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"Eight months after we were married I heard about his wife. I think Ca.s.sim was true to me, in his way, till that time. But we had an awful scene. I told him I'd never live with him again as his wife, and I never have. After that day, everything was different. No more happiness--not even an Arab woman's idea of happiness. Ca.s.sim began to hate me, but with the kind of hate that holds and won't let go. He wouldn't listen when I begged him to set me free. Instead, he wouldn't let me go out at all, or see anyone, or receive or send letters. He punished me by flirting outrageously with a pretty woman, the wife of a French officer.
He took pains that I should hear everything, through my servants. But his cruelty was visited on his own head, for soon there came a dreadful scandal. The woman died suddenly of chloral poisoning, after a quarrel with her husband on Ca.s.sim's account, and it was thought she'd taken too much of the drug on purpose. The day after his wife's death, the officer shot himself. I think he was a colonel; and every one knew that Ca.s.sim was mixed up in the affair. He had to leave the army, and it seemed--he thought so himself--that his career was ruined. He sold his place in Algiers, and took me to a farm-house in the country where we lived for a while, and he was so lonely and miserable he would have been glad to make up, but how could I forgive him? He'd deceived me too horribly--and besides, in my own eyes I wasn't his wife. Surely our marriage wouldn't be considered legal in any country outside Islam, would it? Even you, a child like you, must see that?"
"I suppose so," Victoria answered, sadly. "But----"
"There's no 'but.' I thought so then. I think so a hundred times more now. My life's been a martyrdom. No one could blame me if--but I was telling you about what happened after Algiers. There was a kind of armed truce between us in the country, though we lived only like two acquaintances under the same roof. For months he had n.o.body else to talk to, so he used to talk with me--quite freely sometimes, about a plan some powerful Arabs, friends of his--Maeddine and his father among others--were making for him. It sounded like a fairy story, and I used to think he must be going mad. But he wasn't. It was all true about the plot that was being worked. He knew I couldn't betray him, so it was a relief to his mind, in his nervous excitement, to confide in me."
"Was it a plot against the French?"
"Indirectly. That was one reason it appealed to Ca.s.sim. He'd been proud of his position in the army, and being turned out, or forced to go--much the same thing--made him hate France and everything French. He'd have given his life for revenge, I'm sure. Probably that's why his friends were so anxious to put him in a place of power, for they were men whose watchword was 'Islam for Islam.' Their hope was--and is--to turn France out of North Africa. You wouldn't believe how many there are who hope and band themselves together for that. These friends of Ca.s.sim's persuaded and bribed a wretched cripple--who was next of kin to the last marabout, and ought to have inherited--to let Ca.s.sim take his place.
Secretly, of course. It was a very elaborate plot--it had to be. Three or four rich, important men were in it, and it would have meant ruin if they'd been found out.
"Ca.s.sim would really have come next in succession if it hadn't been for the hunchback, who lived in Morocco, just over the border. If he had any conscience, I suppose that thought soothed it. He told me that the real heir--the cripple--had epileptic fits, and couldn't live long, anyhow.
The way they worked their plan out was by Ca.s.sim's starting for a pilgrimage to Mecca. I had to go away with him, because he was afraid to leave me. I knew too much. And it was simpler to take me than to put me out of the way."
"Saidee--he would never have murdered you?" Victoria whispered.
"He would if necessary--I'm sure of it. But it was safer not. Besides, I'd often told him I wanted to die, so that was an incentive to keep me alive. I didn't go to Mecca. I left the farm-house with Ca.s.sim, and he took me to South Oran, where he is now. I had to stay in the care of a marabouta, a terrible old woman, a bigot and a tyrant, a cousin of Ca.s.sim's, on his mother's side, and a sister of the man who invented the whole plot. The idea was that Ca.s.sim should seem to be drowned in the Bosphorus, while staying at Constantinople with friends, after his pilgrimage to Mecca. But luckily for him there was a big fire in the hotel where he went to stop for the first night, so he just disappeared, and a lot of trouble was saved. He told me about the adventure, when he came to Oran. The next move was to Morocco. And from Morocco he travelled here, in place of the cripple, when the last marabout died, and the heir was called to his inheritance. That was nearly eight years ago."
"And he's never been found out?"
"No. And he never will be. He's far too clever. Outwardly he's hand in glove with the French. High officials and officers come here to consult with him, because he's known to have immense influence all over the South, and in the West, even in Morocco. He's masked, like a Touareg, and the French believe it's because of a vow he made in Mecca. No one but his most intimate friends, or his own people, have ever seen the face of Sidi Mohammed since he inherited the marabouts.h.i.+p, and came to Oued Tolga. He must hate wearing his mask, for he's as handsome as he ever was, and just as vain. But it's worth the sacrifice. Not only is he a great man, with everything--or nearly everything--he wants in the world, but he looks forward to a glorious revenge against the French, whose interests he pretends to serve."
"How can he revenge himself? What power has he to do that?" the girl asked. She had a strange impression that Saidee had forgotten her, that all this talk of the past, and of the marabout, was for some one else of whom her sister was thinking.
"He has tremendous power," Saidee answered, almost angrily, as if she resented the doubt. "All Islam is at his back. The French humour him, and let him do whatever he likes, no matter how eccentric his ways may be, because he's got them to believe he is trying to help the Government in the wildest part of Algeria, the province of Oran--and with the Touaregs in the farthest South; and that he promotes French interests in Morocco. Really, he's at the head of every religious secret society in North Africa, banded together to turn Christians out of Mussulman countries. The French have no idea how many such secret societies exist, and how rich and powerful they are. Their dear friend, the good, wise, polite marabout a.s.sures them that rumours of that sort are nonsense. But some day, when everything's ready--when Morocco and Oran and Algeria and Tunisia will obey the signal, all together, then they'll have a surprise--and Ca.s.sim ben Halim will be revenged."
"It sounds like the weavings of a brain in a dream," Victoria said.
"It will be a nightmare-dream, no matter how it ends;--maybe a nightmare of blood, and war, and ma.s.sacre. Haven't you ever heard, or read, how the Mussulman people expect a saviour, the Moul Saa, as they call him--the Man of the Hour, who will preach a Holy War, and lead it himself, to victory?"
"Yes, I've read that----"
"Well, Ca.s.sim hopes to be the Moul Saa, and deliver Islam by the sword.
I suppose you wonder how I know such secrets, or whether I do really know them at all. But I do. Some things Ca.s.sim told me himself, because he was bursting with vanity, and simply had to speak. Other things I've seen in writing--he would kill me if he found out. And still other things I've guessed. Why, the boys here in the Zaoua are being brought up for the 'great work,' as they call it. Not all of them--but the most important ones among the older boys. They have separate cla.s.ses.
Something secret and mysterious is taught them. There are boys from Morocco and Oran, and sons of Touareg chiefs--all those who most hate Christians. No other zaoua is like this. The place seethes with hidden treachery and sedition. Now you can see where Si Maeddine's power over Ca.s.sim comes in. The Agha, his father, is one of the few who helped make Ca.s.sim what he is, but he's a cautious old man, the kind who wants to run with the hare and hunt with the hounds. Si Maeddine's cautious too, Ca.s.sim has said. He approves the doctrines of the secret societies, but he's so ambitious that without a very strong incentive to turn against them, in act he'd be true to the French. Well, now he has the incentive.
You."
"I don't understand," said Victoria. Yet even as she spoke, she began to understand.
"He'll offer to give himself, and to influence the Agha and the Agha's people--the Ouled-Sirren--if Ca.s.sim will grant his wish. And it's no use saying that Ca.s.sim can't force you to marry any man. You told me yourself, a little while ago, that if you saw harm coming to me----"
"Oh don't--don't speak of that again, Saidee!" the girl cried, sharply.
"I've told you--yes--that I'll do anything--anything on earth to save you pain, or more sorrow. But let's hope--let's pray."
"There is no hope. I've forgotten how to pray," Saidee answered, "and G.o.d has forgotten me."
x.x.xVIII
There was no place for a guest in that part of the marabout's house which had been allotted to Saidee. She had her bedroom and reception-room, her roof terrace, and her garden court. On the ground floor her negresses lived, and cooked for their mistress and themselves.
She did not wish to have Victoria with her, night and day, and so she had quietly directed Noura to make up a bed in the room which would have been her boudoir, if she had lived in Europe. When the sisters came down from the roof, the bed was ready.
In the old time Victoria had slept with her sister; and her greatest happiness as a child had been the "bed-talks," when Saidee had whispered her secret joys or troubles, and confided in the little girl as if she had been a "grown-up."
Hardly a night had pa.s.sed since their parting, that Victoria had not thought of those talks, and imagined herself again lying with her head on Saidee's arm, listening to stories of Saidee's life. She had taken it for granted that she would be put in her sister's room, and seeing the bed made up, and her luggage unpacked in the room adjoining, was a blow.
She knew that Saidee must have given orders, or these arrangements would not have been made, and again she felt the dreadful sinking of the heart which had crushed her an hour ago. Saidee did not want her. Saidee was sorry she had come, and meant to keep her as far off as possible. But the girl encouraged herself once more. Saidee might think now that she would rather have been left alone. But she was mistaken. By and by she would find out the truth, and know that they needed each other.
"I thought you'd be more comfortable here, than crowded in with me,"
Saidee explained, blus.h.i.+ng faintly.
"Yes, thank you, dear," said Victoria quietly. She did not show her disappointment, and seemed to take the matter for granted, as if she had expected nothing else; but the talk on the roof had brought back something into Saidee's heart which she could not keep out, though she did not wish to admit it there. She was sorry for Victoria, sorry for herself, and more miserable than ever. Her nerves were rasped by an intolerable irritation as she looked at the girl, and felt that her thoughts were being read. She had a hideous feeling, almost an impression, that her face had been lifted off like a mask, and that the workings of her brain were open to her sister's eyes, like the exposed mechanism of a clock.
"Noura has brought some food for you," she went on hastily. "You must eat a little, before you go to bed--to please me."
"I will," Victoria a.s.sured her. "You mustn't worry about me at all."
"You'll go to sleep, won't you?--or would you rather talk--while you're eating, perhaps?"
The girl looked at the woman, and saw that her nerves were racked; that she wanted to go, but did not wish her sister to guess.
"You've talked too much already," Victoria said. "The surprise of my coming gave you a shock. Now you must rest and get over it, so you can be strong for to-morrow. Then we'll make up our minds about everything."
"There's only one way to make up our minds," Saidee insisted, dully.
Victoria did not protest. She kissed her sister good-night, and gently refused help from Noura. Then Saidee went away, followed by the negress, who softly closed the door between the two rooms. Her mistress had not told her to do this, but when it was done, she did not say, "Open the door." Saidee was glad that it was shut, because she felt that she could think more freely. She could not bear the idea that her thoughts and life were open to the criticism of those young, blue eyes, which the years since childhood had not clouded. Nevertheless, when Noura had undressed her, and she was alone, she saw Victoria's eyes looking at her sweetly, sadly, with yearning, yet with no reproach. She saw them as clearly as she had seen a man's face, a few hours earlier; and now his was dim, as Victoria's face had been dim when his was clear.
It was dark in the room, except for the moon-rays which streamed through the lacelike open-work of stucco, above the shuttered windows, making jewelled patterns on the wall--pink, green, and golden, according to the different colours of the gla.s.s. There was just enough light to reflect these patterns faintly in the mirrors set in the closed door, opposite which Saidee lay in bed; and to her imagination it was as if she could see through the door, into a lighted place beyond. She wondered if Victoria had gone to bed; if she were sleeping, or if she were crying softly--crying her heart out with bitter grief and disappointment she would never confess.
Victoria had always been like that, even as a little girl. If Saidee did anything to hurt her, she made no moan. Sometimes Saidee had teased her on purpose, or tried to make her jealous, just for fun.
As memories came crowding back, the woman buried her face in the pillow, striving with all her might to shut them out. What was the use of making herself wretched? Victoria ought to have come long, long ago, or not at all.
But the blue eyes would look at her, even when her own were shut; and always there was the faint light in the mirror, which seemed to come through the door.
At last Saidee could not longer lie still. She had to get up and open the door, to see what her sister was really doing. Very softly she turned the handle, for she hoped that by this time Victoria was asleep; but as she pulled the door noiselessly towards her, and peeped into the next room, she saw that one of the lamps was burning. Victoria had not yet gone to bed. She was kneeling beside it, saying her prayers, with her back towards the door.
So absorbed was she in praying, and so little noise had Saidee made, that the girl heard nothing. She remained motionless on her knees, not knowing that Saidee was looking at her.
A sharp pain shot through the woman's heart. How many times had she softly opened their bedroom door, coming home late after a dance, to find her little sister praying, a small, childish form in a long white nightgown, with quant.i.ties of curly red hair pouring over its shoulders!
Sometimes Victoria had gone to sleep on her knees, and Saidee had waked her up with a kiss.
Just as she had looked then, so she looked now, except that the form in the long, white nightgown was that of a young girl, not a child. But the thick waves of falling hair made it seem childish.
"She is praying for me," Saidee thought; and dared not close the door tightly, lest Victoria should hear. By and by it could be done, when the light was out, and the girl dropped asleep.