<h2><SPAN name="chap03"></SPAN>III<br/> SMITH</h2>
<p>Goodwin and the ardent patriot, Zavalla, took all the precautions that their
foresight could contrive to prevent the escape of President Miraflores and his
companion. They sent trusted messengers up the coast to Solitas and Alazan to
warn the local leaders of the flight, and to instruct them to patrol the water
line and arrest the fugitives at all hazards should they reveal themselves in
that territory. After this was done there remained only to cover the district
about Coralio and await the coming of the quarry. The nets were well spread.
The roads were so few, the opportunities for embarkation so limited, and the
two or three probable points of exit so well guarded that it would be strange
indeed if there should slip through the meshes so much of the country’s
dignity, romance, and collateral. The president would, without doubt, move as
secretly as possible, and endeavour to board a vessel by stealth from some
secluded point along the shore.</p>
<p>On the fourth day after the receipt of Englehart’s telegram the
<i>Karlsefin</i>, a Norwegian steamer chartered by the New Orleans fruit trade,
anchored off Coralio with three hoarse toots of her siren. The <i>Karlsefin</i>
was not one of the line operated by the Vesuvius Fruit Company. She was
something of a dilettante, doing odd jobs for a company that was scarcely
important enough to figure as a rival to the Vesuvius. The movements of the
<i>Karlsefin</i> were dependent upon the state of the market. Sometimes she
would ply steadily between the Spanish Main and New Orleans in the regular
transport of fruit; next she would be making erratic trips to Mobile or
Charleston, or even as far north as New York, according to the distribution of
the fruit supply.</p>
<p>Goodwin lounged upon the beach with the usual crowd of idlers that had gathered
to view the steamer. Now that President Miraflores might be expected to reach
the borders of his abjured country at any time, the orders were to keep a
strict and unrelenting watch. Every vessel that approached the shores might now
be considered a possible means of escape for the fugitives; and an eye was kept
even on the sloops and dories that belonged to the sea-going contingent of
Coralio. Goodwin and Zavalla moved everywhere, but without ostentation,
watching the loopholes of escape.</p>
<p>The customs officials crowded importantly into their boat and rowed out to the
<i>Karlsefin</i>. A boat from the steamer landed her purser with his papers,
and took out the quarantine doctor with his green umbrella and clinical
thermometer. Next a swarm of Caribs began to load upon lighters the thousands
of bunches of bananas heaped upon the shore and row them out to the steamer.
The <i>Karlsefin</i> had no passenger list, and was soon done with the
attention of the authorities. The purser declared that the steamer would remain
at anchor until morning, taking on her fruit during the night. The
<i>Karlsefin</i> had come, he said, from New York, to which port her latest
load of oranges and cocoanuts had been conveyed. Two or three of the freighter
sloops were engaged to assist in the work, for the captain was anxious to make
a quick return in order to reap the advantage offered by a certain dearth of
fruit in the States.</p>
<p>About four o’clock in the afternoon another of those marine monsters, not
very familiar in those waters, hove in sight, following the fateful
<i>Idalia</i>—a graceful steam yacht, painted a light buff, clean-cut as
a steel engraving. The beautiful vessel hovered off shore, see-sawing the waves
as lightly as a duck in a rain barrel. A swift boat manned by a crew in uniform
came ashore, and a stocky-built man leaped to the sands.</p>
<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>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>Valhalla’s</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>
<p>Geddie’s revulsion had been a mild one—no more than a swim in a
summer sea after so inglorious an object as a drifting bottle. And now he was
himself again. Upon his desk, ready for the post, was a letter to his
government tendering his resignation as consul, to be effective as soon as
another could be appointed in his place. For Bernard Brannigan, who never did
things in a half-way manner, was to take Geddie at once for a partner in his
very profitable and various enterprises; and Paula was happily engaged in plans
for refurnishing and decorating the upper story of the Brannigan house.</p>
<p>The consul rose from his hammock when he saw the conspicuous stranger in his
door.</p>
<p>“Keep your seat, old man,” said the visitor, with an airy wave of
his large hand. “My name’s Smith; and I’ve come in a yacht.
You are the consul—is that right? A big, cool guy on the beach directed
me here. Thought I’d pay my respects to the flag.”</p>
<p>“Sit down,” said Geddie. “I’ve been admiring your craft
ever since it came in sight. Looks like a fast sailer. What’s her
tonnage?”</p>
<p>“Search me!” said Smith. “I don’t know what she weighs
in at. But she’s got a tidy gait. The <i>Rambler</i>—that’s
her name—don’t take the dust of anything afloat. This is my first
trip on her. I’m taking a squint along this coast just to get an idea of
the countries where the rubber and red pepper and revolutions come from. I had
no idea there was so much scenery down here. Why, Central Park ain’t in
it with this neck of the woods. I’m from New York. They get monkeys, and
cocoanuts, and parrots down here—is that right?”</p>
<p>“We have them all,” said Geddie. “I’m quite sure that
our fauna and flora would take a prize over Central Park.”</p>
<p>“Maybe they would,” admitted Smith, cheerfully. “I
haven’t seen them yet. But I guess you’ve got us skinned on the
animal and vegetation question. You don’t 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>“That’s the <i>Karlsefin</i>,” said the consul.
“She’s 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, I’ll 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 wouldn’t put you
to the trouble. I’d like to meet the guys you speak of, but I won’t
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>
ain’t quite as steady on her feet as a Broadway hotel; and a fellow gets
a touch of seasickness now and then. Thought I’d 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—it’s 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 Madama’s 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>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>“You’re Dr. Gregg—is that right?” said Smith, feeling
the dog’s head pin in his tie. “The constable—I mean the
consul, told me you hung out at this caravansary. My name’s 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>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 animal’s, 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>“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 native’s 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 native’s face.
Next he pulled out his watch and ran his finger round its dial twice. Again the
two fingers confronted the patient’s 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
doctor’s 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 won’t bring the other
watch. You can’t 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>The two leaned against the deserted bar; and Madama set out a bottle without
waiting for the doctor’s 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 won’t have another, come out and let’s sit in
the cool a while. It isn’t 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
Dr.—”</p>
<p>Smith rose from his chair, and laid a hand, soft with apology, upon the
doctor’s shirt sleeve.</p>
<p>“Say, Doc,” he said, solemnly, “I want to hear that story.
You’ve got me interested; and I don’t want to miss the rest of it.
I know it’s a loola by the way it begins; and I want to tell it at the
next meeting of the Barney O’Flynn Association, if you don’t mind.
But I’ve got one or two matters to attend to first. If I get ’em
attended to in time I’ll 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 I—”</p>
<p>“Don’t tell me now, Doc. Don’t spoil the story. Wait till I
come back. I want to hear it as it runs off the reel—is that
right?”</p>
<p>The mountains reached up their bulky shoulders to receive the level gallop of
Apollo’s homing steeds, the day died in the lagoons and in the shadowed
banana groves and in the mangrove swamps, where the great blue crabs were
beginning to crawl to land for their nightly ramble. And it died, at last, upon
the highest peaks. Then the brief twilight, ephemeral as the flight of a moth,
came and went; the Southern Cross peeped with its topmost eye above a row of
palms, and the fire-flies heralded with their torches the approach of
soft-footed night.</p>
<p>In the offing the <i>Karlsefin</i> swayed at anchor, her lights seeming to
penetrate the water to countless fathoms with their shimmering, lanceolate
reflections. The Caribs were busy loading her by means of the great lighters
heaped full from the piles of fruit ranged upon the shore.</p>
<p>On the sandy beach, with his back against a cocoanut-tree and the stubs of many
cigars lying around him, Smith sat waiting, never relaxing his sharp gaze in
the direction of the steamer.</p>
<p>The incongruous yachtsman had concentrated his interest upon the innocent
fruiter. Twice had he been assured that no passengers had come to Coralio on
board of her. And yet, with a persistence not to be attributed to an idling
voyager, he had appealed the case to the higher court of his own eyesight.
Surprisingly like some gay-coated lizard, he crouched at the foot of the
cocoanut palm, and with the beady, shifting eyes of the selfsame reptile,
sustained his espionage on the <i>Karlsefin</i>.</p>
<p>On the white sands a whiter gig belonging to the yacht was drawn up, guarded by
one of the white-ducked crew. Not far away in a <i>pulperia</i> on the
shore-following Calle Grande three other sailors swaggered with their cues
around Coralio’s solitary billiard-table. The boat lay there as if under
orders to be ready for use at any moment. There was in the atmosphere a hint of
expectation, of waiting for something to occur, which was foreign to the air of
Coralio.</p>
<p>Like some passing bird of brilliant plumage, Smith alights on this palmy shore
but to preen his wings for an instant and then to fly away upon silent pinions.
When morning dawned there was no Smith, no waiting gig, no yacht in the offing.
Smith left no intimation of his mission there, no footprints to show where he
had followed the trail of his mystery on the sands of Coralio that night. He
came; he spake his strange jargon of the asphalt and the cafés; he sat under
the cocoanut-tree, and vanished. The next morning Coralio, Smithless, ate its
fried plantain and said: “The man of pictured clothing went himself
away.” With the <i>siesta</i> the incident passed, yawning, into history.</p>
<p>So, for a time, must Smith pass behind the scenes of the play. He comes no more
to Coralio nor to Doctor Gregg, who sits in vain, wagging his redundant beard,
waiting to enrich his derelict audience with his moving tale of trepanning and
jealousy.</p>
<p>But prosperously to the lucidity of these loose pages, Smith shall flutter
among them again. In the nick of time he shall come to tell us why he strewed
so many anxious cigar stumps around the cocoanut palm that night. This he must
do; for, when he sailed away before the dawn in his yacht <i>Rambler</i>, he
carried with him the answer to a riddle so big and preposterous that few in
Anchuria had ventured even to propound it.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />