The Dream Hunter - The Dream Hunter Part 4
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The Dream Hunter Part 4

He did not appear to fathom the hint, tapping his camel to keep it well up with hers. "By Allah, you have a wonderful gun. It is the best I've ever seen."

This was a broad hint of another sort. "And if that is so?"

The Rowalla sighed. "I have nothing."

"Haj Hasan has paid you a riyal, and another when we come to Jof."

"But I have no gun. Will you give me your gun?"

"It is not my gun. It belongs to el-Muhafeh."

The Rowalla struck his skinny camel, urging it forward. For awhile, he pestered Lord Winter to give him the rifle, but Haj Hasan evaded his begging deftly, turning it aside with a question about how far the Rowalla had been to the south. The boy answered readily. As they rode in the hot sun, traversing a rocky plain, the Rowalla admitted that he had not crossed the red sands, but he had been as far east as Baghdad. He boasted on his travels for a few leagues, declaring that Andaluz could have nothing to match the mosque of Baghdad. Haj Hasan merely said that he had not been to Baghdad, and so could not say. Zenia, who had, and knew it to be a shabby enough place, finally grew impatient with the Rowalla's ever-increasing exaggerations and said that he knew nothing of the matter.

"You are only an ignorant Bedu," she said disdainfully. "You've never been anywhere important."

The Rowalla immediately dropped back beside her. "And where have you been, by Allah?"

"Baghdad and Damascus and Beyrout," she said. "You think those are the greatest places in the world, but they're like a little stone to that mountain, compared to the cities of the Franks and the Englezys!"

"The Lord lead you, that's not true. The sultan would never allow kaffirs to have greater cities than his!"

Zenia would have liked to appeal to Lord Winter on this point, but it was too dangerous. The Rowalla, however, had no such scruples.

"Abu Haj Hasan!" he cried, "say the truth of this. Have you been to the Frankish tribes?"

"Wellah, so I have," Lord Winter said, riding before them without turning his head."Then, O wise Muhafeh, what is the name of their greatest city?""London," he said promptly. "Where lives the queen of the Englezys, who sends her ships of war to aid the sultan in his need.""The queen, by Allah! She aids the sultan to crush Ibrahim Pasha and the Egyptians!

Wellah, this is good, but wherefore is a great tribe ruled by a woman?""Such is Allah's will," Haj Hasan said."But what of her husband the king?""She is young, and yet unwed. But her name is Victory, and a lion and a greyhound guard her bed.""Nay, the Lord give thee peace," the boy snorted. "It is not so.""By my life, it is true. And her city is greater than Damascus and Baghdad and Stamboul together, with fifty times ten thousand men, all armed with guns, to fight ather command."The Rowalla's eyes were like saucers. "God is great!" he uttered."Yallah, God is great," Haj Hasan murmured."Such is the queen of the Englezys.""So she is, by Allah.""And you have seen her, O el-Muhafeh.""I have seen her, by Allah."

"Is she beautiful? Will she marry the sultan?""She is a queen. Is not every queen beautiful? She will not marry the sultan, for sheis no foolish bint to be shut up with the harem, but she searches even now all theworld for a husband worthy of her."

"Ay billah, she should come to the Rowalla and seek! I am the son of my father asheik, and if you will give me a rifle, I will marry her, even if she is a Christian!"

Haj Hasan threw back his head and laughed. "Subbak, you are a forward child!""Nay, but Selim does not wish to marry, though you provide him everything in yourkindness! Give me his rifle, so that I may grow rich and take a bride. Yallah, leavehim here in his poor spirits! I'll ride with you in his stead, O Haj Hasan, into the redsands. Your enemies shall be my enemies. I will never desert you!"

Lord Winter turned, looking over his shoulder at Zenia. "What say you to that?"She felt a bolt of fear, that he would abandon her in the midst of the desert for thisboasting simpleton of a Rowalla. But she would not let her fear show in her face or voice, lest the Rowalla pounce upon it. "I say, el-Muhafeh," she answered bluntly,"that he only wants a rifle of you."Lord Winter gave her a slantwise look, the white drape of his kuffiyah hiding his face from the Rowalla boy. "But every morning you tell me you don't wish to go south.""I do not, el-Muhafeh. It is a foolish thing to do."'This young Bedu says that he will go willingly, by Allah. Come, how do I know that you will not abandon me in the sands, Selim?""We are rafik. I have sworn I will not."Lord Winter gazed at her, what thoughts he had in his head unreadable on his face.

"So is this Rowalla my rafik."

"Then let us come to the red sands, O Muhafeh," she said, "and see which of usgoes with you."He smiled slightly. "Inshallah," he said. "As God wills." "Inshallah," the Rowalla repeated piously. "We will hire a hundred camels, and cross the nefud, and go to see

the emir at ar-Riyadh.""What is this, a hundred camels, by Allah's beard?" Zenia said. "El-Muhafeh has noneed of a hundred camels. He travels under the protection of an evil demon, andneeds only myself to serve him."

"A demon!" The Rowalla stared. "Haj Hasan, is it so?""It is so, by Allah," Lord Winter said soberly."Wellahi!" This news appeared to dampen the Rowalla's enthusiasm for their company considerably. He began to ride a little farther from them, drifting ahead on

a pretext of scouting.Lord Winter waited until the Rowalla was well out of hearing. "Paltry fellow!" hemurmured in English. "Floored at the first blow."

"He would not dare cross the nefud sands," she said sullenly. "He only wants a rifle.

If you give it to him, he will find a reason to be gone.""I begin to see how fortunate I am in you, little wolf. That you come with me, underthreat of the sands and a bride too."

"I do not wish for a bride, my lord."

"You confound me. I thought you would be eager. A beautiful girl, with eyes like thegazelle and lips like a rose-such a one does not tempt you?""No, my lord.""Not even for a camel?""Are you wed, my lord?" she asked pointedly.He grinned, his light eyes amused. "A direct hit. You force me to confess that I am not.""I wish to be like you. I think girls are silly.""Indeed!" He rode along, looking at her with a strange quirk to his mouth. "I believe you must be younger than I thought."

"I do not want to marry, my lord," she insisted.

"Yes, we have established that point to our satisfaction.

Rifles are as nothing to you, and camels and brides but dust in your mouth." He smiled at her in a way that made her feel queerly agitated and uncertain. He had admirable strong hands, his fingers resting easily on the gun as he held the rifle upright in one hand, the stock against his knee. "But why the devil England?"

"It is green," she said.

His brows rose. "I see."

"Like a garden everywhere."

"Who told you this? Lady Hester?"

"Is it not true?" She turned anxious eyes to him.

"I suppose it's true enough the place is green. Extremely green. Suffocatingly green, some might say. But you could see trees in Damascus. You don't have to go as far as England."

"You have promised me!" she exclaimed. "I don't care about the trees in Damascus!"

"Peace, little wolf! You'll see all the British trees you can stand, you have my word on it. I'm only curious as to where you conceived this extraordinary desire to do so."

She gave him a hot glance. "You desire to go to the Nejd in disguise, which is stupid and dangerous, and you are quite mad."

"I'm in search of a horse."

"What horse?" Zenia asked warily.

"She is called Shajar al-Durr. The String of Pearls."

She looked suspiciously at the profile of the man who rode beside her. "Who does she belong to?"

"Ah, that is the question-who has her, and where is she? You were not born, little wolf, and I was just a boy when Ibrahim Pasha brought the army of Egypt to the Nejd, to take Mecca back from the fanatics and break the Wahhabi's power. He captured their prince, ibn-Saud, and with him the greatest collection of horses that has ever lived in the desert-all the best bloodlines harvested from the Bedouin were gathered in ar-Riyadh, and when ibn-Saud lost his war, he lost his horses. Ibrahim Pasha demanded them as tribute, and took them back to Egypt."

"Yes," Zenia said, "I have heard of this. And Allah sent that the horses died in Egypt, because Ibrahim Pasha sinned in his covetousness and greed to take them from the desert."

"True. It was a tragedy for the breed, little wolf, verily. But when are the Bedu without stratagems, or bitterness among themselves? Not all of the horses were taken -some were hidden away, and a precious few were allowed to remain in the hands of the Muteyr tribe, who had made common cause with Ibrahim Pasha against the Saudi prince. Which did not make the Saudis happy, you may trust."

Zenia made a gloomy murmur of assent. The old Wahhabi prince had been beheaded in Stamboul-and if some of the tribes had fought on the side of the Egyptians to bring him down, the blood duty for vengeance would endure for generations.

"Once Ibrahim Pasha and his Egyptians got Mecca back for the sultan, Ibrahim took himself off after bigger game," Lord Winter said, "and so for the past twenty springs, the Saudis have been free to amuse themselves by taking their revenge of the Muteyr. They have relieved them of their precious horses, until the only few that remained were sent away for safety. Among them was the finest mare of the finest strain, the Jelibiyat."

"Sent where?" Zenia braced herself for the worst.

"The sheik of the Muteyr committed his last mares to the hands of two of his most trusted men, and charged them to be taken to ibn-Khalif, on the island of Bahreyn."

Bahreyn meant nothing to Zenia; she thought it was far across the desert in the eastern sea. "So we go to Bahreyn?" she asked dubiously.

"Nay. When the Jelibiyat mare left the Muteyr, she was heavy in foal to their best Kuhaylan stallion. When she arrived, she had no foal at her side, nor carried one, and her milk was dry. She had lost it, the sheik's men said, on the journey." He looked aside at her, the kuffiyah shading his face and making his eyes seem as bright as the blue sky within shadow. "But some say that is not so. Some say that she gave birth to a filly that lived to be khadra barda, snow-white, with a dapple marking like a string of pearls about her throat."

"Some will say any foolish thing."

"That is so, by Allah," he agreed.

"Or follow any foolish mirage!"

He smiled slightly. "She is no mirage, little wolf. Abdullah ibn Rashid has her hidden in the mountains of Jabal Shammar."

"Rashid! The emir of Hayil and the Shammar?" Zenia made a moan of dismay. "My lord-you do not hope to buy her?"

"No," he said, "I have no hope of buying her."

"What do you intend to do?"

He said nothing. Zenia felt the hot air grow thick and unbreathable in her lungs. "My lord-please-" She could barely whisper. "You would not go to such risk only to see her."

"Well, no, wolf cub," he said apologetically. "I'm afraid I mean to steal her."

"Cry mercy of Allah!" she gasped.

As if in echo of her words, a shout rose from the far hill, where the Rowalla came charging back on his camel, shrieking, "Ghrazzu! Ghrazzu! A raid, yallah! Fly!"

Hard behind him a band of riders crested the hill, shouting the shrill war cry of their tribe. Before Zenia could turn her mount, Lord Winter struck his camel full force, propelling it directly toward the oncoming ghrazzu. Zenia cried out in dismay, for an instant reaching to stay the unruly beast-and then realized that he had the rifle leveled, that he was riding into them on purpose, the camel breaking to a ground-eating gallop.

His first shot took the spear from one of the raiders' hands. They came on, while Zenia gaped at Lord Winter, and then drove her camel after, screaming at the Rowalla to stop Haj Hasan while she fumbled for the powderhorn he had given her. She did not know the gun; she could not open the bouncing powderhorn while her camel galloped. She heard another shot as she finally grasped the horn and pulled the stopper.

She looked up in panic at the sound of gunfire. Lord Winter could not possibly have reloaded. But the ghrazzu had split, one rider down, and still he rode into their teeth with the rifle trained. Another shot. The fleeing Rowalla passed Lord Winter, yelling in a shrill wail. A fourth shot, and the nearest of the raiders was struggling to turn his mount away from the oncoming attack.

With a shock, she realized that all the fire came from Lord Winter's rifle. The enemy wrestled their camels around, a moment of confusion about the fallen man, but Lord Winter fired again, twice and three times, and they abandoned any thought of rescue. As he topped the hill they were bolting at full gallop down the other, side.

Zenia passed the loose camel and downed Bedui, her gun barrel trained on him, even though it was not primed. He had lost his spear, and seemed to have no firearm. His wide-eyed face stared up at her as she swept by, and he cried, "I am under your protection!"

She raised the rifle overhead, acknowledging it, and came loping up to where Lord Winter sat his camel at the crest of the hill. She was gasping through the cloth of her kuffiyah, not with effort, but with frenzy. As her mount jolted to a halt beside him, she looked at the foreign rifle in amazement.

He was mad, utterly and entirely mad. Their eyes met. She stared at him, panting, and at his incredible rifle that had fired ten shots without a pause before she had even been able to prime her weapon. He unslung it and released the cock.

He grinned at her. She had known that he would, the madman.

"My evil demon, wolf cub," he said mildly, smiling with affection at the remarkable gun. "Mr. Samuel Colt of Connecticut."

CHAPTER 5.

The water skin tied on Selim's camel was sweating. It was a sinister drip; perfectly steady. Arden marked his steps by the drops, one dark spot on the sand at a time, as the beast floundered up a dune in front of him.

Leading his own mount, Arden labored through the deep red sand. The Rowalla had deserted them four days ago, fleeing from the raid without glancing back. Selim had given Arden a pungent I-told-you-so look, which Arden had been so irreverent as to meet with a wink, but neither of them had greatly missed the Rowalla.

Arden had not meant to attempt the nefud sands before halting at the town of Jof to replenish their water and find a guide. But they had a guide already, fallen literally into their hands-the Shammar tribesman downed in the ghrazzu. Bin Dirra was utterly docile in surrender. Drinking Haj Hasan's coffee and cursing his companions for deserting him, he had readily imparted the forbidding news that the Egyptians had garrisoned Jof and would certainly seize any strangers without "letters."

Arden had letters-forgeries of several varieties, in fact-but no intention of risking arrest. At all costs, he must remain out of Egyptian hands. The last news had been of a great battle in the north; England had openly backed the Ottoman sultan to challenge the Egyptian general Ibrahim Pasha and his army, and Arden devoutly did not wish to be identified as an Englezy by any soldier belonging to Egypt.

Bin Dirra, lacking a camel and outraged at his own comrades for abandoning him afoot, had entreated Haj Hasan to let him lead them south by the direct route to Hayil, where he could lodge a complaint against his perfidious associates with the emir Abdullah ibn Rashid himself.

Bin Dirra claimed that he knew the way through the red sands perfectly. Arden, cautious, had looked this time to Selim, silently asking his opinion of the Shammari. The boy made Bin Dirra hold out his hands and swear by the life of his son that he was telling the truth.

Arden thought he was. He hoped he was. They filled the water bags in a range of rocky hills, where Bin Dirra shoved aside flat rocks to uncover secret basins, little pools of sweet rainwater.

So they had turned south into the nefud. And it was like walking knee-deep through the coals of a burning furnace, red walls rising on all sides to reflect back the fire.

For four days they had traversed the horseshoe-shaped dunes, with Bin Dirra feeling his way, making a cast up one hill and then trying another, as a hound would follow a very faint scent. To Arden, every dune and back-dune looked the same as the next.

Heavy sand was the hell of camels. In the hollows of almost all the huge curved dunes were skeletons. There were bones of camels and bones of men. Nobody ever got buried in the nefud sands; they only got scoured by the hot wind. Last night Bin Dirra had told a delightful little tale of how the Bedu had led a company of five hundred Egyptian soldiers into the nefud, pretending to guide them toward Damascus. The next well was just a little way, they had told the Egyptians. Just a little way further! Until the soldiers had fallen down to their knees, and the Bedu had drifted away, only lingering to snare a few horses and camels as they wandered from the dead men.

The story was not, Arden hoped, a hint. But he did not waste energy worrying over unrealized terrors. He had a compass concealed in his baggage, and the nefud was not endless. Their camels were in good condition. And they were committed now.

He watched the water drip, and walked, lost in savage desolation and utter solitude. The long inhuman reaches of the desert, where his body found the limits of what it could endure, and his soul came near to peace.

He had longed for it, with a longing that was terrible. And yet even here, he was looking for something that he could not find.

All of his life, he had been looking. He did not know what for: not a horse, though there was a fine edge of pleasure in that added risk; it was not to spite his father, for that interference had merely driven him to a desert of rock and sand instead of ice. Sometimes he thought he found it in the evening, when they stopped to rest and the red sands turned violet and indigo, flooded with light like a frozen tossing sea, and he turned from that glory to where Selim cooked homely balls of flour in the bottom of the fire, and burned his fingers retrieving them from the ashes.

Sometimes he thought he found it in the morning, when he rose and walked to the top of a sand hill, and grew drunk on the pure clear arch of the sky and the silence. Sometimes he thought he found it in a dry mouth and a thimbleful of water swallowed in the shadow of his patient camel, and sometimes in the grumbling roar of the beast herself as she complained of rising to start again, as his body complained that it was too much, too hard, he was too hot and dry and weary to go on. And yet the camel went, and so did he.

He thought he found what he was looking for, in moments that came and vanished, that he could not hold on to. Even the endless labor of plodding in line behind Selim and the Shammari, his feet burning through the woolen socks that were all he could wear in the sands-he prayed for it to end, and he wanted it to go on forever.

They made their devotions in the last of light, and settled to rest until moonrise. Arden lay in the blessed cooling air, staring up at the stars. Bin Dvrra's voice seemed raucous, echoing back from nowhere, asking questions that Selim answered with short mutters.

A grim wraith, Selim. Almost uncomfortably beautiful, with the exasperating habit of sleeping very close to Arden. At first it had annoyed his rest-though he knew that any Bedui abhorred solitude and would expect to share his tent, he was not prepared to share the very blanket he slept upon. He had spent night after night retreating by inches, only to wake and find Selim pressed against his back again, until they reached the limits of the tent. Finally, on the verge of ordering the boy to sleep outside, which would have drawn questions and attention, the ridiculous nature of the skirmish struck him.