Part 21 (1/2)
Panic threatened, but fortunately the doors were wide, so that, without disaster the whole fantastic company pa.s.sed into the hotel; and even the military band retired.
Cairn perceived that he alone remained in the garden, and glancing along the path in the direction of the fountain, he saw a blotchy drab creature, fully four inches in length, running zigzag towards him. It was a huge scorpion; but, even as he leapt forward to crush it, it turned and crept in amid the tangle of flowers beside the path, where it was lost from view.
The scorching wind grew momentarily fiercer, and Cairn, entering behind a few straggling revellers, found something ominous and dreadful in its sudden fury. At the threshold, he turned and looked back upon the gaily lighted garden. The paper lamps were thras.h.i.+ng in the wind, many extinguished; others were in flames; a number of electric globes fell from their fastenings amid the palm tops, and burst bomb-like upon the ground. The pleasure garden was now a battlefield, beset with dangers, and he fully appreciated the anxiety of the company to get within doors. Where chrysanthemum and _yashmak_ turban and _tarboosh_, uraeus and Indian plume had mingled gaily, no soul remained; but yet--he was in error ... someone did remain.
As if embodying the fear that in a few short minutes had emptied the garden, out beneath the waving lanterns, the flying _debris_, the whirling dust, pacing sombrely from shadow to light, and to shadow again, advancing towards the hotel steps, came the figure of one sandalled, and wearing the short white tunic of Ancient Egypt. His arms were bare, and he carried a long staff; but rising hideously upon his shoulders was a crocodile-mask, which seemed to grin--the mask of Set, Set the Destroyer, G.o.d of the underworld.
Cairn, alone of all the crowd, saw the strange figure, for the reason that Cairn alone faced towards the garden. The gruesome mask seemed to fascinate him; he could not take his gaze from that weird advancing G.o.d; he felt impelled hypnotically to stare at the gleaming eyes set in the saurian head. The mask was at the foot of the steps, and still Cairn stood rigid. When, as the sandalled foot was set upon the first step, a breeze, dust-laden, and hot as from a furnace door, blew fully into the hotel, blinding him. A chorus arose from the crowd at his back; and many voices cried out for doors to be shut. Someone tapped him on the shoulder, and spun him about.
”By G.o.d!”--it was Sime who now had him by the arm--”_Khamsin_ has come with a vengeance! They tell me that they have never had anything like it!”
The native servants were closing and fastening the doors. The night was now as black as Erebus, and the wind was howling about the building with the voices of a million lost souls. Cairn glanced back across his shoulder. Men were drawing heavy curtains across the doors and windows.
”They have shut him out, Sime!” he said.
Sime stared in his dull fas.h.i.+on.
”You surely saw him?” persisted Cairn irritably; ”the man in the mask of Set--he was coming in just behind me.”
Sime strode forward, pulled the curtains aside, and peered out into the deserted garden.
”Not a soul, old man,” he declared. ”You must have seen the Efreet!”
CHAPTER XIII
THE SCORPION WIND
This sudden and appalling change of weather had sadly affected the mood of the gathering. That part of the carnival planned to take place in the garden was perforce abandoned, together with the firework display. A halfhearted attempt was made at dancing, but the howling of the wind, and the omnipresent dust, perpetually reminded the pleasure-seekers that _Khamsin_ raged without--raged with a violence unparalleled in the experience of the oldest residents. This was a full-fledged sand-storm, a terror of the Sahara descended upon Cairo.
But there were few departures, although many of the visitors who had long distances to go, especially those from Mena House, discussed the advisability of leaving before this unique storm should have grown even worse. The general tendency, though, was markedly gregarious; safety seemed to be with the crowd, amid the gaiety, where music and laughter were, rather than in the sand-swept streets.
”Guess we've outstayed our welcome!” confided an American lady to Sime. ”Egypt wants to drive us all home now.”
”Possibly,” he replied with a smile. ”The season has run very late, this year, and so this sort of thing is more or less to be expected.”
The orchestra struck up a lively one-step, and a few of the more enthusiastic dancers accepted the invitation, but the bulk of the company thronged around the edge of the floor, acting as spectators.
Cairn and Sime wedged a way through the heterogeneous crowd to the American Bar.
”I prescribe a 'tango,'” said Sime.
”A 'tango' is--?”
”A 'tango,'” explained Sime, ”is a new kind of c.o.c.ktail sacred to this buffet. Try it. It will either kill you or cure you.”
Cairn smiled rather wanly.
”I must confess that I need bucking up a bit,” he said: ”that confounded sand seems to have got me by the throat.”