Reading Online Novel

The Lioness of Morocco(68)



“Well, just look at the mother,” the other whispered behind her hand. “The apple doesn’t fall far from the tree.”

“Indeed, my dear, indeed.” They eyed Sibylla’s purple silk pants, long silk shirt, and the embroidered scarf around her shoulders with a mixture of distaste and fascination.

Victoria looked over at John but he was sharing a joke with Selwyn and had not heard. She considered how to react. Deep down, she shared the women’s opinion. However, her relationship with Sibylla had finally thawed, and it irritated her to hear outsiders making unkind remarks about her mother-in-law or Emily.

She cleared her throat. “Ladies, I’m certain I misheard you just now, or did you really speak disparagingly about two members of my family?”

The women regarded her uneasily.

“You can consider yourselves fortunate that my husband did not hear,” Victoria went on. “He would not stand for having his mother and his sister spoken ill of. In order not to jeopardize the good business relations between the Hopkins family and your husbands, I am willing to overlook this rudeness—provided I do not hear of any further instances.” Victoria was nodding condescendingly when she suddenly noticed that Sibylla was watching her.

“Well done! Thank you!” Sibylla mouthed.

Victoria blushed. Ever since she had caused such strife with her revelation about Emily’s father, hardly a day had gone by that she did not regret her outburst. The idea that she had just atoned for it in a small way filled her with pride.

Now it was Sibylla’s turn to say good-bye to Sara Willshire. “That was a lovely service,” she said, and Sara replied eagerly, “I am genuinely pleased that you are attending our little gatherings again. Perhaps you, and, of course, Emily, will do me the favor of attending afternoon tea soon?”

That André Rouston—and not Benjamin Hopkins—was Emily’s father was now an open secret. But no one spoke of this twenty-year-old scandal anymore. Emily was well liked and it was obvious that her family stood by her. And besides, Rouston was a reputable man, who, unlike Hopkins, had never been involved in any shady business.

“Thank you for the invitation. Perhaps we will do that soon,” Sibylla replied with a smile. “Good-bye, Sara.”

They joined John on the street. He was having fun with Selwyn by rubbing his stomach with exaggeration and announcing, “We’re starving, aren’t we, and we’re looking forward to a lovely piece of roast lamb!”

His son nodded and mimicked the gesture with a giggle.

“You go on ahead,” Sibylla said. “I’m going to stop by my office in the harbor to pick up a file that I want to go through this afternoon.”

“I’ll come with you, Mother. I feel like walking.” Emily linked arms with Sibylla.

“Hurry!” John called after them. “I don’t want to have to wait too long for my dinner!”



At the harbor, a strong wind off the ocean swept the last clouds from the bright blue sky and tousled Emily’s curls.

No ships can come in today, thought Sibylla and held on to her shawl. Just that morning, John had once again been saying that days like this were far too frequent in windy Mogador and that the resulting delays were very costly for merchants and ship owners.

“That wouldn’t happen in Tangier,” he effused. “It doesn’t get nearly so stormy nor so foggy there, and the harbor will connect the Pacific Ocean with the Atlantic, once the Suez Canal is opened.”

Maybe he’s right, Sibylla thought. The harbor in Mogador really was too small for modern ships, especially if steamboats were indeed the future. And fewer and fewer caravans were coming to Mogador. They went directly from Marrakesh to Rabat, Casablanca, and Tangier.

She looked at the harbor entrance, where the waves were breaking and foaming against the rocks. What would become of her if John moved the business to Tangier? Her children were grown and leading their own lives. If she stayed in Mogador, she would not even have her work to keep her busy.

And in Tangier you will be too far away from André, a voice whispered.

Sibylla pushed the thought aside. Yet something strange had happened since her return from Qasr el Bahia. She had dug out the worn edition of One Thousand and One Nights that she had buried under a pile of old files after her falling-out with André. When she was alone in her bed at night, she would furtively leaf through the stories and discover that they evoked the same confusing fantasies now as they had twenty years earlier. Ecstatic images of passion and lovemaking that followed her into her dreams and made her blush in the morning. She resolved to stash the book away, but then she would find herself reading it again, greedily, and with flushed cheeks, like a drunkard needing his spirits.

Sibylla sighed and looked out at the fishing boats moored to the pier. Some fishermen were using this time to mend their nets, while others repaired their hulls. The rest stood together, smoking shisha and complaining about the Almighty having created such weather when honorable fishermen wanted nothing more than to do their job.

“I feel sorry for those people out there,” Emily shouted against the hissing wind and pointed to a few merchant ships dancing on the waves like nutshells and waiting for the wind to die down so that they could enter the harbor.

“When I came to Mogador, there was a storm,” Sibylla reminisced. “And fog. We had to wait for two days before we came on land. The ship we sailed on, the Queen Charlotte, is in the harbor now. When she is fully loaded, she’ll sail directly back to London. You could go along, perhaps with Victoria.” The idea for making her homesick daughter-in-law happy had come to Sibylla when she heard Victoria defend her and Emily.

Emily, however, was not enthused. “You just want to keep me away from Sabri,” she countered suspiciously.

Mother and daughter were standing in front of the warehouse of the Spencer & Son Shipping Company. Sibylla took out the key to the heavy gate, but found it already unlocked. “Strange,” she muttered and peered inside. But the warehouse was quiet and empty; nothing seemed amiss, so far as she could tell in the semidarkness.

“What’s the matter?” Emily asked.

“Oh, nothing. Perhaps Aladdin is here working. Sunday is for him an ordinary day, after all. Wait here, will you? I’ll be right back.”

When the sound of her mother’s footsteps on the wooden stairs had faded away, Emily walked aimlessly through the large hall and looked at the variety of merchandise stored there. In front by the gate were piles of leather from Fez, which were first in line to be shipped. Behind, there were several rows of wooden barrels with palm oil and on the other side of the gate were crates in which smaller orders could be shipped. Emily was reading the labels when she heard Sibylla shriek.

“Robbers! Thieves!”

Without hesitation Emily grabbed an iron rod normally used to prop open the gate and rushed up the stairs. “Mummy! Where are you? Do you need help?”

She found her mother in front of the large oak cabinet in her office. The doors were wide open. One of the two large earthenware jugs Sibylla used to store the saffron lay shattered. She held the other in her hand.

“They stole all of the saffron!” she cried. She turned the jug over and one last dried blossom floated to the floor. “Everything in the jugs and the four sacks from André as well! I wanted to keep his harvest safe for him. And now this! The thief took the cash box too, almost a thousand English pounds plus as many pesetas and ducats! I had planned to give them to Comstock on the Queen Charlotte.” Sibylla’s voice faded. “But the loss of the saffron is much worse. Of course I’m going to—”

“Mummy!” Emily looked around nervously. “Maybe the thieves are still lurking. We should get out of here!”



Thomas was waiting for them in the salon when they arrived home half an hour later. Already overwrought, Sibylla feared another misfortune. “You’re back already? Is Monsieur Rouston worse?”

“Would that be a reason for me to be here, Mother?” Thomas sounded surprised. “No, I can assure you, Monsieur Rouston is on the road to recovery. But his wife . . .” He paused, for he was still haunted by Aynur’s cruel fate. “She has died.”

“My God!” Sibylla sputtered. “Her poor children are all alone.”

“So is Monsieur Rouston,” Thomas replied. “He is grieving for his wife.”

“Of course.” Sibylla wiped her brow with her hand. Her head swam. She longed for André, wanting him to take her in his arms and console her. But André was mourning Aynur, and Sibylla had no one.

Thomas turned to Emily and kissed her on the cheeks. “Hello, little sister.” He held her at arm’s length and looked her over. “You look strange. Has something happened?”

Sibylla had told her that she wanted to be the one to share the news of the theft, so Emily said only, “Is Sabri back in Mogador as well?”

Thomas nodded. “He is with his family. But he instructed me three times to give you his regards. Also, he’s brought along your little patient with the broken arm and his parents. They’re staying at the maristan and we shall be looking after the little one until he is well.”