<h3><SPAN name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></SPAN>CHAPTER III</h3>
<p>Khaled sat with his sword upon his feet, and when
Zehowah was not in the room he played with the hilt and
thought of all that was happening.</p>
<p>'Truly,' he said to himself, 'Allah is great. Was I
not, but a few days since, one of the genii condemned
to perish at the day of the resurrection? And am I
not now a man, married to the most beautiful woman in
the whole world, and the wisest and the best, needing only
to be loved by her in order to obtain an undying soul?
And why should this woman not love me? Truly, we
shall see before long, when this mummery is finished.'</p>
<p>So he sat on the couch while Zehowah was led before
him again and again each time in clothing more splendid
than before, and each time with new songs and new
music. But at the last time the attendants left her
standing before him and went away, and only a very
old woman remained at the door, screaming out in a
cracked voice the customary exhortations. Then she,
too, went away and the door was shut and Khaled and
Zehowah were alone.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>It was now near the middle of the night. The
chamber was large and high, lighted by a number of
hanging lamps such as are made in Bagdad, of brass
perforated with beautiful designs and filled with coloured
glasses, in each of which a little wick floats upon oil.
Upon the walls rich carpets were hung, both Arabian
and Persian, some taken in war as booty, and some
brought by merchants in time of peace. A brass chafing
dish stood at some distance from the couch, and upon
the coals the women had thrown powdered myrrh and
benzoin before they went away. But Khaled cared
little for these things, since he had seen all the treasures
of the earth in their most secret depositories.</p>
<p>Zehowah had watched him narrowly during the ceremony
of the dresses and had seen that he felt no surprise
at anything which was brought before him.</p>
<p>'His own country must be full of great wealth and
magnificence,' she thought, 'since so much treasure does
not astonish him.' And she was disappointed.</p>
<p>Now that they were alone, he still sat in silence,
gazing at her as she stood beside him, and not even
thinking of any speech, for he was overcome and struck
dumb by her eyes.</p>
<p>'You are not pleased with what I have shown you,'
Zehowah said at last in a tone of displeasure and disappointment.
'And yet you have seen the wealth of
my father's palace.'<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>'I have seen neither wealth nor treasure, neither
rich garments, nor precious stones nor chains of gold
nor embroideries of pearls,' Khaled answered slowly.</p>
<p>But Zehowah frowned and tapped the carpet impatiently
with her foot where she stood, for she was
annoyed, having expected him to praise the beauty of
her many dresses.</p>
<p>'They who have eyes can see,' she said. 'But if you are
not pleased, my father will give me a hundred dresses more
beautiful than these, and pearls and jewels without end.'</p>
<p>'I should not see them,' Khaled replied. 'I have
seen two jewels which have dazzled me so that I can
see nothing else.'</p>
<p>Zehowah gazed at him with a look of inquiry.</p>
<p>'I have seen the eyes of Zehowah,' he continued,
'which are as the stars Sirius and Aldebaran, when
they are over the desert in the nights of winter. What
jewels can you show me like these?'</p>
<p>Then Zehowah laughed softly and sat down beside
her husband on the edge of the couch.</p>
<p>'Nevertheless,' she said, 'the dresses are very rich.
You might admire them also.'</p>
<p>'I will look at them when you are not near me, for
then my sight will be restored for other things.'</p>
<p>Khaled took her hand in his and held it.</p>
<p>'Tell me, Zehowah, will you love me?' he asked in
a soft voice.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>'You are my lord and my master,' she answered,
looking modestly downward, and her hand lay quite
still.</p>
<p>She was so very beautiful that as Khaled sat beside
her and looked at her downcast face, and knew that she
was his, he could not easily believe that she was cold
and indifferent to him.</p>
<p>'By Allah!' he thought, 'can it be so hard to get a
woman's love? Truly, I think she begins to love me
already.'</p>
<p>Zehowah looked up and smiled carelessly as though
answering his question, but Khaled was obliged to
admit in his heart that the answer lacked clearness,
for he found it no easier to interpret a woman's smile
than men had found it before him, and have found it
since, even to this day.</p>
<p>'You have had many suitors,' he said at last, 'and it is
said that your father has given you your own free choice,
allowing you to see them and hear them speak while he
was receiving them. Tell me why you have chosen me
rather than the rest, unless it is because you love me?
For I came with empty hands, and without servants or
slaves, or retinue of any kind, riding alone out of the
Red Desert. It was therefore for myself that you took
me.'</p>
<p>'You are right. It was for yourself that I took you.'</p>
<p>'Then it was for love of me, was it not?'<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>'There were and still are many and good reasons,'
answered Zehowah calmly, and at the same time withdrawing
her hand from his and smoothing back the
black hair from her forehead. 'I told them all to my
father, and he was convinced.'</p>
<p>'Tell them to me also,' said Khaled.</p>
<p>So she explained all to him in detail, making him
see everything as she saw it herself. And the explanation
was so very clear, that Khaled felt a cold chill in
his heart as he understood that she had chosen him
rather for politic reasons, than because she wished him
for her husband.</p>
<p>'And yet,' she added at the end, 'it was the will of
Allah, for otherwise I would not have chosen you.'</p>
<p>'But surely,' he said, somewhat encouraged by these
last words, 'there was some love in the choice, too.'</p>
<p>'How can I tell!' she exclaimed, with a little laugh.
'What is love?'</p>
<p>Finding himself confronted by such an amazing
question, Khaled was silent, and took her hand again.
For though many have asked what love is, no one
has ever been able to find an answer in words to
satisfy the questioner, seeing that the answer can have
no more to do with words than love itself, a matter
sufficiently explained by a certain wise man, who understood
the heart of man. If, said he, a man who loves a
woman, or a woman who loves a man could give in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</SPAN></span>
words the precise reason why he or she loves, then love
itself could be defined in language; but as no man or
woman has ever succeeded in doing this, I infer that
they who love best do not themselves know in what
love consists—still less therefore can any one else know,
wherefore the definition is impossible, and no one need
waste time in trying to find it.</p>
<p>A certain wit has also said that although it be impossible
for any man to explain the nature of love to
many persons at the same time, he generally finds it
easy to make his explanations to one person only. But
this is a mere quibbling jest and not deserving of any
attention.</p>
<p>Zehowah expected an answer to her question, and
Khaled was silent, not because he was as yet too little
acquainted with the feelings of a man to give them
expression, but because he already felt so much that it
was hard for him to speak at all.</p>
<p>Zehowah laughed and shook her head, for she was
not of a timid temper.</p>
<p>'How can you expect me to say that I love you,
when you yourself are unable to answer such a simple
question?' she asked. 'And besides, are you not my
lord and my master? What is it then to you, whether
I love you or not?'</p>
<p>But again Khaled was silent, debating whether he
should tell her the truth, how the angel had promised in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</SPAN></span>
Allah's name that if she loved him he should obtain an
undying soul, and how the task of obtaining her love
had been laid upon him as a sort of atonement for having
slain the Indian prince. But as he reflected he
understood that this would probably estrange her all
the more from him.</p>
<p>'Yet I can answer your question,' he said at last.
'What is love? It is that which is in me for you only.'</p>
<p>'But how am I to know what that is?' asked
Zehowah, drawing up the smooth gold bracelets upon
her arm and letting them fall down to her wrist, so that
they jangled like a camel's bell.</p>
<p>'If you love me you will know,' Khaled answered,
'for then, perhaps, you will feel a tenth part of what
I feel.'</p>
<p>'And why not all that you feel?' she asked, looking
at him, but still playing with the bracelets.</p>
<p>'Because it is impossible for any woman to love as
much as I love you, Zehowah.'</p>
<p>'You mean, perhaps, that a woman is too weak to
love so well,' she suggested. 'And you think, perhaps,
that we are weak because we sit all our lives upon the
carpets in the harem eating sweetmeats, and listening
to singing girls and to old women who tell us tales of
long ago. Yet there have been strong women too—as
strong as men. Kenda, who tore out the heart of Kamsa—was
she weak?'<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>'Women are stronger to hate than to love,' said
Khaled.</p>
<p>'But a man can forget his hatred in the love of a
woman, and his strength also,' laughed Zehowah. 'I
would rather that you should not love me at all, than
that you should forget to be strong in the day of battle.
For I have married you that you may lead my people
to war and bring home the spoil.'</p>
<p>'And if I destroy all your enemies and the enemies
of your people, will you love me then, Zehowah?'</p>
<p>'Why should I love you then, more than now?
What has war to do with love? Again, I ask, what is
it to you whether I love you or not? Am I not your
wife, and are you not my master? What is this love
of which you talk? Is it a rich garment that you
can wear? A precious stone that you can fasten in
your turban? A rich carpet to spread in your house?
A treasure of gold, a mountain of ambergris, a bushel
of pearls from Oman? Why do you covet it? Am I
not beautiful enough? Then is love henna to make
my hair bright, or kohl to darken my eyes, or a boiled
egg with almonds to smooth my face? I have all these
things, and ointments from Egypt, and perfumes from
Syria, and if I am not beautiful enough to please you,
it is the will of Allah, and love will not make me
fairer.'</p>
<p>'Yet love is beauty,' Khaled answered. 'For Kadijah<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</SPAN></span>
was lovely in the eyes of the Prophet, upon whom
be peace, because she loved him, though she was a
widow and old.'</p>
<p>'Am I a widow? Am I old?' asked Zehowah with
some indignation. 'Do I need the imaginary cosmetic
you call love to smooth my wrinkles, to lighten my eyes,
or to make my teeth white?'</p>
<p>'No. You need nothing to make you beautiful.'</p>
<p>'And for the matter of that, I can say it of you. You
tell me that you love me. Is it love that makes your
body tall and straight, your beard black, your forehead
smooth, your hand strong? Would not any woman
see what I see, whether you loved her or not? See!
Is your hand whiter than mine because you love and I
do not?'</p>
<p>She laughed again as she held her hand beside his.</p>
<p>'Truly,' thought Khaled, 'it is less easy than I supposed.
For the heart of a woman who does not love is
like the desert, when the wind blows over it, and there
are neither tracks nor landmarks. And I am wandering
in this desert like a man seeking lost camels.'</p>
<p>But he said nothing, for he was not yet skilled in
the arguments of love. Thereupon Zehowah smiled, and
resting her cheek upon her hand, looked into his face,
as though saying scornfully, 'Is it not all vanity and
folly?'</p>
<p>Khaled sighed, for he was disappointed, as a thirsty<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</SPAN></span>
man who, coming to drink of a clear spring, finds
the water bitter, while his thirst increases and grows
unbearable.</p>
<p>'Why do you sigh?' Zehowah asked, after a little
silence. 'Are you weary? Are you tired with the
feasting? Are you full of bitterness, because I do not
love you? Command me and I will obey. Are you
not my lord to whom I am subject?'</p>
<p>He did not speak, but she drew him to her, so that
his head rested upon her bosom, and she began to sing
to him in a low voice.</p>
<p>For a long time Khaled kept his eyes shut, listening
to her voice. Then, on a sudden, he looked up, and
without speaking so much as a word, he clasped her in
his arms and kissed her.</p>
<p>Before it was day there was a great tumult in the
streets of Riad, of which the noise came up even to the
chamber where Khaled and Zehowah were sleeping.
Zehowah awoke and listened, wondering what had happened
and trying to understand the cries of the distant
multitude. Then she laid her hand upon Khaled's
forehead and waked him.</p>
<p>'What is it?' he asked.</p>
<p>'It is war,' she answered. 'The enemy have surprised
the city in the night of the feast. Arise and take
arms and go out to the people.'</p>
<p>Khaled sprang up and in a moment he was clothed<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</SPAN></span>
and had girt on his sword. Then he took Zehowah in
his arms.</p>
<p>'While I live, you are safe,' he said.</p>
<p>'Am I afraid? Go quickly,' she answered.</p>
<p>At that time the Sultan of Nejed was at war with
the northern tribes of Shammar, and the enemy had
taken advantage of the month of Ramadhan, in which
few persons travel, to advance in great numbers to Riad.
During the three days' feast of Bairam they had moved
on every night, slaying the inhabitants of the villages
so that not one had escaped to bring the news, and in
the daytime they had hidden themselves wherever they
could find shelter. But in the night in which Khaled
and Zehowah were married they reached the very walls
of the city, and waiting until all the people were asleep,
a party of them had climbed up upon the ramparts and
had opened one of the gates to their companions after
killing the guards.</p>
<p>Khaled found his mare and mounted her without
saddle or bridle in his haste, then drawing his sabre
he rode swiftly out of the palace into the confusion.
The enemy with their long spears were driving the
panicstricken guards and the shrieking people before
them towards the palace, slaughtering all whom they
overtook, so that the gutters of the streets were already
flowing with blood, and the horses of the enemy
stumbled over the bodies of the defenders. The whole<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</SPAN></span>
multitude of the pursued and the pursuers were just
breaking out of the principal street into the open space
before the palace when Khaled met them, a single man
facing ten thousand.</p>
<p>'I shall certainly perish in this fight,' he said to
himself, 'and yet I shall not receive the reward of the
faithful, since Allah has not given me a soul. Nevertheless
certain of these dogs shall eat dirt before the
rest get into the palace.'</p>
<p>So he pressed his legs to the bare sides of his mare
and lifted up his sword and rode at the foe, having
neither buckler, nor helmet, nor shirt of mail to protect
him, but only his clothes and his turban. But his arm
was strong, and it has been said by the wise that
it is better to fall upon an old lion with a reed than to
stand armed in the way of a man who seeks death.</p>
<p>'Yallah! The Sword of the Lord!' shouted Khaled, in
such a terrible voice that the assailants ceased to kill for
a moment, and the terrified guards turned to see whence
so great a voice could proceed; and some who had seen
Khaled recognised him and ran to meet him, and the
others followed.</p>
<p>When the enemy saw a single man riding towards
them across the great square before the palace, they
sent up a shout of derision, and turned again to the
slaughter of such of the inhabitants as could not extricate
themselves.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>'Shall one man stop an army?' they said. 'Shall a
fox turn back a herd of hyænas?'</p>
<p>But when Khaled was among them they found less
matter for laughter. For the sword was keen, the mare
was swift to double and turn, and Khaled's hand was
strong. In the twinkling of an eye two of the enemy
lay dead, the one cloven to the chin, the other headless.</p>
<p>Then a strange fever seized Khaled, such as he had
not heard of, and all things turned to scarlet before his
eyes, both the walls of the houses, and the faces and the
garments of his foes. Men who saw him say that his
face was white and shining in the dawn, and that the
flashing of the sword was like a storm of lightning about
his head, and after each flash there was a great rain of
blood, and a crashing like thunder as the horses and
men of the enemy fell to the earth.</p>
<p>In the meantime, too, the soldiers of the city and the
Bedouins of the desert who were within the walls for
the feast, took courage, and turning fiercely began to
drive the assailants back by the way they had come,
towards the market-place in the bazar. But those behind
still kept pressing forward, while those in front were
driven back, and the press became so great that the
Shammars could no longer wield their weapons. The
enemy were crowded together like sheep in a fold, and
Khaled, with his men, began to cut a broad road through
the very midst of them, hewing them down in ranks<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</SPAN></span>
and throwing them aside, as corn is harvested in
Egypt.</p>
<p>But after some time Khaled saw that he was alone,
with a few followers, surrounded by a great throng of
the enemy, for some of his men had been slain after
slaying many of their foes, and some had not been able
to follow, being hindered at first by the heaps of dead
and afterwards by the multitude of their opponents who
closed in again over the bloody way through which
Khaled had passed.</p>
<p>And now the Shammars saw that Khaled could not
escape them, and they pressed him on every side, but
the archers dared not shoot at him for fear of hitting
their own friends, if their arrows chanced to go by the
mark. Otherwise he would undoubtedly have perished,
since he had no armour, and not even a buckler with
which to ward off the darts. But they thrust at him
with spears and struck at him with their swords, and
wounded him more than once, though he was not
conscious of pain or loss of blood, being hot with the
fever of the fight. He was hard pressed therefore, and
while he smote without ceasing he began to know that
unless a speedy rescue came to him, his hour was at
hand. From the borders of the market-place, the men
of Riad could still see his sword flashing and striking,
and they still heard his fierce cry.</p>
<p>He looked about him as he fought, and he saw that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</SPAN></span>
he was now almost alone. One after another, the few
who had penetrated so far forward with him into the
press, were overwhelmed by numbers and fell bleeding
from a hundred wounds till only a score were left, and
Khaled saw that unless he could now cut his way free,
he must inevitably perish. But the press was stubborn
and a man might as well hope to make his way through
a herd of camels crowded together in a narrow street.
Then Khaled bethought him of a stratagem. He alone
was on horseback, for the enemy's riders had ridden
before, and he had met them in the street leading to the
palace, when he had himself slain many, and where the
rest were even now falling under the swords of the men
of Riad. And the few men who were with him were
also all on foot. Therefore looking across the market-place
he made as though he saw a great force coming
to his assistance, and he shouted with all his breath,
while his arm never rested.</p>
<p>'Smite, men of Nejed!' he cried. 'For I see the
Sultan himself coming to meet us with five hundred horsemen!
Smite! Yallah! It is the Sword of the Lord!'</p>
<p>Hearing these words, his men were encouraged, and
of the enemy many turned their heads to see the new
danger. But being on foot they were hindered from
seeing by the throng. Yet so much the more Khaled
shouted that the Sultan was coming, and many of the
heads that turned to look were not turned back again,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</SPAN></span>
but rolled down to the feet of those to whom they had
belonged. The brave men who were with Khaled took
heart and hewed with all their might, taking up the cry
of their leader when they saw that it disconcerted their
foes, so that the last took fright, and the panic ran
through the whole multitude.</p>
<p>'We shall be slain like sheep, and taken like locusts
under a mantle, for we cannot move!' they cried, and
they began to press away out of the market-place, forcing
their comrades before them into the narrow streets.</p>
<p>But here many perished. For while every man in
Riad had taken his sword and had gone out of his house
to fight, the women had dragged up cauldrons of boiling
water, and also hand-mill stones, to the roofs, and they
scalded and crushed their retreating foes. Then too, as
the market-place was cleared, the soldiers came on from
the side of the palace, having slain all that stood in
their way and taken most of their horses alive, which
alone was a great booty, for there are not many horses
in Nejed besides those of the Sultan, though these are
the very best and fleetest in all Arabia. But the Shammars
of the north are great horse-breeders. So the
soldiers mounted and joined Khaled in the pursuit,
and a great slaughter followed in the streets, though
some of the enemy were able to escape to the gates, and
warn those of their fellows who were outside to flee to
the hills for safety, leaving much booty behind.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>At the time of the second call to prayer Khaled dismounted
from his mare in the market-place, and there
was not one of the enemy left alive within the walls.
Those who remember that day say that there were five
thousand dead in the streets in Riad.</p>
<p>Khaled made such ablution as he could, and having
prayed and given thanks to Allah, he went back on foot
to the palace, his bay mare following him, and thrusting
her nose into his hand as he walked. For she was little
hurt, and the blood that covered her shoulders and her
flanks was not her own. But Khaled had many wounds
on him, so that his companions wondered how he was
able to walk.</p>
<p>In the court of the palace the Sultan came to meet
him, and fell upon his neck and embraced him, for
many messengers had come, from time to time, telling
how the fight went, and of the great slaughter. And
Khaled smiled, for he thought that he should now win
the love of Zehowah.</p>
<p>'Said I not truly that he is as brave as the lion, and
as strong as the camel?' cried the Sultan, addressing
those who stood in the court. 'Has he not scattered our
enemies as the wind scatters the sand? Surely he is
well called by the name Khaled.'</p>
<p>'Forget not your own men,' Khaled answered, 'for
they have shared in the danger and have slain more
than I, and deserve the spoil. There was a score of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</SPAN></span>
stout fellows with me at the last in the market-place,
whose faces I should know again on a cloudy night.
They fought as well as I, and it was the will of Allah
that their enemies should broil everlastingly and drink
boiling water. Let them be rewarded.'</p>
<p>'They shall every one have a rich garment and a
sum of money, besides their share of the spoil. But as
for you, my beloved son, go in and rest, and bind up
your wounds, and afterwards there shall be feasting
and merriment until the night.'</p>
<p>'The enemy is not destroyed yet,' answered Khaled.
'Command rather that the army make ready for the
pursuit, and when I have washed I will arm myself
and we will ride out and pursue the dogs until not one
of them is left alive, and by the help of Allah we will
take all Shammar and lay it under tribute and bring
back the women captive. After that we shall feast
more safely, and sleep without fear of being waked by a
herd of hyænas in our streets.'</p>
<p>'Nay, but you must rest before going upon this
expedition,' objected the Sultan.</p>
<p>'The true believer will find rest in the grave, and
feasting in paradise,' answered Khaled.</p>
<p>'This is true. But even the camel must eat and drink
on the journey, or both he and his master will perish.'</p>
<p>'Let us then eat and drink quickly, that we may the
sooner go.'<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>'As you will, let it be,' said the Sultan, with a sigh,
for he loved feasting and music, being now too old to
go out and fight himself as he had formerly done.</p>
<p>Thereupon Khaled went into the harem and returned
to Zehowah's apartment. As he went the women
gathered round him with cries of gladness and songs of
triumph, staunching the blood that flowed from his
wounds with their veils and garments as he walked.
And others ran before to prepare the bath and to tell
Zehowah of his coming.</p>
<p>When she saw him she ran forward and took him by
the hands and led him in, and herself she bathed his
wounds and bound them up with precious balsams of
great healing power, not suffering any of the women to
help her nor to touch him, but sending them away so
that she might be alone with Khaled.</p>
<p>'I have slain certain of your enemies, Zehowah,' he
said, at last, 'and I have driven out the rest from the
city.' As yet neither of them had spoken.</p>
<p>'Do you think that I have not heard what you have
done?' Zehowah asked. 'You have saved us all from
death and captivity. You are our father and our
mother. And now I will bring you food and drink
and afterwards you shall sleep.'</p>
<p>'So you are well pleased with the doings of the husband
you have married,' he said.</p>
<p>He was displeased, for he had supposed that she<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</SPAN></span>
would love him for his deeds and for his wounds and
that she would speak differently. But though she
tended him and bound his wounds, and bathed his brow
with perfumed waters, and laid pillows under his head
and fanned him, as a slave might have done, he saw
that there was no warmth in her cheek, and that the
depths of her eyes were empty, and that her hands were
neither hot nor cold. By all these signs he knew that
she felt no love for him, so he spoke coldly to her.</p>
<p>'Is it for me to be pleased or displeased with the
deeds of my lord and master?' she asked. 'Nevertheless,
thousands are even now blessing your name and
returning thanks to Allah for having sent them a
preserver in the hour of danger. I am but one of
them.'</p>
<p>'I would rather see a faint light in your eyes, as of
a star rising in the desert than hear the blessings of all
the men of Nejed. I would rather that your hand were
cold when it touches mine, and your cheek hot when I
kiss it, than that your father should bestow upon me all
the treasures of Riad.'</p>
<p>'Is that love?' asked Zehowah with a laugh. 'A
cold hand, a hot cheek, a bright eye?'</p>
<p>Khaled was silent, for he saw that she understood
his words but not his meaning. It was now noon and
it was very hot, even in the inner shade of the harem,
and Khaled was glad to rest after the hard fighting,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</SPAN></span>
for his many slight wounds smarted with the healing
balsam, and his heart was heavy and discontented.</p>
<p>Then Zehowah called a slave woman to fan him with
a palm leaf, and presently she brought him meat and
rice and dates to eat, and cool drink in a golden cup,
and she sat at his feet while he refreshed himself.</p>
<p>'How many did you slay with your own hand?' she
asked at last, taking up the good sword which lay beside
him on the carpet.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</SPAN></span></p>
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