IN WHICH THE CAPTIVE STILL CONTINUES HIS ADVENTURES

Before fifteen days were over our renegade had already purchased an

excellent vessel with room for more than thirty persons; and to make the

transaction safe and lend a colour to it, he thought it well to make, as

he did, a voyage to a place called Shershel, twenty leagues from Algiers

on the Oran side, where there is an extensive trade in dried figs. Two or

three times he made this voyage in company with the Tagarin already

mentioned. The Moors of Aragon are called Tagarins in Barbary, and those

of Granada Mudejars; but in the Kingdom of Fez they call the Mudejars

Elches, and they are the people the king chiefly employs in war. To

proceed: every time he passed with his vessel he anchored in a cove that

was not two crossbow shots from the garden where Zoraida was waiting; and

there the renegade, together with the two Moorish lads that rowed, used

purposely to station himself, either going through his prayers, or else

practising as a part what he meant to perform in earnest. And thus he

would go to Zoraida's garden and ask for fruit, which her father gave

him, not knowing him; but though, as he afterwards told me, he sought to

speak to Zoraida, and tell her who he was, and that by my orders he was

to take her to the land of the Christians, so that she might feel

satisfied and easy, he had never been able to do so; for the Moorish

women do not allow themselves to be seen by any Moor or Turk, unless

their husband or father bid them: with Christian captives they permit

freedom of intercourse and communication, even more than might be

considered proper. But for my part I should have been sorry if he had

spoken to her, for perhaps it might have alarmed her to find her affairs

talked of by renegades. But God, who ordered it otherwise, afforded no

opportunity for our renegade's well-meant purpose; and he, seeing how

safely he could go to Shershel and return, and anchor when and how and

where he liked, and that the Tagarin his partner had no will but his, and

that, now I was ransomed, all we wanted was to find some Christians to

row, told me to look out for any I should be willing to take with me,

over and above those who had been ransomed, and to engage them for the

next Friday, which he fixed upon for our departure. On this I spoke to

twelve Spaniards, all stout rowers, and such as could most easily leave

the city; but it was no easy matter to find so many just then, because

there were twenty ships out on a cruise and they had taken all the rowers

with them; and these would not have been found were it not that their

master remained at home that summer without going to sea in order to

finish a galliot that he had upon the stocks. To these men I said nothing

more than that the next Friday in the evening they were to come out

stealthily one by one and hang about Hadji Morato's garden, waiting for

me there until I came. These directions I gave each one separately, with

orders that if they saw any other Christians there they were not to say

anything to them except that I had directed them to wait at that spot.




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