he’ll hang me,” he laughed. “That is the rule of the game.”
“How strange!” she said, half to herself.
“Do you think so? I suppose from the European standpoint—”
“No, no,” she stopped him. “I wasn’t thinking of that. You are logical and you do the logical thing. That is how I would treat my enemies.”
“If you had any,” he suggested.
She nodded.
“If I had any,” she repeated with a hard little smile. “Will you tell me this — do I call you Mr. Muley or Lord Muley?”
“You may call me Wazeer, if you’re so hard up for a title,” he said, and the little idiom sounded queer from him.
“Well, Wazeer, will you tell me: Suppose somebody who had something that you wanted very badly and they wouldn’t give it to you, and you had the power to destroy them, what would you do?”
“I should certainly destroy them,” said Muley Hafiz. “It is unnecessary to ask. ‘The common rule, the simple plan’” he quoted.
Her eyes were fixed on his face, and she was frowning, though this she did not know.
“I am glad I met you this afternoon,” she said. “It must be wonderful living in that atmosphere, the atmosphere of might and power, where men and women aren’t governed by the finicking rules which vitiate the Western world.”
He laughed.
“Then you are tired of your Western civilisation,” he said as he rose and helped her to her feet (his hands were long and delicate, and she grew breathless at the touch of them). “You must come along to my little city in the hills where the law is the sword of Muley Hafiz.”
She looked at him for a moment.
“I almost wish I could,” she said and held out her hand.
He took it in the European fashion and bowed over it. She seemed so tiny a thing by the side of him, her head did not reach his shoulder.
“Goodbye,” she said hurriedly and turning, walked back the way she had come, and he stood watching her until she was out of sight.
Chapter XXXII
“Jean!”
She looked round to meet the scowling gaze of Marcus Stepney.
“I must say you’re the limit,” he said violently. “There are lots of things I imagine you’d do, but to stand there in broad daylight talking to a nigger—”
“If I stand in broad daylight and talk to a cardsharper, Marcus, I think I’m just low enough to do almost anything.”
“A damned Moorish nigger,” he spluttered, and her eyes narrowed.
“Walk up the road with me, and if you possibly can, keep your voice down to the level which gentlemen usually employ when talking to women,” she said.
She was in better condition than he, and he was a little out of breath by the time they reached the Café de Paris, which was crowded at that hour with the afternoon tea people.
He found a quiet corner, and by this time his anger, and a little of his courage, had evaporated.
“I’ve only your interest at heart, Jean,” he said almost pleadingly, “but you don’t want people in our set to know you’ve been hobnobbing with this infernal Moor.”
“When you say ‘our set,’ to which set are you referring?” she asked unpleasantly. “Because if it is the set I believe you mean, they can’t think too badly of me for my liking. It would be a degradation to me to be admired by your set, Marcus.”
“Oh, come now,” he began feebly.
“I thought I had made it clear to you and I hoped you would carry the marks to your dying day” — there was malice in her voice, and he winced— “that I do not allow you to dominate my life or to censor my actions. The ‘nigger’ you referred to was more of a gentleman than you can ever be, Marcus, because he has breed, which the Lord didn’t give to you.”
The waiter brought the tea at that moment, and the conversation passed to unimportant topics till he had gone.
“I’m rather rattled,” he apologised. “I lost six thousand louis last night.”
“Then you have six thousand reasons why you should keep on good terms with me,” said Jean smiling cheerfully.
“That cave man stuff?” he asked, and shook his head. “She’d raise Cain.”
Jean was laughing inside herself, but she did not show her merriment.
“You can but try,” she said. “I’ve already told you how it can be done.”
“I’ll try tomorrow,” he said after a thought. “By heavens, I’ll try tomorrow!”
It was on the tip of her tongue to say “Not tomorrow,” but she checked herself.
Mordon came round with the car to pick her up soon after. Mordon! Her little chin jerked up with a gesture of annoyance, which she seldom permitted herself. And yet she felt unusually cheered. Her meeting with the Moor was a milestone in her life from which memory she could draw both encouragement and comfort.
“You met Muley?” said Lydia. “How thrilling! What is he like, Jean? Was he a blackamoor?”
“No, he wasn’t a blackamoor,” said the girl quietly. “He was an unusually intelligent man.”
“H’m,” grunted her father. “How did you come to meet him, my dear?”
“I picked him up on the beach,” said Jean coolly, “as any flapper would pick up any nut.”
Mr. Briggerland choked.
“I hate to hear you talking like that, Jean. Who introduced him?”
“I told you,” she said complacently. “I introduced myself. I talked to him on the beach and he talked to me, and we sat down and played with the sand and discussed one another’s lives.”
“But how enterprising of you, Jean,” said the admiring Lydia.
Mr. Briggerland was going to say something, but thought better of it.
There was a concert at the theatre that night and the whole party went. They had a box, and the interval had come before Lydia saw somebody ushered into a box on the other side of the house with such evidence of deference that she would have known who he was even if she had not seen the scarlet fez and the white robe.
“It is your Muley,” she whispered.
Jean looked round.
Muley Hafiz was looking across at her; his eyes immediately sought the girl’s, and he bowed slightly.
“What the devil is he bowing at?” grumbled Mr. Briggerland. “You didn’t take any notice of him, did you, Jean?”
“I bowed to him,” said his daughter, not troubling to look round. “Don’t be silly, father; anyway, if he weren’t nice, it would be quite the right thing to do. I’m the most distinguished woman in the house because I know Muley Hafiz, and he has bowed to me! Don’t you realise the social value of a lion’s recognition?”
Lydia could not see him distinctly. She had an impression of a white face, two large black spaces where his eyes were and a black beard. He sat all the time in the shadow of a curtain.
Jean looked round to see