by Talbot Mundy
“Faisal’s up against it, and he’s the best man in all this land, bar none. They’ve dealt to him from a cold deck, and he’s bound to lose this hand whichever way he plays it. To put it differently, he’s in check, but not checkmated. He’ll be checkmated, though, if the French ever lay hands on him, and then good-bye to the Arab’s chance for twenty years.
“I propose to save him for another effort, and the only way to do that is to convince him. The best way to convince him is to show him that letter, which can’t be done if Faisal’s enemies discover who carries it. If Ramsden, Jeremy, Narayan Singh and I start for Damascus, pretending that one or other of us has the letter concealed on his person, and if a woman really carries it, we’ll manage. Is Mabel Ticknor going to be the woman? That’s the point.”
“Too dangerous, Jim! Too dangerous!” Ticknor put in nervously.
“Pardon me, old man. The danger is for us four, who pretend we’ve got the thing.”
“There are lots of other women and I’ve only got one wife!” objected Ticknor.
“We’re pressed for time,” Grim answered. “You see, Ticknor, old man, you’re a Cornstalk and therefore an outsider — just a medico, who saws bones for a living, satisfied to keep your body out of the poorhouse, your soul out of hell, and your name out of the newspapers. Your wife is presumably more so. There are several officials’ wives who would jump at the chance to be useful; but a sudden trip toward Damascus just now would cause any one of them to be suspected, whereas Mabel wouldn’t be.”
“I don’t know why not!” Ticknor retorted. “Wasn’t she in here when those three murderers came to finish the lot of us? If Yussuf Dakmar makes any report at all he’ll surely say he traced the letter to this house.”
“Yussuf Dakmar came no nearer than the street,” Grim answered. “He has no notion who is in here. His three friends are in jail under lock and key, where he can’t get at them. How long have you had this house? Since yesterday, isn’t it? D’you kid yourself that Yussuf Dakmar knows who lives here?”
“I can get leave of absence. Suppose I go in Mabel’s place?” suggested Ticknor, visibly worried.
“The mere fact that she goes, while you stay here, will be presumptive evidence that she isn’t on a dangerous mission,” Grim answered. “No. It has got to be a woman. If Mabel won’t go I’ll find someone else.”
You could tell by Mabel’s eyes and attitude that she was what the salesmen call “sold” already; but you didn’t need a magnifying glass to detect that Ticknor wasn’t. Men of his wandering habit know too well what a brave, good-tempered wife means to encourage her to take long chances; for although there are lots of women who would like to wander and accept the world’s pot luck, there are precious few capable of doing it without doubling a fellow’s trouble; when they know how to halve the trouble and double the fun they’re priceless.
Grim played his usual game, which is to spank down his ace of trumps face upward on the table. Most of us forget what are trumps in a crisis.
“I guess it’s up to you, doc,” he said, turning toward Ticknor. “There’s nothing in it for you. Faisal isn’t on the make; I don’t believe he cares ten cents who is to be the nominal ruler of the Arabs, provided they get their promised independence. He’d rather retire and live privately. But he only considers himself in so far as he can serve the Arab cause. Now, you’ve risked Mabel’s life a score of times in order to help sick men in mining camps, and malaria victims and Lord knows what else. Here’s a chance to do the biggest thing of all—”
“Of course, if you put it that way ...” said Ticknor, hesitating.
“Just your style too. Nobody will know. No bouquets. You won’t have to stammer a speech at any dinner given in your honor.”
“D’you want to do it, Mabel?” asked Ticknor, looking at her keenly across the table.
“Of course I do!”
“All right, girl. Only, hurry back.”
He looked hard at Grim again, then into my eyes and then Jeremy’s.
“She’s in your hands. I don’t want to see any of you three chaps alive again unless she comes back safe. Is that clear?”
“Clear and clean!” exploded Jeremy. “It’s a bet, doc. Half a mo’, you chaps; that’s my mine at Abu Kem, isn’t it? I’ve agreed to give the thing to Faisal and make what terms I can with him. Jim and Rammy divvy up with me on my end, if any. That right? I say; let the doc and Mabel have a half-share each of anything our end amounts to.”
Well, it took about as long to settle that business as you’d expect. The doctor and Mabel protested, but it’s easier to give away a fortune that is still in prospect than a small sum that is really tangible — I mean between folk who stand on their own feet. It doesn’t seem to deprive the giver of much, or to strain the pride of the recipient unduly.
I’ve been given shares in unproven El Doradoes times out of number, and could paper the wall of, say, a good-sized bathroom with the stock certificates — may do it some day if I ever settle down. But the only gift of that sort that I ever knew to pay dividends, except to the printer of the gilt-edged scrip, is Jeremy’s gold mine; and you’ll look in vain for any mention of that in the stock exchange lists. The time to get in on that good thing was that night by Mabel Ticknor’s teapot in Jerusalem.
It was nearly midnight before we had everything settled, and there was still a lot to do before we could catch the morning train. One thing that Grim did was to take gum and paper and contrive an envelope that looked in the dark sufficiently like the alleged Faisal letter; and he carried that in his hand as he took to the street, with Narayan Singh following among the shadows within hail. Jeremy and I kept Narayan Singh in sight, for it was possible that Yussuf Dakmar had gathered a gang to waylay whoever might emerge from the house.
But he seemed to have had enough of bungling accomplices that night. Grim hadn’t gone fifty paces, keeping well in the middle of the road, when a solitary shadow began stalking him, and doing it so cautiously that though he had to cross the circles of street lamplight now and then neither Jeremy nor I could have identified him afterward.
Narayan Singh had orders not to do anything but guard Grim against assault, for Grim judged it wise to leave Yussuf Dakmar at large than to precipitate a climax by arresting him. He had the names of most of the local conspirators, and if the leader were seized too soon the equally dangerous rank and file might scatter and escape.
Down inside the Jaffa Gate, in a dark alley beside the Grand Hotel, there are usually two or three cabs standing at any hour of the night ready to care for belated Christian gentlemen who have looked on the wine when it was any color that it chanced to be. There were three there, and Grim took the first one, flourishing his envelope carelessly under the corner lamp.
Yussuf Dakmar took the next in line, and ordered the driver to follow Grim. So we naturally took the last one, all three of us crowding on to the rear seat in order to watch the cabs in front. But as soon as we had driven back outside the city gate Yussuf Dakmar looked behind him and, growing suspicious of us, ordered his driver to let us pass.
It would have been too obvious if we had stopped too, so we hid our faces as we passed, and then put Jeremy on the front seat, he looking like an Arab and being most unrecognizable. Yussuf Dakmar followed us at long range, and as the lean horses toiled slowly up the Mount of Olives to headquarters the interval between the cabs grew greater. By the time we reached the guard-house and answered the Sikh sentry’s challenge there was no sign of Grim in front, and we could only hear in the distance behind us the occasional click of a loose shoe to tell that Yussuf Dakmar was still following.
CHAPTER 6. “Better the evil that we know...”
Yussuf Dakmar had his nerve with him that night, or possibly desperation robbed him of discretion. He may have been a more than usually daring man with his wits about him, but you’d have to hunt down the valley of death before you could bring the psychoanalytic guns to bear on him for what they’re worth. I can only tell you w
hat he did, not why he did it.
The great hospice that the German nation built on the crown of the Mount of Olives to glorify their Kaiser stood like a shadow among shadows in its compound, surrounded by a fairly high wall. There was a pretty strong’ guard under an Indian officer in the guard-house at the arched main gate where the sentry challenged us.
A sentry stood at the foot of the steps under the portico at the main entrance, and there was another armed man on duty patrolling the grounds. But there were one or two other entrances, locked, though quite easy to negotiate, which the sentry could only observe while he marched toward them; for five minutes at a time, while his back was turned, at least two gates leading to official residences offered opportunity to an active man.
One lone light at a window on the top floor suggested that the officer of the night might be awake, but what with the screeching of owls and a wind that sighed among the shrubs, headquarters looked and sounded more like a deserted ancient castle than the cranium and brain-cells of Administration.
We heard Yussuf Dakmar stop his cab two hundred yards away. The cabman turned his horses and drove back toward Jerusalem without calling on Allah to witness that his fare should have been twice what he received; he didn’t even lash the horses savagely; so we supposed that he hadn’t been paid, and went on to deduce from that that Yussuf Dakmar had driven away again, after satisfying himself that the Faisal letter had reached headquarters. It was lazy, bad reasoning — the sort of superficial, smart stuff that has cost the lives of thousands of good men times out of number — four o’clock o’ the morning intelligence that, like the courage of that hour, needs priming by the foreman, or the sergeant-major, or the bosun as the case may be.
The sentry turned out the guard, who let us through the gate after a word with Narayan Singh; and the man who leaned on his bayonet under the portico at the end of the drive admitted us without any argument at all.
I suppose he thought that having come that far we must be people in authority. Ever since then I have believed all the stories told me about spies who walked where they chose unchallenged during wartime; for we three — a Sikh enlisted man, an Australian disguised as an Arab, and an American in civilian clothes — entered unannounced and unwatched the building where every secret of the Near East was pigeonholed.
We walked about the corridors and up and downstairs for ten minutes, looking in vain for Grim. Here and there a servant snored on a mat in a corner, and once a big dog came and sniffed at us without making any further comment. Jeremy kicked one man awake, who, mistaking him for an Arab, cursed him in three languages, in the name of three separate gods, and promptly went to sleep again. The sensation was like being turned loose in the strong-room of a national treasury with nobody watching if you should choose to help yourself. There are acres of floor in that building. We walked twice the whole circuit of the upper and lower corridors, knocking on dozens of doors but getting no answer and finally brought up in the entrance hall.
Then it occurred to me that Grim might have gone into the building by some private entrance, perhaps round on the eastern side, so we set out to look for one.
We had just reached the northwest angle of the building, when Narayan Singh, who was walking a pace in front, stopped suddenly and held up both hands for silence. Whoever he could see among the shadows must have heard us, but it was no rare thing for officers to come roistering down those front steps and along the drive hours after midnight, and our sudden silence was more likely to give alarm than the noise had been. I began talking again in a normal voice, saying anything at all, peering about into the shadows meanwhile. But it was several seconds before I made out what the Sikh’s keener eyes had detected instantly, and Jeremy saw it before I did.
There was a magnolia shrub about ten paces away from us, casting a shadow so deep that the ground it covered looked like a bottomless abyss. But nevertheless, something bright moved in it — perhaps the sheen of that lone light in an upper window reflected on a knife-hilt or a button — something that moved in time to a man’s breathing.
If there was a certainty in the world it was that somebody who had no right to be there was lurking in that shadow, and he was presumably up to mischief. On the other hand, I had absolutely no right in that place either. Jeremy and Narayan Singh, being both in the British Army, were liable to be disciplined, and I might be requested to leave the country, if we should happen to blunder and tree the wrong ‘possum, revenge being more than usually sweet to the official disturbed in the pursuit of unauthorized “diplomacy.” It might even be some clandestine love affair.
So I took each of my companions by the arm, gripping Jeremy’s particularly tightly, and started forward, whispering an explanation after we had turned the corner of the building. “Let one of us go and warn the guard,” I suggested. “If we should draw that cover and start a shindy, we’re more likely to get shot by the guard than thanked.”
So Narayan Singh started off for the guard-house, he being the one most capable of explaining matters to the Sikh officer, and Jeremy and I crept back through the shadows to within earshot of the dark magnolia tree, choosing a point from which we could see if anybody bolted.
You know how some uncatalogued sense informs you in the dark of the movement of the man beside you? I looked suddenly sideways toward Jeremy, knowing, although I couldn’t see him, that his eyes were seeking mine. It is only the animals who omit in the darkness those instinctive daylight movements; men don’t have sufficient control of themselves. We had both heard Grim’s voice at the same instant, speaking Arabic but unmistakable.
There were three men there. Grim was talking to the other two.
“Keep your hands on each other’s shoulders! Don’t move! I’m going to search all your pockets again. Now, Mr. Charkian. Ah! That feels like quite a pretty little weapon; mother o’ pearl on the butt? Have you a permit? Never mind; not having the weapon you won’t need a permit, will you? And papers — Mashallah! What a lot of documents; they must be highly important ones since you hide them under your shirt. I expect you planned to sell them, eh? Too bad! Too bad!
“You keep your hands on Mr. Charkian’s shoulders, Yussuf Dakmar, or I’ll have to use violence! I’m not sure, Mr. Charkian, that it wouldn’t be kinder to society to send you to jail after all; you need a bath so badly. It seems a pity that a chief clerk to the Administration shouldn’t have a chance to wash himself, doesn’t it? Well, I’ll have to read these papers afterward — after we’ve usurped the prerogative of Destiny and mapped out a little of the future. Now — are you both listening? Do you know who I am?”
There was no answer. “You, Mr. Charkian?”
“I think you are Major Grim.”
“Ah! You wish to flatter me, don’t you? Never mind; let us pretend I’m Major Grim disguised as an Arab; only, I’m afraid we must continue the conversation in Arabic; I might disillusion you if I tried to talk English. We’ll say then that I’m Major Grim, disguised. Let’s see now ... .What would he do in the circumstances? Here’s Yussuf Dakmar, wanted for murder in the city and known to be plotting a massacre, seen climbing a wall when the sentry’s back was turned, and caught in conference with Mr. Charkian, confidential clerk to the Administration. I’m sorry I didn’t hear all that was said at your conference, for that might have made it easier to guess what Major Grim would do.”
“Don’t play with us like a cat playing with a mouse!” snarled somebody. “Tell us what you want. If you were Major Grim you’d have handed us over to those officers who passed just now. You’re just as much irregular as we are. Hurry up and make your bargain, or the guard may come and arrest us all!”
“Yes, hurry up!” complained the other man. “I don’t want to be caught here; and as for those papers you have taken, if we are caught I shall say you stole them from the office — you and Yussuf Dakmar, and that I followed you to recover them, and you both attacked me!”
“Very well,” said Grim’s voice pleasantly. “I’ll let you go. I
think you’re dangerous. You’d better be quick, because I think I hear the guard coming!”
“Give me back the papers, then!”
“Aha! Will you wait and discuss them with the guard, or go at once?”
The Armenian clerk didn’t answer, but got up and slunk away.
“Why did you let that fool go?” demanded Yussuf Dakmar. “Now he will awaken some officer and start hue and cry with a story that we robbed him. Listen! There comes the guard! We had better both run!”
“Not so fast!” Grim answered.
And then he raised his voice perceptibly, as if he wished to be overheard:
“I think those men who passed just now were not officers at all. Perhaps they were strangers. It may be that one of them is confused, and is leading the guard in the wrong direction!”
“Don’t make so much noise then!” retorted Yussuf Dakmar. Jeremy, who thinks habitually about ten times as fast as I do, slipped away at once into the shadows to find Narayan Singh and decoy the guard elsewhere. I didn’t envy him the job, for Sikhs use cold steel first and argue afterward when on the qui vive in the dark. However, he accomplished his purpose. Narayan Singh saved his life, and the guard arrested him on general principles. You could hear both Jeremy and Narayan Singh using Grim’s name freely. Yussuf Dakmar wasn’t deaf. He gave tongue:
“There! Did you hear that? They are speaking of Major Grim. You are a fool if you wait here any longer. That fellow Grim is a devil, I tell you. If he finds us we are both lost!”
“We have to be found first,” Grim answered, and you could almost hear him smile.
“Quick then! What do you want?” snapped Yussuf Dakmar. Grim’s answer was the real surprise of the evening. It bewildered me as much as it astonished Yussuf Dakmar.
“I want that letter that came from the Emir Faisal!”
“I haven’t got it! I swear I haven’t!”
“I know that already, for I searched you. Where is it?”