<h2><SPAN name="XXIV" id="XXIV"></SPAN>XXIV</h2>
<p>It was midnight when Nevill's car ran into the beautiful
oasis town, guarded by the most curious mountains
of the Algerian desert, and they were at their strangest,
cut out clear as the painted mountains of stage scenery,
in the light of the great acetylene lamps. Stephen thought
them like a vast, half-burned Moorish city of mosques and
palaces, over which sand-storms had raged for centuries, leaving
only traces here and there of a ruined tower, a domed roof,
or an ornamental frieze.</p>
<p>Of the palms he could see nothing, except the long, dark
shape of the oasis among the pale sand-billows; but early next
morning he and Nevill were up and out on the roof of the little
French hotel, while sunrise banners marched across the sky.
Stephen had not known that desert dunes could be bright
peach-pink, or that a river flowing over white stones could look
like melted rubies, or that a few laughing Arab girls, ankle-deep
in limpid water, could glitter in morning light like jewelled
houris in celestial gardens. But now that he knew, he would
never forget his first desert picture.</p>
<p>The two men stood on the roof among the bubbly domes
for a long time, looking over the umber-coloured town and
the flowing oasis which swept to Bou-Saada's brown feet like
a tidal wave. It was not yet time to go and ask questions
of the Caïd, whom Nevill knew.</p>
<p>Stephen was advised not to drink coffee in the hotel before
starting on their quest. "We shall have to swallow at least
three cups each of <i>café maure</i> at the Caïd's house, and perhaps
a dash of tea flavoured with mint, on top of all, if we don't<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_225" id="Page_225"></SPAN></span>
want to begin by hurting our host's feelings," Nevill said. So
they fasted, and fed their minds by walking through Bou-Saada
in its first morning glory. Already the old part of the
town was alive, for Arabs love the day when it is young, even as
they love a young girl for a bride.</p>
<p>The Englishmen strolled into the cool, dark mosque, where
heavy Eastern scents of musk and benzoin had lain all night
like fugitives in sanctuary, and where the roof was held up
by cypress poles instead of marble pillars, as in the grand
mosques of big cities. By the time they were ready to leave,
dawn had become daylight, and coming out of the brown dusk,
the town seemed flooded with golden wine, wonderful, bubbling,
unbelievable gold, with scarlet and purple and green
figures floating in it, brilliant as rainbow fish.</p>
<p>The Caïd lived near the old town, in an adobe house, with
a garden which was a tangle of roses and pomegranate blossoms,
under orange trees and palms. And there were narrow paths
of hard sand, the colour of old gold, which rounded up to the
centre, and had little runnels of water on either side. The sunshine
dripped between the long fingers of the palm leaves,
to trail in a lacy pattern along the yellow paths, and the sound
of the running water was sweet.</p>
<p>It was in this garden that the Caïd gave his guests the three
cups of coffee each, followed by the mint-flavoured tea which
Nevill had prophesied. And when they had admired a tame
gazelle which nibbled cakes of almond and honey from their
hands, the Caïd insisted on presenting it to his good friend,
Monsieur Caird.</p>
<p>Over the cups of <i>café maure</i>, they talked of Captain Cassim
ben Halim, but their host could or would tell them nothing
beyond the fact that Ben Halim had once lived for a little
while not far from Bou-Saada. He had inherited from his
father a country house, about fifty kilometres distant, but he had
never stayed there until after retiring from the army, and
selling his place in Algiers. Then he had spent a few months<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_226" id="Page_226"></SPAN></span>
in the country. The Caïd had met him long ago in Algiers,
but had not seen him since. Ben Halim had been ill, and had
led a retired life in the country, receiving no one. Afterward
he had gone away, out of Algeria. It was said that he had
died abroad a little later. Of that, the Caïd was not certain;
but in any case the house on the hill was now in the possession
of the Caïd of Ain Dehdra, Sidi Elaïd ben Sliman, a distant
cousin of Ben Halim, said to be his only living relative.</p>
<p>Then their host went on to describe the house with the white
wall, which looked down upon a cemetery and a village. His
description was almost precisely what Mouni's had been, and
there was no doubt that the place where she had lived with the
beautiful lady was the place of which he spoke. But of the
lady herself they could learn nothing. The Caïd had no information
to give concerning Ben Halim's family.</p>
<p>He pressed them to stay, and see all the beauties of the oasis.
He would introduce them to the marabout at El Hamel, and
in the evening they should see a special dance of the Ouled
Naïls. But they made excuses that they must get on, and bade
the Caïd good-bye after an hour's talk. As for the <i>gazelle
approvoisée</i>, Nevill named her Josette, and hired an Arab
to take her to Algiers by the diligence, with explicit instructions
as to food and milk.</p>
<p>Swarms of locusts flew into their faces, and fell into the
car, or were burned to death in the radiator, as they sped along
the road towards the white house on the golden hill. They
started from Bou-Saada at ten o'clock, and though the road was
far from good, and they were not always sure of the way, the
noon heat was scarcely at its height when Stephen said: "There
it is! That must be the hill and the white wall with the towers."</p>
<p>"Yes, there's the cemetery too," answered Nevill. "We're
seeing it on our left side, as we go, I hope that doesn't mean
we're in for bad luck."</p>
<p>"Rot!" said Stephen, promptly. Yet for all his scorn of
Nevill's grotesque superstitions, he was not in a confident<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_227" id="Page_227"></SPAN></span>
mood. He did not expect much good from this visit to Ben
Halim's old country house. And the worst was, that here
seemed their last chance of finding out what had become of
Saidee Ray, if not of her sister.</p>
<p>The sound of the motor made a brown face flash over the
top of the tall gate, like a Jack popping out of his box.</p>
<p>"La Sidi, el Caïd?" asked Nevill. "Is he at home?"</p>
<p>The face pretended not to understand; and having taken in
every detail of the strangers' appearance and belongings, including
the motor-car, it disappeared.</p>
<p>"What's going to happen now?" Stephen wanted to know.</p>
<p>Nevill looked puzzled. "The creature isn't too polite.
Probably it's afraid of Roumis, and has never been spoken to
by one before. But I hope it will promptly scuttle indoors
and fetch its master, or some one with brains and manners."</p>
<p>Several minutes passed, and the yellow motor-car continued
to advertise its presence outside the Caïd's gate by
panting strenuously. The face did not show itself again; and
there was no evidence of life behind the white wall, except the
peculiarly ominous yelping of Kabyle dogs.</p>
<p>"Let's pound on the gate, and show them we mean to get
in," said Stephen, angry-eyed.</p>
<p>But Nevill counselled waiting. "Never be in a hurry when
you have to do with Arabs. It's patience that pays."</p>
<p>"Here come two chaps on horseback," Stephen said, looking
down at the desert track that trailed near the distant cluster
of mud houses, which were like square blocks of gold in the
fierce sunshine. "They seem to be staring up at the car.
I wonder if they're on their way here!"</p>
<p>"It may be the Caïd, riding home with a friend, or a servant,"
Nevill suggested. "If so, I'll bet my hat there are other eyes
than ours watching for him, peering out through some spy-hole
in one of the gate-towers."</p>
<p>His guess was right. It was the Caïd coming home, and
Maïeddine was with him; for Lella M'Barka had been obliged<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_228" id="Page_228"></SPAN></span>
to rest for three days at the farmhouse on the hill, and the
Caïd's guest had accompanied him before sunrise this morning
to see a favourite white mehari, or racing camel, belonging to
Sidi Elaïd ben Sliman, which was very ill, in care of a wise man
of the village. Now the mehari was dead, and as Maïeddine
seemed impatient to get back, they were riding home, in spite
of the noon heat.</p>
<p>Maïeddine had left the house reluctantly this morning.
Not that he could often see Victoria, who was nursing M'Barka,
and looking so wistful that he guessed she had half hoped to
find her sister waiting behind the white wall on the golden hill.</p>
<p>Though he could expect little of the girl's society, and there
was little reason to fear that harm would come to her, or that
she would steal away in his absence, still he had hated to ride
out of the gate and leave her. If the Caïd had not made
a point of his coming, he would gladly have stayed behind.
Now, when he looked up and saw a yellow motor-car at the gate,
he believed that his feeling had been a presentiment, a warning
of evil, which he ought so have heeded.</p>
<p>He and the Caïd were a long way off when he caught sight of
the car, and heard its pantings, carried by the clear desert air.
He could not be certain of its identity, but he prided himself
upon his keen sight and hearing, and where they failed, instinct
stepped in. He was sure that it was the car which had waited
for Stephen Knight when the <i>Charles Quex</i> came in, the car
of Nevill Caird, about whom he had made inquiries before
leaving Algiers. Maïeddine knew, of course, that Victoria
had been to the Djenan el Djouad, and he was intensely suspicious
as well as jealous of Knight, because of the letter Victoria
had written. He knew also that the two Englishmen had
been asking questions at the Hotel de la Kasbah; and he was
not surprised to see the yellow car in front of the Caïd's gates.
Now that he saw it, he felt dully that he had always known it
would follow him.</p>
<p>If only he had been in the house, it would not have mattered.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_229" id="Page_229"></SPAN></span>
He would have been able to prevent Knight and Caird from
seeing Victoria, or even from having the slightest suspicion that
she was, or had been, there. It was the worst of luck that he
should be outside the gates, for now he could not go back while
the Englishmen were there. Knight would certainly recognize
him, and guess everything that he did not know.</p>
<p>Maïeddine thought very quickly. He dared not ride on, lest
the men in the car should have a field-glass. The only thing
was to let Ben Sliman go alone, so that, if eyes up there on the
hill were watching, it might seem that the Caïd was parting
from some friend who lived in the village. He would have
to trust Elaïd's discretion and tact, as he knew already he might
trust his loyalty. Only—the situation was desperate. Tact,
and an instinct for the right word, the frank look, were worth
even more than loyalty at this moment. And one never quite
knew how far to trust another man's judgment. Besides, the
mischief might have been done before Ben Sliman could arrive
on the scene; and at the thought of what might happen, Maïeddine's
heart seemed to turn in his breast. He had never known
a sensation so painful to body and mind, and it was hideous to
feel helpless, to know that he could do only harm, and not
good, by riding up the hill. Nevertheless, he said to himself,
if he should see Victoria come out to speak with these men,
he would go. He would perhaps kill them, and the chauffeur
too. Anything rather than give up the girl now; for the sharp
stab of the thought that he might lose her, that Stephen Knight
might have her, made him ten times more in love than he had
been before. He wished that Allah might strike the men in the
yellow car dead; although, ardent Mussulman as he was, he
had no hope that such a glorious miracle would happen.</p>
<p>"It is those men from Algiers of whom I told thee," he
said to the Caïd. "I must stop below. They must not recognize
me, or the dark one who was on the ship, will guess.
Possibly he suspects already that I stand for something in this
affair."<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_230" id="Page_230"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Who can have sent them to my house?" Ben Sliman wondered.
The two drew in their horses and put on the manner
of men about to bid each other good-bye.</p>
<p>"I hope, I am almost sure, that they know nothing of <i>her</i>, or
of me. Probably, when inquiring about Ben Halim, in order
to hear of her sister, and so find out where she has gone, they
learned only that Ben Halim once lived here. If thy servants
are discreet, it may be that no harm will come from this visit."</p>
<p>"They will be discreet. Have no fear," the Caïd assured him.
Yet it was on his tongue to say; "the lady herself, when she
hears the sound of the car, may do some unwise thing." But
he did not finish the sentence. Even though the young girl—whom
he had not seen—was a Roumia, obsessed with horrible,
modern ideas, which at present it would be dangerous
to try and correct, he could not discuss her with Maïeddine.
If she showed herself to the men, it could not be helped. What
was to be, would be. Mektûb!</p>
<p>"Far be it from me to distrust my friend's servants," said
Maïeddine; "but if in their zeal they go too far and give an
impression of something to hide, it would be as bad as if they
let drop a word too many."</p>
<p>"I will ride on and break any such impression if it has
been made," Ben Sliman consoled him. "Trust me. I will
be as gracious to these Roumis as if they were true believers."</p>
<p>"I do trust thee completely," answered the younger man.
"While they are at thy gates, or within them, I must wait
with patience. I cannot remain here in the open—yet I wish
to be within sight, that I may see with my own eyes all that
happens. What if I ride to one of the black tents, and ask for
water to wash the mouth of my horse? If they have it not, it is
no matter."</p>
<p>"Thine is a good thought," said Ben Sliman, and rode on,
putting his slim white Arab horse to a trot.</p>
<p>To the left from the group of adobe houses, and at about the
same distance from the rough track on which they had been<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_231" id="Page_231"></SPAN></span>
riding, was a cluster of nomad tents, like giant bats with torpid
wings spread out ink-black on the gold of the desert. A little
farther off was another small encampment of a different tribe;
and their tents were brown, striped with black and yellow.
They looked like huge butterflies resting. But Maïeddine
thought of no such similes. He was a child of the Sahara,
and used to the tents and the tent-dwellers. His own father,
the Agha, lived half the year in a great tent, when he was with
his douar, and Maïeddine had been born under the roof of
camel's hair. His own people and these people were not kin,
and their lives lay far apart; yet a man of one nomad tribe
understands all nomads, though he be a chief's son, and they
as poor as their own ill-fed camels. His pride was his nomad
blood, for all men of the Sahara, be they princes or camel-drivers,
look with scorn upon the sedentary people, those of the
great plain of the Tell, and fat eaters of ripe dates in the
cities.</p>
<p>The eight or ten black tents were gathered round one, a
little higher, a little less ragged than the others—the tent of the
Kebir, or headman; but it was humble enough. There would
have been room and to spare for a dozen such under the <i>tente
sultane</i> of the Agha, at his douar south of El Aghouat.</p>
<p>As Maïeddine rode up, a buzz of excitement rose in the
hive. Some one ran to tell the Kebir that a great Sidi was arriving,
and the headman came out from his tent, where he had
been meditating or dozing after the chanting of the midday
prayer—the prayer of noon.</p>
<p>He was a thin, elderly man, with an eagle eye to awe his
women-folk, and an old burnous of sheep's wool, which was
of a deep cream colour because it had not been washed for
many years. Yet he smelt good, with a smell that was like
the desert, and there was no foul odour in the miniature douar,
as in European dwellings of the very poor. There is never
a smell of uncleanliness about Arabs, even those people who
must perform most of the ablutions prescribed by their religion<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_232" id="Page_232"></SPAN></span>
with sand instead of water. But the Saharian saying is that
the desert purifies all things.</p>
<p>The Kebir was polite though not servile to Maïeddine, and
while the horse borrowed from the Caïd was having its face
economically sprinkled with water from a brown goat-skin,
black coffee was being hospitably prepared for the guest by the
women of the household, unveiled of course, as are all women
of the nomad tribes, except those of highest birth.</p>
<p>Maïeddine did not want the coffee, but it would have been
an insult to refuse, and he made laboured conversation with
the Kebir, his eyes and thoughts fixed on the Caïd's gate and
the yellow motor-car. He hardly saw the tents, beneath whose
low-spread black wings eyes looked out at him, as the bright
eyes of chickens look out from under the mother-hen's feathers.
They were all much alike, though the Kebir's, as befitted his
position, was the best, made of wide strips of black woollen
material stitched together, spread tightly over stout poles,
and pegged down into the hard sand. There was a partition
dividing the tent in two, a partition made of one or two old
haïcks, woven by hand, and if Maïeddine had been interested,
he could have seen his host's bedding arranged for the day; a
few coarse rugs and <i>frechias</i> piled up carelessly, out of the way.
There was a bale of camels' hair, ready for weaving, and on
top of it a little boy was curled up asleep. From the tent-poles
hung an animal's skin, drying, and a cradle of netted
cords in which swung and slept a swaddled baby no bigger
than a doll. It was a girl, therefore its eyes were blackened
with kohl, and its eyebrows neatly sketched on with paint, as
they had been since the unfortunate day of its birth, when the
father grumbled because it was not a "child," but only a
worthless female.</p>
<p>The mother of the four weeks' old doll, a fine young woman
tinkling with Arab silver, left her carpet-weaving to grind the
coffee, while her withered mother-in-law brightened with
brushwood the smouldering fire of camel-dung. The women<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_233" id="Page_233"></SPAN></span>
worked silently, humbly, though they would have been chattering
if the great Sidi stranger had not been there; but two
or three little children in orange and scarlet rags played giggling
among the rubbish outside the tent—a broken bassour-frame,
or palanquin, waiting to be mended; date boxes,
baskets, and wooden plates; old kous-kous bowls, bundles of
alfa grass, chicken feathers, and an infant goat with its mother.</p>
<p>The sound of children's shrill laughter, which passed unnoticed
by the parents, who had it always in their ears, rasped
Maïeddine's nerves, and he would have liked to strike or kick
the babies into silence. Most Arabs worship children, even girls,
and are invariably kind to them, but to-day Maïeddine hated
anything that ran about disturbingly and made a noise.</p>
<p>Now the Caïd had reached the gate, and was talking to the
men in the motor-car. Would he send them away? No, the
gate was being opened by a servant. Ben Sliman must have
invited the Roumis in. Possibly it was a wise thing to do, yet
how dangerous, how terribly dangerous, with Victoria perhaps
peeping from one of the tiny windows at the women's corner
of the house, which looked on the court! They could not see
her there, but she could see them, and if she were tired of travelling
and dancing attendance on a fidgety invalid—if she
repented her promise to keep the secret of this journey?</p>
<p>Maïeddine's experience of women inclined him to think that
they always did forget their promises to a man the moment his
back was turned. Victoria was different from the women of
his race, or those he had met in Paris, yet she was, after all,
a woman; and there was no truer saying than that you might
more easily prophesy the direction of the wind than say what
a woman was likely to do. The coffee which the Kebir handed
him made him feel sick, as if he had had a touch of the sun.
What was happening up there on the hill, behind the gates
which stood half open? What would she do—his Rose of the
West?<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_234" id="Page_234"></SPAN></span></p>
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