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spies. Then he whispered to me to help him carry out the “money” bags. So we each took three for the first trip, and each contrived to drop one. By the time all ten bags were in the car there can hardly have remained any doubt in the conspirators’ minds that we were really taking funds to Mustapha Kemal, or at any rate to somebody up north.

      But Davey was no halfway concession maker. Having lent himself unwillingly to the trick, he did his utmost to make it succeed, like a good sport. He stuck his head out of a bedroom window.

      “Don’t forget, now, to send me those rugs from Damascus!” he shouted.

      It all went like clockwork. Glancing back as we drove by the Jaffa Gate I saw the three spies walk away, and there is very often more information in men’s backs than in their faces. They walked like laborers returning home with a day’s work behind them, finished; not at all like men in doubt, nor as if they suspected they were followed, although in fact they were. Three Sikhs emerged from the corner by the Gate and strolled along behind them. Detailed preparations for the round-up had begun. The unostentatious mechanism of it seemed more weird and terrible than the conspiracy itself.

      There was a full company of Sikhs standing to arms in a side street leading off the Jaffa Road, but they took no notice of us. Their officer looked keenly at us once, and then very deliberately stared the other way, illustrating how some fighting men make pretty poor dissemblers; every one of his dark-skinned rank and file had observed all the details of our outfit without seeming to see us at all.

      “We’re using nothing but Sikhs on this job,” said Turner. “British troops wouldn’t appreciate the delicacy of the situation. Moslems couldn’t be trusted not to talk. The Sikhs enjoy the surreptitious part of it, and don’t care enough about the politics to get excited. Wish I might be in at the finish, though! Have you any notion what the real objective is?”

      “No,” said I, and tried not to feel, or look pleased with myself. But no mere amateur can conceal that, in the moment of discovery, he knows more about the inside of an official business than one of the Administration’s lawful agents. That is nine-tenths of the secret of “bossed” politics—the sheer vanity of being on the inside, “in the know.” I suppose I smirked. “Damn this ride to Haifa! What the hell have you done, I wonder, that you should have a front pew? Is the Intelligence short of offi­cers?”

      I had done nothing beyond making Grim’s acquaintance and by good luck tickling his flair for odd friendship. I thought it better not to say that, so I went on lying.

      “I don’t suppose I know any more than you do.”

      “Rot! I posted the men who watched you into Djemal’s place yesterday, and watched you out again. You acted pretty poorly, if you ask me. It’s a marvel we didn’t have to go in there and rescue you. I suppose you’re another of Grim’s favorites. He picks some funny ones. Half the men in jail seem to be friends of his.”

      I decided to change the subject.

      “I was told to change clothes and walk back after a mile or so,” I said. “Suppose we don’t make it a Marathon. Why walk farther than we need to?”

      “Uh!”

      I think he was feeling sore enough to take me ten miles for the satisfaction of making me tramp them back to Jerusalem. But it turned out not to be his day for working off grievances. We were bowling along pretty fast, and had just reached open country where it would be a simple matter to change into other clothes without risk of being seen doing it, when we began to be overhauled by another, larger car that came along at a terrific pace. It was still too dark to make out who was in it until it drew almost abreast.

      “The Administrator, by the Horn Spoon! What next, I won­der! Pull up!” said Turner. “Morning, sir.”

      The two cars came to a standstill. The Administrator leaned out.

      “I think I can save you a walk,” he said, smiling. “How about changing your clothes between the cars and driving back with me?”

      I did not even know yet what new disguise I was to assume, but Turner opened a hand-bag and produced a suit of my own clothes and a soft hat.

      “Burgled your bedroom,” he explained.

      All he had forgotten was suspenders. No doubt it would have given him immense joy to think of me walking back ten miles without them.

      Sir Louis gave his orders while I changed clothes.

      “You’d better keep going for some time, Turner. No need to go all the way to Haifa, but don’t get back to Jerusalem before noon at the earliest, and be sure you don’t talk to anybody on your way.”

      Turner drove on. I got in beside the Administrator.

      “Grim tells me that you don’t object to a certain amount of risk. You’ve been very useful, and he thinks you would like to see the end of the business. I wouldn’t think of agreeing to it, only we shall have to call on you as a witness against Scharnhoff and Noureddin Ali. As you seem able to keep still about what you know, it seems wiser not to change witnesses at this stage. It is highly important that we should have one unofficial observer, who is neither Jew nor Moslem, and who has no private interest to serve. But I warn you, what is likely to happen this morning will be risky.”

      I looked at the scar on his cheek, and the campaign ribbons, and the attitude of absolute poise that can only be attained by years of familiarity with danger.

      “Why do you soldiers always act like nursemaids toward civilians?” I asked him. “We’re bone of your bone.”

      He laughed.

      “Entrenched privilege! If we let you know too much you’d think too little of us!”

      We stopped at a Jew’s store outside the city for suspenders, and then made the circuit outside the walls in a whirlwind of dust, stopping only at each gate to get reports from the officers commanding companies drawn up in readiness to march in and police the city.

      “It’s all over the place that disaster of some sort is going to happen today,” said Sir Louis. “It only needs a hatful of rumours to set Jerusalemites at one another’s throats. But we’re ready for them. The first to start trouble this morning will be the first to get it. Now—sorry you’ve no time for breakfast—here’s the Jaffa Gate. Will you walk through the city to that street where Grim talked with you from a roof last night? You’ll find him thereabouts. Sure you know the way? Good-bye. Good luck! No, you won’t need a pass; there’ll be nobody to interfere with you.”

      CHAPTER NINETEEN

      “Dead or alive, sahib.”

      I did get breakfast nevertheless, but in a strange place. The city shutters were coming down only under protest, because, just as in Boston and other hubs of sanctity, shop-looting starts less than five minutes after the police let go control. There was an average, that morning, of about ten rumours to the ear. So the shop-keepers had to be ordered to open up. About the mildest rumour was that the British had decide to vacate and to leave the Zionists in charge of things. You couldn’t fool an experienced Jew as to what would happen in that event. There was another rumour that Mustapha Kemal was on the march. Another that an Arab army was invading from the direction of El-Kerak. But there were British officers walking about with memorandum books, and a fifty-pound fine looked more serious than an outbreak that had not occurred yet. So they were putting down their shutters.

      I had nearly reached the Haram-es-Sheriff, and was passing a platoon of Sikhs who dozed beside their rifles near a street corner, when Grim’s voice hailed me through the half open door behind them. He was back in his favourite disguise as a Bedouin, squatting on a mat near the entrance of a vaulted room, where he could see through the door without being seen.

      “This is headquarters for the present,” he explained. “Soon as we bag the game we’ll run ’em in here quick as lightning. Most likely keep ’em here all day, so’s not to have to parade ’em through the streets until after dark. A man’s coming soon with coffee and stuff to eat.”

      “What’s

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