Jimgrim - The Spy Thrillers Series. Talbot Mundy
Чтение книги онлайн.
Читать онлайн книгу Jimgrim - The Spy Thrillers Series - Talbot Mundy страница 211
* Beautiful.
** Supremely beautiful.
It was a first-class song, with never an end to it, for Mahommed added stanza after stanza as the days wore by. It included finally a wonderful account of my defeat of Mujrim in the Valley of Moses, and Mujrim was made the hero of it by the ingenious process of ascribing fearful and supernatural qualities to me.
But the whole song was merely a setting for the wholly fictitious story of Grim’s conquest in battle of the allied “thousands” of the Avenger and Ali Higg combined, winding up with a gorgeous climax, in which Grim carried off “Shellabi Ayisha” from under the eyes of both of them. Grim was the hero of the epic, and however long the song grew day by day, it always ended with a final crashing chorus:
Akbar! Akbar! Jimgrim! Jimgrim!
We sang it all the way home, and roared it in the narrow streets of El- Kalil; and although I suppose that Homer may have been more truthful, I’ve a notion he is an overrated epic-builder in comparison to my friend Mahommed ben Ali Baba ben Hamza, youngest son of Ali Baba, dean of thieves and wiliest old fox in Palestine.
THE END
The Lost Trooper
CHAPTER I “Talk about transmuting elements—”
CHAPTER II “Grim’s a bird—you ought to meet Grim.”
CHAPTER III “Protection looks best from a long way off.”
CHAPTER IV “In the name of Him Who never sleeps it is a bargain!”
CHAPTER V “Suppose we stage an accident!”
CHAPTER VI “Yemen—a thousand miles away—that hardly sounds like Jeremy!”
CHAPTER VII “A member of a strangely free and independent, brave and disrespectful sect.”
CHAPTER VIII “Miyan, you are a great magician!”
CHAPTER IX “Ask the camel of Jmil Ras!”
CHAPTER X “You’re a fallen angel, Ramsden!”
CHAPTER XII “Ross, Ramsden, and Grim. Grim, Ramsden, and Ross.”
CHAPTER XIV “By Allah, it is too late!”
CHAPTER XV “Ali Baba! Ali Baba!”
CHAPTER I
“Talk about transmuting elements—”
How can you begin a tale at the beginning, when it has as many beginnings as there are people in it? I don’t see that these critics who make literary laws have done much else than shut out two-thirds of the best tales by making it impossible to tell them.
At any rate, as I’m telling this one; and as nobody need listen if he doesn’t like, I’m going to begin it where I please, which happens to be in Berlin, Germany, which I visited long enough after the Boer War for men who fought all through it, to show themselves there without having to have police protection.
My business is prospecting, and I hadn’t made my little pile in those days—hadn’t attained, in other words, to that only essential of contentment in this world: the ability as well as the inclination and the right to suit yourself as to what you’ll do next, where you’ll go, and how.
My particular pet delight is independence. But in those days I was trying to get a syndicate of Prussian von’s and zu’s to finance an undertaking in what was then known as German East Africa. Looking back through the smoke of adventurous years I should say now that it would have been about as easy to persuade the U.S. Government to finance a claimant to the throne of France. I cooled my heels, spent money in a very bad hotel, and dare say I should have been insulted finally, if it weren’t for my odd inch or so above six feet and the muscle that carries it upright. Even in those days the Prussians weren’t openly rude to anyone they weren’t sure they could lick.
But I made a profit, for I met an Australian named Jeremy Ross. It was worth a trip half around the world to make that man’s acquaintance.
He was swearing at the methods of the same hotel proprietor and trying to tap the same financial sluices. We had two common grievances, which is sufficient basis for friendship in most circumstances; and, as we both were, comparatively speaking, broke, we walked about together a good deal, seeing what Berliners thought were sights, while the syndicate of von