They Came to Baghdad

They Came to Baghdad by Agatha Christie Page B

Book: They Came to Baghdad by Agatha Christie Read Free Book Online
Authors: Agatha Christie
you’re not going to stay at the Embassy?’ Shrivenham looked nervously apprehensive. ‘But – but – it’s all laid on, sir.’
    ‘What is laid on can be laid off,’ barked Sir Rupert.
    ‘Oh, of course, sir. I didn’t mean –’
    Shrivenham broke off. He had a feeling that in the future someone was going to blame him.
    ‘I have certain somewhat delicate negotiations to carry out. I learn that they cannot be carried out from the Embassy. I want you to book me a room tonight at the Tio Hotel and I wish to leave the Embassy in a reasonably unobtrusive manner. That is to say I do not want to drive up to the Tio in an Embassy car. I also require a seat booked on the plane leaving for Cairo the day after tomorrow.’
    Shrivenham looked more dismayed still.
    ‘But I understood you were staying five days –’
    ‘That is no longer the case. It is imperative that I reach Cairo as soon as my business here is terminated. It would not be safe for me to remain longer.’
    ‘Safe?’
    A sudden grim smile transformed Sir Rupert’s face. The manner which Shrivenham had been likening to that of a Prussian drill sergeant was laid aside. The man’s charm became suddenly apparent.
    ‘Safety hasn’t usually been one of my preoccupations, I agree,’ he said. ‘But in this case it isn’t only my own safety I have to consider – my safety includes the safety of a lot of other people as well. So make those arrangements for me. If the air passage is difficult, apply for priority. Until I leave here tonight, I shall remain in my room.’ He added, as Shrivenham’s mouth opened in surprise, ‘Officially, I’m sick. Touch of malaria.’ The other nodded. ‘So I shan’t need food.’
    ‘But surely we can send you up –’
    ‘Twenty-four hours’ fast is nothing to me. I’ve gone hungry longer than that on some of my journeys. You just do as I tell you.’
    Downstairs Shrivenham was greeted by his colleagues and groaned in answer to their inquiries.
    ‘Cloak and dagger stuff in a big way,’ he said. ‘Can’t quite make his grandiloquence Sir Rupert Crofton Lee out. Whether it’s genuine or play-acting. The swirling cloak and bandit’s hat and all the rest of it. Fellow who’d read one of his books told me that although he’s a bit of a self-advertiser, he really has done all these things and been to these places – but I don’t know…Wish Thomas Rice was up and about to cope. That reminds me, what’s Scheele’s Green?’
    ‘Scheele’s Green?’ said his friend, frowning. ‘Something to do with wallpaper, isn’t it? Poisonous. It’s a form of arsenic, I think.’
    ‘Cripes!’ said Shrivenham, staring. ‘I thought it was a disease. Something like amæbic dysentery.’
    ‘Oh, no, it’s something in the chemical line. What wives do their husbands in with, or vice versa.’
    Shrivenham had relapsed into startled silence. Certain disagreeable facts were becoming clear to him. Crofton Lee had suggested, in effect, that Thomas Rice, Oriental Counsellor to the Embassy, was suffering, not from gastroenteritis, but from arsenical poisoning. Added to that Sir Rupert had suggested that his own life was in danger, and his decision not to eat food and drink prepared in the kitchens of the British Embassy shook Shrivenham’s decorous British soul to the core. He couldn’t imagine what to make of it all.?

They Came to Baghdad

Chapter 10

They Came to Baghdad
    I
    Victoria, breathing in hot choking yellow dust, was unfavourably impressed by Baghdad. From the Airport to the Tio Hotel, her ears had been assailed by continuous and incessant noise. Horns of cars blaring with maddening persistence, voices shouting, whistles blowing, then more deafening senseless blaring of motor horns. Added to the loud incessant noises of the street was a small thin trickle of continuous sound which was Mrs Hamilton Clipp talking.
    Victoria arrived at the Tio Hotel in a dazed condition.
    A small alleyway led back from the fanfare of

Similar Books

This Time

Kristin Leigh

A Week in December

Sebastian Faulks

Blackestnights

Cindy Jacks

The Two Worlds

James P. Hogan

In Plain Sight

Fern Michaels

The Skeleton Crew

Deborah Halber

Two Halves Series

Marta Szemik