<h2>CHAPTER XIV</h2>
<div class="blockquote">
<p>“<i>A greater liar than Moseylama.</i>”—<span class="smcap">Arabic Proverb.</span></p>
</div>
<p>Three weeks passed, in which the Arabian nursed Ralph
Trenchard until the fever, brought on by exhaustion,
thirst and terrific heat, had left him, and left him very
sane and not unduly weak, and very full of gratitude to
the beautiful girl whom he seemed to have seen at his
bedside day and night, and who seemed to have changed
her dress a hundred times, if she had changed it once.</p>
<p>The nerve-racking jangle of her bracelets and anklets
and the overwhelming strength of her perfume drove him
wellnigh crazy at times, but, remembering what he would
learn from her upon his complete recovery, he stuffed
the ends of the silk sheets into his ears and held his
nostrils forcibly between thumb and finger under cover
of the same luxurious bed-spread.</p>
<p>Truly once or twice he grievously feared for his
reason.</p>
<p>He wakened one night to see a remarkably handsome
and muscular man, clad in naught but a loin-cloth, sitting
motionless in the middle of the floor with what looked
like a woman’s sandal pressed to his heart; and right
strange and idiotic did he look, too, when he placed the
sandal upon the floor and proceeded to press his forehead
upon it. Then, two or three, or maybe more, nights following—for
he had completely lost all sense of time—he
wakened to see nothing less than a lion rolling blithely
upon its back not two yards from him, which, having
rolled awhile, proceeded to gambol playfully about the
room, then slouched to the doorway, through which it
disappeared for good. When he turned slowly upon his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</SPAN></span>
bed to see what else might be in store for him, he saw
the face of the beautiful girl looking down upon him
from a spot ’twixt floor and ceiling as though suspended
in mid-air.</p>
<p>He laughed when, the delirium passed, these strange
occurrences were explained to him by Zarah, who, just
because he felt too uncertain for the moment about past
events to question her about Helen, allowed herself to
be deluded into the belief that he had forgotten the tale
Al-Asad had told when he visited the Bedouin camp disguised
as a holy man. Then this evening he sent the
youth who waited upon him to ask her to come to him.</p>
<p>She came quickly, Zarah the beautiful, the tender, the
pitiful, Zarah the most perfect hypocrite and liar, and
sat at his feet upon the floor, appropriately clothed in
black and silver, with the lower part of her lovely face
semi-hidden by a yashmak, over which her beautiful eyes
gazed into his with an expression which would have
deceived even the astutest old Holy Father.</p>
<p>“Where is Helen Raynor?”</p>
<p>He asked the question abruptly, taking her unawares.</p>
<p>She had intended telling him—if he should remember
the Nubian’s story—that Helen had returned to Hutah
under escort and had perished in the locust storm, but
the abrupt question took her off her guard.</p>
<p>“She is dead and buried in the quicksands,” she lied
instantly, uncontrollably, infinitely unwisely, without
giving a thought to the far-reaching effects of the lie.</p>
<p>“Dead! My God! When? How?”</p>
<p>Seeing the terrible mistake she had made, seeing no
way out of it, she backed the lie, planning in a flash to
give a slight foundation to the disastrous mistake by
getting rid of the girl that very night. She laid her
henna-tipped, jewelled hand upon Ralph Trenchard’s
and told him the sad story of Helen Raynor’s death, and
mopped her melting, dry eyes with the corner of the
silken sheet as she answered his horrified questions.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“ ... yes! I made a gr-r-reat effort to save her-r,
my dear-r schoolmate,” she said, “but, alas! <i>kismet</i>,
Allah had decr-r-r-eed other-r-wise....” Her arms
showed like creamy-yellow ivory as she raised them dutifully
above her downcast head in a gesture that showed off
her alluring figure to perfection. “ ... Nay! dear-r
Helena said no wor-rd, she just <i>died</i>. Wher-r-re? Oh!
in a bed. Yes! here in the mountain dwelling. By the
mercy of Mohammed the Pr-r-ophet did she die, so zat
her face should be a beautiful memor-r-y to her fr-r-ien’s,
even if I, Zarah ...” She struck her breast with
a beautiful gesture of resignation, but not hard enough
to mark it, even in her intense grief. “ ... Yea! even
if I, Zarah, shall have to car-r-y the dr-r-readful picture
of it, all br-r-oken, before my eyes until ze day when
death shall claim me also.” When Ralph Trenchard
shivered in absolute horror, she shivered also, perhaps
out of sympathy for him, perhaps to impress the thought
of the English girl’s face upon him—who knows? Then
she got up and trailed across the floor to a table laden
with drinks of divers sweetness and coolness.</p>
<p>He looked at the exquisite picture she made, and, longing
to hear more about the girl he loved, stretched out
his hand; and she looked at him with the love of all women
in her glorious eyes, and walked back to him swiftly and
with all the grace of her Spanish mother, carrying a
tray with glasses of frothing sherbet, which he did not
want or touch.</p>
<p>“Thou art indeed a man,” she said softly in Arabic,
as she placed the tray on a stool, ensconced herself cross-legged
upon the divan, and leant towards him as she lit
her cigarette, so that he was almost suffocated with the
pungency of her perfume. “Yea! verily amongst my
subjects, who are of a truth somewhat misshapen about
the legs from overmuch bestriding of the Nejdee, thou
art indeed a man!”</p>
<p>She sat and looked at him with all her love in her<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</SPAN></span>
eyes, whilst he sat and wished that in some way he could
express his gratitude for all she had done for Helen.
But when, after much searching in those portions of
her raiment which looked as though they might be large
enough to conceal a minute pocket, she showed him
Helen’s wrist-watch upon her palm, then he moved close
to her and crushed her hand in both of his until he
almost broke her fingers, as she told him how Helen
had given it to her in memory of old times.</p>
<p>“ ... I give it to you,” she said at last.</p>
<p>It was a sacrifice.</p>
<p>Smothered in jewels as she was, yet, with the delight
some Orientals have in the purloined object, she coveted
that looted watch more than all her rubies, emeralds,
pearls and diamonds put together in a heap.</p>
<p>He sat for a long time with the tragic, lying, little
token in his hand, then turned and looked into the doe-like
eyes, which looked fearlessly back into his.</p>
<p>“And this is all? You have nothing else, no little
thing, a handkerchief, a hair-pin, anything, no matter
how trivial, that belonged to your old school
friend?”</p>
<p>Zarah shook her beautiful head and sighed as she lied
once more with the ease of long-established custom, and
the certainty of being able before long to give some
foundation to the lie.</p>
<p>“Nozing! No little zing! We bur-r-ried her-r, as
I have told you, in her-r cloze. She was not beautiful to
look upon. <i>Aï, aï</i>, she was not pr-r-etty in ze gr-r-eat
sleep, so we bur-r-ied her-r-r deep, deep in ze comfor-r-ting
sands, which tell no tales.”</p>
<p>She rose once more as she spoke and trailed across the
marble floor to the door.</p>
<p>Perchance she wished to study astronomy or, perchance,
to draw a comparison between the beauty of those who
live in luxury and the disfigurement of those who die in
battle. Whatever her intent, she certainly made a striking<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</SPAN></span>
picture as she leaned against the lintel, wrapped in
a sheath of black and silver.</p>
<p>Ralph Trenchard stared at her, his eyes wandering
from the red curls to the small feet in silver sandals.</p>
<p>She knew his eyes to be upon her, and turned slowly
sideways and sighed as she raised her bare arms above
her head so that their creamy whiteness shone against
the purple background of the sky; she sighed again and
pressed her hands upon the spot where by rights her
heart should have been, whilst her melting eyes showed
fine specimens of the tears of the crocodile as she inwardly
asked herself if, in the whole world, there was to be found
anything quite so slow as an Englishman.</p>
<p>And he sat and gazed and gazed at the exquisite figure,
in which he saw the golden head and the broad shoulders,
the slender waist and the polished riding-boots, of the
girl to whom he had given the gold watch he held in his
hand.</p>
<p>He sat quite still for a long time, stunned with horror,
then, quite unconscious of what he did, caused the beautiful
Arabian to totally lose her bearings, so that fear,
jealousy and love linked hands in her heart and drove
her down the road of tragedy which had been marked
out for her through the ages.</p>
<p>Saying nothing, he smiled at her and held out his
hand, so that, completely on the wrong tack, she ran to
him, the silver embroidery glittering in response to her
fast-beating heart; then he kissed her hand in gratitude,
which was just about the most idiotic thing he could
have done, and, considering all things, spoke words of
equal idiocy into her willing ear.</p>
<p>“You will come and talk to me to-morrow, will you
not?” By talk he meant talk of Helen, but how on earth
was the Arabian to know that? “You will? Thank you
so much, so very much!” He stopped; then, in his
craving to regain his strength so as to get away from the
horror of the place where Helen lay dead, hidden from<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</SPAN></span>
him for ever in the ghastly sands, misled the Arabian
entirely. “Can I walk about the camp? Can I have a
horse or a camel or something to ride in the desert so
as to get really strong?”</p>
<p>“Ride with me?”</p>
<p>She barely whispered the words.</p>
<p>“Rather! If you have the time to spare. It would
be awfully kind of you. Then we could talk about the
school you were at and everything.”</p>
<p>By which he meant Helen’s schooldays and Helen’s
illness and Helen’s death; but how was the Arabian,
blinded by love and vanity, to know that, especially as
out of sheer gratitude he held her hand in both of his
whilst he talked.</p>
<p>He took her to the steps and watched her descend,
then turned and flung himself upon the divan with the
watch against his lips, whilst Zarah the Cruel, wide awake
to the danger of his walking amongst her men whilst
Helen remained in the camp, climbed the narrow path
to the building where dwelt the girl he thought to be
dead.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<div class="blockquote">
<p>“<i>May her envier stumble over her hair.</i>”—<span class="smcap">Arabic Proverb.</span></p>
</div>
<p>She had told Ralph Trenchard that the girl was dead,
when not only was she alive, but a person of some consequence
in the camp through the thrice cursed episode
of the black mare.</p>
<p>Knowing nothing about constancy and honour and
about as much about the question of nationality in marriage,
she was firmly convinced that in time the white man,
forgetting Helen, would succumb to her beauty and
marry her.</p>
<p>But before that thrice blessed day, even before he left
his dwelling to walk with her in the camp as he had just
suggested, the girl must disappear so that the unlucky<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</SPAN></span>
lie should have a slight foundation of truth, as have
so many falsehoods in the East when sifted to the
bottom.</p>
<p>Once the girl was dead she would rely upon her own
power over her own people to prevent the real facts of
the case from reaching his ears.</p>
<p>The first thing was to find a way of ridding herself
of the girl who stood as an obstacle in that path of peace
and love which ended in the white man’s heart, but, above
all, a way which would cause no comment amongst the men.
The way was shown her, startlingly clear and simple,
within the hour.</p>
<p>She cursed herself, the lie, fate and the black mare as
she climbed the steep steps to Helen’s prison.</p>
<p>If only she had not saved the girl in the first place,
if only, in the second, she had not so foolishly allowed
Helen to win the men’s hearts by her magnificent horsemanship,
if only she had not lied. If it had not been for
that thrice cursed episode with Lulah, the mare, she
would not have hesitated an hour ridding herself of the
girl, either by sending her back to civilization under escort
or by some more drastic method.</p>
<p>Up till then the white girl had meant nothing more
than a prisoner to the men, and the disappearance of a
prisoner, even one of the white race, would have been no
subject of comment amongst them. As it was she could
do nothing.</p>
<p>The Nubian reported that the men constantly talked
about Helen; exercised their best horses in the hope
that she would one day ride out in the desert with them,
either to hunt ostrich with cheetahs or to lead them to
the attack on some caravan or company of Bedouins.
They had taken to standing at the foot of the steep steps
to gamble upon the chance of seeing her come out upon
the platform, whilst gossip ran high as to the relationship
between her and the white man whom the half-caste
had saved from the sands of death.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[184]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>So that she cursed herself over and over again for the
lie she had told Ralph.</p>
<p>She lied by nature and by habit; in fact, she found it
easier and a good deal more enjoyable to lie than to tell
the truth, but she had lied without giving herself time to
look at the result of this particular lie from every point
of view.</p>
<p>The surly negress, with the gait of a lame hen, rose
from her squatting position as her dire mistress passed
up the steps, and retired still farther into the shadows,
where she occupied herself in the pleasant and stimulating,
if not too elegant, task of chewing <i>Kaat</i> as a relaxation
from the dull work of spying upon the gentle white girl.</p>
<p>Zarah stood for a moment and looked through the
doorway at Helen. She sat upon a pile of cushions,
reading by the light of a silver lamp hanging from the
ceiling.</p>
<p>Certain that the negress had replaced Namlah for the
purpose of carrying reports about her, she had made up
her mind that nothing but reports of normal behaviour
should be carried.</p>
<p>She woefully missed the peace and austerity of the
other dwelling, also the view of the desert through the
cleft, and of the plateau with the rushing, sparkling
river; but she made no sign, neither did she complain
about the heat, which was so much greater, nor about the
clutter of Persian rugs, cushions and tables, which only
served to intensify it. She had been told that her old
dwelling-place had been required for certain prisoners,
and that on their account she had been forbidden to walk
outside. Not a word of which she believed.</p>
<p>Certain that eyes continually watched her, she forced
herself to read; constantly on the lookout for danger,
she smiled upon and spoke gently to the surly negress,
who would not open her lips or respond in any way to her
friendly advances. She was putting up a plucky fight
against loneliness and anxiety. But it was not likely that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</SPAN></span>
Zarah should understand the moral strength which sustained
the English girl in the long, weary days of silence
and confinement. It would have suited the Arabian
better to have seen her crying her eyes out, or pacing
the floor in agitation; anything, in fact, rather than
sitting quietly reading; so that she made a quick gesture
of impatience, upon which Helen looked up, shut her book
with a snap, and sprang to her feet.</p>
<p>“Zarah!” she cried. “It’s ages since I’ve seen you.
You haven’t been near me since I was moved from my old
place. Have you got rid of the bad prisoners? I am
so tired of being cooped up in here!”</p>
<p>Zarah sat down on a pile of cushions and lit a cigarette,
as an answer to her difficulties flashed across her mind
at Helen’s words.</p>
<p>“You want to walk? You do not like being a
pr-r-isoner-r your-r-self. You ar-r-e no pr-r-isoner. You
must not go acr-r-oss ze plateau, but ozerwise ze place is
all your-r-s.”</p>
<p>As one could not move out of the place without crossing
the plateau, the all-ness seemed to be limited to the building
and a small space behind, surrounded by towering
rocks at which even the goats looked askance.</p>
<p>Helen knew it, and suddenly changed the subject. She
wanted to get leave to wander about the place as she
used to do; she wanted to find the secret path and to
speak to Namlah; she wanted desperately to escape, but
she knew Zarah’s astuteness and had a faint conception
of her intense hatred for herself; so went warily in her
demand for a little more liberty and changed the subject.</p>
<p>“I wonder what this building was used for?” she said,
slowly passing her finger over a roughly carved stone
panel, tracing the outline of a fish, some kind of a waterfowl
and a cross, carved in the centre of a disc in the fifth
century by the Holy Fathers. “The age almost makes
me creep, and I often wonder if the dead fathers come
back at night to walk about their old home.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Zarah sprang to her feet in a positive whirlwind of
gestures against spirits.</p>
<p>“You br-ring ze bad luck upon your-r-self and ze
place, Helena. Nozing comes her-re or-r leaves her-r-e
without my per-r-mission.”</p>
<p>Helen seized the opportunity and crossed quickly to
where Zarah stood, marvelling at her beauty.</p>
<p>“Zarah,” she said sweetly, “<i>when</i> are you going to find
the time to take me to Hutah. I do so want to get
back. Do you know what I’ve been thinking?” Zarah
shook her head as she looked at Helen, raging inwardly
at the English girl’s beauty, especially the golden hair,
which, for coolness sake, hung in two great plaits to her
knees. “You come with me and stay with me on a return
visit, and together we will try and find out what has
become of Ralph Trenchard, because I am sure he is
alive. I should know if he wasn’t, I am sure I should.”</p>
<p>Zarah turned abruptly away, swinging her cloak about
her so that her mouth was hidden. She wanted to laugh,
and she wanted to strike the English girl for the possessive
way in which she always spoke of the sick man,
whom she, Zarah, had nursed so assiduously for days
and nights; also could she willingly have killed her on the
spot for the almost irreparable mistake she had caused
her to make by lying about her death.</p>
<p>Helen saw nothing of the girl’s fury; she had bent to
pick up a box of chocolates, whilst the surly negress
watched her through the doorway and inelegantly wiped
her mouth with the back of her hand.</p>
<p>“Have a sweet, Zarah,” Helen said gently, offering
the box, “and then be really nice and take me for a walk.
I shall die if I don’t get a scramble amongst the rocks.”</p>
<p>“Wher-r-e do you want to go?” Zarah asked, as she
zealously filled her mouth with the sweetmeats the surly
negress coveted.</p>
<p>“I do so want to see the spear which was flung at your
father, and then”—Helen laughed so that her request
should not be taken too seriously—“then couldn’t we<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</SPAN></span>
walk across the wonderful hidden path to the desert, then
walk back? I’ll pin your train up if you’ve got a safety
pin. You <i>are</i> beautiful, Zarah; I can’t think why you
haven’t been married years ago.”</p>
<p>Zarah whirled round on her like a tiger-cat. In her
violent jealousy she thought the other sneered at her;
in her littleness of mind she failed to catch the ring of
honest admiration in the girl’s voice.</p>
<p>“Mar-r-ried!” she shrilled. “I am going to be mar-r-ried
soon, and you won’t be her-r-e to see the cer-r-emony.
Oh, do go away!” She pushed Helen roughly
on one side when she put out her hand in congratulation.
“We Ar-r-rabians do not expand over-r ze idea of mar-r-riage
as you English do.” She walked to the door as
she added insolently, “We have no old maids, and I am
younger zan you,” then clapped her hands and called the
surly negress shrilly, angrily.</p>
<p>“Methinks a whip upon the soles would hasten thy
feet,” she cried furiously, as the woman ran forward and
flung herself face downwards. “Thou three-footed
jackal, get up!” She struck the woman in the face when
she opened her mouth, from which no coherent sound
came, owing to her tongue having been split in her youth
for misdemeanour, and struck again, until Helen caught
her by the shoulder and flung her on one side, whereupon
the negress fell on her knees, bowed her head to the
ground and kissed the Arabian’s feet.</p>
<p>“You stop that, Zarah!”</p>
<p>The words sounded like the crack of a whip as the two
beautiful girls faced each other over the crouching
woman.</p>
<p>“She’s dumb, and I never knew it! It’s awful!”</p>
<p>“You fool!” replied the Arabian. “Her husband beats
her after every meal, and sometimes between. Get up!”
She kicked the woman, who leapt to her feet and stood
shivering with bent head.</p>
<p>“The white woman has a desire for exercise after her
long confinement owing to the unruliness of the prisoners.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</SPAN></span>
Dost hear, thou fool? She wishes to walk across the
path of peril even to the far side. It is dangerous, and
I have tried to prevail against her. One step too far, as
thou knowest, and she passes into the keeping of Allah,
the one and only God. Watch thou and pray to Allah
for her safe return.”</p>
<p>The negress watched them walk slowly along the narrow
path until they were out of sight; then, with all the cunning
of her race in her rolling eyes, and all a child’s glee
at its naughtiness, crept back to the room, and, sidling
along the wall, grabbed a handful of French chocolates.
If she had waited one instant longer she might have seen
a hidden figure crawl away between the rocks as silently
as a snake.</p>
<p>Blind Yussuf went quickly amongst the rocks, as at
home and as sure of his footing in his blindness as any
goat. He crept through incredibly small places, swinging
himself hand over hand at a height where no person with
vision would have dared to have even moved, arrived at
the cleft, thanks to the short cut, ahead of the girls,
dropped like a cat from rock to rock, then, slipping like
a shadow between the boulders, sat down in the shadow
near the thrown spear.</p>
<p>He listened to the girls’ voices as they made their
way down the steep incline. “‘A mouth that prays, a
hand that kills.’” He drew a finger down the scars upon
his face as he quoted the proverb and sat like an image
of Fate as the girls stopped quite close to him at the
beginning of the path.</p>
<p>“It is quite hard, you see,” said Zarah, as she bent
and drove her fingers through a few inches of the wet
sand. “It is not quite three of your yards wide.”</p>
<p>“But how wonderful!” Helen bent and dug her fingers
in, then moved them along sideways until her whole
hand disappeared into soft, wet, warm sand which pulled
it gently. “How dreadful!” Then she laughed. She
had found her way to the secret path and learned its
secret. “I tell you what! You lead the way out, Zarah,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</SPAN></span>
then we’ll turn and I’ll tread in our footsteps and lead
you back.”</p>
<p>Zarah laughed also, suddenly, shrilly.</p>
<p>The way showed clear. The end was in sight! Upon
the return journey she had but to push Helen gently
and all the difficulties arising out of the accursed lie
would be over.</p>
<p>She made a step and put her sandalled foot upon the
path, then turned her head and stood quite still, her face
convulsed with fury.</p>
<p>Like some great guardian spirit Blind Yussuf stood
just behind Helen.</p>
<p>“It is not wise, O mistress,” he said gently, “to venture
upon the perilous path this night of strong wind. It
bloweth from the west unto the east, so that the wayfarer
is like to be blown into the sands of death. It is
not wise, O mistress, and thanks be to Allah that I heard
voices as I passed and followed with great swiftness.
Nay, verily it is not wise.”</p>
<p>He spoke gently, his great cloak hanging motionless
in the still night, and salaamed to the ground when the
Arabian, without a word, beckoned to the bewildered
Helen and swiftly retraced her steps.</p>
<p>Back in her prison, Helen walked out to the space
behind the dwelling to think over matters as the moon
rose over the edge of the mountains. She looked up
when a stone rattled down the side to her feet.</p>
<p>Upon a ledge to which a goat would have hardly dared
to climb sat Yussuf. He put his fingers to his lips as
he looked down at the girl he could not see but whom he
had recognized by her footstep. “<i>A ti balak</i>,” he whispered,
then rose and swung himself from rock to rock
by the way he had come, whilst Helen stood looking up
until he disappeared, frozen with fear for his safety;
then, more determined than ever, through his warning,
to try and find a means of escape, turned and entered
her dwelling, just as Zarah entered hers and summoned
Al-Asad.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />