Jimgrim - The Spy Thrillers Series. Talbot Mundy
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The wiser one looks, and the less one says, in Arab lands, the less trouble there’s likely to be. I tried to look extremely wise, and said nothing.
“Where is Jimgrim?” he demanded.
“If you can tell me that I’ll give you ten piastres,” I answered.
“I will give you fifty if you tell me!”
“Why do you want to know?”
“He is my friend. He said I should see him here. But I have not seen him. He said also I should see you. You are the Amerikani? And you don’t know where he is? Truly? Then, when you see him, will you say to him, ’Mahommed ben Hamza is here with nine men at the house of Abu Shamah?’ Jimgrim will understand.”
I nodded, and the man from Hebron walked away without another word.
“Did he steal your watch?” asked Ahmed. They are as jealous as children, those Arabs.
There was a second execution while I walked back through the city. A wide-eyed, panic-stricken poor devil with slobber on his jaws came tearing down-street with a mob at his heels. We stepped into an alley to let the race go by, but he doubled down the alley opposite. Before he had run twenty yards along it some one hit the back of his head with a piece of rock. A second later they had pounced on him, and in less than a minute after that he was kicking in the noose of a hide rope slung over a house-beam. I don’t know what they hanged him for. No one apparently knew. But they used his carcase for a target and shot it almost to pieces.
I kept on looking for Grim, although the task seemed hopeless. Of course, I could not give a hint of my real purpose. But as Grim knew that the talk about a school-teacher was my passport to the place, it seemed possible that he might use that as an excuse for getting in touch with me. So I told Ahmed to show me the schools.
They weren’t worth looking at—mere tumble-down sheds in which Moslem boys were taught to say the Koran by heart. The places where Christian missionaries once had been were all turned into stores, and even into stables for the horses of the notables.
So I returned to ben Nazir’s house, and found old Sheikh Anazeh sitting outside on the step, as motionless as a tobacco-store Indian but twice as picturesque. He still had his own rifle over his knees, and the plundered one slung over his shoulder by a strap; he never stirred abroad unarmed.
I asked him what the conference of notables was going to be about, and he told me to mind my own business. That struck me as an excellent idea, so, not having slept at all the previous night, I went upstairs and lay on the bed. There was no lock on the door, so I set the chair against it.
Ben Nazir was a man who had traveled a great deal, and picked up western notions of hospitality to add to the inborn eastern sense of sacredness in the relation between host and guest. It seems that an hour or two later he came to take me down to a Gargantuan meal, but, feeling the chair against the door, and hearing snores, he decided it was better manners to let me lie in peace.
So I did not wake up again until after midnight. The moonlight was streaming through a little high-perched window, and fell on the white-robed, ghostly-looking figure of a man, who sat with crossed legs on the end of the bed. I thought I was dead and in hell.
That is no picturesque exaggeration about a man’s hair standing when he is terrified. It really does. I would have yelled aloud, if the breath would have come, but there is a trick of sudden fear that seems to grip your lungs and hold them impotent. The thing on the end of the bed had no eye-brows. It grinned as if it knew all about evil, and were hungry, and living men were its food.
I don’t know how long I stared at the thing, but it seemed like a week. At last it spoke, and I burst into a sweat with the reaction.
“Good job you don’t know how to fasten a door with a chair. I’ll have to show you that trick, or you’ll be dying before your time. Sh-h-h! Don’t make a noise!”
I sat up and looked more closely at him. It was the Ichwan of the afternoon—Sheikh Suliman ben Saoud. And he was speaking unmistakable American. I began again to believe I was dreaming. He chuckled quietly and lit a cigarette.
“Aren’t you wise to me yet?”
“Grim?”
“Who else?”
“But what’s happened to your face? You’re all one-sided.”
“Oh, that’s easy. I just take out my false teeth. The rest is done with a razor and some brown stain. I thought you were going to spot me when you first came. Did you? I didn’t think so. Did you act as well as all that?”
“No. Looked all over town for you afterward.”
“Uh-huh. I thought that was too natural to be acting. Pick up any news in town?”
“Saw a hanging, and met a man who calls himself Mahommed ben Hamza. He’s waiting at the house of Abu Shamah.”
“Any men with him?”
“Nine.”
“Three more than he promised. Ben Hamza is the most honest thief and dependable liar in Palestine—a cheerful murderer who sticks closer than a brother. I saved him once from being hung, because he smiles so nicely. Any more news?”
“I expect none that you don’t know. There’s a sheikh named Abdul Ali from Damascus, preaching a raid into Palestine.”
Grim nodded.
“I’m here to bag that bird.”
“Where do I come in?” I asked.
“You are the plausible excuse, that’s all. Thanks to you old Anazeh got into El-Kerak with twenty men. Two might not have been enough, even with ben Hamza and his nine.”
“Then our host ben Nazir is in on your game?”
“Not he! Up at headquarters in Jerusalem we knew all about this coming conference. These folk are ready to explode. The only way to stop it is to pull the plug—The plug is Abdul Ali. We knew we could count on old Anazeh. But the puzzle was how to get him and his men into El-Kerak. When you told me ben Nazir had invited you, I saw the way to do it. There wasn’t anybody else except Anazeh that ben Nazir could have sent to fetch you, and the old boy is a dependable friend of ours.”
“That did not stop him from raiding two villages on the British side of the Dead Sea,” I answered.
“Did he?”
“Sure. I had part of a raided sheep for breakfast.”
“Um-m-m! Well of all the—damn his impudence! The shrewd old devil must have figured that we can’t get after him for it, seeing how he’s playing our game. Bloody old horse-thief! Well, he gets away with it, this time. You’ll have to be mighty careful not to seem to recognize me. One slip and we’re done for. You’re safe enough. If they once get wise to me they’ll pull me in pieces between four horses.”
“What’s your plan?”
“It’s vague yet. Got to be an opportunist. I’m supposed to be a member of the