Part 26 (2/2)
”Either sign this doc.u.ment or descend from the throne of the family of Omar, and we will seek us out from among the descendants of the Prophet another who shall reign in thy stead.”
”Most abject of slaves! In thy pride thou knowest not what thou sayest! Death comes from Allah and none can avoid it; but who amongst the descendants of Omar would be powerful enough to seize the royal sceptre, and who would be senseless enough to desire it?”
”Look at me.”
”I am looking. The sun does not soil itself by s.h.i.+ning upon a swamp, and therefore I may look even at thee; but I see nothing in thee that would justify the adorning of thy head with a diadem so long as one of the descendants of Sulaiman the Magnificent is alive.”
”Another word and thou shalt cease to live!” cried the desperado, haughtily throwing back his head before the Sultan. ”Art thou aware that thy son Abdul Mejid is in our hands?”
The Sultan shuddered. His consternation at these words was written in every feature.
”My son, Abdul Mejid? Impossible!”
”So it is. The Sultana Valideh gave him up at our request.”
”Oh, madness!” exclaimed the Sultan; and he began pacing to and fro.
Abdul Mejid was still a mere child. The shock of such a rebellion might easily make an epileptic of him. To deliver him into the hands of these rebels was as good as to sign his death-warrant. Even if they did not kill him outright, his nerves might suffer from their violence, and he might perish, as the two and twenty other children of Sultan Mahmoud had perished, every one of whom had died of epilepsy.
Their delicate nervous const.i.tutions had been shattered in their youth under the influence of that perpetual terror to which the children of the Caliph of caliphs had been exposed from time immemorial. What, then, might not happen to Abdul Mejid if he fell into the hands of this savage mob?
”Oh, ye are h.e.l.l's own children! Ye are worse than the Giaours, worse than the Greeks, worse than the Muscovites! Ye do place your feet on the heads of your rulers!”
The despair of the Sultan emboldened the Janissary still further.
”Sign this doc.u.ment, or thy son shall die in our hands!”
”Miserable cowards!” moaned the Sultan. ”And cowards they also who should have defended him! Did not even his mother defend him? Was it necessary to give him up?”
”He is in no danger,” said Kara Makan; ”nay, he is in a safe place. It rests with thee to receive him back into thy arms;” and he shoved towards him again the soiled and crumpled ma.n.u.script.
The Padishah, overcome by the shock of his own feelings, humiliated by the sense of his own soft-heartedness, tottered to the wall, and when his groping hands came in contact with the cold marble he collapsed altogether, and leaning against it, he pressed his burning temples to the cold stone. The Janissary might now say whatever he would, the Sultan neither listened to nor answered him.
At last the rough warrior, who had jumped so suddenly into power, shouted angrily to his comrades, who were cooling their heels outside, ”Bring hither the prince!”
The Sultan heard the pattering of many footsteps in the corridor outside, and the clas.h.i.+ng of swords mingled with the murmuring of voices, but he did not look in that direction.
”Behold!” cried Kara Makan, advancing towards him, ”here is thy son! A drawn sword hovers above his head! Choose either to see thine own name at the foot of that paper or his head at thy feet!”
Mahmoud trembled, but he answered nothing, nor did he turn his head.
”Write, or thy son dies!” cried a number of the Janissaries, suddenly.
Then a musical, familiar voice responded amidst the wild uproar:
”My father! hearken not unto them! Let them slay me if they be valiant enough, but chaffer not with thy slaves!”
Mahmoud looked up in astonishment at this well-known voice, and saw before him a handsome figure in the prince's garments and with a proud and majestic countenance; but that face, though familiar to him and very dear, was not his son's face. Ah, it was Milieva!
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