Howeverââ She smiled bravely again.
Miss Spenser consulted her books.
âThe St. Leonardâs Assistance to Unmarried Mothers want a typist,â said Miss Spenser. âOf course, they donât pay very muchââ
âIs there any chance,â asked Victoria brusquely, âof a post in Baghdad?â
âIn Baghdad?â said Miss Spenser in lively astonishment.
Victoria saw she might as well have said in Kamchatka or at the South Pole.
âI should very much like to get to Baghdad,â said Victoria.
âI hardly thinkâin a secretaryâs post you mean?â
âAnyhow,â said Victoria. âAs a nurse or a cook, or looking after a lunatic. Anyway at all.â
Miss Spenser shook her head.
âIâm afraid I canât hold out much hope. There was a lady in yesterday with two little girls who was offering a passage to Australia.â
Victoria waved away Australia.
She rose. âIf you did hear of anything. Just the fare outâthatâs all I need.â She met the curiosity in the other womanâs eye by explainingââIâve gotâerârelations out there. And I understand there are plenty of well-paid jobs. But of course, one has to get there first.
âYes,â repeated Victoria to herself as she walked away from St. Guildricâs Bureau. âOne has to get there.â
It was an added annoyance to Victoria that, as is customary, when one has had oneâs attention suddenly focused on a particular name or subject, everything seemed to have suddenly conspired to force the thought of Baghdad onto her attention.
A brief paragraph in the evening paper she bought stated that Dr. Pauncefoot Jones, the well-known archaeologist, had started excavation on the ancient city of Murik, situated a hundred and twenty miles from Baghdad. An advertisement mentioned shipping lines to Basrah (and thence by train to Baghdad, Mosul, etc.). In the newspaper that lined her stocking drawer, a few lines of print about students in Baghdad leapt to her eyes. The Thief of Baghdad was on at the local cinema, and in the high-class highbrow bookshop into whose window she always gazed, a New Biography of Haroun el Rashid, Caliph of Baghdad, was prominently displayed.
The whole world, it seemed to her, had suddenly become Baghdad conscious. And until that afternoon at approximately 1:45 she had, for all intents and purposes never heard of Baghdad, and certainly never thought about it.
The prospects of getting there were unsatisfactory, but Victoria had no idea of giving up. She had a fertile brain and the optimistic outlook that if you want to do a thing there is always some way of doing it.
She employed the evening in drawing up a list of possible approaches. It ran:
Â
Try Foreign Office?
Insert advertisement?
Try Iraq Legation?
What about date firms?
Ditto shipping firms?
British Council?
Selfridgeâs Information Bureau?
Citizenâs Advice Bureau?
Â
None of them, she was forced to admit, seemed very promising. She added to the list:
Â
Somehow or other, get hold of a hundred pounds?
II
The intense mental efforts of concentration that Victoria had made overnight, and possibly the subconscious satisfaction at no longer having to be punctually in the office at nine a.m., made Victoria oversleep herself.
She awoke at five minutes past ten, and immediately jumped out of bed and began to dress. She was just passing a final comb through her rebellious dark hair when the telephone rang.
Victoria reached for the receiver.
A positively agitated Miss Spenser was at the other end.
âSo glad to have caught you, my dear. Really the most amazing coincidence.â
âYes?â cried Victoria.
âAs I say, really a startling coincidence. A Mrs. Hamilton Clippâtravelling to Baghdad in three daysâ timeâhas broken her armâneeds someone to assist her on journeyâI rang you up atonce. Of