Prosecutor"My
son," said he, "rejoice and hold yourself ready to start in three days"
time. The ship is to set sail, and I have arranged all about your
passage with the captain "You could not bring me better news," replied
Camaralzaman, "and in return I have something pleasant to tell you.
Follow me and see the good fortune which has befallen you."
He then led the gardener to the cave, and having shown him the
treasure stored up there, said how happy it made him that Heaven should
in this way reward his kind host's many virtues and compensate him for
the privations of many years.
Heading One
"What do you mean?" asked the gardener. "Do you imagine that I should
appropriate this treasure? It is yours, and I have no right whatever to
it. For the last eighty years I have dug up the ground here without
discovering anything. It is clear that these riches are intended for
you, and they are much more needed by a prince like yourself than by an
old man like me, who am near my end and require nothing. This treasure
comes just at the right time, when you are about to return to your own
country, where you will make good use of it."
But the prince would not hear of this suggestion, and finally after
much discussion they agreed to divide the gold. When this was done the
gardener said: "My son, the great thing now is to arrange how you can
best carry off this treasure as secretly as possible for fear of losing
it. There are no olives in the Ebony Island, and those imported from
here fetch a high price. As you know, I have a good stock of the olives
which grew in this garden. Now you must take fifty jars, fill each half
full of gold dust and fill them up with the olives. We will then have
them taken on board ship when you embark."
Heading Two
The prince took this advice, and spent the rest of the day filling
the fifty jars, and fearing lest the precious talisman might slip from
his arm and be lost again, he took the precaution of putting it in one
of the jars, on which he made a mark so as to be able to recognise it.
When night came the jars were all ready, and the prince and his host
went to bed.
Whether in consequence of his great age, or of the fatigues and
excitement of the previous day, I do not know, but the gardener passed a
very bad night. He was worse next day, and by the morning of the third
day was dangerously ill. At daybreak the ship's captain and some of his
sailors knocked at the garden door and asked for the passenger who was
to embark.
"I am he," said Camaralzaman, who had opened the door. "The gardener
who took my passage is ill and cannot see you, but please come in and
take these jars of olives and my bag, and I will follow as soon as I
have taken leave of him."
The sailors did as he asked, and the captain before leaving charged
Camaralzaman to lose no time, as the wind was fair, and he wished to set
sail at once.
As soon as they were gone the prince returned to the cottage to bid
farewell to his old friend, and to thank him once more for all his
kindness. But the old man was at his last gasp, and had barely murmured
his confession of faith when he expired.
Camaralzaman was obliged to stay and pay him the last offices, so
having dug a grave in the garden he wrapped the kind old man up and
buried him. He then locked the door, gave up the key to the owner of the
garden, and hurried to the quay only to hear that the ship had sailed
long ago, after waiting three hours for him.
Heading Three
It may well be believed that the prince felt in despair at this fresh
misfortune, which obliged him to spend another year in a strange and
distasteful country. Moreover, he had once more lost the Princess
Badoura's talisman, which he feared he might never see again. There was
nothing left for him but to hire the garden as the old man had done, and
to live on in the cottage. As he could not well cultivate the garden by
himself, he engaged a lad to help him, and to secure the rest of the
treasure he put the remaining gold dust into fifty more jars, filling
them up with olives so as to have them ready for transport.
Continued