The Eye of Zeitoon eBook

Talbot Mundy
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 370 pages of information about The Eye of Zeitoon.

The Eye of Zeitoon eBook

Talbot Mundy
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 370 pages of information about The Eye of Zeitoon.

Will and I fell in love with the crowd, and engaged a room over the great arched entrance.  We were aware from the first of the dull red marks on the walls of the room, where bed-bugs had been slain with slipper heels by angry owners of the blood; but we were not in search of luxury, and we had our belongings and a can of insect-bane brought down from the hotel at once.  The fact that stallions squealed and fought in the stalls across the courtyard scarcely promised us uninterrupted sleep; but sleep is not to be weighed in the balance against the news of eastern nights.

We went down to the common room close beside the main entrance, and pushed the door open a little way; the men who sat within with their backs against it would only yield enough to pass one person in gingerly at a time.  We saw a sea of heads and hats and faces.  It looked impossible to squeeze another human being in among those already seated on the floor, nor to make another voice heard amid all that babel.

But the babel ceased, and they did make room for us—­places of honor against the far wall, because of our clean clothes and nationality.  We sat wedged between a Georgian in smelly, greasy woolen jacket, and a man who looked Persian but talked for the most part French.  There were other Persians beyond him, for I caught the word poul—­money, the perennial song and shibboleth of that folk.

The day was fine enough, but consensus of opinion had it that snow was likely falling in the Taurus Mountains, and rain would fall the next day between the mountains and the sea, making roads and fords impassable and the mountain passes risky.  So men from the ends of earth sat still contentedly, to pass earth’s gossip to and fro—­an astonishing lot of it.  There was none of it quite true, and some of it not nearly true, but all of it was based on fact of some sort.

Men who know the khans well are agreed that with experience one learns to guess the truth from listening to the ever-changing lies.  We could not hope to pick out truth, but sat as if in the pit of an old-time theater, watching a foreign-language play and understanding some, but missing most of it.

There was a man who drew my attention at once, who looked and was dressed rather like a Russian—­a man with a high-bridged, prominent, lean nose—­not nearly so bulky as his sheepskin coat suggested, but active and strong, with a fiery restless eye.  He talked Russian at intervals with the men who sat near him at the end of the room on our right, but used at least six other languages with any one who cared to agree or disagree with him.  His rather agreeable voice had the trick of carrying words distinctly across the din of countless others.

“What do you suppose is that man’s nationality?” I asked Will, shouting to him because of the roar, although he sat next me.

“Ermenie!” said a Turk next but one beyond Will, and spat venomously, as if the very name Armenian befouled his mouth.

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Project Gutenberg
The Eye of Zeitoon from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.