For a moment Rick hesitated, then asked, "Is there another Ali Moustafa in the bazaar?"
The black eyes locked with his. "There is no other. I am the only Ali Moustafa. And you? If you are Mr. Brant from America, I have been expecting you. Bartouki said you would deliver a package. Is it the one under your arm perhaps?"
Rick didn"t like this at all. Even if the description had been exaggerated in some respects, this cold conversation was scarcely a cordial welcome. Yet, the man knew about the cat, and about Bartouki.
Something was wrong. He wanted to deliver the cat as he had promised, but he had no intention of turning it over to the wrong man.
"I have a package," he returned evenly. "I"m sorry it can"t be delivered now. The man who receives it will have to identify himself without question as the proper Ali Moustafa."
The man shrugged. "You came to my shop. The sign tells you who I am.
There is no other Ali Moustafa. So, I will accept delivery of the cat, if you please."
Rick shook his head. "Sorry."
The man spoke in Arabic and took a step forward. Sensing movement behind him, Rick whirled.
The clerks were moving to block his way!
Rick reacted with lightning speed. He yelled, "Scotty!"
Scotty sensed the urgency of the call and jumped into the doorway.
Rick lifted the Egyptian cat and rifled a pa.s.s through the closing ranks of clerks. Scotty s.n.a.t.c.hed the cat out of the air. Rick followed through with a battering charge that sent a clerk caroming into a stack of copper jars. They went down with a clatter. Another clerk reached out and Rick gave him a straight arm that cleared the way long enough for a jump to the outside.
"Run!" he yelled.
Ha.s.san had been standing with mouth open, astonished at the proceedings.
Now, as a clerk charged through the door, the dragoman flung himself sideways in a beautiful body block that sent the clerk back into the store with a crash. Then the three were rounding the corner at top speed, pushing through the people in the street.
From behind them came a shouted command in Arabic. A figure in a long, dirty robe stepped into Scotty"s path and grabbed for the cat. The boy tossed a lateral pa.s.s to Rick, who tucked the package under his arm.
Scotty"s hand lashed out and his open palm caught the Arab under the chin. The man lifted inches into the air and his head thudded audibly against a brick wall. He lost all interest in the proceedings.
Ha.s.san led the way like a charging lineman, with Rick in his wake.
Scotty fell back a few paces to prevent attack from behind. But in spite of a few yells from the rear, no one else menaced them. The people of the bazaar obviously were curious, but not involved.
Rick had a fleeting thought that a pair of obvious foreigners running at top speed through a department store at home would arouse some curiosity, too. He grinned, in spite of his bewilderment. Then they were at the car. Ha.s.san wheeled the little sedan around in almost its own length and charged through the crowded streets like a miniature juggernaut, heading back to the hotel.
A short time later over _cafe au lait_, part coffee and part hot milk, the boys and Ha.s.san held a half-angry, half-amused post mortem. There had been no opportunity in the car for real conversation because of the sheer adventure of rocketing through impossible traffic at equally impossible speed. Rick had reported briefly to Scotty, and that was all.
Scotty took a sip from his steaming cup and turned to Ha.s.san. "You ever play football?"
Ha.s.san stumbled over the word. "Footsball? What are footsball?"
"Never mind." Scotty grinned. "The way you took that clerk out, I thought you might have played blocking back for the Green Bay Packers."
The dragoman"s bewilderment deepened. Rick came to his rescue. "Football is an American game, Ha.s.san. It is rough. The Green Bay Packers is the name of a famous professional football team."
"One thing is for sure," Scotty offered. "The clerks didn"t know football. That flat pa.s.s you threw was good for plenty of yardage."
"It made a touchdown," Rick pointed out. He changed the subject. "Look, what went on in that store, anyway? I don"t know who the big man was, but he wasn"t Ali Moustafa. At least he didn"t come close to Bartouki"s description."
"Why didn"t you give him the cat, anyway?" Scotty asked with a grin.
"Afraid a brand-new mystery might end without you getting a piece of it?"
Rick grinned back. "Not a bad idea, now that you mention it. I didn"t think of it at the time. The only thing I knew for sure was that I wasn"t going to hand over any helpless little p.u.s.s.ycat to a guy with eyes like that. He"d mistreat it."
"Uhuh. Only, now what do we do with the cat?"
"Give it to the right Ali Moustafa," Rick said. "There must be a right one somewhere."
Scotty waved his arm in a gesture that took in all of Egypt, half of the Sudan, and most of Libya. "Help yourself. I"ll bet there are ten thousand Ali Moustafas around. How do you find the right one?"
Rick didn"t try to answer. Instead, he asked Ha.s.san, "Could there be another Ali Moustafa in El Mouski?"
The guide shook his head. "I ask my friend when we stop. He say there is only one, and he tell me how we get there."
Rick"s brows furrowed. "Then that must be the shop Bartouki meant. Only where was big, fat, jolly Ali Moustafa? Or could I be wrong about the description?"
Scotty was definite. "Not a chance. I remember the description the way you do. Either Bartouki didn"t know his own partner, or the man you saw was not Ali Moustafa--unless he took off weight and shaved his beard.
And changed his disposition in the bargain."
"Which brings us back to the question before the house. What do we do with the Egyptian cat?"
"Give it to Ha.s.san," Scotty suggested with a smile.
The dragoman"s pleasant black face a.s.sumed an air of great sadness.
"Cat"s nice," he said. "But no can take. Too much cost for food."
Rick smiled at the joke, then suddenly he realized Ha.s.san was not joking. He was genuinely sad! He took the package from his lap and held it up. "Ha.s.san, what do you think is in here?"
The dragoman shrugged. "You say cat. I believe."
Scotty asked incredulously, "Didn"t you think carrying a cat wrapped in paper was pretty strange?"
Ha.s.san smiled apologetically. "Americans many time do thing I not understand."
Rick choked back laughter with a heroic effort and almost strangled.
Scotty found a handkerchief and blew his nose violently.
"Pretty strong coffee," Rick managed finally.
Scotty nodded, struggling to keep a straight face. Neither of them wanted to risk hurting the guide"s feelings.
"Ha.s.san," Rick said at last, "even American science couldn"t keep a live, wide-awake cat quiet in a paper parcel. This cat is a model, a statue. You see?"
For an instant Ha.s.san stared, then he rocked back, his white teeth flashed, and he shouted with laughter. The boys broke down, too, and in a moment the entire patronage of the coffee shop was staring at the three idiots who roared with unrestrained laughter in public. Such behavior in Americans was to be deplored, perhaps, but understandable.
But a licensed dragoman ... incredible!