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Ca.s.sim rose before the sun the next morning, and set out for the forest with ten mules bearing great chests which he meant to fill.
With little trouble he found the rock and the door, and, standing before it, spoke the words, "Open, Sesame." The door opened at once, and when he was within closed upon him. Here indeed were the riches of which his brother had told. He quickly brought as many bags of gold as he could carry to the door of the cavern; but his thoughts were so full of his new wealth that he could not think of the word that should let him out. Instead of "Sesame," he said, "Open, Barley," and was much amazed to find that the door remained fast shut. He named several sorts of grain, but still the door would not open.
Ca.s.sim had never expected such a disaster, and was so frightened that the more he tried to recall the word "Sesame," the more confused his mind became. It was as if he had never heard the word at all. He threw down the bags in his hands, and walked wildly up and down, without a thought of the riches lying round about him.
At noon the robbers visited their cave. From afar they saw Ca.s.sim's mules straggling about the rock, and galloped full speed to the cave.
Driving the mules out of sight, they went at once, with their naked sabres in their hands, to the door, which opened as soon as the captain had spoken the proper words before it.
Ca.s.sim had heard the noise of the horses' feet, and guessed that the robbers had come. He resolved to make one effort for his life. As soon as the door opened, he rushed out and threw the leader down, but could not pa.s.s the other robbers, who with their scimitars soon put him to death.
The first care of the robbers was to examine the cave. They found all the bags Ca.s.sim had brought to the door, but did not miss what Ali Baba had taken. As for Ca.s.sim himself, they guessed rightly that, once within, he could not get out again; but how he had managed to learn their secret words that let him in, they could not tell. One thing was certain--there he was; and to warn all others who might know their secret and follow in Ca.s.sim's footsteps, they agreed to cut his body into four quarters--to hang two on one side and two on the other, within the door of the cave. This they did at once, and leaving the place of their h.o.a.rds well closed, mounted their horses and set out to attack the caravans they might meet.
II
When night came, and Ca.s.sim did not return, his wife became very uneasy. She ran to Ali Baba for comfort, and he told her that Ca.s.sim would certainly think it unwise to enter the town till night was well advanced. By midnight Ca.s.sim's wife was still more alarmed, and wept till morning, cursing her desire to pry into the affairs of her brother and sister in law. In the early day she went again, in tears, to Ali Baba.
He did not wait for her to ask him to go and see what had happened to Ca.s.sim, but set out at once for the forest with his three a.s.ses.
Finding some blood at the door of the cave, he took it for an ill omen; but when he had spoken the words, and the door had opened, he was struck with horror at the dismal sight of his brother's body. He could not leave it there, and hastened within to find something to wrap around it. Laying the body on one of his a.s.ses, he covered it with wood. The other two a.s.ses he loaded with bags of gold, covering them also with wood as before. Then bidding the door shut, he came away, but stopped some time at the edge of the forest, that he might not go into the town before night. When he reached home he left the two a.s.ses, laden with gold, in his little yard for his wife to unload, and led the other to his sister-in-law's house.
Ali Baba knocked at the door, which was opened by Morgiana, a clever slave, full of devices to conquer difficulties. When he came into the court and unloaded the a.s.s, he took Morgiana aside, and said to her,--
"You must observe a strict secrecy. Your master's body is contained in these two panniers. We must bury him as if he had died a natural death. Go now and tell your mistress. I leave the matter to your wit and skillful devices."
They placed the body in Ca.s.sim's house, and, charging Morgiana to act well her part, Ali Baba returned home with his a.s.s.
Early the next morning, Morgiana went to a druggist, and asked for a sort of lozenge used in the most dangerous illness. When he asked her for whom she wanted it, she answered with a sigh, "My good master Ca.s.sim. He can neither eat nor speak." In the evening she went to the same druggist, and with tears in her eyes asked for an essence given to sick persons for whose life there is little hope. "Alas!" said she, "I am afraid even this will not save my good master."
All that day Ali Baba and his wife were seen going sadly between their house and Ca.s.sim's, and in the evening n.o.body was surprised to hear the shrieks and cries of Ca.s.sim's wife and Morgiana, who told everybody that her master was dead.
The next morning at daybreak she went to an old cobbler, who was always early at work, and, putting a piece of gold in his hand, said,--
"Baba Mustapha, you must bring your sewing tackle and come with me; but I must tell you, I shall blindfold you when we reach a certain place."
"Oh! oh!" replied he, "you would have me do something against my conscience or my honor."
"G.o.d forbid!" said Morgiana, putting another piece of gold in his hand; "only come along with me, and fear nothing."
Baba Mustapha went with Morgiana, and at a certain place she bound his eyes with a handkerchief, which she never unloosed till they had entered the room of her master's house, where she had put the corpse together.
"Baba Mustapha," said she, "you must make haste, and sew the parts of this body together, and when you have done, I will give you another piece of gold."
After Baba Mustapha had finished his task, she blindfolded him again, gave him the third piece of gold she had promised, and, charging him with secrecy, took him back to the place where she had first bound his eyes. Taking off the bandage, she watched him till he was out of sight, lest he should return and dog her; then she went home.
At Ca.s.sim's house she made all things ready for the funeral, which was duly performed by the imaun and other ministers of the mosque.
Morgiana, as a slave of the dead man, walked in the procession, weeping, beating her breast, and tearing her hair. Ca.s.sim's wife stayed at home, uttering doleful cries with the women of the neighborhood, who, according to custom, came to mourn with her. The whole quarter was filled with sounds of sorrow.
Thus the manner of Ca.s.sim's death was hushed up, and, besides his widow, Ali Baba, and Morgiana, the slave, n.o.body in the city suspected the cause of it. Three or four days after the funeral, Ali Baba removed his few goods openly to his sister-in-law's house, in which he was to live in the future; but the money he had taken from the robbers was carried thither by night. As for Ca.s.sim's warehouse, Ali Baba put it entirely under the charge of his eldest son.
III
While all this was going on, the forty robbers again visited their cave in the forest. Great was their surprise to find Ca.s.sim's body taken away, with some of their bags of gold.
"We are certainly found out," said the captain; "the body and the money have been taken by some one else who knows our secret. For our own lives' sake, we must try and find him. What say you, my lads?"
The robbers all agreed that this must be done.
"Well," said the captain, "one of you, the boldest and most skillful, must go to the town, disguised as a stranger, and try if he can hear any talk of the man we killed, and find out where he lived. This matter is so important that the man who undertakes it and fails should suffer death. What say you?"
One of the robbers, without waiting to know what the rest might think, started up, and said, "I submit to this condition, and think it an honor to expose my life to serve the troop."
This won great praise from the robber's comrades, and he disguised himself at once so that n.o.body could take him for what he was. Just at daybreak he entered the town, and walked up and down till he came by chance to Baba Mustapha's stall, which was always open before any of the shops.
The old cobbler was just going to work when the robber bade him good-morrow, and said,--
"Honest man, you begin to work very early; how can one of your age see so well? Even if it were lighter, I question whether you could see to st.i.tch."
"You do not know me," replied Baba Mustapha; "for old as I am I have excellent eyes. You will not doubt me when I tell you that I sewed the body of a dead man together in a place where I had not so much light as I have now."
"A dead body!" exclaimed the robber amazed.
"Yes, yes," answered Baba Mustapha; "I see you want to know more, but you shall not."
The robber felt sure that he was on the right track. He put a piece of gold into Baba Mustapha's hand, and said to him,--
"I do not want to learn your secret, though you could safely trust me with it. The only thing I ask of you is to show me the house where you st.i.tched up the dead body."
"I could not do that," replied Baba Mustapha, "if I would. I was taken to a certain place, whence I was led blindfold to the house, and afterwards brought back again in the same manner."
"Well," replied the robber, "you may remember a little of the way that you were led blindfold. Come, let me blind your eyes at the same place. We will walk together, and perhaps you may recall the way. Here is another piece of gold for you."
This was enough to bring Baba Mustapha to his feet. They soon reached the place where Morgiana had bandaged his eyes, and here he was blindfolded again. Baba Mustapha and the robber walked on till they came to Ca.s.sim's house, where Ali Baba now lived. Here the old man stopped, and when the thief pulled off the band, and found that his guide could not tell him whose house it was, he let him go. But before he started back for the forest himself, well pleased with what he had learned, he marked the door with a piece of chalk which he had ready in his hand.
Soon after this Morgiana came out upon some errand, and when she returned she saw the mark the robber had made, and stopped to look at it.
"What can this mean?" she said to herself. "Somebody intends my master harm, and in any case it is best to guard against the worst." Then she fetched a piece of chalk, and marked two or three doors on each side in the same manner, saying nothing to her master or mistress.
When the robber rejoined his troop in the forest, and told of his good fortune in meeting the one man that could have helped him, they were all delighted.
"Comrades," said the captain, "we have no time to lose. Let us set off at once, well armed and disguised, enter the town by twos, and join at the great square. Meanwhile our comrade who has brought us the good news and I will go and find out the house, and decide what had best be done."
Two by two they entered the town. Last of all went the captain and the spy. When they came to the first of the houses which Morgiana had marked, the spy pointed it out. But the captain noticed that the next door was chalked in the same manner, and asked his guide which house it was, that or the first. The guide knew not what answer to make, and was still more puzzled when he and the captain saw five or six houses marked after this same fashion. He a.s.sured the captain, with an oath, that he had marked but one, and could not tell who had chalked the rest, nor could he say at which house the cobbler had stopped.
There was nothing to do but to join the other robbers, and tell them to go back to the cave. Here they were told why they had all returned, and the guide was declared by all to be worthy of death. Indeed, he condemned himself, owning that he ought to have been more careful, and prepared to receive the stroke which was to cut off his head.
The safety of the troop still demanded that the second comer to the cave should be found, and another of the gang offered to try it, with the same penalty if he should fail. Like the other robber, he found out Baba Mustapha, and, through him, the house, which he marked, in a place remote from sight, with red chalk.
But nothing could escape Morgiana's eyes, and when she went out, not long after, and saw the red chalk, she argued with herself as before, and marked the other houses near by in the same place and manner.