<h2><SPAN name="chap05"></SPAN>CHAPTER V.<br/> THE FIGHT IN THE VILLAGE</h2>
<p>Here was a horrible position! Four English children, whose proper date was A.D.
1905, and whose proper address was London, set down in Egypt in the year 6000
B.C. with no means whatever of getting back into their own time and place. They
could not find the East, and the sun was of no use at the moment, because some
officious person had once explained to Cyril that the sun did not really set in
the West at all—nor rise in the East either, for the matter of that.</p>
<p>The Psammead had crept out of the bass-bag when they were not looking and had
basely deserted them.</p>
<p>An enemy was approaching. There would be a fight. People get killed in fights,
and the idea of taking part in a fight was one that did not appeal to the
children.</p>
<p>The man who had brought the news of the enemy still lay panting on the sand.
His tongue was hanging out, long and red, like a dog’s. The people of the
village were hurriedly filling the gaps in the fence with thorn-bushes from the
heap that seemed to have been piled there ready for just such a need. They
lifted the cluster-thorns with long poles—much as men at home, nowadays,
lift hay with a fork.</p>
<p>Jane bit her lip and tried to decide not to cry.</p>
<p>Robert felt in his pocket for a toy pistol and loaded it with a pink paper cap.
It was his only weapon.</p>
<p>Cyril tightened his belt two holes.</p>
<p>And Anthea absently took the drooping red roses from the buttonholes of the
others, bit the ends of the stalks, and set them in a pot of water that stood
in the shadow by a hut door. She was always rather silly about flowers.</p>
<p>“Look here!” she said. “I think perhaps the Psammead is
really arranging something for us. I don’t believe it would go away and
leave us all alone in the Past. I’m certain it wouldn’t.”</p>
<p>Jane succeeded in deciding not to cry—at any rate yet.</p>
<p>“But what can we do?” Robert asked.</p>
<p>“Nothing,” Cyril answered promptly, “except keep our eyes and
ears open. Look! That runner chap’s getting his wind. Let’s go and
hear what he’s got to say.”</p>
<p>The runner had risen to his knees and was sitting back on his heels. Now he
stood up and spoke. He began by some respectful remarks addressed to the heads
of the village. His speech got more interesting when he said—</p>
<p>“I went out in my raft to snare ibises, and I had gone up the stream an
hour’s journey. Then I set my snares and waited. And I heard the sound of
many wings, and looking up, saw many herons circling in the air. And I saw that
they were afraid; so I took thought. A beast may scare one heron, coming upon
it suddenly, but no beast will scare a whole flock of herons. And still they
flew and circled, and would not light. So then I knew that what scared the
herons must be men, and men who knew not our ways of going softly so as to take
the birds and beasts unawares. By this I knew they were not of our race or of
our place. So, leaving my raft, I crept along the river bank, and at last came
upon the strangers. They are many as the sands of the desert, and their
spear-heads shine red like the sun. They are a terrible people, and their march
is towards us. Having seen this, I ran, and did not stay till I was before
you.”</p>
<p>“These are <i>your</i> folk,” said the headman, turning suddenly
and angrily on Cyril, “you came as spies for them.”</p>
<p>“We did <i>not</i>,” said Cyril indignantly. “We
wouldn’t be spies for anything. I’m certain these people
aren’t a bit like us. Are they now?” he asked the runner.</p>
<p>“No,” was the answer. “These men’s faces were darkened,
and their hair black as night. Yet these strange children, maybe, are their
gods, who have come before to make ready the way for them.”</p>
<p>A murmur ran through the crowd.</p>
<p>“No, <i>no</i>,” said Cyril again. “We are on your side. We
will help you to guard your sacred things.”</p>
<p>The headman seemed impressed by the fact that Cyril knew that there <i>were</i>
sacred things to be guarded. He stood a moment gazing at the children. Then he
said—</p>
<p>“It is well. And now let all make offering, that we may be strong in
battle.”</p>
<p>The crowd dispersed, and nine men, wearing antelope-skins, grouped themselves
in front of the opening in the hedge in the middle of the village. And
presently, one by one, the men brought all sorts of things—hippopotamus
flesh, ostrich-feathers, the fruit of the date palms, red chalk, green chalk,
fish from the river, and ibex from the mountains; and the headman received
these gifts. There was another hedge inside the first, about a yard from it, so
that there was a lane inside between the hedges. And every now and then one of
the headmen would disappear along this lane with full hands and come back with
hands empty.</p>
<p>“They’re making offerings to their Amulet,” said Anthea.
“We’d better give something too.”</p>
<p>The pockets of the party, hastily explored, yielded a piece of pink tape, a bit
of sealing-wax, and part of the Waterbury watch that Robert had not been able
to help taking to pieces at Christmas and had never had time to rearrange. Most
boys have a watch in this condition.</p>
<p>They presented their offerings, and Anthea added the red roses.</p>
<p>The headman who took the things looked at them with awe, especially at the red
roses and the Waterbury-watch fragment.</p>
<p>“This is a day of very wondrous happenings,” he said. “I have
no more room in me to be astonished. Our maiden said there was peace between
you and us. But for this coming of a foe we should have made sure.”</p>
<p>The children shuddered.</p>
<p>“Now speak. Are you upon our side?”</p>
<p>“<i>Yes</i>. Don’t I keep telling you we are?” Robert said.
“Look here. I will give you a sign. You see this.” He held out the
toy pistol. “I shall speak to it, and if it answers me you will know that
I and the others are come to guard your sacred thing—that we’ve
just made the offerings to.”</p>
<p>“Will that god whose image you hold in your hand speak to you alone, or
shall I also hear it?” asked the man cautiously.</p>
<p>“You’ll be surprised when you <i>do</i> hear it,” said
Robert. “Now, then.” He looked at the pistol and said—</p>
<p>“If we are to guard the sacred treasure within”—he pointed to
the hedged-in space—“speak with thy loud voice, and we shall
obey.”</p>
<p>He pulled the trigger, and the cap went off. The noise was loud, for it was a
two-shilling pistol, and the caps were excellent.</p>
<p>Every man, woman, and child in the village fell on its face on the sand.</p>
<p>The headman who had accepted the test rose first.</p>
<p>“The voice has spoken,” he said. “Lead them into the
ante-room of the sacred thing.”</p>
<p>So now the four children were led in through the opening of the hedge and round
the lane till they came to an opening in the inner hedge, and they went through
an opening in that, and so passed into another lane.</p>
<p>The thing was built something like this, and all the hedges were of brushwood
and thorns:</p>
<div class="fig"> <ANTIMG src="images/fig03.jpg" width-obs="450" height-obs="398" alt="[Illustration]" /></div>
<p>“It’s like the maze at Hampton Court,” whispered Anthea.</p>
<p>The lanes were all open to the sky, but the little hut in the middle of the
maze was round-roofed, and a curtain of skins hung over the doorway.</p>
<p>“Here you may wait,” said their guide, “but do not dare to
pass the curtain.” He himself passed it and disappeared.</p>
<p>“But look here,” whispered Cyril, “some of us ought to be
outside in case the Psammead turns up.”</p>
<p>“Don’t let’s get separated from each other, whatever we
do,” said Anthea. “It’s quite bad enough to be separated from
the Psammead. We can’t do anything while that man is in there.
Let’s all go out into the village again. We can come back later now we
know the way in. That man’ll have to fight like the rest, most likely, if
it comes to fighting. If we find the Psammead we’ll go straight home. It
must be getting late, and I don’t much like this mazy place.”</p>
<p>They went out and told the headman that they would protect the treasure when
the fighting began. And now they looked about them and were able to see exactly
how a first-class worker in flint flakes and notches an arrow-head or the edge
of an axe—an advantage which no other person now alive has ever enjoyed.
The boys found the weapons most interesting. The arrow-heads were not on arrows
such as you shoot from a bow, but on javelins, for throwing from the hand. The
chief weapon was a stone fastened to a rather short stick something like the
things gentlemen used to carry about and call life-preservers in the days of
the garrotters. Then there were long things like spears or lances, with flint
knives—horribly sharp—and flint battle-axes.</p>
<p>Everyone in the village was so busy that the place was like an ant-heap when
you have walked into it by accident. The women were busy and even the children.</p>
<p>Quite suddenly all the air seemed to glow and grow red—it was like the
sudden opening of a furnace door, such as you may see at Woolwich Arsenal if
you ever have the luck to be taken there—and then almost as suddenly it
was as though the furnace doors had been shut. For the sun had set, and it was
night.</p>
<p>The sun had that abrupt way of setting in Egypt eight thousand years ago, and I
believe it has never been able to break itself of the habit, and sets in
exactly the same manner to the present day. The girl brought the skins of wild
deer and led the children to a heap of dry sedge.</p>
<p>“My father says they will not attack yet. Sleep!” she said, and it
really seemed a good idea. You may think that in the midst of all these dangers
the children would not have been able to sleep—but somehow, though they
were rather frightened now and then, the feeling was growing in them—deep
down and almost hidden away, but still growing—that the Psammead was to
be trusted, and that they were really and truly safe. This did not prevent
their being quite as much frightened as they could bear to be without being
perfectly miserable.</p>
<p>“I suppose we’d better go to sleep,” said Robert. “I
don’t know what on earth poor old Nurse will do with us out all night;
set the police on our tracks, I expect. I only wish they could find us! A dozen
policemen would be rather welcome just now. But it’s no use getting into
a stew over it,” he added soothingly. “Good night.”</p>
<p>And they all fell asleep.</p>
<p>They were awakened by long, loud, terrible sounds that seemed to come from
everywhere at once—horrible threatening shouts and shrieks and howls that
sounded, as Cyril said later, like the voices of men thirsting for their
enemies’ blood.</p>
<p>“It is the voice of the strange men,” said the girl, coming to them
trembling through the dark. “They have attacked the walls, and the thorns
have driven them back. My father says they will not try again till daylight.
But they are shouting to frighten us. As though we were savages! Dwellers in
the swamps!” she cried indignantly.</p>
<p>All night the terrible noise went on, but when the sun rose, as abruptly as he
had set, the sound suddenly ceased.</p>
<p>The children had hardly time to be glad of this before a shower of javelins
came hurtling over the great thorn-hedge, and everyone sheltered behind the
huts. But next moment another shower of weapons came from the opposite side,
and the crowd rushed to other shelter. Cyril pulled out a javelin that had
stuck in the roof of the hut beside him. Its head was of brightly burnished
copper.</p>
<p>Then the sound of shouting arose again and the crackle of dried thorns. The
enemy was breaking down the hedge. All the villagers swarmed to the point
whence the crackling and the shouting came; they hurled stones over the hedges,
and short arrows with flint heads. The children had never before seen men with
the fighting light in their eyes. It was very strange and terrible, and gave
you a queer thick feeling in your throat; it was quite different from the
pictures of fights in the illustrated papers at home.</p>
<p>It seemed that the shower of stones had driven back the besiegers. The besieged
drew breath, but at that moment the shouting and the crackling arose on the
opposite side of the village and the crowd hastened to defend that point, and
so the fight swayed to and fro across the village, for the besieged had not the
sense to divide their forces as their enemies had done.</p>
<p>Cyril noticed that every now and then certain of the fighting-men would enter
the maze, and come out with brighter faces, a braver aspect, and a more upright
carriage.</p>
<p>“I believe they go and touch the Amulet,” he said. “You know
the Psammead said it could make people brave.”</p>
<p>They crept through the maze, and watching they saw that Cyril was right. A
headman was standing in front of the skin curtain, and as the warriors came
before him he murmured a word they could not hear, and touched their foreheads
with something that they could not see. And this something he held in his
hands. And through his fingers they saw the gleam of a red stone that they
knew.</p>
<p>The fight raged across the thorn-hedge outside. Suddenly there was a loud and
bitter cry.</p>
<p>“They’re in! They’re in! The hedge is down!”</p>
<p>The headman disappeared behind the deer-skin curtain.</p>
<p>“He’s gone to hide it,” said Anthea. “Oh, Psammead
dear, how could you leave us!”</p>
<p>Suddenly there was a shriek from inside the hut, and the headman staggered out
white with fear and fled out through the maze. The children were as white as
he.</p>
<p>“Oh! What is it? What is it?” moaned Anthea. “Oh, Psammead,
how could you! How could you!”</p>
<p>And the sound of the fight sank breathlessly, and swelled fiercely all around.
It was like the rising and falling of the waves of the sea.</p>
<p>Anthea shuddered and said again, “Oh, Psammead, Psammead!”</p>
<p>“Well?” said a brisk voice, and the curtain of skins was lifted at
one corner by a furry hand, and out peeped the bat’s ears and
snail’s eyes of the Psammead.</p>
<p>Anthea caught it in her arms and a sigh of desperate relief was breathed by
each of the four.</p>
<p>“Oh! which <i>is</i> the East!” Anthea said, and she spoke
hurriedly, for the noise of wild fighting drew nearer and nearer.</p>
<p>“Don’t choke me,” said the Psammead, “come
inside.”</p>
<p>The inside of the hut was pitch dark.</p>
<p>“I’ve got a match,” said Cyril, and struck it. The floor of
the hut was of soft, loose sand.</p>
<p>“I’ve been asleep here,” said the Psammead; “most
comfortable it’s been, the best sand I’ve had for a month.
It’s all right. Everything’s all right. I knew your only chance
would be while the fight was going on. That man won’t come back. I bit
him, and he thinks I’m an Evil Spirit. Now you’ve only got to take
the thing and go.”</p>
<p>The hut was hung with skins. Heaped in the middle were the offerings that had
been given the night before, Anthea’s roses fading on the top of the
heap. At one side of the hut stood a large square stone block, and on it an
oblong box of earthenware with strange figures of men and beasts on it.</p>
<p>“Is the thing in there?” asked Cyril, as the Psammead pointed a
skinny finger at it.</p>
<p>“You must judge of that,” said the Psammead. “The man was
just going to bury the box in the sand when I jumped out at him and bit
him.”</p>
<p>“Light another match, Robert,” said Anthea. “Now, then quick!
which is the East?”</p>
<p>“Why, where the sun rises, of course!”</p>
<p>“But someone told us—”</p>
<p>“Oh! they’ll tell you anything!” said the Psammead
impatiently, getting into its bass-bag and wrapping itself in its waterproof
sheet.</p>
<p>“But we can’t see the sun in here, and it isn’t rising
anyhow,” said Jane.</p>
<p>“How you do waste time!” the Psammead said. “Why, the
East’s where the shrine is, of course. <i>There!</i>”</p>
<p>It pointed to the great stone.</p>
<p>And still the shouting and the clash of stone on metal sounded nearer and
nearer. The children could hear that the headmen had surrounded the hut to
protect their treasure as long as might be from the enemy. But none dare to
come in after the Psammead’s sudden fierce biting of the headman.</p>
<p>“Now, Jane,” said Cyril, very quickly. “I’ll take the
Amulet, you stand ready to hold up the charm, and be sure you don’t let
it go as you come through.”</p>
<p>He made a step forward, but at that instant a great crackling overhead ended in
a blaze of sunlight. The roof had been broken in at one side, and great slabs
of it were being lifted off by two spears. As the children trembled and winked
in the new light, large dark hands tore down the wall, and a dark face, with a
blobby fat nose, looked over the gap. Even at that awful moment Anthea had time
to think that it was very like the face of Mr Jacob Absalom, who had sold them
the charm in the shop near Charing Cross.</p>
<p>“Here is their Amulet,” cried a harsh, strange voice; “it is
this that makes them strong to fight and brave to die. And what else have we
here—gods or demons?”</p>
<p>He glared fiercely at the children, and the whites of his eyes were very white
indeed. He had a wet, red copper knife in his teeth. There was not a moment to
lose.</p>
<p>“Jane, <i>Jane</i>, QUICK!” cried everyone passionately.</p>
<p>Jane with trembling hands held up the charm towards the East, and Cyril spoke
the word of power. The Amulet grew to a great arch. Out beyond it was the
glaring Egyptian sky, the broken wall, the cruel, dark, big-nosed face with the
red, wet knife in its gleaming teeth. Within the arch was the dull, faint,
greeny-brown of London grass and trees.</p>
<p>“Hold tight, Jane!” Cyril cried, and he dashed through the arch,
dragging Anthea and the Psammead after him. Robert followed, clutching Jane.
And in the ears of each, as they passed through the arch of the charm, the
sound and fury of battle died out suddenly and utterly, and they heard only the
low, dull, discontented hum of vast London, and the peeking and patting of the
sparrows on the gravel and the voices of the ragged baby children playing
Ring-o’-Roses on the yellow trampled grass. And the charm was a little
charm again in Jane’s hand, and there was the basket with their dinner
and the bathbuns lying just where they had left it.</p>
<p>“My hat!” said Cyril, drawing a long breath; “that was
something like an adventure.”</p>
<p>“It was rather like one, certainly,” said the Psammead.</p>
<p>They all lay still, breathing in the safe, quiet air of Regent’s Park.</p>
<p>“We’d better go home at once,” said Anthea presently.
“Old Nurse will be most frightfully anxious. The sun looks about the same
as it did when we started yesterday. We’ve been away twenty-four
hours.”</p>
<p>“The buns are quite soft still,” said Cyril, feeling one; “I
suppose the dew kept them fresh.”</p>
<p>They were not hungry, curiously enough.</p>
<p>They picked up the dinner-basket and the Psammead-basket, and went straight
home.</p>
<p>Old Nurse met them with amazement.</p>
<p>“Well, if ever I did!” she said. “What’s gone wrong?
You’ve soon tired of your picnic.”</p>
<p>The children took this to be bitter irony, which means saying the exact
opposite of what you mean in order to make yourself disagreeable; as when you
happen to have a dirty face, and someone says, “How nice and clean you
look!”</p>
<p>“We’re very sorry,” began Anthea, but old Nurse said—</p>
<p>“Oh, bless me, child, I don’t care! Please yourselves and
you’ll please me. Come in and get your dinners comf’table.
I’ve got a potato on a-boiling.”</p>
<p>When she had gone to attend to the potatoes the children looked at each other.
Could it be that old Nurse had so changed that she no longer cared that they
should have been away from home for twenty-four hours—all night in
fact—without any explanation whatever?</p>
<p>But the Psammead put its head out of its basket and said—</p>
<p>“What’s the matter? Don’t you understand? You come back
through the charm-arch at the same time as you go through it. This isn’t
tomorrow!”</p>
<p>“Is it still yesterday?” asked Jane.</p>
<p>“No, it’s today. The same as it’s always been. It
wouldn’t do to go mixing up the present and the Past, and cutting bits
out of one to fit into the other.”</p>
<p>“Then all that adventure took no time at all?”</p>
<p>“You can call it that if you like,” said the Psammead. “It
took none of the modern time, anyhow.”</p>
<p>That evening Anthea carried up a steak for the learned gentleman’s
dinner. She persuaded Beatrice, the maid-of-all-work, who had given her the
bangle with the blue stone, to let her do it. And she stayed and talked to him,
by special invitation, while he ate the dinner.</p>
<p>She told him the whole adventure, beginning with—</p>
<p>“This afternoon we found ourselves on the bank of the River Nile,”
and ending up with, “And then we remembered how to get back, and there we
were in Regent’s Park, and it hadn’t taken any time at all.”</p>
<p>She did not tell anything about the charm or the Psammead, because that was
forbidden, but the story was quite wonderful enough even as it was to entrance
the learned gentleman.</p>
<p>“You are a most unusual little girl,” he said. “Who tells you
all these things?”</p>
<p>“No one,” said Anthea, “they just happen.”</p>
<p>“Make-believe,” he said slowly, as one who recalls and pronounces a
long-forgotten word.</p>
<p>He sat long after she had left him. At last he roused himself with a start.</p>
<p>“I really must take a holiday,” he said; “my nerves must be
all out of order. I actually have a perfectly distinct impression that the
little girl from the rooms below came in and gave me a coherent and graphic
picture of life as I conceive it to have been in pre-dynastic Egypt. Strange
what tricks the mind will play! I shall have to be more careful.”</p>
<p>He finished his bread conscientiously, and actually went for a mile walk before
he went back to his work.</p>
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