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<h2> CHAPTER X. THE SLAVE-MARKET </h2>
<p>At the s�k-el-Abeed it was the hour of the outcry, announced by a blast of
trumpets and the thudding of tom-toms. The traders that until then had
been licensed to ply within the enclosure now put up the shutters of their
little booths. The Hebrew pedlar of gems closed his box and effaced
himself, leaving the steps about the well clear for the most prominent
patrons of the market. These hastened to assemble there, surrounding it
and facing outwards, whilst the rest of the crowd was ranged against the
southern and western walls of the enclosure.</p>
<p>Came negro water-carriers in white turbans with aspersers made of palmetto
leaves to sprinkle the ground and lay the dust against the tramp of slaves
and buyers. The trumpets ceased for an instant, then wound a fresh
imperious blast and fell permanently silent. The crowd about the gates
fell back to right and left, and very slowly and stately three tall
dalals, dressed from head to foot in white and with immaculate turbans
wound about their heads, advanced into the open space. They came to a halt
at the western end of the long wall, the chief dalal standing slightly in
advance of the other two.</p>
<p>The chattering of voices sank upon their advent, it became a hissing
whisper, then a faint drone like that of bees, and then utter silence. In
the solemn and grave demeanour of the dalals there was something almost
sacerdotal, so that when that silence fell upon the crowd the affair took
on the aspect of a sacrament.</p>
<p>The chief dalal stood forward a moment as if in an abstraction with
downcast eyes; then with hands outstretched to catch a blessing he raised
his voice and began to pray in a monotonous chant:</p>
<p>"In the name of Allah the Pitying the Pitiful Who created man from clots
of blood! All that is in the Heavens and in the Earth praiseth Allah, Who
is the Mighty, the Wise! His the kingdom of the Heavens and of the Earth.
He maketh alive and killeth, and He hath power over all things. He is the
first and the last, the seen and the unseen, and He knoweth all things."</p>
<p>"Ameen," intoned the crowd.</p>
<p>"The praise to Him who sent us Mahomet His Prophet to give the world the
True Belief, and curses upon Shaitan the stoned who wages war upon Allah
and His children."</p>
<p>"Ameen."</p>
<p>"The blessings of Allah and our Lord Mahomet upon this market and upon all
who may buy and sell herein, and may Allah increase their wealth and grant
them length of days in which to praise Him."</p>
<p>"Ameen," replied the crowd, as with a stir and rustle the close ranks
relaxed from the tense attitude of prayer, and each man sought elbow-room.</p>
<p>The dalal beat his hands together, whereupon the curtains were drawn aside
and the huddled slaves displayed—some three hundred in all,
occupying three several pens.</p>
<p>In the front rank of the middle pen—the one containing Rosamund and
Lionel—stood a couple of stalwart young Nubians, sleek and muscular,
who looked on with completest indifference, no whit appalled by the fate
which had haled them thither. They caught the eye of the dalal, and
although the usual course was for a buyer to indicate a slave he was
prepared to purchase, yet to the end that good beginning should be
promptly made, the dalal himself pointed out that stalwart pair to the
corsairs who stood on guard. In compliance the two negroes were brought
forth.</p>
<p>"Here is a noble twain," the dalal announced, "strong of muscle and long
of limb, as all may see, whom it were a shameful thing to separate. Who
needs such a pair for strong labour let him say what he will give." He set
out on a slow circuit of the well, the corsairs urging the two slaves to
follow him that all buyers might see and inspect them.</p>
<p>In the foremost ranks of the crowd near the gate stood Ali, sent thither
by Othmani to purchase a score of stout fellows required to make up the
contingent of the galeasse of Sakr-el-Bahr. He had been strictly enjoined
to buy naught but the stoutest stuff the market could afford—with
one exception. Aboard that galeasse they wanted no weaklings who would
trouble the boatswain with their swoonings. Ali announced his business
forthwith.</p>
<p>"I need such tall fellows for the oars of Sakr-el-Bahr," said he with loud
importance, thus drawing upon himself the eyes of the assembly, and
sunning himself in the admiring looks bestowed upon one of the officers of
Oliver-Reis, one of the rovers who were the pride of Islam and a
sword-edge to the infidel.</p>
<p>"They were born to toil nobly at the oar, O Ali-Reis," replied the dalal
in all solemnity. "What wilt thou give for them?"</p>
<p>"Two hundred philips for the twain."</p>
<p>The dalal paced solemnly on, the slaves following in his wake.</p>
<p>"Two hundred philips am I offered for a pair of the lustiest slaves that
by the favour of Allah were ever brought into this market. Who will say
fifty philips more?"</p>
<p>A portly Moor in a flowing blue selham rose from his seat on the step of
the well as the dalal came abreast of him, and the slaves scenting here a
buyer, and preferring any service to that of the galleys with which they
were threatened, came each in turn to kiss his hands and fawn upon him,
for all the world like dogs.</p>
<p>Calm and dignified he ran his hands over them feeling their muscles, and
then forced back their lips and examined their teeth and mouths.</p>
<p>"Two hundred and twenty for the twain," he said, and the dalal passed on
with his wares, announcing the increased price he had been offered.</p>
<p>Thus he completed the circuit and came to stand once more before Ali.</p>
<p>"Two hundred and twenty is now the price, O Ali! By the Koran, they are
worth three hundred at the least. Wilt say three hundred?"</p>
<p>"Two hundred and thirty," was the answer.</p>
<p>Back to the Moor went the dalal. "Two hundred and thirty I am now offered,
O Hamet. Thou wilt give another twenty?"</p>
<p>"Not I, by Allah!" said Hamet, and resumed his seat. "Let him have them."</p>
<p>"Another ten philips?" pleaded the dalal.</p>
<p>"Not another asper."</p>
<p>"They are thine, then, O Ali, for two hundred and thirty. Give thanks to
Allah for so good a bargain."</p>
<p>The Nubians were surrendered to Ali's followers, whilst the dalal's two
assistants advanced to settle accounts with the corsair.</p>
<p>"Wait wait," said he, "is not the name of Sakr-el-Bahr good warranty?"</p>
<p>"The inviolable law is that the purchase money be paid ere a slave leaves
the market, O valiant Ali."</p>
<p>"It shall be observed," was the impatient answer, "and I will so pay
before they leave. But I want others yet, and we will make one account an
it please thee. That fellow yonder now. I have orders to buy him for my
captain." And he indicated Lionel, who stood at Rosamund's side, the very
incarnation of woefulness and debility.</p>
<p>Contemptuous surprise flickered an instant in the eyes of the dalal. But
this he made haste to dissemble.</p>
<p>"Bring forth that yellow-haired infidel," he commanded.</p>
<p>The corsairs laid hands on Lionel. He made a vain attempt to struggle, but
it was observed that the woman leaned over to him and said something
quickly, whereupon his struggles ceased and he suffered himself to be
dragged limply forth into the full view of all the market.</p>
<p>"Dost want him for the oar, Ali?" cried Ayoub-el-Samin across the
quadrangle, a jest this that evoked a general laugh.</p>
<p>"What else?" quoth Ali. "He should be cheap at least."</p>
<p>"Cheap?" quoth the dalal in an affectation of surprise. "Nay, now. 'Tis a
comely fellow and a young one. What wilt thou give, now? a hundred
philips?"</p>
<p>"A hundred philips!" cried Ali derisively. "A hundred philips for that
skinful of bones! Ma'sh'-Allah! Five philips is my price, O dalal."</p>
<p>Again laughter crackled through the mob. But the dalal stiffened with
increasing dignity. Some of that laughter seemed to touch himself, and he
was not a person to be made the butt of mirth.</p>
<p>"'Tis a jest, my master," said he, with a forgiving yet contemptuous wave.
"Behold how sound he is." He signed to one of the corsairs, and Lionel's
doublet was slit from neck to girdle and wrenched away from his body,
leaving him naked to the waist, and displaying better proportions than
might have been expected. In a passion at that indignity Lionel writhed in
the grip of his guards, until one of the corsairs struck him a light blow
with a whip in earnest of what to expect if he continued to be
troublesome. "Consider him now," said the dalal, pointing to that white
torso. "And behold how sound he is. See how excellent are his teeth." He
seized Lionel's head and forced the jaws apart.</p>
<p>"Ay," said Ali, "but consider me those lean shanks and that woman's arm."</p>
<p>"'Tis a fault the oar will mend," the dalal insisted.</p>
<p>"You filthy blackamoors!" burst from Lionel in a sob of rage.</p>
<p>"He is muttering curses in his infidel tongue," said Ali. "His temper is
none too good, you see. I have said five philips. I'll say no more."</p>
<p>With a shrug the dalal began his circuit of the well, the corsairs
thrusting Lionel after him. Here one rose to handle him, there another,
but none seemed disposed to purchase.</p>
<p>"Five philips is the foolish price offered me for this fine young Frank,"
cried the dalal. "Will no True-Believer pay ten for such a slave? Wilt not
thou, O Ayoub? Thou, Hamet—ten philips?"</p>
<p>But one after another those to whom he was offered shook their heads. The
haggardness of Lionel's face was too unprepossessing. They had seen slaves
with that look before, and experience told them that no good was ever to
be done with such fellows. Moreover, though shapely, his muscles were too
slight, his flesh looked too soft and tender. Of what use a slave who must
be hardened and nourished into strength, and who might very well die in
the process? Even at five philips he would be dear. So the disgusted dalal
came back to Ali.</p>
<p>"He is thine, then, for five philips—Allah pardon thy avarice."</p>
<p>Ali grinned, and his men seized upon Lionel and bore him off into the
background to join the two negroes previously purchased.</p>
<p>And then, before Ali could bid for another of the slaves he desired to
acquire, a tall, elderly Jew, dressed in black doublet and hose like a
Castilian gentleman, with a ruffle at his neck, a plumed bonnet on his
grey locks, and a serviceable dagger hanging from his girdle of hammered
gold, had claimed the attention of the dalal.</p>
<p>In the pen that held the captives of the lesser raids conducted by
Biskaine sat an Andalusian girl of perhaps some twenty years, of a beauty
entirely Spanish.</p>
<p>Her face was of the warm pallor of ivory, her massed hair of an ebony
black, her eyebrows were finely pencilled, and her eyes of deepest and
softest brown. She was dressed in the becoming garb of the Castilian
peasant, the folded kerchief of red and yellow above her bodice leaving
bare the glories of her neck. She was very pale, and her eyes were wild in
their look, but this detracted nothing from her beauty.</p>
<p>She had attracted the jew's notice, and it is not impossible that there
may have stirred in him a desire to avenge upon her some of the cruel
wrongs, some of the rackings, burning, confiscations, and banishment
suffered by the men of his race at the hands of the men of hers. He may
have bethought him of invaded ghettos, of Jewish maidens ravished, and
Jewish children butchered in the name of the God those Spanish Christians
worshipped, for there was something almost of contemptuous fierceness in
his dark eyes and in the hand he flung out to indicate her.</p>
<p>"Yonder is a Castilian wench for whom I will give fifty Philips, O dalal,"
he announced. The datal made a sign, whereupon the corsairs dragged her
struggling forth.</p>
<p>"So much loveliness may not be bought for fifty Philips, O Ibrahim," said
he. "Yusuf here will pay sixty at least." And he stood expectantly before
a resplendent Moor.</p>
<p>The Moor, however, shook his head.</p>
<p>"Allah knows I have three wives who would destroy her loveliness within
the hour and so leave me the loser."</p>
<p>The dalal moved on, the girl following him but contesting every step of
the way with those who impelled her forward, and reviling them too in hot
Castilian. She drove her nails into the arms of one and spat fiercely into
the face of another of her corsair guards. Rosamund's weary eyes quickened
to horror as she watched her—a horror prompted as much by the fate
awaiting that poor child as by the undignified fury of the futile battle
she waged against it. But it happened that her behaviour impressed a
Levantine Turk quite differently. He rose, a short squat figure, from his
seat on the steps of the well.</p>
<p>"Sixty Philips will I pay for the joy of taming that wild cat," said he.</p>
<p>But Ibrahim was not to be outbidden. He offered seventy, the Turk
countered with a bid of eighty, and Ibrahim again raised the price to
ninety, and there fell a pause.</p>
<p>The dalal spurred on the Turk. "Wilt thou be beaten then, and by an
Israelite? Shall this lovely maid be given to a perverter of the
Scriptures, to an inheritor of the fire, to one of a race that would not
bestow on their fellow-men so much as the speck out of a date-stone? It
were a shame upon a True-Believer."</p>
<p>Urged thus the Turk offered another five Philips, but with obvious
reluctance. The Jew, however, entirely unabashed by a tirade against him,
the like of which he heard a score of times a day in the course of
trading, pulled forth a heavy purse from his girdle.</p>
<p>"Here are one hundred Philips," he announced. "'Tis overmuch. But I offer
it."</p>
<p>Ere the dalal's pious and seductive tongue could urge him further the Turk
sat down again with a gesture of finality.</p>
<p>"I give him joy of her," said he.</p>
<p>"She is thine, then, O Ibrahim, for one hundred philips."</p>
<p>The Israelite relinquished the purse to the dalal's white-robed assistants
and advanced to receive the girl. The corsairs thrust her forward against
him, still vainly battling, and his arms closed about her for a moment.</p>
<p>"Thou has cost me dear, thou daughter of Spain," said he. "But I am
content. Come." And he made shift to lead her away. Suddenly, however,
fierce as a tiger-cat she writhed her arms upwards and clawed at his face.
With a scream of pain he relaxed his hold of her and in that moment, quick
as lightning she plucked the dagger that hung from his girdle so
temptingly within her reach.</p>
<p>"Valga me Dios!" she cried, and ere a hand could be raised to prevent her
she had buried the blade in her lovely breast and sank in a laughing,
coughing, heap at his feet. A final convulsive heave and she lay there
quite still, whilst Ibrahim glared down at her with eyes of dismay, and
over all the market there hung a hush of sudden awe.</p>
<p>Rosamund had risen in her place, and a faint colour came to warm her
pallor, a faint light kindled in her eyes. God had shown her the way
through this poor Spanish girl, and assuredly God would give her the means
to take it when her own turn came. She felt herself suddenly uplifted and
enheartened. Death was a sharp, swift severing, an easy door of escape
from the horror that threatened her, and God in His mercy, she knew, would
justify self-murder under such circumstances as were her own and that poor
dead Andalusian maid's.</p>
<p>At length Ibrahim roused himself from his momentary stupor. He stepped
deliberately across the body, his face inflamed, and stood to beard the
impassive dalal.</p>
<p>"She is dead!" he bleated. "I am defrauded. Give me back my gold!"</p>
<p>"Are we to give back the price of every slave that dies?" the dalal
questioned him.</p>
<p>"But she was not yet delivered to me," raved the Jew. "My hands had not
touched her. Give me back my gold."</p>
<p>"Thou liest, son of a dog," was the answer, dispassionately delivered.
"She was thine already. I had so pronounced her. Bear her hence, since she
belongs to thee."</p>
<p>The Jew, his face empurpling, seemed to fight for breath</p>
<p>"How?" he choked. "Am I to lose a hundred philips?"</p>
<p>"What is written is written," replied the serene dalal.</p>
<p>Ibrahim was frothing at the lips, his eyes were blood-injected. "But it
was never written that...."</p>
<p>"Peace," said the dalal. "Had it not been written it could not have come
to pass. It is the will of Allah! Who dares rebel against it?"</p>
<p>The crowd began to murmur.</p>
<p>"I want my hundred philips," the Jew insisted, whereupon the murmur
swelled into a sudden roar.</p>
<p>"Thou hearest?" said the dalal. "Allah pardon thee, thou art disturbing
the peace of this market. Away, ere ill betide thee."</p>
<p>"Hence! hence!" roared the crowd, and some advanced threateningly upon the
luckless Ibrahim. "Away, thou perverter of Holy Writ! thou filth! thou
dog! Away!"</p>
<p>Such was the uproar, such the menace of angry countenances and clenched
fists shaken in his very face, that Ibrahim quailed and forgot his loss in
fear.</p>
<p>"I go, I go," he said, and turned hastily to depart.</p>
<p>But the dalal summoned him back. "Take hence thy property," said he, and
pointed to the body. And so Ibrahim was forced to suffer the further
mockery of summoning his slaves to bear away the lifeless body for which
he had paid in lively potent gold.</p>
<p>Yet by the gates he paused again. "I will appeal me to the Basha," he
threatened. "Asad-ed-Din is just, and he will have my money restored to
me."</p>
<p>"So he will," said the dalal, "when thou canst restore the dead to life,"
and he turned to the portly Ayoub, who was plucking at his sleeve. He bent
his head to catch the muttered words of Fenzileh's wazeer. Then, in
obedience to them, he ordered Rosamund to be brought forward.</p>
<p>She offered no least resistance, advancing in a singularly lifeless way,
like a sleep-walker or one who had been drugged. In the heat and glare of
the open market she stood by the dalal's side at the head of the well,
whilst he dilated upon her physical merits in that lingua franca which he
used since it was current coin among all the assorted races represented
there—a language which the knowledge of French that her residence in
France had taught her she was to her increasing horror and shame able to
understand.</p>
<p>The first to make an offer for her was that same portly Moor who had
sought to purchase the two Nubeans. He rose to scrutinize her closely, and
must have been satisfied, for the price he offered was a good one, and he
offered it with contemptuous assurance that he would not be outbidden.</p>
<p>"One hundred philips for the milk-faced girl."</p>
<p>"'Tis not enough. Consider me the moon-bright loveliness of her face,"
said the dalal as he moved on. "Chigil yields us fair women, but no woman
of Chigil was ever half so fair."</p>
<p>"One hundred and fifty," said the Levantine Turk with a snap.</p>
<p>"Not yet enough. Behold the stately height which Allah hath vouchsafed
her. See the noble carriage of her head, the lustre of her eye! By Allah,
she is worthy to grace the Sultan's own hareem."</p>
<p>He said no more than the buyers recognized to be true, and excitement
stirred faintly through their usually impassive ranks. A Tagareen Moor
named Yusuf offered at once two hundred.</p>
<p>But still the dalal continued to sing her praises. He held up one of her
arms for inspection, and she submitted with lowered eyes, and no sign of
resentment beyond the slow flush that spread across her face and vanished
again.</p>
<p>"Behold me these limbs, smooth as Arabian silks and whiter than ivory.
Look at those lips like pomegranate blossoms. The price is now two hundred
philips. What wilt thou give, O Hamet?"</p>
<p>Hamet showed himself angry that his original bid should so speedily have
been doubled. "By the Koran, I have purchased three sturdy girls from the
Sus for less."</p>
<p>"Wouldst thou compare a squat-faced girl from the Sus with this
narcissus-eyed glory of womanhood?" scoffed the dalal.</p>
<p>"Two hundred and ten, then," was Hamet's sulky grunt.</p>
<p>The watchful Tsamanni considered that the time had come to buy her for his
lord as he had been bidden.</p>
<p>"Three hundred," he said curtly, to make an end of matters, and—</p>
<p>"Four hundred," instantly piped a shrill voice behind him.</p>
<p>He spun round in his amazement and met the leering face of Ayoub. A murmur
ran through the ranks of the buyers, the people craned their necks to
catch a glimpse of this open-handed purchaser.</p>
<p>Yusuf the Tagareen rose up in a passion. He announced angrily that never
again should the dust of the s�k of Algiers defile his slippers, that
never again would he come there to purchase slaves.</p>
<p>"By the Well of Zem-Zem," he swore, "all men are bewitched in this market.
Four hundred philips for a Frankish girl! May Allah increase your wealth,
for verily you'll need it." And in his supreme disgust he stalked to the
gates, and elbowed his way through the crowd, and so vanished from the
s�k.</p>
<p>Yet ere he was out of earshot her price had risen further. Whilst Tsamanni
was recovering from his surprise at the competitor that had suddenly
appeared before him, the dalal had lured an increased offer from the Turk.</p>
<p>"'Tis a madness," the latter deplored. "But she pleaseth me, and should it
seem good to Allah the Merciful to lead her into the True Faith she may
yet become the light of my hareem. Four hundred and twenty philips, then,
O dalal, and Allah pardon me my prodigality."</p>
<p>Yet scarcely was his little speech concluded than Tsamanni with laconic
eloquence rapped out: "Five hundred."</p>
<p>"Y'Allah!" cried the Turk, raising his hands to heaven, and "Y'Allah!"
echoed the crowd.</p>
<p>"Five hundred and fifty," shrilled Ayoub's voice above the general din.</p>
<p>"Six hundred," replied Tsamanni, still unmoved.</p>
<p>And now such was the general hubbub provoked by these unprecedented prices
that the dalal was forced to raise his voice and cry for silence.</p>
<p>When this was restored Ayoub at once raised the price to seven hundred.</p>
<p>"Eight hundred," snapped Tsamanni, showing at last a little heat.</p>
<p>"Nine hundred," replied Ayoub.</p>
<p>Tsamanni swung round upon him again, white now with fury.</p>
<p>"Is this a jest, O father of wind?" he cried, and excited laughter by the
taunt implicit in that appellation.</p>
<p>"And thou'rt the jester," replied Ayoub with forced calm, "thou'lt find
the jest a costly one."</p>
<p>With a shrug Tsamanni turned again to the dalal. "A thousand philips,"
said he shortly.</p>
<p>"Silence there!" cried the dalal again. "Silence, and praise Allah who
sends good prices."</p>
<p>"One thousand and one hundred," said Ayoub the irrepressible</p>
<p>And now Tsamanni not only found himself outbidden, but he had reached the
outrageous limit appointed by Asad. He lacked authority to go further,
dared not do so without first consulting the Basha. Yet if he left the s�k
for that purpose Ayoub would meanwhile secure the girl. He found himself
between sword and wall. On the one hand did he permit himself to be
outbidden his master might visit upon him his disappointment. On the
other, did he continue beyond the limit so idly mentioned as being far
beyond all possibility, it might fare no less ill with him.</p>
<p>He turned to the crowd, waving his arms in furious gesticulation. "By the
beard of the Prophet, this bladder of wind and grease makes sport of us.
He has no intent to buy. What man ever heard of the half of such a price
for a slave girl?"</p>
<p>Ayoub's answer was eloquent; he produced a fat bag and flung it on the
ground, where it fell with a mellow chink. "There is my sponsor," he made
answer, grinning in the very best of humours, savouring to the full his
enemy's rage and discomfiture, and savouring it at no cost to himself.
"Shall I count out one thousand and one hundred philips, O dalal."</p>
<p>"If the wazeer Tsamanni is content."</p>
<p>"Dost thou know for whom I buy?" roared Tsamanni. "For the Basha himself,
Asad-ed-Din, the exalted of Allah," He advanced upon Ayoub with hands
upheld. "What shalt thou say to him, O dog, when he calls thee to account
for daring to outbid him."</p>
<p>But Ayoub remained unruffled before all this fury. He spread his fat
hands, his eyes twinkling, his great lips pursed. "How should I know,
since Allah has not made me all-knowing? Thou shouldst have said so
earlier. 'Tis thus I shall answer the Basha should he question me, and the
Basha is just."</p>
<p>"I would not be thee, Ayoub—not for the throne of Istambul."</p>
<p>"Nor I thee, Tsamanni; for thou art jaundiced with rage."</p>
<p>And so they stood glaring each at the other until the dalal called them
back to the business that was to do.</p>
<p>"The price is now one thousand and one hundred philips. Wilt thou suffer
defeat, O wazeer?"</p>
<p>"Since Allah wills. I have no authority to go further."</p>
<p>"Then at one thousand and one hundred philips, Ayoub, she is...."</p>
<p>But the sale was not yet to be completed. From the dense and eager throng
about the gates rang a crisp voice—</p>
<p>"One thousand and two hundred philips for the Frankish girl."</p>
<p>The dalal, who had conceived that the limits of madness had been already
reached, stood gaping now in fresh amazement. The mob crowed and cheered
and roared between enthusiasm and derision, and even Tsamanni brightened
to see another champion enter the lists who perhaps would avenge him upon
Ayoub. The crowd parted quickly to right and left, and through it into the
open strode Sakr-el-Bahr. They recognized him instantly, and his name was
shouted in acclamation by that idolizing multitude.</p>
<p>That Barbary name of his conveyed no information to Rosamund, and her back
being turned to the entrance she did not see him. But she had recognized
his voice, and she had shuddered at the sound. She could make nothing of
the bidding, nor what the purpose that surely underlay it to account for
the extraordinary excitement of the traders. Vaguely had she been
wondering what dastardly purpose Oliver might intend to serve, but now
that she heard his voice that wonder ceased and understanding took its
place. He had hung there somewhere in the crowd waiting until all
competitors but one should have been outbidden, and now he stepped forth
to buy her for his own—his slave! She closed her eyes a moment and
prayed God that he might not prevail in his intent. Any fate but that; she
would rob him even of the satisfaction of driving her to sheathe a poniard
in her heart as that poor Andalusian girl had done. A wave almost of
unconsciousness passed over her in the intensity of her horror. For a
moment the ground seemed to rock and heave under her feet.</p>
<p>Then the dizziness passed, and she was herself again. She heard the crowd
thundering "Ma'sh'Allah!" and "Sakr-el-Bahr!" and the dalal clamouring
sternly for silence. When this was at last restored she heard his
exclamation—</p>
<p>"The glory to Allah who sends eager buyers! What sayest thou, O wazeer
Ayoub?"</p>
<p>"Ay!" sneered Tsamanni, "what now?"</p>
<p>"One thousand and three hundred," said Ayoub with a quaver of uneasy
defiance.</p>
<p>"Another hundred, O dalal," came from Sakr-el-Bahr in a quiet voice.</p>
<p>"One thousand and five hundred," screamed Ayoub, thus reaching not only
the limit imposed by his mistress, but the very limit of the resources at
her immediate disposal. Gone, too, with that bid was all hope of profit to
himself.</p>
<p>But Sakr-el-Bahr, impassive as Fate, and without so much as deigning to
bestow a look upon the quivering eunuch, said again—</p>
<p>"Another hundred, O dalal."</p>
<p>"One thousand and six hundred philips!" cried the dalal, more in amazement
than to announce the figure reached. Then controlling his emotions he
bowed his head in reverence and made confession of his faith. "All things
are possible if Allah wills them. The praise to Him who sends wealthy
buyers."</p>
<p>He turned to the crestfallen Ayoub, so crestfallen that in the
contemplation of him Tsamanni was fast gathering consolation for his own
discomfiture, vicariously tasting the sweets of vengeance. "What say you
now, O perspicuous wazeer?"</p>
<p>"I say," choked Ayoub, "that since by the favour of Shaitan he hath so
much wealth he must prevail."</p>
<p>But the insulting words were scarcely uttered than Sakr-el-Bahr's great
hand had taken the wazeer by the nape of his fat neck, a growl of anger
running through the assembly to approve him.</p>
<p>"By the favour of Shaitan, sayest thou, thou sex-less dog?" he growled,
and tightened his grip so that the wazeer squirmed and twisted in an agony
of pain. Down was his head thrust, and still down, until his fat body gave
way and he lay supine and writhing in the dust of the s�k. "Shall I
strangle thee, thou father of filth, or shall I fling thy soft flesh to
the hooks to teach thee what is a man's due from thee?" And as he spoke he
rubbed the too daring fellow's face roughly on the ground.</p>
<p>"Mercy!" squealed the wazeer. "Mercy, O mighty Sakr-el-Bahr, as thou
lookest for mercy!"</p>
<p>"Unsay thy words, thou offal. Pronounce thyself a liar and a dog."</p>
<p>"I do unsay them. I have foully lied. Thy wealth is the reward sent thee
by Allah for thy glorious victories over the unbelieving."</p>
<p>"Put out thine offending tongue," said Sakr-el-Bahr, "and cleanse it in
the dust. Put it forth, I say."</p>
<p>Ayoub obeyed him in fearful alacrity, whereupon Sakr-el-Bahr released his
hold and allowed the unfortunate fellow to rise at last, half-choked with
dirt, livid of face, and quaking like a jelly, an object of ridicule and
cruel mockery to all assembled.</p>
<p>"Now get thee hence, ere my sea-hawks lay their talons on thee. Go!"</p>
<p>Ayoub departed in all haste to the increasing jeers of the multitude and
the taunts of Tsamanni, whilst Sakr-el-Bahr turned him once more to the
dalal.</p>
<p>"At one thousand and six hundred philips this slave is thine, O
Sakr-el-Bahr, thou glory of Islam. May Allah increase thy victories!"</p>
<p>"Pay him, Ali," said the corsair shortly, and he advanced to receive his
purchase.</p>
<p>Face to face stood he now with Rosamund, for the first time since that day
before the encounter with the Dutch argosy when he had sought her in the
cabin of the carack.</p>
<p>One swift glance she bestowed on him, then, her senses reeling with horror
at her circumstance she shrank back, her face of a deathly pallor. In his
treatment of Ayoub she had just witnessed the lengths of brutality of
which he was capable, and she was not to know that this brutality had been
a deliberate piece of mummery calculated to strike terror into her.</p>
<p>Pondering her now he smiled a tight-lipped cruel smile that only served to
increase her terror.</p>
<p>"Come," he said in English.</p>
<p>She cowered back against the dalal as if for protection. Sakr-el-Bahr
reached forward, caught her by the wrists, and almost tossed her to his
Nubians, Abiad and Zal-Zer, who were attending him.</p>
<p>"Cover her face," he bade them. "Bear her to my house. Away!"</p>
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