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Captive of the Harem

Page 22

by Anne Herries


  hurrying back to see what al the commotion was about. She

  looked at Eleanor and her eyes were dark with fear.

  ‘I was told to offer you the fruit,’ she said, her voice a harsh

  whisper. ‘Fatima made me bring it to you.’

  ‘Would you repeat that to the lord Suleiman if you were

  asked?’

  Marisa looked into Eleanor’s eyes for a moment, and then

  nodded. ‘Forgive me, my lady. I did not know that the fruit

  was…’ She could not bring herself to say the word. ‘I ate one of

  the grapes myself as we talked…’ Her face was ashen. ‘I might

  have died instead of that poor creature.’

  ‘You should send to the lord Suleiman,’ Elizabetta said.

  ‘Fatima is evil, Eleanor, and she ought to be punished.’

  ‘Yes, yes, she should be punished,’ several voices were

  suddenly raised against the woman many of the others had

  feared and secretly hated. ‘We should tel Karin.’

  ‘Karin is il,’ Eleanor said. ‘And my lord cannot be disturbed

  ‘Karin is il,’ Eleanor said. ‘And my lord cannot be disturbed

  at this time. I shal deal with this myself.’

  ‘Be careful,’ Elizabetta warned. ‘If you chalenge her, she wil

  turn on you like a wounded beast.’

  ‘Yes, I know she may be dangerous,’ Eleanor replied. ‘But I

  cannot let this terrible thing she has done go unchalenged.

  Fatima must be brought to understand that her rule has ended.’

  She got up and walked purposefuly from the room, leaving

  the other women staring after her in dismay. Eleanor did not

  realise how cruel and ruthless Fatima could be. She had never been dragged from sleep by Abu and whipped until she begged

  for mercy.

  ‘We should do something to help her,’ Elizabetta said.

  ‘But what can we do?’ the others asked and looked at each

  other helplessly. None of them had ever dared to stand up to the

  favourite, and they were afraid of her. ‘If only Karin were here

  to guide us.’

  ‘That is why she was poisoned first,’ Elizabetta said. ‘Fatima

  is hoping that none of us wil be brave enough to stand up to her

  —but we cannot let her kil Eleanor. She is our salvation.’

  ‘Yes, yes, we must help her,’ Marisa agreed, remembering

  the promise Eleanor had made her. ‘We must al help her.

  Fatima cannot subdue us al if we are of one mind.’

  Eleanor was unaware of the debate she had left behind her.

  She was not afraid of Fatima. She had guessed that poisoned

  fruit might be offered her by one of the women, and that the

  women would know nothing of what was planned. She had

  women would know nothing of what was planned. She had

  therefore warned Morna that she must prepare al their food

  herself, and let no one else touch anything. Yet the ploy had been

  so obvious that Eleanor suspected the plot went deeper.

  Surely Fatima could not have hoped that Eleanor would eat

  the poisoned grape? Especialy since she must know that Karin

  would have told her of her own suspicions concerning Fatima.

  As she approached, she saw Dinazade about to leave her

  mistress’s rooms. When the servant caught sight of Eleanor, she

  ran back inside to warn her mistress.

  Fatima was waiting as Eleanor entered. Her dark eyes flashed

  with temper and her hatred was almost tangible.

  ‘I did not send for you,’ she said. ‘How dare you come here

  without being sent for?’

  ‘I need no invitation,’ Eleanor replied quietly. ‘We both know

  why I have come here, Fatima. You ordered Marisa to bring me

  that bowl of fruit. Why? Only some of the fruit was poisoned—

  how could you be sure I would eat it?’

  ‘I do not know of what you speak,’ Fatima said haughtily. ‘I

  sent you no fruit. If Marisa says otherwise she lies.’

  ‘I refused it,’ Eleanor told her, her eyes never leaving the

  other woman’s face for an instant. ‘Marisa ate one of the grapes

  and the monkey ate another. That poor creature died horribly,

  but Marisa is alive and able to tel her story to the lord

  Suleiman.’

  ‘He wil not believe her,’ Fatima said and smiled smugly. ‘He

  knows that the other women are jealous and tel lies about me.

  Why should I try to kil you? He does not take you to his bed.

  Why should I try to kil you? He does not take you to his bed.

  You are merely his scribe.’

  ‘I have used my skils with the Latin to assist my lord,’

  Eleanor agreed. ‘But I am soon to be his wife—and when that

  happens you wil be a long way from here, Fatima. You are to

  be sent back to Algiers.’

  ‘You lie!’ Fatima’s lovely face was twisted and made ugly by

  anger. ‘My lord wil not send me away for your sake. You are

  merely a passing fancy. When he is tired of you, he wil want me

  again.’

  ‘If Karin were not il it would already have been done.’

  ‘No!’ Fatima suddenly snatched up a knife she had been

  using to peel a peach and sprang at Eleanor with the blade. ‘I

  shal kil you. When you are dead, my lord wil send for me

  again.’

  Eleanor ducked as the other woman stabbed at her viciously.

  She looked about for something with which to protect herself

  and caught up a plump cushion, holding it in front of her face.

  Fatima’s knife tore through the silk, rendering it useless.

  ‘Help me!’ Fatima demanded of her servant as Eleanor

  continued to duck and weave, avoiding her slashing blade as the

  woman lunged at her again and again. ‘Catch her and hold her

  while I teach her who is mistress here. I shal destroy her beauty.

  My lord wil not want her then.’

  ‘Do nothing, Dinazade,’ Elizabetta commanded from the

  doorway. ‘Put the knife down, Fatima. We have sent for the

  eunuchs and they wil punish you if you injure…’

  Eleanor had been momentarily distracted by the sound of

  Eleanor had been momentarily distracted by the sound of

  Elizabetta’s voice. She took her eyes from Fatima, and in that

  instant the other woman gave a cry of triumph as her knife struck

  home, slashing across Eleanor’s upper arm. Eleanor gave a cry

  of pain, stumbled back and fel into Elizabetta’s arms.

  ‘You have kiled her!’ Marisa cried, helping Elizabetta to

  support Eleanor. ‘You tried to poison her and now you have

  kiled her!’

  ‘She attacked me.’ Fatima felt a flicker of fear as she saw

  accusation in the faces of the other women. They had massed

  together in the doorway and were staring at her in anger and

  disgust. ‘She was mad! She came here to kil me. You saw her,

  Dinazade! You saw her attack me. I wrested the knife from her

  to protect myself from her attack. Tel them! Tel them what you

  saw!’

  Dinazade stared at her mistress in silence. She had hated and

  feared her for years; now at last she saw the way to be revenged

  for al the beatings she had suffered at Fatima’s hands. Glancing

  over her shoulder, she saw that the eunuchs were pushing their

  way past the women.

  ‘I saw y
ou poison the grape,’ she said clearly. ‘I heard you

  order Marisa to take the bowl of fruit to the Englishwoman—and

  I saw you take up the knife. It was your intention to kil her. You

  wanted her dead because you knew that you had lost the lord

  Suleiman’s favour. You knew that she would have you

  banished…’

  ‘You traitor!’ Fatima had lost al control as she screamed and

  ‘You traitor!’ Fatima had lost al control as she screamed and

  flew at the servant. She stabbed her twice in the chest before

  Dinazade fel to the floor at her feet, the blood pouring from her

  wounds.

  A silence had falen over the women. The chief eunuch Hasar

  had been kneeling beside Eleanor. He glanced at two others who

  had folowed him in and then pointed at Fatima.

  ‘Take her,’ he said harshly. ‘She is to be imprisoned in the

  punishment cels and held there until the lord Suleiman decides

  her fate.’

  ‘No!’ Fatima screamed and struggled as the eunuchs

  approached her. Her eyes were wild and she stil held the

  bloodied knife that had kiled her servant and wounded Eleanor.

  ‘Do not touch me or my lord wil have you punished. He wants

  only me…only me…’

  Even as she screamed the words, one of the eunuchs hit her

  at the base of the neck with the side of his hand, and she

  colapsed, not dead but rendered unconscious by the disabling

  blow. He hoisted her over his shoulder and the women parted to

  let him through, some of them spitting at Fatima’s unconscious

  face as she was taken away. They had hated her with good

  reason, and not one of them was sorry for her. She deserved her

  punishment.

  ‘Dinazade is dead,’ one of the women said. ‘Poor woman,

  Fatima kiled her.’

  ‘Eleanor is alive,’ Elizabetta told them. ‘She fainted from the

  pain, but she is alive.’

  ‘I shal send the physician to her,’ Hasar said. He bent down

  ‘I shal send the physician to her,’ Hasar said. He bent down

  and lifted Eleanor in his arms, the other women fluttering behind

  him as he carried her to her room and laid her gently down on

  her divan. She was moaning slightly, barely conscious.

  ‘Take care of her,’ he instructed Elizabetta. ‘The physician

  wil come soon. But you may try to staunch the blood in the

  meantime.’

  ‘She must not die,’ Elizabetta said.

  ‘Pray that Alah grants her life,’ Hasar replied harshly. ‘The

  lord Suleiman is at prayer and cannot be disturbed—but should

  this woman die, his anger wil not be contained.’

  ‘We shal care for her,’ Elizabetta promised. ‘She is our

  friend. It was only Fatima who hated her.’

  ‘Others were present when this happened and did nothing to

  help her,’ the eunuch replied severely. ‘My master may choose

  to punish everyone if she dies. My own life is forfeit. I was told

  to protect her with my life, and I have failed.’

  Elizabetta looked at Marisa and the others as he went out.

  ‘We must pray that Eleanor lives—for we may al suffer if she

  dies.’

  ‘If only Anastasia or Karin were here.’

  ‘We must do what we can,’ Marisa said, looking at her

  fearfuly.

  ‘Leave her to me,’ Morna said, pushing them aside. ‘Bring

  me clean water and cloths. I shal be the one to tend her, though

  you must al help to watch over her—but only I shal touch her.

  My life means little to me. If she dies, I shal take the blame.’

  ‘I shal help you,’ Elizabetta said.

  ‘I shal help you,’ Elizabetta said.

  ‘And I—only tel me what to do,’ Marisa insisted. ‘You

  cannot bear al the nursing alone, or al the blame.’

  ‘I, too, shal help,’ Rosamunde said, coming forward. ‘I was

  in the garden while al this was going on and knew nothing until

  this moment. Why do you waste time in chatter? Eleanor wil

  bleed to death if you do nothing to staunch the wound. Bring

  clean cloths and help me. I have seen such wounds before and

  know what must be done to stop the bleeding.’

  Rosamunde’s manner of calm authority brought instant

  response from the others. Elizabetta had been filing a basin with

  water, and Morna had produced a shift of clean white cloth,

  which she proceeded to tear into strips.

  The other women stood just outside the door watching until

  Marisa shooed them away.

  ‘She wil sleep now,’ the physician told Rosamunde as

  Eleanor’s eyes closed and he laid her gently back against the

  cushions. He glanced at Rosamunde with approval. ‘You did

  wel to staunch the wound, lady. But she has lost too much blood

  and the wound is deep. She wil need careful nursing if she is not

  to die of the putrid infection.’

  ‘Tel me what I must do,’ Rosamunde begged. ‘She is my

  friend. I love her and would not have her die.’

  The physician nodded. He had been robbed of his manhood

  long years ago, and no longer felt the desires of a natural man—

  but even he could appreciate the beauty of his patient. And he

  but even he could appreciate the beauty of his patient. And he

  had been told that she was the intended bride of the Caliph’s

  son.

  ‘You must keep her drugged for at least two days,’ he

  replied. ‘Otherwise she wil not bear the pain. Her bandages

  must be changed frequently. And if the fever strikes…’ He

  shook his head sorrowfuly. ‘I shal bring you a mixture of herbs

  for her to drink, but in that case it wil be as Alah wils it.’

  Rosamunde nodded. She knew that the physician had done

  his best for Eleanor, repairing the deep slash in her arm skilfuly.

  There was no doubt that his work would leave a scar, but that

  could not be helped. Al that mattered now was that Eleanor

  should live.

  Rosamunde wished that Anastasia was with them, for they

  sorely needed her skils, but somehow, she and the others must

  make Eleanor wel. Rosamunde had not heard Hasar’s warning

  herself, but Elizabetta and Marisa had told her that al their lives

  might be forfeit if Eleanor died.

  Rosamunde had been sent for a few times by the lord

  Suleiman during her first year or two in the harem. She had found

  him a stern, passionate man, though he had asked her only to

  sing for him. She was not sure what he might be capable of if his

  anger were aroused.

  Everyone said he loved Eleanor. If that were so, he might go

  mad with grief if she should die of her wound.

  Rosamunde glanced at Elizabetta as she came to take her turn

  at sitting beside their patient.

  ‘Do you think he knows?’ she asked. ‘Do you suppose that

  anyone has told the lord Suleiman what has happened to

  Eleanor?’

  ‘I do not know,’ Elizabetta replied. ‘I believe he keeps a vigil

  for his sick friend. I do not think anyone would dare to approach

  him with such news at this time.’

  Rosamunde frowned. ‘I have never said it—but I find him

  intimidating. I thank God that I a
m not the one who has to tel

  him.’

  ‘Our lord can be fierce,’ Elizabetta said thoughtfuly. ‘But he

  was always kind to me, though he sent for me only a few times

  —and not at al once Fatima came, for her dancing pleased him

  more than mine. Yet I do not believe that he would punish us al

  for something that was not our fault.’

  ‘A man may do anything when half out of his mind with grief,’

  Rosamunde replied. ‘We must pray that Eleanor recovers—for

  her sake and our own.

  Chapter Ten

  ‘I thank you for your care of my friend,’ Suleiman said. ‘Your nursing has done what al my wise physicians could not.’ He

  smiled at Anastasia. ‘I would grant you any boon that you ask—

  including your freedom and a pension to keep you from the need

  to return to slavery.’

  ‘Al I would ask is to be alowed to stay here, my lord. I

  would like to serve the lady Eleanor—and to be given freedom

  to nurse the sick. I believe there are many within the palace that

  would benefit from my help. If there could be a room

  somewhere within the palace grounds where I might tend any

  who need me…’ She looked at him anxiously. ‘And I must tel

  you, my lord, that the poultice the lady Eleanor recommended

  was a part of the cure. I have used it before and I know its

  healing properties.’

  ‘You shal have al that you have asked and more,’ Suleiman

  promised. ‘I have been aware that too many die for lack of care

  —we shal see what can be done to remedy this, lady. From

  now on you are no longer bound by the rules of the harem. You

  may come and go as you please within the palace—and to the

  city with an escort to protect you.’

  ‘You are generous, my lord.’

  Suleiman shook his head. ‘It is I who have much to thank you

  for, lady. You may return to the harem if you wish. I hope that

  the lady Karin wil be wel enough to resume her duties soon. I

  shal send her to you with news I believe you may already have

  guessed.’

  Anastasia smiled and bowed her head as she left him. He was

  staring at his manuscripts through the long-handled glasses he

  had adopted for studying when the eunuch approached. At once,

  Suleiman realised that something was wrong—the man looked

  terrified!

  ‘Yes, what is it, Hasar?’

  The eunuch fel to his knees before him. ‘Forgive me, my

 

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