Greenmantle John Buchan (korean novels in english TXT) đ
- Author: John Buchan
Book online «Greenmantle John Buchan (korean novels in english TXT) đ». Author John Buchan
âWhy, no,â he said. âBut they gave me the key, and I could make my own arrangements. In Germany I buried myself deep in the local atmosphere and never peeped out. That was my game, for I was looking for something in Germany itself, and didnât want any foreign cross-bearings. As you know, I failed where you succeeded. But so soon as I crossed the Danube I set about opening up my lines of communication, and I hadnât been two days in this metropolis before I had got my telephone exchange buzzing. Sometime Iâll explain the thing to you, for itâs a pretty little business. Iâve got the cutest cipherâ ââ ⊠No, it ainât my invention. Itâs your Governmentâs. Anyone, babe, imbecile, or dotard, can carry my messagesâ âyou saw some of them todayâ âbut it takes some mind to set the piece, and it takes a lot of figuring at my end to work out the results. Some day you shall hear it all, for I guess it would please you.â
âHow do you use it?â I asked.
âWell, I get early noos of what is going on in this cabbage-patch. Likewise I get authentic noos of the rest of Europe, and I can send a message to Mr. X. in Petrograd and Mr. Y. in London, or, if I wish, to Mr. Z. in Noo York. Whatâs the matter with that for a post-office? Iâm the best informed man in Constantinople, for old General Liman only hears one side, and mostly lies at that, and Enver prefers not to listen at all. Also, I could give them points on what is happening at their very door, for our friend Sandy is a big boss in the best-run crowd of mountebanks that ever fiddled secrets out of menâs hearts. Without their help I wouldnât have cut much ice in this city.â
âI want you to tell me one thing, Blenkiron,â I said. âIâve been playing a part for the past month, and it wears my nerves to tatters. Is this job very tiring, for if it is, I doubt I may buckle up.â
He looked thoughtful. âI canât call our business an absolute rest-cure any time. Youâve got to keep your eyes skinned, and thereâs always the risk of the little packet of dynamite going off unexpected. But as these things go, I rate this stunt as easy. Weâve only got to be natural. We wear our natural clothes, and talk English, and sport a Teddy Roosevelt smile, and there isnât any call for theatrical talent. Where Iâve found the job tight was when I had got to be natural, and my naturalness was the same brand as that of everybody round about, and all the time I had to do unnatural things. It isnât easy to be going down town to business and taking cocktails with Mr. Carl Rosenheim, and next hour being engaged trying to blow Mr. Rosenheimâs friends sky-high. And it isnât easy to keep up a part which is clean outside your ordinary life. Iâve never tried that. My line has always been to keep my normal personality. But you have, Major, and I guess you found it wearing.â
âWearingâs a mild word,â I said. âBut I want to know another thing. It seems to me that the line youâve picked is as good as could be. But itâs a cast-iron line. It commits us pretty deep and it wonât be a simple job to drop it.â
âWhy, thatâs just the point I was coming to,â he said. âI was going to put you wise about that very thing. When I started out I figured on some situation like this. I argued that unless I had a very clear part with a big bluff in it I wouldnât get the confidences which I needed. Weâve got to be at the heart of the show, taking a real hand and not just looking on. So I settled I would be a big engineerâ âthere was a time when there werenât many bigger in the U-nited States than John S. Blenkiron. I talked large about what might be done in Mesopotamia in the way of washing the British down the river. Well, that talk caught on. They knew of my reputation as an hydraulic expert, and they were tickled to death to rope me in. I told them I wanted a helper, and I told them about my friend Richard Hanau, as good a German as ever supped sauerkraut, who was coming through Russia and Romania as a benevolent neutral; but when he got to Constantinople would drop his neutrality and double his benevolence. They got reports on you by wire from the Statesâ âI arranged that before I left London. So youâre going to be welcomed and taken to their bosoms just like John S. was. Weâve both got jobs we can hold down, and now youâre in these pretty clothes youâre the dead ringer of the brightest kind of American engineerâ ââ ⊠But we canât go back on our tracks. If we wanted to leave for Constanza next week theyâd be very polite, but theyâd never let us. Weâve got to go on with this adventure and nose our way down into Mesopotamia, hoping that our luck will holdâ ââ ⊠God knows how we will get out of it; but itâs no good going out to meet trouble. As I observed before, I believe in an all-wise and beneficent Providence, but youâve got to give him a chance.â
I am bound to confess the prospect staggered me. We might be let in for fightingâ âand worse than fightingâ âagainst our own side. I wondered if it wouldnât be better to make a bolt for it, and said so.
He shook his head. âI reckon not. In the first place we havenât finished our inquiries. Weâve got Greenmantle located right enough, thanks to you, but we still know mighty little about that holy man. In the second place it wonât be as bad as you
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