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"Indeed, I wished him well. I was willing to forgive the debt if he would let me take the child."
A horrid look of agony pa.s.sed over Gregorio's face, but he remained silent and motionless. The watchers saw that he understood and that a tempest of wrath and pain surged within the lifeless body. They stooped down and carried him downstairs and across the road to the Penny-farthing Shop. The Jew's touch burned Gregorio like hot embers, but he could not shake himself free. When he was laid on a bed in a room above the bar, through the floor of which rose discordant sounds of revelry, Amos left them. Madam Marx flung herself on the bed beside him and wept.
Two days later Gregorio sat, at sunset, by Madam Marx's side, on the threshold of the cafe. He had recovered speech and use of limbs. With wrathful eloquence he had told his companion the history of the terrible night, and now sat weaving plots in his maddened brain.
Replying to his a.s.sertion that Amos was responsible, Madam Marx said:
"Don't be too impetuous, Gregorio. Search cunningly before you strike.
Maybe your wife knows something."
"My wife! Not she; she is with her Englishman. Amos has stolen the boy, and you know it as well as I do. Didn't he tell you he wanted the child?
I met him that night, and he told me if I did not pay I had only myself to blame for the trouble that would fall on me."
"Come, come, Gregorio, cheer up!" said the woman; for the Greek, with head resting on his hands, was sobbing violently.
"I tell you, all I cared for in life is taken from me. But I will have my revenge, that I tell you too."
For a while they sat silent, looking into the street. At last Gregorio spoke:
"My wife has not returned since that night, has she?"
"I have not seen her."
"Well, I must see her; she can leave the Englishman now."
Madam Marx laughed a little, but said nothing.
"There is Ahmed," cried Gregorio, as a blue-clad figure pa.s.sed on the other side of the street. He beckoned to the Arab, who came across at his summons.
"You seem troubled," he said, as he looked into the Greek's face; and Gregorio retold the terrible story.
"You know nothing of all this?" he added, suspiciously, as his narrative ended.
"Nothing."
"My G.o.d! it is so awful I thought all the world knew of it. You often nursed and played with the boy?"
"Ay, and fed him. We Arabs love children, even Christian children, and I will help you if I can."
"Why should Amos want the boy?" asked Madam Marx, as she put coffee and tobacco before the guests.
"Because I owe him money, and he knew the loss of my son would be the deadliest revenge. He will make my son a Jew, a beastly Jew. By G.o.d, he shall not, he shall not!"
"We must find him and save him," said the woman.
"He will never be a Jew. That is not what Amos wants your son for; there are plenty of Jews." Ahmed spoke quietly.
"They sacrifice children," he continued, after a moment's pause; "surely you know that, and if you would save your boy there is not much time to lose."
Gregorio trembled at Ahmed's words. He wondered how he could have forgotten the common report, and his fingers grasped convulsively the handle of his knife.
"Let us go to Amos," he said, speaking the words with difficulty, for he was choking with fear for his son.
"Wait," answered the Arab; "I will come again to-night and bring some friends with me, two men who will be glad to serve you. We Arabs are not sorry to strike at the Jews; we have our own wrongs. Wait here till I come."
"But what will you do?" asked Madam Marx, looking anxiously on the man she loved, though her words were for the Arab.
"Gregorio will ask for his son. If the old man refuses to restore him, or denies that he has taken him, then we will know the worst, and then--"
Gregorio's knife-blade glittered in the sunset rays, as he tested its sharpness between thumb and finger. The Arab watched with a smile.
"We understand one another," he said. There was no need to finish the description of his plan. With a solemn wave of his hand he left the cafe.
"That man Ahmed," said Madam Marx, "has a grudge against Amos. It dates from the bombardment, and he had waited all these years to avenge himself. I believe it was the loss of his wife."
"Amos made her a Jewess, eh?" And then, after a pause, Gregorio added:
"So we can depend on Ahmed. To-night I will win back my son or--"
"Or?" queried madam, tremblingly.
"Or Amos starts on his journey to h.e.l.l. G.o.d, how my fingers itch to slay him! The devil, the Jew devil!"
X--AT THE HOUSE OF AMOS
As Ahmed had advised, Gregorio settled himself patiently to await the summons. Madam would have liked to ask him many questions, and to have extracted a promise from him not to risk his life in any mad enterprise his accomplice might suggest. But though the Greek's body seemed almost lifeless, so quietly and immovably he rested on his chair, there was a restless look in his eyes that told her how fiercely and irrepressibly his anger burned. She knew enough of his race to know that no power on earth could stop him striking for revenge. And she trembled, for she knew also that directly he had begun to strike his madness would increase, and that only sheer physical exhaustion would stay his hand.
Madam Marx was unhappy, and as she waited on her customers her eyes rested continually on the Greek, who heeded her not. Once she carried some wine to him, and he drank eagerly, spilling a few drops on the floor first. "It's like blood," he muttered, and smiled. Madam hastily covered his mouth with her trembling fingers.
Just before midnight Ahmed arrived with his two friends. Gregorio saw them at once, and, calling them to him, they spoke together in low voices for a few moments. There was little need for words, and soon, scarcely noticed by the drinkers and gamblers, they pa.s.sed out into the street and walked slowly toward the Jew's house. Ahmed rapidly repeated the plan of action. When they reached the door they stood for a moment before they woke the Arab, and these words pa.s.sed between them:
"For a wife."
"For a sister."
"For a son."
Gregorio then demanded admittance and led the way, followed by his three friends. He had visited the house of Amos before, on less b.l.o.o.d.y but less delightful business, and he did not hesitate, but strode on to where he knew the Jew would be. His companions stood behind the curtain, awaiting the signal.
Amos looked somewhat surprised at the Greek's entrance, but motioned him to a seat, and, as on the occasion of his first visit, clapped his hands together as a signal that coffee and pipes were required.
"It is kind of you to come, for doubtless you wish to pay me what is owing."
"I wish to pay you."
"That is well. I hope you are better again. I regretted to find you so ill two nights ago."