Omar's Slave
:
The Great White Queen
OMAR had been at Trigger's a little over two years when a strange
incident occurred. We were then both aged about sixteen, he a few months
older than myself. The summer holidays had come round again. I had a
month ago visited my uncle in London, and he had given me to understand
that after next term I should leave school and commence life in the City.
He took me to his warehouse in Thames Street and showed me the gas-lit
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cellar wherein his clerks were busy entering goods and calling out long
columns of amounts. The prospect was certainly not inviting, for I was
never good at arithmetic, and to spend one's days in a place wherein
never a ray of sunshine entered was to my mind the worst existence to
which one could be condemned.
When I returned I confessed my misgivings to Omar, who sympathised with
me, and we had many long chats upon the situation as during the six weeks
we wandered daily by the sea. We cared little for the Grand Parade, with
its line of garish hotels, tawdry boarding-houses and stucco-fronted
villas, and the crowd of promenaders did not interest us. Seldom even we
went on the pier, except to swim. Our favourite walks were away in the
country through Willingdon to Polegate, over Beachy Head, returning
through East Dean to Litlington and its famed tea-garden, or across
Pevensey Levels to Wartling, for we always preferred the more
unfrequented ways. One day, when I was more than usually gloomy over the
prospect of drudgery under my close-fisted relative, my friend said to me
cheerfully:
"Come, Scars, don't make yourself miserable about it. My people have a
saying that a smile is the only weapon one can use to combat misfortune,
and I think it's true. We have yet a few months more together before you
leave. In life our ways will lie a long way apart. You will become a
trader in your great city, while I shall leave soon, I expect, to----"
and he paused.
"To do what?" I inquired.
"To go back to my own people, perhaps," he answered mechanically.
"Perhaps I shall remain here and wait, I know not."
"Wait for what?"
"Wait until I receive orders to return," he answered. "Ah, you don't know
what a strange life mine has been, Scars," he added a moment later in a
confidential tone. "I have never told you of myself for the simple
reason that silence is best. We are friends; I hope we shall be friends
always, even though my enemies seek to despise me because I am not quite
white like them. But loyalty is one of the cherished traditions of my
people, and now that during two years our friendship has been firmly
established I trust nothing will ever occur to interrupt it."
"I take no heed of your enemies, Omar," I said. "You have proved yourself
genuine, and the question of colour, race, or creed has nothing to do
with it."
"Perhaps creed has," he exclaimed rather sadly. "But I make no pretence
of being what I am not. Your religion interests me, although, as you
know, I have never been taught the belief you have. My gods are in the
air, in the trees, in the sky. I believe what I have been taught; I pray
in silence and the great god Zomara hears me even though I am separated
from my race by yonder great ocean. Yet I sometimes think I cannot act as
you white people do, that, after all, what my enemies say is true. I am
still what you term a savage, although wearing the clothes of your
civilization."
"Though a man be a pagan he may still be a friend," I said.
"Yes, I am at least your friend," he said. "My only regret is that your
uncle will part us in a few months. Still, in years to come we shall
remember each other, and you will at least have a passing thought for
Omar, the Guinea Pig," he added, laughing.
I smiled too, but I noticed that although he endeavoured to appear gay,
his happiness was feigned, and there was in his dark eyes a look of
unutterable sadness. Our conversation drifted to a local cricket match
that was to be played on the morrow, and soon the gloomy thoughts that
seemed to possess him were dispelled.
It was on the same sunny afternoon, however, that a curious incident
occurred which was responsible for altering the steady prosaic course of
our lives. The most trifling incidents change the current of a life, and
the smallest events are sufficient to alter history altogether. Through
the blazing August afternoon we had walked beyond Meads, mounted Beachy
Head, passed the lighthouse at Belle Tout and descended to the beach at a
point known as the Seven Sisters. The sky was cloudless, the sea like
glass, and during that long walk without shelter from the sun's rays I
had been compelled to halt once or twice and mop my face with my
handkerchief. Yet without fatigue, without the slightest apparent effort,
and still feeling cool, Omar walked on, smiling at the manner in which
the unusual heat affected me, saying:
"Ah! It is not hot here. You might grumble at the heat if the sun were as
powerful as it is in my country."
When we descended to the beach and threw ourselves down under the shadow
of the high white cliffs to rest, I saw there was no one about and
suggested a swim. It was against old Trigger's orders, nevertheless the
calm, cool water as it lazily lapped the sand proved too tempting, and
very shortly we had plunged in and were enjoying ourselves. Omar left the
water first, and presently I saw while he was dressing the figure of a
tallish, muscular man attired in black and wearing a silk hat approaching
him. As I watched, wondering what business the stranger could have with
my companion, I saw that when they met Omar greeted him in native fashion
by snapping fingers, as he had often done playfully to me. Whoever he
might be, the stranger was unexpected, and judging from the manner in
which he had been received, a welcome visitor. I was not near enough to
distinguish the features of the newcomer, but remembering that I had been
in the water long enough, I struck out for the shore, and presently
walked up the beach towards them.
Omar had dressed, and was in earnest conversation with a gigantic negro
of even darker complexion than Mr. Makhana. Unconscious of my approach,
for my feet fell noiselessly upon the sand, he was speaking rapidly in
his own language, while the man who had approached him stood listening in
meek, submissive attitude. Then, for the first time, I noticed that my
friend held in his hand a grotesquely carved stick that had apparently
been presented by the new-comer as his credential, together with a scrap
of parchment whereon some curious signs, something like Arabic, were
written. While Omar addressed him he bowed low from time to time,
murmuring some strange words that I could not catch, but which were
evidently intended to assure my friend that he was his humble servant.
In spare moments Omar had taught me a good deal of his language. Indeed,
such a ready pupil had I been that frequently when we did not desire the
other fellows to understand our conversation we spoke in his tongue. But
of what he was saying to this stranger, I could only understand one or
two words and they conveyed to me no meaning. The negro was a veritable
giant in stature, showily dressed, with one of those gaudily-coloured
neckties that delight the heart of Africans, while on his fat brown hand
was a large ring of very light-coloured metal that looked suspiciously
like brass. His boots were new, and of enormous size, but as he stood he
shifted uneasily from one foot to the other, showing that he was far
from comfortable in his civilized habiliments.
Without approaching closer I picked up my things and dressed rapidly,
then walked forward to join my companion.
"Scars!" he cried, as soon as I stood before him. "I had quite forgotten
you. This is my mother's confidential adviser, Kouaga."
Then, turning to the grinning ebon-faced giant he uttered some rapid
words in his own language and told him my name, whereupon he snapped
fingers in true native fashion, the negro showing an even set of white
teeth as an expression of pleasure passed over his countenance.
"We little thought that we were being watched this afternoon," Omar said
to me, smiling and throwing himself down upon the sand, an example
followed by the negro and myself. "It seems that Kouaga arrived in
Eastbourne this morning, but there are strong reasons why none should
know that he has seen me. Therefore he followed me here to hold palaver
at a spot where we should not be observed."
"You have a letter, I see."
"Yes," he said slowly, re-reading the strange lines of hieroglyphics.
"The news it contains necessitates me leaving for Africa immediately."
"For Africa!" I cried dismayed. "Are you going?"
"Yes, I must. It is imperative."
"Then I shall lose you earlier than I anticipated," I observed with
heart-felt sorrow at the prospect of parting with my only chum. "It is
true, as you predicted, our lives lie very far apart."
The negro lifted his hat from his brow as if its weight oppressed him,
then turning to me, said slowly and with distinctness in his own tongue:
"I bring the words of the mighty Naya unto her son. None dare disobey her
commands on pain of death. She is a ruler above all rulers; before her
armed men monarchs bow the knee, at her frown nations tremble. In order
to bring the palaver she would make with her son I have journeyed for
three moons by land and sea to reach him and deliver the royal staff in
secret. I have done my duty. It is for Omar to obey. Kouaga has spoken."
"Let me briefly explain, Scarsmere," my friend interrupted. "Until the
present I have been compelled to keep my identity a secret, for truth to
tell, there is a plot against our dynasty, and I fear assassination."
"Your dynasty!" I cried amazed. "Are your people kings and queens?"
"They are," he answered. "I am the last descendant of the great Sanoms of
Mo, the powerful rulers who for a thousand years have held our country
against all its enemies, Mahommedan, Pagan or Christian. I am the Prince
of Mo."
"But where is Mo?" I asked. "I have never heard of it."
"I am not surprised," he said. "No stranger has entered it, or ever will,
for it is unapproachable and well-guarded. One intrepid white man
ventured a year ago to ascend to the grass plateau that forms its
southern boundary, but he was expelled immediately on pain of death. My
country, known to the neighbouring tribes as the Land Beyond the Clouds,
lies many weeks' journey from the sea in the vast region within the bend
of the great Niger river, north of Upper Guinea, and is coterminous with
the states of Gurunsi and Kipirsi on the west, with Yatenga on the
north-west, with Jilgodi, Aribinda, and Libtako on the north, with Gurma
on the east, and with the Nampursi district of Gurunsi on the south."
"The names have no meaning for me," I said. "But the fact that you are an
actual Prince is astounding."
With his hands clasped behind his head, he flung himself back upon the
sand, laughing heartily.
"Well," he said, "I didn't want to parade my royal ancestry, neither do I
want to now. I only tell you in confidence, and in order that you shall
understand why I am compelled to return. During the past ten years there
have been many dissensions among the people, fostered by the enemies of
our country, with a view to depose the reigning dynasty. Three years ago
a dastardly plot was discovered to murder my mother and myself, seize the
palace, and massacre its inmates. Fortunately it was frustrated, but my
mother deemed it best to send me secretly out of the country, for I am
sole heir to the throne, and if the conspirators killed me, our dynasty
must end. Therefore Makhana, my mother's secret agent, who purchases our
arms and ammunition in England and conducts all trade we have with
civilized countries, brought me hither, and I have since been in hiding."
"But Makhana has been bribed by our enemies," exclaimed the big negro,
who had been eagerly listening to our conversation, but understanding no
word of it save the mention of Makhana's name. Turning to Omar he added:
"Makhana will, if he obtains a chance, kill you. Be warned in time
against him. It has been ascertained that he supplied the men of Moloto
with forty cases of rifles, and that he has given his pledge that you
shall never return to Africa. Therefore obey the injunction of my royal
mistress, the great Naya, and leave with me secretly."
"Without seeing Makhana?" asked Omar.
"Yes," the black-faced man replied. "He must not know, or the plans of
the Naya may be thwarted. Our enemies have arranged to strike their blow
three moons from now, but ere that we shall be back in Mo, and they will
find that they go only to their graves. Kouaga has made fetish for the
son of his royal mistress, and has come to him bearing the stick."
"What does the letter say?" I asked Omar, noticing him reading it again.
"It is brief enough, and reads as follows," he said:
"'Know, O my son Omar, that I send my stick unto thee by our
trusty Kouaga. Return unto Mo on the wings of haste, for our
throne is threatened and thy presence can avert our overthrow.
Tarry not in the country of the white men, but let thy face
illuminate the darkness of my life ere I go to the tomb of my
ancestors.
"NAYA.'"
I glanced at the scrap of parchment, and saw appended a truly regal seal.
"And shall you go?" I asked with sorrow.
"Yes--if you will accompany me."
"Accompany you!" I cried. "How can I? I have no money to go to Africa,
besides----"
"Besides what?" he answered smiling. "Kouaga has money sufficient to pay
both our passages. Remember, I am Prince of Mo, and this man is my
slave. If I command him to take you with me he will obey. Will you go?"
The prospect of adventure in an unknown land was indeed enticing. In a
few brief words he recalled my dismal forebodings of the life in an
underground office in London, and contrasted it with a free existence in
a fertile and abundant land, where I should be the guest and perhaps an
official of its ruler. He urged me most strongly to go as his companion,
and in conclusion said:
"Your presence in Mo will be unique, for you will be the first stranger
who has ever set foot within its capital."
"But your mother may object to me, as she did to the entrance of the
white man of whom you just now spoke."
"Ah! he came to make trade palaver. You are my friend and confidant," he
said.
"Then you suggest that we should both leave Eastbourne at once, travel
with Kouaga to Liverpool and embark for Africa without returning to
Trigger's, or saying a word to anyone?"
"We must. If we announce our intention of going we are certain to be
delayed, and as the steamers leave only once a month, delay may be fatal
to my mother's plans."
As he briefly explained to Kouaga that he had invited me to accompany him
I saw that companion to an African prince would be a much more genial
occupation than calculating sums in a gas-lit cellar; therefore, fired by
the pleasant picture he placed before me, I resolved to accept his
invitation.
"Very well, Omar," I said, trying to suppress the excitement that rose
within me. "We are friends, and where you go I will go also."
Delighted at my decision my friend sprang to his feet with a cry of joy,
and we all three snapped fingers, after which we each took a handful of
dry sand and by Omar's instructions placed it in one heap upon a rock.
Then, having first mumbled something over his amulets, he quickly stirred
the heap of sand with his finger, saying:
"As these grains of sand cannot be divided, so cannot the bonds of
friendship uniting Omar, Prince of Mo, with Scarsmere and Kouaga, be rent
asunder. Omar has spoken."