Luxor, as most of those
who have been there will allow, is a place of notable charm, and boasts
many attractions for the traveller, chief among which he will reckon an
excellent hotel containing a billiard-room, a garden fit for the gods to
sit in,
any quantity of visitors, at least a weekly dance on board a tourist
steamer, quail shooting, a climate as of Avilion, and a number of
stupendously ancient monuments for those archeologically inclined. But
to certain others, few indeed in number, but almost fanatically
convinced of their own orthodoxy, the charm of Luxor, like some sleeping
beauty, only wakes when these things cease, when the hotel has grown
empty and the billard-marker “has gone for a long rest” to Cairo,
when the decimated quail and the decimating tourist have fled
northwards, and the Theban plain, Dana to a tropical sun, is
a gridiron across which no man would willingly make a journey by
day, not even if Queen Hatasoo herself should signify that she would
give him audience on the terraces of Deir-el-Bahari. A suspicion however
that the fanatic few were right, for in other respects they were men of
estimable opinions, induced me to examine their convictions for myself,
and thus it came about that two years ago, certain days toward the
beginning of June saw me still there, a confirmed convert.
Much tobacco and the length of summer
days had assisted us to the analysis of the charm of which summer in the
south is possessed, and Weston — one of the earliest of the elect —
and myself had discussed it at some length, and though we reserved as
the principal ingredient a nameless something which baffled the chemist,
and must be felt to be understood, we were easily able to detect certain
other drugs of sight and sound, which we were agreed contributed to the
whole. A few of them are here sub joined.
The waking in the warm darkness just
before dawn to find that the desire for stopping in bed fails with the
awakening.
The silent start across the Nile in the
still air with our horses, who, like us, stand and sniff at the
incredible sweetness of the coming morning without apparently finding it
less wonderful in repetition.
The moment infinitesimal in duration
but infinite in sensation, just before the sun rises, when the grey
shrouded river is struck suddenly out of darkness, and becomes a sheet
of green bronze.
The rose flush, rapid as a change of
colour in some chemical combination, which shoots across the sky from
east to west, followed immediately by the sunlight which catches the
peaks of the western hills, and flows down like some luminous liquid.
The stir and whisper which goes through
the world: a breeze springs up; a lark soars, and sings; the boatman
shouts “YalIah, YaIIah”; the horses toss their heads.
The subsequent ride.
The subsequent breakfast on our return.
The subsequent absence of anything to
do.
At sunset the ride into the desert
thick with the scent of warm barren sand, which smells like nothing else
in the world, for it smells of nothing at all.
The blaze of the tropical night.
Camel’s milk.
Converse with the fellahin, who are the
most charming and least accountable people on the face of the earth
except when tourists are about, and when in consequence there is no
thought but backsheesh.
Lastly, and with this we are concerned,
the possibility of odd experiences.
The beginning of the
things which make this tale occurred four days ago, when Abdul Mi, the
oldest man in the village, died suddenly, full of days and riches. Both,
some thought, had probably been somewhat exaggerated, but his relations
affirmed without variation that he had as many years as he had English
pounds, and that each was a hundred. The apt roundness of these numbers
was incontestable, the thing was too neat not to be true, and before he
had been dead for twenty-four hours it was a matter of orthodoxy. But
with regard to his relations, that which turned their bereavement, which
must soon have occurred, into a source of blank dismay instead of pious
resignation, was that not one of these English pounds, not even their
less satisfactory equivalent in notes, which, out of the tourist season,
are looked upon at Luxor as a not very dependable variety of
Philosopher’s stone, though certainly capable of producing gold under
favourable circumstances, could be found. Abdul Au with his hundred
years was dead, his century of sovereigns — they might as well have
been an annuity — were dead with him, and his son Mohamed, who had
previously enjoyed a sort of brevet rank in anticipation of the event,
was considered to be throwing far more dust in the air than the genuine
affection even of a chief mourner wholly justified.
Abdul, it is to be feared, was not a
man of stereotyped respectability; though full of years and riches, he
enjoyed no great reputation for honour. He drank wine whenever he could
get it, he ate food during the days of Ramadan, scornful of the fact,
when his appetite desired it, he was supposed to have the evil eye, and
in his last moments he was attended by the notorious Achmet, who is well
known here to be practised in Black Magic, and has been suspected of the
much meaner crime of robbing the bodies of those lately dead. For in
Egypt, while to despoil the bodies of ancient kings and priests is a
privilege for which advanced and learned societies vie with each other,
to rob the corpses of your contemporaries is considered the deed of a
dog. Mohamed, who soon exchanged the throwing of dust in the air for the
more natural mode of expressing chagrin, which is to gnaw the nails,
told us in confidence that he suspected Achmet of having ascertained the
secret of where his father’s money was, but it appeared that Achmet
had as blank a face as anybody when his patient, who was striving to
make some communication to him, went out into the great silence, and the
suspicion that he knew where the money was gave way, in the minds, of
those who were competent to form an estimate of his character, to a but
dubious regret that he had Just failed to learn that very important
fact.
So Abdul died and was buried, and we
all went to the funeral feast, at which we ate more roast meat than one
naturally cares about at five in the afternoon on a June day, in
consequence of which Weston and I, not requiring dinner, stopped at home
after our return from the ride into the desert, and talked to Mohamed,
Abdul’s son, and Hussein, Abdul’s youngest grandson, a boy of about
twenty, who is also our valet, cook and housemaid, and they together
woefully narrated of the money that had been and was not, and told us
scandalous tales about Achmet concerning his weakness for cemeteries.
They drank coffee and smoked, for though Hussein was our servant, we had
been that day the guests of his father, and shortly after they had gone,
up came Machmout.
Machmout, who says he thinks he is
twelve, but does not know for certain, is kitchen-maid, groom and
gardener, and has to an extraordinary degree some occult power
resembling clairvoyance. Weston, who is a member of the Society for
Psychical Research, and the tragedy of whose life has been the detection
of the fraudulent medium Mrs. Blunt, says that it is all
thought-reading, and has made notes of many of Machmout’s
performances, which may subsequently turn out to be of interest.
Thought-reading, however, does not seem to me to fully explain the
experience which followed Abdul’s funeral, and with Machmout I have to
put it down to White Magic, which should be a very inclusive term, or to
Pure Coincidence, which is even more inclusive, and will cover all the
inexplicable phenomena of the world, taken singly. Machmout’s method
of unloosing the forces of White Magic is simple, being the ink-mirror
known by name to many, and it is as follows.
A little black ink is poured into the
palm of Machmout’s hand, or, as ink has been at a premium lately owing
to the last post-boat from Cairo which contained stationery for us
having stuck on a sand-bank, a small piece of black American cloth about
an inch in diameter is found to be a perfect substitute. Upon this he
gazes. After five or ten minutes his shrewd monkey-like expression is
struck from his face, his eyes, wide open, remain fixed on the cloth, a
complete rigidity sets in over his muscles, and he tells us of the
curious things he sees. In whatever position he is, in that position he
remains without the deflection of a hair’s breadth until the ink is
washed off or the cloth removed. Then he looks up and says “Khahás,”
which means, “It is finished.”
We only engaged Machmout’s services
as second general domestic a fortnight ago, but the first evening he was
with us he came upstairs when he had finished his work, and said, “I
will show you White Magic; give me ink,” and proceeded to describe the
front hall of our house in London, saying that there were two horses at
the door, and that a man and woman soon came out, gave the horses each a
piece of bread and mounted. The thing was so probable that by the next
mail I wrote asking my mother to write down exactly what she was doing
and where at half-past five (English time) on the evening of June 12. At
the corresponding time in Egypt Machmout was describing speaking to us
of a “sitt” (lady) having tea in a room which he described with some
minuteness, and I am waiting anxiously for her letter. The explanation
which Weston gives us of all these phenomena is that a certain picture
of people I know is present in my mind, though I may not be aware of it,
— present to my subliminal self, I think, he says, — and that I give
an unspoken suggestion to the hypnotised Machmout. My explanation is
that there isn’t any explanation, for no suggestion on my part would
make my brother go out and ride at the moment when Machmout says he is
so doing (if indeed we find that Machmout’s visions are
chronologically correct). Consequently I prefer the open mind and am
prepared to believe anything. Weston, however, does not speak quite so
calmly or scientifically about Machmout’s last performance, and since
it took place he has almost entirely ceased to urge me to become a
member of the Society for Psychical Research, in order that I may no
longer be hidebound by vain superstitions.
Machmout will not exercise these powers
if his own folk are present, for he says that when he is in this state,
if a man who knew Black Magic was in the room, or knew that he was
practising White Magic, he could get the spirit who presides over the
Black Magic to kill the spirit of White Magic, for the Black Magic is
the more potent, and the two are foes. And as the spirit of White Magic
is on occasions a powerful friend — he had before now befriended
Machmout in a manner which I consider incredible — Machmout is very
desirous that he should abide long with him. But Englishmen it appears
do not know the Black Magic, so with us he is safe. The spirit of Black
Magic, to speak to whom it is death, Machmout saw once “between heaven
and earth, and night and day,” so he phrases it, on the Karnak road.
He may be known, he told us, by the fact that he is of paler skin than
his people, that he has two long teeth, one in each corner of his mouth,
and that his eyes, which are white all over, are as big as the eyes of a
horse.
Machmout squatted himself comfortably
in the corner, and I gave him the piece of black American cloth. As some
minutes must elapse before he gets into the hypnotic state in which the
visions begin, I strolled out on to the balcony for coolness. It was the
hottest night we had yet had, and though the sun had set three hours,
the thermometer still registered close on 100º. Above, the sky seemed
veiled with grey, where it should have been dark velvety blue, and a
fitful puffing wind from the south threatened three days of the sandy
intolerable khamseen. A little way up the street to the left was a small
café in front of which were glowing and waning little glowworm specks
of light from the water pipes of Arabs sitting out there in the dark.
From inside came the click of brass castanets in the hands of some
dancing-girl, sounding sharp and precise against the wailing bagpipe
music of the strings and pipes which accompany these movements which
Arabs love and Europeans think so unpleasing. Eastwards the sky was
paler and luminous, for the moon was imminently rising, and even as I
looked the red rim of the enormous disc cut the line of the desert, and
on the instant, with a curious aptness, one of the Arabs outside the café
broke out into that wonderful chant—
“I cannot
sleep for longing for thee, 0 full moon.
Far is thy
throne over Mecca, slip down, 0 beloved, to me.”
Immediately afterwards I heard the
piping monotone of Machmout’s voice begin, and in a moment or two I
went inside.
We have found that the experiments gave
the quickest result by contact, a fact which confirmed Weston in his
explanation of them by thought transference of some elaborate kind,
which I confess I cannot understand. He was writing at a table in the
window when I came in, but looked up.
“Take his hand,” he said; “at
present he is quite incoherent.”
“Do you explain that?” I asked.
“It is closely analogous, so Myers
thinks, to talking in sleep. He has been saying something about a tomb.
Do make a suggestion, and see if he gives it right. He is remarkably
sensitive, and he responds quicker to you than to me. Probably Abdul’s
funeral suggested the tomb!”
A sudden thought struck me.
“Hush!” I said, “I want to
listen.”
Machmout’s head was thrown a little
back, and he held the hand in which was the piece of cloth rather above
his face. As usual he was talking very slowly, and in a high staccato
voice, absolutely unlike his usual tones.
“On one side of the grave,” he
pipes, “is a tamarisk tree, and the green beetles make fantasia
about it. On the other side is a mud wall. There are many other
graves about, but they are all asleep. This is the
grave, because it is awake, and it moist and not sandy.”
“I thought so,” said Weston. “It
is Abdul’s grave he is talking about.”
“There is a red moon sitting on the
desert,” continued Machmout, “and it is now. There is the puffing of
khamseen, and much dust coming. The moon is red with dust, and because
it is low.”
“Still sensitive to external
conditions,” said Weston. “That is rather curious. Pinch him, will
you?”
I pinched Machmout; he did not pay the
slightest attention.
“In the last house of the street, and
in the doorway stands a man. Ah! ah!” cried the boy suddenly, “it is
the Black Magic he knows. Don’t let him come. He is going out of the
house,” he shrieked, “he is coming — no, he is going the other way
towards the moon and the grave. He has the Black Magic with him, which
can raise the dead, and he has a murdering knife, and a spade. I cannot
see his face, for the Black Magic is between it and my eyes.”
Weston had got up, and, like me, was
hanging on Machmout’s words.
“We will go there,” he said.
“Here is an opportunity of testing it. Listen a moment.”
“He is walking, walking, walking,”
piped Machmout, “still walking to the moon and the grave. The moon
sits no longer on the desert, but has sprung up a little way.”
I pointed out of the window.
“That at any rate is true,” I said.
Weston took the cloth out of
Machmout’s hand, and the piping ceased. In a moment he stretched
himself, and rubbed his eyes.
“Khalás,” he said.
“Yes, it is Khalás.”
“Did I tell you of the sitt in
England?” he asked.
“Yes, oh, yes,” I answered;
“thank you, little Machmout. The White Magic was very good to-night.
Get you to bed.”
Machmout trotted obediently out of the
room, and Weston closed the door after him.
“We must be quick,” he said. “It
is worth while going and giving the thing a chance, though I wish he had
seen something less gruesome. The odd thing is that he was not at the
funeral, and yet he describes the grave accurately. What do you make of
it?”
“I make that the White Magic has
shown Machmout that somebody with black magic is going to Abdul’s
grave, perhaps to rob it,” I answered resolutely.
“What are we to do when we get
there?” asked Weston.
“See the Black Magic at work.
Personally I am in a blue funk. So are you.”
“There is no such thing as Black
Magic,” said Weston. “Ah, I have it. Give me that orange.”
Weston rapidly skinned it, and cut from
the rind two circles as big as a five shilling piece, and two long,
white fangs of skin. The first he fixed in his eyes, the two latter in
the corners of his mouth.
“The Spirit of Black Magic?” I
asked.
“The same.”
He took up a long black burnous and
wrapped it round him. Even in the bright lamp light, the spirit of black
magic was a sufficiently terrific personage.
“I don’t believe in black magic,”
he said, “but others do. If it is necessary to put a stop to — to
anything that is going on, we will hoist the man on his own petard. Come
along. Whom do you suspect it is— I mean, of course, who was the
person you were thinking of when your thoughts were transferred to
Machmout.”
“What Machmout said,” I answered,
“suggested Achmet to me.”
Weston indulged in a laugh of
scientific incredulity, and we set off.
The moon, as the boy had told us, was
just clear of the horizon, and as it rose higher, its colour at first
red and sombre, like the blaze of some distant conflagration, paled to a
tawny yellow. The hot wind from the south, blowing no longer fitfully
but with a steadily increasing violence, was thick with sand, and of an
incredibly scorching heat, and the tops of the palm trees in the garden
of the deserted hotel on the right were lashing themselves to and fro
with a harsh rattle of dry leaves. The cemetery lay on the outskirts of
the village, and, as long as our way lay between the mud walls of the
huddling street, the wind came to us only as the heat from behind closed
furnace doors. Every now and then with a whisper and whistle rising into
a great buffeting flap, a sudden whirlwind of dust would scour some
twenty yards along the road, and then break like a shore-quenched wave
against one or other of the mud walls or throw itself heavily against a
house and fall in a shower of sand. But once free of obstructions we
were opposed to the full heat and blast of the wind which blew full in
our teeth. It was the first summer khamseen of the year, and for the
moment I wished I had gone north with the tourist and the quail and the
billiard marker, for khamseen fetches the marrow out of the bones, and
turns the body to blotting paper. We passed no one in the street, and
the only sound we heard, except the wind, was the howling of moonstruck
dogs.
The cemetery is surrounded by a tall
mud-built wall, and sheltering for a few moments under this we discussed
our movements. The row of tamarisks close to which the tomb lay went
down the centre of the graveyard, and by skirting the wall outside and
climbing softly over where they approached it, the fury of the wind
might help us to get near the grave without being seen, if anyone
happened to be there. We had just decided on this, and were moving on to
put the scheme into execution, when the wind dropped for a moment, and
in the silence we could hear the chump of the spade being driven into
the earth, and what gave me a sudden thrill of intimate horror, the cry
of the carrion-feeding hawk from the dusky sky just overhead.
Two minutes later we were creeping up
in the shade of the tamarisks, to where Abdul had been buried. The great
green beetles which live on the trees were flying about blindly, and
once or twice one dashed into my face with a whirr of mail-dad wings.
When we were within some twenty yards of the grave we stopped for a
moment, and, looking cautiously out from our shelter of tamarisks, saw
the figure of a man already waist deep in the earth, digging out the
newly turned grave. Weston, who was standing behind me, had adjusted the
characteristics of the spirit of Black Magic so as to be ready for
emergencies, and turning round suddenly, and finding myself unawares
face to face with that realistic impersonation, though my nerves are not
precariously strong, I could have found it within me to shriek aloud.
But that unsympathetic man of iron only shook with suppressed laughter,
and, holding the eyes in his hand, motioned me forward again without
speaking to where the trees grew thicker. There we stood not a dozen
yards away from the grave.
We waited, I suppose, for some ten
minutes, while the man, whom we saw to be Achmet, toiled on at his
impious task. He was entirely naked, and his brown skin glistened with
the dews of exertion in the moonlight. At times he chattered in a cold
uncanny manner to himself, and once or twice he stopped for breath. Then
he began scraping the earth away with his hands, and soon afterwards
searched in his clothes, which were lying near, for a piece of rope,
with which he stepped into the grave, and in a moment reappeared again
with both ends in his hands. Then, standing astride the grave, he pulled
strongly, and one end of the coffin appeared above the ground. He
chipped a piece of the lid away to make sure that he had the right end,
and then, setting it upright, wrenched off the top with his knife, and
there faced us, leaning against the coffin lid, the small shrivelled
figure of the dead Abdul, swathed like a baby in white.
I was just about to motion the spirit
of Black Magic to make his appearance, when Machmout’s words came into
my head: “He had with him the Black Magic which can raise the dead,”
and sudden overwhelming curiosity, which froze disgust and horror into
chill unfeeling things, came over me.
“Wait,” I whispered to Weston,
“he will use the Black Magic.”
Again the wind dropped for a moment,
and again, in the silence that came with it, I heard the chiding of the
hawk overhead, this time nearer, and thought I heard more birds than
one.
Achmet meantime had taken the covering
from off the face, and had undone the swathing band, which at the moment
after death is bound round the chin to close the jaw, and in Arab burial
is always left there, and from where we stood I could see that the jaw
dropped when the bandage was untied, as if, though the wind blew towards
us with a ghastly scent of mortality on it, the muscles were not even
now set, though the man had been dead sixty hours. But still a rank and
burning curiosity to see what this unclean ghoul would do next stifled
all other feelings in my mind. He seemed not to notice, or, at any rate,
to disregard that mouth gaping awry, and moved about nimbly in the
moonlight.
He took from a pocket of his clothes,
which were lying near, two small black objects, which now are safely
embedded in the mud at the bottom of the Nile, and rubbed them briskly
together. By degrees they grew luminous with a sickly yellow pallor of
light, and from his hands went up a wavy, phosphorescent flame. One of
these cubes he placed in the open mouth of the corpse, the other in his
own, and, taking the dead man closely in his arms as though he would
indeed dance with death, he breathed long breaths from his mouth into
that dead cavern which was pressed to his. Suddenly he started back with
a quick-drawn breath of wonder and perhaps of horror, and stood for a
space as if irresolute, for the cube which the dead man held instead of
lying loosely in the jaw was pressed tight between clenched teeth. After
a moment of irresolution he stepped back quickly to his clothes again,
and took up from near them the knife with which he had stripped off the
coffin lid, and holding this in one hand behind his back, with the other
he took out the cube from the dead man’s mouth, though with a visible
exhibition of force, and spoke.
“Abdul,” he said, “I am your
friend, and I swear I will give your money to Mohamed, if you will tell
me where it is.”
Certain I am that the lips of the dead
moved, and the eyelids fluttered for a moment like the wings of a
wounded bird, but at that sight the horror so grew on me that I was
physically incapable of stifling the cry that rose to my lips, and
Achmet turned round. Next moment the complete Spirit of Black Magic
glided out of the shade of the trees, and stood before him. The wretched
man stood for a moment without stirring, then, turning with shaking
knees to flee, he stepped back and fell into the grave he had just
opened.
Weston turned on me angrily, dropping
the eyes and the teeth of the Afrit.
“You spoiled it all,” he cried.
“It would perhaps have been the most interesting ...” and his eye
lighted on the dead Abdul, who peered open-eyed from the coffin, then
swayed, tottered, and fell forward, face downwards on the ground close
to him. For one moment he lay there, and then the body rolled slowly on
to its back without visible cause of movement, and lay staring into the
sky. The face was covered with dust, but with the dust was mingled fresh
blood. A nail had caught the cloth that wound him, underneath which, as
usual, were the clothes in which he had died, for the Arabs do not wash
their dead, and it had torn a great rent through them all, leaving the
right shoulder bare.
Weston strove to speak once, but
failed. Then:
“I will go and inform the police,”
he said, “if you will stop here, and see that Achmet does not get
out.”
But this I altogether refused to do,
and, after covering the body with the coffin to protect it from the
hawks, we secured Achmet’s arms with the rope he had already used that
night, and took him off to Luxor.
Next morning Mohamed came to see us.
“I thought Achmet knew where the
money was,” he said exultantly.
“Where was it?”
“In a little purse tied round the
shoulder. The dog had already begun stripping it. See” — and he
brought it out of his pocket— “it is all there in those English
notes, five pounds each, and there are twenty of them.”
Our conclusion was slightly different,
for even Weston will allow that Achmet hoped
to learn from dead lips the secret of the treasure, and then to kill
the man anew and bury him. But that is pure conjecture.
The only other point of interest lies
in the two black cubes which we picked up, and found to be graven with
curious characters. These I put one evening into Machmout’s hand, when
he was exhibiting to us his curious powers of “thought
transference.” The effect was that he screamed aloud, crying out that
the Black Magic had come, and though I did not feel certain about that,
I thought they would be safer in mid-Nile. Weston grumbled a little, and
said that he had wanted to take them to the British Museum, but that I
feel sure was an afterthought.
