ike a brass horn above all others shouting his war-cry.
But at Khartoum came Seti's fall. Many sorts of original sin had been
his, with profit and prodigious pleasure, but when, by the supposed
orders of the bimbashi, he went through Khartoum levying a tax upon
every dancing-girl in the place and making her pay upon the spot at the
point of a merciless tongue, he went one step too far. For his genius
had preceded that of Selamlik Pasha, the friend of the Mouffetish
at Cairo, by one day only. Selamlik himself had collected taxes on
dancing-girls all the way from Cairo to Khartoum; and to be hoist by
an Arab in a foot regiment having no authority and only a limitless
insolence, was more than the Excellency could bear.
To Selamlik Pasha the bimbashi hastily disowned all knowledge of Seti's
perfidy, but both were brought out to have their hands and feet and
heads cut off in the Beit-el-Mal, in the presence of the dancing-girls
and the populace. In the appointed place, when Seti saw how the bimbashi
wept--for he had been to Paris and had no Arab blood in him; how he
wrung his hands--for had not absinthe weakened his nerves in the cafes
of St. Michel?--when Seti saw that he was no Arab and was afraid to die,
then he told the truth to Selamlik Pasha. He even boldly offered to tell
the pasha where half his own ill-gotten gains were hid, if he would
let the bimbashi go. Now, Selamlik Pasha was an Egyptian, and is it
not written in the Book of Egypt that no man without the most dangerous
reason may refuse backsheesh? So it was that Selamlik talked to the
Ulema, the holy men, who were there, and they urged him to clemency, as
holy men will, even in Egypt--at a price.
So it was also that the bimbashi went back to his regiment with all his
limbs intact. Seti and the other half of his ill-gotten gains were left.
His hands were about to be struck off, when he realised of how little
account his gold would be without them; so he offered it to Selamlik
Pasha for their sake. The pasha promised, and then, having found the
money, serenely prepared the execution. For his anger was great. Was not
the idea of taxing the dancing-girls his very own, the most original tax
ever levied in Egypt? And to have the honour of it filched from him by a
soldier of Manfaloot--no, Mahommed Seti should be crucified!
And Seti, the pride and the curse of his regiment, would have been
crucified between two palms on the banks of the river had it not been
f
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