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Departments He
waited as he was told, but instead of the lady there entered a huge
black slave with a sword in his hand. Approaching my brother with an
angry countenance he exclaimed, "What business have you here?" His voice
and manner were so terrific that Alnaschar had not strength to reply,
and allowed his gold to be taken from him, and even sabre cuts to be
inflicted on him without making any resistance. As soon as he was let
go, he sank on the ground powerless to move, though he still had
possession of his senses. Thinking he was dead, the black ordered the
Greek slave to bring him some salt, and between them they rubbed it into
his wounds, thus giving him acute agony, though he had the presence of
mind to give no sign of life. They then left him, and their place was
taken by the old woman, who dragged him to a trapdoor and threw him down
into a vault filled with the bodies of murdered men.
Heading One
At first the violence of his fall caused him to lose consciousness,
but luckily the salt which had been rubbed into his wounds had by its
smarting preserved his life, and little by little he regained his
strength. At the end of two days he lifted the trapdoor during the night
and hid himself in the courtyard till daybreak, when he saw the old
woman leave the house in search of more prey. Luckily she did not
observe him, and when she was out of sight he stole from this nest of
assassins and took refuge in my house.
Heading Two
I dressed his wounds and tended him carefully, and when a month had
passed he was as well as ever. His one thought was how to be revenged on
that wicked old hag, and for this purpose he had a purse made large
enough to contain five hundred gold pieces, but filled it instead with
bits of glass. This he tied round him with his sash, and, disguising
himself as an old woman, he took a sabre, which he hid under his dress.
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One morning as he was hobbling through the streets he met his old
enemy prowling to see if she could find anyone to decoy.
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He
went up to her and, imitating the voice of a woman,
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he
said,
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"Do you happen to have a pair of scales you could lend me? I have
just come from Persia and have brought with me five hundred gold
pieces, and I am anxious to see if they are the proper weight."
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"Good woman,"
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replied the old hag,
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"you could not have asked anyone better.
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My
son is a money-changer, and if you will follow me he will weigh them
for you himself.
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Only we must be quick or he will have gone to his shop." So saying
she led the way to the same house as before, and the door was opened by
the same Greek slave.
Again my brother was left in the hall, and the pretended son appeared
under the form of the black slave. "Miserable crone,"
Heading Three
he said to my brother, "get up and come with me," and turned to lead
the way to the place of murder. Alnaschar rose too, and drawing the
sabre from under his dress dealt the black such a blow on his neck that
his head was severed from his body. My brother picked up the head with
one hand, and seizing the body with the other dragged it to the vault,
when he threw it in and sent the head after it. The Greek slave,
supposing that all had passed as usual, shortly arrived with the basin
of salt, but when she beheld Alnaschar with the sabre in his hand she
let the basin fall and turned to fly. My brother, however, was too quick
for her, and in another instant her head was rolling from her shoulders.
The noise brought the old woman running to see what was the matter, and
he seized her before she had time to escape. "Wretch!" he cried, "do you
know me?"
Continued
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