Part 9 (2/2)
Beyond the river, with its black rocks, which showed in the water like the indefinite forms of seals or shoals of swirling porpoises, there was the bright yellow sand of the desert, which led into a world of primitive silence, while above them and all around them there were the stars and the night of Egypt.
Mrs. Mervill had left the ball-room early, because she knew that the balcony would be almost empty during the first part of the evening.
”Isn't having this all to ourselves better than dancing in that crowd?
This is Egypt.”
”It's beautiful,” Michael said, as he arranged the cus.h.i.+ons in her chair to suit her taste, which was scarcely in keeping with the views of a dignified woman. When he had finished, Mrs. Mervill let her hand slip down his coat-sleeve--she had laid it there as she spoke to him--until it rested on his wrist; her fingers were caressing.
”Tell me,” she said, looking up into his face with a winning and soft expression, ”what have you been doing with yourself since we parted?
You have been much in my thoughts--never out of them, indeed.”
”My usual work in the camp,” Michael said. ”Its interest always increases, and although it seems pretty much the same every day to ordinary people, to us it is full of variety.”
”Lucky man! We poor women have no such distractions. I want to live in the desert,” she said eagerly. ”I want to sleep in the open under these stars.”
Anyone might have made the same remark with no _arriere pensee_ in their words. Mrs. Mervill could not. Her remark contained an invitation; Michael knew it.
”Can you never get away?” she asked. ”It would be my expedition, if you would run it for me.”
Michael moved from her side, with the pretence of drawing a chair to within speaking distance of her. She had reluctantly to let his wrist slip from her fingers.
”Say you will arrange it,” she pleaded. ”For weeks I have felt the call of the desert and you know you'd love to come.”
”I can't do it,” Michael said, almost sternly. ”Please don't tempt me . . . I have work to do.”
”Oh, but I will tempt you!” She laughed the soft, low laugh of pa.s.sion. ”By every means in my power. With you it is so difficult to know what will tempt you most. Am I to appeal to the mystic side of you, or to the human? I think the human Michael will suit me best, the Michael who longs to let himself go and enjoy the fullness of Egypt and the wonders of the desert!”
”Don't appeal to any part of me,” he said quickly. ”Leave me to do my work in the best possible way--try not to act as a disturbing influence.”
”Then I have been a disturbing influence?” Michael's voice had betrayed the fact that his work had not been accomplished without difficulty.
”Yes,” he said, for the spirit of truth was always uppermost in Michael. ”For some days after I left you the last time I found great difficulty in concentrating my mind on my work. . . . I was dissatisfied.”
”Then I succeeded!” The amethyst eyes, devoid of all hardness now, caressed Michael and disturbed his nerves. The woman was very beautiful, and he was conscious that her mind was set on her desire to win him. He knew that it was not love; he knew that their intimacy was not one of wholesome friends.h.i.+p. He was becoming more and more awake to the fact that this wealthy woman, who looked like a child but for the expression of her eyes, had taken an unreasoning desire to have him for her lover. In a measure he could not but feel flattered, for with her beauty and wealth she could have had the attention of better men than himself. He was too generous in his judgment of women to attribute her desire to the lowest motives, the prospect of enjoying through another the innocence which she had lost herself so long ago.
”I tried to reach you, Mike. I used every effort of my will-power, or mind-power, or whatever power you like to call it. I insisted on your feeling me. I sent myself out of myself to you.”
”Why did you do it?” he said. He had leaned forward and had laid his hand on the cus.h.i.+ons of her chair, at the back of her head. His distressed voice was less harsh.
”Why did I do it? Because, dear, I want you.” Her voice was low and wooing; it was one of her charms.
Michael did not answer. His senses were beginning to throb. The sound of a native earthen drum, with its sensual thud, thud, thudding, and the watery note of a key striking a gla.s.s bottle, as an accompaniment to the slow measures of bare feet on the deck of a Nile boat, added an undefinable touch, of Oriental pa.s.sion to the scene.
Michael tried to draw away his hand, but she caught it and pulled his arm round her neck and held his long fingers imprisoned under her chin.
<script>