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So John rests on his oars and waits for the chance to come; and the unseen hand that weaves the fabric of their lives, manipulates the shuttle through the woof.
CHAPTER XXIII.
FOUND--IN THE HOUSE OF THE MOOR.
John hears at last.
A native servant brings him a note, and it can be set down as positive that the young Chicagoan eagerly breaks the seal.
It is from Ben Taleb. He writes a fair English hand, for he is a man of much education.
"Come again this night at eleven. Tell Mustapha to be at the wall where you departed from my house, at that hour, and to rap upon the large stone with the handle of his knife, giving the signal of Mahomet's tomb.
"Ben Taleb, of Morocco."
So John's heart thrills with expectation. This looks friendly; he may be near the end of his journey. It is still dark and uncertain ahead, for even when he has found his mother, a reconciliation between these separated parents seems impossible. The past has too much of bitterness in it to be easily put aside.
His first thought is of Mustapha, and he casts around for the Arab, whom he last saw close by the door of the hotel.
The dusky courier is near by, engaged in a little game with several companion guides, for the Arab as a rule loves gaming, and will risk everything but his horse.
When Mustapha catches his eye he comes up hastily, understanding there is something in the wind.
"We are to go again into the old town."
"When, monsieur?"
"This night. See! Ben Taleb has sent me a message."
The Arab looks at the paper stolidly; it might as well be Sanscrit to him.
"Read it, monsieur."
So John complies, and his guide takes in all that is said. He nods his head to show that he understands.
"This time I, too, will change my appearance, and they will not know that it is Mustapha Cadi who walks through the lanes of old Al Jezira with an unbeliever at his side."
"A bright thought, Mustapha. When shall we leave the hotel?"
"Say half past nine, meet me here. I will have all arranged. The _burnoose_ is safe."
John prepares for business.
He remembers that on the previous occasion he had need of weapons--that they came very near an encounter with the natives--and hence arms himself.
Before quitting the hotel he feels it inc.u.mbent upon himself to see Lady Ruth, and tell her where he is going. Nothing like beginning early, you know. She has already commenced to control his destiny.
Lady Ruth has a headache, and is bathing her brow with cologne in the privacy of her little boudoir parlor, but readily consents to see the young man.
"You'll think me a fright, John, with my hair brushed back like this"--John stops this in a thrice as any ardent lover might, taking advantage of the professor's absence, and the fact that Aunt Gwen has gone back in the second room for another chair--"but once in a great while I have a headache that will only succ.u.mb to a certain process. You will excuse me?"
"Indeed, I sympathize with you; have had the same splitting headache myself more than a few times. I wouldn't have intruded--"
"You know it's no intrusion, John," with reproach in her eyes.
"Kind of you to say so, my dear, but to the point I have heard from Ben Taleb."
"Oh! your face tells me it is good news."
"I am to visit him at ten."
"To-night?"
"Yes."
"But John, the danger. You yourself told me it was no little thing to enter old Al Jezira in the night. Those narrow lanes, with strange figures here and there, eying one fiercely; the houses that threaten to topple over on one's head; all these things make it a risky place to wander in even during the daytime. After dark it must be awful."
So John describes the plan of action, and interests his affianced, who asks more questions about his former visit, not forgetting the marvelous beauty of the Moor's daughter, for she is human.
Time flies under such circ.u.mstances, and hence it is John suddenly exclaims:
"I declare, it's after nine o'clock."
"And my headache is gone."
At this both laugh.
"You must be a wizard, John, to charm it away so completely," she declares.
"I trust I shall always be as successful in the days to come," breathes John, and this of course causes a blush to sweep over the fair maid's face.
He hurries to his room to prepare for what is before him. Deep in his heart arises a prayer for success. Again that feeling of antic.i.p.ation sweeps over him. Remembering former disappointments, he endeavors to subdue his hopes and to prepare for another set back, but this does not prevent him at times from indulging in dreams of happiness.
It is just half-past nine when he reaches the door of the hotel.
Mustapha Cadi is there, looking confident and bearing a small bundle.
Again, in a dark corner, John a.s.sumes an Arab covering, while his conductor proceeds to alter his own looks so that any whom they meet may not know who the tall Arab is.
So they tread the lanes of the hill-side town. Just as on the previous night, they meet Arabs, Moors, Kabyles, Jews and negroes. The silence is like that of the tomb, and yet the interior of more than one house doubtless presents a spectacle gay enough to please any lover of light and color, of lovely women, of rippling fountains, sweet flowers that load the air with their incense, and all the accessories a Moorish court can devise, for these people, while keeping the exterior of their dwellings plain, spend money lavishly upon the interior.
Now they are at the wall, and Mustapha gives the signal clearly; indeed, John fancies the hilt of the knife meets the stone with more force than is necessary, or else his ears deceive him.
The signal is heard, is answered, and in another minute they are inside the wall.
As they walk along behind their guide John whispers to the Arab: