<h3><SPAN name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></SPAN>CHAPTER VI</h3>
<p>On the following day Khaled made a division of the
spoils, and gave Almasta to Abdul Kerim, enjoining
upon him to marry her, since he had but two wives and
could do so lawfully. The sheikh of the horsemen was
glad, for he had heard much of Almasta's beauty, and
he loved fair women, being of a fierce temper and not
more than forty years old. So he called his friends to
the marriage feast that same day, and Zehowah sent
Almasta in a litter to his harem, giving her also numerous
rich garments by way of a dower, but which in fact
were due to Abdul Kerim as his share of the booty. So
the men feasted, with music, until the evening, when
the bridegroom retired to the harem and the Kadi came
and read the contract; after which Abdul Kerim sat
down while Almasta was brought before him in various
dresses, one after the other, as is customary.</p>
<p>When the women were all gone away, Abdul Kerim
began to talk to his wife, but she only laughed and said
the few words she knew, not knowing what he said,
and presently she began to sing to him in a low voice,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</SPAN></span>
in her own language. Her voice was very clear and
quite different from that of the Arabian women whom
Abdul had heard, and the tones vibrated with great
passion and sweetness, so that he was enchanted and
listened, as in a dream, while his head rested against
Almasta's knee. She continued to sing in such a
manner that his soul was transported with delight;
and at last, as the sound soothed him, he fell into a
gentle sleep.</p>
<p>Almasta, still singing softly, loosened his vest, touching
him so gently that he did not wake. She then drew
out of one of the three tresses of her hair a fine steel
needle, extremely long and sharp, having at one end a
small wooden ball for a handle, and while she sang, she
thrust it very quickly into his breast to its full length,
so that it pierced his heart and he died instantly. But
she continued to sing, lest any of the women should be
listening from a distance. Presently she withdrew the
needle so slowly that not a drop of blood followed it,
and having made it pass thrice through the carpet she
restored it to her hair, after which she fastened the dead
man's vest again, so that nothing was disarranged. She
sang on, after this for some time, and then after a short
silence she sprang up from the couch, uttering loud
screams and lamentations and beating her breast
violently.</p>
<p>The women of the harem came in quickly, and when<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</SPAN></span>
they saw that their master was dead, they sat down
with Almasta and wept with her, for as he lay dead
there was no mark of any violence nor any sign whereby
it could be told that he had not died naturally.</p>
<p>When Khaled heard that Abdul Kerim was dead, he
was much grieved at heart, for the man had been brave
and had been often at his right hand in battle. But
the news being brought to him at dawn when he awoke,
he immediately sent the Jewish physician of the court
to ascertain if possible the cause of the sudden death.
The physician made careful examination of the body,
and having purified himself returned to Khaled to give
an account.</p>
<p>'I have executed my lord's orders with scrupulous
exactness,' he said, 'and I find that without doubt the
sheikh of the horsemen died suddenly by an access of
humours to the heart, the sun being at that time in the
Nadir, for he died about midnight, and being moreover
in evil conjunction with the Dragon's Tail in the Heart
of the Lion, and not yet far from the square aspect of
Al Marech which caused the death of his majesty the
late Sultan, upon whom be peace.'</p>
<p>But Khaled was thoughtful, for he reflected that this
was the second time that a man had died suddenly
when he was about to be Almasta's husband, and he
remembered, how she had attempted to kill the Sultan
of Haïl, and had ultimately brought about his death.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>'Have you examined the dead man as minutely as
you have observed the stars?' he inquired. 'Is there
no mark of violence upon him, nor of poison, nor of
strangling?'</p>
<p>'There is no mark. By Allah! I speak truth. My
lord may see for himself, for the man is not yet buried.'</p>
<p>'Am I a jackal, that I should sniff at dead bodies?'
asked Khaled. 'Go in peace.'</p>
<p>The physician withdrew, for he saw that Khaled
was displeased, and he was himself as much surprised
as any one by the death of Abdul Kerim, a man lean
and strong, not given to surfeiting and in the prime of
health.</p>
<p>'Min Allah!' he said as he departed. 'We are in the
hand of the Lord, who knoweth our rising up and our
lying down. It is possible that if I had seen this man
at the moment of death, or a little before, I might have
discovered the nature of his disease, for I could have
talked with him and questioned him.'</p>
<p>But Khaled went in and talked with Zehowah. She
was greatly astonished when she heard that Almasta's
husband was dead, but she was satisfied with the answer
of the Jewish physician, who enjoyed great reputation and
was believed to be at that time the wisest man in Arabia.</p>
<p>'Give her back to me, to be one of my women,' said
she. 'It is not written that she should marry a man of
Nejed, unless you will take her yourself.'<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>But Khaled bent his brow angrily and his eyes
glowed like the coals of a camp fire which is almost
extinguished, when the night wind blows suddenly over
the ashes.</p>
<p>'I have spoken,' he said.</p>
<p>'And I have heard,' she answered. 'Let there be an
end. But give me this woman to divert me with her
broken speech.'</p>
<p>'I fear she will do you an injury of which you may
not live,' said Khaled.</p>
<p>'What injury can she do me?' asked Zehowah in
astonishment, not understanding him.</p>
<p>'She asked of your father the head of the Sultan of
Haïl, whom she hated. And your father gave it to her.'</p>
<p>'Peace be upon him!' exclaimed Zehowah piously.</p>
<p>'Upon him peace. And when he would have
married her, he died suddenly at the feasting. And
now this Abdul Kerim, who was to have been her husband,
is dead also, without sign, in the night, as a man
stung by a serpent in his sleep. These are strange
doings.'</p>
<p>'If you think she has done evil, let her be put to
death,' said Zehowah. 'But the physician found no
mark upon Abdul Kerim. By the hand of Allah he
was taken.'</p>
<p>'Doubtless his fate was about his neck. But it is
strange.'<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Zehowah looked at Khaled in silence, but presently
she smiled and laid her hand upon his.</p>
<p>'This woman loves you with her whole soul,' she
said. 'You think that she has slain Abdul Kerim by
secret arts, in the hope that she may marry you.'</p>
<p>'And your father also.'</p>
<p>Then they were both silent, and Zehowah covered
her face, since she could not prevent tears from falling
when she thought of her father, whom she had loved.</p>
<p>'If this be so,' she said after a long time, 'let the
woman die immediately.'</p>
<p>'It is necessary to be just,' Khaled answered. 'I
will put no one to death without witnesses, not even a
captive woman, who is certainly an unbeliever at heart.
Has any one seen her do these deeds, or does any one
know by what means a man may be slain in his sleep,
or at a feast, so that no mark is left upon his body?
At Dereyiyah your father was alone with her in the
inner part of the tent, and she was singing to him that
he might sleep. For I have made inquiry. And when
Abdul Kerim died he was also alone with her. I cannot
understand these things. But you are a woman and subtle.
It may be that you can see what is too dark for me.'</p>
<p>'It may be. Therefore give her back to me, and I
will lay a trap for her, so that she will betray herself if
she has really done evil. And when we have convicted
her by her own words she shall die.'<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>'Are you not afraid, Zehowah?'</p>
<p>'Can I change my destiny? If my hour is come, I
shall die of a fever, or of a cold, whether she be with
me or not. But if my years are not full, she cannot
hurt me.'</p>
<p>'This is undoubtedly true,' answered Khaled, who
could find nothing to say. 'But I will first question
the woman myself.'</p>
<p>So he sent slaves with a litter to bring Almasta from
the house of mourning to the palace, and when she was
come he sent out all the other women and remained
alone with her and Zehowah, making her sit down
before him so that he could see her face. Her cheeks
were pale, for she had not slept, having been occupied
in weeping and lamentation during the whole night,
and her eyes moved restlessly as those of a person distracted
with grief.</p>
<p>Khaled then drew his sword and laid it across his
feet as he sat and looked fixedly at Almasta.</p>
<p>'If you do not speak the truth,' he said, 'I will cut
off your head with my own hand. Allah is witness.'</p>
<p>When Almasta saw the drawn sword, her face grew
whiter than before, and for some moments she seemed
not able to breathe. But suddenly she began to beat
her breast, and broke out into loud wailings, rocking herself
to and fro as she sat on the carpet.</p>
<p>'My husband is dead!' she cried. 'He was young;<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</SPAN></span>
he was beautiful! He is dead! Wah! Wah! my
husband is dead! Kill me too!'</p>
<p>Khaled looked at Zehowah, but she said nothing,
though she watched Almasta attentively. Then Khaled
spoke to the woman again.</p>
<p>'Make an end of lamenting for the present,' he
said. 'It has pleased Allah to take your husband to
the fellowship of the faithful. Peace be upon him.
Tell us in what manner he died, and what words he
spoke when he felt his end approaching, for he was my
good friend and I wish to know all.'</p>
<p>Almasta either did not understand or made a pretence
of not understanding, but when she heard Khaled's
words she ceased from wailing and sobbed silently,
beating her breast from time to time.</p>
<p>'How did he die?' Khaled asked in a stern voice.</p>
<p>'He was asleep. He died,' replied Almasta in broken
tones.</p>
<p>'You will get no other answer,' said Zehowah. 'She
cannot speak our tongue.'</p>
<p>'Is there no woman among them all who can talk
this woman's language?' asked Khaled with impatience,
for he saw how useless it was to question her.</p>
<p>'There is no one. I have inquired. Leave her
with me, and if there is anything to be known, I will
try to find it out.'</p>
<p>So Khaled went away and Zehowah endeavoured to<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</SPAN></span>
soothe Almasta and make her talk in her broken words.
But the woman made as though she would not be comforted,
and went and sat apart upon the stone floor where
there was no carpet, rocking to and fro, and wailing in
a low voice. Zehowah understood that whatever the
truth might be Almasta was determined to express her
sorrow in the customary way, and that it would be
better to leave her alone.</p>
<p>For seven days she sat thus apart, covering her head
and mourning, and refusing to speak with any one, so
that all the women supposed her to be indeed distracted
with grief at the death of Abdul Kerim. And each
day Khaled inquired of his wife whether she had yet
learned anything, and received the same answer. But
in the meantime he was occupied with his own thoughts,
as well as with the affairs of the kingdom, though the
latter were as nothing in his mind compared with the
workings of his heart when he thought of Zehowah.</p>
<p>It chanced one evening that Khaled was riding
among the gardens without the city, attended only by a
few horsemen, for he was simple in all his ways and
liked little to have a great throng of attendants about
him. So he rode alone, while the horsemen followed at
a distance.</p>
<p>'Was ever a man, or an angel, so placed in the world
as I am placed?' he thought. 'How much better would
it have been had I never seen Zehowah, and if I had<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</SPAN></span>
never slain the Indian prince. For I should still have
been with my fellows, the genii, from whom I am now
cut off, and at least I should have lived until the day
of the resurrection. But now my horse may stumble
and fall, and my neck may be broken, and there is no
hereafter. Or I may die in my sleep, or be killed in
my sleep, and there will be no resurrection for me, nor
any more life, anywhere in earth or heaven. For
Zehowah will never love me. Was ever a man so
placed? And I am ashamed to complain to her any
more, for she is a good wife, obedient and careful of
my wants, and beautiful as the moon at the full, rising
amidst palm trees, besides being very wise and subtle.
How can I complain? Has she not given me herself,
whom I desired, and a great kingdom which, indeed, I did
not desire, but which no man can despise as a gift? Yet
I am burned up within, and my heart is melting as a piece
of frankincense laid upon coals in an empty chamber,
when no man cares for its sweet savour. Surely, I am
the most wretched of mankind. Oh, that the angel who
made garments for me of a ghada bush, and a bay mare
of a locust, would come down and lay his hand upon
Zehowah's breast and make a living heart of the stone
which Allah has set in its place!'</p>
<p>So he rode slowly on, reasoning as he had often
reasoned before, and reaching the same conclusion in
all his argument, which availed him nothing. But suddenly,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</SPAN></span>
as the sun went down, a new thought entered
his mind and gave him a little hope.</p>
<p>'The sun is gone down,' he said to himself. 'But
Allah has not destroyed the sun. It will rise in the
east to-morrow when the white cock crows in the first
heaven. Many things have being, which the sight of
man cannot see. It may be that although I see no
signs of love in the heaven of Zehowah's eyes, yet love
is already there and will before long rise as the sun and
illuminate my darkness. For I am not subtle as the
evil genii are, but I must see very clearly before I am
able to distinguish.'</p>
<p>He rode back into the city, planning how he might
surprise Zehowah and obtain from her unawares some
proof that she indeed loved him. To this end he
entered the palace by a secret gate, covering his garments
with his aba, and his head with the kefiyeh he
wore, in order to disguise himself from the slaves and
the soldiers whom he met on his way to the harem.
He passed on towards Zehowah's apartment by an unlighted
passage not generally used, and hid himself in
a niche of the wall close to the open door, from which
he could see all that happened, and hear what was said.</p>
<p>Zehowah was seated in her accustomed place and
Almasta was beside her. Khaled could watch their
faces by the light of the hanging lamps, as the two
women talked together.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>'You must put aside all mourning now,' Zehowah
was saying. 'For I will find another husband for you.'</p>
<p>'Another husband?' Almasta smiled and shook her
head.</p>
<p>'Yes, there are other goodly men in Riad, though
Abdul Kerim was of the goodliest, as all say who knew
him. He was the Sultan's friend, but he was more
soldier than courtier. He deserved a better death.'</p>
<p>'Abdul Kerim died in peace. He was asleep.'
Almasta smiled still, but more sadly, and her eyes were
cast down.</p>
<p>'He died in peace,' Zehowah repeated, watching her
narrowly. 'But it is better to die in battle by the
enemy's hand. Such a man, falling in the front of the
fight for the true faith, enters immediately into paradise,
to dwell for ever under the perpetual shade of the tree
Sedrat, and neither blackness nor shame shall cover his
face. There the rivers flow with milk and with clarified
honey, and he shall rest on a couch covered with thick
silk embroidered with gold, and shall possess seventy
beautiful virgins whose eyes are blacker than mine and
their skin whiter than yours, having colour like rubies
and pearls, and their voices like the song of nightingales
in Ajjem, of which travellers tell. These are the
rewards of the true believer as set forth in Al Koran by
our prophet, upon whom peace. A man slain in battle
for the faith enters directly into the possession of all<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</SPAN></span>
this, but unbelievers shall be taken by the forelock and
the heels and cast into hell, to drink boiling molten
brass, as a thirsty camel drinks clear water.'</p>
<p>Almasta understood very little of what Zehowah
said, but she smiled, nevertheless, catching the meaning
of some of the words.</p>
<p>'The Sultan Khaled loves black eyes,' she said. 'He
will go to paradise.'</p>
<p>'Doubtless, he will quench his thirst in the incorruptible
milk of heavenly rivers,' Zehowah replied.
'He is the chief of the brave, the light of the faith and
the burning torch of righteousness. Otherwise Allah
would not have chosen him to rule. But I spoke of
Abdul Kerim.'</p>
<p>'He died in peace,' said Almasta the second time,
and again looking down.</p>
<p>'I do not know how he died,' Zehowah answered,
looking steadily at the woman's face. 'It was a great
misfortune for you. Do you understand? I am very
sorry for you. You would have been happy with Abdul
Kerim.'</p>
<p>'I mourn for him,' Almasta said, not raising her
eyes.</p>
<p>'It is natural and right. Doubtless you loved him
as soon as you saw him.'</p>
<p>Almasta glanced quickly at Zehowah, as though
suspecting a hidden meaning in the words, and for a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[120]</SPAN></span>
moment each of the women looked into the other's eyes,
but Zehowah saw nothing. For a wise man has truly
said that one may see into the depths of black eyes as
into a deep well, but that blue eyes are like the sea of
Oman in winter, sparkling in the sun as a plain of blue
sand, but underneath more unfathomable than the
desert.</p>
<p>Almasta was too wise and deceitful to let the silence
last. So when she had looked at Zehowah and understood,
she smiled somewhat sorrowfully and spoke.</p>
<p>'I could have loved him,' she said. 'I desire no
husband now.'</p>
<p>'That is not true,' Zehowah answered quickly. 'You
wish to marry Khaled, and that is the reason why you
killed Abdul Kerim.'</p>
<p>Almasta started as a camel struck by a flight of
locusts.</p>
<p>'What is this lie?' she cried out with indignation.
'Who has told you this lie?' But her face was as grey
as a stone, and her lips trembled.</p>
<p>'You probably killed him by magic arts learned in
your own country,' said Zehowah quietly. 'Do not be
afraid. We are alone, and no one can hear us. Tell me
how you killed him. Truly it was very skilful of you,
since the physician, who is the wisest man in Arabia,
could not tell how it was done.'</p>
<p>But Almasta began to beat her breast and to make<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</SPAN></span>
oaths and asseverations in her own language, which
Zehowah could not understand.</p>
<p>'If you will tell me how you did it, I will give you
a rich gift,' Zehowah continued.</p>
<p>But so much the more Almasta cried out, stretching
her hands upwards and speaking incomprehensible
words. So Zehowah waited until she became quiet
again.</p>
<p>'It may be that Khaled will marry you, if you will
tell me your secret,' Zehowah said, after a time.</p>
<p>Then Almasta's cheek burned and she bent down her
eyes.</p>
<p>'Will you tell me how to kill a man and leave no
trace?' asked Zehowah, still pressing her. 'Look at
this pearl. Is it not beautiful? See how well it looks
upon your hair. It is as the leaf of a white rose upon
a river of red gold. And on your neck—you cannot
see it yourself—it is like the full moon hanging upon a
milky cloud. Khaled would give you many pearls like
this, if he married you. Will you not tell me?'</p>
<p>'Whom do you wish to kill?' Almasta asked, very
suddenly. But Zehowah was unmoved.</p>
<p>'It may be that I have a private enemy,' she said.
'Perhaps there is one who disturbs me, against whom I
plot in the night, but can find no way of ridding myself
of him. A woman might give much to destroy such a
one.'<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>'Khaled will kill your enemies. He loves you. He
will kill all whom you hate.'</p>
<p>'You make progress. You speak our language
better,' said Zehowah, laughing a little. 'You will
soon be able to tell the Sultan that you love him, as
well as I could myself.'</p>
<p>'But you do not love him,' Almasta answered boldly.</p>
<p>Zehowah bent her brows so that they met between
her eyes as the grip of a bow. Then Khaled's heart
leaped in his breast, for he saw that she was angry with
the woman, and he supposed it was because she secretly
loved him. But he held his breath lest even his breathing
should betray him.</p>
<p>'The portion of fools is fire,' said Zehowah, not
deigning to give any other answer. For she was a
king's daughter and Almasta a bought slave, though
Khaled had taken her in war.</p>
<p>'Be merciful!' exclaimed Almasta, in humble tones.
'I am your handmaid, and I speak Arabic badly.'</p>
<p>'You speak with exceeding clearness when it pleases
you.'</p>
<p>'Indeed I cannot talk in your language, for it is not
long since I came into Arabia.'</p>
<p>'We will have you taught, for we will give you a
husband who will teach you with sticks. There is a
certain hunchback, having one eye and marked with the
smallpox, whose fists are as the feet of an old camel.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</SPAN></span>
He will be a good husband for you and will teach you
the Arabic language, and your skin shall be dissolved
but your mind will be enlightened thereby.'</p>
<p>'Be merciful! I desire no husband.'</p>
<p>'It is good that a woman should marry, even though
the bridegroom be a hunchback. But if you will tell me
your secret I will give you a better husband and forgive
you.'</p>
<p>'There is no secret! I have killed no one!' cried
Almasta. 'Who has told you the lie?'</p>
<p>'And moreover,' continued Zehowah, not regarding
her protestations, 'there are other ways of learning
secrets, besides by kindness; such, for instance, as
sticks, and hot irons, and hunger and thirst in a prison
where there are reptiles and poisonous spiders, besides
many other things with which I have no doubt the
slaves of the palace are acquainted. It is better that
you should tell your secret and be happy.'</p>
<p>'There is no secret,' Almasta repeated, and she would
say nothing else, for she did not trust Zehowah and
feared a cruel death if she told the truth.</p>
<p>But Zehowah wearied of the contest at last, being by
no means sure that the woman had really done any
evil, and having no intention of using any violent means
such as she had suggested. For she was as just as she
was wise and would have no one suffer wrongly.
Khaled, indeed, cared little for the pain of others, having<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</SPAN></span>
seen much blood shed in war, and would have
caused Almasta to be tortured if Zehowah had desired
it. But she did not, preferring to wait and see whether
she could not entrap the slave into a confession.</p>
<p>Khaled now came out of his hiding-place into the
room and advanced towards Zehowah, who remained
sitting upon the carpet, while Almasta rose and made
a respectful salutation. But neither of the women
knew that he had been hidden in the niche. Zehowah
did not seem surprised, but Almasta's face was white
and her eyes were cast down, though indeed Khaled
wished that it had been otherwise. He was encouraged,
however, by what he had seen, for Zehowah had certainly
been angry with Almasta on his account, and he dismissed
the latter that he might be alone with his wife.</p>
<p>'You are wise, Zehowah,' he said, 'and gifted with
much insight, but you will learn nothing from this
woman, though you talk with her a whole year. For
she suspects you and is guarded in her speech and
manner. I was standing by the doorway a long time.
You did not see me, but I heard all that you said.'</p>
<p>'Why did you hide yourself?' Zehowah asked, looking
at him curiously.</p>
<p>'In order to listen,' he answered. 'And I heard
something and saw something which pleased me. For
when she said that you did not love me, you were
angry.'<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>'Did that please you? You are more easily pleased
than I had thought. Shall I bear such things from a
slave? How is it her business whether I love or not?'</p>
<p>'But you were angry,' Khaled repeated, vainly hoping
that she would say more, yet not wishing to press her
too far, lest she should say again that she did not love
him.</p>
<p>She, however, said nothing in reply, but busied herself
in taking his kefiyeh from his head and his sword
from his side that he might be at ease. He rested
against the cushions and drank of the cool drink she
offered him.</p>
<p>'This woman, Almasta, is exceedingly beautiful,' he
said at last. 'It would indeed be a pity that a slave of
such value should go into the possession of another so
that we could see her no more. It is best that you
should keep her with you.'</p>
<p>Zehowah laughed a little, as she sat down beside
him and began to play with her beads.</p>
<p>'This is what I have always said,' she answered.
'I will keep her with me.'</p>
<p>'It is better so,' said Khaled.</p>
<p>Then he remained silent in deep thought, having
devised a new plan for gaining what he most desired.
It seemed to him possible that Zehowah might be
moved by jealousy, if by nothing else; for although he
had sworn to her, and angrily, that he would never take<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</SPAN></span>
Almasta for his wife, and though nothing could really
have prevailed upon him to make him do so, yet it
would be easy for him to talk to the woman and speak
to her of her beauty, and appear to take delight in her
singing, which was more melodious than that of a
Persian nightingale. Since she would be now permanently
established in his harem, nothing would be easier
than for him to spend many hours in the woman's
society. Being a simple-minded man the plan seemed
to him subtle, and he determined to put it into execution
without delay. He knew also that Almasta had
loved him since the first day when she had been
brought before him in the palace at Haïl, and this
would make it still more easy to rouse Zehowah's
jealousy.</p>
<p>Though she had herself advised him to marry
Almasta, he did not believe that she was greatly in
earnest, and he felt assured that if the possibility were
presented before her, in such a way as to appear
imminent, she would be deceived by the appearance.</p>
<p>'It is better that she should remain here,' he said
after a long time. 'For we cannot put her to death
without evidence of her guilt, and if we are obstinate in
wishing to give her a husband, we do not know how
many husbands she may destroy before she is satisfied.
She is beautiful, and will be an ornament in your
kahwah. Indeed I do not know why I sent her away<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</SPAN></span>
just now, when I came in. Let us call her back, that
she may sing to us some of her own songs.'</p>
<p>Zehowah clapped her hands and Almasta immediately
returned, for she had indeed been waiting outside
the door, endeavouring to hear what was said, since she
suspected that Khaled would speak of her and ask
questions. She understood well enough, and often
much better than she was willing to show, though she
could as yet speak but few words of the Arabic language.</p>
<p>'Sit at my feet,' said Khaled, 'and sing to me the
songs of your own people.'</p>
<p>Almasta took a musical instrument from the wall
and sat down to sing. Her voice, indeed, was of enchanting
sweetness, but as for the words of her songs,
the seven wise men themselves could not have understood
a syllable of them, seeing that they were neither
Arabic nor Persian, nor even Greek. Nevertheless,
Khaled made a pretence of being much pleased, resting
his head against the cushions and closing his eyes as
though the sound soothed him. As for Zehowah, she
watched the woman with great curiosity, wondering
whether it were possible that a creature so fair as
Almasta could have done the evil deeds of which she
was suspected, and planning how she might surprise
her into a confession of guilt.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</SPAN></span></p>
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