“There are things she would not answer in thy presence!”
“Very well. Only, please be quick!”
He bowed. Swinging the door open, he pushed the ayah through it to the room beyond. Ruth was left alone, to watch the red glow on the skyline and try to see the outline of the watcher in the gloom below. No sound came through the heavy teak door that the Risaldar had slammed behind him, and no sound came from him who watched; but from the silence of the night outside and from dark corners of the room that she was in and from the roof and walls and floor here came little eerie noises that made her flesh creep, as though she were being stared at by eyes she could not see. She felt that she must scream, or die, unless she moved; and she was too afraid to move, and by far too proud to scream! At last she tore herself away from the window and ran to a low divan and lay on it, smothering her face among the cushions. It seemed an hour before the Risaldar came out again, and then he took her by surprise.
“Heavenborn!” he said. She looked up with a start, to find him standing close beside her.
“Mahommed Khan! You're panting! What ails you?”
“The heat, heavenborn—and I am old.”
His left hand was on his saber-hilt, thrusting it toward her respectfully; she noticed that it trembled.
“Have I the heavenborn's leave to lock the ayah in that inner room?”
“Why, Risaldar?”
“The fiend had this in her possession!” He showed her a thin-bladed dagger with an ivory handle; his own hand shook as he held it out to her, and she saw that there were beads of perspiration on his wrist. “She would have killed thee!”