muddy riding boots, I thought there could be no more desirable woman in the world.
“My name is Ardatha,” she replied in a low voice.
“Ardatha! A charming name, but as you say one I have never heard before. To what country does it belong?” Suddenly she opened her eyes widely.
“Why do you keep me here talking to you?” she flashed, and clenched her hand. “I will tell you nothing. I have as much right to be here as you. Please stand away from that door and let me go.”
The demand was made imperiously, but unless my vanity invented a paradox her eyes were denying the urgency of her words.
“It is the duty of every decent Christian,” I said, reluctantly forcing myself to face facts, “to detain any man or any woman belonging to the black organisation of which you are a member.”
“Every Christian!” she flashed back. “
I
am a Christian. I was educated in Cairo.”
“Coptic?”
“Yes, Coptic.”
“But you are not a Copt!”
“Did I say I was a Copt?”
“You belong to the Si-Fan.”
“You don’t know what you are talking about. Even if I did, what then?”
I was drifting again and I knew it. The words came almost against my will:
“Do you understand what this society stands for? Do you know that they employ stranglers, garroters, poisoners, cut-throats, that they trade in assassination?”
“Is that so?” She was watching me closely and now spoke in a quiet voice. “And your Christian rulers, your rulers of the West—yes? What do
they
do? If the Si-Fan kills a man, that man is an active enemy. But when your Western murderers kill they kill men, women and children—hundreds—thousands who never harmed them—who never sought to harm anybody. My whole family—do you hear me?—my whole family, was wiped from life in one bombing raid. I alone escaped. General Quinto ordered that raid. You have seen what became of General Quinto…”
I felt the platform of my argument slipping from beneath my feet. This was the sophistry of Fu-Manchu! Yet I hadn’t the wit to answer her. The stern face of Nayland Smith seemed to rise up before me; I read reproach in the grey eyes.
“I think we’ve talked long enough,” I said. “If you will walk out in front of me, we will go and discuss the matter with those able to decide between us.”
She was silent for a moment, seeming to be studying my considerable bulk, firmly planted between herself and freedom.
“Very well.” I saw the gleam of little white teeth as she bit her lip. “I am not afraid. What I have done I am proud to have done. In any case I don’t matter. But bring the notebook—it might help me if I am to be arrested.”
“The notebook?”
She pointed to the open cupboard out of which I had stepped. I turned and saw in the dim light among the other objects which I have mentioned what certainly looked like a small notebook. Three steps and I had it in my hand.
But those three steps were fatal.
From behind me came a sound which I can only describe as a rush. I turned and sprang to the doorway. She was through—she must have reached it in one bound! The door was slammed in my face, dealing me a staggering blow on the forehead. I took a step back to hurl myself against it and heard the click of the padlock.
Undeterred, I dashed my weight against the closed door; but although old it was solid. The padlock held.
“Don’t try to follow me!” I heard. “They will kill you if you try to follow me!”
I stood still, listening, but not the faintest sound reached my ears to inform me in which direction Ardatha had gone. Switching on my lamp I stared about the hut.
Yes, she had taken the mandarin’s cap! I had shown less resource than a schoolboy! I had been tricked, outwitted by a girl not yet out of her teens, I judged. I grew hot with humiliation.How could I ever tell such a story to Nayland Smith?
The mood passed. I became cool again and began to search for some means of getting out. Barely glancing at the notebook, I
Tim Dorsey
Sheri Whitefeather
Sarra Cannon
Chad Leito
Michael Fowler
Ann Vremont
James Carlson
Judith Gould
Tom Holt
Anthony de Sa