Part 22 (2/2)
The Pasha salaamed. d.i.c.ky drew over to the lady, with a keen warning glance at Kingsley. The Pasha salaamed again, and Kingsley responded in kind. ”Good-day to you, Pasha,” he said.
”May the dew of the morning bring flowers to your life, Excellency,” was the reply. He salaamed now towards the lady, and Kingsley murmured his name to her.
”Will you not be seated,” she said, and touched a chair as though to sit down, yet casting a doubtful glance at the squad of men and the brilliant kava.s.s drawn up near by. The Pasha looked from one to the other, and Kingsley spoke.
”What is it, Pasha? Her ladys.h.i.+p doesn't know why she should be honoured.”
”But that makes no difference,” she interposed. ”Here is coffee--ah, that's right, cigarettes too! But, yes, you will take my coffee, Pasha,”
she urged.
The insolent look which had gathered in the man's face cleared away. He salaamed, hesitated, and took the coffee, then salaamed again to her.
She had caught at a difficulty; an instinctive sense of peril had taken possession of her; and, feeling that the danger was for the Englishman who had come to her out of her old life, she had interposed a diplomatic moment. She wanted to gain time before the mystery broke over her. She felt something at stake for herself. Premonition, a troubling of the spirit, told her that she was in the presence of a crisis out of which she would not come unchanged.
d.i.c.ky was talking now, helping her--asking the Pasha questions of his journey up the river, of the last news from Europe, of the Khedive's health, though he and Kingsley had only left Cairo a half-day before the Pasha.
The officer thanked the lady and salaamed again, then turned towards Kingsley.
”You wished to speak with me, perhaps, Pasha,” said Kingsley.
”If a moment of your time may have so little honour, saadat el bey.”
Kingsley moved down the veranda shoulder to shoulder with the Pasha, and the latter's men, responding to a glance, moved down also. Kingsley saw, but gave no heed.
”What's up, Pasha?” he asked in a low voice. ”The Khedive commands your return to Cairo.”
”With you?”
”So, effendi.”
”Compulsion, eh? I don't see quite. I'm an Englishman, not a fellah.”
”But I have my commands, saadat el bey.”
”What's the row, Pasha?”
”Is it for the servant to know the mind of his master?”
”And if I don't go?”
The Pasha pointed to his men, and motioned towards the boat where forty or fifty others showed. ”Bosh, Pasha! That's no reason. That's flummery, and you know and the Highness knows it. That would have been all very well in the desert, but this is not the desert, and I'm not doing business with the Highness any more. What's the penalty if I don't go?”
”Twenty men will lose their heads to-morrow morning, a riot will occur, the bank where much gold is will be broken into, some one will be made poor, and--”
”Come, never mind twaddle about my money--we'll see about that. Those twenty men--my men?”
”Your men, saadat el bey.”
”They're seized?”
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