<h2>CHAPTER XV</h2>
<div class="blockquote">
<p>“<i>A rose fell to the lot of a monkey.</i>”—<span class="smcap">Arabic Proverb.</span></p>
</div>
<p>Zarah and Al-Asad sat in consultation.</p>
<p>Two beautiful beings in whom cunning stood for brain
and nether millstones for hearts—where others were
concerned.</p>
<p>To enhance her beauty in the eyes of the white man,
who looked upon her but indifferently, the Arabian
had worn a transparent <i>yashmak</i>, dyed her finger tips,
plastered her person with as many jewels as she could
fasten on to her garments, and walked like a cat on hot
bricks or a mannequin or a Spaniard. In the presence
of the Nubian, who loved her with all the might of his
half-savage soul, she sat cross-legged on a pile of
cushions, smoking endless cigarettes, wound in a wrapping
of silk, which she kept in its place by tucking the ends
in, and with her bare feet thrust into heelless slippers.
She was far more beautiful in her simplicity than in her
most extravagant apparel, if she had only known it, and
a furnace would have but mildly described the tumult of
love which she aroused in her magnificent slave.</p>
<p>An hour had passed since she had hastily summoned
him on her return from her meeting with her blind enemy
at the beginning of the secret path—an hour in which
they had talked and suggested and yet had failed to find
a way out of the difficulty which had arisen out of her
lie.</p>
<p>“Thinkest thou, O Al-Asad, that the blind one <i>knew</i>?”</p>
<p>“I know not, mistress,” he said slowly. “Perchance
’tis Fate who guides his feet continually across thy path,
or maybe the wind of chance. Yet can we do nothing.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>He touched an amulet of good luck at his neck; the
Arabian made a circle in the air with her fingers.</p>
<p>“May the spirit of my father, who placed the safekeeping
of the blind one in my hands, remain peacefully
in Paradise.”</p>
<p>They got up solemnly, turned from left to right three
times, and sat down again.</p>
<p>The heathens!</p>
<p>When <i>will</i> they learn to touch wood or to turn the
whole chair or couch round three times, with themselves,
as do their Christian and more civilized brethren!</p>
<p>“Thou dost worry overmuch, woman, about this white
girl. She is but a fly to be blown from the rim of thy
cup of happiness and good fortune. A word to thy
slave and he pinches the fly between his thumb and
finger.”</p>
<p>He illustrated his words, his splendid teeth flashing as
he laughed, then ducked his handsome head so as to avoid
the back-hander dealt him by the woman he worshipped.</p>
<p>“Thou fool!” she replied shortly. “Where findest thou
the sense to drink when thou art thirsty or to eat when
thou art empty? Have I not told thee that the white
man believes the white woman to be dead, yea, buried
in the sands, as she would verily have been buried this
night if the thrice accursed blind one had not yet again
crossed my path. If the white man who has, through
the accursed foolishness of my tongue, been told that the
girl is dead, speaks with one who tells him that she is
alive, what then? Thou dullard! Canst thou not see a
glimmer of light? Behold, art thou blinder than the blind
one, thou imbecile offspring of foolish parents!” She
got up and crossed to the door, from which nothing could
be seen but the stars above great walls of rock, whilst the
Nubian rose and followed her noiselessly.</p>
<p>Standing close to her, girt in his loin cloth, he towered
above her. He bent his head so that the scented curls
touched his lips, and gently stroked the silken wrapper<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</SPAN></span>
with his slender fingers, whilst his heart almost broke
in the love he had for her.</p>
<p>He would have starved for her, endured torture for her,
died for her; he was her rightful mate; she was his
woman out of all the world; yet she hankered for the
grapes which hung well beyond the reach of her crossbred
hands, and he forgot his manhood in the fear of
losing the little—which was yet so much—she gave him.
He worked so hard to gain the barest word of gratitude;
he found such joy in lying across the threshold o’ nights
to keep her safe; he suffered such hell through jealousy;
yet in his loyalty, in his desire to bring her happiness, he
had not once thought of removing the white man from his
own path. The white woman, yea, why not? What difference
would one soulless woman more or less make in
this world already overstocked with soulless women? Once
she was removed and the woman of his heart’s desire married
to the man she loved—and did Allah in His wisdom
ever know of such a tangle—then he would ride out into
the desert and die, or, better still, become chief of a band
with which to harry the white man when he ventured
across the quicksands.</p>
<p>Primitive reasoning, but not too bad for one who could
neither read nor write, and whose idea of God was a vasty,
corporeal deity who offered sweetmeats with one hand
and struck one for taking them with the other.</p>
<p>He laughed as he spoke, on the spur of his primitive
reasoning, and stroked the soft silk which wrapped his
rightful mate.</p>
<p>“Mistress!”</p>
<p>At a certain tone in his voice with which she was unacquainted
she turned her head and looked over her
shoulder and up at him sideways, so that her yellow eyes
gleamed through half-closed lids, just as gleamed the eyes
of the wellnigh adolescent lion cub watching them from a
corner of the luxurious room.</p>
<p>“Mistress, it were well if I broke the neck of the white<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</SPAN></span>
woman within the hour, and fastening her dead body upon
some horse, sent them floundering into the sands of death.
Then will I spread a tale of the white woman’s betrayal
of thy hospitality, and how she stole thy horse and attempted
to escape, so——”</p>
<p>He laughed as she turned upon him in anger, then bent
and looked down into her beautiful, furious eyes with a
look she did not understand, but which caused her to draw
back a pace.</p>
<p>“Behold, are thy words as bright as a rusty sword and
thy reasoning as sharp as the blunt edge,” she cried.
“The white woman has found favour in the eyes of thy
brethren, thou fool! Thinkest thou that when they hear
of her death that their lamentations will not reach to the
mountaintops, yea, and to the ears of the white man, so
that he turns upon me in rage? Behold, are the wits of
the deaf boy who waits upon the white man like two-edged
daggers compared to thine, O Al-Asad of the camel head!”</p>
<p>Al-Asad of the camel head made no sign of the storm
caused within him by the nearness of the woman and her
contemptuous words. He stood quite still, the perfume
of her hair in his nostrils, the silk of her garment in his
hands.</p>
<p>“Thou makest a pond of a raindrop, woman,” he answered.
“What are my brethren but children, pleased
to-day at a smile, angered to-morrow at a word? Make
great promise of feasting and fighting, and their love
belongs to the giver of food and promoter of battle; laugh
at them, mock them, make sport of their words and their
raiment and their countenance, and they kill without a
word.”</p>
<p>Zarah put her little hands against his chest and pushed
him away, and looked at him sideways as she crossed to
the couch, and looked at him again when he did not follow,
and beckoned him with a backward movement of the
head, which showed him the beauty of her throat as he
leant against the lintel and looked at her, and laughed<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</SPAN></span>
at the simplicity of the plan that was formulating in his
mind.</p>
<p>Dying of thirst, he stretched for the cup even if there
was but a drop of water left; starving, he swept the very
floor for a crust; destitute, he demanded the smallest
coin as price for the way he had found for removing the
obstacle from the Arabian girl’s path. When she beckoned
he crossed to her and sat down, but not upon the floor
at her feet. He sat beside her, close to her, and looked
at her so that she shrank away.</p>
<p>“Shelter is given to the camel, meat to the dog, water
to the horse at the end of a day of toil,” he said slowly.
“What reward will be given this slave if he removes the
cloud from before the sun of his mistress’s happiness?”</p>
<p>“Thou! A reward given unto thee?” She could hardly
have shown more astonishment if he had asked for the
heaped-up contents of her jewel safe. “My father gave
thee shelter when thou didst flee from the wrath of those
who desired thy life, dates when thy bones pierced thy
skin, water when thou wast wellnigh dead from thirst.
A reward? Behold, the whip across thy mouth will be
thy reward for thy daring, thou mongrel!”</p>
<p>She had worked herself into a rare rage, and flung herself
to the far end of the couch, so that an end of the
silken wrapper became untucked; and she beat upon the
cushions with clenched fists, thereby causing the loosened
garment to slip yet lower still, until it exposed the
splendid shoulders, which looked the more bewitching
in that they were half draped.</p>
<p>Alas! that it be so hard a task to drill into the heads
of women the simple truth that, where <i>décollétage</i> is concerned,
a hint is far more potent than a whole hard fact.</p>
<p>“A reward for thee?” she repeated. “For thee?”</p>
<p>“Yea, a date, a drop of water....” He paused, then
rose and walked to the door and looked up at the stars
and laughed at the thought of the gift he would pluck
from paradise. “Yea, a date for the camel and water<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</SPAN></span>
for the horse, but a kiss—one kiss—from thy mouth,
which is as a red flower fashioned in rubies and set with
pearls which are thy teeth. Nay, fling not thyself upon
thy slave, for he could break thee with one hand. The
camel works not without reward, the horse dies without
water, thy slave will not reveal his plan without the promise
of that which he craves.”</p>
<p>“But the camel and the horse fulfil their tasks,” said
Zarah sweetly, slowly, baiting her trap, into which the
simple barbarian would ultimately fall. “The reward
comes afterwards, O Al-Asad, when the heat of the day
is o’er and the peace of the night falleth apace. Come!”</p>
<p>She held out her hand and he ran to her, ran as swiftly
as a deer, as noiselessly as the lion watching them out of
tawny, half-closed eyes, and knelt at her feet and encircled
her with his arms without touching her withal.</p>
<p>“Thou wilt—thou wilt—when my plan is unfolded—my
tale is told—thou wilt?”</p>
<p>Zarah the liar, the hypocrite, the merciless, smiled gently
as she looked down into the handsome face so near her
own, nodded her head as she listened, and pushed away
the encircling arms as she rose to her feet and moved a
few steps.</p>
<p>It was such a simple plan and such an effective plan
for getting her out of her quandary, and the reward was
such a simple one to grant—a solitary kiss, a thing of
nothing, a sound, a fleeting second of rapture to him;
yet she vowed in her treacherous heart that no man but
the man she loved should hold her in his arms or other
lips than his touch her beautiful, lying mouth.</p>
<p>“Yea, verily, ’tis a good plan and easy,” she said,
watching him out of the corner of her eyes. “Thou wilt
spread tales of this white woman’s ingratitude and of
her mocking of our sisters, so that the men, infuriated,
fall upon her and kill her, not this night, but upon the
night of feasting.”</p>
<p>“Yea, mistress, upon the night of feasting, so that the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</SPAN></span>
women, occupied in the task of cooking, know nothing of
her death, and knowing nothing, will say nothing. Mistress,”
he ended in a whisper, “is it not a good plan and
simple?”</p>
<p>Forgetting the Arabian proverb which teaches that
“a spark can fire the whole quarter,” counting upon her
power over the man, forgetting also that he was human
even if he were a slave, she laughed mockingly as she
answered: “Verily is it simple, and methinks that the
little toil is not worthy of so great reward!”</p>
<p>He crossed the room in one bound and swept her, fighting
desperately, into his arm. He crushed her down upon
his heart and laughed at her when she met her teeth in his
forearm until the blood ran, and caught her hands in one
of his and held her beautiful head pressed against his
shoulder with his arm and kissed her scented hair; then
flung her upon the divan and, laughing, turned to meet
the lion as it sprang.</p>
<p>He caught it in mid-air, grasping its throat with his
left hand, and with a lightning sideways movement gripped
its hind legs just at the joint with his right.</p>
<p>The beast’s front paws just reached his chest and tore
it with great claws until the blood streamed; it roared
and choked and moaned as, holding it at arm’s length as
it struggled and fought, the gigantic man bent the head
back to meet the feet of the hind legs, which he as slowly
bent over the back to meet the head.</p>
<p>Zarah stood upon tiptoe, eyes blazing, hands clasped,
insult forgotten in the wonderful feat of strength, of
which even she did not think the man was capable.</p>
<p>“<i>Wah! Wah!</i>” she cried, a very child of the desert,
as she watched the animal fighting for its life. “<i>Wah!
Wah!</i>” she cried again, clapping her hands when Al-Asad,
the magnificent half-caste, met the lion’s feet and head
with a hardly perceptible effort, and at the little click
which was all that announced the end, flung the carcass
at the woman’s feet and walked towards the door.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Al-Asad! Thy wounds!”</p>
<p>He turned and looked at the beautiful woman who, carried
out of herself by the intoxication of the moment,
held out her arms to him, then down at the mark of her
teeth upon his arm.</p>
<p>“My wound, O woman, is thy seal upon me, which I
shall carry to the day when Allah, the one and only God,
shall bid me leave this maze which we call life. I go to
work upon my plan, so that the desire of thy heart is
granted thee.” He paused for one moment with his
hand upon the curtain and took his revenge for all the
bitterness of the past. “I have kissed thy hair, I have
held thee upon my heart, I have bruised thee. Go to the
white man an thou wilt; he will find thee marked by
another man. I will have nothing, not even one kiss
from thee, until of thy own free will thou givest it
me.”</p>
<p>He was gone, leaving her staring at the curtain. She
laughed, laughed at the thought of the white man’s love
which awaited her, laughed at the memory of the just
fled hour, and raised her hands to call her body-woman;
then turned her head and listened.</p>
<p>From somewhere outside amongst the rocks came the
sound of a man singing.</p>
<p>Over and over again he sang the Arabian proverb
mockingly, sweetly.</p>
<p>“‘They wooed her and she resisted; they left her, and
she fell in love.’”</p>
<p>Over and over again the Nubian sang the words in his
golden tenor voice as he made his way to the men’s
quarters.</p>
<p>Then she clapped her hands sharply, threw herself on
the couch, and sought for the photograph of Ralph
Trenchard, which she wore upon her heart in Helen Raynor’s
golden locket.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</SPAN></span></p>
<hr class="tb" />
<div class="blockquote">
<p>“<i>The fire of more than one war has been kindled by a single
word.</i>”—<span class="smcap">Arabic Proverb.</span></p>
</div>
<p>The firelight shone on Al-Asad as he stood in the centre
of an admiring circle. His bronzed skin glistened and
his perfect teeth flashed and the blood upon his chest
showed dark as he moved lightly upon his feet in describing
the fight with the lion.</p>
<p>He had got the men interested and pleased and curious,
and it would require but a very slight effort to get them
angry.</p>
<p>Their splendid teeth flashed as they laughed and shouted
encouragement, and their shadows danced as they answered
the Nubian’s every movement. They stretched out
their hands and brought them slowly together, and bent
this way and that way as they breathed heavily, in unconscious
imitation of the half-caste, as is the way of the
Oriental when deeply interested in a story.</p>
<p>“<i>Wah! Wah!</i>” they yelled. “What then? What then?”</p>
<p>They shouted with laughter, gleefully, joyously, and
exchanged remarks which were better left unprinted, when
a youth ran forward and touched Al-Asad’s arm.</p>
<p>“Now, O brother, tell us the tale of the tiger-cat. The
lion is dead; didst thou perchance also draw the tiger-cat’s
teeth and claws, <i>after</i> they had mauled thy flesh?”</p>
<p>The youth wrapped his great cloak tight about himself
and, copying Zarah’s walk, strolled back to his place,
where he stood looking over his shoulder at the Nubian
from half-closed eyes. The men roared with laughter
and yelled encouragement and suggestion until the mountains
echoed and re-echoed to the sound.</p>
<p>Al-Asad took advantage of the opening.</p>
<p>He sprang at the youth, caught him, tightly wrapped
in the great white cloak, held him easily above his head in
spite of his struggles, then, still holding him horizontally,
swung him round and round, with much the same movement
as one uses in swinging clubs, plumped him on his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</SPAN></span>
feet, shook him like a rat, and flung him like a sack of
<i>durra</i> back to his place, whilst the men roared with delight.</p>
<p>“I break thy neck, O brother, and the neck of any who
dares to make mock of Zarah the Beautiful. She is a
woman, but is she not the child of our dead chief? Did
she not give us shelter when we fled from the wrath of the
pursuers? Food when our bones wellnigh pierced the
skin? Water when we thirsted? Then....”</p>
<p>“’Tis well said, O Lionheart, verily is thy speech of
gold....”</p>
<p>“Does she not reward us when the toil is done?” continued
Al-Asad, taking no notice of the unseemly interruption.
“When the heat of the day is o’er and the
peace of the night falleth apace.” He glanced down at
the mark upon his arm, well pleased at the effect his
flowing, if borrowed, rhetoric was having upon his unsuspecting
audience. “Shall we not be grateful? Shall
we not show her our gratitude? Shall we not—shall we
not help her against her enemies—even as she helped
us in our need?”</p>
<p>He had the men in the hollow of his hand.</p>
<p>Their knives flashed as they leapt to their feet, their
voices sounded like thunder as they shouted in execration,
cursed in volume, and clamoured to be led against the
foe.</p>
<p>Al-Asad gave them no time to collect their senses scattered
by their desire for battle, murder and revenge. He
hit whilst their wrath was at white heat, raining blows
upon their pride and ultrasensitiveness. He seized the
white cloak from the one nearest and wrapped it about
him, and cleared a space by the strength of his good right
arm.</p>
<p>“Her enemy, my brethren, and thine, is a woman, nay!
give ear for a while. Our mistress, with a desire to help
her white prisoner—yea! even she—sat with her anon,
whilst I sat without the curtain, unseen by either of them.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</SPAN></span>
Before Allah, they were as night and day, sun and moon,
in their beauty. Yea! and I will see that thou speakest
not again in this life, my brother, if thou essayest once
more to open thy mouth, which is as wide and ugly as
the storm-swept desert. And, behold! this is what mine
eyes saw and mine ears heard. She mocked, this white
she-devil, mocked the people of the desert, walked like
thee, brother, this wise”—with all the aptitude of the
negro, he bowed his legs and rolled as he walked towards
Bowlegs, the finest horseman in the Nejd—“and sat crosswise
upon the cushions and rode like thee, little one”—he
laughed and pointed at a youth who was noted for his
ungainly seat upon horseback—“and made mock of our
women as they draw water for her bath or grind the
<i>durra</i> for her bread.” He imitated the surly negress
with the gait of a lame hen, he also gave the quick movements
of Namlah the Ant, then ran and barred the way
as the men made a sudden, ugly rush. It was touch and
go if he held them or if they overpowered him and, in one
blinding moment of fury, rushed and killed Helen, thereby
rousing the sleeping women and children and undoing all
his cunning work. He laughed, laughed long and loud,
until the place rang, laughed until, suspicious of being
fooled, they hesitated and stopped.</p>
<p>Then he beckoned them and, squatting upon his
haunches, spoke to them in whispers, thereby imparting
a feeling of mystery to the tale he recounted of Zarah’s
lie, which they thoroughly appreciated, and her dilemma,
which they laughed at right heartily.</p>
<p>But he had reckoned without the love of gambling with
which the Eastern is obsessed.</p>
<p>The Patriarch, who looked for all the world like Abraham
at his most benevolent, and who was the hardest
rider to hounds, or, rather, into battle, and the most
inveterate gambler in Arabia, held up his hand, upon
which the rest of the inveterate gamblers nudged each
other with the <i>mijan</i>, the small stick the Bedouin usually<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</SPAN></span>
carries, and felt for their counters or dice or whatever
they fancied most in games of chance.</p>
<p>“Thou sayest, O Asad, mighty of muscle and clear of
understanding, that our mistress desires the death of the
white woman, so that there shall be a portion of truth
in the tale she has told the white man of the death of this
white woman, who still lives.”</p>
<p>Al-Asad nodded. He was loth to see his plans go
awry, but he would have been still more loth to lose the
chance of an hour’s gambling.</p>
<p>“<i>We</i> say that for her mocking this white woman shall
die this night, <i>thou</i> sayest she must live until the night
of the great feasting which our mistress prepareth for
us, so that in the sounds of singing and dancing her passing
shall be unnoticed by the women, who, were it otherwise,
might prattle about her death. I will play thee
for her death! Choose thou the game.”</p>
<p>Came a positive roar, which brought Helen upsitting
upon her bed, as each man shouted to his neighbour, and
Al-Asad drew from out his loin-cloth a set of cherished
dice, whilst Yussuf drew nearer the fire with his counters
in his hand.</p>
<p>Logs were thrown on the fires, so that orange, red and
yellow flames shot skywards, against which the infuriated,
excited men stood out in startling relief as they gesticulated
and laughed and cursed; bets were laid against the
time of Helen Raynor’s death, and the particular kind
of death she should die for her breaking of the great
law of hospitality, with side bets upon every conceivable
trifle which by the wildest stretch of the most prolific
Oriental imagination could be possibly connected with
the case.</p>
<p>“Thou Yussuf!” shouted Bowlegs, as he walked towards
the blind man with the roll of a sailing ship in the Bay.
“My eldest daughter—who is as fair favoured as an
ostrich without feathers—against thy spavined mare that
the white woman dies upon the night of the feast.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Yussuf leaned forward so that the firelight shone upon
his terrible face whilst the men gathered about the two,
forgetting their own concerns, for the moment, in the
interest they always took in the doings and sayings of
the afflicted man.</p>
<p>“I prefer the gentle company of my spavined mare,
though she be useless for the chase or the battle, O my
brother, but I will lay my jewel-encrusted <i>nagileh</i> against
a handful of dates that the white woman dies to-night.
This woman without compassion, this breaker of the
Arab’s law. I have suffered much, my brethren, but to
the death I uphold our mistress against one who abuses
her. For is it not written, ‘A well from which thou drinkest,
throw not a stone in it’?” Yussuf was playing to
the gallery and throwing sand across his brethren’s vision,
whilst praying secretly to Allah the Compassionate and
the Merciful to hold the scales of justice well balanced
between the two women.</p>
<p>The benevolent looking Patriarch, who had more death
notches in his favourite spear than any man in the Peninsula,
once more held up his hand. He stroked his flowing
white beard as he looked at Al-Asad, who sat with
no sign of his inner perturbation upon his handsome face,
whilst at the top of his voice Yussuf cursed the white
woman in her past, present and future, as well as in her
morals, looks and ancestry.</p>
<p>“So it has been arranged, O my children,” said the
Patriarch, who looked as though he should have been
patting the heads of the third or fourth generation clustering
about his knees instead of gambling on a woman’s
death. “If our brother Al-Asad throws the dice so that
three sixes fall upwards at the same time, then the thrice-accursed
woman dies upon the night of feasting and
banqueting. If Fate decrees that I throw these three
figures of the same value at the same time, <i>kismet</i>, ’tis the
will of Allah that she dies to-night. Throw, my son!”</p>
<p>Al-Asad shook the dice between his slender hands and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</SPAN></span>
tossed them high into the air. The men backed as the
ivory squares fell amongst them and made way for the
Patriarch and Al-Asad to examine them.</p>
<p>The Patriarch raised his hands, Al-Asad laughed softly,
the men howled in disappointment.</p>
<p>The half-caste had thrown three sixes.</p>
<p>In one brief second the chances of a whole night of
gambling, to be followed by the exhilarating task of putting
an offender to death, had been wiped out, yet by the
decision of the dice did those uneducated, semi-savage,
grievously disappointed men abide.</p>
<p>True, they turned in the direction of the dwelling
wherein Helen slept and fingered their knives, but more
from the rancour aroused by her insult than with any intention
of disputing the untoward ending to what might
have been such an enjoyable night.</p>
<p>The Patriarch looked at them and grieved for their
disappointment, as much as for his own, and walked to
a little distance, where he lifted his benign countenance
to the stars as he worked his wits, which in their cunning
could have given points to a monkey; then he turned and
spread wide his arms, looking for all the world as though
he had stepped out of a picture by some old master, and
called his sons so that they ran to him, like the children
they really were, in spite of their ferocious appearance
and still more ferocious deeds.</p>
<p>“Al-Asad the Lion of nimble wit saith that ’twere wise
to allow our mistress to wed this white man—for a space.
Allah alone wots of this power which drives the white to
the dark, the fat to the lean, the well-favoured to the ill-favoured,
and which causes more trouble than the rat in
the corn or the viper on the hearth.”</p>
<p>“And the tiger-cat to meet its teeth in the flesh of the
slave,” shrilled the youth who had been swung like a
club, but who had revived sufficiently to gamble with the
best.</p>
<p>The men, restored to good humour by the promise in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</SPAN></span>
the old man’s voice, shouted with laughter as they aimed
friendly blows at the Nubian, who stood close to the
Patriarch’s side.</p>
<p>“My son!” said the old man as he stroked his beard,
which was about his one possession he would not have
staked against fortune. “I will play thee for the death
of the white man. If I throw three sixes he dies this
night, if thou throwest three sixes then he takes Zarah
the Gentle as wife for the length of six moons, after which
he dies so that thou mayest take his place at her side.
And may Allah show thee the path through the maze of
love which spreads about thee and her and the white
man.”</p>
<p>Helen, sitting on the edge of her bed, covered her ears
with her hands at the savagery in the shouts of the men,
whilst Yussuf strode forward with his counters in his
hand.</p>
<p>“My spavined mare against a bowl of rice cooked by
thy daughter—and may her cooking be better favoured
than is her face—that the white man—and may his soul
be as black in <i>Jehannam</i> as his skin is white on earth—dieth
this dawn in the stead of the thrice accursed white
woman,” he cried, whilst praying secretly and fervently
to Allah the Merciful to strike the Patriarch dead.</p>
<p>They threw the dice unavailingly till dawn, whilst the
elder women, wakened by the gentle method of applying
the foot to their slumbering persons, rose and made coffee
for their lords, half of whom, at the last throw of the
dice, were to find themselves minus coffee beans, daughters,
horses, weapons or <i>piastres</i>.</p>
<p>The sky shone like an opal in the east, the birds sang,
the smoke of the fires in the women’s quarter clung like
mist against the mountainside as Al-Asad shook the dice
in his hands and flung them up to the flaming heavens.</p>
<p>The men backed as the ivory squares fell amongst them,
and made way for the Patriarch and the Nubian to examine
the result.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The Patriarch raised his hands, Al-Asad laughed, the
men shouted with laughter and smote him friendly-wise,
hip and thigh.</p>
<p>He had thrown three sixes.</p>
<p>And half an hour later Helen, little recking how near
she and the man she loved had been to death, stood just
inside her door, watching the magnificent sight of the
shouting, laughing men as they rode their horses up
the steep incline on their way to a gallop across the
desert.</p>
<p>Her eyes were full of perplexity, her heart beat heavily
in an unaccountable fear, but, determined that the spy
should have naught to tell her mistress, she let drop the
curtain and stretched herself upon her bed.</p>
<p>Al-Asad ran up the steps to his mistress’s dwelling and
entered her room.</p>
<p>She watched him from under her arm as she lay upon
the divan and smiled at the mastery of the man’s bearing,
then looked up at him out of sleepy, opalescent eyes as
he knelt beside her so that his face was on a level with
hers.</p>
<p>“He is thine, woman. The white man is thine for a
space. I, Al-Asad the slave, have given him unto thee.
I have worked well for thee, mistress, I have worked well
for thee!”</p>
<p>He rose as he spoke and swept her into his arms, and
laughed down at her as she struggled desperately.</p>
<p>Then he kissed her scented hair, and held her down
upon his heart so that she could not move.</p>
<p>“I give thee the white man! For a spell! I, thy mate!”</p>
<p>He crushed her until she lay as still as death in his
arms, then flung her on the cushions and ran out of the
dwelling and down the steps to the stables, where he led
out his mare, and, without saddle or bridle or harness
whatever, leapt across her back and rode her, shouting
with the joy of life, up the steep path and out to the
desert he loved.</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</SPAN></span></p>
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