<h3><SPAN name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></SPAN>CHAPTER IV</h3>
<p>Khaled pondered deeply, being uncertain what to do,
and trying to find out some action which could win for
him what he wanted. Zehowah received no answer to
her question as to the number of enemies he had slain
and she did not ask again, for she thought that he was
weary and wished to rest in silence.</p>
<p>'What do you like best in the whole world?' he
asked after a long time, to see what she would say.</p>
<p>'I like you best,' she answered, smiling, while she
still played with his sword.</p>
<p>'That is very strange,' Khaled answered, musing.
But the colour rose darkly in his cheeks above his
beard, for he was pleased now as he had been displeased
before.</p>
<p>'Why is it strange?' asked Zehowah. 'Are you not
the palm tree in my plain, and a tower of refuge for my
people?'</p>
<p>'And will you dry up the well from which the tree
draws life, and take away the corner-stone of the tower's
foundation?'<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>'You speak in fables,' said Zehowah, laughing.</p>
<p>'Yet you imagined the fable yourself, when you
likened me to a palm and to a tower. But I am no
lover of allegories. The sword is my argument, and my
wit is in my arm. The wall by the tree is the wall of
love, and the chief foundation of the tower is the love of
Zehowah. If you destroy that, the tree will wither and
the tower will fall.'</p>
<p>'Surely there was never such a man as you,' Zehowah
answered, half jesting but half in earnest. 'You
are as one who has bought a white mare; and though
she is fleet, and good to look at, and obedient to his
voice and knee, yet he is discontented because she
cannot speak to him, and he would fain have her black
instead of white, and if possible would teach her to sing
like a Persian nightingale.'</p>
<p>'Is it then not natural in a woman to love man?
Have you heard no tales of love from the story-tellers of
the harem?'</p>
<p>'I have heard many such tales, but none of them
were told of me,' Zehowah replied. 'Will you drink
again? Is the drink too sweet, or is it not cool?'</p>
<p>She had risen from her seat and held the golden cup,
bending down to him, so that her face was near his.
He laid his hand upon her shoulder.</p>
<p>'Hear me, Zehowah,' he said. 'I want but one thing
in the world, and it was for that I came out of the Red<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</SPAN></span>
Desert to be your husband. And that thing I will
have, though the price be greater than rubies, or than
blood, or than life itself.'</p>
<p>'If it is mine, I freely give it to you. If it is not
mine, take it by force, or I will help you to take it by
a stratagem, if I can. Am I not your wife?'</p>
<p>She spoke thus, supposing from his face that he meant
some treasure that could be taken by strength or by
wile, for she could not believe a man could speak so
seriously of a mere thought such as love.</p>
<p>'Neither my right hand nor your wit can give me
this, but only your heart, Zehowah,' he answered, still
holding her and looking at her.</p>
<p>But now she did not laugh, for she saw that he was
greatly in earnest.</p>
<p>'You are still talking of love,' she said. 'And you
are not jesting. I do not know what to answer you.
Gladly will I say, I love you. Is that all? What is it
else? Are those the words?'</p>
<p>'I care little for the words. But I will have the
reality, though it cost your life and mine.'</p>
<p>'My life? Will you take my life, for the sake of a
thought?'</p>
<p>'A thought!' he exclaimed. 'Do you call love a
thought? I had not believed a woman could be so
cold as that.'</p>
<p>'If not a thought, what then? I have spoken the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</SPAN></span>
truth. If it were a treasure, or anything that can be
taken, you could take it, and I could help you. But if
the possibility of possessing it lie not in deeds, it lies
in thoughts, and is itself a thought. If you can teach
me, I will think what you will; but if you cannot teach
me, who shall? And how will it profit you to take my
life or your own?'</p>
<p>'Is it possible that love is only a thought?' asked
Khaled, speaking rather to himself than to her.</p>
<p>'It must be,' she answered. 'The body is what it is
in the eyes of others, but the soul is what it thinks
itself to be, happy or unhappy, loving or not loving.'</p>
<p>'You are too subtle for me, Zehowah,' Khaled said.
'Yet I know that this is not all true.'</p>
<p>For he knew that he possessed no soul, and yet he
loved her. Moreover he could think himself happy or
unhappy.</p>
<p>'You are too subtle,' he repeated. 'I will take my
sword again and I will go out and fight, and pursue the
enemy and waste their country, for it is not so hard to
cut through steel as to touch the heart of a woman who
does not love, and it is easier to tear down towers and
strongholds of stone with the naked hands than to build
a temple upon the moving sand of an empty heart.'</p>
<p>Khaled would have risen at once, but Zehowah took
his hand and entreated him to stay with her.</p>
<p>'Will you go out in the heat of the day, wounded<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</SPAN></span>
and wearied?' she asked. 'Surely you will take a
fever and die before you have followed the Shammars
so far as two days' journey.'</p>
<p>'My wounds are slight, and I am not weary,' Khaled
answered. 'When the smith has heated the iron in
the forge, does he wait until it is cold before striking?'</p>
<p>'But think also of the soldiers, who have striven
hard, and cannot thus go out upon a great expedition
without preparation as well as rest.'</p>
<p>'I will take those whom I can find. And if they
will go with me, it is well. But if not, I will go alone,
and they and the rest will follow after.'</p>
<p>'It is summer, too,' said Zehowah, keeping him back.
'Is this a time to go out into the northern desert?
Both men and beasts will perish by the way.'</p>
<p>'Has not Allah bound every man's fate about his
neck? And can a man cast it from him?'</p>
<p>'I know not otherwise, but if heat and hunger and
thirst do not kill the men, they will certainly destroy
the beasts, whose names are not recorded by Asrael, and
who have no destiny of their own.'</p>
<p>'You hinder me,' said Khaled. 'And yet you do
not know how many of the Shammar may be yet lurking
within a day's march of the city, slaying your
people, burning their houses and destroying their harvest.
Let me go. Will you love me better if I stay?'</p>
<p>'You will be the better able to get the victory.'<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>'Will you love me better if I stay?'</p>
<p>'If you go now, you may fail in your purpose and
perish as well. How could I love you at all then?'</p>
<p>'It is the victory you love then—not me?'</p>
<p>'Could I love defeat? Nay, do not be angry with
me. Stay here at least until the evening. Think of
the burning sun and the raging thirst and the smarting
of your wounds which have only been dressed this first
time. Think of the soldiers, too——'</p>
<p>'They can bear what I can bear. Was it not summer-time
when the Prophet went out against the Romans?'</p>
<p>'I do not know. Stay with me, Khaled.'</p>
<p>'I will come back when I have destroyed the
Shammars.'</p>
<p>'And if the soldiers will not go with you, will you
indeed go out alone?'</p>
<p>'Yes. I will go alone. When they see that they
will follow me. They are not foxes. They are brave
men.'</p>
<p>Khaled rose and girt his sword about him. Zehowah
helped him, seeing that she could not persuade him to
stay.</p>
<p>'Farewell,' he said, shortly, and without so much as
touching her hand he turned and went out. She followed
him to the door of the room and stood watching as he
went away.</p>
<p>'One of us two was to rule,' she said to herself, 'and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</SPAN></span>
it is he, for I cannot move him. But what is this talk
of love? Does he need love, who is himself the master?'</p>
<p>She sighed and went back to the carpet on which
they had been sitting. Then she called in her women
and bid them tell her all they had heard about the fight
in the morning; and they, thinking to please her, extolled
the deeds of Khaled and of the tens he had slain
they made hundreds, and of the thousands of the
enemy's army, they made tens of thousands, till the
walls of Riad could not have contained the hosts of
which they spoke, and the dry sand of the desert could
not have drunk all the blood which had been shed.</p>
<p>Meanwhile Khaled went into the outer court of
the palace, where many soldiers were congregated together
in the shade of the high wall, eating camel's
meat and blanket bread and drinking the water from the
well. They were all able-bodied and unhurt, for those
who had been wounded were at their houses, tended by
their wives.</p>
<p>'Men of Riad!' cried Khaled, standing before them.
'We have fought a good fight this morning and the
power of our foes is broken. But all are not yet destroyed,
and it may be that there are many thousands
still lurking within a day's march of the city, slaying
the people, burning their houses and destroying their
harvests. Let us go out and kill them all before they
are able to go back to their own country. Afterwards<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</SPAN></span>
we will pursue those who are already escaping, and we
will lay all the tribes of Shammar under tribute and
bring back the women captive.'</p>
<p>Thereupon a division arose among the soldiers.
Some were for going at once with Khaled, but others
said it was the hot season and no time for war.</p>
<p>'It is indeed summer,' said Khaled. 'But if the
Shammars were able to come to Riad in the heat, the
men of Riad are able to go to them. And I at least
will go at once, and those who wish to share the spoil
will go with me, but those who are satisfied to sit in
the shade and eat camel's meat will stay behind. In
an hour's time I will ride out of the northern gate.'</p>
<p>So saying, Khaled rode slowly down into the city
towards the market-place. The people were carrying
away their own dead, and dragging off the bodies of
their enemies, with camels, by fours and fives tied together
to bury them in a great ditch without the walls.
When Khaled appeared, many of the men gathered
round him, with cries of joy, for they had supposed that
some of his wounds were dangerous and that they should
not see him for many days.</p>
<p>'Wallah! He is with us again!' they shouted, jostling
each other to get near, and standing on tiptoe to see
the good mare that had carried him so well in the fight.</p>
<p>'Masallah! I am with you,' answered Khaled, 'and
if you will go with me we will send many more of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</SPAN></span>
Shammars to eat thorns and thistles, as many as dwell
in Kasim and Tabal Shammar as far as Haïl; and by
the help of Allah we will take the city of Haïl itself
and divide the spoil and bring away the women captive;
and when we have taken all that there is we will lay
the land under tribute and make it subject to Nejed.
So let those who will go with me arm themselves and
take every man his horse or his camel, and dates and
barley and water-skins, and in an hour's time we will
ride out. For Allah will certainly give us the victory.'</p>
<p>'Let us bury the dead to-day and to-morrow we will
go,' said many of those nearest to him.</p>
<p>'Are there no old men and boys in Riad to bind the
sheaves you have mown?' asked Khaled. 'And are
there no women to mourn over the dead of your kindred
who have fallen in a good fight? And as for to-morrow,
it is yet in Allah's hand. But to-day we have already
with us. However, if you will not go with me, I will
go alone.'</p>
<p>The men were pleased with Khaled's speech, and
indeed the greater part of the dead were buried by this
time, for all the people had made haste to the work,
fearing lest the bodies should bring a pestilence among
them, since it was summer-time and very hot. Then
all those who were unhurt and could bear arms, went
and washed themselves, and took their weapons and
food, as Khaled had directed them. Before the call to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</SPAN></span>
afternoon prayers the whole host went out of the
northern gate.</p>
<p>Then Khaled accomplished all that he had spoken
of, and much more, for he drove the scattered force of
the enemy before him, overtaking all at last and slaying
all whom he overtook as far as Zulfah which is by the
narrow end of the Nefud. Here he rested a short time,
and then quickly crossing the sand, he entered the
country called Kasim which is subject to the Shammars.
Here he was told by a woman who had been taken
that the Shammars were coming with a new army
against him out of Haïl. He therefore hid his host in a
pass of the hills just above the plain, and sent down a
few Bedouins to encamp at the foot of the mountains,
bidding them call themselves Shammars and make a
show of being friendly to the enemy. So when the
army of the Shammars reached the foot of the hills,
they saw the tents and only one or two camels, and
Khaled's Bedouins came out and welcomed them, and
told them that Khaled was still crossing the Nefud, and
that if they made haste through the hills they might
come upon him unawares and at an advantage as he
began to ascend. Thereupon the enemy rejoiced and
entered the pass in haste, after filling their water-skins.</p>
<p>When they were in the midst of the hills, Khaled
and his army sprang up from the ambush and fell upon
them, and utterly destroyed them, taking all their<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</SPAN></span>
horses and camels and arms; after which he went down
into the plain and laid waste the country about Haïl.
He took the city as the Shammars had taken Riad.
For he himself got upon the wall at night, with the
strongest and the bravest of his followers, and slew the
guards and opened the gate just before the dawn. But
there was no Khaled in Haïl to rally the soldiers and
give them heart to turn and make a stand in the streets.</p>
<p>Khaled then entered the palace and took the Sultan
of Shammar alive, not suffering him to be hurt, for he
wished to bring him to Riad. This Sultan was a man of
middle age, having only one eye, and also otherwise ill-favoured,
besides being cowardly and fat. So Khaled
ordered that he should be put into a litter, and the
litter into a cage, and the cage slung between two
camels. But he commanded that the women of the
harem should be well treated and brought before him,
that he might see them, intending to bring back the
most beautiful of them as presents to his father-in-law.</p>
<p>'Surely,' said the men who were with him, 'you will
keep the fairest for yourself.'</p>
<p>But Khaled turned angrily upon them.</p>
<p>'Have I not lately married the most beautiful woman
in the world?' he asked. 'I tell you it is for her sake
that I have destroyed the Shammars. But the Sultan
shall have the best of these women, and afterwards the
rest of them will be divided amongst you by lot.'<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>When the women heard that they were to be distributed
among the men of Nejed they at first made a
pretence of howling and beating their breasts, but they
rejoiced secretly and soon began to laugh and talk
among themselves, pointing out to each other the
strongest and most richly dressed of Khaled's
followers, as though choosing husbands among them.
But one of them neither wept nor spoke to her companions,
but stood silently watching Khaled, and when
he sat down upon a carpet in the chief kahwah of the
house, she brought him drink in a goblet set with pearls
from Katar, and sat down at his feet as though she had
been his wife. But he took little heed of her at first,
for he was busy with grave matters.</p>
<p>The other women, seeing what she did, thought that
she was acting wisely in the hope of gaining Khaled's
favour, seeing that he was the chief of their enemies, so
they, too, came near, and brought water for his hands,
and perfumes, and sweetmeats, thinking to outdo her.
But she pushed them away, taking what they brought
for him, and offering it herself.</p>
<p>'Are you better than we?' the women said angrily.
'Has our lord chosen you for himself, that you will not
let us come near him?'</p>
<p>Then Khaled noticed her and began to wonder at
her attention and zeal.</p>
<p>'What is your name?' he asked. But she did<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[76]</SPAN></span>
not speak. 'Who is she?' he inquired of the other
women.</p>
<p>'She is an unbeliever,' they answered contemptuously.
'And she is proud, for she trusts in her white skin and
her blue eyes, and her hair which is red without henna.
She thinks she is better than we. Command us to
uncover our faces, that you may see and judge
between us.'</p>
<p>'Let it be so. Let us see who is the fairest,' said
Khaled, and he laughed.</p>
<p>Then the woman who sat at his feet threw aside her
veil, and all the others did the same. Khaled saw that
the one was certainly more beautiful than the rest, for
her skin was as white as milk, and her eyes like the sea
of Oman when it is blue in winter. She had also long
hair, plaited in three tresses which came down to her
feet, red as the locusts when the sun shines upon them
at evening, and not dyed.</p>
<p>'There is a bay mare in a stable of black ones,'
Khaled said. 'What is the name of the bay mare?'</p>
<p>'Her name is Aziz, and she is a Christian,' said one
of the women.</p>
<p>'Not Aziz—Almasta,' said the beautiful woman in
an accent which showed that she could not speak Arabic
fluently. 'Almasta, a Christian.'</p>
<p>'She was lately sent as a present to our master by
the Emir of Basrah,' said one of the others.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>'He paid a thousand and five hundred sequins for her,
for she was brought from Georgia,' said another. 'But
I am a free woman, and myself the daughter of an emir.'</p>
<p>Then all the others began to scream.</p>
<p>'It is a lie,' they cried. 'Your father was a white
slave from Syria.'</p>
<p>'You are fools,' retorted the woman who had spoken.
'You should have said that you were also free women
and the daughters of emirs. So our lord would have
treated you with more consideration.'</p>
<p>The others saw their folly and were silent and drew
back, but Khaled only smiled.</p>
<p>'As good mares are bred in the stable as in the
desert,' he said, and the women laughed with him at the
jest, for they saw that it pleased him.</p>
<p>But Almasta was silent and sat at his feet, looking
into his face.</p>
<p>'You must learn to talk in Arabic,' he said, 'and then
you will be able to tell stories of your native country
to the Sultan, for he loves tales of travel.'</p>
<p>Almasta smiled and bent her head a little, but she
did not understand all he said, being but lately come
into Arabia.</p>
<p>'I will go with you,' she answered.</p>
<p>'Yes. You will go with me to Riad to the Sultan,
and perhaps he will make you his wife, for he has none
at present.'<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>'I will go with you,' she repeated, looking at him.</p>
<p>'She does not understand you,' said the women,
laughing at her ignorance of their own tongue.</p>
<p>'It is no matter,' said Khaled. 'She will learn in
due time. Perhaps it has pleased Allah to send my
lord the Sultan a wife without a tongue for a blessing
in his old age.'</p>
<p>'I will go with you,' Almasta said again.</p>
<p>'She can say nothing else,' jeered the women.</p>
<p>One of them pulled her by her upper garment, so
that she looked round.</p>
<p>'Can you say this, "My father was a dog and the
son of dogs"?' asked the woman.</p>
<p>But Almasta pushed her angrily away, for she half
understood. Then the woman grew angry too, and
shook her fist in Almasta's face.</p>
<p>'If you fight, you shall eat sticks,' said Khaled, and
then they were all quiet.</p>
<p>Thus he took possession of the city of Haïl and remaining
there some time he reduced all the country to submission,
so that it remained a part of the kingdom of Nejed for
many years after that. For the power of the Shammars
was broken, and they could nowhere have mustered a
thousand men able to bear arms. Khaled set a governor
in the place of the Sultan and ordered all the laws of
the country in the same manner as those of Nejed, and
after he had been absent from Riad nearly two months,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</SPAN></span>
he set aside a part of his force to remain behind and
keep the peace in case there should be an outbreak,
and with the rest he began to journey homeward, taking
a great spoil and many captives with him.</p>
<p>During the march most of the women captives rode
on camels, but a few of the most beautiful were taken
in litters lest the fatigues of riding should injure their
appearance and thus diminish their value. Almasta
was one of these, and the Sultan of Haïl was taken in a
cage as has been said, though he was not otherwise ill-treated,
and received his portion of camel's meat and
bread, equal to that of the soldiers.</p>
<p>Khaled sent messengers on fleet mares to Riad to
give warning of his coming, but he could not himself
proceed very quickly, because his army was burdened
with so much spoil; and as there was now no haste to
overtake an enemy he journeyed chiefly at night, resting
during the day wherever there was water, for although
the summer was far advanced it was still hot. He
thought continually of Zehowah, by day in his tent and
by night on the march, for he supposed that she would
be glad when she heard of the victory and that she
would now love him, because he had avenged her people,
and taken Haïl, and brought back gold and captives,
besides other treasures.</p>
<p>'She was already pleased with my deeds, before we
left Riad,' he thought, 'for she asked me how many of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</SPAN></span>
the Shammars I had slain with my own hand, and at
the last she wished me to stay with her, most probably
that I might tell her more about the fight. How much
the more will she be glad now, since I have killed so
many more and have brought back treasure, and made
a whole country subject to her father. Shall not blood
and gold buy the love of a woman?'</p>
<p>It chanced once during this journey that Khaled
was sitting at the door of his tent after the sun had
gone down and before the night march had begun.
Upon the one side, at a little distance, was the tent of
the women captives who had been taken from the palace
in Haïl, and upon the other the soldiers had set down
the cage in which the Sultan of Shammar was carried.
The men had laid a carpet over the cage to keep the
sun from the prisoner during the heat of the day, lest
he should not reach Riad alive as Khaled desired. For
the Sultan was fat and of a choleric temper. Now the
soldiers had given him food but had forgotten to bring
him water, and it was hot under the carpet now that
the evening had come. But he could lift it up a little
on one side, and having done so, he began to cry out,
cursing Khaled and railing at him, not knowing that he
was so near at hand.</p>
<p>'Oh you whose portion it shall be to broil everlastingly,
and to eat thistles and thorns, and to lie
bound in red-hot chains as I lie in this cage! Have<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</SPAN></span>
you brought me out into the desert to die of thirst like
a lame camel? Surely your entertainment on the day
of judgment shall be boiling water and the fruit of
Al Zakkam, and whenever you try to get out of hell
you shall be dragged back again and beaten with iron
clubs, and your skin shall dissolve, and the boiling
water shall be poured upon your head!'</p>
<p>In this way the captive cried out, for he was very
thirsty. But when Khaled saw that no one gave him
water he called in the darkness to the women who sat
by their tent.</p>
<p>'Fetch water and give the man to drink,' he said.</p>
<p>One of the women rose quickly and filled a jar at the
well close by, and took it to the cage. But then the
railing and cursing broke out afresh, so that Khaled
wondered what had happened.</p>
<p>'Who has sent me this unbelieving woman to
torture me with thirst?' cried the prisoner. 'Are you
not Aziz whom I was about to take for my fourth wife
on account of your red hair? But your hair shall be a
perpetual flame hereafter, burning the bones of your
head, and your flesh shall be white with heat as iron in
a forge. If I were still in my kingdom you should eat
many sticks! If Allah delivers me from my enemies
I will cause your skin to be embroidered with gold for
a trapping to my horse!'</p>
<p>The moon rose at this time, being a little past the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</SPAN></span>
full, and Khaled looked towards the cage and saw that
the woman was standing two paces away from the
Sultan's outstretched hand. She dabbled in the cool
water with her fingers so that a plashing sound was
heard, and then drank herself, and scattered afterwards
a few drops in the face of the thirsty captive.</p>
<p>'It is good water,' she said. 'It is cold.'</p>
<p>Khaled knew from her broken speech that it was
Almasta, and he understood that she was torturing the
prisoner with the sound and sight of the water, and
with her words. So he rose from his place and went
to the cage.</p>
<p>'Did I not tell you to give him drink?' he asked,
standing before the woman.</p>
<p>'Oh my lord, be merciful,' cried the captive, when he
saw that Khaled himself was there. 'Be merciful and
let me drink, for your heart is easily moved to pity,
and by an act of charity you shall hereafter sit in the
shade of the tree Sedrat and drink for ever of the wine
of paradise.'</p>
<p>'I do not desire wine,' said Khaled. 'But you shall
certainly not thirst. Give him the jar,' he said to
Almasta. But she shook her head.</p>
<p>'He is bad and ugly,' she said. 'If he does not
drink, he will die.'</p>
<p>Then Khaled put out his hand to take the jar of
water, but Almasta threw it violently to the ground,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</SPAN></span>
and it broke to pieces. Thereupon the captive began
again to rail and curse at Almasta and to implore
Khaled with many blessings.</p>
<p>'You shall drink, for I will bring water myself,' said
Khaled. He went back to his tent and took his own
jar to the well, and filled it carefully.</p>
<p>When he turned he saw that Almasta was running
from his tent towards the cage, with a drawn sword in
her hand. He then ran also, and being very swift of
foot, he overtook her just as she thrust at the Sultan
through the bars. But the sword caught in the folds of
the soft carpet, and Khaled took it from her hand, and
thrust her down so that she fell upon her knees. Then
he gave the prisoner the jar with the water that
remained in it, for some had been spilt as he ran.</p>
<p>'Who has given you the right to kill my captives?'
he asked of Almasta.</p>
<p>'Kill me, then!' she cried.</p>
<p>'Indeed, if you were not so valuable, I would cut off
your head,' Khaled answered. 'Why do you wish me
to kill you?'</p>
<p>'I hate him,' she said, pointing to the captive who
was drinking like a thirsty camel.</p>
<p>'That is no reason why I should kill you. Go back
to the tents.'</p>
<p>But Almasta laid her hand on the sword he held
and tried to bring it to her own throat.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>'This is a strange woman,' said Khaled. 'Why do
you wish to die? You shall go to Riad and be the
Sultan's wife.'</p>
<p>'No, no!' she cried. 'Kill me! Not him, not
him!'</p>
<p>'Of whom do you speak?'</p>
<p>'Him!' she answered, again pointing to the prisoner.
'Is he not the Sultan?'</p>
<p>Khaled laughed aloud, for he saw that she had
supposed she was to be taken to Riad to be made the
wife of the Sultan of Shammar. Indeed, the other
women had told her so, to anger her.</p>
<p>'Not this man,' he said, endeavouring to make her
understand. 'There is another Sultan at Riad. The
Sultan of Shammar is one, the Sultan of Nejed another.'</p>
<p>'You?' she asked, suddenly springing up. 'With
you?'</p>
<p>The moon was bright and Khaled saw that her eyes
gleamed like stars and her face grew warm, and when
she took his hands her own were cold.</p>
<p>'No, not I,' he answered. 'I am not the Sultan.'</p>
<p>But her face became grey in the moonlight, and she
covered her head with her veil and went slowly back to
her tent.</p>
<p>'This woman loves me,' Khaled thought. 'And as
I have not talked much with her, it must be because I
am strong and have conquered the people among whom<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</SPAN></span>
she was captive. How much the more then, will
Zehowah love me, for the same reason.'</p>
<p>So he was light of heart, and soon afterwards he
commanded everything to be made ready and mounted
his bay mare for the night march.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />