Ha.s.san"s eyes flashed.
"Yonder he stands," he said, "alone. Will you come with me and speak to him?"
She bowed her head, and giving her his hand, he led her to the p.o.o.p.
"Sir captain," he began, addressing Lozelle, "the Princess here tells me a strange story--that you have dared to offer your love to her, by Allah! to her, a niece of Salah-ed-din."
"What of it, Sir Saracen?" answered Lozelle, insolently. "Is not a Christian knight fit mate for the blood of an Eastern chief?
Had I offered her less than marriage, you might have spoken."
"You!" answered Ha.s.san, with rage in his low voice, "you, huckstering thief and renegade, who swear by Mahomet in Damascus and by your prophet Jesus in England--ay, deny it not, I have heard you, as I have heard that rogue, Nicholas, your servant.
You, her fit mate? Why, were it not that you must guide this ship, and that my master bade me not to quarrel with you till your task was done, I would behead you now and cut from your throat the tongue that dared to speak such words," and as he spoke he gripped the handle of his scimitar.
Lozelle quailed before his fierce eyes, for well he knew Ha.s.san, and knew also that if it came to fighting his sailors were no match for the emir and his picked Saracens.
"When our duty is done you shall answer for those words," he said, trying to look brave.
"By Allah! I hold you to the promise," replied Ha.s.san. "Before Salah-ed-din I will answer for them when and where you will, as you shall answer to him for your treachery."
"Of what, then, am I accused?" asked Lozelle. "Of loving the lady Rosamund, as do all men--perhaps yourself, old and withered as you are, among them?"
"Ay, and for that crime I will repay you, old and withered as I am, Sir Renegade. But with Salah-ed-din you have another score to settle--that by promising her escape you tried to seduce her from this ship, where you were sworn to guard her, saying that you would find her refuge among the Greeks of Cyprus."
"Were this true," replied Lozelle, "the Sultan might have cause of complaint against me. But it is not true. Hearken, since speak I must. The lady Rosamund prayed me to do this deed, and I told her that for my honour"s sake it is not possible, although it was true that I loved her now as always, and would dare much for her.
Then she said that if I did but save her from you Saracens, I should not go without my reward, since she would wed me. Again, although it cost me sore, I answered that it might not be, but when once I had brought my ship to land, I was her true knight, and being freed of my oath, would do my best to save her."
"Princess, you hear," said Ha.s.san, turning to Rosamund. "What say you?"
"I say," she answered coldly, "that this man lies to save himself. I say, moreover, that I answered to him, that sooner would I die than that he should lay a finger on me."
"I hold also that he lies," said Ha.s.san. "Nay; unclasp that dagger if you would live to see another sun. Here, I will not fight with you, but Salah-ed-din shall learn all this case when we reach his court, and judge between the word of the princess of Baalbec and of his hired servant, the false Frank and pirate, Sir Hugh Lozelle."
"Let him learn it--when we reach his court," answered Lozelle, with meaning; then added, "Have you aught else to say to me, prince Ha.s.san? Because if not, I must be attending to the business of my ship, which you suppose that I was about to abandon to win a lady"s smile."
"Only this, that the ship is the Sultan"s and not yours, for he bought it from you, and that henceforth this lady will be guarded day and night, and doubly guarded when we come to the sh.o.r.es of Cyprus, where it seems that you have friends. Understand and remember."
"I understand, and certainly I will remember," replied Lozelle, and so they parted.
"I think," said Rosamund, when he had gone, "that we shall be fortunate if we land safe in Syria."
"That was in my mind, also, lady. I think, too, that I have forgot my wisdom, but my heart rose against this man, and being still weak from sickness, I lost my judgment and spoke what was in my heart, who would have done better to wait. Now, perhaps, it will be best to kill him, if it were not that he alone has the skill to navigate the ship, which is a trade that he has followed from his youth. Nay, let it go as Allah wills. He is just, and will bring the matter to judgment in due time."
"Yes, but to what judgment?" asked Rosamund.
"I hope to that of the sword," answered Ha.s.san, as he bowed and left her.
From that time forward armed men watched all the night through before Rosamund"s cabin, and when she walked the deck armed men walked after her. Nor was she troubled by Lozelle, who sought to speak with her no more, or to Ha.s.san either. Only with the man Nicholas he spoke much.
At length upon one golden evening--for Lozelle was a skilful pilot, one of the best, indeed, who sailed those seas--they came to the sh.o.r.es of Cyprus, and cast anchor. Before them, stretched along the beach, lay the white town of Limazol, with palm trees standing up amidst its gardens, while beyond the fertile plain rose the mighty mountain range of Trooidos. Sick and weary of the endless ocean, Rosamund gazed with rapture at this green and beauteous sh.o.r.e, the home of so much history, and sighed to think that on it she might set no foot. Lozelle saw her look and heard her sigh, and as he climbed into the boat which had come out to row him into the harbour, mocked her, saying:
"Will you not change your mind, lady, and come with me to visit my friend, the Emperor Isaac? I swear that his court is gay, not packed full of sour Saracens or pilgrims thinking of their souls.
In Cyprus they only make pilgrimages to Paphos yonder, where Venus was born from out the foam, and has reigned since the beginning of the world--ay, and will reign until its end."
Rosamund made no answer, and Lozelle, descending into the boat, was rowed sh.o.r.ewards through the breakers by the dark-skinned, Cyprian oarsmen, who wore flowers in their hair and sang as they laboured at the oars.
For ten whole days they rolled off Limazol, although the weather was fair and the wind blew straight for Syria. When Rosamund asked why they bided there so long, Ha.s.san stamped his foot and said it was because the Emperor refused to supply them with more food or water than was sufficient for their daily need, unless he, Ha.s.san, would land and travel to an inland town called Nicosia, where his court lay, and there do homage to him. This, scenting a trap, he feared to do, nor could they put out to sea without provisions.
"Cannot Sir Hugh Lozelle see to it?" asked Rosamund.
"Doubtless, if he will," answered Ha.s.san, grinding his teeth; "but he swears that he is powerless."
So there they bode day after day, baked by the sweltering summer sun and rocked to and fro on the long ocean rollers till their hearts grew sick within them, and their bodies also, for some of them were seized with a fever common to the sh.o.r.es of Cyprus, of which two died. Now and again some officer would come off from the sh.o.r.e with Lozelle and a little food and water, and bargain with them, saying that before their wants were supplied the prince Ha.s.san must visit the Emperor and bring with him the fair lady who was his pa.s.senger, whom he desired to see.
Ha.s.san would answer no, and double the guard about Rosamund, for at nights boats appeared that cruised round them. In the daytime also bands of men, fantastically dressed in silks, and with them women, could be seen riding to and fro upon the sh.o.r.e and staring at them, as though they were striving to make up their minds to attack the ship.
Then Ha.s.san armed his grim Saracens and bade them stand in line upon the bulwarks, drawn scimitar in hand, a sight that seemed to frighten the Cypriotes--at least they always rode away towards the great square tower of Colossi.
At length Ha.s.san would bear it no more. One morning Lozelle came off from Limazol, where he slept at night, bringing with him three Cyprian lords, who visited the ship--not to bargain as they pretended, but to obtain sight of the beauteous princess Rosamund. Thereon the common talk began of homage that must be paid before food was granted, failing which the Emperor would bid his seamen capture the ship. Ha.s.san listened a while, then suddenly issued an order that the lords should be seized.
"Now," he said to Lozelle, "bid your sailors haul up the anchor, and let us begone for Syria."
"But," answered the knight, "we have neither food nor water for more than one day."
"I care not," answered Ha.s.san, "as well die of thirst and starvation on the sea as rot here with fever. What we can bear these Cyprian gallants can bear also. Bid the sailors lift the anchor and hoist the sail, or I loose my scimitars among them."
Now Lozelle stamped and foamed, but without avail, so he turned to the three lords, who were pale with fear, and said:
"Which will you do: find food and water for this ship, or put to sea without them, which is but to die?"
They answered that they would go ash.o.r.e and supply all that was needful.
"Nay," said Ha.s.san, "you bide here until it comes."
In the end, then, this happened, for one of the lords chanced to be a nephew of the Emperor, who, when he learned that he was captive, sent supplies in plenty. Thus it came about that the Cyprian lords having been sent back with the last empty boat, within two days they were at sea again.
Now Rosamund missed the hated face of the spy, Nicholas, and told Ha.s.san, who made inquiry, to find--or so said Lozelle--that he went ash.o.r.e and vanished there on the first day of their landing in Cyprus, though whether he had been killed in some brawl, or fallen sick, or hidden himself away, he did not know. Ha.s.san shrugged his shoulders, and Rosamund was glad enough to be rid of him, but in her heart she wondered for what evil purpose Nicholas had left the ship.
When the galley was one day out from Cyprus steering for the coast of Syria, they fell into a calm such as is common in those seas in summer. This calm lasted eight whole days, during which they made but little progress. At length, when all were weary of staring at the oil-like sea, a wind sprang up that grew gradually to a gale blowing towards Syria, and before it they fled along swiftly. Worse and stronger grew that gale, till on the evening of the second day, when they seemed in no little danger of being p.o.o.ped, they saw a great mountain far away, at the sight of which Lozelle thanked G.o.d aloud.
"Are those the mountains near Antioch?" asked Ha.s.san.
"Nay," he answered, "they are more than fifty miles south of them, between Ladikiya and Jebela. There, by the mercy of Heaven, is a good haven, for I have visited it, where we can lie till this storm is past."
"But we are steering for Darbesak, not for a haven near Jebela, which is a Frankish port," answered Ha.s.san, angrily.
"Then put the ship about and steer there yourself," said Lozelle, "and I promise you this, that within two hours every one of you will be dead at the bottom of the sea."
Ha.s.san considered. It was true, for then the waves would strike them broadside on, and they must fill and sink.