The Eye of Zeitoon. Talbot Mundy

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Название The Eye of Zeitoon
Автор произведения Talbot Mundy
Жанр Языкознание
Серия
Издательство Языкознание
Год выпуска 0
isbn 4057664606143



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masked meekness that disguises most outrageous racial pride.

      "It is common report," I said, "that the Turks settled all Armenian problems long ago by process of massacre until you have no spirit for revolt left."

      "The report lies, that is all!" he answered. Then suddenly he beat on his chest with clenched fist. "There is spirit here! There is spirit in Zeitoon! No Osmanli dare molest my people! Come to Zeitoon to shoot bear, boar, antelope! I will show you! I will prove my words!"

      "Were those six jingaan in the common room your men?" I asked him, and he laughed as suddenly as he had stormed, like a teacher at a child's mistake.

      "Jingaan is a bad word," he said. "I might kill a man who named me that—depending on the man. My brother I would kill for it—a stranger perhaps not. Those men are Zingarri, who detest to sleep between brick walls. They have a tent pitched in the yard."

      "Are they your men?"

      "Zingarri are no man's men."

      The denial carried no conviction.

      "Is there nothing but hunting at Zeitoon?" Will demanded.

      "Is that not much? In addition the place itself is wonderful—a mountain in a mist, with houses clinging to the flanks of it, and scenery to burst the heart!"

      "What else?" I asked. "No ancient buildings?"

      He changed his tactics instantly.

      "Effendi," he said, leaning forward and pointing a forefinger at me by way of emphasis, "there are castles on the mountains near Zeitoon that have never been explored since the Turks—may God destroy them!—overran the land! Castles hidden among trees where only bears dwell! Castles built by the Seljuks—Armenians—Romans—Saracens—Crusaders! I know the way to every one of them!"

      "What else?" demanded Will, purposely incredulous.

      "Beyond Zeitoon to north and west are cave-dwellers. Mountains so hollowed out that only a shell remains, a sponge—a honeycomb! No man knows how far those tunnels run! The Turks have attempted now and then to smoke out the inhabitants. They were laughed at! One mountain is connected with another, and the tunnels run for miles and miles!"

      "I've seen cave-dwellings in the States," Will answered, unimpressed.

       "But just where do you come in?"

      "I do not understand."

      "What do you propose to get out of it?"

      "Nothing! I am proud of my country. I am sportman. I am pleased to show."

      We both jeered at him, for that explanation was too outrageously ridiculous. Armenians love money, whatever else they do or leave undone, and can wring a handsome profit out of business whose very existence the easier-going Turk would not suspect.

      "See if I can't read your mind," said Will. "You'll guide us for some distance out of town, at a place you know, and your jingaan-gipsy brethren will hold us up at some point and rob us to a fare-you-well. Is that the pretty scheme?"

      Some men would have flown into a fury. Some would have laughed the matter off. Any and every crook would have been at pains to hide his real feelings. Yet this strange individual was at a loss how to answer, and not averse to our knowing that.

      For a moment a sort of low cunning seemed to creep over his mind, but he dismissed it. Three times he raised his hands, palms upward, and checked himself in the middle of a word.

      "You could pay me for my services," he said at last, not as if that were the real reason, nor as if he hoped to convince us that it was, but as if he were offering an excuse that we might care to accept for the sake of making peace with our own compunctions.

      "There are four in our party," said Will, apropos apparently of nothing.

       The effect was unexpected.

      "Four?" His eyes opened wide, and he made the knuckle-bones of both hands crack like caps going off. "Four Eenglis sportman?"

      "I said four. If you're willing to tell the naked truth about what's back of your offer, I'll undertake to talk it over with my other friends. Then, either we'll all four agree to take you up, or we'll give you a flat refusal within a day or two. Now—suit yourself."

      "I have told the truth—Zeitoon—caves—boar—antelope—wild boar.

       I am a very good guide. You shall pay me handsomely."

      "Sure, we'll ante up like foreigners. But why do you make the proposal?

       What's behind it?"

      "I never saw you until this afternoon. You are Eenglis sportmen.

       I can show good sport. You shall pay me. Could it be simpler?"

      It seemed to me we had been within an ace of discovery, but the man's mind had closed again against us in obedience to some racial or religious instinct outside our comprehension. He had been on the verge of taking us into confidence.

      "Let the sportmen think it over," he said, getting up. "Jannam! (My soul!) Effendi, when I was a younger man none could have made me half such a sportmanlike proposal without an answer on the instant! A man fit to strike the highway with his foot should be a judge of men! I have judged you fit to be invited! Now you judge me—the Eye of Zeitoon!"

      "What is your real name?"

      "I have none—or many, which is the same thing! I did not ask your names; they are your own affair!"

      He stood with his hand on the door, not irresolute, but taking one last look at us and our belongings.

      "I wish you comfortable sleep, and long lives, effendim!" he said then, and swung himself out, closing the door behind him with an air of having honored us, not we him particularly. And after he had gone we were not at all sure that summary of the situation was not right.

      We lay awake on our cots until long after midnight, hazarding guesses about him. Whatever else he had done he had thoroughly aroused our curiosity.

      "If you want my opinion that's all he was after anyway!" said Will, dropping his last cigarette-end on the floor and flattening it with his slipper.

      "Cut the cackle, and let's sleep!"

      We fell asleep at last amid the noise of wild carousing; for the proprietor of the Yeni Khan, although a Turk, and therefore himself presumably abstemious, was not above dispensing at a price mastika that the Greeks get drunk on, and the viler raki, with which Georgians, Circassians, Albanians, and even the less religious Turks woo imagination or forgetfulness.

      There was knife-fighting as well as carousal before dawn, to judge by the cat-and-dog-fight swearing in and out among the camel pickets and the wheels of arabas. But that was the business of the men who fought, and no one interfered.

       Table of Contents

      A TIME AND TIMES AND HALF A TIME

      When Cydnus bore the Taurus snows

       To sweeten Cleopatra's keels,

       And rippled in the breeze that sings

       From Kara Dagh, where leafy wings

       Of flowers fall and gloaming steals

       The colors of the blowing rose,

       Old were the wharves and woods and ways—

       Older the tale of steel and fire,

       Involved intrigue, envenomed plan,

       Man marketing his brother man

       By dread duress to glut desire.

       No peace was in those olden days.