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To The Far Blue Mountains by Louis L’Amour

Ocean.

There was a cup for each of us, and a pleasant, warming drink it was.

Jublain and Pim came to me. “Will they attack again, think you?”

“I do not know. The ladders failed only because we were alert, but they will

think their medicine was bad. We must wait and see.”

The attack had lasted only minutes, and now all was still. We drank more of the

coffee and some men returned to their rest. A slow hour passed by, and then

another. There was a faint gray fight in the east, or perhaps I but wished it

so.

Watkins came to me beside the parapet. “There’s two ladders outside near the

gate. Request permission to go out and get them.”

I hesitated. To open the gates was a risk, but I wished to keep as many ladders

from their hands as possible. Always before Indians had failed to succeed in

attacks against stockades unless they could get in before a gate was closed.

“How many men will you need?”

“Twelve, I think. Two men for each ladder, the others to stand by in case of

attack.”

“Very well. Only it must be done quickly. At the first move from them retreat

within the gate and close it.”

We waited … the creak of the heavy gates was unnaturally loud in the

stillness. Surely, the Indians could hear it, but what would they think? That we

were pursuing them?

Yet Watkins and his men moved swiftly indeed. Within minutes the gates had swung

shut again, and at least two of the ladders were within.

He came to me. It had grown a little lighter and his grin was easy to see.

“There was a third we could not carry so I almost cut the rawhide bindings

through,” he said. “Wait until they try climbing that one!”

Watching toward the dark line of forest, I thought of Naguska.

The threads that hold a man to leadership be thin indeed, and he had trusted his

success to a new thing, an un-Indian thing, and it had failed. Some of them were

sure to think that it was this strange thing that led to their defeat, they

would blame him. I could not but feel regret for him, for he seemed an able man,

although I was sorry he respected his father so little.

Yet, might it not be that he secretly loved him? That all this was a mask, a

thing to shield him from such an emotion? For few of the Indians we had met thus

far regarded the father with veneration, for the maternal uncle was he who drew

the respect we gave to a father.

We waited, and waited, yet no further attack came, and slowly the sky grew

lighter.

Here and there we saw patches of darkness on the grass, left by the blood of a

victim, but there were no bodies, alive or dead. All had been spirited away in

the darkness. We found four more ladders, one abandoned almost at the edge of

the brush.

How well for us and all who lived behind stockades that this new way of war had

failed them. I wondered how often it might have happened—that a truly great

discovery was cast aside because of initial failure. The ladders were well-made,

the uprights notched slightly, and the crosspieces bound in place with rawhide.

Abigail had breakfast ready when I came below. She had not waited for the main

table to be set, knowing I would be hungry. I told her of Naguska, and she

looked at me, smiling with amusement. “You are a strange man, Barnabas, for you

seem almost regretful that he failed, when his success might have meant death to

us all.”

“It was a new idea to them, Abby, the ladders. And he must have argued many

hours to convince his warriors of their worth.” I reflected. “Yes, I do feel

regret for him, and someday I hope we can meet again … under other

circumstances. I would know more of this father of his. How he came to be here

and what his name was. And whence he came.”

Sakim and Pim came in to share coffee with me, and I told them of my thinking.

“How strange it is to think that all our knowledge, all our skills can seem

worthless to a people not accustomed to them.”

Sakim shrugged. “It was ever so. Long ago I was on a ship to the Moluccas, and

we stopped by an island to trade. No steel was known there, nor any metal at

all. The tools, axes, knives … all were of stone.

“One such was beautifully made and I wished it for something to take home with

me, and offered to trade a steel hatchet for his of stone. He looked at my

hatchet, turned it over, used it, looked astonished at how easily it cut, then

returned it to me and took up his own. He would not trade. He wanted what was

known and familiar, not this strange tool of whose properties he knew nothing.”

Sakim sipped his coffee. “It is good,” he said, “but thin to my taste. I must

show you someday how it is made in my country.”

He put down his cup. “I have come tonight to talk to you of that.”

“Of your country? My father knew a little, but too little. Peter talked some of

the Eastern lands, but I know too little except that spices come from there, and

gold and tea and coffee and much else.”

Sakim smiled, and turned his cup upon the table. “Much else, indeed.” He looked

at me, his black eyes amused and a little doubtful, I thought. “That young man,

Naguska. I am very like him in that I, too, have learning that may be despised,

as his was.”

“How so? I despise no learning, Sakim. That you know.”

“Perhaps, my friend, and that is why I have decided to tell you what I have told

no man since my first captivity to Europeans. It was easier to let them believe

I was a Moor, for all understood what was a Moor, and to explain what I really

was … it would have been useless, and worse, puzzling.

“Men do not like puzzles, Barnabas. They prefer categories. It is far easier to

slip a piece of information into a known slot than to puzzle over the unknown.”

“You are not a Moor? But you are a Moslem?”

“Many who follow Mohammed are not Moors, nor even Arabs. They were a conquering

people, those Arabs who came out of their deserts after the death of Mohammed,

and they carried the sword and fire to many lands, including Persia, one of the

oldest, and I, who now call myself Sakim, came from a far place known as

Khurasan, from the city of Nisphapur.

“It was the home of my father, and of my father’s father as well, and who knows

how many others? We were scholars, sometimes of the law, often of medicine,

always of philosophy.

“In the study of medicine we were far advanced, for were we not the heirs of

Greece? But we had learned from India as well, and from Cathay. In Bagdad alone

we once had sixty-five hospitals divided into wards for the separate treatments

of various ills and diseases, with running water in every room … and that was

in the eighth century … eight hundred years ago.”

“So what happened?” Burke asked skeptically. “I have seen none of this great

medicine.”

“Genghis Khan came … you have heard of him? And something like a hundred years

later, Timur the Lame. He who in the West is called Tamerlane.

“You think you have seen war … Timur made pyramids of skulls and the streets

ran red with blood … several times over a hundred thousand were put to the

sword. No man truly knows how many, but he killed all … at first.

“Later, when he became wiser, he tried to save the artisans and the scholars,

but too many had died. The hospitals were destroyed, the books burned, the

teachers slain.

“Those two conquerors set civilization back five hundred years, my friends, and

only a few survived. Several were ancestors of mine who fled into the hidden

fastnesses of the Pamirs, and others into the far desert, the Takla-makan.

“There they treated the ill, they taught their sons and grandsons, and in time

returned to Nisphapur and to Marv and to Meshed.

“In my time I studied in Nisphapur and in Marv, then in Isfahan and

Constantinople, but by that time the urge was upon me to travel to the westward,

so I set sail from Constantinople for Tripoli. Our ship was taken by pirates …

I was enslaved … was taken by other pirates then freed, and when we met I was

a sailor, only wishing to go home.”

“And now you are here,” Abigail said.

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