It was the head waiter"s Napoleonic voice. Mr. Greyne controlled himself. The man was smiling intelligently. All the staff of the hotel smiled intelligently at Mr. Greyne to-day--the waiters, the porters, the cha.s.seurs. The child of eight who was thankful that he knew no better had greeted him with a merry laugh as he came down to breakfast, and an "_Oh, la, la!_" which had elicited a rebuke from the proprietor. Indeed, a wave of human sympathy flowed upon Mr. Greyne, whose ashy face and dull, washed-out eyes betrayed the severity of his night-watch.
"Monsieur will feel better after a little food."
The head waiter handed the b.u.t.tered toast with bland majesty, at the same time shooting a reproving glance at the little cha.s.seur, who was peeping from behind the door at the afternoon breakfaster.
"I feel perfectly well," replied Mr. Greyne, with an attempt at cheerfulness.
"Still, monsieur will feel much better after a little food."
Mr. Greyne began to toy with an egg.
"You know Algiers?" he asked.
"I was born here, monsieur. If monsieur wishes to explore to-night again the Kasbah I can----"
But Mr. Greyne stopped him with a gesture that was almost fierce.
"Where is the Rue du Pet.i.t Negre?"
"Monsieur wishes to go there to-night?"
"I wish to go there now, directly I have finished break--lunch."
The head waiter"s face was wreathed with humorous surprise.
"But monsieur is wonderful--superb! Never have I seen a traveller like monsieur!"
He gazed at Mr. Greyne with tropical appreciation.
"Monsieur had better have a carriage. The street is difficult to find."
"Order me one. I shall start at once."
Mr. Greyne pushed away the sunlit b.u.t.tered toast, and got up.
"Monsieur is superb. Never have I seen a traveller like monsieur!"
Napoleon"s voice was almost reverent. He hastened out, followed slowly by Mr. Greyne.
"A carriage for monsieur! Monsieur desires to go to the Rue du Pet.i.t Negre!"
The staff of the hotel gathered about the door as if to speed a royal personage, and Mr. Greyne noticed that their faces too were touched with an almost startled reverence. He stepped into the carriage, signed feebly, but with determination, to the Arab coachman, and was driven away, followed by a parting "_Oh, la la!_" from the cha.s.seur, uttered in a voice that sounded shrill with sheer amazement.
Through winding, crowded streets he went, by bazaars and Moorish bath-houses, mosques and Catholic churches, barracks and cafes, till at length the carriage turned into an alley that crept up a steep hill. It moved on a little way, and then stopped.
"Monsieur must descend here," said the coachman. "Mount the steps, go to the right and then to the left. Near the summit of the hill he will find the Rue du Pet.i.t Negre. Shall I wait for monsieur?"
"Yes."
The coachman began to make a cigarette, while Mr. Greyne set forth to follow his directions, and, at length, stood before an arch, which opened into a courtyard adorned with orange-trees in tubs, and paved with blue and white tiles. Around this courtyard was a three-storey house with a flat roof, and from a bureau near a little fountain a stout Frenchwoman called to demand his business. He asked for Mademoiselle Verbena, and was at once shown into a saloon lined with chairs covered with yellow rep, and begged to take a seat. In two minutes Mademoiselle Verbena appeared, drying her eyes with a tiny pocket-handkerchief, and forcing a little pathetic smile of welcome. Mr. Greyne clasped her hand in silence. She sat down in a rep chair at his right, and they looked at each other.
"_Mais, mon Dieu!_ How monsieur is changed!" cried the Levantine. "If madame could see him! What has happened to monsieur?"
"Miss Verbena," replied Mr. Greyne, "I have seen the Ouled on the heights."
A spasm crossed the Levantine"s face. She put her handkerchief to it for a moment. "What is an Ouled?" she inquired, withdrawing it.
"I dare not tell you," he replied solemnly.
"But indeed I wish to know, so that I may sympathise with monsieur."
Mr. Greyne hesitated, but his heart was full; he felt the need of sympathy. He looked at Mademoiselle Verbena, and a great longing to unburden himself overcame him.
"An Ouled," he replied, "is a dancing-girl from the desert of Sahara."
"_Mon Dieu!_ How does she dance? Is it a valse, a polka, a quadrille?"
"No. Would that it were!" And Mr. Greyne, unable further to govern his desire for full expression, gave Mademoiselle Verbena a slightly Bowdlerised description of the dances of the desert. She heard him with amazement.
"How terrible!" she exclaimed when he had finished. "And does one pay much to see such steps of the Evil One?"
"I gave her twenty pounds. Abdallah Jack----"
"Abdallah Jack?"
"My guide informed me that was the price. He tells me it is against the law, and that each time an Ouled dances she risks being thrown into prison."
"Poor lady! How sad to have to earn one"s bread by such devices, instead of by teaching to the sweet little ones of monsieur the sympathetic grammar of one"s native country."
Mr. Greyne was touched to the quick by this allusion, which brought, as in a vision, the happy home in Belgrave Square before him.
"You are an angel!" he exclaimed.
Mademoiselle Verbena shook her head.
"And this poor Ouled, you will go to her again?
"Yes. It seems that she is in communication with all the--the--well, all the odd people of Algiers, and that one can only get at them through her."
"Indeed?"
"Abdallah Jack tells me that while I am here I should pay her a weekly salary, and that, in return, I shall see all the terrible ceremonies of the Arabs. I have decided to do so------
"Ah, you have decided!"
For a moment Mr. Greyne started. There seemed a new sound in Mademoiselle Verbena"s voice, a gleam in her dark brown eyes.
"Yes," he said, looking at her in wonder. "But I have not yet told Abdallah Jack."
The Levantine looked gently sad again.