<h2><SPAN name="chap04"></SPAN>IV<br/> CAUGHT</h2>
<p>The plans for the detention of the flying President Miraflores and his
companion at the coast line seemed hardly likely to fail. Dr. Zavalla himself
had gone to the port of Alazan to establish a guard at that point. At Solitas
the Liberal patriot Varras could be depended upon to keep close watch. Goodwin
held himself responsible for the district about Coralio.</p>
<p>The news of the president’s flight had been disclosed to no one in the
coast towns save trusted members of the ambitious political party that was
desirous of succeeding to power. The telegraph wire running from San Mateo to
the coast had been cut far up on the mountain trail by an emissary of
Zavalla’s. Long before this could be repaired and word received along it
from the capital the fugitives would have reached the coast and the question of
escape or capture been solved.</p>
<p>Goodwin had stationed armed sentinels at frequent intervals along the shore for
a mile in each direction from Coralio. They were instructed to keep a vigilant
lookout during the night to prevent Miraflores from attempting to embark
stealthily by means of some boat or sloop found by chance at the water’s
edge. A dozen patrols walked the streets of Coralio unsuspected, ready to
intercept the truant official should he show himself there.</p>
<p>Goodwin was very well convinced that no precautions had been overlooked. He
strolled about the streets that bore such high-sounding names and were but
narrow, grass-covered lanes, lending his own aid to the vigil that had been
intrusted to him by Bob Englehart.</p>
<p>The town had begun the tepid round of its nightly diversions. A few leisurely
dandies, clad in white duck, with flowing neckties, and swinging slim bamboo
canes, threaded the grassy by-ways toward the houses of their favoured
señoritas. Those who wooed the art of music dragged tirelessly at whining
concertinas, or fingered lugubrious guitars at doors and windows. An occasional
soldier from the <i>cuartel</i>, with flapping straw hat, without coat or
shoes, hurried by, balancing his long gun like a lance in one hand. From every
density of the foliage the giant tree frogs sounded their loud and irritating
clatter. Further out, where the by-ways perished at the brink of the jungle,
the guttural cries of marauding baboons and the coughing of the alligators in
the black estuaries fractured the vain silence of the wood.</p>
<p>By ten o’clock the streets were deserted. The oil lamps that had burned,
a sickly yellow, at random corners, had been extinguished by some economical
civic agent. Coralio lay sleeping calmly between toppling mountains and
encroaching sea like a stolen babe in the arms of its abductors. Somewhere over
in that tropical darkness—perhaps already threading the profundities of
the alluvial lowlands—the high adventurer and his mate were moving toward
land’s end. The game of Fox-in-the-Morning should be coming soon to its
close.</p>
<p>Goodwin, at his deliberate gait, passed the long, low <i>cuartel</i> where
Coralio’s contingent of Anchuria’s military force slumbered, with
its bare toes pointed heavenward. There was a law that no civilian might come
so near the headquarters of that citadel of war after nine o’clock, but
Goodwin was always forgetting the minor statutes.</p>
<p>“<i>Quién vive?</i>” shrieked the sentinel, wrestling prodigiously
with his lengthy musket.</p>
<p>“<i>Americano</i>,” growled Goodwin, without turning his head, and
passed on, unhalted.</p>
<p>To the right he turned, and to the left up the street that ultimately reached
the Plaza Nacional. When within the toss of a cigar stump from the intersecting
Street of the Holy Sepulchre, he stopped suddenly in the pathway.</p>
<p>He saw the form of a tall man, clothed in black and carrying a large valise,
hurry down the cross-street in the direction of the beach. And Goodwin’s
second glance made him aware of a woman at the man’s elbow on the farther
side, who seemed to urge forward, if not even to assist, her companion in their
swift but silent progress. They were no Coralians, those two.</p>
<p>Goodwin followed at increased speed, but without any of the artful tactics that
are so dear to the heart of the sleuth. The American was too broad to feel the
instinct of the detective. He stood as an agent for the people of Anchuria, and
but for political reasons he would have demanded then and there the money. It
was the design of his party to secure the imperilled fund, to restore it to the
treasury of the country, and to declare itself in power without bloodshed or
resistance.</p>
<p>The couple halted at the door of the Hotel de los Estranjeros, and the man
struck upon the wood with the impatience of one unused to his entry being
stayed. Madama was long in response; but after a time her light showed, the
door was opened, and the guests housed.</p>
<p>Goodwin stood in the quiet street, lighting another cigar. In two minutes a
faint gleam began to show between the slats of the jalousies in the upper story
of the hotel. “They have engaged rooms,” said Goodwin to himself.
“So, then, their arrangements for sailing have yet to be made.”</p>
<p>At that moment there came along one Estebán Delgado, a barber, an enemy to
existing government, a jovial plotter against stagnation in any form. This
barber was one of Coralio’s saddest dogs, often remaining out of doors as
late as eleven, post meridian. He was a partisan Liberal; and he greeted
Goodwin with flatulent importance as a brother in the cause. But he had
something important to tell.</p>
<p>“What think you, Don Frank!” he cried, in the universal tone of the
conspirator. “I have to-night shaved <i>la barba</i>—what you call
the ‘weeskers’ of the <i>Presidente</i> himself, of this countree!
Consider! He sent for me to come. In the poor <i>casita</i> of an old woman he
awaited me—in a verree leetle house in a dark place.
<i>Carramba!</i>—el Señor Presidente to make himself thus secret and
obscured! I think he desired not to be known—but, <i>carajo!</i> can you
shave a man and not see his face? This gold piece he gave me, and said it was
to be all quite still. I think, Don Frank, there is what you call a chip over
the bug.”</p>
<p>“Have you ever seen President Miraflores before?” asked Goodwin.</p>
<p>“But once,” answered Estebán. “He is tall; and he had
weeskers, verree black and sufficient.”</p>
<p>“Was anyone else present when you shaved him?”</p>
<p>“An old Indian woman, Señor, that belonged with the <i>casa</i>, and one
señorita—a ladee of so much beautee!—<i>ah, Dios!</i>”</p>
<p>“All right, Estebán,” said Goodwin. “It’s very lucky
that you happened along with your tonsorial information. The new administration
will be likely to remember you for this.”</p>
<p>Then in a few words he made the barber acquainted with the crisis into which
the affairs of the nation had culminated, and instructed him to remain outside,
keeping watch upon the two sides of the hotel that looked upon the street, and
observing whether anyone should attempt to leave the house by any door or
window. Goodwin himself went to the door through which the guests had entered,
opened it and stepped inside.</p>
<p>Madama had returned downstairs from her journey above to see after the comfort
of her lodgers. Her candle stood upon the bar. She was about to take a
thimbleful of rum as a solace for having her rest disturbed. She looked up
without surprise or alarm as her third caller entered.</p>
<p>“Ah! it is the Señor Goodwin. Not often does he honour my poor house by
his presence.”</p>
<p>“I must come oftener,” said Goodwin, with the Goodwin smile.
“I hear that your cognac is the best between Belize to the north and Rio
to the south. Set out the bottle, Madama, and let us have the proof in <i>un
vasito</i> for each of us.”</p>
<p>“My <i>aguardiente</i>,” said Madama, with pride, “is the
best. It grows, in beautiful bottles, in the dark places among the
banana-trees. <i>Si, Señor.</i> Only at midnight can they be picked by
sailor-men who bring them, before daylight comes, to your back door. Good
<i>aguardiente</i> is a verree difficult fruit to handle, Señor Goodwin.”</p>
<p>Smuggling, in Coralio, was much nearer than competition to being the life of
trade. One spoke of it slyly, yet with a certain conceit, when it had been well
accomplished.</p>
<p>“You have guests in the house to-night,” said Goodwin, laying a
silver dollar upon the counter.</p>
<p>“Why not?” said Madama, counting the change. “Two; but the
smallest while finished to arrive. One señor, not quite old, and one señorita
of sufficient handsomeness. To their rooms they have ascended, not desiring the
to-eat nor the to-drink. Two rooms—<i>Numero</i> 9 and <i>Numero</i>
10.”</p>
<p>“I was expecting that gentleman and that lady,” said Goodwin.
“I have important <i>negocios</i> that must be transacted. Will you allow
me to see them?”</p>
<p>“Why not?” sighed Madama, placidly. “Why should not Señor
Goodwin ascend and speak to his friends? <i>Está bueno.</i> Room <i>Numero</i>
9 and room <i>Numero</i> 10.”</p>
<p>Goodwin loosened in his coat pocket the American revolver that he carried, and
ascended the steep, dark stairway.</p>
<p>In the hallway above, the saffron light from a hanging lamp allowed him to
select the gaudy numbers on the doors. He turned the knob of Number 9, entered
and closed the door behind him.</p>
<p>If that was Isabel Guilbert seated by the table in that poorly furnished room,
report had failed to do her charms justice. She rested her head upon one hand.
Extreme fatigue was signified in every line of her figure; and upon her
countenance a deep perplexity was written. Her eyes were gray-irised, and of
that mould that seems to have belonged to the orbs of all the famous queens of
hearts. Their whites were singularly clear and brilliant, concealed above the
irises by heavy horizontal lids, and showing a snowy line below them. Such eyes
denote great nobility, vigour, and, if you can conceive of it, a most generous
selfishness. She looked up when the American entered with an expression of
surprised inquiry, but without alarm.</p>
<p>Goodwin took off his hat and seated himself, with his characteristic deliberate
ease, upon a corner of the table. He held a lighted cigar between his fingers.
He took this familiar course because he was sure that preliminaries would be
wasted upon Miss Guilbert. He knew her history, and the small part that the
conventions had played in it.</p>
<p>“Good evening,” he said. “Now, madame, let us come to
business at once. You will observe that I mention no names, but I know who is
in the next room, and what he carries in that valise. That is the point which
brings me here. I have come to dictate terms of surrender.”</p>
<p>The lady neither moved nor replied, but steadily regarded the cigar in
Goodwin’s hand.</p>
<p>“We,” continued the dictator, thoughtfully regarding the neat
buckskin shoe on his gently swinging foot—“I speak for a
considerable majority of the people—demand the return of the stolen funds
belonging to them. Our terms go very little further than that. They are very
simple. As an accredited spokesman, I promise that our interference will cease
if they are accepted. Give up the money, and you and your companion will be
permitted to proceed wherever you will. In fact, assistance will be given you
in the matter of securing a passage by any outgoing vessel you may choose. It
is on my personal responsibility that I add congratulations to the gentleman in
Number 10 upon his taste in feminine charms.”</p>
<p>Returning his cigar to his mouth, Goodwin observed her, and saw that her eyes
followed it and rested upon it with icy and significant concentration.
Apparently she had not heard a word he had said. He understood, tossed the
cigar out the window, and, with an amused laugh, slid from the table to his
feet.</p>
<p>“That is better,” said the lady. “It makes it possible for me
to listen to you. For a second lesson in good manners, you might now tell me by
whom I am being insulted.”</p>
<p>“I am sorry,” said Goodwin, leaning one hand on the table,
“that my time is too brief for devoting much of it to a course of
etiquette. Come, now; I appeal to your good sense. You have shown yourself, in
more than one instance, to be well aware of what is to your advantage. This is
an occasion that demands the exercise of your undoubted intelligence. There is
no mystery here. I am Frank Goodwin; and I have come for the money. I entered
this room at a venture. Had I entered the other I would have had it before now.
Do you want it in words? The gentleman in Number 10 has betrayed a great trust.
He has robbed his people of a large sum, and it is I who will prevent their
losing it. I do not say who that gentleman is; but if I should be forced to see
him and he should prove to be a certain high official of the republic, it will
be my duty to arrest him. The house is guarded. I am offering you liberal
terms. It is not absolutely necessary that I confer personally with the
gentleman in the next room. Bring me the valise containing the money, and we
will call the affair ended.”</p>
<p>The lady arose from her chair and stood for a moment, thinking deeply.</p>
<p>“Do you live here, Mr. Goodwin?” she asked, presently.</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“What is your authority for this intrusion?”</p>
<p>“I am an instrument of the republic. I was advised by wire of the
movements of the—gentleman in Number 10.”</p>
<p>“May I ask you two or three questions? I believe you to be a man more apt
to be truthful than—timid. What sort of a town is this—Coralio, I
think they call it?”</p>
<p>“Not much of a town,” said Goodwin, smiling. “A banana town,
as they run. Grass huts, ’dobes, five or six two-story houses,
accommodations limited, population half-breed Spanish and Indian, Caribs and
blackamoors. No sidewalks to speak of, no amusements. Rather unmoral.
That’s an offhand sketch, of course.”</p>
<p>“Are there any inducements, say in a social or in a business way, for
people to reside here?”</p>
<p>“Oh, yes,” answered Goodwin, smiling broadly. “There are no
afternoon teas, no hand-organs, no department stores—and there is no
extradition treaty.”</p>
<p>“He told me,” went on the lady, speaking as if to herself, and with
a slight frown, “that there were towns on this coast of beauty and
importance; that there was a pleasing social order—especially an American
colony of cultured residents.”</p>
<p>“There is an American colony,” said Goodwin, gazing at her in some
wonder. “Some of the members are all right. Some are fugitives from
justice from the States. I recall two exiled bank presidents, one army
paymaster under a cloud, a couple of manslayers, and a widow—arsenic, I
believe, was the suspicion in her case. I myself complete the colony, but, as
yet, I have not distinguished myself by any particular crime.”</p>
<p>“Do not lose hope,” said the lady, dryly; “I see nothing in
your actions to-night to guarantee you further obscurity. Some mistake has been
made; I do not know just where. But <i>him</i> you shall not disturb to-night.
The journey has fatigued him so that he has fallen asleep, I think, in his
clothes. You talk of stolen money! I do not understand you. Some mistake has
been made. I will convince you. Remain where you are and I will bring you the
valise that you seem to covet so, and show it to you.”</p>
<p>She moved toward the closed door that connected the two rooms, but stopped, and
half turned and bestowed upon Goodwin a grave, searching look that ended in a
quizzical smile.</p>
<p>“You force my door,” she said, “and you follow your ruffianly
behaviour with the basest accusations; and yet”—she hesitated, as
if to reconsider what she was about to say—“and yet—it is a
puzzling thing—I am sure there has been some mistake.”</p>
<p>She took a step toward the door, but Goodwin stayed her by a light touch upon
her arm. I have said before that women turned to look at him in the streets. He
was the viking sort of man, big, good-looking, and with an air of kindly
truculence. She was dark and proud, glowing or pale as her mood moved her. I do
not know if Eve were light or dark, but if such a woman had stood in the garden
I know that the apple would have been eaten. This woman was to be
Goodwin’s fate, and he did not know it; but he must have felt the first
throes of destiny, for, as he faced her, the knowledge of what report named her
turned bitter in his throat.</p>
<p>“If there has been any mistake,” he said, hotly, “it was
yours. I do not blame the man who has lost his country, his honour, and is
about to lose the poor consolation of his stolen riches as much as I blame you,
for, by Heaven! I can very well see how he was brought to it. I can understand,
and pity him. It is such women as you that strew this degraded coast with
wretched exiles, that make men forget their trusts, that drag—”</p>
<p>The lady interrupted him with a weary gesture.</p>
<p>“There is no need to continue your insults,” she said, coldly.
“I do not understand what you are saying, nor do I know what mad blunder
you are making; but if the inspection of the contents of a gentleman’s
portmanteau will rid me of you, let us delay it no longer.”</p>
<p>She passed quickly and noiselessly into the other room, and returned with the
heavy leather valise, which she handed to the American with an air of patient
contempt.</p>
<p>Goodwin set the valise quickly upon the table and began to unfasten the straps.
The lady stood by, with an expression of infinite scorn and weariness upon her
face.</p>
<p>The valise opened wide to a powerful, sidelong wrench. Goodwin dragged out two
or three articles of clothing, exposing the bulk of its contents—package
after package of tightly packed United States bank and treasury notes of large
denomination. Reckoning from the high figures written upon the paper bands that
bound them, the total must have come closely upon the hundred thousand mark.</p>
<p>Goodwin glanced swiftly at the woman, and saw, with surprise and a thrill of
pleasure that he wondered at, that she had experienced an unmistakable shock.
Her eyes grew wide, she gasped, and leaned heavily against the table. She had
been ignorant, then, he inferred, that her companion had looted the government
treasury. But why, he angrily asked himself, should he be so well pleased to
think this wandering and unscrupulous singer not so black as report had painted
her?</p>
<p>A noise in the other room startled them both. The door swung open, and a tall,
elderly, dark complexioned man, recently shaven, hurried into the room.</p>
<p>All the pictures of President Miraflores represent him as the possessor of a
luxuriant supply of dark and carefully tended whiskers; but the story of the
barber, Estebán, had prepared Goodwin for the change.</p>
<p>The man stumbled in from the dark room, his eyes blinking at the lamplight, and
heavy from sleep.</p>
<p>“What does this mean?” he demanded in excellent English, with a
keen and perturbed look at the American—“robbery?”</p>
<p>“Very near it,” answered Goodwin. “But I rather think
I’m in time to prevent it. I represent the people to whom this money
belongs, and I have come to convey it back to them.” He thrust his hand
into a pocket of his loose, linen coat.</p>
<p>The other man’s hand went quickly behind him.</p>
<p>“Don’t draw,” called Goodwin, sharply; “I’ve got
you covered from my pocket.”</p>
<p>The lady stepped forward, and laid one hand upon the shoulder of her hesitating
companion. She pointed to the table. “Tell me the truth—the
truth,” she said, in a low voice. “Whose money is that?”</p>
<p>The man did not answer. He gave a deep, long-drawn sigh, leaned and kissed her
on the forehead, stepped back into the other room and closed the door.</p>
<p>Goodwin foresaw his purpose, and jumped for the door, but the report of the
pistol echoed as his hand touched the knob. A heavy fall followed, and some one
swept him aside and struggled into the room of the fallen man.</p>
<p>A desolation, thought Goodwin, greater than that derived from the loss of
cavalier and gold must have been in the heart of the enchantress to have wrung
from her, in that moment, the cry of one turning to the all-forgiving,
all-comforting earthly consoler—to have made her call out from that
bloody and dishonoured room—“Oh, mother, mother, mother!”</p>
<p>But there was an alarm outside. The barber, Estebán, at the sound of the shot,
had raised his voice; and the shot itself had aroused half the town. A
pattering of feet came up the street, and official orders rang out on the still
air. Goodwin had a duty to perform. Circumstances had made him the custodian of
his adopted country’s treasure. Swiftly cramming the money into the
valise, he closed it, leaned far out of the window and dropped it into a thick
orange-tree in the little inclosure below.</p>
<p class="p2">
They will tell you in Coralio, as they delight in telling the stranger, of the
conclusion of that tragic flight. They will tell you how the upholders of the
law came apace when the alarm was sounded—the <i>Comandante</i> in red
slippers and a jacket like a head waiter’s and girded sword, the soldiers
with their interminable guns, followed by outnumbering officers struggling into
their gold lace and epaulettes; the barefooted policemen (the only capables in
the lot), and ruffled citizens of every hue and description.</p>
<p>They say that the countenance of the dead man was marred sadly by the effects
of the shot; but he was identified as the fallen president by both Goodwin and
the barber Estebán. On the next morning messages began to come over the mended
telegraph wire; and the story of the flight from the capital was given out to
the public. In San Mateo the revolutionary party had seized the sceptre of
government, without opposition, and the <i>vivas</i> of the mercurial populace
quickly effaced the interest belonging to the unfortunate Miraflores.</p>
<p>They will relate to you how the new government sifted the towns and raked the
roads to find the valise containing Anchuria’s surplus capital, which the
president was known to have carried with him, but all in vain. In Coralio Señor
Goodwin himself led the searching party which combed that town as carefully as
a woman combs her hair; but the money was not found.</p>
<p>So they buried the dead man, without honours, back of the town near the little
bridge that spans the mangrove swamp; and for a <i>real</i> a boy will show you
his grave. They say that the old woman in whose hut the barber shaved the
president placed the wooden slab at his head, and burned the inscription upon
it with a hot iron.</p>
<p>You will hear also that Señor Goodwin, like a tower of strength, shielded Doña
Isabel Guilbert through those subsequent distressful days; and that his
scruples as to her past career (if he had any) vanished; and her adventuresome
waywardness (if she had any) left her, and they were wedded and were happy.</p>
<p>The American built a home on a little foothill near the town. It is a
conglomerate structure of native woods that, exported, would be worth a
fortune, and of brick, palm, glass, bamboo and adobe. There is a paradise of
nature about it; and something of the same sort within. The natives speak of
its interior with hands uplifted in admiration. There are floors polished like
mirrors and covered with hand-woven Indian rugs of silk fibre, tall ornaments
and pictures, musical instruments and papered
walls—“figure-it-to-yourself!” they exclaim.</p>
<p>But they cannot tell you in Coralio (as you shall learn) what became of the
money that Frank Goodwin dropped into the orange-tree. But that shall come
later; for the palms are fluttering in the breeze, bidding us to sport and
gaiety.</p>
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