<h2><SPAN name="XLV" id="XLV"></SPAN>XLV</h2>
<p>"Oh Lella Saïda, there is a message, of which I
hardly dare to speak," whispered Noura to her mistress,
when she brought supper for the two sisters, the
night when the way to the roof had been closed up.</p>
<p>"Tell me what it is, and do not be foolish," Saidee said
sharply. Her nerves were keyed to the breaking point, and
she had no patience left. It was almost a pleasure to visit
her misery upon some one else. She hated everybody and
everything, because all hope was gone now. The door to the
roof was nailed shut; and she and Victoria were buried alive.</p>
<p>"But one sends the message who must not be named; and
it is not even for thee, lady. It is for the Little Rose, thy sister."</p>
<p>"If thou dost not speak out instantly, I will strike thee!"
Saidee exclaimed, on the verge of hysterical tears.</p>
<p>"And if I speak, still thou wilt strike! Be this upon thine
own head, my mistress. The Ouled Naïl has dared send her
woman, saying that if the Little Rose will visit her house after
supper, it will be for the good of all concerned, since she has
a thing to tell of great importance. At first I would have
refused even to take the message, but her woman, Hadda, is
my cousin, and she feared to go back without some answer.
The Ouled Naïl is a demon when in a temper, and she would
thrust pins into Hadda's arms and thighs."</p>
<p>Saidee blushed with anger, disgustful words tingling on
her tongue; but she remained silent, her lips parted.</p>
<p>"Of course I won't go," said Victoria, shocked. The very
existence of Miluda was to her a dreadful mystery upon which
she could not bear to let her mind dwell.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_419" id="Page_419"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"I'm not sure," Saidee murmured. "Let me think. This
means something very curious, I can't think what. But I
should like to know. It can't make things worse for us if you
accept her invitation. It may make them better. Will you
go and see what the creature wants?"</p>
<p>"Oh, Saidee, how can I?"</p>
<p>"Because I ask it," Saidee answered, the girl's opposition
deciding her doubts. "She can't eat you."</p>
<p>"It isn't that I'm afraid——"</p>
<p>"I know! It's because of your loyalty to me. But if I
send you, Babe, you needn't mind. It will be for my sake."</p>
<p>"Hadda is waiting for an answer," Noura hinted.</p>
<p>"My sister will go. Is the woman ready to take her?"</p>
<p>"I will find out, lady."</p>
<p>In a moment the negress came back. "Hadda will lead the
Little Rose to her mistress. She is glad that it is to be now,
and not later."</p>
<p>"Be very careful what you say, and forget nothing that <i>she</i>
says," was Saidee's last advice. And it sounded very Eastern
to Victoria.</p>
<p>She hated her errand, but undertook it without further
protest, since it was for Saidee's sake.</p>
<p>Hadda was old and ugly. She and Noura had been born
in the quarter of the freed Negroes, in the village across the
river, and knew nothing of any world beyond; yet all the
wiliness and wisdom of female things, since Eve—woman,
cat and snake—glittered under their slanting eyelids.</p>
<p>Victoria had not been out of her sister's rooms and garden,
except to visit M'Barka in the women's guest-house, since
the night when Maïeddine brought her to the Zaouïa; and
when she had time to think of her bodily needs, she realized
that she longed desperately for exercise. Physically it was a
relief to walk even the short distance between Saidee's house
and Miluda's; but her cheeks tingled with some emotion
she could hardly understand when she saw that the Ouled<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_420" id="Page_420"></SPAN></span>
Naïl's garden-court was larger and more beautiful than
Saidee's.</p>
<p>Miluda, however, was not waiting for her in the garden.
The girl was escorted upstairs, perhaps to show her how
much more important was the favourite wife of the marabout
than a mere Roumia, an unmarried maiden.</p>
<p>A meal had been cleared away, in a room larger and better
furnished than Saidee's and on the floor stood a large copper
incense-burner, a thin blue smoke filtering through the perforations,
clouding the atmosphere and loading it with heavy
perfume. Behind the mist Victoria saw a divan, spread with
trailing folds of purple velvet, stamped with gold; and something
lay curled up on a huge tiger-skin, flung over pillows.</p>
<p>As the blue incense wreaths floated aside the curled thing
on the tiger skin moved, and the light from a copper lamp
like Saidee's, streamed through huge coloured lumps of glass,
into a pair of brilliant eyes. A delicate brown hand, ringed
on each finger, waved away the smoke of a cigarette it held,
and Victoria saw a small face, which was like the face of a
perfectly beautiful doll. Never had she imagined anything
so utterly pagan; yet the creature was childlike, even innocent
in its expression, as a baby tigress might be innocent.</p>
<p>Having sat up, the little heathen goddess squatted in her
shrine, only bestirring herself to show the Roumia how beautiful
she was, and what wonderful jewellery she had. She
thought, that without doubt, the girl would run back jealously
to the sister (whom Miluda despised) to pour out floods of
description. She herself had heard much of Lella Saïda,
and supposed that unfortunate woman had as eagerly collected
information about her; but it was especially piquant
that further details of enviable magnificence should be carried
back by the forlorn wife's sister.</p>
<p>The Ouled Naïl tinkled at the slightest movement, even
with the heaving of her bosom, as she breathed, making music
with many necklaces, and long earrings that clinked against<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_421" id="Page_421"></SPAN></span>
them. Dozens of old silver cases, tubes, and little jewelled
boxes containing holy relics; hairs of Mohammed's beard;
a bit of web spun by the sacred spider which saved his life;
moles' feet blessed by marabouts, and texts from the Koran;
all these hung over Miluda's breast, on chains of turquoise
and amber beads. They rattled metallically, and her bracelets
and anklets tinkled. Some luscious perfume hung about
her, intoxicatingly sweet. A thick, braided clump of hair was
looped on each side of the small face painted white as ivory,
and her eyes, under lashes half an inch long, were bright and
unhuman as those of an untamed gazelle.</p>
<p>"Wilt thou sit down?" she asked, waving the hand with
the cigarette towards a French chair, upholstered in red brocade.
"The Sidi gave me that seat because I asked for it.
He gives me all I ask for."</p>
<p>"I will stand," answered Victoria.</p>
<p>"Oh, it is true, then, thou speakest Arab! I had heard so.
I have heard much of thee and of thy youth and beauty. I
see that my women did not lie. But perhaps thou art not as
young as I am, though I have been a wife for a year, and have
borne a beautiful babe. I am not yet sixteen."</p>
<p>Victoria did not answer, and the Ouled Naïl gazed at her
unwinkingly, as a child gazes.</p>
<p>"Thou hast travelled much, even more than the marabout
himself, hast thou not?" she inquired, graciously. "I have
heard that thou hast been to England. Are there many
Arab villages there, and is it true that the King was
deposed when the Sultan, the head of our faith, lost his
throne?"</p>
<p>"There are no Arab villages, and the King still reigns,"
said Victoria. "But I think thou didst not send for me to
ask these questions?"</p>
<p>"Thou art right. Yet there is no harm in asking them.
I sent for thee, for three reasons. One is, that I wished to see
thee, to know if indeed thou wert as beautiful as I; another<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_422" id="Page_422"></SPAN></span>
is, that I had a thing to give thee, and before I tell thee my
third reason, thou shalt have the gift."</p>
<p>She fumbled in the tawny folds of the tiger-skin on which
she lay, and presently held out a bracelet, made of
flexible squares of gold, like scales, jewelled with different
stones.</p>
<p>"It is thy wedding present from me," she said. "I wish
to give it, because it is not long since I myself was married,
and because we are both young. Besides, Si Maïeddine is a
good friend of the marabout. I have heard that he is brave
and handsome, all that a young girl can most desire in a husband."</p>
<p>"I am not going to marry Si Maïeddine," said Victoria.
"I thank thee; but thou must keep thy gift for his bride when
he finds one."</p>
<p>"He has found her in thee. The marriage will be a week
from to-morrow, if Allah wills, and he will take thee away to
his home. The marabout himself has told me this, though
he does not know that I have sent for thee, and that thou art
with me now."</p>
<p>"Allah does not will," said the girl.</p>
<p>"Perhaps not, since thy bridegroom-to-be lies ill with marsh
fever, so Hadda has told me. He came back from Algiers
with the sickness heavy upon him, caught in the saltpetre
marshes that stretch between Biskra and Touggourt. I
know those marshes, for I was in Biskra with my mother when
she danced there; but she was careful, and we did not lie at
night in the dangerous regions where the great mosquitoes
are. Men are never careful, though they do not like to be ill,
and thy bridegroom is fretting. But he will be better in a few
days if he takes the draughts which the marabout has blessed
for him; and if the wedding is not in a week, it will be a few
days later. It is in Allah's hands."</p>
<p>"I tell thee, it will be never," Victoria persisted. "And
I believe thou but sayest these things to torture me."<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_423" id="Page_423"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Dost thou not love Si Maïeddine?" Miluda asked innocently.</p>
<p>"Not at all."</p>
<p>"Then it must be that thou lovest some other man. Dost
thou, Roumia?"</p>
<p>"Thou hast no right to ask such questions."</p>
<p>"Be not angry, Roumia, for we are coming now to the great
reason why I sent for thee. It is to help thee. I wish to know
whether there is a man of thine own people thou preferest to
Si Maïeddine."</p>
<p>"Why shouldst thou wish to help me? Thou hast never
seen me till now."</p>
<p>"I will speak the truth with thee," said Miluda, "because
thy face pleases me, though I prefer my own. Thine is pure and
good, like the face of the white angel that is ever at our right
hand; and even if I should speak falsely, I think thou wouldst
not be deceived. Before I saw thee, I did not care whether
thou wert happy or sad. It was nothing to me; but I saw a
way of getting thee and thy sister out of my husband's house,
and for a long time I have wished thy sister gone. Not that
I am jealous of her. I have not seen her face, but I know
she is already old, and if she were not friendless in our land, the
Sidi would have put her away at the time of my marriage to
him, since long ago he has ceased to care whether she lives or
dies. But his heart is great, and he has kept her under his
roof for kindness' sake, though she has given him no child, and
is no longer a wife to him. I alone fill his life."</p>
<p>She paused, hoping perhaps that Victoria would answer;
but the girl was silent, biting her lip, her eyes cast down. So
Miluda talked on, more quietly.</p>
<p>"There is a wise woman in the city, who brings me perfumes
and silks which have come to Oued Tolga by caravan from
Tunis. She has told me that thy sister has ill-wished me, and
that I shall never have a boy—a real child—while Lella
Saïda breathes the same air with me. That is the reason I<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_424" id="Page_424"></SPAN></span>
want her to be gone. I will not help thee to go, unless thou
takest her with thee."</p>
<p>"I will never, never leave this place unless we go together,"
Victoria answered, deeply interested and excited now.</p>
<p>"That is well. And if she loves thee also, she would not
go alone; so my wish is to do what I can for both."</p>
<p>"What canst thou do?" the girl asked.</p>
<p>"I will tell thee. But first there is something to make
clear. I was on my roof to-day, when a young Roumi rode
up to the Zaouïa on the road from Oued Tolga. He looked
towards the roofs, and I wondered. From mine, I cannot see
much of thy sister's roof, but I watched, and I saw an arm
outstretched, to throw a packet. Then I said to myself that
he had come for thee. And later I was sure, because my
women told me that while he talked with the marabout, the
door which leads to thy sister's roof was nailed up hastily, by
command of the master. Some order must have gone from
him, unknown to the Roumi, while the two men were together.
I could coax nothing of the story from the Sidi when he came
to me, but he was vexed, and his brows drew together over
eyes which for the first time did not seem to look at me with
pleasure."</p>
<p>"Thou hast guessed aright," Victoria admitted, thankful
that Miluda's suspicions concerned her affairs only, and not
Saidee's. "The man who came here was my friend. I
care for him more than for any one in the world, except my
sister; and if I cannot marry him, I will die rather than marry
Si Maïeddine or any other."</p>
<p>"Then, unless I help thee, thou wilt have to die, for nothing
which thou alone, or thy sister can do, will open the gates for
thee to go out, except as Si Maïeddine's wife."</p>
<p>"Then help me," said Victoria, boldly, "and thou wilt be
rid of us both forever."</p>
<p>"It is with our wits we must work, not with our hands,"
replied the Ouled Naïl. "The power of the marabout is<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_425" id="Page_425"></SPAN></span>
great. He has many men to serve him, and the gates are strong,
while women are very, very weak. Yet I have seen into the
master's heart, and I can give thee a key which will unlock
the gates. Only it had better be done soon, for when Si Maïeddine
is well, he will fight for thee; and if thou goest forth free,
he will follow, and take thee in the dunes."</p>
<p>Victoria shivered, for the picture was vivid before her eyes,
as Miluda painted it. "Give me the key," she said in a low
voice.</p>
<p>"The key of the master's heart is his son," the other answered,
in a tone that kept down anger and humiliation. "Even
me he would sacrifice to his boy. I know it well, and I hate the
child. I pray for one of my own, for because the Sidi loves me,
and did not love the boy's mother, he would care ten thousand
times more for a child of mine. The wise woman says so, and I
believe it. When thy sister is gone, I shall have a boy, and nothing
left to wish for on earth. Send a message to thy lover,
saying that the marabout's only son is at school in Oued
Tolga, the city. Tell him to steal the child and hide it, making
a bargain with the marabout that he shall have it safely back,
if he will let thee and thy sister go; otherwise he shall never
see it again."</p>
<p>"That would be a cruel thing to do, and my sister could not
consent," said Victoria, "even if we were able to send a message."</p>
<p>"Hadda would send the message. A friend from the village
is coming to see her, and the master has no suspicion of me at
present, as he has of thee. We could send a letter, and Hadda
would manage everything. But there is not much time, for
now while my husband is with Si Maïeddine, treating him
for his fever, is our only chance, to-night. We have perhaps
an hour in which to decide and arrange everything. After that,
his coming may be announced to me. And no harm would
happen to the child. The master would suffer in his mind
for a short time, till he decided to make terms, that is all.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_426" id="Page_426"></SPAN></span>
As for me, have no fear of my betraying thee. Thou
needst but revenge thyself by letting the master know how
I plotted for the stealing of his boy, for him to put me out
of his heart and house forever. Then I should have to kill
myself with a knife, or with poison; and I am young and
happy, and do not desire to die yet. Go now, and tell thy
sister what I have said. Let her answer for thee, for she
knows this land and the people of it, and she is wiser than thou."</p>
<p>Without another word or look at the beautiful pagan face,
Victoria went out of the room, and found Hadda waiting to
hurry her away.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_427" id="Page_427"></SPAN></span></p>
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