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“But don’t they see that you don’t spend like the old king?” she was asking from behind him, her body pressed against his, her arms around his waist, anchoring him to the saddle.
“When I came back, I sold some of my family’s assets and used the money to help my people, because they were in dire need. Some other well-to-do businessmen in the tribe didn’t look favorably on this, probably thought that if I was helping, they might be expected to help, as well.”
“They resented you for it.”
“They figured if I had enough to hand out, then I must have whole fortunes. Then later, when I couldn’t give any more without jeopardizing the businesses that are our future, they spread the rumor that I grew greedy and was keeping the rest.”
“It’s insane.”
“And people outside the tribe believed the rumors very easily. Majid stole from them. They want to think that the money still exists someplace, and that they might someday get it back.”
Tariq closed his eyes against the throbbing in his temples. “I receive at least a couple of petitions for restitution weekly. People hated me on sight for being Majid’s half brother. He was the bloodiest king in recent history. Now they hate me even more, for supposedly keeping their money.”
He clamped his mouth shut. He hadn’t meant to let all his frustrations come out like that, but there was something about Sara that drew confidences, even from a man who didn’t give his trust easily.
The horizon swam before his eyes.
He was fading fast. He had to do something.
He had to get the camel close enough to water so the animal could sense it and head there on its own. Camels could smell water from miles away, a trait developed over millennia of evolution. They were made for the desert. Tariq would take Sara as far as he could, then trust her to the dromedary.
“If I fall asleep, just follow the clouds,” he said, doing his best not to sound as weak as he felt. He didn’t want to worry her. Truth was, he was on the verge of passing out. His peripheral vision narrowed; the buzzing in his ears intensified ….
“FOLLOW THE CLOUDS,” Sara muttered to herself two hours later.
Great advice. Except that there were no stinking clouds!
Woozy from the sun, she’d let go of the reins a long time ago and given up any pretense of directing the camel. Instead, she concentrated on keeping Tariq in the saddle and forcing water between his lips at regular intervals.
Seeing him, a big, powerful man, defenseless like this was scary. She didn’t want to think about the possibility of him not making it. She would get him to his tribe somehow. Even the nomads had cell phones and cars these days. They could take him to the nearest hospital.
She kept that in mind as she searched the skies. When she felt exhausted enough that she began worrying about falling asleep and tumbling from the saddle, she talked to keep herself awake.
“I was pretty young when my mom died. Sometimes her face flashes into my mind, clear as anything. But sometimes I can’t remember what she looked like. I hate that. But I had a great dad. You would have liked him. You’re a lot like him.” Brave, strong, doing the right thing, focused on building a future, but never forgetting the people he was responsible for.”
She went on talking about her family and the people at the company for a while.
“I’m addicted to romance novels and action flicks.” She moved on to the next topic when she had exhausted the first. “I know some people think that’s mindless entertainment. Their loss, as far as I’m concerned. It’s not like being addicted to nicotine. I like happy endings.” She wondered if this adventure was going to have one.
Heat radiated from above, as well as from the sand. It felt like noon in hell, but her sense of time said it probably wasn’t even eleven yet.
An eternity seemed to pass before she spotted a small gossamer cloud in the distance, sitting low in the sky. “Hey, they do exist,” she muttered.
She didn’t have to angle the camel toward it. The animal moved in that direction of its own volition, picking up speed. She held tighter to Tariq. If he fell out of the saddle, she didn’t think she could get him back in. If the camel waited for them, which she doubted. The animal seemed pretty intent on reaching some invisible point on the horizon.
When she first made out the dark line on the sand, she thought it to be a Bedu camp. But as she got closer and closer, she saw green all around and no tents. Then the camel broke into a full trot without any urging from her, and soon she heard water.
“We’re here. Wake up.” She shook Tariq gently, but he didn’t respond. She held him tight as she stared ahead.
The oasis that unfolded before her put her wildest fantasies to shame. She judged the island of green to be at least three acres, dotted with date palms. Several boulders towered at the far end, each twenty or thirty feet high, throwing some shade over the pool at their feet.
Heaven.
“Whoa. Stop. Sit.” She yanked on the camel’s rope, but the animal wouldn’t stop until it reached water, until its head was submerged.
“We’re going to get a drink, too,” she said, on the off chance that Tariq could somehow hear her.
He was still alive; his chest rose and fell at regular intervals. She slid from the saddle—she couldn’t get the camel to sit—and pulled Tariq down, but couldn’t support his weight. The best she could do was break his fall. He didn’t even groan as he hit the grass.
They had done a number on him, beaten him severely from the looks of it, in addition to his gunshot injuries and his burns. A weaker man would have allowed himself to slip away by now, just to escape the pain.
“I’m not going to let them win,” she muttered as much to herself as to him. “They can all go to hell.” Then she realized they already had. She was too worried about Tariq for that thought to make her feel any better.
The water was several degrees cooler than the air, shaded as it was by the boulders and palm trees. She rolled Tariq in, clothes and all, and went in after him to keep him from drowning. A good soaking couldn’t hurt his sand-and-sweat-clogged wounds, and she had to bring his temperature down somehow. She dragged him farther in, gingerly, making sure the pool didn’t deepen so suddenly that she lost her footing.
He was unconscious. If she let him slip to the bottom of the pool, he would drown.
“Hang in there. We’re in the shade, we have water. The battle is half-won.” She moved slowly, step by step, all the way to the base of the boulders, where the water seemed the coolest.
This was probably where the stream that fed it bubbled up from the ground.
She took off the headdress she’d worn and rinsed it with one hand, then draped it across her hair. She did the same with Tariq’s, folding it and draping it across his forehead. Then she uncovered his injuries as gently as possible and washed his wounds.
He was in bad shape, the infection probably spreading through his blood. What was she supposed to do? He needed to go to the nearest E.R. But she couldn’t do that for him. So she did the only thing she could: she prayed.
They were at an oasis. With water. Somebody would come here sooner or later. All she had to do was keep Tariq alive until then.
She stayed in the cool water for a good half hour before making for shore, and then only because she realized that she’d left the camel untethered, with nothing to stop it from wandering away. But the animal seemed content standing by the water’s edge.
“Okay. Let’s rest on the sand for a while.” She floated Tariq’s listless body to shore, pushed and pulled him to dry land and made him comfortable in the shade. Then she tied the camel to the nearest palm tree, close enough to the water to drink if it needed to. But it seemed filled up for now, and chose instead to go after the grass.
Sara’s stomach growled. It’d been a while since she had regular meals.
She got a small bundle of food from the saddlebag, things she had collected from the bandits’ belongings, and the remaining bags of chips and dried fruit from the vending machine. She unwrapped a package of dried figs and some white mess that smelled like it could have been goat cheese, or something else entirely, and was possibly spoiled.
“You have to wake up if you want to eat.” She waved the cheese in front of Tariq’s nose, using it like smelling salts in Victorian times.
He didn’t react, and she didn’t dare force solid food down his throat for fear that he would choke. She gave him water, and then she ate, not nearly enough, leaving more than half of the loot for when he came to.
Hopefully, that would be soon. If he didn’t take nourishment, how was he to regain his strength and fight the infection?
The camel brayed, drawing her attention.
She’d assumed it was a male, based on its size. What if it wasn’t? If she could force some camel milk down Tariq’s throat … She was on her feet before she finished the thought, kneeling by the animal and peering underneath its body.
Definitely male.
She blinked her eyes for a second in dismay, then shook off the unproductive emotion. She wasn’t going to give up now. They were at an oasis. Somebody was going to come.
Tariq gave a low moan.
“Wake up. Come on.” She hurried back to him and drew his head onto her lap, leaning against a palm tree, wiping his face with the damp headdress. Their clothes were nearly dry already. She touched her palm against his forehead. It seemed the cold bath had lowered his fever a bit.
She would rest for a few moments, then repeat the procedure. There was little else she could do.
She must have dozed, because she woke to the sound of bells. And when she opened her eyes, confused and disoriented, she found herself surrounded by a gaggle of girls, who seemed to range in age from six to sixteen. They were staring at her with wide-eyed curiosity.
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