens at sunrise when the light wraps
the world in softest colouring. Her eyes are the blue of
the night in which shines the morning star, her mouth<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</SPAN></span>
as the sun-kissed pomegranate, her teeth as shimmering
pearls. Her hair! The houris which wait in paradise
to reward the faithful have not such hair as she. It is
as the web of the spider gilded by the sunlight, as the
corn glowing in the noonday sun, and, in its waywardness,
twineth about the heart of men as a child’s fingers
about the mother’s breast.”</p>
<p>The men secretly touched each other as they watched
the effect of the man’s words upon the woman who ruled
them with no gentle hand. Thrones built upon a foundation
of consideration towards others are rocky enough
at any time, but there is absolutely no security for the
monarch who uses his sceptre as a stick with which to
drive his subjects.</p>
<p>Zarah sat back in her chair, too primitive in her love
to try to hide the jealousy which consumed her.</p>
<p>“Who is she and what position does she hold in the
expedition?”</p>
<p>“She rules men, O mistress, and is the granddaughter
of the aged one.”</p>
<p>“His name?”</p>
<p>“It taketh a twisted tongue, O mistress, to pronounce
it. I have essayed and failed. He is a great Sheikh from
<i>Inglistan</i>, the land where, ’tis said, the heavens drop water
without ceasing. His men are well armed; his camels,
over which devil-possessed animal the white man with a
scar has a strange control, are of the best; his men content,
and averse to speech with strangers. They have
started; a great caravan awaits them at the port of
Jiddah; I hastened by swiftest camel to bring thee the
news.”</p>
<p>Zarah sat silent for a moment, then called the names
of six of her most trusted and unscrupulous followers,
and sharply ordered the hall to be cleared for the space of
one hour.</p>
<p>“And the Damascenes, mistress?” asked Al-Asad, who
had mounted the dais at his mistress’s call and stood,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</SPAN></span>
gigantic, powerful, behind her, ready to do her bidding.</p>
<p>Zarah frowned.</p>
<p>Jealousy might torture, but hope and an abnormal
vanity lay as balm upon the wounds. She had no time
for the trivial occupation of finding a punishment befitting
the crime of the prisoners. She had called her six
most trusted servants with a view to making plans for
the capture of the entire party, headed by the beautiful
woman with the unpronounceable name.</p>
<p>Time pressed.</p>
<p>Let her but make a prisoner of the white man who had
held her in his arms, subject him to her wiles, her beauty,
and surround him with all the evidence of her great
wealth, then what would she have to fear of any woman
where love was concerned!</p>
<p>“Al-Asad!”</p>
<p>He knelt and touched her foot.</p>
<p>“They beg their freedom, those thirty fools. Their freedom
they shall have! Lead them safely over the path,
then whip them out into the desert to find their way back
across the road by which they came. The desert is free
to all—to man as well as to beasts of prey and carrion
birds. They have asked for liberty and naught else; bid
them begone with empty hands.”</p>
<p>But there was no fear in the heart of the girl who had
leapt to aid the old man when he fell; she ran forward
to the very foot of the dais and called down curses upon
the woman above her, cursed her until the hall rang with
the terrible words and the superstitious men drew back
in fear.</p>
<p>“ ... and thou shalt be driven into the desert, O woman
without heart,” she ended, “and death shall find thee
bereft of power and love. Thou shalt leave thy beauty to
the jackals and the scorpions shall nest in thine eyes and
thy hair.” A speck of foam appeared at the corners of her
mouth as she prophesied with the vision of the East.
“I see thee pursuing, I see thee pursued, I see dogs upon<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</SPAN></span>
thy track, and one, whose light cometh from within to
lighten his darkness, hard upon thy heels, hunting thee.
I——”</p>
<p>She laughed shrilly, pointing at Zarah, who made a
quick movement of the hand. Al-Asad sprang down and,
seizing the girl by the throat, hurled her backwards, whilst
the rest of the prisoners, with hope eternal to spur them,
ran from one to the other, until at last, with the girl and
the old man in the centre, they marched boldly from the
hall, with the gigantic half-caste harrying them in the
rear.</p>
<p>Whispered words fell upon the ears of Almana, the
gentle Damascene, as she paused to allow those in front
to pass through the door out into the night. She turned
for a moment and looked up into Yussuf’s blinded face as
he stood near her in the shadows.</p>
<p>“Put thy trust in Allah and hasten not. Journey
westward and stop and wait. He will save thee and
thine.”</p>
<p>He had caught the sound of the girl’s voice as she
passed, encouraging the old man, and risked his life to
tell her of the help that awaits those who put their trust
in a higher power.</p>
<p>She whispered her thanks as she passed on, and in such
wise did love come to Yussuf, the blind, and Almana, the
Damascene.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Zarah sat in council with all her men; the women and
children and servants slept, so that there were no eyes
to watch, nor ears to hear Yussuf as he passed silently
amongst the rocks to the paddock where the camels were
herded at night, hobbled or tied to posts to prevent them
from fighting, as is the custom of the brutes when together
in great numbers.</p>
<p>He passed his hands over the animals, choosing three,
then crossed to a shed in which were piled the “<i>ghakeet</i>”
and “<i>shedad</i>” the saddles used for riding or baggage<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</SPAN></span>
camels, with water skins and sacks of dates, the emergency
rations required by an Arab for a sudden journey.</p>
<p>Surely Allah, the one and only God, watched over him
and listened to his prayers when, later, he walked unhesitatingly
across the narrow path of rock, leading the
first of three beasts, which followed, grumbling and snarling,
but obediently, from fear, and guided them by the
sound of voices to the Damascenes.</p>
<p>Almana ran to meet him when he rode towards them
out of the night, and led him to her grandfather, who
rose and blessed him.</p>
<p>“Come with us, my son, for surely yon place in the
mountains is the dwelling-place of devils. Come with us
to Damascus.”</p>
<p>“I will come one day when my task is accomplished,
and that will be in the time appointed, O father,” replied
Yussuf, raising his head and turning towards the East
as the wind of dawn swept his face.</p>
<p>The Damascenes lifted their voices in prayer, calling
down blessings upon him as he mounted his camel and rode
away into the glory of the sunrise.</p>
<p>“How sad,” Almana whispered to her grandfather as
they watched him moving swiftly towards the mountains,
and “His Eyes” who rode to meet him. “How sad that
he should be blind.”</p>
<p>“He is not blind, my daughter,” replied the old man,
as he laid his hand upon her head. “There are those
who see by the light of the soul, and, verily, our protector
is numbered among them.”</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[90]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />