Jimgrim - The Spy Thrillers Series. Talbot Mundy
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When you’re broke it’s no use figuring on the pile you should have; then’s the time to use nickels for all they’re worth. And in a desperate situation it isn’t any good worrying about what you don’t know; the thing is to act on what you do know. Then, if circumstances get the upper hand in spite of energy and courage, nobody can blame you. At least, they’ll blame you, but they haven’t any right to, which is different.
I knew one or two things for a fact. One was that Grim has genius, that he stands by his friends, and that he was keener than anybody on finding a solution of the general mess. Another certainty was that Ali Baba had gone to tell him the facts of the situation. It wasn’t going to help me or anybody else to take into the reckoning just then the possibility of Ali Baba failing to find Grim. That was up to providence and Ali Baba.
A third indisputable fact was that Grim had stated his intention of putting Ayisha in command of these hundred and forty men. That made three things that I knew, which the men in front of me did not. It didn’t look easy to build a compelling argument out of them, but I could try. And a fourth fact—that they imagined Grim was Ali Higg, and Ali Higg was Grim, but that I knew the truth of the matter—provided an element of confusion, which any professional spell-binder could easily turn to advantage. Not being a trained orator gave me no right to lie down on the job, and I waded in.
“Allaho Akbar!” I roared again. (I can bellow like a mad bull on suitable occasion.)
“Allaho Akbar!” they answered. We were getting on finely. A common platform was established. It was as if a soap-box orator in Union Square had started his speech by asserting that the Stars and Stripes is a first-class flag; whoever didn’t think so in the audience would have to pretend to agree for his hat’s sake. There was no fear of opposition now for a minute or two.
“Ye followers of the Lion of Petra,” I thundered out, “Heroes of the desert—faithful followers of the true Prophet, on whom be peace —I bring word to you from Ali Higg, your leader.”
“Akbar!” they began to shout. So I had guessed right. It was only their commander who was disaffected.
I held up the rifle again for silence, and kept them waiting, having often noticed that the pauses are the best part of a speech.
“Ali Higg the terrible, the Lord of the limits of the Desert and the Waters, had declared against Saoud in the name of Allah. Saoud, who dares to call himself Avenger, shall lie low!”
“Akbar! Akbar Ali Higg!” they shouted; for shouting cost nothing in any language, and commits nobody as long as reporters are not present.
“This fellow who calls himself Avenger has eight hundred men,” I went on. “But what are numbers? Had the Prophet numbers when he marched against his enemies? Allah makes all things easy!”
“Allaho Akbar!” they agreed.
“This Avenger fellow is a jackal, but he of Petra is a Lion. And like a lion he has taken to the desert, where cunning and craft win the day against numbers, even as the wind can blow the sand.”
I was far from being certain of that simile; but my audience were not pedagogues. They were men who wanted to listen to optimism, and didn’t care whether sand or wind resembled a lion’s cunning, or otherwise.
“And does a lion hunt in company?” I demanded, glaring about me as if I had propounded a problem such as only a sage could answer. “Nay! He hunts alone! He stalks. He lies in wait. He strikes at the unexpected moment. And who can stand against him? He is terrible in his wrath, and his enemies are confused, not knowing the path he took nor the direction of his coming. Woe, then, to the lion’s enemies!”
That part of the speech had such a good effect on them that I paused again to let the emotion work; and glaring this and that way with a rolling eye, as I have seen the professionals behave, I got a chance to observe Ibrahim ben Ah’s tent. The old man was still sitting in there, cursing steadily, I should say, by the way his beard moved; and Narayan Sing was so well placed that you couldn’t possibly tell from outside the tent that he held a cocked revolver in his hand. The two seemed to be deep in conversation.
“But how about the Lion’s friends?” I roared, as soon as there was perfect silence. “Does he desert them? Never! Does he leave them to their own resources? No! Does he leave them at the mercy of an old man, whose days all numbered, whose marrowless bones might quake at the thought of facing the Avenger? Do ye think that the Lion would do such a thing?”
I paused once more, and as they did not know what was coming they held their breath.
“What think ye of the Lion’s wife?”
“Jael! Jael!” they began to shout, and I didn’t contradict them. I didn’t dare mention Ayisha yet, because the news of her divorce might possibly have reached them. The main point was to establish the thought in their minds that Ali Higg was going to send a woman deputy to override, and perhaps replace altogether, old Ibrahim ben Ah.
“The Lion’s wife knows all his plans,” I went on. “She keeps his secrets. She understands the craft with which he hunts. She had courage, and guile, and ability. Are ye afraid to follow a woman? Has a woman never led you to victory?”
They made no secret of the fact that they preferred a woman. Possibly even Jael’s discipline was less fierce than Ibrahim ben Ah’s or Ali Higg’s.
“Good! We will follow his wife!” they shouted.
“He had more than one wife,” I countered then. “What does it matter to you which wife he sends?”
They said it made no difference. I think they rather hoped a junior wife would come, whose hand would fall less heavily than Jael’s on offenders. They were just as feckless in the hour of uncertainty as any other crowd of men —the usual human mixture of emotions, fierce and sheeplike alternately—accustomed to be led, and consequently afraid of nothing so much as to be left to their own resources.
Can you think of one crowd of rebels since history was written that in a climax wasn’t eager for a change of captains? They were still full of confidence in Ali Higg, because he had always held himself as much as possible aloof from them. He was a sort of mystery, who led them once in a while in person on some whirlwind foray, and who imposed his drastic punishments more often than not by deputy. So Ibrahim ben Ah, the deputy, was a weariness to the flesh, while Ali Higg remained a hero in their imaginations.
I dare say that in that minute I could have led a mutiny against Ibrahim ben Ah. It would only have called for a little mouthing of religious platitudes—quotations from the Koran—any of the pabulum with which all agitators fool the crowd into believing it has justice on its side (for you can’t do much, even with a crowd of pirates, unless you make them think the issue is a moral one.)
But, setting aside the fact that mutinous troops are useless to anybody, and Grim, as far as I understood the situation, wanted a force in being to maneuver against the Avenger, there is something in my make-up that rebels against that sort of thing. It strikes me as playing off-side, and I don’t enjoy to win my point, earn money, or resolve a difficulty that way.
To trick an opponent is one thing. To take him by surprise, catch him napping,