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"I told my secretary to bring it to you as soon as it arrived,"
Fernandez answered. "It is very late in arriving today."
"Have you any idea of what he is going to say, Joe?"
"He is a very sound man," Fernandez said. "I am sure that the speech will be satisfactory."
"It won't call for the nationalization of the mines, at any rate," Smith added.
He made the mistake of translating his remark for Joaquin Rios. He might just as well have dropped a match into a keg of gunpowder. The wax mustaches under the purpling nose of ex-Senator Rios began quivering even before he unleashed an avalanche of ringing livid paragraphs on the subject. His eyes blind to the cold stares of Jose Fernandez, he unlimbered his heaviest verbal artillery, pounded the table until the gla.s.ses rattled, pointed accusing fingers at every corner of the room, and otherwise managed rather effectively to end the luncheon. Fernandez fairly had to drag him out of the Emba.s.sy to cool him down.
"Fine fellows," Skidmore said to Hall when they were gone. "Best of the lot down here."
"Sure," Hall said. "I've known all about Fernandez for years."
"He's a great guy, Hall. Publishes one of the best newspapers on the continent. As a matter of cold fact, old man, I wouldn't be at all surprised if he won the--well, he might be in for a rather high honor."
"I know. The Cabot Prize."
"Who told you?"
Hall looked at Smith, who was growing uncomfortable. "I can't remember,"
he said. "But it's hard to keep such a secret in San Hermano."
"Well, I'll be d.a.m.ned," the Amba.s.sador laughed. "It was nice to see you again, old man. Drop in any time when you have a problem."
"Problems in San Hermano? Things seem to be pretty much under control, I'd say."
"Yes," the Amba.s.sador admitted. "Things are pretty quiet."
"Will it be as quiet when Tabio dies? I heard talk that the Gamburdo crowd is pretty close to the fascists."
"Gamburdo?" Skidmore grew both amused and indignant. "What kind of communistic nonsense have you been hearing? I know Eduardo Gamburdo intimately. I've entertained him at the Emba.s.sy, and I've week-ended at his estate. He's a fine conservative influence on this government and, d.a.m.n it all, young man, Gamburdo is a thorough gentleman."
"Yeah," Hall said. "Thorough." For a few seconds, during the luncheon, he had toyed with the idea of telling the Amba.s.sador all that he knew about Gamburdo and Ansaldo and the role of the Falange. Now he cursed himself for a fool. Skidmore, he saw, was Orville Smith at sixty, but with the power to make trouble for any visiting American who rubbed against his deep-set prejudices. "Well, thanks for everything," he said.
"I guess you're pretty busy today."
Hall rushed out of the Emba.s.sy, his face twitching crazily as he charged down the marble walk to the curb. He had broken into a heavy sweat which drenched him from head to toe. "Get me out of here," he roared at Pepe.
"Get going before I kill someone."
"What happened?" Pepe asked.
"Nothing. Where are we going?"
"Nowhere. What's the matter with your face?"
"Nothing." He put his hand against his right cheek. "Nothing. Did you see Gonzales?"
"I gave him the letter. He said you should go to the opening of Congress today. He says you might be surprised."
"Thanks. I had my surprise for the day already."
"Gonzales was serious. He says you should go. It starts at four o'clock."
"All right. I'll go. Better take me to Gobernacion. I'll need a pa.s.s from the Press Bureau. No, wait, let's go to Duarte's place. He takes his siesta at this time. I'll call that Vardieno b.i.t.c.h from his place."
Hall opened his tie. "Have we time to stop for a beer?" he asked. "I'm dying for a drink."
"No. We might miss Duarte. He'll have beer for you."
Pepe was right. Duarte did have beer, and had they stopped on the way, they would have missed him. He was about to leave the house when they arrived. Duarte was wearing the green dress uniform of a Mexican lieutenant-colonel, to which he had pinned his Spanish medals and insignia.
"Going to war?" Hall asked.
"No. To the opening of Congress."
"You've got time."
"Hall is dying," Pepe said. "He needs cold beer."
The Mexican brought out five bottles of beer. "I've got more in the ice box," he said. "What's the matter?"
"He wants to kill someone," Pepe said.
"Me too. What of it?"
Hall put the mouth of the opened bottle to his lips, tilted his head back. "G.o.d," he said, "Pepe is right. Let me make one phone call, and then I'll spill it. I've got to get it off my chest before I blow the top."
He reached the Vardieno girl on the phone. She was so sorry. The lists had all gone down to the Hall of Congress. Anyway, all requests for foreign writers had to come through their emba.s.sies. That was the Press Chief's new ruling.
"That's fine. That settles it," Hall said when he put the phone away.
"Now I must ask the Amba.s.sador to approve me for the press gallery."
"Sit down, Mateo," Duarte said. "I can wait a full hour if necessary."
He put a bottle of cold beer into Hall's hand. "Tell us about it."
"I'll wait outside," Pepe said.
"No. Stay with us, Pepe. I want you to know the facts. Do you both remember that I was waiting for a letter from Havana? Well, I got it.
Two letters, in fact. They told me what I wanted to know about Ansaldo."
He drained the second bottle and then told them what had happened to him at the Emba.s.sy.
"Don't bother with him," Duarte said. "You don't need his permission.
I'll give you my diplomatic invitation and my carnet. The uniform is all I need to get through the gates. You'll sit in the diplomatic gallery with me."
"Great."
"You can even act as Skidmore's interpreter."