<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXIX" id="CHAPTER_XXIX"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXIX.</h2>
<h3>A MYSTERY.</h3>
<p><span class="smcap">From</span> the glittering Hall of Audience a forward movement
was soon made to the inner rooms that formed the
private apartments of the Naya. Carried onward by the
press of people, I was amazed at the magnificence and
luxury everywhere apparent. The walls were mostly of
polished marble inlaid with gold and adorned with
frescoes, the ceilings ornamented with strange allegorical
paintings, and the floors of jasper and alabaster. But as
the irate crowd dashed onward through the great tenantless
chambers they tore down the rich silk hangings and
trod them underfoot, broke up the tiny gold-inlaid
tables, and out of sheer wantonness hacked the soft
divans with their swords.</p>
<p>The discovery that the Naya had fled increased the
indignation of the mob, and were it not for the urgent
appeal of Kona, who had at once assumed the commandership,
the whole of the magnificent rooms would
no doubt have been wrecked. As it was, however, the
good counsels of the Dagomba head-man prevailed, and
wanton hands were stayed from committing more serious
excesses.</p>
<p>Whither the Great White Queen had fled no one
knew. To every nook and corner search parties penetrated;
even the sleeping apartment, with its massive bed
of ivory and hangings of purple, gold-embroidered satin,
was not held sacred. Yet nowhere could the once-dreaded
ruler be discovered. Some cried that she had
escaped into the city in the guise of a slave, others that<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_230" id="Page_230"></SPAN>[<SPAN href="./images/230.png">230</SPAN>]</span>
she had descended into the cavern where stood the
gigantic Temple of Zomara.</p>
<p>Another fact puzzled us greatly. From our elevated
position we could see afar off a fierce conflict proceeding
near the city gate on that side where access could be
gained only by the steep flight of steps. Once, when I had
looked, I saw that the city was comparatively quiet; now,
however, this conflict had broken out again suddenly,
and judging from the smoke and tumult it must have
been terrific. All were surprised, and stood watching
the clouds of grey smoke roll up into the bright morning
air. But soon it died away, and believing it to be an
outbreak by the conquered troops subdued with a firm
hand by the victorious people, we thought no more of it.</p>
<p>The hours that succeeded were full of stirring
incidents, and it was long before the least semblance of
order could be restored in the city. With Kona I went
forth into the crowded, turbulent streets, and the sight
that met our gaze was awful. Bodies of soldiers and
civilians were lying everywhere, the faces of some, to
whom death had come swiftly, so calm and composed
that they looked as if they slept, while upon the blood-smeared
countenances of others, hideously mutilated
perhaps, were terrible expressions, showing in what
frightful agony they had passed into eternity. The road-ways
were strewn with heaps of corpses; the gutters
flowed with blood.</p>
<p>At such terrible cost had the tyrannical reign of the
Naya been terminated; by such a frightful loss of human
life had Omar been raised to the Emerald Throne.</p>
<p>Greater part of that eventful day was spent by Niaro,
Kona, Goliba and myself in restoring order, while the
people themselves, assisted by the troops, who had<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_231" id="Page_231"></SPAN>[<SPAN href="./images/231.png">231</SPAN>]</span>
already sworn allegiance to their young Naba, cleared
the streets and removed, as far as possible, all traces of
the deadly feud. But to us there came no tidings of
the Naya, although the strictest watch was kept everywhere
to prevent her escaping.</p>
<p>The people were determined that if she might not pay
the penalty of her evil deeds by death, she should at
least be held captive in one of the foul dungeons beneath
the palace, where so many of their relatives had rotted
and died in agony or starvation.</p>
<p>A blazing noontide was succeeded by a calm and peaceful
evening. Through many hours I had endeavoured,
as far as lay in my power, to assume the command given
me, and assisted by a number of quaintly-garbed officials
enthusiastic in Omar's cause, I found my office by no
means difficult. Order again reigning in the streets and
the bodies removed, the city had quietly settled down,
though of course not to its usual peacefulness. Crowds
of the more excited ones still surged up and down the
broad thoroughfares, calling down vengeance upon the
once powerful queen, but all voices were united in cheers
for the Naba Omar, their chosen ruler.</p>
<p>Save for those required to preserve order, the survivors
of the troops were back in barracks long before sunset,
and the palace-guard had been reorganised under Kona's
personal supervision. The Dagombas alone comprised
Omar's body-guard, and I found on my return to the
palace that they had exchanged their scanty clothes of
native bark-cloth for the rich bright-coloured silk
uniforms of those who had acted in a similar capacity to
the Naya. With their black happy shining faces they
looked a magnificent set of men, though for the first
few hours they appeared a trifle awkward in gay attire<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_232" id="Page_232"></SPAN>[<SPAN href="./images/232.png">232</SPAN>]</span>
that was entirely strange to them. It was amusing, too,
to watch how each stalked by, erect and proud, like a
peacock spreading its brilliant plumage to the sun.</p>
<p>That night, when the bright moon rose, lighting up the
great silent court, until yesterday occupied by the terrible
queen and her corrupt <i>entourage</i>, Omar and I sat together
discussing the events of those fateful hours since midnight.
We had eaten from the gold dishes in which the
Naya's food had been served; we had quenched our
thirst from the jewel-encrusted goblets that she was wont
to raise to her thin blue lips. By Omar's side I thus
tasted, for the first time, the pleasures of royalty.</p>
<p>My old chum had sent away his attendants, the host
of slaves with the twelve Dagombas who acted as the
body-guard on duty, and we sat alone together in the
moonlight, the quiet broken only by the distant roll of a
drum somewhere down in the city, and the cool plashing
of the beautiful fountain as it fell softly into its crystal
basin. Kona, Goliba and Niaro were all away at their
duties, and now for the first time for many hours, we had
a few minutes to talk together.</p>
<p>"Do you know, Scars," Omar said, moving uneasily
upon the royal divan that had been carried out into the
court at his orders, while, tired out, I reclined upon
another close to him—"do you know there is but one
thing I regret, now that I have succeeded to the throne
that was my birthright?"</p>
<p>"Regret!" I exclaimed. "What regret can you
have? Surely you were entirely right in acting as you
did? The people were anxious for a just and upright
ruler, and having regard to the fact that your mother
plotted your assassination in so cold-blooded a manner,
her overthrow is justly deserved."</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_233" id="Page_233"></SPAN>[<SPAN href="./images/233.png">233</SPAN>]</span>
"Yes, yes, I know," he answered, rather impatiently.
"But it is not that—not that. One thing remains to
complete my happiness, but alas!"——and he sighed
heavily without finishing his sentence.</p>
<p>"Why speak so despondently?" I inquired, surprised.
"As Naba of Mo all things are possible."</p>
<p>"Alas! not everything," he said, with an air of
melancholy.</p>
<p>"Well, tell me," I urged. "Why are you so downcast?"</p>
<p>"I—I have lost Liola," he answered hoarsely.
"Truth to tell, Scarsmere, I loved Goliba's daughter."</p>
<p>"She is absolutely beautiful," I admitted. "No man
can deny that she is handsome enough to share your
royal throne."</p>
<p>"Indeed she was," he said with emotion, his chin
upon his breast.</p>
<p>"Was!" I cried. "Why do you speak thus?"</p>
<p>"Because she is dead!" he answered huskily. "Ah!
Scars, you don't know how fondly I loved her ever since
the first moment we met. I loved her better than life;
better than all this honour and pomp to which I have
succeeded. Yet she has been taken from me, and my
life in future will be devoid of that happiness I had contemplated.
True I am Naba of Mo, successor to the
stool whereon a line of unconquered monarchs have sat
throughout a thousand years, yet all is an empty pleasure
now that my well-beloved is lost to me."</p>
<p>"Have you obtained definite news of her death?" I
asked sympathetically.</p>
<p>"Yes. When we were captured in Goliba's house,
she, too, was seized by the soldiers. While held powerless
I saw her struggling with her captors, for they had<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_234" id="Page_234"></SPAN>[<SPAN href="./images/234.png">234</SPAN>]</span>
somehow obtained knowledge of the part she had played
in our conspiracy against their queen. The Naya had,
it appears, ordered her guards to bring us all before her,
dead or alive. With valiant courage she resented the
indignity of arrest, and as a consequence she was brutally
killed by those who held her prisoner."</p>
<p>"How have you ascertained this?" I asked, shocked
at the news, for I myself had admired Liola's extraordinary
beauty.</p>
<p>"To-day I have had before me the three survivors of the
guards who captured us, and all relate the same story.
They say that a young girl, taken prisoner with us, while
being dragged up the roadway towards the palace was in
danger of being released by the people, and one of their
comrades, remembering the Naya's orders that none of
us were to escape, in the <i>mêlée</i> raised his sword and
plunged it into her heart."</p>
<p>"The brute!" I cried. "Is the murderer among the
survivors?"</p>
<p>"No. All three agree that the mob, witnessing his
action, set upon him and literally tore him limb from
limb."</p>
<p>"A fate he certainly deserved," I said. "But has
her body been recovered?"</p>
<p>"A body has been found and I have seen it. But
the limbs are crushed, and her face is, alas! trampled
out of all recognition, although the dress answers exactly
to one that Goliba says his daughter possessed, and in
which I myself saw her. There is, alas! no doubt
of her fate. She has been brutally murdered, and at the
instigation of the Naya, who sent forth her fiendish
horde to kill us."</p>
<p>"I knew from the manner you exchanged glances with<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_235" id="Page_235"></SPAN>[<SPAN href="./images/235.png">235</SPAN>]</span>
Liola that you loved her," I said, after a pause, brief and
painful.</p>
<p>"Yes," he answered sadly. "Surreptitiously I had
breathed into her ear words of affection, and had been
transported to a veritable paradise of delight by the
discovery that she reciprocated my love. But," he
added, harshly, "my brief happy love-dream is now
ended. I must live and work only for my people;
they must be to me both sweetheart and wife. I must
act as my ancestors have done, indulging them and
loving them."</p>
<p>Never before, even in the moments when as fellow-adventurers
things looked blackest, had I seen him in
so utterly dejected an attitude. The light had died
from his face, and he had suddenly become burdened
by a monarch's responsibilities; prematurely aged by a
bitter sorrow that had sapped all youthful gaiety from
his buoyant heart.</p>
<p>With heartfelt sympathy I endeavoured to console
him, but all was unavailing. That he had loved her
madly was only too apparent, and it seemed equally
certain that she was dead, for shortly afterwards Goliba
entered, and in a voice full of emotion told us how he
had been able to identify the body, and that his tardy
attendance upon his royal master was due to the fact
that he had been superintending her burial.</p>
<p>The old sage's words visibly increased Omar's
burden of sorrow, for in the moonlight I saw a tear
trickle down his pale cheek, glistening for an instant
brighter than the jewels upon his robe. Liola had
fallen victim to the inhuman brutality of the Naya's
guards, and Mo had thus been deprived of a bewitchingly
handsome queen.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_236" id="Page_236"></SPAN>[<SPAN href="./images/236.png">236</SPAN>]</span>
The <i>dénouement</i> of this stirring story of a throne was
indeed a tragic one; Goliba had lost his only daughter,
the pride of his heart, and Omar the woman he loved.</p>
<p>The silence that followed was broken by a hasty
footstep, and the tall dark figure of Kona approached.</p>
<p>"A strange fact hath transpired, O Master!" he
cried breathlessly, addressing Omar.</p>
<p>"Speak, tell me," the young Naba exclaimed,
starting up. "Is it of Liola that thou bearest news?"</p>
<p>"Alas! no. That she was murdered in the first
moments of the conflict is only too certain," he answered.
"The news I bring thee is amazing. While we were
engaged in the struggle for thy throne, thine enemies,
the people of Samory, entered the city and fought side
by side with the military!"</p>
<p>"Samory's people here!" we all three cried, starting up.</p>
<p>"They were, but they have departed no one knows
whither. Their numbers were not great, but they
sacked and burned several large buildings near the city-gate
and fought desperately to join their allies the troops
of Mo, but were at last prevented and driven back by the
people in a fierce bloody conflict that actually occurred
after thou wert enthroned."</p>
<p>Then I remembered having noticed the smoke of the
encounter, and how with others, I had been puzzled.</p>
<p>"But how could they enter our country, and unseen
approach the city?" Omar exclaimed astounded.</p>
<p>"I know not the intricacies of the approaches to Mo
save the perilous Way of the Thousand Steps," Kona
replied. "The force may have been the rear-guard of
the army that attacked Mo, and were defeated in the
great chasm known as the Grave of Enemies. If they
approached by that means they must have followed<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_237" id="Page_237"></SPAN>[<SPAN href="./images/237.png">237</SPAN>]</span>
closely in our footsteps, and through the treachery of spies,
been admitted to the city at a time when the alertness
of the guards was diverted by the popular rising."</p>
<p>"Were their losses great in the fight?" Goliba asked.</p>
<p>"Terrible. Whole streets and market-places in the
vicinity of the entrance to the city were found strewn
with their dead," the black giant answered. "Apparently
the people discovered the identity of their
enemies and took no prisoners. With the exception of
about two hundred survivors all were killed."</p>
<p>"And the survivors have escaped!" Omar observed
thoughtfully.</p>
<p>"Yes. Owing to the lax watch kept at the gate
during those momentous hours, they were enabled to
descend the steps to the plain and get clear away."</p>
<p>"They must nevertheless be still in Mo. They must be
found," Omar cried excitedly. "While they are among
us our country will be in jeopardy, for they will act as
spies. Samory hath set his mind upon conquering this
our land; his plot must be frustrated."</p>
<p>"Already have I given orders for a search from the
land's most northerly limits even to the Grave of
Enemies, O Master," Kona answered. "All the men
who could be spared from guarding the city I have
dispatched on expeditions with orders to attack and
destroy the fugitives."</p>
<p>"They cannot have travelled far," the young ruler
said. "They have only about twelve hours' start of your
men."</p>
<p>"To a man our troops are now loyal to thee," the
newly-created chief of the army answered. "They are
alive to the fact that Samory's fighting-men are their
bitterest foes, therefore if the survivors of that intrepid<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_238" id="Page_238"></SPAN>[<SPAN href="./images/238.png">238</SPAN>]</span>
force are within our boundaries, they will assuredly be
overtaken and killed."</p>
<p>"I would rather that they were captured and held as
hostages," Omar said. "Enough blood hath been already
shed to-day."</p>
<p>"The order to capture them is not sufficient incentive
to thine army to rout them from their hiding-place," Kona
replied. "They have had the audacity to make a dash
upon thy city and burn some of its most renowned and
beautiful structures, therefore in their opinion if not in
thine, death alone would expiate their offence."</p>
<p>"I would wish their lives to be spared," Omar
repeated. "But the army is under thy control, and I
leave the final annihilation of the band of freebooters
unto thee. Hast thou obtained any tidings of the Naya's
flight?"</p>
<p>"None. My Dagombas have searched every nook
and corner of this thy palace, each prison dungeon
hath been entered by detachments of soldiers, while
enthusiastic parties have descended to the subterranean
Temple of Zomara, but found only the dwarf priests
there. The Naya hath disappeared as completely as
if Zomara had crushed her between his jaws."</p>
<p>"Her disappearance is amazing," Omar observed.
"Even her personal attendants whom I have questioned
are ignorant of the direction she hath taken. They
declare that she escaped within ten minutes of the
blowing up of the palace-gate. The catastrophe
alarmed her, and she saw in the fall of these defences
the instability of her throne."</p>
<p>"All is being done that can be done to secure her
arrest," Kona said. "It is absolutely necessary that we
should hold her captive, or, like the deposed queen of<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_239" id="Page_239"></SPAN>[<SPAN href="./images/239.png">239</SPAN>]</span>
the Nupé, she may stir up strife and form a plot to
reascend the stool."</p>
<p>"To thee, Kona, I look to guard me from mine
enemies," my friend exclaimed. "We must elucidate
the mystery of the sudden descent of this weak force of
Samory's, the rapidity with which they struck their blow,
and the means by which they have, within twelve hours,
so completely eluded us."</p>
<p>"News of them hath been flashed even unto the
furthermost limits of thy kingdom, O Great Chief,"
Kona assured him. "No effort shall be spared by thy
servant in executing thy commands. I go forth again,
and sleep shall not close my eyes until the men of
Samory have been overtaken."</p>
<p>With these words he made deep obeisance to the
newly-enthroned sovereign, and lifting his long native
spear, which he still retained, he swore vengeance most
terrible upon the enemies of Mo, who had, with such
consummate strategic skill, entered and attacked the city
at the moment when it remained undefended.</p>
<p>"There is some deep mystery underlying this, Scars,"
Omar said, when Kona had stalked away into the darkness,
and Goliba had risen and crossed the moon-lit
court in response to a message delivered by a black
slave. "I am scarcely surprised at Kona's failure to
capture the Naya; indeed, personally, I should only be
too happy to know that she had got safely beyond the
limits of Mo. But the sudden attack and rapid disappearance
of this marauding band of Samory proves two
things; first that our country, long thought impregnable,
may be invaded, and secondly that through Kouaga
Samory is in possession of certain of our secrets."</p>
<p>"What secrets?" I asked.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_240" id="Page_240"></SPAN>[<SPAN href="./images/240.png">240</SPAN>]</span>
"Secrets upon the preservation of which the welfare
and safety of my country depend," he answered mysteriously.
Then, with a sudden air of dejection, he added:
"But there, what matters after all, now that Liola is
dead and my life is desolate? At the very moment when
the greatest honour has been bestowed upon me and I
am enthroned Naba, the saviour of my people, the
greatest sorrow has also fallen upon me."</p>
<p>After a moment's silence he started up in sudden
desperation, crying: "Slave have I been to evil all the
days of my life! I have toiled and earned nothing; I
have sown in care and reaped not in merriment; I have
poisoned the comfort of others, but no blessing hath
fallen into my own lap. Blasted are the paths whereon
I trod; my past actions are ravenous vultures gnawing
on my vitals, and the sharpened claws of malicious spirits
await my arrival among the regions of the accursed."</p>
<p>"Yes," I observed with a sigh, for the remembrance
of that bright, beautiful face was to me likewise one of
ineffable sadness. "Yes," I said, "Fate has indeed been
unkind. What she has bestowed with one hand, she
has taken away with the other."</p>
<p>Then we were silent. Above the cool plashing music
of the fountain could be heard the distant roar of voices
in great rejoicing, while upon the starlit sky was still
reflected a red ominous glare from the fires raging
in the city that no effort of man could subdue. At the
gate leading outward to the next court stood two
sentries with drawn swords gleaming in the moonbeams,
mute and motionless like statues, while echoing along
the colonnade was the measured tramp of the soldier
as he paced before the entrance of the gilded Hall of
Audience, the scene of so many stirring dramas in the<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_241" id="Page_241"></SPAN>[<SPAN href="./images/241.png">241</SPAN>]</span>
nation's history. From the divan whereon I sat I could
see the great Emerald Throne glittering green under a
brilliant light, with its golden image of the sacred crocodile
and its banner bearing the hideous vampire-bat,
while around it were still grouped the officials of the
household, the body-guard of faithful Dagombas, the
slaves ready with their great fans, and Gankoma, the
executioner, with his bright double-edged <i>doka</i>, all
standing in patience, awaiting the coming of their royal
master.</p>
<p>The Court of Mo was, I reflected, a strange admixture
of European civilization and culture with
African superstition and barbarity. On the one hand
the buildings were of marble or stone, magnificent in
their proportions, with decorations in the highest style
of Moorish art, the arms were of the latest pattern
surreptitiously imported from England and many of
them faithfully copied by skilful, enlightened workmen;
electricity was known and used, and the tastes of the
people showed a refinement almost equal to that of any
European state. Yet in religion there prevailed the
crudest and most ignorant forms of superstition, one
of which was the horrible practice of burying alive all
sick persons, while the custom of the executioner accompanying
the reigning monarch everywhere, ready to
obey the royal command, was distinctly a relic of savage
barbarism.</p>
<p>"A few moments ago you spoke of secrets that must be
preserved," I said presently, turning to Omar.</p>
<p>"Yes," he answered slowly. "But my heart is too full
of poignant grief to think of them. To-night the secrets
are mine alone; to-morrow you shall be in possession of
at least one of them. I have, however, much yet to do, I<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_242" id="Page_242"></SPAN>[<SPAN href="./images/242.png">242</SPAN>]</span>
see, before I rest," he added, glancing over his shoulder
into the brilliant hall where stood the empty throne.</p>
<p>Then rising wearily, he sighed for Goliba's dead
daughter, and weighted by his rich robes, slowly strode
across to the arched entrance from which the light
streamed forth, and as he set foot upon its threshold
every proud head bowed to earth in deep, abject
obeisance.</p>
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