“This is the best dancing-house. The children dance here.”
Domini’s height enabled her to peer over the shoulders of those gathered before the door, and in the lighted distance of a white-walled room, painted with figures of soldiers and Arab chiefs, she saw a small wriggling figure between two rows of squatting men, two baby hands waving coloured handkerchiefs, two little feet tapping vigorously upon an earthen floor, for background a divan crowded with women and musicians, with inflated cheeks and squinting eyes. She stood for a moment to look, then she turned away. There was an expression of disgust in her eyes.
“No, I don’t want to see children,” she said. “That’s too—”
She glanced at her escort and did not finish.
“I know,” said Batouch. “Madame wishes for the real ouleds.”
He led them across the street. Hadj followed reluctantly. Before going into this second dancing-house Domini stopped again to see from outside what it was like, but only for an instant. Then a brightness came into her eyes, an eager look.
“Yes, take me in here,” she said.
Batouch laughed softly, and Hadj uttered a word below his breath.
“Madame will see Irena here,” said Batouch, pushing the watching Arabs unceremoniously away.
Domini did not answer. Her eyes were fixed on a man who was sitting in a corner far up the room, bending forward and staring intently at a woman who was in the act of stepping down from a raised platform decorated with lamps and small bunches of flowers in earthen pots.