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Gamburdo until after the Congress convenes."
Nice going, he thought. "An interview with the Vice-President? But how did Mr. Valenti know that was what I wanted?"
"I don't know, Mr. Hall. I guess he just presumed. Every one wants to interview Mr. Gamburdo these days. If it keeps up I guess he'll make the cover of _Time_, don't you think?" She sat down and propped up a flower sagging over the rim of the crystal vase on her desk. "Our pretty tropical blooms are too darned delicate, don't you think?"
"Oh, yes," Hall said, thinking not of the broken blossom but of the speed with which the text of his cable had reached Gamburdo's new Press Secretary.
Miss Vardieno brushed an imaginary fleck of dust from her skirt. "Well, anyway," she said in her best bored-with-it-all nuance, "he's going to be a vast improvement over Tovarich Tabio."
"I'll be seeing you," Hall said.
"Don't be a stranger now," Miss Vardieno said. "It's such a relief to speak English during office hours."
Hall closed the door behind him and started to whistle the ballad about the graft that built the marble halls of Gobernacion's _edificio magnifico_. "You're right," he told the old attendant. "Valenti can never wear Don Pascual's _pantalones_."
The old man's dry cackle followed Hall down the swirling marble stairs.
Hall walked out to the Avenida de la Liberacion, looked in all directions for the man who had followed him the night before. The yellow straw hat was nowhere in sight. He turned his steps toward the fas.h.i.+onable shopping district directly south on the avenue. If his shadow were on him, he would flush him by walking down the broad, sunny avenue.
The shopping district brought no sign of the "little dog." Hall shopped the plate-gla.s.s windows, hoping to catch a tell-tale glimpse of anyone who might be on his heels. He went into a department store, bought a tropical dinner suit, and arranged to have it altered and delivered to the Bolivar at five. Then, after selecting a maroon tie and a s.h.i.+rt, he found a phone booth and called Fielding's office.
A Spanish-speaking secretary answered the phone. Fielding was in Alcala at an auction, she said. "Please have him call Father Arupe's secretary," Hall said.
The hot noon-day sun forced Hall to abandon his ideas of taking a leisurely stroll to the Bolivar. He found a rickety cab and relaxed on the dusty cus.h.i.+ons. Fielding was the man he needed now, Fielding might be able to make Androtten show his cards, Fielding might have some of the answers about the new Press Chief and his brand-new secretary. And if Souza could find out who owned the Renault Androtten and the little dog used, maybe Fielding could tie the information into some of his own data and come up with something. Then when the boys in Havana answered that screwy letter perhaps they'd all have something to go by. In three days at the outside there would be word from Havana. Three days of waiting and accepting Souza and Pepe and even Fielding on faith.
At the Bolivar, the desk clerk told Hall that Pepe had called to say that he was having some minor engine trouble and would be delayed for about an hour. Hall noted the word "minor" and put it down to a delay in reaching Souza or Juan Antonio. He ordered a jug of iced pineapple juice sent up and went to his room. The long walk down the Avenida de la Liberacion under the broiling sun had covered Hall with sweat. He stripped and went to the bathroom. A slow gust of air hissed out of the faucets when Hall turned the taps. He washed his face with cold water at the basin while waiting for the pressure to force up the water to the bath faucets.
But no water came. The hissing ceased, the faucets went bone dry. Hall phoned the news down to the desk.
"I am so sorry, Senor," the clerk said. "But all the baths on your line seem to have gone dry. The manager has sent for a plumber."
Hall stretched out on his bed and tried to relax.
The desk clerk phoned him back. "Can I send the plumber up?" he asked.
"Sure." Hall put on his pants and a pair of slippers. More than anything else, at this moment, he wanted to wallow in a cold tub. The plumber, who looked enough like Pepe Delgado to be his twin, had other ideas.
"It is very serious, Senor," he complained. "There will be no water from these rotted pipes in a century." He banged the pipes with one tool and twisted them with another, cursing them as he worked. "It is very serious," he concluded. "I can do nothing on them today."
"Mother of G.o.d!" Hall said, and then he saw the sly smile on the plumber's ma.s.sive face.
"Even She couldn't get any water from these pipes," the plumber said.
"How am I going to bathe?"
"Who knows? Maybe the manager will give you another room where the bath still works."
"Maybe. Well, thanks for trying."
"For nothing, Senor." The plumber picked up his tools and left.
Hall dressed and joined Pepe in the car. "What did the plumber say?"
Pepe asked.
"Enough. Let's have a quick lunch somewhere."
"Souza is changing your room tonight. He is also changing the rooms of four other guests. They have no water either."
"Good work. Where are we eating?"
"When I stop the car you'll find out."
"Is the plumber your brother?"
"My cousin. I also spoke to Juan Antonio. He made that telephone call."
"Are you very hungry?" Hall asked. "I want to buy you half a steer."
"I could eat half a steer, _companero_. And I know where to get it, too." He drove to an old garden restaurant near the beach. "Here they serve the best meat in San Hermano. And at low prices, too."
Pepe did ample justice to a tremendous steak. He washed it down with a quart of beer, chiding Hall for confining his luncheon to a simple roast-beef sandwich. "Such food is all right for little children, Senor Hall. But you are a man."
"Call me Mateo."
"You should eat like a man, _Companero_ Mateo."
"I don't feel like eating."
"Then go to a good doctor. Or take that red-headed woman into your bed for a night. You'd eat in the morning, _chico_!"
Hall laughed. "I'd rather see a doctor," he said.
"A doctor?" Pepe grew serious. "Is anything wrong?"
"Who knows? This Dr. Gonzales you mentioned. Is he a medico?"
"Yes. Would you like to see him, _Companero_ Mateo?"
"Could we see him after lunch?"
"Now is the best time. He's surely taking a little siesta, and it is better not to telephone. His daughter is at school all day. Come on, I'll drive you over."
They got into the car and Pepe swung into a street with a trolley track that led them to a middle-cla.s.s suburb. He stopped in front of a gray frame house similar to any doctor's house in an American town. A fat and ancient Persian cat was sleeping in the shadiest part of the porch. Pepe meowed at the cat. She opened a lazy eye, yawned, and went back to sleep.
"The cat and her master always take their siesta at the same time," Pepe explained. "It is a very intelligent cat." He opened the screen door.
"Is there no bell?"
"He disconnects the bell when he naps." Pepe led Hall into a cool, shaded living room. There was no rug on the highly polished redwood floor. The furniture was made by native craftsmen of bamboo and wicker, although the designs reflected the functional modernism of the Bauhaus school. It was the first modern furniture Hall had ever seen in South America.