<SPAN name="2HCH0004"></SPAN>
<h2> CHAPTER IV </h2>
<h3> EXPLANATIONS </h3>
<p>The remaining hours of Jack Ryder's night might be divided into
three periods. There was an interval of astounding exhilaration
coupled with complete mental vacancy, during which a figure in a
Scots costume might have been observed by the astonished Egyptian
moon striding obliviously along the silent road to the Nile, past
sleeping camels and snoring <i>dhurra</i> merchants—a period during
which his sole distinguishable sensation was the memory of
enchanting eyes, of a voice, low and lovely ... of a slender figure
in a muffling tcharchaf ... of the touch of soft lips beneath a
gauzy veil....</p>
<p>This period was succeeded by hours of utter incredulity, in which he
lay wide-eyed on the sleeping porch of McLean's domicile and stared
into the white cloud of his fly net and questioned high heaven and
himself.</p>
<p>Had he really done this? Had he actually caught and kissed this
girl, this girl whose name he did not know, whose face he had never
seen, of whom he knew nothing but that she was the daughter of a
Turk and utterly forbidden by every canon of sanity and
self-preservation?</p>
<p>In the name of wonder, what had possessed him? The night? The moon?
The mystery of the unknown?... If he had never really kissed her he
might have convinced himself that he had never really wanted to. But
having kissed her—!</p>
<p>He looked upon himself as a stranger. A stranger of whom he would be
remarkably wary, in the days and nights to come ... but a stranger
for whom he entertained a sort of secret, amazed respect. There had
been an undeniable dash and daring to that stranger....</p>
<p>During the third period he slept.</p>
<p>When he awoke, late in the morning, and descended from a cold tub to
a breakfast room from which McLean had long since departed, he
brought yet another mood with him, a mood of dark, deep disgust and
a shamed inclination to dismiss these events very speedily from
memory. For that shadowy and rather shady affair he had abandoned
the merry and delightful Jinny Jeffries and got himself involved now
in the duty of explanations and peacemaking.</p>
<p>What in the world was he going to say?</p>
<p>He meditated a note—but he hated a lie on paper. It looked so
thunderingly black and white. Besides, he could not think of any.
"Dear Jinny—Awfully sorry I was called away."</p>
<p>No, that wouldn't do. He could take refuge in no such vagueness.
Unfortunately, he and Jinny were on such terms of old intimacy that
a certain explicitness of detail was expected.</p>
<p>"Dear Jinny—I had to leave last night and take a girl home—"</p>
<p>No, she would ask about the girl. Jinny had a propensity for
locating people. It wouldn't do.</p>
<p>His masculine instinct for saying the least possible in a matter
with a woman, and his ripening experience which taught him to leave
no mystery to awaken suspicion, wrestled with the affair for some
time and then retired from the field.</p>
<p>He compromised by telephoning Jinny briefly—and Jinny was equally
as brief and twice as cool and cryptic—and promising to take her
out to tea.</p>
<p>He reflected that if he took her to tea he would really have to stay
over another night, for it would be too late to regain his desert
camp. But the circumstances seemed to call for some social amend....
And no matter how many nights he stayed he certainly was not going
to lurk about that lane, outside garden doors!</p>
<p>He must have been mad, stark, staring, March-hatter mad!</p>
<hr class="short">
<p>That morning, during its remainder, he concluded his buying of
supplies and saw to their shipment upon the boat that left upon the
following morning. That noon he lunched with an assistant curator of
the Cairo museum who found him a good listener.</p>
<p>That afternoon he escorted Jinny Jeffries and her uncle and aunt,
the Josiah Pendletons, to tea upon the little island in the Cairo
park, where white-robed Arabs brought them tea over the tiny bridge
and violins played behind the shrubbery and white swans glided upon
the blue lake, and then he carried them off in a victoria to view
the sunset from the Citadel heights.</p>
<p>Not a word about the dance—except a general affirmative to Mrs.
Pendleton's question if he had enjoyed himself. The Pendletons had
not stayed to look on for long, and Jinny had apparently not worn
her bleeding heart upon her sleeve.</p>
<p>But this immunity could not last. He could not hug the protecting
Pendletons to him forever.</p>
<p>Nor did he want to. They waned upon him. Mrs. Pendleton's
conversation was a perpetual, "Do look at—!" or dissertations from
the guide books—already she had imparted a great deal of Flinders
Petrie to him about his tombs. Mr. Pendleton was neither
enthusiastic nor voluble, but he was attacking the objects of their
travels in the same thorough-going spirit that he had attacked and
surmounted the industrial obstacles of his career, and he went to a
great deal of persistent trouble to ascertain the exact dates of
passing mosques and the conformations of their arches.</p>
<p>The travelers had already "done" the Citadel. They had climbed its
rocky hill, they had viewed the Mahomet Ali mosque and its columns
and its carpets and had taken their guide's and their guidebook's
word that it was an inferior structure although so amazingly
effective from below; they had looked studiously down upon the city
and tried to distinguish its minarets and towers and ancient gates,
they had viewed with proper quizzicalness the imprint in the stone
parapet of the hoof of that blindfolded horse which the last of the
Mamelukes, cornered and betrayed, had spurred from the heights.</p>
<p>So now, no duty upon them, Ryder led them past the Citadel, up the
Mokattam hills behind it, to that hilltop on which stood the little
ancient mosque of the Sheykh-el-Gauchy, where the sunset spaces
flowed round them like a sea of light and the world dropped into
miniature at their feet.</p>
<p>Below them, in a golden haze, Cairo's domes and minarets were
shining like a city of dreams. To the north, toy fields, vivid
green, of rice and cotton lands, and the silver thread of the
winding Nile, and all beyond, west and southwest, the vast,
illimitable stretch of desert, shimmering in the opalescent air,
sweeping on to the farthest edge of blue horizon.</p>
<p>"A nice resting place," said Jack Ryder appreciatively of the tomb
of the Sheykh-el-Gauchy.</p>
<p>"I presume the date is given," Mr. Pendleton was murmuring, as he
began to ferret with his Baedecker.</p>
<p>Mrs. Pendleton sighed sentimentally. "He must have been very fond of
nature."</p>
<p>"He was very distrustful of his wives," said Ryder, grinning. "He
had three of them, all young and beautiful."</p>
<p>"I thought you said he was a saint?" murmured Jinny, to which
interpolation he responded, "Wouldn't three wives make any man a
saint?" and resumed his narrative.</p>
<p>"And so he had his tomb made where he could overlook the whole city
and observe the conduct of his widows."</p>
<p>"They could move," objected Miss Jeffries.</p>
<p>"The female of the Mohammedan species is not the free agent that you
imagine," Ryder retorted, beginning with a smile and ending with a
queer, reminiscent pang. He had a moment's rather complicated twinge
of amusement at her reactions if she should know that to an
encounter with a female of the Mohammedan species was to be
attributed his departure from her party last night.</p>
<p>And then he remembered that he hadn't decided yet what to tell her
and the time was undoubtedly at hand.</p>
<p>The time <i>was</i> at hand. The Pendletons were too thorough-going
Americans not to abdicate before the young. They did not saunter
self-consciously away and make any opportunity for Jack and Jinny,
as sympathetic European chaperons might have done; they sat
matter-of-factedly upon the rocks while their competent young people
betook themselves to higher heights.</p>
<p>Conscientiously Ryder was pointing out the pyramid fields.</p>
<p>"Gizeh, Abusir, Sakkara, Dahsur—and now here, if you look—that's
the Medun pyramid—that tiny, sharp prick. If we had glasses...."</p>
<p>"Yes; but why didn't you like the ball?" murmured Jinny the direct.</p>
<p>"I did like the ball. Very much."</p>
<p>"Then why didn't you stay?"</p>
<p>"I—I wasn't feeling top-hole," he murmured lamely, wondering why
girls always wanted to go back and stir up dogs that had gone
comfortably to sleep.</p>
<p>"Did it come on suddenly?" said Jinny, unsympathetically, her eyes
still upon the pyramids.</p>
<p>Something whimsical twitched at Jack Ryder's lips. "Very suddenly.
Like thunder, out of China crost the bay."</p>
<p>"I suppose that dancing with the same girl in succession brings on
the seizures?"</p>
<p>So she had noticed that!... Not for nothing were those bright, gray
eyes of hers! Not for nothing the red hair.</p>
<p>"Well, I rather think it did," he said deliberately. "That girl was
a child who hadn't danced in four years—so she said, and I believe
her."</p>
<p>And Jinny received what he intended to convey. "Stepped on your
buckled shoon and you felt a martyr?... But why bolt? There were
other girls who <i>had</i> danced within four years—"</p>
<p>"I went into the garden," he murmured. "The fact is, I was feeling
awfully—queer," he brought out in an odd tone.</p>
<p>Queer was a good word for it. He let it go at that. He couldn't do
better.</p>
<p>Jinny looked suddenly uncertain. Her pique was streaked with
compunction. She had been horribly angry with him for running away,
and she remembered his opposition to the idea enough to be
suspicious of any disappearance—but there was certainly an accent
of embarrassed sincerity about him.</p>
<p>Perhaps he <i>had</i> been ill. Sudden seizures were not unknown in
Egypt. And for all his desert brown he didn't look very rugged.</p>
<p>She murmured, "I hope you hadn't taken anything that disagreed with
you."</p>
<p>"H'm—it rather agreed with me at the time," said Jack, and then
brought himself up short. "I expect I haven't looked very sharp
after myself—"</p>
<p>But Jinny did not wholly renounce her idea. "Does it always take you
at dances you don't want to go to?"</p>
<p>"That's unfair. I came, you know."</p>
<p>"You came—and went."</p>
<p>"I'd have been all right if I hadn't come," he murmured, and Jinny
felt suddenly ashamed of herself.</p>
<p>"Do you suppose that you would stay all right if you came to
dinner?" she offered pacificably. "It's our last night, you know,
till we come back from the Nile."</p>
<p>"I wish I could." Ryder stopped short. Now, why didn't he? Certainly
he didn't intend—</p>
<p>But his tongue took matters promptly out of his hesitation's hands.
"Fact is, I've an engagement." He added, appeasingly, "That's why I
was so keen on getting you for tea." And Jinny told him
appreciatively that it was a lovely tea and a lovely view.</p>
<p>"We're going to be at the hotel, I expect," she threw out,
carelessly, "and if you get through in time—"</p>
<p>Rather hastily he assured her that indeed, if he got through in
time—</p>
<p>She was a nice girl, was Jinny. A pretty girl, with just the right
amount of red in her hair. Sanity would have sent him to the hotel
to dine with her.</p>
<p>Sanity would also have sent him to the Jockey Club with McLean.</p>
<p>Certainly sanity had nothing to do with the way that he kept himself
to himself, after his farewells at the hotel with the Pendletons,
and took him to an out-of-the-way Greek caf� where he dined very
badly upon stringy lamb and sodden baklava.</p>
<p>Later he wandered restlessly about dark, medieval streets where
squat groups were clustered about some coffee house door, intent
upon a game of checkers or some patriarchal story teller,
recounting, very probably, a bandied narration of the Thousand and
One Nights. Through other open doors drifted the exasperating nasal
twang of Cairene music, and idly pausing, Ryder could see above the
red fezes and turbans that topped the cross-legged audiences the
dark, sleek, slowly-revolving body of some desert dancing girl.</p>
<p>Irresolutely he drifted on to the Esbekeyih quarters, to the streets
where the withdrawn camels and donkeys had left pre-eminent the
carriages and motors of that stream of Continental night life which
sets towards Cairo in the season, Russian dukes and German
millionaires, Viennese actresses and French singers and ladies of no
avowed profession, gamblers, idlers, diplomats, drifters, vivid
flashes of color in the bizarre, kaleidoscopic spectacle.</p>
<p>It was quite dark now. The last pale gleam of the afterglow had
faded, and the blue of the sky, deepening and darkening, was pierced
with the thronging stars. It was very warm; no breeze, but a fitful
stirring in the tops of the feathery palms.</p>
<p>The streets were growing still. Only from some of the hotels came
the sound of music from lighted, open windows.</p>
<p>Jinny would be rather expectant at her hotel. He could, of course,
drop in for a few minutes since he was so near.... He walked past
the hotel.... Jinny would be packing—or ought to be. A pity to
disturb her.... And his dusty tweeds and traveling cap was no
calling costume....</p>
<p>He walked past again. And this time he paused, on the brink of a
dark canyon of a lane, running back between walls hung with
bougainvillea.</p>
<p>Quite suddenly he remembered that he had told that girl, whose name
he did not know, that he would come. It was a definite promise. It
was an obligation.</p>
<p>He could do nothing less. It might be unwelcome, absurd, a nuisance,
but really it was an obligation.</p>
<p>He sauntered down the lane, keeping carefully in the shadow. He
loitered within that deep-set door—and felt a queer throb of
emotion at the sight of it—and so, sauntering and loitering, he
waited in the darkening night, promising himself disgustedly through
the dragging moments to clear out and be done with this, but still
interminably lingering, his pulses throbbing with that disowned
expectancy.</p>
<p>Very cautiously, the gate began to open.</p>
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