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Authors: Gloria Whelan

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Father was silent for a long while, just looking intently at me. Finally he asked, “Would you care so much?”

I thought if ever there was a time for truth, it was now. “I would care a great deal.”

Father looked down at his plate and, after a moment's consideration, pushed it away, his dinner nearly untouched. “I'll see what I can do tomorrow morning,” he said. “Just promise me that you won't attempt anything foolish.” At that moment the waiter came to the table to exclaim unhappily over the food remaining on our plates, relieving me of the need to make a promise I had no intention of keeping.

My room was stifling; even the airy mosquito netting
that muffled my bed seemed to keep out the air. In desperation I pushed the netting aside and went out onto my balcony. The dark city, Alexandretta, “little Alexandria,” was sheltered by the foothills of the Taurus Mountains. Earlier I had watched the hills fade from emerald to jade to gray. Now they were nothing more than black shadows. Beyond those mountains lay Turkey and Mersina. I was sure that if the
Poseidon
sailed with Graham aboard, I would never see him again. Why, I wondered, did I have to depend on the consul and my father for everything; why could I do nothing for myself? But try as I might, I couldn't think what to do. As the night inched on, my ideas grew more desperate.

The next morning Mr. Robinson was back in my room before breakfast, a bulky carpetbag under his arm and a conspiratorial expression on his face. “I believe we can solve our problem if you are willing to take a risk.” He studied me and must have felt reassured about my willingness, for he went on. “Saladin has managed to bribe one of two Turkish soldiers guarding Geddes's cabin on the
Poseidon
. The soldier will leave the door between Geddes's cabin and the adjoining cabin unlocked, but this will not permit Geddes to escape. Unfortunately, only one soldier is bribeable. The second soldier outside Geddes's cabin as well as the two soldiers on the gangplank would intercept him.”

“But what can I do?”

“You will be an Arab woman on her way to Mersina to join her husband; Arab women take steamers to Mersina and Istanbul all the time. We have arranged that you are to have the cabin next to Graham, the one with the unlocked door.”

“I have no Arab things to wear.” I could not find my way into Robinson's plans, though I was excited, trusting his cunning.

“Saladin has gone to the bazaar and found you something.”

The consul held out a long dark abeyah and veil like those worn by Arab women. Mr. Robinson watched my reaction with approval. “I see you are not afraid of taking a chance. I thought with a father as autocratic as yours, you might be less adventurous.”

Now that I was about to disobey him, I felt I ought to defend my father. “He means well,” I said, aware at once of what a feeble defense that was.

“I think he would not approve of my little plot, but he need never know. You are to make your way to Geddes's adjoining cabin. There you will give him this carpetbag, which contains clothes identical to yours, but in his size. Just before the
Poseidon
sails, Geddes will walk out of your cabin as a veiled Arab woman and go ashore. The soldiers at the
gangplank will have no reason to be suspicious. Give Geddes enough time to get safely away and into a carriage that I will have waiting, and then, while our guard diverts his companion's attention, you will leave the ship in your own clothes. The soldiers at the gangplank will imagine you have been on board the ship to see off a fellow countryman.”

“But my passage. They will want to see my ticket.”

“That, too, has been taken care of. Here are papers of identification showing you to be an Arab woman, tickets for your passage to Mersina, and the reservation for the cabin next to Graham's.”

I was grateful for his efforts, but I felt he was less interested in saving Graham than in heaping revenge on Father. For that, I felt sure, he wouldn't mind putting me in danger. I was sorry to be a part of his revenge, but not sorry enough to abandon Graham.

“When you have changed your clothes, leave by the back entrance of the hotel and you will be thought to be a servant. Be sure to have the driver drop you off out of sight of the wharf: The sort of Arab woman you are supposed to be would not arrive in a carriage. There is one pitfall, and it is a serious one. You don't speak Arabic, but that is a risk we must take. I don't believe anyone will address you—it is considered unseemly for a man to engage in conversation
with a woman not of his family. If they do, you must pretend to be overcome with shyness. Just giggle. I don't like to send you on a mission that has its dangers, but Geddes would not trust a stranger. Of course you must not breathe a word to your father.”

XVIII
THE IMPOSTOR

T
O SHOW MY GRATITUDE
to the consul, I reached for his hand, which was small and soft and slightly furry, so I felt I had gotten hold of a little timid animal. As soon as Mr. Robinson left, I began to struggle into the abeyah and veil. I was trying to arrange them in the way I had noticed on Arab women when Edith came into my room without knocking. In someone else that would have been considered rude, but in Edith it was only a brusqueness I had long since become used to, knowing it indicated nothing more than an impatience with social niceties.

“Good Lord! You would be the last person I would have thought of as going native. What are you doing in that costume?”

I was caught unawares, and anxious for help, I explained, “It's a disguise. Mr. Robinson has arranged for me to get into the cabin next to Graham's, and I'm to bring an
Arab woman's clothes to him so he can get off the boat. Promise not to breathe a word to Father.”

I glanced at the mirror. “Edith, you know about these things—can you arrange the veil so it looks right? I'm too nervous to think about what I'm doing.”

In an angry voice Edith said, “Robinson has no right to put you up to a trick like that. You are not playing a child's game, you know. You could be caught and carted off to a Turkish prison yourself.”

“I'll be careful.” I could not keep fear out of my voice.

“Nonsense. What if they ask you a question. You can't say more than ‘please' and ‘thank you' in Arabic. They'll spot you for an impostor immediately.”

“Mr. Robinson said it was a risk, but he thought since I had papers and my passage, no one would question me.” I was rapidly losing my resolve, and more to encourage myself than convince Edith, I said, “It's the only chance to get Graham off the boat.”

Edith considered. “Look, here, I speak the language like a native. I'll do it for you, but you're to stay in your room until the thing is done, and you are not to say a word to Robinson. It was very good of him to manage all of this, and it wouldn't do to hurt his feelings by letting him know you have altered his little game without consulting him. I've
seen the way he looks at your father. Obviously Robinson is pleased that through you, he is getting the better of your father. We mustn't disappoint him. I'll tell Geddes not to say anything, and I'll come back to the hotel and directly to your room; Robinson need never know. Now, give me those things and let me get on with it.”

Reluctantly I handed over the clothes. I longed to go myself. I wanted to see Graham, wanted to have him grateful to me; but I believed Edith would have the better chance of carrying off Graham's escape. I told myself that was the important thing. Besides, I didn't like the idea of Robinson using me to get back at my father.

If I had any doubts, when I saw how cleverly Edith had draped the abeyah and veil, I felt sure of having made the right decision. Snatching up the carpetbag, she took the identity papers and steamer ticket. “I must go to my room to attend to a few things, and then I'll be off. You're to keep to your room, and remember, at all costs you're to stay away from Robinson.”

The voice beneath the veil rattled off a string of Arabic words. I saw Edith would be a hundred times more effective than I would have been. For the first time, I felt encouraged. “Edith, I'm so grateful to you.” But she was gone before I could finish thanking her.

I wanted to follow her to the ship, to be there when Graham escaped, but after Edith's warning I felt I had to stay out of the consul's way. I wondered if Saladin and the consul would be at the wharves, watching for me. They would see Arab women boarding the ship and not know which of the black-robed women might be me; certainly they would not guess one of them was Edith.

I passed the time by imagining Edith's journey from the hotel—how she would summon a carriage, travel through the crowded streets of Alexandretta, reach the wharves and dismiss her driver, and then make her way to the ship, walking up the gangplank past the guards, entering her cabin and opening the door that led to Graham.

There was a knock. Afraid it might be the consul, I didn't answer until I heard Hakki calling my name. I opened the door, and Hakki hurried into my room, a troubled expression on his face. “When it is so important for all of us to stay together, why does Miss Phillips depart without us?”

“I am sure she only went out for a short time. She'll be back directly.”

“We are not sailing until tomorrow morning, but I just passed the porters on the stairs carrying off Miss Phillips's trunk and all the numerous things for her plants. Her room is empty and she is nowhere to be seen.”

Fear, so slight as to be no more than the shadow of a rat's tail, brushed me. I asked Hakki, “Where could she be sending her things? I thought our luggage was not to be picked up until this evening.”

“Exactly. So why is it her things go now and not by my arrangements?”

I grabbed Hakki's arm and forced him out into the hall and down the stairway. We reached the lobby as the carriage pulled away; it was loaded with Edith's luggage, all of which was thoroughly familiar to me. “You must ask the hotel porter where they are taking Edith's things,” I ordered Hakki.

“To the
Poseidon
, sir,” was the porter's answer. “There were very many boxes.”

“Get me a carriage. Immediately,” I told the man.

He was quick to sense my urgency and ran into the street. In a moment he was helping me into a carriage.

“But you mustn't go away as well,” Hakki cried. “If you go, I must go with you, or you, too, will be lost.”

As the carriage sped toward the wharf, my fear grew to suspicion and then to anger. It must have been Edith all along. I could hardly believe it, yet it made sense. With her knowledge of plants and her connivance with Mastur, who did the cooking and served us, Edith had managed to
poison my father. When Father became ill and we had to stay behind, she arranged for Mohammed to remain with us, and then she sent her Metawileh thugs after him. My mind was racing. Of course it was Edith who turned in Monsieur Louvois and then Graham. When I'd told her about the consul's plan to rescue Graham, she had talked me into letting her take my place. Instead of rescuing Graham, she would see to it that he would be taken to Mersina and left to the mercy of the sultan's men. What I didn't understand was why she hated Father and Graham.

Hakki complained, “I don't know why you and the others hire me if you are always to go off on your own. What will Watson and Sons think of me if I have lost everyone?”

“Hakki, I know who complained to Watson and Sons. It was Edith.”

His face crumpled. “How can that be? She said she would write in my favor. But if what you say is true, that is a cruel thing and I am not sorry she has gone her own way.”

Remembering that Hakki had told us how he had once taught the children of the Turkish soldiers, I said, “Hakki, can't you do something for Graham? Couldn't you go to the Turkish authorities?”

A look of alarm spread over his face. “Miss Hamilton, you must know that I did not choose to be a tour leader. I
loved my teaching. I am not a
hafiz
, a holy man who knows the Koran by heart and teaches in the traditional Islamic school where the students spend their days reciting aloud from the Holy Scriptures. As a child I attended such a school and grew to hate the boredom. I did not want to teach at such a school. My uncle Mehmet, who was in the Turkish army, pulled a few strings, and I found myself teaching at a military school.

“I was proud of my position and of my students, in their navy-blue uniforms decorated with rows of gold buttons and the star and crescent. Then one day I was called to the school and told that I would be excused from teaching the following term. I had been chosen to act as a tour director, yet not as a tour director. I was to understand that my position was highly secret. Alas, I was forced, against my will, to act as a spy for the Turkish government. No, no. I could not interfere with the authorities, as you call them.”

By the time Hakki finished his story, we had reached the pier. The
Poseidon
was preparing to sail, and the pier was filled with the sad excitement of farewells. One passenger was carrying a freshly butchered lamb on board, another a tent made into a parcel. Dockworkers pitched bolts of silk and bundles of hides into the hold, along with burlap bags that emitted the sickly-sweet smell of licorice.

I saw how clever Robinson's plan had been, for the pier was crowded with Turks and Arabs. I could easily have slipped aboard in the crush of passengers hurrying onto the ship; instead, I had lost my nerve and given way to Edith. Hakki and I watched as the porters shouldered luggage up and down a gangplank that was guarded by a pair of Turkish soldiers. While I tried to think how I could possibly rescue Graham, two porters—an ancient man, much too old and decrepit for his burden, and a younger man who looked as though he might be the old man's son—struggled up the gangplank carrying Edith's trunk and specimen boxes and disappeared among the passengers milling about the deck.

Hakki pointed at them. “There, didn't I say?”

The pair reappeared and made their way down the gangplank. Waiting until the two porters were a safe distance from the ship, I ran up to them, pressing coins into the hand of the son. “To whom did you deliver that trunk just now?”

“To an English lady, Mademoiselle Phillips,” he said.

“Not to an Arab lady?” I asked. “An Arab lady in an abeyah and veil?”

“An Arab lady with all that luggage? No, no,
effendim
. It went to the English lady whose name I gave to you.”

“What destination was marked on them?”

“Istanbul, madam. She has also given to me a letter to deliver to the Hotel Tirsoni,” he added, pleased to show his importance, “but for that I am to wait until the ship sails.”

“For whom is the letter?”

“I don't know,
effendim
. I was to give it to the clerk in the hotel. The name is written down on the envelope, but English writing means nothing to me.”

I looked at the envelope and read my name. “That is my name. You can give it to me.”

“I was told to give it to the clerk at the hotel.” The porter clearly wanted the pleasure of entering such a hotel.

“This is the lady named on the letter,” Hakki confirmed. “Let her have it.”

I handed the porter a gold sovereign. “Give it to me and it will save you the trouble of making the trip to the Tirsoni.”

The father gave the son a greedy nudge, and the letter was handed over. A moment later the two men disappeared into the crowd.

I led Hakki to a café a short distance from the pier. Dockworkers, along with hangers-on who looked as though they made their living in secret ways, were gathered in sullen clumps around a handful of tables. They were clearly outraged that a woman should invade their café. I led a
protesting Hakki to a back table and ordered coffee from a nervous waiter, not because I wanted the coffee but to get rid of the waiter, who was trying to find a polite way to ask us to leave. I tore open the envelope.

Dear Julia,

I have traveled among the Arabs for thirty years. They are my friends. I will not have interlopers come to their country to scavenge about for spoils. I have known from the beginning what all of you wanted. My “kidnapping” in Jerud was to give me an opportunity to inform the Arabs of your greedy errands. From Jerud the Metawilehs followed us about like good angels to do my bidding.

Your father came here to do the dirty work of England's Foreign Office, looking about to see what he could steal for the empire. It was a pleasure to watch this messenger of English lust grow weak and uncertain with my poison, a poison concocted from the plant of a country he would barter away and administered by Mastur, my friend and a loyal Arab. I am only sorry it did not do its job.

It was the same with Louvois, who crept about seeing where the French might move in as if this country were
just another pretty trinket he might steal. I arranged for him to be allowed to keep his little collection of antiquities so that it would appear he was the one to betray Geddes, but be assured the customs officers will not be so generous, for they will be ready for him.

Hakki is nothing more than a spy sent to keep an eye on us for the Turks. I was pleased to denounce him to Watson & Sons so that he can no longer act the part of the informer; nor will the Turks be pleased with a spy who has failed.

By having Mastur delay the carriage while you and your father were in Ain el Beida, we were able to take care of Mohammed, who should not have betrayed his fellow Arabs by doing Geddes's work for him.

As for your friend Geddes, he thinks he is for the Arabs but he is for the Ottoman Empire. If Geddes's Young Turks are successful, they will forget the concessions they have promised to the Arabs—and the Greeks, Armenians, and Jews as well. The leaders of the Young Turks are, after all, Turks; and Turks will not be willing to preside at the dispersal of the Ottoman Empire. When the Arabs ask for the independence they have been promised by well-meaning fools like Geddes, do you believe for a moment the Young Turks will give it to them? The
Young Turks are more nationalistic than the sultan. Geddes will die in Mersina, but he will not die quickly. I made sure Professor Ladamacher, who wished to betray the Arabs to the Germans, learned the same deadly lesson.

By the time you read this, the
Poseidon
will have sailed. Put Geddes out of your mind. He cares nothing for you; he is in love with his own ambition.

You ought to do something with your sketching: you are really quite passable, and under other circumstances we might have remained friends.

One day Turkey will be overthrown by the Arabs. It is well known that in north Africa there are Arabs who have kept hanging on their walls for four hundred years the keys of houses in Spain's Seville and Granada, cities that once were theirs.

As for me, I will ship my finds to the Royal Botanic Gardens and then I will disappear into the desert. It is where I belong and where I wish to die.

Edith

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