Online Book Reader

Home Category

They came to Baghdad - Agatha Christie [41]

By Root 672 0
has got to be improvised, too. It’s got to be hastily thought of and hastily arranged. It’s got to come, so to speak, from the outside. There’s no question here of someone established in the Tio six months ago waiting. The Tio’s never been in the picture until now. There’s never been any idea or suggestion of using the Tio as the rendezvous.’

He looked at his watch. ‘I’ll go up now and see Crofton Lee.’

Dakin’s raised hand had no need to tap on Sir Rupert’s door. It opened silently to let him in.

The traveller had only one small reading-lamp alight and had placed his chair beside it. As he sat down again, he gently slipped a small automatic pistol on to the table within reach of his hand.

He said: ‘What about it, Dakin? Do you think he’ll come?’

‘I think so, yes, Sir Rupert.’ Then he said, ‘You’ve never met him have you?’

The other shook his head.

‘No. I’m looking forward to meeting him tonight. That young man, Dakin, must have got guts.’

‘Oh yes,’ said Mr Dakin in his flat voice. ‘He’s got guts.’

He sounded a little surprised at the fact needing to be stated.

‘I don’t mean only courage,’ said the other. ‘Lots of courage in the war – magnificent. I mean –’

‘Imagination?’ suggested Dakin.

‘Yes. To have the guts to believe something that isn’t in the least degree probable. To risk your life finding out that a ridiculous story isn’t ridiculous at all. That takes something that the modern young man usually hasn’t got. I hope he’ll come.’

‘I think he’ll come,’ said Mr Dakin.

Sir Rupert glanced at him sharply.

‘You’ve got it all sewn up?’

‘Crosbie’s on the balcony, and I shall be watching the stairs. When Carmichael reaches you, tap on the wall and I’ll come in.’

Crofton Lee nodded.

Dakin went softly out of the room. He went to the left and on to the balcony and walked to the extreme corner. Here, too, a knotted rope dropped over the edge and came to earth in the shade of a eucalyptus tree and some judas bushes.

Mr Dakin went back past Crofton Lee’s door and into his own room beyond. His room had a second door in it leading on to the passage behind the rooms and it opened within a few feet of the head of the stairs. With this door unobtrusively ajar, Mr Dakin settled down to his vigil.

It was about four hours later that a gufa, that primitive craft of the Tigris, dropped gently downstream and came to shore on the mudflat beneath the Tio Hotel. A few moments later a slim figure swarmed up the rope and crouched amongst the judas trees.

Chapter 13

It had been Victoria’s intention to go to bed and to sleep and to leave all problems until the morning, but having already slept most of the afternoon, she found herself devastatingly wide-awake.

In the end she switched on the light, finished a magazine story she had been reading in the plane, darned her stockings, tried on her new nylons, wrote out several different advertisements requiring employment (she could ask tomorrow where these should be inserted), wrote three or four tentative letters to Mrs Hamilton Clipp, each setting out a different and more ingenious set of unforeseen circumstances which had resulted in her being ‘stranded’ in Baghdad, sketched out one or two telegrams appealing for help to her sole surviving relative, a very old, crusty, and unpleasant gentleman in the North of England who had never helped anybody in his life; tried out a new style of hair-do, and finally with a sudden yawn decided that at last she really was desperately sleepy and ready for bed and repose.

It was at this moment that without any warning her bedroom door swung open, a man slipped in, turned the key in the lock behind him and said to her urgently:

‘For God’s sake hide me somewhere – quickly…’

Victoria’s reactions were never slow. In a twinkling of an eye she had noted the laboured breathing, the fading voice, the way the man held an old red knitted scarf bunched on his breast with a desperate clutching hand. And she rose immediately in response to the adventure.

The room did not lend itself to many hiding-places.

Return Main Page Previous Page Next Page

®Online Book Reader