When Tamara woke in the morning the recollection of her camel ride

seemed like a dream. She sat for a long time at the window of her room

looking out toward the green world and Cairo. She was trying to adjust

things in her mind. This stranger had certainly produced an effect upon

her.

She wondered who he was, and how he would look in daylight--and above

all whither he had galloped into the desert. Then she wondered at

herself. The whole thing was so out of her line--so bizarre--in a life

of carefully balanced proprieties. And were the thoughts the Sphinx had

awaked in her brain true? Yes, certainly she had been ruled by others

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always--and had never developed her own soul.

She was very sensitive--that last whimsical smile of the unknown had

humiliated her. She felt he had laughed at her prim propriety in

wishing to get rid of him before the gate. Indeed, she suddenly felt he

might laugh at a good many of the things she did. And this ruffled her

serenity. She put up her slender hands and pushed the thick hair back

from her forehead with an impatient gesture. It all made her

dissatisfied with herself and full of unrest.

"You don't tell me a thing about your Sphinx excursion last night,

Tamara," Millicent Hardcastle said at breakfast, rather peevishly. They

were sipping coffee together in the latter's room in dressing-gowns.

"Was it nice, and had the tourists quite departed?"

"It was wonderful!" and Tamara leant back and looked into distance.

"There were no tourists, and it made me think a number of new

things--we seem such ordinary people, Millicent."

Mrs. Hardcastle glanced up surprised, not to say offended, with coffee

cup poised in the air.

"Yes--you may wonder, but it is true, Milly--we do the same things

every day, and think the same thoughts, and are just thoroughly

commonplace and uninteresting."

"And you came to these conclusions from gazing at the Sphinx?" Mrs.

Hardcastle asked.

"Yes," said Tamara, the pink deepening for a moment in her cheeks. In

her whole life she hardly ever had had a secret. "I sat there,

Millicent, in the sand opposite the strange image, and it seemed to

smile and mock at all little things; it appeared perfectly ridiculous

that we pay so much attention to what the world says or thinks. I could

not help looking back to the time when you and I were at Dresden

together. What dull lives we have both led since! Yours perhaps more

filled than mine has been, because you have children; but really we

have both been browsing like sheep."




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