Cry Wolf - Smith Wilbur (книги онлайн без регистрации полностью .TXT) 📗
knowing expression in his eyes that she felt herself flushing.
"I'm beginning to find that out," he said, and stepped towards her, but
she raised both hands protectively.
"You'll put grease on this dress-"
"If I were to bath first?"
"Bath," she ordered. "And then we'll talk again, mister."
In the last few minutes of daylight, a rider had come down the gorge,
clattering and sliding on the rough footing, and then hitting the level
ground and galloping into the Ras's camp on a blown and lathered
horse.
Sara Sagud took the message he carried, came flying up to the cluster
of tents under the flat-topped camel-thorn trees and burst into
Vicky Camberwell's tent waving the folded cablegram, without dreaming
of announcing her entrance.
Vicky was deep in a bearlike enfolding embrace into which Jake
Barton had taken her moments before, and the interruption came just
as
Vicky was abandoning herself to the pleasure of the moment. Jake
towered over her, freshly scrubbed and smelling of carbolic soap, with
his hair still wet and newly combed. Vicky broke out of his arms and
turned furiously to the girl.
"Oh!" exclaimed Sara, with the natural interest and fascination of a
born conspirator discovering a fresh intrigue.
"You are busy."
"Yes, I am, "snapped Vicky, cheeks aflame with embarrassment and
confusion.
"I'm sorry, Miss Camberwell. But I thought this message must be
important-" and Vicky's irritation faded, as she saw the cablegram.
"I
thought you would want it." Vicky snatched it from her, broke the seal
and read avidly. Her anger faded as she read, and she looked up with
shining eyes at Sara.
"You were right thank you, my dear," and she spun back to Jake,
dancing up to him and flinging both arms around his neck, laughing and
gay.
"Hey," Jake laughed with her, holding her awkwardly in front of the
girl, "What's this all about?"
"It's from my editor," she told him.
"My story about the attack at the Wells was an international scoop.
Headlines around the world and there is to be an emergency session of
the League of Nations." Sara snatched the cable form back from her,
and read it as though by right.
"This is what my father believed you could do for us, Miss
Camberwell for our land and our people." Sara was weeping, fat oily
tears breaking from the dark gazelle eyes and clinging in her long
lashes. "Now the world knows. Now they will come to save us from the
tyranny." The girl's faith in the triumph of good over evil was
childlike, and she pulled Vicky from Jake's arms and embraced her
instead.
"Oh, you have given us a chance again. We will always be grateful to
you." Her tears smeared Vicky's cheek, and she drew back, sniffing
wetly, and wiped her own tears from Vicky's face with the palm of her
hand. "We will never forget you," she said, and then smiled through
the tears. "We must go and tell my grandfather." They found it
impossible to convey to the Ras the exact nature of this new
advancement of the Ethiopian cause. He was very hazy in his exact
understanding of the role and importance of the League of Nations, or
the power and influence of the international press. After the first
few pints of tej he had made sure in his own mind that in some
miraculous fashion the great Queen of England had espoused their
cause,
and that the armies of Great Britain would soon join him in the
field.
Both Gregorius and Sara spoke to him at great length, trying to explain
his error, and he nodded and grinned benevolently at them but remained
completely unshaken in his conviction, and ended by embracing Gareth
Swales, making a long rambling speech in Amharic, hailing him as an
Englishman and a comrade in arms. Then, before the speech ended, the
Ras fell suddenly and dramatically asleep in mid-sentence, falling face
forward into a large bowl of mutton wat. The day's battle, the
excitement of learning of his new and powerful ally, and the large
quantities of tej were too much for him, and four of his bodyguard
lifted him from the bowl and carried him snoring loudly to his
household tent.
"Do not worry," Sara told his guests. "My grandfather will not be gone
for long after a small rest he will return."
"Tell him not to put himself out," murmured Gareth Swales. "I for one
have seen about enough of him for one day." The glow of the bonfires
turned the sky ruddy and paled the moon that sailed above the mountain
peaks. It shone on the steel and polished wood of the huge pile of
captured weapons, rifles and pistols and ammunition bandoliers, that
were heaped triumphantly in the open space before the royal party.
The sparks from the fires rose straight upwards into the still night
and the laughter and voices of the guests became more unrestrained as
the tej gourds circulated.
Farther along the valley, also within the acacia grove, the Gallas of
Ras Kullah were celebrating the victory also, and there was the
occasional faint outburst of drunken shouts and a fusillade of shots
from captured Italian rifles.
Vicky sat between Gareth and Jake. She had not arranged it so,
and if given the choice would have sat alone with Jake, but Gareth
Swales had not been as easily discouraged as she had believed he
might.
Sara came from her place beside Gregorius. Crossing the squatting
circle of feasting guests, she knelt on the pile of leather cushions
beside Vicky, pushing herself in between Gareth and the girl and she
leaned close to Vicky, an arm around her shoulder and her lips touching
her ear.
"You should have told me," she accused her sadly. "I did not know that
you had decided on Jake first. I would have advised you-" At that
instant a sound carried from the camp of the tance and Gallas to where
they sat. It was muted by ths almost obscured by the closer hubbub of
the feasting Harari filling yet the terrible heart-stopping quality of
it pierced Vicky so that she gasped and clutched Sara's wrist.
Beside her Jake and Gareth had stiffened and were listening also,
their heads turned to catch the sound that rose and died in a
long-drawn-out rending sob.
"You have not handled them correctly, Miss Camberwell." Sara went on
speaking as if she had heard nothing.
"Sara, what is it what was that?" Vicky shook her arm urgently.
"Ah!" Sara made a gesture of disdain and contempt. "That fat pervert
Ras Kullah has come down from his hiding-place.
the victory, he has come to enjoy Now that we have won the booty.
He arrived an hour ago with his fat milch cows and now he feasts and
entertains himself." The sound came again. It was inhuman, a terrible
high pitched screech that tore across Vicky's nerves. It rose higher
and higher, until Vicky wanted to cover her ears with both hands. At
the instant that it seemed her nerves must snap, the sound was cut off
abruptly.
A listening silence had fallen upon the revelling throng around the
bonfires, and the silence persisted for a few then there was a seconds
longer after the scream had ended, murmur of comment and here and there
a burst of careless, cruel laughter.