<h2><SPAN name="XII" id="XII"></SPAN>XII</h2>
<p>While Victoria was still in the lily-garden with her
host and his friend, the cab which she had ordered to
return came back to fetch her. It was early, and
Lady MacGregor had expected her to stop for tea, as
most people did stop, who visited Djenan el Djouad for the first
time, because every one wished to see the house; and to see the
house took hours. But the dancing-girl, appearing slightly embarrassed
as she expressed her regrets, said that she must go;
she had to keep an engagement. She did not explain what
the engagement was, and as she betrayed constraint in speaking
of it, both Stephen and Nevill guessed that she did not wish
to explain. They took it for granted that it was something to
do with her sister's affairs, something which she considered of
importance; otherwise, as she had no friends in Algiers, and
Lady MacGregor was putting herself out to be kind, the girl
would have been pleased to spend an afternoon with those to
whom she could talk freely. No questions could be asked,
though, as Lady MacGregor remarked when Victoria had
gone (after christening the baby panther), it did seem ridiculous
that a child should be allowed to make its own plans and carry
them out alone in a place like Algiers, without having any
advice from its elders.</p>
<p>"I've been, and expect to go on being, what you might call
a perpetual chaperon," said she resignedly; "and chaperoning
is so ingrained in my nature that I hate to see a baby running
about unprotected, doing what it chooses, as if it were a married
woman, not to say a widow. But I suppose it can't be stopped."</p>
<p>"She's been on the stage," said Nevill reassuringly, Miss<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_122" id="Page_122"></SPAN></span>
Ray having already broken this hard fact to the Scotch lady
at luncheon.</p>
<p>"I tell you it's a baby! Even John Knox would see that,"
sharply replied Aunt Caroline.</p>
<p>There was nothing better to do with the rest of the afternoon,
Nevill thought, than to take a spin in the motor, which
they did, the chauffeur at the wheel, as Nevill confessed himself
of too lazy a turn of mind to care for driving his own car.
While Stephen waited outside, he called at Djenan el Hadj
(an old Arab house at a little distance from the town, buried
deep in a beautiful garden), but the ladies were out. Nevill
wrote a note on his card, explaining that his aunt would like
to bring a friend, whose relatives had once lived in the house;
and this done, they had a swift run about the beautiful country
in the neighbourhood of Algiers.</p>
<p>It was dinner-time when they returned, and meanwhile an
answer had come from Mrs. Jewett. She would be delighted
to see any friend of Lady MacGregor's, and hoped Miss Ray
might be brought to tea the following afternoon.</p>
<p>"Shall we send a note to her hotel, or shall we stroll down
after dinner?" asked Nevill.</p>
<p>"Suppose we stroll down," Stephen decided, trying to appear
indifferent, though he was ridiculously pleased at the idea
of having a few unexpected words with Victoria.</p>
<p>"Good. We might take a look at the Kasbah afterward,"
said Nevill. "Night's the time when it's most mysterious,
and we shall be close to the old town when we leave Miss Ray's
hotel."</p>
<p>Dinner seemed long to Stephen. He could have spared
several courses. Nevertheless, though they sat down at eight,
it was only nine when they started out. Up on the hill of Mustapha
Supérieur, all was peaceful under the moonlight; but
below, in the streets of French shops and cafés, the light-hearted
people of the South were ready to begin enjoying themselves
after a day of work. Streams of electric light poured<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_123" id="Page_123"></SPAN></span>
from restaurant windows, and good smells of French cooking
filtered out, as doors opened and shut. The native cafés were
crowded with dark men smoking chibouques, eating kous-kous,
playing dominoes, or sipping absinthe and golden liqueurs which,
fortunately not having been invented in the Prophet's time, had
not been forbidden by him. Curio shops and bazaars for
native jewellery and brasswork were still open, lit up with pink
and yellow lamps. The brilliant uniforms of young Spahis
and Zouaves made spots of vivid colour among the dark clothes
of Europeans, tourists, or employés in commercial houses out
for amusement. Sailors of different nations swung along arm
in arm, laughing and ogling the handsome Jewesses and
painted ladies from the Levant or Marseilles. American
girls just arrived on big ships took care of their chaperons and
gazed with interest at the passing show, especially at the magnificent
Arabs who appeared to float rather than walk, looking
neither to right nor left, their white burnouses blowing behind
them. The girls stared eagerly, too, at the few veiled and
swathed figures of native women who mingled with the crowd,
padding timidly with bare feet thrust into slippers. The
foreigners mistook them no doubt for Arab ladies, not knowing
that ladies never walk; and were but little interested in the
old, unveiled women with chocolate-coloured faces, who begged,
or tried to sell picture-postcards. The arcaded streets were
full of light and laughter, noise of voices, clatter of horses'
hoofs, carriage-wheels, and tramcars, bells of bicycles and
horns of motors. The scene was as gay as any Paris boulevard,
and far more picturesque because of the older, Eastern civilization
in the midst of, though never part of, an imported
European life—the flitting white and brown figures, like
thronging ghosts outnumbering the guests at a banquet.</p>
<p>Stephen and Nevill Caird went up the Rue Bab-el-Oued,
leading to the old town, and so came to the Hotel de la Kasbah,
where Victoria Ray was staying. It looked more attractive
at night, with its blaze of electricity that threw out the Oriental<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_124" id="Page_124"></SPAN></span>
colouring of some crude decorations in the entrance-hall, yet
the place appeared less than ever suited to Victoria.</p>
<p>An Arab porter stood at the door, smoking a cigarette. His
fingers were stained with henna, and he wore an embroidered
jacket which showed grease-spots and untidy creases. It
was with the calmest indifference he eyed the Englishmen, as
Nevill inquired in French for Miss Ray.</p>
<p>The question whether she were "at home" was conventionally
put, for it seemed practically certain that she must be
in the hotel. Where could she, who had no other friends than
they, and no chaperon, go at night? It was with blank surprise,
therefore, that he and Stephen heard the man's answer. Mademoiselle
was out.</p>
<p>"I don't believe it," Stephen muttered in English, to Nevill.</p>
<p>The porter understood, and looked sulky. "I tell ze troot,"
he persisted. "Ze gentlemens no believe, zay ask some ozzer."</p>
<p>They took him at his word, and walked past the Arab into
the hotel. A few Frenchmen and Spaniards of inferior type
were in the hall, and at the back, near a stairway made of the
cheapest marble, was a window labelled "Bureau." Behind
this window, in a cagelike room, sat the proprietor at a desk,
adding up figures in a large book. He was very fat, and his
chins went all the way round his neck in grooves, as if his thick
throat might pull out like an accordion. There was something
curiously exotic about him, as there is in persons of mixed
races; an olive pallor of skin, an oiliness of black hair, and a
jetty brightness of eye under heavy lids.</p>
<p>This time it was Stephen who asked for Miss Ray; but he
was given the same answer. She had gone out.</p>
<p>"You are sure?"</p>
<p>"Mais, oui, monsieur."</p>
<p>"Has she been gone long?" Stephen persisted, feeling perplexed
and irritated, as if something underhand were going
on.</p>
<p>"Of that I cannot tell," returned the hotel proprietor, still<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_125" id="Page_125"></SPAN></span>
in guttural French. "She left word she would not be at the
dinner."</p>
<p>"Did she say when she would be back?"</p>
<p>"No, monsieur. She did not say."</p>
<p>"Perhaps the American Consul's family took pity on her,
and invited her to dine with them," suggested Nevill.</p>
<p>"Yes," Stephen said, relieved. "That's the most likely
thing, and would explain her engagement this afternoon."</p>
<p>"We might explore the Kasbah for an hour, and call again,
to inquire."</p>
<p>"Let us," returned Stephen. "I should like to know that
she's got in all right."</p>
<p>Five minutes later they had left the noisy Twentieth Century
behind them, and plunged into the shadowy silence of
a thousand years ago.</p>
<p>The change could not have been more sudden and complete
if, from a gaily lighted modern street, full of hum and bustle,
they had fallen down an oubliette into a dark, deserted fairyland.
Just outside was the imported life of Paris, but this
old town was Turkish, Arab, Moorish, Jewish and Spanish;
and in Algeria old things do not change.</p>
<p>After all, the alley was not deserted, though it was soundless
as a tomb save for a dull drumming somewhere behind
thick walls. They were in a narrow tunnel, rather than a street,
between houses that bent towards each other, their upper stories
supported by beams. There was no electric light, scarcely
any light at all save a strip of moonshine, fine as a line of silver
inlaid in ebony, along the cobbled way which ascended in
steps, and a faint glimmer of a lamp here and there in the distance,
a lamp small and greenish as the pale spark of a glow-worm.
As they went up, treading carefully, forms white
as spirits came down the street in heelless babouches that made
no more noise than the wings of a bat. These forms loomed
vague in the shadow, then took shape as Arab men, whose
eyes gleamed under turbans or out from hoods.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_126" id="Page_126"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Moving aside to let a cloaked figure go by, Stephen brushed
against the blank wall of a house, which was cold, sweating
dampness like an underground vault. No sun, except a streak
at midday, could ever penetrate this tunnel-street.</p>
<p>So they went on from one alley into another, as if lost in
a catacomb, or the troubling mazes of a nightmare. Always
the walls were blank, save for a deep-set, nail-studded door,
or a small window like a square dark hole. Yet in reality,
Nevill Caird was not lost. He knew his way very well in
the Kasbah, which he never tired of exploring, though he had
spent eight winters in Algiers. By and by he guided his
friend into a street not so narrow as the others they had
climbed, though it was rather like the bed of a mountain
torrent, underfoot. Because the moon could pour down a
silver flood it was not dark, but the lamps were so dull that
the moonlight seemed to put them out.</p>
<p>Here the beating was as loud as a frightened heart. The
walls resounded with it, and sent out an echo. More than one
nailed door stood open, revealing a long straight passage,
with painted walls faintly lighted from above, and a curtain
like a shadow, hiding the end. In these passages hung the
smoky perfume of incense; and from over tile-topped walls
came the fragrance of roses and lemon blossoms, half choked
with the melancholy scent of things old, musty and decayed.
Beautiful pillars, brought perhaps from ruined Carthage, were
set deeply in the whitewashed walls, looking sad and lumpy
now that centuries of chalk-coats had thickened their graceful
contours. But to compensate for loss of shape, they were dazzling
white, marvellous as columns of carved pearl in the moonlight,
they and their surrounding walls seeming to send out an
eerie, bleached light of their own which struck at the eye. The
uneven path ran floods of moonlight; and from tiny windows
in the leaning snow-palaces—windows like little golden
frames—looked out the faces of women, as if painted on backgrounds
of dull yellow, emerald-green, or rose-coloured light.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_127" id="Page_127"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>They were unveiled women, jewelled like idols, white and
pink as wax-dolls, their brows drawn in black lines with herkous,
their eyes glittering between bluish lines of kohl, their
lips poppy-red with the tint of mesouak, their heads bound in
sequined nets of silvered gauze, and crowned with tiaras of
gold coins. The windows were so small that the women were
hidden below their shoulders, but their huge hoop-earrings
flashed, and their many necklaces sent out sparks as they
nodded, smiling, at the passers; and one who seemed young
and beautiful as a wicked fairy, against a purple light, threw
a spray of orange blossoms at Stephen's feet.</p>
<p>Then, out of that street of muffled music, open doors, and
sequined idols, the two men passed to another where, in small
open-air cafés, bright with flaring torches or electric light
squatting men smoked, listening to story-tellers; and where,
further on, Moorish baths belched out steam mingled with
smells of perfume and heated humanity. So, back again to
black tunnels, where the blind walls heard secrets they would
never tell. The houses had no eyes, and the street doors drew
back into shadow.</p>
<p>"Do you wonder now," Nevill asked, "that it's difficult
to find out what goes on in an Arab's household?"</p>
<p>"No," said Stephen. "I feel half stifled. It's wonderful,
but somehow terrible. Let's get out of this 'Arabian Nights'
dream, into light and air, or something will happen to us, some
such things as befell the Seven Calendars. We must have
been here an hour. It's time to inquire for Miss Ray again.
She's sure to have come in by now."</p>
<p>Back they walked into the Twentieth Century. Some of
the lights in the hotel had been put out. There was nobody
in the hall but the porter, who had smoked his last cigarette,
and as no one had given him another, he was trying to sleep
in a chair by the door.</p>
<p>Mademoiselle might have come in. He did not know.
Yes, he could ask, if there were any one to ask, but the woman<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_128" id="Page_128"></SPAN></span>
who looked after the bedrooms had an evening out. There
was only one <i>femme de chambre</i>, but what would you? The
high season was over. As for the key of Mademoiselle,
very few of the clients ever left their keys in the bureau when
they promenaded themselves. It was too much trouble. But
certainly, he could knock at the door of Mademoiselle, if the
gentlemen insisted, though it was now on the way to eleven
o'clock, and it would be a pity to wake the young lady if she
were sleeping.</p>
<p>"Knock softly. If she's awake, she'll hear you," Stephen
directed. "If she's asleep, she won't."</p>
<p>The porter went lazily upstairs, appearing again in a few
minutes to announce that he had obeyed instructions and the
lady had not answered. "But," he added, "one would say
that an all little light came through the keyhole."</p>
<p>"Brute, to look!" mumbled Stephen. There was, however,
nothing more to be done. It was late, and they must take it
for granted that Miss Ray had come home and gone to bed.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_129" id="Page_129"></SPAN></span></p>
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