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"How am I to believe you? Will you give me a sign, something, anything, so that I shall know that if I ever want to visit the wonderful tents I shall find them?"
She only spoke to gain time.
Knowing that outside the curtain there stretched the path across the Field of Content, she deliberately placed her foot upon the desert sand, and whilst common sense urged her to get out of the room, she listened to temptation and lingered, throwing safety to the four winds, opening wide her arms to danger.
"By the sign of the black stallion who awaits thee at dawn near all that remaineth upright of the City of On, shalt thou find the Tents of Purple and Gold."
"But I don't ride any more," said Damaris. "I can't find a horse, a good one, and I don't know where the City of On is."
"Thou shall know, thou ivory casket to which love is the key. And if thou see'st one afar off as thou ridest into the desert at dawn, fear not; for behold, is thy beauty spoken of, yea, even in the harem, and it were not wise for thee to ride alone."
The girl put out her hand towards the silken curtain.
"How do you know who I am?"
"By thy voice, which is as the wind of dawn."
She hesitated, divided between a desire to know more about this man and an innate courtesy which forbade her questioning.
"Search not, ask not, woman," said the fortune-teller, divining her thoughts, "for I am not worthy of thy notice. Were I to cross thy threshold, were I to lay my hand upon thee, as surely should I pollute thee. There is that within me which cries aloud, urging me to lead thy feet upon the burning desert sands; and, again, there is that within me which would fain force thee, for thy happiness, upon the path running through the Field of Content. Yet, behold, art thou all safe with me."
"Could I help you? If you were to tell me your trouble, perhaps it would be easier?"
"The moment is not yet, woman, but, being a teller of tales, even as I am a teller of fortunes, one day will I sit at thy feet and, for the pa.s.sing of an hour, will tell thee the story of the Hawk of Egypt."
"You have made this hour pa.s.s so pleasantly that I should--should like to--to give you something so as--as to show you how pleased I am. But I have nothing with me, nothing."
She put out her hands and turned them down.
The man looked down at her for a moment with blazing eyes.
"Give me--as a reward--Allah--give me----" They stood quite still as the torrent surged, about them. "Give me the ring from off thy finger," he added, gently.
The girl held out her hand.
"Take it, though it seems a poor reward for all you have promised me."
"Nay, give it thou to me."
She slipped it off and held it out, showing a bruise across the back of her hand.
"Allah!" whispered the man, "that I should mark thee thus--and yet, in love--in love!"
He took the ring, of which the dull-gold setting held an emerald in the form of a scarab with heartshaped base.
The fortune-teller turned it over in the palm of his hand, then held it out.
"Nay, this I cannot take. I thought it was a ring from the bazaar to go with thy dress of fantasy. Behold, it is an amulet of the heart, of--nay, I cannot tell thus quickly of what dynasty--with words of power engraved upon it which read thus:
"'_My heart, my mother; my heart, my mother. My heart whereby I came into being_.'"
The girl listened entranced, touching the ring with finger-tips which felt as snow-flakes upon the man's hand.
"What is an amulet of the heart?"
"In the days of Ancient Egypt, when the heart had been taken from the dead body for purposes of preservation, an amulet, a scarab, sometimes heart-shaped, was placed within the body to ensure it life and movement in the new life."
They both stood looking down upon the jewel, the girl's finger-tips resting upon the man's hand.
"Keep it," she said softly. "Keep it."
"I will keep it to replace that which has gone from me. I will restore it to its shape, I will take from it the golden setting of the ring. I will wear it upon my breast." And, bending, he gently raised the yashmak in both hands and pressed his forehead to the few inches which had rested above her crimson mouth.
CHAPTER IX
"_Love is one and the same in the original, but there are a thousand copies of it, and, it may be, all differing from one another_."
LA ROCHEFOUCAULD.
Ben Kelham, disguised as Rameses the Great, laid a hand upon the girl's shoulder as, pa.s.sing to the left of the tent, she walked slowly towards the door leading to the grounds, whilst sounds of wrath came from the serried ranks of those who wished to pry into the future.
The fortune-teller had sent word that there would be no more reading of horoscopes or hands that evening, and had absented himself therewith through a back entrance.
"You _have_ been a long time," said Ben Kelham. He looked magnificent as the great Sestoris, who had stood well over six feet in the days of Ancient Egypt. "What was the man telling you?"
Damaris was disturbed, and it was most unfortunate that, under the spur of inquietude, he should have chosen just this occasion and this moment to allow a hint of authority to creep into his voice and a shadow of proprietors.h.i.+p to show in his actions.
"How do you know who I am?" parried the girl coldly, as she shrugged the proprietory hand off her shoulder.
"Wellington gave you away. He followed your trail to the tent and sat growling at everybody until I came along and removed him."
"I wish you would leave the dog alone," said Damaris, with a certain amount of acerbity. "He is my custos."
"But that is not the kind of guardian you want, Damaris--you are too beautiful, you know. Let us sit here; it's lovely and warm, and the stars look just like diamonds, don't they?"
"I would rather walk," said Damaris, who was longing to sit down.
But she sat down when Ben Kelham took her by the elbow and led her to the seat; and she sat quite still when he suddenly took both her hands.
"Oh! don't, Ben," she said, when he pulled them up against his heart.
"I can't stand any more to-night." And he, being over-slow in the uptak', failed to catch her in this slip of the tongue.
"I want you for my wife, dear," was all he said.
Then Damaris pulled her hands away and, removing the yashmak, looked up into his face, whilst he drew a breath sharply at the beauty of her.