“Are they known to be thy people?”
“No.
To the world they are robbers, whom it is mine to catch and slay.”
“Again, sheik.
You call me son of Hur— my father’s name.
I did not think myself known to a person on earth.
How came you by the knowledge?”
Ilderim hesitated; but, rallying, he answered,
“I know you, yet I am not free to tell you more.”
“Some one holds you in restraint?”
The sheik closed his mouth, and walked away; but, observing Ben-Hur’s disappointment, he came back, and said,
“Let us say no more about the matter now.
I will go to town; when I return, I may talk to you fully.
Give me the letter.”
Ilderim rolled the papyrus carefully, restored it to its envelopes, and became once more all energy.
“What sayest thou?” he asked, while waiting for his horse and retinue. “I told what I would do, were I thou, and thou hast made no answer.”
“I intended to answer, sheik, and I will.” Ben-Hur’s countenance and voice changed with the feeling invoked. “All thou hast said, I will do— all at least in the power of a man.
I devoted myself to vengeance long ago.
Every hour of the five years passed, I have lived with no other thought. I have taken no respite.
I have had no pleasures of youth.
The blandishments of Rome were not for me.
I wanted her to educate me for revenge.
I resorted to her most famous masters and professors—not those of rhetoric or philosophy: alas! I had no time for them.
The arts essential to a fighting-man were my desire.
I associated with gladiators, and with winners of prizes in the Circus; and they were my teachers.
The drill-masters in the great camp accepted me as a scholar, and were proud of my attainments in their line.
O sheik, I am a soldier; but the things of which I dream require me to be a captain.
With that thought, I have taken part in the campaign against the Parthians; when it is over, then, if the Lord spare my life and strength— then”— he raised his clenched hands, and spoke vehemently— “then I will be an enemy Roman-taught in all things; then Rome shall account to me in Roman lives for her ills.
You have my answer, sheik.”
Ilderim put an arm over his shoulder, and kissed him, saying, passionately,
“If thy God favor thee not, son of Hur, it is because he is dead.
Take thou this from me— sworn to, if so thy preference run: thou shalt have my hands, and their fulness— men, horses, camels, and the desert for preparation.
I swear it!
For the present, enough.
Thou shalt see or hear from me before night.”
Turning abruptly off, the sheik was speedily on the road to the city.
Chapter 6
The intercepted letter was conclusive upon a number of points of great interest to Ben-Hur.
It had all the effect of a confession that the writer was a party to the putting-away of the family with murderous intent; that he had sanctioned the plan adopted for the purpose; that he had received a portion of the proceeds of the confiscation, and was yet in enjoyment of his part; that he dreaded the unexpected appearance of what he was pleased to call the chief malefactor, and accepted it as a menace; that he contemplated such further action as would secure him in the future, and was ready to do whatever his accomplice in Caesarea might advise.
And, now that the letter had reached the hand of him really its subject, it was notice of danger to come, as well as a confession of guilt.
So when Ilderim left the tent, Ben-Hur had much to think about, requiring immediate action.
His enemies were as adroit and powerful as any in the East.
If they were afraid of him, he had greater reason to be afraid of them.
He strove earnestly to reflect upon the situation, but could not; his feelings constantly overwhelmed him.
There was a certain qualified pleasure in the assurance that his mother and sister were alive; and it mattered little that the foundation of the assurance was a mere inference.
That there was one person who could tell him where they were seemed to his hope so long deferred as if discovery were now close at hand. These were mere causes of feeling; underlying them, it must be confessed he had a superstitious fancy that God was about to make ordination in his behalf, in which event faith whispered him to stand still.
Occasionally, referring to the words of Ilderim, he wondered whence the Arab derived his information about him; not from Malluch certainly; nor from Simonides, whose interests, all adverse, would hold him dumb.
Could Messala have been the informant?
No, no: disclosure might be dangerous in that quarter.
Conjecture was vain; at the same time, often as Ben-Hur was beaten back from the solution, he was consoled with the thought that whoever the person with the knowledge might be, he was a friend, and, being such, would reveal himself in good time.