The journey took some days, as caravans go very slowly, but at last the walls and towers of the capital appeared in the distance. When the caravan halted the travellers went their different ways, and Neangir was left, feeling very strange and rather lonely. He had plenty of courage and made friends very easily; still, not only was it the first time he had left the village where he had been brought up, but no one had ever spoken to him of Constantinople, and he did not so much as know the name of a single street or of a creature who lived in it.
Wondering what he was to do next, Neangir stood still for a moment to look about him, when suddenly a pleasant-looking man came up, and bowing politely, asked if the youth would do him the honour of staying in his house till he had made some plans for himself. Neangir, not seeing anything else he could do, accepted the stranger"s offer and followed him home.
They entered a large room, where a girl of about twelve years old was laying three places at the table.
"Zelida," said the stranger, "was I not quite right when I told you that I should bring back a friend to sup with us?"
"My father," replied the girl, "you are always right in what you say, and what is better still, you never mislead others." As she spoke, an old slave placed on the table a dish called pillau, made of rice and meat, which is a great favourite among people in the East, and setting down gla.s.ses of sherbet before each person, left the room quietly.
During the meal the host talked a great deal upon all sorts of subjects; but Neangir did nothing but look at Zelida, as far as he could without being positively rude.
The girl blushed and grew uncomfortable, and at last turned to her father. "The stranger"s eyes never wander from me," she said in a low and hesitating voice. "If Ha.s.san should hear of it, jealousy will make him mad."
"No, no," replied the father, "you are certainly not for this young man.
Did I not tell you before that I intend him for your sister Argentine. I will at once take measures to fix his heart upon her," and he rose and opened a cupboard, from which he took some fruits and a jug of wine, which he put on the table, together with a small silver and mother-of-pearl box.
"Taste this wine," he said to the young man, pouring some into a gla.s.s.
"Give me a little, too," cried Zelida.
"Certainly not," answered her father, "you and Ha.s.san both had as much as was good for you the other day."
"Then drink some yourself," replied she, "or this young man will think we mean to poison him."
"Well, if you wish, I will do so," said the father; "this elixir is not dangerous at my age, as it is at yours."
When Neangir had emptied his gla.s.s, his host opened the mother-of-pearl box and held it out to him. Neangir was beside himself with delight at the picture of a young maiden more beautiful than anything he had ever dreamed of. He stood speechless before it, while his breast swelled with a feeling quite new to him.
His two companions watched him with amus.e.m.e.nt, until at last Neangir roused himself. "Explain to me, I pray you," he said, "the meaning of these mysteries. Why did you ask me here? Why did you force me to drink this dangerous liquid which has set fire to my blood? Why have you shown me this picture which has almost deprived me of reason?"
"I will answer some of your questions," replied his host," but all, I may not. The picture that you hold in your hand is that of Zelida"s sister. It has filled your heart with love for her; therefore, go and seek her. When you find her, you will find yourself."
"But where _shall_ I find her?" cried Neangir, kissing the charming miniature on which his eyes were fixed.
"I am unable to tell you more," replied his host cautiously.
"But I can," interrupted Zelida eagerly. "To-morrow you must go to the Jewish bazaar, and buy a watch from the second shop on the right hand.
And at midnight----"
But what was to happen at midnight, Neangir did not hear, for Zelida"s father hastily laid his hand over her mouth, crying: "Oh, be silent, child! Would you draw down on you by imprudence the fate of your unhappy sisters?" Hardly had he uttered the words, when a thick black vapour rose about him, proceeding from the precious bottle, which his rapid movement had overturned. The old slave rushed in and shrieked loudly, while Neangir, upset by this strange adventure, left the house.
[Ill.u.s.tration: NEANGIR SEES THE PICTURE OF ARGENTINE]
He pa.s.sed the rest of the night on the steps of a mosque, and with the first streaks of dawn he took his picture out of the folds of his turban. Then, remembering Zelida"s words, he inquired the way to the bazaar, and went straight to the shop she had described.
In answer to Neangir"s request to be shown some watches, the merchant produced several and pointed out the one which he considered the best.
The price was three gold pieces, which Neangir readily agreed to give him; but the man made a difficulty about handing over the watch unless he knew where his customer lived.
"That is more than I know myself," replied Neangir. "I only arrived in the town yesterday and cannot find the way to the house where I went first."
"Well," said the merchant, "come with me, and I will take you to a good Mussulman, where you will have everything you desire at a small charge."
Neangir consented, and the two walked together through several streets till they reached the house recommended by the Jewish merchant. By his advice the young man paid in advance the last gold piece that remained to him for his food and lodging.
As soon as Neangir had dined he shut himself up in his room, and thrusting his hand into the folds of his turban, drew out his beloved portrait. As he did so, he touched a sealed letter which had apparently been hidden there without his knowledge, and seeing it was written by his foster-mother, Zinebi, he tore it eagerly open. Judge of his surprise when he read these words:
"My dearest Child,--This letter, which you will some day find in your turban, is to inform you that you are not really our son. We believe your father to have been a great lord in some distant land, and inside this packet is a letter from him, threatening to be avenged on us if you are not restored to him at once. We shall always love you, but do not seek us or even write to us. It will be useless."
In the same wrapper was a roll of paper with a few words as follows, traced in a hand unknown to Neangir:
"Traitors, you are no doubt in league with those magicians who have stolen the two daughters of the unfortunate Siroco, and have taken from them the talisman given them by their father. You have kept my son from me, but I have found out your hiding-place and swear by the Holy Prophet to punish your crime. The stroke of my scimitar is swifter than the lightning."
The unhappy Neangir on reading these two letters--of which he understood absolutely nothing--felt sadder and more lonely than ever. It soon dawned on him that he must be the son of the man who had written to Mohammed and his wife, but he did not know where to look for him, and indeed thought much more about the people who had brought him up and whom he was never to see again.
To shake off these gloomy feelings, so as to be able to make some plans for the future, Neangir left the house and walked briskly about the city till darkness had fallen. He then retraced his steps and was just crossing the threshold when he saw something at his feet sparkling in the moonlight. He picked it up, and discovered it to be a gold watch shining with precious stones. He gazed up and down the street to see if there was anyone about to whom it might belong, but there was not a creature visible. So he put it in his sash, by the side of a silver watch which he had bought from the Jew that morning.
The possession of this piece of good fortune cheered Neangir up a little, "for," thought he, "I can sell these jewels for at least a thousand sequins, and that will certainly last me till I have found my father." And consoled by this reflection he laid both watches beside him and prepared to sleep.
In the middle of the night he awoke suddenly and heard a soft voice speaking, which seemed to come from one of the watches.
"Aurora, my sister," it whispered gently. "Did they remember to wind you up at midnight?"
"No, dear Argentine," was the reply. "And you?"
"They forgot me, too," answered the first voice, "and it is now one o"clock, so that we shall not be able to leave our prison till to-morrow--if we are not forgotten again--then."
"We have nothing now to do here," said Aurora. "We must resign ourselves to our fate--let us go."
Filled with astonishment Neangir sat up in bed, and beheld by the light of the moon the two watches slide to the ground and roll out of the room past the cats" quarters. He rushed towards the door and on to the staircase, but the watches slipped downstairs without his seeing them, and into the street. He tried to unlock the door and follow them, but the key refused to turn, so he gave up the chase and went back to bed.
The next day all his sorrows returned with tenfold force. He felt himself lonelier and poorer than ever, and in a fit of despair he thrust his turban on his head, stuck his sword in his belt, and left the house determined to seek an explanation from the merchant who had sold him the silver watch.
When Neangir reached the bazaar he found the man he sought was absent from his shop, and his place filled by another Jew.
"It is my brother you want," said he; "we keep the shop in turn, and in turn go into the city to do our business."
"Ah! _what_ business?" cried Neangir in a fury. "You are the brother of a scoundrel who sold me yesterday a watch that ran away in the night.
But I will find it somehow, or else you shall pay for it, as you are his brother!"
"What is that you say?" asked the Jew, around whom a crowd had rapidly gathered. "A watch that ran away. If it had been a cask of wine, your story might be true, but a watch----! That is hardly possible!"
"The Cadi shall say whether it is possible or not," replied Neangir, who at that moment perceived the other Jew enter the bazaar. Darting up, he seized him by the arm and dragged him to the Cadi"s house; but not before the man whom he had found in the shop contrived to whisper to his brother, in a tone loud enough for Neangir to hear, "Confess nothing, or we shall both be lost."
When the Cadi was informed of what had taken place he ordered the crowd to be dispersed by blows, after the Turkish manner, and then asked Neangir to state his complaint. After hearing the young man"s story, which seemed to him most extraordinary, he turned to question the Jewish merchant, who instead of answering raised his eyes to heaven and fell down in a dead faint.
The judge took no notice of the swooning man, but told Neangir that his tale was so singular he really could not believe it, and that he should have the merchant carried back to his own house. This so enraged Neangir that he forgot the respect due to the Cadi, and exclaimed at the top of his voice, "Recover this fellow from his fainting fit, and force him to confess the truth," giving the Jew as he spoke a blow with his sword which caused him to utter a piercing scream.
"You see for yourself," said the Jew to the Cadi, "that this young man is out of his mind. I forgive him his blow, but do not, I pray you, leave me in his power."