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diff --git a/old/5746.txt b/old/5746.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..75a75be --- /dev/null +++ b/old/5746.txt @@ -0,0 +1,9613 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Ancient Allan, by H. Rider Haggard + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The Ancient Allan + +Author: H. Rider Haggard + +Posting Date: March 20, 2009 +Release Date: May, 2004 [EBook #5746] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ANCIENT ALLAN *** + + + + +Produced by John Bickers and Dagny + + + + + + + + +THE ANCIENT ALLAN + +By H. Rider Haggard + +First Published 1920. + + + + +CHAPTER I. AN OLD FRIEND + +Now I, Allan Quatermain, come to the weirdest (with one or two +exceptions perhaps) of all the experiences which it has amused me to +employ my idle hours in recording here in a strange land, for after all +England is strange to me. I grow elderly. I have, as I suppose, passed +the period of enterprise and adventure and I should be well satisfied +with the lot that Fate has given to my unworthy self. + +To begin with, I am still alive and in health when by all the rules I +should have been dead many times over. I suppose I ought to be thankful +for that but, before expressing an opinion on the point, I should have +to be quite sure whether it is better to be alive or dead. The religious +plump for the latter, though I have never observed that the religious +are more eager to die than the rest of us poor mortals. + +For instance, if they are told that their holy hearts are wrong, they +spend time and much money in rushing to a place called Nauheim +in Germany, to put them right by means of water-drinking, thereby +shortening their hours of heavenly bliss and depriving their heirs of +a certain amount of cash. The same thing applies to Buxton in my own +neighbourhood and gout, especially when it threatens the stomach or the +throat. Even archbishops will do these things, to say nothing of such +small fry as deans, or stout and prominent lay figures of the Church. + +From common sinners like myself such conduct might be expected, but in +the case of those who are obviously poised on the topmost rungs of the +Jacobean--I mean, the heavenly--ladder, it is legitimate to inquire why +they show such reluctance in jumping off. As a matter of fact the only +persons that, individually, I have seen quite willing to die, except now +and again to save somebody else whom they were so foolish as to care for +more than they did for themselves, have been not those "upon whom the +light has shined" to quote an earnest paper I chanced to read this +morning, but, to quote again, "the sinful heathen wandering in their +native blackness," by which I understand the writer to refer to their +moral state and not to their sable skins wherein for the most part they +are also condemned to wander, that is if they happen to have been born +south of a certain degree of latitude. + +To come to facts, the staff of Faith which each must shape for himself, +is often hewn from unsuitable kinds of wood, yes, even by the very best +among us. Willow, for instance, is pretty and easy to cut, but try to +support yourself with it on the edge of a precipice and see where you +are. Then of a truth you will long for ironbark, or even homely oak. I +might carry my parable further, some allusions to the proper material +of which to fashion the helmet of Salvation suggest themselves to me for +example, but I won't. + +The truth is that we fear to die because all the religions are full of +uncomfortable hints as to what may happen to us afterwards as a reward +for our deviations from their laws and we half believe in something, +whereas often the savage, not being troubled with religion, fears less, +because he half believes in nothing. For very few inhabitants of this +earth can attain either to complete belief or to its absolute opposite. +They can seldom lay their hands upon their hearts, and say they _know_ +that they will live for ever, or sleep for ever; there remains in the +case of most honest men an element of doubt in either hypothesis. + +That is what makes this story of mine so interesting, at any rate to +me, since it does seem to suggest that whether or no I have a future, +as personally I hold to be the case and not altogether without evidence, +certainly I have had a past, though, so far as I know, in this world +only; a fact, if it be a fact, from which can be deduced all kinds of +arguments according to the taste of the reasoner. + +And now for my experience, which it is only fair to add, may after all +have been no more than a long and connected dream. Yet how was I to +dream of lands, events and people where of I have only the vaguest +knowledge, or none at all, unless indeed, as some say, being a part of +this world, we have hidden away somewhere in ourselves an acquaintance +with everything that has ever happened in the world. However, it does +not much matter and it is useless to discuss that which we cannot prove. + +Here at any rate is the story. + + +In a book or a record which I have written down and put away with others +under the title of "The Ivory Child," I have told the tale of a certain +expedition I made in company with Lord Ragnall. Its object was to search +for his wife who was stolen away while travelling in Egypt in a state of +mental incapacity resulting from shock caused by the loss of her child +under tragic and terrible circumstances. The thieves were the priests of +a certain bastard Arab tribe who, on account of a birthmark shaped like +the young moon which was visible above her breast, believed her to be +the priestess or oracle of their worship. This worship evidently had its +origin in Ancient Egypt since, although they did not seem to know it, +the priestess was nothing less than a personification of the great +goddess Isis, and the Ivory Child, their fetish, was a statue of the +infant Horus, the fabled son of Isis and Osiris whom the Egyptians +looked upon as the overcomer of Set or the Devil, the murderer of Osiris +before his resurrection and ascent to Heaven to be the god of the dead. + +I need not set down afresh all that happened to us on this remarkable +adventure. Suffice it to say that in the end we recovered the lady and +that her mind was restored to her. Before she left the Kendah country, +however, the priesthood presented her with two ancient rolls of +papyrus, also with a quantity of a certain herb, not unlike tobacco in +appearance, which by the Kendah was called _Taduki_. Once, before we +took our great homeward journey across the desert, Lady Ragnall and I +had a curious conversation about this herb whereof the property is to +cause the person who inhales its fumes to become clairvoyant, or to +dream dreams, whichever the truth may be. It was used for this purpose +in the mystical ceremonies of the Kendah religion when under its +influence the priestess or oracle of the Ivory Child was wont to +announce divine revelations. During her tenure of this office Lady +Ragnall was frequently subjected to the spell of the _Taduki_ vapour, +and said strange things, some of which I heard with my own ears. Also +myself once I experienced its effects and saw a curious vision, whereof +many of the particulars were afterwards translated into facts. + +Now the conversation which I have mentioned was shortly to the effect, +that she, Lady Ragnall, believed a time would come when she or I or both +of us, were destined to imbibe these _Taduki_ fumes and see wonderful +pictures of some past or future existence in which we were both +concerned. This knowledge, she declared, had come to her while she was +officiating in an apparently mindless condition as the priestess of the +Kendah god called the Ivory Child. + +At the time I did not think it wise to pursue so exciting a subject with +a woman whose mind had been recently unbalanced, and afterwards in the +stress of new experiences, I forgot all about the matter, or at any rate +only thought of it very rarely. + +Once, however, it did recur to me with some force. Shortly after I +came to England to spend my remaining days far from the temptations of +adventure, I was beguiled into becoming a steward of a Charity dinner +and, what was worse, into attending the said dinner. Although its +objects were admirable, it proved one of the most dreadful functions +in which I was ever called upon to share. There was a vast number of +people, some of them highly distinguished, who had come to support the +Charity or to show off their Orders, I don't know which, and others like +myself, not at all distinguished, just common subscribers, who had no +Orders and stood about the crowded room like waiters looking for a job. + +At the dinner, which was very bad, I sat at a table so remote that I +could hear but little of the interminable speeches, which was perhaps +fortunate for me. In these circumstances I drifted into conversation +with my neighbour, a queer, wizened, black-bearded man who somehow +or other had found out that I was acquainted with the wilder parts of +Africa. He proved to be a wealthy scientist whose passion it was +to study the properties of herbs, especially of such as grow in the +interior of South America where he had been travelling for some years. + +Presently he mentioned a root named Yage, known to the Indians which, +when pounded up into a paste and taken in the form of pills, had the +effect of enabling the patient to see events that were passing at a +distance. Indeed he alleged that a vision thus produced had caused him +to return home, since in it he saw that some relative of his, I think +a twin-sister, was dangerously ill. In fact, however, he might as well +have stayed away, as he only arrived in London on the day after her +funeral. + +As I saw that he was really interested in the subject and observed that +he was a very temperate man who did not seem to be romancing, I told him +something of my experiences with _Taduki_, to which he listened with a +kind of rapt but suppressed excitement. When I affected disbelief in the +whole business, he differed from me almost rudely, asking why I rejected +phenomena simply because I was too dense to understand them. I answered +perhaps because such phenomena were inconvenient and upset one's ideas. +To this he replied that all progress involved the upsetting of existent +ideas. Moreover he implored me, if the chance should ever come my way, +to pursue experiments with _Taduki_ fumes and let him know the results. + +Here our conversation came to an end for suddenly a band that was +braying near by, struck up "God save the Queen," and we hastily +exchanged cards and parted. I only mention it because, had it not +occurred, I think it probable that I should never have been in a +position to write this history. + +The remarks of my acquaintance remained in my mind and influenced it so +much that when the occasion came, I did as a kind of duty what, however +much I was pressed, I am almost sure I should never have done for any +other reason, just because I thought that I ought to take an opportunity +of trying to discover what was the truth of the matter. As it chanced it +was quick in coming. + +Here I should explain that I attended the dinner of which I have spoken +not very long after a very lengthy absence from England, whither I had +come to live when King Solomon's Mines had made me rich. Therefore it +happened that between the conclusion of my Kendah adventure some years +before and this time I saw nothing and heard little of Lord and Lady +Ragnall. Once a rumour did reach me, however, I think through Sir Henry +Curtis or Captain Good, that the former had died as a result of an +accident. What the accident was my informant did not know and as I was +just starting on a far journey at the time, I had no opportunity of +making inquiries. My talk with the botanical scientist determined me +to do so; indeed a few days later I discovered from a book of reference +that Lord Ragnall was dead, leaving no heir; also that his wife survived +him. + +I was working myself up to write to her when one morning the postman +brought me here at the Grange a letter which had "Ragnall Castle" +printed on the flap of the envelope. I did not know the writing +which was very clear and firm, for as it chanced, to the best of my +recollection, I had never seen that of Lady Ragnall. Here is a copy of +the letter it contained: + + + "My dear Mr. Quatermain,--Very strangely I have just seen at a + meeting of the Horticultural Society, a gentleman who declares + that a few days ago he sat next to you at some public dinner. + Indeed I do not think there can be any doubt for he showed me your + card which he had in his purse with a Yorkshire address upon it. + + "A dispute had arisen as to whether a certain variety of Crinum + lily was first found in Africa, or Southern America. This + gentleman, an authority upon South American flora, made a speech + saying that he had never met with it there, but that an + acquaintance of his, Mr. Quatermain, to whom he had spoken on the + subject, said that he had seen something of the sort in the + interior of Africa." (This was quite true for I remembered the + incident.) "At the tea which followed the meeting I spoke to this + gentleman whose name I never caught, and to my astonishment learnt + that he must have been referring to you whom I believed to be + dead, for so we were told a long time ago. This seemed certain, + for in addition to the evidence of the name, he described your + personal appearance and told me that you had come to live in + England. + + "My dear friend, I can assure you it is long since I heard anything + which rejoiced me so much. Oh! as I write all the past comes back, + flowing in upon me like a pent-up flood of water, but I trust that + of this I shall soon have an opportunity of talking to you. So let + it be for a while. + + "Alas! my friend, since we parted on the shores of the Red Sea, + tragedy has pursued me. As you will know, for both my husband and + I wrote to you, although you did not answer the letters" (I never + received them), "we reached England safely and took up our old + life again, though to tell you the truth, after my African + experiences things could never be quite the same to me, or for the + matter of that to George either. To a great extent he changed his + pursuits and certain political ambitions which he once cherished, + seemed no longer to appeal to him. He became a student of past + history and especially of Egyptology, which under all the + circumstances you may think strange, as I did. However it suited + me well enough, since I also have tastes that way. So we worked + together and I can now read hieroglyphics as well as most people. + One year he said that he would like to go to Egypt again, if I + were not afraid. I answered that it had not been a very lucky + place for us, but that personally I was not in the least afraid + and longed to return there. For as you know, I have, or think I + have, ties with Egypt and indeed with all Africa. Well, we went + and had a very happy time, although I was always expecting to see + old Harut come round the corner. + + "After this it became a custom with us who, since George + practically gave up shooting and attending the House of Lords, had + nothing to keep us in England, to winter in Egypt. We did this for + five years in succession, living in a bungalow which we built at a + place in the desert, not far from the banks of the Nile, about + half way between Luxor which was the ancient Thebes, and Assouan. + George took a great fancy to this spot when first he saw it, and + so in truth did I, for, like Memphis, it attracted me so much that + I used to laugh and say I believed that once I had something to do + with it. + + "Now near to our villa that we called 'Ragnall' after this house, + are the remains of a temple which were almost buried in the sand. + This temple George obtained permission to excavate. It proved to + be a long and costly business, but as he did not mind spending the + money, that was no obstacle. For four winters we worked at it, + employing several hundred men. As we went on we discovered that + although not one of the largest, the temple, owing to its having + been buried by the sand during, or shortly after the Roman epoch, + remained much more perfect than we had expected, because the early + Christians had never got at it with their chisels and hammers. + Before long I hope to show you pictures and photographs of the + various courts, etc., so I will not attempt to describe them now. + + "It is a temple to Isis--built, or rather rebuilt over the remains + of an older temple on a site that seems to have been called Amada, + at any rate in the later days, and so named after a city in Nubia, + apparently by one of the Amen-hetep Pharaohs who had conquered it. + Its style is beautiful, being of the best period of the Egyptian + Renaissance under the last native dynasties. + + "At the beginning of the fifth winter, at length we approached the + sanctuary, a difficult business because of the retaining walls + that had to be built to keep the sand from flowing down as fast as + it was removed, and the great quantities of stuff that must be + carried off by the tramway. In so doing we came upon a shallow + grave which appeared to have been hastily filled in and roughly + covered over with paving stones like the rest of the court, as + though to conceal its existence. In this grave lay the skeleton of + a large man, together with the rusted blade of an iron sword and + some fragments of armour. Evidently he had never been mummified, + for there were no wrappings, canopic jars, _ushapti_ figures or + funeral offerings. The state of the bones showed us why, for the + right forearm was cut through and the skull smashed in; also an + iron arrow-head lay among the ribs. The man had been buried + hurriedly after a battle in which he had met his death. Searching + in the dust beneath the bones we found a gold ring still on one of + the fingers. On its bezel was engraved the cartouche of 'Peroa, + beloved of Ra.' Now Peroa probably means Pharaoh and perhaps he + was Khabasha who revolted against the Persians and ruled for a + year or two, after which he is supposed to have been defeated and + killed, though of his end and place of burial there is no record. + Whether these were the remnants of Khabasha himself, or of one of + his high ministers or generals who wore the King's cartouche upon + his ring in token of his office, of course I cannot say. + + "When George had read the cartouche he handed me the ring which I + slipped upon the first finger of my left hand, where I still wear + it. Then leaving the grave open for further examination, we went + on with the work, for we were greatly excited. At length, this was + towards evening, we had cleared enough of the sanctuary, which was + small, to uncover the shrine that, if not a monolith, was made of + four pieces of granite so wonderfully put together that one could + not see the joints. On the curved architrave as I think it is + called, was carved the symbol of a winged disc, and beneath in + hieroglyphics as fresh as though they had only been cut yesterday, + an inscription to the effect that Peroa, Royal Son of the Sun, + gave this shrine as an 'excellent eternal work,' together with the + statues of the Holy Mother and the Holy Child to the 'emanations + of the great Goddess Isis and the god Horus,' Amada, Royal Lady, + being votaress or high-priestess. + + "We only read the hieroglyphics very hurriedly, being anxious to + see what was within the shrine that, the cedar door having rotted + away, was filled with fine, drifted sand. Basketful by basketful + we got it out and then, my friend, there appeared the most + beautiful life-sized statue of Isis carved in alabaster that ever + I have seen. She was seated on a throne-like chair and wore the + vulture cap on which traces of colour remained. Her arms were held + forward as though to support a child, which perhaps she was + suckling as one of the breasts was bare. But if so, the child had + gone. The execution of the statue was exquisite and its tender and + mystic face extraordinarily beautiful, so life-like also that I + think it must have been copied from a living model. Oh! my friend, + when I looked upon it, which we did by the light of the candles, + for the sun was sinking and shadows gathered in that excavated + hole, I felt--never mind what I felt--perhaps _you_ can guess who + know my history. + + "While we stared and stared, I longing to go upon my knees, I knew + not why, suddenly I felt a faint trembling of the ground. At the + same moment, the head overseer of the works, a man called Achmet, + rushed up to us, shouting out--'Back! Back! The wall has burst. + The sand runs!' + + "He seized me by the arm and dragged me away beside of and behind + the grave, George turning to follow. Next instant I saw a kind of + wave of sand, on the crest of which appeared the stones of the + wall, curl over and break. It struck the shrine, overturned and + shattered it, which makes me think it was made of four pieces, and + shattered also the alabaster statue within, for I saw its head + strike George upon the back and throw him forward. He reeled and + fell into the open grave which in another moment was filled and + covered with the debris that seemed to grip me to my middle in its + flow. After this I remembered nothing more until hours later I + found myself lying in our house. + + "Achmet and his Egyptians had done nothing; indeed none of them + could be persuaded to approach the place till the sun rose + because, as they said, the old gods of the land whom they looked + upon as devils, were angry at being disturbed and would kill them + as they had killed the Bey, meaning George. Then, distracted as I + was, I went myself for there was no other European there, to find + that the whole site of the sanctuary was buried beneath hundreds + of tons of sand, that, beginning at the gap in the broken wall, + had flowed from every side. Indeed it would have taken weeks to + dig it out, since to sink a shaft was impracticable and so + dangerous that the local officials refused to allow it to be + attempted. The end of it was that an English bishop came up from + Cairo and consecrated the ground by special arrangement with the + Government, which of course makes it impossible that this part of + the temple should be further disturbed. After this he read the + Burial Service over my dear husband. + + "So there is the end of a very terrible story which I have written + down because I do not wish to have to talk about it more than is + necessary when we meet. For, dear Mr. Quatermain, we shall meet, + as I always knew that we should--yes, even after I heard that you + were dead. You will remember that I told you so years ago in + Kendah Land and that it would happen after a great change in my + life, though what that change might be I could not say...." + + +This is the end of the letter except for certain suggested dates for the +visit which she took for granted I should make to Ragnall. + + + + +CHAPTER II. RAGNALL CASTLE + +When I had finished reading this amazing document I lit my pipe and +set to work to think it over. The hypothetical inquirer might ask why I +thought it amazing. There was nothing odd in a dilettante Englishman of +highly cultivated mind taking to Egyptology and, being, as it chanced, +one of the richest men in the kingdom, spending a fraction of his wealth +in excavating temples. Nor was it strange that he should have happened +to die by accident when engaged in that pursuit, which I can imagine to +be very fascinating in the delightful winter climate of Egypt. He was +not the first person to be buried by a fall of sand. Why, only a little +while ago the same fate overtook a nursery-governess and the child in +her charge who were trying to dig out a martin's nest in a pit in +this very parish. Their operations brought down a huge mass of the +overhanging bank beneath which the sand-vein had been hollowed by +workmen who deserted the pit when they saw that it had become unsafe. +Next day I and my gardeners helped to recover their bodies, for their +whereabouts was not discovered until the following morning, and a sad +business it was. + +Yet, taken in conjunction with the history of this couple, the whole +Ragnall affair was very strange. When but a child Lady Ragnall, then the +Hon. Miss Holmes, had been identified by the priests of a remote African +tribe as the oracle of their peculiar faith, which we afterwards proved +to be derived from old Egypt, in short the worship of Isis and Horus. +Subsequently they tried to steal her away and through the accident of +my intervention, failed. Later on, after her marriage when shock had +deprived her of her mind, these priests renewed the attempt, this time +in Egypt, and succeeded. In the end we rescued her in Central Africa, +where she was playing the part of the Mother-goddess Isis and even +wearing her ancient robes. Next she and her husband came home with their +minds turned towards a branch of study that took them back to Egypt. +Here they devote themselves to unearthing a temple and find out that +among all the gods of Egypt, who seem to have been extremely numerous, +it was dedicated to Isis and Horus, the very divinities with whom they +recently they had been so intimately concerned if in traditional and +degenerate forms. + +Moreover that was not the finish of it. They come to the sanctuary. They +discover the statue of the goddess with the child gone, as their child +was gone. A disaster occurs and both destroys and buries Ragnall so +effectually that nothing of him is ever seen again: he just vanishes +into another man's grave and remains there. + +A common sort of catastrophe enough, it is true, though people of +superstitious mind might have thought that it looked as though the +goddess, or whatever force was behind the goddess, was working vengeance +on the man who desecrated her ancient shrine. And, by the way, though +I cannot remember whether or no I mentioned it in "The Ivory Child," +I recall that the old priest of the Kendah, Harut, once told me he was +sure Ragnall would meet with a violent death. This seemed likely enough +in that country under our circumstances there, still I asked him why. He +answered, + +"Because he has laid hands on that which is holy and not meant for man," +and he looked at Lady Ragnall. + +I remarked that all women were holy, whereon he replied that he did not +think so and changed the subject. + +Well, Ragnall, who had married the lady who once served as the last +priestess of Isis upon earth, was killed, whereas she, the priestess, +was almost miraculously preserved from harm. And--oh! the whole story +was deuced odd and that is all. Poor Ragnall! He was a great English +gentleman and one whom when first I knew him, I held to be the most +fortunate person I ever met, endowed as he was with every advantage of +mind, body and estate. Yet in the end this did not prove to be the case. +Well, while he lived he was a good friend and a good fellow and none +can hope for a better epitaph in a world where all things are soon +forgotten. + +And now, what was I to do? To tell the truth I did not altogether desire +to reopen this chapter in past history, or to have to listen to painful +reminiscences from the lips of a bereaved woman. Moreover, beautiful +as she had been, for doubtless she was _passee_ now, and charming as of +course she remained--I do not think I ever knew anyone who was quite so +charming--there was something about Lady Ragnall which alarmed me. She +did not resemble any other woman. Of course no woman is ever quite like +another, but in her case the separateness, if I may so call it, was very +marked. It was as though she had walked out of a different age, or even +world, and been but superficially clothed with the attributes of our +own. I felt that from the first moment I set eyes upon her and while +reading her letter the sensation returned with added force. + +Also for me she had a peculiar attraction and not one of the ordinary +kind. It is curious to find oneself strangely intimate with a person +of whom after all one does not know much, just as if one really knew a +great deal that was shut off by a thin but quite impassable door. If so, +I did not want to open that door for who could tell what might be on +the other side of it? And intimate conversations with a lady in whose +company one has shared very strange experiences, not infrequently lead +to the opening of every kind of door. + +Further I had made up my mind some time ago to have no more friendships +with women who are so full of surprises, but to live out the rest of +my life in a kind of monastery of men who have few surprises, being +creatures whose thoughts are nearly always open and whose actions can +always be foretold. + +Lastly there was that _Taduki_ business. Well, there at any rate I was +clear and decided. No earthly power would induce me to have anything +more to do with _Taduki_ smoke. Of course I remembered that Lady Ragnall +once told me kindly but firmly that I would if she wished. But that was +just where she made a mistake. For the rest it seemed unkind to refuse +her invitation now when she was in trouble, especially as I had once +promised that if ever I could be of help, she had only to command me. +No, I must go. But if that word--_Taduki_--were so much as mentioned I +would leave again in a hurry. Moreover it would not be, for doubtless +she had forgotten all about the stuff by now, even if it were not lost. + +The end of it was that as I did not wish to write a long letter entering +into all that Lady Ragnall had told me, I sent her a telegram, saying +that if convenient to her, I would arrive at the Castle on the following +Saturday evening and adding that I must be back here on the Tuesday +afternoon, as I had guests coming to stay with me on that day. This +was perfectly true as the season was mid-November and I was to begin +shooting my coverts on the Wednesday morning, a function that once +fixed, cannot be postponed. + +In due course an answer arrived--"Delighted, but hoped that you would +have been able to stay longer." + + + +Behold me then about six o'clock on the said Saturday evening being once +more whirled by a splendid pair of horses through the gateway arch of +Ragnall Castle. The carriage stopped beneath the portico, the great +doors flew open revealing the glow of the hall fire and lights within, +the footman sprang down from the box and two other footmen descended +the steps to assist me and my belongings out of the carriage. These, +I remember, consisted of a handbag with my dress clothes and a +yellow-backed novel. + +So one of them took the handbag and the other had to content himself +with the novel, which made me wish I had brought a portmanteau as well, +if only for the look of the thing. The pair thus burdened, escorted me +up the steps and delivered me over to the butler who scanned me with a +critical eye. I scanned him also and perceived that he was a very fine +specimen of his class. Indeed his stately presence so overcame me that +I remarked nervously, as he helped me off with my coat, that when last I +was here another had filled his office. + +"Indeed, Sir," he said, "and what was his name, Sir?" + +"Savage," I replied. + +"And where might he be now, Sir?" + +"Inside a snake!" I answered. "At least he was inside a snake but now I +hope he is waiting upon his master in Heaven." + +The man recoiled a little, pulling off my coat with a jerk. Then he +coughed, rubbed his bald head, stared and recovering himself with an +effort, said, + +"Indeed, Sir! I only came to this place after the death of his late +lordship, when her ladyship changed all the household. Alfred, show +this gentleman up to her ladyship's boudoir, and William, take +his--baggage--to the blue room. Her ladyship wishes to see you at once, +Sir, before the others come." + +So I went up the big staircase to a part of the Castle that I did not +remember, wondering who "the others" might be. Almost could I have sworn +that the shade of Savage accompanied me up those stairs; I could feel +him at my side. + +Presently a door was thrown open and I was ushered into a room +somewhat dimly lit and full of the scent of flowers. By the fire near a +tea-table, stood a lady clad in some dark dress with the light glinting +on her rich-hued hair. She turned and I saw that she still wore the +necklace of red stones, and beneath it on her breast a single red +flower. For this was Lady Ragnall; about that there was no doubt at all, +so little doubt indeed that I was amazed. I had expected to see a stout, +elderly woman whom I should only know by the colour of her eyes and her +voice, and perhaps certain tricks of manner. But, this was the mischief +of it, I could not perceive any change, at any rate in that light. +She was just the same! Perhaps a little fuller in figure, which was an +advantage; perhaps a little more considered in her movements, perhaps a +little taller or at any rate more stately, and that was all. + +These things I learned in a flash. Then with a murmured "Mr. Quatermain, +my Lady," the footman closed the door and she saw me. + +Moving quickly towards me with both her hands outstretched, she +exclaimed in that honey-soft voice of hers, + +"Oh! my dear friend----" stopped and added, "Why, you haven't changed a +bit." + +"Fossils wear well," I replied, "but that is just what I was thinking of +you." + +"Then it is very rude of you to call me a fossil when I am only +approaching that stage. Oh! I am glad to see you. I _am_ glad!" and she +gave me both the outstretched hands. + +Upon my word I felt inclined to kiss her and have wondered ever since if +she would have been very angry. I am not certain that she did not divine +the inclination. At any rate after a little pause she dropped my hands +and laughed. Then she said, + +"I must tell you at once. A most terrible catastrophe has happened----" + +Instantly it occurred to me that she had forgotten having informed me by +letter of all the details of her husband's death. Such things chance +to people who have once lost their memory. So I tried to look as +sympathetic as I felt, sighed and waited. + +"It's not so bad as all that," she said with a little shake of her head, +reading my thought as she always had the power to do from the first +moment we met. "We can talk about _that_ afterwards. It's only that I +hoped we were going to have a quiet two days, and now the Atterby-Smiths +are coming, yes, in half an hour. Five of them!" + +"The Atterby-Smiths!" I exclaimed, for somehow I too felt disappointed. +"Who are the Atterby-Smiths?" + +"Cousins of George's, his nearest relatives. They think he ought to have +left them everything. But he didn't, because he could never bear the +sight of them. You see his property was unentailed and he left it all to +me. Now the entire family is advancing to suggest that I should leave +it to them, as perhaps I might have done if they had not chosen to come +just now." + +"Why didn't you put them off?" I asked. + +"Because I couldn't," she answered with a little stamp of her foot, +"otherwise do you suppose they would have been here? They were far too +clever. They telegraphed after lunch giving the train by which they were +to arrive, but no address save Charing Cross. I thought of moving up +to the Berkeley Square house, but it was impossible in the time, also I +didn't know how to catch you. Oh! it's _most_ vexatious." + +"Perhaps they are very nice," I suggested feebly. + +"Nice! Wait till you have seen them. Besides if they had been angels +I did not want them just now. But how selfish I am! Come and have +some tea. And you can stop longer, that is if you live through the +Atterby-Smiths who are worse than both the Kendah tribes put together. +Indeed I wish old Harut were coming instead. I should like to see Harut +again, wouldn't you?" and suddenly the mystical look I knew so well, +gathered on her face. + +"Yes, perhaps I should," I replied doubtfully. "But I must leave by the +first train on Tuesday morning; it goes at eight o'clock. I looked it +up." + +"Then the Atterby-Smiths leave on Monday if I have to turn them out +of the house. So we shall get one evening clear at any rate. Stop a +minute," and she rang the bell. + +The footman appeared as suddenly as though he had been listening at the +door. + +"Alfred," she said, "tell Moxley" (he, I discovered, was the butler) +"that when Mr. and Mrs. Atterby-Smith, the two Misses Atterby-Smith and +the young Mr. Atterby-Smith arrive, they are to be shown to their rooms. +Tell the cook also to put off dinner till half-past eight, and if Mr. +and Mrs. Scroope arrive earlier, tell Moxley to tell them that I +am sorry to be a little late, but that I was delayed by some parish +business. Now do you understand?" + +"Yes, my Lady," said Alfred and vanished. + +"He doesn't understand in the least," remarked Lady Ragnall, "but so +long as he doesn't show the Atterby-Smiths up here, in which case he can +go away with them on Monday, I don't care. It will all work out somehow. +Now sit down by the fire and let's talk. We've got nearly an hour and +twenty minutes and you can smoke if you like. I learnt to in Egypt," and +she took a cigarette from the mantelpiece and lit it. + +That hour and twenty minutes went like a flash, for we had so much to +say to each other that we never even got to the things we wanted to say. +For instance, I began to tell her about King Solomon's Mines, which was +a long story; and she to tell me what happened after we parted on the +shores of the Red Sea. At least the first hour and a quarter went, +when suddenly the door opened and Alfred in a somewhat frightened voice +announced--"Mr. and Mrs. Atterby-Smith, the Misses Atterby-Smith and Mr. +Atterby-Smith junior." + +Then he caught sight of his mistress's eye and fled. + +I looked and felt inclined to do likewise if only there had been another +door. But there wasn't and that which existed was quite full. In the +forefront came A.-S. senior, like a bull leading the herd. Indeed his +appearance was bull-like as my eye, travelling from the expanse of white +shirt-front (they were all dressed for dinner) to his red and massive +countenance surmounted by two horn-like tufts of carroty hair, informed +me at a glance. Followed Mrs. A.-S., the British matron incarnate. +Literally there seemed to be acres of her; black silk below and white +skin above on which set in filigree floated big green stones, like +islands in an ocean. Her countenance too, though stupid was very stern +and frightened me. Followed the progeny of this formidable pair. They +were tall and thin, also red haired. The girls, whose age I could not +guess in the least, were exactly like each other, which was not strange +as afterwards I discovered that they were twins. They had pale blue eyes +and somehow reminded me of fish. Both of them were dressed in green and +wore topaz necklaces. The young man who seemed to be about one or +two and twenty, had also pale blue eyes, in one of which he wore an +eye-glass, but his hair was sandy as though it had been bleached, parted +in the middle and oiled down flat. + +For a moment there was a silence which I felt to be dreadful. Then in a +big, pompous voice A.-S. _pere_ said, + +"How do you do, my dear Luna? As I ascertained from the footman that +you had not yet gone to dress, I insisted upon his leading us here for a +little private conversation after we have been parted for so many years. +We wished to offer you our condolences in person on your and our still +recent loss." + +"Thank you," said Lady Ragnall, "but I think we have corresponded on the +subject which is painful to me." + +"I fear that we are interrupting a smoking party, Thomas," said Mrs. +A.-S. in a cold voice, sniffing at the air for all the world like a +suspicious animal, whereon the five of them stared at Lady Ragnall's +cigarette which she held between her fingers. + +"Yes," said Lady Ragnall. "Won't you have one? Mr. Quatermain, hand Mrs. +Smith the box, please." + +I obeyed automatically, proffering it to the lady who nearly withered me +with a glance, and then to each to each in turn. To my relief the young +man took one. + +"Archibald," said his mother, "you are surely not going to make your +sisters' dresses smell of tobacco just before dinner." + +Archibald sniggered and replied, + +"A little more smoke will not make any difference in this room, Ma." + +"That is true, darling," said Mrs. A.-S. and was straightway seized with +a fit of asthma. + +After this I am sure I don't know what happened, for muttering something +about its being time to dress, I rushed from the room and wandered about +until I could find someone to conduct me to my own where I lingered +until I heard the dinner-bell ring. But even this retreat was not +without disaster, for in my hurry I trod upon one of the young lady's +dresses; I don't know whether it was Dolly's or Polly's (they were named +Dolly and Polly) and heard a dreadful crack about her middle as though +she were breaking in two. Thereon Archibald giggled again and Dolly and +Polly remarked with one voice--they always spoke together, + +"Oh! clumsy!" + +To complete my misfortunes I missed my way going downstairs and strayed +to and fro like a lost lamb until I found myself confronted by a green +baize door which reminded me of something. I stood staring at it till +suddenly a vision arose before me of myself following a bell wire +through that very door in the darkness of the night when in search for +the late Mr. Savage upon a certain urgent occasion. Yes, there could be +no doubt about it, for look! there was the wire, and strange it seemed +to me that I should live to behold it again. Curiosity led me to push +the door open just to ascertain if my memory served me aright about +the exact locality of the room. Next moment I regretted it for I fell +straight into the arms of either Polly or Dolly. + +"Oh!" said she, "I've just been sewn up." + +I reflected that this was my case also in another sense, but asked +feebly if she knew the way downstairs. + +She didn't; neither of us did, till at length we met Mrs. Smith coming +to look for her. + +If I had been a burglar she could not have regarded me with graver +suspicions. But at any rate _she_ knew the way downstairs. And there to +my joy I found my old friend Scroope and his wife, both of them grown +stout and elderly, but as jolly as ever, after which the Smith family +ceased to trouble me. + +Also there was the rector of the parish, Dr. Jeffreys and an absurdly +young wife whom he had recently married, a fluffy-headed little thing +with round eyes and a cheerful, perky manner. The two of them together +looked exactly like a turkey-cock and a chicken. I remembered him well +enough and to my astonishment he remembered me, perhaps because Lady +Ragnall, when she had hastily invited him to meet the Smith family, +mentioned that I was coming. Lastly there was the curate, a dark, +young man who seemed to be always brooding over the secrets of time and +eternity, though perhaps he was only thinking about his dinner or the +next day's services. + +Well, there we stood in that well-remembered drawing-room in which first +I had made the acquaintance of Harut and Marut; also of the beautiful +Miss Holmes as Lady Ragnall was then called. The Scroopes, the Jeffreys +and I gathered in one group and the Atterby-Smiths in another like +a force about to attack, while between the two, brooding and +indeterminate, stood the curate, a neutral observer. + +Presently Lady Ragnall arrived, apologizing for being late. For some +reason best known to herself she had chosen to dress as though for a +great party. I believe it was out of mischief and in order to show Mrs. +Atterby-Smith some of the diamonds she was firmly determined that family +should never inherit. At any rate there she stood glittering and lovely, +and smiled upon us. + +Then came dinner and once more I marched to the great hall in her +company; Dr. Jeffreys got Mrs. Smith; Papa Smith got Mrs. Jeffreys who +looked like a Grecian maiden walking into dinner with the Minotaur; +Scroope got one of the Miss Smiths, she who wore a pink bow, the gloomy +curate got the other with a blue bow, and Archibald got Mrs. Scroope who +departed making faces at us over his shoulder. + +"You look very grand and nice," I said to Lady Ragnall as we followed +the others at a discreet distance. + +"I am glad," she answered, "as to the nice, I mean. As for the grand, +that dreadful woman is always writing to me about the Ragnall diamonds, +so I thought that she should see some of them for the first and last +time. Do you know I haven't worn these things since George and I went to +Court together, and I daresay shall never wear them again, for there is +only one ornament I care for and I have got _that_ on under my dress." + +I stared and her and with a laugh said that she was very mischievous. + +"I suppose so," she replied, "but I detest those people who are pompous +and rude and have spoiled my party. Do you know I had half a mind to +come down in the dress that I wore as Isis in Kendah Land. I have got it +upstairs and you shall see me in it before you go, for old time's sake. +Only it occurred to me that they might think me mad, so I didn't. Dr. +Jeffreys, will you say grace, please?" + +Well, it was a most agreeable dinner so far as I was concerned, for I +sat between my hostess and Mrs. Scroope and the rest were too far off +for conversation. Moreover as Archibald developed an unexpected quantity +of small talk, and Scroope on the other side amused himself by filling +pink-bow Miss Smith's innocent mind with preposterous stories about +Africa, as had happened to me once before at this table, Lady Ragnall +and I were practically left undisturbed. + +"Isn't it strange that we should find ourselves sitting here again after +all these years, except that you are in my poor mother's place? Oh! when +that scientific gentleman convinced me the other day that you whom I had +heard were dead, were not only alive and well but actually in England, +really I could have embraced him." + +I thought of an answer but did not make it, though as usual she read my +mind for I saw her smile. + +"The truth is," she went on, "I am an only child and really have no +friends, though of course being--well, you know," and she glanced at the +jewels on her breast, "I have plenty of acquaintances." + +"And suitors," I suggested. + +"Yes," she replied blushing, "as many as Penelope, not one of whom +cares twopence about me any more than I care for them. The truth is, Mr. +Quatermain, that nobody and nothing interest me, except a spot in the +churchyard yonder and another amid ruins in Egypt." + +"You have had sad bereavements," I said looking the other way. + +"Very sad and they have left life empty. Still I should not complain +for I have had my share of good. Also it isn't true to say that nothing +interests me. Egypt interests me, though after what has happened I do +not feel as though I could return there. All Africa interests me and," +she added dropping her voice, "I can say it because I know you will not +misunderstand, you interest me, as you have always done since the first +moment I saw you." + +"_I!_" I exclaimed, staring at my own reflection in a silver plate which +made me look--well, more unattractive than usual. "It's very kind of +you to say so, but I can't understand why I should. You have seen very +little of me, Lady Ragnall, except in that long journey across the +desert when we did not talk much, since you were otherwise engaged." + +"I know. That's the odd part of it, for I feel as though I had seen you +for years and years and knew everything about you that one human being +can know of another. Of course, too, I do know a good lot of your life +through George and Harut." + +"Harut was a great liar," I said uneasily. + +"Was he? I always thought him painfully truthful, though how he got at +the truth I do not know. Anyhow," she added with meaning, "don't suppose +I think the worse of you because others have thought so well. Women who +seem to be all different, generally, I notice, have this in common. If +one or two of them like a man, the rest like him also because something +in him appeals to the universal feminine instinct, and the same applies +to their dislike. Now men, I think, are different in that respect." + +"Perhaps because they are more catholic and charitable," I suggested, +"or perhaps because they like those who like them." + +She laughed in her charming way, and said, + +"However these remarks do not apply to you and me, for as I think I told +you once before in that cedar wood in Kendah Land where you feared lest +I should catch a chill, or become--odd again, it is another you with +whom something in me seems to be so intimate." + +"That's fortunate for your sake," I muttered, still staring at and +pointing to the silver plate. + +Again she laughed. "Do you remember the _Taduki_ herb?" she asked. "I +have plenty of it safe upstairs, and not long ago I took a whiff of it, +only a whiff because you know it had to be saved." + +"And what did you see?" + +"Never mind. The question is what shall we _both_ see?" + +"Nothing," I said firmly. "No earthly power will make me breathe that +unholy drug again." + +"Except me," she murmured with sweet decision. "No, don't think about +leaving the house. You can't, there are no Sunday trains. Besides you +won't if I ask you not." + +"'In vain is the net spread in the sight of any bird,'" I replied, firm +as a mountain. + +"Is it? Then why are so many caught?" + +At that moment the Bull of Bashan--I mean Smith, began to bellow +something at his hostess from the other end of the table and our +conversation came to an end. + +"I say, old chap," whispered Scroope in my ear when we stood up to see +the ladies out. "I suppose you are thinking of marrying again. Well, you +might do worse," and he glanced at the glittering form of Lady Ragnall +vanishing through the doorway behind her guests. + +"Shut up, you idiot!" I replied indignantly. + +"Why?" he asked with innocence. "Marriage is an honourable estate, +especially when there is lots of the latter. I remember saying something +of the sort to you years ago and at this table, when as it happened you +also took in her ladyship. Only there was George in the wind then; now +it has carried him away." + +Without deigning any reply I seized my glass and went to sit down +between the canon and the Bull of Bashan. + + + + +CHAPTER III. ALLAN GIVES HIS WORD + +Mr. Atterby-Smith proved on acquaintance to be even worse than unfond +fancy painted him. He was a gentleman in a way and of good family +whereof the real name was Atterby, the Smith having been added to secure +a moderate fortune left to him on that condition. His connection with +Lord Ragnall was not close and through the mother's side. For the +rest he lived in some south-coast watering-place and fancied himself a +sportsman because he had on various occasions hired a Scottish moor or +deer forest. Evidently he had never done anything nor earned a shilling +during all his life and was bringing his family up to follow in his +useless footsteps. The chief note of his character was that intolerable +vanity which so often marks men who have nothing whatsoever about which +to be vain. Also he had a great idea of his rights and what was due to +him, which he appeared to consider included, upon what ground I could +not in the least understand, the reversal of all the Ragnall properties +and wealth. I do not think I need say any more about him, except that he +bored me to extinction, especially after his fourth glass of port. + +Perhaps, however, the son was worse, for he asked questions without +number and when at last I was reduced to silence, lectured me about +shooting. Yes, this callow youth who was at Sandhurst, instructed +me, Allan Quatermain, how to kill elephants, he who had never seen an +elephant except when he fed it with buns at the Zoo. At last Mr. Smith, +who to Scroope's great amusement had taken the end of the table and +assumed the position of host, gave the signal to move and we adjourned +to the drawing-room. + +I don't know what had happened but there we found the atmosphere +distinctly stormy. The ample Mrs. Smith sat in a chair fanning herself, +which caused the barbaric ornaments she wore to clank upon her fat arm. +Upon either side of her, pale and indeterminate, stood Polly and Dolly +each pretending to read a book. Somehow the three of them reminded me of +a coat-of-arms seen in a nightmare, British Matron _sejant_ with Modesty +and Virtue as supporters. Opposite, on the other side of the fire and +evidently very angry, stood Lady Ragnall, _regardant_. + +"Do I understand you to say, Luna," I heard Mrs. A.-S. ask in resonant +tones as I entered the room, "that you actually played the part of a +heathen goddess among these savages, clad in a transparent bed-robe?" + +"Yes, Mrs. Atterby-Smith," replied Lady Ragnall, "and a nightcap of +feathers. I will put it on for you if you won't be shocked. Or perhaps +one of your daughters----" + +"Oh!" said both the young ladies together, "please be quiet. Here come +the gentlemen." + +After this there was a heavy silence broken only by the stifled giggles +in the background of Mrs. Scroope and the canon's fluffy-headed wife, +who to do her justice had some fun in her. Thank goodness the evening, +or rather that part of it did not last long, since presently Mrs. +Atterby-Smith, after studying me for a long while with a cold eye, rose +majestically and swept off to bed followed by her offspring. + +Afterwards I ascertained from Mrs. Scroope that Lady Ragnall had been +amusing herself by taking away my character in every possible manner for +the benefit of her connections, who were left with a general impression +that I was the chief of a native tribe somewhere in Central Africa where +I dwelt in light attire surrounded by the usual accessories. No wonder, +therefore, that Mrs. A.-S. thought it best to remove her "Twin Pets," as +she called them, out of my ravening reach. + +Then the Scroopes went away, having arranged for me to lunch with them +on the morrow, an invitation that I hastily accepted, though I heard +Lady Ragnall mutter--"Mean!" beneath her breath. With them departed the +canon and his wife and the curate, being, as they said, "early birds +with duties to perform." After this Lady Ragnall paid me out by going to +bed, having instructed Moxley to show us to the smoking room, "where," +she whispered as she said good night, "I hope you will enjoy yourself." + +Over the rest of the night I draw a veil. For a solid hour and +three-quarters did I sit in that room between this dreadful pair, being +alternately questioned and lectured. At length I could stand it no +longer and while pretending to help myself to whiskey and soda, slipped +through the door and fled upstairs. + +I arrived late to breakfast purposely and found that I was wise, for +Lady Ragnall was absent upstairs, recovering from "a headache." Mr. +A.-Smith was also suffering from a headache downstairs, the result of +champagne, port and whisky mixed, and all his family seemed to have +pains in their tempers. Having ascertained that they were going to the +church in the park, I departed to one two miles away and thence walked +straight on to the Scroopes' where I had a very pleasant time, remaining +till five in the afternoon. I returned to tea at the Castle where I +found Lady Ragnall so cross that I went to church again, to the six +o'clock service this time, only getting back in time to dress for +dinner. Here I was paid out for I had to take in Mrs. Atterby-Smith. Oh! +what a meal was that. We sat for the most part in solemn silence +broken only by requests to pass the salt. I observed with satisfaction, +however, that things were growing lively at the other end of the table +where A.-Smith _pere_ was drinking a good deal too much wine. At last I +heard him say, + +"We had hoped to spend a few days with you, my dear Luna. But as you +tell us that your engagements make this impossible"--and he paused to +drink some port, whereon Lady Ragnall remarked inconsequently, + +"I assure you the ten o'clock train is far the best and I have ordered +the carriage at half-past nine, which is not very early." + +"As your engagements make this impossible," he repeated, "we would ask +for the opportunity of a little family conclave with you to-night." + +Here all of them turned and glowered at me. + +"Certainly," said Lady Ragnall, "'the sooner 'tis over the sooner to +sleep.' Mr. Quatermain, I am sure, will excuse us, will you not? I +have had the museum lit up for you, Mr. Quatermain. You may find some +Egyptian things there that will interest you." + +"Oh, with pleasure!" I murmured, and fled away. + +I spent a very instructive two hours in the museum, studying various +Egyptian antiquities including a couple of mummies which rather +terrified me. They looked so very corpse-like standing there in +their wrappings. One was that of a lady who was a "Singer of Amen," I +remember. I wondered where she was singing now and what song. Presently +I came to a glass case which riveted my attention, for above it was a +label bearing the following words: "Two Papyri given to Lady Ragnall +by the priests of the Kendah Tribe in Africa." Within were the papyri +unrolled and beneath each of the documents, its translation, so far as +they could be translated for they were somewhat broken. No. 1, which +was dated, "In the first year of Peroa," appeared to be the official +appointment of the Royal Lady Amada, to be the prophetess to the temple +of Isis and Horus the Child, which was also called Amada, and situated +on the east bank of the Nile above Thebes. Evidently this was the same +temple of which Lady Ragnall had written to me in her letter, where her +husband had met his death by accident, a coincidence which made me start +when I remembered how and where the document had come into her hands and +what kind of office she filled at the time. + +The second papyrus, or rather its translation, contained a most +comprehensive curse upon any man who ventured to interfere with the +personal sanctity of this same Royal Lady of Amada, who, apparently in +virtue of her office, was doomed to perpetual celibacy like the vestal +virgins. I do not remember all the terms of the curse, but I know that +it invoked the vengeance of Isis the Mother, Lady of the Moon, and Horus +the Child upon anyone who should dare such a desecration, and in so many +words doomed him to death by violence "far from his own country where +first he had looked on Ra," (i.e. the sun) and also to certain spiritual +sufferings afterwards. + +The document gave me the idea that it was composed in troubled days to +protect that particularly sacred person, the Prophetess of Isis whose +cult, as I have since learned, was rising in Egypt at the time, from +threatened danger, perhaps at the hands of some foreign man. It occurred +to me even that this Princess, for evidently she was a descendant of +kings, had been appointed to a most sacred office for that very purpose. +Men who shrink from little will often fear to incur the direct curse of +widely venerated gods in order to obtain their desires, even if they +be not their own gods. Such were my conclusions about this curious and +ancient writing which I regret I cannot give in full as I neglected to +copy it at the time. + +I may add that it seemed extremely strange to me that it and the other +which dealt with a particular temple in Egypt should have passed into +Lady Ragnall's hands over two thousand years later in a distant part of +Africa, and that subsequently her husband should have been killed in +her presence whilst excavating the very temple to which they referred, +whence too in all probability they were taken. Moreover, oddly enough +Lady Ragnall had herself for a while filled the role of Isis in a shrine +whereof these two papyri had been part of the sacred appurtenances for +unknown ages, and one of her official titles there was Prophetess and +Lady of the Moon, whose symbol she wore upon her breast. + +Although I have always recognized that there are a great many more +things in the world than are dreamt of in our philosophy, I say with +truth and confidence that I am not a superstitious man. Yet I confess +that these papers and the circumstances connected with them, made me +feel afraid. + +Also they made me wish that I had not come to Ragnall Castle. + +Well, the Atterby-Smiths had so far effectually put a stop to any talk +of such matters and even if Lady Ragnall should succeed in getting +rid of them by that morning train, as to which I was doubtful, there +remained but a single day of my visit during which it ought not to be +hard to stave off the subject. Thus I reflected, standing face to face +with those mummies, till presently I observed that the Singer of Amen +who wore a staring, gold mask, seemed to be watching me with her oblong +painted eyes. To my fancy a sardonic smile gathered in them and spread +to the mouth. + +"That's what _you_ think," this smile seemed to say, "as once before you +thought that Fate could be escaped. Wait and see, my friend. Wait and +see!" + +"Not in this room any way," I remarked aloud, and departed in a hurry +down the passage which led to the main staircase. + +Before I reached its end a remarkable sight caused me to halt in the +shadow. The Atterby-Smith family were going to bed _en bloc_. They +marched in single file up the great stair, each of them carrying a +hand candle. Papa led and young Hopeful brought up the rear. Their +countenances were full of war, even the twins looked like angry lambs, +but something written on them informed me that they had suffered defeat +recent and grievous. So they vanished up the stairway and out of my ken +for ever. + +When they had gone I started again and ran straight into Lady Ragnall. +If her guests had been angry, it was clear that _she_ was furious, +almost weeping with rage, indeed. Moreover, she turned and rent me. + +"You are a wretch," she said, "to run away and leave me all day long +with those horrible people. Well, they will never come here again, for I +have told them that if they do the servants have orders to shut the door +in their faces." + +Not knowing what to say I remarked that I had spent a most instructive +evening in the museum, which seemed to make her angrier than ever. At +any rate she whisked off without even saying "good night" and left +me standing there. Afterwards I learned that the A.-S.'s had calmly +informed Lady Ragnall that she had stolen their property and demanded +that "as an act of justice" she should make a will leaving everything +she possessed to them, and meanwhile furnish them with an allowance of +L4,000 a year. What I did not learn were the exact terms of her answer. + +Next morning Alfred, when he called me, brought me a note from his +mistress which I fully expected would contain a request that I should +depart by the same train as her other guests. Its real contents, +however, were very different. + + + "My dear Friend," it ran, "I am so ashamed of myself and so sorry + for my rudeness last night, for which I deeply apologise. If you + knew all that I had gone through at the hands of those dreadful + mendicants, you would forgive me.--L.R." + + "P.S.--I have ordered breakfast at 10. Don't go down much before, + for your own sake." + + +Somewhat relieved in my mind, for I thought she was really angry with +me, not altogether without cause, I rose, dressed and set to work +to write some letters. While I was doing so I heard the wheels of a +carriage beneath and opening my window, saw the Atterby-Smith family in +the act of departing in the Castle bus. Smith himself seemed to be still +enraged, but the others looked depressed. Indeed I heard the wife of his +bosom say to him, + +"Calm yourself, my dear. Remember that Providence knows what is best for +us and that beggars on horseback are always unjust and ungrateful." + +To which her spouse replied, + +"Hold your infernal tongue, will you," and then began to rate the +servants about the luggage. + +Well, off they went. Glaring through the door of the bus, Mr. Smith +caught sight of me leaning out of the window, seeing which I waved my +hand to him in adieu. His only reply to this courtesy was to shake +his fist, though whether at me or at the Castle and its inhabitants in +general, I neither know nor care. + +When I was quite sure that they had gone and were not coming back again +to find something they had forgotten, I went downstairs and surprised a +conclave between the butler, Moxley, and his satellites, reinforced by +Lady Ragnall's maid and two other female servants. + +"Gratuities!" Moxley was exclaiming, which I thought a fine word for +tips, "not a smell of them! His gratuities were--'Damn your eyes, you +fat bottle-washer,' being his name for butler. _My_ eyes, mind you, Ann, +not Alfred's or William's, and that because he had tumbled over his own +rugs. Gentleman! Why, I name him a hog with his litter." + +"Hogs don't have litters, Mr. Moxley," observed Ann smartly. + +"Well, young woman, if there weren't no hogs, there'd be no litters, +so there! However, he won't root about in this castle no more, for +I happened to catch a word or two of what passed between him and her +Ladyship last night. He said straight out that she was making love to +that little Mr. Quatermain who wanted her money, and probably not for +the first time as they had forgathered in Africa. A gentleman, mind you, +Ann, who although peculiar, I like, and who, the keeper Charles tells +me, is the best shot in the whole world." + +"And what did she say to that?" asked Ann. + +"What did she say? What didn't she say, that's the question. It was just +as though all the furniture in the room got up and went for them Smiths. +Well, having heard enough, and more than I wanted, I stepped off +with the tray and next minute out they all come and grab the bedroom +candlesticks. That's all and there's her Ladyship's bell. Alfred, don't +stand gaping there but go and light the hot-plates." + +So they melted away and I descended from the landing, indignant but +laughing. No wonder that Lady Ragnall lost her temper! + +Ten minutes later she arrived in the dining-room, waving a lighted +ribbon that disseminated perfume. + +"What on earth are you doing?" I asked. + +"Fumigating the house," she said. "It is unnecessary as I don't think +they were infectious, but the ceremony has a moral significance--like +incense. Anyway it relieves my feelings." + +Then she laughed and threw the remains of the ribbon into the fire, +adding, + +"If you say a word about those people I'll leave the room." + +I think we had one of the jolliest breakfasts I ever remember. To begin +with we were both hungry since our miseries of the night before had +prevented us from eating any dinner. Indeed she swore that she had +scarcely tasted food since Saturday. Then we had such a lot to talk +about. With short intervals we talked all that day, either in the house +or while walking through the gardens and grounds. Passing through the +latter I came to the spot on the back drive where once I had saved her +from being abducted by Harut and Marut, and as I recognized it, uttered +an exclamation. She asked me why and the end of it was that I told her +all that story which to this moment she had never heard, for Ragnall had +thought well to keep it from her. + +She listened intently, then said, + +"So I owe you more than I knew. Yet, I'm not sure, for you see I was +abducted after all. Also if I had been taken there, probably George +would never have married me or seen me again, and that might have been +better for him." + +"Why?" I asked. "You were all the world to him." + +"Is any woman ever all the world to a man, Mr. Quatermain?" + +I hesitated, expecting some attack. + +"Don't answer," she went on, "it would be too long and you wouldn't +convince me who have been in the East. However, he was all the world +to me. Therefore his welfare was what I wished and wish, and I think he +would have had more of it if he had never married me." + +"Why?" I asked again. + +"Because I brought him no good luck, did I? I needn't go through all +the story as you know it. And in the end it was through me that he was +killed in Egypt." + +"Or through the goddess Isis," I broke in rather nervously. + +"Yes, the goddess Isis, a part I have played in my time, or something +like it. And he was killed in the temple of the goddess Isis. And those +papyri of which you read the translations in the museum, which were +given to me in Kendah Land, seem to have come from that same temple. +And--how about the Ivory Child? Isis in the temple evidently held a +child in her arms, but when we found her it had gone. Supposing this +child was the same as that of which I was guardian! It might have been, +since the papyri came from that temple. What do you think?" + +"I don't think anything," I answered, "except that it is all very odd. I +don't even understand what Isis and the child Horus represent. They were +not mere images either in Egypt or Kendah Land. There must be an idea +behind them somewhere." + +"Oh! there was. Isis was the universal Mother, Nature herself with all +the powers, seen and unseen, that are hidden in Nature; Love personified +also, although not actually the queen of Love like Hathor, her sister +goddess. The Horus child, whom the old Egyptians called Heru-Hennu, +signified eternal regeneration, eternal youth, eternal strength and +beauty. Also he was the Avenger who overthrew Set, the Prince of +Darkness, and thus in a way opened the Door of Life to men." + +"It seems to me that all religions have much in common," I said. + +"Yes, a great deal. It was easy for the old Egyptians to become +Christian, since for many of them it only meant worshipping Isis and +Horus under new and holier names. But come in, it grows cold." + +We had tea in Lady Ragnall's boudoir and after it had been taken away +our conversation died. She sat there on the other side of the fire with +a cigarette between her lips, looking at me through the perfumed smoke +till I began to grow uncomfortable and to feel that a crisis of some +sort was at hand. This proved perfectly correct, for it was. Presently +she said, + +"We took a long journey once together, Mr. Quatermain, did we not?" + +"Undoubtedly," I answered, and began to talk of it until she cut me +short with a wave of her hand, and went on, + +"Well, we are going to take a longer one together after dinner +to-night." + +"What! Where! How!" I exclaimed much alarmed. + +"I don't know where, but as for how--look in that box," and she pointed +to a little carved Eastern chest made of rose or sandal wood, that stood +upon a table between us. + +With a groan I rose and opened it. Inside was another box made of +silver. This I opened also and perceived that within lay bundles of +dried leaves that looked like tobacco, from which floated an enervating +and well-remembered scent that clouded my brain for a moment. Then I +shut down the lids and returned to my seat. + +"_Taduki_," I murmured. + +"Yes, _Taduki_, and I believe in perfect order with all its virtue +intact." + +"Virtue!" I exclaimed. "I don't think there is any virtue about that +hateful and magical herb which I believe grew in the devil's garden. +Moreover, Lady Ragnall, although there are few things in the world that +I would refuse you, I tell you at once that nothing will induce me to +have anything more to do with it." + +She laughed softly and asked why not. + +"Because I find life so full of perplexities and memories that I have +no wish to make acquaintance with any more, such as I am sure lie hid by +the thousand in that box." + +"If so, don't you think that they might clear up some of those which +surround you to-day?" + +"No, for in such things there is no finality, since whatever one saw +would also require explanation." + +"Don't let us argue," she replied. "It is tiring and I daresay we shall +need all our strength to-night." + +I looked at her speechless. Why could she not take No for an answer? As +usual she read my thought and replied to it. + +"Why did not Adam refuse the apple that Eve offered him?" she inquired +musingly. "Or rather why did he eat it after many refusals and learn +the secret of good and evil, to the great gain of the world which +thenceforward became acquainted with the dignity of labour?" + +"Because the woman tempted him," I snapped. + +"Quite so. It has always been her business in life and always will be. +Well, I am tempting you now, and not in vain." + +"Do you remember who was tempting the woman?" + +"Certainly. Also that he was a good school-master since he caused the +thirst for knowledge to overcome fear and thus laid the foundation-stone +of all human progress. That allegory may be read two ways, as one of a +rise from ignorance instead of a fall from innocence." + +"You are too clever for me with your perverted notions. Also, you said +we were not to argue. I have therefore only to repeat that I will not +eat your apple, or rather, breathe your _Taduki_." + +"Adam over again," she replied, shaking her head. "The same old +beginning and the same old end, because you see at last you will do +exactly what Adam did." + +Here she rose and standing over me, looked me straight in the eyes with +the curious result that all my will power seemed to evaporate. Then she +sat down again, laughing softly, and remarked as though to herself, + +"Who would have thought that Allan Quatermain was a moral coward!" + +"Coward," I repeated. "Coward!" + +"Yes, that's the right word. At least you were a minute ago. Now courage +has come back to you. Why, it's almost time to dress for dinner, but +before you go, listen. I have some power over you, my friend, as you +have some power over me, for I tell you frankly if you wished me very +much to do anything, I should have to do it; and the same applies +conversely. Now, to-night we are, as I believe, going to open a great +gate and to see wonderful things, glorious things that will thrill us +for the rest of our lives, and perhaps suggest to us what is coming +after death. You will not fail me, will you?" she continued in a +pleading voice. "If you do I must try alone since no one else will +serve, and then I _know_--how I cannot say--that I shall be exposed to +great danger. Yes, I think that I shall lose my mind once more and never +find it again this side the grave. You would not have that happen to me, +would you, just because you shrink from digging up old memories?" + +"Of course not," I stammered. "I should never forgive myself." + +"Yes, of course not. There was really no need for me to ask you. Then +you promise you will do all I wish?" and once more she looked at me, +adding, "Don't be ashamed, for you remember that I have been in touch +with hidden things and am not quite as other women are. You will +recollect I told you that which I have never breathed to any other +living soul, years ago on that night when first we met." + +"I promise," I answered and was about to add something, I forget what, +when she cut me short, saying, + +"That's enough, for I know your word is rather better than your bond. +Now dress as quickly as you can or the dinner will be spoiled." + + + + +CHAPTER IV. THROUGH THE GATES + +Short as was the time at my disposal before the dinner-gong sounded, +it proved ample for reflection. With every article of attire that +I discarded went some of that boudoir glamour till its last traces +vanished with my walking-boots. I was fallen indeed. I who had come to +this place so full of virtuous resolutions, could now only reflect upon +the true and universal meaning of our daily prayer that we might be kept +from temptation. And yet what had tempted me? For my life's sake I could +not say. The desire to please a most charming woman and to keep her from +making solitary experiments of a dangerous nature, I suppose, though +whether they should be less dangerous carried out jointly remained to +be seen. Certainly it was not any wish to eat of her proffered apple of +Knowledge, for already I knew a great deal more than I cared for about +things in general. Oh! the truth was that woman is the mightiest +force in the world, at any rate where the majority of us poor men is +concerned. She commanded and I must obey. + +I grew desperate and wondered if I could escape. Perhaps I might slip +out of the back door and run for it, without my great coat or hat +although the night was so cold and I should probably be taken up as a +lunatic. No, it was impossible for I had forged a chain that might not +be broken. I had passed my word of honour. Well, I was in for it and +after all what was there of which I need be afraid that I should tremble +and shrink back as though I were about to run away with somebody's wife, +or rather to be run away with quite contrary to my own inclination? +Nothing at all. A mere nonsensical ordeal much less serious than a visit +to the dentist. + +Probably that stuff had lost its strength by now--that is, unless it +had grown more powerful by keeping, as is the case with certain sorts +of explosives. And if it had not, the worst to be expected was a silly +dream, followed perhaps by headache. That is, unless I did not chance +to wake up again at all in this world, which was a most unpleasant +possibility. Another thing, suppose I woke and she didn't! What should +I say then? Of a certainty I should find myself in the dock. Yes, and +there were further dreadful eventualities, quite conceivable, every one +of them, the very thought of which plunged me into a cold perspiration +and made me feel so weak that I was obliged to sit down. + +Then I heard the gong; to me it sounded like the execution bell to a +prisoner under sentence of death. I crept downstairs feebly and found +Lady Ragnall waiting for me in the drawing-room, clothed with gaiety as +with a garment. I remember that it made me most indignant that she could +be so happy in such circumstances, but I said nothing. She looked me up +and down and remarked, + +"Really from your appearance you might have seen the Ragnall ghost, or +be going to be married against your will, or--I don't know what. Also +you have forgotten to fasten your tie." + +I looked in the glass. It was true, for there hung the ends down my +shirt front. Then I struggled with the wretched thing until at last she +had to help me, which she did laughing softly. Somehow her touch gave me +confidence again and enabled me to say quite boldly that I only wanted +my dinner. + +"Yes," she replied, "but you are not to eat much and you must only drink +water. The priestesses in Kendah Land told me that this was necessary +before taking _Taduki_ in its strongest form, as we are going to do +to-night. You know the prophet Harut only gave us the merest whiff in +this room years ago." + +I groaned and she laughed again. + +That dinner with nothing to drink, although to avoid suspicion I let +Moxley fill my glass once or twice, and little to eat for my appetite +had vanished, went by like a bad dream. I recall no more about it until +I heard Lady Ragnall tell Moxley to see that there was a good fire +in the museum where we were going to study that night and must not be +disturbed. + +Another minute and I was automatically opening the door for her. As she +passed she paused to do something to her dress and whispered, + +"Come in a quarter of an hour. Mind--no port which clouds the +intellect." + +"I have none left to cloud," I remarked after her. + +Then I went back and sat by the fire feeling most miserable and staring +at the decanters, for never in my life do I remember wanting a bottle +of wine more. The big clock ticked and ticked and at last chimed the +quarter, jarring on my nerves in that great lonely banqueting hall. Then +I rose and crept upstairs like an evil-doer and it seemed to me that the +servants in the hall looked on me with suspicion, as well they might. + +I reached the museum and found it brilliantly lit, but empty except for +the cheerful company of the two mummies who also appeared to regard me +with gleaming but doubtful eyes. So I sat down there in front of the +fire, not even daring to smoke lest tobacco should complicate _Taduki_. + +Presently I heard a low sound of laughter, looked up and nearly fell +backwards, that is, metaphorically, for the chair prevented such a +physical collapse. + +It was not wonderful since before me, like a bride of ancient days +adorned for her husband, stood the goddess Isis--white robes, feathered +headdress, ancient bracelets, gold-studded sandals on bare feet, scented +hair, ruby necklace and all the rest. I stared, then there burst from me +words which were the last I meant to say, + +"Great Heavens! how beautiful you are." + +"Am I?" she asked. "I am glad," and she glided across the room and +locked the door. + +"Now," she said, returning, "we had better get to business, that is +unless you would like to worship the goddess Isis a little first, to +bring yourself into a proper frame of mind, you know." + +"No," I replied, my dignity returning to me. "I do not wish to worship +any goddess, especially when she isn't a goddess. It was not a part of +the bargain." + +"Quite so," she said, nodding, "but who knows what you will be +worshipping before an hour is over? Oh! forgive me for laughing at you, +but I can't help it. You are so evidently frightened." + +"Who wouldn't be frightened?" I answered, looking with gloomy +apprehension at the sandal-wood box which had appeared upon a case full +of scarabs. "Look here, Lady Ragnall," I added, "why can't you leave all +this unholy business alone and let us spend a pleasant evening talking, +now that those Smith people have gone? I have lots of stories about my +African adventures which would interest you." + +"Because I want to hear my own African adventures, and perhaps yours +too, which I am sure will interest me a great deal more," she exclaimed +earnestly. "You think it is all foolishness, but it is not. Those Kendah +priestesses told me much when I seemed to be out of my mind. For a long +time I did not remember what they said, but of late years, especially +since George and I began to excavate that temple, plenty has come back +to me bit by bit, fragments, you know, that make me desire to learn the +rest as I never desired anything else on earth. And the worst of it has +always been that from the beginning I have known--and know--that this +can only happen with you and through you, why I cannot say, or have +forgotten. That's what sent me nearly wild with joy when I heard that +you were not only alive, but in this country. You won't disappoint me, +will you? There is nothing I can offer you which would have any value +for you, so I can only beg you not to disappoint me--well, because I am +your friend." + +I turned away my head, hesitating, and when I looked up again I saw +that her beautiful eyes were full of tears. Naturally that settled the +matter, so I only said, + +"Let us get on with the affair. What am I to do? Stop a bit. I may as +well provide against eventualities," and going to a table I took a sheet +of notepaper and wrote: + + + "Lady Ragnall and I, Allan Quatermain, are about to make an + experiment with an herb which we discovered some years ago in + Africa. If by any chance this should result in accident to either + or both of us, the Coroner is requested to understand that it is + not a case of murder or of suicide, but merely of unfortunate + scientific research." + + +This I dated, adding the hour, 9.47 P.M., and signed, requesting her to +do the same. + +She obeyed with a smile, saying it was strange that one who had lived a +life of such constant danger as myself, should be so afraid to die. + +"Look here, young lady," I replied with irritation, "doesn't it occur to +you that _I_ may be afraid lest _you_ should die--and _I_ be hanged for +it," I added by an afterthought. + +"Oh! I see," she answered, "that is really very nice of you. But, of +course, you would think like that; it is your nature." + +"Yes," I replied. "Nature, not merit." + +She went to a cupboard which formed the bottom of one of the mahogany +museum cases, and extracted from it first of all a bowl of ancient +appearance made of some black stone with projecting knobs for handles +that were carved with the heads of women wearing ceremonial wigs; and +next a low tripod of ebony or some other black wood. I looked at these +articles and recognized them. They had stood in front of the sanctuary +in the temple in Kendah Land, and over them I had once seen this very +woman dressed as she was to-night, bend her head in the magic smoke +before she had uttered the prophecy of the passing of the Kendah god. + +"So you brought these away too," I said. + +"Yes," she replied with solemnity, "that they might be ready at the +appointed hour when we needed them." + +Then she spoke no more for a while, but busied herself with certain +rather eerie preparations. First she set the tripod and its bowl in an +open space which I was glad to note was at some distance from the fire, +since if either of us fell into that who would there be to take us off +before cremation ensued? Then she drew up a curved settee with a back +and arms, a comfortable-looking article having a seat that sloped +backwards like those in clubs, and motioned to me to sit down. This I +did with much the same sensations that are evoked by taking one's place +upon an operation-table. + +Next she brought that accursed _Taduki_ box, I mean the inner silver +one, the contents of which I heartily wished I had thrown upon the fire, +and set it down, open, near the tripod. Lastly she lifted some glowing +embers of wood from the grate with tongs, and dropped them into the +stone bowl. + +"I think that's all. Now for the great adventure," she said in a voice +that was at once rapt and dreamy. + +"What am I to do?" I asked feebly. + +"That is quite simple," she replied, as she sat herself down beside me +well within reach of the _Taduki_ box, the brazier being between us +with its tripod stand pressed against the edge of the couch, and in +its curve, so that we were really upon each side of it. "When the smoke +begins to rise thickly you have only to bend your head a little forward, +with your shoulders still resting against the settee, and inhale until +you find your senses leaving you, though I don't know that this is +necessary for the stuff is subtle. Then throw your head back, go to +sleep and dream." + +"What am I to dream about?" I inquired in a vacuous way, for my senses +were leaving me already. + +"You will dream, I think, of past events in which both of us played a +part, at least I hope so. I dreamt of them before in Kendah Land, +but then I was not myself, and for the most part they are forgotten. +Moreover, I learned that we can only see them all when we are together. +Now speak no more." + +This command, by the way, at once produced in me an intense desire for +prolonged conversation. It was not to be gratified, however, for at that +moment she stood up again facing the tripod and me, and began to sing in +a rich and thrilling voice. What she sang I do not know for I could not +understand the language, but I presume it was some ancient chant that +she learned in Kendah Land. At any rate, there she stood, a lovely and +inspired priestess clad in her sacerdotal robes, and sang, waving her +arms and fixing her eyes upon mine. Presently she bent down, took a +little of the _Taduki_ weed and with words of incantation, dropped it +upon the embers in the bowl. Twice she did this, then sat herself upon +the couch and waited. + +A clear flame sprang up and burned for thirty seconds or so, I suppose +while it consumed the volatile oils in the weed. Then it died down and +smoke began to come, white, rich and billowy, with a very pleasant odour +resembling that of hot-house flowers. It spread out between us like a +fan, and though its veil I heard her say, + +"The gates are wide. Enter!" + +I knew what she meant well enough, and though for a moment I thought of +cheating, there is no other word for it, knew also that she had detected +the thought and was scorning me in her mind. At any rate I felt that I +must obey and thrust my head forward into the smoke, as a green ham is +thrust into a chimney. The warm vapour struck against my face like fog, +or rather steam, but without causing me to choke or my eyes to smart. I +drew it down my throat with a deep inhalation--once, twice, thrice, then +as my brain began to swim, threw myself back as I had been instructed +to do. A deep and happy drowsiness stole over me, and the last thing I +remember was hearing the clock strike the first two strokes of the hour +of ten. The third stroke I heard also, but it sounded like to that of +the richest-throated bell that ever boomed in all the world. I remember +becoming aware that it was the signal for the rolling up of some vast +proscenium, revealing behind it a stage that was the world--nothing +less. + + + +What did I see? What did I see? Let me try to recall and record. + +First of all something chaotic. Great rushes of vapour driven by mighty +winds; great seas, for the most part calm. Then upheavals and volcanoes +spouting fire. Then tropic scenes of infinite luxuriance. Terrific +reptiles feeding on the brinks of marshes, and huge elephant-like +animals moving between palms beyond. Then, in a glade, rough huts and +about them a jabbering crowd of creatures that were only half human, for +sometimes they stood upright and sometimes ran on their hands and feet. +Also they were almost covered with hair which was all they had in +the way of clothes, and at the moment that I met them, were terribly +frightened by the appearance of a huge mammoth, if that is the right +name for it, which walked into the glade and looked at us. At any rate +it was a beast of the elephant tribe which I judged to be nearly twenty +feet high, with enormous curving tusks. + +The point of the vision was that I recognized myself among those hairy +jabberers, not by anything outward and visible, but by something inward +and spiritual. Moreover, I was being urged by a female of the race, I +can scarcely call her a woman, to justify my existence by tackling the +mammoth in her particular interest, or to give her up to someone who +would. In the end I tackled it, rushing forward with a weapon, I think +it was a sharp stone tied to a stick, though how I could expect to +hurt a beast twenty feet high with such a thing is more than I can +understand, unless perhaps the stone was poisoned. + +At any rate the end was sudden. I threw the stone, whereat a great trunk +shot out from between the tusks and caught me. Round and round I went +in the air, reflecting as I did so, for I suppose at the time my normal +consciousness had not quite left me, that this was my first encounter +with the elephant Jana, also that it was very foolish to try to oblige a +female regardless of personal risk.... + +All became dark, as no doubt it would have done, but presently, that is +after a lapse of a great many thousands of years, or so it appeared to +me, light grew again. This time I was a black man living in something +not unlike a Kaffir kraal on the top of a hill. + +There was shouting below and enemies attacked us; a woman rushed out +of a hut and gave me a spear and a shield, the latter made of wood with +white spots on it, and pointed to the path of duty which ran down the +hill. I followed in company with others, though without enthusiasm, and +presently met a roaring giant of a man at the bottom. I stuck my spear +into him and he stuck his into me, through the stomach, which hurt me +most abominably. After this I retired up the hill where the woman pulled +the spear out and gave it to another man. I remember no more. + +Then followed a whole maze of visions, but really I cannot disentangle +them. Nor is it worth while doing so since after all they were only of +the nature of an overture, jumbled incidents of former lives, real or +imaginary, or so I suppose, having to do, all of them, with elementary +things, such as hunger and wounds and women and death. + +At length these broken fragments of the past were swept away out of my +consciousness and I found myself face to face with something connected +and tangible, not too remote or unfamiliar for understanding. It was the +beginning of the real story. + + + +I, please remember always that I knew it was I, Allan, and no one else, +that is, the same personality or whatever it may be which makes each +man different from any other man, saw myself in a chariot drawn by two +horses with arched necks and driven by a charioteer who sat on a little +seat in front. It was a highly ornamented, springless vehicle of wood +and gilded, something like a packing-case with a pole, or as we +should call it in South Africa, a disselboom, to which the horses were +harnessed. In this cart I stood arrayed in flowing robes fastened round +my middle by a studded belt, with strips of coloured cloth wound round +my legs and sandals on my feet. To my mind the general effect of the +attire was distinctly feminine and I did not like it at all. + +I was glad to observe, however, that the I of those days was anything +but feminine. Indeed I could never have believed that once I was so +good-looking, even over two thousand years ago. I was not very tall but +extremely stalwart, burly almost, with an arm that as I could observe, +since it projected from the sleeve of my lady's gown, would have done no +discredit to a prize-fighter, and a chest like a bull. + +The face also I admired very much. The brow was broad; the black eyes +were full and proud-looking, the features somewhat massive but well-cut +and highly intelligent; the mouth firm and shapely, with lips that were +perhaps a trifle too thick; the hair--well, there was rather a failure +in the hair, at least according to modern ideas, for it curled so +beautifully as to suggest that one of my ancestors might have fallen +in love with a person of negroid origin. However there was lots of it, +hanging down almost to the shoulders and bound about the brow by a very +neat fillet of blue cloth with silver studs. The colour of my skin, I +was glad to note, was by no means black, only a light and pleasing brown +such as might have been produced by sunburn. My age, I might add, was +anywhere between five and twenty and five and thirty, perhaps nearer the +latter than the former, at any rate, the very prime of life. + +For the rest, I held in my left hand a very stout, long bow of black +wood which seemed to have seen much service, with a string of what +looked like catgut, on which was set a broad-feathered, barbed arrow. +This I kept in place with the fingers of my right hand, on one of which +I observed a handsome gold ring with strange characters carved upon the +bezel. + +Now for the charioteer. + +He was black as night, black as a Sunday hat, with yellow rolling +eyes set in a countenance of extraordinary ugliness and I may add, +extraordinary humour. His big, wide mouth with thick lips ran up the +left side of his face towards an ear that was also big and projecting. +His hair, that had a feather stuck in it, was real nigger wool covering +a skull like a cannon ball and I should imagine as hard. This head, by +the way, was set plumb upon the shoulders, as though it had been driven +down between them by a pile hammer. They were very broad shoulders +suggesting enormous strength, but the gaily-clad body beneath, which was +supported by two bowed legs and large, flat feet, was that of a dwarf +who by the proportions of his limbs Nature first intended for a giant; +yes, an Ethiopian dwarf. + +Looking through this remarkable exterior, as it were, I recognized +that inside of it was the soul, or animating principle, of--whom do +you think? None other than my beloved old servant and companion, the +Hottentot Hans whose loss I had mourned for years! Hans himself who died +for me, slaying the great elephant, Jana, in Kendah Land, the elephant +I could not hit, and thereby saving my life. Oh! although I had been +obliged to go back to the days of I knew not what ancient empire to +do so in my trance, or whatever it was, I could have wept with joy at +finding him again, especially as I knew by instinct that as he loved +the Allan Quatermain of to-day, so he loved this Egyptian in a wheeled +packing-case, for I may as well say at once that such was my nationality +in the dream. + +Now I looked about me and perceived that my chariot was the second of a +cavalcade. Immediately in front of it was one infinitely more gorgeous +in which stood a person who even if I had not known it, I should have +guessed to be a king, and who, as a matter of fact, was none other than +the King of kings, at that time the absolute master of most of the known +world, though what his name may have been, I have no notion. He wore a +long flowing robe of purple silk embroidered with gold and bound in at +the waist by a jewelled girdle from which hung the private, sacred +seal; the little "White Seal" that, as I learned afterwards, was famous +throughout the earth. + +On his head was a stiff cloth cap, also purple in colour, round which +was fastened a fillet of light blue stuff spotted with white. The best +idea that I can give of its general appearance is to liken it to a tall +hat of fashionable shape, without a brim, slightly squashed in so that +it bulged at the top, and surrounded by a rather sporting necktie. +Really, however, it was the _kitaris_ or headdress of these monarchs +worn by them alone. If anyone else had put on that hat, even by mistake +in the dark, well, his head would have come off with it, that is all. + +This king held a bow in his hand with an arrow set upon its string, +just as I did, for we were out hunting, and as I shall have to narrate +presently, lions are no respecters of persons. By his side, leaning +against the back of the chariot, was a tall, sharp-pointed wand of cedar +wood with a knob of some green precious stone, probably an emerald, +fashioned to the likeness of an apple. This was the royal sceptre. +Immediately behind the chariot walked several great nobles. One of them +carried a golden footstool, another a parasol, furled at the moment; +another a spare bow and a quiver of arrows, and another a jewelled +fly-whisk made of palm fibre. + +The king, I should add, was young, handsome with a curled beard and +clear-cut, high-bred looking features; his face, however, was bad, cruel +and stamped with an air of weariness, or rather, satiety, which was +emphasized by the black circles beneath his fine dark eyes. Moreover +pride seemed to emanate from him and yet there was something in his +bearing and glances which suggested fear. He was a god who knows that +he is mortal and is therefore afraid lest at any moment he may be called +upon to lose his godship in his mortality. + +Not that he dreaded the perils of the chase; he was too much of a man +for that. But how could he tell lest among all that crowd of crawling +nobles, there was not one who had a dagger ready for his back, or a +phial of poison to mix with his wine or water? He with all the world +in the hollow of his hand, was filled with secret terrors which as I +learned since first I seemed to see him thus, fulfilled themselves at +the appointed time. For this man of blood was destined to die in blood, +though not by murder. + + + +The cavalcade halted. Presently a fat eunuch glittering in his +gold-wrought garments like some bronzed beetle in the sunlight, came +waddling back towards me. He was odious and I knew that we hated each +other. + +"Greeting, Egyptian," he said, mopping his brow with his sleeve for +the sun was hot. "An honour for you! A great honour! The King of kings +commands your presence. Yes, he would speak with you with his own lips, +and with that abortion of a servant of yours also. Come! Come swiftly!" + +"Swift as an arrow, Houman," I answered laughing, "seeing that for three +moons I, like an arrow, have rested upon the string and flown no nearer +to his Majesty." + +"Three moons!" screeched the eunuch. "Why, many wait three years and +many go to the grave still waiting; bigger men than you, Egyptian, +though I hear you do claim to be of royal blood yonder on the Nile. +But talk not of arrows flying towards the most High, for surely it is +ill-omened and might earn you another honour, that of the string," and +he made a motion suggestive of a cord encircling his throat. "Man, leave +your bow behind! Would you appear before the King armed? Yes, and your +dagger also." + +"Perchance a lion might appear before the King and he does not leave +his claws and teeth behind," I answered drily as I divested myself of my +weapons. + +Then we started, the three of us, leaving the chariot in charge of a +soldier. + +"Draw your sleeves over your hands," said the eunuch. "None must +appear before the King showing his hands, and, dwarf, since you have no +sleeves, thrust yours into your robe." + +"What am I to do with my feet?" he answered in a thick, guttural voice. +"Will it offend the King of kings to see my feet, most noble eunuch?" + +"Certainly, certainly," answered Houman, "since they are ugly enough to +offend even me. Hide them as much as possible. Now we are near, down on +your faces and crawl forward slowly on your knees and elbows, as I do. +Down, I say!" + +So down I went, though with anger in my heart, for be it remembered +that I, the modern Allan Quatermain, knew every thought and feeling that +passed through the mind of my prototype. + +It was as though I were a spectator at a play, with this difference. I +could read the motives and reflections of this former _ego_ as well as +observe his actions. Also I could rejoice when he rejoiced, weep when +he wept and generally feel all that he felt, though at the same time +I retained the power of studying him from my own modern standpoint and +with my own existing intelligence. Being two we still were one, or being +one we still were two, whichever way you like to put it. Lastly I lacked +these powers with reference to the other actors in the piece. Of these +I knew just as much, or as little as my former self knew, that is if he +ever really existed. There was nothing unnatural in my faculties where +they were concerned. I had no insight into their souls any more than I +have into those of the people about me to-day. Now I hope that I have +made clear my somewhat uncommon position with reference to these pages +from the Book of the Past. + +Well, preceded by the eunuch and followed by the dwarf, I crawled though +the sand in which grew some thorny plants that pricked my knees +and fingers, towards the person of the Monarch of the World. He had +descended from his chariot by help of a footstool, and was engaged in +drinking from a golden cup, while his attendants stood around in various +attitudes of adoration, he who had handed him the cup being upon his +knees. Presently he looked up and saw us. + +"Who are these?" he asked in a high voice that yet was not unmusical, +"and why do you bring them into my presence?" + +"May it please the King," answered our guide, knocking his head upon the +ground in a very agony of humiliation, "may it please the King----" + +"It would please me better, dog, if you answered my question. Who are +they?" + +"May it please the King, this is the Egyptian hunter and noble, +Shabaka." + +"I hear," said his Majesty with a gleam of interest in his tired eyes, +"and what does this Egyptian here?" + +"May it please the King, the King bade me bring him to the presence, but +now when the chariots halted." + +"I forgot; you are forgiven. But who is that with him? Is it a man or an +ape?" + +Here I screwed my head round and saw that my slave in his efforts to +obey the eunuch's instructions and hide his feet, had made himself +into a kind of ball, much as a hedgehog does, except that his big head +appeared in front of the ball. + +"O King, that I understand is the Egyptian's servant and charioteer." + +Again he looked interested, and exclaimed, + +"Is it so? Then Egypt must be a stranger country than I thought if such +ape-men live there. Stand up, Egyptian, and bid your ape stand up also, +for I cannot hear men who speak with their mouths in the dust." + +So I rose and saluted by lifting both my hands and bowing as I had +observed others do, trying, however, to keep them covered by my sleeves. +The King looked me up and down, then said briefly, + +"Set out your name and the business that brought you to my city." + +"May the King live for ever," I replied. "As this lord said," and I +pointed to the eunuch---- + +"He is not a lord but a dog," interrupted the Monarch, "who wears the +robe of women. But continue." + +"As this dog who wears the robe of women said"--here the King laughed, +but the eunuch, Houman, turned green with rage and glowered at me--"my +name is Shabaka. I am a descendant of the Ethiopian king of Egypt of +that same name." + +"It seems from all I hear that there are too many descendants of kings +in Egypt. When I visit that land which perhaps soon I must do with an +army at my back," here he stared at me coldly, "it may be well to lessen +their number. There is a certain Peroa for instance." + +He paused, but I made no answer, since Peroa was my father's cousin and +of the fallen Royal House; also the protector of my youth. + +"Well, Shabaka," he went on, "in Persia royal blood is common also, +though some of us think it looks best when it is shed. What else are +you?" + +"A slayer of royal beasts, O King of kings, a hunter of lions and of +elephants," (this statement interested me, Allan Quatermain, intensely, +showing me as it did that our tastes are very persistent); "also when I +am at home, a breeder of cattle and a grower of grain." + +"Good trades, all of them, Shabaka. But why came you here?" + +"Idernes the satrap of Egypt, servant of the King of kings, sought for +one who would travel to the East because the King of kings desired to +hear of the hunting of lions in the lands that lie to the south of Egypt +towards the beginnings of the great river. Then I, who desired to see +new countries, said, 'Here am I. Send me.' So I came and for three moons +have dwelt in the royal city, but till this hour have scarcely so much +as seen the face of the great King, although by many messengers I have +announced my presence, showing them the letters of Idernes giving me +safe-conduct. Therefore I propose to-morrow or the next day to return to +Egypt." + +The King said a word and a scribe appeared whom he commanded to take +note of my words and let the matter be inquired of, since some should +suffer for this neglect, a saying at which I saw Houman and certain of +the nobles turn pale and whisper to each other. + +"Now I remember," he exclaimed, "that I did desire Idernes to send me an +Egyptian hunter. Well, you are here and we are about to hunt the lion +of which there are many in yonder reeds, hungry and fierce beasts, since +for three days they have been herded in so that they can kill no food. +How many lions have you slain, Shabaka?" + +"Fifty and three in all, O King, not counting the cubs." + +He stared at me, answering with a sneer, + +"You Egyptians have large mouths. I have always heard it of you. Well, +to-day we will see whether you can kill a fifty-fourth. In an hour when +the sun begins to sink, the hounds will be loosed in yonder reeds and +since the water is behind them, the lions will come out, and then we +shall see." + +Now I saw that the King thought me to be a liar and the blood rose to my +head. + +"Why wait till the sun begins to sink, O King of kings?" I said. "Why +not enter the reeds, as is our fashion in the Land of Kush, and rouse +the lions from sleep in their own lair?" + +Now the King laughed outright and called in a loud voice to his +courtiers, + +"Do ye hear this boasting Egyptian, who talks of entering the reeds and +facing the lions in their lair, a thing that no man dare do where none +can see to shoot? What say ye now? Shall we ask him to prove his words?" + +Some great lord stepped forward, one who was a hunter though he looked +little like it, for the scent on his hair reached me from four paces +away and there was paint upon his face. + +"Yes, O King," he said in a mincing voice, "let him enter and kill a +lion. But if he fail, then let a lion kill him. There are some hungry in +the palace den and it is not fit that the King's ears should be filled +with empty words by foreigners from Egypt." + +"So be it," said the King. "Egyptian, you have brought it on your own +head. Prove that you can do what you say and I will give you great +honour. Fail, and to the lions with him who lies of lions. Still," he +added, "it is not right that you should go alone. Choose therefore one +of these lords to keep you company; he who would put you to the test, if +you will." + +Now I looked at the scented noble who turned pale beneath his paint. +Then I looked at the fat eunuch, Houman, who opened his mouth and gasped +like a fish, and when I had looked, I shook my head and said as though +to myself, + +"Not so, no woman and no eunuch shall be my companion on this quest," +whereat the King and all the rest laughed out loud. "The dwarf and I +will go alone." + +"The dwarf!" said the King. "Can he hunt lions also?" + +"No, O King, but perchance he can smell them, for otherwise how shall I +find them in that thicket within an hour?" + +"Perchance they can smell him. How is the ape-man named?" asked the +King. + +"Bes, O King, after the god of the Egyptians whom he resembles." + +"Dare you accompany your master on this hunt, O Bes?" inquired the King. + +Then Bes looked up, rolling his yellow eyes, and answered in his thick +and guttural voice, + +"I am my master's slave and dare I refuse to accompany him? If I did he +might kill me, as the King of kings kills his slaves. It is better to +die with honour by the teeth of a lion, than with dishonour beneath the +whip of a master. So at least we think in Ethiopia." + +"Well spoken, dwarf Bes!" exclaimed the King. "So would I have all men +think throughout the East. Let the words of this Ethiop be written down +and copies of them sent to the satraps of all the provinces that they +may be read to the peoples of the earth. I the King have decreed it." + + + + +CHAPTER V. THE WAGER + +While the scribes were at their work I bowed before the King and prayed +his leave and I and the dwarf Bes might get to ours. + +"Go," he said, "and return here within an hour. If you do not return +tidings of your death shall be sent to the satrap of Egypt to be told to +your wives." + +"I thank the King, but it is needless, for I have no wives, which are +ill company for a hunter." + +"Strange," he said, "since many women would be glad to name such a man +their husband, at least here among us Easterns." + +Walking backwards and bowing as we went, Bes and I returned to our +chariot. There we stripped off our outer garments till Bes was naked +save for his waistcloth and I was clad only in a jerkin. Then I took +my bow, my arrows and my knife, and Bes took two spears, one light for +throwing and the other short, broad and heavy for stabbing. Thus armed +we passed back before the Easterns who stared at us, and advanced to the +edge of the thicket of tall reeds that was full of lions. + +Here Bes took dust and threw it into the air that we might learn from +which quarter the light wind blew. + +"We will go against the breeze, Lord," he said, "that I may smell the +lions before they smell us." + +I nodded, and answered, + +"Hearken, Bes. Well may it be that we kill no lions in this place where +it is hard to shoot. Yet I would not return to be thrown to wild beasts +by yonder evil king. Therefore if we fail in this or in any other way, +do you kill me, if you still live." + +He rolled his eyes and grinned. + +"Not so, Master. Then we will win through the reeds and lie hid in their +edge till darkness comes, for in them those half-men will never dare to +seek for us. Afterwards we will swim the water and disguise ourselves +as jugglers and try to reach the coast, and so back to Egypt, having +learned much. Never stretch out your hand to Death till he stretches out +his to you, which he will do soon enough, Master." + +Again I nodded and said, + +"And if a lion should kill me, Bes, what then?" + +"Then, Master, I will kill that lion if I can and go report the matter +to the King." + +"And if he should wish to throw you to the beasts, Bes, what then?" + +"Then, first I will drag him down to the greatest of all beasts, he who +waits to devour evil-doers in the Under-world, be they kings or slaves," +and he stretched out his long arms and made a motion as of clutching +a man by the throat. "Oh! have no fear, Master, I can break him like a +stick, and afterwards we will talk the matter over among the dead, for I +shall swallow my tongue and die also. It is a good trick, Master, which +I wish you would learn." + +Then he took my hand and kissed it and we entered the reeds, I, who was +a hunter, feeling more happy than I had done since we set foot in the +East. + +Yet the quest was desperate for the reeds were tall and often I could +not see more than a bow's length in front of me. Presently, however, +we found a path made perchance by game coming down to drink, or by +crocodiles coming up to sleep, and followed it, I with an arrow on +my string and Bes with the throwing spear in his right hand and the +stabbing spear in his left, half a pace ahead of me. On we crept, Bes +drawing in the air through his great nostrils as a hound might do, till +suddenly he stopped and sniffed towards the north. + +"I smell lion near," he whispered, searching among the reed stems with +his eyes. "I see lion," he whispered again, and pointed, but I could see +nothing save the stems of the reeds. + +"Rouse him," I whispered back, "and I will shoot as he bounds." + +Then Bes poised the spear, shook it till it quivered, and threw. There +was a roar and a lioness appeared with the spear fast in her flank. I +loosed the arrow but it cut into the thick reeds and stuck there. + +"Forward!" whispered Bes, "for where woman is, there look for man. The +lion will be near." + +We crept on, Bes stopping to cut the arrow from a reed and set it back +in the quiver, for it was a good arrow made by himself. But now he +shifted the broad spear to his right hand and in his left held his +knife. We heard the wounded lioness roar not far away. + +"She calls her man to help her," whispered Bes, and as the words left +his lips the reeds down wind began to sway, for we were smelt. + +They swayed, they parted and, half seen, half hid between their stems, +appeared the head of a great, black-maned lion. I drew the string and +shot, this time not in vain, for I heard the arrow thud upon his hide. +Then before I could set another he was on us, reared upon his hind legs +and roaring. As I drew my dagger he struck at me, but I bent down and +his paw went over my head. Then his weight came against me and I fell +beneath him, stabbing him in the belly as I fell. I saw his mighty jaws +open to crush my head. Then they shut again and through them burst a +whine like that of a hurt dog. + +Bes had driven his spear into the lion's breast, so deep that the point +of it came out through the back. Still he was not dead, only now it was +Bes he sought. The dwarf ran at him as he reared up again, and casting +his great arms about the brute's body, wrestled with him as man with +man. + +Then it was, for the first time I think, that I learned all the +Ethiopian's strength. For he, a dwarf, threw that lion on its back and +thrusting his big head beneath the jaws, struggled with it madly. I +was up, the knife still in my hand, and oh! I too was strong. Into +the throat I drove it, dragging it this way and that, and lo! the lion +moaned and died and his blood gushed out over both of us. Then Bes sat +up and laughed, and I too laughed, since neither of us had more than +scratches and we had done what men could scarcely do. + +"Do you remember, Master," said Bes when he had finished laughing, as he +wiped his brow with some damp moss, "how, once far away up the Nile you +charged a mad elephant with a spear and saved me who had fallen, from +being trampled to death?" + +I, Shabaka, answered that I did. (And I, Allan Quatermain, observing +all these things in my psychic trance in the museum of Ragnall Castle, +reflected that I also remembered how a certain Hans had saved me from a +certain mad elephant, to wit, Jana, not so long before, which just shows +how things come round.) + +"Yes," went on Bes, "you saved me from that elephant, though it seemed +death to you. And, Master, I will tell you something now. That very +morning I had tried to poison you, only you would not wait to eat +because the elephants were near." + +"Did you?" I asked idly. "Why?" + +"Because two years before you captured me in battle with some of my +people, and as I was misshapen, or for pity's sake, spared my life and +made me your slave. Well, I who had been a chief, a very great chief, +Master, did not wish to remain a slave and did wish to avenge my +people's blood. Therefore I tried to poison you, and that very day you +saved my life, offering for it your own." + +"I think it was because I wanted the tusks of the elephant, Bes." + +"Perhaps, Master, only you will remember that this elephant was a young +cow and had no tusks worth anything. Still had it carried tusks, it +might have been so, since one white tusk is worth many black dwarfs. +Well, to-day I have paid you back. I say it lest you should forget that +had it not been for me, that lion would have eaten you." + +"Yes, Bes, you have paid me back and I thank you." + +"Master, hitherto I always thought you one who worshipped Maat, goddess +of Truth. Now I see that you worship the god of Lies, whoever he may +be, that god who dwells in the breasts of women and most men, but has no +name. For, Master, it was _you_ who saved _me_ from the lion and not I +you, since you cut its throat at the last. So that debt of mine is still +to pay and by the great Grasshopper which we worship in my country, who +is much better than all the gods of the Egyptians put together, I swear +that I will pay it soon, or mayhap ten thousand years hence. At the last +it shall be paid." + +"Why do you worship a grasshopper and why is he better than the gods of +the Egyptians?" I asked carelessly, for I was tired and his talk amused +me while we rested. + +"We worship the Grasshopper, Master, because he jumps with men's spirits +from one life to another, or from this world to the next, yes, right +through the blue sky. And he is better than your Egyptian gods because +they leave you to find your own way there, and then eat you alive, that +is if you have tried to poison people, as of course we have all done. +But, Master, we are fresh again now, so let us be going, for the hour +will soon be finished. Also when she has eaten the spear handle, that +lioness may return." + +"Yes," I said; "let us go and report to the King of kings that we have +killed a lion." + +"Master, it is not enough. Even common kings believe little that they +do not see, wherefore it is certain that a King of kings will believe +nothing and still more certain that he will not come here to look. So as +we cannot carry the lion, we must take a bit of it," and straightway he +cut off the end of the brute's tail. + +Following the crocodile path, presently we reached the edge of the reeds +opposite to the camp where the King now sat in state beneath a purple +pavilion that had been reared, eating a meal, with his courtiers +standing at a distance and looking very hungry. + +Out of the reeds bounded Bes, naked and bloody, waving the lion's tail +and singing some wild Ethiopian chant, while I, also bloody and half +naked, for the lion's claws had torn my jerkin off me, followed with bow +unstrung. + +The King looked up and saw us. + +"What! Do you live, Egyptian?" he asked. "Of a surety I thought that by +now you would be dead." + +"It was the lion that died, O King," I answered, pointing to Bes who, +having ceased from his song, was jumping about carrying the beast's tail +in his mouth as a dog carries a bone. + +"It seems that this Egyptian has killed a lion," said the King to one of +his lords, him of the painted face and scented hair. + +"May be please the King," he answered, bowing, "a tail is not the whole +beast and may have been taken thither, or cut from a lion lying dead +already. The King knows that the Egyptians are great liars." + +So he spoke because he was jealous of the deed. + +"These men look as though they had met a live one, not one that is +dead," said the King, scanning our blood-stained shapes. "Still, as +you doubt it, you will wish to put the matter to the proof. Therefore, +Cousin, take six men with you, enter the reeds and search. In that soft +ground it will be easy to follow their footmarks." + +"It is dangerous, O King," began the prince, for such he was, no less. + +"And therefore the task will be the more to your taste, Cousin. Go now, +and be swift." + +So six hunters were called and the prince went, cursing me beneath his +breath as he passed us. For he was terribly afraid, and with reason. +Suddenly Bes ceased from his antics and prostrating himself, cried, + +"A boon, O King. This noble lord throws doubt upon my master's word. +Suffer that I may lead him to where the lion lies dead, since otherwise +wandering in those reeds the great King's cousin might come to harm and +the great King be grieved." + +"I have many cousins," said the King. "Still go if you wish, Dwarf." + +So Bes ran after the prince and catching him up, tapped him on the +shoulder with the lion's tail to point out the way. Then they vanished +into the reeds and I went to the chariot to wash off the blood from my +body and clothes. As I fastened my robe I heard a sound of roaring, then +one scream, after which all grew still. Now I drew near to the reeds and +stood between them and the King's camp. + +Presently on their edge appeared Bes dancing and singing as before, but +this time he held a lion's tail in either hand. After him came the six +hunters dragging between them the body of the lion we had killed. They +staggered with it towards the King, and I followed. + +"I see the dwarf," he said. "I see the dead lion and I see the hunters. +But where is my cousin? Make report, O Bes." + +"O King of kings," replied Bes, "the mighty prince your cousin lies flat +yonder beneath the body of that lion's wife. She sprang upon him and +killed him, and I sprang upon her and killed her with my spear. Here is +her tail, O King of kings." + +"Is this true?" he asked of the hunters. + +"It is true, O King," answered their captain. "The lioness, which was +wounded, leapt upon the prince, choosing him although he was behind us +all. Then this dwarf leapt upon the lioness, being behind the prince and +nearest to him, and drove his spear through her shoulders to her heart. +So we brought the first lion as the King commanded us, since we could +carry no more." + +The face of the King grew red with rage. + +"Seven of my people and one black dwarf!" he exclaimed. "Yet the lioness +kills my cousin and the dwarf kills the lioness. Such is the tale that +will go to Egypt concerning the hunters of the King of the world. Seize +those men, Guards, and let them be fed to the wild beasts in the palace +dens." + +At once the unfortunates were seized and led away. Then the King called +Bes to him, and taking the gold chain he wore about his neck, threw +it over his head, thereby, though I knew nothing of it at the time, +conferring upon him some noble rank. Next he called to me and said, + +"It would seem that you are skilled in the use of the bow and in the +hunting of lions, Egyptian. Therefore I will honour you, for this +afternoon your chariot shall drive with my chariot, and we will hunt +side by side. Moreover, I will lay you a wager as to which of us will +kill the most lions, for know, Shabaka, that I also am skilled in +the use of the bow, more skilled than any among the millions of my +subjects." + +"Then, O King, it is of little use for me to match myself against you, +seeing that I have met men who can shoot better than I do, or, since in +the East all must speak nothing but the truth, not being liars as the +dead prince said we Egyptians are, one man." + +"Who was that man, Shabaka?" + +"The Prince Peroa, O King." + +The King frowned as though the name displeased him, then answered, + +"Am I not greater than this Peroa and cannot I therefore shoot better?" + +"Doubtless, O King of kings, and therefore how can I who shoot worse +than Peroa, match myself against you?" + +"For which reason I will give you odds, Shabaka. Behold this rope of +rose-hued pearls I wear. They are unequalled in the whole world, for +twenty years the merchants sought them in the days of my father; half +of them would buy a satrapy. I wager them"--here the listening nobles +gasped and the fat eunuch, Houman, held up his hands in horror. + +"Against what, O King?" + +"Your slave Bes, to whom I have taken a fancy." + +Now I trembled and Bes rolled his yellow eyes. + +"Your pardon, O King of kings," I said, "but it is not enough. I am a +hunter and to such, priceless pearls are of little use. But to me that +dwarf is of much use in my hunting." + +"So be it, Shabaka, then I will add to the wager. If you win, together +with the pearls I will give you the dwarf's weight in solid gold." + +"The King is bountiful," I answered, "but it is not enough, for even if +I win against one who can shoot better than Peroa, which is impossible, +what should I do with so much gold? Surely for the sake of it I should +be murdered or ever I saw the coasts of Egypt." + +"What shall I add then?" asked the King. "The most beauteous maiden in +the House of Women?" + +I shook my head. "Not so, O King, for then I must marry who would remain +single." + +"There is no need, you might sell her to your friend, Peroa. A satrapy?" + +"Not so, O King, for then I must govern it, which would keep me from my +hunting, until it pleased the King to take my head." + +"By the name of the holy ones I worship what then do you ask added to +the pearls and the pure gold?" + +Now I tried to bethink me of something that the King could not grant, +since I had no wish for this match which my heart warned me would end +in trouble. As no thought came to me I looked at Bes and saw that he was +rolling his eyes towards the six doomed hunters who were being led away, +also in pretence of driving off a fly, pointing to them with one of the +lion tails. Then I remembered that a decree once uttered by the King of +the East could not be altered, and saw a road of escape. + +"O King," I said, "together with the pearls and the gold I ask that the +lives of those six hunters be added to the wager, to be spared if by +chance I should win." + +"Why?" asked the King amazed. + +"Because they are brave men, O King, and I would not see the bones of +such cracked by tame beasts in a cage." + +"Is my judgment registered?" asked the King. + +"Not yet, O King," answered the head scribe. + +"Then it has no weight and can be suspended without the breaking of the +law. Shabaka, thus stands our wager. If I kill more lions than you do +this day, or, should but two be slain, I kill the first, or should none +be slain, I plant more arrows in their bodies, I take your slave, Bes +the dwarf, to be my slave. But should you have the better of me in any +of these ways, then I give to you this girdle of rose pearls and the +weight of the dwarf Bes in gold and the six hunters free of harm, to do +with what you will. Let it be recorded, and to the hunt." + + + +Soon Bes and I were in our chariot which by command took place in line +with that of the King, but at a distance of some thirty steps. Bending +over the dwarf who drove, I spoke with him, saying, + +"Our luck is ill to-day, Bes, seeing that before the end of it we may +well be parted." + +"Not so, Master, our luck is good to-day seeing that before the end of +it you will be the richer by the finest pearls in the whole world, by my +weight in pure gold (and Master, I am twice as heavy as the king thought +and will stuff myself with twenty pounds of meat before the weighing, if +I have the chance, or at least with water, though in this hot place that +will not last for long), and by six picked huntsmen, brave men as you +thought, who will serve to escort us and our treasure to the coast." + +"First I must win the match, Bes." + +"Which you could do with one eye blinded, Master, and a sore finger. +Kings think that they can shoot because all the worms that crawl about +them and are named men, dare not show themselves their betters. Oh! I +have heard tales in yonder city. There have been days when this Lord +of the world has missed six lions with as many arrows, and they seated +smiling in his face, being but tamed brutes brought from far in cages of +wood, yes, smiling like cats in the sun. Look you, Master, he drinks +too much wine and sits up too late in his Women's house--there are three +hundred of them there, Master--to shoot as you and I can. If you doubt +it, look at his eyes and hands. Oh! the pearls and the gold and the men +are yours, and that painted prince who mocked us is where he ought to +be--dead in the mud. + +"Did I tell you how I managed that, Master? As you know better than I +do, lions hate those that have on them the smell of their own blood. +Therefore, while I pointed out the way to him, I touched the painted +prince with the bleeding tail of that which we killed, pretending that +it was by chance, for which he cursed me, as well he might. So when we +came to the dead lion and, as I had expected, met there the lioness you +had wounded, she charged through the hunters at him who smelt of her +husband, and bit his head off." + +"But, Bes, you smelt of him also, and worse." + +"Yes, Master, but that painted cousin of the King came first. I kept +well behind him, pretending to be afraid," and he chuckled quietly, +adding, "I expect that he is now telling an angry tale about me to +Osiris, or to the Grasshopper that takes him there, as it may happen." + +"These Easterns worship neither Osiris, nor your Grasshopper, Bes, but a +flame of fire." + +"Then he is telling the tale to the fire, and I hope that it will get +tired and burn him." + +So we talked merrily enough because we had done great deeds and thought +that we had outwitted the Easterns and the King, not knowing all their +craft. For none had told us that that man who hunted with the King and +yet dared to draw arrow upon the quarry before the King should be put +to death as one who had done insult to his Majesty. This that royal fox +remembered and therefore was sure that he would win the wager. + +Now the chariots turned and passing down a path came to an open space +that was cleared of reeds. Here they halted, that of the King and my own +side by side with ten paces between them, and those of the court behind. +Meanwhile huntsmen with dogs entered the great brake far away to the +right and left of us, also in front, so that the lions might be driven +backwards and forwards across the open space. + +Soon we heard the hounds baying on all sides. Then Bes made a sucking +noise with his great lips and pointed to the edge of the reeds in front +of us some sixty paces away. Looking, I saw a yellow shape creeping +along between their dark stems, and although the shot was far, +forgetting all things save I was a hunter and there was my game, I drew +the arrow to my ear, aimed and loosed, making allowance for its fall and +for the wind. + +Oh! that shot was good. It struck the lion in the body and pierced him +through. Out he came, roaring, rolling, and tearing at the ground. But +by now I had another arrow on the string, and although the King lifted +his bow, I loosed first. Again it struck, this time in the throat, and +that lion groaned and died. + +The King looked at me angrily, and from the court behind rose a murmur +of wonder mingled with wrath, wonder at my marksmanship, and wrath +because I had dared to shoot before the King. + +"The wager looks well for us," muttered Bes, but I bade him be silent, +for more lions were stirring. + +Now one leapt across the open space, passing in front of the King and +within thirty paces of us. He shot and missed it, sending his shaft two +spans above its back. Then I shot and drove the arrow through it just +where the head joins the neck, cutting the spine, so that it died at +once. + +Again that murmur went up and the King struck the charioteer on the head +with his clenched fist, crying out that he had suffered the horses to +move and should be scourged for causing his hand to shake. + +This charioteer, although he was a lord--since in the East men of high +rank waited on the King like slaves and even clipped his nails and +beard--craved pardon humbly, admitting his fault. + +"It is a lie," whispered Bes. "The horses never stirred. How could they +with those grooms holding their heads? Nevertheless, Master, the pearls +are as good as round your neck." + +"Silence," I answered. "As we have heard, in the East all men speak the +truth; it is only Egyptians who lie. Also in the East men's necks are +encircled with bowstrings as well as pearls, and ears are long." + +The hounds continued to bay, drawing nearer to us. A lioness bounded out +of the reeds, ran towards the King's chariot and as though amazed, sat +down like a dog, so near that a man might have hit it with a stone. The +King shot short, striking it in the fore-paw only, whereon it shook out +the arrow and rushed back into the reeds, while the court behind cried, + +"May the King live for ever! The beast is dead." + +"We shall see if it is dead presently," said Bes, and I nodded. + +Another lion appeared to the right of the King. Again he shot and missed +it, whereon he began to curse and to swear in his own royal oaths, and +the charioteer trembled. Then came the end. + +One of the hounds drew quite close and roused the lioness that had been +pricked in the foot. She turned and killed it with a blow of her paw, +then, being mad, charged straight at the King's chariot. The horses +reared, lifting the grooms off their feet. The King shot wildly and fell +backwards out of the chariot, as even Kings of the world must do when +they have nothing left to stand on. The lioness saw that he was down and +leapt at him, straight over the chariot. As she leapt I shot at her +in the air and pierced her through the loins, paralysing her, so that +although she fell down near the King, she could not come at him to kill +him. + +I sprang from my chariot, but before I could reach the lioness hunters +had run up with spears and stabbed her, which was easy as she could not +move. + +The King rose from the ground, for he was unharmed, and said in a loud +voice, + +"Had not that shaft of mine gone home, I think that the East would have +bowed to another lord to-night." + +Now, forgetting that I was speaking to the King of the earth, forgetting +the wager and all besides, I exclaimed, + +"Nay, your shaft missed; mine went home," whereon one of the courtiers +cried, + +"This Egyptian is a liar, and calls the King one!" + +"A liar?" I said astonished. "Look at the arrow and see from whose +quiver it came," and I drew one from my own of the Egyptian make and +marked with my mark. + +Then a tumult broke out, all the courtiers and eunuchs talking at once, +yet all bowing to the mud-stained person of the King, like ears of wheat +to a tree in a storm. Not wishing to urge my claims further, for my part +I returned to the chariot and the hunting being done, as I supposed, +unstrung my bow which I prized above all things, and set it in its case. + +While I was thus employed the eunuch Houman approached me with a sickly +smile, saying, + +"The King commands your presence, Egyptian, that you may receive your +reward." + +I nodded, saying that I would come, and he returned. + +"Bes," I said when he was out of hearing, "my heart sinks. I do not +trust that King who I think means mischief." + +"So do I, Master. Oh! we have been great fools. When a god and a man +climb a tree together, the man should allow the god to come first to the +top, and thence tell the world that he is a god." + +"Yes," I answered, "but who ever sees Wisdom until she is flying away? +Now perhaps, the god being the stronger, will cast down the man." + +Then both together we advanced towards the King, leaving the chariot in +charge of soldiers. He was seated on a gilded chair which served him +as a throne, and behind him were his officers, eunuchs and attendants, +though not all of them, since at a little distance some of them were +engaged in beating the lord who had served as his charioteer upon the +feet with rods. We prostrated ourselves before him and waited till he +spoke. At length he said, + +"Shabaka the Egyptian, we made a wager with you, of which you will +remember the terms. It seems that you have won the wager, since you slew +two lions, whereas we, the King, slew but one, that which leapt upon us +in the chariot." + +Here Bes groaned at my side and I looked up. + +"Fear nothing," he went on, "it shall be paid." Here he snatched off the +girdle of priceless, rose-hued pearls and threw it in my face. + +"At the palace too," he went on, "the dwarf shall be set in the scales +and his full weight in pure gold shall be given to you. Moreover, the +lives of the six hunters are yours, and with them the men themselves." + +"May the King live for ever!" I exclaimed, feeling that I must say +something. + +"I hope so," he answered cruelly, "but, Egyptian, you shall not, who +have broken the laws of the land." + +"In what way, O King?" I asked. + +"By shooting at the lions before the King had time to draw his bow, and +by telling the King that he lied to his face, for both of which things +the punishment is death." + +Now my heart swelled till I thought it would burst with rage. Then of a +sudden, a certain spirit entered into me and I rose to my feet and said, + +"O King, you have declared that I must die and as this is so, I will +kneel to you no more who soon shall sup at the table of Osiris, and +there be far greater than any king, going before him with clean hands. +Is it not your law that he who is condemned to die has first the right +to set out his case for the honour of his name?" + +"It is," said the King, I think because he was curious to hear what I +had to say. "Speak on." + +"O King, although my blood is as high as your own, of that I say +nothing, for at the wish of your satrap I came to the East from Egypt as +a hunter, to show you how we of Egypt kill lions and other beasts. For +three months I have waited in the royal city seeking admission to the +presence of the King, and in vain. At length I was bidden to this hunt +when I was about to depart to my own land, and being taunted by your +servants, entered the reeds with my slave, and there slew a lion. Then +it pleased you to thrust a wager upon me which I did not wish to +take, as to which of us would shoot the most lions; a wager as I now +understand you did not mean that I should win, whatever might be my +skill, since you thought I knew that I must shoot at nothing till you +had first shot and killed the beasts or scared them away. + +"So I matched myself against you, as hunter against hunter, for in the +field, as before the gods, all are equal, not as a slave against a king +who is determined to avenge defeat by death. We were posted and the +lions came. I shot at those which appeared opposite to me, or upon +my side, leaving those that appeared opposite to you, or on your side +unshot at, as is the custom of hunters. My skill, or my fortune, was +better than yours and I killed, whereas you missed or only wounded. In +the end a lioness sprang at you and I shot it lest it should kill you; +as could easily be proved by the arrow in its body. Now you say that I +must die because I have broken some laws of yours which men should +be ashamed to make, and to save your honour, pay me what I have won, +knowing that pearls and gold and slaves are of no value to a dying man +and can be taken back again. That is all the story. + +"Yet I would add one word. You Easterns have two sayings which you teach +to your children; that they should learn to shoot with the bow, and to +tell the truth. O King, they are my last lessons to you. Learn to shoot +with the bow--which you cannot do, and to tell the truth which you have +not done. Now I have spoken and am ready to die and I thank you for +the patience with which you have heard my words, that, as the King does +_not_ live for ever, I hope one day to repeat to you more fully beyond +the grave." + +Now at this bold speech of mine all those nobles and attendants gasped, +for never had they heard such words addressed to his Majesty. The King +turned red as though with shame, but made no answer, only he asked of +those about him. + +"What fate for this man?" + +"Death, O King!" they cried with one voice. + +"What death?" he asked again. + +Then his Councillors consulted together and one of them answered, + +"The slowest known to our law, _death by the boat_." + +Hearing this and not knowing what was meant, it came into my mind that I +was to be turned adrift in a boat and there left to starve. + +"Behold the reward of good hunting!" I mocked in my rage. "O King, +because of this deed of shame I call upon you the curse of all the gods +of all the peoples. Henceforth may your sleep be ever haunted by evil +dreams of what shall follow the last sleep, and in the end may you also +die in blood." + +The King opened his mouth as though to answer, but from it came nothing +but a low cry of fear. Then guards rushed up and seized me. + + + + +CHAPTER VI. THE DOOM OF THE BOAT + +The guards led me to my chariot and thrust me into it, and with me Bes. +I asked them if they would murder him also, to which the eunuch, Houman, +answered No, since he had committed no crime, but that he must go with +me to be weighed. Then soldiers took the horses by the bridles and led +them, while others, having first snatched away my bow and all our other +weapons, surrounded the chariot lest we should escape. So Bes and I were +able to talk together in a Libyan tongue that none of them understood, +even if they heard our words. + +"Your life is spared," I said to him, "that the King may take you as a +slave." + +"Then he will take an ill slave, Master, since I swear by the +Grasshopper that within a moon I will find means to kill him, and +afterwards come to join you in a land where men hunt fair." + +I smiled and Bes went on, + +"Now I wish I had time to teach you that trick of swallowing your own +tongue, since perhaps you will need it in this boat of which they talk." + +"Did you not say to me an hour or two ago, Bes, that we are fools to +stretch out our hands to Death until he stretches out his to us? I will +not die until I must--now." + +"Why 'now,' Master, seeing that only this afternoon you bade me kill you +rather than let you be thrown to the wild beasts?" he asked peering at +me curiously. + +"Do you remember the old hermit, the holy Tanofir, who dwells in a cell +over the sepulchre of the Apis bulls in the burial ground of the desert +near to Memphis, Bes?" + +"The magician and prophet who is the brother of your grandfather, +Master, and the son of a king; he who brought you up before he became a +hermit? Yes, I know him well, though I have seldom been very near to him +because his eyes frighten me, as they frightened Cambyses the Persian +when Tanofir cursed him and foretold his doom after he had stabbed the +holy Apis, saying that by a wound from that same sword in his own body +he should die himself, which thing came to pass. As they have frightened +many another man also." + +"Well, Bes, when yonder king told me that I must die, fear filled me +who did not wish to die thus, and after the fear came a blackness in my +mind. Then of a sudden in that blackness I saw a picture of Tanofir, my +great uncle, seated in a sepulchre looking towards the East. Moreover +I heard him speak, and to me, saying, 'Shabaka, my foster-son, fear +nothing. You are in great danger but it will pass. Speak to the great +King all that rises in your heart, for the gods of Vengeance make use of +your tongue and whatever you prophesy to him shall be fulfilled.' So I +spoke the words you heard and I feared nothing." + +"Is it so, Master? Then I think that the holy Tanofir must have entered +my heart also. Know that I was minded to leap upon that king and break +his neck, so that all three of us might end together. But of a sudden +something seemed to tell me to leave him alone and let things go as they +are fated. But how can the holy Tanofir who grows blind with age, see so +far?" + +"I do not know, Bes, save that he is not as are other men, for in him +is gathered all the ancient wisdom of Egypt. Moreover he lives with the +gods while still upon earth, and like the gods can send his _Ka_, as we +Egyptians call the spirit, or invisible self which companions all from +the cradle to the grave and afterwards, whither he will. So doubtless +to-day he sent it hither to me whom he loves more than anything on +earth. Also I remember that before I entered on this journey he told +me that I should return safe and sound. Therefore, Bes, I say I fear +nothing." + +"Nor do I, Master. Yet if you see me do strange things, or hear me speak +strange words, take no note of them, since I shall be but playing a part +as I think wisest." + +After this we talked of that day's adventure with the lions, and of +others that we had shared together, laughing merrily all the while, till +the soldiers stared at us as though we were mad. Also the fat eunuch, +Houman, who was mounted on an ass, rode up and said, + +"What, Egyptian who dared to twist the beard of the Great King, you +laugh, do you? Well, you will sing a different song in the boat to that +which you sing in the chariot. Think of my words on the eighth day from +this." + +"I will think of them, Eunuch," I answered, looking at him fiercely in +the eyes, "but who knows what kind of a song you will be singing before +the eighth day from this?" + +"What I do is done under the authority of the ancient and holy Seal of +Seals," he answered in a quavering voice, touching the little cylinder +of white shell which I had noted upon the person of the King, but that +now hung from a gold chain about the eunuch's neck. + +Then he made the sign which Easterns use to avert evil and rode off +again, looking very frightened. + +So we came to the royal city and went up to a wonderful palace. Here we +were taken from the chariot and led into a room where food and drink in +plenty were given to me as though I were an honoured guest, which caused +me to wonder. Bes also, seated on the ground at a distance, ate and +drank, for his own reasons filling himself to the throat as though he +were a wineskin, until the serving slaves mocked at him for a glutton. + +When we had finished eating, slaves appeared bearing a wooden framework +from which hung a great pair of scales. Also there appeared officers of +the King's Treasury, carrying leather bags which they opened, breaking +the seals to show that the contents were pure gold coin. They set a +number of these bags on one of the scales, and then ordered Bes to seat +himself in the other. So much heavier did he prove than they expected +him to be, that they were obliged to send back to the Treasury to fetch +more bags of gold, for although Bes was so short in height, his weight +was that of a large man. One of the treasurers grumbled, saying he +should have been weighed before he had eaten and drunk. But the officer +to whom he spoke grinned and answered that it mattered little, since the +King was heir to criminals and that these bags would soon return to +the Treasury, only they would need washing first, a remark that made me +wonder. + +At length, when the scales were even, the six hunters whose lives I had +won and who had been given to me as slaves, were brought in and ordered +to shoulder the bags of gold. I too was seized and my hands were bound +behind me. Then I was led out in charge of the eunuch Houman, who +informed me with a leer that it would be his duty to attend to my +comfort till the end. With him were four black men all dressed in the +same way. These, he said, were the executioners. Lastly came Bes watched +by three of the king's guards armed with spears, lest he should attempt +to rescue me or to do anyone a mischief. + +Now my heart began to sink and I asked Houman what was to happen to me. + +"This, O Egyptian slayer of lions. You will be laid upon a bed in a +little boat upon the river and another boat will be placed over you, for +these boats are called the Twins, Egyptian, in such a fashion that your +head and your hands will project at one end and your feet at the other. +There you will be left, comfortable as a baby in its cradle, and twice +every day the best of food and drink will be brought to you. Should your +appetite fail, moreover, it will be my duty to revive it by pricking +your eyes with the point of a knife until it returns. Also after each +meal I shall wash your face, your hands and your feet with milk and +honey, lest the flies that buzz about them should suffer hunger, and to +preserve your skin from burning by the sun. Thus slowly you will +grow weaker and at length fall asleep. The last one who went into the +boat--he, unlucky man, had by accident wandered into the court of the +House of Women and seen some of the ladies there unveiled--only +lived for twelve days, but you, being so strong, may hope to last for +eighteen. Is there anything more that I can tell you? If so, ask it +quickly for we draw near to the river." + +Now when I heard this and understood all the horror of my fate, I forgot +the vision of my great uncle, the holy Tanofir, and his comfortable +prophecies, and my heart failed me altogether, so that I stood stock +still. + +"What, Lion-hunter and Bearder of kings, do you think it is too early to +go to bed?" mocked this devilish eunuch. "On with you!" and he began to +beat me about the face with the handle of his fly-whisk. + +Then my manhood came back to me. + +"When did the King tell you to touch me, you fatted swine?" I roared, +and turning, since I could not reach him with my bound hands, kicked +him in the body with all my strength, so that he fell down, writhing and +screaming with agony. Indeed, had not the executioners leapt upon me, I +would have trampled the life out of him where he lay. But they held me +fast and presently, after he had been sick, Houman recovered enough to +come forward leaning on the shoulders of two guards. Only now he mocked +me no more. + +We reached a quay just as the sun was setting. There in charge of a +one-eyed black slave, a little square-ended boat floated at the river's +edge, while on the quay itself lay a similar but somewhat shorter boat, +bottom uppermost. Now the hunters whom I had won in the wager, with many +glances of compassion, for they were brave men and knew that it was I +who had saved their lives, placed the bags of gold in the bottom of the +floating boat, and on the top of these a mattress stuffed with straw. +Then the girdle of rose-hued pearls was made fast about my middle, my +hands were untied, I was seized by the executioners and laid on my back +on the mattress, and my wrists and ankles were fixed by cords to iron +rings that were screwed to the thwarts of the boat. After this the +other, shorter boat was laid over me in such a manner that it did not +touch me, leaving my head, my hands and my feet exposed as the eunuch +had said. + +While this wicked work was going forward Bes sat on the quay, watching, +till presently, after I had been made fast and covered up, he burst into +shouts of laughter, clapped his hands and began to dance about as though +with joy, till the eunuch, who had now recovered somewhat from my kick, +grew curious and asked him why he behaved thus. + +"O noble Eunuch," he answered, "once I was free and that man made me a +slave, so that for many years I have been obliged to toil for him whom I +hate. Moreover, often he has beaten me and starved me, which was why you +saw me eat so much not long ago, and threatened to kill me, and now at +last I have my revenge upon him who is about to die miserably. That is +why I laugh and sing and dance and clap my hands, O most noble Eunuch, +I who shall become the follower and servant of the glorious King of +all the earth, and perhaps your friend, too, O Eunuch of eunuchs, whose +sacred person my brutal master dared to kick." + +"I understand," said Houman smiling, though with a twisted face, "and +will make report of all you say to the King, and ask him to grant that +you shall sometimes prick this Egyptian in the eye. Now go spit in his +face and tell him what you think of him." + +So Bes waded into the water which was quite shallow here, and spat into +my face, or pretended to, while amid a torrent of vile language, he +interpolated certain words in the Libyan tongue, which meant, + +"O my most beloved father, mother, and other relatives, have no fear. +Though things look very black, remember the vision of the holy Tanofir, +who doubtless allows these things to happen to you to try your faith by +direct order of the gods. Be sure that I will not leave you to perish, +or if there should be no escape, that I will find a way to put you out +of your misery and to avenge you. Yes, yes, I will yet see that accursed +swine, Houman, take your place in this boat. Now I go to the Court to +which it seems that this gold chain gives me a right of entry, or so the +eunuch says, but soon I will be back again." + +Then followed another stream or most horrible abuse and more spitting, +after which he waded back to land and embraced Houman, calling him his +best friend. + +They went, leaving me alone in the boat save for the guard upon the quay +who, now that darkness had come, soon grew silent. It was lonely, very +lonely, lying there staring at the empty sky with only the stinging +gnats for company, and soon my limbs began to ache. I thought of the +poor wretches who had suffered in this same boat and wondered if their +lot would be my lot. + +Bes was faithful and clever, but what could a single dwarf do among all +these black-hearted fiends? And if he could do nothing, oh! if he could +do nothing! + +The seconds seemed minutes, the minutes seemed hours, and the hours +seemed years. What then would the days be, passed in torture and +agony while waiting for a filthy death? Where now were the gods I had +worshipped and--was there any god? Or was man but a self-deceiver who +created gods instead of the gods creating him, because he did not love +to think of an eternal blackness in which he would soon be swallowed up +and lost? Well, at least that would mean sleep, and sleep is better than +torment of mind or body. + +It came to me, I think, who was so weary. At any rate I opened my eyes +to see that the low moon had vanished and that some of the stars which +I knew as a hunter who had often steered his way by them, had moved a +little. While I was wondering idly why they moved, I heard the tramp of +soldiers on the quay and the voice of an officer giving a command. Then +I felt the boat being drawn in by the cord with which it was attached to +the quay. Next the other boat that lay over me was lifted off, the ropes +that bound we were undone and I was set upon my feet, for already I was +so stiff that I could scarcely stand. A voice which I recognised as that +of the eunuch Houman, addressed me in respectful tones, which made me +think I must be dreaming. + +"Noble Shabaka," said the voice, "the Great King commands your presence +at his feast." + +"Is it so?" I answered in my dream. "Then my absence from their feast +will vex the gnats of the river," a saying at which Houman and others +with him laughed obsequiously. + +Next I heard the bags of gold being removed from the boat, after which +we walked away, guards supporting me by either elbow until I found my +strength again, and Houman following just behind, perhaps because he +feared my foot if he went in front. + +"What has chanced, Eunuch," I asked presently, "that I am disturbed from +the bed where I was sleeping so well?" + +"I do not know, Lord," he answered. "I only know that the King of kings +has suddenly commanded that you should be brought before him as a guest +clothed in a robe of honour, even if to do so, you must be awakened from +your rest, yes, to his own royal table, for he holds a feast this night. +Lord," he went on in a whining voice, "if perchance fortune should have +changed her face to you, I pray you bear no malice to those who, when +she frowned, were forced, yes, under the private Seal of Seals, against +their will to carry out the commands of the King. Be just, O Lord +Shabaka." + +"Say no more. I will try to be just," I answered. "But what is justice +in the East? I only know of it in Egypt." + +Now we reached one of the doors of the palace and I was taken to a +chamber where slaves who were waiting, washed and anointed me with +scents, after which they clad me in a beautiful robe of silk, setting +the girdle of rose-hued pearls about me. + +When they had finished, preceded by Houman I was led to a great pillared +hall closed in with silk hangings, where many feasted. Through them I +went to a dais at the head of the hall where between half-drawn curtains +surrounded by cup-bearers and other officers, the King sat in all his +glory upon a cushioned golden throne. He had a glittering wine-cup in +his hand and at a glance I saw that he was drunk, as it is the fashion +for these Easterns to be at their great feasts, for he looked happy and +human which he did not do when he was sober. Or perchance, as sometimes +I thought afterwards, he only pretended to be drunk. Also I saw +something else, namely, Bes, wondrously attired with the gold chain +about his neck and wearing a red headdress. He was seated on the carpet +before the throne, and saying things that made the King laugh and even +caused the grave officers behind to smile. + +I came to the dais and at a little sign from Bes who yet did not seem to +see me, such a sign as he often made when he caught sight of game before +I did, I prostrated myself. The King looked at me, then asked, + +"Who is this?" adding, "Oh, I remember, the Egyptian whose arrows do not +miss, the wonderful hunter whom Idernes sent to me from Memphis, which +I hope to visit ere long. We quarrelled, did we not, Egyptian, something +about a lion?" + +"Not so, King," I answered. "The King was angry and with justice, +because I could not kill a lion before it frightened his horses." + +This I said because my hours in the boat had made me humble, also +because the words came to my lips. + +"Yes, yes, something like that, or at least you lie well. Whatever it +may have been, it is done with now, a mere hunters' difference," and +taking from his side his long sceptre that was headed with the great +emerald, he stretched it out for me to touch in token of pardon. + +Then I knew that I was safe for he to whom the King has extended his +sceptre is forgiven all crimes, yes, even if he had attempted the royal +life. The Court knew it also, for every man who saw bowed towards me, +yes, even the officers behind the King. One of the cup-bearers too +brought me a goblet of the King's own wine, which I drank thankfully, +calling down health on the King. + +"That was a wonderful shot of yours, Egyptian," he said, "when you sent +an arrow through the lioness that dared to attack my Majesty. Yes, the +King owes his life to you and he is grateful as you shall learn. This +slave of yours," and he pointed to Bes in his gaudy attire, "has brought +the whole matter to my mind whence it had fallen, and, Shabaka," here he +hiccupped, "you may have noted how differently things look to the naked +eye and when seen through a wine goblet. He has told me a wonderful +story--what was the story, Dwarf?" + +"May it please the great King," answered Bes, rolling his big eyes, +"only a little tale of another king of my own country whom I used to +think great until I came to the East and learned what kings could be. +That king had a servant with whom he used to hunt, indeed he was my own +father. One day they were out together seeking a certain elephant whose +tusks were bigger than those of any other. Then the elephant charged the +king and my father, at the risk of his life, killed it and claimed the +tusks, as is the custom among the Ethiopians. But the king who greatly +desired those tusks, caused my father to be poisoned that he might take +them as his heir. Only before he died, my father, who could talk the +elephant language, told all the other elephants of this wickedness, +at which they were very angry, because they knew well that from the +beginning of time their tusks have belonged to him who killed them, and +the elephants are a people who do not like ancient laws to be altered. +So the elephants made a league together and when the king next went out +hunting, taking heed of nothing else they rushed at the king and tore +him into pieces no bigger than a finger, and then killed the prince his +son, who was behind him. That is the tale of the elephants who love Law, +O King." + +"Yes, yes," said his Majesty, waking up from a little doze, "but what +became of the great tusks? I should like to have them." + +"I inherited them as my father's son, O King, and gave them to my +master, who doubtless will send them to you when he gets back to Egypt." + +"A strange tale," said the King. "A very strange tale which seems to +remind me of something that happened not long ago. What was it? Well, it +does not matter. Egyptian, do you seek any reward for that shot of +yours at the lioness? If so, it shall be given to you. Have you a grudge +against anyone, for instance?" + +"O King," I answered, "I do seek justice against a certain man. This +evening I was led to the bank of the river in charge of the eunuch +Houman, who desired to take me for a row in a boat. On the road, for no +offence he struck me on the head with the handle of his fly-whip. See, +here are the marks of it, O King. Unless the King commanded him to +strike me which I do not remember, I seek justice against this eunuch." + +Now the King grew very angry and cried, + +"What! Did the dog dare to strike a freeborn noble Egyptian?" + +Here Houman threw himself upon his face in terror and began to babble +out I know not what about the punishment of the boat, which was unlucky +for him, for it put the matter into the King's mind. + +"The boat!" he cried. "Ah! yes, the boat; being so fat you will fit it +well, Eunuch. To the boat with him, and before he enters it a hundred +blows upon the feet with the rods," and he pointed at him with his +sceptre. + +Then guards sprang upon Houman and dragged him away. As he went he +clutched at Bes, but hissing something into his ear, the dwarf bit +him through the hand till he let go. So Houman departed and the King's +guests laughed at the sight, for he had worked mischief to many. + +When he had gone the King stared at me and asked, + +"But why did I disturb you from your sleep, Egyptian? Oh! I remember. +This dwarf says that he has seen the fairest woman in the whole world, +and the most learned, some lady of Egypt, but that he does not know her +name, that you alone know her name. I disturbed you that you might tell +it to me but if you have forgotten it, you can go back to your bed and +rest there till it returns to you. There are plenty of boats in the +river, Egyptian." + +"The fairest and most learned woman in the world?" I said astonished. +"Who can that be, unless he means the lady Amada?" and I paused, wishing +I had bitten out my tongue before I spoke, for I smelt a trap. + +"Yes, Master," said Bes in a clear voice. "That was the name, the lady +Amada." + +"Who is this lady Amada?" asked the King, seeming to grow suddenly +sober. "And what is she like?" + +"I can tell you that, O King," said Bes. "She is like a willow shaken in +the wind for slenderness and grace. She has eyes like those of a buck +at gaze; she has lips like rosebuds; she has hair black as the night and +soft as silk, the odour of which floats round her like that of flowers. +She has a voice that whispers like the evening wind, and yet is rich +as honey. Oh! she is beautiful as a goddess and when men see her their +hearts melt like wax in the sun and for a long while they can look upon +no other woman, not till the next day indeed if they meet her in the +evening," and Bes smacked his thick lips and gazed upwards. + +"By the holy Fire," laughed the King, "I feel my heart melting already. +Say, Shabaka, what do you know of this Amada? Is she married or a +maiden?" + +Now I answered because I must, for after all that boat was not far away, +nor did I dare to lie. + +"She is married, O King of kings, to the goddess Isis whom she loves +alone." + +"A woman married to a woman, or rather to the Queen of women," he +answered laughing, "well, that matters little." + +"Nay, O King, it matters much since she is under the protection of Isis +and inviolate." + +"That remains to be seen, Shabaka. I think that I would dare the wrath +of every false goddess in heaven to win such a prize. Learned also, you +say, Shabaka." + +"Aye, O King, full of learning to the finger tips, a prophetess also, +one in whom the divine fire burns like a lamp in a vase of alabaster, +one to whom visions come and who can read the future and the past." + +"Still better," said the King. "One, then, who would be a fitting +consort for the King of kings, who wearies of fat, round-eyed, +sweetmeat-sucking fools whereof there are hundreds yonder," and he +pointed towards the House of Women. "Who is this maid's father?" + +"He is dead but she is the niece of the Prince Peroa, and by birth the +Royal Lady of Egypt, O King." + +"Good, then she is well born also. Hearken, O Shabaka, to-morrow you +start back to Egypt, bearing letters from me to my vassal Peroa, and to +my Satrap Idernes, bidding Peroa to hand over this lady Amada to Idernes +and bidding Idernes to send her to the East with all honour and without +delay, that she may enter my household as one of my wives." + +Now I was filled with rage and horror, and about to refuse this mission +when Bes broke in swiftly, + +"Will the King of kings be pleased to give command as to my master's +safe and honourable escort to Egypt?" + +"It is commanded with all things necessary for Shabaka the Egyptian and +the dwarf his servant, with the gold and gems and slaves he won from me +in a wager, and everything else that is his. Let it be recorded." + +Scribes sprang forward and wrote the King's words down, while like one +in a dream I thought to myself that they could not now be altered. The +King watched them sleepily for a while, then seemed to wake up and grow +clear-minded again. At least he said to me, + +"Fortune has shown you smiles and frowns to-day, Egyptian, and the +smiles last. Yet remember that she has teeth behind her lips wherewith +to tear out the throat of the faithless. Man, if you play me false or +fail in your mission, be sure that you shall die and in such a fashion +that will make you think of yonder boat as a pleasant bed, and with you +this woman Amada and her uncle Peroa, and all your kin and hers; yes," +he added with a burst of shrewdness, "and even that abortion of a dwarf +to whom I have listened because he amused me, but who perhaps is more +cunning than he seems." + +"O King of kings," I said, "I will not be false." But I did not add to +whom I would be true. + +"Good. Ere long I shall visit Egypt, as I have told you, and there +I shall pass judgment on you and others. Till then, farewell. Fear +nothing, for you have my safe-conduct. Begone, both of you, for you +weary me. But first drink and keep the cup, and in exchange, give me +that bow of yours which shoots so far and straight." + +"It is the King's," I answered as I pledged him in the golden, jewelled +cup which a butler had handed to me. + +Then the curtain fell in front of the throne and chamberlains came +forward to lead me and Bes back to our lodging, one of whom took the cup +and bore it in front of us. Down the hall we went between the feasting +nobles who all bowed to one to whom the Great King had shown favour, and +so out of the palace through the quiet night back to the house where I +had dwelt while waiting audience of the King. Here the chamberlains +bade me farewell, giving the cup to Bes to carry, and saying that on the +morrow early my gold should be brought to me together with all that was +needed for my journey, also one who would receive the bow I had promised +to the King, which had already been returned to my lodgings with +everything that was ours. Then they bowed and went. + +We entered the house, climbing a stair to an upper chamber. Here Bes +barred the door and the shutters, making sure that none could see or +hear us. + +Then he turned, threw his arms about me, kissed my hand and burst into +tears. + + + + +CHAPTER VII. BES STEALS THE SIGNET + +"Oh! my Master," gulped Bes, "I weep because I am tired, so take no +notice. The day was long and during it twice at least there has been but +the twinkling of an eyelid, but the thickness of a finger nail, but the +weight of a hair between you and death." + +"Yes," I said, "and you were the eyelid, the finger nail and the hair." + +"No, Master, not I, but something beyond me. The tool carves the statue +and the hand holds the tool but the spirit guides the hand. Not once +only since the sun rose has my mind been empty as a drum. Then something +struck on it, perhaps the holy Tanofir, perhaps another, and it knew +what note to sound. So it was when I cursed you in the boat. So it was +when I walked back with the eunuch, meaning to kill him on the road, and +then remembered that the death of one vile eunuch would not help you at +all, whereas alive he could bring me to the presence of the King, if +I paid him, as I did out of the gold in your purse which I carried. +Moreover he earned his hire, for when the King grew dull, wine not yet +having taken a hold on him, it was he who brought me to his mind as one +who might amuse him, being so ugly and different from others, if only +for a few minutes, after the women dancers had failed to do so." + +"And what happened then, Bes?" + +"Then I was fetched and did my juggling tricks with that snake I caught +and tamed, which is in my pouch now. You should not hate it any more, +Master, for it played your game well. After this the King began to talk +to me and I saw that his mind was ill at ease about you whom he knew +that he had wronged. So I told him that story of an elephant that my +father killed to save a king--it grew up in my mind like a toadstool in +the night, Master, did this story of an ungrateful king and what befell +him. Then the King became still more unquiet in his heart about you and +asked the eunuch, Houman, where you were, to which he answered that by +his order you were sleeping in a boat and might not be disturbed. So +that arrow of mine missed its mark because the King did not like to eat +his own words and cause you to be brought from out the boat, whither he +had sent you. Now when everything seemed lost, some god, or perhaps +the holy Tanofir who is ever present with me to see that I have not +forgotten him, put it into the King's mouth to begin to talk about women +and to ask me if I had ever seen any fairer than those dancers whom I +met going out as I came in. I answered that I had not noticed them much +because they were so ugly, as indeed all women had seemed to me since +once upon the banks of Nile I had looked upon one who was as Hathor +herself for beauty. The King asked me who this might be and I answered +that I did not know since I had never dared to ask the name of one whom +even my master held to be as a goddess, although as boy and girl they +had been brought up together. + +"Then the King saw his opportunity to ease his conscience and inquired +of an old councillor if there were not a law which gave the king power +to alter his decree if thereby he could satisfy his soul and acquire +knowledge. The councillor answered that there was such a law and began +to give examples of its working, till the King cut him short and said +that by virtue of it he commanded that you should be brought out of your +bed in the boat and led before him to answer a question. + +"So you were sent for, Master, but I did not go with the messengers, +fearing lest if I did the King would forget all about the matter before +you came. Therefore I stayed and amused him with tales of hunting, till +I could not think of any more, for you were long in coming. Indeed I +began to fear lest he should declare the feast at an end. But at the +last, just as he was yawning and spoke to one of his councillors, +bidding him send to the House of Women that they might make ready to +receive him there, you came, and the rest you know." + +Now I looked at Bes and said, + +"May the blessing of all the gods of all the lands be on your head, +since had it not been for you I should now lie in torment in that boat. +Hearken, friend: If ever we reach Egypt again, you will set foot on it, +not as a slave but as a free man. You will be rich also, Bes, that is, +if we can take the gold I won with us, since half of it is yours." + +Bes squatted down upon the floor and looked up at me with a strange +smile on his ugly face. + +"You have given me three things, Master," he said. "Gold, which I do +not want at present; freedom, which I do not want at present and mayhap, +never shall while you live and love me; and the title of friend. This +I do want, though why I should care to hear it from your lips I am not +sure, seeing that for a long while I have known that it was spoken in +your heart. Since you have said it, however, I will tell you something +which hitherto I have hid even from you. I have a right to that name, +for if your blood is high, O Shabaka, so is mine. Know that this poor +dwarf whom you took captive and saved long years ago was more than the +petty chief which he declared himself to be. He was and is by right the +King of the Ethiopians and that throne with all its wealth and power he +could claim to-morrow if he would." + +"The King of the Ethiopians!" I said. "Oh! friend Bes, I pray you to +remember that we no longer stand in yonder court lying for our lives." + +"I speak no lie, O Shabaka, I before you am King of the Ethiopians. +Moreover, I laid that kingship down of my own will and should I so +desire, can take it up again when I will, since the Ethiopians are +faithful to their kings." + +"Why?" I asked, astonished. + +"Master, for so I will still call you who am not yet upon the land +of Egypt where you have promised me freedom, do you remember anything +strange about the people of that tribe from among whom you and the +Egyptian soldiers captured me by surprise, because they wished to drive +you and your following from their country?" + +Now I thought and answered, + +"Yes, one thing. I saw no women in their camp, nor any sign of children. +This I know because I gave orders that such were to be spared and it was +reported to me that there were none, so I supposed that they had fled +away." + +"There were none to fly, Master. That tribe was a brotherhood which had +abjured women. Look on me now. I am misshapen, hideous, am I not? Born +thus, it is said, because before my birth my mother was frightened by +a dwarf. Yet the law of the Ethiopians is that their kings must marry +within a year of their crowning. Therefore I chose a woman to be the +queen whom I had long desired in secret. She scorned me, vowing that not +for all the thrones of all the world would she be mated to a monster, +and that if it were done by force she would kill herself, a saying that +went abroad throughout the land. I said that she had spoken well and +sent her in safety from the country, after which I too laid down my +crown and departed with some who loved me, to form a brotherhood of +women-haters further down the Nile, beyond the borders of Ethiopia. +There the Egyptian force of which you were in command, attacked us +unprepared, and you made me your slave. That is all." + +"But why did you do this, Bes, seeing that maidens are many and all +would not have thought thus?" + +"Because I wished for that one only, Master; also I feared lest I should +become the father of a breed of twisted dwarfs. So I who was a king am +now a slave, and yet, who knows which way the Grasshopper will jump? One +day from a slave I may again grow into a king. And now let us seek that +wherein kings are as slaves and slaves as kings--sleep." + +So we lay down and slept, I thanking the gods that my bed was not yonder +in the boat upon the great river. + +When I woke refreshed, though after all I had gone through on the +yesterday my brain still swam a little, the light was pouring through +the carved work of the shuttered windows. By it I saw Bes seated on the +floor engaged in doing something to his bow, which, as I have said, had +been restored to us with our other weapons, and asked him sleepily what +it was. + +"Master," he said, "yonder King demanded your bow and therefore a bow +must be sent to him. But there is no need for it to be that with which +you shot the lions, which, too, you value above anything you have, +seeing that it came down to you from your forefather who was a Pharaoh +of Egypt, and has been your companion from boyhood ever since you were +strong enough to draw it. As you may remember I copied that bow out of a +somewhat lighter wood, which I could bend with ease, and it is the copy +that we will give to the King. Only first I must set your string upon +it, for that may have been noted; also make one or two marks that are on +your bow which I am finishing now, having begun the task with the dawn." + +"You are clever," I said laughing, "and I am glad. The holy Tanofir, +looking on my bow, once had a vision. It was that an arrow loosed from +it would drink the blood of a great king and save Egypt. But what king +and when, he did not see." + +The dwarf nodded and answered, + +"I have heard that tale and so have others. Therefore I play this trick +since it is better that yonder palace dweller should get the arrow than +the bow. There, it is finished to the last scratch, and none, save you +and I, would know them apart. Till we are clear of this cursed land your +bow is mine, Master, and you must find you another of the Eastern make." + +"Master," I repeated after him. "Say, Bes, did I dream or did you in +truth tell me last night that you are by birth and right the king of a +great country?" + +"I told you that, Master and it is true, no dream, since joy and +suffering mixed unseal the lips and from them comes that at times which +the heart would hide. Now I ask a favour of you, that you will speak no +more of this matter either to me or to any other, man or woman, unless I +should speak of it first. Let it be as though it were indeed a dream." + +"It is granted," I said as I rose and clothed myself, not in my own +garments which had been taken from me in the palace, but in the splendid +silken robes that had been set upon me after I was loosed from the boat. +When this was done and I had washed and combed my long, curling hair, +we descended to a lower chamber and called for the woman of the house to +bring us food, of which I ate heartily. As we finished our meal we +heard shouts in the street outside of, "Make way for the servants of +the King!" and looking through the window-place, saw a great cavalcade +approaching, headed by two princes on horseback. + +"Now I pray that yonder Tyrant has not changed his mind and that these +do not come to take me back to the boat," I said in a low voice. + +"Have no fear, Master," answered Bes, "seeing that you have touched his +sceptre and drunk from his cup which he gave to you. After these things +no harm can happen to you in any land he rules. Therefore be at ease and +deal with these fellows proudly." + +A minute later two princes entered followed by slaves who bore many +things, among them those hide bags filled with gold that had been set +beneath me in the boat. The elder of them bowed, greeting me with the +title of "Lord," and I bowed back to him. Then he handed me certain +rolls tied up with silk and sealed, which he said I was to deliver as +the King had commanded to the King's Satrap in Egypt, and to the Prince +Peroa. Also he gave me other letters addressed to the King's servants on +the road and written on tablets of clay in a writing I could not read, +with all of which I touched my forehead in the Eastern fashion. + +After this he told me that by noon all would be ready for my journey +which I should make with the rank of the King's Envoy, duly provisioned +and escorted by his servants, with liberty to use the royal horses from +post to post. Then he ordered the slaves to bring in the gifts which the +King sent to me, and these were many, including even suits of flexible +armour that would turn any sword-thrust or arrow. + +I thanked him, saying that I would be ready to start by noon, and asked +whether the King wished to see me before I rode. He replied that he had +so wished, but that as he was suffering in his head from the effects +of the sun, he could not. He bade me, however, remember all that he had +said to me and to be sure that the beauteous lady Amada, of whom I had +spoken, was sent to him without delay. In that case my reward should be +great; but if I failed to fulfil his commands, then his wrath would be +greater and I should perish miserably as he had promised. + +I bowed and made no answer, after which he and his companions opened the +bags of gold to show me that it was there, offering to weigh it again +against my servant, the dwarf, so that I could see that nothing had been +taken away. + +I replied that the King's word was truer than any scale, whereon the +bags were tied up again and sealed. Then I produced the bow, or rather +its counterfeit, and having shown it to the princes, wrapped it and +six of my own arrows in a linen cloth, to be taken to the King, with +a message that though hard to draw it was the deadliest weapon in the +world. The elder of them took it, bowed and bade me farewell, saying +that perhaps we should meet again ere long in Egypt, if my gods gave me +a safe journey. So we parted and I was glad to see the last of them. + +Scarcely had they gone when the six hunters whom I had won in the wager +and thereby saved from death, entered the chamber and fell upon their +knees before me, asking for orders as to making ready my gear for the +journey. I inquired of them if they were coming also, to which their +spokesman replied that they were my slaves to do what I commanded. + +"Do you desire to come?" I inquired. + +"O Lord Shabaka," answered their spokesman, "we do, though some of us +must leave wives and children behind us." + +"Why?" I asked. + +"For two reasons, Lord. Here we are men disgraced, though through no +fault of our own and if you were to leave us in this land, soon the +anger of the King would find us out and we should lose not only our +wives and children, but with them our lives. Whereas in another land we +may get other wives and more children, but never shall we get another +life. Therefore we would leave those dear ones to our friends, knowing +that soon the women will forget and find other husbands, and that the +children will grow up to whatever fate is appointed them, thinking of +us, their fathers, as dead. Secondly we are hunters by trade, and we +have seen that you are a great hunter, one whom we shall always be proud +to serve in the chase or in war, one, too, who went out of his path to +save our lives, because he saw that we had been unjustly doomed to a +cruel death. Therefore we desire nothing better than to be your slaves, +hoping that perchance we may earn our liberty from you in days to come +by our good service." + +"Is that the wish of all of you?" I asked. + +Speaking one by one, they said that it was, though tears rose in the +eyes of some of them who were married at the thought of parting from +their women and their little ones, who, it seemed might not be brought +with them because they were the people of the King and had not been +named in the bet. Moreover, horses could not be found for so many, nor +could they travel fast. + +"Come then," I said, "and know that while you are faithful to me, I will +be good to you, men of my own trade, and perhaps in the end set you free +in a land where brave fellows are not given to be torn to pieces by wild +beasts at the word of any kind. But if you fail me or betray me, then +either I will kill you, or sell you to those who deal in slaves, to work +at the oar, or in the mines till you die." + +"Henceforth we have no lord but you, O Shabaka," they said, and one +after another took my hand and pressed it to their foreheads, vowing to +be true to me in all things while we lived. + +So I bade them begone to bid farewell to those they loved and return +again within half an hour of noon, never expecting, to tell the truth, +that they would come. Indeed I did this to give them the opportunity of +escaping if they saw fit, and hiding themselves where they would. But as +I have often noted, the trade of hunting breeds honesty in the blood +and at the hour appointed all of these men appeared, one of them with +a woman who carried a child in her arms, clinging to him and weeping +bitterly. When her veil slipped aside I saw that she was young and very +fair to look on. + + + +So at noon we left the city of the Great King in the charge of two of +his officers who brought me his thanks for the bow I had sent him, which +he said he should treasure above everything he possessed, a saying +at which Bes rolled his yellow eyes and grinned. We were mounted on +splendid stallions from the royal stables and clad in the shirts of mail +that had been presented to us, though when we were clear of the city +we took these off because of the heat, also because that which Bes wore +chafed him, being too long for his squat shape. Our goods together with +the bags of gold were laden on sumpter horses which were led by my six +hunter slaves. Four picked soldiers brought up the rear, mighty men from +the King's own bodyguard, and two of the royal postmen who served us as +guides. Also there were cooks and grooms with spare horses. + +Thus we started in state and a great crowd watched us go. Our road ran +by the river which we must cross in barges lower down, so that in a +few minutes we came to that quay whither I had been led on the previous +night to die. Yes, there were the watching guards, and there floated the +hateful double boat, at the prow of which appeared the tortured face of +the eunuch Houman, who rolled his head from side to side to rid himself +of the torment of the flies. He caught sight of us and began to scream +for pity and forgiveness, whereat Bes smiled. The officers halted our +cavalcade and one of them approaching me said, + +"It is the King's command, O Lord Shabaka, that you should look upon +this villain who traduced you to the King and afterwards dared to strike +you. If you will, enter the water and blind him, that your face may be +the last thing he sees before he passes into darkness." + +I shook my head, but Bes into whose mind some thought had come, +whispered to me, + +"I wish to speak with yonder eunuch, so give me leave and fear nothing. +I will do him no hurt, only good, if I find the chance." + +Then I said to the officer, + +"It is not for great lords to avenge themselves upon the fallen. Yet my +slave here was also wronged and would say a word to yonder Houman." + +"So be it," said the officer, "only let him be careful not to hurt +him too sorely, lest he should die before the time and escape his +punishment." + +Then Bes tucked up his robes and waded into the river, flourishing a +great knife, while seeing him come, Houman began to scream with fear. +He reached the boat and bent over the eunuch, talking to him in a low +voice. What he did there I could not see because his cloak was spread +out on either side of the man's head. Presently, however, I caught sight +of the flash of a knife and heard yells of agony followed by groans, +whereat I called to him to return and let the fellow be. For when I +remembered that his fate was near to being my own, those sounds made me +sick at heart and I grew angry with Bes, though the cruel Easterns only +laughed. + +At length he came back grinning and washing the blade of his knife in +the water. I spoke fiercely to him in my own language, and still he +grinned on, making no answer. When we were mounted again and riding away +from that horrible boat with its groaning prisoner, watching Bes whose +behaviour and silence I could not understand, I saw him sweep his hand +across his great mouth and thrust it swiftly into his bosom. After +this he spoke readily enough, though in a low voice lest someone who +understood Egyptian should overhear him. + +"You are a fool, Master," he said, "to think that I should wish to waste +time in torturing that fat knave." + +"Then why did you torture him?" I asked. + +"Because my god, the Grasshopper, when he fashioned me a dwarf, gave +me a big mouth and good teeth," he answered, whereon I stared at him, +thinking that he had gone mad. + +"Listen, Master. I did not hurt Houman. All I did was to cut his cords +nearly through from the under side, so that when night comes he can +break them and escape, if he has the wit. Now, Master, you may not have +noticed, but I did, that before the King doomed you to death by the boat +yesterday, he took a certain round, white seal, a cylinder with gods and +signs cut on it, which hung by a gold chain from his girdle, and gave it +to Houman to be his warrant for all he did. This seal Houman showed to +the Treasurer whereon they produced the gold that was weighed in the +scales against me, and to others when he ordered the boat to be prepared +for you to lie in. Moreover he forgot to return it, for when he himself +was dragged off to the boat by direct command of the King, I caught +sight of the chain beneath his robe. Can you guess the rest?" + +"Not quite," I answered, for I wished to hear the tale in his own words. + +"Well, Master, when I was walking with Houman after he had put you in +the boat, I asked him about this seal. He showed it to me and said that +he who bore it was for the time the king of all the Empire of the +East. It seems that there is but one such seal which has descended from +ancient days from king to king, and that of it every officer, great or +small, has an impress in all lands. If the seal is produced to him, +he compares it with the impress and should the two agree, he obeys the +order that is brought as though the King had given it in person. When +we reached the Court doubtless Houman would have returned the seal, but +seeing that the King was, or feigned to be drunk, waited for fear lest +it should be lost, and with it his life. Then he was seized as you saw, +and in his terror forgot all about the seal, as did the King and his +officers." + +"But, surely, Bes, those who took Houman to the boat would have removed +it." + +"Master, even the most clear-sighted do not see well at night. At any +rate my hope was that they had not done so, and that is why I waded out +to prick the eyes of Houman. Moreover, as I had hoped, so it was; there +beneath his robe I saw the chain. Then I spoke to him, saying, + +"'I am come to put out your eyes, as you deserve, seeing how you have +treated my master. Still I will spare you at a price. Give me the King's +ancient white seal that opens all doors, and I will only make a pretence +of blinding you. Moreover I will cut your cords nearly through, so +that when the night comes you can break them, roll into the river and +escape.' + +"'Take it if you can,' he said, 'and use it to injure or destroy that +accursed one.'" + +"So you took it, Bes." + +"Yes, Master, but not easily. Remember, it was on a chain about the +man's neck, and I could not draw it over his head, for, like his hands, +his throat was tied by a cord, as you remember yours was." + +"I remember very well," I said, "for my throat is still sore from the +rope that ran to the same staples to which my hands were fastened." + +"Yes, Master, and therefore if I drew the chain off his neck, it would +still have been on the ropes. I thought of trying to cut it with the +knife, but this was not easy because it is thick, and if I had dragged +it up on the blade of the knife it would have been seen, for many eyes +were watching me, Master. Then I took another counsel. While I pretended +to be putting out the eyes of Houman, I bent down and getting the chain +between my teeth I bit it through. One tooth broke--see, but the next +finished the business. I ate through the soft gold, Master, and then +sucked up the chain and the round white seal into my mouth, and that +is why I could not answer you just now, because my cheeks were full of +chain. So we have the King's seal that all the subject countries know +and obey. It may be useful, yonder in Egypt, and at least the gold is of +value." + +"Clever!" I exclaimed, "very clever. But you have forgotten something, +Bes. When that knave escapes, he will tell the whole story and the King +will send after us and kill us who have stolen his royal seal." + +"I don't think so, Master. First, it is not likely that Houman will +escape. He is very fat and soft and already suffers much. After a day in +the sun also he will be weak. Moreover I do not think that he can swim, +for eunuchs hate the water. So if he gets out of the boat it is probable +that he will drown in the river, since he dare not wade to the quay +where the guards will be waiting. But if he does escape by swimming +across the river, he will hide for his life's sake and never be seen +again, and if by chance he is caught, he will say that the seal fell +into the water when he was taken to the boat, or that one of the guards +had stolen it. What he will not say is that he had bargained it away +with someone who in return, cut his cords, since for that crime he must +die by worse tortures than those of the boat. Lastly we shall ride so +fast that with six hours' start none will catch us. Or if they do I can +throw away the chain and swallow the seal." + +As Bes said, so it happened. The fate of Houman I never learned, and of +the theft of the seal I heard no more until a proclamation was issued to +all the kingdoms that a new one was in use. But this was not until long +afterwards when it had served my turn and that of Egypt. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII. THE LADY AMADA + +Now day by day, hour by hour and minute by minute every detail of that +journey appeared before me, but to set it all down is needless. As I, +Allan Quatermain, write the record of my vision, still I seem to hear +the thunder of our horses' hoofs while we rushed forward at full gallop +over the plains, over the mountain passes and by the banks of rivers. +The speed at which we travelled was wonderful, for at intervals of about +forty miles were post-houses and at these, whatever might be the hour +of day or night, we found fresh horses from the King's stud awaiting us. +Moreover, the postmasters knew that we were coming, which astonished +me until we discovered that they had been warned of our arrival by two +King's messengers who travelled ahead of us. + +These men, it would seem, although our officers and guides professed +ignorance of the matter, must have left the King's palace at dawn on the +day of our departure, whereas we did not mount in the city till a little +after noon. Therefore they had six hours good start of us, and what is +more, travelled lighter than we did, having no sumpter beasts with them, +and no cooks or servants. Moreover, always they had the pick of the +horses and chose the three swiftest beasts, leading the third in case +one of their own should founder or meet with accident. Thus it came +about that we never caught them up although we covered quite a hundred +miles a day. Only once did I see them, far off upon the skyline of a +mountain range which we had to climb, but by the time we had reached its +crest they were gone. + +At length we came to the desert without accident and crossed it, though +more slowly. But even here the King had his posts which were in charge +of Arabs who lived in tents by wells of water, or sometimes where there +was none save what was brought to them. So still we galloped on, parched +by the burning sand beneath and the burning sand above, and reached the +borders of Egypt. + +Here, upon the very boundary line, the two officers halted the cavalcade +saying that their orders were to return thence and make report to the +King. There then we parted, Bes and I with the six hunters who still +chose to cling to me, going forward and the officers of the King with +the guides and servants going back. The good horses that we rode from +the last post they gave to us by the King's command, together with the +sumpter beasts, since horses broken to the saddle were hard to come +by in Egypt where they were trained to draw chariots. These we took, +sending back my thanks to the King, and started on once more, Bes +leading that beast which bore the gold and the hunters serving as a +guard. + +Indeed I was glad to see the last of those Easterns although they had +brought us safely and treated us well, for all the while I was never +sure but that they had some orders to lead us into a trap, or perhaps to +make away with us in our sleep and take back the gold and the priceless, +rose-hued pearls, any two of which were worth it all. But such was not +their command nor did they dare to steal them on their own account, +since then, even if they escaped the vengeance of the King, their wives +and all their families would have paid the price. + + + +Now we entered Egypt near the Salt Lakes that are not far from the head +of the Gulf, crossing the canal that the old Pharaohs had dug, which +proved easy for it was silted up. Before we reached it we found some +peasant folk labouring in their gardens and I heard one of them call to +another, + +"Here come more of the Easterns. What is toward, think you, neighbour?" + +"I do not know," answered the other, "but when I passed down the canal +this morning, I saw a body of the Great King's guards gathering from the +fort. Doubtless it is to meet these men of whose coming the other two +who went by fifty hours ago, have warned the officers." + +"Now what does that mean?" I asked of Bes. + +"Neither more nor less than we have heard, Master. The two King's +messengers who have gone ahead of us all the way from the city, have +told the officer of the frontier fort that we are coming, so he has +advanced to the ford to meet us, for what purpose I do not know." + +"Nor do I," I said, "but I wish we could take another road, if there +were one." + +"There is none, Master, for above and below the canal is full of water +and the banks are too steep for horses to climb. Also we must show no +doubt or fear." + +He thought a while, then added, + +"Take the royal seal, Master. It may be useful." + +He gave it to me, and I examined it more closely than I had done before. +It was a cylinder of plain white shell hung on a gold chain, that which +Bes had bitten through, but now mended again by taking out the broken +link. On this cylinder were cut figures; as I think of a priest +presenting a noble to a god, over whom was the crescent of the moon, +while behind the god stood a man or demon with a tall spear. Also +between the figures were mystic signs, meaning I know not what. The +workmanship of the carving was grown shallow with time and use for the +cylinder seemed to be very ancient, a sacred thing that had descended +from generation to generation and was threaded through with a bar of +silver on which it turned. + +I put the seal which was like no other that I had seen, being the work +of an early and simpler age, round my neck beneath my mail and we went +on. + +Descending the steep bank of the canal we came to the ford where the +sand that had silted in was covered by not more than a foot of water. As +we entered it, on the top of the further bank appeared a body of about +thirty armed and mounted men, one of whom carried the Great King's +banner, on which I noted was blazoned the very figures that were cut +upon the cylinder. Now it was too late to retreat, so we rode through +the water and met the soldiers. Their officer advanced, crying, + +"In the name of the Great King, greeting, my lord Shabaka! + +"In the name of the Great King, greeting!" I answered. "What would you +with Shabaka, Officer of the King?" + +"Only to do him honour. The word of the King has reached us and we +come to escort you to the Court of Idernes, the Satrap of the King and +Governor of Egypt who sits at Sais." + +"That is not my road, Officer. I travel to Memphis to deliver the +commands of the King to my cousin, Peroa, the ruler of Egypt under the +King. Afterwards, perchance, I shall visit the high Idernes." + +"To whom our commands are to take you now, my lord Shabaka, not +afterwards," said the officer sternly, glancing round at his armed +escort. + +"I come to give commands, not to receive them, Captain of the King." + +"Seize Shabaka and his servants," said the officer briefly, whereon the +soldiers rode forward to surround us. + +I waited till they were near at hand. Then suddenly I plunged my hand +beneath my robe and drew out the small, white seal which I held before +the eyes of the officer, saying, + +"Who is it that dares to lay a finger upon the holder of the King's +White Seal? Surely that man is ready for death." + +The officer stared at it, then leapt from his horse and flung himself +face downwards on the ground, crying, + +"It is the ancient signet of the Kings of the East, given to their first +forefather by Samas the Sungod, on which hangs the fortunes of the Great +House! Pardon, my lord Shabaka." + +"It is granted," I answered, "because what you did you did in ignorance. +Now go to the Satrap Idernes and say to him that if he would have speech +with the bearer of the King's seal which all must obey, he will find him +at Memphis. Farewell," and with Bes and the six hunters I rode through +the guards, none striving to hinder me. + +"That was well done, Master," said Bes. + +"Yes," I said. "Those two messengers who went ahead of us brought orders +to the frontier guard of Idernes that I should be taken to him as a +prisoner. I do not know why, but I think because things are passing in +Egypt of which we know nothing and the King did not desire that I should +see the Prince Peroa and give him news that I might have gathered. +Mayhap we have been outwitted, Bes, and the business of the lady Amada +is but a pretext to pick a quarrel suddenly before Peroa can strike the +first blow." + +"Perhaps, Master, for these Easterns are very crafty. But, Master, what +happens to those who make a false use of the King's ancient, sacred +signet? I think they have cut the ropes which tie them to earth," and he +looked upwards to the sky rolling his yellow eyes. + +"They must find new ropes, Bes, and quickly, before they are caught. +Hearken. You have sat upon a throne and I can speak out to you. Think +you that my cousin, the Prince Peroa, loves to be the servant of this +distant, Eastern king, he who by right is Pharaoh of Egypt? Peroa must +strike or lose his niece and perchance his life. Forward, that we may +warn him." + +"And if he will not strike, Master, knowing the King's might and being +somewhat slow to move?" + +"Then, Bes, I think that you and I had best go hunting far away in those +lands you know, where even the Great King cannot follow us." + +"And where, if only I can find a woman who does not make me ill to look +on, and whom I do not make ill, I too can once more be a king, Master, +and the lord of many thousand brave armed men. I must speak of that +matter to the holy Tanofir." + +"Who doubtless will know what to advise you, Bes; or, if he dies not, I +shall." + +For a while we rode on in silence, each thinking his own thoughts. Then +Bes said, + +"Master, before so very long we shall reach the Nile, and having with us +gold in plenty can buy boats and hire crews. It comes into my mind that +we should do well for our own safety and comfort to start at once on a +hunting journey far from Egypt; in the land of the Ethiopians, Master. +There perchance I could gather together some of the wise men in whose +hands I left the rule of my kingdom, and submit to them this question of +a woman to marry me. The Ethiopians are a faithful people, Master, and +will not reject me because I have spent some years seeing the world +afar, that I might learn how to rule them better." + +"I have remembered that it cannot be, Bes," I said. + +"Why not, Master?" + +"For this reason. You left your country because of a woman? I cannot +leave mine again because of a woman." + +Bes rolled his eyes around as though he thought to see that woman in the +desert. Not discovering her, he stared upwards and there found light. + +"Is she perchance named the lady Amada, Master?" + +I nodded. + +"So. The lady Amada who you told the Great King is the most beautiful +one in the whole world, causing the fire of Love to burn up in his +royal heart, and with it many other things of which we do not know at +present." + +"_You_ told him, Bes," I said angrily. + +"I told him of a beautiful one; I did not tell him her name, Master, and +although I never thought of it at the time, perhaps she will be angry +with him who told her name." + +Now fear took hold of me, and Bes saw it in my face. + +"Do not be afraid, Master. If there is trouble I will swear that I told +the Great King that lady's name." + +"Yes, Bes, but how would that fit in with the story, seeing that I was +brought out of the boat for this very purpose?" + +"Quite easily, Master, since I will say that you were led from the boat +to confirm my tale. Oh! she will be angry with me, no doubt, but in +Egypt even a dwarf cannot be killed because he has declared a certain +lady to be the most beautiful in the world. But, Master, tell me, when +did you learn to love her?" + +"When we were boy and girl, Bes. We used to play together, being +cousins, and I used to hold her hand. Then suddenly she refused to let +me hold her hand any more, and I being quite grown up then, though she +was younger, understood that I had better go away." + +"I should have stopped where I was, Master." + +"No, Bes. She was studying to be a priestess and my great uncle, the +holy Tanofir, told me that I had better go away. So I went down south +hunting and fighting in command of the troops, and met you, Bes." + +"Which perhaps was better for you, Master, than to stop to watch the +lady Amada acquire learning. Still, I wonder whether the holy Tanofir is +_always_ right. You see, Master, he thinks a great deal of priests and +priestesses, and is so very old that he has forgotten all about love and +that without it there never would have been a holy Tanofir." + +"The holy Tanofir thinks of souls, not of bodies, Bes." + +"Yes, Master. Still, oil is of no use without a lamp, or a soul without +a body, at least here underneath the sun, or so we were taught who +worship the Grasshopper. But, Master, when you came back from all your +hunting, what happened then?" + +"Then I found, Bes, that the lady Amada, having acquired all the +learning possible, had taken her first vows to Isis, which she said she +would not break for any man on earth although she might have done so +without crime. Therefore, although I was dear to her, as a brother would +have been had she had one, and she swore that she had never even thought +of another man, she refused so much as to think of marrying who dreamed +only of the heavenly perfections of the lady Isis." + +"Ump!" said Bes. "We Ethiopians have Priestesses of the Grasshopper, or +the Grasshopper's wife, but they do not think of her like that. I hope +that one day something stronger than herself will not cause the lady +Amada to break her vows to the heavenly Isis. Only then, perhaps, it may +be for the sake of another man who did not go off to the East on account +of such fool's talk. But here is a village and the horses are spent. Let +us stop and eat, as I suppose even the lady Amada does sometimes." + + + +On the following afternoon we crossed the Nile, and towards sunset +entered the vast and ancient city of Memphis. On its white walls floated +the banners of the Great King which Bes pointed out to me, saying that +wherever we went in the whole world, it seemed that we could never be +free from those accursed symbols. + +"May I live to spit upon them and cast them into the moat," I answered +savagely, for as I drew near to Amada they grew ten times more hateful +to me than they had been before. + +In truth I was nearer to Amada than I thought, for after we had +passed the enclosure of the temple of Ptah, the most wonderful and the +mightiest in the whole world, we came to the temple of Isis. There near +to the pylon gate we met a procession of her priests and priestesses +advancing to offer the evening sacrifice of song and flowers, clad, all +of them, in robes of purest white. It was a day of festival, so singers +went with them. After the singers came a band of priestesses bearing +flowers, in front of whom walked another priestess shaking a _sistrum_ +that made a little tinkling music. + +Even at a distance there was something about the tall and slender shape +of this priestess that stirred me. When we came nearer I saw why, for it +was Amada herself. Through the thin veil she wore I could see her dark +and tender eyes set beneath the broad brow that was so full of thought, +and the sweet, curved mouth that was like no other woman's. Moreover +there could be no doubt since the veil parting above her breast showed +the birth-mark for which she was famous, the mark of the young moon, the +sign of Isis. + +I sprang from my horse and ran towards her. She looked up and saw me. +At first she frowned, then her face grew wondering, then tender, and I +thought that her red lips shaped my name. Moreover in her confusion she +let the _sistrum_ fall. + +I muttered "Amada!" and stepped forward, but priests ran between us and +thrust me away. Next moment she had recovered the _sistrum_ and passed +on with her head bowed. Nor did she lift her eyes to look back. + +"Begone, man!" cried a priest, "Begone, whoever you may be. Because you +wear Eastern armour do you think that you can dare the curse of Isis?" + +Then I fell back, the holy image of the goddess passed and the +procession vanished through the pylon gate. I, Shabaka the Egyptian, +stood by my horse and watched it depart. I was happy because the lady +Amada was alive, well, and more beautiful than ever; also because she +had shown signs of joy and confusion at seeing me again. Yet I was +unhappy because I met her still filling a holy office which built a wall +between us, also because it seemed to me an evil omen that I should have +been repelled from her by a priest of Isis who talked of the curse of +the goddess. Moreover the sacred statue, I suppose by accident, turned +towards me as it passed and perhaps by the chance of light, seemed to +frown upon me. + +Thus I thought as Shabaka hundreds of years before the Christian +era, but as Allan Quatermain the modern man, to whom it was given so +marvellously to behold all these things and who in beholding them, yet +never quite lost the sense of his own identity of to-day, I was amazed. +For I knew that this lady Amada was the same being though clad in +different flesh, as that other lady with whom I had breathed the magical +_Taduki_ fumes which had power to rend the curtain of the past, or, +perhaps, only to breed dreams of what it might have been. + +To the outward eye, indeed she was different, as I was different, +taller, more slender, larger-eyed, with longer and slimmer hands than +those of any Western woman, and on the whole even more beautiful and +alluring. Moreover that mysterious look which from time to time I had +seen on Lady Ragnall's face, was more constant on that of the lady +Amada. It brooded in the deep eyes and settled in a curious smile about +the curves of the lips, a smile that was not altogether human, such a +smile as one might wear who had looked on hidden things and heard voices +that spoke beyond the limits of the world. + +Somehow neither then nor at any other time during all my dream, could I +imagine this Amada, this daughter of a hundred kings, whose blood might +be traced back through dynasty on dynasty, as nothing but a woman who +nurses children upon her breast. It was as though something of our +common nature had been bred out of her and something of another nature +whereof we have no ken, had entered to fill its place. And yet these two +women were the same, that I _knew_, or at any rate, much of them was the +same, for who can say what part of us we leave behind as we flit from +life to life, to find it again elsewhere in the abysms of Time and +Change? One thing too was quite identical--the birthmark of the new moon +above the breast which the priests of the Kendah had declared was always +the seal that marked their prophetess, the guardian of the Holy Child. + + + +When the procession had quite departed and I could no longer hear the +sound of singing, I remounted and rode on to my house, or rather to that +of my mother, the great lady Tiu, which was situated beneath the wall of +the old palace facing towards the Nile. Indeed my heart was full of this +mother of mine whom I loved and who loved me, for I was her only child, +and my father had been long dead; so long that I could not remember him. +Eight months had gone by since I saw her face and in eight months who +knew what might have happened? The thought made me cold for she, who +was aged and not too strong, perhaps had been gathered to Osiris. Oh! if +that were so! + +I shook my tired horse to a canter, Bes riding ahead of me to clear a +road through the crowded street in which, at this hour of sundown, all +the idlers of Memphis seemed to have gathered. They stared at me because +it was not common to see men riding in Memphis, and with little love, +since from my dress and escort they took me to be some envoy from their +hated master, the Great King of the East. Some even threatened to bar +the way; but we thrust through and presently turned into a thoroughfare +of private houses standing in their own gardens. Ours was the third of +these. At its gate I leapt from my horse, pushed open the closed door +and hastened in to seek and learn. + +I had not far to go for, there in the courtyard, standing at the head of +our modest household and dressed in her festal robes, was my mother, the +stately and white-haired lady Tiu, as one stands who awaits the coming +of an honoured guest. I ran to her and kneeling, kissed her hand, +saying, + +"My mother! My mother, I have come safe home and greet you." + +"I greet you also, my son," she answered, bending down and kissing me +on the brow, "who have been in far lands and passed so many dangers. +I greet you and thank the guardian gods who have brought you safe home +again. Rise, my son." + +I rose and kissed her on the face, then looked at the servants who were +bowing their welcome to me, and said, + +"How comes it, Lady of the House, that all are gathered here? Did you +await some guest?" + +"We awaited you, my son. For an hour have we stood here listening for +the sound of your feet." + +"Me!" I exclaimed. "That is strange, seeing that I have ridden fast +and hard from the East, tarrying only a few minutes, and those since I +entered Memphis, when I met----" and I stopped. + +"Met whom, Shabaka?" + +"The lady Amada walking in the procession of Isis." + +"Ah! the lady Amada. The mother waits that the son may stop to greet the +lady Amada!" + +"But _why_ did you wait, my mother? Who but a spirit or a bird of +the air could have told you that I was coming, seeing that I sent no +messenger before me?" + +"You must have done so, Shabaka, since yesterday one came from the holy +Tanofir, our relative who dwells in the desert in the burial-ground of +Sekera. He bore a message from Tanofir to me, telling me to make ready +since before sundown to-night you, my son, would be with me, having +escaped great dangers, accompanied by the dwarf Bes, your servant, and +six strange Eastern men. So I made ready and waited; also I prepared +lodging for the six strange men in the outbuildings behind the house and +sent a thank offering to the temple. For know, my son, I have suffered +much fear for you." + +"And not without cause, as you will say when I tell you all," I answered +laughing. "But how Tanofir knew that I was coming is more than I can +guess. Come, my mother, greet Bes here, for had it not been for him, +never should I have lived to hold your hand again." + +So she greeted him and thanked him, whereon Bes rolled his eyes and +muttered something about the holy Tanofir, after which we entered the +house. Thence I despatched a messenger to the Prince Peroa saying that +if it were his pleasure I would wait on him at once, seeing that I had +much to tell him. This done I bathed and caused my hair and beard to be +trimmed and, discarding the Eastern garments, clothed myself in those +of Egypt, and so felt that I was my own man again. Then I came out +refreshed and drank a cup of Syrian wine and the night having fallen, +sat down by my mother in the chamber with a lamp between us, and, +holding her hand, told her something of my story, showing her the sacks +of gold that had come with me safely from the East, and the chain of +priceless, rose-hued pearls that I had won in a wager from the Great +King. + +Now when she learned how Bes by his wit had saved me from a death of +torment in the boat, my mother clapped her hands to summon a servant and +sent for Bes, and said to him, + +"Bes, hitherto I have looked on you as a slave taken by my son, the +noble Shabaka, in one of his far journeys that it pleases him to make to +fight and to hunt. But henceforth I look upon you as a friend and give +you a seat at my table. Moreover it comes into my mind that although so +strangely shaped by some evil god, perhaps you are more than you seem to +be." + +Now Bes looked at me to see if I had told my mother anything, and when I +shook my head answered, + +"I thank you, O Lady of the House, who have but done my duty to my +master. Still it is true that as a goatskin often holds good wine, so a +dwarf should not always be judged by what can be seen of him." + +Then he went away. + +"It seems that we are rich again, Son, who have been somewhat poor of +late years," said my mother, looking at the bags of gold. "Also, there +are the pearls which doubtless are worth more than the gold. What are +you going to do with them, Shabaka?" + +"I thought of offering them as a gift to the lady Amada," I replied +hesitatingly, "that is unless you----" + +"I? No, I am too old for such gems. Yet, Son, it might be well to keep +them for a time, seeing that while they are your own they may give you +more weight in the eyes of the Prince Peroa and others. Whereas if you +gave them the lady Amada and she took them, perchance it might only be +to see them return to the East, whither you tell me she is summoned by +one whose orders may not be disobeyed." + +Now I turned white with rage and answered, + +"While I live, Mother, Amada shall never go to the East to be the woman +of yonder King." + +"While you live, Son. But those who cross the will of a great king, are +apt to die. Also this is a matter which her uncle, the Prince Peroa, +must decide as policy dictates. Now as ever the woman is but a pawn in +the game. Oh! my son," she went on, "do not pin all your heart to the +robe of this Amada. She is very fair and very learned, but is she +one who will love? Moreover, if so she is a priestess and it would be +difficult for her to wed who is sworn to Isis. Lastly, remember this: +If Egypt were free, she would be its heiress, not her uncle, Peroa. For +hers is the true blood, not his. Would he, therefore, be willing to give +her to any man who, according to the ancient custom, through her would +acquire the right to rule?" + +"I do not seek to rule, Mother; I only seek to wed Amada whom I love." + +"Amada whom you love and whose name you, or rather your servant Bes, +which is the same thing since it will be held that he did it by your +order, gave to the King of the East, or so I understand. Here is a +pretty tangle, Shabaka, and rather would I be without all that gold and +those priceless pearls than have the task of its unravelling." + +Before I could answer and explain all the truth to her, the curtain was +swung aside and through it came a messenger from the Prince Peroa, who +bade me come to eat with him at once at the palace, since he must see me +this night. + +So my mother having set the rope of rose-hued pearls in a double chain +about my neck, I kissed her and went, with Bes who was also bidden. +Outside a chariot was waiting into which we entered. + +"Now, Master," said Bes to me as we drove to the palace, "I almost wish +that we were back in another chariot hunting lions in the East." + +"Why?" I asked. + +"Because then, although we had much to fear, there was no woman in the +story. Now the woman has entered it and I think that our real troubles +are about to begin. Oh! to-morrow I go to seek counsel of the holy +Tanofir." + +"And I come with you," I answered, "for I think it will be needed." + + + + +CHAPTER IX. THE MESSENGERS + +We descended at the great gate of the palace and were led through empty +halls that were no longer used now when there was no king in Egypt, to +the wing of the building in which dwelt the Prince Peroa. Here we were +received by a chamberlain, for the Prince of Egypt still kept some +state although it was but small, and had about him men who bore the old, +high-sounding titles of the "Officers of Pharaoh." + +The chamberlain led me and Bes to an ante-chamber of the banqueting hall +and left us, saying that he would summon the Prince who wished to see +me before he ate. This, however, was not necessary since while he spoke +Peroa, who as I guessed had been waiting for me, entered by another +door. He was a majestic-looking man of middle age, for grey showed in +his hair and beard, clad in white garments with a purple hem and wearing +on his brow a golden circlet, from the front of which rose the _uraeus_ +in the shape of a hooded snake that might be worn by those of royal +blood alone. His face was full of thought and his black and piercing +eyes looked heavy as though with sleeplessness. Indeed I could see that +he was troubled. His gaze fell upon us and his features changed to a +pleasant smile. + +"Greeting, Cousin Shabaka," he said. "I am glad that you have returned +safe from the East, and burn to hear your tidings. I pray that they may +be good, for never was good news more needed in Egypt." + +"Greeting, Prince," I answered, bowing my knee. "I and my servant here +are returned safe, but as for our tidings, well, judge of them for +yourself," and drawing the letter of the Great King from my robe, I +touched my forehead with the roll and handed it to him. + +"I see that you have acquired the Eastern customs, Shabaka," he said as +he took it. "But here in my own house which once was the palace of our +forefathers, the Pharaohs of Egypt, by your leave I will omit them. Amen +be my witness," he added bitterly, "I cannot bear to lay the letter of a +foreign king against my brow in token of my country's vassalage." + +Then he broke the silk of the seals and read, and as he read his face +grew black with rage. + +"What!" he cried, casting down the roll and stamping on it. "What! Does +this dog of an Eastern king bid me send my niece, by birth the Royal +Princess of Egypt, to be his toy until he wearies of her? First I will +choke her with my own hands. How comes it, Shabaka, that you care to +bring me such a message? Were I Pharaoh now I think your life would pay +the price." + +"As it would certainly have paid the price, had I not done so. Prince, +I brought the letter because I must. Also a copy of it has gone, I +believe, to Idernes the Satrap at Sais. It is better to face the truth, +Prince, and I think that I may be of more service to you alive than +dead. If you do not wish to send the lady Amada to the King, marry her +to someone else, after which he will seek her no more." + +He looked at me shrewdly and said, + +"To whom then? I cannot marry her, being her uncle and already married. +Do you mean to yourself, Shabaka?" + +"I have loved the lady Amada from a child, Prince," I answered boldly. +"Also I have high blood in me and having brought much gold from the +East, am rich again and one accustomed to war." + +"So you have brought gold from the East! How? Well, you can tell me +afterwards. But you fly high. You, a Count of Egypt, wish to marry the +Royal Lady of Egypt, for such she is by birth and rank, which, if ever +Egypt were free again, would give you a title to the throne." + +"I ask no throne, Prince. If there were one to fill I should be content +to leave that to you and your heirs." + +"So you say, no doubt honestly. But would the children of Amada say the +same? Would you even say it if you were her husband, and would she say +it? Moreover she is a priestess, sworn not to wed, though perhaps that +trouble might be overcome, if she wishes to wed, which I doubt. Mayhap +you might discover. Well, you are hungry and worn with long travelling. +Come, let us eat, and afterwards you can tell your story. Amada and the +others will be glad to hear it, as I shall. Follow me, Count Shabaka." + +So we went to the lesser banqueting-hall, I filled with joy because I +should see Amada, and yet, much afraid because of that story which I +must tell. Gathered there, waiting for the Prince, we found the Princess +his wife, a large and kindly woman, also his two eldest daughters and +his young son, a lad of about sixteen. Moreover, there were certain +officers, while at the tables of the lower hall sat others of the +household, men of smaller rank, and their wives, since Peroa still +maintained some kind of a shadow of the Court of old Egypt. + +The Princess and the others greeted me, and Bes also who had always been +a favourite with them, before he went to take his seat at the lowest +table, and I greeted them, looking all the while for Amada whom I did +not see. Presently, however, as we took our places on the couches, she +entered dressed, not as a priestess, but in the beautiful robes of a +great lady of Egypt and wearing on her head the _uraeus_ circlet that +signified her royal blood. As it chanced the only seat left vacant was +that next to myself, which she took before she recognized me, for +she was engaged in asking pardon for her lateness of the Prince and +Princess, saying that she had been detained by the ceremonies at the +temple. Seeing suddenly that I was her neighbour, she made as though she +would change her place, then altered her mind and stayed where she was. + +"Greeting, Cousin Shabaka," she said, "though not for the first time +to-day. Oh! my heart was glad when looking up, outside the temple, I +caught sight of you clad in that strange Eastern armour, and knew that +you had returned safe from your long wanderings. Yet afterwards I must +do penance for it by saying two added prayers, since at such a time my +thoughts should have been with the goddess only." + +"Greeting, Cousin Amada," I answered, "but she must be a jealous goddess +who grudges a thought to a relative--and friend--at such a time." + +"She is jealous, Shabaka, as being the Queen of women she must be who +demands to reign alone in the hearts of her votaries. But tell me of +your travels in the East and how you came by that rope of wondrous +pearls, if indeed there can be pearls so large and beautiful." + +This at the time I had little chance of doing, however, since the young +Princess on the other side of her began to talk to Amada about some +forthcoming festival, and the Prince's son next to me who was fond of +hunting, to question me about sport in the East and when, unhappily, I +said that I had shot lions there, gave me no peace for the rest of that +feast. Also the Princess opposite was anxious to learn what food noble +people ate in the East, and how it was cooked and how they sat at table, +and what was the furniture of their rooms and did women attend feasts as +in Egypt, and so forth. So it came about that what between these things +and eating and drinking, which, being well-nigh starved, I was obliged +to do, for, save a cup of wine, I had taken nothing in my mother's +house, I found little chance of talking with the lovely Amada, although +I knew that all the while she was studying me out of the corners of her +large eyes. Or perhaps it was the rose-hued pearls she studied, I was +not sure. + +Only one thing did she say to me when there was a little pause while the +cup went round, and she pledged me according to custom and passed it on. +It was, + +"You look well, Shabaka, though somewhat tired, but sadder than you +used, I think." + +"Perhaps because I have seen things to sadden me, Amada. But you too +look well but somewhat lovelier than you used, I think, if that be +possible." + +She smiled and blushed as she replied, + +"The Eastern ladies have taught you how to say pretty things. But you +should not waste them upon me who have done with women's vanities and +have given myself to learning and--religion." + +"Have learning and religion no vanities of their own?" I began, when +suddenly the Prince gave a signal to end the feast. + +Thereon all the lower part of the hall went away and the little tables +at which we ate were removed by servants, leaving us only wine-cups in +our hands which a butler filled from time to time, mixing the wine with +water. This reminded me of something, and having asked leave, I beckoned +to Bes, who still lingered near the door, and took from him that +splendid, golden goblet which the Great King had given me, that by my +command he had brought wrapped up in linen and hidden beneath his robe. +Having undone the wrappings I bowed and offered it to the Prince Peroa. + +"What is this wondrous thing?" asked the Prince, when all had finished +admiring its workmanship. "Is it a gift that you bring me from the King +of the East, Shabaka?" + +"It is a gift from myself, O Prince, if you will be pleased to accept +it," I answered, adding, "Yet it is true that it comes from the King of +the East, since it was his own drinking-cup that he gave me in exchange +for a certain bow, though not the one he sought, after he had pledged +me." + +"You seem to have found much favour in the eyes of this king, Shabaka, +which is more than most of us Egyptians do," he exclaimed, then went +on hastily, "Still, I thank you for your splendid gift, and however you +came by it, shall value it much." + +"Perhaps my cousin Shabaka will tell us his story," broke in Amada, her +eyes still fixed upon the rose-hued pearls, "and of how he came to win +all the beauteous things that dazzle our eyes to-night." + +Now I thought of offering her the pearls, but remembering my mother's +words, also that the Princess might not like to see another woman bear +off such a prize, did not do so. So I began to tell my story instead, +Bes seated on the ground near to me by the Prince's wish, that he might +tell his. + +The tale was long for in it was much that went before the day when I saw +myself in the chariot hunting lions with the King of kings, which I, the +modern man who set down all this vision, now learned for the first time. +It told of the details of my journey to the East, of my coming to the +royal city and the rest, all of which it is needless to repeat. Then I +came to the lion hunt, to my winning of the wager, and all that happened +to me; of my being condemned to death, of the weighing of Bes against +the gold, and of how I was laid in the boat of torment, a story at which +I noticed Amada turn pale and tremble. + +Here I ceased, saying that Bes knew better than I what had chanced at +the Court while I was pinned in the boat, whereon all present cried out +to Bes to take up the tale. This he did, and much better than I could +have done, bringing out many little things which made the scene appear +before them, as Ethiopians have the art of doing. At last he came to the +place in his story where the king asked him if he had ever seen a woman +fairer than the dancers, and went on thus: + +"O Prince, I told the Great King that I had; that there dwelt in Egypt +a lady of royal blood with eyes like stars, with hair like silk and long +as an unbridled horse's tail, with a shape like to that of a goddess, +with breath like flowers, with skin like milk, with a voice like honey, +with learning like to that of the god Thoth, with wit like a razor's +edge, with teeth like pearls, with majesty of bearing like to that of +the king himself, with fingers like rosebuds set in pink seashells, with +motion like that of an antelope, with grace like that of a swan floating +upon water, and--I don't remember the rest, O Prince." + +"Perhaps it is as well," exclaimed Peroa. "But what did the King say +then?" + +"He asked her name, O Prince." + +"And what name did you give to this wondrous lady who surpasses all the +goddesses in loveliness and charm, O dwarf Bes?" inquired Amada much +amused. + +"What name, O High-born One? Is it needful to ask? Why, what name could +I give but your own, for is there any other in the world of whom a man +whose heart is filled with truth could speak such things?" + +Now hearing this I gasped, but before I could speak Amada leapt up, +crying, + +"Wretch! You dared to speak my name to this king! Surely you should be +scourged till your bones are bare." + +"And why not, Lady? Would you have had me sit still and hear those +fat trollops of the East exalted above you? Would you have had me so +disloyal to your royal loveliness?" + +"You should be scourged," repeated Amada stamping her foot. "My Uncle, I +pray you cause this knave to be scourged." + +"Nay, nay," said Peroa moodily. "Poor simple man, he knew no better and +thought only to sing your praises in a far land. Be not angry with the +dwarf, Niece. Had it been Shabaka who gave your name, the thing would be +different. What happened next, Bes?" + +"Only this, Prince," said Bes, looking upwards and rolling his eyes, as +was his fashion when unloading some great lie from his heart. "The +King sent his servants to bring my master from the boat, that he might +inquire of him whether he had always found me truthful. For, Prince, +those Easterns set much store by truth which here in Egypt is worshipped +as a goddess. There they do not worship her because she lives in the +heart of every man, and some women." + +Now all stared at Bes who continued to stare at the ceiling, and I rose +to say something, I know not what, when suddenly the doors opened and +through them appeared heralds, crying, + +"Hearken, Peroa, Prince of Egypt by grace of the Great King. A message +from the Great King. Read and obey, O Peroa, Prince of Egypt by grace of +the Great King!" + +As they cried thus from between them emerged a man whose long Eastern +robes were stained with the dust of travel. Advancing without salute he +drew out a roll, touched his forehead with it, bowing deeply, and handed +it to the prince, saying, + +"Kiss the Word. Read the Word. Obey the Word, O servant of our Master, +the King of kings, beneath whose feet we are all but dust." + +Peroa took the roll, made a semblance of lifting it to his forehead, +opened and read it. As he did so I saw the veins swell upon his neck and +his eyes flash, but he only said, + +"O Messenger, to-night I feast, to-morrow an answer shall be given to +you to convey to the Satrap Idernes. My servants will find you food and +lodging. You are dismissed." + +"Let the answer be given early lest you also should be dismissed, O +Peroa," said the man with insolence. + +Then he turned his back upon the prince, as one does on an inferior, and +walked away, accompanied by the herald. + +When they were gone and the doors had been shut, Peroa spoke in a voice +that was thick with fury, saying, + +"Hearken, all of you, to the words of the writing." + +Then he read it. + + + "From the King of kings, the Ruler of all the earth, to Peroa, one + of his servants in the Satrapy of Egypt, + + "Deliver over to my servant Idernes without delay, the person of + Amada, a lady of the blood of the old Pharaohs of Egypt, who is + your relative and in your guardianship, that she may be numbered + among the women of my house." + + +Now all present looked at each other, while Amada stood as though she +had been frozen into stone. Before she could speak, Peroa went on, + +"See how the King seeks a quarrel against me that he may destroy me and +bray Egypt in his mortar, and tan it like a hide to wrap about his feet. +Nay, hold your peace, Amada. Have no fear. You shall not be sent to the +East; first will I kill you with my own hands. But what answer shall +we give, for the matter is urgent and on it hang all our lives? Bethink +you, Idernes has a great force yonder at Sais, and if I refuse outright, +he will attack us, which indeed is what the King means him to do before +we can make preparation. Say then, shall we fight, or shall we fly to +Upper Egypt, abandoning Memphis, and there make our stand?" + +Now the Councillors present seemed to find no answer, for they did not +know what to say. But Bes whispered in my ear, + +"Remember, Master, that you hold the King's seal. Let an answer be sent +to Idernes under the White Seal, bidding him wait on you." + +Then I rose and spoke. + +"O Peroa," I said, "as it chances I am the bearer of the private signet +of the Great King, which all men must obey in the north and in the +south, in the east and in the west, wherever the sun shines over the +dominions of the King. Look on it," and taking the ancient White Seal +from about my neck, I handed it to him. + +He looked and the Councillors looked. Then they said almost with one +voice, + +"It is the White Seal, the very signet of the Great Kings of the East," +and they bowed before the dreadful thing. + +"How you came by this we do not know, Shabaka," said Peroa. "That can +be inquired of afterwards. Yet in truth it seems to be the old Signet +of signets, that which has come down from father to son for countless +generations, that which the King of kings carries on his person and +affixes to his private orders and to the greatest documents of State, +which afterwards can never be recalled, that of which a copy is +emblazoned on his banner." + +"It is," I answered, "and from the King's person it came to me for a +while. If any doubt, let the impress be brought, that is furnished to +all the officers throughout the Empire, and let the seal be set in the +impress." + +Now one of the officers rose and went to bring the impress which was in +his keeping, but Peroa continued, + +"If this be the true seal, how would you use it, Shabaka, to help us in +our present trouble?" + +"Thus, Prince," I answered. "I would send a command under the seal to +Idernes to wait upon the holder of the seal here in Memphis. He will +suspect a trap and will not come until he has gathered a great army. +Then he will come, but meanwhile, you, Prince, can also collect an +army." + +"That needs gold, Shabaka, and I have little. The King of kings takes +all in tribute." + +"I have some, Prince, to the weight of a heavy man, and it is at the +service of Egypt." + +"I thank you, Shabaka. Believe me, such generosity shall not go +unrewarded," and he glanced at Amada who dropped her eyes. "But if we +can collect the army, what then?" + +"Then you can put Memphis into a state of defence. Then too when Idernes +comes I will meet him and, as the bearer of the seal, command him under +the seal to retreat and disperse his army." + +"But if he does, Shabaka, it will only be until he has received fresh +orders from the Great King, whereon he will advance again." + +"No, Prince, _he_ will not advance, or that army either. For when they +are in retreat we will fall on them and destroy them, and declare you, +O Prince, Pharaoh of Egypt, though what will happen afterwards I do not +know." + +When they heard this all gasped. Only Amada whispered, + +"Well said!" and Bes clapped his big hands softly in the Ethiopian +fashion. + +"A bold counsel," said Peroa, "and one on which I must have the night to +think. Return here, Shabaka, an hour after sunrise to-morrow, by which +time I can gather all the wisest men in Memphis, and we will discuss +this matter. Ah! here is the impress. Now let the seal be tried." + +A box was brought and opened. In it was a slab of wood on which was an +impress of the King's seal in wax, surrounded by those of other seals +certifying that it was genuine. Also there was a writing describing +the appearance of the seal. I handed the signet to Peroa who, having +compared it with the description in the writing, fitted it to the +impress on the wax. + +"It is the same," he said. "See, all of you." + +They looked and nodded. Then he would have given it back to me but I +refused to take it, saying, + +"It is not well that this mighty symbol should hang about the neck of a +private man whence it might be stolen or lost." + +"Or who might be murdered for its sake," interrupted Peroa. + +"Yes, Prince. Therefore take it and hide it in the safest and most +secret place in the palace, and with it these pearls that are too +priceless to be flaunted about the streets of Memphis at night, unless +indeed----" and I turned to look for Amada, but she was gone. + +So the seal and the pearls were taken and locked in the box with the +impress and borne away. Nor was I sorry to see the last of them, wisely +as it happened. Then I bade the Prince and his company good night, and +presently was driving homeward with Bes in the chariot. + +Our way led us past some large houses once occupied by officers of the +Court of Pharaoh, but now that there was no Court, fallen into ruins. +Suddenly from out of these houses sprang a band of men disguised as +common robbers, whose faces were hidden by cloths with eye-holes cut +in them. They seized the horses by the bridles, and before we could do +anything, leapt upon us and held us fast. Then a tall man speaking with +a foreign accent, said, + +"Search that officer and the dwarf. Take from them the seal upon a gold +chain and a rope of rose-hued pearls which they have stolen. But do them +no harm." + +So they searched us, the tall man himself helping and, aided by others, +holding Bes who struggled with them, and searched the chariot also, by +the light of the moon, but found nothing. The tall man muttered that I +must be the wrong officer, and at a sign they left us and ran away. + +"That was a wise thought of mine, Bes, which caused me to leave certain +ornaments in the palace," I said. "As it is they have taken nothing." + +"Yes, Master," he answered, "though I have taken something from them," +a saying that I did not understand at the time. "Those Easterns whom we +met by the canal told Idernes about the seal, and he ordered this to be +done. That tall man was one of the messengers who came to-night to the +palace." + +"Then why did they not kill us, Bes?" + +"Because murder, especially of one who holds the seal, is an ugly +business, that is easily tracked down, whereas thieves are many in +Memphis and who troubles about them when they have failed? Oh! the +Grasshopper, or Amen, or both, have been with us to-night." + +So I thought although I said nothing, for since we had come off +scatheless, what did it matter? Well, this. It showed me that the signet +of the Great King was indeed to be dreaded and coveted, even here in +Egypt. If Idernes could get it into his possession, what might he not do +with it? Cause himself to be proclaimed Pharaoh perhaps and become the +forefather of an independent dynasty. Why not, when the Empire of the +East was taxed with a great war elsewhere? And if this was so why should +not Peroa do the same, he who had behind him all Old Egypt, maddened +with its wrongs and foreign rule? + +That same night before I slept, but after Bes and I had hidden away the +bags of gold by burying them beneath the clay floor, I laid the whole +matter before my mother who was a very wise woman. She heard me out, +answering little, then said, + +"The business is very dangerous, and of its end I will not speak until +I have heard the counsel of your great-uncle, the holy Tanofir. Still, +things having gone so far, it seems to me that boldness may be the best +course, since the great King has his Grecian wars to deal with, and +whatever he may say, cannot attack Egypt yet awhile. Therefore if Peroa +is able to overcome Idernes and his army he may cause himself to be +proclaimed Pharaoh and make Egypt free if only for a time." + +"Such is my mind, Mother." + +"Not all your mind, Son, I think," she answered smiling, "for you +think more of the lovely Amada than of these high policies, at any +rate to-night. Well, marry your Amada if you can, though I misdoubt me +somewhat of a woman who is so lost in learning and thinks so much about +her soul. At least if you marry her and Egypt should become free, as it +was for thousands of years, you will be the next heir to the throne as +husband of the Great Royal Lady." + +"How can that be, Mother, seeing that Peroa has a son?" + +"A vain youth with no more in him than a child's rattle. If once Amada +ceases to think about her soul she will begin to think about her throne, +especially if she has children. But all this is far away and for the +present I am glad that neither she nor the thieves have got those +pearls, though perhaps they might be safer here than where they are. +And now, my son, go rest for you need it, and dream of nothing, not even +Amada, who for her part will dream of Isis, if at all. I will wake you +before the dawn." + +So I went, being too tired to talk more, and slept like a crocodile +in the sun, till, as it seemed to me, but a few minutes later I saw my +mother standing over me with a lamp, saying that it was time to rise. I +rose, unwillingly enough, but refreshed, washed and dressed myself, +by which time the sun had begun to appear. Then I ate some food and, +calling Bes, made ready to start for the palace. + +"My son," said my mother, the lady Tiu, before we parted, "while you +have been sleeping I have been thinking, as is the way of the old. +Peroa, your cousin, will be glad enough to make use of you, but he does +not love you over much because he is jealous of you and fears lest you +should become his rival in the future. Still he is an honest man and +will keep a bargain which he once has made. Now it seems that above +everything on earth you desire Amada on whom you have set your heart +since boyhood, but who has always played with you and spoken to you with +her arm stretched out. Also life is short and may come to an end any +day, as you should know better than most men who have lived among +dangers, and therefore it is well that a man should take what he +desires, even if he finds afterwards that the rose he crushes to his +breast has thorns. For then at least he will have smelt the rose, not +only have looked on and longed to smell it. Therefore, before you hand +over your gold, and place your wit and strength at the service of Peroa, +make your bargain with him; namely, that if thereby you save Amada from +the King's House of Women and help to set Peroa on the throne, he shall +promise her to you free of any priestly curse, you giving her as dowry +the priceless rose-hued pearls that are worth a kingdom. So you will get +your rose till it withers, and if the thorns prick, do not blame me, and +one day you may become a king--or a slave, Amen knows which." + +Now I laughed and said that I would take her counsel who desired Amada +and nothing else. As for all her talk about thorns, I paid no heed to +it, knowing that she loved me very much and was jealous of Amada who she +thought would take her place with me. + + + + +CHAPTER X. SHABAKA PLIGHTS HIS TROTH + +Bes and I went armed to the palace, walking in the middle of the road, +but now that the sun was up we met no more robbers. At the gate a +messenger summoned me alone to the presence of Peroa, who, he said, +wished to talk with me before the sitting of the Council. I went and +found him by himself. + +"I hear that you were attacked last night," he said after greeting me. + +I answered that I was and told him the story, adding that it was +fortunate I had left the White Seal and the pearls in safe keeping, +since without doubt the would-be thieves were Easterns who desired to +recover them. + +"Ah! the pearls," he said. "One of those who handled them, who was once +a dealer in gems, says that they are without price, unmatched in the +whole world, and that never in all his life has he seen any to equal the +smallest of them." + +I replied that I believed this was so. Then he asked me of the value of +the gold of which I had spoken. I told him and it was a great sum, for +gold was scarce in Egypt. His eyes gleamed for he needed wealth to pay +soldiers. + +"And all this you are ready to hand over to me, Shabaka?" + +Now I bethought me of my mother's words, and answered, + +"Yes, Prince, at a price." + +"What price, Shabaka?" + +"The price of the hand of the Royal Lady, Amada, freed from her vows. +Moreover, I will give her the pearls as a marriage dowry and place at +your service my sword and all the knowledge I have gained in the East, +swearing to stand or fall with you." + +"I thought it, Shabaka. Well, in this world nothing is given for nothing +and the offer is a fair one. You are well born, too, as well as myself, +and a brave and clever man. Further, Amada has not taken her final vows +and therefore the high priests can absolve her from her marriage to +the goddess, or to her son Horus, whichever it may be, for I do not +understand these mysteries. But, Shabaka, if Fortune should chance to go +with us and I should became the first Pharaoh of a new dynasty in Egypt, +he who was married to the Royal Princess of the true blood might become +a danger to my throne and family." + +"I shall not be that man, Prince, who am content with my own station, +and to be your servant." + +"And my son's, Shabaka? You know that I have but one lawful son." + +"And your son's, Prince." + +"You are honest, Shabaka, and I believe you. But how about your sons, +if you have any, and how about Amada herself? Well, in great businesses +something must be risked, and I need the gold and the rest which I +cannot take for nothing, for you won them by your skill and courage and +they are yours. But how you won the seal you have not told us, nor is +there time for you to do so now." + +He thought a little, walking up and down the chamber, then went on, + +"I accept your offer, Shabaka, so far as I can." + +"So far as you can, Prince?" + +"Yes; I can give you Amada in marriage and make that marriage easy, but +only if Amada herself consents. The will of a Royal Princess of Egypt of +full age cannot be forced, save by her father if he reigns as Pharaoh, +and I am not her father, but only her guardian. Therefore it stands +thus. Are you willing to fulfil your part of the bargain, save only as +regards the pearls, if she does not marry you, and to take your chance +of winning Amada as a man wins a woman, I on my part promising to do all +in my power to help your suit?" + +Now it was my turn to think for a moment. What did I risk? The gold and +perhaps the pearls, no more, for in any case I should fight for Peroa +against the Eastern king whom I hated, and through him for Egypt. Well, +these came to me by chance, and if they went by chance what of it? Also +I was not one who desired to wed a woman, however much I worshipped +her, if she desired to turn her back on me. If I could win her in fair +love--well. If not, it was my misfortune, and I wanted her in no other +way. Lastly, I had reason to think that she looked on me more favourably +than she had ever done on any other man, and that if it had not been for +what my mother called her soul and its longings, she would have given +herself to me before I journeyed to the East. Indeed, once she had said +as much, and there was something in her eyes last night which told me +that in her heart she loved me, though with what passion at the time I +did not know. So very swiftly I made up my mind and answered, + +"I understand and I accept. The gold shall be delivered to you to-day, +Prince. The pearls are already in your keeping to await the end." + +"Good!" he exclaimed. "Then let the matter be reduced to writing and at +once, that afterwards neither of us may have cause to complain of the +other." + +So he sent for his secret scribe and dictated to him, briefly but +clearly, the substance of our bargain, nothing being added, and nothing +taken away. This roll written on papyrus was afterwards copied twice, +Peroa taking one copy, I another, and a third being deposited according +to custom, in the library of the temple of Ptah. + +When all was done and Peroa and I had touched each other's breasts and +given our word in the name of Amen, we went to the hall in which we +had dined, where those whom the Prince had summoned were assembled. +Altogether there were about thirty of them, great citizens of Memphis, +or landowners from without who had been called together in the night. +Some of these men were very old and could remember when Egypt had a +Pharaoh of its own before the East set its heel upon her neck, of noble +blood also. + +Others were merchants who dealt with all the cities of Egypt; others +hereditary generals, or captains of fleets of ships; others Grecians, +officers of mercenaries who were supposed to be in the pay of the King +of kings, but hated him, as did all the Greeks. Then there were the high +priests of Ptah, of Amen, of Osiris and others who were still the most +powerful men in the land, since there was no village between Thebes and +the mouths of the Nile in which they had not those who were sworn to the +service of their gods. + +Such was the company representing all that remained or could be gathered +there of the greatness of Egypt the ancient and the fallen. + +To these when the doors had been closed and barred and trusty watchmen +set to guard them, Peroa expounded the case in a low and earnest voice. +He showed them that the King of the East sought a new quarrel against +Egypt that he might grind her to powder beneath his heel, and that he +did this by demanding the person of Amada, his own niece and the Royal +Lady of Egypt, to be included in his household like any common woman. If +she were refused then he would send a great army under pretext of taking +her, and lay the land waste as far as Thebes. And if she were granted +some new quarrel would be picked and in the person of the royal Amada +all of them be for ever shamed. + +Next he showed the seal, telling them that I--who was known to many of +them, at least by repute--had brought it from the East, and repeating to +them the plan that I had proposed upon the previous night. After this he +asked their counsel, saying that before noon he must send an answer to +Idernes, the King's Satrap at Sais. + +Then I was called upon to speak and, in answer to questions, answered +frankly that I had stolen the ancient White Seal from the King's servant +who carried it as a warrant for the King's private vengeance on one who +had bested him. How I did not mention. I told them also of the state of +the Great King's empire and that I had heard that he was about to enter +upon a war with the Greeks which would need all its strength, and that +therefore if they wished to strike for liberty the time was at hand. + +Then the talk began and lasted for two hours, each man giving his +judgment according to precedence, some one way and some another. When +all had done and it became clear that there were differences of opinion, +some being content to live on in slavery with what remained to them and +others desiring to strike for freedom, among whom were the high priests +who feared lest the Eastern heretics should utterly destroy their +worship, Peroa spoke once more. + +"Elders of Egypt," he said briefly, "certain of you think one way, and +certain another, but of this be sure, such talk as we have held together +cannot be hid. It will come to the ears of spies and through them to +those of the Great King, and then all of us alike are doomed. If you +refuse to stir, this very day I with my family and household and the +Royal Lady Amada, and all who cling to me, fly to Upper Egypt and +perhaps beyond it to Ethiopia, leaving you to deal with the Great King, +as you will, or to follow me into exile. That he will attack us there is +no doubt, either over the pretext of Amada or some other, since Shabaka +has heard as much from his own lips. Now choose." + +Then, after a little whispering together, every man of them voted for +rebellion, though some of them I could see with heavy hearts, and bound +themselves by a great oath to cling together to the last. + +The matter being thus settled such a letter was written to Idernes as +I had suggested on the night before, and sealed with the Signet of +signets. Of the yielding up of Amada it said nothing, but commanded +Idernes, under the private White Seal that none dared disobey, to wait +upon the Prince Peroa at Memphis forthwith, and there learn from him, +the Holder of the Seal, what was the will of the Great King. Then +the Council was adjourned till one hour after noon, and most of them +departed to send messengers bearing secret word to the various cities +and nomes of Egypt. + +Before they went, however, I was directed to wait upon my relative, +the holy Tanofir, whom all acknowledged to be the greatest magician in +Egypt, and to ask of him to seek wisdom and an oracle from his Spirit +as to the future and whether in it we should fare well or ill. This I +promised to do. + +When most of the Council were gone the messengers of Idernes were +summoned, and came proudly, and with them, or rather before them, Bes +for whom I had sent as he was not present at the Council. + +"Master," he whispered to me, "the tallest of those messengers is the +man who captained the robbers last night. Wait and I will prove it." + +Peroa gave the roll to the head messenger, bidding him bear it to the +Satrap in answer to the letter which he had delivered to him. The man +took it insolently and thrust it into his robe, as he did so revealing +a silver chain that had been broken and knotted together, and asked +whether there were words to bear besides those written in the roll. +Before Peroa could answer Bes sprang up saying, + +"O Prince, a boon, the boon of justice on this man. Last night he and +others with him attacked my master and myself, seeking to rob us, but +finding nothing let us go." + +"You lie, Abortion!" said the Eastern. + +"Oh! I lie, do I?" mocked Bes. "Well, let us see," and shooting out his +long arm, he grasped the chain about the messenger's neck and broke it +with a jerk. "Look, O Prince," he said, "you may have noted last night, +when that man entered the hall, that there hung about his neck this +chain to which was tied a silver key." + +"I noted it," said Peroa. + +"Then ask him, O Prince, where is the key now." + +"What is that to you, Dwarf?" broke in the man. "The key is my mark of +office as chief butler to the High Satrap. Must I always bear it for +your pleasure?" + +"Not when it has been taken from you, Butler," answered Bes. "See, here +it is," and from his sleeve he produced the key hanging to a piece of +the chain. "Listen, O Prince," he said. "I struggled with this man and +the key was in my left hand though he did not know it at the time, and +with it some of the chain. Compare them and judge. Also his mask slipped +and I saw his face and knew him again." + +Peroa laid the pieces of the chain together and observed the workmanship +which was Eastern and rare. Then he clapped his hands, at which sign +armed men of his household entered from behind him. + +"It is the same," he said. "Butler of Idernes, you are a common thief." + +The man strove to answer, but could not for the deed was proved against +him. + +"Then, O Prince," asked Bes, "what is the punishment of those thieves +who attack passers-by with violence in the streets of Memphis, for such +I demand on him?" + +"The cutting off of the right hand and scourging," answered Peroa, at +which words the butler turned to fly. But Bes leapt on him like an ape +upon a bird, and held him fast. + +"Seize that thief," said Peroa to his servants, "and let him receive +fifty blows with the rods. His hand I spare because he must travel." + +They laid the man down and the rods having been fetched, gave him the +blows until at the thirtieth he howled for mercy, crying out that it was +true and that it was he who had captained the robbers, words which Peroa +caused to be written down. Then he asked him why he, a messenger from +the Satrap, had robbed in the streets of Memphis, and as he refused to +answer, commanded the officer of justice to lay on. After three more +blows the man said, + +"O Prince, this was no common robbery for gain. I did what I was +commanded to do, because yonder noble had about him the ancient White +Seal of the Great King which he showed to certain of the Satrap's +servants by the banks of the canal. That seal is a holy token, O Prince, +which, it is said, has descended for twice a thousand years in the +family of the Great King, and as the Satrap did not know how it had come +into the hands of the noble Shabaka, he ordered me to obtain it if I +could." + +"And the pearls too, Butler?" + +"Yes, O Prince, since those gems are a great possession with which any +Satrap could buy a larger satrapy." + +"Let him go," said Peroa, and the man rose, rubbing himself and weeping +in his pain. + +"Now, Butler," he went on, "return to your master with a grateful heart, +since you have been spared much that you deserve. Say to him that he +cannot steal the Signet, but that if he is wise he will obey it, since +otherwise his fate may be worse than yours, and to all his servants say +the same. Foolish man, how can you, or your master, guess what is in +the mind of the Great King, or for what purpose the Signet of signets is +here in Egypt? Beware lest you fall into a pit, all of you together, and +let Idernes beware lest he find himself at the very bottom of that pit." + +"O Prince, I will beware," said the humbled butler, "and whatever is +written over the seal, that I will obey, like many others." + +"You are wise," answered Peroa; "I pray for his own sake that the Satrap +Idernes may be as wise. Now begone, thanking whatever god you worship +that your life is whole in you and that your right hand remains upon +your wrist." + +So the butler and those with him prostrated themselves before Peroa +and bowed humbly to me and even to Bes because in their hearts now they +believed that we were clothed by the Great King with terrible powers +that might destroy them all, if so we chose. Then they went, the butler +limping a little and with no pride left in him. + +"That was good work," said Peroa to me afterwards when we were alone, +"for now yonder knave is frightened and will frighten his master." + +"Yes," I answered, "you played that pipe well, Prince. Still, there is +no time to lose, since before another moon this will all be reported in +the East, whence a new light may arise and perchance a new signet." + +"You say you stole the White Seal?" he asked. + +"Nay, Prince, the truth is that Bes bought it--in a certain fashion--and +I used it. Perhaps it is well that you should know no more at present." + +"Perhaps," he answered, and we parted, for he had much to do. + +That afternoon the Council met again. At it I gave over the gold and by +help of it all was arranged. Within a week ten thousand armed men would +be in Memphis and a hundred ships with their crews upon the Nile; also +a great army would be gathering in Upper Egypt, officered for the most +part by Greeks skilled in war. The Greek cities too at the mouths of the +Nile would be ready to revolt, or so some of their citizens declared, +for they hated the Great King bitterly and longed to cast off his yoke. + +For my part, I received the command of the bodyguard of Peroa in which +were many Greeks, and a generalship in the army; while to Bes, at my +prayer, was given the freedom of the land which he accepted with a +smile, he who was a king in his own country. + +At length all was finished and I went out into the palace garden to rest +myself before I rode into the desert to see my great uncle, the holy +Tanofir. I was alone, for Bes had gone to bring our horses on which we +were to ride, and sat myself down beneath a palm-tree, thinking of the +great adventure on which we had entered with a merry heart, for I loved +adventures. + +Next I thought of Amada and was less merry. Then I looked up and lo! +she stood before me, unaccompanied and wearing the dress, not of a +priestess, but of an Egyptian lady with the little circlet of her rank +upon her hair. I rose and bowed to her and we began to walk together +beneath the palms, my heart beating hard within me, for I knew that my +hour had come to speak. + +Yet it was she who spoke the first, saying, + +"I hear that you have been playing a high part, Shabaka, and doing great +things for Egypt." + +"For Egypt and for you who are Egypt," I answered. + +"So I should have been called in the old days, Cousin, because of my +blood and the rank it gives, though now I am but as any other lady of +the land." + +"And so you shall be called in days to come, Amada, if my sword and wit +can win their way." + +"How so, Cousin, seeing that you have promised certain things to my +uncle Peroa and his son?" + +"I have promised those things, Amada, and I will abide by my promise; +but the gods are above all, and who knows what they may decree?" + +"Yes, Cousin, the gods are above all, and in their hands we will let +these matters rest, provoking them in no manner and least of all by +treachery to our oaths." + +We walked for a little way in silence. Then I spoke. + +"Amada, there are more things than thrones in the world." + +"Yes, Cousin, there is that in which all thrones end--death, which it +seems we court." + +"And, Amada, there is that in which all thrones begin--love, which I +court from you." + +"I have known it long," she said, considering me gravely, "and been +grateful to you who are more to me than any man has been or ever will +be. But, Shabaka, I am a priestess bound to set the holy One I serve +above a mortal." + +"That holy One was wed and bore a child, Amada, who avenged his father, +as I trust that we shall avenge Egypt. Therefore she looks with a kind +eye upon wives and mothers. Also you have not taken your final vows and +can be absolved." + +"Yes," she said softly. + +"Then, Amada, will you give yourself into my keeping?" + +"I think so, Shabaka, though it has been in my mind for long, as you +know well, to give myself only to learning and the service of the +heavenly Lady. My heart calls me to you, it is true, day and night it +calls, how loudly I will not tell; yet I would not yield myself to that +alone. But Egypt calls me also, since I have been shown in a dream while +I watched in the sanctuary, that you are the only man who can free her, +and I think that this dream came from on high. Therefore I will give +myself, but not yet." + +"Not yet," I said dismayed. "When?" + +"When I have been absolved from my vows, which must be done on the night +of the next new moon, which is twenty-seven days from this. Then, if +nothing comes between us during those twenty-seven days, it shall be +announced that the Royal Lady of Egypt is to wed the noble Shabaka." + +"Twenty-seven days! In such times much may happen in them, Amada. Still, +except death, what can come between us?" + +"I know of nothing, Shabaka, whose past is shadowless as the noon." + +"Or I either," I replied. + +Now we were standing in the clear sunlight, but as I said the words a +wind stirred the palm-trees and the shadow from one of them fell full +upon me, and she who was very quick, noted it. + +"Some might take that for an omen," she said with a little laugh, +pointing to the line of the shadow. "Oh! Shabaka, if you have aught +to confess, say it now and I will forgive it. But do not leave me to +discover it afterwards when I may not forgive. Perchance during your +journeyings in the East----" + +"Nothing, nothing," I exclaimed joyfully, who during all that time had +scarcely spoken to a youthful woman. + +"I am glad that nothing happened in the East that could separate us, +Shabaka, though in truth my thought was not your own, for there are more +things than women in the world. Only it seems strange to me that you +should return to Egypt laden with such priceless gifts from him who is +Egypt's greatest enemy." + +"Have I not told you that I put my country before myself? Those gifts +were won fairly in a wager, Amada, whereof you heard the story but last +night. Moreover you know the purpose to which they are to be put," I +replied indignantly. + +"Yes, I know and now I am sure. Be not angry, Shabaka, with her who +loves you truly and hopes ere long to call you husband. But till that +day take it not amiss if I keep somewhat aloof from you, who must break +with the past and learn to face a future of which I did not dream." + +For the rest she stretched out her hand and I kissed it, for while she +was still a priestess her lips she would not suffer me to touch. Another +moment and smiling happily, she had glided away, leaving me alone in the +garden. + +Then it was for the first time that I bethought me of the warnings of +Bes and remembered that it was I, not he, who had told the Great +King the name of the most beautiful woman in Egypt, although in all +innocence. Yes, I remembered, and felt as if all the shadows on the +earth had wrapped me round. I thought of finding her, but she had gone +whither I knew not in that great palace. So I determined that the next +time we were alone I would tell her of the matter, explaining all, and +with this thought I comforted myself who did not know that until many +days were past we should be alone no more. + +After this I went home and told my mother all my joy, for in truth there +was no happier man in Egypt. She listened, then answered, smiling a +little. + +"When your father wished to take me to wife, Shabaka, it was not my hand +that I gave him to kiss, and as you know, I too have the blood of kings +in me. But then I was not a priestess of Isis, so doubtless all is well. +Only in twenty-seven days much may happen, as you said to Amada. Now I +wonder why did she----? Well, no matter, since priestesses are not like +other women who only think of the man they have won and of naught before +or after. The blessing of the gods and mine be on you both, my son," and +she went away to attend to her household matters. + +As we rode to Sekera to find the holy Tanofir I told Bes also, adding +that I had forgotten to reveal that it was I who had spoken Amada's name +to the king, but that I intended to do so ere long. + +Bes rolled his eyes and answered, + +"If I were you, Master, as I had forgotten, I should continue to forget, +for what is welcome in one hour is not always welcome in another. Why +speak of the matter at all, which is one hard to explain to a woman, +however wise and royal? I have already said that _I_ spoke the name to +the King and that you were brought from the boat to say whether I was +noted for my truthfulness. Is not that enough?" + +While I considered, Bes went on, + +"You may remember, Master, that when I told, well--the truth about this +story, the lady Amada asked earnestly that I should be scourged, even +to the bones. Now if you should tell another truth which will make mine +dull as tarnished silver, she will not leave me even my bones, for I +shall be proved a liar, and what will happen to you I am sure I do +not know. And, Master, as I am no longer a slave here in Egypt, to say +nothing of what I may be elsewhere, I have no fancy for scourgings, who +may not kiss the hand that smites me as you can." + +"But, Bes," I said, "what is, is and may always be learned in this way +or in that." + +"Master, if what is were always learned, I think the world would fall +to pieces, or at least there would be no men left on it. Why should +this matter be learned? It is known to you and me alone, leaving out the +Great King who probably has forgotten as he was drunk at the time. Oh! +Master, when you have neither bow nor spear at hand, it is not wise +to kick a sleeping lion in the stomach, for then he will remember its +emptiness and sup off you. Beside, when first I told you that tale +I made a mistake. I did tell the Great King, as I now remember quite +clearly, that the beautiful lady was named Amada, and he only sent for +you to ask if I spoke the truth." + +"Bes," I exclaimed, "you worshippers of the Grasshopper wear virtue +easily." + +"Easily as an old sandal, Master, or rather not at all, since the +Grasshopper has need of none. For ages they have studied the ways of +those who worship the gods of Egypt, and from them have learned----" + +"What?" + +"Amongst other things, Master, that woman, being modest, is shocked at +the sight of the naked Truth." + + + + +CHAPTER XI. THE HOLY TANOFIR + +We entered the City of Graves that is called Sekera. In the centre +towered pyramids that hid the bones of ancient and forgotten kings, +and everywhere around upon the desert sands was street upon street of +monuments, but save for a priest or two hurrying to patter his paid +office in the funeral chapels of the departed, never a living man. Bes +looked about him and sniffed with his wide nostrils. + +"Is there not death enough in the world, Master," he asked, "that the +living should wish to proclaim it in this fashion, rolling it on their +tongues like a morsel they are loth to swallow, because it tastes so +good? Oh! what a waste is here. All these have had their day and yet +they need houses and pyramids and painted chambers in which to sleep, +whereas if they believed the faith they practised, they would have been +content to give their bones to feed the earth they fed on, and fill +heaven with their souls." + +"Do your people thus, Bes?" + +"For the most part, Master. Our dead kings and great ones we enclose in +pillars of crystal, but we do this that they may serve a double purpose. +One is that the pillars may support the roof of their successors, and +the other, that those who inherit their goods may please themselves by +reflecting how much handsomer they are than those who went before them. +For no mummy looks really nice, Master, at least with its wrappings off, +and our kings are put naked into the crystal." + +"And what becomes of the rest, Bes?" + +"Their bodies go to the earth or the water and the Grasshopper carries +off their souls to--where, Master?" + +"I do not know, Bes." + +"No, Master, no one knows, except the lady Amada and perhaps the holy +Tanofir. Here I think is the entrance to his hole," and he pulled up his +beast with a jerk at what looked like the doorway of a tomb. + +Apparently we were expected, for a tall and proud-looking girl clad in +white and with extraordinarily dark eyes, appeared in the doorway and +asked in a soft voice if we were the noble Shabaka and Bes, his slave. + +"I am Shabaka," I answered, "and this is Bes, who is not my slave but a +free citizen of Egypt." + +The girl contemplated the dwarf with her big eyes, then said, + +"And other things, I think." + +"What things?" inquired Bes with interest, as he stared at this +beautiful lady. + +"A very brave and clever man and one perhaps who is more than he seems +to be?" + +"Who has been telling you about me?" exclaimed Bes anxiously. + +"No one, O Bes, at least not that I can remember." + +"Not that you can remember! Then who and what are you who learn things +you know not how?" + +"I am named Karema and desert-bred, and my office is that of Cup to the +holy Tanofir." + +"If hermits drink from such a cup I shall turn hermit," said Bes, +laughing. "But how can a woman be a man's cup and what kind of a wine +does he drink from her?" + +"The wine of wisdom, O Bes," she replied colouring a little, for like +many Arabs of high blood she was very fair in hue. + +"Wine of wisdom," said Bes. "From such cups most drink the wine of +folly, or sometimes of madness." + +"The holy Tanofir awaits you," she interrupted, and turning, entered the +doorway. + +A little way down the passage was a niche in which stood three lamps +ready lighted. One of these she took and gave the others to us. Then we +followed her down a steep incline of many steps, till at length we +found ourselves in a hot and enormous hall hewn from the living rock and +filled with blackness. + +"What is this place?" said Bes, who looked frightened, and although he +spoke in a low whisper, our guide overheard him and turning, answered, + +"This is the burial place of the Apis bulls. See, here lies the last, +not yet closed in," and holding up her lamp she revealed a mighty +sarcophagus of black granite set in a niche of the mausoleum. + +"So they make mummies of bulls as well as of men," groaned Bes. "Oh! +what a land. But when I have seen the holy Tanofir it was in a brick +cell beneath the sky." + +"Doubtless that was at night, O Bes," answered Karema, "for in such a +house he sleeps, spending his days in the Apis tomb, because of all the +evil that is worked beneath the sun." + +"Hump," said Bes, "I should have thought that more was worked beneath +the moon, but doubtless the holy Tanofir knows better, or being asleep +does not mind." + +Now in front of each of the walled-up niches was a little chapel, and at +the fourth of these whence a light came, the maiden stopped, saying, + +"Enter. Here dwells the holy Tanofir. He tended this god during its +life-days in his youth, and now that the god is dead he prays above its +bones." + +"Prays to the bones of a dead bull in the dark! Well, give me a live +grasshopper in the light; he is more cheerful," muttered Bes. + +"O Dwarf," cried a deep and resounding voice from within the chapel, +"talk no more of things you do not understand. I do not pray to the +bones of a dead bull, as you in your ignorance suppose. I pray to the +spirit whereof this sacred beast was but one of the fleshly symbols, +which in this haunted place you will do well not to offend." + +Then for once I saw Bes grow afraid, for his great jaw dropped and he +trembled. + +"Master," he said to me, "when next you visit tombs where maidens look +into your heart and hermits hear your very thoughts, I pray you leave me +behind. The holy Tanofir I love, if from afar, but I like not his house, +or his----" Here he looked at Karema who was regarding him with a sweet +smile over the lamp flame, and added, "There is something the matter +with me, Master; I cannot even lie." + +"Cease from talking follies, O Shabaka and Bes, and enter," said the +tremendous voice from within. + +So we entered and saw a strange sight. Against the back wall of the +chapel which was lit with lamps, stood a life-sized statue of Maat, +goddess of Law and Truth, fashioned of alabaster. On her head was a tall +feather, her hair was covered with a wig, on her neck lay a collar of +blue stones; on her arms and wrists were bracelets of gold. A tight robe +draped her body. In her right hand that hung down by her side, she held +the looped Cross of Life, and in her left which was advanced, a long, +lotus-headed sceptre, while her painted eyes stared fixedly at the +darkness. Crouched upon the ground, at the feet of the statue, scribe +fashion, sat my great-uncle Tanofir, a very aged man with sightless +eyes and long hands, so thin that one might see through them against the +lamp-flame. His head was shaven, his beard was long and white; white too +was his robe. In front of him was a low altar, on which stood a shallow +silver vessel filled with pure water, and on either side of it a burning +lamp. + +We knelt down before him, or rather I knelt, for Bes threw himself flat +upon his face. + +"Am I the King of kings whom you have so lately visited, that you should +prostrate yourselves before me?" said Tanofir in his great voice, which, +coming from so frail and aged a man seemed most unnatural. "Or is it +to the goddess of Truth beyond that you bow yourselves? If so, that is +well, since one, if not both of you, greatly needs her pardon and her +help. Or is it to the sleeping god beyond who holds the whole world on +his horns? Or is it to the darkness of this hallowed place which causes +you to remember the nearness of the awaiting tomb?" + +"Nay, my Uncle," I said, "we would greet you, no more, who are so worthy +of our veneration, seeing we believe, both of us, that you saved us +yonder in the East, from that tomb of which you speak, or rather from +the jaws of lions or a cruel death by torments." + +"Perchance I did, I or the gods of which I am the instrument. At least I +remember that I sent you certain messages in answer to a prayer for help +that reached me, here in my darkness. For know that since we parted I +have gone quite blind so that I must use this maiden's eyes to read what +is written in yonder divining-cup. Well, it makes the darkness of this +sepulchre easier to bear and prepares me for my own. 'Tis full a hundred +and twenty years since first I looked upon the light, and now the time +of sleep draws near. Come hither, my nephew, and kiss me on the brow, +remembering in your strength that a day will dawn when as I am, so shall +you be, if the gods spare you so long." + +So I kissed him, not without fear, for the old man was unearthly. Then +he sent Karema from the place and bade me tell him my story, which I +did. Why he did this I cannot say, since he seemed to know it already +and once or twice corrected me in certain matters that I had forgotten, +for instance as to the exact words that I had used to the Great King in +my rage and as to the fashion in which I was tied in the boat. When I +had done, he said, + +"So you gave the name of Amada to the Great King, did you? Well, +you could have done nothing else if you wished to go on living, and +therefore cannot be blamed. Yet before all is finished I think it will +bring you into trouble, Shabaka, since among many gifts, the gods did +not give that of reason to women. If so, bear it, since it is better to +have trouble and be alive than to have none and be dead, that is, for +those whose work is still to do in the world. And you, or rather Bes, +stole the White Signet of signets of which, although it is so simple and +ancient, there is not the like for power in the whole world. That +was well done since it will be useful for a while. And now Peroa has +determined to rebel against the King, which also is well done. Oh! +trouble not to tell me of that business for I know all. But what would +you learn of me, Shabaka?" + +"I am instructed to learn from you the end of these great matters, my +Uncle." + +"Are you mad, Shabaka, that you should think me a god who can read the +future?" + +"Not at all, my Uncle, who know that you can if you will." + +"Call the maiden," he said. + +So Bes went out and brought her in. + +"Be seated, Karema, there in front of the altar, and look into my eyes." + +She obeyed and presently seemed to go to sleep for her head nodded. Then +he said, + +"Wake, woman, look into the water in the bowl upon the altar and tell me +what you see." + +She appeared to wake, though I perceived that this was not really so, +for she seemed a different woman with a fixed face that frightened me, +and wide and frozen eyes. She stared into the silver bowl, then spoke in +a new voice, as though some spirit used her tongue. + +"I see myself crowned a queen in a land I hate," she said coldly, a +saying at which I gasped. "I am seated on a throne beside yonder dwarf," +a saying at which Bes gasped. "Although so hideous, this dwarf is a +great man with a good heart, a cunning mind and the courage of a lion. +Also his blood is royal." + +Here Bes rolled his eyes and smiled, but Tanofir did not seem in the +least astonished, and said, + +"Much of this is known to me and the rest can be guessed. Pass on to +what will happen in Egypt, before the spirit leaves you." + +"There will be war in Egypt," she answered. "I see fightings; Shabaka +and others lead the Egyptians. The Easterns are driven away or slain. +Peroa rules as Pharaoh, I see him on his throne. Shabaka is driven away +in his turn, I see him travelling south with the dwarf and with +myself, looking very sad. Time passes. I see the moons float by; I see +messengers reach Shabaka, sent by Peroa and you O holy Tanofir; they +tell of trouble in Egypt. I see Shabaka and the dwarf coming north at +the head of a great army of black men armed with bows. With them I come +rejoicing, for my heart seems to shine. He reaches a temple on the Nile +about which is camped another great army, a countless army of Easterns +under the command of the King of kings. Shabaka and the dwarf give +battle to that army and the fray is desperate. They destroy it, they +drive it into the Nile; the Nile runs red with blood. The Great King +falls, an arrow from the bow of Shabaka is in his heart. He enters +the temple, a conqueror, and there lies Peroa, dying or dead. A veiled +priestess is there before an image, I cannot see her face. Shabaka looks +on her. She stretches out her arms to him, her eyes burn with woman's +love, her breast heaves, and above the image frowns and threatens. All +is done, for Tanofir, Master of spirits, you die, yonder in the temple +on the Nile, and therefore I can see no more. The power that comes +through you, has left me." + +Then once more she became as a woman asleep. + +"You have heard, Shabaka and Bes," said Tanofir quietly and stroking his +long white beard, "and what that maiden seemed to read in the water you +may believe or disbelieve as you will." + +"What do you believe, O holy Tanofir?" I asked. + +"The only part of the story whereof I am sure," he replied, evading a +direct answer, "is that which said that I shall die, and that when I +am dead I shall no longer be able to cause the maiden Karema to see +visions. For the rest I do not know. These things may happen or they may +not. But," he added with a note of warning in his voice, "whether they +happen or not, my counsel to you both is that you say nothing of them +beforehand." + +"What then shall we report to those who bid me seek the oracle of your +wisdom, O Tanofir?" + +"You can tell them that my wisdom declared that the omens were mixed +with good and evil, but that time would show the truth. Hush now, the +maiden is about to awake and must not be frightened. Also it is time for +me to be led from this sepulchre to where I sleep, for I think that Ra +has set and I am weary. Oh! Shabaka, why do you seek to peer into the +future, which from day to day will unroll itself as does a scroll? Be +content with the present, man, and take what Fate gives you of good or +ill, not seeking to learn what offerings he hides beneath his robe in +the days and the years and the centuries to come." + +"Yet you have sought to learn those things, O Tanofir, and not in vain." + +"Aye and what have they made of me? A blind old hermit weighed down with +the weight of years and holding in my fingers but some few threads that +with pain and grief I have plucked from the fringe of Wisdom's robe. Be +warned by me, Nephew. While you are a man, live the life of a man, and +when you become a spirit, live the life of a spirit. But do not seek to +mix the two together like oil and wine, and thus spoil both. I am glad +to learn, O Bes, that you are going to make a king's, or a slave's wife, +whichever it may be, of this maiden, seeing that I love her well and +hold this trade unwholesome for her. She will be better bearing babes +than reading visions in a diviner's cup, and I will pray the gods that +they may not be dwarfs as you are, but take on the likeness of their +mother, who tells me that she is fair. Hush! she stirs. + +"Karema, are you awake? Good. Then lead me from the sepulchre, that I +may make my evening prayer beneath the stars. Go, Shabaka and Bes, you +are brave men, both of you, and I am glad to have the one for nephew +and the other for pupil. My greetings to your mother, Tiu. She is a good +woman and a true, one to whom you will do well to hearken. To the lady +Amada also, and bid her study her beauteous face in a mirror and not be +holy overmuch, since too great holiness often thwarts itself and ends in +trouble for the unholy flesh. Still she loves pearls like other women, +does she not, and even the statue of Isis likes to be adorned. As for +you, Bes, though I think that is not your name, do not lie except when +you are obliged, for jugglers who play with too many knives are apt +to cut their fingers. Also give no more evil counsel to your Master +on matters that have to do with woman. Now farewell. Let me hear how +fortune favours you from time to time, Shabaka, for you take part in a +great game, such as I loved in my youth before I became a holy hermit. +Oh! if they had listened to me, things would have been different in +Egypt to-day. But it was written otherwise, and as ever, women were the +scribes. Good night, good night, good night! I am glad that my thought +reached you yonder in the East, and taught you what to say and do. It +is well to be wise sometimes, for others' sake, but not for our own, oh! +not for our own." + + + +"Master," said Bes as we ambled homewards beneath the stars, "the holy +Tanofir is a man for thought to feed on, since having climbed to the +topmost peak of holiness, he does not seem to like its cold air and +warns off those who would follow in his footsteps." + +"Then he might have spared himself the pains in your case, Bes, or in my +own for that matter, since we shall never come so high." + +"No, Master, and I am glad to have his leave to stay lower down, since +that hot place of dead bulls is not one which I wish to inhabit in my +age, making use of a maiden to stare into a pot of water, and there read +marvels, which I could invent better for myself after a jug or two of +wine. Oh! the holy Tanofir is quite right. If these things are going +to happen let them happen, for we cannot change them by knowing of them +beforehand. Who wishes to know, Master, if his throat will be cut?" + +"Or that he will be married," I suggested. + +"Just so, Master, seeing that such prophecies end in becoming truths +because we make them true, feeling that we must. Thus, now I must marry +yonder Karema if she will marry me for fear lest I should prove the holy +Tanofir to be what he called me--a liar." + +I laughed and then asked Bes if he had taken note of what the seeress +said of our flight south and our return thence with a great army of +black men armed with bows. + +"Yes, Master," he answered gravely, "and I think this army can be none +other than that of the Ethiopians of whom by right I am the King. This +very night I send messengers to tell those who rule in my place that I +still live and am changing my mind on the matter of marriage. Also that +if I do change it I may return to them, the wisest man who ever wore the +crown of Ethiopia, having journeyed all about the world and collected +much knowledge." + +"Perhaps, Bes, those who rule in your place may not wish to give it up +to you. Perhaps they will kill you." + +"Have no fear, Master; as I have told you, the Ethiopians are a faithful +people. Moreover they know that such a deed would bring the curse of the +Grasshopper on them, since then the locusts would appear and eat up all +their land, and when they were starving their enemies would attack them. +Lastly they are a very tall folk and simple-minded and would not wish +to miss the chance of being ruled over by the wisest dwarf in all the +world, if only because it would be something new to them, Master." + +Again I laughed thinking that Bes was jesting according to his fashion. +But when that night, chancing to go round the corner of the house, I +came upon him with a circlet of feathers round his head and his big bow +in his hand, addressing three great black men who knelt before him as +though he were a god, I changed my mind. As I withdrew he caught sight +of me and said, + +"I pray you, my lord Shabaka, stay one moment." Then he spoke to the +three men in his own language, translating sentence by sentence to me +what he said to them. Briefly it was this:-- + +"Say to the Lords and Councillors of the Ancient Kingdom that I, the +Karoon" (for such it seemed was his title) "have a friend named the lord +Shabaka, he whom you see before you, who again and again has saved my +life, nursing me in his arms as a mother nurses her babe, and who is, +after me, the bravest and the wisest man in all the world. Say to them +that if indeed I double myself by marriage and return having fulfilled +the law, I will beg this mighty prince to accompany me, and that if he +consents that will be the most joyful day which the Ethiopians have seen +for a thousand years, since he will teach them wisdom and lead their +armies in great and glorious battles. Let the priests of the Grasshopper +pray therefore that he may consent to do so. Now salute the mighty lord +Shabaka who can send one arrow through all three of you and two more +behind, and depart, tarrying not day or night till you reach the land +of Ethiopia. Then when you have delivered the message of Karoon to the +Captains and the Councillors, return, or let others return and seek me +out wherever I may be, bringing of the gold of Ethiopia and other gifts, +together with their answer, seeing that I and the lord Shabaka who have +the world beneath our feet, will not come to a land where we are not +welcome." + +So these great men saluted me as though I were the King of kings +himself, after which they rubbed their foreheads in the dust before Bes, +said something which I did not understand, leapt to their feet, crying +"Karoon" and sprang away into the night. + +"It is good to have been a slave, Master," said Bes when they had gone, +"since it teaches one that it is even better to be a king, at least +sometimes." + +Here I may add that during the days which followed Bes was often absent. +When I asked him where he had gone, he would answer, to drink in the +wisdom of the holy Tanofir by help of a certain silver vessel that the +maiden Karema held to his lips. From all of which I gathered that he was +wooing the lady who had called herself the Cup of Tanofir, and wondered +how the business went, though as he said no more I did not ask him. + +Indeed I had little time to talk with Bes about such light matters, +since things moved apace in Memphis. Within six days all the great lords +left in Upper Egypt were sworn to the revolt under the leadership of +Peroa, and hour by hour their vassals or hired mercenaries flowed into +the city. These it was my duty to weld into an army, and at this task I +toiled without cease, separating them into regiments and drilling them, +also arranging for the arming and victualling of the boats of war. Then +news came that Idernes was advancing from Sais with a great force of +Easterns, all the garrison of Lower Egypt indeed, as his messengers +said, to answer the summons conveyed to him under the private Seal of +seals. + +Of Amada during this time I saw little, only meeting her now and again +at the table of Peroa, or elsewhere in public. For the rest it pleased +her to keep away from me. Once or twice I tried to find her alone, only +to discover that she was engaged in the service of the goddess. Once, +too, as she left Peroa's table, I whispered into her ear that I wished +to speak with her. But she shook her head, saying, + +"After the new moon, Shabaka. Then you shall speak with me as much as +you wish." + +Thus it came about that never could I find opportunity to tell her of +that matter of what had happened at the court of the Great King. Still +every morning she sent me some token, flowers or trifling gifts, and +once a ring that must have belonged to her forefathers, since on its +bezel was engraved the royal _uraeus_, together with the signs of long +life and health, which ring I wore hung about my neck but not upon my +finger, fearing lest that emblem of royalty might offend Peroa or some +of his House, if they chanced to see it. So in answer I also sent her +flowers and other gifts, and for the rest was content to wait. + +All of which things my mother noted with a smile, saying that the lady +Amada showed a wonderful discretion, such as any man would value in +a wife of so much beauty, which also must be most pleasing to her +mistress, the goddess Isis. To this I answered that I valued it less as +a lover than I might do as a husband. My mother smiled again and spoke +of something else. + +Thus things went on while the storm-clouds gathered over Egypt. + +One night I could not sleep. It was that of the new moon and I knew that +during those hours of darkness, before the solemn conclave of the high +priests, with pomp and ceremony in the sanctuary of the temple, Amada +had undergone absolution of her vows to Isis and been given liberty +to wed as other women do. Indeed my mother, in virtue of her rank as a +Singer of Amen, had been present at the rite, and returning, told me all +that happened. + +She described how Amada had appeared, clad as a priestess, how she had +put up her prayer to the four high priests seated in state, demanding to +be loosed from her vow "for the sake of her heart and of Egypt." + +Then one of the high priests, he of Amen, I think, as the chief of them +all, had advanced to the statue of the goddess Isis and whispered the +prayer to it, whereon after a pause the goddess nodded thrice in the +sight of all present, thereby signifying her assent. This done the high +priest returned and proclaimed the absolution in the ancient words "for +the sake of the suppliant's heart and of Egypt" and with it the blessing +of the goddess on her union, adding, however, the formula, "at thy +prayer, daughter and spouse, I, the goddess Isis, cut the rope that +binds thee to me on earth. Yet if thou should'st tie it again, know that +it may never more be severed, for if thou strivest so to do, it shall +strangle thee in whatever shape thou livest on the earth throughout the +generations, and with thee the man thou choosest and those who give thee +to him. Thus saith Isis the Queen of Heaven." + +"What does that mean?" I asked my mother. + +"It means, my son, that if, having broken her vows to Isis, a woman +should repeat them and once more enter the service of the goddess, and +then for the second time seek to break them, she and the man for whom +she did this thing would be like flies in a spider's web, and that not +only in this life, but in any other that may be given to them in the +world." + +"It seems that Isis has a long arm," I said. + +"Without doubt a very long arm, my son, since Isis, by whatever name she +is called, is a power that does not die or forget." + +"Well, Mother, in this case she can have no reason to remember, since +never again will Amada be her priestess." + +"I think not, Shabaka. Yet who can be sure of what a woman will or will +not do, now or hereafter? For my part I am glad that I have served Amen +and not Isis, and that after I was wed." + + + + +CHAPTER XII. THE SLAYING OF IDERNES + +Whilst I was still talking to my mother I received an urgent summons to +the palace. I went and in a little ante-chamber met Amada alone, who, +I could see, was waiting there for me. She was arrayed in her secular +dress and wore the insignia of royalty, looking exceedingly beautiful. +Moreover, her whole aspect had changed, for now she was no longer a +priestess sworn to mysteries, but just a lovely and a loving woman. + +"It is done, Shabaka," she whispered, "and thou art mine and I am +thine." + +Then I opened my arms and she sank upon my breast and for the first time +I kissed her on the lips, kissed her many times and oh! my heart almost +burst with joy. But all too fleeting was that sweet moment of love's +first fruits, whereon I had sown the seed so many years ago, for while +we yet clung together, whispering sweet things into each other's ears, +I heard a voice calling me and was forced to go away before I had even +time to ask when we might be wed. + +Within the Council was gathered. The news before it was that the Satrap +Idernes lay camped upon the Nile with some ten thousand men, not far +from the great pyramids, that is, within striking distance of Memphis. +Moreover his messengers announced that he purposed to visit the Prince +Peroa that day with a small guard only, to inquire into this matter of +the Signet, for which visit he demanded a safe-conduct sworn in the +name of the Great King and in those of the gods of Egypt and the +East. Failing this he would at once attack Memphis notwithstanding +any commands that might be given him under the Signet, which, until he +beheld it with his own eyes, he believed to be a forgery. + +The question was--what answer should be sent to him? The debate that +followed proved long and earnest. Some were in favour of attacking +Idernes at once although his camp was reported to be strongly entrenched +and flanked on one side by the Nile and on the other by the rising +ground whereon stood the great sphinx and the pyramids. Others, among +whom I was numbered, thought otherwise, for I hold that some evil god +led me to give counsel that day which, if it were good for Egypt was +most ill for my own fortunes. Perchance this god was Isis, angry at the +loss of her votary. + +I pointed out that by receiving Idernes Peroa would gain time which +would enable a body of three thousand men, if not more, who were +advancing down the Nile, to join us before they were perhaps cut off +from the city, and thus give us a force as large as his, or larger. Also +I showed that having summoned Idernes under the Signet, we should put +ourselves in the wrong if we refused to receive him and instead attacked +him at once. + +A third party was in favour of allowing him to enter Memphis with his +guard and then making him prisoner or killing him. As to this I pointed +out again that not only would it involve the breaking of a solemn oath, +which might bring the curse of the gods upon our cause and proclaim us +traitors to the world, but it would also be foolish since Idernes was +not the only general of the Easterns and if we cut off him and his +escort, it would avail us little for then the rest of the Easterns would +fight in a just cause. + +So in the end it was agreed that the safe-conduct should be sent and +that Peroa should receive Idernes that very day at a great feast given +in his honour. Accordingly it was sent in the ancient form, the oaths +being taken before the messengers that neither he nor those with him +who must not number more than twenty men, would be harmed in Memphis and +that he would be guarded on the road back until he reached the outposts +of his own camp. + +This done, I was despatched up the Nile bank in a chariot accompanied +only by Bes, to hurry on the march of those troops of which I have +spoken, so that they might reach Memphis by sundown. Before I went, +however, I had some words alone with Peroa. He told me that my immediate +marriage with the lady Amada would be announced at the feast that night. +Thereon I prayed him to deliver to Amada the rope of priceless rose-hued +pearls which was in his keeping, as my betrothal gift, with the prayer +that she would wear them at the feast for my sake. There was no time for +more. + +The journey up Nile proved long for the road was bad being covered with +drifted sand in some places and deep in mud from the inundation waters +in others. At length I found the troops just starting forward after +their rest, and rejoiced to see that there were more of them than I +had thought. I told the case to their captains, who promised to make a +forced march and to be in Memphis two hours before midnight. + +As we drove back Bes said to me suddenly, + +"Do you know why you could not find me this morning?" + +I answered that I did not. + +"Because a good slave should always run a pace ahead of his master, to +clear the road and tell him of its pitfalls. I was being married. The +Cup of the holy Tanofir is now by law and right Queen of the Ethiopians. +So when you meet her again you must treat her with great respect, as I +do already." + +"Indeed, Bes," I said laughing, "and how did you manage that business? +You must have wooed her well during these days which have been so full +for both of us." + +"I did not woo her over much, Master; indeed, the time was lacking. I +wooed the holy Tanofir, which was more important." + +"The holy Tanofir, Bes?" I exclaimed. + +"Yes, Master. You see this beautiful Cup of his is after all--his +beautiful Cup. Her mind is the shadow of his mind and from her he pours +out his wisdom. So I told him all the case. At first he was angry, for, +notwithstanding the words he spoke to you and me, when it came to a +point the holy Tanofir, being after all much like other men, did not +wish to lose his Cup. Indeed had he been a few score of years younger +I am not sure but that he would have forgotten some of his holiness +because of her. Still he came to see matters in the true light at +last--for your sake, Master, not for mine, since his wisdom told him +it was needful that I should become King of the Ethiopians again, to do +which I must be married. At any rate he worked upon the mind of that Cup +of his--having first settled that she should procure a younger sister of +her own to fill her place--in such fashion that when at length I spoke +to her on the matter, she did not say no." + +"No doubt because she was fond of you for yourself, Bes. A woman would +not marry even to please the holy Tanofir." + +"Oh! Master," he replied in a new voice, a very sad voice, "I would +that I could think so. But look at me, a misshapen dwarf, accursed from +birth. Could a fair lady like this Karema wed such a one for his own +sake?" + +"Well, Bes, there might be other reasons besides the holy Tanofir," I +said hurriedly. + +"Master, there were no other reasons, unless the Cup, when it is awake, +remembers what it has held in trance, which I do not believe. I wooed +her as I was, not telling her that I am also King of the Ethiopians, or +any more than I seem to be. Moreover the holy Tanofir told her nothing, +for he swore as much to me and he does not lie." + +"And what did she say to you, Bes?" I asked, for I was curious. + +"She lied fast enough, Master. She said--well, what she said when first +we met her, that there was more in me than the eye saw and that she who +had lived so much with spirits looked to the spirit rather than to the +flesh, and that dwarf or no she loved me and desired nothing better than +to marry me and be my true and faithful wife and helpmeet. She lied so +well that once or twice almost I believed her. At any rate I took her +at her word, not altogether for myself, believe me, Master, but because +without doubt what the holy Tanofir has shown us will come to pass, and +it is necessary to you that I should be married." + +"You married her to help me, Bes?" + +"That is so, Master--after all, but a little thing, seeing that she is +beautiful, well born and very pleasant, and I am fond of her. Also I do +her no wrong for she has bought more than she bargained for, and if she +has any that are not dwarfs, her children may be kings. I do not think," +he added reflectively, "that even the faithful Ethiopians could accept +a second dwarf as their king. One is very well for a change, but not two +or three. The stomach of a tall people would turn against them." + +I took Bes's hand and pressed it, understanding the depth of his +love and sacrifice. Also some spirit--doubtless it came from the holy +Tanofir--moved me to say, + +"Be comforted, Bes, for I am sure of this. Your children will be strong +and straight and tall, more so than any of their forefathers that went +before them." + +This indeed proved to be the case, for their father's deformity was but +an accident, not born in his blood. + +"Those are good-omened words, Master, for which I thank you, though the +holy Tanofir said the like when he wed us with the sacred words this +morning and gave us his blessing, endowing my wife with certain gifts of +secret wisdom which he said would be of use to her and me." + +"Where is she now, Bes?" + +"With the holy Tanofir, Master, until I fetch her, training her younger +sister to be a diviner's worthy Cup. Only perhaps I shall never send, +seeing that I think there will be fighting soon." + +"Yes, Bes, but being newly married you will do well to leave it to +others." + +"No, no, Master. Battle is better than wives. Moreover, could you think +that I would leave you to stand alone in the fray? Why if I did and harm +came to you I should die of shame or hang myself and then Karema would +never be a queen. So both her trades would be gone, since after marriage +she cannot be a Cup, and her heart would break. But here are the gates +of Memphis, so we will forget love and think of war." + + + +An hour later I and my mother, the lady Tiu, stood in the banqueting +hall of the palace with many others, and learned that the Satrap Idernes +and his escort had reached Memphis and would be present at the feast. A +while later trumpets blew and a glittering procession entered the hall. +At the head of it was Peroa who led Idernes by the hand. This Eastern +was a big, strong man with tired and anxious eyes, such as I had noted +were common among the servants of the Great King who from day to day +never knew whether they would fill a Satrapy or a grave. He was clad in +gorgeous silks and wore a cap upon his head in which shone a jewel, but +beneath his robes I caught the glint of mail. + +As he came into the hall and noted the number and quality of the guests +and the stir and the expectant look upon their faces, he started as +though he were afraid, but recovering himself, murmured some courteous +words to his host and advanced towards the seat of honour which was +pointed out to him upon the Prince's right. After these two followed the +wife of Peroa with her son and daughters. Then, walking alone in token +of her high rank, appeared Amada, the Royal Lady of Egypt, wonderfully +arrayed. Now, however, she wore no emblems of royalty, either because it +was not thought wise that these should be shown in the presence of the +Satrap, or because she was about to be given in marriage to one who was +not royal. Indeed, as I noted with joy, her only ornament was the rope +of rose-hued pearls which were arranged in a double row upon her breast. + +She searched me out with her eyes, smiled, touching the pearls with her +finger, and passed on to her place next to the daughters of Peroa, at +one end of the head table which was shaped like a horse's hoof. + +After her came the nobles who had accompanied Idernes, grave Eastern +men. One of these, a tall captain with eyes like a hawk, seemed familiar +to me. Nor was I mistaken, for Bes, who stood behind me and whose +business it would be to wait on me at the feast, whispered in my ear, + +"Note that man. He was present when you were brought before the Great +King from the boat and saw and heard all that passed." + +"Then I wish he were absent now," I whispered back, for at the words a +sudden fear shot through me, of what I could not say. + +By degrees all were seated in their appointed places. Mine was by that +of my mother at a long table that stood as it were across the ends of +the high table but at a little distance from them, so that I was almost +opposite to Peroa and Idernes and could see Amada, although she was too +far away for me to be able to speak to her. + +The feast began and at first was somewhat heavy and silent, since, save +for the talk of courtesy, none spoke much. At length wine, whereof I +noted that Idernes drank a good deal, as did his escort, but Peroa and +the Egyptians little, loosened men's tongues and they grew merrier. +For it was the custom of the people of the Great King to discuss both +private and public business when full of strong drink, but of the +Egyptians when they were quite sober. This was well known to Peroa and +many of us, especially to myself who had been among them, which was one +of the reasons why Idernes had been asked to meet us at a feast, where +we might have the advantage of him in debate. + +Presently the Satrap noted the splendid cup from which he drank and +asked some question concerning it of the hawk-eyed noble of whom I have +spoken. When it had been answered he said in a voice loud enough for me +to overhear, + +"Tell me, O Prince Peroa, was this cup ever that of the Great King which +it so much resembles?" + +"So I understand, O Idernes," answered Peroa. "That is, until it became +mine by gift from the lord Shabaka, who received it from the Great +King." + +An expression of horror appeared upon the face of the Satrap and upon +those of his nobles. + +"Surely," he answered, "this Shabaka must hold the King's favours +lightly if he passes them on thus to the first-comer. At the least, let +not the vessel which has been hallowed by the lips of the King of kings +be dishonoured by the humblest of his servants. I pray you, O Prince, +that I may be given another cup." + +So a new goblet was brought to him, Peroa trying to pass the matter off +as a jest by appealing to me to tell the story of the cup. Then I said +while all listened, + +"O Prince, the most high Satrap is mistaken. The King of kings did not +give me the cup, I bought it from him in exchange for a certain famous +bow, and therefore held it not wrong to pass it on to you, my lord." + +Idernes made no answer and seemed to forget the matter. + +A while later, however, his eye fell upon Amada and the rose-hued pearls +she wore, and again he asked a question of the hawk-eyed captain, then +said, + +"Think me not discourteous, O Prince, if I seem to look upon yonder +lovely lady which in our country, where women do not appear in public, +we should think it an insult to do. But on her fair breast I see certain +pearls like to some that are known throughout the world, which for many +years have been worn by those who sit upon the throne of the East. I +would ask if they are the same, or others?" + +"I do not know, O Idernes," answered Peroa; "I only know that the +lord Shabaka brought them from the East. Inquire of him, if it be your +pleasure." + +"Shabaka again----" began Idernes, but I cut him short, saying, + +"Yes, O Satrap, Shabaka again. I won those pearls in a bet from the +Great King, and with them a certain weight of gold. This I think you +knew before, since your messenger of a while ago was whipped for +trying to steal them, which under the rods he said he did by command, O +Satrap." + +To this bold speech Idernes made no answer. Only his captains frowned +and many of the Egyptians murmured approval. + +After this the feast went on without further incident for a while, +the Easterns always drinking more wine, till at length the tables were +cleared and all of the meaner sort departed from the hall, save the +butlers and the personal servants such as Bes, who stood behind the +seats of their masters. There came a silence such as precedes the +bursting of a storm, and in the midst of it Idernes spoke, somewhat +thickly. + +"I did not come here, O Peroa," he said, "from the seat of government +at Sais to eat your meats and drink your wine. I came to speak of high +matters with you." + +"It is so, O Satrap," answered Peroa. "And now what may be your will? +Would you retire to discuss them with me and my Councillors?" + +"Where is the need, O Peroa, seeing that I have naught to say which may +not be heard by all?" + +"As it pleases you. Speak on, O Satrap." + +"I have been summoned here, Prince Peroa, by a writing under what seems +to be the Signet of signets--the ancient White Seal that for generations +unknown has been worn by the forefathers of the King of kings. Where is +this Signet?" + +"Here," said the Prince, opening his robe. "Look on it, Satrap, and let +your lords look, but let none of you dare to touch it." + +Idernes looked long and earnestly, and so did some of his people, +especially the lord with the hawk eyes. Then they stared at each other +bewildered and whispered together. + +"It seems to be the very Seal--the White Seal itself!" exclaimed Idernes +at length. "Tell me now, Peroa. How came this sacred thing that dwells +in the East hither into Egypt?" + +"The lord Shabaka brought it to me with certain letters from the Great +King, O Satrap." + +"Shabaka for the third time, by the holy Fire!" cried Idernes. "He +brought the cup; he brought the famous pearls; he brought the gold, and +he brought the Signet of signets. What is there then that he did not +bring? Perchance he has the person of the King of kings himself in his +keeping!" + +"Not that, O Satrap, only the commands of the King of kings which +are prepared ready to deliver to you under the White Seal that you +acknowledge." + +"And what may they be, Egyptian?" + +"This, O Satrap: That you and all the army which you have brought with +you retire to Sais and thence out of Egypt as quickly as you may, or pay +for disobedience with your lives." + +Now Idernes and his captains gasped. + +"Why this is rebellion!" he said. + +"No, O Satrap, only the command of the Great King given under the White +Seal," and drawing a roll from his breast, Peroa laid it on his brow and +cast it down before Idernes, adding, + +"Obey the writing and the Signet, or by virtue of my commission, as soon +as you are returned to your army and your safe-conduct is expired, I +fall upon you and destroy you." + +Idernes looked about him like a wolf in a trap, then asked, + +"Do you mean to murder me here?" + +"Not so," answered Peroa, "for you have our safe-conduct and Egyptians +are honourable men. But you are dismissed your office and ordered to +leave Egypt." + +Idernes thought a little while, then said, + +"If I leave Egypt, there is at least one whom I am commanded to take +with me under orders and writings that you will not dispute, a maiden +named Amada whom the Great King would number among his women. I am told +it is she who sits yonder--a jewel indeed, fair as the pearls upon her +breast which thus will return into the King's keeping. Let her be handed +over, for she rides with me at once." + +Now in the midst of an intense silence Peroa answered, + +"Amada, the Royal Lady of Egypt, cannot be sent to dwell in the House of +Women of the Great King without the consent of the lord Shabaka, whose +she is." + +"Shabaka for the fourth time!" said Idernes, glaring at me. "Then let +Shabaka come too. Or his head in a basket will suffice, since that will +save trouble afterwards, also some pain to Shabaka. Why, now I remember. +It was this very Shabaka whom the Great King condemned to death by +the boat for a crime against his Majesty, and who bought his life by +promising to deliver to him the fairest and most learned woman in the +world--the lady Amada of Egypt. And thus does the knave keep his oath!" + +Now I leapt to my feet, as did most of those present. Only Amada kept +her seat and looked at me. + +"You lie!" I cried, "and were it not for your safe-conduct I would kill +you for the lie." + +"I lie, do I?" sneered Idernes. "Speak then, you who were present, and +tell this noble company whether I lie," and he pointed to the hawk-eyed +lord. + +"He does not lie," said the Captain. "I was in the Court of the Great +King and heard yonder Shabaka purchase pardon by promising to hand over +his cousin, the lady Amada, to the King. The pearls were entrusted to +him as a gift to her and I see she wears them. The gold also of which +mention has been made was to provide for her journey in state to the +East, or so I heard. The cup was his guerdon, also a sum for his own +purse." + +"It is false," I shouted. "The name of Amada slipped my lips by +chance--no more." + +"So it slipped your lips by chance, did it?" sneered Idernes. "Now, if +you are wise, you will suffer the lady Amada to slip your hand, and not +by chance. But let us have done with this cunning knave. Prince, will +you hand over yonder fair woman, or will you not?" + +"Satrap, I will not," answered Peroa. "The demand is an insult put +forward to force us to rebellion, since there is no man in Egypt who +will not be ready to die in defence of the Royal Lady of Egypt." + +This statement was received with a shout of applause by every Egyptian +in the hall. Idernes waited until it had died away, then said, + +"Prince Peroa and Egyptians, you have conveyed to me certain commands +sealed with the Signet of signets, which I think was stolen by yonder +Shabaka. Now hearken; until this matter is made clear I will obey those +commands thus far. I will return with my army to Sais and there wait +until I have received the orders of the Great King, after report made to +him. If so much as an arrow is shot at us on our march, it will be open +rebellion, as the price of which Egypt shall be crushed as she was never +crushed before, and every one of you here present shall lose his head, +save only the lady Amada who is the property of the Great King. Now I +thank you for your hospitality and demand that you escort me and those +with me back to my camp, since it seems that here we are in the midst of +enemies." + +"Before you go, Idernes," I shouted, "know that you and your lying +captain shall pay with your lives for your slander on me." + +"Many will pay with their lives for this night's work, O thief of pearls +and seals," answered the Satrap, and turning, left the hall with his +company. + +Now I searched for Amada, but she also had gone with the ladies of +Peroa's household who feared lest the feast should end in blows and +bloodshed, also lest she should be snatched away. Indeed of all the +women in the hall, only my mother remained. + +"Search out the lady Amada," I said to her, "and tell her the truth." + +"Yes, my son," she answered thoughtfully; "but what is the truth? I +understood it was Bes who first gave the name of the lady Amada to the +Great King. Now we learn from your own lips that it was you. Wise would +you have been, my son, if you had bitten out your tongue before you said +it, since this is a matter that any woman may well misunderstand." + +"Her name was surprised out of me, Mother. It was Bes who spoke to the +King of the beauty of a certain lady of Egypt." + +"And I think, my son, it was Bes who told Peroa and his guests that he +and not you had given the King her name, which you do not seem to have +denied. Well, doubtless both of you are to blame for foolishness, no +more, since well I know that you would have died ten times over rather +than buy your life at the price of the honour of the Lady of Egypt. This +I will say to her as soon as I may, praying that it may not be too late, +and afterwards you shall tell me everything, which you would have done +well to do at first, if Bes, as I think, had not been over cunning after +the fashion of black people, and counselled you otherwise. See, Peroa +calls you and I must go, for there are greater matters afoot than that +of who let slip the name of the lady Amada to the King of kings." + +So she went and there followed a swift council of war, the question +being whether we were to strike at the Satrap's army or to allow it to +retreat to Sais. In my turn I was asked for my judgment of the issue, +and answered, + +"Strike and at once, since we cannot hope to storm Sais, which is far +away. Moreover such strength as we have is now gathered and if it is +idle and perhaps unpaid, will disperse again. But if we can destroy +Idernes and his army, it will be long before the King of kings, who is +sending all his multitudes against the Greeks, can gather another, and +during this time Egypt may again become a nation and able to protect +herself under Peroa her own Pharaoh." + +In the end I, and those who thought like me, prevailed, so that before +the dawn I was sailing down the Nile with the fleet, having two thousand +men under my command. Also I took with me the six hunters whom I had won +from the Great King, since I knew them to be faithful, and thought that +their knowledge of the Easterns and their ways might be of service. Our +orders were to hold a certain neck of land between the river and the +hills where the army of Idernes must pass, until Peroa and all his +strength could attack him from behind. + +Four hours later, the wind being very favourable to us, we reached that +place and there took up our station and having made all as ready as we +could, rested. + +In the early afternoon Bes awakened me from the heavy sleep into which +I had fallen, and pointed to the south. I looked and through the desert +haze saw the chariots of Idernes advancing in ordered ranks, and after +them the masses of his footmen. + +Now we had no chariots, only archers, and two regiments armed with long +spears and swords. Also the sailors on the boats had their slings and +throwing javelins. Lastly the ground was in our favour since it sloped +upwards and the space between the river and the hills was narrow, +somewhat boggy too after the inundation of the Nile, which meant that +the chariots must advance in a column and could not gather sufficient +speed to sweep over us. + +Idernes and his captains noted all this also, and halted. Then they sent +a herald forward to ask who we were and to command us in the name of the +Great King to make way for the army of the Great King. + +I answered that we were Egyptians, ordered by Peroa to hold the road +against the Satrap who had done affront to Egypt by demanding that +its Royal Lady should be given over to him to be sent to the East as +a woman-slave, and that if the Satrap wished to clear a road, he could +come and do so. Or if it pleased him he could go back towards Memphis, +or stay where he was, since we did not wish to strike the first blow. I +added this, + +"I who speak on behalf of the Prince Peroa, am the lord Shabaka, that +same man whom but last night the Satrap and a certain captain of his +named a liar. Now the Easterns are brave men and we of Egypt have +always heard that among them none is braver than Idernes who gained his +advancement through courage and skill in war. Let him therefore come out +together with the lord who named me a liar, armed with swords only, and +I, who being a liar must also be a coward, together with my servant, a +black dwarf, will meet them man to man in the sight of both the armies, +and fight them to the death. Or if it pleases Idernes better, let him +not come and I will seek him and kill him in the battle, or by him be +killed." + +The herald, having taken stock of me and of Bes at whom he laughed, +returned with the message. + +"Will he come, think you, Master?" asked Bes. + +"Mayhap," I answered, "since it is a shame for an Eastern to refuse +a challenge from any man whom he calls barbarian, and if he did so it +might cost him his life afterwards at the hands of the Great King. Also +if he should fall there are others to take his command, but none who can +wipe away the stain upon his honour." + +"Yes," said Bes; "also they will think me a dwarf of no account, which +makes the task of killing you easy. Well, they shall see." + +Now when I sent this challenge I had more in my mind than a desire to +avenge myself upon Idernes and his captain for the public shame they had +put upon me. I wished to delay the attack of their host upon our little +band and give time for the army of Peroa to come up behind. Moreover, if +I fell it did not greatly matter, except as an omen, seeing that I had +good officers under me who knew all my plans. + +We saw the herald reach the Satrap's army and after a while return +towards us again, which made us think my challenge had been refused, +especially as with him was an officer who, I took it, was sent to spy +out our strength. But this was not so, for the man said, + +"The Satrap Idernes has sworn by the Great King to kill the thief of the +Signet and send his head to the Great King, and fears that if he waits +to meet him in battle, he may slip away. Therefore he is minded to +accept your challenge, O Shabaka, and put an end to you, and indeed +under the laws of the East he may not refuse. But a noble of the Great +King may not fight against a black slave save with a whip, so how can +that noble accept the challenge of the dwarf Bes?" + +"Quite well," answered Bes, "seeing that I am no slave but a free +citizen of Egypt. Moreover, in my own country of Ethiopia I am of +royal blood. Lastly, tell the man this, that if he does not come and +afterwards falls into my hands or into those of the lord Shabaka, he who +talks of whips shall be scourged with them till his life creeps out from +between his bare bones." + +Thus spoke Bes, rolling his great eyes and looking so terrible that the +herald and the officer fell back a step or two. Then I told them that +if my offer did not please them, I myself would fight, first Idernes and +then the noble. So they returned. + +The end of it was that we saw Idernes and his captain advancing, +followed by a guard of ten men. Then after I had explained all things to +my officers, I also advanced with Bes, followed by a guard of ten picked +men. We met between the armies on a little sandy plain at the foot of +the rise and there followed talk between the captains of our guards as +to arms and so forth, but we four said nothing to each other, since the +time for words was past. Only Bes and I sat down upon the sand and spoke +a little together of Amada and Karema and of how they would receive the +news of our victory or deaths. + +"It does not much matter, Master," said Bes at last, "seeing that if we +die we shall never know, and if we live we shall learn for ourselves." + +At length all was arranged and we stood up to face each other, the four +of us being armed in the same way. For as did Idernes and the hawk-eyed +lord, Bes and I wore shirts of mail and helms, those that we had brought +with us from the East. For weapons we had short and heavy swords, small +shields and knives at our girdles. + +"Look your last upon the sun, Thieves," mocked Idernes, "for when you +see it again, it shall be with blind eyes from the points of spears +fastened to the gateway pillars of the Great King's palace." + +"Liars you have lived and liars you shall die," shouted Bes, but I said +nothing. + +Now the agreement was that when the word had been given Idernes and I, +and the noble and Bes, should fight together, but if they killed one of +us, or we killed one of them, the two who survived might fall together +on the remaining man. Remembering this, as he told me afterwards, at the +signal Bes leapt forward like a flash with working face and foam upon +his lips, and before ever I could come to Idernes, how I know not, +had received the blow of the Eastern lord upon his shield and without +striking back, had gripped him in his long arms and wrapped him +round with his bowed legs. In an instant they were on the ground, Bes +uppermost, and I heard the sound of blow upon blow struck with knife or +sword, I knew not which, upon the Eastern's mail, followed by a shout of +victory from the Egyptians which told me that Bes had slain him. + +Now Idernes and I were smiting at each other. He was a taller and +a bigger man than myself, but older and one who had lived too well. +Therefore I thought it wise to keep him at a distance and tire him, +which I did by retreating and catching his sword-cuts on my shield, only +smiting back now and again. + +"He runs! He runs!" shouted the Easterns. "O Idernes, beware the dwarf!" + +"Stand away, Bes," I called; "this is my game," and he obeyed, as often +he had done when we were hunting together. + +Now a shrewd blow from Idernes cut through my helm and staggered me, and +another before I could recover myself, shore the shield from my hand, +whereat the Easterns shouted more loudly than before. Then fear of +defeat entered into me and made me mad, for this Satrap was a great +fighter. With a shout of "Egypt!" I went at him like a wounded lion and +soon it was his turn to stagger back. But alas! I struck too hard, for +my sword snapped upon his mail. + +"The knife!" screamed Bes; "the knife!" + +I hurled the sword hilt in the Satrap's face and drew the dagger from +my belt. Then I ran in beneath his guard and stabbed and stabbed and +stabbed. He gripped me and we went down side by side, rolling over each +other. The gods know how it ended, for things were growing dim to me +when some thrust of mine found a rent in his mail made when the sword +broke and he became weak. His spirit weakened also, for he gasped, + +"Spare my life, Egyptian, and my treasure is yours. I swear it by the +Fire." + +"Not for all the treasure in the world, Slanderer," I panted back +and drove the dagger home to the hilt thrice, until he died. Then I +staggered to my feet, and when the armies saw that it was I who rose +while Idernes lay still a roar of triumph went up from the Egyptians, +answered by a roar of rage from the Easterns. + +With a cry of "Well done, Master!" Bes leapt upon the dead man and hewed +his head from him, as already he had served the hawk-eyed noble. Then +gripping one head in each hand he held them up for the Easterns to see. + +"Men of the Great King," I said, "bear us witness that we have fought +fairly, man to man, when we need not have done so." + +The ten of the Satrap's guard stood silent, but my own shouted, + +"Back, Shabaka! The Easterns charge!" + +I looked and saw them coming like waves of steel, then supported by my +men and preceded by Bes who danced in front shaking the severed heads, I +ran back to my own ranks where one gave me wine to drink and threw +water over my hurts which were but slight. Scarcely was it done when the +battle closed in and soon in it I forgot the deaths of Idernes and the +Eastern liar. + + + + +CHAPTER XIII. AMADA RETURNS TO ISIS + +We fought a very terrible fight that evening there by the banks of Nile. +Our position was good, but we were outnumbered by four or five to one, +and the Easterns and their mercenaries were mad at the death of the +Satrap by my hand. Time upon time they came on furiously, charging up +the slope like wild bulls. For the most part we relied upon our archers +to drive them back, since our half-trained troops could scarcely hope to +stand against the onset of veterans disciplined in war. So taking cover +behind the rocks we rained arrows on them, shooting the horses in the +chariots, and when these were down, pouring our shafts upon the footmen +behind. Myself I took my great black bow and drew it thrice, and each +time I saw a noble fall, for no mail could withstand the arrows which it +sent, and of that art I was a master. None in Egypt could shoot so far +or so straight as I did, save perhaps Peroa himself. I had no time to do +more since always I must be moving up and down the line encouraging my +men. + +Three times we drove them back, after which they grew cunning. Ceasing +from a direct onslaught and keeping what remained of their chariots in +reserve, they sent one body of men to climb along the slope of the hill +where the rocks gave them cover from our arrows, and another to creep +through the reeds and growing crops upon the bank of the river where we +could not see to shoot them well, although the slingers in the ships did +them some damage. + +Thus they attacked us on either flank, and while we were thus engaged +their centre made a charge. Then came the bitterest of the fighting +for now the bows were useless, and it was sword against sword and spear +against spear. Once we broke and I thought that they were through. But +I led a charge against them and drove them back a little way. Still the +issue was doubtful till I saw Bes rush past me grinning and leaping, +and with him a small body of Greeks whom we held in reserve, and I +think that the sight of the terrible dwarf whom they thought a devil, +frightened the Easterns more than did the Greeks. + +At any rate, shouting out something about an evil spirit whom the +Egyptians worshipped, by which I suppose they meant that god after +whom Bes was named, they retreated, leaving many dead but taking their +wounded with them, for they were unbroken. + +At the foot of the slope they reformed and took counsel, then sat down +out of bowshot as though to rest. Now I guessed their plan. It was to +wait till night closed in, which would be soon for the sun was sinking, +and then, when we could not see to shoot, either rush through us by +the weight of numbers, or march back to where the cliffs were lower and +climb them, thus passing us on the higher open land. + +Now we also took counsel, though little came of it, since we did not +know what to do. We were too few to attack so great an army, nor if we +climbed the cliffs could we hope to withstand them in the desert sands, +or to hold our own against them if they charged in the dark. If this +happened it seemed that all we could do would be to fight as long as we +could, after which the survivors of us must take refuge on our boats. So +it came to this, that we should lose the battle and the greater part of +the Easterns would win back to Sais, unless indeed the main army under +Peroa came to our aid. + +Whilst we talked I caused the wounded to be carried to the ships +before it grew too dark to move them. Bes went with them. Presently he +returned, running swiftly. + +"Master," he said, "the evening wind is blowing strong and stirs the +sand, but from a mast-head through it I caught sight of Peroa's banners. +The army comes round the bend of the river not four furlongs away. Now +charge and those Easterns will be caught between the hammer and the +stone, for while they are meeting us they will not look behind." + +So I went down the lines of our little force telling them the good news +and showing them my plan. They listened and understood. We formed up, +those who were left of us, not more than a thousand men perhaps, and +advanced. The Easterns laughed when they saw us coming down the slope, +for they thought that we were mad and that they would kill us every one, +believing as they did that Peroa had no other army. When we were within +bowshot we began to shoot, though sparingly, for but few arrows were +left. Galled by our archery they marshalled their ranks to charge us +again. With a shout we leapt forward to meet them, for now from the +higher ground I saw the chariots of Peroa rushing to our rescue. + +We met, we fought. Surely there had been no such fighting since the days +of Thotmes and Rameses the Great. Still they drove us back till unseen +and unsuspected the chariots and the footmen of Peroa broke on them from +behind, broke on them like a desert storm. They gave, they fled this way +and that, some to the banks of the Nile, some to the hills. By the light +of the setting sun we finished it and ere the darkness closed in the +Great King's army was destroyed, save for the fugitives whom we hunted +down next day. + +Yes, in that battle perished ten thousand of the Easterns and their +mercenaries, and upon its field at dawn we crowned Peroa Pharaoh of +Egypt, and he named me the chief general of his army. There, too, fell +over a thousand of my men and among them those six hunters whom I had +won in the wager with the Great King and brought with me from the East. +Throughout the fray they served me as a bodyguard, fighting furiously, +who knew that they could hope for no mercy from their own people. One by +one they were slain, the last two of them in the charge at sunset. Well, +they were brave and faithful to me, so peace be on their spirits. Better +to die thus than in the den of lions. + + + +In triumph we returned to Memphis, I bringing in the rear-guard and the +spoils. Before Pharaoh and I parted a messenger brought me more good +news. Sure tidings had come that the King of kings had been driven by +revolt in his dominions to embark upon a mighty war with Syria, Greece +and Cyprus and other half-conquered countries, in which, doubtless +by agreement, the fires of insurrection had suddenly burned up. Also +already Peroa's messengers had departed to tell them of what was passing +on the Nile. + +"If this be true," said Peroa when he had heard all, "the Great King +will have no new army to spare for Egypt." + +"It is so, Pharaoh," I answered. "Yet I think he will conquer in this +great war and that within two years you must be prepared to meet him +face to face." + +"Two years are long, Shabaka, and in them, by your help, much may be +done." + +But as it chanced he was destined to be robbed of that help, and this by +the work of Woman the destroyer. + +It happened thus. Amidst great rejoicings Pharaoh reached Memphis and in +the vast temple of Amen laid down our spoils in the presence of the god, +thousands of right hands hewn from the fallen, thousands of swords and +other weapons and tens of chariots, together with much treasure of which +a portion was given to the god. The high priests blessed us in the name +of Amen and of the other gods; the people blessed us and threw flowers +in our path; all the land rejoiced because once more it was free. + +There too that day in the temple with ancient form and ceremonial Peroa +was crowned Pharaoh of Egypt. Sceptres and jewels that had been hid +for generations were brought out by those who knew the secret of their +hiding-places; the crowns that had been worn by old Pharaohs, were set +upon his head; yes, the double crown of the Upper and the Lower Land. +Thus in a Memphis mad with joy at the casting off of the foreign yoke, +he was anointed the first of a new dynasty, and with him his queen. + +I too received honours, for the story of the slaying of Idernes at +my hands and of how I held the pass had gone abroad, so that next to +Pharaoh, I was looked upon as the greatest man in Egypt. Nor was Bes +forgotten, since many of the common people thought that he was a +spirit in the form of a dwarf whom the gods had sent to aid us with his +strength and cunning. Indeed at the close of the ceremony voices cried +out in the multitude of watchers, demanding that I who was to marry the +Royal Lady of Egypt should be named next in succession to the throne. + +The Pharaoh heard and glanced first at his son and then at me, +doubtfully, whereon, covered with confusion, I slipped away. + +The portico of the temple was deserted, since all, even the guards, had +crowded into the vast court to watch the coronation. Only in the shadow, +seated against the pedestal of one of the two colossal statues in front +of the outer pylon gate and looking very small beneath its greatness, +was a man wrapped in a dark cloak whom noting vaguely I took to be a +beggar. As I passed him, he plucked at my robe, and I stopped to search +for something to give to him but could find naught. + +"I have nothing, Father," I said laughing, "except the gold hilt of my +sword." + +"Do not part with that, Son," answered a deep voice, "for I think you +will need it before all is over." + +Then while I stared at him he threw back his hood and I saw that +beneath was the ancient withered face and the long white beard of my +great-uncle, the holy Tanofir, the hermit and magician. + +"Great things happen yonder, Shabaka. So great that I have come from my +sepulchre to see, or rather, being blind, to listen, who thrice in my +life days have known the like before," and he pointed to the glittering +throng in the court within. "Yes," he went on, "I have seen Pharaohs +crowned and Pharaohs die--one of them at the hand of a conqueror. What +will happen to this Pharaoh, think you, Shabaka?" + +"You should be better able to answer that question than I, who am no +prophet, my Uncle." + +"How, my Nephew, seeing that your dwarf has borne away my magic Cup? I +do not grudge her to him for he is a brave dwarf and clever, who may yet +prove a good prop to you, as he has done before, and to Egypt also. But +she has gone and the new vessel is not yet shaped to my liking. So how +can I answer?" + +"Out of the store of wisdom gathered in your breast." + +"So! my Nephew. Well, my store of wisdom tells me that feasts are +sometimes followed by want and rejoicings by sorrow and victories by +defeat, and splendid sins by repentance and slow climbing back to good +again. Also that you will soon take a long journey. Where is the Royal +Lady Amada? I did not hear her step among those who passed in to the +Crowning. But even my hearing has grown somewhat weak of late, except in +the silence of the night, Shabaka." + +"I do not know, my Uncle, who have only been in Memphis one hour. But +what do you mean? Doubtless she prepares herself for the feast where I +shall meet her." + +"Doubtless. Tell me, what passes at the temple of Isis? As I crept past +the pylon feeling my way with my beggar's staff, I thought--but how +can you know who have only been in Memphis an hour? Yet surely I heard +voices just now calling out that you, Shabaka, should be named as the +next successor to the throne of Egypt. Was it so?" + +"Yes, holy Tanofir. That is why I have left who was vexed and am sworn +to seek no such honour, which indeed I do not desire." + +"Just so, Nephew. Yet gifts have a way of coming to those who do not +desire them and the last vision that I saw before my Cup left me, or +rather that she saw, was of you wearing the Double Crown. She said that +you looked very well in it, Shabaka. But now begone, for hark, here +comes the procession with the new-anointed Pharaoh whose royal robe you +won for him yonder in the pass, when you smote down Idernes and held his +legions. Oh! it was well done and my new Cup, though faulty, was good +enough to show me all. I felt proud of you, Shabaka, but begone, begone! +'A gift for the poor old beggar! A gift, my lords, for the poor blind +beggar who has had none since the last Pharaoh was crowned in Egypt and +finds it hard to live on memories!'" + + + +At our house I found my mother just returned from the Coronation, but +Bes I did not find and guessed that he had slipped away to meet his +new-made wife, Karema. My mother embraced me and blessed me, making much +of me and my deeds in the battle; also she doctored such small hurts as +I had. I put the matter by as shortly as I could and asked her if she +had seen aught of Amada. She answered that she had neither seen nor +heard of her which I was sure she thought strange, as she began to +talk quickly of other things. I said to her what I had said to the holy +Tanofir, that doubtless she was making ready for the feast since I could +not find her at the Crowning. + +"Or saying good-bye to the goddess," answered my mother nodding, "since +there are some who find it even harder to fall from heaven to earth than +to climb from earth to heaven, and after all you are but a man, my son." + +Then she slipped away to attire herself, leaving me wondering, because +my mother was shrewd and never spoke at random. + +There was the holy Tanofir, too, with his talk about the temple of Isis, +and he also did not speak at random. Oh! now I felt as I had done when +the shadow of the palm-tree fell on me yonder in the palace garden. + +The mood passed for my blood still tingled with the glory of that great +fight, and my heart shut its doors to sadness, knowing as I did, that I +was the most praised man in Memphis that day. Indeed had I not, I should +have learned it when with my mother I entered the great banqueting-hall +of the palace somewhat late, for she was long in making ready. + +The first thing I saw there was Bes gorgeously arrayed in Eastern silks +that he had plundered from the Satrap's tent, standing on a table so +that all might see and hear him, and holding aloft in one hand the +grisly head of Idernes and in the other that of the hawk-eyed noble whom +he had slain, while in his thick, guttural voice he told the tale of +that great fray. Catching sight of me, he called aloud, + +"See! Here comes the man! Here comes the hero to whom Egypt owes its +liberty and Pharaoh his crown." + +Thereon all the company and the soldiers and servants who were gathered +about the door began to shout and acclaim me, till I wished that I could +vanish away as the holy Tanofir was said to be able to do. Since this +was impossible I rushed at Bes who leapt from the table like a monkey +and, still waving the heads and talking, slipped from the hall, I know +not how, followed by the loud laughter of the guests. + +Then heralds announced the coming of Pharaoh and all grew silent. He and +his company entered with pomp and we, his subjects, prostrated ourselves +in the ancient fashion. + +"Rise, my guests," he cried. "Rise, my people. Above all do you rise, +Shabaka, my beloved cousin, to whom Egypt and I owe so much." + +So we rose and I took my seat in a place of honour having my mother +at my side, and looked about me for Amada, but in vain. There was +the carven chair upon which she should have been among those of the +princesses, but it was empty. At first I thought that she was late, but +when time went by and she did not appear, I asked if she were ill, a +question that none seemed able to answer. + +The feast went on with all the ancient ceremonies that attended the +crowning of a Pharaoh of Egypt, since there were old men who remembered +these, also the scribes and priests had them written in their books. + +I took no heed of them and will not set them down. At length Pharaoh +pledged his subjects, and his subjects pledged Pharaoh. Then the doors +were opened and through them came a company of white-robed, shaven +priests bearing on a bier the body of a dead man wrapped in his +mummy-cloths. At first some laughed for this rite had not been performed +in Egypt since she passed into the hands of the Great Kings of the East +and therefore was strange to them. Then they grew silent since after +all it was solemn to see those death-bearing priests flitting in and out +between the great columns, now seen and now lost in the shadows, and to +listen to their funeral chants. + +In the hush my mother whispered to me that this body was that of the +last Pharaoh of Egypt brought from his tomb, but whether this were so +I cannot say for certain. At length they brought the mummy which was +crowned with a snake-headed circlet of the royal _uraeus_ and still +draped with withered funeral wreaths, and stood it on its feet opposite +to Peroa just behind and between my mother and me in such a fashion that +it cut off the light from us. + +The faint and heavy smell of the embalmer's spices struck upon my +nostrils, a dead flower from the chaplets fell upon my head and, +glancing over my shoulder, I saw the painted or enamelled eyes in the +gilded mask staring at me. The thing filled me with fear, I knew not +of what. Not of death, surely, for that I had faced a score of times of +late and thought nothing of it. Indeed I am not sure that it was fear I +felt, but rather a deep sense of the vanity of all things. It seemed +to come home to me--Shabaka or Allan Quatermain, for in my dream the +inspiration or whatever it might be, struck through the spirit that +animated both of us--as it had never done before, that everything is +_nothing_, that victory and love and even life itself have no meaning; +that naught really exists save the soul of man and God, of whom +perchance that soul is a part sent forth for a while to do His work +through good and ill. The thought lifted me up and yet crushed me, +since for a moment all that makes a man passed away, and I felt myself +standing in utter loneliness, naked before the glory of God, watched +only by the flaming stars that light his throne. Yes, and at that moment +suddenly I learned that all the gods are but one God, having many shapes +and called by many names. + +Then I heard the priests saying, + +"Pharaoh the Osiris greets Pharaoh the living on the Earth and sends to +him this message--'As I am, so shalt thou be, and where I am, there thou +shalt dwell through all the ages of Eternity.'" + +Then Pharaoh the living rose and bowed to Pharaoh the dead and Pharaoh +the dead was taken away back to his Eternal House and I wondered whether +his Ka or his spirit, or whatever is the part of him that lives on, were +watching us and remembering the feasts whereof he had partaken in his +pomp in this pillared hall, as his forefathers had done before him for +hundreds or thousands of years. + +Not until the mummy had gone and the last sound of the chanting of the +priests had died, did the hearts of the feasters grow light again. But +soon they forgot, as men alive always forget death and those whom Time +has devoured, for the wine was good and strong and the eyes of the women +were bright and victory had crowned our spears, and for a while Egypt +was once more free. + +So it went on till Pharaoh rose and departed, the great gold earrings +in his ears jingling as he walked, and the trumpets sounding before and +after him. I too rose to go with my mother when a messenger came and +bade me wait upon Pharaoh, and with me the dwarf Bes. So we went, +leaving an officer to conduct my mother to our home. As I passed her she +caught me by the sleeve and whispered in my ear, + +"My son, whatever chances to you, be brave and remember that the world +holds more than women." + +"Yes," I answered, "it holds death and God, or they hold it," though +what put the words into my mind I do not know, since I did not +understand and had no time to ask her meaning. + +The messenger led us to the door of Peroa's private chamber, the same in +which I had seen him on my return from the East. Here he bade me enter, +and Bes to wait without. I went in and found two men and a woman in the +chamber, all standing very silent. The men were Pharaoh who still wore +his glorious robe and Double Crown, and the high priest of Isis clothed +in white; the other was the lady Amada also clothed in the snowy robes +of Isis. + +At the sight of her thus arrayed my heart stopped and I stood silent +because I could not speak. She too stood silent and I saw that beneath +her thin veil her beautiful face was set and pale as that of an +alabaster statue. Indeed she might have been not a lovely living woman, +but the goddess Isis herself whose symbols she bore about her. + +"Shabaka," said Pharaoh at length, "the Royal Lady of Egypt, Amada, +priestess of Isis, has somewhat to say to you." + +"Let the Royal Lady of Egypt speak on to her servant and affianced +husband," I answered. + +"Count Shabaka, General of the armies," she began in a cold clear voice +like to that of one who repeats a lesson, "learn that you are no more my +affianced husband and that I who am gathered again to Isis the divine, +am no more your affianced wife." + +"I do not understand. Will it please you to be more plain?" I said +faintly. + +"I will be more plain, Count Shabaka, more plain than you have been with +me. Since we speak together for the last time it is well that I should +be plain. Hear me. When first you returned from the East, in yonder hall +you told us of certain things that happened to you there. Then the dwarf +your servant took up the tale. He said that he gave my name to the Great +King. I was wroth as well I might be, but even when I prayed that he +should be scourged, you did not deny that it was he who gave my name to +the King, although Pharaoh yonder said that if you had spoken the name +it would have been another matter." + +"I had no time," I answered, "for just then the messengers came from +Idernes and afterwards when I sought you you were gone." + +"Had you then no time," she asked coldly, "beneath the palms in the +garden of the palace when we were affianced? Oh! there was time in +plenty but it did not please you to tell me that you had bought safety +and great gifts at the price of the honour of the Lady of Egypt whose +love you stole." + +"You do not understand!" I exclaimed wildly. + +"Forgive me, Shabaka, but I understand very well indeed, since from +your own words I learned at the feast given to Idernes that 'the name +of Amada' slipped your lips by chance and thus came to the ears of the +Great King." + +"The tale that Idernes and his captain told was false, Lady, and for it +Bes and I took their lives with our own hands." + +"It had perhaps been better, Shabaka, if you had kept them living that +they might confess that it was false. But doubtless you thought them +safer dead, since dead men cannot speak, and for this reason challenged +them to single combat." + +I gasped and could not answer for my mind seemed to leave me, and she +went on in a gentler voice, + +"I do not wish to speak angrily to you, my cousin Shabaka, especially +when you have just wrought such great deeds for Egypt. Moreover by the +law I serve I may speak angrily to no man. Know then that on learning +the truth, since I could love none but you according to the flesh and +therefore can never give myself in marriage to another, I sought refuge +in the arms of the goddess whom for your sake I had deserted. She was +pleased to receive me, forgetting my treason. On this very day for the +second time I took the oaths which may no more be broken, and that I may +dwell where I shall never see you more, Pharaoh here has been pleased, +at my request to name me high priestess and prophetess of Isis and to +appoint me as a dwelling-place her temple at Amada where I was born far +away in Upper Egypt. Now all is said and done, so farewell." + +"All is not said and done," I broke out in fury. "Pharaoh, I ask your +leave to tell the full story of this business of the naming of the lady +Amada to the King of kings, and that in the presence of the dwarf Bes. +Even a slave is allowed to set out his tale before judgment is passed +upon him." + +Peroa glanced at Amada who made no sign, then said, + +"It is granted, General Shabaka." + +So Bes was called into the chamber and having looked about him +curiously, seated himself upon the ground. + +"Bes," I said, "you have heard nothing of what has passed." (Here I was +mistaken, for as he told me afterwards he had heard everything through +the door which was not quite closed.) "It is needful, Bes, that you +should repeat truly all that happened at the court of the King of kings +before and after I was brought from the boat." + +Bes obeyed, telling the tale very well, so well that all listened +earnestly, without error moreover. When he had finished I also told my +story and how, shaken by all I had gone through and already weak from +the torment of the boat, the name of Amada was surprised from me who +never dreamed that the King would at once make demand of her, and who +would have perished a thousand times rather than such a thing should +happen. I added what I had learned afterwards from our escort, that this +name was already well known to the Great King who meant to make use of +it as a cause of quarrel with Egypt. Further, that he had let me escape +from a death by horrible torments because of some dream that he had +dreamed while he rested before the banquet, in which a god appeared and +told him that it was an evil thing to slay a man because that man had +bested him at a hunting match and one of which heaven would keep an +account. Still because of the law of his land he must find a public +pretext for loosing one whom he had once condemned, and therefore chose +this matter of the lady Amada whom he pretended to send me to bring to +him. + +When I had finished, as Amada still remained silent, Pharaoh asked of +Bes how it came about that he told one story on the night of our return +and another on this night. + +"Because, O Pharaoh," answered Bes rolling his eyes, "for the first time +in my life I have been just a little too clever and shot my arrow just +a little too far. Hearken, Pharaoh, and Royal Lady, and High Priest. I +knew that my master loves the lady Amada and knew also that she is quick +of tongue and temper, one who readily takes offence even if thereby +she breaks her own heart and so brings her life to ruin, and with it +perchance her country. Therefore, knowing women whom I have studied in +my own land, I saw in this matter just such a cause of offence as she +would lay hold of, and counselled my master to keep silent as to the +story of the naming of her before the King. Some evil spirit made him +listen to this bad counsel, so far at least, that when I lied as to +what had chanced, for which lie the lady Amada prayed that I might be +scourged till my bones broke through the skin, he did not at once tell +all the truth. Nor did he do so afterwards because he feared that if he +did I should in fact be scourged, for my master and I love each other. +Neither of us wishes to see the other scourged, though such is my lot +to-night," and he glanced at Amada. "I have said." + +Then at last Amada spoke. + +"Had I known all this story from the first, perhaps I should not have +done what I have done to-day and perhaps I should have forgiven and +forgotten, for in truth even if the dwarf still lies, I believe your +word, O Shabaka, and understand how all came about. But now it is too +late to change. Say, O Priest of the Mother, is it not too late?" + +"It is too late," said the priest solemnly, "seeing that if such vows +as yours are broken for the second time, O Prophetess, the curse of the +goddess will pursue you and him for whom they were broken, yes, through +this life and all other lives that perchance may be given to you upon +the earth or elsewhere." + +"Pharaoh," I cried in despair, "I made a bond with you. It is recorded +in writing and sealed. I have kept my part of the bond; my treasure you +have spent; your enemies I have slain; your army I have commanded not so +ill. Will you not keep yours and bid the priests release this lady from +her vow and give her to me to whom she was promised? Or must I believe +that you refuse, not because of goddesses and vows, but because yonder +is the Royal Lady of Egypt, the true heiress to the throne who might +perchance bear children, which as prophetess of Isis she can never do. +Yes, because of this and because of certain cries that came to your ears +in the hour of your crowning before Amen-ra and all the gods?" + +Peroa flushed as he heard me and answered, + +"You speak roughly, Cousin, and were you any other man I might be +tempted to answer roughly. But I know that you suffer and therefore I +forgive. Nay, you must believe no such things. Rather must you remember +that in this bond of which you speak, it was set down that I only +promised you the lady Amada with her own consent, and this she has +withdrawn." + +"Then, Pharaoh, hearken! To-morrow I leave Egypt for another land, +giving you back your generalship and sheathing the sword that I had +hoped to wield in its defence and yours when the last great day of trial +by battle comes, as come it will. I tell you that I go to return no +more, unless the lady Amada yonder shall summon me back to fight for her +and you, promising herself to me in guerdon." + +"That can never be," said Amada. + +Then I became aware of another presence in the room, though how and when +it appeared I do not know, but I suppose that it had crept in while we +were lost in talk. At least between me and Pharaoh, crouched upon the +ground, was the figure of a man wrapped in a beggar's cloak. It threw +back the hood and there appeared the ashen face and snowy beard of the +holy Tanofir. + +"You know me, Pharaoh," he said in his deep, solemn voice. "I am +Tanofir, the King's son; Tanofir the hermit, Tanofir the seer. I have +heard all that passes, it matters not how and I come to you with a +message, I who read men's hearts. Of vows and goddesses and women I say +nothing. But this I say to you, that if you break the spirit of your +bond and suffer yonder Shabaka to go hence with a bitter heart, trouble +shall come on you. All the Great King's armies did not die yonder by the +banks of Nile, and mayhap one day he will journey to bury the bones of +those who fell, and with them _yours_, O Pharaoh. I do not think that +you will listen to me to-night, and I am sure that yonder lady, full of +the new-fanned flame of the jealous goddess, will not listen. Still let +her take counsel and remember my words: In the hour of desperate danger +let her send to Shabaka and demand his help, promising in return what he +has asked and remembering that if Isis loves her, that goddess was born +upon the Nile and loves Egypt more." + +"Too late, too late, _too late!_" wailed Amada + +Then she burst into tears and turning fled away with the high priest. +Pharaoh went also leaving me and Bes alone. I looked for the holy +Tanofir to speak with him, but he too was gone. + +"It is time to sleep, Master," said Bes, "for all this talk is more +wearisome than any battle. Why! what is this that has your name upon +it?" and he picked a silk-wrapped package from the floor and opened it. + +Within were the priceless rose-hued pearls! + + + + +CHAPTER XIV. SHABAKA FIGHTS THE CROCODILE + +"Where to?" I said to Bes when we were outside the palace, for I was so +broken with grief that I scarcely knew what I did. + +"To the house of the lady Tiu, I think, Master, since there you must +make preparations for your start on the morrow, also bid her farewell. +Oh!" he went on in a kind of rapture which afterwards I knew was feigned +though at the time I did not think about it, "Oh! how happy should you +be who now are free from all this woman-coil, with life new and fresh +before you. Reflect, Master, on the hunting we will have yonder in +Ethiopia. No more cares, no more plannings for the welfare of Egypt, +no more persuading of the doubtful to take up arms, no more desperate +battle-ventures with your country's honour on your sword-point. And if +you must see women--well, there are plenty in Ethiopia who come and go +lightly as an evening breeze laden with the odour of flowers, and never +trouble in the morning." + +"At any rate _you_ are not free from such coils, Bes," I said and in the +moonlight I saw his great face fall in. + +"No, Master, I am tying them about my throat. See, such is the way of +the world, or of the gods that rule the world, I know not which. For +years I have been happy and free, I have enjoyed adventures and visited +strange countries and have gathered learning, till I think I am the +wisest man upon the Nile, at the side of one whom I loved and holding +nothing at risk, except my own life which mattered no more than that of +a gnat dancing in the sun. Now all is changed. I have a wife whom I love +also, more than I can tell you," and he sighed, "but who still must +be looked after and obeyed--yes, obeyed. Further, soon I shall have a +people and a crown to wear, and councillors and affairs of state, and +an ancient religion to support and the Grasshopper itself knows what +besides. The burden has rolled from your back to mine, Master, making my +heart which was so light, heavy, and oh! I wish it had stopped where it +was." + +Even then I laughed, sad as I was, for truth lived in the philosophy of +Bes. + +"Master," he went on in a changed voice, "I have been a fool and my +folly has worked you ill. Forgive me since I acted for the best, only +until the end no one ever knows what is the best. Now here is the house +and I go to meet my wife and to make certain arrangements. By dawn +perhaps you will be ready to start to Ethiopia." + +"Do you really desire that I should accompany you there, Bes?" + +"Certainly, Master. That is unless you should desire that I accompany +you somewhere else instead, by sea southward for instance. If so, I do +not know that I would refuse, since Ethiopia will not run away and there +is much of the world that I should still like to visit. Only then there +is Karema to be thought about, who expects, or, when she learns all, +soon will expect, to be a queen," he added doubtfully. + +"No, Bes, I am too tired to make new plans, so let us go to Ethiopia and +not disappoint Karema, who after holding a cup so long naturally would +like to try a sceptre." + +"I think that is wisest, Master; at any rate the holy Tanofir thinks +it wisest, and he is the voice of Fate. Oh! why do we trouble who after +all, every one of us, are nothing but pieces upon the board of Fate." + +Then he turned and left me and I entered the house where I found my +mother sitting, still in her festal robes, like one who waits. She +looked at my face, then asked what troubled me. I sat down on a stool at +her feet and told her everything. + +"Much as I thought," she said when I had finished. "These over-learned +women are strange fish to catch and hold, and too much soul is like too +much sail upon a boat when the desert wind begins to blow across the +Nile. Well, do not let us blame her or Bes, or Peroa who is already +anxious for his dynasty and would rather that Amada were a priestess +than your wife, or even the goddess Isis, who no doubt is anxious for +her votaries. Let us rather blame the Power that is behind the veil, or +to it bow our heads, seeing that we know nothing of the end for which it +works. So Egypt shuts her doors on you, my Son, and whither away? Not +to the East again, I trust, for there you would soon grow shorter by a +head." + +"I go to Ethiopia, my Mother, where it seems that Bes is a great man and +can shelter me." + +"So we go to Ethiopia, do we? Well, it is a long journey for an old +woman, but I weary of Memphis where I have lived for so many years and +doubtless the sands of the south make good burial grounds." + +"We!" I exclaimed. "_We?_" + +"Surely, my Son, since in losing a wife you have again found a mother +and until I die we part no more." + +When I heard this my eyes filled with tears. My conscience smote me also +because of late, and indeed for years past, I had thought so much of +Amada and so little of my mother. And now it was Amada who had cast me +out, unjustly, without waiting to learn the truth, because at the worst +I, who worshipped her, had saved myself from death in slow torment by +speaking her name, while my mother, forgetting all, took me to her bosom +again as she had done when I was a babe. I knew not what to say, +but remembering the pearls, I drew them out and placed them round my +mother's neck. + +She looked at the wonderful things and smiled, then said, + +"Such gems as these become white locks and withered breasts but ill. +Yet, my Son, I will keep them for you till you find a wife, if not +Amada, then another." + +"If not Amada, I shall never find a wife," I said bitterly, whereat she +smiled. + +Then she left me to make ready before she slept a while. + + + +Work as we would noon had passed two hours, on the following day, before +we were prepared to start, for there was much to do. Thus the house must +be placed in charge of friends and the means of travel collected. Also a +messenger came from Pharaoh praying me for his and Egypt's sake to think +again before I left them, and an answer sent that go I must, whither +the holy Tanofir would know if at any time Pharaoh desired to learn. In +reply to this came another messenger who brought me parting gifts from +Pharaoh, a chain of honour, a title of higher nobility, a commission +as his envoy to whatever land I wandered, and so forth, which I must +acknowledge. Lastly as we were leaving the house to seek the boat which +Bes had made ready on the Nile, there came yet another messenger at the +sight of whom my heart leapt, for he was priest of Isis. + +He bowed and handed me a roll. I opened it with a trembling hand and +read: + + + "From the Prophetess of Isis whose house is at Amada, aforetime + Royal Lady of Egypt, to the Count Shabaka, + + "I learn, O my Cousin, that you depart from Egypt and knowing the + reason my heart is sore. Believe me, my Cousin, I love you well, + better than any who lives upon the earth, nor will that love ever + change, since the goddess who holds my future in her hands, knows + of what we are made and is not jealous of the past. Therefore she + will not be wroth at the earthly love of one who is gathered to + her heavenly arms. Her blessing and mine be on you and if we see + each other no more face to face in the world, may we meet again in + the halls of Osiris. Farewell, beloved Shabaka. Oh! why did you + suffer that black master of lies, the dwarf Bes, to persuade you + to hide the truth from me?" + + +So the writing ended and below it were two stains still wet, which I +knew were caused by tears. Moreover, wrapped in a piece of silk and +fastened to the scroll was a little gold ring graven with the royal +_uraeus_ that Amada had always worn from childhood. Only on the previous +night I had noted it on the first finger of her right hand. + +I took my stylus and my waxen tablets and wrote on one of them: + + + "Had you been a man, Amada, and not a woman, I think you would have + judged me differently but, learned priestess and prophetess as you + are, a woman you remain. Perchance a time may come when once more + you will turn to me in the hour of your need; if so and I am + living, I will come. Yea, if I am dead I think that I still shall + come, since nothing can really part us. Meanwhile by day and by + night I wear your ring and whenever I look on it I think of Amada + the woman whose lips have pressed my own, and forget Amada the + priestess who for her soul's sake has been pleased to break the + heart of the man who loved her and whom she misjudged so sorely in + her pride and anger." + + +This tablet I wrapped up and sealed, using clay and her own ring to make +the seal, and gave it for delivery to the priest. + +At length we drew near to the river and here, gathered on the open land, +I found the most of those who had fought with me in the battle against +the Easterns, and with them a great concourse of others from the +city. These collected round me, some of them wounded and hobbling upon +crutches, praying me not to go, as did the others who foresaw sorrow to +Egypt from my loss. But I broke away from them almost in tears and +with my mother hid myself beneath the canopy of the boat. Here Bes was +waiting, also his beautiful wife who, although she seemed sad at leaving +Egypt, smiled a greeting to us while the steersmen and rowers of the +boat, tall Ethiopians every one of them, rose and gave me a General's +salute. Then, as the wind served, we hoisted the sail and glided away up +Nile, till presently the temples and palm-groves of Memphis were lost to +sight. + + + +Of that long, long journey there is no need to tell. Up the Nile we +travelled slowly, dragging the boat past the cataracts till Egypt was +far behind us. In the end, many days after we had passed the mouth of +another river that was blue in colour which flowed from the northern +mountain lands down into the Nile, we came to a place where the rapids +were so long and steep that we must leave the boat and travel overland. +Drawing near to it at sunset I saw a multitude of people gathered on the +sand and beyond them a camp in which were set many beautiful pavilions +that seemed to be broidered with silk and gold, as were the banners that +floated above them whereon appeared the effigy of a grasshopper, also +done in gold with silver legs. + +"It seems that my messengers travelled in safety," said Bes to me, "for +know, that yonder are some of my subjects who have come here to meet +us. Now, Master, I must no longer call you master since I fear I am once +more a king. And you must no longer call me Bes, but Karoon. Moreover, +forgive me, but when you come into my presence you must bow, which I +shall like less than you do, but it is the custom of the Ethiopians. +Oh! I would that you were the king and that I were your friend, for +henceforth good-bye to ease and jollity." + +I laughed, but Bes did not laugh at all, only turned to his wife who +already ruled him as though he were indeed a slave, and said, "Lady +Karema, make yourself as beautiful as you can and forget that you have +ever been a Cup or anything useful, since henceforth you must be a +queen, that is if you please my people." + +"And what happens if I do not please them, Husband?" asked Karema +opening her fine eyes. + +"I do not quite know, Wife. Perhaps they may refuse to accept me, at +which I shall not weep. Or perhaps they may refuse to accept you, at +which of course I should weep very much, for you see you are so very +white and, heretofore, all the queens of the Ethiopians have been +black." + +"And if they refuse to accept me because I am white, or rather brown, +instead of black like oiled marble, what then, O Husband?" + +"Then--oh! then I cannot say, O Wife. Perhaps they will send you back +to your own country. Or perhaps they will separate us and place you in +a temple where you will live alone in all honour. I remember that once +they did that to a white woman, making a goddess of her until she died +of weariness. Or perhaps--well, I do not know." + +Then Karema grew angry. + +"Now I wish I had remained a Cup," she said, "and the servant of the +holy Tanofir who at least taught me many secret things, instead of +coming to dwell among black barbarians in the company of a dwarf who, +even if he be a king, it seems has no power to protect the wife whom he +has chosen." + +"Why will women always grow wroth before there is need?" asked Bes +humbly. "Surely it would be time to rate me when any of these things had +happened." + +"If any of them do happen, Husband, I shall say much worse things than +that," she replied, but the talk went no further, for at this moment our +boat grounded and singing a wild song, many of those who waited rushed +into the water to drag it to the bank. + +Then Bes stood up on the prow, waving his bow and there arose a mighty +shout of, "_Karoon! Karoon!_ It is he, it is he returned after many +years!" + +Twice they shouted thus and then, every one of them, threw themselves +face downwards in the sand. + +"Yes, my people," cried Bes, "it is I, Karoon, who having been +miraculously preserved from many dangers in far lands by the help of the +Grasshopper in heaven, and, as my messengers will have told you, of my +beloved friend, lord Shabaka the Egyptian, who has deigned to come to +dwell with us for a while, have at length returned to Ethiopia that I +may shed my wisdom on you like the sun and pour it on your heads like +melted honey. Moreover, mindful of our laws which aforetime I defied and +therefore left you, I have searched the whole world through till I found +the most beautiful woman that it contained, and made her my wife. She +too has deigned to come to this far country to be your queen. Advance, +fair Karema, and show yourself to these my Ethiopians." + +So Karema stepped forward and stood on the prow of the boat by the side +of Bes, and a strange couple they looked. The Ethiopians who had risen, +considered her gravely, then one of them said, + +"Karoon called her beautiful, but in truth she is almost white and very +ugly." + +"At least she is a woman," said another, "for her shape is female." + +"Yes, and he has married her," remarked a third, "and even a king +may choose his own wife sometimes. For in such matters who can judge +another's taste?" + +"Cease," said Bes in a lordly way. "If you do not think her beautiful +to-night, you will to-morrow. And now let us land and rest." + +So we landed and while I did so I took note of these Ethiopians. They +were great men, black as charcoal with thick lips, white teeth and flat +noses. Their eyes were large and the whites of them somewhat yellow, +their hair curled like wool, their beards were short and on their faces +they wore a continual smile. Of dress most of them had little, but their +elders or leaders wore lion and leopard skins and some were clad in a +kind of silken tunic belted about the middle. All were armed for war +with long bows, short swords and small shields round in shape and made +from the hide of the hippopotamus or of the unicorn. Gold was plentiful +amongst them since even the humblest wore bracelets of that metal, while +about the necks of the chieftains it was wound in great torques, also +sometimes on their ankles. They wore sandals on their feet and some +of them had ostrich feathers stuck in their hair, a few also had +grasshoppers fashioned of gold bound on the top of their heads, and +these I took to be the priests. There were no women in their number. + +As the sun was sinking we were led at once to a very beautiful tent made +of woven flax and ornamented as I have described, where we found food +made ready for us in plenty, milk in bowls and the flesh of sheep and +oxen boiled and roasted. Bes, however, was taken to a place apart, which +made Karema even more angry than she was before. + +Scarcely had we finished eating when a herald rushed into the tent +crying, "Prostrate yourselves! Yea, be prostrated, the Grasshopper +comes! Karoon comes." + +Here I must say that I found that the title of Karoon meant "Great +Grasshopper," but Karema who did not know this, asked indignantly why +she should prostrate herself to a grasshopper. Indeed she refused to +do so even when Bes entered the pavilion wonderfully attired in a +gorgeous-coloured robe of which the train was held by two huge men. So +absurd did he look that my mother and I must bow very deeply to hide our +laughter while Karema said, + +"It would be better, Husband, if you found children to carry your robe +instead of two giants. Moreover, if it is meant to copy the colours of +a grasshopper, 'tis badly done, since grasshoppers are green and you +are gold and scarlet. Also they do not wear feathers set awry upon their +heads." + +Bes rolled his eyes as though in agony, then turning, bade his +attendants be gone. They obeyed, though doubtfully as though they did +not like to leave him alone with us, whereon he let down the flap of the +pavilion, threw off his gorgeous coverings and said, + +"You must learn to understand, Wife, that our customs are different from +those of Egypt. There I was happy as a slave and you were held to +be beautiful as the Cup of the holy Tanofir, also learned. Here I am +wretched as a king and you are held to be ugly, also ignorant as a +stranger. Oh! do not answer, I pray you, but learn that all goes well. +For the time you are accepted as my wife, subject to the decision of a +council of matrons, aged relatives of my family, who will decide when +we reach the City of the Grasshopper whether or not you shall be +acknowledged as the Queen of the Ethiopians. No, no, I pray you say +nothing since I must go away at once, as according to the law of the +Ethiopians the time has come for the Grasshopper to sleep, alone, +Karema, as you are not yet acknowledged as my wife. You also can sleep +with the lady Tiu and for Shabaka a tent is provided. Rest sweetly, +Wife. Hark! They fetch me." + +"Now, if I had my way," said Karema, "I would rest in that boat going +back to Egypt. What say you, lord Shabaka?" + +But I made no answer who followed Bes out of the tent, leaving her to +talk the matter over with my mother. Here I found a crowd of his people +waiting to convey him to sleep and watching, saw them place him in +another tent round which they ranged themselves, playing upon musical +instruments. After this someone came and led me to my own place where +was a good bed in which I lay down to sleep. This however I could not do +for a long while because of my own laughter and the noise of the drums +and horns that were soothing Bes to his rest. For now I understood why +he had preferred to be a slave in Egypt rather than a king in Ethiopia. + +In the morning I rose before the dawn and went out to the river-bank to +bathe. While I was making ready to wash myself, who should appear but +Bes, followed, but at a distance, by a number of his people. + +"Never have I spent such a night, Master," he said, "at least not since +you took me prisoner years ago, since by law I may not stop those horns +and musical instruments. Now, however, also according to the law of the +Ethiopians, I am my own lord until the sun rises. So I have come here +to gather some of those blue lilies which she loves as a present for +Karema, because I fear that she is angry and must be appeased." + +"Certainly she is very angry," I said, "or at least was so when I left +her last night. Oh! Bes, why did you let your people tell her that she +was ugly?" + +"How can I help it, Master? Have you not always heard that the +Ethiopians are chiefly famous for one thing, namely that they speak +nothing but the truth. To them she, being different, seems to be ugly. +Therefore when they say that she is ugly, they speak the truth." + +"If so, it is a truth that she does not like, Bes, as I have no doubt +she will tell you by and by. Do they think me ugly also?" + +"Yes, they do, Master; but they think also that you look like a man who +can draw a bow and use a sword, and that goes far with the Ethiopians. +Of your mother they say nothing because she is old and they venerate the +aged whom the Grasshopper is waiting to carry away." + +Now I began to laugh again and went with Bes to gather the lilies. These +grew at the end of a mass of reeds woven together by the pressure of the +current and floating on the water. Bes lay down upon his stomach while +his people watched from a distance on the bank amazed into silence, and +stretched out his long arms to reach the blue lotus flowers. Suddenly +the reeds gave way beneath him just as he had grasped two of the flowers +and was dragging at them, so that he fell into the river. + +Next instant I saw a swirl in the brown water and perceived a huge +crocodile. It rushed at Bes open-mouthed. Being a good swimmer he +twisted his body in order to avoid it, but I heard the great teeth +close with a snap on the short leathern garment which he wore about his +middle. + +"The devil has me! Farewell!" he cried and vanished beneath the water. + +Now, as I have said, I was almost stripped for bathing, but had not +yet taken off my short sword which was girded round me by a belt. In an +instant I drew it and amidst the yells of horror of the Ethiopians who +had seen all from the bank, I plunged into the river. There are few able +to swim as I could and I had the art of diving with my eyes open and +remaining long beneath the surface without drawing breath, for this I +had practised from a child. + +Immediately I saw the great reptile sinking to the mud and dragging Bes +with him to drown him there. But here the river was very deep and with +a few swift strokes I was able to get under the crocodile. Then with all +my strength I stabbed upwards, driving the sword far into the soft part +of the throat. Feeling the pain of the sharp iron the beast let go of +Bes and turned on me. How it happened I do not know but presently I +found myself upon its back and was striking at its eyes. One thrust at +least went home, for the blinded brute rose to the surface, bearing me +with him, and oh! the sweetness of the air as I breathed again. + +Thus we appeared, I riding the crocodile like a horse and stabbing +furiously, while close by was Bes rolling his yellow eyes but helpless, +for he had no weapon. Still the devil was not dead although blood +streamed from him, only mad with pain and rage. Nor could the shouting +Ethiopians help me since they had only bows and dared not shoot lest +their shafts should pierce me. The crocodile began to sink again, +snapping furiously at my legs. Then I bethought me of a trick I had seen +practised by natives on the Nile. + +Waiting till its huge jaws were open I thrust my arm between them, +grasping the short sword in such fashion that the hilt rested on its +tongue and the point against the roof of its mouth. It tried to close +its jaws and lo! the good iron was fixed between them, holding them wide +open. Then I withdrew my hand and floated upwards with nothing worse +than a cut upon the wrist from one of its sharp fangs. I appeared upon +the surface and after me the crocodile spouting blood and wallowing in +its death agonies. I remembered no more till I found myself lying on the +bank surrounded by a multitude with Bes standing over me. Also in the +shallow water was the crocodile dead, my sword still fixed between its +jaws. + +"Are you harmed, Master" cried Bes in a voice of agony. + +"Very little I think," I answered, sitting up with the blood pouring +from my arm. + +Bes thrust aside Karema who had come lightly clothed from her tent, +saying, + +"All is well, Wife. I will bring you the lilies presently." + +Then he flung his arms about me, kissed my hands and my brow and turning +to the crowd, shouted, + +"Last night you were disputing as to whether this Egyptian lord should +be allowed to dwell with me in the land of Ethiopia. Which of you +disputes it now?" + +"No one!" they answered with a roar. "He is not a man but a god. No man +could have done such a deed." + +"So it seems," answered Bes quietly. "At least none of you even tried +to do it. Yet he is not a god but only that kind of man who is called +a hero. Also he is my brother, and while I reign in Ethiopia either he +shall reign at my side, or I go away with him." + +"It shall be so, Karoon!" they shouted with one voice. And after this I +was carried back to the tent. + +In front of it my mother waited and kissed me proudly before them all, +whereat they shouted again. + + + +So ended this adventure of the crocodile, except that presently Bes went +back and recovered the two lilies for Karema, this time from a boat, +which caused the Ethiopians to call out that he must love her very much, +though not as much as he did me. + +That afternoon, borne in litters, we set out for the City of the +Grasshopper, which we reached on the fourth day. As we drew near the +place regiments of men to the number of twelve thousand or more, came +out to meet us, so that at last we arrived escorted by an army who sang +their songs of triumph and played upon their musical instruments until +my head ached with the noise. + +This city was a great place whereof the houses were built of mud and +thatched with reeds. It stood upon a wide plain and in its centre rose +a natural, rocky hill upon the crest of which, fashioned of blocks of +gleaming marble and roofed with a metal that shone as gold, was the +temple of the Grasshopper, a columned building very like to those of +Egypt. Round it also were other public buildings, among them the palace +of the Karoon, the whole being surrounded by triple marble walls as a +protection from attack by foes. Never had I seen anything so beautiful +as that hill with its edifices of shining white roofed with gold or +copper and gleaming in the sun. + +Descending from my litter I walked to those of my mother and Karema, for +Bes in his majesty might not be approached, and said as much to them. + +"Yes, Son," answered my mother, "it is worth while to have travelled so +far to see such a sight. I shall have a fine sepulchre, Son." + +"I have seen it all before," broke in Karema. + +"When?" I asked. + +"I do not know. I suppose it must have been when I was the Cup of the +holy Tanofir. At least it is familiar to me. Already I weary of it, for +who can care for a land or a city where they think white people hideous +and scarcely allow a wife to go near her husband, save between midnight +and dawn when they cease from their horrible music?" + +"It will be your part to change these customs, Karema." + +"Yes," she exclaimed, "certainly that will be my part," after which I +went back to my litter. + + + + +CHAPTER XV. THE SUMMONS + +Now at the gates of the City of the Grasshopper we were royally +received. The priests came out to meet us, pushing a colossal image +of their god before them on a kind of flat chariot, and I remember +wondering what would be the value of that huge golden locust, if it were +melted down. Also the Council came, very ancient men all of them, +since the Ethiopians for the most part lived more than a hundred years. +Perhaps that is why they were so glad to welcome Bes since they were too +old to care about retaining power in their own hands as they had done +during his long absence. For save Bes there was no other man living of +the true royal blood who could take the throne. + +Then there were thousands of women, broad-faced and smiling whose black +skins shone with scented oils, for they wore little except a girdle +about their waists and many ornaments of gold. Thus their earrings +were sometimes a palm in breadth and many of them had great gold rings +through their noses, such as in Egypt are put in those of bulls. My +mother laughed at them, but Karema said that she thought them hideous +and hateful. + +They were a strange people, these Ethiopians, like children, most of +them, being merry and kind and never thinking of one thing for more +than a minute. Thus one would see them weep and laugh almost in the same +breath. But among them was an upper class who had great learning and +much ancient knowledge. These men made their laws wherein there was +always sense under what seemed to be folly, designed the temples, +managed the mines of gold and other metals and followed the arts. They +were the real masters of the land, the rest were but slaves content to +live in plenty, for in that fertile soil want never came near them, and +to do as they were bid. + +Thus they passed from the cradle to the grave amidst song and flowers, +carrying out their light, allotted tasks, and for the rest, living as +they would and loving those they would, especially their children, of +whom they had many. By nature and tradition the men were warriors and +hunters, being skilled in the use of the bow and always at war when they +could find anyone to fight. Indeed when we came among them their trouble +was that they had no enemies left, and at once they implored Bes to lead +them out to battle since they were weary of herding kine and tilling +fields. + +All of these things I found out by degrees, also that they were a great +people who could send out an army of seventy thousand men and yet leave +enough behind them to defend their land. Of the world beyond their +borders the most of them knew little, but the learned men of whom I have +spoken, a great deal, since they travelled to Egypt and elsewhere to +study the customs of other countries. For the rest their only god was +the Grasshopper and like that insect they skipped and chirruped through +life and when the winter of death came sprang away to another of which +they knew nothing, leaving their young behind them to bask in the sun of +unborn summers. Such were the Ethiopians. + +Now of all the ceremonies of the reception of Bes and his re-crowning +as Karoon, I knew little, for the reason that the tooth of the crocodile +poisoned my blood and made me very ill, so that I remained for a moon +or more lying in a fine room in the palace where gold seemed to be as +plentiful as earthen pots are in Egypt, and all the vessels were of +crystal. Had it not been for the skill of the Ethiopian leeches and +above all for the nursing of my mother, I think that I must have died. +She it was who withstood them when they wished to cut off my arm, and +wisely, for it recovered and was as strong as it had ever been. In the +end I grew well again and from the platform in front of the temple was +presented to the people by Bes as his saviour and the next greatest to +him in the kingdom, nor shall I ever forget the shoutings with which I +was received. + +Karema also was presented as his wife, having passed the Ordeal of the +Matrons, but only, I think, because it was found that she was in the way +to give an heir to the throne. For to them her beauty was ugliness, nor +could they understand how it came about that their king, who contrary +to the general customs of the land, was only allowed one wife lest the +children should quarrel, could have chosen a lady who was not black. +So they received her in silence with many whisperings which made Karema +very angry. + +When in due course, however, the child came and proved to be a son black +as the best of them and of perfect shape, they relented towards her and +after the birth of a second, grew to love her. But she never forgave and +loved them not at all. Nor was she over-fond of these children of hers +because they were so black which, she said, showed how poisonous was the +blood of the Ethiopians. And indeed this is so, for often I have noticed +that if an Ethiopian weds with one of another colour, their offspring +is black down to the third or fourth generation. Therefore Karema longed +for Egypt notwithstanding the splendour in which she dwelt. + +So greatly did she long that she had recourse to the magic lore which +she had learned from the holy Tanofir, and would sit for hours gazing +into water in a crystal bowl, or sometimes into a ball of crystal +without the water, trying to see visions therein that had to do with +what passed in Egypt. Moreover in time much of her gift returned to her +and she did see many things which she repeated to me, for she would tell +no one else of them, not even her husband. + +Thus she saw Amada kneeling in a shrine before the statue of Isis and +weeping: a picture that made me sad. Also she saw the holy Tanofir +brooding in the darkness of the Cave of the Bulls, and read in his mind +that he was thinking of us, though what he thought she could not read. +Again she saw Eastern messengers delivering letters to Pharaoh and knew +from his face that he was disturbed and that Egypt was threatened with +calamities. And so forth. + +Soon the news of her powers of divination spread abroad, so that all the +Ethiopians grew to fear her as a seeress and thenceforth, whatever they +may have thought, none of them dared to say that she was ugly. Further, +her gift was real, since if she told me of a certain thing such as that +messengers were approaching, in due course they would arrive and make +clear much that she had not been able to understand in her visions. + +Now from the time that I grew strong again and as soon as Bes was firmly +seated on his throne, he and I set to work to train and drill the army +of the Ethiopians, which hitherto had been little more than a mob of men +carrying bows and swords. We divided it into phalanxes after the Greek +fashion, and armed these bodies with long lances, swords, and large +shields in the place of the small ones they had carried before. Also we +trained the archers, teaching them to advance in open order and shoot +from cover, and lastly chose the best soldiers to be captains and +generals. So it came about that at the end of the two years that I +spent in Ethiopia there was a force of sixty thousand men or more whom +I should not have been afraid to match against any troops in the world, +since they were of great strength and courage, and, as I have said, by +nature lovers of war. Also their bows being longer and more powerful, +they could shoot arrows farther than the Easterns or the Egyptians. + +The Ethiopian lords wondered why their King and I did these things, +since they saw no enemy against which so great an army could be led to +battle. On that matter Bes and I kept our own counsel, telling them only +that it was good for the men to be trained to war, since, hearing of +their wealth, one day the King of kings might attempt to invade their +country. So month by month I laboured at this task, leading armies into +distant regions to accustom them to travelling far afield, carrying with +them what was necessary for their sustenance. + +So it went on until a sad thing happened, since on returning from one +of these forays in which I had punished a tribe that had murdered some +Ethiopian hunters and we had taken many thousands of their cattle, I +found my mother dying. She had been smitten by a fever which was common +at that season of the year, and being old and weak had no strength to +throw it off. + +As medicine did not help her, the priests of the Grasshopper prayed day +and night in their temple for her recovery. Yes, there they prayed to a +golden locust standing on an altar in a sanctuary that was surrounded by +crystal coffins wherein rested the flesh of former kings of the land. +To me the sight was pitiful, but Bes asked me what was the difference +between praying to a locust and praying to images with the heads of +beasts, or to a dwarf shaped as he was like we did in Egypt, and I could +not answer him. + +"The truth is, Brother," he said, for so he called me now, "that all +peoples in the world do not offer petitions to what they see and have +been taught to revere, but to something beyond of which to them it is +a sign. But why the Ethiopians should have chosen a grasshopper as a +symbol of God who is everywhere, is more than I can tell. Still they +have done so for thousands of years." + +When I came to my mother's bedside she was wandering and I saw that she +could not live long. In a little while, however, her mind cleared so +that she knew me and tears of joy ran down her pale cheeks because I had +returned before she died. She reminded me that she had always said that +she would find a grave in Ethiopia, and asked to be buried and not kept +above ground in crystal, as was the custom there. Then she said that she +had been dreaming of my father and of me; also that she did not think +that I need fret myself overmuch about Amada, since she was sure that +before long I should kiss her on the lips. + +I asked if she meant that I should marry her and that we should be happy +and fortunate. She replied that she supposed that I should marry her, +but of the rest would say nothing. Indeed her face grew troubled, as +though some thought hurt her, and leaving the matter of Amada she bade +Karema bring me the rose-hued pearls, blessed me, prayed for our reunion +in the halls of Osiris, and straightway died. + +So I caused her to be embalmed after the Egyptian fashion and enclosed +in a coffin of crystal with a scarab on her heart that Karema had +discovered somewhere in the city, for always she was searching for +things that reminded her of Egypt, whereof many were to be found brought +from time to time by travellers or strangers. Then with such ceremony +as we could without the services of the priests of Osiris, Karema and I +buried her in a tomb that Bes had caused to be made near to the steps of +the temple of the Grasshopper, while Bes and his nobles watched from a +distance. + +And so farewell to my beloved mother, the lady Tiu. + + + +After she was gone I grew very sad and lonely. While she lived I had a +home, but now I was an exile, a stranger in a strange land with no one +of my own people to talk to except Karema, with whom, as there were +gossips even in Ethiopia, I thought it well not to talk too much. There +was Bes it was true, but now he was a great king and the time of kings +is not their own. Moreover Bes was Bes and an Ethiopian and I was I and +an Egyptian, and therefore notwithstanding our love and brotherhood, we +could never be like men of the same blood and country. + +I grew weary of Ethiopia with its useless gold and damp eternal green +and heat, and longed for the sand and the keen desert air. Bes noted it +and offered me wives, but I shrank from these black women however buxom +and kindly, and wished for no offspring of their race whom afterwards I +could never leave. To Egypt I had sworn not to return unless one voice +called me and it remained silent. What then was I to do, being no longer +content to discipline and command an army that I might not lead into +battle? + +At length I made up my mind. By nature I was a hunter as much as a +soldier; I would beg from Bes a band of brave men whom I knew, lovers +of adventure who sought new things, and with them strike down south, +following the path of the elephants to wherever the gods might lead us. +Doubtless in the end it would be to death, but what matter when there is +nothing for which one cares to live? + +While I was brooding over these plans Karema read my mind, perhaps +because it was her own, perhaps by help of her strange arts, which I do +not know. At least one day when I was sitting alone looking at the city +beneath from one of the palace window-places, she came to me looking +very beautiful and very mystic in the white robes she always loved to +wear, and said, + +"My lord Shabaka, you tire of this land of honey and sweetness and soft +airs and flowers and gold and crystal and black people who grin and +chatter and are not pleasant to be near, is it not so?" + +"Yes, Queen," I answered. + +"Do not call me queen, my lord Shabaka, for I weary of that name, as we +both do of the rest. Call me Karema the Arab, or Karema the Cup, which +you will, but by the name of Thoth, god of learning, do _not_ call me +queen." + +"Karema then," I said. "Well, how do you know that I tire of all this, +Karema?" + +"How could you do otherwise who are not a barbarian and who have Egypt +in your heart, and Egypt's fate and----" here she looked me straight in +the eye's, "Egypt's Lady. Besides, I measure you by myself." + +"You at least should be happy, Karema, who are great and rich and +beloved, and the wife of a King who is one of the best of men, and the +mother of children." + +"Yes, Shabaka, I should be but I am not, for who can live on sweetmeats +only, especially when they like what is sour? See now how strangely we +are made. When I was a girl, the daughter of an Arab chief, well bred +and well taught as it chanced, I tired of the hard life of the desert +and the narrow minds about me, I who longed for wisdom and to know great +men. Then I became the Cup of the holy Tanofir and wisdom was all about +me, strange wisdom from another world, rough, sharp wisdom from Tanofir, +and the quiet wisdom of the dead among whom I dwelt. I wearied of that +also, Shabaka. I was beautiful and knew it and I longed to shine in +a Court, to be admired among men, to be envied of women, to rule. My +husband came my way. He was clever with a great heart. He was your +friend and therefore I was sure that he must be loyal and true. He was, +or might be, a king, as I knew, though he thought that I did not. I +married him and the holy Tanofir laughed but he did not say me nay, and +I became a queen. And now I wish sometimes that I were dead, or back +holding the cup of the holy Tanofir with the wisdom of the heavens +flowing round me and the soft darkness of the tombs about me. It seems +that in this world we never can be content, Shabaka." + +"No, Karema, we only think that we should be if things were otherwise +than they are. But how can I help you, Karema?" + +"Least of all by going away and leaving me alone," she answered with the +tears starting to her eyes. + +Looking at her, I began to think that the best thing I could do would be +to go away and at once, but as ever she read my thought, shook her head +and laughed. + +"No, no, I have put on my yoke and will carry it to the end. Have I not +two black children and a husband who is a hero, a wit and a mountebank +in one, and a throne and more gold and crystal than I ever wish to see +again even in a dream, and shall I not cling to these good things? If +you went I should only be a little more unhappy than before, that is +all. Not for my sake do I ask you to stay, but for your own." + +"How for my own, Karema? I have done all that I can do here. I have +built the army afresh from cook-boys to generals. Bes needs me no longer +who has you, his children and his country, and I die of weariness." + +"You can stop to make use of that army you have built afresh, Shabaka." + +"Against whom? There are none to fight." + +"Against the Great King of the East. Listen. My gift of vision has grown +strong and clear of late. Only to-day I have seen a meeting between +Pharaoh, the holy Tanofir and the lady Amada. They were all disturbed, +I know not at what, and the end of it was that Amada wrote in a roll +and gave the writing to messengers, who I think even now are speeding +southward--to you, Shabaka. Nay, do not look doubtfully on me, it is +true." + +"Then you did well to tell me, Karema, for within a moon of this day I +should have been where perhaps no messengers would have found me. Now +I will wait and let it be your part to prepare the mind of Bes. Do you +think that he would give me an army to lead to Egypt, if there were +need?" + +She nodded and answered, + +"He would do so for three reasons. The first is because he loves you, +the second because he too wearies of Ethiopia and this rich, fat life of +peace, and the third, because I shall tell him that he must." + +"Then why trouble to speak of the other two?" I said laughing. + +So I stayed on in the City of the Grasshopper, and busied myself with +the questions of how to transport and feed a great army that must hold +the field for six months or a year; also with the setting of hundreds of +skilled men to the making of bows, arrows, swords and shields. Nor did +Bes say me no in these matters. Indeed he helped them forward by issuing +the orders as his own, wherein I saw the hand of Karema. + +Three months went by and I began to think that Karema's power had been +at fault, or that her vision was one that came from her lips and not +from her heart, to keep me in Ethiopia. But again she read my mind and +smiled. + +"Not so, Shabaka," she said. "Those messengers have come to trouble and +are detained by a petty tribe beyond our borders over some matter of a +woman. Ten days ago the frontier guards marched to set them free." + +So again I waited and at length the messengers came, three of them +Egyptians and three men of Ethiopia who dwelt in Egypt to learn its +wisdom, reporting that as Karema had said, through the foolishness of a +servant they had been held prisoner by an Arab chief and thus delayed. +Then they delivered the writings which they had kept safe. One was from +Pharaoh to the Karoon of Ethiopia; one from the holy Tanofir to Karema; +and one from the lady Amada to myself. + +With a trembling hand I broke the silk and seals and read. It ran thus: + + + "Shabaka, my Cousin, + + "You departed from Egypt saying that never would you return unless + I, Amada the priestess, called you, and I told you that I should + never call. You said, moreover, that if you came at my call you + would demand me in guerdon, and I told you that never would I give + myself to you who was doubly sworn to Isis. Yet now I call and now + I say that if you come and conquer and I yet live, then, if you + still will it, I am yours. Thus stands the case: The Great King + advances upon Egypt with an army countless as the sands, nor can + Egypt hope to battle against him unaided and alone. He comes to + make of her a slave, to kill her children, to burn her temples, to + sack her cities and to defile her gods with blasphemies. Moreover + he comes to seize me and to drag me away to shame in his House of + Women. + + "Therefore for the sake of the gods, for Egypt's sake and for my + own, I pray you come and save us. Moreover I still love you, + Shabaka, yes, more a thousand times, then ever I did, though + whether you still love me I know not. For that love's sake, + therefore, I am ready to break my vows to Isis and to dare her + vengeance, if she should desire to be avenged upon me who would + save her and her worship, praying that it may fall on my head and + not on yours. This will I do by the counsel of the holy Tanofir, + by command of Pharaoh, and with the consent of the high priests of + Egypt. + + "Now I, Amada, have written. Choose, Shabaka, beloved of my heart." + + +Such was the letter that caused my head to swim and set my soul on fire. +Still I said nothing, but thrust it into my robe and waited. Presently +Bes, who had been reading in his roll, looked up and spoke, saying, + +"Are you minded to see arrows fly and swords shine in war, Brother? +If so, here is opportunity. Pharaoh writes to me above his own seal, +seeking an alliance between Egypt and Ethiopia. He says that the King of +kings invades him and that if he conquers Egypt he has sworn to travel +on and conquer Ethiopia also, since he learns that it is now ruled by a +certain dwarf who once stole his White Signet, and by a certain Egyptian +who once killed his Satrap, Idernes." + +"What says the Karoon?" I asked. + +Bes rolled his eyes and turning to Karema, asked, + +"What says the Karoon's wife?" + +Karema laid down the roll she had been studying and answered, + +"She says that she has received a command from her master the holy +Tanofir to wait upon him forthwith, for reasons that he will explain +when she arrives, or to brave his curse upon her, her children, her +country and her husband, and not only his but that of the spirits who +serve him." + +"The curse of the holy Tanofir is not a thing to mock at," said Bes, "as +I who revere him, know as well as any man." + +"No, Husband, and therefore I leave for Egypt as soon as may be. It +seems that my sister is dead, this year past, and the holy Tanofir has +no one to hold his cup." + +"And what shall I do?" asked Bes. + +"That is for you to say, Husband. But if you will, you can stay here +and guard our children, giving the command of your army to the lord +Shabaka." + +Now, for we were alone, Bes twisted himself about, rolling his eyes and +laughing as he used to do before he became Karoon of Ethiopia. + +"O-ho-ho! Wife," he said, "so you are to go to Egypt, leaving me to play +the nurse to babes, and my brother here is to command my armies, leaving +me to look after the old men and the women. Nay, I think otherwise. I +think that I shall come also, that is if my brother wishes it. Did he +not save my life and is it not his and with it all I have? Oh! have +done. Once more we will stand side by side in the battle, Brother, and +afterwards let Fate do as it will with us. Tell me now, what is the tale +of archers and of swordsmen with which we can march against the Great +King with whom, like you, I have a score to settle?" + +"Seventy and five thousand," I answered. + +"Good! On the fifth day from now the army marches for Egypt." + + + + +CHAPTER XVI. TANOFIR FINDS HIS BROKEN CUP + +March we did, but on the fifteenth day, not the fifth, since there +was much to make ready. First the Council of the Ethiopians must be +consulted and through them the people. In the beginning there was +trouble over the matter, since many were against a distant war, and this +even after Bes had urged that it was better to attack than wait to be +attacked. For they answered, and justly, that here in Ethiopia distance +and the desert were their shields, since the King of kings, however +great his strength, would be weary and famished before he set foot +within their borders. + +In the end the knot was cut with a sword, for when the army came to +learn of the dispute, from the generals down to the common soldiers, +every man clamoured to be led to war, since, as I have said, these +Ethiopians were fighters all of them, and near at hand there were none +left with whom they could fight. So when the Council came to see that +they must choose between war abroad and revolt at home, they gave way, +bargaining only that the children of the Karoon should not leave the +land so that if aught befell him, there would be some of the true blood +left to succeed. + +Also the Grasshopper was consulted by the priests who found the omens +favourable. Indeed I was told that this great golden locust sat up upon +its hind legs upon the altar and waved its feelers in the air, which +only happened when wonderful fortune was about to bless the land. The +tale reminded me of the nodding of the statues of our own gods in Egypt +when a new Pharaoh was presented to them, and of that of Isis when Amada +put up her prayer to the divine Mother. To tell the truth, I suspected +Karema of having some hand in the business. However, so it happened. + +At length we set forth, a mighty host, Bes commanding the swordsmen and +I, under him, the archers, of whom there were more than thirty thousand +men, and glad was I when all the farewells were said and we were free of +the weeping crowds of women. At first Bes and Karema were somewhat sad +at parting from their children, but in a little while they grew gay +again since the one longed for battle and the other for the sands of +Egypt. + +Now of our advance I need say little, except that it was slow, though +none dared to bar the road of so mighty an array. Since we must go on +foot, we were not able to cover more than five leagues a day, for even +after we reached the river boats could not be found for so many, though +Karema travelled in one with her ladies. Also cattle and corn must +always be sent forward for food. Still we crept on to Egypt without +sickness, accident, or revolt. + +When we drew near to its frontiers messengers met us from Pharaoh +bearing letters in answer to those which we had sent with the tidings +of our coming. These contained little but ill news. It seemed that the +Great King with a countless host had taken all the cities of the Delta +and, after a long siege, had captured Memphis and put it to the sack, +and that the army of Egypt, fighting desperately by land and upon the +Nile was being driven southwards towards Thebes. Pharaoh added that he +proposed to make his last stand at the strong city of Amada, since he +doubted whether the troops from Lower Egypt would not rather surrender +to the Easterns than retreat further up the Nile. He thanked and blessed +us for our promised aid and prayed that it might come in time to save +Egypt from slavery and himself from death. + +Also there was a letter for me from Amada in which she said, + + + "Oh! come quickly. Come quickly, beloved Shabaka, lest of me you + should find but bones for never will I fall living into the hands + of the Great King. We are sore pressed and although Amada has been + made very strong, it can stand but a little while against such a + countless multitude armed with all the engines of war." + + +For Karema, too, there were messages from the holy Tanofir of the same +meaning, saying that unless we appeared within a moon of their receipt, +all was lost. + +We read and took counsel. Then we pressed forward by double marches, +sending swift runners forward to bid Pharaoh and his army hold on to the +last spear and arrow. + +On the twenty-fifth day from the receipt of this news we came to the +great frontier city which we found in tumult for its citizens were +mad with fear. Here we rested one night and ate of the food that was +gathered there in plenty. Then leaving a small rear-guard of five +thousand men who were tired out, to hold the place, we pressed onwards, +for Amada was still four days' march away. On the morning of the fourth +day we were told that it was falling, or had fallen, and when at length +we came in sight of the place we saw that it was beleaguered by an +innumerable host of Easterns, while on the Nile was a great fleet of +Grecian and Cyprian mercenaries. Moreover, heralds from the King of +kings reached us, saying: + +"Surrender, Barbarians, or before the second day dawns you shall sleep +sound, every one of you." + +To these we answered that we would take counsel on the matter and that +perhaps on the morrow we would surrender, since when we had marched from +Ethiopia, we did not know how great was the King's strength, having been +deceived as to it by the letters of the Pharaoh. Meanwhile that the +King of kings would do well to let us alone, since we were brave men and +meant to die hard, and it would be better for him to leave us to march +back to Ethiopia, rather than lose an army in trying to kill us. + +With these words which were spoken by Bes himself, the messengers +departed. One of them however, who seemed to be a great lord, called in +a loud voice to his companions, saying it was hard that nobles should +have to do the errands, not of a man but of an ape who would look better +hanging to a pole. Bes made no answer, only rolled his yellow eyes and +said when the lord was out of hearing, + +"Now by the Grasshopper and all the gods of Egypt I swear that in +payment for this insult I will choke the Nile with the army of the Great +King, and hang that knave to a pole from the prow of the royal ship." +Which last thing I hope he did. + + + +When the embassy had gone Bes gave orders that the whole army should eat +and lie down to sleep. + +"I am sure," said he, "that the Great King will not attack us at once, +since he will hope that we shall flee away during the night, having seen +his strength." + +So the Ethiopians filled themselves and then lay down to sleep, which +these people can do at any time, even if not tired as they were. But +while they rested Bes and I and Karema, with some of the generals +consulted together long and earnestly. For in truth we knew not what +to do. But a league away lay the town of Amada beset by hundreds of +thousands of the Easterns so that none could come in or out, and within +its walls were the remains of Pharaoh's army, not more than twenty +thousand men, all told, if what we heard were true. On the Nile also +was the great Grecian and Cyprian fleet, two hundred vessels and more, +though as we could see by the light of the setting sun the most of these +were made fast to the western bank where the Egyptians could not come at +them. + +For the rest our position was good, being on high desert beyond the +cultivated land which bordered the eastern bank. But in front of us, +separating us from the southern army of the King, stretched a swamp hard +to cross, so that we could not hope to make an attack by night as there +was no moon. Lastly, the main Eastern strength, to the number of two +hundred thousand or more, lay to the north beyond Amada. + +All these things we considered, talking low and earnestly there in the +tent, till it grew so dark that we could not see each other's faces +while behind us slumbered our army that now numbered some seventy +thousand men. + +"We are in a trap," said Bes at length. "If we await attack they will +weigh us down with numbers. If we flee they have camels and horses and +will overtake us; also ships of which we have none. If we attack it must +be without cover through swamp where we shall be bogged. + +"Meanwhile Pharaoh is perishing within yonder walls of Amada which the +engines batter down. By the Grasshopper! I know not what to do. It seems +that our journey is vain and that few of us will see Ethiopia more; also +that Egypt is sped." + +I made no answer, for here my generalship failed me and I had nothing +to say. The captains, too, were silent, only woman-like, Karema wept a +little, and I too went near to weeping who thought of Amada penned in +yonder temple like a lamb that awaits the butcher's knife. + +Suddenly, coming from the door of the tent which I thought was closed, I +heard a deep voice say, + +"I have ever noted that those of Ethiopian blood are melancholy after +sundown, though of Egyptians I had thought better things." + +Now about this voice there was something familiar to me, still I said +nothing, nor did the others, for to speak the truth, all of us were +frightened and thought that we must dream. For how could any thing that +breathed approach this tent through a triple line of sentries? So we sat +still, staring at the darkness, till presently in that darkness appeared +a glow of light, such as comes from the fire-flies of Ethiopia. It grew +and grew while we gasped with fear, till presently it took shape, and +the shape it took was that of the ancient withered face, the sightless +eyes, and the white beard of the holy Tanofir. Yes, there not two feet +from the ground seemed to float the head of the holy Tanofir, limned in +faint flame, which I suppose must have been reflected on to it from the +light of some camp-fire without. + +"O my beloved master!" cried Karema, and threw herself towards him. + +"O my beloved Cup!" answered Tanofir. "Glad am I to know you well and +unshattered." + +Then a torch was lit and lo! there before us, wrapped in his dark cloak +sat the holy Tanofir. + +"Whence come you, my Great-uncle?" I asked amazed. + +"From less far than you do, Nephew," he answered. "Namely out of Amada +yonder. Oh! ask me not how. It is easy if you are a blind old beggar +who knows the path. And by the way, if you have aught to eat I should be +glad of a bite and a sup, since in Amada food has been scarce for this +last month, and to-night there is little left." + +Karema sped from the tent and presently returned with bread and wine of +which Tanofir partook almost greedily. + +"This is the first strong drink that I have tasted for many a year," he +said as he drained the goblet; "but better a broken vow than broken wits +when one has much to plan and do. At least I hope the gods will think so +when I meet them presently. There--I am strong again. Now, say, what is +your force?" + +We told him. + +"Good. And what is your plan?" + +We shook our heads, having none. + +"Bes," he said sternly, "I think you grow dull since you became a +king--or perhaps it is marriage that makes you so. Why, in bygone years +schemes would have come so fast that they would have choked each other +between those thick lips of yours. And Shabaka, tell me, have you lost +all your generalship whereof once you had plenty, in the soft air of +Ethiopia? Or is it that even the shadow of marriage makes _you_ dull? +Well, I must turn to the woman, for that is always the lot of man. Your +plan, Karema, and quickly for there is no time to lose." + +Now the face of Karema grew fixed and her eyes dreamy as she spoke in a +slow, measured voice like one who knows not what she says. + +"My plan is to destroy the armies of the Great King and to relieve the +city of Amada." + +"A very good plan," said holy Tanofir, "but the question is, how?" + +"I think," went on Karema, "that about a league above this place there +is a spot where at this season the Nile can be forded by tall men +without the wetting of their shoulders. First then, I would send five +thousand swordsmen across that ford and let them creep down on the navy +of the Great King where the sailors revel in safety, or sleep sound, and +fire the ships. The wind blows strongly from the south and the flames +will leap fast from one of them to the other. Most of their crews will +be burned and the rest can be slain by our five thousand." + +"Good, very good," said the holy Tanofir, "but not enough, seeing that +on the eastern bank is gathered the host of over two hundred thousand +men. Now how will you deal with _them_, Karema?" + +"I seem to see a road yonder beyond the swamp. It runs on the edge of +the desert but behind the sand-hills. I would send the archers of whom +there are more than thirty thousand, under the command of Shabaka along +that road which leads them past Amada. On its farther side are low hills +strewn with rocks. Here I would let the archers take cover and wait for +the breaking of the dawn. Then beneath them they will see the most of +the Eastern host and with such bows as ours they can sweep the plain +from the hills almost to the Nile, and having a hundred arrows to a man, +should slaughter the Easterns by the ten thousand, for when these turn +to charge a shaft should pierce through two together." + +"Good again," said Tanofir. "But what of the army of the Great King +which lies upon this side of Amada?" + +"I think that before the dawn, believing us so few, it will advance and +with the first light begin to thread the swamp, and therefore we must +keep five thousand archers to gall it as it comes. Still it will win +through, though with loss, and find us waiting for it here shoulder to +shoulder, rank upon rank with locked shields, against which horse +and foot shall break in vain, for who shall drive a wedge through the +Ethiopian squares that Shabaka has trained and that Bes, the Karoon, +commands? I say that they shall roll back like waves from a cliff; yes, +again and again, growing ever fewer till the clamour of battle and +the shouts of fear and agony reach their ears from beyond Amada where +Shabaka and the archers do their work and the sight of the burning ships +strikes terror in them and they fly." + +"Good again," said the holy Tanofir. "But still many on both fronts will +be left, for this army of Easterns is very vast. And how will you deal +with these, O Karema?" + +"On these I would have Pharaoh with all his remaining strength pour +from the northern and the southern gates of Amada, for so shall they be +caught like wounded lions between two wild bulls and torn and trampled +and utterly destroyed. Only I know not how to tell Pharaoh what he must +do, and when." + +"Good again," said the holy Tanofir, "very good. And as for the telling +of Pharaoh, well, I shall see him presently. It is strange, my chipped +Cup which I had almost thrown away as useless, that although broken, you +still hold so much wisdom. For know, wonderful though it may seem, that +just such plans as you have spoken have grown up in my own mind, only I +wished to learn if you thought them wise." + +Then he laughed a little and Karema stretched her arms as one does who +awakes from sleep, rubbed her eyes and asked if he would not eat more +food. + +In an instant Tanofir was speaking again in a quick, clear voice. + +"Bes, or King," he said, "doubtless you will do your wife's will. +Therefore let the host be aroused and stand to its arms. As it chances +I have four men without who can be trusted. Two of these will guide the +five thousand to the ford and across it; also down upon the ships. The +other two will guide Shabaka and the archers along the road which Karema +remembers so well; perhaps she trod it as a child. For my part I return +to Amada to make sure that Pharaoh does his share and at the right time. +For mark, unless all this is carried through to-night Amada will fall +to-morrow, a certain priestess will die, and you, Bes, and your soldiers +will never look on Ethiopia again. Is it agreed?" + +I nodded who did not wish to waste time in words, and Bes rolled his +eyes and answered, + +"When one can think of nothing, it is best to follow the counsel of +those who can think of something; also to hunt rather than to be hunted. +Especially is this so if that something comes from the holy Tanofir or +his broken Cup. Generals, you have heard. Rouse the host and bid them +stand to their arms company by company!" + +The generals leapt away into the darkness like arrows from a bow, and +presently we heard the noise of gathering men. + +"Where are these guides of yours, holy Tanofir?" asked Bes. + +Tanofir beckoned over his shoulder, and out of the gloom, one by one, +four men stole into the tent. They were strange, quiet men, but I can +say no more of them since their faces were veiled, nor as it chances, +did I ever see any of them after the battle, in which I suppose that +they were killed. Or perhaps they appeared after--well, never mind! + +"You have heard," said Tanofir, whereupon all four of them bowed their +mysterious veiled heads. + +"Now, my Brother," whispered Bes into my ear, "tell me, I pray you, how +did four men who were not in the tent, hear what was said in this tent, +and how did they come through the guards who have orders to kill anyone +who does not know the countersign, especially men whose faces are +wrapped in napkins?" + +"I do not know," I answered, whereon Bes groaned, only Karema smiled a +little as though to herself. + +"Then, having heard, obey," said the holy Tanofir, whereon the four +veiled ones bowed again. + +"Will you not give them their orders, O most Venerable?" inquired Bes +doubtfully. + +"I think it is needless," said Tanofir in a dry voice. "Why try to teach +those who know?" + +"Will you not offer them something to eat, since they also must be +hungry?" I asked of Karema. + +"Fool, be silent," she replied, looking on me with contempt. "Do +the--friends--of Tanofir need to eat?" + +"I should have thought so after being beleaguered for a month in a +starving town. If the master wants to eat, why should not his men?" I +murmured. + +Then a thought struck me and I was silent. + +A general returned and reported that the orders had been executed and +that all the army was afoot. + +"Good," said Bes. "Then start forthwith with five thousand men, and burn +those ships, according to the plan laid down by the Queen Karema, which +you heard her speak but now," and he named certain regiments that he +should take with him, those of the general's own command, adding: "Save +some of the ships if you can, and afterwards cross the Nile in them with +your men, and join yourself either to my force or to that of the lord +Shabaka, according to what you see. May the Grasshopper give you victory +and wisdom." + +The general saluted and asked, + +"Who guides us to and across the ford of the great river?" + +Two of the veiled men stepped forward whereon the general muttered into +my ear, + +"I like not the look of them. I pray the Grasshopper they do not guide +us across the River of Death." + +"Have no fear, General," said the holy Tanofir from the other end of the +tent. "If you and your men play their parts as well as the guides will +play theirs, the ships are already burned together with their companies. +Only take fire with you." + +So that general departed with the two guides, looking somewhat +frightened, and soon was marching up Nile at the head of five thousand +swordsmen. + +Now Bes looked at me and said, + +"It seems that you had better be gone also, my Brother, with the +archers. Perchance the holy Tanofir will show you whither." + +"No, no," answered Tanofir, "my guides will show him. Look not so +doubtful, Shabaka. Did I fail you when you were in the grip of the King +of kings in the East, and only your own life and that of Bes were at +stake?" + +"I do not know," I answered. + +"You do not know, but I know, as I think do Bes and Karema, since the +one received the messages which the other sent. Well, if I did not fail +you then, shall I fail you now when Egypt is at stake? Follow these +guides I give you, and----" here he took hold of the quiver of arrows +that lay beside me on the ground, and as certainly as though he could +see it with his blind eyes, touched one of them, on the shaft of which +were two black and a white feather, "remember my words after you have +loosed this arrow from your great black bow and noted where it strikes." + +Then I turned to Bes and asked, + +"Where do we meet again?" + +"I cannot say, Brother," he answered. "In Amada if that may be. If not, +at the Table of Osiris, or in the fields of the Grasshopper, or in the +blackness which swallows all, gods and men together." + +"Does Karema come with me or bide with you?" I asked again. + +"She does neither," interrupted Tanofir, "she accompanies me to Amada, +where I have need of her and she will be more safe. Oh! fear nothing, +for every hermit however poor, still carries his staff and his cup, even +if it be cracked." + +Then I shook Bes by the hand and went my way, wondering if I were awake +or dreaming, and the last thing I saw in that tent was the beautiful +face of Karema smiling at me. This I took to be a good omen, since I +knew that it was the heart of the holy Tanofir which smiled, and that +her eyes were but its mirror. + +Already my thirty thousand archers were marshalling, and having made +sure that there was ample store of arrows and that all their gourds +were filled with water, I set myself at their head while in front of me +walked the two veiled guides. I looked upon them doubtfully, since it +seemed dangerous to trust an army to unknown men who for aught I knew, +might lead us into the midst of our foes. Then I remembered that they +were vouched for by the holy Tanofir, my own great-uncle whom I trusted +above any man on earth, and took heart again. + +How had he come into our tent, I wondered, and how, blind as he was, +would he get back into Amada with Karema, if he took her? Well, who +could account for the goings or the comings of the holy Tanofir, who was +more of a spirit than a man? Perhaps it was not really he whom we had +seen, but what we Egyptians called his _Ka_ or Double which can pass +to and fro at will. Only do _Kas_ eat? Of this matter I knew only that +offerings of food and drink are made to them in tombs. So leaving the +holy Tanofir to guard himself, I turned my mind to our own business, +which was to surprise the army of the Great King. + +Skirting the swamp we came to rough and higher ground and though I could +see little in that darkness, I knew that we were walking up a hill. +Presently we crossed its crest and descending for three bowshots or so, +I felt that my feet were on a road. Now the guides turned to the left +and after them in a long line came my army of thirty thousand archers. +In utter silence we went since we had no beasts with us and our +sandalled feet made little noise; moreover orders had been passed down +the line that the man who made a sound should die. + +For two hours or more we marched thus, then bore to the left again and +climbed a slope, by which time I judged we must be well past the town +of Amada. Here suddenly the guides halted and we after them at whispered +words of command. One of them took me by the cloak, led me forward a +little way to the crest of the ridge, and pointed with his white-sleeved +arm. I looked and there beneath me, well within bowshot, were thousands +of the watchfires of the King's army, flaring, some of them, in the +strong wind. For a full league those fires burned and we were opposite +to the midmost of them. + +"See now, General Shabaka," said the guide, speaking for the first time +in a curious hissing whisper such as might come from a man who had no +lips, "beneath you sleeps the Eastern host, which being so great, has +not thought it needful to guard this ridge. Now marshal your archers in +a fourfold line in such fashion that at the first break of dawn they +can take cover behind the rocks and shoot, every man of them without +piercing his fellow. Do you bide here with the centre where your +standard can be seen by all to north and south. I and my companion will +lead your vanguard farther on to where the ridge draws nearer to the +Nile, so that with their arrows they can hold back and slay any who +strive to escape down stream. The rest is in your hands, for we are +guides, not generals. Summon your captains and issue your commands." + +So we went back again and I called the officers together and told them +what they were to do, then despatched them to their regiments. + +Presently the vanguard of ten thousand men drew away and vanished, and +with them the white-robed guides on whom I never looked again. Then I +marshalled my centre as well as I could in the gloom, and bade them lie +down to rest and sleep if they were able; also, within thirty minutes of +the sunrise, to eat and drink a little of the food they carried, to +see that every bow was ready and that the arrows were loosened in every +quiver. This done, with a few whom I trusted to serve me as messengers +and guard, I crept up to the brow of the hill or slope, and there we +laid us down and watched. + + + + +CHAPTER XVII. THE BATTLE--AND AFTER + +Two hours went by and I knew by the stars that the dawn could not be far +away. My eyes were fixed upon the Nile and on the lights that hung to +the prows of the Great King's ships. Where were those who had been sent +to fire them, I wondered, for of them I saw nothing. Well, their journey +would be long as they must wade the river. Perhaps they had not yet +arrived, or perhaps they had miscarried. At least the fleet seemed very +quiet. None were alarmed there and no sentry challenged. + +At length it grew near to dawn and behind me I heard the gentle stir of +the Ethiopians arising and eating as they had been bidden, whereon I +too ate and drank a little, though never had I less wished for food. The +East brightened and far up the Nile of a sudden there appeared what at +first I took to be a meteor or a lantern waving in the wind that now was +blowing its strongest, as it does at this season of the year just at the +time of dawn. Yet that lantern seemed to travel fast and lo! now I saw +that it was fire running up the rigging of a ship. + +It leapt from rope to rope and from sail to sail till they blazed +fiercely, and in other ships also nearer to us, flame appeared that grew +to a great red sheet. Our men had not failed; the navy of the King of +kings was burning! Oh! how it burned fanned by the breath of that strong +wind. From vessel to vessel leapt the fire like a thing alive, for all +of them were drawn up on the bank with prows fastened in such fashion +that they could not readily be made loose. Some broke away indeed, but +they were aflame and only served to spread the fire more quickly. Before +the rim of the sun appeared for a league or more there was nothing but +blazing ships from which rose a hideous crying, and still more and more +took fire lower down the line. + +I had no time to watch for now I must be up and doing. The sky grew +grey, there was light enough to see though faintly. I cast my eyes about +me and perceived that no place in the world could have been better for +archery. In front the hill was steep for a hundred paces or more and +scattered over with thousands of large stones behind which bowmen might +take shelter. Then came a gentle slope of loose sand up which attackers +would find it hard to climb. Then the long flat plain whereon the +Easterns were camped, and beyond it, scarce two furlongs away, the banks +of Nile. + +Indeed the place was ill-chosen for so great an army, nor could it have +held them all, had not the camping ground been a full league in length, +and even so they were crowded. Out of the mist their tents appeared, +thousands of them, farther than my eye could reach, and almost opposite +to me, near to the banks of the river, was a great pavilion of silk +and gold that I guessed must shelter the majesty of the King of kings. +Indeed this was certain since now I saw that over it floated his royal +banner which I knew so well, I who had stolen the little White Signet +of signets from which it was taken. Truly the holy Tanofir, or his Cup, +Karema, or his messengers, or the spirits with whom he dwelt, I know not +which, had a general's eye and knew how to plan an ambuscade. + +So, thought I to myself as I ran back to my army to meet the gathered +captains and set all things in order. It was soon done for they were +ready, as were the fierce Ethiopians fresh from their rest and food, +and stringing their bows, every one of them, or loosening the arrows in +their quivers. As I came they lifted their hands in salute, for speak +they dared not and I sent a whisper down their ranks, that this day +they must fight and conquer, or fall for the glory of Ethiopia and their +king. Then I gave my orders and before the sun rose and revealed them +they crept forward in a fourfold line and took shelter behind the +stones, lying there invisible on their bellies until the moment came. + +The red rim of Ra appeared glorious in the East, and I, from behind the +rocks that I had chosen, sat down and watched. Oh! truly Tanofir or +the gods of Egypt were ordering things aright for us. The huge camp was +awake now and aware of what was happening on the Nile. They could not +see well because of the tall reeds upon the river's rim and therefore, +without order or discipline, by the thousand and the ten thousand, for +their numbers were countless, some with arms and some without, they ran +to the slope of sand beneath our station and began to climb it to have a +better view of the burning ships. + +The sun leapt up swiftly as it does in Egypt. His glowing edge appeared +over the crest of the hill though the hollows beneath were still filled +with shadow. The moment was at hand. I waited till I had counted ten, +glancing to the right and left of me to see that all were ready and to +suffer the crowd to thicken on the slope, but not to reach the lowest +rocks, whither they were climbing. Then I gave the double signal that +had been agreed. + +Behind me the banner of the golden Grasshopper was raised upon a tall +pole and broke upon the breeze. That was the first signal whereat every +man rose to his knees and set shaft on string. Next I lifted my bow, the +black bow, the ancient bow that few save I could bend, and drew it to my +ear. + +Far away, out of arrow-reach as most would have said, floated the Great +King's standard over his pavilion. At this I aimed, making allowance for +the wind, and shot. The shaft leapt forward, seen in the sunlight, lost +in the shadow, seen in the sunlight again and lastly seen once more, +pinning that golden standard against its pole! + +At the sight of the omen a roar went up that rolled to right and left of +us, a roar from thirty thousand throats. Now it was lost in a sound like +to the hissing of thunder rain in Ethiopia, the sound of thirty thousand +arrows rushing through the wind. Oh! they were well aimed, those arrows +for I had not taught the Ethiopians archery in vain. + +How many went down before them? The gods of Egypt know alone. I do not. +All I know is that the long slope of sand which had been crowded with +standing men, was now thick with fallen men, many of whom lay as though +they were asleep. For what mail could resist the iron-pointed shafts +driven by the strong bows of the Ethiopians? + +And this was but a beginning, for, flight after flight, those arrows +sped till the air grew dark with them. Soon there were no more to shoot +at on the slope, for these were down, and the order went to lift the +bows and draw upon the camp, and especially upon the parks of baggage +beasts. Presently these were down also, or rushing maddened to and fro. + +At last the Eastern generals saw and understood. Orders were shouted +and in a mad confusion the scores of thousands who were unharmed, rushed +back towards the banks of Nile where our shafts could not reach them. +Here they formed up in their companies and took counsel. It was soon +ended, for all the vast mass of them, preceded by a cloud of archers, +began to advance upon the hill. + +Now I passed a command to the Ethiopians, of whom so far not one +had fallen, to lie low and wait. On came the glittering multitude of +Easterns, gay with purple and gold, their mail and swords shining in the +risen sun. On they came by squadron and by company, more than the eye +could number. They reached the sand slope thick with their own dead and +wounded and paused a little because they could see no man, since the +black bodies of the Ethiopians were hid behind the black stones and the +black bows did not catch the light. + +Then from a gorgeous group that I guessed hid the person of the Great +King surrounded by his regiment of guards, ten thousand of them who were +called Immortals, messengers sprang forth screaming the order to charge. +The host began to climb the slippery sand slope but still I held my hand +till their endless lines were within fifty paces of us and their arrows +rattled harmlessly against our stones. Then I caused the banner of the +Grasshopper that had been lowered, to be lifted thrice, and at the third +lifting once more thirty thousand arrows rushed forth to kill. + +They went down, they went down in lines and heaps, riddled through and +through. But still others came on for they fought under the eye of the +Great King, and to fly meant death with shame and torture. We could not +kill them all, they were too many. We could not kill the half of them. +Now their foremost were within ten paces of us and since we must stand +up to shoot, our men began to fall, also pierced with arrows. I caused +the blast of retreat to be sounded on the ivory horn and step by step we +drew back to the crest of the ridge, shooting as we went. On the crest +we re-formed rapidly in a double line standing as close as we could +together and my example was followed all down the ranks to right and +left. Then I bethought me of a plan that I had taught these archers +again and again in Ethiopia. + +With the flag I signalled a command to stop shooting and also passed the +word down the line, so that presently no more arrows flew. The Easterns +hesitated, wondering whether this were a trap, or if we lacked shafts, +and meanwhile I sent messengers with certain orders to the vanguard, who +sped away at speed behind the hill, running as they never ran before. +Presently I heard a voice below cry out, + +"The Great King commands that the barbarians be destroyed. Let the +barbarians be destroyed!" + +Now with a roar they came on like a flood. I waited till they were +within twenty paces of us, and shouted, "Shoot and fall!" + +The first line shot and oh! fearful was its work, for not a shaft missed +those crowded hosts and many pinned two together. My archers shot and +fell down, setting new arrows to the string as they fell, whereon the +second line also shot over them. Then up we sprang and loosed again, and +again fell down, whereon the second line once more poured in its deadly +hail. + +Now the Easterns stayed their advance, for their front ranks lay prone, +and those behind must climb over them if they could. Yes, standing there +in glittering groups they rocked and hesitated although their officers +struck them with swords and lances to drive them forward. Once more our +front rank rose and loosed, and once more we dropped and let the shafts +of the second speed over us. It was too much, flesh and blood could not +bear more of those arrows. Thousands upon thousands were down and the +rest began to flee in confusion. + +Then at my command the ivory horns sounded the charge. Every man slung +his bow upon his back and drew his short sword. + +"On to them!" I cried and leapt forward. + +Like a black torrent we rushed down the hill, leaping over the dead and +wounded. The retreat became a rout since before these ebon, great-eyed +warriors the soft Easterns did not care to stand. They fled screaming, + +"These are devils! These are devils!" + +We were among them now, hacking and stabbing with the short swords upon +their heads and backs. There was no need to aim the blow, they were so +many. Like a huddled mob of cattle they turned and fled down Nile. But +my orders had reached the vanguard and these, hidden in the growing +crops on the narrow neck of swampy land between the hills and the Nile, +met them with arrows as they came, also raked them from the steep cliff +side. Their chariot wheels sank into the mud till the horses were slain; +their footmen were piled in heaps about them, till soon there was a +mighty wall of dead and dying. And our centre and rearguard came up +behind. Oh! we slew and slew, till before the sun was an hour high over +half the army of the Great King was no more. Then we re-formed, having +suffered but little loss, and drank of the water of the Nile. + +"All is not done," I cried. + +For the Immortals still remained behind us, gathered in massed ranks +about their king. Also there were many thousands of others between these +and the walls of Amada, and to the south of the city yet a second army, +that with which Bes had been left to deal, with what success I knew not. + +"Ethiopians," I shouted, "cease crying Victory, since the battle is +about to begin. Strike, and at once before the Easterns find their heart +again." + +So we advanced upon the Immortals, all of us, for now the vanguard had +joined our strength. + +In long lines we advanced over that blood-soaked plain, and as we came +the Great King loosed his remaining chariots against us. It availed him +nothing, since the horses could not face our arrows whereof, thanks +be to the gods! I had prepared so ample a store, carried in bundles +by lads. Scarce a chariot reached our lines, and those that did were +destroyed, leaving us unbroken. + +The chariots were done with and their drivers dead, but there still +frowned the squares of the Immortals. We shot at them till nearly all +our shafts were spent, and, galled to madness, they charged. We did +not wait for the points of those long spears, but ran in beneath them +striking with our short swords, and oh! grim and desperate was that +battle, since the Easterns were clad in mail and the Ethiopians had but +short jerkins of bull's hide. + +Fight as we would we were driven back. The fray turned against us and +we fell by hundreds. I bethought me of flight to the hills, since now +we were outnumbered and very weary. But behold! when all seemed lost a +great shouting rose from Amada and through her opened gates poured forth +all that remained of the army of Pharaoh, perhaps eighteen or twenty +thousand men. I saw, and my heart rose again. + +"Stand firm!" I cried. "Stand firm!" and lo! we stood. + +The Egyptians were on them now and in their midst I saw Pharaoh's +banner. By degrees the battle swayed towards the banks of Nile, we to +the north, the Egyptians to the south and the Easterns between us. They +were trying to turn our flank; yes, and would have done it, had there +not suddenly appeared upon the Nile a fleet of ships. At first I thought +that we were lost, for these ships were from Greece and Cyprus, till I +saw the banner of the Grasshopper wave from a prow, and knew that they +were manned by our five thousand who had gone out to burn the fleet, +and had saved these vessels. They beached and from their crowded holds +poured the five thousand, or those that were left of them, and ranging +themselves upon the bank, raised their war-shout and attacked the ends +of the Easterns' lines. + +Now we charged for the last time and the Egyptians charged from the +south. Ha-ha! the ranks of the Immortals were broken at length. We +were among them. I saw Pharaoh, his _uraeus_ circlet on his helm. He was +wounded and sore beset. A tall Immortal rushed at him with a spear and +drove it home. + +Pharaoh fell. + +I leapt over him and killed that Eastern with a blow upon the neck, but +my sword shattered on his armour. The tide of battle rolled up and swept +us apart and I saw Pharaoh being carried away. Look! yonder was the +Great King himself standing in a golden chariot, the Great King in all +his glory whom last I had seen far away in the East. He knew me and shot +at me with a bow, the bow he thought my own, shouting, "Die, dog of an +Egyptian!" + +His arrow pierced my helm but missed my head. I strove to come at him +but could not. + +The real rout began. The Immortals were broken like an earthen jar. They +retreated in groups fighting desperately and of these the thickest was +around the Great King. He whom I hated was about to escape me. He still +had horses; he would fly down Nile, gain his reserves and so away back +to the East, where he would gather new and yet larger armies, since men +in millions were at his command. Then he would return and destroy Egypt +when perchance there were no Ethiopians to help her, and perhaps after +all drag Amada to his House of Women. See, they were breaking through +and already I was far away with a wound in my breast, a hurt leg and a +shattered sword. + +What could I do? My arrows were spent and the bearers had none left to +give me. No, there was one still in the quiver. I drew it out. On its +shaft were two black feathers and one white. Who had spoken of that +arrow? I remembered, Tanofir. I was to think of certain things that he +had said when I noted what it pierced. I unslung my bow, strung it and +set that arrow on the string. + +By now the Great King was far away, out of reach for most archers. His +chariot forging ahead amidst the remnant of his guards and the nobles +who attended on his sacred person, travelled over a little rise where +doubtless once there had been a village, long since rotted down to its +parent clay. The sunlight glinted on his shining armour and silken robe, +whereof the back was toward me. + +I aimed, I drew, I loosed! Swift and far the shaft sped forward. By +Osiris! it struck him full between the shoulders, and lo! the King of +kings, the Monarch of the World, lurched forward, fell on to the rail of +his chariot, and rolled to the ground. Next instant there arose a roar +of, "The King is dead! The Great King is dead! _Fly, fly, fly!_" + +So they fled and after them thundered the pursuers slaying and slaying +till they could lift their arms no more. Oh! yes, some escaped though +the men of Thebes and country folk murdered many of them and but a few +ever won back to the East to tell the tale of the blotting out of the +mighty army of the King of kings and of the doom dealt to him by the +great black bow of Shabaka the Egyptian. + +I stood there gasping, when suddenly I heard a voice at my side. It +said, + +"You seem to have done very well, Brother, even better than we did +yonder on the other side of the town, though some might think that fray +a thing whereof to make a song. Also that last shot of yours was worthy +of a good archer, for I marked it, I marked it. A great lord was laid +low thereby. Let us go and see who it was." + +I threw my arm round the bull neck of Bes and leaning on him, advanced +to where the King lay alone save for the fallen about him. + +"This man is not yet sped," said Bes. "Let us look upon his face," and +he turned him over, and stretched him there upon the sand with the arrow +standing two spans beyond his corselet. + +"Why," said Bes, "this is a certain High one with whom we had dealings +in the East!" and he laughed thickly. + +Then the Great King opened his eyes and knew us and on his dying +features came a look of hate. + +"So you have conquered, Egyptian," he said. "Oh! if only I had you again +in the East, whence in my folly I let you go----" + +"You would set me in your boat, would you not, whence by the wisdom of +Bes I escaped." + +"More than that," he gasped. + +"I shall not serve you so," I went on. "I shall leave you to die as a +warrior should upon a fair fought field. But learn, tyrant and murderer, +that the shaft which overthrew you came from the black bow you coveted +and thought you had received, and that this hand loosed it--not at +hazard." + +"I guessed it," he whispered. + +"Know, too, King, that the lady Amada whom you also coveted, waits to be +my wife; that your mighty army is destroyed, and that Egypt is free by +the hands of Shabaka the Egyptian and Bes the dwarf." + +"Shabaka the Egyptian," he muttered, "whom I held and let go because of +a dream and for policy. So, Shabaka, you will wed Amada whom I desired +because I could not take her, and doubtless you will rule in Egypt, for +Pharaoh, I think, is as I am to-day. O Shabaka, you are strong and +a great warrior, but there is something stronger than you in the +world--that which men call Fate. Such success as yours offends the gods. +Look on me, Shabaka, look on the King of kings, the Ruler of the earth, +lying shamed in the dust before you, and, accursed Shabaka! do not call +yourself happy until you see death as near as I do now." + +Then he threw his arms wide and died. + + + +We called to soldiers to bear his body and having set the pursuit, with +that royal clay entered into Amada in triumph. It was not a very great +town and the temple was its finest building and thither we wended. In +the outer court we found Pharaoh lying at the point of death, for from +many wounds his life drained out with his flowing blood, nor could the +leeches help him. + +"Greeting, Shabaka," he said, "you and the Ethiopians have saved Egypt. +My son is slain in the battle and I too am slain, and who remains to +rule her save you, you and Amada? Would that you had married her at +once, and never left my side. But she was foolish and headstrong and +I--was jealous of you, Shabaka. Forgive me, and farewell." + +He spoke no more although he lived a little while. + +Karema came from the inner court. She greeted her husband, then turned +and said, + +"Lord Shabaka, one waits to welcome you." + +I rested myself upon her shoulder, for I could not walk alone. + +"What happened to the army of the Karoon?" I asked as we went slowly. + +"That happened, Lord, which the holy Tanofir foretold. The Easterns +attacked across the swamp, thinking to bear us down by numbers. But the +paths were too narrow and their columns were bogged in the mud. +Still they struggled on against the arrows to its edge and there the +Ethiopians fell on them and being lighter-footed and without armour, had +the mastery of them, who were encumbered by their very multitude. Oh! I +saw it all from the temple top. Bes did well and I am proud of him, as I +am proud of you." + +"It is of the Ethiopians that you should be proud, Karema, since with +one to five they have won a great battle." + +We came to the end of the second court where was a sanctuary. + +"Enter," said Karema and fell back. + +I did so and though the cedar door was left a little ajar, at first +could see nothing because of the gloom of the place. By degrees my eyes +grew accustomed to the darkness and I perceived an alabaster statue +of the goddess Isis of the size of life, who held in her arms an ivory +child, also lifesize. Then I heard a sigh and, looking down, saw a +woman clad in white kneeling at the feet of the statue, lost in prayer. +Suddenly she rose and turned and the ray of light from the door ajar +fell upon her. It was Amada draped only in the transparent robe of a +priestess, and oh! she was beautiful beyond imagining, so beautiful that +my heart stood still. + +She saw me in my battered mail and the blood flowed up to her breast +and brow and in her eyes there came a light such as I had never known +in them before, the light that is lit only by the torch of woman's love. +Yes, no longer were hers the eyes of a priestess; they were the eyes of +a woman who burns with mortal passion. + +"Amada," I whispered, "Amada found at last." + +"Shabaka," she whispered back, "returned at last, to me, your home," and +she stretched out her arms toward me. + +But before I could take her into mine, she uttered a little cry and +shrank away. + +"Oh! not here," she said, "not here in the presence of this Holy One who +watches all that passes in heaven and earth." + +"Then perchance, Amada, she has watched the freeing of Egypt on yonder +field to-day, and knows for whose sake it was done." + +"Hearken, Shabaka. I am your guerdon. Moreover as a woman I am yours. +There is naught I desire so much as to feel your kiss upon me. For it +and it alone I am ready to risk my spirit's death and torment. But for +you I fear. Twice have I sworn myself to this goddess and she is very +jealous of those who rob her of her votaries. I fear that her curse will +fall not only on me, but on you also, and not only for this life but for +all lives that may be given to us. For your own sake, I pray you leave +me. I hear that Pharaoh my uncle is dead or dying, and doubtless they +will offer you the throne. Take it, Shabaka, for in it I ask no share. +Take it and leave me to serve the goddess till my death." + +"I too serve a goddess," I answered hoarsely, "and she is named Love, +and you are her priestess. Little I care for Isis who serve the goddess +Love. Come, kiss me here and now, ere perchance I die. Kiss me who have +waited long enough, and so let us be wed." + +One moment she paused, swaying in the wind of passion, like a tall reed +on the banks of Nile, and then, ah! then she sank upon my breast and +pressed her lips against my own. + + + + AND AFTER + +For a few moments I, Shabaka, seemed to be lost in a kind of delirium +and surrounded by a rose-hued mist. Then I, Allan Quatermain, heard a +sharp quick sound as of a clock striking, and looked up. It was a lock, +a beautiful old clock on a mantelpiece opposite to me and the hands +showed that it had just struck the hour of ten. + +Now I remembered that centuries ago, as I was dropping asleep, I did not +know why, I had seen that clock and those hands in the same position and +known that it was striking the second stroke of ten. Oh! what did it all +mean? Had thousands of years gone by or--only eight seconds? + +There was a weight upon my shoulder. I glanced round to see what it +was and discovered the beautiful head of Lady Ragnall who was sweetly +sleeping there. Lady Ragnall! and in that very strange dream which I had +dreamed she was the priestess called Amada. Look, there was the mark +of the new moon above her breast. And not a second ago I had been in a +shrine with Amada dressed as Lady Ragnall was to-night, in circumstances +so intimate that it made me blush to think of them. Lady Ragnall! +Amada!--Amada! Lady Ragnall! A shrine! A boudoir! Oh! I must be going +mad! + +I could not disturb her, it would have been--well, unseemly. So +I, Shabaka, or Allan Quatermain, just sat still feeling curiously +comfortable, and tried to piece things together, when suddenly Amada--I +mean Lady Ragnall woke. + +"I wonder," she said without lifting her head from my shoulder, "what +happened to the holy Tanofir. I think that I heard him outside the shine +giving directions for the digging of Pharaoh's grave at that spot, and +saying that he must do so at once as his time was very short. Yes, and +I wished that he would go away. Oh! my goodness!" she exclaimed, and +suddenly sprang up. + +I too rose and we stood facing each other. + +Between us, in front of the fire stood the tripod and the bowl of black +stone at the bottom of which lay a pinch of white ashes, the remains of +the _Taduki_. We stared at it and at each other. + +"Oh! where have we been, Shaba--I mean, Mr. Quatermain?" she gasped, +looking at me round-eyed. + +"I don't know," I answered confusedly. "To the East I suppose. That +is--it was all a dream." + +"A dream!" she said. "What nonsense! Tell me, were you or were you not +in a sanctuary just now with me before the statue of Isis, the same that +fell on George two years ago and killed him, and did you or did you not +give me a necklace of wonderful rosy pearls which we put upon the neck +of the statue as a peace-offering because I had broken my vows to the +goddess--those that you won from the Great King?" + +"No," I answered triumphantly, "I did nothing of the sort. Is it likely +that I should have taken those priceless pearls into battle? I gave them +to Karema to keep after my mother returned them to me on her death-bed; +I remember it distinctly." + +"Yes, and Karema handed them to me again as your love-token when she +appeared in the city with the holy Tanofir, and what was more welcome at +the moment--something to eat. For we were near starving, you know. Well, +I threw them over your neck and my own in the shrine to be the symbol +of our eternal union. But afterwards we thought that it might be wise +to offer them to the goddess--to appease her, you know. Oh! how dared we +plight our mortal troth there in her very shrine and presence, and I her +twice-sworn servant? It was insult heaped on sacrilege." + +"At a guess, because love is stronger than fear," I replied. "But it +seems that you dreamed a little longer than I did. So perhaps you can +tell me what happened afterwards. I only got as far as--well, I forget +how far I got," I added, for at that moment full memory returned and I +could not go on. + +She blushed to her eyes and grew disturbed. + +"It is all mixed up in my mind too," she exclaimed. "I can only remember +something rather absurd--and affectionate. You know what strange things +dreams are." + +"I thought you said it wasn't a dream." + +"Really I don't know what it was. But--your wound doesn't hurt you, does +it? You were bleeding a good deal. It stained me here," and she touched +her breast and looked down wonderingly at her sacred, ancient robe as +though she expected to see that it was red. + +"As there is no stain now it _must_ have been a dream. But my word! that +was a battle," I answered. + +"Yes, I watched it from the pylon top, and oh! it was glorious. Do you +remember the charge of the Ethiopians against the Immortals? Why of +course you must as you led it. And then the fall of Pharaoh Peroa--he +was George, you know. And the death of the Great King, killed by your +black bow; you were a wonderful shot even then, you see. And the burning +of the ships, how they blazed! And--a hundred other things." + +"Yes," I said, "it came off. The holy Tanofir was a good strategist--or +his Cup was, I don't know which." + +"And you were a good general, and so for the matter of that was Bes. Oh! +what agonies I went through while the fight hung doubtful. My heart was +on fire, yes, I seemed to burn for----" and she stopped. + +"For whom?" I asked. + +"For Egypt of course, and when, reflected in the alabaster, I saw +you enter that shrine, where you remember I was praying for your +success--and safety, I nearly died of joy. For you know I had been, +well, attached to you--to Shabaka, I mean--all the time--that's my part +of the story which I daresay you did not see. Although I seemed so cold +and wayward I could love, yes, in that life I knew how to love. And +Shabaka looked, oh! a hero with his rent mail and the glory of triumph +in his eyes. He was very handsome, too, in his way. But what nonsense I +am talking." + +"Yes, great nonsense. Still, I wish we were sure how it ended. It is a +pity that you forget, for I am crazed with curiosity. I suppose there is +no more _Taduki_, is there?" + +"Not a scrap," she answered firmly, "and if there were it would be fatal +to take it twice on the same day. We have learned all there is to learn. +Perhaps it is as well, though I should like to know what happened after +our--our marriage." + +"So we _were_ married, were we?" + +"I mean," she went on ignoring my remark, "whether you ruled long in +Egypt. For you, or rather Shabaka, did rule. Also whether the Easterns +returned and drove us out, or what. You see the Ivory Child went away +somehow, for we found it again in Kendah Land only a few years ago." + +"Perhaps we retired to Ethiopia," I suggested, "and the worship of the +Child continued in some part of that country after the Ethiopian kingdom +passed away." + +"Perhaps, only I don't think Karema would ever have gone back to +Ethiopia unless she was obliged. You remember how she hated the place. +No, not even to see those black children of hers. Well, as we can never +tell, it is no use speculating." + +"I thought there _was_ more _Taduki_," I remarked sadly. "I am sure I +saw some in the coffer." + +"Not one bit," she answered still more firmly than before, and, +stretching out her hand, she shut down the lid of the coffer before I +could look into it. "It may be best so, for as it stands the story had +a happy ending and I don't want to learn, oh! I don't want to learn how +the curse of Isis fell on you and me." + +"So you believe in that?" + +"Yes, I do," she answered with passion, "and what is more, I believe +it is working still, which perhaps is why we have all come down in the +world, you and I and George and Hans, yes, and even old Harut whom we +knew in Kendah Land, who, I think, was the holy Tanofir. For as surely +as I live I _know_ beyond possibility of doubt that whatever we may +be called to-day, you were the General Shabaka and I was the priestess +Amada, Royal Lady of Egypt, and between us and about us the curse of +Isis wavers like a sword. That is why George was killed and that is +why--but I feel very tired, I think I had better go to bed." + + +As I recall that I have explained, I was obliged to leave Ragnall Castle +early the next morning to keep a shooting engagement. O heavens! to keep +a shooting engagement! + + +But whatever Amada, I mean Lady Ragnall, said, there _was_ plenty more +_Taduki_, as I have good reason to know. + + +Allan Quatermain. + + + + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Ancient Allan, by H. 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