<h2>CHAPTER XI</h2>
<div class="blockquote">
<p>“<i>The hole which he made opened into a granary.</i>”—<span class="smcap">Arabic Proverb.</span></p>
</div>
<p>She did not dine with the Arabian that night nor any
other night, and when, one evening, some seven days later,
completely restored to health, she walked out to the edge
of the platform to ascertain the cause of the shouting
of men, barking of dogs, and occasional firing of rifles,
Namlah crept up behind and urged her to go in.</p>
<p>“Orders have come. Her Excellency is to remain inside
her chamber until other orders come giving her her
freedom.”</p>
<p>“But what is it all about?” inquired Helen, as she reluctantly
entered her room.</p>
<p>Namlah spat, or, rather, made a sound as though she
spat, before replying.</p>
<p>“Zarah the Merciless makes an excursion into the
Robaa-el-Khali.” She pointed towards the cleft through
which the desert in the starlight showed like the face
of a veiled woman. “Allah grant that she remain there,
a food for vultures, as have remained so many. She is
a liar, a thief, a murderess. Allah guide the knife through
her black heart.”</p>
<p>A spirit of rebellion, of adventure, of recklessness,
showed in Helen’s eyes as she questioned the little woman
who had repeated all she had heard the night she had spied
through the window and had so urgently counselled silence
and watchfulness and patience.</p>
<p>“Yea! Excellency! she leads the men. The men and
beasts laden with provision and water and ammunition
wherewith to make a camp between this and the scene
of the fighting have departed these many hours. Ah!<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</SPAN></span>
she is as cunning as the jackal. She relies not upon
chance. She has always a place of refuge to fall back
on if the fight goes against her, or if the men are in need
of food for themselves or their guns. How long she will
be gone? I know not; maybe a few hours, a night, a
week—who knows?”</p>
<p>“The Nubian, has he gone too?”</p>
<p>Namlah laughed shrilly.</p>
<p>“Ha! the knotter of shoe-strings, the eater of dust,
behold he has gone these may days upon some secret
journey. He held conclave of great length with the
woman who rules us with a rod fashioned in the nethermost
<i>Jahannam</i>. They sat under the starlight so that
I could not approach, Excellency; they spoke softly so
that I could not catch their words from the rock behind
which I lay concealed.”</p>
<p>She smiled up into Helen’s face when, under the strain
of the suspense in which she had lived for the last ten
days, she took the servant by the shoulders and shook
her none too gently.</p>
<p>“I can’t bear it much longer, Namlah!” she said in her
pretty, broken Arabic. “I can’t bear the uncertainty,
I can’t bear the silence, the waiting, with nothing to do
to kill the terrible hours. I simply cannot bear it. For
danger to myself I do not fear, I do not care. Cannot
I find the way out so that I can escape? Can I not?”</p>
<p>There was no one in sight, there was certainly no one
within hearing, up there in the eyrie so near the stars,
but the little woman ran first to the right and then to
the left and then into the room before she sidled up to
Helen and whispered.</p>
<p>Is not intrigue as the breath of life in the East?</p>
<p>“Her Excellency must take exercise, must walk under
the stars to-night whilst <i>she</i> is abroad.” She spread her
fingers wide and down in the direction of the path leading
across the quicksands. “Her Excellency must walk, even
if it be amongst the rocks where the shadows lie blackest.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Helen looked intently at the little woman, who gazed
out of the doorway with an air of seraphic innocence.</p>
<p>“I could not find my way down there, Namlah! I
should fall or get lost or——”</p>
<p>Namlah trotted to the door and stood with her hand
shading her eyes, looking out towards the desert.</p>
<p>“Yet is there one, Excellency, who without eyes walketh
safely amongst the rocks. One without eyes, but with
much wisdom upon his tongue and goodness in his heart,
who walketh ever without fear in the great darkness;
one who yearneth to help those whose backs have suffered
from the whip or whose hearts have suffered from the
power wielded by that daughter of <i>Shaitan</i>!” She crept
close to Helen and whispered in her ear: “One who likewise
craveth to hurt, to wound, to kill, in revenge.”</p>
<p>Helen shivered at the hate in the little woman’s voice,
but she understood. She had learned the history of the
blind man from Namlah; once when, restless and unable
to sleep through anxiety, she had walked out on to the
platform she had seen him in the grey light of the dawn,
standing midway on the steps, his face raised to her
abode; once Namlah had lain a few flowers on the silken
coverlet, had whispered, “patience brings victory to the
blind and the prisoner,” and had retired to her pots and
pans with finger on lips.</p>
<p>The body-woman walked to the edge of the platform
and beckoned to the white girl she loved, and pointed to a
silvery cloud of sand far out in the desert.</p>
<p>“Yonder she rides,” she whispered. “May the sand
choke her! May the scorpion sting her heel! May....”
She smiled up at Helen and shrugged her scarred shoulders
in the expressive Eastern way. “But of the luck of such,
Excellency, is it written, ‘throw him into the river and
he will rise with a fish in his mouth.’ Yet will her turn
come; the tide cannot remain at the full, the sun must
set. Behold! I descend to the river, whilst the men and
women make merry in her absence, to fetch water for her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</SPAN></span>
Excellency’s bath, leaving her alone, to walk amongst
the rocks, in the protection of Allah!”</p>
<p>Helen watched the little woman descend the steep steps,
balancing a great earthenware jar skilfully upon her
head; noticed that she stopped for a moment near one
gigantic boulder which lay to the right of the steps;
listened to her singing as she made the rest of the descent
down to the water, which looked like a ribbon of silver
run through a purple velvet curtain, then entered the
room, which was really a prison cell, pulled a sheet of
dark blue silk from her bed, and ran out on to the ledge.</p>
<p>She did not hesitate.</p>
<p>That the woman might be a spy did not once enter her
head, and if it had, under the strength of her love and
her anxiety, she would doubtlessly have thrown caution
to the soft night wind and risked her life in an endeavour
to find out if there was not some way of escape by which
she could return to the man she loved.</p>
<p>Her own clothes, cleansed and pressed by Namlah’s
busy fingers, had been returned to her, so that she stood,
a beautiful picture of an English girl, in the strangest
of strange surroundings, looking down into the shadows
out of which, she prayed, help might come to her.</p>
<p>Afraid of her outline against the sky, fearful of dislodging
some stone to send it clattering down the steps,
she wrapped the blue sheet round herself and descended
slowly, carefully, pausing to listen, standing to peer into
the ink-black shadows on every side, and down to the
plateau where, by the light of torches and of fires, she
could see men and women passing to and fro.</p>
<p>She had almost reached the great boulder, when she
stopped and drew the dark silk still tighter and peered
about uneasily, as she tried to locate a soft hissing sound
which came from some spot quite near to her.</p>
<p>Through bitter experience she had learned the ways of
Arabia’s scorpions, centipedes, wasps and flies; had fled
in terror from the one and only <i>aboo hanekein</i> she had<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</SPAN></span>
encountered, a fat, poisonous brute of a spider with
formidable pincers, and wrestled vainly against the great
variety of ants which the Peninsula offers; of locusts she
had but the slightest acquaintance, and of the deadly
vipers, the <i>Rukla</i> and the <i>Afar</i>, which abound in rocks
she had only been warned that afternoon.</p>
<p>Yet for fear of someone mounting the steps she dared
not remain where she was, and had just decided to risk
the few yards which would bring her to the boulder,
when once more she caught the hissing sound.</p>
<p>And then from sheer relief she almost laughed.</p>
<p>“<i>Sit!</i>” whispered Yussuf from the shadows. “<i>Ya Sit!
Sit!</i>”</p>
<p>She crept forward and round the boulder to where stood
the blind man, who had been perfectly aware of her noiseless
descent. She did not shrink at the terrible face,
twisted and scarred, which looked down upon her; rather
did her heart go out to the maimed man as she laid her
hand upon his arm and called him by name.</p>
<p>“I trust you, Yussuf,” she said simply, which is quite
one of the best ways of winning the heart of an embittered
man.</p>
<p>“Her Excellency <i>can</i> trust me!” whispered Yussuf as
he salaamed. “Namlah and I are brother and sister in
affliction. I have lost the light of these mine eyes, she
has lost the light of her life, her son, in the grievous
battle. To ease our hurts we seek to help thee, gracious
lady, so that upon her return the woman who rules us
may find ashes in the taste of her victory and gall in
the wine of her success. The plans are laid, have been
laid this long while. I will carry her Excellency over the
secret path and out into the desert, then will I return
for Namlah and the camels, which are hidden and waiting
these many hours, the swiftest and most docile <i>hejeen</i> in
the stables.”</p>
<p>“Now? At once?” asked Helen, trembling with excitement.
“But how can you guide us across the desert?”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Thy servant rides by the wind.” He lifted his sightless
face to the star-strewn sky and smiled. “’Tis from
the east, <i>Sit</i>. Let it blow in our faces, and we go towards
the east until the sun sets after the passing of two days,
then we go north upon the path to Hutāh, passing the
field of the battle where the accursed offspring of the devil
lifted the white woman.”</p>
<p>Overpowered with gratitude, almost speechless with
amazement as the weight of her fear was lifted from her,
Helen trembled, under the shock of the sudden realization
of her hopes and, desirous that he should share in
her happiness, caught the man’s hand in entreaty.</p>
<p>“You will come with us? You will let me and his
Excellency, the man I am going to marry, look after you,
make you happy, make you forget, you and Namlah?”
She laughed softly, aglow with love and hope. “Gratitude
is a small, a very small, word, Yussuf, and it cannot express
what I would say in thanks.”</p>
<p>Yussuf smiled as he shook his head. Such words were
rare in his ears; of such brotherly love, excepting for
that in his own heart, he had had no knowledge.</p>
<p>“I will take thee, <i>Sit</i>, to within sight of the oasis, then
must I return. My task is not finished, will not be finished,
until the spirit of Zarah the Cruel has returned to the
<i>Jahannam</i> from which it came. We must hasten by a path
known only to me. I will lift her Excellency over the
rough places and carry her safely across the parts where
danger lies. The way is open, the night is clear, we——”</p>
<p>He stopped abruptly at the sound of voices raised in
anger, and feeling for Helen, gripped her tight about the
wrist.</p>
<p>Namlah’s voice seemed to rise in a screaming crescendo,
in ratio to the steps she climbed, accompanied or followed
by someone upon whom she poured out the vials of her
wrath.</p>
<p>“Nay! thou wine-bibber,” she shrilled. “What if thy
mistress did place the safekeeping of the white woman<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</SPAN></span>
in thy useless hands? Nay! thou shalt not push me to
the side of this accursed path so that thy legs, which may
Allah strike with numbness, may carry thee with speed
to the post thou didst forget in thy drunkenness. Keep
thou behind me, lest I break the jar upon thy empty
head and waste the precious water upon thy unclean body,
which is fit carrion for the birds of prey. What sayest
thou? Thou wouldst but look upon the white woman?
So that thou mayst see her with thine own eyes? Verily
shalt thou, if thou canst see for the wine with which thou
hast filled thy vile and accursed body.”</p>
<p>Yussuf lifted Helen bodily into his arms.</p>
<p>“‘If thou seest a wall inclining, run from under it.’”
He quoted the proverb as he carried her swiftly up the
mountainside by a steep short cut, as sure-footed as a
goat, as certain of his path as if he had eyes. “It is
not the hour, but let her Excellency remember that Yussuf
is her servant in all things.” He put her gently on her
feet upon a ledge from which she could climb to the platform.
“Remember, too, that when the hour does strike,
then will Yussuf strike also. ‘Patience brings victory to
the blind and to the prisoner.’”</p>
<p>A few moments later Helen stood just inside the doorway,
listening to the violent altercation upon the
steps.</p>
<p>There came the crash of a breaking jar, torrents of
execration and imprecation, then silence, and, in spite of
her disappointment, she smiled as she watched Namlah,
slowly and with much dignity, climbing the steps, with
a dripping wet individual in the rear.</p>
<p>“Seest thou the white woman with thine own eyes?
Yea! Then sit thou there, thou dog!” cried Namlah at
the top of her voice. “Nay, upon the second step.
Wouldst force thy company upon thy betters? And may
Allah strike thee with cold for having forgotten thy duty
to thy mistress, so that thou diest of palsy before the
dawn.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>There was a twinkle of laughter in the depths of the
brown eyes as she combed the prisoner’s golden hair.</p>
<p>Is not intrigue as the breath of life to the Oriental?</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<div class="blockquote">
<p>“<i>He swims in a span of water.</i>”—<span class="smcap">Arabic Proverb.</span></p>
</div>
<p>At that very hour Al-Asad, disguised as a holy man,
sat in the camp of the Bedouins who had befriended Ralph
Trenchard.</p>
<p>True, the holy man’s body was somewhat well covered,
as though he had not unduly deprived himself of food
in the ecstasy of his religion, and his feet in fairly good
trim, considering the length of the pilgrimage he was
making on foot to Mecca; also, upon close inspection,
might the rents in his one garment be attributed to a blunt
knife rather than to time.</p>
<p>But there are many kinds of holy men criss-crossing
desert places, depending entirely upon the charity of
chance-met Arabs for sustenance and the will of Allah
for a safe arrival at their journey’s end. The tattered
handkerchief fluttering from the end of the staff can be
traced by the keen-eyed, approaching or retreating, for
miles in the desert’s clear atmosphere, and heartbeats
never fail to quicken at the chance encounter with the
solitary human who wends his way across the burning
sands, alone with his God.</p>
<p>As to others, so to Ralph Trenchard, sitting outside
his tent, came that feeling of great respect which the
sudden appearance of these mystics arouses in those who
have the wherewithal to allay their hunger, and a place
upon which to lay their heads at night; and with the
respect, a great curiosity to read the secrets of a mind
which allows so emaciated a body to endure and survive
days of endless wandering and starvation and nights
under heaven’s starlit roof. Al-Asad sat motionless, his
eyes fixed upon space, whilst his stomach rebelled against<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</SPAN></span>
the rice in the wooden bowl at his feet, and his whole
being longed to get back to the spot, in the far distance,
where he had hobbled his well-laden camel.</p>
<p>Fearful of news of his search being transmitted through
space to the ears of those he sought, he had been forced
to act up to his disguise and to travel many weary, sandy
miles on foot to various Bedouin camps, and to eat
many bowls of insipid rice, washed down his gasping
throat with muddy coffee, whilst abstracting the news
he wanted from his unsuspicious host by subtle questioning.</p>
<p>He had rejoiced to the innermost part of his being
when, whilst humbly asking alms from the Bedouin chief,
he had seen Ralph Trenchard out of the corner of his
eye.</p>
<p>His quest was at an end. He had but to get into
communication in some way with the white man and arouse
his interest, then leave the rest to the foolishness of a
race which, as his mistress had told him, taught its men
to look upon women as an almost sacred charge. He
rose, and with hands uplifted turned to the four quarters
of the globe, his keen eyes sweeping the camp for sign
of the lynx-eyed Abdul, whilst the Bedouins drew back
out of respect for his holiness.</p>
<p>On catching sight of the servant at the back of his
master’s tent, Al-Asad squatted upon his haunches and
muttered to himself, letting the beads of Mecca run swiftly
through his fingers whilst his crafty mind searched for
the best way to start the business without arousing the
servant’s suspicions.</p>
<p>He scraped up the last handful of rice, being careful
not to leave one single grain, and forced it down his
rebelling throat, then rose and crossed slowly to a black
patch of shadow, in which he sat himself, well aware
that the eyes of the whole camp, especially those of the
white man, were upon him. He sat motionless for awhile
as though in thanksgiving for the nauseating meal, then<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</SPAN></span>
made a gesture, upon which, with little cries and great
jostling, the whole camp, men, women and many children,
crowded about him, then, with the chief in the centre, sat
themselves down in a semicircle at the respectful distance
demanded by the holy one’s piety.</p>
<p>Ralph Trenchard strolled to the extreme end of the
right side of the semicircle. He was wholly restored
to health, a prey to intense anxiety, and upon the eve
of his departure for Hutah, where he intended calling
upon the aid of the entire Peninsula for the recovery
of Helen, and felt thankful for anything which might
serve to distract his tormented mind. Abdul gave a final
look round his master’s tent, which consisted of camel-skins
thrown over four upright poles, and ran quickly
to his master’s side.</p>
<p>He had done his best to dissuade his master from the
rash proceeding of trying to discover her Excellency’s
whereabouts, had preached the doctrine of fatalism as
known in the East, and had at last resigned himself to
the inevitable and sworn, in the secret places of his
faithful heart, to stick to the white man through thick
and thin.</p>
<p>The visit of a holy man creates a welcome diversion in a
camp where meals of dates, muddy coffee, and, if luck
is in, a sickly mess of boiled camel flesh as <i>pièce de résistance</i>
form the only break in the long, monotonous
hours when fighting is not toward; the advent of a holy
man who deigned to open his lips except in prayer was
to be reckoned a miracle.</p>
<p>Abdul moved close to Ralph Trenchard at the holy
one’s first words.</p>
<p>“Are any of thy children wounded, O my Son?” The
words came faint and slow, as though spoken by one who
had almost lost the power of speech. “I have with me
an ointment of great power.” Al-Asad searched amongst
his rags and produced an alabaster pot, which had once
contained rouge and had been bought by Zarah in Cairo,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</SPAN></span>
but which now reeked to high heaven of rancid camel fat
mixed with aniseed.</p>
<p>“Nay! Father!” replied the chief, whilst his children
whispered amongst themselves. “Those that were wounded
are healed, those that were sick are recovered. Whyfore
asketh thou? How knowest thou that they have been
in battle?”</p>
<p>Al-Asad barely suppressed a chuckle as he pressed the
lid down upon the distressing concoction and stored it
once more about his person. He made no answer. He
sat motionless, as though lost in meditation, until Ralph
Trenchard could have fallen upon and shaken him back
to a consciousness of his surroundings.</p>
<p>“A moon ago I prayed upon the site of a great battle,
O my Son!” murmured Al-Asad slowly, after some long
while and as though he had but just heard the question.
“There was naught but bones and this.” He once more
searched amongst his rags and looked at some object,
which he did not disclose to view, and took no notice of
a quickly suppressed movement at the right end of the
circle as Abdul gripped Ralph Trenchard by the arm.
“I have asked those I have met upon my path if they
knew aught about that combat. Nay, my Son! interrupt
me not, the hour is slipping into eternity and I must
be gone.” The chief, who had been anxious to tell what
<i>he</i> knew of the fight from personal experience, bowed in
obedience and spread his hands. “It was a fight between
white men and the woman of whose dire deeds the desert
rings. All were killed but a white woman, who, grievously
wounded and nigh unto death, was made prisoner and
taken to the mountains known as the Sanctuary, which
lie but a day’s journey and a night’s journey to the south
of the spot where they fought, and where dwells the woman
of evil repute.”</p>
<p>He rose as he spoke, standing a dim and arresting figure
in the shadows, and stretched out his hand.</p>
<p>“This I perceived glittering in the sun, midway between<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</SPAN></span>
the mountains and the battlefield, upon a path marked
in the sand by the swift passing of two camels. It is of
too great a value for one who lives upon the words of the
Prophet of Allah, the one and only God. Perchance wilt
thou, my son, take it in return for thy charity to the
humble pilgrim.”</p>
<p>He placed the locket in the chief’s hands, and in the
scramble of the entire camp to get a better view of the
gift, crept behind the tent and disappeared into the night,
where, once sure that he was beyond the chief’s range of
vision, he emulated the ostrich in speed until he reached
the spot where he had left his well-laden camel.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />