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The doctor shook his head. "It is the end," he said. "Don Anibal will never speak again."
"You lie!"
"No, Esteban." He turned to Hall. "His last words were to you, _companero_."
"Christ Almighty!"
"For G.o.d's sake, tell me what happened to Anibal!"
"He fell into a coma. I think it is a stroke." Gonzales sat heavily in one of the leather chairs, began to fumble in his pocket for another adrenalin vial. His fingers began to become frantic in their impotence.
"I--I ..."
Hall caught his head as he started to collapse. He reached into the doctor's pocket, found the adrenalin and used it.
"It is a stupid way to live," Gonzales said. "To have your life depend always on your being a vegetable with a bottle. Thank you, _companero_.
Just let me rest here for a few minutes."
Throughout all of this, Lavandero stood over Tabio's table, staring down at the jar of pencils with a dark, ugly face. He clenched opened clenched opened clenched his fists, his fingers working to no definite rhythm, and then he looked at his fists opening and closing and for a few minutes it seemed as if he looked upon his own hands with loathing.
Then, straightening up, he put his hands in the pockets of his blue jacket and turned to Hall and Gonzales. "This is no time to plan personal violence," he said. "It would be exactly what the fascists wanted."
"I am at your orders," Hall said. "I think you know that."
"I am counting on you."
"What do I do now?"
"Keep out of sight for a few hours. I think you should go to Gonzales'
house. I'll get you an official car and a chauffeur."
"I'm not alone," Hall said. He told Lavandero about Jerry and the death of Androtten.
"_Madre de Dios_, take her with you! And keep her hidden." The sweat pouring down his face betrayed Lavandero's excitement; his voice was calm and steady. "I'll send an armed guard with you."
"I'll get the nurse," Gonzales said.
"No. Don't get up. Tell us where she is."
Lavandero had taken over. Later, Hall knew, the man would allow himself to fly into a wild rage, but he would do it alone, where no one could hear or see him. And Hall knew, also, that soon Lavandero would be engaged in a battle with Gamburdo and the fascists for control of the nation.
_Chapter fourteen_
The black Packard roared out of the subterranean garage of the Presidencia, shot out to the Avenida de la Liberacion. Hall and Jerry, in the back seat, looked behind them at the second Packard which carried their convoy of guards. "They have enough tommy guns back there to blow up anyone who makes a pa.s.s at us," he said. "And the two boys in the front seat can throw plenty of lead."
"It's like a gangster movie," Jerry said.
"That shooting in your room this morning was no movie. I've never seen a deader n.a.z.i than the late Wilhelm Androtten, alias X."
"What's going to happen to us now, Matt?"
"Don't worry."
"I am worried. I want to know."
The two cars pulled up at the doctor's house. Maria Luisa, Gonzales'
fourteen-year-old daughter, met them at the door. "I am preparing some sandwiches," she said. "Father said you were famished."
They waited in the living room while the girl worked in the kitchen.
"You're too hot in San Hermano," Hall said.
"Not yet. They don't know what happened to Androtten. I can just go on being Ansaldo's nurse until ..."
"Forget it," he snapped. "This isn't for amateurs any longer. And you're still an amateur, baby."
"Then what do you suggest I do?"
"You're going back to the States with a bodyguard on the next plane out of here. You're waiting for me in Miami. I'll give you a letter to one of the chiefs of Military Intelligence there. You'll be safe."
"How about you?"
"I'll meet you in two weeks. Three weeks at the outside."
"I won't do it, Matt. I'm staying here with you."
"But I won't be here all the time."
"Then I'll wait here for you."
"Baby, listen." He took out a package of American cigarettes, put one in her mouth, lit it. "Ladies don't smoke in San Hermano. You can smoke until you hear anyone coming. Then hand it to me. Now, sit down like a good girl, and for G.o.d's sake, listen carefully. There's a job I've got to do. It's my job alone. I've got to do it alone. I had an idea that before I was through here I'd have to do it. But Tabio's last words were spoken in English and they were to me, and baby, as soon as he stopped talking I knew what I had to do."
Hall quoted the President's words about the power of Truth. "And he was right," he said. "I remember what happened when I got out of the can in Spain. I went back to Paris to get some rest. Tabio was in Geneva, packing his things to go home. I found out he was still there and I went to see him before he left. He was going home to run for President so that this country shouldn't become a second Spain.
"I remember telling him that the thing which kept me alive in Franco's prison was my feeling that a miracle would happen--that the little guys in England and France would force the appeasers to sell guns to the Republic, or that Russia would be able to fly some heavy bombers across France for Madrid, or that Roosevelt would open his eyes and lift the d.a.m.ned embargo, or anything. Any good miracle like these, even a tiny one, would have saved the day. And I went to sleep every day sure that each morning I'd wake up closer to the day this miracle would happen, and that some morning I'd wake up and find that the people somewhere outside of Spain had performed this miracle.
"I remember the way Tabio listened to me speak, and how when I was done he said that the miracle I wanted all that time was that the truth should get to the people. It was that simple. And he was dead right.
It's exactly what he did in his own country, and you know how the people love him for it."
Jerry looked puzzled. "But what do you propose to do?"
"Look," he said. "It's a matter of days at most before the whole nation will be mourning Tabio. The Const.i.tution says that within thirty days after the President dies, there must be a general election. I have an idea that the race will be between Gamburdo and someone like Lavandero.
Both will claim that they are Tabio's real choice as a successor. If I can get to Havana, I can dig up the truth about Gamburdo and Ansaldo in a matter of days. I'm sure of it. If it's anywhere at all, it's in Havana. Gamburdo is taking public credit for trying to save Tabio's life by bringing Ansaldo to San Hermano. The truth can make this boomerang in his face."
"Can't I help in any way?"
Hall stopped short. "Do you know what you're asking? That sc.r.a.pe in the hotel this morning was nothing compared to the things you're asking for if you stay. Even if Gamburdo is licked, it's only the beginning."