Part 35 (1/2)
”Splendid chaps, madame!”
He sat up straight, and threw out his chest and thumped it.
”Beef, plum pudding, fine fellers, rulers!”
”You mustn't laugh at my countrymen.”
”Laugh--never! But--may I smile, just at one corner?”
He showed his rows of little, straight, white teeth, which looked strong enough to bite through a bar of iron.
”The Englishman rules us in Egypt. He keeps saying we are ruling, and he keeps on ruling us. And all the time he rules us, he despises us, madame. He thinks us silly children. But sometimes we smile at him, though of course he never smiles at us, for fear a smile from him should make us think we are not so far below him. It is very wrong of us, but somehow Allah permits us to smile. And then”--again he leaned forward, and his chair creaked in the darkness--”there are some Englishwomen who like to see us smile, some who even smile with us behind the Englishman's back.”
He spoke calmly, with a certain subtle irony, but quite without any hint of bitterness, and in speaking the last words he slightly lowered his voice.
”Is it very wrong of them, madame? What do you say? Do you condemn them?”
She did not answer, but her mobile, painted lips quivered, as if she were trying to repress a smile and were not quite succeeding.
”If they smile, if they smile--isn't that a shame, madame?”
He was smiling into her eyes.
”It is a great shame,” she said. ”I despise deceitful women.”
”And yet who does not deceive? Everybody--except the splendid fellers!”
He threw back his head and laughed, while she looked at his magnificent throat.
”You never talked like this on the _Hohenzollern_,” she said.
”Madame, I was never alone with you. How could I talk like this? I should not have been properly understood.”
Not only in his eyes, but also in this a.s.sumption of a certain comrades.h.i.+p and sympathy from which Nigel and Nigel's kind were necessarily excluded, there was a definite insolence that seemed to strike upon and challenge Mrs. Armine, like a glove flung in her face.
Would she perhaps have resented it even yesterday? She could not tell.
To-night she was ready to welcome it, for to-night she almost hated Nigel. But, apart from her personal anger, Baroudi made an impression upon her that was definite and strong. She felt, she ever seemed to perceive with her eyes, the love of brigandage in him--and had she not been a brigand? There were some ruined men who could have answered that question. And in this man there was a great fund of force and of energy.
He threw out an extraordinary atmosphere of physical strength, in which seemed involved a strength that was mental, like dancing motes in a beam of light. Mrs. Armine was a resolute woman, as Meyer Isaacson had at once divined. She felt that here was a human being who could be even more resolute than herself, more persistent, more unyielding, and quite as subtle, quite as cool. Though he was an Eastern man and she was a Western woman, how should each not understand much of the other's character? And as to him--Orientals are readers of brains, if not of souls.
She felt a great sense of relief, as if a balm were laid at evening upon the morning's wound.
”Ruby!”
Baroudi leaned back quietly, looking calm and strong and practical. And this time Mrs. Armine noticed that the basket chair did not creak beneath his movement.
”Is it all right about the dinner, Nigel?”
”I hope so,” he said. ”But Baroudi mustn't suppose we've got a _chef_ like his.”
”I'll leave you for a little while,” she said, getting up. ”Dinner at a quarter past eight.”
”Thank you, madame.”