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We at once gave the renegade five hundred
crowns to buy the vessel, and with eight hundred I ransomed myself, giving the
money to a Valencian merchant who happened to be in Algiers at the time, and
who had me released on his word, pledging it that on the arrival of the first
ship from Valencia he would pay my ransom; for if he had given the money at
once it would have made the king suspect that my ransom money had been for a
long time in Algiers, and that the merchant had for his own advantage kept it
secret. In fact my master was so difficult to deal with that I dared not on any
account pay down the money at once. The Thursday before the Friday on which the
fair Zoraida was to go to the garden she gave us a thousand crowns more, and
warned us of her departure, begging me, if I were ransomed, to find out her
father's garden at once, and by all means to seek an opportunity of going there
to see her. I answered in a few words that I would do so, and that she must
remember to commend us to Lela Marien with all the prayers the captive had
taught her. This having been done, steps were taken to ransom our three
comrades, so as to enable them to quit the bano, and lest, seeing me ransomed
and themselves not, though the money was forthcoming, they should make a
disturbance about it and the devil should prompt them to do something that
might injure Zoraida; for though their position might be sufficient to relieve
me from this apprehension, nevertheless I was unwilling to run any risk in the
matter; and so I had them ransomed in the same way as I was, handing over all
the money to the merchant so that he might with safety and confidence give
security; without, however, confiding our arrangement and secret to him, which
might have been dangerous.
CHAPTER XLI. IN WHICH THE CAPTIVE STILL CONTINUES
HIS ADVENTURES
Before fifteen days were over our renegade had already purchased an
excellent vessel with room for more than thirty persons; and to make the
transaction safe and lend a colour to it, he thought it well to make, as he
did, a voyage to a place called Shershel, twenty leagues from Algiers on the
Oran side, where there is an extensive trade in dried figs. Two or three times he
made this voyage in company with the Tagarin already mentioned. The Moors of
Aragon are called Tagarins in Barbary, and those of
Granada Mudejars; but in the Kingdom
of Fez they call the Mudejars
Elches, and they are the people the king chiefly employs in war. To proceed:
every time he passed with his vessel he anchored in a cove that was not two
crossbow shots from the garden where Zoraida was waiting; and there the
renegade, together with the two Moorish lads that rowed, used purposely to
station himself, either going through his prayers, or else practising as a part
what he meant to perform in earnest. And thus he would go to Zoraida's garden
and ask for fruit, which her father gave him, not knowing him; but though, as
he afterwards told me, he sought to speak to Zoraida, and tell her who he was,
and that by my orders he was to take her to the land of the Christians, so that
she might feel satisfied and easy, he had never been able to do so; for the
Moorish women do not allow themselves to be seen by any Moor or Turk, unless
their husband or father bid them: with Christian captives they permit freedom
of intercourse and communication, even more than might be considered proper.
But for my part I should have been sorry if he had spoken to her, for perhaps it
might have alarmed her to find her affairs talked of by renegades. But God, who
ordered it otherwise, afforded no opportunity for our renegade's well-meant
purpose; and he, seeing how safely he could go to Shershel and return, and
anchor when and how and where he liked, and that the Tagarin his partner had no
will but his, and that, now I was ransomed, all we wanted was to find some
Christians to row, told me to look out for any I should he willing to take with
me, over and above those who had been ransomed, and to engage them for the next
Friday, which he fixed upon for our departure. On this I spoke to twelve
Spaniards, all stout rowers, and such as could most easily leave the city; but
it was no easy matter to find so many just then, because there were twenty
ships out on a cruise and they had taken all the rowers with them; and these
would not have been found were it not that their master remained at home that
summer without going to sea in order to finish a galliot that he had upon the
stocks. To these men I said nothing more than that the next Friday in the
evening they were to come out stealthily one by one and hang about Hadji
Morato's garden, waiting for me there until I came. These directions I gave
each one separately, with orders that if they saw any other Christians there
they were not to say anything to them except that I had directed them to wait
at that spot.
This preliminary having been settled, another still more necessary step had
to be taken, which was to let Zoraida know how matters stood that she might be
prepared and forewarned, so as not to be taken by surprise if we were suddenly
to seize upon her before she thought the Christians' vessel could have
returned. I determined, therefore, to go to the garden and try if I could speak
to her; and the day before my departure I went there under the pretence of
gathering herbs. The first person I met was her father, who addressed me in the
language that all over Barbary and even in Constantinople
is the medium between captives and Moors, and is neither Morisco nor Castilian,
nor of any other nation, but a mixture of all languages, by means of which we
can all understand one another. In this sort of language, I say, he asked me
what I wanted in his garden, and to whom I belonged. I replied that I was a
slave of the Arnaut Mami (for I knew as a certainty that he was a very great
friend of his), and that I wanted some herbs to make a salad. He asked me then
whether I were on ransom or not, and what my master demanded for me. While
these questions and answers were proceeding, the fair Zoraida, who had already
perceived me some time before, came out of the house in the garden, and as
Moorish women are by no means particular about letting themselves be seen by
Christians, or, as I have said before, at all coy, she had no hesitation in
coming to where her father stood with me; moreover her father, seeing her
approaching slowly, called to her to come. It would be beyond my power now to
describe to you the great beauty, the high-bred air, the brilliant attire of my
beloved Zoraida as she presented herself before my eyes. I will content myself
with saying that more pearls hung from her fair neck, her ears, and her hair
than she had hairs on her head. On her ankles, which as is customary were bare,
she had carcajes (for so bracelets or anklets are called in Morisco) of the
purest gold, set with so many diamonds that she told me afterwards her father
valued them at ten thousand doubloons, and those she had on her wrists were
worth as much more. The pearls were in profusion and very fine, for the highest
display and adornment of the Moorish women is decking themselves with rich
pearls and seed-pearls; and of these there are therefore more among the Moors
than among any other people. Zoraida's father had to the reputation of
possessing a great number, and the purest in all Algiers, and of possessing
also more than two hundred thousand Spanish crowns; and she, who is now
mistress of me only, was mistress of all this. Whether thus adorned she would
have been beautiful or not, and what she must have been in her prosperity, may
be imagined from the beauty remaining to her after so many hardships; for, as
everyone knows, the beauty of some women has its times and its seasons, and is
increased or diminished by chance causes; and naturally the emotions of the
mind will heighten or impair it, though indeed more frequently they totally
destroy it. In a word she presented herself before me that day attired with the
utmost splendour, and supremely beautiful; at any rate, she seemed to me the
most beautiful object I had ever seen; and when, besides, I thought of all I
owed to her I felt as though I had before me some heavenly being come to earth
to bring me relief and happiness.
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