Caesar or Nothing - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"I know what you are doing," said Caesar. "Be careful, because it may cost you a term in prison."
"You are the one that may have to pay by going to prison," replied the inspector.
"Just try to arrest me, you poor fool, and I'll shoot your head off!"
The police inspector jumped up from the table where he was seated, and, as he went out, he let one of the ballots fall. Caesar looked over the men who were with the police inspector; one of them was "Sparkler." Some days before he had come to Moncada's headquarters to offer to work for him, and he was the director of the contaminating persons sent to Castro by the Government.
A CLANDESTINE MEETING
When he returned to the headquarters, they told him there was a meeting in "Furibis's" tavern at nine that night. Caesar got there a little later than the time set. The place was gloomy, and had some big earthen jars in it. They had put a table at the back of this cave, and an acetylene light illuminated it.
Those present formed a semicircle around the table.
Caesar knocked at the tavern, and they opened the door to him; a workman who was speaking delayed his peroration, and they waited until Caesar had reached the table and got seated. The atmosphere was suffocating.
Everything was closed so that the Civil Guards would not see the light through the windows and suspect that there was a meeting being held there. The workmen were, for the most part, masons, weavers, brickmakers. There were women there with their little ones asleep in their bosoms. The air one breathed there was horrible. It looked like a gathering of desperate people. They had learned that their arrested comrades had been beaten in the prison, and that San Roman and Dr.
Ortigosa were in the infirmary as a result.
_EULOGY OF VIOLENCE_
The excitement among those present was terrible. "Limpy" was the most strenuous; he was in favour of their all going out that moment and storming the jail.
When they had all spoken, Caesar got up and asked them to wait. If he won the election the next day, he promised them that the prisoners should be freed immediately; if he did not win and the prisoners remained there...
"Then what is to be done?" said a voice.
"What is to be done? I am in favour of violence," answered Caesar; "burning the jail, setting fire to the whole town; I am ready for anything."
At that moment he really did think he had been too lenient.
"Man's first duty is to break the law," he shouted, "when it is a bad law. Everything is due to violence and war. I will go to the post of danger this very second, whenever you wish. Shall we storm the jail?
Let's go right now."
This storming of the jail didn't seem an easy thing to the others. One might try to climb down the hill and surprise the prison guards, but it would be difficult. According to "Furibis," the best thing would be for ten or twelve of them to go out into the street with guns and pistols and shoot right and left.
At this disturbance the Civil Guard would come out, and that would be the moment for the others to enter the jail and drag the prisoners out into the street.
Some one else said that it seemed better to him for them to approach the Civil Guards' quarters cautiously, kill the sentinels, and take possession of the rifles.
"Decide," said Caesar; "I am ready for anything."
Caesar's att.i.tude made the excited ones grow calmer and understand that it was not so easy to storm the jail.
It was about eleven when the meeting at the tavern ended. They had decided to wait and see what would happen the next day, and they left the place one by one.
"We will escort you, Don Caesar," several of them said.
"No. What for?"
"Remember there are people who might attack you. 'Driveller' Juan is at large in Castro."
"Really?"
"Yes."
"That bully can't do anything to me."
_AT NIGHT_
Caesar went out of the tavern, pulled down his hat, and wrapped himself in his cape. He had not brought the motor, to avoid being recognized. It was a cloudy night, but still and beautiful.
Before they got out of the town a small boy came up to Caesar.
"'The Cub-s.l.u.t' sent me to tell you to come to her house; she wants to speak to you."
"I will go tomorrow."
"No. You must come now, because what she has to say is very important,"
shouted the youngster.
"Well, I can't go now."
The youngster protested, and Caesar continued on his way. "Limpy" and "Uncle Chinaman" followed him. Caesar was walking in the middle of the highway, when, about half way home, a man on the run pa.s.sed him. No doubt he was going to give some signal.
"Limpy" and "Chinaman" shouted over and over:
"Don Caesar! Don Caesar!"
Caesar halted, and "Chinaman" and "Limpy" ran up to him.
"What's going on?" asked Caesar.
"They are lying in wait for you," said "Limpy." "Didn't you see a man go past running?"
"Yes."
"We are going to stay with you. We will sleep at your house," said "Chinaman," "and if they attack us, we will defend ourselves."
He showed a pistol which he carried in his sash.
The three walked on together, and as they pa.s.sed a little grove in front of the palace, a shadow pa.s.sed by, crawling, and fled away.
"He was there," said "Chinaman."
They went into the house. Amparito, with the old nurse, was praying before a lighted image.