through them an
involuntaryshudder. Old Omar collapsed on his
carpet and moaned
feebly; Lakamba stared with
gloomycontempt in
the direction of the inhuman sound; but Babalatchi, forcing a
smile, pushed his
distinguishedprotector through the narrow gate
in the
stockade, followed him, and closed it quickly.
The old woman, who had been most of the time kneeling by the
fire, now rose, glanced round fearfully and crouched hiding
behind the tree. The gate of the great
courtyard flew open with
a great
clatter before a
frantic kick, and Willems darted in
carrying Aissa in his arms. He rushed up the
enclosure like a
tornado, pressing the girl to his breast, her arms round his
neck, her head
hanging back over his arm, her eyes closed and her
long hair nearly
touching the ground. They appeared for a second
in the glare of the fire, then, with
immense strides, he dashed
up the planks and disappeared with his burden in the
doorway of
the big house.
Inside and outside the
enclosure there was silence. Omar lay
supporting himself on his elbow, his terrified face with its
closed eyes giving him the appearance of a man tormented by a
nightmare.
"What is it? Help! Help me to rise!" he called out faintly.
The old hag, still crouching in the shadow, stared with bleared
eyes at the
doorway of the big house, and took no notice of his
call. He listened for a while, then his arm gave way, and, with
a deep sigh of
discouragement, he let himself fall on the carpet.
The boughs of the tree nodded and trembled in the unsteady
currents of the light wind. A leaf fluttered down slowly from
some high branch and rested on the ground, immobile, as if
resting for ever, in the glow of the fire; but soon it stirred,
then soared suddenly, and flew,
spinning and turning before the
breath of the perfumed
breeze,
drivenhelplessly into the dark
night that had closed over the land.
CHAPTER THREE
For
upwards of forty years Abdulla had walked in the way of his
Lord. Son of the rich Syed Selim bin Sali, the great Mohammedan
trader of the Straits, he went forth at the age of seventeen on
his first
commercialexpedition, as his father's representative
on board a
pilgrim ship chartered by the
wealthy Arab to
convey a
crowd of pious Malays to the Holy Shrine. That was in the days
when steam was not in those seas--or, at least, not so much as
now. The
voyage was long, and the young man's eyes were opened
to the wonders of many lands. Allah had made it his fate to
become a
pilgrim very early in life. This was a great favour of
Heaven, and it could not have been bestowed upon a man who prized
it more, or who made himself more
worthy of it by the unswerving
piety of his heart and by the religious
solemnity of his
demeanour. Later on it became clear that the book of his destiny
contained the programme of a wandering life. He visited Bombay
and Calcutta, looked in at the Persian Gulf,
beheld in due course
the high and
barren coasts of the Gulf of Suez, and this was the
limit of his wanderings
westward. He was then twenty-seven, and
the
writing on his
forehead decreed that the time had come for
him to return to the Straits and take from his dying father's
hands the many threads of a business that was spread over all the
Archipelago: from Sumatra to New Guinea, from Batavia to Palawan.
Very soon his
ability, his will--strong to obstinacy--his wisdom
beyond his years, caused him to be recognized as the head of a
family whose members and connections were found in every part of
those seas. An uncle here--a brother there; a father-in-law in
Batavia, another in Palembang; husbands of numerous sisters;
cousins
innumerable scattered north, south, east, and west--in
every place where there was trade: the great family lay like a
network over the islands. They lent money to princes, influenced
the council-rooms, faced--if need be--with
peaceful intrepidity
the white rulers who held the land and the sea under the edge of
sharp swords; and they all paid great deference to Abdulla,
listened to his advice, entered into his plans--because he was
wise, pious, and
fortunate.
He bore himself with the
humility becoming a Believer, who never
forgets, even for one moment of his waking life, that he is the
servant of the Most High. He was largely
charitable because the
charitable man is the friend of Allah, and when he walked out of
his house--built of stone, just outside the town of Penang--on
his way to his godowns in the port, he had often to
snatch his
hand away
sharply from under the lips of men of his race and
creed; and often he had to murmur deprecating words, or even to
rebuke with
severity those who attempted to touch his knees with
their finger-tips in
gratitude or supplication. He was very
handsome, and carried his small head high with meek
gravity. His
lofty brow, straight nose, narrow, dark face with its chiselled
delicacy of feature, gave him an
aristocratic appearance which
proclaimed his pure
descent. His beard was trimmed close and to
a rounded point. His large brown eyes looked out
steadily with a
sweetness that was belied by the expression of his thin-lipped
mouth. His
aspect was
serene. He had a
belief in his own
prosperity which nothing could shake.
Restless, like all his people, he very seldom dwelt for many days
together in his splendid house in Penang. Owner of ships, he was
often on board one or another of them, traversing in all
directions the field of his operations. In every port he had a
household--his own or that of a relation--to hail his
advent with
demonstrative joy. In every port there were rich and influential
men eager to see him, there was business to talk over, there were
important letters to read: an
immensecorrespondence, enclosed
in silk envelopes--a
correspondence which had nothing to do with
the infidels of
colonial post-offices, but came into his hands by
devious, yet safe, ways. It was left for him by taciturn
nakhodas of native trading craft, or was delivered with profound
salaams by travel-stained and weary men who would
withdraw from
his presence
calling upon Allah to bless the
generous giver of
splendid rewards. And the news was always good, and all his
attempts always succeeded, and in his ears there rang always a
chorus of
admiration, of
gratitude, of
humble entreaties.
A
fortunate man. And his
felicity was so complete that the good
genii, who ordered the stars at his birth, had not neglected--by
a
refinement of benevolence strange in such
primitive beings--to
provide him with a desire difficult to
attain, and with an enemy
hard to
overcome. The envy of Lingard's political and
commercialsuccesses, and the wish to get the best of him in every way,
became Abdulla's mania, the
paramount interest of his life, the
salt of his existence.
For the last few months he had been receiving
mysterious messages
from Sambir urging him to
decisive action. He had found the
river a couple of years ago, and had been anchored more than once
off that estuary where the, till then, rapid Pantai, spreading
slowly over the lowlands, seems to
hesitate, before it flows
gently through twenty outlets; over a maze of mudflats, sandbanks
and reefs, into the
expectant sea. He had never attempted the
entrance, however, because men of his race, although brave and
adventurous travellers, lack the true seamanlike instincts, and
he was afraid of getting wrecked. He could not bear the idea of
the Rajah Laut being able to boast that Abdulla bin Selim, like
other and
lesser men, had also come to grief when
trying to wrest
his secret from him. Meantime he returned encouraging answers to
his unknown friends in Sambir, and waited for his opportunity in
the calm certitude of
ultimate triumph.
Such was the man whom Lakamba and Babalatchi expected to see for
the first time on the night of Willems' return to Aissa.
Babalatchi, who had been tormented for three days by the fear of
having over-reached himself in his little plot, now, feeling sure
of his white man, felt lighthearted and happy as he superintended
the preparations in the
courtyard for Abdulla's
reception.
Half-way between Lakamba's house and the river a pile of dry wood
was made ready for the torch that would set fire to it at the
moment of Abdulla's
landing. Between this and the house again
there was, ranged in a semicircle, a set of low
bamboo frames,