For Fortune and Glory | Page 5

Lewis Hough
same uncanny manner, and
bringing his right-hand round towards his left hip, as if ready to grasp a
sword-hilt.
"One prophet," he continued, "was raised up for the destruction of
idolatry, and wherever he appeared the false gods vanished. There were
those who worshipped the True God, but received not his Prophet, and
with them Islam has for centuries waged equal war, for their time was
not yet come, and the mission of Mohammed was not for them. But the
years of probation have expired, and the nations of the West remain in

wilful darkness. They receive not the commandments of the Prophet;
they drink fermented liquor, they eat the unclean beast, their worship of
gold and science has become a real idolatry. Another prophet has arisen
for their destruction, and Asia and Africa shall, ere another generation
has come and gone, be swept clean of the Infidel. Swept clean! Swept
clean! With the scimitar for a besom!"
He remained with his eyes fixed and his lips parted, and Harry did not
quite know what to do next. But he summoned courage to rise and say
that he hoped his father would have come home by now and as he had
not seen him yet, he thought he would go.
Filial affection might surely be taken as a valid excuse for withdrawal.
And yet, having had no experience of the etiquette due to prophets
when the orgy of vaticination is upon them, he was not quite
comfortable on the question of being scathed. There was no need for
fear; Sheikh Burrachee was too rapt to heed his presence or absence.
He heard not his voice, and knew not when he crossed the room and
closed the door softly behind him. He found Trix in the hall looking out
for him.
"Well?" she cried.
"Oh, my prophetic uncle!" ejaculated Harry.
"That is a mis-quotation."
"It is not a quotation at all; it is an exclamation, and a very natural one
under the circumstances."
"Has he been telling your fortune?" asked Beatrice, her large eyes
expanding with the interest which is begotten of mystery.
"Not exactly," replied Harry; "except that he hinted something about
the propriety of my choosing the profession of a Bedouin, and, I
suppose, making a fortune by robbing caravans. But he told the
misfortunes of other people with a vengeance. The Mohammedans are
going to turn the Christians out of Asia and Africa everywhere."

"Good gracious, Harry! Why, papa's a director of the Great Transit
Bank, and all our money is in it, and it does all its business in the East."
"By Jove! Let us hope the prophet doesn't know, then. But, upon my
word, he looked like seeing into futurity. At least, I could not make out
what else he was looking at."
"Poor man, he had a sunstroke when he was quite young in India, and
has led a queer life amongst savages ever since. But papa has come
home and been asking for you. You will find him in the
drawing-room."
Harry thought his father thinner and older than when he had last seen
him, and asked how he was in a more earnest and meaning manner than
is customary in the conventional "How do you do?"
"Do I look altered?" asked Mr Forsyth, quickly.
"Oh, no, father, only a little pale; tired-looking, you know," said Harry,
rather hesitatingly, in spite of the effort made to speak carelessly.
"I have not been quite the thing, and have seen a physician about it.
Only a little weakness about the heart, which affects the circulation.
But do not mention it to your mother or sister; women are so easily
frightened, and their serious faces would make me imagine myself
seriously ill. Well, how did you get on with your uncle? You see he has
turned me out of my private den."
"Is he at all--a little--that is, a trifle cracked, father?"
"A good deal, I should say. And yet he is a very clever man, and
sensible enough at times, and upon some subjects. He was most useful
to me out in Egypt on several occasions when we happened to meet. A
great traveller and a wonderful linguist."
"Was he badly treated by Government? He told me a story in the third
person, but I expect that he referred to himself all the time," said Harry.

"Well," replied Mr Forsyth, "it is difficult to tell all the rights of the
story. Ever since he had an illness in India, as a very young man, he has
been subject to delusions. No doubt he behaved well on the occasion of
a certain shipwreck--if that is what you allude to--and incurred heavy
expense, which ought to have been made up to him. But I doubt if he
went the right way
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