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But he had only taken a step or two when he was confronted. It was the man who had been nailing up the posters; he was still holding the hammer. Armando frowned. He was in no mood to be further threatened that day, but before he could take the hammer from the man’s hand and either break it in two or thrust it down the man’s throat, the man had stepped back and dropped the hammer, evidently realizing the possible misinterpretation that could be put upon the tool.

“Wait!” the man said hastily, holding up an apologetic hand. “How would you like a job?”

Armando let his huge arms fall, relaxing his fists. Here he was leaving home for the first time in his life, and two minutes after the decision had been made, he was being offered a job! Well, with his size and strength, it was not surprising. There were undoubtedly many jobs to be had — loading wagons, unloading wagons. This man probably wanted him to finish nailing up the posters. Well, he could do that, too. It took little brains that he could see.

“What’s the job?” he asked.

“Working in the circus. As the strong man,” the man said.

He could get into the circus without paying! Then Armando stopped to think. “What’s a strong man in the circus supposed to do?” he asked suspiciously, and then shook his head at himself for being so stupid. Undoubtedly to put up the tent. Well, he could do that, too.

“Just lift things,” the man said, and eyed Armando’s size and the muscles in the big arms. He didn’t know how the next statement might be taken, so he made his voice conversational, making it all seem quite innocuous. “Maybe sometimes fight people, too.”

“Fight people?” Normally Armando did not like to fight people; his mother was opposed to his fighting. Still, he had fought all the boys in his school, many of them older — although not bigger — and he had never lost. And he had been taught that when one took a job one did what one was told. “All right,” he said. “How much would the job pay?”

The man wet his lips. He would have liked to say just room and board, but there was always the possibility that the boy was not as stupid as he looked. He didn’t look particularly bright, but why take a chance with a boy that size? With those monstrous muscles? “You come along with me,” the man said confidently. “We’ll come to some arrangement, I’m sure.”

And that was how Armando Mattos Silveira de Costa became known as the Man Mountain of Angola, the Angolan Ape, the Benguela Beast; as well as being billed as the Strongest Man in the World! That was also how the posters that advised the world thereafter of Armando’s talents all stated that he would fight any man in the audience for a period of six rounds by any rules the challenger might prefer, the challenger, should he defeat Armando, to receive Five Pounds! On the other hand, should the challenger lose — which had never failed to occur — the challenger was guaranteed the best medical aid the town where the bout took place could offer. To Armando it meant a few minutes of minimum effort, for the local champions that fell before his lethal fists it meant momentary glory and often the soothing hand of some fair maiden afterward, and to the owner of the circus, of course, it meant a performance for which all tickets never failed to be sold. Everyone was happy.

Except Armando’s mother, even though her pride in her son now came close to bursting the heart in her more than ample breast as she heard of triumph after triumph for the fruit of her loins. She would lean over and cuff her husband’s ears.

“The money could have been ours, idiota!” she would say viciously, and swing the heavy arms that were Armando’s legacy. “Burro! Bêsta! Estúpido!” And Armando’s father would sadly know that he would sleep alone one more night…

The money that had been earned in the almost three years since Barney and Harry Isaacs’ two nephews had arrived in Kimberley had not been bad money; in the East End of London it would have been untold wealth. But the East End was not Kimberley, and the ambitions Barney Isaacs had had in the East End were not the ambitions Barney Isaacs had in Kimberley in southern Africa. For one thing, there had been no Fay Bees — beautiful, desirable Fay Bees — in the East End. Although Barney would have been the first to admit that any attempt at matchmaking on his part had been a total failure.

“Barney,” Harry had said one day with narrowed eyes to indicate he was running short of patience, a thing quite unlike Barney’s normally calm brother, “are you trying to push your girl friend off onto me?”

Barney had instantly flared. “What d’you mean?”

“What I say. Now, look,” Harry had said in a more normal tone, “I like Fay. She’s a great girl, and a beautiful girl. But she’s simply not for me. Or me for her, as far as that goes. I told you before that I have a girl waiting for me back in London that I’m going back to as soon as we build up our stake a little more.”

“You’re crazy,” Barney said but without conviction, and somehow felt happy about it.

“I’m crazy,” Harry had agreed evenly, and had looked at his brother a long moment. “Anyway,” he added quietly, “one of us is crazy.” And he had gone about his business.

True, Barney Isaacs was now the top kopje walloper in the Kimberley area. The best stones — those that were offered to wallopers and not dealers in the first place — were offered to him. And for the stones he bought, he received the best prices when he resold them. He had established a reputation for honesty and integrity, as well as one for his detailed knowledge of diamonds, and it all helped. But he was still only a kopje walloper and no more, and he knew it. And it galled him. He wasn’t a diamond trader, a dealer, and that was the bitter fact. He worked out of his hat, so to speak — or, rather, out of old Rhodes’ oat bag, which was more like it. He had no stock, nor any office in which to display large quantities of stones to the buyers from London or Paris; that was the way to make money! Not buying and selling one or two decent stones a day, together with a dozen or so inferior ones. They had made some money, he didn’t deny that; but they hadn’t made what he called money! What he meant was, he didn’t have capital. He had his daily profits, plus what Jack Joel and Solly Loeb took from the two claims he had bought as part of their general partnership, but they weren’t great claims. They lay near the reef, rather than in the center of the mine; but unfortunately, those in the center of the mine cost real money.

Oh, yes, things had changed in the four years since Barney had become a kopje walloper; but he didn’t know if they had changed for the better or not, or at least had changed as he would have wished. His two nephews were there, it was true, and they had both turned out to be hardworking, intelligent boys, who didn’t seem to mind the long hours down in the mine, or the boring but vital work at the sorting table. It was also true that the diamond market had improved and decent stones that could be cut to a carat or more could now easily bring as much as four pounds a carat. More diggers had formed partnerships to work the mines more efficiently; fewer were leaving. Kimberley was beginning to take on the appearance of an organized town. Barney’s few books, the ones he had rented out until they had fallen to pieces, would have been a joke now. Someone had raised subscriptions and had started a free library, which had its own building and everything, even a full-time librarian. Tents were now by far in the minority, and the Miner’s Committee had strict rules as to the killing of animals and the disposal of wastes.