Complete Works of Hall Caine, page 438
At that the electrical atmosphere of the room broke into rumblings of thunder. The order of the Government was an outrage on the Mohammedan religion, which England had pledged herself to respect. El Azhar was one of the three holy places of the Islamic world, and to close it was to take the bread of life from the Moslems. “The Government might as well cut our throats at once and have done with it,” said some one.
From denouncing the order of the Government, the Ulema went on to denounce the Government itself. It was eating the people! It was like wolves trying to devour them! “Are we to be body and soul under the heel of the infidel?” they asked themselves.
After that they denounced Lord Nuneham. He was the slave of power! He was drunk with the strong drink of authority! The University was their voice — he had deprived them of every other — and now he was trying to strike them dumb! When somebody, remembering that they were speaking before the Consul-General’s son, suggested that if he was doing a bad act it might be with a good conscience, an alim with an injured eye and a malignant face cried: “No, by Allah! The man who usurps the place of God becomes a devil, and that’s what Nuneham is and long has been.”
Listening to their violence Gordon had found himself taking his father’s part, and at this moment his anger had risen so high that he was struggling against an impulse to take the unkempt creature by the throat and fling, him out of the room, when the soft voice of the Chancellor began to plead for peace.
“Mohammed — to him be prayer and peace — always yielded to superior force; and who are we that we should be too proud to follow his example?”
But at that the reactionary party became louder and fiercer than before. “Our Prophet,” cried one, “has commanded us not to seek war and not to begin it. But he has also told us that if war is waged against Islam we are to resist it under penalty of being ourselves as unbelievers, and to follow up those who assail us without pity and without remorse. Therefore, if the English close our holy El Azhar they will be waging war on our religion, and, by the Most High God, we will fight them to the last man, woman, and child.”
At that instant Hafiz, who had been trembling in an obscure seat by the door, rose to his feet and said, in a nervous voice, addressing his uncle:
“Eminence, may I say something?”
“Speak, son of my sister,” said the Chancellor.
“It is about Colonel Lord,” said Hafiz. “If you refuse to close El Azhar, an order to force you to do so will be issued to the military and Colonel Lord will be required to carry it into effect.”
“Well?”
“He is the friend of the Muslemeen, your Eminence, but if you resist him he will be compelled to kill you.”
“Wouldn’t it be well to say ‘With God’s permission?’” said the man with the injured eye, whereupon Hafiz wheeled round on him and answered, hotly:
“He has the bayonets and he has the courage, and if you fight him there won’t be so much as a rat among you that will be left alive.”
There was a moment of tense and breathless silence, and then Hafiz, now as nervous as before, said quietly: “On the other hand, if he refuses to obey his orders he will lose his place and rank as a soldier. Which of these do you wish to see, your Eminence?”
There was another moment of breathless silence, and then Ishmael Ameer, who had not spoken before, said in his quivering voice:
“Let us call on God to guide us, my brothers — in tears and in fervent prayer, all night long in the mosque, until His light shines on us and a door of hope has opened.”
XX
As Gordon returned to barracks the air of the native section of the city seemed to tingle with excitement. The dirty, unpaved streets with their overhanging tenements were thronged. Framed portraits of Ishmael Ameer, with candles burning in front of them, were standing on the counters of nearly all the cafés and the men squatting on the benches about were chanting the Koran. One man, generally a blind man, with his right hand before his ear, would be reciting the text, and at the close of every Surah the others would be crying “Allah! Allah!”
In the densest quarter, where the streets were narrowest and most full of ruts, the houses most wretched and the windows most covered with cobwebs, a company of dervishes were walking in procession, bearing their ragged banners and singing their weird Arab music to the accompaniment of pipes and drums, while boys parading beside them were carrying tin lamps and open flares. Before certain of the houses they stopped, and for some minutes they swayed their bodies to an increasing chorus of “Allah! Allah! Allah!”
Gordon saw what had happened. With the coming of the new teacher a wave of religious feeling had swept over the city. Dam it up suddenly, and what scenes of fanatical frenzy might not occur.
Back in his room, with the window down to shut out the noises of the river and the bridge, he tried to come to a conclusion as to what he ought to do the following day if the Ulema decided to resist. They would resist; he had no doubt about that, for where men were under the influence of gusts of religious passion they might call on God, but God’s answer was always the same.
If the Ulema were to decide not to close their sacred place they would intend to die in defence of it, and, seeing the issue from the Moslem point of view, that El Azhar was the centre of their spiritual life, Gordon concluded that they would be justified in resisting. If they were justified the order to evict them would be wicked, and the act of eviction would be a crime. “I can’t do it!” he told himself. “I can’t and I won’t!”
This firm resolve relieved him for a moment, and then he began to ask himself what would happen if he refused to obey. The bad work would be done all the same, for somebody else would do it. “What then will be the result?” he thought.
The first result would be that he himself would suffer. He would be tried for insubordination, and, of course, degraded and punished. As a man he might be in the right, but as a soldier he would be in the wrong. He thought of his hard-fought fights and of the honours he had won, and his head went round in a whirl.
The next result would be that he would bring disgrace on his father as well. His refusal to obey orders would become known, and if the consequences he expected should come to pass he would seem to stand up as the first of his father’s accusers. He, his father’s only son, would be the means of condemning him in the eyes of England, of Europe, of the world! In his old age, too, and after all he had done for Egypt!
Then, above all, there was Helena! The General would side with the Consul-General, and Helena would be required to cast in her lot with her father or with him. If she sided with him she would have to break with her father; if she sided with her father she would have to part from him. In either case the happiness of her life would be wasted — he would have wasted it, and he would have wasted his own happiness as well.
This thought seemed to take him by the throat and stifle him. He leaped from the bed on which he had been lying in restless pain and threw open the window. The river and the bridge were quiet by that time, but through the breathless night air there came the music of a waltz. It was the last dance of the visiting season at an hotel near by — a number of British officers were dancing on the edge of the volcano.
Gordon shut the window and again threw himself on the bed. At length the problem that tormented him seemed to resolve itself into one issue. His father did not realise that the Moslems would die rather than give up possession of their holy place, and that in order to turn them out of it he would have to destroy them — slaughter them. A man could not outrage the most sacred of human feelings without being morally blind to what he was doing. His father was a great man — a thousand times greater than he himself could ever hope to be — but in this case he was blind and somebody had to open his eyes.
“I’ll go and bring him to reason,” he thought. “He may insult me if he likes, but no matter!”
The last cab had rattled home and the streets were silent when Gordon reached the entrance to the Agency. Then he saw that it was late, for the house was in darkness, and not even the window of the library showed a light. The moon was full, and he looked at his watch. Good heavens! It was two o’clock!
The house dog heard his footsteps on the gravel path, and barked and bounded toward him; then, recognising him, it began to snuffle and to lick his hands. At the same moment a light appeared in an upper window. It was the window of his mother’s room, and at sight of it his resolution began to ebb away, and he was once more seized with uncertainty.
Strife between himself and his father would extinguish the last rays of his mother’s flickering life. He could see her looking at him with her pleading and frightened eyes.
“Am I really going to kill my mother — that, too?” he thought.
He was as far as ever from knowing what course he ought to take to-morrow, but the light in his mother’s window, filtering through the lace curtains that were drawn across it, was like a tear-dimmed, accusing eye, and with a new emotion he was compelled to turn away.
XXI
As two o’clock struck on the soft cathedral bell of a little clock by the side of her bed, Fatimah rose with a yawn, switched on the electric light, and filled a small glass from a bottle on the mantelpiece.
“Time to take your medicine, my lady,” she said, in a sleepy voice.
Her mistress did not reply immediately, and she asked:
“Are you asleep?”
But her lady, who was wide awake, whispered: “Hush! Do you hear Rover? Isn’t that somebody on the path?”
Fatimah listened as well as she could through the drums of sleep that were beating in her ears, and then she answered:
“No; I hear nothing.”
“I thought it -was Gordon’s footstep,” said the old -lady, raising herself in bed to take the medicine that Fatimah was holding out to her.
“It’s strange! Gordon’s step is exactly like his grandfather’s.”
“Don’t spill it, my lady,” said Fatimah, and with a trembling hand the old lady drank off her dose.
“He’s like his grandfather in other things, too. I remember when I was a girl there was a story of how he struck one of his soldiers in the Civil War, thinking the man was guilty of some offence. But afterward he found the poor fellow was innocent and had taken the blow for his brother without saying a word. Father never forgave himself for that — never!”
“Shall I put on the eiderdown? The nights are cold if the days are hot, you know.”
“Yes — no — just as you think best, nurse.... I’m sure Gordon will do what is right, whatever happens. I’m sorry for his father, though. Did you hear what he said when he came to bid me good night: ‘They think they’ve caught me now that they’ve caught my son, but let them wait — we’ll see.’”
“Hush!” said Fatimah, and she pointed to the wall of the adjoining room. From the other side of it came the faint sound of measured footsteps.
“He’s walking again — can’t sleep, I suppose,” said Fatimah, in a drowsy whisper.
“Ah, well!” said the old lady, after listening for a moment; and then Fatimah put out the light and went back to her bed.
“God bless my boy!” said a tremulous voice in the darkness.
After that there was a sigh, and then silence — save for the hollow thud of footsteps in the adjoining room.
XXII
BEFORE Gordon was out of bed next morning Hafiz rang him up on the telephone. He had just heard from his uncle, the Chancellor, that as a result of their night-long deliberation and prayer the Ulema had decided to ask the Consul-General to receive Ishmael Ameer and listen to a suggestion.
“What will it be?” asked Gordon.
“That the Government should leave El Azhar alone on condition that the Ulema consent to open it, and all the mosques connected with it, to public and police inspection, so as to dissipate the suspicion that they are centres of sedition.”
“Splendid! To make the mosques as free as Christian churches is a splendid thought — an inspiration. But if the Government will not agree, what then?”
“Then the order to close El Azhar will be resisted. ‘Only over our dead bodies,’ they say, ‘shall the soldiers enter it.’”
Gordon went about his work that morning like a man dazed and dumb, but after lunch he dressed himself carefully in his full staff uniform, with his aiguilettes hanging from his left shoulder, his gold and crimson sash, his sword and his white be-spiked helmet. He put on all his medals and decorations, too — his Distinguished Service Order; his King’s and South African War Medal with four clasps; his British Soudan Medal; his Medjidieh, and his Khedive’s Medal with four clasps. It was not for nothing that he did this, nor merely because he was going to an official conference, but with a certain pride as of a man who had won the right to consideration.
Taking a cab by the gate of the barracks, he drove through the native quarters of the city and saw crowds surging through the streets in the direction of El Azhar. The atmosphere seemed to tingle with the spirit of revolution, and seeing the sublime instinct of humanity which leads people in defence of their faith to the place where danger is greatest, he felt glad and proud that what was best in him was about to conquer.
Arriving at the Citadel he found Helena’s black boy waiting for him at the door of the General’s house with a message from his mistress, saying the gentlemen had not arrived and she wished to see him. The city below lay bright under the warm soolham of the afternoon sun, and the swallows were swirling past the windows of Helena’s sitting-room, but Helena herself was under a cloud.
“I see what it is — you are angry with me for going to El Azhar last night,” said Gordon.
“No, it isn’t that, though I think you might have kept faith with me,” she answered. “But we have no time to lose, and I have something to say to you. In the first place, I want you to know that Colonel Macdonald, your Deputy Assistant Adjutant, has been ordered to stand by. He will be only too happy to take your place if necessary.”
“He’s welcome!” said Gordon.
Her brows were contracted, her lips set. She fastened her eyes on him and said:
“Then there is something else I wish to tell you.”
“What is it, Helena?”
“When my father asked me if I could marry a man who had disobeyed and been degraded, I said... But it doesn’t matter what I said. My father has hardly ever spoken to me since. It has been the first cloud that has come between us — the very first. But when I answered him as I did there was something I had forgotten.”
“What was it, dearest?”
“I cannot tell you what it was — I can only tell you what it comes to.”
“What does it come to, Helena?”
“That whatever happens to-day I can never leave my father — never as long as he lives.”
“God forbid that you should be tempted to do so — but why?”
“That is what I cannot tell you. It is a secret.”
“I can think of no secret that I could not share with you, Helena.”
“Nor I with you — if it were my own — but this isn’t.”
“I cannot understand you, dear.”
“Say it is somebody’s else’s secret, and that his life, his career, depends upon it. Say it couldn’t be told to you without putting you in a false position, involving you in responsibilities which you have no right to bear.”
“You puzzle me, bewilder me, Helena.”
“Then trust me, dear; trust me for the present, at all events, and some day you shall know everything,” she said, whereupon Gordon, who had not taken his eyes off her, said: “So what it really comes to is this — that whatever course your father takes to-day I must take it also, under pain of a violent separation from you! Isn’t that it, Helena? Isn’t it? And, if so, isn’t it like sending a man into battle with his hands tied and his eyes blindfolded?”
She dropped her head, but made no reply.
“That is not what I expected of you, Helena. The Helena who has been living in my mind is a girl who would say to me at a moment like this, ‘Do what you believe to be right, Gordon, and whether you are degraded to the lowest rank or raised to the highest honour, I will he with you — I will stand by your side!”
Her eyes flashed and she drew herself up.
“So you think I couldn’t say that — that I didn’t say anything like it when my father spoke to me? But if you have been thinking of me as a girl like that, I have been thinking of you as a man who would say, ‘I love you, and do you know what my love means? It means that my love for you is above everything and everybody in the world.’”
“And it is, Helena, it is.”
“Then why,” she said, with her eyes fixed on his, “why do you let this Egyptian and his interests come between us? If you take his part after what I have just told you, will it not be the same thing in the end as choosing him against me?”
“Don’t vex me, Helena. I’ve told you before that your jealousy of this man is nonsense.”
The word cut her to the quick and she drew herself up again.
“Very well,” she said, with a new force, “if it’s jealousy and if it’s nonsense you must make your account with it. I said I couldn’t tell you why I cannot leave my father — now I won’t. You must choose between us. It is either that man or me.”
“You mean that if the General decides against Ishmael Ameer you will follow your father, and that I — whatever my conscience may say — I must follow you?”
Her eyes blazed and she answered, “Yes.”
“Good God, Helena! What is it you want me to be? Is it a man or a manikin?”
At that moment the young lieutenant who was the General’s aide-de-camp came in to say that the Consul-General and the Prime Minister had arrived, and required Colonel Lord’s attendance.
“Presently,” said Gordon, and as soon as the lieutenant had gone he turned to Helena again.
“Helena,” he said, “there is not a moment to lose. Remember, this is the last time I can see you before I am required to act one way or the other. God knows what may happen before I come out of that room. Will you send me into it without any choice?”
