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<h2> CHAPTER XIII. IN THE SIGHT OF ALLAH </h2>
<p>Sakr-el-Bahr stood lost in thought after she had gone. Again he weighed
her every word and considered precisely how he should meet Asad, and how
refuse him, if the Basha's were indeed such an errand as Fenzileh had
heralded.</p>
<p>Thus in silence he remained waiting for Ali or another to summon him to
the presence of the Basha. Instead, however, when Ali entered it was
actually to announce Asad-ed-Din, who followed immediately upon his heels,
having insisted in his impatience upon being conducted straight to the
presence of Sakr-el-Bahr.</p>
<p>"The peace of the Prophet upon thee, my son, was the Basha's greeting.</p>
<p>"And upon thee, my lord." Sakr-el-Bahr salaamed. "My house is honoured."
With a gesture he dismissed Ali.</p>
<p>"I come to thee a suppliant," said Asad, advancing.</p>
<p>"A suppliant, thou? No need, my lord. I have no will that is not the echo
of thine own."</p>
<p>The Basha's questing eyes went beyond him and glowed as they rested upon
Rosamund.</p>
<p>"I come in haste," he said, "like any callow lover, guided by my every
instinct to the presence of her I seek—this Frankish pearl, this
pen-faced captive of thy latest raid. I was away from the Kasbah when that
pig Tsamanni returned thither from the s�k; but when at last I learnt that
he had failed to purchase her as I commanded, I could have wept for very
grief. I feared at first that some merchant from the Sus might have bought
her and departed; but when I heard—blessed be Allah!—that thou
wert the buyer, I was comforted again. For thou'lt yield her up to me, my
son."</p>
<p>He spoke with such confidence that Oliver had a difficulty in choosing the
words that were to disillusion him. Therefore he stood in hesitancy a
moment.</p>
<p>"I will make good thy, loss," Asad ran on. "Thou shalt have the sixteen
hundred philips paid and another five hundred to console thee. Say that
will content thee; for I boil with impatience."</p>
<p>Sakr-el-Bahr smiled grimly. "It is an impatience well known to me, my
lord, where she is concerned," he answered slowly. "I boiled with it
myself for five interminable years. To make an end of it I went a distant
perilous voyage to England in a captured Frankish vessel. Thou didst not
know, O Asad, else thou wouldst...."</p>
<p>"Bah!" broke in the Basha. "Thou'rt a huckster born. There is none like
thee, Sakr-el-Bahr, in any game of wits. Well, well, name thine own price,
strike thine own profit out of my impatience and let us have done."</p>
<p>"My lord," he said quietly, "it is not the profit that is in question. She
is not for sale."</p>
<p>Asad blinked at him, speechless, and slowly a faint colour crept into his
sallow cheeks.</p>
<p>"Not... not for sale?" he echoed, faltering in his amazement.</p>
<p>"Not if thou offered me thy Bashalik as the price of her," was the solemn
answer. Then more warmly, in a voice that held a note of intercession—"Ask
anything else that is mine," he continued, "and gladly will I lay it at
thy feet in earnest of my loyalty and love for thee."</p>
<p>"But I want nothing else." Asad's tone was impatient, petulant almost. "I
want this slave."</p>
<p>"Then," replied Oliver, "I cast myself upon thy mercy and beseech thee to
turn thine eyes elsewhere."</p>
<p>Asad scowled upon him. "Dost thou deny me?" he demanded, throwing back his
head.</p>
<p>"Alas!" said Sakr-el-Bahr.</p>
<p>There fell a pause. Darker and darker grew the countenance of Asad,
fiercer glowed the eyes he bent upon his lieutenant. "I see," he said at
last, with a calm so oddly at variance with his looks as to be sinister.
"I see. It seems that there is more truth in Fenzileh than I suspected.
So!" He considered the corsair a moment with his sunken smouldering eyes.</p>
<p>Then he addressed him in a tone that vibrated with his suppressed anger.
"Bethink thee, Sakr-el-Bahr, of what thou art, of what I have made thee.
Bethink thee of all the bounty these hands have lavished on thee. Thou art
my own lieutenant, and mayest one day be more. In Algiers there is none
above thee save myself. Art, then, so thankless as to deny me the first
thing I ask of thee? Truly is it written 'Ungrateful is Man.'"</p>
<p>"Didst thou know," began Sakr-el-Bahr, "all that is involved for me in
this...."</p>
<p>"I neither know nor care," Asad cut in. "Whatever it may be, it should be
as naught when set against my will." Then he discarded anger for cajolery.
He set a hand upon Sakr-el-Bahr's stalwart shoulder. "Come, my son. I will
deal generously with thee out of my love, and I will put thy refusal from
my mind."</p>
<p>"Be generous, my lord, to the point of forgetting that ever thou didst ask
me for her."</p>
<p>"Dost still refuse?" The voice, honeyed an instant ago, rang harsh again.
"Take care how far thou strain my patience. Even as I have raised thee
from the dirt, so at a word can I cast thee down again. Even as I broke
the shackles that chained thee to the rowers' bench, so can I rivet them
on thee anew."</p>
<p>"All this canst thou do," Sakr-el-Bahr agreed. "And since, knowing it, I
still hold to what is doubly mine—by right of capture and of
purchase—thou mayest conceive how mighty are my reasons. Be
merciful, then, Asad...."</p>
<p>"Must I take her by force in spite of thee?" roared the Basha.</p>
<p>Sakr-el-Bahr stiffened. He threw back his head and looked the Basha
squarely in the eyes.</p>
<p>"Whilst I live, not even that mayest thou do," he answered.</p>
<p>"Disloyal, mutinous dog! Wilt thou resist me—me?"</p>
<p>"It is my prayer that thou'lt not be so ungenerous and unjust as to compel
thy servant to a course so hateful."</p>
<p>Asad sneered. "Is that thy last word?" he demanded.</p>
<p>"Save only that in all things else I am thy slave, O Asad."</p>
<p>A moment the Basha stood regarding him, his glance baleful. Then
deliberately, as one who has taken his resolve, he strode to the door. On
the threshold he paused and turned again. "Wait!" he said, and on that
threatening word departed.</p>
<p>Sakr-el-Bahr remained a moment where he had stood during the interview,
then with a shrug he turned. He met Rosamund's eyes fixed intently upon
him, and invested with a look he could not read. He found himself unable
to meet it, and he turned away. It was inevitable that in such a moment
the earlier stab of remorse should be repeated. He had overreached himself
indeed. Despair settled down upon him, a full consciousness of the
horrible thing he had done, which seemed now so irrevocable. In his silent
anguish he almost conceived that he had mistaken his feelings for
Rosamund; that far from hating her as he had supposed, his love for her
had not yet been slain, else surely he should not be tortured now by the
thought of her becoming Asad's prey. If he hated her, indeed, as he had
supposed, he would have surrendered her and gloated.</p>
<p>He wondered was his present frame of mind purely the result of his
discovery that the appearances against him had been stronger far than he
imagined, so strong as to justify her conviction that he was her brother's
slayer.</p>
<p>And then her voice, crisp and steady, cut into his torture of
consideration.</p>
<p>"Why did you deny him?"</p>
<p>He swung round again to face her, amazed, horror-stricken.</p>
<p>"You understood?" he gasped.</p>
<p>"I understood enough," said she. "This lingua franca is none so different
from French." And again she asked—"Why did you deny him?"</p>
<p>He paced across to her side and stood looking down at her.</p>
<p>"Do you ask why?"</p>
<p>"Indeed," she said bitterly, "there is scarce the need perhaps. And yet
can it be that your lust of vengeance is so insatiable that sooner than
willingly forgo an ounce of it you will lose your head?"</p>
<p>His face became grim again. "Of course," he sneered, "it would be so that
you'd interpret me."</p>
<p>"Nay. If I have asked it is because I doubt."</p>
<p>"Do you realize what it can mean to become the prey of Asad-ed-Din?"</p>
<p>She shuddered, and her glance fell from his, yet her voice was composed
when she answered him—"Is it so very much worse than becoming the
prey of Oliver-Reis or Sakr-el-Bahr, or whatever they may call you?"</p>
<p>"If you say that it is all one to you there's an end to my opposing him,"
he answered coldly. "You may go to him. If I resisted him—like a
fool, perhaps—it was for no sake of vengeance upon you. It was
because the thought of it fills me with horror."</p>
<p>"Then it should fill you with horror of yourself no less," said she.</p>
<p>His answer startled her.</p>
<p>"Perhaps it does," he said, scarcely above a murmur. "Perhaps it does."</p>
<p>She flashed him an upward glance and looked as if she would have spoken.
But he went on, suddenly passionate, without giving her time to interrupt
him. "O God! It needed this to show me the vileness of the thing I have
done. Asad has no such motives as had I. I wanted you that I might punish
you. But he...O God!" he groaned, and for a moment put his face to his
hands.</p>
<p>She rose slowly, a strange agitation stirring in her, her bosom galloping.
But in his overwrought condition he failed to observe it. And then like a
ray of hope to illumine his despair came the counsel that Fenzileh had
given him, the barrier which she had said that Asad, being a devout
Muslim, would never dare to violate.</p>
<p>"There is a way," he cried. "There is the way suggested by Fenzileh at the
promptings of her malice." An instant he hesitated, his eyes averted. Then
he made his plunge. "You must marry me."</p>
<p>It was almost as if he had struck her. She recoiled. Instantly suspicion
awoke in her; swiftly it drew to a conviction that he had but sought to
trick her by a pretended penitence.</p>
<p>"Marry you!" she echoed.</p>
<p>"Ay," he insisted. And he set himself to explain to her how if she were
his wife she must be sacred and inviolable to all good Muslimeen, that
none could set a finger upon her without doing outrage to the Prophet's
holy law, and that, whoever might be so disposed, Asad was not of those,
since Asad was perfervidly devout. "Thus only," he ended, "can I place you
beyond his reach."</p>
<p>But she was still scornfully reluctant.</p>
<p>"It is too desperate a remedy even for so desperate an ill," said she, and
thus drove him into a frenzy of impatience with her.</p>
<p>"You must, I say," he insisted, almost angrily. "You must—or else
consent to be borne this very night to Asad's hareem—and not even as
his wife, but as his slave. Oh, you must trust me for your own sake! You
must!"</p>
<p>"Trust you!" she cried, and almost laughed in the intensity of her scorn.
"Trust you! How can I trust one who is a renegade and worse?"</p>
<p>He controlled himself that he might reason with her, that by cold logic he
might conquer her consent.</p>
<p>"You are very unmerciful," he said. "In judging me you leave out of all
account the suffering through which I have gone and what yourself
contributed to it. Knowing now how falsely I was accused and what other
bitter wrongs I suffered, consider that I was one to whom the man and the
woman I most loved in all this world had proven false. I had lost faith in
man and in God, and if I became a Muslim, a renegade, and a corsair, it
was because there was no other gate by which I could escape the
unutterable toil of the oar to which I had been chained." He looked at her
sadly. "Can you find no excuse for me in all that?"</p>
<p>It moved her a little, for if she maintained a hostile attitude, at least
she put aside her scorn.</p>
<p>"No wrongs," she told him, almost with sorrow in her voice, "could justify
you in outraging chivalry, in dishonouring your manhood, in abusing your
strength to persecute a woman. Whatever the causes that may have led to
it, you have fallen too low, sir, to make it possible that I should trust
you."</p>
<p>He bowed his head under the rebuke which already he had uttered in his own
heart. It was just and most deserved, and since he recognized its justice
he found it impossible to resent it.</p>
<p>"I know," he said. "But I am not asking you to trust me to my profit, but
to your own. It is for your sake alone that I implore you to do this."
Upon a sudden inspiration he drew the heavy dagger from his girdle and
proffered it, hilt foremost. "If you need an earnest of my good faith," he
said, "take this knife with which to-night you attempted to stab yourself.
At the first sign that I am false to my trust, use it as you will—upon
me or upon yourself."</p>
<p>She pondered him in some surprise. Then slowly she put out her hand to
take the weapon, as he bade her.</p>
<p>"Are you not afraid," she asked him, "that I shall use it now, and so make
an end?"</p>
<p>"I am trusting you," he said, "that in return you may trust me. Further, I
am arming you against the worst. For if it comes to choice between death
and Asad, I shall approve your choice of death. But let me add that it
were foolish to choose death whilst yet there is a chance of life."</p>
<p>"What chance?" she asked, with a faint return of her old scorn. "The
chance of life with you?"</p>
<p>"No," he answered firmly. "If you will trust me, I swear that I will seek
to undo the evil I have done. Listen. At dawn my galeasse sets out upon a
raid. I will convey you secretly aboard and find a way to land you in some
Christian country—Italy or France—whence you may make your way
home again."</p>
<p>"But meanwhile," she reminded him, "I shall have become your wife."</p>
<p>He smiled wistfully. "Do you still fear a trap? Can naught convince you of
my sincerity? A Muslim marriage is not binding upon a Christian, and I
shall account it no marriage. It will be no more than a pretence to
shelter you until we are away."</p>
<p>"How can I trust your word in that?"</p>
<p>"How?" He paused, baffled; but only for a moment. "You have the dagger,"
he answered pregnantly.</p>
<p>She stood considering, her eyes upon the weapon's lividly gleaming blade.
"And this marriage?" she asked. "How is it to take place?"</p>
<p>He explained to her then that by the Muslim law all that was required was
a declaration made before a kadi, or his superior, and in the presence of
witnesses. He was still at his explanation when from below there came a
sound of voices, the tramp of feet, and the flash of torches.</p>
<p>"Here is Asad returning in force," he cried, and his voice trembled. "Do
you consent?"</p>
<p>"But the kadi?" she inquired, and by the question he knew that she was won
to his way of saving her.</p>
<p>"I said the kadi or his superior. Asad himself shall be our priest, his
followers our witnesses."</p>
<p>"And if he refuses? He will refuse!" she cried, clasping her hands before
her in her excitement.</p>
<p>"I shall not ask him. I shall take him by surprise."</p>
<p>"It... it must anger him. He may avenge himself for what he must deem a
trick."</p>
<p>"Ay," he answered, wild-eyed. "I have thought of that, too. But it is a
risk we must run. If we do not prevail, then—"</p>
<p>"I have the dagger," she cried fearlessly.</p>
<p>"And for me there will be the rope or the sword," he answered. "Be calm!
They come!"</p>
<p>But the steps that pattered up the stairs were Ali's. He flung upon the
terrace in alarm.</p>
<p>"My lord, my lord! Asad-ed-Din is here in force. He has an armed following
with him!"</p>
<p>"There is naught to fear," said Sakr-el-Bahr, with every show of calm.
"All will be well."</p>
<p>Asad swept up the stairs and out upon that terrace to confront his
rebellious lieutenant. After him came a dozen black-robed janissaries with
scimitars along which the light of the torches rippled in little runnels
as of blood.</p>
<p>The Basha came to a halt before Sakr-el-Bahr, his arms majestically
folded, his head thrown back, so that his long white beard jutted forward.</p>
<p>"I am returned," he said, "to employ force where gentleness will not
avail. Yet I pray that Allah may have lighted thee to a wiser frame of
mind."</p>
<p>"He has, indeed, my lord," replied Sakr-el-Bahr.</p>
<p>"The praise to Him!" exclaimed Asad in a voice that rang with joy. "The
girl, then!" And he held out a hand.</p>
<p>Sakr-el-Bahr stepped back to her and took her hand in his as if to lead
her forward. Then he spoke the fateful words.</p>
<p>"In Allah's Holy Name and in His All-seeing eyes, before thee,
Asad-ed-Din, and in the presence of these witnesses, I take this woman to
be my wife by the merciful law of the Prophet of Allah the All-wise, the
All-pitying."</p>
<p>The words were out and the thing was done before Asad had realized the
corsair's intent. A gasp of dismay escaped him; then his visage grew
inflamed, his eyes blazed.</p>
<p>But Sakr-el-Bahr, cool and undaunted before that royal anger, took the
scarf that lay about Rosamund's shoulders, and raising it, flung it over
her head, so that her face was covered by it.</p>
<p>"May Allah rot off the hand of him who in contempt of our Lord Mahomet's
holy law may dare to unveil that face, and may Allah bless this union and
cast into the pit of Gehenna any who shall attempt to dissolve a bond that
is tied in His All-seeing eyes."</p>
<p>It was formidable. Too formidable for Asad-ed-Din. Behind him his
janissaries like hounds in leash stood eagerly awaiting his command. But
none came. He stood there breathing heavily, swaying a little, and turning
from red to pale in the battle that was being fought within him between
rage and vexation on the one hand and his profound piety on the other. And
as he yet hesitated perhaps Sakr-el-Bahr assisted his piety to gain the
day.</p>
<p>"Now you will understand why I would not yield her, O mighty Asad," he
said. "Thyself hast thou oft and rightly reproached me with my celibacy,
reminding me that it is not pleasing in the sight of Allah, that it is
unworthy a good Muslim. At last it hath pleased the Prophet to send me
such a maid as I could take to wife."</p>
<p>Asad bowed his head. "What is written is written," he said in the voice of
one who admonished himself. Then he raised his arms aloft. "Allah is
All-knowing," he declared. "His will be done!"</p>
<p>"Ameen," said Sakr-el-Bahr very solemnly and with a great surge of
thankful prayer to his own long-forgotten God.</p>
<p>The Basha stayed yet a moment, as if he would have spoken. Then abruptly
he turned and waved a hand to his janissaries. "Away!" was all he said to
them, and stalked out in their wake.</p>
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