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"And if there are things I don't understand, I know--they are such trifles in comparison--I know you'll explain. Won't you?"
"Not to-night. I can't explain things to-night."
"No. You're tired out. To-morrow--to-morrow!"
"Ah!" she said again.
He leant right down to her, and took both her hands.
"Come upstairs with me! Come!" She stood up. "Come! I'll prove to you--I'll prove to you--"
There was a sort of desperation of crude pa.s.sion in his manner.
He tried to draw her towards the house. She resisted him.
"Ruby!"
"I'm not coming."
He stopped.
"Ruby!" he said again, but with a different voice.
"I'm not coming!"
His hands grew cold on hers. He let her hands go. They dropped to her sides.
"So you didn't believe what Isaacson told you?" she said.
Her only thought was, "I'll make him give me my liberty! I'll make him give me my liberty, so that Baroudi must keep me!"
"What?" he said.
"You didn't believe what Isaacson told you?" she repeated.
"Believe it! I turned him out!"
"You fool!" she said.
She moved a step nearer to him.
"You fool!" she repeated. "It's true!"
She s.n.a.t.c.hed up the gilded box from the table. He tore it out of her hands.
"Who--who--?" he whispered, with lips that had gone white.
"Mahmoud Baroudi," she said.
The box fell from his hands to the terrace, scattering the aids to her beauty, which he had always hated.
She turned, pulled her cloak closely round her, and hurried to the bank of the Nile.
"Ibrahim! Ibrahim!"
"My lady!"
He came, striding up the bank.
"Take my hand! Help me! Quickly!"
She almost threw herself down the bank.
"Where is the boat--ah!"
She stumbled as she got into it, and nearly fell.
"Push off!"
She sat straight up on the hard, narrow bench, and stared at the lights on the _Loulia_.
"There's a girl on board," she said, in a minute.
"Yes, my lady, one girl. Whether Mahmoud Baroudi likin' we comin' I dunno."
"Ibrahim!"
"My lady!"
"Directly I go on board the _Loulia_, you are to go. Take the boat straight back to Luxor."
"I leavin' you?"
He looked relieved.
"Yes. I'll--I'll come back in Baroudi's felucca."
"I quite well stayin', waitin' till you ready."
"No, no. I don't wish that. Promise me you will take the boat away at once."
"All what you want you must have," he murmured.
"How loudly the sailors are singing!" she said.
Now they were drawing near to the _Loulia_. Mrs. Armine, with fierce eyes, gazed at the lighted cabin windows, at the upper deck, at the balcony in the stern where so often she had sat with Nigel. She was on fire with eagerness; she was the prey of an excitement that made her forget all her bodily fatigue, forget everything except that at last she was close to Baroudi. Already her husband had ceased to exist for her. He was gone for ever with the past. Not only the river but a great gulf, never to be bridged, divided them.
"Baroudi! Baroudi! Baroudi!"