Atlantida - Page 136/145

Ceghéir-ben-Cheikh had reckoned eight days to get to the wooded

country of the Awellimiden, forerunners of the grassy steppes of the

Soudan. He knew well the worth of his beast. Tanit-Zerga had suddenly

given him a name, El Mellen, the white one, for the magnificent

mehari had an almost spotless coat. Once he went two days without

eating, merely picking up here and there a branch of an acacia tree

whose hideous white spines, four inches long, filled me with fear for

our friend's oesophagus. The wells marked out by Ceghéir-ben-Cheikh

were indeed at the indicated spots, but we found nothing in them but a

burning yellow mud. It was enough for the camel, enough so that at the

end of the fifth day, thanks to prodigious self-control, we had used

up only one of our two water skins. Then we believed ourselves safe.

Near one of these muddy puddles, I succeeded that day in shooting down

a little straight-horned desert gazelle. Tanit-Zerga skinned the beast

and we regaled ourselves with a delicious haunch. Meantime, little

Galé, who never ceased prying about the cracks in the rocks during our

mid-day halts in the heat, discovered an ourane, a sand crocodile,

five feet long, and made short work of breaking his neck. She ate so

much she could not budge. It cost us a pint of water to help her

digestion. We gave it with good grace, for we were happy. Tanit-Zerga

did not say so, but her joy at knowing that I was thinking no more of

the woman in the gold diadem and the emeralds was apparent. And

really, during those days, I hardly thought of her. I thought only of

the torrid heat to be avoided, of the water skins which, if you wished

to drink fresh water, had to be left for an hour in a cleft in the

rocks; of the intense joy which seized you when you raised to your

lips a leather goblet brimming with that life-saving water.... I can

say this with authority, with good authority, indeed; passion,

spiritual or physical, is a thing for those who have eaten and drunk

and rested.

It was five o'clock in the afternoon. The frightful heat was

slackening. We had left a kind of rocky crevice where we had had a

little nap. Seated on a huge rock, we were watching the reddening

west.

I spread out the roll of paper on which Ceghéir-ben-Cheikh had marked

the stages of our journey as far as the road from the Soudan. I

realized again with joy that his itinerary was exact and that I had

followed it scrupulously.