In these days many of the Bedouin
tribes came near the city and encamped in great numbers
within half a day’s journey and less. Abdullah
was exceedingly busy with his preparations, and spent
much time in talking with other sheikhs, hardly making
any concealment of his movements or plans. For
by this time it seemed clear to him that the greater
part of the people were with him, and every one spoke
of the coming overthrow of Khaled as an open matter.
Khaled himself, too, was reported to be in fear of
his life, and he was no longer seen in the streets
as formerly, nor in the courts of the palace, nor
even every day in the hall, but remained shut up in
the harem, and none saw him except the women and a
few slaves. Men said aloud that he was in great
fear and distress, and as this story gained credence,
so Abdullah’s importance increased, since it
was he who had brought such terror upon Khaled.
All this was open talk in the bazar, but Abdullah
was himself somewhat suspicious, supposing that Khaled
must have a plan in reserve for defending his possession
of the throne. Abdullah, however, kept secret
the manner in which he intended to enter the palace,
though he promised his adherents to open to them the
gates of the castle, and the doors of the treasure
chambers on a certain day, which he named, at the time
of the first call to prayer in the morning, warning
all those who were with him to come together in the
great square before that hour in order to be ready
to help him, if necessary, and to overwhelm the guards
of the palace if they should make any resistance.
But he did not know that the man of his tribe who
was kinsman to the chief of the beggars had overheard
his talk with his wife.
Meanwhile the beggars seemed to be
multiplied exceedingly in Riad, for whenever Abdullah
went out of his house they came upon him, sometimes
by twos and threes and sometimes in scores, pressing
close to him and begging alms. They also cried
out a great deal, praising his generosity and praying
for blessings upon him.
‘Behold the sheikh of sheikhs!’
they exclaimed. ’He bears gold in his right
hand and silver in his left. Yallah! Send
him a long life and prosperity, for he loves the poor
and his name is the Alms-giver. He is not El
Herir but Er Rahman and his heart over-flows with
mercy as his purse does with small coins. Come,
O brothers, and taste of his charity, which is a perpetual
spring of good water beside a palm tree full of sugar-dates!
Ya Abdullah, Servant of Allah, we love you! You
are our father and mother. Your kefiyeh is the
banner which goes before our pilgrimage. Come,
O brothers, and taste of his charity.’
Abdullah was not dissatisfied with
these words, and the beggars said much more to the
same effect, which he regarded as signs of his popularity,
so that he opened his purse from time to time and threw
handfuls of money into the crowd, not counting the
cost since he expected to be master of all the treasure
in Riad within a few days. But the beggars were
disappointed, for they had hoped that he would turn
out to be avaricious, and endeavour to elude them
by walking through narrow and lonely streets, where
they might catch him. So they pressed more and
more upon him every day, trying to exhaust his patience
and his charity. In this however they failed,
not understanding that the vanity of such a man is
inexhaustible and knows no price. Abdullah, too,
chose rather to be abroad during the daytime than
in the evening or the early morning, for he desired
to be seen by the multitude and spoken of as he went
through the market-place. Yet on the last evening
of all he fell into the hands of the Sheikh of the
beggars, and evil befell him.
The hour of prayer was passed and
it was almost the time when lights are extinguished.
Then Abdullah took his sword under his aba, and also
a good knife, which he had proved in battle, and which
in his hand would pierce a coat of mail as though
it were silk. Almasta, his wife, also made a
bundle of woman’s clothing and carried it in
her arms. For they intended to go to a lonely
place by the city wall, that Abdullah might there
put on female garments, before entering the palace.
He feared, indeed, lest if it were afterwards known
by what disguise he had accomplished his purpose,
he might receive some name in derision, from which
he should never escape so long as he lived. Yet
he had no choice but to dress as a woman, since he
could not otherwise by any means have gone into the
harem.
As he came out of his house, accompanied
only by Almasta he was seen at once by the two beggars
who were always on the watch. And then, wishing
to warn their companions, of whom many were lying asleep
upon doorsteps in the same street and in others close
by, these two made haste to get up, pretending to
be lame and making a great clatter with their staves,
as they limped after Abdullah. Then he, who loved
to exercise charity in the market-place, but not in
the dark where none could applaud him, made a pretence
of not seeing the poor men, and went swiftly on with
Almasta running by his side. But as he walked
fast, the two beggars although apparently lame increased
their speed with his, and their clatter also.
‘Does a sound man need a horse
to escape from cripples?’ asked Abdullah.
And he turned quickly into a narrow lane.
‘It will be wiser to scatter
a few coins to them,’ said Almasta. ’They
will then stop and search for them in the dark.
For these men are very importunate and will certainly
hinder us.’
But Abdullah was confident in his
legs as a strong man and only walked the faster, so
that Almasta could with great difficulty keep beside
him. Then they heard the beggars running after
them in the dark and calling upon them.
‘O Abdullah!’ they cried.
’The light of your charitable countenance goes
before us like a lantern, and illuminates the whole
street! Be merciful and give us a small coin,
and Allah will reward you!’
Then Abdullah stopped in the darkest
part of the narrow lane, seeing that they had recognised
him, and conceiving that it would be a reproach for
a sheikh of pure blood to run from beggars; and he
feared also that it would be remembered against him
on the morrow. He therefore made a pretence of
being diverted, and laughed.
‘Surely,’ he said, ’the
lame men of Riad could outrun in a race the sound
men of any other city. And, by Allah, I have little
money with me, for I was going to a friend’s
house to receive a sum due to me for certain mares;
yet I will give you what I have, and I pray you, go
in peace.’
Thereupon he sought in his wallet
for something to give them, and while he was seeking
they began to praise him after their manner.
‘See this Abdullah!’ they
said. ’He is the father of the poor and
distressed, and is ever ready to divide all he has
with us. Yallah! Bless him exceedingly!
Yallah! Increase his family!’
But when Abdullah had found the money
and was putting it into their hands, he was suddenly
aware that instead of two beggars there were now ten
or more, and these again multiplied in an extraordinary
manner, so that he felt himself hemmed in on every
side in a close press.
‘O Allah!’ he exclaimed.
’Thou art witness that unless these small coins
are multiplied a hundredfold, as the basket of dates
by the Prophet at the trench before Medina, I shall
have nothing to give these worthy persons.’
By this time the blind Sheikh of the
beggars was present, and he pushed forward, pretending
to rebuke his companions.
‘O you greedy ones!’ he
cried. ’How often have I told you not to
be so importunate? Yet you crowd upon him like
wasps upon a date, presuming upon the goodness of
his heart, and when there is no more room you crowd
upon each other. Forgive them, O Abdullah!’
he said, addressing him directly, ’for they
have the appetites of jackals together with the understanding
of little children. They would thrust into the
dish a hand as small as a crow’s foot and withdraw
it looking as big as a camel’s hoof. Their
manners are also ’
‘My friend,’ said Abdullah,
’I have given what I can. Let me therefore
pass on, for my business is of importance, yet the
throng is so great that I cannot move a step.
To-morrow I will distribute much alms to you all.’
‘The radiance of your merciful
countenance is enough for us,’ replied the Sheikh
of the beggars, ’and even I who am blind am comforted
by its rays as by those of the sun in spring, and
my hunger is appeased by the honey of your incomparable
eloquence ’
‘My friend,’ said Abdullah,
interrupting him again, ’I pray you to let me
go forward now, for I have a very important matter
in hand, though it is with difficulty that I tear
myself away from your society and I would willingly
listen much longer to the words of the wise.’
Then the blind man turned to the other
beggars, and his hearing told him that by this time
there were at least threescore in the street.
‘Come, my brothers!’ he
cried. ’Let us accompany our benefactor
to the house of his friend, and afterwards we will
wait for him and see that he reaches his own dwelling
in safety. Surely it is not fitting that a sheikh
of such great consideration should go about the streets
at night without so much as an attendant carrying
a lantern. Let us go with him.’
Now these last words were the signal
agreed upon, and even as Abdullah began to protest
that he desired no such honourable escort as the beggars
offered him, one came from behind and suddenly drew
a thick barley-sack over his head, so that his voice
was heard no more, and he was dragged down by the
throat, while the one-eyed hunchback caught him by
the legs and bound his feet and four others laid hold
of his hands and tied them firmly behind him.
Nor had Almasta time to utter a single cry before
she was bound hand and foot with her head in a sack,
like her husband. Then at a signal the beggars
took up the two as though they had been bales packed
ready for a camel’s back, and carried them away
swiftly into the darkness, towards the eastern gate
where the blind man lived in a ruined house together
with three or four of his most trusted companions.
He also sent a messenger to his relation, the Bedouin,
as had been agreed. It was already quite dark
in the streets and the few persons who met the beggars
did not see what they were carrying, nor ask questions
of them, merely supposing that they had lingered long
in the public square after evening prayers and were
now returning in a body to their own quarter.
The blind man’s house was built
of three rooms and a wall, standing in a square around
a small court. But only one of the rooms had a
roof of its own, though there was a sort of cellar
under the floor of one of the others which served
at once as a lodging for beggars in winter, as a storehouse
for food when there was any in supply and as a place
of deposit for the ancient iron chest in which the
common fund of money was kept. To this vault
the Sheikh of the beggars made his companions bring
the two prisoners, and having set them on the floor,
side by side, he proceeded to hold a council, in which
the captives themselves had no part, since their heads
were tied up in dusty barley-sacks and they could
not speak so as to be heard.
‘O my brothers!’ said
the blind man. ’Allah has delivered the
enemies of the kingdom into our hand, and it is necessary
to decide what we will do with them. Let the
oldest and the wisest give their opinions first, and
after them the others, even to the youngest, and last
of all I will speak, and let us see whether we can
agree.’
’Let us kill the man and bury
him, and then cast lots among us for the woman,’
said one.
‘No,’ said the next, a
man who had twice made the pilgrimage, and was much
respected, ’we cannot do this, for the man is
a true believer, and evil will befall us if we shed
his blood. Let us rather keep him here, and purify
his hide every day with our staves, until Khaled is
in no more danger, and then we will take him to the
palace and deliver him up.’
‘It is to be feared,’
said the Sheikh of the beggars, ’that the man
might chance to die of this sort of purification, though
indeed it be very wholesome for him, and I am not
altogether against it.’
‘Let us make him our slave,’
said a third who had himself been the slave of a poor
man who had died without heirs. ’The fellow
is strong. Let us buy millstones and make him
grind barley for us in this cellar. In this way
he will not eat our food for nothing.’
After this many others gave advice
of the same kind. But while they were talking
there was a great clattering and noise upon the stone
steps which led down into the cellar, and a man fell
over the last step and rolled over and over into the
very midst of the council, railing and lamenting.
‘It is that ass of Egypt,’
said the Sheikh of the beggars. ’I know
him by the clattering of the wooden hoofs he wears
on his hands, and also by his braying. Let him
also give his opinion when he is recovered from his
fall.’
‘It is strange and marvellous,’
said one, ’that he who has no legs should suffer
so many falls, being, by the will of Allah, always
upon the earth. For when we first saw him we
found him fainting upon the ground, having fallen
from the wall of a garden, though no man could tell
how he had climbed upon it.’
‘I had been transported to the
top of the wall as in a dream,’ replied the
cripple, ’for there were dates in that garden.
But having eaten too greedily of them I fell asleep
on the top and I dreamed that my body was torn by
hyaenas; and waking suddenly I fell down. For
the dates were yet green.’
‘This may or may not be true,’
said the blind man. ’For you are an Egyptian.
Let us, however, hear what you have to advise in the
matter of Abdullah and his wife, whom we have taken
prisoners.’
‘I fear that you mock me, O
my lord,’ answered the man. ’But if
I am mocked, I will advise that this Abdullah be also
made a sport of, for us first, and for the people
of Riad afterwards.’
’Tell us how this may be done,
for a good jest is better than salt for roasting,
and the sheep lie here bound before us.’
‘Take this man, then,’
said the cripple, ’and uncover his face, and
hold him fast. Then let one of us get the razor
and shave off all his beard and his eyebrows, and
the hair of his head even to the nape of his neck.
Then if he came suddenly before her who bore him and
cried, “Mother,” she would cover her face
and answer, “Begone, thou ostrich’s egg!”
For she would not know him. And to-morrow we
will take his excellent clothes from him and put them
upon our Sheikh. But we will dress Abdullah in
rags such as would not serve to wipe the mud from a
slave’s shoes in the time of the subsiding waters,
and we will tie his hands under his arm-pits and put
a halter over his head and lead him about the city.
Then he will cry out against us to the people, saying
that he is Abdullah, but we will also cry out in answer:
“See this madman, who believes himself to be
a sheikh of Bedouins though Allah has given him no
beard! O people of Riad, you may know that the
spring is come, by the braying of this ass."’
‘Yet I see now that there may
be wisdom in brayings,’ said the Sheikh of the
beggars, ’though Balaam ibn Beor shut his ears
against it, and was punished for his cursing so that
his tongue hung down to his breast, all his days,
like that of a thirsty dog. This is good counsel,
for in this way we shall not shed the man’s
blood, nor render ourselves guilty of his death; but
I think we shall earn a great reward from Khaled, and
his kingdom will be saved in laughter.’
During all this time Abdullah had
not moved, knowing that he was in the power of many
enemies and beyond all reach of help, but when he heard
the decision of the Sheikh of the beggars he was filled
with shame and rolled himself from side to side upon
the floor, as though trying to escape from the bonds
that held him. Almasta, for her part, lay quietly
where they had put her, for she saw that all chance
of success was gone and was pondering how she might
take advantage of what happened, to save herself.
Then the beggars laid hold of Abdullah
and held him, while others took the sack from his
head. He was indeed half smothered with dust,
so that at first he could not speak aloud, but coughed
and sneezed like a dog that has thrust its nose into
a dust-heap to find the bone which is hidden underneath.
But presently he recovered his breath and began to
rail at them and curse them. To this they paid
no attention, but brought the oil lamp near him, and
one began to rub soap upon his face and head while
another got the razor with which the beggars shaved
their heads and began to whet it upon his leathern
girdle.
‘Do not waste the precious stones
of your eloquence upon a barber,’ said the Sheikh
of the beggars, ’but reserve your breath and
the rich treasures of your speech until you are brought
as a plucked bird before the people of Riad.
Moreover we only wish to shave off your beard, but
if you are restless some of your hide will certainly
be removed also, whereby you will be hurt and it will
be still harder for your friends to recognise you
to-morrow. It is also useless to shout and scream
as though you were driving camels, for you are in
the cellar of my house which is at a good distance
from other habitations, on the borders of the city.’
So Abdullah saw that there was no
escape, and that his fate was about his neck, and
he sat still as they had placed him, while the one-eyed
hunchback shaved off his beard and the hair on his
upper lip and his eyebrows, and the lock at the back
of his head.
When this was done the blind man put
out his hand and felt Abdullah’s face.
‘Surely,’ he said, ’this
is not a man’s head, but the round end of a
walking-staff, rubbed smooth by much use.’
They also tied his hands under his
arm-pits and put upon him a ragged shirt with sleeves
so that he seemed to have lost both arms at the elbow.
‘This is very well done,’
said the hunchback turning his head from side to side
in order to see all with his one eye. ’But
what shall we do with the woman? Let us cast
lots for her, and he who wins her shall marry her,
and we will hold the feast immediately, for we have
not yet supped and there is some of the camel’s
meat which we received to-day at the palace.’
‘O my brothers,’ answered
the Sheikh of the beggars, ’let us do nothing
unlawful in our haste. For this woman is certainly
one of Abdullah’s wives, as you may see by her
clothes, and unless he divorces her none of us can
take her for ourselves, seeing that she is the wife
of a believer. Take the sack from her head, however,
and if she deafens us with her screaming we can put
it on again. But you must by no means put her
to shame by taking the veil from her face, for she
may be an honest wife, though her husband be a dog.
If she has done well, we shall find it out, and no
harm will have come to her; but if she is a sharer
in this fellow’s plans, her punishment will
be grievous, since she will be the wife of an outcast,
having neither beard nor eyebrows and rejected by
all men.’
Some of the beggars murmured at this,
but most of them praised their Sheikh’s wisdom,
and would indeed have feared greatly to break the holy
law, being chiefly devout men who prayed daily in the
mosque and listened to the Khotbah on Friday.
They therefore placed Almasta in one corner of the
cellar and Abdullah in another, so that the two could
not converse together, and then they took out such
food as they had and began to eat their supper, laughing
and talking over the jest and anticipating the reward
which awaited them for saving Khaled.
In the meanwhile the night was advancing
and many of Abdullah’s friends left their houses
secretly and gathered in the neighbourhood of the
palace to wait for the first signal from within.
By threes and by twos and singly they came out of
their dwellings, looking to the right and left to
see whether they were not the first, as men do who
are not sure of being in the right. All had their
swords with them, and some their bows also, and some
few carried their spears, and they made no secret of
their bearing weapons; but under each man’s aba
was concealed the largest barley-sack he could find
in his house, and concerning this no one of the multitude
said anything to his neighbour, for each hoped to
get a greater share than the others of the gold and
precious stones from the fabulous treasure stored
in the palace. Then most of these men sat down
to wait, as vultures do before the camel is quite dead.
But not long after the middle of the night they were
joined by a great throng of Bedouins from Abdullah’s
tribe. These had been admitted into the city by
the watchman according to the agreement, and passed
up the great street from the Hasa gate, in a close
body, not speaking and making but little noise with
their feet as they walked; yet all of them together
could be heard from a distance, because they were
so many, and the sound was like the night wind among
the branches of dry palm trees. After them, other
Bedouins came in from camps both near and far, some
of them having made half a day’s journey since
sunset; and they surrounded the palace on all sides,
and filled the great street, and the street which passes
by the mosque towards the Dereyiyah gate and all the
other approaches to the open square, sitting down
wherever there was room, or leaning against the closed
shops of the bazar, or standing up in a thick
crowd when they were too closely pressed to be at
ease. They talked together from time to time
in low tones, but when their voices rose above a whisper
some man in authority hushed them saying that the
hour was not yet come.
‘By this time Abdullah has slain
Khaled,’ said some, ’and the daughter
of the old Sultan is a prisoner.’
‘And by this time,’ said
others, ’Abdullah is surely unlocking the treasure
chamber and filling a barley-sack with pearls and rubies.
It is certain that he who slays the lion deserves
his bride, but we hope that something will be left
for us.’
‘Hush!’ said the voice
of one moving in the darkness. ’Be patient.
It is not yet time.’
Then, for a space, a deep silence
fell on the speakers and they crouched in their places
watching the high black walls of the palace and marking
the motion of the stars by the highest point of the
tower. Before long whispered words were heard
again.
’It would have been more just
if Abdullah had opened the gate to us as soon as he
had slain Khaled, for then we could have seen what
he took. But now, who shall tell us what share
of the riches he is hiding away in the more secret
vaults?’
‘This is true,’ answered
others. ’And besides, what need have we
of Abdullah to help us into the palace? Surely
we could have broken down the gates and slain the
guards and Khaled himself without Abdullah’s
help. Yet we, for our part, would not shed the
blood of a man who has always dealt very generously
with us, nor do we believe the story of the camels
laden secretly in Hail. However, what is ordained
will take place, and we shall undoubtedly receive
plentiful gold merely for sitting here to watch the
stars through the night.’
‘The story of the camels is
not true,’ said a certain man, speaking alone.
’For I was of the drivers sent with them, and
being hungry, we opened one of the bales on the way.
By Allah! There was nothing but wheat in it,
and it was white and good; but there was nothing else,
not so much as a few small coins ’
Then there was the sound of a blow,
and the man who was speaking was struck on the mouth,
so that his speech was interrupted.
‘Peace and be silent!’
said a voice. ’They who speak lies will
receive no share with the rest when the time comes.’
But the man who had been struck was
the strongest of all his tribe, though he who had
struck him did not know it. And the man caught
his assailant by the waist in the dark, and wrestled
with him violently, being very angry, and broke his
forearm and his collar-bone and several of his ribs,
and when he had done with him, he threw him over his
shoulder so that he fell fainting and moaning three
paces away.
’O you who strike honest men
on the mouth in the dark, you have been over-rash!’
he cried. ’Go home and hide yourself lest
I recognise you and break such bones as you have still
whole!’
‘This is well done,’ said
one of the bystanders in a loud voice. ’For
the story of the camels laden secretly with treasure
is a lie. I also was with the drivers and ate
of the wheat. Nor do I believe that Khaled is
a robber and a Persian.’
‘We do not believe it!’
cried a score of Bedouins together. ’And
if we have come here, it is to get our share like
other men, since they tell us that Khaled is dead.
But now we believe that Abdullah has shut himself
into the palace and means to keep all for himself,
and is cheating us.’
These men were none of them of Abdullah’s
tribe, but as the voices grew louder, Abdullah’s
kinsmen came up, and endeavoured to quiet the growing
tumult. The crowd had parted a little and the
strong man stood alone in the midst.
‘We pray you to be patient,’
said Abdullah’s men, ’for the time is at
hand and the false dawn has already passed, though
you have not seen it, so that before long it will
be day. Then the gates will be opened and you
shall all go in.’
‘We have no need of your sheikh
to open gates for us,’ said the strong man,
in a voice that could be heard very far through the
crowd. ’And moreover it will be better
for you not to strike any more of us, or, by Allah,
we will not only break your bones but shed your blood.’
At this there was a sullen cry and
men sprang to their feet and laid their hands upon
their weapons. But a youth who had come up with
Abdullah’s kinsmen, though not one of them, bent
very low over the man who had been thrown down and
then spoke out with a loud and laughing voice.
‘Truly they say that crows lead
people to the carcases of dogs!’ he said.
’This fellow is of the family which murdered
my father, upon whom may Allah send peace! Nor
will I exceed the bounds of moderation and justice.’
Thereupon the young man drew out his
knife and immediately killed his father’s enemy
as he lay upon the ground, and then he withdrew quickly
into the dark crowd so that none knew him. But
though there was only the light of the stars and the
multitude was great, many had seen the deed and each
man stood closer by his neighbour and grasped his weapon
to be in readiness. The kinsmen of Abdullah saw
that they were separated from their own tribe and
drew back, warning the others to keep the peace and
be silent, lest they should be cut off from their share
of the spoil. But their voices trembled with
fears for their own safety, and they were answered
by scornful shouts and jeers.
‘The young man says well that
you are crows,’ cried the angry men, ’for
you wish to keep the carcase for yourselves. Come
and take it if you are able!’
Now indeed the quarrel which had been
begun by the blow struck in the dark spread suddenly
to great dimensions, for the words spoken were caught
up as grains of sand by the wind and blown into all
men’s ears. Many were ready enough to believe
that Abdullah cared only for enriching himself and
his tribe, and many more who had been persuaded to
the enterprise by the hope of gain turned again to
their faith in Khaled as the dream of gold disappeared
from their eyes. Yet Abdullah’s tribe was
numerous, and it was easy to see that if the dissension
grew into a strife of arms the fight would be long
and fierce on both sides.
Then certain of those who were against
Abdullah raised the cry that he had slain Khaled and
escaped with the treasure by a secret passage leading
under the walls of the city, which passage was spoken
of in old tales, though no one knew where to find
it. But the multitude believed and pressed forward
in a strong body and began to beat against the iron-bound
gate of the palace with great stones and pieces of
wood. Abdullah’s men came on fiercely to
prevent them, but were opposed by many, and as the
wing of night was lifted and the dawn drank the stars,
the wide square was filled with the clashing of arms
and the noise of a terrible tumult.