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No man, says I, who attacks and confiscates a country single-handed could be called a coward. The worst you can be charged with is plagiarism or imitation. If Anthony Hope and Roosevelt let you get away with it, nobody else will have any right to kick. Im not joking, says OConnor. And Ive got $1,500 cash to work the scheme with. Ive taken a liking to you. Do you want it, or not? Im not working, I told him; but how is it to be? Do I eat during the fomentation of the insurrection, or am I only to be Secretary of War after the country is conquered? Is it to be a pay envelope or only a portfolio? Ill pay all expenses, says OConnor. I want a man I can trust. If we succeed you may pick out any appointment you want in the gift of the government. All right, then, says I. You can get me a bunch of draying contracts and then a quick-action consignment to a seat on the Supreme Court bench so I wont be in line for the presidency. The kind of cannon they chasten their presidents with in that country hurt too much. You can consider me on the pay-roll. Two weeks afterward OConnor and me took a steamer for the small, green, doomed country. We were three weeks on the trip. OConnor said he had his plans all figured out in advance; but being the commanding general, it consorted with his dignity to keep the details concealed from his army and cabinet, commonly known as William T. Bowers. Three dollars a day was the price for which I joined the cause of liberating an undiscovered country from the ills that threatened or sustained it. Every Saturday night on the steamer I stood in line at parade rest, and OConnor handed over the twenty-one dollars. The town we landed at was named Guayaquerita, so they told me. Not for me, says I. Itll be little old Hilldale or Tompkinsville or Cherry Tree Corners when I speak of it. Its a clear case where spelling reform ought to butt in and disenvowel it. But the town looked fine from the bay when we sailed in. It was white, with green ruching and lace ruffles on the skirt when the surf slashed up on the sand. It looked as tropical and dolce far ultra as the pictures of Lake Ronkonkoma in the brochure of the passenger department of the Long Island Railroad. We went through the quarantine and custom-house indignities; and then OConnor leads me to a dobe house on a street called The Avenue of the Dolorous Butterflies of the Individual and Collective Saints. Ten feet wide it was, and knee-deep in alfalfa and cigar stumps. Hooligan Alley, says I, re-christening it. Twill be our head-quarters, says OConnor. My agent here, Don Fernando Pacheco, secured it for us. So in that house OConnor and me established the revolutionary centre. In the front room we had ostensible things such as fruit, a guitar, and a table with a conch shell on it. In the back room OConnor had his desk and a large looking-glass and his sword hid in a roll of straw matting. We slept on hammocks that we hung to hooks in the wall; and took our meals at the Hotel Ingles, a beanery run on the American plan by a German proprietor with Chinese cooking served à la Kansas City lunch counter. It seems that OConnor really did have some sort of system planned out beforehand. He wrote plenty of letters; and every day or two some native gent would stroll round to head-quarters and be shut up in the back room for half an hour with OConnor and the interpreter. I noticed that when they went in they were always smoking eight-inch cigars and at peace with the world; but when they came out they would be folding up a ten- or twenty-dollar bill and cursing the government horribly. |
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