Captive of the Harem

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by Anne Herries


  Chapter Eight

  ‘Suleiman and the Caliph must both die,’ Abu said, eyes

  glowing like black diamonds. ‘For, if one lived, retribution would

  be swift. Our only hope is to take them by surprise—and by

  taking this hunting trip together they play into our hands.’

  He glanced round at the faces of the men who had been

  bribed to join him—the Caliph’s second son Hasan, four of

  Hasan’s guards and two of Suleiman’s own men. Abu was not

  entirely certain of these two, though they were afraid of him.

  Both had lain with Fatima, which meant they would be put to

  death if their crime were discovered. She was insatiable, and

  even when she had been Suleiman’s favourite, she had craved

  sexual pleasure with others. Abu had arranged for her to lie with

  these two in return for help with the disappearance of a woman

  from the harem.

  ‘We shal kil them both—and when they are dead I shal rule

  in my father’s place,’ Hasan said, his cruel mouth narrowed in a

  sneer. ‘And you shal be my chief adviser, Abu. You may have a

  free hand in disposing of Suleiman’s concubines.’

  Abu inclined his head, his features expressionless. He knew

  he could not hope to become Caliph himself, but he could

  control this weak fool and rule through him. He moistened his

  lips with the tip of his tongue at the thought of the power he

  would hold.

  ‘I shal make you more powerful than your father,’ he

  promised. ‘Only play your part, Hasan, and within two days you

  shal be Caliph…’

  ‘Yes, yes…’ Hasan’s weak face glowed with the thought of

  his triumph over the brother who had always taken precedence

  over him in their father’s favour. ‘And then I shal dispose of al

  my enemies…’

  ‘Why do you come to me with this tale, Bayezid?’ Suleiman’s

  eyes narrowed as they fixed on his younger brother. ‘I know

  wel that you do not like Hasan—why should I believe your

  story? It might be that you wish to make trouble for him.’

  ‘I cannot make you believe my story,’ Bayezid said. ‘I can

  only tel you that I have seen Hasan and Abu together. They

  thought they had concealed their meeting, but I came upon them

  behind the stables of the Janissaries, and I heard something. I do

  not know what it means, but I believe they intend to kil you

  during the hunting trip with our father.’

  ‘And you do not wish to see me kiled?’

  ‘They would also need to kil our father, and I respect the

  Caliph because he is a good and just man—and I would like to

  be as he is one day if I can earn the respect of others and be

  given a position of trust.’

  Suleiman nodded. Bayezid was young and studious and,

  although he knew there was envy and hatred between Hasan and

  Bayezid, he was inclined to believe his story—especialy as he

  had known Abu must have had help from inside the palace to

  make his escape. He had thought Abu must have gone long ago,

  but now he realised the renegade was hiding somewhere within

  the palace grounds. Clearly he was waiting his chance to do

  more mischief.

  Suleiman could instigate a thorough search, root out the

  culprits and punish them—or he could alow the conspirators to

  go ahead with their treachery and have them taken in the act.

  Perhaps this was the best course, since he would then catch al

  the birds in one throw.

  ‘Thank you for your warning, brother.’ He smiled at Bayezid.

  ‘I believe it took courage to come and tel me—is there some

  way in which I might reward you?’

  Bayezid shook his head. ‘I have al that I need, brother. I

  want only a quiet life and to be left in peace to study. May Alah

  protect and guide your hand tomorrow.’

  ‘Alah be with you.’

  Left alone, Suleiman walked to the window that looked out

  on the harem gardens. They were deserted at this time of night,

  for his brother had waited until after dark to come to him in

  secret.

  Suleiman was wrestling with his problem and frowned as he

  came to his decision. He had given his word to Eleanor that she

  might accompany them on their hunting trip, but it must be

  broken. Her presence in the camp would hamper him, for she

  would be vulnerable and he had no time to watch over her. He

  would be vulnerable and he had no time to watch over her. He

  would need al his wits about him if he were to defeat his

  enemies.

  Eleanor would be disappointed to be left behind. If it were

  not so late he would send for her and explain, but the women

  would be sleeping and anything out of the ordinary might alert the

  conspirators.

  No, he must act as usual, but Eleanor must stay behind

  tomorrow.

  ‘What do you mean—I am not to accompany the lord

  Suleiman?’ Eleanor stared at Karin in dismay. She had looked

  forward to this trip outside the confines of the palace and to be

  denied at the last moment was a terrible disappointment. ‘Why?

  What have I done to displease my lord?’

  ‘I do not know,’ Karin replied, frowning. ‘He sent word early

  this morning that you were not to go after al. I am sorry,

  Eleanor. I suppose that he must have changed his mind.’

  ‘He changed his mind…’ Eleanor nodded, her eyes sparking

  with anger. Suleiman had changed his mind and so she was not

  to go. Her feelings on the matter were of no importance. He had

  not even bothered to send for her to tel her himself, merely

  sending a message at the last moment. It seemed he broke his

  promises as easily as he made them. ‘Yes, I see—I see that he is

  faithless and cares little for his word.’

  ‘You should not speak so of the lord Suleiman,’ Karin said

  giving her a severe look. ‘If it were reported to him, you could

  giving her a severe look. ‘If it were reported to him, you could

  be beaten. I am sure he has his reasons for disappointing you.’

  Eleanor’s temper was at bursting point, but she held it inside.

  Her anger was almost as much against herself as Suleiman. She

  had begun to believe in him, to trust him—and now he had done

  this! It made her realise that he could not be trusted…ever. She

  would be a fool to let herself be swayed by his soft words and

  his promises. He was, after al, nothing but a barbarian—and

  next time they met she would keep her distance.

  Her mood was not improved as she saw Fatima preening

  herself in the harem gardens that morning. She was wearing a

  satisfied expression that seemed to say she was back in

  Suleiman’s favour, and the news that Eleanor was not after al to

  be taken on the hunting trip made an interesting piece of gossip

  for the ladies of the harem.

  Some of the women cast her pitying glances, others made a

  fuss of Fatima as if wanting to assure her that they had never

  even for one moment thought that she had truly been set aside

  for this new woman.

  Anastasia, Elizabetta and Rosamunde were sympathetic

/>   towards Eleanor, teling her that Suleiman must have good

  reason not to take her with him. She smiled and pretended to

  agree with them, but her heart had begun to ache and it was

  difficult for her not to creep away and weep. But she would not

  let Fatima see that it mattered, and so she stayed with the others

  throughout the day, playing with the monkey and talking to the

  parrot, which she was trying to teach to say a few polite words

  in French.

  in French.

  It was not until the evening that she retired to her own room

  to study and transcribe some of the latest work that Suleiman

  had sent her—and then the heaviness of her heart was indeed

  hard to bear. She was a fool to have let down her guard even for

  a moment; if she once let herself truly care for him, she would be

  the same as al the other women who sighed and waited for him

  to notice them.

  The attack came on the first night at the camp. During the day

  the hunting had gone wel and they had kiled a wolf in the forest

  above the plains, which was better sport than the wild boar

  which was seldom hunted by Muslims. It had been decided they

  would make deer their sport on the next day.

  Suleiman had set his spies to watch Hasan and his guards,

  and he was warned long before the thin blade of a knife began to

  slit the side of his pavilion. He watched from the shadows in the

  far corner as the stealthy figure crept towards the sleeping palet

  where he ought to have been lying asleep, and as the dagger was

  brought down into the bundle he had arranged to resemble a

  man beneath the blanket.

  ‘Die, you dog!’

  The voice proclaimed the identity of the assassin had

  Suleiman needed proof. ‘Unfortunately for you, Abu—that was

  not me.’

  The cloaked figure gave a startled oath, the knife stil in his

  hand as he swung round, gasping his dismay. Suleiman moved

  hand as he swung round, gasping his dismay. Suleiman moved

  forward out of the shadows so that the assassin could see his

  face. Abu cursed. He lunged wildly at his half-brother, the

  certainty of what would happen when the discovery of his ful

  treachery was known making him lose his fear.

  ‘So you live stil!’ he yeled. ‘Yet I shal kil you—guards, to

  me! To me!’

  His cry to the men who stood on guard outside the tent went

  unheeded. He had chosen the men who had once served

  Suleiman, but they had already sensed his plans had gone awry,

  hesitating about folowing him inside and slipped away into the

  night rather than face the fury of the master they had foolishly

  betrayed. Somehow the lord Suleiman had learned of the

  treachery planned this night, and their only chance now was to

  flee.

  Suleiman met his half-brother’s attack without hesitation,

  striking a blow at his arm, and then twisting it so that Abu cried

  out in pain as a bone cracked and his weapon fel uselessly to the

  ground. He swayed on his feet, half-fainting in his agony, his eyes

  sulen and disbelieving as he looked at Suleiman. He had known

  he was strong, but his skil was even more awesome than Abu

  had imagined. The cowardly dogs he had paid to help him had

  refused to enter the tent, saying that they would watch over him

  and he suspected them of betraying him.

  ‘So now you wil kil me,’ he said as he looked into

  Suleiman’s cold eyes. ‘You wil not be foolish enough to spare

  me again.’

  ‘You made a mistake by throwing in your lot with Hasan,’

  ‘You made a mistake by throwing in your lot with Hasan,’

  Suleiman replied, his features set like iron. ‘Had your attack

  been just against me I might have kept to my original plans for

  you, Abu—but you dared to lift your hand against my father and

  for that there can be only one punishment.’ He raised his voice to

  summon his trusted guards. ‘Take him away!’

  Three guards entered the pavilion and laid hands on Abu,

  dragging him away as he cursed and screamed, for they did not

  and would not spare him. He would suffer horribly, for he had

  dared to plot against the life of the Caliph, and such a crime must

  be punished in a way that would deter others. Even Suleiman

  could not spare him what was to come—nor would he have

  considered it.

  ‘My father?’ Suleiman asked as a fourth man entered the

  pavilion after the others had gone. ‘The Caliph is unharmed?’

  ‘Your instructions were folowed to the letter, my lord,’ the

  captain of the Janissaries replied. ‘I took your father’s place and

  when they came to kil him my men were waiting—the traitors

  have been taken and wil be punished in accordance with their

  crimes.’

  ‘Good—I leave justice in your hands, Omar. And I thank you

  and your men for their loyalty.’

  ‘The two who betrayed you with Fatima have been arrested

  —what would you have me do with them, my lord?’

  ‘They may go to the galeys for two years and then be free to

  go whither they wil,’ Suleiman said. ‘They confessed their

  crimes and told of the plot against me—and for that I shal spare

  crimes and told of the plot against me—and for that I shal spare

  their lives.’

  ‘You are just, my lord,’ Omar said. ‘Alah be praised that this

  night went wel—but what of your brother Hasan?’

  ‘Has my father spoken?’

  ‘He says that Hasan may be spared only if you grant him his

  life.’

  ‘I do not,’ Suleiman said, his eyes as cold as deep water ice.

  ‘If he is spared he wil plot against us again, and others wil be

  foolish enough to folow. In order that no more lives may be lost,

  his is forfeit. However, he is not to be tortured and he is to be

  given a clean death by the sword. I trust you to see that my

  order is carried out as I have given it, Omar.’

  ‘Again your justice is good, my lord. It is how it should be.’

  Suleiman inclined his head, but did not speak as the captain of

  the guard bowed and left him. A deep shudder went through him

  as he thought of the fate of the traitors, and he knew that he had

  never felt so alone—so desperately alone.

  The Caliph had felt incapable of ordering the execution of his

  second son, even though he knew it must be and so he had left it

  to Suleiman, who had not shrunk from his duty—but it was a

  hard duty, the hardest thing he had ever done. To condemn his

  half-brothers to death… Abu he had never liked or trusted, but

  as a smal boy Hasan had been a delightful companion and they

  had spent much time together. He was sorry that Hasan’s life

  had come to this sorry end.

  Yet it had to be, there was no other way open to Suleiman.

  This world in which they lived was a harsh one and justice must

  This world in which they lived was a harsh one and justice must

  be seen to be done or the fragile order would crumble about

  their ears. He had been weak in alowing Abu to escape death

  the first time, but he would not esca
pe this time—and nor would

  poor foolish Hasan.

  And yet Suleiman felt as if it were he who was being

  punished. He shivered again, feeling the darkness descend on

  him as he went to open the flap of the pavilion and look out at

  the stars.

  Did those same stars shine in the sky above England? The

  land of his mother’s birth, of which she and Eleanor had told him

  —and would life be less harsh in such a place?

  He doubted it, for had not Eleanor been forced to flee her

  home in fear of retribution from a harsh regime? Why did human

  beings do so much harm to each other and themselves?

  Suleiman gave himself a mental shake. To dream of a

  civilisation where people could exist in harmony without spite or

  cruelty was to live in a fool’s paradise. Perhaps one day people

  would learn a new way, but it would not come in his lifetime.

  He smiled wryly at his own thoughts. Saidi Kasim had taught

  him too wel. He was beset with the doubts that would best

  become a philosopher and were not for the son of Caliph

  Bakhar, who must be strong and just. He would do better to

  think of something more pleasant…of a woman’s soft limbs and

  a smile that made him want to drown in her arms.

  ‘Oh, my lady,’ he murmured. ‘Would that you were here to

  lie beside me and drive away the demons this night.’

  The hunting trip was due to continue for another day, but after

  The hunting trip was due to continue for another day, but after

  that he would send for Eleanor and tel her what he had decided

  for her future.

  Elizabetta was teaching Eleanor to dance, showing her how to

  sway her hips aluringly. Anastasia was playing music for them,

  and Rosamunde was standing by to comment and encourage.

  Some of the other women had also come to watch.

  ‘Yes, you are beginning to get the idea now,’ Elizabetta said

  ‘you just need to put a little more feeling into it. Imagine that you are reaching out to your lover, begging him to take you in his

  arms and caress you…’

  Eleanor shook her head, throwing herself down on the

  cushions and laughing. ‘It is no good. I shal never be able to

  dance the way you do, Elizabetta.’

  ‘That is because you have never learned,’ her friend replied.

  ‘It wil come if you practise.’

  ‘I wil show you how to dance—how it should properly be

  done.’

  Eleanor looked up in surprise as she saw Fatima, wondering

 

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