<h2><SPAN name="VII" id="VII"></SPAN>VII</h2>
<p>A first glance, at such close quarters, would have
told the least instructed stranger that he was in the
presence of two clashing civilizations, both tenacious,
one powerful.</p>
<p>In front, all along the shore, towered with confident effrontery
a massive line of buildings many stories high, great cubes
of brick and stone, having elaborate balconies that shadowed
swarming offices with dark, gaping vaults below. Along the
broad, stone-paved street clanged electric tramcars. There
was a constant coming and going of men. Cloaked and
hooded white forms, or half-clad apparitions wrapped in what
looked like dirty bagging, mingled with commonplace figures
in Western dress. But huddled in elbow-high with this busy
town of modern France (which might have been Marseilles
or Bordeaux) was something alien, something remote in spirit;
a ghostly band of white buildings, silent and pale in the midst
of colour and noise. Low houses with flat roofs or miniature
domes, small, secret doorways, tiny windows like eyes
narrowed for spying, and overhanging upper stories supported
on close-set, projecting sticks of mellow brown which meant
great age. Minarets sprang up in mute protest against the
infidel, appealing to the sky. All that was left of old Algiers
tried to boast, in forced dumbness, of past glories, of every
charm the beautiful, fierce city of pirates must have possessed
before the French came to push it slowly but with deadly
sureness back from the sea. Now, silent and proud in the
tragedy of failure, it stood masked behind pretentious
French houses, blocklike in ugliness, or flauntingly ornate<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_76" id="Page_76"></SPAN></span>
as many buildings in the Rue de Rivoli or Boulevard
Haussmann.</p>
<p>In those low-browed dwellings which thickly enamelled the
hill with a mosaic of pink and pearly whiteness, all the way
up to the old fortress castle, the Kasbah, the true life of African
Algiers hid and whispered. The modern French front along
the fine street was but a gay veneer concealing realities, an
incrusted civilization imposed upon one incredibly ancient,
unspeakably different and ever unchanging.</p>
<p>Stephen remembered now that he had heard people decry
Algiers, pronouncing it spoiled and "completely Frenchified."
But it occurred to him that in this very process of spoiling,
an impression of tragic romance had been created which less
"spoiled" towns might lack. Here were clashing contrasts
which, even at a glance, made the strangest picture he had
ever seen; and already he began to feel more and more keenly,
though not yet to understand, something of the magic of the
East. For this place, though not the East according to geographers,
held all the spirit of the East—was in essence truly
the East.</p>
<p>Before the ship lay fairly in harbour, brown men had climbed
on board from little boats, demanding to be given charge of the
passengers' small luggage, which the stewards had brought on
deck, and while one of these was arguing in bad French with
Stephen, a tall, dark youth beautifully dressed in crimson and
white, wearing a fez jauntily on one side, stepped up with a
smile. "<i>Pardon, monsieur</i>," he ventured. "<i>Je suis le domestique
de Monsieur Caird.</i>" And then, in richly guttural
accents, he offered the information that he was charged to
look after monsieur's baggage; that it was best to avoid <i>tous
ces Arabes là</i>, and that Monsieur Caird impatiently awaited
his friend on the wharf.</p>
<p>"But you—aren't you Arab?" asked Stephen, who knew
no subtle differences between those who wore the turban or
fez. He saw that the good-looking, merry-faced boy was no<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_77" id="Page_77"></SPAN></span>
browner than many a Frenchman of the south, and that his
eyes were hazel; still, he did not know what he might be, if
not Arab.</p>
<p>"<i>Je suis Kabyle, monsieur; Kabyle des hauts plateaux</i>,"
replied the youth with pride, and a look of contempt at the
shouting porters, which was returned with interest. They
darted glances of scorn at his gold-braided vest and jacket of
crimson cloth, his light blue sash, and his enormously full
white trousers, beneath which showed a strip of pale golden
leg above the short white stockings, spurning the immaculate
smartness of his livery, preferring, or pretending to prefer,
their own soiled shabbiness and freedom. The Kabyle saw
these glances, but, completely satisfied with himself, evidently
attributed them to envy.</p>
<p>Stephen turned towards Victoria, of whom he had lost sight
for a moment. He wished to offer the Kabyle boy's services,
but already she had accepted those of a very old Arab who
looked thin and ostentatiously pathetic. It was too late now.
He saw by her face that she would refuse help, rather than
hurt the man's feelings. But she had told him the name of
the hotel where she had telegraphed to engage a room, and
Stephen meant at the instant of greeting his host, to ask if it
were suitable for a young girl travelling alone.</p>
<p>He caught sight of Caird, looking up and waiting for him,
before he was able to land. It was the face he remembered;
boyish, with beautiful bright eyes, a wide forehead, and curly
light hair. The expression was more mature, but the same
quaintly angelic look was there, which had earned for Nevill
the nickname of "Choir Boy" and "Wings."</p>
<p>"Hullo, Legs!" called out Caird, waving his Panama.</p>
<p>"Hullo, Wings!" shouted Stephen, and was suddenly tremendously
glad to see the friend he had thought of seldom
during the last eight or nine years. In another moment he
was introducing Nevill to Miss Ray and hastily asking questions
concerning her hotel, while a fantastic crowd surged<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_78" id="Page_78"></SPAN></span>
round all three. Brown, skurrying men in torn bagging, the
muscles of whose bare, hairless legs seemed carved in dark
oak; shining black men whose faces were ebony under the
ivory white of their turbans; pale, patient Kabyles of the
plains bent under great sacks of flour which drained through
ill-sewn seams and floated on the air in white smoke, making
every one sneeze as the crowd swarmed past. Large grey
mules roared, miniature donkeys brayed, and half-naked
children laughed or howled, and darted under the heads of
the horses, or fell against the bright bonnets of waiting motor
cars. There were smart victorias, shabby cabs, hotel omnibuses,
and huge carts; and, mingling with the floating dust
of the spilt flour was a heavy perfume of spices, of incense
perhaps blown from some far-off mosque, and ambergris mixed
with grains of musk in amulets which the Arabs wore round
their necks, heated by their sweating flesh as they worked or
stalked about shouting guttural orders. There was a salt
tang of seaweed, too, like an undertone, a foundation for all
the other smells; and the air was warm with a hint of summer,
a softness that was not enervating.</p>
<p>As soon as the first greeting and the introduction to Miss
Ray were confusedly over, Caird cleverly extricated the newcomers
from the thick of the throng, sheltering them between
his large yellow motor car and a hotel omnibus waiting for
passengers and luggage.</p>
<p>"Now you're safe," he said, in the young-sounding voice
which pleasantly matched his whole personality. He was
several years older than Stephen, but looked younger, for
Stephen was nearly if not quite six feet in height, and Nevill
Caird was less in stature by at least four inches. He was very
slightly built, too, and his hair was as yellow as a child's. His
face was clean-shaven, like Stephen's, and though Stephen,
living mostly in London, was brown as if tanned by the sun,
Nevill, out of doors constantly and exposed to hot southern
sunshine, had the complexion of a girl. Nevertheless, thought<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_79" id="Page_79"></SPAN></span>
Victoria—sensitive and quick in forming impressions—he
somehow contrived to look a thorough man, passionate and
ready to be violently in earnest, like one who would love or
hate in a fiery way. "He would make a splendid martyr," the
girl said to herself, giving him straight look for straight look,
as he began advising her against her chosen hotel. "But I
think he would want his best friends to come and look on
while he burned. Mr. Knight would chase everybody away."</p>
<p>"Don't go to any hotel," Nevill said. "Be my aunt's
guest. It's a great deal more her house than mine. There's
lots of room in it—ever so much more than we want. Just
now there's no one staying with us, but often we have a dozen
or so. Sometimes my aunt invites people. Sometimes I do:
sometimes both together. Now I invite you, in her name.
She's quite a nice old lady. You'll like her. And we've got
all kinds of animals—everything, nearly, that will live in this
climate, from tortoises of Carthage, to white mice from Japan,
and a baby panther from Grand Kabylia. But they keep
themselves to themselves. I promise you the panther won't
try to sit on your lap. And you'll be just in time to christen
him. We've been looking for a name."</p>
<p>"I should love to christen the panther, and you are more than
kind to say your aunt would like me to visit her; but I can't
possibly, thank you very much," answered Victoria in the
old-fashioned, quaintly provincial way which somehow intensified
the effect of her brilliant prettiness. "I have come
to Algiers on—on business that's very important to me. Mr.
Knight will tell you all about it. I've asked him to tell, and
he's promised to beg for your help. When you know, you'll
see that it will be better for me not to be visiting anybody.
I—I would rather be in a hotel, in spite of your great kindness."</p>
<p>That settled the matter. Nevill Caird had too much tact
to insist, though he was far from being convinced. He said
that his aunt, Lady MacGregor, would write Miss Ray a note
asking her to lunch next day, and then they would have the<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_80" id="Page_80"></SPAN></span>
panther-christening. Also by that time he would know, from
his friend, how his help might best be given. But in any case
he hoped that Miss Ray would allow his car to drop her at the
Hotel de la Kasbah, which had no omnibus and therefore did
not send to meet the boat. Her luggage might go up with the
rest, and be left at the hotel.</p>
<p>These offers Victoria accepted gratefully; and as Caird
put her into the fine yellow car, the handsome Arab who had
been on the boat looked at her with chastened curiosity as he
passed. He must have seen that she was with the Englishman
who had talked to her on board the <i>Charles Quex</i>, and
that now there was another man, who seemed to be the owner
of the large automobile. The Arab had a servant with him,
who had travelled second class on the boat, a man much darker
than himself, plainly dressed, with a smaller turban bound by
cheaper cord; but he was very clean, and as dignified as his
master. Stephen scarcely noticed the two figures. The
fine-looking Arab had ceased to be of importance since he
had left the ship, and would see no more of Victoria Ray.</p>
<p>The chauffeur who drove Nevill's car was an Algerian who
looked as if he might have a dash of dark blood in his veins.
Beside him sat the Kabyle servant, who, in his picturesque
embroidered clothes, with his jaunty fez, appeared amusingly
out of place in the smart automobile, which struck the last
note of modernity. The chauffeur had a reckless, daring face,
with the smile of a mischievous boy; but he steered with caution
and skill through the crowded streets where open trams
rushed by, filled to overflowing with white-veiled Arab women
of the lower classes, and French girls in large hats, who sat
crushed together on the same seats. Arabs walked in the middle
of the street, and disdained to quicken their steps for motor
cars and carriages. Tiny children with charming brown faces
and eyes like wells of light, darted out from the pavement,
almost in front of the motor, smiling and begging, absolutely,
fearless and engagingly impudent. It was all intensely interes<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_81" id="Page_81"></SPAN></span>ting
to Stephen, who was, however, conscious enough of his past
to be glad that he was able to take so keen an interest. He
had the sensation of a man who has been partially paralyzed,
and is delighted to find that he can feel a pinch.</p>
<p>The Hotel de la Kasbah, which Victoria frankly admitted
she had chosen because of its low prices, was, as its name
indicated, close to the mounting of the town, near the corner
of a tortuous Arab street, narrow and shadowy despite its
thick coat of whitewash. The house was kept by an extremely
fat Algerian, married to a woman who called herself Spanish,
but was more than half Moorish; and the proprietor himself
being of mixed blood, all the servants except an Algerian
maid or two, were Kabyles or Arabs. They were cheap and
easy to manage, since master and mistress had no prejudices.
Stephen did not like the look of the place, which might suit
commercial travellers or parties of economical tourists who
liked to rub shoulders with native life; but for a pretty young
girl travelling alone, it seemed to him that, though it was clean
enough, nothing could be less appropriate. Victoria had
made up her mind and engaged her room, however; and so
as no definite objection could be urged, he followed Caird's
example, and held his tongue. As they bade the girl good-bye
in the tiled hall (a fearful combination of all that was
worst in Arab and European taste) Nevill begged her to let
them know if she were not comfortable. "You're coming to
lunch to-morrow at half-past one," he went on, "but if there's
anything meanwhile, call us up on the telephone. We can
easily find you another hotel, or a pension, if you're determined
not to visit my aunt."</p>
<p>"If I need you, I promise that I will call," Victoria said.
And though she answered Caird, she looked at Stephen Knight.</p>
<p>Then they left her; and Stephen became rather thoughtful.
But he tried not to let Nevill see his preoccupation.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_82" id="Page_82"></SPAN></span></p>
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