and her children are his relatives and the great Mahdi loves them. If we deliver you and the little 'bint' to him, he will exchange you for Fatma and her sons and will bless us. Know that even the water, in which every morning according to the precepts of the Koran he makes his ablutions, heals the sick and eliminates sins; and think what his blessing can accomplish!"
"Bismillah!" reiterated the Sudânese and Bedouins.
But Stas, clutching at the last plank for help, said:
"Then take me and let the Bedouins return with the little 'bint.' For me they will surrender Fatma and her sons."
"It is yet more certain that they will surrender her for you two."
At this the boy addressed Chamis:
"Your father shall answer for your conduct."
"My father is already in the desert, on his way to the prophet," retorted Chamis.
"Then they will capture and hang him."
Here, however, Idris deemed it proper to give encouragement to his companions.
"Those vultures," he said, "which will pick the flesh from our bones may not yet be hatched. We know what threatens us, but we are not children, and we know the desert of old. These men (here he pointed at the Bedouins) were many times in Berber and are acquainted with roads over which only gazelles roam. There nobody will find us and nobody will seek us. We must indeed turn for water to the Bahr Yûsuf and later to the Nile, but will do that in the night. Besides, do you think that on the river there are no secret friends of the Mahdi? And I tell you that the farther south we go the more of them we will find. There, tribes and their sheiks are only waiting for the favorable moment to seize the