Talbot Mundy

The Ivory Trail


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of his cache."

      "He ought to have fallen for that," said Yerkes, but the doctor shook his head.

      "He's an Arab. They're Shiah Muhammedans. Their Paradise is a pleasant place from all accounts. He advised me to drink my own elixir, and have lots and lots of years in which to find the ivory, without being beholden to him for help. Wily old scaramouch! But I had a better card up my sleeve. He has taken to discarding ancient prejudices—doesn't drink or anything like that, but treats his harem almost humanly. Lets 'em have anything that costs him nothing. Even sends for a medico when they're sick! Getting lax in his old age! Sent for me a while ago to attend his favorite wife—sixty years old if she's a day, and as proud of him as if he were the king of Jerusalem. Well—I looked her over, judged she was likely to keep her bed, and did some thinking."

      "You know their religious law? A woman can't go to Paradise without special intercession, mainly vicarious. I found a mullah—that's a Muhammedan priest—who'd do anything for half of nothing. They most of them will. I gave him fifty dibs, and promised him more if the trick worked. Then I told the old woman she was going to die, but that if she'd tell me the secret of Tippoo Tib's ivory I had a mullah handy who would pass her into Paradise ahead of her old man. What did she do? She called Tippoo Tib, and he turned me out of the house. So I'm fifty out of pocket, and what's worse, the old girl didn't die—got right up out of bed and stayed up! My rep's all smashed to pieces among the Arabs!"

      "D'you suppose the old woman knew the secret?" I asked.

      "Not she! If she'd known it she'd have split! The one ambition she has left is to be with Tippoo Tib in Paradise. But he can intercede for her and get her in—provided he feels that way; so she rounded on me in the hope of winning his special favor! But the old ruffian knows better! He'll no more pray for her than tell me where the ivory is! The Koran tells him there are much better houris in Paradise, so why trouble to take along a toothless favorite from this world?"

      "Has the government any official information?" asked Monty.

      "Quite a bit, I'm told. Official records of vain searches. Between you and me and these four walls, about the only reason why they didn't hang the old slave-driving murderer was that they've always hoped he'd divulge the secret some day. But he hates the men who broke him far too bitterly to enrich them on any terms! If any man wins the secret from him it'll be a foreigner. They tell me a German had a hard try once. One of Karl Peters' men."

      "That'll be Carpets!" said Monty. "Somebody belonging to Carpets—Karl

       Peters."

      "The man's serving a life sentence in the jail for torturing our friend

       Juma here."

      "Then Juma knows the secret?"

      "So they say. But Juma, too, hopes to go to Paradise and wait on

       Tippoo Tib."

      "He told us just now that he dislikes Tippoo Tib," I objected.

      "So he does, but that makes no difference. Tippoo Tib is a big chief—sultani kubwa—take any one he fancies to Heaven with him!"

      We all looked at Juma with a new respect.

      "I got Juma his job in here," said the doctor. "I've rather the notion of getting my ten per cent. on the value of that ivory some day!"

      "Are there any people after it just now?" asked Monty.

      "I don't know, I'm sure. There was a German named Schillingschen, who spent a month in Zanzibar and talked a lot with Tippoo Tib. The old rascal might tell his secret to any one he thought was England's really dangerous enemy. Schillingschen crossed over to British East if I remember rightly. He might be on the track of it."

      "Tell us more about Schillingschen," said Monty.

      "He's one of those orientalists, who profess to know more about Islam than Christianity—more about Africa and Arabia than Europe—more about the occult than what's in the open. A man with a shovel beard—stout—thick-set—talks Kiswahili and Arabic and half a dozen other languages better than the natives do themselves. Has money—outfit like a prince's—everything imaginable—Rifles—microscopes—cigars—wine. He didn't make himself agreeable here—except to the Arabs. Didn't call at the Residency. Some of us asked him to dinner one evening, but he pleaded a headache. We were glad, because afterward we saw him eat at the hotel—has ways of using his fingers at table, picked up I suppose from the people he has lived among."

      "Are you nearly ready to let us out of here?" asked Monty.

      "Your quarantine's up," said the doctor. "I'm only waiting for word from the office."

      We drank three rounds of cocktails with him, after which he grew darkly friendly and proposed we should all set out together in search of the hoard.

      "I've no money," he assured us. "Nothing but a knowledge of the natives and a priceless thirst. I'd have to throw up my practise here. Of course I'd need some sort of guarantee from you chaps."

      The proposal falling flat, he gathered the nearly empty bottles into one place and shouted for his boy to come and carry them away.

      "Think it over!" he urged as he got up to leave us. "You might take a bigger fool than me with you. You'd need a doctor on a trip like that. I'm an expert on some of these tropical diseases. Think it over!"

      "Fred!" said Monty, as soon as the doctor had left the room, "I'm tempted by this ivory of yours."

      But Fred, in the new blue dressing-gown the doctor had brought, was in another world—a land of trope and key and metaphor. For the last ten minutes he had kept a stub of pencil and a scrap of paper working, and now the strident tones of his too long neglected concertina stirred the heavy air and shocked the birds outside to silence. The instrument was wheezy, for in addition to the sacrilege the port authorities had done by way of disinfection, the bellows had been wetted when Fred plunged from the sinking Bundesrath and swam. But he is not what you could call particular, as long as a good loud noise comes forth that can be jerked and broken into anything resembling tune.

      "Tempted, are you?" he laughed. He looked like a drunken troubadour en deshabille, with those up-brushed mustaches and his usually neat brown beard all spread awry. "Temptation's more fun than plunder!"

      Yerkes threw an orange at him, more by way of recognition than remonstrance. We had not heard Fred sing since he tried to charm cholera victims in the Bundesrath's fo'castle, and, like the rest of us, he had his rights. He sang with legs spread wide in front of him, and head thrown back, and, each time he came to the chorus, kept on repeating it until we joined in.

      There's a prize that's full familiar from Zanzibar to France;

       From Tokio to Boston; we are paid it in advance.

       It's the wages of adventure, and the wide world knows the feel

       Of the stuff that stirs good huntsmen all and brings the

       hounds to heel!

       It's the one reward that's gratis and precedes the toilsome task—

       It's the one thing always better than an optimist can ask!

       It's amusing, it's amazing, and it's never twice the same;

       It's the salt of true adventure and the glamour of the game!

      CHORUS

       It is tem-tem-pitation!

       The one sublime sensation!

       You may doubt it, but without it

       There would be no derring-do!

       The reward the temptee cashes

       Is too often dust and ashes,

       But you'll need no spurs or lashes

       When temptation beckons you!

      Oh, it drew the Roman legions to old Britain's distant isle,

       And it beckoned H. M. Stanley to the sources of the Nile;

       It's the one