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In alarm, Vicenti glanced in that direction, and then came close to Peter, seizing him by the arm.
"If he's mad," he whispered fiercely, "then _I_ am mad, and I know ten thousand more as mad as he."
When the sun rose dripping out of the harbor, Vicenti and Peter walked into the garden.
"I can leave him now," said the doctor. He looked at Peter's white face and the black rings around his eyes, and laughed. "When he wakes," he said, "he will be in much better health than you or I."
"He certainly gave us a jolly night," sighed Peter, "and I shall never thank you enough for staying by me and Pedro. When a man I've roomed with for two years can't make up his mind whether I am I or a shark, it gets on my nerves."
A few hours later, in another garden half a mile distant, Pedro was telling his young mistress of the night just past. The tears stood in his eyes and his hands trembled in eloquent pantomime.
"He is so like my young master, your brother," he pleaded, "so brave, so strong, so young, and, like him, loves so deeply."
"I am very grateful," said the girl gently. "For my father and for me he risked his life. I am grateful to him--and to G.o.d, who spared him."
Pedro lowered his eyes as he repeated: "And he loves so deeply."
The girl regarded him steadily.
"What is it you wish to say?" she demanded.
"All through the night I sat beside him," answered the old man eagerly, "and in his fever he spoke only one name."
The girl turned from him and for a moment stood looking out into the harbor.
"Then the others heard?" she said.
Pedro, with a deprecatory gesture, bowed. With sudden vehemence, with a gesture of relief, the girl flung out her arms.
"I'm glad," she cried. "I am _tired_ of secrets, tired of deceit. I am glad they know. It makes me proud! It makes me happy!"
During the long night, while Roddy had tossed and muttered, Vicenti talked to Peter frankly and freely. He held back nothing. His appointment as prison doctor he had received from Alvarez, but it was impossible for any one to be long in close contact with General Rojas and not learn to admire and love him. And for the past year Vicenti had done all in his power to keep life in the older man and to work for his release. But General Rojas, embittered by past experience, did not confide in him, did not trust him. In spite of this, the doctor had continued working in his interests. He a.s.sured Peter that the adherents of Rojas were many, that they were well organized, that they waited only for the proper moment to revolt against Alvarez, release Rojas, and place him in power. On their programme Vega had no place.
They suspected his loyalty to his former patron and chief, they feared his ambition; and they believed, were he to succeed in making himself President, he would be the servant of Forrester, and of the other foreigners who desired concessions, rather than of the people of Venezuela. The amnesty, Vicenti believed, had been declared only that Alvarez might entice Vega to Venezuela, where, when he wished, he could lay his hands on him. When he had obtained evidence that Vega was plotting against him he would submit this evidence to the people and throw Vega into prison.
"Vega knows his danger," added Vicenti, "and, knowing it, he must mean to strike soon--to-day--to-morrow. We of the Rojas faction are as ignorant of his plans as we hope he is of ours. But in every camp there are traitors. No one can tell at what hour all our secrets may not be made known. Of only one thing you can be certain: matters cannot continue as they are. Within a week you will see this country torn by civil war, or those who oppose Alvarez, either of our party or of Vega's, will be in prison."
When Roddy, rested and refreshed and with normal pulse and mind, came to luncheon, Peter confided to him all that Vicenti had told him.
"If all that is going to happen," was Roddy's comment, "the sooner we get Rojas free the better. We will begin work on the tunnel to-night."
The attacking party consisted of McKildrick, Roddy, and Peter. When the day's task on the light-house was finished and the other workmen had returned to the city, these three men remained behind and, placing crowbars, picks, and sticks of dynamite in Roddy's launch, proceeded to a little inlet a half-mile below El Morro. By seven o'clock they had made their way through the laurel to the fortress, and while Roddy and Peter acted as lookouts McKildrick attacked the entrance to the tunnel. He did not, as he had boasted, open it in an hour, but by ten o'clock the iron bars that held the slabs together had been cut and the cement loosened. Fearful of the consequences if they returned to the city at too late an hour, the tools and dynamite were hidden, rubbish and vines were so scattered as to conceal the evidence of their work, and the launch landed the conspirators at Roddy's wharf.
"We shall say," explained Roddy, "that we have been out spearing eels, and I suggest that we now go to the _Dos Hermanos_ and say it."
They found the cafe, as usual, crowded. Men of all political opinions, officers of the army and the custom-house, from the tiny wars.h.i.+p in the harbor, Vegaistas, and those who secretly were adherents of Rojas, were all gathered amicably together. The Americans, saluting impartially their acquaintances, made their way to a table that remained empty in the middle of the room. They had hardly seated themselves when from a distant corner an alert young man, waving his hand in greeting, pushed his way toward them. They recognized the third vice-president of the Forrester Construction Company, Mr. Sam Caldwell.
Mr. Caldwell had arrived that afternoon. He was delighted at being free of the s.h.i.+p. At the house of Colonel Vega he had dined well, and at sight of familiar faces he was inclined to unbend. He approached the employees of the company as one conferring a favor and a.s.sured of a welcome. He appreciated that since his arrival he was the man of the moment. In the crowded restaurant every one knew him as the representative of that great corporation that had dared to lock horns with the government. As he pa.s.sed the tables the officers of that government followed him with a scowl or a sneer; those of the Vegaistas, who looked upon him as the man who dealt out money, ammunition and offices, with awe. How the secret supporters of Rojas considered him was soon to appear.
"This," Roddy whispered in a quick aside, "is where I renounce the F.
C. C. and all its works."
"Don't be an a.s.s!" entreated Peter.
Roddy rose and, with his hands sunk in his pockets, awaited the approach of the third vice-president.
"Well, boys, here I am!" called that young man heartily. He seemed to feel that his own surprise at finding himself outside the limits of Greater New York must be shared by all. But, as though to see to whom this greeting was extended, Roddy turned and glanced at his companions.
McKildrick rose and stood uncomfortably.
"Well, Roddy," exclaimed Sam Caldwell genially, "how's business?"
Roddy's eyebrows rose.
"'Roddy?'" he repeated, as though he had not heard aright. "Are you speaking to me?"
Sam Caldwell was conscious that over all the room there had come a sudden hush. A waiter, hurrying with a tray of jingling gla.s.ses, by some unseen hand was jerked by the ap.r.o.n and brought to abrupt silence. In the sudden quiet Roddy's voice seemed to Caldwell to have come through a megaphone. The pink, smooth-shaven cheeks of the newcomer, that were in such contrast to the dark and sun-tanned faces around him, turned slowly red.
"What's the idea?" he asked.
"You sent me a cable to Curacao," Roddy replied, "telling me to mind my own business."
It had never been said of Sam Caldwell that he was an unwilling or unworthy antagonist. He accepted Roddy's challenge promptly. His little, piglike eyes regarded Roddy contemptuously.
"I did," he retaliated, "at your father's dictation."
"Well, my business hours," continued Roddy undisturbed, "are between eight and five. If you come out to the light-house to-morrow you will see me minding my own business and bossing a gang of n.i.g.g.e.rs, at twenty dollars a week. Outside of business hours I choose my own company."
Caldwell came closer to him and dropped his voice.
"Are you sober?" he demanded.
"Perfectly," said Roddy.
Caldwell surveyed him grimly.
"You are more out of hand than we thought," he commented. "I have heard some pretty strange tales about you this afternoon. Are they true?"
"You have your own methods of finding out," returned Roddy. He waved his hand toward the table. "If you wish to join these gentlemen I am delighted to withdraw."
Caldwell retreated a few steps and then turned back angrily.
"I'll have a talk with you to-morrow," he said, "and to-night I'll cable your father what you are doing here."
Roddy bowed and slightly raised his voice, so that it reached to every part of the room.
"If you can interest my father," he said, "in anything that concerns his son I shall be grateful."
As Caldwell made his way to the door, and Roddy, frowning gravely, sank back into his chair, the long silence was broken by a babble of whispered questions and rapid answers. Even to those who understood no English the pantomime had been sufficiently enlightening.