[C&K] Semanticate

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<p>“I catch the idea,” said Goodwin. “It wont do to let the goose and gander slip through our fingers, Billy; their feathers are too valuable. Our crowd is prepared and able to step into the shoes of the government at once; but with the treasury empty wed stay in power about as long as a tenderfoot would stick on an untamed bronco. We must play the fox on every foot of the coast to prevent their getting out of the country.”</p>
<p>“By the mule-back schedule,” said Keogh, “its five days down from San Mateo. Weve got plenty of time to set our outposts. Theres only three places on the coast where they can hope to sail from—here and Solitas and Alazan. Theyre the only points well have to guard. Its as easy as a chess problem—fox to play, and mate in three moves. Oh, goosey, goosey, gander, whither do you wander? By the blessing of the literary telegraph the boodle of this benighted fatherland shall be preserved to the honest political party that is seeking to overthrow it.”</p>
<p>The situation had been justly outlined by Keogh. The down trail from the capital was at all times a weary road to travel. A jiggety-joggety journey it was; ice-cold and hot, wet and dry. The trail climbed appalling mountains, wound like a rotten string about the brows of breathless precipices, plunged through chilling snow-fed streams, and wriggled like a snake through sunless forests teeming with menacing insect and animal life. After descending to the foothills it turned to a trident, the central prong ending at Alazan. Another branched off to Coralio; the third penetrated to Solitas. Between the sea and the foothills stretched the five miles breadth of alluvial coast. Here was the flora of the tropics in its rankest and most prodigal growth. Spaces here and there had been wrested from the jungle and planted with bananas and cane and orange groves. The rest was a riot of wild vegetation, the home of monkeys, tapirs, jaguars, alligators and prodigious reptiles and insects. Where no road was cut a serpent could scarcely make its way through the tangle of vines and creepers. Across the treacherous mangrove swamps few things without wings could safely pass. Therefore the fugitives could hope to reach the coast only by one of the routes named.</p>
<p>“Keep the matter quiet, Billy,” advised Goodwin. “We dont want the Ins to know that the president is in flight. I suppose Bobs information is something of a scoop in the capital as yet. Otherwise he would not have tried to make his message a confidential one; and besides, everybody would have heard the news. Im going around now to see Dr. Zavalla, and start a man up the trail to cut the telegraph wire.”</p>
<p>“Keep the matter quiet, Billy,” advised Goodwin. “We dont want the Ins to know that the president is in flight. I suppose Bobs information is something of a scoop in the capital as yet. Otherwise he would not have tried to make his message a confidential one; and besides, everybody would have heard the news. Im going around now to see <abbr>Dr.</abbr> Zavalla, and start a man up the trail to cut the telegraph wire.”</p>
<p>As Goodwin rose, Keogh threw his hat upon the grass by the door and expelled a tremendous sigh.</p>
<p>“Whats the trouble, Billy?” asked Goodwin, pausing. “Thats the first time I ever heard you sigh.”</p>
<p>Tis the last,” said Keogh. “With that sorrowful puff of wind I resign myself to a life of praiseworthy but harassing honesty. What are tintypes, if you please, to the opportunities of the great and hilarious class of ganders and geese? Not that I would be a president, Frank—and the boodle hes got is too big for me to handle—but in some ways I feel my conscience hurting me for addicting myself to photographing a nation instead of running away with it. Frank, did you ever see the bundle of muslin that His Excellency has wrapped up and carried off?”</p>
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<p>These side streets were covered by a growth of thick, rank grass, which was kept to a navigable shortness by the machetes of the police. Stone sidewalks, little more than a ledge in width, ran along the base of the mean and monotonous adobe houses. At the outskirts of the village these streets dwindled to nothing; and here were set the palm-thatched huts of the Caribs and the poorer natives, and the shabby cabins of negroes from Jamaica and the West India islands. A few structures raised their heads above the red-tiled roofs of the one-story houses—the bell tower of the <i>Calaboza</i>, the Hotel de los Estranjeros, the residence of the Vesuvius Fruit Companys agent, the store and residence of Bernard Brannigan, a ruined cathedral in which Columbus had once set foot, and, most imposing of all, the Casa Morena—the summer “White House” of the President of Anchuria. On the principal street running along the beach—the Broadway of Coralio—were the larger stores, the government <i>bodega</i> and post-office, the <i>cuartel</i>, the rum-shops and the market place.</p>
<p>On his way Goodwin passed the house of Bernard Brannigan. It was a modern wooden building, two stories in height. The ground floor was occupied by Brannigans store, the upper one contained the living apartments. A wide cool porch ran around the house half way up its outer walls. A handsome, vivacious girl neatly dressed in flowing white leaned over the railing and smiled down upon Goodwin. She was no darker than many an Andalusian of high descent; and she sparkled and glowed like a tropical moonlight.</p>
<p>“Good evening, Miss Paula,” said Goodwin, taking off his hat, with his ready smile. There was little difference in his manner whether he addressed women or men. Everybody in Coralio liked to receive the salutation of the big American.</p>
<p>“Is there any news, Mr. Goodwin? Please dont say no. Isnt it warm? I feel just like Mariana in her moated grange—or was it a range?—its hot enough.”</p>
<p>“Is there any news, <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Goodwin? Please dont say no. Isnt it warm? I feel just like Mariana in her moated grange—or was it a range?—its hot enough.”</p>
<p>“No, theres no news to tell, I believe,” said Goodwin, with a mischievous look in his eye, “except that old Geddie is getting grumpier and crosser every day. If something doesnt happen to relieve his mind Ill have to quit smoking on his back porch—and theres no other place available that is cool enough.”</p>
<p>“He isnt grumpy,” said Paula Brannigan, impulsively, “when <span class="nowrap">he—”</span></p>
<p>But she ceased suddenly, and drew back with a deepening colour; for her mother had been a <i>mestizo</i> lady, and the Spanish blood had brought to Paula a certain shyness that was an adornment to the other half of her demonstrative nature.</p>

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<h2>X</h2>
<h3>THE SHAMROCK AND THE PALM<br/> </h3>
<p>One night when there was no breeze, and Coralio seemed closer than ever to the gratings of Avernus, five men were grouped about the door of the photograph establishment of Keogh and Clancy. Thus, in all the scorched and exotic places of the earth, Caucasians meet when the days work is done to preserve the fulness of their heritage by the aspersion of alien things.</p>
<p>Johnny Atwood lay stretched upon the grass in the undress uniform of a Carib, and prated feebly of cool water to be had in the cucumber-wood pumps of Dalesburg. Dr. Gregg, through the prestige of his whiskers and as a bribe against the relation of his imminent professional tales, was conceded the hammock that was swung between the door jamb and a calabash-tree. Keogh had moved out upon the grass a little table that held the instrument for burnishing completed photographs. He was the only busy one of the group. Industriously from between the cylinders of the burnisher rolled the finished depictments of Coralios citizens. Blanchard, the French mining engineer, in his cool linen viewed the smoke of his cigarette through his calm glasses, impervious to the heat. Clancy sat on the steps, smoking his short pipe. His mood was the gossips; the others were reduced, by the humidity, to the state of disability desirable in an audience.</p>
<p>Johnny Atwood lay stretched upon the grass in the undress uniform of a Carib, and prated feebly of cool water to be had in the cucumber-wood pumps of Dalesburg. <abbr>Dr.</abbr> Gregg, through the prestige of his whiskers and as a bribe against the relation of his imminent professional tales, was conceded the hammock that was swung between the door jamb and a calabash-tree. Keogh had moved out upon the grass a little table that held the instrument for burnishing completed photographs. He was the only busy one of the group. Industriously from between the cylinders of the burnisher rolled the finished depictments of Coralios citizens. Blanchard, the French mining engineer, in his cool linen viewed the smoke of his cigarette through his calm glasses, impervious to the heat. Clancy sat on the steps, smoking his short pipe. His mood was the gossips; the others were reduced, by the humidity, to the state of disability desirable in an audience.</p>
<p>Clancy was an American with an Irish diathesis and cosmopolitan proclivities. Many businesses had claimed him, but not for long. The roadsters blood was in his veins. The voice of the tintype was but one of the many callings that had wooed him upon so many roads. Sometimes he could be persuaded to oral construction of his voyages into the informal and egregious. To-night there were symptoms of divulgement in him.</p>
<p>Tis elegant weather for filibusterin,” he volunteered. “It reminds me of the time I struggled to liberate a nation from the poisonous breath of a tyrants clutch. Twas hard work. Tis strainin to the back and makes corns on the hands.”</p>
<p>“I didnt know you had ever lent your sword to an oppressed people,” murmured Atwood, from the grass.</p>

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<p>Three drinking shops the forlorn one next visited in succession. In all of these his money, his credit and his welcome had long since been spent; but Blythe felt that he would have fawned in the dust at the feet of an enemy that morning for one draught of <i>aguardiente</i>. In two of the <i>pulperias</i> his courageous petition for drink was met with a refusal so polite that it stung worse than abuse. The third establishment had acquired something of American methods; and here he was seized bodily and cast out upon his hands and knees.</p>
<p>This physical indignity caused a singular change in the man. As he picked himself up and walked away, an expression of absolute relief came upon his features. The specious and conciliatory smile that had been graven there was succeeded by a look of calm and sinister resolve. “Beelzebub” had been floundering in the sea of improbity, holding by a slender life-line to the respectable world that had cast him overboard. He must have felt that with this ultimate shock the line had snapped, and have experienced the welcome ease of the drowning swimmer who has ceased to struggle.</p>
<p>Blythe walked to the next corner and stood there while he brushed the sand from his garments and re-polished his glasses.</p>
<p>“Ive got to do it—oh, Ive got to do it,” he told himself, aloud. “If I had a quart of rum I believe I could stave it off yet—for a little while. But theres no more rum forBeelzebub, as they call me. By the flames of Tartarus! if Im to sit at the right hand of Satan somebody has got to pay the court expenses. Youll have to pony up, Mr. Frank Goodwin. Youre a good fellow; but a gentleman must draw the line at being kicked into the gutter. Blackmail isnt a pretty word, but its the next station on the road Im travelling.”</p>
<p>“Ive got to do it—oh, Ive got to do it,” he told himself, aloud. “If I had a quart of rum I believe I could stave it off yet—for a little while. But theres no more rum forBeelzebub, as they call me. By the flames of Tartarus! if Im to sit at the right hand of Satan somebody has got to pay the court expenses. Youll have to pony up, <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Frank Goodwin. Youre a good fellow; but a gentleman must draw the line at being kicked into the gutter. Blackmail isnt a pretty word, but its the next station on the road Im travelling.”</p>
<p>With purpose in his steps Blythe now moved rapidly through the town by way of its landward environs. He passed through the squalid quarters of the improvident negroes and on beyond the picturesque shacks of the poorer <i>mestizos</i>. From many points along his course he could see, through the umbrageous glades, the house of Frank Goodwin on its wooded hill. And as he crossed the little bridge over the lagoon he saw the old Indian, Galvez, scrubbing at the wooden slab that bore the name of Miraflores. Beyond the lagoon the lands of Goodwin began to slope gently upward. A grassy road, shaded by a munificent and diverse array of tropical flora wound from the edge of an outlying banana grove to the dwelling. Blythe took this road with long and purposeful strides.</p>
<p>Goodwin was seated on his coolest gallery, dictating letters to his secretary, a sallow and capable native youth. The household adhered to the American plan of breakfast; and that meal had been a thing of the past for the better part of an hour.</p>
<p>The castaway walked to the steps, and flourished a hand.</p>
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<p>“Suppose you go into the details,” suggested Goodwin, calmly arranging his letters on the table.</p>
<p>“All right,” said “Beelzebub.” “I like the way you take it. I despise histrionics; so you will please prepare yourself for the facts without any red fire, calcium or grace notes on the saxophone.</p>
<p>“On the night that His Fly-by-night Excellency arrived in town I was very drunk. You will excuse the pride with which I state that fact; but it was quite a feat for me to attain that desirable state. Somebody had left a cot out under the orange trees in the yard of Madama Ortizs hotel. I stepped over the wall, laid down upon it, and fell asleep. I was awakened by an orange that dropped from the tree upon my nose; and I laid there for awhile cursing Sir Isaac Newton, or whoever it was that invented gravitation, for not confining his theory to apples.</p>
<p>“And then along came Mr. Miraflores and his true-love with the treasury in a valise, and went into the hotel. Next you hove in sight, and held a pow-wow with the tonsorial artist who insisted upon talking shop after hours. I tried to slumber again; but once more my rest was disturbed—this time by the noise of the popgun that went off upstairs. Then that valise came crashing down into an orange tree just above my head; and I arose from my couch, not knowing when it might begin to rain Saratoga trunks. When the army and the constabulary began to arrive, with their medals and decorations hastily pinned to their pajamas, and their snickersnees drawn, I crawled into the welcome shadow of a banana plant. I remained there for an hour, by which time the excitement and the people had cleared away. And then, my dear Goodwin—excuse me—I saw you sneak back and pluck that ripe and juicy valise from the orange tree. I followed you, and saw you take it to your own house. A hundred-thousand-dollar crop from one orange tree in a season about breaks the record of the fruit-growing industry.</p>
<p>“And then along came <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Miraflores and his true-love with the treasury in a valise, and went into the hotel. Next you hove in sight, and held a pow-wow with the tonsorial artist who insisted upon talking shop after hours. I tried to slumber again; but once more my rest was disturbed—this time by the noise of the popgun that went off upstairs. Then that valise came crashing down into an orange tree just above my head; and I arose from my couch, not knowing when it might begin to rain Saratoga trunks. When the army and the constabulary began to arrive, with their medals and decorations hastily pinned to their pajamas, and their snickersnees drawn, I crawled into the welcome shadow of a banana plant. I remained there for an hour, by which time the excitement and the people had cleared away. And then, my dear Goodwin—excuse me—I saw you sneak back and pluck that ripe and juicy valise from the orange tree. I followed you, and saw you take it to your own house. A hundred-thousand-dollar crop from one orange tree in a season about breaks the record of the fruit-growing industry.</p>
<p>“Being a gentleman at that time, of course, I never mentioned the incident to anyone. But this morning I was kicked out of a saloon, my code of honour is all out at the elbows, and Id sell my mothers prayer-book for three fingers of <i>aguardiente</i>. Im not putting on the screws hard. It ought to be worth a thousand to you for me to have slept on that cot through the whole business without waking up and seeing anything.”</p>
<p>Goodwin opened two more letters, and made memoranda in pencil on them. Then he called “Manuel!” to his secretary, who came, spryly.</p>
<p>“The <i>Ariel</i>—when does she sail?” asked Goodwin.</p>

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<p>Keogh reflected judicially.</p>
<p>“Lets see—theres you and me and—”</p>
<p>“Not me,” said Johnny, promptly and incorrectly, holding up a foot encased in a disreputable deerskin <i>zapato</i>. “I havent been a victim to shoes in months.”</p>
<p>“But youve got em, though,” went on Keogh. “And theres Goodwin and Blanchard and Geddie and old Lutz and Doc Gregg and that Italian thats agent for the banana company, and theres old Delgado—no; he wears sandals. And, oh, yes; theres Madama Ortiz, what kapes the hotel—she had on a pair of red slippers at the <i>baile</i> the other night. And Miss Pasa, her daughter, that went to school in the States—she brought back some civilized notions in the way of footgear. And theres the <i>comandantes</i> sister that dresses up her feet on feast-days—and Mrs. Geddie, who wears a two with a Castilian instep—and thats about all the ladies. Lets see—dont some of the soldiers at the <i>cuartel</i>—no: thats so; theyre allowed shoes only when on the march. In barracks they turn their little toeses out to grass.”</p>
<p>“But youve got em, though,” went on Keogh. “And theres Goodwin and Blanchard and Geddie and old Lutz and Doc Gregg and that Italian thats agent for the banana company, and theres old Delgado—no; he wears sandals. And, oh, yes; theres Madama Ortiz, what kapes the hotel—she had on a pair of red slippers at the <i>baile</i> the other night. And Miss Pasa, her daughter, that went to school in the States—she brought back some civilized notions in the way of footgear. And theres the <i>comandantes</i> sister that dresses up her feet on feast-days—and <abbr>Mrs.</abbr> Geddie, who wears a two with a Castilian instep—and thats about all the ladies. Lets see—dont some of the soldiers at the <i>cuartel</i>—no: thats so; theyre allowed shoes only when on the march. In barracks they turn their little toeses out to grass.”</p>
<p>Bout right,” agreed the consul. “Not over twenty out of the three thousand ever felt leather on their walking arrangements. Oh, yes; Coralio is just the town for an enterprising shoe store—that doesnt want to part with its goods. Wonder if old Patterson is trying to jolly me! He always was full of things he called jokes. Write him a letter, Billy. Ill dictate it. Well jolly him back a few.”</p>
<p>Keogh dipped his pen, and wrote at Johnnys dictation. With many pauses, filled in with smoke and sundry travellings of the bottle and glasses, the following reply to the Dalesburg communication was perpetrated:<br/></p>
<blockquote>
<p class="noindent"><span class="smallcaps">Mr. Obadiah Patterson</span>,<br/><span class="ind2">Dalesburg, Ala.</span></p>
<p class="noindent"><span class="smallcaps"><abbr>Mr.</abbr> Obadiah Patterson</span>,<br/><span class="ind2">Dalesburg, Ala.</span></p>
<p class="noindent"><i>Dear Sir:</i> In reply to your favour of July 2d, I have the honour to inform you that, according to my opinion, there is no place on the habitable globe that presents to the eye stronger evidence of the need of a first-class shoe store than does the town of Coralio. There are 3,000 inhabitants in the place, and not a single shoe store! The situation speaks for itself. This coast is rapidly becoming the goal of enterprising business men, but the shoe business is one that has been sadly overlooked or neglected. In fact, there are a considerable number of our citizens actually without shoes at present.</p>
<p>Besides the want above mentioned, there is also a crying need for a brewery, a college of higher mathematics, a coal yard, and a clean and intellectual Punch and Judy show. I have the honour to be, sir,</p>
<p class="ind6">Your Obt. Servant,</p>
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<br/>
<span class="ind10">U. S. Consul at Coralio.</span>
</p>
<p class="noindent">P.S.—Hello! Uncle Obadiah. Hows the old burg racking along? What would the government do without you and me? Look out for a green-headed parrot and a bunch of bananas soon, from your old friend</p>
<p class="noindent"><abbr>P.S.</abbr>—Hello! Uncle Obadiah. Hows the old burg racking along? What would the government do without you and me? Look out for a green-headed parrot and a bunch of bananas soon, from your old friend</p>
<p class="ind15"><span class="smallcaps">Johnny</span>.<br/></p>
</blockquote>
<p>“I throw in that postscript,” explained the consul, “so Uncle Obadiah wont take offence at the official tone of the letter! Now, Billy, you get that correspondence fixed up, and send Pancho to the post-office with it. The <i>Ariadne</i> takes the mail out to-morrow if they make up that load of fruit to-day.”</p>
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<p>An hour later Billy Keogh lounged into the consulate, clean and cool in his linen clothes, and grinning like a pleased shark.</p>
<p>“Guess what?” he said to Johnny, lounging in his hammock.</p>
<p>“Too hot to guess,” said Johnny, lazily.</p>
<p>“Your shoe-store mans come,” said Keogh, rolling the sweet morsel on his tongue, “with a stock of goods big enough to supply the continent as far down as Terra del Fuego. Theyre carting his cases over to the custom-house now. Six barges full they brought ashore and have paddled back for the rest. Oh, ye saints in glory! wont there be regalements in the air when he gets onto the joke and has an interview with Mr. Consul? Itll be worth nine years in the tropics just to witness that one joyful moment.”</p>
<p>“Your shoe-store mans come,” said Keogh, rolling the sweet morsel on his tongue, “with a stock of goods big enough to supply the continent as far down as Terra del Fuego. Theyre carting his cases over to the custom-house now. Six barges full they brought ashore and have paddled back for the rest. Oh, ye saints in glory! wont there be regalements in the air when he gets onto the joke and has an interview with <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Consul? Itll be worth nine years in the tropics just to witness that one joyful moment.”</p>
<p>Keogh loved to take his mirth easily. He selected a clean place on the matting and lay upon the floor. The walls shook with his enjoyment. Johnny turned half over and blinked.</p>
<p>“Dont tell me,” he said, “that anybody was fool enough to take that letter seriously.”</p>
<p>“Four-thousand-dollar stock of goods!” gasped Keogh, in ecstasy. “Talk about coals to Newcastle! Why didnt he take a ship-load of palm-leaf fans to Spitzbergen while he was about it? Saw the old codger on the beach. You ought to have been there when he put on his specs and squinted at the five hundred or so barefooted citizens standing around.”</p>
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<p>Johnnys moccasined feet struck the floor with a thud as he wriggled out of his hammock.</p>
<p>“Get up, you idiot,” he said, sternly, “or Ill brain you with this inkstand. Thats Rosine and her father. Gad! what a drivelling idiot old Patterson is! Get up, here, Billy Keogh, and help me. What the devil are we going to do? Has all the world gone crazy?”</p>
<p>Keogh rose and dusted himself. He managed to regain a decorous demeanour.</p>
<p>“Situation has got to be met, Johnny,” he said, with some success at seriousness. “I didnt think about its being your girl until you spoke. First thing to do is to get them comfortable quarters. You go down and face the music, and Ill trot out to Goodwins and see if Mrs. Goodwin wont take them in. Theyve got the decentest house in town.”</p>
<p>“Situation has got to be met, Johnny,” he said, with some success at seriousness. “I didnt think about its being your girl until you spoke. First thing to do is to get them comfortable quarters. You go down and face the music, and Ill trot out to Goodwins and see if <abbr>Mrs.</abbr> Goodwin wont take them in. Theyve got the decentest house in town.”</p>
<p>“Bless you, Billy!” said the consul. “I knew you wouldnt desert me. The worlds bound to come to an end, but maybe we can stave it off for a day or two.”</p>
<p>Keogh hoisted his umbrella and set out for Goodwins house. Johnny put on his coat and hat. He picked up the brandy bottle, but set it down again without drinking, and marched bravely down to the beach.</p>
<p>In the shade of the custom-house walls he found Mr. Hemstetter and Rosine surrounded by a mass of gaping citizens. The customs officers were ducking and scraping, while the captain of the <i>Andador</i> interpreted the business of the new arrivals. Rosine looked healthy and very much alive. She was gazing at the strange scenes around her with amused interest. There was a faint blush upon her round cheek as she greeted her old admirer. Mr. Hemstetter shook hands with Johnny in a very friendly way. He was an oldish, impractical man—one of that numerous class of erratic business men who are forever dissatisfied, and seeking a change.</p>
<p>In the shade of the custom-house walls he found <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Hemstetter and Rosine surrounded by a mass of gaping citizens. The customs officers were ducking and scraping, while the captain of the <i>Andador</i> interpreted the business of the new arrivals. Rosine looked healthy and very much alive. She was gazing at the strange scenes around her with amused interest. There was a faint blush upon her round cheek as she greeted her old admirer. <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Hemstetter shook hands with Johnny in a very friendly way. He was an oldish, impractical man—one of that numerous class of erratic business men who are forever dissatisfied, and seeking a change.</p>
<p>“I am very glad to see you, John—may I call you John?” he said. “Let me thank you for your prompt answer to our postmasters letter of inquiry. He volunteered to write to you on my behalf. I was looking about for something different in the way of a business in which the profits would be greater. I had noticed in the papers that this coast was receiving much attention from investors. I am extremely grateful for your advice to come. I sold out everything that I possess, and invested the proceeds in as fine a stock of shoes as could be bought in the North. You have a picturesque town here, John. I hope business will be as good as your letter justifies me in expecting.”</p>
<p>Johnnys agony was abbreviated by the arrival of Keogh, who hurried up with the news that Mrs. Goodwin would be much pleased to place rooms at the disposal of Mr. Hemstetter and his daughter. So there Mr. Hemstetter and Rosine were at once conducted and left to recuperate from the fatigue of the voyage, while Johnny went down to see that the cases of shoes were safely stored in the customs warehouse pending their examination by the officials. Keogh, grinning like a shark, skirmished about to find Goodwin, to instruct him not to expose to Mr. Hemstetter the true state of Coralio as a shoe market until Johnny had been given a chance to redeem the situation, if such a thing were possible.</p>
<p>Johnnys agony was abbreviated by the arrival of Keogh, who hurried up with the news that <abbr>Mrs.</abbr> Goodwin would be much pleased to place rooms at the disposal of <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Hemstetter and his daughter. So there <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Hemstetter and Rosine were at once conducted and left to recuperate from the fatigue of the voyage, while Johnny went down to see that the cases of shoes were safely stored in the customs warehouse pending their examination by the officials. Keogh, grinning like a shark, skirmished about to find Goodwin, to instruct him not to expose to <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Hemstetter the true state of Coralio as a shoe market until Johnny had been given a chance to redeem the situation, if such a thing were possible.</p>
<p>That night the consul and Keogh held a desperate consultation on the breezy porch of the consulate.</p>
<p>“Send em back home,” began Keogh, reading Johnnys thoughts.</p>
<p>“I would,” said Johnny, after a little silence; “but Ive been lying to you, Billy.”</p>

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<section id="chapter-13" epub:type="chapter">
<h2>XIII</h2>
<h3>SHIPS<br/> </h3>
<p>Within a week a suitable building had been secured in the Calle Grande, and Mr. Hemstetters stock of shoes arranged upon their shelves. The rent of the store was moderate; and the stock made a fine showing of neat white boxes, attractively displayed.</p>
<p>Within a week a suitable building had been secured in the Calle Grande, and <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Hemstetters stock of shoes arranged upon their shelves. The rent of the store was moderate; and the stock made a fine showing of neat white boxes, attractively displayed.</p>
<p>Johnnys friends stood by him loyally. On the first day Keogh strolled into the store in a casual kind of way about once every hour, and bought shoes. After he had purchased a pair each of extension soles, congress gaiters, button kids, low-quartered calfs, dancing pumps, rubber boots, tans of various hues, tennis shoes and flowered slippers, he sought out Johnny to be prompted as to names of other kinds that he might inquire for. The other English-speaking residents also played their parts nobly by buying often and liberally. Keogh was grand marshal, and made them distribute their patronage, thus keeping up a fair run of custom for several days.</p>
<p>Mr. Hemstetter was gratified by the amount of business done thus far; but expressed surprise that the natives were so backward with their custom.</p>
<p><abbr>Mr.</abbr> Hemstetter was gratified by the amount of business done thus far; but expressed surprise that the natives were so backward with their custom.</p>
<p>“Oh, theyre awfully shy,” explained Johnny, as he wiped his forehead nervously. “Theyll get the habit pretty soon. Theyll come with a rush when they do come.”</p>
<p>One afternoon Keogh dropped into the consuls office, chewing an unlighted cigar thoughtfully.</p>
<p>“Got anything up your sleeve?” he inquired of Johnny. “If you have its about time to show it. If you can borrow some gents hat in the audience, and make a lot of customers for an idle stock of shoes come out of it, youd better spiel. The boys have all laid in enough footwear to last em ten years; and theres nothing doing in the shoe store but dolcy far nienty. I just came by there. Your venerable victim was standing in the door, gazing through his specs at the bare toes passing by his emporium. The natives here have got the true artistic temperament. Me and Clancy took eighteen tintypes this morning in two hours. Theres been but one pair of shoes sold all day. Blanchard went in and bought a pair of fur-lined house-slippers because he thought he saw Miss Hemstetter go into the store. I saw him throw the slippers into the lagoon afterwards.”</p>
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<p>Don Señor Ildefonso Federico Valdazar, <i>Juez de la Paz</i>, weighing twenty stone, attempted to convey his bulk to the <i>pulperia</i> at the corner of the plaza in order to assuage his matutinal thirst. The first plunge of his unshod foot into the cool grass struck a concealed mine. Don Ildefonso fell like a crumpled cathedral, crying out that he had been fatally bitten by a deadly scorpion. Everywhere were the shoeless citizens hopping, stumbling, limping, and picking from their feet the venomous insects that had come in a single night to harass them.</p>
<p>The first to perceive the remedy was Estebán Delgado, the barber, a man of travel and education. Sitting upon a stone, he plucked burrs from his toes, and made oration:</p>
<p>“Behold, my friends, these bugs of the devil! I know them well. They soar through the skies in swarms like pigeons. These are the dead ones that fell during the night. In Yucatan I have seen them as large as oranges. Yes! There they hiss like serpents, and have wings like bats. It is the shoes—the shoes that one needs! <i>Zapatos—zapatos para mi!</i></p>
<p>Estebán hobbled to Mr. Hemstetters store, and bought shoes. Coming out, he swaggered down the street with impunity, reviling loudly the bugs of the devil. The suffering ones sat up or stood upon one foot and beheld the immune barber. Men, women and children took up the cry: “<i>Zapatos! zapatos!</i></p>
<p>The necessity for the demand had been created. The demand followed. That day Mr. Hemstetter sold three hundred pairs of shoes.</p>
<p>Estebán hobbled to <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Hemstetters store, and bought shoes. Coming out, he swaggered down the street with impunity, reviling loudly the bugs of the devil. The suffering ones sat up or stood upon one foot and beheld the immune barber. Men, women and children took up the cry: “<i>Zapatos! zapatos!</i></p>
<p>The necessity for the demand had been created. The demand followed. That day <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Hemstetter sold three hundred pairs of shoes.</p>
<p>“It is really surprising,” he said to Johnny, who came up in the evening to help him straighten out the stock, “how trade is picking up. Yesterday I made but three sales.”</p>
<p>“I told you theyd whoop things up when they got started,” said the consul.</p>
<p>“I think I shall order a dozen more cases of goods, to keep the stock up,” said Mr. Hemstetter, beaming through his spectacles.</p>
<p>“I think I shall order a dozen more cases of goods, to keep the stock up,” said <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Hemstetter, beaming through his spectacles.</p>
<p>“I wouldnt send in any orders yet,” advised Johnny. “Wait till you see how the trade holds up.”</p>
<p>Each night Johnny and Keogh sowed the crop that grew dollars by day. At the end of ten days two-thirds of the stock of shoes had been sold; and the stock of cockleburrs was exhausted. Johnny cabled to Pink Dawson for another 500 pounds, paying twenty cents per pound as before. Mr. Hemstetter carefully made up an order for $1500 worth of shoes from Northern firms. Johnny hung about the store until this order was ready for the mail, and succeeded in destroying it before it reached the postoffice.</p>
<p>Each night Johnny and Keogh sowed the crop that grew dollars by day. At the end of ten days two-thirds of the stock of shoes had been sold; and the stock of cockleburrs was exhausted. Johnny cabled to Pink Dawson for another 500 pounds, paying twenty cents per pound as before. <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Hemstetter carefully made up an order for $1500 worth of shoes from Northern firms. Johnny hung about the store until this order was ready for the mail, and succeeded in destroying it before it reached the postoffice.</p>
<p>That night he took Rosine under the mango tree by Goodwins porch, and confessed everything. She looked him in the eye, and said: “You are a very wicked man. Father and I will go back home. You say it was a joke? I think it is a very serious matter.”</p>
<p>But at the end of half an hours argument the conversation had been turned upon a different subject. The two were considering the respective merits of pale blue and pink wall paper with which the old colonial mansion of the Atwoods in Dalesburg was to be decorated after the wedding.</p>
<p>On the next morning Johnny confessed to Mr. Hemstetter. The shoe merchant put on his spectacles, and said through them: “You strike me as being a most extraordinary young scamp. If I had not managed this enterprise with good business judgment my entire stock of goods might have been a complete loss. Now, how do you propose to dispose of the rest of it?”</p>
<p>On the next morning Johnny confessed to <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Hemstetter. The shoe merchant put on his spectacles, and said through them: “You strike me as being a most extraordinary young scamp. If I had not managed this enterprise with good business judgment my entire stock of goods might have been a complete loss. Now, how do you propose to dispose of the rest of it?”</p>
<p>When the second invoice of cockleburrs arrived Johnny loaded them and the remainder of the shoes into a schooner, and sailed down the coast to Alazan.</p>
<p>There, in the same dark and diabolical manner, he repeated his success; and came back with a bag of money and not so much as a shoestring.</p>
<p>And then he besought his great Uncle of the waving goatee and starred vest to accept his resignation, for the lotus no longer lured him. He hankered for the spinach and cress of Dalesburg.</p>
<p>The services of Mr. William Terence Keogh as acting consul, <i>pro tem.</i>, were suggested and accepted, and Johnny sailed with the Hemstetters back to his native shores.</p>
<p>The services of <abbr>Mr.</abbr> William Terence Keogh as acting consul, <i>pro tem.</i>, were suggested and accepted, and Johnny sailed with the Hemstetters back to his native shores.</p>
<p>Keogh slipped into the sinecure of the American consulship with the ease that never left him even in such high places. The tintype establishment was soon to become a thing of the past, although its deadly work along the peaceful and helpless Spanish Main was never effaced. The restless partners were about to be off again, scouting ahead of the slow ranks of Fortune. But now they would take different ways. There were rumours of a promising uprising in Peru; and thither the martial Clancy would turn his adventurous steps. As for Keogh, he was figuring in his mind and on quires of Government letter-heads a scheme that dwarfed the art of misrepresenting the human countenance upon tin.</p>
<p>“What suits me,” Keogh used to say, “in the way of a business proposition is something diversified that looks like a longer shot than it is—something in the way of a genteel graft that isnt worked enough for the correspondence schools to be teaching it by mail. I take the long end; but I like to have at least as good a chance to win as a man learning to play poker on an ocean steamer, or running for governor of Texas on the Republican ticket. And when I cash in my winnings, I dont want to find any widows and orphans chips in my stack.”</p>
<p>The grass-grown globe was the green table on which Keogh gambled. The games he played were of his own invention. He was no grubber after the diffident dollar. Nor did he care to follow it with horn and hounds. Rather he loved to coax it with egregious and brilliant flies from its habitat in the waters of strange streams. Yet Keogh was a business man; and his schemes, in spite of their singularity, were as solidly set as the plans of a building contractor. In Arthurs time Sir William Keogh would have been a Knight of the Round Table. In these modern days he rides abroad, seeking the Graft instead of the Grail.</p>

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<p>The new scheme that his mind had conceived, his stout heart indorsed, and his blue pencil corroborated, was laid around the characteristics and human frailties of the new president of Anchuria. These characteristics, and the situation out of which Keogh hoped to wrest a golden tribute, deserve chronicling contributive to the clear order of events.</p>
<p>President Losada—many called him Dictator—was a man whose genius would have made him conspicuous even among Anglo-Saxons, had not that genius been intermixed with other traits that were petty and subversive. He had some of the lofty patriotism of Washington (the man he most admired), the force of Napoleon, and much of the wisdom of the sages. These characteristics might have justified him in the assumption of the title of “The Illustrious Liberator,” had they not been accompanied by a stupendous and amazing vanity that kept him in the less worthy ranks of the dictators.</p>
<p>Yet he did his country great service. With a mighty grasp he shook it nearly free from the shackles of ignorance and sloth and the vermin that fed upon it, and all but made it a power in the council of nations. He established schools and hospitals, built roads, bridges, railroads and palaces, and bestowed generous subsidies upon the arts and sciences. He was the absolute despot and the idol of his people. The wealth of the country poured into his hands. Other presidents had been rapacious without reason. Losada amassed enormous wealth, but his people had their share of the benefits.</p>
<p>The joint in his armour was his insatiate passion for monuments and tokens commemorating his glory. In every town he caused to be erected statues of himself bearing legends in praise of his greatness. In the walls of every public edifice, tablets were fixed reciting his splendour and the gratitude of his subjects. His statuettes and portraits were scattered throughout the land in every house and hut. One of the sycophants in his court painted him as St. John, with a halo and a train of attendants in full uniform. Losada saw nothing incongruous in this picture, and had it hung in a church in the capital. He ordered from a French sculptor a marble group including himself with Napoleon, Alexander the Great, and one or two others whom he deemed worthy of the honour.</p>
<p>The joint in his armour was his insatiate passion for monuments and tokens commemorating his glory. In every town he caused to be erected statues of himself bearing legends in praise of his greatness. In the walls of every public edifice, tablets were fixed reciting his splendour and the gratitude of his subjects. His statuettes and portraits were scattered throughout the land in every house and hut. One of the sycophants in his court painted him as <abbr>St.</abbr> John, with a halo and a train of attendants in full uniform. Losada saw nothing incongruous in this picture, and had it hung in a church in the capital. He ordered from a French sculptor a marble group including himself with Napoleon, Alexander the Great, and one or two others whom he deemed worthy of the honour.</p>
<p>He ransacked Europe for decorations, employing policy, money and intrigue to cajole the orders he coveted from kings and rulers. On state occasions his breast was covered from shoulder to shoulder with crosses, stars, golden roses, medals and ribbons. It was said that the man who could contrive for him a new decoration, or invent some new method of extolling his greatness, might plunge a hand deep into the treasury.</p>
<p>This was the man upon whom Billy Keogh had his eye. The gentle buccaneer had observed the rain of favors that fell upon those who ministered to the presidents vanities, and he did not deem it his duty to hoist his umbrella against the scattering drops of liquid fortune.</p>
<p>In a few weeks the new consul arrived, releasing Keogh from his temporary duties. He was a young man fresh from college, who lived for botany alone. The consulate at Coralio gave him the opportunity to study tropical flora. He wore smoked glasses, and carried a green umbrella. He filled the cool, back porch of the consulate with plants and specimens so that space for a bottle and chair was not to be found. Keogh gazed on him sadly, but without rancour, and began to pack his gripsack. For his new plot against stagnation along the Spanish Main required of him a voyage overseas.</p>
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<p>“You dont understand, Billy,” said White, with an uneasy laugh. “Some of us fellows who try to paint have big notions about Art. I wanted to paint a picture some day that people would stand before and forget that it was made of paint. I wanted it to creep into them like a bar of music and mushroom there like a soft bullet. And I wanted em to go away and ask, What else has he done? And I didnt want em to find a thing; not a portrait nor a magazine cover nor an illustration nor a drawing of a girl—nothing but <i>the</i> picture. Thats why Ive lived on fried sausages, and tried to keep true to myself. I persuaded myself to do this portrait for the chance it might give me to study abroad. But this howling, screaming caricature! Good Lord! cant you see how it is?”</p>
<p>“Sure,” said Keogh, as tenderly as he would have spoken to a child, and he laid a long forefinger on Whites knee. “I see. Its bad to have your art all slugged up like that. I know. You wanted to paint a big thing like the panorama of the battle of Gettysburg. But let me kalsomine you a little mental sketch to consider. Up to date were out $385.50 on this scheme. Our capital took every cent both of us could raise. Weve got about enough left to get back to New York on. I need my share of that ten thousand. I want to work a copper deal in Idaho, and make a hundred thousand. Thats the business end of the thing. Come down off your art perch, Carry, and lets land that hatful of dollars.”</p>
<p>“Billy,” said White, with an effort, “Ill try. I wont say Ill do it, but Ill try. Ill go at it, and put it through if I can.”</p>
<p>“Thats business,” said Keogh heartily. “Good boy! Now, heres another thing—rush that picture—crowd it through as quick as you can. Get a couple of boys to help you mix the paint if necessary. Ive picked up some pointers around town. The people here are beginning to get sick of Mr. President. They say hes been too free with concessions; and they accuse him of trying to make a dicker with England to sell out the country. We want that picture done and paid for before theres any row.”</p>
<p>“Thats business,” said Keogh heartily. “Good boy! Now, heres another thing—rush that picture—crowd it through as quick as you can. Get a couple of boys to help you mix the paint if necessary. Ive picked up some pointers around town. The people here are beginning to get sick of <abbr>Mr.</abbr> President. They say hes been too free with concessions; and they accuse him of trying to make a dicker with England to sell out the country. We want that picture done and paid for before theres any row.”</p>
<p>In the great <i>patio</i> of Casa Morena, the president caused to be stretched a huge canvas. Under this White set up his temporary studio. For two hours each day the great man sat to him.</p>
<p>White worked faithfully. But, as the work progressed, he had seasons of bitter scorn, of infinite self-contempt, of sullen gloom and sardonic gaiety. Keogh, with the patience of a great general, soothed, coaxed, argued—kept him at the picture.</p>
<p>At the end of a month White announced that the picture was completed—Jupiter, Washington, angels, clouds, cannon and all. His face was pale and his mouth drawn straight when he told Keogh. He said the president was much pleased with it. It was to be hung in the National Gallery of Statesmen and Heroes. The artist had been requested to return to Casa Morena on the following day to receive payment. At the appointed time he left the hotel, silent under his friends joyful talk of their success.</p>
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<p>“Wrong,” said Keogh with shining eyes. “Its a slung-shot. Its a can of dynamite. Its a gold mine. Its a sight-draft on your president man for twenty thousand dollars—yes, sir—twenty thousand this time, and no spoiling the picture. No ethics of art in the way. Art! You with your smelly little tubes! Ive got you skinned to death with a kodak. Take a look at that.”</p>
<p>White took the picture in his hand, and gave a long whistle.</p>
<p>“Jove!” he exclaimed, “but wouldnt that stir up a row in town if you let it be seen. How in the world did you get it, Billy?”</p>
<p>“You know that high wall around the president mans back garden? I was up there trying to get a birds-eye of the town. I happened to notice a chink in the wall where a stone and a lot of plaster had slid out. Thinks I, Ill take a peep through to see how Mr. Presidents cabbages are growing. The first thing I saw was him and this Sir Englishman sitting at a little table about twenty feet away. They had the table all spread over with documents, and they were hobnobbing over them as thick as two pirates. Twas a nice corner of the garden, all private and shady with palms and orange trees, and they had a pail of champagne set by handy in the grass. I knew then was the time for me to make my big hit in Art. So I raised the machine up to the crack, and pressed the button. Just as I did so them old boys shook hands on the deal—you see they took that way in the picture.”</p>
<p>“You know that high wall around the president mans back garden? I was up there trying to get a birds-eye of the town. I happened to notice a chink in the wall where a stone and a lot of plaster had slid out. Thinks I, Ill take a peep through to see how <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Presidents cabbages are growing. The first thing I saw was him and this Sir Englishman sitting at a little table about twenty feet away. They had the table all spread over with documents, and they were hobnobbing over them as thick as two pirates. Twas a nice corner of the garden, all private and shady with palms and orange trees, and they had a pail of champagne set by handy in the grass. I knew then was the time for me to make my big hit in Art. So I raised the machine up to the crack, and pressed the button. Just as I did so them old boys shook hands on the deal—you see they took that way in the picture.”</p>
<p>Keogh put on his coat and hat.</p>
<p>“What are you going to do with it?” asked White.</p>
<p>“Me,” said Keogh in a hurt tone, “why, Im going to tie a pink ribbon to it and hang it on the what-not, of course. Im surprised at you. But while Im out you just try to figure out what ginger-cake potentate would be most likely to want to buy this work of art for his private collection—just to keep it out of circulation.”</p>
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<p>“Lets try the feel of one,” said White, curiously. “I never saw a thousand-dollar bill.” Keogh did not immediately respond.</p>
<p>“Carry,” he said, in an absent-minded way, “you think a heap of your art, dont you?”</p>
<p>“More,” said White, frankly, “than has been for the financial good of myself and my friends.”</p>
<p>“I thought you were a fool the other day,” went on Keogh, quietly, “and Im not sure now that you wasnt. But if you was, so am I. Ive been in some funny deals, Carry, but Ive always managed to scramble fair, and match my brains and capital against the other fellows. But when it comes to—well, when youve got the other fellow cinched, and the screws on him, and hes got to put up—why, it dont strike me as being a mans game. Theyve got a name for it, you know; its—confound you, dont you understand? A fellow feels—its something like that blamed art of yours—he—well, I tore that photograph up and laid the pieces on that stack of money and shoved the whole business back across the table. Excuse me, Mr. Losada, I said, but I guess Ive made a mistake in the price. You get the photo for nothing. Now, Carry, you get out the pencil, and well do some more figuring. Id like to save enough out of our capital for you to have some fried sausages in your joint when you get back to New York.”</p>
<p>“I thought you were a fool the other day,” went on Keogh, quietly, “and Im not sure now that you wasnt. But if you was, so am I. Ive been in some funny deals, Carry, but Ive always managed to scramble fair, and match my brains and capital against the other fellows. But when it comes to—well, when youve got the other fellow cinched, and the screws on him, and hes got to put up—why, it dont strike me as being a mans game. Theyve got a name for it, you know; its—confound you, dont you understand? A fellow feels—its something like that blamed art of yours—he—well, I tore that photograph up and laid the pieces on that stack of money and shoved the whole business back across the table. Excuse me, <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Losada, I said, but I guess Ive made a mistake in the price. You get the photo for nothing. Now, Carry, you get out the pencil, and well do some more figuring. Id like to save enough out of our capital for you to have some fried sausages in your joint when you get back to New York.”</p>
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<p>The failure of the art expedition did not stretch the cat-footed Keogh upon his back. The ups and downs of Fortune made smooth travelling for his nimble steps. His blue pencil stub was at work again before the smoke of the steamer on which White sailed had cleared away from the horizon. He had but to speak a word to Geddie to find his credit negotiable for whatever goods he wanted from the store of Brannigan &amp; Company. On the same day on which White arrived in New York Keogh, at the rear of a train of five pack mules loaded with hardware and cutlery, set his face toward the grim, interior mountains. There the Indian tribes wash gold dust from the auriferous streams; and when a market is brought to them trading is brisk and <i>muy bueno</i> in the Cordilleras.</p>
<p>In Coralio Time folded his wings and paced wearily along his drowsy path. They who had most cheered the torpid hours were gone. Clancy had sailed on a Spanish barque for Colon, contemplating a cut across the isthmus and then a further voyage to end at Calao, where the fighting was said to be on. Geddie, whose quiet and genial nature had once served to mitigate the frequent dull reaction of lotus eating, was now a home-man, happy with his bright orchid, Paula, and never even dreaming of or regretting the unsolved, sealed and monogramed Bottle whose contents, now inconsiderable, were held safely in the keeping of the sea.</p>
<p>Well may the Walrus, most discerning and eclectic of beasts, place sealing-wax midway on his programme of topics that fall pertinent and diverting upon the ear.</p>
<p>Atwood was gone—he of the hospitable back porch and ingenuous cunning. Dr. Gregg, with his trepanning story smouldering within him, was a whiskered volcano, always showing signs of imminent eruption, and was not to be considered in the ranks of those who might contribute to the amelioration of ennui. The new consuls note chimed with the sad sea waves and the violent tropical greens—he had not a bar of Scheherezade or of the Round Table in his lute. Goodwin was employed with large projects: what time he was loosed from them found him at his home, where he loved to be. Therefore it will be seen that there was a dearth of fellowship and entertainment among the foreign contingent of Coralio.</p>
<p>Atwood was gone—he of the hospitable back porch and ingenuous cunning. <abbr>Dr.</abbr> Gregg, with his trepanning story smouldering within him, was a whiskered volcano, always showing signs of imminent eruption, and was not to be considered in the ranks of those who might contribute to the amelioration of ennui. The new consuls note chimed with the sad sea waves and the violent tropical greens—he had not a bar of Scheherezade or of the Round Table in his lute. Goodwin was employed with large projects: what time he was loosed from them found him at his home, where he loved to be. Therefore it will be seen that there was a dearth of fellowship and entertainment among the foreign contingent of Coralio.</p>
<p>And then Dicky Maloney dropped down from the clouds upon the town, and amused it.</p>
<p>Nobody knew where Dicky Maloney hailed from or how he reached Coralio. He appeared there one day; and that was all. He afterward said that he came on the fruit steamer <i>Thor</i>; but an inspection of the <i>Thors</i> passenger list of that date was found to be Maloneyless. Curiosity, however, soon perished; and Dicky took his place among the odd fish cast up by the Caribbean.</p>
<p>He was an active, devil-may-care, rollicking fellow with an engaging gray eye, the most irresistible grin, a rather dark or much sunburned complexion, and a head of the fieriest red hair ever seen in that country. Speaking the Spanish language as well as he spoke English, and seeming always to have plenty of silver in his pockets, it was not long before he was a welcome companion whithersoever he went. He had an extreme fondness for <i>vino blanco</i>, and gained the reputation of being able to drink more of it than any three men in town. Everybody called him “Dicky”; everybody cheered up at the sight of him—especially the natives, to whom his marvellous red hair and his free-and-easy style were a constant delight and envy. Wherever you went in the town you would soon see Dicky or hear his genial laugh, and find around him a group of admirers who appreciated him both for his good nature and the white wine he was always so ready to buy.</p>
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<p>That Dicky Maloney would, sooner or later, explore this field was a thing to be foreseen. There were few doors in Coralio into which his red head had not been poked.</p>
<p>In an incredibly short space of time after his first sight of her he was there, seated close beside her rocking chair. There were no back-against-the-wall poses in Dickys theory of wooing. His plan of subjection was an attack at close range. To carry the fortress with one concentrated, ardent, eloquent, irresistible <i>escalade</i>—that was Dickys way.</p>
<p>Pasa was descended from the proudest Spanish families in the country. Moreover, she had had unusual advantages. Two years in a New Orleans school had elevated her ambitions and fitted her for a fate above the ordinary maidens of her native land. And yet here she succumbed to the first red-haired scamp with a glib tongue and a charming smile that came along and courted her properly.</p>
<p>Very soon Dicky took her to the little church on the corner of the plaza, and “Mrs. Maloney” was added to her string of distinguished names.</p>
<p>Very soon Dicky took her to the little church on the corner of the plaza, and “<abbr>Mrs.</abbr> Maloney” was added to her string of distinguished names.</p>
<p>And it was her fate to sit, with her patient, saintly eyes and figure like a bisque Psyche, behind the sequestered counter of the little shop, while Dicky drank and philandered with his frivolous acquaintances.</p>
<p>The women, with their naturally fine instinct, saw a chance for vivisection, and delicately taunted her with his habits. She turned upon them in a beautiful, steady blaze of sorrowful contempt.</p>
<p>“You meat-cows,” she said, in her level, crystal-clear tones; “you know nothing of a man. Your men are <i>maromeros</i>. They are fit only to roll cigarettes in the shade until the sun strikes and shrivels them up. They drone in your hammocks and you comb their hair and feed them with fresh fruit. My man is of no such blood. Let him drink of the wine. When he has taken sufficient of it to drown one of your <i>flaccitos</i> he will come home to me more of a man than one thousand of your <i>pobrecitos</i>. <i>My</i> hair he smooths and braids; to me he sings; he himself removes my <i>zapatos</i>, and there, there, upon each instep leaves a kiss. He holds—Oh, you will never understand! Blind ones who have never known a <i>man</i>.”</p>
<p>Sometimes mysterious things happened at night about Dickys shop. While the front of it was dark, in the little room back of it Dicky and a few of his friends would sit about a table carrying on some kind of very quiet <i>negocios</i> until quite late. Finally he would let them out the front door very carefully, and go upstairs to his little saint. These visitors were generally conspirator-like men with dark clothes and hats. Of course, these dark doings were noticed after a while, and talked about.</p>
<p>Dicky seemed to care nothing at all for the society of the alien residents of the town. He avoided Goodwin, and his skilful escape from the trepanning story of Dr. Gregg is still referred to, in Coralio, as a masterpiece of lightning diplomacy.</p>
<p>Many letters arrived, addressed to “Mr. Dicky Maloney,” or “Señor Dickee Maloney,” to the considerable pride of Pasa. That so many people should desire to write to him only confirmed her own suspicion that the light from his red head shone around the world. As to their contents she never felt curiosity. There was a wife for you!</p>
<p>Dicky seemed to care nothing at all for the society of the alien residents of the town. He avoided Goodwin, and his skilful escape from the trepanning story of <abbr>Dr.</abbr> Gregg is still referred to, in Coralio, as a masterpiece of lightning diplomacy.</p>
<p>Many letters arrived, addressed to “<abbr>Mr.</abbr> Dicky Maloney,” or “Señor Dickee Maloney,” to the considerable pride of Pasa. That so many people should desire to write to him only confirmed her own suspicion that the light from his red head shone around the world. As to their contents she never felt curiosity. There was a wife for you!</p>
<p>The one mistake Dicky made in Coralio was to run out of money at the wrong time. Where his money came from was a puzzle, for the sales of his shop were next to nothing, but that source failed, and at a peculiarly unfortunate time. It was when the <i>comandante</i>, Don Señor el Coronel Encarnacion Rios, looked upon the little saint seated in the shop and felt his heart go pitapat.</p>
<p>The <i>comandante</i>, who was versed in all the intricate arts of gallantry, first delicately hinted at his sentiments by donning his dress uniform and strutting up and down fiercely before her window. Pasa, glancing demurely with her saintly eyes, instantly perceived his resemblance to her parrot, Chichi, and was diverted to the extent of a smile. The <i>comandante</i> saw the smile, which was not intended for him. Convinced of an impression made, he entered the shop, confidently, and advanced to open compliment. Pasa froze; he pranced; she flamed royally; he was charmed to injudicious persistence; she commanded him to leave the shop; he tried to capture her hand—and Dicky entered, smiling broadly, full of white wine and the devil.</p>
<p>He spent five minutes in punishing the <i>comandante</i> scientifically and carefully, so that the pain might be prolonged as far as possible. At the end of that time he pitched the rash wooer out the door upon the stones of the street, senseless.</p>
@ -64,10 +64,10 @@
<p>“Oh, heavens!” exclaimed the consul, hurriedly adjusting his spectacles. “Are you a Yale man, too? Were you in that crowd? I dont seem to remember any one with red—any one named Maloney. Such a lot of college men seem to have misused their advantages. One of the best mathematicians of the class of 91 is selling lottery tickets in Belize. A Cornell man dropped off here last month. He was second steward on a guano boat. Ill write to the department if you like, Maloney. Or if theres any tobacco, or <span class="nowrap">newspa—”</span></p>
<p>“Theres nothing,” interrupted Dicky, shortly, “but this. You go tell the captain of the <i>Catarina</i> that Dicky Maloney wants to see him as soon as he can conveniently come. Tell him where I am. Hurry. Thats all.”</p>
<p>The consul, glad to be let off so easily, hurried away. The captain of the <i>Catarina</i>, a stout man, Sicilian born, soon appeared, shoving, with little ceremony, through the guards to the jail door. The Vesuvius Fruit Company had a habit of doing things that way in Anchuria.</p>
<p>“I am exceedingly sorry—exceedingly sorry,” said the captain, “to see this occur. I place myself at your service, Mr. Maloney. What you need shall be furnished. Whatever you say shall be done.”</p>
<p>“I am exceedingly sorry—exceedingly sorry,” said the captain, “to see this occur. I place myself at your service, <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Maloney. What you need shall be furnished. Whatever you say shall be done.”</p>
<p>Dicky looked at him unsmilingly. His red hair could not detract from his attitude of severe dignity as he stood, tall and calm, with his now grim mouth forming a horizontal line.</p>
<p>“Captain De Lucco, I believe I still have funds in the hands of your company—ample and personal funds. I ordered a remittance last week. The money has not arrived. You know what is needed in this game. Money and money and more money. Why has it not been sent?”</p>
<p>“By the <i>Cristobal</i>,” replied De Lucco, gesticulating, “it was despatched. Where is the <i>Cristobal</i>? Off Cape Antonio I spoke her with a broken shaft. A tramp coaster was towing her back to New Orleans. I brought money ashore thinking your need for it might not withstand delay. In this envelope is one thousand dollars. There is more if you need it, Mr. Maloney.”</p>
<p>“By the <i>Cristobal</i>,” replied De Lucco, gesticulating, “it was despatched. Where is the <i>Cristobal</i>? Off Cape Antonio I spoke her with a broken shaft. A tramp coaster was towing her back to New Orleans. I brought money ashore thinking your need for it might not withstand delay. In this envelope is one thousand dollars. There is more if you need it, <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Maloney.”</p>
<p>“For the present it will suffice,” said Dicky, softening as he crinkled the envelope and looked down at the half-inch thickness of smooth, dingy bills.</p>
<p>“The long green!” he said, gently, with a new reverence in his gaze. “Is there anything it will not buy, Captain?”</p>
<p>“I had three friends,” replied De Lucco, who was a bit of a philosopher, “who had money. One of them speculated in stocks and made ten million; another is in heaven, and the third married a poor girl whom he loved.”</p>

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@ -12,14 +12,14 @@
<p>It has been indicated that disaffection followed the elevation of Losada to the presidency. This feeling continued to grow. Throughout the entire republic there seemed to be a spirit of silent, sullen discontent. Even the old Liberal party to which Goodwin, Zavalla and other patriots had lent their aid was disappointed. Losada had failed to become a popular idol. Fresh taxes, fresh import duties and, more than all, his tolerance of the outrageous oppression of citizens by the military had rendered him the most obnoxious president since the despicable Alforan. The majority of his own cabinet were out of sympathy with him. The army, which he had courted by giving it license to tyrannize, had been his main, and thus far adequate support.</p>
<p>But the most impolitic of the administrations moves had been when it antagonized the Vesuvius Fruit Company, an organization plying twelve steamers and with a cash capital somewhat larger than Anchurias surplus and debt combined.</p>
<p>Reasonably an established concern like the Vesuvius would become irritated at having a small, retail republic with no rating at all attempt to squeeze it. So when the government proxies applied for a subsidy they encountered a polite refusal. The president at once retaliated by clapping an export duty of one <i>real</i> per bunch on bananas—a thing unprecedented in fruit-growing countries. The Vesuvius Company had invested large sums in wharves and plantations along the Anchurian coast, their agents had erected fine homes in the towns where they had their headquarters, and heretofore had worked with the republic in good-will and with advantage to both. It would lose an immense sum if compelled to move out. The selling price of bananas from Vera Cruz to Trinidad was three <i>reals</i> per bunch. This new duty of one <i>real</i> would have ruined the fruit growers in Anchuria and have seriously discommoded the Vesuvius Company had it declined to pay it. But for some reason, the Vesuvius continued to buy Anchurian fruit, paying four <i>reals</i> for it; and not suffering the growers to bear the loss.</p>
<p>This apparent victory deceived His Excellency; and he began to hunger for more of it. He sent an emissary to request a conference with a representative of the fruit company. The Vesuvius sent Mr. Franzoni, a little, stout, cheerful man, always cool, and whistling airs from Verdis operas. Señor Espirition, of the office of the Minister of Finance, attempted the sandbagging in behalf of Anchuria. The meeting took place in the cabin of the <i>Salvador</i>, of the Vesuvius line.</p>
<p>This apparent victory deceived His Excellency; and he began to hunger for more of it. He sent an emissary to request a conference with a representative of the fruit company. The Vesuvius sent <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Franzoni, a little, stout, cheerful man, always cool, and whistling airs from Verdis operas. Señor Espirition, of the office of the Minister of Finance, attempted the sandbagging in behalf of Anchuria. The meeting took place in the cabin of the <i>Salvador</i>, of the Vesuvius line.</p>
<p>Señor Espirition opened negotiations by announcing that the government contemplated the building of a railroad to skirt the alluvial coast lands. After touching upon the benefits such a road would confer upon the interests of the Vesuvius, he reached the definite suggestion that a contribution to the roads expenses of, say, fifty thousand <i>pesos</i> would not be more than an equivalent to benefits received.</p>
<p>Mr. Franzoni denied that his company would receive any benefits from a contemplated road. As its representative he must decline to contribute fifty thousand <i>pesos</i>. But he would assume the responsibility of offering twenty-five.</p>
<p><abbr>Mr.</abbr> Franzoni denied that his company would receive any benefits from a contemplated road. As its representative he must decline to contribute fifty thousand <i>pesos</i>. But he would assume the responsibility of offering twenty-five.</p>
<p>Did Señor Espirition understand Señor Franzoni to mean twenty-five thousand <i>pesos</i>?</p>
<p>By no means. Twenty-five <i>pesos</i>. And in silver; not in gold.</p>
<p>“Your offer insults my government,” cried Señor Espirition, rising with indignation.</p>
<p>“Then,” said Mr. Franzoni, in warning tone, “<i>we will change it</i>.”</p>
<p>The offer was never changed. Could Mr. Franzoni have meant the government?</p>
<p>“Then,” said <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Franzoni, in warning tone, “<i>we will change it</i>.”</p>
<p>The offer was never changed. Could <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Franzoni have meant the government?</p>
<p>This was the state of affairs in Anchuria when the winter season opened at Coralio at the end of the second year of Losadas administration. So, when the government and society made its annual exodus to the seashore it was evident that the presidential advent would not be celebrated by unlimited rejoicing. The tenth of November was the day set for the entrance into Coralio of the gay company from the capital. A narrow-gauge railroad runs twenty miles into the interior from Solitas. The government party travels by carriage from San Mateo to this roads terminal point, and proceeds by train to Solitas. From here they march in grand procession to Coralio where, on the day of their coming, festivities and ceremonies abound. But this season saw an ominous dawning of the tenth of November.</p>
<p>Although the rainy season was over, the day seemed to hark back to reeking June. A fine drizzle of rain fell all during the forenoon. The procession entered Coralio amid a strange silence.</p>
<p>President Losada was an elderly man, grizzly bearded, with a considerable ratio of Indian blood revealed in his cinnamon complexion. His carriage headed the procession, surrounded and guarded by Captain Cruz and his famous troop of one hundred light horse “<i>El Ciento Huilando</i>.” Colonel Rocas followed, with a regiment of the regular army.</p>
@ -27,9 +27,9 @@
<p>At length, after a prodigious galloping and curvetting of red-sashed majors, gold-laced colonels and epauletted generals, the procession formed for its annual progress down the Calle Grande to the Casa Morena, where the ceremony of welcome to the visiting president always took place.</p>
<p>The Swiss band led the line of march. After it pranced the local <i>comandante</i>, mounted, and a detachment of his troops. Next came a carriage with four members of the cabinet, conspicuous among them the Minister of War, old General Pilar, with his white moustache and his soldierly bearing. Then the presidents vehicle, containing also the Ministers of Finance and State; and surrounded by Captain Cruzs light horse formed in a close double file of fours. Following them, the rest of the officials of state, the judges and distinguished military and social ornaments of public and private life.</p>
<p>As the band struck up, and the movement began, like a bird of ill-omen the <i>Valhalla</i>, the swiftest steamship of the Vesuvius line, glided into the harbour in plain view of the president and his train. Of course, there was nothing menacing about its arrival—a business firm does not go to war with a nation—but it reminded Señor Espirition and others in those carriages that the Vesuvius Fruit Company was undoubtedly carrying something up its sleeve for them.</p>
<p>By the time the van of the procession had reached the government building, Captain Cronin, of the <i>Valhalla</i>, and Mr. Vincenti, member of the Vesuvius Company, had landed and were pushing their way, bluff, hearty and nonchalant, through the crowd on the narrow sidewalk. Clad in white linen, big, debonair, with an air of good-humoured authority, they made conspicuous figures among the dark mass of unimposing Anchurians, as they penetrated to within a few yards of the steps of the Casa Morena. Looking easily above the heads of the crowd, they perceived another that towered above the undersized natives. It was the fiery poll of Dicky Maloney against the wall close by the lower step; and his broad, seductive grin showed that he recognized their presence.</p>
<p>By the time the van of the procession had reached the government building, Captain Cronin, of the <i>Valhalla</i>, and <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Vincenti, member of the Vesuvius Company, had landed and were pushing their way, bluff, hearty and nonchalant, through the crowd on the narrow sidewalk. Clad in white linen, big, debonair, with an air of good-humoured authority, they made conspicuous figures among the dark mass of unimposing Anchurians, as they penetrated to within a few yards of the steps of the Casa Morena. Looking easily above the heads of the crowd, they perceived another that towered above the undersized natives. It was the fiery poll of Dicky Maloney against the wall close by the lower step; and his broad, seductive grin showed that he recognized their presence.</p>
<p>Dicky had attired himself becomingly for the festive occasion in a well-fitting black suit. Pasa was close by his side, her head covered with the ubiquitous black mantilla.</p>
<p>Mr. Vincenti looked at her attentively.</p>
<p><abbr>Mr.</abbr> Vincenti looked at her attentively.</p>
<p>“Botticellis Madonna,” he remarked, gravely. “I wonder when she got into the game. I dont like his getting tangled with the women. I hoped he would keep away from them.”</p>
<p>Captain Cronins laugh almost drew attention from the parade.</p>
<p>“With that head of hair! Keep away from the women! And a Maloney! Hasnt he got a license? But, nonsense aside, what do you think of the prospects? Its a species of filibustering out of my line.”</p>
@ -43,7 +43,7 @@
<p>Thus disposing of Losadas administration, he abruptly reverted to that of Olivarra, Anchurias most popular ruler. Olivarra had been assassinated nine years before while in the prime of life and usefulness. A faction of the Liberal party led by Losada himself had been accused of the deed. Whether guilty or not, it was eight years before the ambitious and scheming Losada had gained his goal.</p>
<p>Upon this theme General Pilars eloquence was loosed. He drew the picture of the beneficent Olivarra with a loving hand. He reminded the people of the peace, the security and the happiness they had enjoyed during that period. He recalled in vivid detail and with significant contrast the last winter sojourn of President Olivarra in Coralio, when his appearance at their fiestas was the signal for thundering <i>vivas</i> of love and approbation.</p>
<p>The first public expression of sentiment from the people that day followed. A low, sustained murmur went among them like the surf rolling along the shore.</p>
<p>“Ten dollars to a dinner at the Saint Charles,” remarked Mr. Vincenti, “that <i>rouge</i> wins.”</p>
<p>“Ten dollars to a dinner at the Saint Charles,” remarked <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Vincenti, “that <i>rouge</i> wins.”</p>
<p>“I never bet against my own interests,” said Captain Cronin, lighting a cigar. “Long-winded old boy, for his age. Whats he talking about?”</p>
<p>“My Spanish,” replied Vincenti, “runs about ten words to the minute; his is something around two hundred. Whatever hes saying, hes getting them warmed up.”</p>
<p>“Friends and brothers,” General Pilar was saying, “could I reach out my hand this day across the lamentable silence of the grave to Olivarra the Good, to the ruler who was one of you, whose tears fell when you sorrowed, and whose smile followed your joy—I would bring him back to you, but—Olivarra is dead—dead at the hands of a craven assassin!”</p>
@ -57,12 +57,12 @@
<p>And the enthusiasm was not confined to the blood of the plebs. Colonel Rocas ascended the steps and laid his sword theatrically at young Ramon Olivarras feet. Four members of the cabinet embraced him. Captain Cruz gave a command, and twenty of <i>El Ciento Huilando</i> dismounted and arranged themselves in a cordon about the steps of Casa Morena.</p>
<p>But Ramon Olivarra seized that moment to prove himself a born genius and politician. He waved those soldiers aside, and descended the steps to the street. There, without losing his dignity or the distinguished elegance that the loss of his red hair brought him, he took the proletariat to his bosom—the barefooted, the dirty, Indians, Caribs, babies, beggars, old, young, saints, soldiers and sinners—he missed none of them.</p>
<p>While this act of the drama was being presented, the scene shifters had been busy at the duties that had been assigned to them. Two of Cruzs dragoons had seized the bridle reins of Losadas horses; others formed a close guard around the carriage; and they galloped off with the tyrant and his two unpopular Ministers. No doubt a place had been prepared for them. There are a number of well-barred stone apartments in Coralio.</p>
<p><i>Rouge</i> wins,” said Mr. Vincenti, calmly lighting another cigar.</p>
<p><i>Rouge</i> wins,” said <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Vincenti, calmly lighting another cigar.</p>
<p>Captain Cronin had been intently watching the vicinity of the stone steps for some time.</p>
<p>“Good boy!” he exclaimed suddenly, as if relieved. “I wondered if he was going to forget his Kathleen Mavourneen.”</p>
<p>Young Olivarra had reascended the steps and spoken a few words to General Pilar. Then that distinguished veteran descended to the ground and approached Pasa, who still stood, wonder-eyed, where Dicky had left her. With his plumed hat in his hand, and his medals and decorations shining on his breast, the general spoke to her and gave her his arm, and they went up the stone steps of the Casa Morena together. And then Ramon Olivarra stepped forward and took both her hands before all the people.</p>
<p>And while the cheering was breaking out afresh everywhere, Captain Cronin and Mr. Vincenti turned and walked back toward the shore where the gig was waiting for them.</p>
<p>“Therell be another <i>presidente proclamada</i> in the morning,” said Mr. Vincenti, musingly. “As a rule they are not as reliable as the elected ones, but this youngster seems to have some good stuff in him. He planned and manœuvred the entire campaign. Olivarras widow, you know, was wealthy. After her husband was assassinated she went to the States, and educated her son at Yale. The Vesuvius Company hunted him up, and backed him in the little game.”</p>
<p>And while the cheering was breaking out afresh everywhere, Captain Cronin and <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Vincenti turned and walked back toward the shore where the gig was waiting for them.</p>
<p>“Therell be another <i>presidente proclamada</i> in the morning,” said <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Vincenti, musingly. “As a rule they are not as reliable as the elected ones, but this youngster seems to have some good stuff in him. He planned and manœuvred the entire campaign. Olivarras widow, you know, was wealthy. After her husband was assassinated she went to the States, and educated her son at Yale. The Vesuvius Company hunted him up, and backed him in the little game.”</p>
<p>“Its a glorious thing,” said Cronin, half jestingly, “to be able to discharge a government, and insert one of your own choosing, in these days.”</p>
<p>“Oh, it is only a matter of business,” said Vincenti, stopping and offering the stump of his cigar to a monkey that swung down from a lime tree; “and that is what moves the world of to-day. That extra <i>real</i> on the price of bananas had to go. We took the shortest way of removing it.”</p>
</section>

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@ -25,7 +25,7 @@
<p>“After dark I sat under a cocoanut tree on the beach for a while, and then I walked around and investigated that town some, and it was enough to give you the lions. If a man could stay in New York and be honest, hed better do it than to hit that monkey town with a million.</p>
<p>“Dinky little mud houses; grass over your shoe tops in the streets; ladies in low-neck-and-short-sleeves walking around smoking cigars; tree frogs rattling like a hose cart going to a ten blow; big mountains dropping gravel in the back yards, and the sea licking the paint off in front—no, sir—a man had better be in Gods country living on free lunch than there.</p>
<p>“The main street ran along the beach, and I walked down it, and then turned up a kind of lane where the houses were made of poles and straw. I wanted to see what the monkeys did when they werent climbing cocoanut trees. The very first shack I looked in I saw my people. They must have come ashore while I was promenading. A man about fifty, smooth face, heavy eyebrows, dressed in black broadcloth, looking like he was just about to say, Can any little boy in the Sunday school answer that? He was freezing on to a grip that weighed like a dozen gold bricks, and a swell girl—a regular peach, with a Fifth Avenue cut—was sitting on a wooden chair. An old black woman was fixing some coffee and beans on a table. The light they had come from a lantern hung on a nail. I went and stood in the door, and they looked at me, and I said:</p>
<p>Mr. Wahrfield, you are my prisoner. I hope, for the ladys sake, you will take the matter sensibly. You know why I want you.</p>
<p>“ ‘<abbr>Mr.</abbr> Wahrfield, you are my prisoner. I hope, for the ladys sake, you will take the matter sensibly. You know why I want you.</p>
<p>Who are you? says the old gent.</p>
<p>ODay, says I, of the Columbia Detective Agency. And now, sir, let me give you a piece of good advice. You go back and take your medicine like a man. Hand em back the boodle; and maybe theyll let you off light. Go back easy, and Ill put in a word for you. Ill give you five minutes to decide. I pulled out my watch and waited.</p>
<p>“Then the young lady chipped in. She was one of the genuine high-steppers. You could tell by the way her clothes fit and the style she had that Fifth Avenue was made for her.</p>
@ -36,30 +36,30 @@
<p>Well, then, says I, it ought to be plain to you. Wanted, in New York, J. Churchill Wahrfield, president of the Republic Insurance Company.</p>
<p>Also the funds belonging to said company, now in that grip, in the unlawful possession of said J. Churchill Wahrfield.</p>
<p>Oh-h-h-h! says the young lady, as if she was thinking, you want to take us back to New York?</p>
<p>To take Mr. Wahrfield. Theres no charge against you, miss. Therell be no objection, of course, to your returning with your father.</p>
<p>To take <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Wahrfield. Theres no charge against you, miss. Therell be no objection, of course, to your returning with your father.</p>
<p>“Of a sudden the girl gave a tiny scream and grabbed the old boy around the neck. Oh, father, father! she says, kind of contralto, can this be true? Have you taken money that is not yours? Speak, father! It made you shiver to hear the tremolo stop she put on her voice.</p>
<p>“The old boy looked pretty bughouse when she first grappled him, but she went on, whispering in his ear and patting his off shoulder till he stood still, but sweating a little.</p>
<p>“She got him to one side and they talked together a minute, and then he put on some gold eyeglasses and walked up and handed me the grip.</p>
<p>Mr. Detective, he says, talking a little broken, I conclude to return with you. I have finished to discover that life on this desolate and displeased coast would be worse than to die, itself. I will go back and hurl myself upon the mercy of the Republic Company. Have you brought a sheep?</p>
<p>“ ‘<abbr>Mr.</abbr> Detective, he says, talking a little broken, I conclude to return with you. I have finished to discover that life on this desolate and displeased coast would be worse than to die, itself. I will go back and hurl myself upon the mercy of the Republic Company. Have you brought a sheep?</p>
<p>Sheep! says I; I havent a single</p>
<p>Ship, cut in the young lady. Dont get funny. Father is of German birth, and doesnt speak perfect English. How did you come?</p>
<p>“The girl was all broke up. She had a handkerchief to her face, and kept saying every little bit, Oh, father, father! She walked up to me and laid her lily-white hand on the clothes that had pained her at first. I smelt a million violets. She was a lulu. I told her I came in a private yacht.</p>
<p>Mr. ODay, she says. Oh, take us away from this horrid country at once. Can you! Will you! Say you will.</p>
<p>“ ‘<abbr>Mr.</abbr> ODay, she says. Oh, take us away from this horrid country at once. Can you! Will you! Say you will.</p>
<p>Ill try, I said, concealing the fact that I was dying to get them on salt water before they could change their mind.</p>
<p>“One thing they both kicked against was going through the town to the boat landing. Said they dreaded publicity, and now that they were going to return, they had a hope that the thing might yet be kept out of the papers. They swore they wouldnt go unless I got them out to the yacht without any one knowing it, so I agreed to humour them.</p>
<p>“The sailors who rowed me ashore were playing billiards in a bar-room near the water, waiting for orders, and I proposed to have them take the boat down the beach half a mile or so, and take us up there. How to get them word was the question, for I couldnt leave the grip with the prisoner, and I couldnt take it with me, not knowing but what the monkeys might stick me up.</p>
<p>“The young lady says the old coloured woman would take them a note. I sat down and wrote it, and gave it to the dame with plain directions what to do, and she grins like a baboon and shakes her head.</p>
<p>“Then Mr. Wahrfield handed her a string of foreign dialect, and she nods her head and says, See, señor, maybe fifty times, and lights out with the note.</p>
<p>“Then <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Wahrfield handed her a string of foreign dialect, and she nods her head and says, See, señor, maybe fifty times, and lights out with the note.</p>
<p>Old Augusta only understands German, said Miss Wahrfield, smiling at me. We stopped in her house to ask where we could find lodging, and she insisted upon our having coffee. She tells us she was raised in a German family in San Domingo.</p>
<p>Very likely, I said. But you can search me for German words, except <i>nix verstay</i> and <i>noch einst</i>. I would have called that “See, señor” French, though, on a gamble.</p>
<p>“Well, we three made a sneak around the edge of town so as not to be seen. We got tangled in vines and ferns and the banana bushes and tropical scenery a good deal. The monkey suburbs was as wild as places in Central Park. We came out on the beach a good half mile below. A brown chap was lying asleep under a cocoanut tree, with a ten-foot musket beside him. Mr. Wahrfield takes up the gun and pitches it into the sea. The coast is guarded, he says. Rebellion and plots ripen like fruit. He pointed to the sleeping man, who never stirred. Thus, he says, they perform trusts. Children!</p>
<p>“Well, we three made a sneak around the edge of town so as not to be seen. We got tangled in vines and ferns and the banana bushes and tropical scenery a good deal. The monkey suburbs was as wild as places in Central Park. We came out on the beach a good half mile below. A brown chap was lying asleep under a cocoanut tree, with a ten-foot musket beside him. <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Wahrfield takes up the gun and pitches it into the sea. The coast is guarded, he says. Rebellion and plots ripen like fruit. He pointed to the sleeping man, who never stirred. Thus, he says, they perform trusts. Children!</p>
<p>“I saw our boat coming, and I struck a match and lit a piece of newspaper to show them where we were. In thirty minutes we were on board the yacht.</p>
<p>“The first thing, Mr. Wahrfield and his daughter and I took the grip into the owners cabin, opened it up, and took an inventory. There was one hundred and five thousand dollars, United States treasury notes, in it, besides a lot of diamond jewelry and a couple of hundred Havana cigars. I gave the old man the cigars and a receipt for the rest of the lot, as agent for the company, and locked the stuff up in my private quarters.</p>
<p>“I never had a pleasanter trip than that one. After we got to sea the young lady turned out to be the jolliest ever. The very first time we sat down to dinner, and the steward filled her glass with champagne—that directors yacht was a regular floating Waldorf-Astoria—she winks at me and says, Whats the use to borrow trouble, Mr. Fly Cop? Heres hoping you may live to eat the hen that scratches on your grave. There was a piano on board, and she sat down to it and sung better than you give up two cases to hear plenty times. She knew about nine operas clear through. She was sure enough <i>bon ton</i> and swell. She wasnt one of the among others present kind; she belonged on the special mention list!</p>
<p>“The old man, too, perked up amazingly on the way. He passed the cigars, and says to me once, quite chipper, out of a cloud of smoke, Mr. ODay, somehow I think the Republic Company will not give me the much trouble. Guard well the gripvalise of the money, Mr. ODay, for that it must be returned to them that it belongs when we finish to arrive.</p>
<p>“The first thing, <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Wahrfield and his daughter and I took the grip into the owners cabin, opened it up, and took an inventory. There was one hundred and five thousand dollars, United States treasury notes, in it, besides a lot of diamond jewelry and a couple of hundred Havana cigars. I gave the old man the cigars and a receipt for the rest of the lot, as agent for the company, and locked the stuff up in my private quarters.</p>
<p>“I never had a pleasanter trip than that one. After we got to sea the young lady turned out to be the jolliest ever. The very first time we sat down to dinner, and the steward filled her glass with champagne—that directors yacht was a regular floating Waldorf-Astoria—she winks at me and says, Whats the use to borrow trouble, <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Fly Cop? Heres hoping you may live to eat the hen that scratches on your grave. There was a piano on board, and she sat down to it and sung better than you give up two cases to hear plenty times. She knew about nine operas clear through. She was sure enough <i>bon ton</i> and swell. She wasnt one of the among others present kind; she belonged on the special mention list!</p>
<p>“The old man, too, perked up amazingly on the way. He passed the cigars, and says to me once, quite chipper, out of a cloud of smoke, <abbr>Mr.</abbr> ODay, somehow I think the Republic Company will not give me the much trouble. Guard well the gripvalise of the money, <abbr>Mr.</abbr> ODay, for that it must be returned to them that it belongs when we finish to arrive.</p>
<p>“When we landed in New York I phoned to the chief to meet us in that directors office. We got in a cab and went there. I carried the grip, and we walked in, and I was pleased to see that the chief had got together that same old crowd of moneybugs with pink faces and white vests to see us march in. I set the grip on the table. Theres the money, I said.</p>
<p>And your prisoner? said the chief.</p>
<p>“I pointed to Mr. Wahrfield, and he stepped forward and says:</p>
<p>“I pointed to <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Wahrfield, and he stepped forward and says:</p>
<p>The honour of a word with you, sir, to explain.</p>
<p>“He and the chief went into another room and stayed ten minutes. When they came back the chief looked as black as a ton of coal.</p>
<p>Did this gentleman, he says to me, have this valise in his possession when you first saw him?</p>

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<br/>
</p>
<blockquote>
<p class="noindent">My Dear Mr. Goodwin:—Your communication per Messrs. Howland and Fourchet, of New Orleans, has reached us. Also their draft on N. Y. for $100,000, the amount abstracted from the funds of this company by the late J. Churchill Wahrfield, its former president. … The officers and directors unite in requesting me to express to you their sincere esteem and thanks for your prompt and much appreciated return of the entire missing sum within two weeks from the time of its disappearance. … Can assure you that the matter will not be allowed to receive the least publicity. … Regret exceedingly the distressing death of Mr. Wahrfield by his own hand, <span class="nowrap">but</span> Congratulations on your marriage to Miss Wahrfield… many charms, winning manners, noble and womanly nature and envied position in the best metropolitan <span class="nowrap">society</span></p>
<p class="noindent">My Dear <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Goodwin:—Your communication per <abbr>Messrs.</abbr> Howland and Fourchet, of New Orleans, has reached us. Also their draft on N. Y. for $100,000, the amount abstracted from the funds of this company by the late J. Churchill Wahrfield, its former president. … The officers and directors unite in requesting me to express to you their sincere esteem and thanks for your prompt and much appreciated return of the entire missing sum within two weeks from the time of its disappearance. … Can assure you that the matter will not be allowed to receive the least publicity. … Regret exceedingly the distressing death of <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Wahrfield by his own hand, <span class="nowrap">but</span> Congratulations on your marriage to Miss Wahrfield… many charms, winning manners, noble and womanly nature and envied position in the best metropolitan <span class="nowrap">society</span></p>
<p class="noindent">
<span class="ind12">Cordially yours,</span>
</p>

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<p>The paper that came first to his hand was one of those bulky mattresses of printed stuff upon which the readers of certain New York journals are supposed to take their Sabbath literary nap. Opening this the consul rested it upon the table, supporting its weight with the aid of the back of a chair. Then he partook of his meal deliberately, turning the leaves from time to time and glancing half idly at the contents.</p>
<p>Presently he was struck by something familiar to him in a picture—a half-page, badly printed reproduction of a photograph of a vessel. Languidly interested, he leaned for a nearer scrutiny and a view of the florid headlines of the column next to the picture.</p>
<p>Yes; he was not mistaken. The engraving was of the eight-hundred-ton yacht <i>Idalia</i>, belonging to “that prince of good fellows, Midas of the money market, and societys pink of perfection, J. Ward Tolliver.”</p>
<p>Slowly sipping his black coffee, Geddie read the column of print. Following a listed statement of Mr. Tollivers real estate and bonds, came a description of the yachts furnishings, and then the grain of news no bigger than a mustard seed. Mr. Tolliver, with a party of favoured guests, would sail the next day on a six weeks cruise along the Central American and South American coasts and among the Bahama Islands. Among the guests were Mrs. Cumberland Payne and Miss Ida Payne, of Norfolk.</p>
<p>The writer, with the fatuous presumption that was demanded of him by his readers, had concocted a romance suited to their palates. He bracketed the names of Miss Payne and Mr. Tolliver until he had well-nigh read the marriage ceremony over them. He played coyly and insinuatingly upon the strings of “<i>on dit</i>” and “Madame Rumour” and “a little bird” and “no one would be surprised,” and ended with congratulations.</p>
<p>Slowly sipping his black coffee, Geddie read the column of print. Following a listed statement of <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Tollivers real estate and bonds, came a description of the yachts furnishings, and then the grain of news no bigger than a mustard seed. <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Tolliver, with a party of favoured guests, would sail the next day on a six weeks cruise along the Central American and South American coasts and among the Bahama Islands. Among the guests were <abbr>Mrs.</abbr> Cumberland Payne and Miss Ida Payne, of Norfolk.</p>
<p>The writer, with the fatuous presumption that was demanded of him by his readers, had concocted a romance suited to their palates. He bracketed the names of Miss Payne and <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Tolliver until he had well-nigh read the marriage ceremony over them. He played coyly and insinuatingly upon the strings of “<i>on dit</i>” and “Madame Rumour” and “a little bird” and “no one would be surprised,” and ended with congratulations.</p>
<p>Geddie, having finished his breakfast, took his papers to the edge of the gallery, and sat there in his favourite steamer chair with his feet on the bamboo railing. He lighted a cigar, and looked out upon the sea. He felt a glow of satisfaction at finding he was so little disturbed by what he had read. He told himself that he had conquered the distress that had sent him, a voluntary exile, to this far land of the lotus. He could never forget Ida, of course; but there was no longer any pain in thinking about her. When they had had that misunderstanding and quarrel he had impulsively sought this consulship, with the desire to retaliate upon her by detaching himself from her world and presence. He had succeeded thoroughly in that. During the twelve months of his life in Coralio no word had passed between them, though he had sometimes heard of her through the dilatory correspondence with the few friends to whom he still wrote. Still he could not repress a little thrill of satisfaction at knowing that she had not yet married Tolliver or anyone else. But evidently Tolliver had not yet abandoned hope.</p>
<p>Well, it made no difference to him now. He had eaten of the lotus. He was happy and content in this land of perpetual afternoon. Those old days of life in the States seemed like an irritating dream. He hoped Ida would be as happy as he was. The climate as balmy as that of distant Avalon; the fetterless, idyllic round of enchanted days; the life among this indolent, romantic people—a life full of music, flowers, and low laughter; the influence of the imminent sea and mountains, and the many shapes of love and magic and beauty that bloomed in the white tropic nights—with all he was more than content. Also, there was Paula Brannigan.</p>
<p>Geddie intended to marry Paula—if, of course, she would consent; but he felt rather sure that she would do that. Somehow, he kept postponing his proposal. Several times he had been quite near to it; but a mysterious something always held him back. Perhaps it was only the unconscious, instinctive conviction that the act would sever the last tie that bound him to his old world.</p>
@ -63,8 +63,8 @@
<p>“Simon!—Oh, Simon!—wake up there, Simon!” bawled a sonorous voice at the edge of the water.</p>
<p>Old Simon Cruz was a half-breed fisherman and smuggler who lived in a hut on the beach. Out of his earliest nap Simon was thus awakened.</p>
<p>He slipped on his shoes and went outside. Just landing from one of the <i>Valhallas</i> boats was the third mate of that vessel, who was an acquaintance of Simons, and three sailors from the fruiter.</p>
<p>“Go up, Simon,” called the mate, “and find Dr. Gregg or Mr. Goodwin or anybody thats a friend to Mr. Geddie, and bring em here at once.”</p>
<p>“Saints of the skies!” said Simon, sleepily, “nothing has happened to Mr. Geddie?”</p>
<p>“Go up, Simon,” called the mate, “and find <abbr>Dr.</abbr> Gregg or <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Goodwin or anybody thats a friend to <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Geddie, and bring em here at once.”</p>
<p>“Saints of the skies!” said Simon, sleepily, “nothing has happened to <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Geddie?”</p>
<p>“Hes under that tarpauling,” said the mate, pointing to the boat, “and hes rather more than half drownded. We seen him from the steamer nearly a mile out from shore, swimmin like mad after a bottle that was floatin in the water, outward bound. We lowered the gig and started for him. He nearly had his hand on the bottle, when he gave out and went under. We pulled him out in time to save him, maybe; but the doctor is the one to decide that.”</p>
<p>“A bottle?” said the old man, rubbing his eyes. He was not yet fully awake. “Where is the bottle?”</p>
<p>“Driftin along out there someeres,” said the mate, jerking his thumb toward the sea. “Get on with you, Simon.”</p>

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<p>The new-comer seemed to turn a disapproving eye upon the rather motley congregation of native Anchurians, and made his way at once toward Goodwin, who was the most conspicuously Anglo-Saxon figure present. Goodwin greeted him with courtesy.</p>
<p>Conversation developed that the newly landed one was named Smith, and that he had come in a yacht. A meagre biography, truly; for the yacht was most apparent; and the “Smith” not beyond a reasonable guess before the revelation. Yet to the eye of Goodwin, who had seen several things, there was a discrepancy between Smith and his yacht. A bullet-headed man Smith was, with an oblique, dead eye and the moustache of a cocktail-mixer. And unless he had shifted costumes before putting off for shore he had affronted the deck of his correct vessel clad in a pearl-gray derby, a gay plaid suit and vaudeville neckwear. Men owning pleasure yachts generally harmonize better with them.</p>
<p>Smith looked business, but he was no advertiser. He commented upon the scenery, remarking upon its fidelity to the pictures in the geography; and then inquired for the United States consul. Goodwin pointed out the starred-and-striped bunting hanging above the little consulate, which was concealed behind the orange-trees.</p>
<p>“Mr. Geddie, the consul, will be sure to be there,” said Goodwin. “He was very nearly drowned a few days ago while taking a swim in the sea, and the doctor has ordered him to remain indoors for some time.”</p>
<p><abbr>Mr.</abbr> Geddie, the consul, will be sure to be there,” said Goodwin. “He was very nearly drowned a few days ago while taking a swim in the sea, and the doctor has ordered him to remain indoors for some time.”</p>
<p>Smith plowed his way through the sand to the consulate, his haberdashery creating violent discord against the smooth tropical blues and greens.</p>
<p>Geddie was lounging in his hammock, somewhat pale of face and languid in pose. On that night when the <i>Valhallas</i> boat had brought him ashore apparently drenched to death by the sea, Doctor Gregg and his other friends had toiled for hours to preserve the little spark of life that remained to him. The bottle, with its impotent message, was gone out to sea, and the problem that it had provoked was reduced to a simple sum in addition—one and one make two, by the rule of arithmetic; one by the rule of romance.</p>
<p>There is a quaint old theory that man may have two souls—a peripheral one which serves ordinarily, and a central one which is stirred only at certain times, but then with activity and vigour. While under the domination of the former a man will shave, vote, pay taxes, give money to his family, buy subscription books and comport himself on the average plan. But let the central soul suddenly become dominant, and he may, in the twinkling of an eye, turn upon the partner of his joys with furious execration; he may change his politics while you could snap your fingers; he may deal out deadly insult to his dearest friend; he may get him, instanter, to a monastery or a dance hall; he may elope, or hang himself—or he may write a song or poem, or kiss his wife unasked, or give his funds to the search of a microbe. Then the peripheral soul will return; and we have our safe, sane citizen again. It is but the revolt of the Ego against Order; and its effect is to shake up the atoms only that they may settle where they belong.</p>
@ -30,32 +30,32 @@
<p>“Maybe they would,” admitted Smith, cheerfully. “I havent seen them yet. But I guess youve got us skinned on the animal and vegetation question. You dont have much travel here, do you?”</p>
<p>“Travel?” queried the consul. “I suppose you mean passengers on the steamers. No; very few people land in Coralio. An investor now and then—tourists and sight-seers generally go further down the coast to one of the larger towns where there is a harbour.”</p>
<p>“I see a ship out there loading up with bananas,” said Smith. “Any passengers come on her?”</p>
<p>“Thats the <i>Karlsefin</i>,” said the consul. “Shes a tramp fruiter—made her last trip to New York, I believe. No; she brought no passengers. I saw her boat come ashore, and there was no one. About the only exciting recreation we have here is watching steamers when they arrive; and a passenger on one of them generally causes the whole town to turn out. If you are going to remain in Coralio a while, Mr. Smith, Ill be glad to take you around to meet some people. There are four or five American chaps that are good to know, besides the native high-fliers.”</p>
<p>“Thats the <i>Karlsefin</i>,” said the consul. “Shes a tramp fruiter—made her last trip to New York, I believe. No; she brought no passengers. I saw her boat come ashore, and there was no one. About the only exciting recreation we have here is watching steamers when they arrive; and a passenger on one of them generally causes the whole town to turn out. If you are going to remain in Coralio a while, <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Smith, Ill be glad to take you around to meet some people. There are four or five American chaps that are good to know, besides the native high-fliers.”</p>
<p>“Thanks,” said the yachtsman, “but I wouldnt put you to the trouble. Id like to meet the guys you speak of, but I wont be here long enough to do much knocking around. That cool gent on the beach spoke of a doctor; can you tell me where I could find him? The <i>Rambler</i> aint quite as steady on her feet as a Broadway hotel; and a fellow gets a touch of seasickness now and then. Thought Id strike the croaker for a handful of the little sugar pills, in case I need em.”</p>
<p>“You will be apt to find Dr. Gregg at the hotel,” said the consul. “You can see it from the door—its that two-story building with the balcony, where the orange-trees are.”</p>
<p>“You will be apt to find <abbr>Dr.</abbr> Gregg at the hotel,” said the consul. “You can see it from the door—its that two-story building with the balcony, where the orange-trees are.”</p>
<p>The Hotel de los Estranjeros was a dreary hostelry, in great disuse both by strangers and friends. It stood at a corner of the Street of the Holy Sepulchre. A grove of small orange-trees crowded against one side of it, enclosed by a low, rock wall over which a tall man might easily step. The house was of plastered adobe, stained a hundred shades of colour by the salt breeze and the sun. Upon its upper balcony opened a central door and two windows containing broad jalousies instead of sashes.</p>
<p>The lower floor communicated by two doorways with the narrow, rock-paved sidewalk. The <i>pulperia</i>—or drinking shop—of the proprietress, Madama Timotea Ortiz, occupied the ground floor. On the bottles of brandy, <i>anisada</i>, Scotch “smoke” and inexpensive wines behind the little counter the dust lay thick save where the fingers of infrequent customers had left irregular prints. The upper story contained four or five guest-rooms which were rarely put to their destined use. Sometimes a fruit-grower, riding in from his plantation to confer with his agent, would pass a melancholy night in the dismal upper story; sometimes a minor native official on some trifling government quest would have his pomp and majesty awed by Madamas sepulchral hospitality. But Madama sat behind her bar content, not desiring to quarrel with Fate. If anyone required meat, drink or lodging at the Hotel de los Estranjeros they had but to come, and be served. <i>Está bueno.</i> If they came not, why, then, they came not. <i>Está bueno.</i></p>
<p>As the exceptional yachtsman was making his way down the precarious sidewalk of the Street of the Holy Sepulchre, the solitary permanent guest of that decaying hotel sat at its door, enjoying the breeze from the sea.</p>
<p>Dr. Gregg, the quarantine physician, was a man of fifty or sixty, with a florid face and the longest beard between Topeka and Terra del Fuego. He held his position by virtue of an appointment by the Board of Health of a seaport city in one of the Southern states. That city feared the ancient enemy of every Southern seaport—the yellow fever—and it was the duty of Dr. Gregg to examine crew and passengers of every vessel leaving Coralio for preliminary symptoms. The duties were light, and the salary, for one who lived in Coralio, ample. Surplus time there was in plenty; and the good doctor added to his gains by a large private practice among the residents of the coast. The fact that he did not know ten words of Spanish was no obstacle; a pulse could be felt and a fee collected without one being a linguist. Add to the description the facts that the doctor had a story to tell concerning the operation of trepanning which no listener had ever allowed him to conclude, and that he believed in brandy as a prophylactic; and the special points of interest possessed by Dr. Gregg will have become exhausted.</p>
<p><abbr>Dr.</abbr> Gregg, the quarantine physician, was a man of fifty or sixty, with a florid face and the longest beard between Topeka and Terra del Fuego. He held his position by virtue of an appointment by the Board of Health of a seaport city in one of the Southern states. That city feared the ancient enemy of every Southern seaport—the yellow fever—and it was the duty of <abbr>Dr.</abbr> Gregg to examine crew and passengers of every vessel leaving Coralio for preliminary symptoms. The duties were light, and the salary, for one who lived in Coralio, ample. Surplus time there was in plenty; and the good doctor added to his gains by a large private practice among the residents of the coast. The fact that he did not know ten words of Spanish was no obstacle; a pulse could be felt and a fee collected without one being a linguist. Add to the description the facts that the doctor had a story to tell concerning the operation of trepanning which no listener had ever allowed him to conclude, and that he believed in brandy as a prophylactic; and the special points of interest possessed by <abbr>Dr.</abbr> Gregg will have become exhausted.</p>
<p>The doctor had dragged a chair to the sidewalk. He was coatless, and he leaned back against the wall and smoked, while he stroked his beard. Surprise came into his pale blue eyes when he caught sight of Smith in his unusual and prismatic clothes.</p>
<p>“Youre Dr. Gregg—is that right?” said Smith, feeling the dogs head pin in his tie. “The constable—I mean the consul, told me you hung out at this caravansary. My names Smith; and I came in a yacht. Taking a cruise around, looking at the monkeys and pineapple-trees. Come inside and have a drink, Doc. This café looks on the blink, but I guess it can set out something wet.”</p>
<p>“I will join you, sir, in just a taste of brandy,” said Dr. Gregg, rising quickly. “I find that as a prophylactic a little brandy is almost a necessity in this climate.”</p>
<p>“Youre <abbr>Dr.</abbr> Gregg—is that right?” said Smith, feeling the dogs head pin in his tie. “The constable—I mean the consul, told me you hung out at this caravansary. My names Smith; and I came in a yacht. Taking a cruise around, looking at the monkeys and pineapple-trees. Come inside and have a drink, Doc. This café looks on the blink, but I guess it can set out something wet.”</p>
<p>“I will join you, sir, in just a taste of brandy,” said <abbr>Dr.</abbr> Gregg, rising quickly. “I find that as a prophylactic a little brandy is almost a necessity in this climate.”</p>
<p>As they turned to enter the <i>pulperia</i> a native man, barefoot, glided noiselessly up and addressed the doctor in Spanish. He was yellowish-brown, like an over-ripe lemon; he wore a cotton shirt and ragged linen trousers girded by a leather belt. His face was like an animals, live and wary, but without promise of much intelligence. This man jabbered with animation and so much seriousness that it seemed a pity that his words were to be wasted.</p>
<p>Dr. Gregg felt his pulse.</p>
<p><abbr>Dr.</abbr> Gregg felt his pulse.</p>
<p>“You sick?” he inquired.</p>
<p><i>Mi mujer está enferma en la casa</i>,” said the man, thus endeavouring to convey the news, in the only language open to him, that his wife lay ill in her palm-thatched hut.</p>
<p>The doctor drew a handful of capsules filled with a white powder from his trousers pocket. He counted out ten of them into the natives hand, and held up his forefinger impressively.</p>
<p>“Take one,” said the doctor, “every two hours.” He then held up two fingers, shaking them emphatically before the natives face. Next he pulled out his watch and ran his finger round its dial twice. Again the two fingers confronted the patients nose. “Two—two—two hours,” repeated the doctor.</p>
<p><i>Si, Señor</i>,” said the native, sadly.</p>
<p>He pulled a cheap silver watch from his own pocket and laid it in the doctors hand. “Me bring,” said he, struggling painfully with his scant English, “other watchy to-morrow.” Then he departed downheartedly with his capsules.</p>
<p>“A very ignorant race of people, sir,” said the doctor, as he slipped the watch into his pocket. “He seems to have mistaken my directions for taking the physic for the fee. However, it is all right. He owes me an account, anyway. The chances are that he wont bring the other watch. You cant depend on anything they promise you. About that drink, now? How did you come to Coralio, Mr. Smith? I was not aware that any boats except the <i>Karlsefin</i> had arrived for some days.”</p>
<p>“A very ignorant race of people, sir,” said the doctor, as he slipped the watch into his pocket. “He seems to have mistaken my directions for taking the physic for the fee. However, it is all right. He owes me an account, anyway. The chances are that he wont bring the other watch. You cant depend on anything they promise you. About that drink, now? How did you come to Coralio, <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Smith? I was not aware that any boats except the <i>Karlsefin</i> had arrived for some days.”</p>
<p>The two leaned against the deserted bar; and Madama set out a bottle without waiting for the doctors order. There was no dust on it.</p>
<p>After they had drank twice Smith said:</p>
<p>“You say there were no passengers on the <i>Karlsefin</i>, Doc? Are you sure about that? It seems to me I heard somebody down on the beach say that there was one or two aboard.”</p>
<p>“They were mistaken, sir. I myself went out and put all hands through a medical examination, as usual. The <i>Karlsefin</i> sails as soon as she gets her bananas loaded, which will be about daylight in the morning, and she got everything ready this afternoon. No, sir, there was no passenger list. Like that Three-Star? A French schooner landed two slooploads of it a month ago. If any customs duties on it went to the distinguished republic of Anchuria you may have my hat. If you wont have another, come out and lets sit in the cool a while. It isnt often we exiles get a chance to talk with somebody from the outside world.”</p>
<p>The doctor brought out another chair to the sidewalk for his new acquaintance. The two seated themselves.</p>
<p>“You are a man of the world,” said Dr. Gregg; “a man of travel and experience. Your decision in a matter of ethics and, no doubt, on the points of equity, ability and professional probity should be of value. I would be glad if you will listen to the history of a case that I think stands unique in medical annals.</p>
<p>“About nine years ago, while I was engaged in the practice of medicine in my native city, I was called to treat a case of contusion of the skull. I made the diagnosis that a splinter of bone was pressing upon the brain, and that the surgical operation known as trepanning was required. However, as the patient was a gentleman of wealth and position, I called in for consultation <span class="nowrap">Dr.⁠—”</span></p>
<p>“You are a man of the world,” said <abbr>Dr.</abbr> Gregg; “a man of travel and experience. Your decision in a matter of ethics and, no doubt, on the points of equity, ability and professional probity should be of value. I would be glad if you will listen to the history of a case that I think stands unique in medical annals.</p>
<p>“About nine years ago, while I was engaged in the practice of medicine in my native city, I was called to treat a case of contusion of the skull. I made the diagnosis that a splinter of bone was pressing upon the brain, and that the surgical operation known as trepanning was required. However, as the patient was a gentleman of wealth and position, I called in for consultation <span class="nowrap"><abbr>Dr.</abbr>⁠—”</span></p>
<p>Smith rose from his chair, and laid a hand, soft with apology, upon the doctors shirt sleeve.</p>
<p>“Say, Doc,” he said, solemnly, “I want to hear that story. Youve got me interested; and I dont want to miss the rest of it. I know its a loola by the way it begins; and I want to tell it at the next meeting of the Barney OFlynn Association, if you dont mind. But Ive got one or two matters to attend to first. If I get em attended to in time Ill come right back and hear you spiel the rest before bedtime—is that right?”</p>
<p>“By all means,” said the doctor, “get your business attended to, and then return. I shall wait up for you. You see, one of the most prominent physicians at the consultation diagnosed the trouble as a blood clot; another said it was an abscess, but <span class="nowrap">I—”</span></p>

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<section id="chapter-4" epub:type="chapter">
<h2>IV</h2>
<h3>CAUGHT<br/> </h3>
<p>The plans for the detention of the flying President Miraflores and his companion at the coast line seemed hardly likely to fail. Dr. Zavalla himself had gone to the port of Alazan to establish a guard at that point. At Solitas the Liberal patriot Varras could be depended upon to keep close watch. Goodwin held himself responsible for the district about Coralio.</p>
<p>The plans for the detention of the flying President Miraflores and his companion at the coast line seemed hardly likely to fail. <abbr>Dr.</abbr> Zavalla himself had gone to the port of Alazan to establish a guard at that point. At Solitas the Liberal patriot Varras could be depended upon to keep close watch. Goodwin held himself responsible for the district about Coralio.</p>
<p>The news of the presidents flight had been disclosed to no one in the coast towns save trusted members of the ambitious political party that was desirous of succeeding to power. The telegraph wire running from San Mateo to the coast had been cut far up on the mountain trail by an emissary of Zavallas. Long before this could be repaired and word received along it from the capital the fugitives would have reached the coast and the question of escape or capture been solved.</p>
<p>Goodwin had stationed armed sentinels at frequent intervals along the shore for a mile in each direction from Coralio. They were instructed to keep a vigilant lookout during the night to prevent Miraflores from attempting to embark stealthily by means of some boat or sloop found by chance at the waters edge. A dozen patrols walked the streets of Coralio unsuspected, ready to intercept the truant official should he show himself there.</p>
<p>Goodwin was very well convinced that no precautions had been overlooked. He strolled about the streets that bore such high-sounding names and were but narrow, grass-covered lanes, lending his own aid to the vigil that had been intrusted to him by Bob Englehart.</p>
@ -51,7 +51,7 @@
<p>“That is better,” said the lady. “It makes it possible for me to listen to you. For a second lesson in good manners, you might now tell me by whom I am being insulted.”</p>
<p>“I am sorry,” said Goodwin, leaning one hand on the table, “that my time is too brief for devoting much of it to a course of etiquette. Come, now; I appeal to your good sense. You have shown yourself, in more than one instance, to be well aware of what is to your advantage. This is an occasion that demands the exercise of your undoubted intelligence. There is no mystery here. I am Frank Goodwin; and I have come for the money. I entered this room at a venture. Had I entered the other I would have had it before now. Do you want it in words? The gentleman in Number 10 has betrayed a great trust. He has robbed his people of a large sum, and it is I who will prevent their losing it. I do not say who that gentleman is; but if I should be forced to see him and he should prove to be a certain high official of the republic, it will be my duty to arrest him. The house is guarded. I am offering you liberal terms. It is not absolutely necessary that I confer personally with the gentleman in the next room. Bring me the valise containing the money, and we will call the affair ended.”</p>
<p>The lady arose from her chair and stood for a moment, thinking deeply.</p>
<p>“Do you live here, Mr. Goodwin?” she asked, presently.</p>
<p>“Do you live here, <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Goodwin?” she asked, presently.</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“What is your authority for this intrusion?”</p>
<p>“I am an instrument of the republic. I was advised by wire of the movements of the—gentleman in Number 10.”</p>

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<section id="chapter-5" epub:type="chapter">
<h2>V</h2>
<h3>CUPIDS EXILE NUMBER TWO<br/> </h3>
<p>The United States of America, after looking over its stock of consular timber, selected Mr. John De Graffenreid Atwood, of Dalesburg, Alabama, for a successor to Willard Geddie, resigned.</p>
<p>Without prejudice to Mr. Atwood, it will have to be acknowledged that, in this instance, it was the man who sought the office. As with the self-banished Geddie, it was nothing less than the artful smiles of lovely woman that had driven Johnny Atwood to the desperate expedient of accepting office under a despised Federal Government so that he might go far, far away and never see again the false, fair face that had wrecked his young life. The consulship at Coralio seemed to offer a retreat sufficiently removed and romantic enough to inject the necessary drama into the pastoral scenes of Dalesburg life.</p>
<p>The United States of America, after looking over its stock of consular timber, selected <abbr>Mr.</abbr> John De Graffenreid Atwood, of Dalesburg, Alabama, for a successor to Willard Geddie, resigned.</p>
<p>Without prejudice to <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Atwood, it will have to be acknowledged that, in this instance, it was the man who sought the office. As with the self-banished Geddie, it was nothing less than the artful smiles of lovely woman that had driven Johnny Atwood to the desperate expedient of accepting office under a despised Federal Government so that he might go far, far away and never see again the false, fair face that had wrecked his young life. The consulship at Coralio seemed to offer a retreat sufficiently removed and romantic enough to inject the necessary drama into the pastoral scenes of Dalesburg life.</p>
<p>It was while playing the part of Cupids exile that Johnny added his handiwork to the long list of casualties along the Spanish Main by his famous manipulation of the shoe market, and his unparalleled feat of elevating the most despised and useless weed in his own country from obscurity to be a valuable product in international commerce.</p>
<p>The trouble began, as trouble often begins instead of ending, with a romance. In Dalesburg there was a man named Elijah Hemstetter, who kept a general store. His family consisted of one daughter called Rosine, a name that atoned much for “Hemstetter.” This young woman was possessed of plentiful attractions, so that the young men of the community were agitated in their bosoms. Among the more agitated was Johnny, the son of Judge Atwood, who lived in the big colonial mansion on the edge of Dalesburg.</p>
<p>It would seem that the desirable Rosine should have been pleased to return the affection of an Atwood, a name honoured all over the state long before and since the war. It does seem that she should have gladly consented to have been led into that stately but rather empty colonial mansion. But not so. There was a cloud on the horizon, a threatening, cumulus cloud, in the shape of a lively and shrewd young farmer in the neighbourhood who dared to enter the lists as a rival to the high-born Atwood.</p>
<p>One night Johnny propounded to Rosine a question that is considered of much importance by the young of the human species. The accessories were all there—moonlight, oleanders, magnolias, the mock-birds song. Whether or no the shadow of Pinkney Dawson, the prosperous young farmer, came between them on that occasion is not known; but Rosines answer was unfavourable. Mr. John De Graffenreid Atwood bowed till his hat touched the lawn grass, and went away with his head high, but with a sore wound in his pedigree and heart. A Hemstetter refuse an Atwood! Zounds!</p>
<p>One night Johnny propounded to Rosine a question that is considered of much importance by the young of the human species. The accessories were all there—moonlight, oleanders, magnolias, the mock-birds song. Whether or no the shadow of Pinkney Dawson, the prosperous young farmer, came between them on that occasion is not known; but Rosines answer was unfavourable. <abbr>Mr.</abbr> John De Graffenreid Atwood bowed till his hat touched the lawn grass, and went away with his head high, but with a sore wound in his pedigree and heart. A Hemstetter refuse an Atwood! Zounds!</p>
<p>Among other accidents of that year was a Democratic president. Judge Atwood was a warhorse of Democracy. Johnny persuaded him to set the wheels moving for some foreign appointment. He would go away—away. Perhaps in years to come Rosine would think how true, how faithful his love had been, and would drop a tear—maybe in the cream she would be skimming for Pink Dawsons breakfast.</p>
<p>The wheels of politics revolved; and Johnny was appointed consul to Coralio. Just before leaving he dropped in at Hemstetters to say good-bye. There was a queer, pinkish look about Rosines eyes; and had the two been alone, the United States might have had to cast about for another consul. But Pink Dawson was there, of course, talking about his 400-acre orchard, and the three-mile alfalfa tract, and the 200-acre pasture. So Johnny shook hands with Rosine as coolly as if he were only going to run up to Montgomery for a couple of days. They had the royal manner when they chose, those Atwoods.</p>
<p>“If you happen to strike anything in the way of a good investment down there, Johnny,” said Pink Dawson, “just let me know, will you? I reckon I could lay my hands on a few extra thousands most any time for a profitable deal.”</p>
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<p>Geddie came down to the consulate to explain the duties and workings of the office. He and Keogh tried to interest the new consul in their description of the work that his government expected him to perform.</p>
<p>“Its all right,” said Johnny from the hammock that he had set up as the official reclining place. “If anything turns up that has to be done Ill let you fellows do it. You cant expect a Democrat to work during his first term of holding office.”</p>
<p>“You might look over these headings,” suggested Geddie, “of the different lines of exports you will have to keep account of. The fruit is classified; and there are the valuable woods, coffee, <span class="nowrap">rubber—”</span></p>
<p>“That last account sounds all right,” interrupted Mr. Atwood. “Sounds as if it could be stretched. I want to buy a new flag, a monkey, a guitar and a barrel of pineapples. Will that rubber account stretch over em?”</p>
<p>“That last account sounds all right,” interrupted <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Atwood. “Sounds as if it could be stretched. I want to buy a new flag, a monkey, a guitar and a barrel of pineapples. Will that rubber account stretch over em?”</p>
<p>“Thats merely statistics,” said Geddie, smiling. “The expense account is what you want. It is supposed to have a slight elasticity. The stationery items are sometimes carelessly audited by the State Department.”</p>
<p>“Were wasting our time,” said Keogh. “This man was born to hold office. He penetrates to the root of the art at one step of his eagle eye. The true genius of government shows its hand in every word of his speech.”</p>
<p>“I didnt take this job with any intention of working,” explained Johnny, lazily. “I wanted to go somewhere in the world where they didnt talk about farms. There are none here, are there?”</p>

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<p>“Henry and me met at Texarkana, and figured out this phonograph scheme. He had $360 which came to him out of a land allotment in the reservation. I had run down from Little Rock on account of a distressful scene I had witnessed on the street there. A man stood on a box and passed around some gold watches, screw case, stem-winders, Elgin movement, very elegant. Twenty bucks they cost you over the counter. At three dollars the crowd fought for the tickers. The man happened to find a valise full of them handy, and he passed them out like putting hot biscuits on a plate. The backs were hard to unscrew, but the crowd put its ear to the case, and they ticked mollifying and agreeable. Three of these watches were genuine tickers; the rest were only kickers. Hey? Why, empty cases with one of them horny black bugs that fly around electric lights in em. Them bugs kick off minutes and seconds industrious and beautiful. So, this man I was speaking of cleaned up $288; and then he went away, because he knew that when it came time to wind watches in Little Rock an entomologist would be needed, and he wasnt one.</p>
<p>“So, as I say, Henry had $360, and I had $288. The idea of introducing the phonograph to South America was Henrys; but I took to it freely, being fond of machinery of all kinds.</p>
<p>The Latin races, says Henry, explaining easy in the idioms he learned at college, are peculiarly adapted to be victims of the phonograph. They have the artistic temperament. They yearn for music and color and gaiety. They give wampum to the hand-organ man and the four-legged chicken in the tent when theyre months behind with the grocery and the bread-fruit tree.</p>
<p>Then, says I, well export canned music to the Latins; but Im mindful of Mr. Julius Cæsars account of em where he says: “<i>Omnia Gallia in tres partes divisa est</i>;” which is the same as to say, “We will need all of our gall in devising means to tree them parties.” ’</p>
<p>Then, says I, well export canned music to the Latins; but Im mindful of <abbr>Mr.</abbr> Julius Cæsars account of em where he says: “<i>Omnia Gallia in tres partes divisa est</i>;” which is the same as to say, “We will need all of our gall in devising means to tree them parties.” ’</p>
<p>“I hated to make a show of education; but I was disinclined to be overdone in syntax by a mere Indian, a member of a race to which we owe nothing except the land on which the United States is situated.</p>
<p>“We bought a fine phonograph in Texarkana—one of the best make—and half a trunkful of records. We packed up, and took the T. and P. for New Orleans. From that celebrated centre of molasses and disfranchised coon songs we took a steamer for South America.</p>
<p>“We landed at Solitas, forty miles up the coast from here. Twas a palatable enough place to look at. The houses were clean and white; and to look at em stuck around among the scenery they reminded you of hard-boiled eggs served with lettuce. There was a block of skyscraper mountains in the suburbs; and they kept pretty quiet, like they had crept up there and were watching the town. And the sea was remarking Sh-sh-sh on the beach; and now and then a ripe cocoanut would drop kerblip in the sand; and that was all there was doing. Yes, I judge that town was considerably on the quiet. I judge that after Gabriel quits blowing his horn, and the car starts, with Philadelphia swinging to the last strap, and Pine Gully, Arkansas, hanging onto the rear step, this town of Solitas will wake up and ask if anybody spoke.</p>

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<p>Colonel Falcon soon came to the reasonable conclusion that if anyone in Coralio could furnish a clue to the vanished money, Frank Goodwin must be the man. But the wise secretary pursued a different course in seeking information from the American. Goodwin was a powerful friend to the new administration, and one who was not to be carelessly dealt with in respect to either his honesty or his courage. Even the private secretary of His Excellency hesitated to have this rubber prince and mahogany baron haled before him as a common citizen of Anchuria. So he sent Goodwin a flowery epistle, each word-petal dripping with honey, requesting the favour of an interview. Goodwin replied with an invitation to dinner at his own house.</p>
<p>Before the hour named the American walked over to the Casa Morena, and greeted his guest frankly and friendly. Then the two strolled, in the cool of the afternoon, to Goodwins home in the environs.</p>
<p>The American left Colonel Falcon in a big, cool, shadowed room with a floor of inlaid and polished woods that any millionaire in the States would have envied, excusing himself for a few minutes. He crossed a <i>patio</i>, shaded with deftly arranged awnings and plants, and entered a long room looking upon the sea in the opposite wing of the house. The broad jalousies were opened wide, and the ocean breeze flowed in through the room, an invisible current of coolness and health. Goodwins wife sat near one of the windows, making a water-color sketch of the afternoon seascape.</p>
<p>Here was a woman who looked to be happy. And more—she looked to be content. Had a poet been inspired to pen just similes concerning her favour, he would have likened her full, clear eyes, with their white-encircled, gray irises, to moonflowers. With none of the goddesses whose traditional charms have become coldly classic would the discerning rhymester have compared her. She was purely Paradisaic, not Olympian. If you can imagine Eve, after the eviction, beguiling the flaming warriors and serenely re-entering the Garden, you will have her. Just so human, and still so harmonious with Eden seemed Mrs. Goodwin.</p>
<p>Here was a woman who looked to be happy. And more—she looked to be content. Had a poet been inspired to pen just similes concerning her favour, he would have likened her full, clear eyes, with their white-encircled, gray irises, to moonflowers. With none of the goddesses whose traditional charms have become coldly classic would the discerning rhymester have compared her. She was purely Paradisaic, not Olympian. If you can imagine Eve, after the eviction, beguiling the flaming warriors and serenely re-entering the Garden, you will have her. Just so human, and still so harmonious with Eden seemed <abbr>Mrs.</abbr> Goodwin.</p>
<p>When her husband entered she looked up, and her lips curved and parted; her eyelids fluttered twice or thrice—a movement remindful (Poesy forgive us!) of the tail-wagging of a faithful dog—and a little ripple went through her like the commotion set up in a weeping willow by a puff of wind. Thus she ever acknowledged his coming, were it twenty times a day. If they who sometimes sat over their wine in Coralio, reshaping old, diverting stories of the madcap career of Isabel Guilbert, could have seen the wife of Frank Goodwin that afternoon in the estimable aura of her happy wifehood, they might have disbelieved, or have agreed to forget, those graphic annals of the life of the one for whom their president gave up his country and his honour.</p>
<p>“I have brought a guest to dinner,” said Goodwin. “One Colonel Falcon, from San Mateo. He is come on government business. I do not think you will care to see him, so I prescribe for you one of those convenient and indisputable feminine headaches.”</p>
<p>“He has come to inquire about the lost money, has he not?” asked Mrs. Goodwin, going on with her sketch.</p>
<p>“He has come to inquire about the lost money, has he not?” asked <abbr>Mrs.</abbr> Goodwin, going on with her sketch.</p>
<p>“A good guess!” acknowledged Goodwin. “He has been holding an inquisition among the natives for three days. I am next on his list of witnesses, but as he feels shy about dragging one of Uncle Sams subjects before him, he consents to give it the outward appearance of a social function. He will apply the torture over my own wine and provender.”</p>
<p>“Has he found anyone who saw the valise of money?”</p>
<p>“Not a soul. Even Madama Ortiz, whose eyes are so sharp for the sight of a revenue official, does not remember that there was any baggage.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Goodwin laid down her brush and sighed.</p>
<p><abbr>Mrs.</abbr> Goodwin laid down her brush and sighed.</p>
<p>“I am so sorry, Frank,” she said, “that they are giving you so much trouble about the money. But we cant let them know about it, can we?”</p>
<p>“Not without doing our intelligence a great injustice,” said Goodwin, with a smile and a shrug that he had picked up from the natives. “<i>Americano</i>, though I am, they would have me in the <i>calaboza</i> in half an hour if they knew we had appropriated that valise. No; we must appear as ignorant about the money as the other ignoramuses in Coralio.”</p>
<p>“Do you think that this man they have sent suspects you?” she asked, with a little pucker of her brows.</p>
<p>“Hed better not,” said the American, carelessly. “Its lucky that no one caught a sight of the valise except myself. As I was in the rooms when the shot was fired, it is not surprising that they should want to investigate my part in the affair rather closely. But theres no cause for alarm. This colonel is down on the list of events for a good dinner, with a dessert of American bluff that will end the matter, I think.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Goodwin rose and walked to the window. Goodwin followed and stood by her side. She leaned to him, and rested in the protection of his strength, as she had always rested since that dark night on which he had first made himself her tower of refuge. Thus they stood for a little while.</p>
<p><abbr>Mrs.</abbr> Goodwin rose and walked to the window. Goodwin followed and stood by her side. She leaned to him, and rested in the protection of his strength, as she had always rested since that dark night on which he had first made himself her tower of refuge. Thus they stood for a little while.</p>
<p>Straight through the lavish growth of tropical branch and leaf and vine that confronted them had been cunningly trimmed a vista, that ended at the cleared environs of Coralio, on the banks of the mangrove swamp. At the other end of the aerial tunnel they could see the grave and wooden headpiece that bore the name of the unhappy President Miraflores. From this window when the rains forbade the open, and from the green and shady slopes of Goodwins fruitful lands when the skies were smiling, his wife was wont to look upon that grave with a gentle sadness that was now scarcely a mar to her happiness.</p>
<p>“I loved him so, Frank!” she said, “even after that terrible flight and its awful ending. And you have been so good to me, and have made me so happy. It has all grown into such a strange puzzle. If they were to find out that we got the money do you think they would force you to make the amount good to the government?”</p>
<p>“They would undoubtedly try,” answered Goodwin. “You are right about its being a puzzle. And it must remain a puzzle to Falcon and all his countrymen until it solves itself. You and I, who know more than anyone else, only know half of the solution. We must not let even a hint about this money get abroad. Let them come to the theory that the president concealed it in the mountains during his journey, or that he found means to ship it out of the country before he reached Coralio. I dont think that Falcon suspects me. He is making a close investigation, according to his orders, but he will find out nothing.”</p>
<p>Thus they spake together. Had anyone overheard or overseen them as they discussed the lost funds of Anchuria there would have been a second puzzle presented. For upon the faces and in the bearing of each of them was visible (if countenances are to be believed) Saxon honesty and pride and honourable thoughts. In Goodwins steady eye and firm lineaments, moulded into material shape by the inward spirit of kindness and generosity and courage, there was nothing reconcilable with his words.</p>
<p>As for his wife, physiognomy championed her even in the face of their accusive talk. Nobility was in her guise; purity was in her glance. The devotion that she manifested had not even the appearance of that feeling that now and then inspires a woman to share the guilt of her partner out of the pathetic greatness of her love. No, there was a discrepancy here between what the eye would have seen and the ear have heard.</p>
<p>Dinner was served to Goodwin and his guest in the <i>patio</i>, under cool foliage and flowers. The American begged the illustrious secretary to excuse the absence of Mrs. Goodwin, who was suffering, he said, from a headache brought on by a slight <i>calentura</i>.</p>
<p>Dinner was served to Goodwin and his guest in the <i>patio</i>, under cool foliage and flowers. The American begged the illustrious secretary to excuse the absence of <abbr>Mrs.</abbr> Goodwin, who was suffering, he said, from a headache brought on by a slight <i>calentura</i>.</p>
<p>After the meal they lingered, according to the custom, over their coffee and cigars. Colonel Falcon, with true Castilian delicacy, waited for his host to open the question that they had met to discuss. He had not long to wait. As soon as the cigars were lighted, the American cleared the way by inquiring whether the secretarys investigations in the town had furnished him with any clue to the lost funds.</p>
<p>“I have found no one yet,” admitted Colonel Falcon, “who even had sight of the valise or the money. Yet I have persisted. It has been proven in the capital that President Miraflores set out from San Mateo with one hundred thousand dollars belonging to the government, accompanied by <i>Señorita</i> Isabel Guilbert, the opera singer. The Government, officially and personally, is loathe to believe,” concluded Colonel Falcon, with a smile, “that our late Presidents tastes would have permitted him to abandon on the route, as excess baggage, either of the desirable articles with which his flight was burdened.”</p>
<p>“I suppose you would like to hear what I have to say about the affair,” said Goodwin, coming directly to the point. “It will not require many words.</p>
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<p>“I must trot along in a minute or two,” hinted Goodwin. “Was there anything in particular?”</p>
<p>Blythe did not reply at once.</p>
<p>“Old Losada would make it a hot country,” he remarked at length, “for the man who swiped that gripsack of treasury boodle, dont you think?”</p>
<p>“Undoubtedly, he would,” agreed Goodwin calmly, as he rose leisurely to his feet. “Ill be running over to the house now, old man. Mrs. Goodwin is alone. There was nothing important you had to say, was there?”</p>
<p>“Undoubtedly, he would,” agreed Goodwin calmly, as he rose leisurely to his feet. “Ill be running over to the house now, old man. <abbr>Mrs.</abbr> Goodwin is alone. There was nothing important you had to say, was there?”</p>
<p>“Thats all,” said Blythe. “Unless you wouldnt mind sending in another drink from the bar as you go out. Old Espada has closed my account to profit and loss. And pay for the lot, will you, like a good fellow?”</p>
<p>“All right,” said Goodwin. “<i>Buenas noches.</i></p>
<p>“Beelzebub” Blythe lingered over his cups, polishing his eyeglasses with a disreputable handkerchief.</p>

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<body epub:type="bodymatter z3998:fiction">
<section id="chapter-8" epub:type="chapter">
<h2>VIII</h2>
<h3>THE ADMIRAL<br/> </h3>
<h3>THE <abbr class="era">AD</abbr>MIRAL<br/> </h3>
<p>Spilled milk draws few tears from an Anchurian administration. Many are its lacteal sources; and the clocks hands point forever to milking time. Even the rich cream skimmed from the treasury by the bewitched Miraflores did not cause the newly-installed patriots to waste time in unprofitable regrets. The government philosophically set about supplying the deficiency by increasing the import duties and by “suggesting” to wealthy private citizens that contributions according to their means would be considered patriotic and in order. Prosperity was expected to attend the reign of Losada, the new president. The ousted office-holders and military favourites organized a new “Liberal” party, and began to lay their plans for a re-succession. Thus the game of Anchurian politics began, like a Chinese comedy, to unwind slowly its serial length. Here and there Mirth peeps for an instant from the wings and illumines the florid lines.</p>
<p>A dozen quarts of champagne in conjunction with an informal sitting of the president and his cabinet led to the establishment of the navy and the appointment of Felipe Carrera as its admiral.</p>
<p>Next to the champagne the credit of the appointment belongs to Don Sabas Placido, the newly confirmed Minister of War.</p>

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<p>It is characteristic of this buoyant people that they pursue no man beyond the grave. “Let God be his judge!”—Even with the hundred thousand unfound, though greatly coveted, the hue and cry went no further than that.</p>
<p>To the stranger or the guest the people of Coralio will relate the story of the tragic end of their former president; how he strove to escape from the country with the public funds and also with Doña Isabel Guilbert, the young American opera singer; and how, being apprehended by members of the opposing political party in Coralio, he shot himself through the head rather than give up the funds, and, in consequence, the Señorita Guilbert. They will relate further that Doña Isabel, her adventurous bark of fortune shoaled by the simultaneous loss of her distinguished admirer and the souvenir hundred thousand, dropped anchor on this stagnant coast, awaiting a rising tide.</p>
<p>They say, in Coralio, that she found a prompt and prosperous tide in the form of Frank Goodwin, an American resident of the town, an investor who had grown wealthy by dealing in the products of the country—a banana king, a rubber prince, a sarsaparilla, indigo, and mahogany baron. The Señorita Guilbert, you will be told, married Señor Goodwin one month after the presidents death, thus, in the very moment when Fortune had ceased to smile, wresting from her a gift greater than the prize withdrawn.</p>
<p>Of the American, Don Frank Goodwin, and of his wife the natives have nothing but good to say. Don Frank has lived among them for years, and has compelled their respect. His lady is easily queen of what social life the sober coast affords. The wife of the governor of the district, herself, who was of the proud Castilian family of Monteleon y Dolorosa de los Santos y Mendez, feels honoured to unfold her napkin with olive-hued, ringed hands at the table of Señora Goodwin. Were you to refer (with your northern prejudices) to the vivacious past of Mrs. Goodwin when her audacious and gleeful abandon in light opera captured the mature presidents fancy, or to her share in that statesmans downfall and malfeasance, the Latin shrug of the shoulder would be your only answer and rebuttal. What prejudices there were in Coralio concerning Señora Goodwin seemed now to be in her favour, whatever they had been in the past.</p>
<p>Of the American, Don Frank Goodwin, and of his wife the natives have nothing but good to say. Don Frank has lived among them for years, and has compelled their respect. His lady is easily queen of what social life the sober coast affords. The wife of the governor of the district, herself, who was of the proud Castilian family of Monteleon y Dolorosa de los Santos y Mendez, feels honoured to unfold her napkin with olive-hued, ringed hands at the table of Señora Goodwin. Were you to refer (with your northern prejudices) to the vivacious past of <abbr>Mrs.</abbr> Goodwin when her audacious and gleeful abandon in light opera captured the mature presidents fancy, or to her share in that statesmans downfall and malfeasance, the Latin shrug of the shoulder would be your only answer and rebuttal. What prejudices there were in Coralio concerning Señora Goodwin seemed now to be in her favour, whatever they had been in the past.</p>
<p>It would seem that the story is ended, instead of begun; that the close of tragedy and the climax of a romance have covered the ground of interest; but, to the more curious reader it shall be some slight instruction to trace the close threads that underlie the ingenuous web of circumstances.</p>
<p>The headpiece bearing the name of President Miraflores is daily scrubbed with soap-bark and sand. An old half-breed Indian tends the grave with fidelity and the dawdling minuteness of inherited sloth. He chops down the weeds and ever-springing grass with his machete, he plucks ants and scorpions and beetles from it with his horny fingers, and sprinkles its turf with water from the plaza fountain. There is no grave anywhere so well kept and ordered.</p>
<p>Only by following out the underlying threads will it be made clear why the old Indian, Galvez, is secretly paid to keep green the grave of President Miraflores by one who never saw that unfortunate statesman in life or in death, and why that one was wont to walk in the twilight, casting from a distance looks of gentle sadness upon that unhonoured mound.</p>