The Monsoon (55 page)

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Authors: Wilbur Smith

Tags: #Thriller, #Adventure

BOOK: The Monsoon
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“So, you treated the ferenghi prisoners of al-Auf as well as the true believers?” Tom asked.

“Of course. That is the will of Allah, the Compassionate.”

“You cared for my brother? You gave him comfort?”

“He is a winsome boy, your brother. I did what I could for him,” Ben Abram said.

“But Allah knows, it was not as much as I would have wished.” Tom hesitated slightly before he countermanded his father’s orders, but then he reached a decision.

“You have earned your freedom for that. I will send you back to Zanzibar with the women and children.” He turned to the guards.

“Have this man’s chains struck off, then bring him back to me. He is not to be transported to Ceylon with the rest of these blackguards.” When Ben Abram returned, free of his chains, Tom sent him to help the surgeon’s mates in the makeshift thatched-roof hospital.

Laden with her human cargo, the Yeoman sailed with the following dawn, and Tom watched her from the beach until she disappeared below the eastern horizon. He knew that Anderson was optimistic in thinking he could make the long voyage across the Indian Ocean to Ceylon and return to Flor de la Mar within two months.

“The longer he takes, the more time for Father to grow strong again,” Tom whispered, as he closed the telescope and called for the longboat.

s soon as Tom entered the stern cabin he realized that his father was worse than when he had left him only hours before.

There was the sour smell of sickness in the cabin and Hal was flushed, restless. Once again he had relapsed into delirium.

“There are rats crawling on my body. Black rats, hairy-” He broke off and screamed, and struck Out at things Tom could not see. In a panic Tom sent the longboat back to the island to fetch Dr. Reynolds.

Tom bent over Hal and touched his face. The skin was so hot that he jerked away his hand in surprise. Aboli brought a bowl of cool water and they stripped back the sheets from Hal’s emaciated body, from which the fever had burned the flesh. As they exposed the stumps of his legs the stench of corruption rose in a thick cloud, strong enough to make Tom gag.

“Tell the doctor to hurry!” he bellowed and heard his order relayed to the approaching longboat. Aboli and Tom bathed the fever-hot body and laid wet cloths over Hal’s trunk to try to reduce his temperature. Tom was relieved when at last Reynolds came down the passage and hurried to Hal’s side. He unwound the bandages.

Immediately the stink in the small hot cabin was stronger.

Tom stood behind him and peered in horror at the stumps of his father’s legs. They were swollen purple red, and the stitches of black cat-gut were almost hidden in the puffy flesh.

“AhP Reynolds murmured, and leaned forward to sniff the wounds like a connoisseur nosing a fine claret.

“They have ripened very prettily. At last I can pluck the sutures.” He rolled up his sleeves, and called for the pewter bowl.

“Hold it like that under the stump,” he told Tom.

“Hold him down!” he ordered Aboli, who leaned over Hal and took his shoulders gently in his huge hands.

Reynolds took a firm hold of the end of one of the strings of cat-gut that hung out between the pursed crimson lips of the wound, and tugged at it. Hal stiffened and screamed, and the sweat burst out across his forehead in a white rash. The black string came free and slithered out of the wound, followed by a gush of greenish yellow pus, which dripped thick as cream into the pewter bowl. Hal dropped back on the pillows in a dead faint.

Reynolds took the bowl from Tom and sniffed the vile effluent again.

“Lovely! It’s benign, not a taint of gas gangrene to it.”

While Tom knelt at his side, he plucked out the other sutures one at a time from the inflamed, swollen flesh. Each had a tiny piece of yellow detritus, the remains of the decayed blood vessel, caught in the knot at the end. He dropped them into the bowl. When he had finished he rebandaged the stumps with fresh white cotton strips.

“Should we not wash the legs first?” Tom asked diffidently.

Reynolds shook his head firmly.

“We will let them heal in the pus. It is safer to let nature take its own course without interference,” he said, sternly.

“Your father’s chances of survival are now very much improved, and within another few days I will be able to remove the main stitches that are holding the flaps of the stumps.”

That night his father rested much easier, and by the morning the heat -and inflammation of his wounds had !” abated considerably.

Three days later Reynolds removed the remaining stitches. He snipped the black threads with a pair of scissors and used ivory tweezers to pull the last remainin pieces of cat-gut from the tormented flesh.

Within days thereafter Hal was able to sit up with pillows propped behind his back, and to take a keen, intelligent interest in the reports Tom gave him of events.

“I have sent the captured dhow south to the Gloriettas to fetch the Lamb. She should rejoin the squadron within two weeks at the latest,” Tom told him.

“I shall be relieved when we have her and that fat cargo of tea once more under our guns,” Hal said.

“She’s very vulnerable lying down there unprotected.” Tom’s estimate was accurate, and it was exactly fourteen days later that the two vessels, the small dhow and the matronly Lamb, sailed through the pass in the reef and dropped anchor once more in the lagoon of Flor de la Mar.

from had Mustapha, the captain of the dhow, and his terrified crew brought down from the cells in the fort where they had been imprisoned since their capture by the Minotaur. When they were paraded before him, they fell on their knees before him in the white beach sand, fully believing that the hour of their execution had come at last.

“I do not believe you are guilty of piracy,” Tom said, to calm their fears.

“As Allah is my witness, what you say is the truth, exalted one,” Mustapha agreed fervently, and touched the sand with his forehead.

When he looked up again his forehead was dusted with the white grains like a sugared bun.

“I am setting you free,” Tom reassured him, “but I make only one condition. You must take certain passengers back with you to the port of Zanzibar. The chief of these is, like you, an honest man and a son of the Prophet. There are also the women and children who were with alAuf when we captured the island.”

“The blessings of Allah upon you, wise and compassionate one!” Mustapha genuflected again and tears of joy streamed down into his beard.

“However,” Tom cut short this show of gratitude, “there is no doubt in my mind that you came here to trade with al-Auf, and that you knew full well that the goods he offered were the plunder of a pirate and that they were besmirched with the blood of innocent men.”

“I call on God to witness that I did not know,” Mustapha cried passionately.

Tom cocked his head on one side and looked heavenwards for a minute. Then he said drily, “God does not seem to answer your call.

Therefore, I will fine you the amount of sixty, five thousand gold dinars, which is, by a remarkable coincidence, exactly the sum we found in your chest when we searched your ship.” Mustapha wailed with horror at such terrible injustice, but Tom turned away and told the guards, “Release them.

Give them back the dhow and let them go. They will take all the women and children. The Arab physician, Ben Abram, will go with them too, but send him to me before he goes aboard the dhow.” When Ben Abram came, Tom led him away to the end of the long white beach so that they could make their farewells in privacy.

“Mustapha, the owner of the dhow, has agreed to take you to Zanzibar when he sails.” Tom gestured across the water of the lagoon to where the small ship lay at anchor.

“He is taking the women and children from the garrison on board now.”

They watched the refugees being ferried aboard, clutching their infants and pathetic bundles of their possessions.

Ben Abram nodded gravely.

“I offer you my thanks, but Allah will write your true reward against your name.

You are young, but you will grow up to be a man of power.

I have seen you fight. Any man who can overcome al-Auf in single combat is a warrior indeed.” He nodded again as he considered that feat of arms.

“The manner in which you have treated those weaker than yourself, the widows and orphans, shows that you temper your strength with com, passion, and that will make you great.”

“You are also a man of great heart,” Tom told him.

“I have watched you work with the sick and wounded, even those who do not follow the teachings of your Prophet.”

“God is great,” Ben Abram intoned.

“In his sight we are all worthy of mercy.”

“Even the young children.”

“Especially the young children,” Ben Abram agreed.

“That is why, old father, you are going to tell me those things concerning my brother that so far you have kept from me.” Ben Abram came up short and stared at Tom, but Tom returned his gaze steadily and Ben Abram dropped his eyes.

“You know the name of the man who bought my brother from al-Auf,” Tom insisted.

“You know his name.” Ben Abram stroked his beard and looked out to sea.

Then, at last, he sighed.

“Yes,” he said quietly.

“I know his name, but he is a mighty man, of royal blood. I cannot betray him.

That is why I have concealed his name from you, even though I have sympathy for your loss.” Tom was silent, allowing the old man to wrestle with his conscience and his sense of duty. Then Ben Abram said, “You already know the man’s name.” Tom stared at him, puzzled.

“You captured one of his dhows,” Ben Abram prompted him.

Tom’s expression cleared.

“AlMalik!” he exclaimed.

“Prince Abd Muhammad alMalik?”

“I did not say the name,” said Ben Abram.

“I did not betray my prince.”

“So the lakh of rupees that was on board the dhow of alMalik was indeed the payment for my brother, as we suspected?” Tom asked.

“I cannot say if that is true.” Ben Abram ruffled his silver beard.

“But neither can I say that it is false.”

“Both my father and I believed that was so, but I could not understand how Dorry could be gone from Flor de la Mar before the payment arrived on the island. I cannot believe that al-Auf would trust anyone with such a valuable slave as Dorry without receiving full payment first.” The old man replied, “The Prince is the most powerful man in Araby, save only for his elder brother, the Caliph himself. AlMalik cannot count his ships and his gold, his warriors and his camels, his slaves and his wives.

His fame spreads from the mighty River Nile and the deserts of the north, east to the kingdom of the Great Mogul, west to the forbidden forests of Africa, and south to the land of the Monamatapa.”

“You are saying that al-Auf trusted him with the debt of a lakh of rupees?” Tom demanded.

“I am saying that al-Auf trusted no living man, but Prince Abd Muhammad alMalik.”

“When you leave here, Ben Abram, will you return to Lamu, where alMalik is the governor?” I ” will return to Lamu,” the old man agreed.

“Perchance you will see my brother again?”

“That is in the hands of God.”

“If God is kind, will you give a message to my brother?”

“Your brother is a boy of great beauty and courage.” Ben Abram smiled at the memory.

“I called him my little red lion cub. Because of the kindness you have shown me, and because of the affection I have for the child, I will carry your message to him.”

“Tell my brother that I will be true to the dreadful oath I swore to him. I will never forget that oath, not even on the day of my death.” Dorian sat on a mattress on the stone floor. The only air in his cell came through the narrow loophole opposite him. It was a faint eddy of the monsoon that reached him, and kept the heat bearable.

When he listened he could hear the sounds of prisoners in the other cells along the passage, their muttering broken at intervals by outbursts of abusive shouting at their Arab guards and bitter argument among themselves. They were like dogs confined in cages too small for their numbers, and in the oppressive heat these naturally aggressive, violent sailors became murderous. Only yesterday he had heard the sounds of a terrible conflict, and of a man being strangled to death in the next cell while his mates cheered on the murder. Dorian shuddered now, and reapplied himself to the task he had chosen to while away the monotony of his captivity. He was using a link of his leg irons to scratch his name into the wall. Many others who had been confined in this cell had left their marks carved into the soft coral blocks.

“Perhaps one day Tom will find my name here and know what happened to me,” he told himself, as he rubbed away at the stone.

His captors had put the chains on him only the previous morning.

At first they had left him unfettered, then yesterday they had caught him trying to wriggle out through the narrow loophole in the far wall.

Dorian had not been daunted by the thirty-foot drop below the opening, and he had succeeded in forcing the top half of his small body through it before there had been cries of alarm behind him, his gaolers had seized his ankles and dragged him back into the cell.

They held him while he struggled like a fish on a hook.

“Al-Auf will have no mercy on us if the infidel puppy injures himself. Bring the slave chains.” A blacksmith had altered the fetters to fit his small ankle.

“Make certain that the iron does not gall him. Al-Auf will kill the man who marks his white skin or harms one red hair on his head.” Apart from the leg-irons, they treated him with consideration and respect. Every morning, despite his struggles, two veiled women took him down to the courtyard. They stripped him and oiled his body, then bathed him at the rainwater cistern. On board ship Dorian had gone for months at a time without bathing, there was no fresh water for such extravagance, added to which all seamen knew that too much washing reduced the natural oils of the skin and was bad for the health. The Mussulmen were strangely addicted to these excesses of personal cleanliness Dorian had watched them wash five times a day, before they went through the ritual of their prayers, so even though it threatened his health, he had to resign himself to this daily ordeal by water. He even grew to welcome the break in the dreary routine of his captivity, and had more trouble each time in rousing his temper to register his protests.

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