Part 14 (1/2)

The other said, laughing, ”Who has ever heard of a black Roumi? And you, O El Ha.s.san, are as black as a Bela.”

The Amenokal finished off the mystery of Crawford's recognition.

”Know, El Ha.s.san, that whilst you were here before, one of the slaves that served you for pay shamelessly looked upon your face in the privacy of your tent. It was this slave who recognized your face when the Roumi presented it on the magic instrument, calling upon all men to see you and to brand you enemy.”

So that was it. The Reunited Nations, and probably all the rest, had used their radio and TV stations to broadcast a warning and offer a reward for Homer and his followers. Old Sven was losing no time. This wasn't so good. A Tuareg owes allegiance to no one beyond clan, tribe and confederation. All others are outside the pale and any advantage, monetary or otherwise, to be gained by exploiting a stranger is well within desert mores.

He might as well bring it to the point. Crawford said evenly, ”And I have entered your camp alone except for two followers. Your people are many. So why, O Amenokal, have you not seized me for the reward the Roumi offer?”

There was a moment of silence and Homer Crawford sensed that the sub-chieftains had leaned forward in antic.i.p.ation, waiting for their leader's words. Possibly they, too, could not understand.

The Tuareg leader finished his tea.

”Because, El Ha.s.san, we yet have not heard the message which the Roumi are so anxious that you not be allowed to bring the men of the desert.

The Roumi are great liars, and great thieves, as each man knows. In the memory of those still living, they have stolen of the bedouin and robbed him of land and wealth. So now we would hear of what you say, before we decide.”

”Spoken like a true Amenokal, a veritable Suliman ben Davud,” Homer said with a heartiness he could only partly feel. At least they were open to persuasion.

For a long moment he stared down at the rug upon which they sat, as though deep in contemplation.

”These words I speak will be truly difficult to hear and accept, O men of the veil,” he said at last. ”For I speak of great change, and no man loves change in the way of his life.”

”Speak, El Ha.s.san,” Melchizedek said flatly. ”Great change is everywhere upon us, as each man knows, and none can tell how to maintain the ways of our fathers.”

”We can fight,” one of the younger men growled.

The Amenokal turned to him and grunted scorn. ”And would you fight against the weapons of the djinn and afrit, O Guemama? Know that in my youth I was distant witness to the explosion of a great weapon which the accursed Franzawi discharged south of Reggan. Know, that this single explosion, my sister's son, could with ease have destroyed the total of all the tribesmen of the Ahaggar, had they been gathered.”

”And the Roumi have many such weapons,” Crawford added gently.

The eyes of the tribal headmen came back to him.

”As each man knows,” Crawford continued, ”change is upon the world. No matter how strongly one wills to continue the traditions of his fathers, change is upon us all. And he who would press against the sand storm, rather than drifting with it, lasts not long.”

One of the subchiefs growled, ”We Tuareg love not change, El Ha.s.san.”

Crawford turned to him. ”That is why I and my viziers have spent long hours in _ekhwan_, in great council, devoted to the problems of the Tuareg and how they can best fit into the new Africa that everywhere awakes.”

They stirred in interest now. The Tuareg, once the Scourge of the Sahara, the Sons of Shaitan and the Forgotten of Allah, to the Arab, Teda, Moroccan and other fellow inhabitants of North Africa, were of recent decades developing a tribal complex. Robbed of their nomadic-bandit way of life by first the French Camel Corps and later by the efforts of the Reunited Nations, they were rapidly descending into a condition of poverty and defensive bewilderment. Not only were large numbers of former bedouin drifting to the area's sedentary centers, an act beyond contempt within the memory of the elders, but the best elements of the clans were often deserting Tuareg country completely and defecting to the new industrial centers, the dam projects, the afforestation projects, the new oases irrigated with the solar-powered pumps.

”Speak, El Ha.s.san,” the Amenokal ordered. And unconsciously, he, too, leaned forward, as did his subchiefs. The Ahaggar Tuareg were reaching for straws, unconsciously seeking shoulders upon which to lay their unsolvable problems.

”Let me, O chiefs of the Tuareg, tell of a once strong tribe of warriors and nomads who lived in the far country in which I was born,”

Crawford said. The desert man loves a story, a parable, a tale of the strong men of yesteryear.

Melchizedek clapped his hands in summons and when a slave appeared, called for _narghileh_ water pipes. When all had been supplied, they relaxed, bits in mouths and looked again at Homer Crawford.

”They were called,” he intoned, ”the Cheyenne. The Northern Cheyenne, for they had a sister tribe to the South. And on all the plains of this great land, a land, verily, as large as all that over which the Tuareg confederations now roam, they were the greatest huntsmen, the greatest warriors. All feared them. They were the lords of all.”