There were many fair and attractive women in the room, of widely varied types--Americans, Austrians and English: that was how they took their place in the scale of beauty in Margaret"s opinion. Amongst them all there was perhaps no one who was more commented upon and admired than herself. Sitting by herself, for one thing, provoked curiosity, while for another her claim to good looks had the high quality of distinguished individuality; in an a.s.sembly of well-dressed women of the world, Margaret, like Hada.s.sah, could never be overlooked.
She had been out of the world of fashion and frivolity for so long that the gay scene interested her and made it easy for her to temporarily put aside her troubles. She had lived in the Valley, studying the lives and customs of lost civilizations until they had become a part of her own life. Now she found it amusing to be back again amongst the men and women of to-day, people who were, as she reminded herself, in their own little way creating history. They were as typical of the world"s evolution in the twentieth century as the Pharaohs in their tombs and the painted figures of men and women and dancing girls on the temple and tomb-walls were typical of the world"s evolution three thousand years ago.
After dinner she drank her coffee in the fine lounge of the hotel, under tall palm-trees, while a Hungarian band played music which stirred her blood and pulses. It made her feel very much alone and a little desolate. She had been happier before the music began; it made calls upon her heart, it gave re-birth to a thousand wants. Her sense of loneliness increased as she watched more than one pair of lovers gradually drift off and settle themselves down somewhere out of sight.
She heard one radiant couple making arrangements for going to see the Pyramids by moonlight.
She had never seen the Pyramids or the Sphinx. Perhaps when she was staying with the Iretons, they would take her to see them. She had certainly no desire to make the excursion alone.
As she thought of the Pyramids, and Mike"s a.s.sociation with them, a wave of hate and rage spread over Margaret like a blush. She wondered if any of the curious eyes of the tourists had noticed it; she had been conscious of being freely criticized all the evening. She looked about her quickly. The place had become almost devoid of young people; only some elderly men and women were left, reclining in big chairs. With the absence of youth, Margaret"s spirits sank very low; it was not bracing to her strained nerves and lonely condition to sit with the elderly invalids and watch them pa.s.sing the time away in a semi-dozing condition until it was the recognized hour for going to bed.
To be true to Michael she must not allow herself to grow despondent.
Hada.s.sah Ireton had gone through far greater trials and suffering than she was facing, and what had been her reward? Margaret visualized her married life, her expression of happiness as she greeted her, her pride in the small son who was toddling at her side. It was a condition of life well worth suffering and waiting for.
When the clock struck ten, Margaret rose from her retired seat. She felt justified in going early to bed after such a long and trying day.
There was nothing better to do. As she entered the lift which was to take her up to her floor, she suddenly found herself face to face with Millicent Mervill.
She was so wholly unprepared for the meeting that she never afterwards was able to understand why she did not lose her presence of mind. It is on such occasions that the metal we are made of is put to the test.
The two women faced each other in silence. The next moment the lift went swiftly up, and as it went, Margaret had but one clear thought--that she would stop at the first floor and get out; she could walk up the remaining flight of stairs. The next second she realized that that would be a foolish and weak thing to do. It was her duty to speak to Millicent and learn the cause of the scandal from her own lips. She owed it to Michael. She must do the one thing which she could to clear his name of the dishonour of which Freddy accused him.
Millicent was getting out at the first landing. The lift shot up so quickly that the silence between them had been of the briefest.
Margaret left the lift at the same moment and again the two women stood facing one another, as the gate closed behind them and the lift began its downward journey.
"Good evening," Millicent said gaily. "I never expected to have the pleasure of seeing you in Cairo." A smile which might have hidden any meaning lit up her eyes and showed the perfection of her mouth and teeth. But even at that critical moment, Margaret was conscious that her beauty had lost something of its radiance. Had her youth, which had seemed eternal, vanished at last? Had it left her as rats leave a sinking ship? Had the G.o.ds recalled what had already tarried too long?
"Good-evening," was all that Margaret managed to say. Her heart was floundering in a sea of anger; her mind was struggling for wise words, words which would drag the truth from the pretty lips, playing over still prettier teeth. She was determined not to let the opportunity slip.
But Millicent was too quick. She left Margaret no chance to take the lead in the conversation; she seized and kept it to the end. Margaret should know just as much as she, Millicent, wished her to know, and no more. She meant to enjoy herself; the devout Margaret was going to receive some nasty knocks.
"How is our mystic?" she asked lightly.
The word "our" instantly deprived Meg of her resolution to speak tactfully and even hypocritically, if it was necessary. Millicent did not wait for her tardy answer. Meg"s expression had flamed the devil"s fire of mischief in her callous heart.
"Have you heard from him since I left him?"
Here Margaret"s pride helped her. She threw up her chin; a trick with her when her fighting spirit was roused.
"I really don"t know. I forget how long ago it is since you saw him."
"I left him almost within sight of his promised land, of his King Solomon"s mine. Has he found it? Were the jewels very wonderful?"
The woman"s audacity amazed Margaret, while it infuriated her, but thanks to the blood of her ancestors, a fight always braced her nerves and quickened her wits; it was tenderness which brought tears. She was not going to allow the brazen little beast to know or see what her words meant to her; she was not going to tell her of Michael"s disappointment. If she had betrayed him and robbed him of Akhnaton"s treasure, she was not going to let her batten on the suffering she had caused, so she said:
"My brother has just heard that information of the discovery has come to the Minister of Public Works. The Government has sent out some men to make the preliminary excavations, so I suppose it is all right."
Millicent"s eyes gleamed. Something like sympathy pleasure beautified them; for a moment her desire to wound the girl who had robbed her of the lover she desired was forgotten; it was lost in surprise.
"Then Mike was right? He has really discovered his precious treasure, his legacy of Akhnaton? I"m so glad!" She paused. "I never really believed he would, did you? It seemed to me mere moonshine, a delightful excuse for a desert romance."
Margaret was still more amazed. What an actress the woman was! If she had not known her true character, she would have believed that she was innocent of the base treachery of which she was guilty.
"Yes, it would appear so," she said coldly. "But we know very little--we have only had the official news of the discovery. His letters will tell us more. Does the news surprise you?"
Millicent looked at Margaret keenly. Their eyes met as bitter antagonists. Millicent supposed that Margaret thought that Michael would have written to her and told her the news; she answered accordingly.
"His breathless letters--you know how he writes--are probably resting in some desert village. They"ll come along all right. But I"m awfully glad the dear man hasn"t found a mare"s nest, aren"t you?" She spoke again quickly, before Margaret had time to answer. "What does your brother say about it? Isn"t he surprised? He thought it was all tommy-rot, didn"t he? How different they are!"
"It is always difficult to tell what Freddy thinks," Margaret said.
"He is a very reserved person. If the whole thing turns out as Michael expected, he will be delighted and interested."
"If there is anything there at all," Millicent said, "that ought to be sufficient proof of the seer"s powers--I mean, things of Akhnaton"s period. The portable treasure might have been stolen--it probably was.
If the saint had discovered it, why not others?"
"I have had no particulars," Meg said coldly. She felt certain that Millicent was pumping her for her own pleasure.
"Your brother never mentioned the King Solomon"s mine of gold and the jewels," Millicent said laughingly; "yet even my men were talking about it quite openly on my homeward journey. Mike and I were so careful--we never mentioned a word about it. To all outward appearances we were merely journeying in the desert for pleasure; our objective was to be the tomb where Akhnaton"s body was buried. They must have learned all about it from the holy man--tents have ears. You have heard all about our meeting with the "child of G.o.d," of course?" She searched Margaret"s eyes as she spoke and then added lightly: "I should like to have seen Mike in his strange counting-house, counting out his money, shouldn"t you?"
Margaret very nearly said, "You little liar, get out of my sight!" The sudden temptation to shake her was almost past enduring; it was all she could do to keep her hands off her and remain silent. She had heard from the woman"s own lips what she had told Freddy she never would hear; her promise to him flashed through her mind. Her doom was sealed. The psychological and archaeological interest of what Millicent had told her did not penetrate her brain; even her reference to their meeting with a "child of G.o.d" fell on deaf ears. Millicent had asked her if she had shared Michael"s beliefs in the occult and mystic interpretation of the discovery, in tones which implied that she did not expect Margaret to understand or sympathize with that side of Michael Amory"s character.
Margaret managed to keep her wits about her. The agony which she was enduring must at all costs be hidden from her enemy.
With a calm that surprised her own ears, she said. "Did you enjoy your time in the desert? Why did you return before the eventful discovery?
If you had waited, you would have seen Mr. Amory wading in the historic jewels."
Millicent was very quick. She had arranged in her own mind how much and how little she was going to tell Margaret. It was to be enough to ruin her happiness and trust in her lover, enough to rob Michael of the woman who had robbed her of him; but not enough to let her know why she, Millicent, had flown from the camp.
"Oh, we both loved it!" she said. "We had some unique and strange experiences, things we shall never forget. But I had to come back, my time was up. I am leaving for England on the twenty-eighth--I have so much to pack and collect."
"It is getting very warm," Margaret said. "The tourists are all going back."
"Oh, I never mind the heat--I like it--but unfortunately I have to go home--money matters. I"ve been rather lucky, in a manner--a rich relation in Australia died a few months ago and I have just heard that he has left me a nice little bit."
Millicent"s words instantly confirmed Margaret"s suspicions. The unscrupulous woman had secured at least a part of the buried gold.
Margaret wondered if it would be wise to attack her on the subject.
She refrained; instinct cautioned her. With Margaret it was always a case of--When in doubt, hold your tongue.
"What a fortunate coincidence!" she said coldly. "How very odd!"
Millicent looked at her sharply. What did her words mean? What was she driving at? Margaret never spoke unthinkingly.
"I don"t understand what coincidence you refer to, but certainly I"ve been lucky as regards legacies and money. I"ve always been fortunate about money, but there is a saying that money goes where money is, and that if you get one legacy you will get three. I really could have done without the last windfall. I have enough of this world"s goods for a lone woman--if I had some babies it would be different."
There was a note of sadness in Millicent"s words which would have appealed to Margaret if she had not known what a perfect actress the woman was. How was she to believe anything she said after what she had done?
"You needn"t let it be a burden to you." Margaret pretended to laugh.
"There are other people"s babies who have none. There are plenty of ways of disposing of super-wealth. Why not pay for the costs of some of the Egyptian exploration work next autumn? It would interest you and . . ." Margaret paused. ". . . it would be a suitable way of spending the gold. It would repay Mr. Amory."
In saying these words, Margaret felt that she was going as near to the point as she dared. As she said them, Millicent"s eyes hardened. She had spoken with sincerity when she said that she could have done without her uncle"s fortune, for there were moments when she deceived herself into believing that if her grand pa.s.sion for Michael had been returned, that if she had ever been loved as greatly as she felt that she herself could love, or if she had had any children, she would have been a good and n.o.ble woman. No chance of goodness had ever come her way, and she had never stepped aside to look for it.