His excellency the pasha had done them the honour to pay them a visit of ceremony on board ship, and was seated in great state surrounded by his suite in the best saloon.
After the chief personages on board had been presented, his excellency had, according to Captain Deering, desired to see that distinguished personage, Mr. Figgins, _alias_ the orphan.
And now the orphan stood trembling outside the door of the saloon.
"In you go, Mr. Figgins," whispered Captain Deering.
"One moment."
"Nonsense."
"Just a word."
"Bah!" said the captain, with a grin; "you aren"t going to have a tooth out. In with you."
He opened the door, gave the timorous orphan a vigorous drive behind, and Mr. Figgins stood in the august presence.
The pasha was seated--it would be irreverent to say squatted, which would better express it--upon a cushion that was, as Paddy says, hanging up on the floor.
His excellency was in that peculiar, not to say painful att.i.tude, which less agile mortals find unattainable, but which appears to mean true rest to Turk or tailor.
The pasha rejoiced in a beard of enormous dimensions, a grizzled dirt-coloured beard that almost touched the cushion upon which he sat.
A turban of red and gold silk was upon his venerable head.
And beside his excellency upon a cushion were laid his arms, weapons of barbarous make, thought the orphan.
A scimitar, curved _a la_ Saladin, two long-barrelled pistols, with jewelled b.u.t.ts, "as though they were earrings or bracelets," the orphan said to himself, a long dagger with an ivory hilt and sheath, and a piece of cord.
"That"s to tie them together with," mentally decided the orphan. "One might as well travel with the Woolwich a.r.s.enal or the armoury from the Tower. Barbarous old beast."
"Now," said Captain Deering, "tuck in your tuppenny, Mr. Figgins; bow as low as you can."
The orphan put his back into an angle of forty-five with his legs.
"Lower."
"Ugh!"
"A little bit more."
"Lower," said Captain Deering, in an agonised whisper. "We shall all be bowstrung if his excellency thinks us wanting in respect."
The orphan thus admonished made a further effort, and over he went
Head first!
There was such a chattering, such horrible sounds going on, as Captain Deering scrambled after the unfortunate orphan, that the latter thought his time was come.
The captain dragged him to his feet, however.
Then the presentation was proceeded with.
"His Excellency Ali Kungham Ben Nardbake," cried a dignitary standing beside the pasha, with a voice like a toastmaster.
"Good gracious me!" exclaimed the orphan, "all that?"
"That"s not half of it," said Captain Deering. "To the faithful, he is known as well as Sid Ney Ali Ben Lesters puar Nasr ed Bowstrung and Strattford Bustum."
Mr. Figgins was greatly alarmed at this.
"Powerful memories his G.o.dfathers and G.o.dmothers must have had," he murmured.
Beside the pasha stood an official, with a beard of extraordinary length.
"Who"s that?"
"Hush?" whispered Deering; "don"t speak so loud."
"Who is he?" again asked the orphan, sinking his voice.
"The one with the beard?"
"Yes."
"His name is Whiska Said Mahmoud Ben Ross Latreille," returned Deering.
"Dear, dear!" murmured the orphan, in despairing accents, "I shall never----"
"Ease her, stop her!" cried a familiar voice in Mr. Figgins"s ear, "you"ve got it in a knot."
It was Nat Cringle.
All was hushed.
The bearded official looked at the pasha, who nodded.
Then drawing his sword, he signed to two of his men, and Nat Cringle, looking dreadfully frightened, was bustled off behind a curtain which had been rigged up across the saloon, just at the pasha"s back.
"What are they going to do?" asked the orphan, his teeth chattering in alarm.
Captain Deering was so much affected at this stage of the proceedings that he covered his face with his pocket-handkerchief.
"Poor Nat!"
"What is it?" faltered Mr. Figgins, faintly.
"Did you not see the cord taken away with Nat?" demanded the captain, in a funereal ba.s.s.