Jimgrim - The Spy Thrillers Series. Talbot Mundy
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“These British and French and Italians promised us an independent Arab country. Where is it? Have you seen any of it? No. And you’re helping the British break their promise!
“Ali Higg is doing his best to redeem what Arabs fought for in the war, and I’m his wife. You ask me to betray him? Never!”
“Ali Higg is doing his worst, not his best, Jael.”
“He is creating unity among these tribes,” she retorted.
“He is practically forcing the British to come out and smash him,” said Grim. “Now, see here, Jael, I don’t want him smashed. I don’t hold with his method, but that’s the Arab’s business; if being crucified and shot for differences of opinion suits them, why, no doubt Ali Higg’s the right man for them. They tell me he delivers the goods. But he can’t go starting a new war out here, not while I’ve any say he can’t.”
“Who are you that should say or not say?” she demanded.
“Same as Ali Higg, Jael; I’m a human. He’s from Arabia, you’re from the Balkans, I’m from the U.S. We’re all three foreigners, aren’t we?”
“Yes. But he and I are foreigners who will drive the British out—”
“And let French or Italians in.”
“Ali Higg is a fighter, I tell you! He’s an Arab, and he knows how to control Arabs just as the Prophet Mohammed did. He has only begun in a small way, but—”
“But he’ll wind up like a small-town sport in the lock-up, the way he’s going,” said Grim. “Now, see here, Jael, I’m just as set on doing my bit in the world as Ali Higg is. Maybe I’m a mite more tolerant, but there isn’t a man or woman living who can shift me off a course once I’m set on it.
“Ali Higg considers the Arabs need a holy war. I’m hell bent for peace. I’m going to stop him. I’m not arguing that point, for it won’t bear arguing, and I’m not trying to convert you. But you’re in my power, and though I sure would hate to inconvenience a lady, I’m that plumb remorseless I’d separate you from Ali Higg for ever unless you helped me call him off the warpath.”
“Help you!” she exclaimed with horror.
“Sure. You’ve got to! There’s no law this side of the border, Jael, that can make me hand you over to authority. There’s no mandate out here yet. There never will be one if I can prevent it. I’m here to keep a foreign army from trespassing across the Jordan, it being my crazy notion that Arabs can evolve their own government, if let. You’ve got to help me keep that foreign army out, or take the consequences.”
She laughed at last. It was rather a hard laugh without much mirth in it.
“Your words are a liar’s, but your voice rings true,” she said. “I think you’re only another of these diplomatists.”
“I’m that diplomatic I’m chancing my hide to save other peoples,” he answered. “Let’s be quite frank, Jael. I’m in danger out here. All I’ve got with me besides two respectable men are thieves from El-Kalil. That little army of Ali Higg’s lies between me and the border, and I’m no kind of a darn-fool optimist when it comes to figuring on Ali Higg’s hospitality in Petra. Nor am I kidding myself I can persuade His Dibs by a theological argument or any cheap advice.
“But I’ve reasoned it out this way—if Ali Higg sends Ayisha to El- Kalil rather than trust you to do your shopping, that’s because he sets a value on you. Since he sends you out in charge of a raid on El-Maan I guess he sets a high value on you. That’s as good as saying you’ve got influence. Believe me, Jael, you’ll use that influence to suit my plans or we’re not going to be friends!”
“Friends?” she said, and stared at him.
“Sure. Why not? Look at the men I’ve got with me; they’re all my friends. I’m right proud to say it. I might have hanged most of them once, but I never knew it do much good to a man to hang him; so we get acquainted, and one way and another we contrive to keep on good terms.
“See my point? Nobody’d hang you if I scooted back over the border with you, Jael. There isn’t a law that would cover your case. But they’d deport you, and you’d be an outcast with tabs kept on you, and I’ve seen your sort come to a bad end. I never liked to see it. I never saw anybody gain by it. I’d sooner see you winning everyone’s respect by sticking to Ali Higg and schooling him to play safe.”
Her pale face actually blushed under the freckles. She had not lived in America for nothing. As the wife of a polygamist she knew exactly what he meant about winning respect. Her sort enjoys to be patronized by reformers and social uplifters about as much as an eagle likes a cage.
“You talk well,” she said, “but you must be a fool at bottom, or you wouldn’t suggest friendship with me. Can you imagine me not pushing you into Ali Higg’s clutches at the first chance?”
“Sure I can, or I wouldn’t waste time talking. You’ve got more sense than that, Jael. You might trick me. It has been done. Ali Higg might scupper me and the crowd—he mighty likely would. But that ‘ud be the end of Ali Higg’s prospects, for as sure as my name’s Grim the British would smash him to avenge me, and you know it! If they didn’t get you they’d get him, and you’d become the property of the first petty chief who could lay his hands on you. So let’s talk like two sensible people.”
“You’ll find me sensible,” she answered. “I shall just do nothing— tell you nothing.”
“You’ve told too much already to be able to stop now, Jael,” he answered, smiling. “I’m sure you won’t put me to the necessity of searching you; you’ve too much pride for that. So suppose you pass me Ali Higg’s seal—the one you sign all his letters with. No, don’t try to hide it in the sand; put it here.”
He held his hand out, and she bit her lip in mortification. It was too bad that she had made that slip of boasting to Narayan Singh and me about the seal, but there was nothing else for it now and she gave it to him—a gold thing as big as a silver half-dollar, marvelously engraved.
“That settles the financial end of it,” said Grim. “We can impound all that money in the Bank of Egypt—although I’m free to admit I wouldn’t take such a seal away from a friend of mine.”
“Give it back, then,” she answered with a bitter little laugh. “I see I’ll have to be your friend.”
He smiled—wonderfully gently. There wasn’t the least offense in it, although there wasn’t any credulity either.
“I always aim to prove myself a man’s friend—or a woman’s,” he said, “before expecting to be trusted out of sight. I dare say that’s your code too?”
“If ever Ali Higg catches you with that seal—”
“He won’t catch me, Jael; he won’t catch me. But you shall have it back, and the money shan’t be touched, if you play straight.”
She shrugged her shoulders petulantly, admitting defeat but resenting it. There came a time, months later,