Note: All characters in this novella are older than 18.
[This is a completed ten-chapter novella, to be posted in six entries by mid June 2019]
*****
Shepheard's Hotel Gentlemen's Dining Room, Cairo, Egypt, November 1924
The times were such that it was folly for anyone of European visage to walk the avenues and alleys of Cairo alone. It had been four years of fear and chaos in Cairo capped by the assassination in the city in November, 1924, of the British governor general of Sudan, Sir Lee Stack. The city was caught in the vice of the British pressuring the Egyptian king to bow to the client state demands of British foreign policy needs and the upstart Wafd party in Egypt pressing to end British influence altogether.
Viscount Edmund Allenby, British high commissioner for Egypt and Sudan and sponsor of the creation of a sovereign Egypt, was taking a hard line, demanding that Egypt apologize, prosecute the assassins, and pay a crippling indemnity. The Wafd was taking an even harder line, sending bandits out into the streets to assail and kidnap for exorbitant ransom any European or British sympathizer it could lay its hands on.
In response, the foreign community, in its arrogance and confidence, did what it always didâit donned its suffocating, tight-fitting costumes of the latest style in Europe, completely ignoring the demands for cooler wear of the Egyptian deserts, and it went to Shepheard's for dinner and to see and be seen in sophisticated and oblivious London splendor.
For its part Shepheard's Hotel, occupying a commanding spot in Cairo near the banks of the Nile, was doing what it did bestâperpetuating a life of European opulence as it had done for the past eighty years, without a thought to the tension and forming revolution in the street.
On this night, the hotel was in full cry, its rooms fully booked by those coming and goingâarchaeologists in abundance following the opening of the tomb of the boy pharaoh, Tutankhamun, in the Theban hills of the Valley of the Kings a mere two years previously; the families of British military officers meeting their sons, fathers, and husbands on furlough down from action in the uprisings in Sudan; and the occasional inveterate wealthy European and American tourist in search of adventure and danger and the right to say they were there first. Its public dining and party rooms were overflowing with revelers grasping for the glories and privileges of yesteryear and trying to shut out the cries for change and independence from the Egyptian street.
And down a long, not easily found corridor at the rear of the hotel, the men of power and position in Egypt moved to and from a special dining room not marked on any public sketch of the hotel: the Gentlemen's Dining Room. Here no skirt was seen or swished. No man of only middling import was permitted entrance. Here among the stark white, starched tablecloths and napkins, the gold-rimmed china, the solid-silver plate, and a blue haze of smoke rising to the pinnacle of the coffered roof above a square room, centered by a three-tiered bubbling fountain, dining galleries bordering a central area, and stained-glass clerestory windows on three walls, dined the brains, financial backbone, literary heart, and military muscle of the British empire presence in the Mediterranean and northern Africa.
Dining that evening, on the western balcony tierâbeing denied access to the ground-floor, central hall by his ethnic origin even though his position both as a political and financial force and a literary light was supremeâwas Pasha Rushdy Abazar, scion of a family that traced its origins back to Abraham's tent and that had traded ruling status in Egypt off with only two other families for the past two centuries.
Abazar was listening to his dining companion, the minister of culture in the current regimeâand, not incidentally, his cousinâwhile trying his best not to draw the attention of those throughout the dining roomâand particularly those Europeans permitted in the dining area below. Abazar was somewhat of a recluse, but his booksâmany considered a bit racy and suggestiveâwell, more than a bitâwere all the rage throughout the British colonial empire at the moment.
He was a man of mysteryâfabulously wealthy, average sized but quite well-built of stature, powerfully connected to all factions in Egypt, cerebral, sharp-tongued, and bigger-than-life darkly handsome. When the British social scientists argued that the Arab could come close to becoming civilized, it was Abazar they were imaging.
Many of those below would have loved to invite Abazar to descend the social division of the stairs from the balcony seating to the main floor and join them both to break the tedium of the severely limiting, constantly repetitive small talk of their never-changing dinner companions and to be titillated by trying to discover through guarded discussion if half of the nefarious activities attributed to Abazar and alluded to in his writings were true.
For his part, Abazar would have enjoyed descending that staircase just to see and enjoy the shock waves that would reverberate through the stagnant society that was the British expatriate community of Cairo.
As Abazar listened to his cousin drone on with half an ear, received messages and gave instructions to a flunkey lurking near the table at frequent intervals, and watched what passed as the cream of the European community in Egypt below watch him and speculate on what he was thinking, his attention was arrested by a flurry of activity at the central door to the lower dining area and the near-simultaneous craning of heads on the ground floor to this entry.
So staid was the privileged foreign community here that Abazar, even as rarely as he dined here, could close his eyes and identify exactly where everyone below was sittingâbecause that's where they always sat, much like people do in their houses of worship. The Gentlemen's Dining Room was, in essence, such a house of worship.
On this night nearly every chair was filledâwith the exception of the table of the club steward, Sir Hilary Wainsworth-Jones, which sat empty, as well it should, because Sir Hilary was deeper down into the continent climbing Mount Kilimanjaro.
Abazar held his breath, as did everyone at the tables below, and trained his eyes to the room's main entrance, as did everyone in the room except for his inattentive, babbling cousin, as two men glided into the room, and, walking behind a proud, strutting maĂŽtre d', were ushered to the club steward's table. The table was located next to the fountain, almost in the center of the roomâand on a dais above the floor level, so that it could be seen from any vantage point in the dining room. Headwaiters in black tails and white gloves rushed forward and pulled chairs, faces reverently lowered, as the two menâintriguingly, men of unknown origin and importâsettled in their own gilded thrones, and, for a brief moment the two were lost to view by a bevy of table waiters in black pants and starched white shirts and also wearing immaculate white gloves who revolved around the two, making them comfortable, filling the wine glass of one, explaining the menu, suggesting specials and particular delicacies, and taking orders.