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"He stays." The officer pushed his dagger a quarter inch into Ali's ribs.
Because it was an ideal time to think of something else, Ali speculated about The Jackal. Whatever else he might be, The Jackal was a brave man.
What would happen, if he were detected, to a Druse who not only joined the _Hadj_ but the Pasha's personal soldiers too, and who was obviously representing himself as a Moslem, Ali couldn't even imagine.
He did know that one false step would be one too many for the deceiver.
If The Jackal took that step, he would live a very long while in agony before voicing his final shriek. Of course, it was a true Moslem's duty to tell what he knew, but The Jackal had only to speak and Ali would face the torturers with him. Whatever purpose had brought The Jackal here, he must be playing for tremendous stakes.
Ali was considerably relieved, but not greatly astonished, when the officer withdrew his dagger and sheathed it. He addressed Ali as he might have spoken to a stray cur.
"On second thought, we will take you to Al Misri, The Egyptian, and let him kill you. Bring the _dalul_, dog, and, for your own sake, see that it does not stray."
4. The Hadj
As soon as possible, which was as soon as their own riding camels could be brought from wherever they had been hidden, the Moslem soldiers mounted and prepared to set out. On the point of mounting Ben Akbar, Ali was knocked to the ground by the flat of the fierce officer's sword and informed in terms that left no room for doubt that he was Ben Akbar's attendant. n.o.body except the Pasha of Damascus was to be his rider.
Despite clear grounds for argument, Ali smothered his anger and comforted himself with logic. There are times to fight, but on this specific occasion logic indicated clearly that one man armed with a dagger can hope for nothing except a very certain demise by defying twenty men who are armed with everything. Ali walked beside the _dalul_, a rather simple process, since the speed of all must necessarily be regulated by the pace of the slow baggage camels, and Ben Akbar refused to leave his friend's side, anyhow.
With nightfall, they made camp at a water hole too small to be dignified by the t.i.tle of oasis. After he had finished eating, the officer contemptuously tossed Ali the remains of his meal and a silken cord. He said nothing, apparently he had no desire to degrade himself by speaking unnecessarily to anyone who was so clearly and so greatly his inferior, but the implication was obvious. Ben Akbar must not stray.
Knowing the cord was unnecessary, Ali chose the diplomatic course. He tied one end of the cord to his wrist and the other around the young _dalul's_ neck. While Ben Akbar grazed, Ali sat quietly and devoted a few fleeting thoughts to the various possibilities of a social position that is approximately on a level with the fleas that torment camels--and sometimes riders of camels.
While it was true that the soldiers, grouped about their evening fire, ignored him as completely as though he didn't even exist, Ali saw no good reason why he should ignore them in a similar fas.h.i.+on. He breathed a silent thanks to Allah for blessing him with sharp ears. What those ears heard as Ali sat pretending to doze, but alert as a desert fox, might have a powerful influence on his plans for the future.
There were diverse possibilities. One that had already been considered most thoroughly and at great length was rooted in the pleasing thought that Ben Akbar was no longer a tired, hungry and thirsty _dalul_. Given as much as a five-second start, there wasn't another camel on the desert that could even hope to catch him.
If this was to be Ali's choice, tonight was the time for action. But before committing himself to anything, he wanted to consider everything.
The patrol, as Ali had learned from the conversation at the campfire, was one of several dispatched from the great _Hadj_ six days ago. Their only purpose was to find Ben Akbar; their orders were not to return without him.
Ben Akbar had been lost, so Ali learned, through the laxity of a seven-times-cursed camel driver from Smyrna. His only duty, a task to which he'd been a.s.signed because he was one of the very few men Ben Akbar would obey, was to watch over the Pasha's most-prized _dalul_.
Somehow or other--a soldier voiced the opinion that he'd been in collusion with the very Druse from whom Ali had taken him--he'd managed to lose his charge. All the soldiers gave fervent thanks to Allah because their mission was successfully completed. Hunting lost camels was not their idea of interesting diversion.
Ali digested the food for thought thus provided and decided, to his own satisfaction, that his previous deduction had been entirely correct. He had not been spared because the Moslem soldiers were compa.s.sionate, but because not one among them knew how to handle Ben Akbar without resorting to force. Furthermore, if Ben Akbar were not greatly esteemed, several patrols of soldiers who might at any time be needed for other duties never would have been charged with the exclusive task of recovering him.
While Ben Akbar moved so carefully that the silken cord was never even taut, Ali lay back to gaze at the sky and consider the most profitable use of the information at his disposal.
If he rode into the desert on Ben Akbar, a possibility that retained much appeal, he need have no fear of successful pursuit. However, the Pasha's soldiers would certainly continue their search. As long as Ben Akbar was with him--and Ali had already decided that that would be as long as he lived--he must inevitably be a marked man. Unless he rode into a country ruled by some sultan or Pasha who was hostile to the Pasha of Damascus--in which event there was a fine chance of having his throat cut by someone who wanted to steal Ben Akbar--he would lead a hara.s.sed and harried life.
On the other hand, if he stayed with the soldiers and went into camp, he'd be doing exactly what he'd set out to do in the first place--he'd join the great _Hadj_. As there seemed to be few camel drivers who knew how to handle Ben Akbar, there was more than a good chance that Ali would make the pilgrimage as his attendant. Since he'd already determined that Ben Akbar would be a part of his future, regardless of what that was or where it led him, this prospect was entrancing. In addition, once his holy pilgrimage was properly completed, he would be ent.i.tled to call himself Hadji Ali and to take advantage of the expanded horizon derived therefrom.
Only one small cloud of doubt prevented Ali from choosing this latter course without further hesitation or thought. The Moslem officer's voice had been laden with more than casual respect when he referred to Al Misri, or The Egyptian. The casual p.r.o.nouncement that The Egyptian was to have the pleasure of executing Ali might be, and probably was, just another attempt to intimidate him. But this was the Syrian _Hadj_. As such, it differed distinctly from the Moslem pilgrimage that originated in and departed from Cairo, Egypt. Every Syrian knew that Egyptians are inferior.
The very fact that a responsible and high-ranking officer of the Syrian _Hadj_ possessed the sheer brazen effrontery to call himself The Egyptian, plus the strength and authority to command respect for such a t.i.tle, was more than enough to mark him as a man apart. Doubtless he was a man of firm convictions that were translated into action without loss of time. If he had, or if he should develop, a firm conviction that Ali dead was more pleasing than Ali alive--
Ali finally decided to go in with the soldiers and trust Allah. His decision made, he lay down, arranged his burnous to suit him and went peacefully to sleep.
In the thin, cold light of very early morning, he came awake and, as usual, lay quietly before moving. The silken cord that was tied to his wrist and Ben Akbar's neck was both slack and motionless; the _dalul_ must be resting. The dagger and pilgrim's robe were safe. Rea.s.sured concerning the state of his personal world and possessions of the moment, Ali sat up and looked toward Ben Akbar.
No more than a dozen feet away, the young _dalul_ was standing quietly where he had finished grazing. An ecstatic glow lighted Ali's eyes. Ben Akbar's recuperative powers must be as marvelous as his speed and endurance. He scarcely seemed to be the same spent and reeling beast that Ali had led into ambush yesterday morning. After only one night's rest and grazing, even his hump was noticeably bigger.
Ali joined the other Moslems at morning prayer, stood humbly aside as they saddled and mounted and started the baggage camels moving and fell in behind with Ben Akbar. n.o.body paid the least attention to him; if he planned to escape, he would not be fool enough to make the attempt by day.
Four hours later, the travelers looked from a hillock upon the great _Hadj_.
A sea of tents, like rippling waves, overflowed and seemed about to overwhelm a broad valley. There were no palms or any other indication of water. Obviously, this was a dry camp--one of many on the long, dangerous route--and dry camps were the primary reason why so many baggage camels were needed. But even with thousands of baggage camels burdened with food and water, often there was not enough. Falling in that order to thirst, bandits, disease or hunger--or succ.u.mbing to the desert itself--a full third of the pilgrims with any _Hadj_ might die before reaching the Holy City.
Save for a few tethered camels and some horses, there were no animals in sight. Ali knew that the majority had been given over to herders and were in various pastures. The picketed camels and horses were for the convenience of those who might find it necessary to ride.
For the most part, the camp would rest all day. Only when late afternoon shadows tempered the glaring sun would it come awake. Then, guided by blazing torches on either flank, at the mile-or mile-and-a-half-an-hour which was the swiftest pace so many baggage animals could maintain, it would march toward Mecca all night long.
Impressive as the camp appeared, Ali knew also that it was just a small part--though one of the wealthier parts or there would not have been so many tents--of the great _Hadj_. There was not a single valley in the entire desert s.p.a.cious enough to accommodate the five thousand humans, and the more than twenty thousand beasts, whose destination was the Holy City of Mecca.
After a brief halt, the officer led his men down into the camp. There were few humans stirring, and those who were regarded the returning patrol with complete indifference.
In the very center of the camp, before a huge and luxurious tent that, together with its furnis.h.i.+ngs, must require a whole herd of baggage camels just to transport it, the officer dismounted, handed the reins of his riding camel to a soldier and entered the tent. The remainder of the patrol formed an armed circle around Ali and Ben Akbar.
Wis.h.i.+ng he could feel as unconcerned as he hoped he appeared, Ali sought to ease the tension by observing and speculating. This tent, he presently decided, was not headquarters for the Pasha himself. Though the Pasha's tent couldn't possibly be much more luxurious, it would be surrounded by the camps of other dignitaries, and the whole would be so well-guarded by soldiers that n.o.body could have come even near. Ali guessed that this was the headquarters of Al Misri, and that they were in a camp of officers and lesser notables.
Twenty minutes after he entered the tent--Ali guessed shrewdly that he had been allowed to cool his heels for a decorous interval--the officer backed out. He bowed, a curious and somehow a ludicrous gesture for anyone so fiery, and held the tent flaps open. When a second man emerged, the officer stepped humbly to one side and waited whatever action the other might consider.
Short and squat, at first glance Al Misri seemed a shapeless lump of human flesh that has somehow been given the breath of life. His silken robe hung loosely open. Uncovered, his ma.s.sive head seemed to be supported directly on his shoulders, without benefit of or need for a neck. It was bald as an egg. He plopped a date into his mouth and chewed it as the soldiers moved respectfully back to give him room.
Yet Ali needed only one glance to tell him that Al Misri was far more than just a funny little fat man who chewed dates in a rather disgusting manner. His grotesque body was enveloped in an aura not unlike that which enfolded Ben Akbar. Al Misri commanded because it was his destiny to command.
He came near, spat the date pit into Ali's face and spoke to the officer. The latter conveyed the message to Ali.
"Even though Al Misri prefers to kill vermin, you are granted your life.
You win this favor, not through compa.s.sion, but because you are able to ride a _dalul_ that kills other men."
Ali remained silent, as was expected of him. Al Misri gave the officer another message for the captive camel driver.
"The other keeper of the _dalul_ let it stray," the officer announced.
"The keeper died in a fire, a very slow fire that was kindled at dawn, but the keeper still nodded his head at high noon. You are now keeper of the _dalul_. Take care that it strays not."
Without another word or a backward glance, Al Misri turned and waddled back to his tent. The officer disbanded his men.
Ali led Ben Akbar to pasture at the edge of camp.
The travelers came to Tanim, far enough outside Holy Territory so that there was no possibility of desecrating it, but near enough to furnish a convenient stopping place for donning the _ihram_, in the cool of early morning. Not all who had been with the _Hadj_ when Ali finally joined it--and not all who had since come from one place or another--were still present. Many good Moslems who would never see the Holy City had died trying to reach it.
Ali reflected curiously that some of the more devout were dead, while some who seemed to regard this holy journey in anything except a pious light were very much alive. A merchant who had come all the way from Damascus, and who was about to don the _ihram_, deferred the ceremony so that he might bargain about something or other with another merchant from Smyrna. Though they were all Moslems--except for The Jackal, Ali thought quickly--obviously the true light burned brightly for some and dimly for others.
Ali wondered uneasily about the category in which he belonged. He worried about the fact that he did not feel greatly different from the way he had felt while out on the caravan routes or in the bazaar of The Street Called Straight. He thought he should feel something else.