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Table of contents
BOOK I THE MAN
CHAPTER I PRINCE KASAM OF BALUCHISTAN
CHAPTER II THE AMERICAN COMMISSION
CHAPTER III THE PERSIAN PHYSICIAN
CHAPTER IV THE DAUGHTER OF THE VIZIER
CHAPTER V THE PERIL OF BURAH KHAN
CHAPTER VI THE MAN OF DESTINY
CHAPTER VII DIRRAG
CHAPTER VIII A WOMAN’S WAY
CHAPTER IX THE SIXTH DAY
CHAPTER X AHMED KHAN
BOOK II THE WOMAN
CHAPTER XI CAPTURE OF DAVID THE JEW
CHAPTER XII THE GIRL ON THE DIVAN.
CHAPTER XIII A WILD WOOING
CHAPTER XIV THE VEILED WOMAN.
CHAPTER XV SALAMAN
CHAPTER XVI THE ABDUCTION
CHAPTER XVII DAVID SELLS AN IMPORTANT SECRET
CHAPTER XVIII THE VIZIER OPENS THE GATE
CHAPTER XIX IN THE GARDEN OF AGAHR
CHAPTER XX THE GIRL IN THE HAREM
CHAPTER XXI THE CHAMBER OF DEATH
CHAPTER XXII BY THE HAND OF ALLAH
CHAPTER XXIII THE VENGEANCE OF MAIE
CHAPTER XXIV THE SPIRIT OF UNREST
CHAPTER XXV KASAM KHAN
CHAPTER XXVI HER SERENE HIGHNESS THE KHANUM
BOOK I THE MAN
CHAPTER I PRINCE KASAM OF BALUCHISTAN
“
What
country did you say, Prince?”
“
Baluchistan,
my lord.”The
great financier lay back in his chair and a slight smile flickered
over his stern features. Then he removed his eye-glasses and
twirled
them thoughtfully around his finger as he addressed the young man
opposite.
“
I
remember,” said he, “that when I attended school as a boy one of
my chiefest trials in geography was to learn how to bound
Baluchistan.”
“
Ah,
do not say that, sir,” exclaimed Prince Kasam, eagerly. “It is a
customary thing, whenever my country is mentioned, for an
Englishman
to refer to his geography. I have borne the slight with rare
patience, Lord Marvale, since first I came, a boy, to London; but
permit me to say that I expected
you
to be better informed.”
“
But,
why?” asked the nobleman, raising his brows at the retort.
“
Because
Baluchistan is a great country, sir. You might drop all of England
upon one of its plains—and have some trouble to find it
again.”Lord
Marvale’s eyes twinkled.
“
And
how about London?” he asked. “You have many such cities, I
suppose?”
“
There
is but one London, my lord,” answered the young man composedly;
“and, to be frank with you, there are few clusters of houses in my
country that are worthy the name of cities. We Baluchi are a wild
race, as yet untamed by the influence of your western civilization,
and those who wander in desert and plain far exceed in numbers the
dwellers in towns.”
“
I
am not so ignorant as you may suppose,” declared Lord Marvale; “for
it is a part of my business training to acquire information
concerning all countries of the world, however remote and barbaric
they may be. For instance, I know that your country is ruled by the
Khan of Kelat, and that the English have established a protectorate
over it.”
“
Kelat!”
cried the other, a touch of scorn in his tone; “that, sir, is not
Baluchistan at all. It is the country of the Brahoes, a weak and
cowardly race that is distinct from the Baluchi, my own people.
Small
wonder they need the English to protect them! But Kelat, although
placed in Baluchistan by your map-makers, is another country
altogether, and the unconquered Baluchi owe no allegiance to any
nation in the world.”For
a time the financier sat silently in his chair. Then he
asked:
“
You
have lived here since childhood, Prince?”
“
Since
eight years of age, my lord.”
“
Why
were you educated in London, if your people dislike
Europeans?”
“
For
political reasons, sir. I am the sole legitimate descendant of
seven
generations of Khans of Mekran—rulers of all Baluchistan. But in my
grandsire’s time our throne was usurped by Keedar Khan, a fierce
tribesman who carried all before his mighty sword. His son, Burah
Khan, now an old man and in bad health, at present rules at Mekran.
Therefore I was sent by my kinsmen, who are yet powerful and loyal
to
our family, to London, that I might escape assassination at the
hands
of the usurpers.”
“
I
see; you hope to succeed Burah Khan.”
“
That
is my ambition. All that stands in my way is a son of the khan,
who,
however, has been confined in a Sunnite monastery since youth and
is
reported to be more fitted to become a priest than a ruler of
men.”
“
Well?”
“
My
lord, I desire your coöperation and assistance. Twice have I
secretly revisited Baluchistan, where my uncle is vizier to the
present khan. The adherents to my cause are many. We have no money,
but possess vast store of rare jewels, and much gold and silver
plate
hoarded for centuries—since the day when Alexander’s army,
marching through our land, was forced to abandon and cast aside
much
of its burden of plunder. If we can convert this treasure into
money
it is our intention to hire an army of Afghan mercenaries to assist
us and with their aid to rise at the death of Burah Khan, which
cannot be long delayed, and again seize the throne that by right
belongs to me. You, my lord, are noted for your shrewdness in
financing great affairs. Here is one of magnitude in which you may
profit largely. Will you aid me?”The
man appealed to was, through long experience, a competent judge of
human nature, and while Kasam spoke he studied the young Oriental
critically.The
prince was of medium height, full faced and broad shouldered. His
beard was clipped in modern fashion, and he wore a conventional
frock
coat. But his swarthy skin and glittering dark eyes proclaimed his
Eastern origin, and for head-dress he wore the turban of his tribe,
twisted gracefully but with studied care into that particular fold
which to an Oriental declared as plainly as the written page of a
book the wearer’s nationality and tribe and degree. To the
Westerner a turban means nothing more than a head-covering; to the
Oriental it is eloquent of detail. In the manner of fold, the size,
the color and the material of which it is composed, he reads
clearly
the wearer’s caste and condition in life, and accords him the exact
respect that is his due.Aside
from the turban, Kasam wore the tribal sash over his shoulder, thus
combining the apparel of the orient with that of the Occident in a
picturesque and most effective manner.The
expression of his face was animated and winning; he gesticulated
freely, but with grace; the words that flowed from his full red
lips
were fervent, but well chosen.Prince
Kasam spoke fluent English. His handsome countenance glowed with
the
eager enthusiasm of youth, with the conscious pride of high
station,
of powerful friends and of a just cause.Lord
Marvale was impressed.
“
Come
to me in three days,” said the banker. “I will make enquiries and
take counsel with my colleagues. Then I shall be able to consider
your proposal with more intelligence.”Three
days later a long conference was held in Lord Marvale’s office,
during which Prince Kasam related with clearness yet characteristic
Eastern loquaciousness the details of a carefully planned
conspiracy
to replace him upon the throne of his ancestors. The plot seemed
both
simple and practical, and Lord Marvale was by no means averse to
acquiring the rare treasure of ancient plate and the rich oriental
jewels that the adherents of Prince Kasam were anxious to exchange
for English money and support.It
was not the only conference before the bargain was finally struck,
but Kasam’s proposals met with no serious opposition and it was
arranged that he should secretly return to Baluchistan, get
together
the treasure, and bring it with him to London, where Lord Marvale
would convert it into money and also negotiate with the Afghans for
an army of mercenaries. The countenance and moral support of the
English government the banker could safely pledge.It
did not occur to Kasam that time might become a powerful factor in
his future plans, and that all this detail would require
considerable
time to consummate. He had worn out many years of tedious waiting
in
London, and really thought events were beginning to move swiftly.
But
when he received a message stating that Burah Khan was failing fast
and urging him to hasten home, he realized that in order to
accomplish his purposes he must lose no single moment in delay.
Therefore he hurried to Lord Marvale with the information that he
would return at once to Baluchistan.
“
Good!”
exclaimed the banker. “Your decision will relieve me of a slight
embarrassment and enable me, through your courtesy, to serve an
influential friend.”
“
That
will please me very much,” said Kasam.
“
There
has arrived in London a party of American capitalists representing
a
great New York syndicate, and our minister in Washington has given
their chief a letter to me, asking me to arrange for the safe
conduct
of the party through Baluchistan.”
“
Baluchistan!
My own country? Why, my lord, few Englishmen have ever approached
its
borders, and never an American—so far as I know. What can induce
them to visit Baluchistan?”
“
I
understand it is a matter of some railway enterprise or other.
These
Americans penetrate into the most outlandish and unfrequented
places,
and no one ever pays much attention to their wanderings. But the
minister’s letter asks me to supply them with a guide. What do you
say, Prince, to undertaking the task yourself? It will enable you
to
return to Mekran incognito, as the conductor of a party of wealthy
and influential Americans; and, as you are not likely to be
recognized, you may accomplish your task of collecting the treasure
more safely than if you travelled alone.”
“
That
is true,” answered the young man, thoughtfully; and after a
moment’s reflection he added: “Very well; inform your Americans
that I will guide them to Baluchistan—even to the walls of
Mekran—and no one can do it more safely or swiftly than I.”
CHAPTER II THE AMERICAN COMMISSION
When the American
Construction Syndicate, of New York and Chicago, conceived the idea
of laying a railway across Baluchistan, through the Alexandrian
Pass and so into the Lower Indies—thus connecting Asia and Europe
by the shortest possible route—it was regarded as a bold
undertaking even for this gigantic corporation. But the Syndicate
scorned the imputation that any undertaking might be too hazardous
or difficult for it to accomplish; so, when the route was proposed
and its advantages understood, the railway was as good as built, in
the minds of the directors.There were preliminaries, of course. A commission must
be sent to Baluchistan to secure right of way. And the route must
be surveyed. But these were mere matters of detail. Already the
Syndicate had built a road across the Balkans; even now it was
laying rails in Turkestan. And this Baluchistan route was but a
part of a great system wisely and cleverly
projected.The Alexandrian Pass was the same that nearly proved
fatal to Alexander the Great on the occasion of his invasion of
India. Since then little had been heard of it. But doubtless the
Pass was still there, and had been waiting all these years for some
one to utilize it. It was part of the domain of the Khan of Mekran,
who also ruled the greater part of Baluchistan.The directors had the histories consulted. Baluchistan
seemed practically unknown to history. There were no books of
travel in Baluchistan. Strange! The country was there—very big on
the maps—and some one ought to know something about it. But no one
apparently did.Well, the Commission would discover all there was to
know, and a semi-barbarous country would be easy to deal
with.Next the Commission itself was considered, and Colonel
Piedmont Moore was selected as its chief. Colonel Moore was one of
the Syndicate’s largest stockholders and most respected officers,
and the gentleman himself directed the selection of the chief,
because he had decided to get away from the office for a time and
travel, his health having become undermined by too close attention
to business.Dr. Warner, his intimate friend, had repeatedly
counselled him to break away from work and take better care of
himself. Travel was what he needed—travel in such remote lands that
no temptation would exist to return to New York to “see how the
Syndicate was getting on.”When the Baluchistan Commission was first spoken of the
Colonel mentioned it to his old friend, who was also a stockholder
in the concern, the doctor having grown wealthy and retired from
active practice several years before.
“ Just the thing!” declared the old gentleman. “A trip
to Baluchistan would probably set you on your feet again. Let me
see—where is it? Somewhere in South America, isn’t
it?”
“ No; I believe it’s in Asia,” returned the Colonel,
gravely. “And that is a long distance to journey
alone.”
“ Why, bless your soul! I’ll go with you,” declared Dr.
Warner, cheerfully. “I’ve intended to do a bit of travelling
myself, as soon as I got around to it; and Baluchistan has a fine
climate, I’m sure.”
“ No one seems to know much about it,” answered the
Colonel.
“ All the better! Why, we’ll be explorers. We’ll find
out all about Darkest Baluchistan, and perhaps write a book on our
discoveries. We’ll combine business and pleasure. I’m in the
Syndicate. Have me appointed as your second on the Commission, and
the Syndicate shall pay our expenses.”So the plans were made, and afterward amplified to
include the Colonel’s son, Mr. Allison Moore, as official surveyor.
Not that Allison Moore was an especially practical or proficient
man in his profession—indeed, the directors feared just the
contrary was true—but this was going to be a sort of family party,
and the Colonel was a person absolutely to be depended upon. He was
willing to vouch for his son, and that settled the
matter.In fact, the Colonel was glad to have Allison with him
on this trip. Glad to have the young man under his eye, for one
thing, and glad of an opportunity to advance his son
professionally. For Allison seemed to have some difficulty in
getting the right sort of a start, even though he had spent years
in making the attempt.At first the young man declined to go to Baluchistan,
and there were angry words between father and son. But Dr. Warner
acted as peacemaker and Allison finally consented to go provided
his father would pay certain debts he had accumulated and make him
an allowance in addition to his salary from the syndicate. It was
the first salary he had ever received, and although the syndicate
thought it liberal enough, it seemed absurdly small to a gentleman
of Allison’s requirements.All this having been pleasantly settled, the doctor
proposed taking along his daughter Bessie, who had been pleading to
go ever since the trip was suggested.At first the Colonel demurred.
“ It’s a business expedition,” said
he.
“ Business and pleasure,” amended the doctor,
promptly.
“ And I don’t know what sort of country we’re going to.
It may not be pleasant for ladies.”
“ We’ll make it pleasant for them. Better take Janet
with you, Colonel, and we’ll induce Aunt Lucy to go along as
chaperon.”
“ She wouldn’t consider such a trip an
instant.”
“ Who wouldn’t?”
“ Janet.”
“ Ask her about it.”So the Colonel mentioned it at dinner, in a casual way,
and Miss Janet Moore at first opened her beautiful dark eyes in
surprise, then considered the matter silently for a half hour, and
at dessert decided she would go.The Colonel was pleased. It was difficult to interest
Janet in anything, and if the Baluchistan trip would draw her out
of her dreamy lassitude and awaken in her something of her old
bright self, why, the syndicate be thanked for conceiving the idea
of a Commission!The old gentleman tolerated his son as a cross to be
borne with Christian resignation: he was devoted to his beautiful
daughter.Janet Moore in face and form represented that type of
American girl which has come to be acknowledged in all countries
the ideal of womanly grace and loveliness. The delicate contour of
her features did not destroy nor even abate their unmistakable
strength and dignity. The well-opened eyes were clear as a mountain
pool, yet penetrating and often discomfiting in their steadiness;
the mouth was wide, yet sweet and essentially feminine; the chin,
held high and firm, was alluringly curved and dimpled, displaying
beneath it a throat so rarely perfect that only in the Sicilian
Aphrodite has sculptor ever equalled it. Her head was poised in
queenly fashion upon a form so lithe and rounded that Diana might
well have envied it, and while Janet’s expression at all times bore
a trace of sadness, a half smile always lingered upon her lips—a
smile so pathetic in its appeal that one who loved her would be far
less sympathetically affected by a flood of tears. The girl had
suffered a terrible disappointment seven years before. The man she
loved had been proven an arrant scoundrel. He had forged her
father’s name; been guilty of crime and ingratitude; worse than all
else, he had run away to escape punishment. It had been clearly
proven against Herbert Osborne, yet Janet, by a strange caprice,
would never accept the proof. She had a distinctly feminine idea
that in spite of everything Herbert was incapable of crime or any
sort of dishonesty. And, knowing full well that she stood alone in
her belief, the girl proudly suffered in silence.There was more to Janet’s old romance than anyone ever
dreamed; but whatever the girl’s secret might be, she kept all
details safely locked within her own bosom.The Colonel was surprised that his daughter should so
readily agree to undertake a tedious and perhaps uninteresting
journey to a far-away country; but he was nevertheless delighted.
The change would assuredly do her good, and Bessie Warner was just
the jolly companion she needed to waken her into new
life.So the doctor was informed that the two girls would
accompany the Commission, and Bessie at once set out to interview
her Aunt Lucy and persuade that very accommodating lady to go with
them as chaperon. Aunt Lucy was without a single tie to keep her in
New York, and she was so accustomed to being dragged here and there
by her energetic niece that she never stopped to enquire where
Baluchistan was or how they were expected to get there. In her mild
and pleasant little voice she remarked:
“ Very well, dear. When do we start?”
“ Oh, I’ll send you word, auntie. And thank you very
much for being so nice.”
“ We’ll be back by Thanksgiving, I
suppose?”
“ I hardly know, dear. It’s a business trip of papa’s,
and of course the length of our stay depends entirely upon him and
the Colonel, who is some way interested in the matter. By the way,
it’s called a Commission, and we’ll be very important travellers, I
assure you! Good bye, auntie, dear!”Then she hurried away; for that suggestion of returning
by Thanksgiving day, scarcely a month distant, showed her how
little Aunt Lucy really knew of the far journey she had so
recklessly undertaken.So this was the personnel of the famous Commission that
was to invade Baluchistan and secure from the Khan of Mekran a
right of way for a railroad through the Alexandrian Pass: Col.
Piedmont Moore, Chief; Dr. Luther Warner, Assistant; Allison Moore,
Civil Engineer; Janet Moore and Bessie Warner, chaperoned by Mrs.
Lucy Higgins, Accessories and Appendages.The Commission crossed the ocean in safety; it reached
London without incident worthy of record, and there the Chief
endeavored to secure some definite knowledge of
Baluchistan.Not until he had presented the British minister’s
letter to Lord Marvale did the Colonel meet with any good fortune
in his quest. Then the atmosphere of doubt and uncertainty suddenly
cleared, for a real Baluch of Baluchistan was then in London and
could be secured to pilot the Americans to their
destination.To be sure this native—Kasam Ullah Raab by name—was
uncommunicative at first regarding the character of the Khan of
Mekran or the probability of the Syndicate’s being able to
negotiate for a right of way through his country; and, indeed, the
Baluch could be induced to commit himself neither to criticism nor
encouragement of the plan. But, after all, it was not to be
supposed that much information of value could be secured from a
mere guide. The main point to be considered just then was how to
journey to Mekran with comfort and despatch, and incidentally the
accomplishments and attainments of the guide
himself.Kasam’s charming manners and frank, handsome
countenance soon won the confidence of the entire party. Even
Allison Moore did not withhold his admiration for the “gentlemanly
barbarian,” as Aunt Lucy called him, and the young ladies felt
entirely at ease in his company.
“ Really,” said Bessie, “our Kasam is quite a superior
personage, for a guide.”And the prince overheard the remark and
smiled.During the journey the guide proved very thoughtful and
gallant toward the young ladies, and with the friendly familiarity
common to Americans they made Kasam one of themselves and treated
him with frank consideration. It was perhaps natural that the
prince should respond by openly confiding to them his rank and
ambition, thus explaining his reason for journeying with them in
the humble capacity of guide. Before they had reached Quettah the
entire party knew every detail of Kasam’s history, and canvassed
his prospect of becoming khan as eagerly as they did the details of
their own vast enterprise. Indeed, the Colonel was quick to
recognize the advantage the Commission would acquire by being on
friendly terms with the future Khan of Mekran, and since Burah Khan
was old and suffered from many wounds received in many battles, the
chances were strongly in favor of the young prince being soon
called to the throne.
“ My uncle is vizier to the usurper,” said Kasam, “and
I will secure, through him, an interview for you with Burah Khan.
Also my uncle shall extend to your party his good offices. He is
the leader of the party which is plotting to restore to me the
throne of my ancestors, and is therefore entirely devoted to my
interests. Of course you will understand that I dare not publicly
announce my presence in Mekran; therefore I will guide you as a
hired servant, and so escape notice. Only my uncle Agahr and two of
the sirdars—or leaders of the tribes—are acquainted with my person
or know who I really am. But the spies of the Khan are everywhere,
as I have discovered during my former secret visits to Mekran, and
it is best for me to avoid them at this
juncture.”All this was intensely interesting to every member of
the Commission, and it is no wonder Bessie smiled upon the handsome
guide who possessed so romantic a story. But Bessie’s brightest
smiles seemed less desirable to Kasam than one sympathetic look
from Janet’s Moore’s serious dark eyes.The evident adoration with which the “foreign prince,”
as she called him, came to regard Miss Moore was a source of much
uneasiness to Aunt Lucy; but Janet did not seem to notice it, and
the young man was ever most humble and discreet while in her
presence. In fact, there was nothing in the prince’s behavior that
the gentle old lady might complain of openly. Yet she had her own
suspicions, clinched by experienced observation, of the foreigner’s
intentions, and determined to keep a sharp lookout in the interests
of her charge. Soon they would enter a barbarous country where this
handsome prince would be more powerful than the great Commission
itself. And then?At Quettah they secured camels and formed a caravan to
cross the corner of the Gedrasian Desert and so journey on to
Mekran; but there was more or less grumbling when this necessity
was disclosed. Allison Moore, who had behaved fairly well so far,
flatly declined to go further toward the wild and unknown country
they had come so far to visit. The inn at Quettah was fairly good.
He would stay there. Vainly his father stormed and argued,
alternately; he even threatened to cut his son off with a dime—the
nearest approach to the legendary shilling he could think of; but
Allison proved stubborn. Having once declared his intention, he
answered nothing to the demands of his father or the pleadings of
Dr. Warner. He smoked his pipe, stared straight ahead and would not
budge an inch from Quettah.
“ I’ll wait here till you come back,” he said,
sullenly. “If you ever do.”This was the first disagreeable incident of the
journey. Even Bessie was depressed by Allison’s inference that they
were involved in a dangerous enterprise. As for Aunt Lucy, she
suddenly conceived an idea that the band of Afghans Kasam had
employed to accompany the caravan were nothing more than desperate
bandits, who would carry the Commission into the mountains and
either murder every individual outright or hold them for an
impossible ransom.Kasam’s earnest protestations finally disabused the
minds of the ladies of all impressions of danger. It was true that
in Baluchistan they might meet with lawless bands of Baluchi; but
their caravan was too well guarded to be interfered with. They were
supplied with fleet saddle horses and fleeter dromedaries; the
twenty Afghans were bold and fearless and would fight for them unto
death. Really, they had nothing at all to fear.So at last they started, an imposing cavalcade, for the
Khan’s dominions, leaving Allison in the doorway of the inn smoking
his everlasting pipe and staring sullenly after them. The ladies
rode dromedaries, and found them less uncomfortable than they had
at first feared they would be. The Colonel did not seem to mind his
son’s desertion, for Kasam had whispered in his ear an amusing plan
to conquer the young surveyor’s obstinacy.An hour later one of the prince’s Afghans, selected
because he spoke the English language, returned from the caravan to
warn Allison that he was in grave danger. The night before a plot
had been overheard to murder and rob the young man as soon as his
friends had departed.
“ If you shoot well and are quick with the knife,”
added the Afghan, coolly, “you may succeed in preserving your life
till our return. His Highness the Prince sent me to advise you to
fight to the last, for these scoundrels of Quettah have no mercy on
foreigners.”Then Allison stared again, rather blankly this time,
and the next moment requested the Afghan to secure him a
horse.Kasam was assuring the Colonel for the twentieth time
that his son would soon rejoin them when Allison and the Afghan
rode up at a gallop and attached themselves without a word to the
cavalcade. And the Colonel was undecided whether most to commend
the guide’s cunning or his son’s cautiousness.This portion of their journey was greatly enjoyed by
all members of the party. The doctor declared he felt more than
ever like an explorer, and the Colonel silently speculated on all
that might be gained by opening this unknown territory to the world
by means of the railway. The distinct novelty of their present mode
of progression was delightful to the ladies, and Aunt Lucy decided
she much preferred a camel to an automobile. Even Janet’s pale
cheeks gathered a tint from the desert air, and despite the
uncertainties of their pilgrimage the entire party retained to a
wonderful degree their cheerfulness and good
nature.At the end of four days they halted in a small village
where Kasam intended them to rest while he alone went forward to
Mekran to obtain their passports. For they were now upon the edge
of the Khan’s dominions, and without Burah’s protection the party
was liable to interference by some wandering tribe of
Baluchi.The accommodations they were able to secure in this
unfrequented village were none of the best, and Allison began to
grumble anew, thereby bringing upon himself a stern rebuke from the
guide, who frankly informed the young man that he was making his
friends uncomfortable when nothing could be gained by
protesting.
“ You cannot go back, and you dare not go forward
without passports,” said Kasam. “Therefore, if you possess any
gentlemanly instincts at all, you will endeavor to encourage the
ladies and your father, instead of adding to their annoyance. When
one travels, one must be a philosopher.”
“