me,â said Sarah. âItâs awful, isnât it, but I do hate women! When theyâre inefficient and idiotic like Miss Pierce, they infuriate meâand, when theyâre efficient like Lady Westholme, they annoy me more still.â
âIt is, I should say, unavoidable that these two people should annoy you. Lady Westholme is exactly fitted to the life she leads and is completely happy and successful. Miss Pierce has worked for years as a nursery governess and has suddenly come into a small legacy which has enabled her to fulfill her life-long wish and travel. So far, travel has lived up to her expectations. Consequently you, who have just been thwarted in obtaining what you want, naturally resent the existence of people who have been more successful in life than you are.â
âI suppose youâre right,â said Sarah gloomily. âWhat a horribly accurate mind-reader you are. I keep trying to humbug myself and you wonât let me.â
At this moment the others returned. The guide seemed the most exhausted of the three. He was quite subdued and hardly exuded any information on the way to Amman. He did not even mention the Jews. For which everyone was profoundly grateful. His voluble and frenzied account of their iniquities had done much to try everyoneâs temper on the journey from Jerusalem.
Now the road wound upward from the Jordan, twisting and turning, with clumps of oleanders showing rose-coloured flowers.
They reached Amman late in the afternoon and after a short visit to the Graeco-Roman theatre went to bed early. They were to make an early start the next morning as it was a full dayâs motor run across the desert to Maâan.
They left soon after eight oâclock. The party was inclined to be silent. It was a hot airless day and by noon when a halt was made for a picnic lunch to be eaten, it was really stiflingly hot. The irritation of a hot day of being boxed up closely with three other human beings had got a little on everyoneâs nerves.
Lady Westholme and Dr Gerard had a somewhat irritable argument over the League of Nations. Lady Westholme was a fervent supporter of the League. The Frenchman, on the other hand, chose to be witty at the Leagueâs expense. From the attitude of the League concerning Abyssinia and Spain they passed to the Litvania boundary dispute of which Sarah had never heard and from there to the activities of the League in suppressing dope gangs.
âYou must admit they have done wonderful work. Wonderful!â snapped Lady Westholme.
Dr Gerard shrugged his shoulders.
âPerhaps. And at wonderful expense too!â
âThe matter is a very serious one. Under the Dangerous Drugs Actââ The argument waged on.
Miss Pierce twittered to Sarah: âIt is really most interesting travelling with Lady Westholme.â
Sarah said acidly: âIs it?â but Miss Pierce did not notice the acerbity and twittered happily on.
âIâve so often seen her name in the papers. So clever of women to go into public life and hold their own. Iâm always so glad when a woman accomplishes something!â
âWhy?â demanded Sarah ferociously.
Miss Pierceâs mouth fell open and she stammered a little.
âOh, becauseâI meanâjust becauseâwellâitâs so nice that women are able to do things!â
âI donât agree,â said Sarah. âItâs nice when any human being is able to accomplish something worth while! It doesnât matter a bit whether itâs a man or a woman. Why should it?â
âWell, of courseââ said Miss Pierce. âYes, I confessâof course, looking at it in that lightââ
But she looked slightly wistful. Sarah said more gently:
âIâm sorry, but I do hate this differentiation between the sexes. â The modern girl has a thoroughly business-like attitude towards life .â That sort of thing. Itâs not