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The Bride Box Page 9
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‘I expect he was thinking what a pretty little girl you are.’
‘I don’t think he was thinking that,’ said Leila doubtfully.
Zeinab let it pass but she remembered Owen’s worries that the slavers might try to steal Leila back and decided to keep her eyes open in future. Once or twice she saw a man look at Leila in a way that troubled her but in each case Leila said it was not the man who had looked at her before. Zeinab mentioned it to Musa’s wife and she said she would talk to Musa about it so that he could be on his guard, too.
Zeinab also told her friend Aisha about it, but Aisha said that men were always looking at young girls in a troubling way and she doubted if there was any real matter for concern. However, Zeinab thought she would mention it to Owen when he got back, which she hoped would be soon.
SIX
There was an unfamiliar face at the station, belonging to the man standing in for the clerk. He said that he was the clerk’s brother and that he had done the job before. He was familiar with the duties. His name, he said, was Babikr.
Owen asked him about the station. How much traffic was there? Lots, said Babikr. But, on further enquiry, it didn’t seem to amount to that much, merely the train coming up from Luxor once a day and then a corresponding train returning south late in the afternoon. Sometimes a goods train passed through, usually at night. It must have been this train that Leila had seen and then hidden under. Trains stopped at Denderah for water and to drop or pick up packages. Like the bride box, thought Owen. There wasn’t a lot of business of this sort.
Owen asked if he knew of a white man who had come to Denderah recently on business.
Babikr nodded.
‘That would be Clarke Effendi,’ he said. ‘He trades in gum arabic and trocchee shells. The desert men’ – this was said with a certain contempt – ‘bring the gum in on their camels. It gets divided here and sent to different destinations, some on the coast, some in the big cities. A lot goes to Cairo. Clarke Effendi comes to see to that himself. He does not keep a man in Denderah.’
Babikr said that Clarke Effendi did not come often. He would wait, perhaps for months, for the stocks of gum arabic to build up and then would come with a big caravan to take it away. He combined this with a large trade in trocchee shells. On the outward journey from the coast to Denderah he would bring trocchee shells, which again would be distributed from Denderah. Most would go up to Cairo, from where they would be distributed to factories inland, but some would go straight to Alexandria or Port Said for export abroad. The shells went all over the world, some as far as America.
Having deposited trocchee shells in Denderah, the caravan would pick up gum arabic for the return journey. It was a big operation, said Babikr, and it all came together at Denderah. For over a week Denderah would be transformed.
‘You wouldn’t recognize it, Effendi.’
The space behind the station, about the size of two football fields, would be given over to camels and their drivers. The incoming loads of trocchee shells and gum arabic would be divided and subdivided and re-consigned. All, said Babikr, was bustle and busyness.
And over it all, Clarke Effendi presided in person. He had assistants, of course, mostly Levantines from the north, but he watched over it all like a hawk. ‘Trusting no one,’ said Babikr in admiration.
Miraculously, in little more than a week, it would all get sorted out. The trocchee shells would go one way, the gum arabic another. The desert men would go back to their gum trees, the caravan, its camels now loaded up with bales of gum arabic, back to the coast. The space behind the station would become empty and all, said Babikr, would be still again.
But the Effendi would see for himself if he stayed on. For the caravan was due to arrive the following week.
‘Ah!’ said Owen. ‘And Clarke Effendi with it?’
‘Most certainly! For he likes to keep an eye on all things.’
‘And does he sometimes come to Denderah on other occasions?’
‘As the time for the great caravan nears, he will come over on several occasions, to make sure that the suppliers of gum arabic are coming in as expected.’
‘Has he been recently?’
‘Oh, yes. And then he had been angry because he had thought that not enough had come in, and he had sent men to chide the suppliers. With some result, for the bales are now coming in thick and fast. Effendi, you will no doubt have seen how they are piling up at the station.’
‘And does the caravan sometimes bring things besides trocchee shells?’
‘Oh, yes, Effendi! This is the main caravan of the year, now that the huge pilgrim caravans of the past are dwindling in importance with the coming of the trains. Many ordinary people wish to send things from east to west, or from west to east, and not trusting the new postal system, will make use of it.’
‘What sort of things?’
‘Things for the bazaars, Effendi. Or presents to the family.’
‘Bride boxes?’ suggested Owen.
‘Oh, no! Effendi!’ said Babikr, shocked. And knowing perfectly well what Owen was thinking.
Owen found Mustapha sitting in his small yard, his work things spread out on the ground around him. A half-finished basket was held between his knees. Some reeds ready for threading were stuck between his toes. He looked up listlessly as Owen came into the yard.
‘Effendi!’
‘Mustapha,’ said Owen, squatting down beside him, ‘I need you to tell me more.’
‘I have told you all, Effendi,’ said the basket maker.
‘Not quite all. Tell me about the slaver.’
Mustapha shrugged. ‘What is there to tell? He was a slaver. That is all.’
‘How did you come upon him?’
‘People said that he was in the neighbourhood.’
‘He was a Sudani. Did you go to him because he was a Sudani?’
‘Why should I go to him because he was a Sudani?’
‘Was not your wife a Sudani?’
‘I did not go to him because of that.’
‘No?’
‘I thought it might help,’ said Mustapha, after a moment.
‘Tell me about her. How came it that you met her? The Sudan is far from here.’
‘She came back with the Pasha when he brought his new wife. She brought servants and Hoseina was one of them. After a time she sought a husband. I had a friend who knew someone in the Pasha’s household and he spoke for me. I was doing well then. I promised to be a man of substance.’
‘How comes it that you did not become a man of substance?’
‘Children,’ said Mustapha bitterly.
‘You had too many?’
‘I could not provide for them. And they came too quickly for Hoseina. She ailed and could not manage the house. But still they came. It broke her down. And I could not provide.’
‘Did you not speak to the Pasha’s lady and ask for help?’
‘I did, and at first she helped us. But then she had troubles of her own and forgot about us.’
‘I wondered if perhaps the reason she took Soraya on to help in her house was that she remembered your wife?’
‘In part, yes. But it did not work out. She came home again and I thought that was the end of it. So when the slaver came … when the slaver came and said there was a man who had his eye on Soraya, my heart rejoiced. He said he would arrange it all. He did not speak of her as a slave, Effendi, but as … more than that.’
‘A concubine?’
‘Well, perhaps to start with. But it might grow, Effendi. These things have happened, I have known of them happening. And I thought it might be so with Soraya. She was not ill-favoured. The slaver himself said that. He said that affection might grow in the man’s heart, and then, who knew? He said the man had already noticed her, the seeds were already there. He spoke of it as a likely thing. More than likely; almost a certain thing. And I … I believed him, Effendi. I was a fool, yes I know, but I did not wish her harm, Effendi. She was my daughter, after all
. But there were difficulties in the house, and besides, money was promised …’
‘Was money given?’
‘A little, Effendi, a little. But more was promised. And, besides, Effendi …’
‘Yes?’
‘The slaver spoke of it as a done thing. I thought of it as a done thing. And so I asked him if I should send the bride box with her, and when he laughed and said, “Why not?” I believed it to be certain.’
He shook his head.
‘I still cannot believe it, Effendi. Why should he kill her? As he himself said, she was a beautiful girl who would surely fetch a good bride price. So why kill her, Effendi? That is what I cannot understand.’
‘Tell me more about the slaver, Abdulla Sardawi. Where does he come from?’
‘Suakin.’
‘Suakin? The Dead City? Is that likely?’
‘Not many live there, Effendi, but he does.’
‘So that he may more easily slip his slaves across the sea?’
‘So they say, Effendi.’
‘I hope you are telling me truly. If so it may go some way towards reducing the punishment that awaits you. But if not, expect the punishment to be heavier.’
‘I have told you truly, Effendi. I tell you not because of the punishment. Let it fall upon me; I have deserved it. I tell it for Soraya. I tell it for the daughter who was once mine.’
Owen went back to the railway station. Mahmoud and the clerk were not yet back and the clerk’s brother was still standing as substitute.
‘Babikr …’
‘Effendi?’
‘Can you send a cable?’
‘I can, Effendi. I am a master of all the arts.’
‘Good. Well, send this one, then. It is to the Sudan.’
‘There will be no difficulty, Effendi. It will go straight to Khartoum.’
‘I wish it to go to the Slavery Bureau.’
The clerk’s brother handed him a pad. ‘Write your message there, Effendi, and I will send it at once. Within the moment.’
Owen took the pad and wrote:
Request assistance. Slaver active in Upper Egypt area. Believed based in Suakin. Possibly returning there with child slaves. Name Sardawi, Abdulla Sardawi.
The Mamur Zapt.
A long line of camels had just come in and were unloading their bales beside the rail tracks. The stacks of gum arabic had suddenly grown, and in the town itself there were more people. Many of them were from the desert and they wandered around the shops, not buying but looking at the wares. The space behind the station was filling up. After depositing their loads the camels had moved on to the square and were tearing at the forage thrown down on the ground for them to eat. Beside them sat their drivers, sometimes around a brazier, drinking tea. They were a different kind of Arab from the ones seen in the town, thin, wiry, with short galabeyas showing knees burned almost black by the sun. Some of them had great masses of fuzzy hair. These were Kipling’s ‘Fuzzy-Wuzzies’ and they came from the other side of the Sudan, near the coast, from the Red Sea Hills. They often had short stabbing spears. One or two merchants were already setting up stalls in anticipation of the caravan’s arrival.
Seeing the shoppers reminded Owen that he would be returning to Cairo the next day – he had already spent far too long away from his desk – and he ought to take something back for Zeinab. And also for Leila. He mustn’t forget about her!
But what? He had never bought for a child before and had no idea of what to buy. A toy of some kind? But they didn’t seem to have toys in the shops here. In Cairo it would have been no problem, but here …
Clothes? He would do a lot better in Cairo, where he would be able to draw on other people’s expertise. Zeinab, perhaps, was not the world’s expert on anything for children, but Georgiades’s Rosa was sure to have a sharp eye for these things. Nikos, of course, would be a dead loss.
And then there was the question of size. He knew roughly what size Leila was but not in the way a woman would. Better steer clear of clothes.
Slippers, say. There were some nice little embroidered ones in the shops here. She would like those. But again there was the question of size. He had an uneasy feeling that the ones here would be too small for Leila. He rather thought her feet were quite big in relation to her general size. Maybe feet grew first? Again he was venturing into areas new to him. If the slippers wouldn’t fit, they would be useless. Better steer clear of footwear.
But what then? Material? One or two of the shops had what seemed to him quite attractive lengths of material. But he could hear Zeinab dismissing them scathingly over his shoulder. They might do for Musa’s wife, he thought, but for Leila?
He was going to buy a carved wooden bracelet for Zeinab, something made locally and with a curiosity value. Would that do for Leila as well?
He was passing a carpenter’s shop. It was just an empty space with a few planks leaning against the walls. There was no counter. In the other shops, as in the less sophisticated parts of Cairo, there would have been a counter, with a shopkeeper sitting on it. There was one like that nearby, the one where they sold materials. But the carpenter’s shop was not like that.
He could see the carpenter working away in the back of the shop. He looked up and came across to Owen. ‘Does the Effendi desire anything?’
‘Advice,’ said Owen. He explained the situation.
‘What I would give my grandchildren,’ said the carpenter, ‘is something I had made. A spoon, perhaps? Like this.’
He produced some long, finely carved spoons.
‘That looks pretty good!’ said Owen, relieved.
‘Or this. To keep things in. Children always like something like this.’ He produced a little box.
Why not? It was small, about six inches long, made of nice wood. Sandalwood? It was smooth, pleasant to touch and agreeably smelling.
‘I’ll take it.’
‘Wait! Wait! Some paper, Selim. Go to Ali’s and ask him for some nice paper to wrap a present in, a present for a little girl.’
A boy at the back of the shop rushed out. There seemed something familiar about him. Selim?
‘Is that the Selim who came with me to the old temple? And found the things from Soraya’s bride box?’
‘Yes, it is. I don’t like to think of that, Effendi. Soraya was a sweet girl. I made her bride box for her. To think of the use it was put to! Oh, Effendi, there are wicked men in the world!’
He shook his head.
‘But you’re right, Effendi, it was Selim who found the things.’ He looked around furtively, but Selim was not yet back. ‘Between you and me, Effendi, there was something between Selim and Soraya. He has not been the same boy since. I try to keep him busy but you can tell his heart’s not in it.’
The boy returned and began to wrap up the box.
‘This is for Leila,’ said Owen quietly. ‘I will tell her that you wrapped the box.’
Mahmoud was getting ready to leave. By the time he and the clerk got back to Denderah it would have long been dark, but there was no point in staying here. He had done what he could. He had hoped that, with the clerk’s aid, he would have been able to wrap the whole thing up. They would have identified the men who had put Soraya in the bride box. They would probably be the men who had killed her but even if they weren’t, it could have opened the whole thing up. The end would have been in sight and so would have been his return to Cairo. Cairo, and his family. Mahmoud was missing his children. He had never been away from them for so long before.
But it hadn’t worked out like that. There had been no identifications. He was no further on than when he had started. Although perhaps he was. Not as far on as he had hoped, but at least he had been given a lead.
He called the clerk to him and told him to let it be known that Mahmoud would like to know when Suleiman returned. And there would be money in it. The clerk was to drop this in casually. Mahmoud had not been able to speak to Suleiman while he was here. As they knew, Suleiman had gone off on an er
rand for the lady, so Mahmoud had missed him. But he still wanted to talk to everyone, to make sure that he had spoken to all the lady’s servants. All, without exception. He wanted to be sure that he hadn’t missed anything. And so he would be grateful if he could be told when Suleiman had got back. And, as the clerk had said, there would be money in it.
More than that he could not do. At least for the moment. It wasn’t much but it was something. He might still be able to extract something from his visit to the Pasha’s estate. To both the houses. That at least he had learned.
At the last moment, as he was setting out for Denderah, the lady appeared. Give it another hour, she said. It would be cooler then. The sun’s heat would have gone from the ground, and it would be much nicer for travelling. True, it would be dark, but she would send someone with him to show him the way. Mahmoud accepted the offer gratefully. He could still feel the day’s heat in the air, and both he and certainly the clerk had just about had enough of it.
A servant brought him lemonade in the mandar’ah. Karim looked in once or twice, friendly but at a loss for conversation. He offered to show Mahmoud his guns, having apparently forgotten that he had already done so. Mahmoud politely declined.
The lady herself did not appear.
A servant came and said that Salah was now waiting. Mahmoud went out into the yard, where the donkeys were standing docilely. Salah was a short, stocky man who presumably worked in the lady’s fields. At the last moment Karim came out to say farewell. He said he would walk with them a little of the way.
As they went past the barns Mahmoud saw that activity of some sort was going on. The doors, which he had previously seen locked, were now open and men were bringing out heavy boxes. In the torch light something glistened.
‘It’s the guns,’ said Karim.
‘From your collection?’
‘No, no; these are the ones we’ve been storing for Hafiz.’
Mahmoud could count six boxes. There might be more inside the barn. ‘That’s a lot of guns,’ he said.
‘Yes,’ said Karim casually.
They moved on past.
‘Yakub will be sending someone to collect them tomorrow,’ said Karim. ‘Sometimes he brings a gun for me.’