Greenmantle by John Buchan (learn to read activity book TXT) đ
- Author: John Buchan
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âSir Walter was right, as Blenkiron has told us. Thereâs a great stirring in Islam, something moving on the face of the waters. They make no secret of it. Those religious revivals come in cycles, and one was due about now. And they are quite clear about the details. A seer has arisen of the blood of the Prophet, who will restore the Khalifate to its old glories and Islam to its old purity. His sayings are everywhere in the Moslem world. All the orthodox believers have them by heart. That is why they are enduring grinding poverty and preposterous taxation, and that is why their young men are rolling up to the armies and dying without complaint in Gallipoli and Transcaucasia. They believe they are on the eve of a great deliverance.
âNow the first thing I found out was that the Young Turks had nothing to do with this. They are unpopular and unorthodox, and no true Turks. But Germany has. How, I donât know, but I could see quite plainly that in some subtle way Germany was regarded as a collaborator in the movement. It is that belief that is keeping the present regime going. The ordinary Turk loathes the Committee, but he has some queer perverted expectation from Germany. It is not a case of Enver and the rest carrying on their shoulders the unpopular Teuton; it is a case of the Teuton carrying the unpopular Committee. And Germanyâs graft is just this and nothing moreâthat she has some hand in the coming of the new deliverer.
âThey talk about the thing quite openly. It is called the KaĂĄba-i-hurriyeh, the Palladium of Liberty. The prophet himself is known as Zimrudââthe Emeraldââand his four ministers are called also after jewelsâSapphire, Ruby, Pearl, and Topaz. You will hear their names as often in the talk of the towns and villages as you will hear the names of generals in England. But no one knew where Zimrud was or when he would reveal himself, though every week came his messages to the faithful. All that I could learn was that he and his followers were coming from the West.
âYou will say, what about Kasredin? That puzzled me dreadfully, for no one used the phrase. The Home of the Spirit! It is an obvious cliche, just as in England some new sect might call itself the Church of Christ. Only no one seemed to use it.
âBut by and by I discovered that there was an inner and an outer circle in this mystery. Every creed has an esoteric side which is kept from the common herd. I struck this side in Constantinople. Now there is a very famous Turkish shaka called Kasredin, one of those old half-comic miracle plays with an allegorical meaning which they call orta oyun, and which take a week to read. That tale tells of the coming of a prophet, and I found that the select of the faith spoke of the new revelation in terms of it. The curious thing is that in that tale the prophet is aided by one of the few women who play much part in the hagiology of Islam. That is the point of the tale, and it is partly a jest, but mainly a religious mystery. The prophet, too, is not called Emerald.â
âI know,â I said; âhe is called Greenmantle.â
Sandy scrambled to his feet, letting his pipe drop in the fireplace.
âNow how on earth did you find out that?â he cried.
Then I told them of Stumm and Gaudian and the whispered words I had not been meant to hear. Blenkiron was giving me the benefit of a steady stare, unusual from one who seemed always to have his eyes abstracted, and Sandy had taken to ranging up and down the room.
âGermanyâs in the heart of the plan. That is what I always thought. If weâre to find the KaĂĄba-i-hurriyeh it is no good fossicking among the Committee or in the Turkish provinces. The secretâs in Germany. Dick, you should not have crossed the Danube.â
âThatâs what I half feared,â I said. âBut on the other hand it is obvious that the thing must come east, and sooner rather than later. I take it they canât afford to delay too long before they deliver the goods. If we can stick it out here we must hit the trail ... Iâve got another bit of evidence. I have solved Harry Bullivantâs third puzzle.â
Sandyâs eyes were very bright and I had an audience on wires.
âDid you say that in the tale of Kasredin a woman is the ally of the prophet?â
âYes,â said Sandy; âwhat of that?â
âOnly that the same thing is true of Greenmantle. I can give you her name.â
I fetched a piece of paper and a pencil from Blenkironâs desk and handed it to Sandy.
âWrite down Harry Bullivantâs third word.â
He promptly wrote down âv. I.â
Then I told them of the other name Stumm and Gaudian had spoken. I told of my discovery as I lay in the woodmanâs cottage.
âThe âIâ is not the letter of the alphabet, but the numeral. The name is Von EinemâHilda von Einem.â
âGood old Harry,â said Sandy softly. âHe was a dashed clever chap. Hilda von Einem? Who and where is she? for if we find her we have done the trick.â
Then Blenkiron spoke. âI reckon I can put you wise on that, gentlemen,â he said. âI saw her no later than yesterday. She is a lovely lady. She happens also to be the owner of this house.â
Both Sandy and I began to laugh. It was too comic to have stumbled across Europe and lighted on the very headquarters of the puzzle we had set out to unriddle.
But Blenkiron did not laugh. At the mention of Hilda von Einem he had suddenly become very solemn, and the sight of his face pulled me up short.
âI donât like it, gentlemen,â he said. âI would rather you had mentioned any other name on Godâs earth. I havenât been long in this city, but I have been long enough to size up the various political bosses. They havenât much to them. I reckon they wouldnât stand up against what we could show them in the U-nited States. But I have met the Frau von Einem, and that ladyâs a very different proposition. The man that will understand her has got to take a biggish size in hats.â
âWho is she?â I asked.
âWhy, that is just what I canât tell you. She was a great excavator of Babylonish and Hittite ruins, and she married a diplomat who went to glory three years back. It isnât what she has been, but what she is, and thatâs a mighty clever woman.â
Blenkironâs respect did not depress me. I felt as if at last we had got our job narrowed to a decent compass, for I had hated casting about in the dark. I asked where she lived.
âThat I donât know,â said Blenkiron. âYou wonât find people unduly anxious to gratify your natural curiosity about Frau von Einem.â
âI can find that out,â said Sandy. âThatâs the advantage of having a push like mine. Meantime, Iâve got to clear, for my dayâs work isnât finished. Dick, you and Peter must go to bed at once.â
âWhy?â I asked in amazement. Sandy spoke like a medical adviser.
Sandy spoke like a medical adviser. âBecause I want your clothesâthe things youâve got on now. Iâll take them off with me and youâll never see them again.â
âYouâve a queer taste in souvenirs,â I said.
âSay rather the Turkish police. The current in the Bosporus is pretty strong, and these sad relics of two misguided Dutchmen will be washed up tomorrow about Seraglio Point. In this game you must drop the curtain neat and pat at the end of each Scene, if you donât want trouble later with the missing heir and the family lawyer.â
I Move in Good Society
I walked out of that house next morning with Blenkironâs arm in mine, a different being from the friendless creature who had looked vainly the day before for sanctuary. To begin with, I was splendidly dressed. I had a navy-blue suit with square padded shoulders, a neat black bow-tie, shoes with a hump at the toe, and a brown bowler. Over that I wore a greatcoat lined with wolf fur. I had a smart malacca cane, and one of Blenkironâs cigars in my mouth. Peter had been made to trim his beard, and, dressed in unassuming pepper-and-salt, looked with his docile eyes and quiet voice a very respectable servant. Old Blenkiron had done the job in style, for, if youâll believe it, he had brought the clothes all the way from London. I realized now why he and Sandy had been fossicking in my wardrobe. Peterâs suit had been of Sandyâs procuring, and it was not the fit of mine. I had no difficulty about the accent. Any man brought up in the colonies can get his tongue round American, and I flattered myself I made a very fair shape at the lingo of the Middle West.
The wind had gone to the south and the snow was melting fast. There was a blue sky above Asia, and away to the north masses of white cloud drifting over the Black Sea. What had seemed the day before the dingiest of cities now took on a strange beauty, the beauty of unexpected horizons and tongues of grey water winding below cypress-studded shores. A manâs temper has a lot to do with his appreciation of scenery. I felt a free man once more, and could use my eyes.
That street was a jumble of every nationality on earth. There were Turkish regulars in their queer conical khaki helmets, and wild-looking levies who had no kin with Europe. There were squads of Germans in flat forage-caps, staring vacantly at novel sights, and quick to salute any officer on the side-walk. Turks in closed carriages passed, and Turks on good Arab horses, and Turks who looked as if they had come out of the Ark. But it was the rabble that caught the eyeâvery wild, pinched, miserable rabble. I never in my life saw such swarms of beggars, and you walked down that street to the accompaniment of entreaties for alms in all the tongues of the Tower of Babel. Blenkiron and I behaved as if we were interested tourists. We would stop and laugh at one fellow and give a penny to a second, passing comments in high-pitched Western voices.
We went into a cafe and had a cup of coffee. A beggar came in and asked alms. Hitherto Blenkironâs purse had been closed, but now he took out some small nickels and planked five down on the table. The man cried down blessings and picked up three. Blenkiron very swiftly swept the other two into his pocket.
That seemed to me queer, and I remarked that I had never before seen a beggar who gave change. Blenkiron said nothing, and presently we moved on and came to the harbour-side.
There were a number of small tugs moored alongside, and one or two bigger craftâfruit boats, I judged, which used to ply in the Aegean. They looked pretty well moth-eaten from disuse. We stopped at one of them and watched a fellow in a blue nightcap splicing ropes. He raised his eyes once and looked at us, and then kept on with his business.
Blenkiron asked him where he came from, but he shook his head, not understanding the tongue. A Turkish policeman came up and stared at us suspiciously, till Blenkiron opened his coat, as if by accident, and displayed a tiny square of ribbon, at which he saluted. Failing to make conversation with the sailor, Blenkiron flung him three of his black cigars.
âI guess you can smoke, friend, if you canât talk,â he said.
The man grinned and caught the three neatly in the air. Then to my amazement he tossed one of them back.
The donor regarded it quizzically as it lay on the pavement. âThat boyâs a connoisseur of tobacco,â he said. As we moved away I saw the Turkish policeman pick it up and put it inside his cap.
We returned by the long street on the crest of the hill. There was a man selling oranges on a tray, and Blenkiron stopped to look at them. I noticed that the man shuffled fifteen into a cluster. Blenkiron felt the oranges, as if to see that they were sound, and
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