Jimgrim - The Spy Thrillers Series. Talbot Mundy
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“Then you are Ali Higg?”
“Who else?”
“And these?”
“My servants.”
“Your honor travels abroad with a scant escort!”
“Let us see, then, whether it is not enough! A tale was told me of a black-faced liar on a Bishareen dromedary who fled hither from El-Kalil last night to persuade the dogs of this place to bark in some hunt of his. There was mention made of a woman. My men pursued him along the road, but fear gave him wings. Hand him over!”
“Allah! He is my guest.”
“Or let us see whether I cannot fire one shot and summon enough men to eat this place!”
“That is loud talk. They tell me you travel with but twenty.”
“Try me!”
You didn’t have to be much of a thought-reader to know what was passing in that sheikh’s mind. Supposing that Grim were really the notorious Ali Higg, he might easily have left Hebron with twenty men and have been joined by fifty or a hundred others in the night. Or there might be others on the way to meet him now. It was a big risk, for Ali Higg’s vengeance was always the same; he simply turned a horde of men loose to work their will on the inhabitants of any village that defied him. The sheikh was not quite sure yet that he really sat face to face with the redoubtable robber, yet did not dare put that doubt to the test.
“Is that all Your Honor wants?” he asked. “Just that messenger?”
“Him and his camel—and another thing.”
“What else, then? We are poor folk in this place. There has been a bad season. We have neither corn nor money.”
“If I needed corn or money I would come and take them,” Grim answered. “I have no present need. I give an order.”
“Allah! What then?”
“It pleases me to camp yonder.”
He made a lordly motion with his head toward the west.
“This side your village, then, all this day until sundown, none of your people venture.”
“But our camels go to graze that way.”
“Not this day. Today yours graze to the eastward.”
“There is poor grazing to the eastward.”
“Nevertheless, whoever ventures to the westward all this day does so in despite of me, and the village pays the price!”
“Allah!”
“Let Allah witness!” answered Grim.
And his face was an enigma; but half the puzzle was already solved because there was no suggestion of weakness there. It was the best piece of sheer bluffing on a weak hand that I had ever seen.
“Will Your Honor not visit my town and break bread with me?” asked Mahommed Abbas.
“If I visit that dung-hill it will be to burn it,” Grim answered. “Send me out that black-faced liar and the Bishareen. I am not pleased to wait long in the sun.”
“If we obey the command do we not merit Your Honor’s favor?”
That was a very shrewd question. A weak man with a weak hand would have walked into that trap by betraying the spirit of compromise. On the other hand an ordinary bluffer would have blundered by overdoing the high hand.
“Consider what is known of me,” Grim answered. “How many have disobeyed me and escaped? How many have obeyed and regretted it? But by the beard of Allah’s Prophet,” he thundered suddenly, “I grow weary of words! What son of sixty dogs dares keep me waiting in the desert while he barks?”
Mahommed Abbas did not like that medicine, especially in front of all his men. But they had ceased circling long ago and were waiting stock-still at a respectful distance; for the name of Ali Higg meant evidently more to them than the honor of their own sheikh—which at best depends on the sheikh’s own generalship. It was a safe bet that if he had called on them to attack that minute they would have declined.
So he gave the dignified Arab salute, which Grim deigned to acknowledge with the slightest possible inclination of the head, and led his men away.
“What would you have done if he had called your bluff?” I asked Grim, as soon as they were all out of earshot.
“Dunno,” he said, smiling. “I’ve learned never to try a bluff unless I’m pretty sure of my man. That guy doesn’t own many chips. As a last resort I’d have to admit I’m a government officer—if they hadn’t killed us all first!”
We sat our camels there for about three quarters of an hour before half a dozen of Mahommed Abbas’ men appeared with Rafiki’s messenger riding the Bishareen between them. His face when they handed him over was the color of raw liver, and if ever a man was too scared to try to escape it was he. Ali Baba’s two sons got one on either side of him without making him feel any better, for he too was a Hebron man and knew them and their reputation. There was nothing improbable about their throwing in their lot with the greater robber Ali Higg.
Then the sheikh’s men tried to load gifts on Grim—chickens, a live sheep, melons, vegetables, and camel milk in a gourd. Grim did not even deign to acknowledge them in person, but made a gesture to Narayan Singh, who promptly took charge of the prisoner himself and sent Ali Baba’s sons back for the presents. They had the good grace to find fault with everything, vowing that the sheep especially was only fit for vultures. However, with a final sneer or two anent the donor’s manners they bore sheep and all along behind us back to camp.
“Is it well?” called Ali Baba, watching on the ridge of a dune, and coming to life like a heron as soon as we drew near.
“All’s well,” said Grim.
“Father of cunning! What now?” the old man answered.
* To call anyone an Egyptian is an Arab’s notion of a perfect insult.
* A synonym for Allah.
* What?
* This is strange!
CHAPTER 5
“Let that mother of snakes beware”
The terms that Grim had imposed on Abbas Mahommed were perfectly well understood by everyone concerned. The Arab is an individualist of fervid likes and dislikes and the thing that perhaps he hates most of all is to be observed by strangers; he does not like it even from his own people. So there was nothing