<h2>CHAPTER VIII</h2>
<div class="blockquote">
<p>“<i>A person sat demanding from God the rise of morn—when
morn rose he became blind.</i>”—<span class="smcap">Arabic Proverb.</span></p>
</div>
<p>“I wish the stars could be seen,” Sir Richard said irritably,
three nights later, as he looked up at the sky, across
which hung a heavy purple cloud. Due to the intense
heat, it obliterated the stars, thereby trying the patience
of the old man to the uttermost. “This delay is simply
abominable. To think, just to think, that this wind
has been blowing for nearly a week, clouding the sky
and blotting out the stars—the stars by which, if they
could have been seen, I could have proved, absolutely
proved, that we are camped upon the exact spot, between
the mountains of Hareek and the Jebel Akhaf, from
where the Holy Fathers turned due south. We could
have followed in their footsteps, started to-night; think
of it, could have started to-night, if only this wind hadn’t
blown. What? Try to find out what the firing meant
the other night? Nonsense, man, nonsense! We don’t want
to go over all that again. Some Arab, a solitary one.
Sound carries for miles, miles in the desert, the slightest
sound. If you let a pin drop it could be almost heard in
Hutah. Absurd! The thing to do is to get <i>on</i>.” He
spread out, with an angry slap, the copy he had made
of the vellum inscribed by the Holy Palladius, and read
out the Latin words by the light of an electric torch.
“It absolutely tallies,” he cried enthusiastically. “You
see, ab-so-lutely tallies! Another week, perhaps a little
less, perhaps a little more, and we should see the Sanctuary
before us, if we could only start!”</p>
<p>“But, Grandad,” interrupted Helen, who sat fanning<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</SPAN></span>
herself with her topee in an endeavour to bear with the
terrible heat, which had encircled her eyes with deep
violet shadows and caused her collar bones to show with
undue prominence. “How can you be sure that that
range of mountains is the one in which the water is hidden?
It seems to me to be too near the beginning of the
desert not to have been discovered before, if it is. In
fact, Abdul told me that his own brother had been within
five miles of it.”</p>
<p>“And why, when so close, did he not go closer still?”</p>
<p>“Because of the great barrier of evil the bad spirits,
which live in the mountains, have built to keep people
away.”</p>
<p>“Exactly,” said the old man triumphantly. “We are
not going to break new ground, my dear child; we are
going to break through the barrier of superstition
erected by the Arabs themselves, and which <i>alone</i> has kept
them from the water of which they stand so badly in need
in this terrible spot.”</p>
<p>“It is rather appalling, I must say, without the camp
fires,” said Ralph Trenchard, who, in shorts and a silk
shirt, wrestled unceasingly with insects of all sizes and
shapes which flew and crawled about them, attracted
by the light of the torch.</p>
<p>“However did those poor beggars get through without
oils of lavender and lemon, kerosene and smoke of sulphur
to protect them from these brutes?” He speared a spider
as he spoke and flung it into the night, then took Helen’s
hand in both of his. “Why not turn in, dearest? You
look tired out, and we can’t move until the stars come out,
either late to-night or to-morrow night.”</p>
<p>She shook her head as she looked first at the sullen
sky, then at the huddled figures of the Arabs, sitting with
their heads buried in their burnous, and at the camels
lying with their muzzles hidden in each other’s sides. She
put her finger to her lips and shook her head again, as
she glanced at her grandfather poring over the map, then<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</SPAN></span>
at the sentries who paced the four sides of the rough
square.</p>
<p>The square was small and compact, with their Excellencies’
tents in the middle, and the camels so stabled
that there could be no confusion between them and their
drivers if danger should arise. To mark the four sides
of the square a tent had been pitched at each angle. In
the shadow of the one to the south a man lay with his
ear to the ground. He lay like one asleep or dead until
the sentry turned, when he crawled upon his belly back
to the lines where, with the help of two others such as
he, he unhobbled certain camels and fastened them
together by means of long leather thongs buckled above the
knee of the right forelegs, then let them loose. It is an
invention of Satan himself to create confusion in a herd
of camels, and has never been known to fail in the annals
of the turbulent Peninsula.</p>
<p>“Yes, why don’t you go and get some sleep, child?”
said Sir Richard, who paid no attention to the passing
of the hours himself, having acquired the Oriental’s gift
of falling asleep when and where he wished. “Two o’clock
already! Dear me! How quickly time does pass when
one is pleasantly occupied!” He evicted something that
crawled from the vicinity of his neck and patted his
granddaughter’s hand. “There’ll be plenty of time for
love-making, little one, when we get back to east winds
and frosts, so run along and take off your boots and
comb your hair and wheedle a basinful of water from
Hassin. I don’t know what I should have done without
you, and I’m glad to think that there is a man <i>almost</i> good
enough to look after you. Ah! I thought so. We’re in
for a thunderstorm. That accounts for the sky and this
oppressiveness.”</p>
<p>He turned and looked due south, childishly pleased
that he had caught the distant rumbling before the others;
then looked up at Ralph Trenchard, who had leapt to his
feet, jerking Helen up beside him.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Do you hear it now? Of course, the storm may pass
us by.”</p>
<p>“The storm’s not going to pass us by!” answered
Ralph Trenchard sharply. “That sound has nothing to
do with thunder; it’s the sound of horses galloping on
sand. Remember I did my bit in Egypt and know what
I’m talking about, and they’re not far off either. Take
Helen to your tent and stay there, so that I can know
where you are. Don’t leave it. Quick! Oh, damn the fool!”</p>
<p>A sentry had fired into the pitchy darkness.</p>
<p>The Arab is inclined to impulsiveness with firearms
when left to himself, but he is a born fighter and a magnificent
fighter when properly armed and led. He will
fight to the death for a cause, for a bet, for nothing at
all; he loves fighting, and does not own himself beaten
until death overtakes him or he is rendered incapable of
movement through wounds.</p>
<p>The camp seethed.</p>
<p>Now that the danger was upon them the men were in
high fettle at the prospect of a fight. If they died—well,
<i>kismet</i>! It would be because their hour had come. If
they lived, the great English Sheikh would reward them
bounteously for having so well defended her Excellency
their mistress. They were well armed, the ammunition
plentiful, and the young English Sheikh a man among men
to lead them into battle. So they yelled in response to
the yelling of the distant enemy, and loosened their knives
and examined their rifles whilst calling upon the Prophet
to allow the battle to be long and bloody and the reward
great.</p>
<p>The camp had not been caught unprepared, and all
might have gone exceeding well if it had not been for
the half-dozen camels which the spies had fastened
together with leather thongs. Panic-stricken, they rushed
amongst the others standing helpless on account of the
hobbles, entangling them, binding them one to the other
as they fought to get free.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Rifle all right, darling? And yours, sir?”</p>
<p>Ralph Trenchard paused for an instant at the tent,
then ran to take his place amongst the men who watched
the magnificent picture before them, withholding their
fire by his orders.</p>
<p>A torch flared suddenly in the far distance, and another,
and yet another, until a line of orange flame swept across
the sky towards the camp, rising and falling at regular
intervals as though borne upon the crest of some gigantic
wave.</p>
<p>From underneath the flaming line came the thunder of
many hoofs and the shouting of many men, invisible
in the darkness. Then showed dimly the shape of a white
horse ridden by a woman, and behind her horses and men
sweeping down to the attack.</p>
<p>Glittering from head to foot with jewels, shouting
with her men, Zarah the Cruel, the mysterious woman
of the desert, rode her favourite stallion native-wise,
guiding him with her knees, ripping his satiny sides
with golden spur to keep him a length ahead of those she
led.</p>
<p>“<i>Ista’jil! Zarah! Ista’jil! Zarah!</i>”</p>
<p>The men shouted the battle-cry and the Arabian’s
name unceasingly as they drove their horses at full gallop
over the billows of sand, holding aloft their throwing
spears, upon the points of which lighted torches flared.
Little cared she that the line of light made a splendid
target for the enemy hidden in the darkness; little cared
she what happened to those around her so long as tales
of mystery and power about her were carried throughout
the Peninsula, across to Egypt, and up to Turkey and far
away to India.</p>
<p>She raised her spear when a volley from the camp
brought men and horses crashing to the ground, and turning
to Al-Asad, who rode at her right hand, shouted an
order, which he repeated, whilst the men yelled “<i>Wah!
Wah!</i>” as they raised their spears and whirled them above<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</SPAN></span>
their heads, until the sky seemed full of great circles of
fire and the earth possessed of demons.</p>
<p>There came the crash of a second volley from the camp
just as Al-Asad raised his hand, and the spears, with
flaming torch upon the points, flashed like meteors in a
semicircle through the air, to fall in the centre of the
camp.</p>
<p>“They surround us, Excellency!” shouted Abdul, who
had left the screaming, fighting camels to their fate so
as to stand by the side of the white man he had learned
to love and respect during the long weeks they had passed
together. “Watch her, that thrice accursed daughter
of pigs; she makes the point from which her men
deploy.”</p>
<p>As the men spread out on each side of her Zarah reined
the stallion in, holding him, rearing and plunging, upon
one spot, seemingly indifferent to the bullets which
rained about her, spitting up the sand at the animal’s
feet, bringing her men and her horses to the ground. She
laughed aloud and raised her spear twice above her head
as the tent to the north caught fire, lighting up the
smallest detail of the inferno. In the fire and the smoke
caused by the torches falling amongst the packs and tents
Ralph Trenchard and his men worked like demons to
loosen the great water skins, whilst the camels shrieked
and fought and tore at each other in their agony, as
the spears hurled by the enemy were buried in their sides
or in the ground, or in the breasts of the Arabs who fought
so desperately for life.</p>
<p>“Have they no rifles?” yelled Trenchard.</p>
<p>“Yea, verily! But the daughter of swine would take
the white people alive for ransom,” yelled back Abdul.
“We are surrounded, Excellency. To the glory of Allah
we die fighting.”</p>
<p>Trenchard gave one quick look over his shoulder
towards the tent where, outlined against the light of
the fire, Sir Richard and Helen stood shoulder to shoulder<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</SPAN></span>
with smoking rifles in their hands. “Fire!” he shouted, as
Zarah raised her spear and threw it with unerring aim.</p>
<p>“Out knives and fight to the death!”</p>
<p>He yelled the order which transports the Arab to
the seventh heaven of delight as the spear buried itself
in Sir Richard’s gallant old heart, and the enemy moved
suddenly and swiftly down upon them.</p>
<p>“Fall back and give no quarter!” he shouted again,
unwitting in the din and turmoil of a party of Bedouins
which, attracted by the red glow in the sky and the
sound of firing, raced towards the scene of battle from
the west.</p>
<p>Shouting encouragement, firing until his rifle became
too hot to hold, Trenchard backed slowly towards Helen,
who knelt clasping her grandfather in her arms.
Wounded, shouting, the men fell back slowly to form a
square round her Excellency the white woman, who had
accounted for more than one of the enemy and who, in
her bravery, was to be ranked with the most famous of
<i>hadeeyahs</i>, even Ayesha, the wife of Mohammed the
Prophet, whilst the spy who had loosened the camels
worked his way sideways until he stood close behind the
white man for whose capture alive a great reward had been
promised.</p>
<p>“Stand fast, men, they’re on us!” shouted Trenchard
as, with a ringing yell, the enemy charged, just as the
six camels, their long leather thongs burned through,
shrieking and maddened with the agony of their burns
and wounds, rushed the gallant square.</p>
<p>“God have mercy upon us!” Helen cried as she sprang
to her feet to watch the terrible sight of horses and
camels fighting to the death, making an impassable wedge
separating her from Ralph Trenchard.</p>
<p>Outlined against a background of orange light, they
looked like mighty prehistoric beasts as they reared and
plunged, falling to their knees, scrambling to their feet,
shrieking as only horses and camels can shriek, in pain<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</SPAN></span>
and fear. Sick to the heart, she tried in vain to catch
a glimpse of the man she loved, whilst Zarah, with Al-Asad
at her side, rode round and round the camp, shouting
the battle-cry, yelling encouragement to those of her
men who were left alive to fight.</p>
<p>Just for the moment Helen stood searching vainly for
her lover, her ears deaf to the din of the battle, her eyes
blinded to the terrible sights, then flung herself down
beside the old man she loved so deeply. Where she loved
she had no fear, neither could any task be too hard for
her to undertake for the loved one’s welfare, so that she
knelt beside Sir Richard and gently drew out the spear
which had pierced the gallant heart. When she understood
that it had for ever ceased to beat she gathered
him up into her strong arms and kissed his white hair.
She held him so, just for a little while, as her mind uncontrollably
raced back through the happy years spent with
him; then she laid him down upon the desert sand and,
picking up her rifle, rose to her feet.</p>
<p>She was of those for whom great danger holds no
terror. Thrice blessed indeed are they upon whom that
great tranquillity descends in the midst of danger; who,
steadied and exhilarated by peril, help those around
them by their unwavering calm.</p>
<p>She stood, with the dead man at her feet, waiting
to help the living man she loved as he fell back slowly
towards her, fighting desperately.</p>
<p>Where the men met they fought without quarter, regardless
of the hammering hoofs, the tearing teeth, the foam
and blood and welter of the animals. Stripped to the
waist, black with grime, fighting at such close quarters
that he could scarce tell friend from foe, Trenchard
fought, using the butt-end of his revolver, with Abdul by
his side, whilst the Bedouins approached nearer and
nearer, unseen on account of the smoke, unheard in the din.</p>
<p>“Thy wife!” shouted Zarah, leaning towards Al-Asad
and pointing to Helen, who stood alone with her back<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</SPAN></span>
towards them, nauseated at the sight of a bay mare and
a wounded camel in death grips. The camel had reared
and flung itself upon the mare, meeting its teeth just
below her ears, whilst she, lashing out until great rents
were torn in the dying camel’s belly, tried vainly to free
herself from the paralysis which crept over her through
the vice-like grip upon her spine.</p>
<p>“<i>Bism ’allah!</i>” yelled Al-Asad, as Helen raised her
rifle. “Behold! is she the maid to be the mother of sons?
Let us take her to blind Yussuf as his part of the spoil.”
He yelled again in sheer admiration as a double report
rang out and the fighting beasts dropped; then rode down
upon Helen as she reloaded, and lifting her, swung her,
fighting like a tiger, across the saddle.</p>
<p>He laughed exultantly as he held her down, pressing her
hands against her neck with his left hand until she was
almost suffocated, and her knees down with his right
hand, whilst his horse, guided by the pressure of his
knees, raced back to where Zarah waited, laughing and
shouting remarks which, fortunately, were not heard above
the uproar.</p>
<p>“Behold, she is for thee—thy mate,” she cried; “and
I—look thou—look—look—behold <i>my</i> mate, alone
amongst wolves.” Al-Asad, who could hear no word of
what she said, looked to where she pointed, then laughed
savagely when she screamed in an agony of fear.</p>
<p>It happened in a second.</p>
<p>Flames suddenly burst from the tent to the east, leaping
to the very sky, against which, for one instant, Ralph
Trenchard, with Abdul at his side, stood out clearly.</p>
<p>Zarah leant forward, revolver in hand, and fired—too
late. From out the heap of dead and dying the spy had
sprung, felling Ralph Trenchard to the ground with a
blow from the handle of a throwing knife behind the ear,
to fall himself with Abdul’s knife in his side.</p>
<p>Then friend and foe turned and, shoulder to shoulder,
faced the onslaught of the new terror which fell upon them<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</SPAN></span>
out of the night, whilst Abdul flung himself down upon the
body of the white man he loved, and ripping the cloak from
a dead Arab, covered him and pulled him under the sheltering
bodies of two dead camels.</p>
<p>Zarah turned in her saddle and emptied her revolver into
the group of Bedouins who, lying upon their horses’
necks, raced down upon her; then shouted to Al-Asad
and, giving the stallion his head, fled for her life. They
did not skirt the camp; they rode right through it and
over everything they encountered in their path, heedless
of the curses called down upon them by the wounded they
trampled underfoot. Out into the coming dawn they
sped, guided by the stars for which Sir Richard had so
ardently longed, with the limp body of the English girl
as their sole reward for the disastrous night.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>The stars went out and the sky lightened down in
the east as the Bedouins sat in a circle, taking counsel
together.</p>
<p>The camels and horses that were fit for use stood
hobbled, placidly ruminating or fretting and fidgeting,
near the spot where the west tent had stood; the prisoners
lay groaning on the ground, or sat, with the fatalism of
the East, awaiting their sentence.</p>
<p>The sky was covered, as far as eye could see, with
vultures, whirling and swooping, settling as near as
they dare to the feast awaiting them, or standing motionless
until some noise or movement sent them flying in
flocks skywards, an offence against the glory of the
heavens.</p>
<p>The unconscious form of Ralph Trenchard lay at the
feet of the Bedouin chief, whilst Abdul, by his side, craftily
bargained for their lives.</p>
<p>“A man of much wealth thou hast seized, O my brother!<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</SPAN></span>
A great sheikh in a country where the towns are paved
with gold, the bazaars are full of jewels, and the streets
of houris of the greatest beauty.”</p>
<p>“Perchance ’tis true; but how know we that he will
give us of his wealth once we have nursed him back to
life and allowed him to depart from us?”</p>
<p>Abdul turned in the direction of Mecca and lifted his
hand.</p>
<p>“By the beard of the Prophet I swear it, by the wind
and the wool and the honour of the Arab I swear it,
knowing him of whom I speak. In the name of my father
and my father’s fathers I will stand as bond for
this man’s honour. My life for his word, O brother; and
life is sweet, even unto those who are born in lowliness.
There is much wealth upon the backs of the camels, for
behold! the fire has but touched the covering. It is thine
in return for his life.”</p>
<p>“It is mine already, O brother!”</p>
<p>Abdul played his trump card.</p>
<p>“Yea, if thou darest to take it. If thou wilt listen
to me it will be thine without the fear of questioning
from the king of the great white race, who knows the
movements of each one of his subjects and meteth out
death to those who slay his children or keep them prisoner.
I am the white man’s servant; let me but nurse him back
to health, heal his wounds and allay his fever so that he
may start upon the quest of the white woman he loves,
and I will pour the tale of thy goodness into his ears in
such wise that peace and plenty will be thine for ever
more. Is it not written, brethren, ‘He is the chosen of
the people who rejoices in the welfare of others’?”</p>
<p>So it came about as it had been written that, after
many hours the birds of prey drew closer to the scene
of tragedy, whilst Abdul, holding his master gently in
his arms, followed the Bedouins upon camelback as they
rode slowly away across the path by which they had so
swiftly come.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />