Authors: Hammond; Innes
“It was because I befriended David that Colonel Whitaker asked me to look after his financial affairs.”
“Yess. Yess, I believe that.” But his eyes still searched my face as though he wasn't sure.
“What is it you want to tell me?” I wanted to get this over. Presumably Gorde and Otto would be leaving with Erkhard, and I wanted to be on that plane, away from the dark feuds of this desert world.
He didn't answer at once. But then he suddenly seemed to make up his mind. He leaned forward. “David is alive,” he said.
I stared at him, too astounded for the moment to utter a word. “Alive?” Those three women ⦠but, remembering their attitude, I remembered Whitaker's too. “What do you mean?” I was suddenly extremely angry with Khalid. “How can he be alive?” And when he didn't say anything, I added: “It's more than six weeks since your father sent an armed guard to arrest him and they found his camp deserted.”
“I know. But is alive.” He said it very seriously.
“Where is he, then?” I still didn't believe him. I thought it was a damned stupid lie he'd thought up to try and keep Whitaker in Saraifa. As if Whitaker, with all his experience of the desert, would believe it. “You tell me where he is andâ”
“No.” His voice was flat and decisive. “No, I don't tell youânot yet. But is alive. That I promise, Meester Grant.” I suppose he realized that just stating it wouldn't convince me, for he went on quickly: “When
Haj
Whitaker is gone to visit the Emir, I am much disturbed for David's life. He is already on that border almost two moons with the truck that was brought by his father across the Jebel Mountains from Muscat. He is altogether alone, and his father I believe to be hating him for things he has said.”
“What sort of things?”
He shrugged. “He don't tell me. But he is very much unhappy, I know that. He come here to this room to see me before he leave, and he warn me there is no oil where
Haj
Whitaker is drilling, that the only place there is any probability of oil is on that border. He says also that his father is an old man now and has lost faith in himself and that he is drilling to cheat the Company, for revenge against this Meester Erk-hard and nothing more.”
“And you believed him?”
“He is as my brother. He don't lie to me.” And then he told me how he'd taken two of his men and a spare camel and had ridden to the border as soon as he knew David was to be arrested. He'd found David alone, deserted by his crew. After emptying the spare cans from the seismological truck, David had driven it into the Rub al Khali desert until it had run out of petrol on the side of that dune. “Then he leaves the truck and rides on with us. It is all as we arrange it together.”
“You mean you planned it in advance?”
“Yess. It is all arranged between us because I am afraid for this emergency.”
The details fitted. They fitted so well that I was forced to accept what he'd told me as the truth. But he wouldn't reveal where David was hidden. “He is with my two menâHamid and a boy called Ali. They are of the Wahiba and altogether to be trusted.”
“Why have you told me this?” I asked.
“Because everything is gone wrong, everything David plannedâand now I need your help. You are David's friend, and also you work for his father. I think per'aps only you can bring reconciliation between them. And without reconciliation ⦔ But he seemed reluctant to put his fears into words. “What do you think now, sir?” he asked abruptly. “Is reconciliation possible? How will
Haj
Whitaker act when he finds David is alive?”
“How would you react if you thought your son were dead?” But I realized I'd no idea what Whitaker's reaction would be. I didn't know enough about their relationship, how he'd come to regard his son in those last months. If Sue were right and they really had been close at one time ⦠“It'll come as a hell of a shock to him.”
“Yess, but is it possibleâa reconciliation?”
“Of course. Particularly now that Colonel Whitaker ⦔ I hesitated, wondering whether I ought to tell him what was in Whitaker's mind. But I thought he'd a right to know that Whitaker was considering drilling on his son's locations. After all, it was what David had wanted. They'd be able to work on it together now.
With this thought in mind, I was quite unprepared for the violence of Khalid's reaction when I told him. “Is imbecility!” he cried, jumping to his feet. “He cannot do that now. Is altogether too late.” He was pacing up and down, very agitated and waving his arms about. “Sheikh Abdullah has already left to return to Hadd. He will report to the Emir all that has occurred here. If then
Haj
Whitaker remove his oil rig to the border ⦔ He turned to me, still in great agitation, and said: “It will mean war between us and Hadd. War, do you understand? For my father is guided by
Haj
Whitaker. The Emir knows that. And if
Haj
Whitaker himself is on that border, then the Emir will know there is oil there and that my father will concede no revision of the boundaries between Hadd and Saraifa. You understand? You will help me?” He didn't give me time to answer, but summoned my escort. “We leave at once, for there is little time. Excuse, please. I go to my father now.”
He left then and I was alone with my three Arab guards. The child had stopped crying. There was no sound of women's voices. The palace slept, and, sitting there, thinking about David, convinced now that he was still alive, I gradually became resigned to the fact that I wasn't going to get away in the plane that morning.
Khalid was gone about ten minutes. When he came back his face was pale, his manner subdued. “I tell my father I am going to Dhaid to gather more men.”
“Did you tell him about Whitaker?”
“No. I don't tell him. And I don't tell him about David eitherânot yet. Is very much disturbed already. Come!”
“Is David at Dhaid?” I asked.
“No. But Sheikh Hassa holds that village for us. He will give us camels, and perhaps Salim bin Gharuf is there. I don't know. We have to hurry.” He gave an order to my escort and I was hustled out of the palace into the great courtyard where his Land Rover stood. The escort piled in behind us, and as we drove down into the date-gardens it was difficult to believe that the people of this peaceful place were threatened with extinction, that they had been so roused that night that they'd set fire to an oil-company plane. The breeze had died and the whole world was still. Nothing moved. And when we ran out into the desert beyond the palms, it was into a dead, white world, for the moon was high now. We headed south, Khalid driving the Land Rover flat out, bucking the soft sand patches, eating up the flat gravel stretches at a tearing speed.
We were held up for a time by a choked petrol feed, and the first grey light of dawn was taking the brightness from the moon when a needle-tip of latticed steel showed above the grey whaleback of a dune. It was Whitaker's oil rig, a mobile outfitâthe sort they call an “A” rig, truck and drill combined. It stood up out of the desert floor like a steel spear planted in the sand as a challenge to the vast wastes of emptiness that surrounded it. Beside it was a
barasti
, two Bedou tents and some tattered wisps of black cloth that acted as windbreaks.
As we neared it we heard the sound of the diesel, could see the Arab drilling crew busy drawing pipe. Other Arabs were loading a second truck with lengths of pipe. Early though it was, the place was humming with activity, and when Khalid stopped and questioned them, he learned that Yousif had arrived just over an hour before with orders for them to prepare to move.
Whitaker had made his decision. He was moving his rig to the Hadd border, and up in my empty turret room there were doubtless letters waiting for me to take to Bahrain. “Is crazy!” Khalid cried, jumping back into the driving-seat. “Why does he do this now? He should do it before or not at all.” He drove on then, passing close below the derrick. It looked old and battered, the metal bare of paint and burnished bright in places by the drifting sands. The derrick man was up aloft stacking pipe, his loincloth smeared with oil, his turbaned head a bundle of cloth against the paling sky.
Dawn was coming swiftly now, and beyond the shallow slope of a dune I saw the tinsel gleam of Erkhard's aircraft. It stood at the far end of a cleared stretch of gravel, and the sight of it brought back to me my urge to escape from the desert. But when I demanded to be taken to it, Khalid took no notice except to give an order to the Arabs in the back. I reached for the ignition key. A brown hand seized my arm, another gripped my shoulders, and I was held pinned to my seat whilst we plunged at more than thirty miles an hour into a world of small dunes, and the plane vanished beyond my reach.
After that the going was very bad for mile after weary mile. And when finally we came out of the little-dune country, it was on to a gravel plain ribbed by crumbling limestone outcrops. A few dried-up herbs, brittle as dead twigs, bore witness to the fact that it had rained there once, many years ago. The land was dry and dead, flat as a pan, and as dawn broke and the sun came up, I lost all sense of horizon, for the whitish surface reflected the glare in an endless mirage.
All the way from the rig the going was bad. We had more trouble with the petrol feed, and it was past midday before we caught sight of the low hill on which Dhaid stood. It throbbed in the heat haze, looking like the back of a stranded whale surrounded by pools of water. The crumbling mud walls of the village were merged in colour and substance with the crumbling rock on which they were built, so that it wasn't until we stopped at the foot of a well-worn camel track that I could make out the shape of the buildings. There was a single arched gateway, and we had barely started up the track on foot when the villagers poured out of it and rushed upon us, leaping from rock to rock, shouting and brandishing their weapons.
Khalid showed no alarm, walking steadily forward, his gait, his whole bearing suddenly full of dignity. And then they were upon us, engulfing us: a wild, ragamuffin lot, teeth and eyes flashing, dark sinewy hands stretched out to us in the clasp of friendship. They were dirty, dusty-looking men, some with no more than a loincloth, and they looked dangerous with their black hair and bearded faces and their animal exuberance; and yet the warmth of that unexpected welcome was such after that empty, gruelling drive that I greeted them like brothers, their horny, calloused hands gripped around my wrists. It was the beginning of my acceptance of desert life.
Sheikh Hassa followed behind the rest of the villagers, picking his way sedately over the rock, his gun-bearer just ahead of him carrying his new BSA rifle, which was his pride and joy. He was a short, tough-looking man with a shaggy black beard that gave him an almost piratical appearance. He greeted Khalid with deference, touching his hand with his fingers, carrying them to his lips and to his heart. “
Faddal
.” And we went up the track and through the gateway into the village. A crowded square pulsating in the heat, a cool, darkened room spread with a rug, camel milk in bowls still warm from the beast's udder, and talkâendless, endless talk. I leaned back on the cushions, my eyelids falling, my head nodding. The buzz of flies. The buzz of talk. Not even coffee could keep me awake.
And then Khalid called to me and introduced me to a sinewy old man who stood half naked in the gloom, a filthy loincloth round his waist and his headcloth wound in a great pile above his greying locks so that he looked top-heavy. This was Salim bin Gharuf. “He is of the Dura,” Khalid said, “and he knows the place.” I asked him what place, but he ignored that. “Is better now that you wear these, please.” He produced a bundle of Bedou clothing, holding it out to me.
They were cast-off clothes and none too clean. “Is this really necessary?” I demanded.
He nodded emphatically. “Is better you look like one of us now.”
“Why? Where are we going?”
“I tell you later. Not here. You will change, please.” He helped me off with my European clothes and wound the loincloth round my waist; the long, dusty robe, the length of cloth twisted about my head, sandals, too, and an old brass-hilted knife for my belt. Sheikh Hassa watched me critically. I think the clothes were his. Men came and peered, and the crowded room resounded with their mirth. Khalid sensed my annoyance. “They don't mean any disrespect, sir. And you are going where no
faranji
has been beforeâsave David.”
It was meant to mollify, but all it did was rouse my curiosity again. “Well, if you won't tell me where he is,” I said, “at least tell me how long it will take us to reach him.”
“A day and then half a day if we travel fast. Perhaps two days. I don't know. There is possibility of a storm.”
I think perhaps he might have told me more, but at that moment a man burst into the room shouting something, and instantly all was confusion. The room emptied with a rush that carried me with it out on to the white glare of a rooftop. Below us a single camel climbed wearily up the track, urged on by its rider.
Khalid pushed past me. “Is one of my father's racing camels,” he said.
Five minutes later he returned with the rider, a thick-set man with long hair twisted up in his headcloth. Khalid talked for a moment with Sheikh Hassa and then with Salim. Finally he came to me. “The oil men have left, and at dawn this morning several large raiding parties from Hadd crossed our borders. My father orders me to return.”
My surprise was occasioned less by the news than by the realization that the camel must have made the journey in less time than we had taken in the Land Rover. But Khalid's next words jolted me into awareness of what it meant to me personally. “You go now with Salim.”
“But ⦔
“Please, Meester Grant.” His face looked old now beyond his years, haggard after the long drive, the sleepless night. His eyes, staring at me, burned with an inner fire. “Is altogether important now. Tell David what has happened, that his plan has failed and that there is no hope now of the oil concession. He must go to his father immediately.”