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"If Gallagher gets tangled up in any difficulty," said Dr. O'Grady, as he said good-bye to Doyle, "send him straight round to me. Don't you attempt to extricate him or you'll make matters worse. I shall be at home for the next two hours. It will take me that time at least to talk sense into the Major."
When he got back to his own house Dr. O'Grady found his friend in a state of badly repressed impatience.
"That seems to have been a pretty long explanation which you gave to Doyle," said the Major. "I hope mine will turn out to be a bit shorter."
"That," said Dr. O'Grady, "will entirely depend on yourself, Major.
If you were a really intelligent man no explanation whatever would be necessary. You'd grasp the situation for yourself. If you were even fairly intelligent a short explanation would be quite sufficient. If, as I fear, you are downright stupid I may have to spend an hour or two talking to you."
"I don't see the slightest necessity for that," said the Major. "You've only got to give a simple answer to a perfectly plain question. Who was General John Regan? You answer that, and no further explanation will be necessary."
"I'm afraid it will," said Dr. O'Grady. "Even if I tell you all I know about the General you'll still want to heckle me and generally upset my plans."
"No, I won't, O'Grady. I promise you I won't. Just tell me all you know about this General and I won't say another word."
"Very well," said Dr. O'Grady. "I don't know anything at all about the General. I never heard of him in my life until to-day."
Major Kent gasped. Then he grew suddenly red in the face. Then he spluttered explosively. Then he burst into violent speech.
"And what the devil do you mean, O'Grady, by ??? I'm hanged if I ever heard of such??"
"There you are," said Dr. O'Grady. "I knew you wouldn't be satisfied.
I've told you all I know about the General, and so far from saying nothing more, you begin to curse in the most frightful way."
"That's all very well," said the Major, "but if there's no such person as that General??"
"I didn't say that. I said I knew nothing about him. I'm a well educated man, Major, far better educated than you are. But there are thousands and thousands of quite eminent people still alive whose names I've never heard, and when it comes to dead people there are probably millions, scattered up and down through history books, whom I know nothing about.
They may all be quite famous in their own localities and may thoroughly deserve statues. It's not their fault that I know nothing about them."
"But we don't any of us know anything about this General. I don't. Doyle doesn't. You don't. Why on earth should we put up a statue to him?"
"Why shouldn't we allow that American?Billing or whatever his name is?to put up a statue if he likes? He wants to. Why shouldn't he?"
"Why should he put it up here?" said the Major. "What brings him to Ballymoy?"
"I expect," said Dr. O'Grady?"mind, I don't know for certain?but I expect that he's come to the wrong place, mixed up Ballymoy with some other town, with the town in which Regan was really born. This General of his was evidently a pretty big pot in his way, and if he had been born in Ballymoy some of us would have heard of him."
"In that case," said the Major, "we ought to tell Billing of his mistake."
"Certainly not. In the first place that would be a very unkind thing to do. n.o.body likes being told of their mistakes, especially when they're as full of bounce and self-confidence as this fellow Billing. It's not right to be maliciously and wantonly unkind, Major, even to dumb animals; and I can't imagine anything more cruel than to tell Billing that he's made a mistake. In the next place, why on earth should we miss the chance of getting a statue in Ballymoy? We haven't got one at present, and a good statue?we'll get quite a respectable one for Billing's 100, even if we don't subscribe a penny ourselves?will be a great ornament to the town. You may not care for statues, Major, but all really cultivated people love them. Look at Dublin! It's a city with two universities in it, and the consequence is that it's simply spotted all over with statues. Look at ancient Athens, the most cultured city the world has ever seen. The number of statues the Athenians had would surprise you. Why shouldn't we have one? It'll do us all good."
"I call it a fraud," said the Major. "It's getting money out of this fool of an American under false pretences. If this General of his wasn't born here??"
"Now do you suppose, Major, that the General himself, the original John Regan, cares a pin where his statue is?"
"Of course he doesn't. The one thing we do know about him is that he's dead. Why should he care?"
"Quite so. Then there's no fraud so far as he's concerned."
"I wasn't talking about him. I was talking about the American."
"I'm just coming to him. Billing wants a statue to the General. He wants it so much that he's prepared to pay 100 for it. He also believes that the General was born here. I think myself that he's mistaken about that; but there's no doubt he believes it. He'll be quite satisfied if we have the statue here. If we don't he'll have to go to a lot of trouble and expense looking up another birthplace for the General. When he finds one the people there may not be as civil and obliging as we are. Or they may have as many statues as they want already. I cannot for the life of me see that we're committing any kind of fraud when we're saving Billing a lot of expense, possibly a great disappointment, and allowing him to do exactly what he wants."
Major Kent sighed hopelessly.
"It's no use arguing with you," he said, "but you'll get us all into trouble before you've done. You're absolutely certain to be found out."
"Now you're beginning to talk sense," said Dr. O'Grady. "There is a certain risk of being found out. I don't deny that. What we have to do is to minimise it as far as possible. We must take care not to commit ourselves to any statement about the General's public career until we've found out all we can about him. I intend to write to Dublin to-night for every book there is about Bolivia, which is the country he liberated.
In the meanwhile we're fairly safe in working up any kind of local tradition we can think of. If that sort of thing is well done there's practically no risk of discovery. Even if the stories don't exactly fit in with what's known about the General's later life, it doesn't matter.
The things that are told about the boyhood of great men are all invented afterwards. n.o.body expects them to be true; but biographers have to put them in to satisfy the curiosity of the public. There must be a chapter headed 'Early Days,' or 'Home Life,' or something of that kind in every biography. That's the stuff Billing expects us to supply in exchange for the statue. At the same time men like Gallagher and Doyle are appallingly stupid, and I can't say you're exactly brilliant, Major. Any of you may, in an unguarded moment??"
"I shan't," said the Major, "because I'm going straight home and don't mean to leave the house again till this whole business is over."
"I wish that were possible," said Dr. O'Grady. "I should be much easier in my mind if you weren't here at all. But unfortunately we must have you. You give an air of solid respectability to the proceedings.
You inspire confidence. We can't do without you. I'll get Gregg, the District Inspector, dragged into it too, and Ford, the Resident Magistrate, if I can."
"You won't get him. He has too much sense."
"I'll get his wife anyway. She loves a fuss of any kind."
"Some of them will give you away," said the Major. "You'll be found out."
"If Gallagher gets through this afternoon," said Dr. O'Grady, "I shall feel pretty safe. I wish I hadn't been obliged to send Gallagher off alone with Billing. Poor Thady is such an a.s.s. But what could I do? I couldn't go myself because I had to explain the situation to you and Doyle. I shall feel deeply thankful when Thady is safely home again."
"By the way," said the Major, "what was the explanation that you gave to Doyle? It was different from my one I know. I'd rather like to hear it."
"Poor Doyle!" said Dr. O'Grady. "Do you know I felt quite sorry for him about that filly. He probably won't find out what's wrong with her for about a fortnight or three weeks. He'll be so busy over this General John Regan business that he won't have time to do anything with her. But when he does find out??"
"He'll not be the first man in Ireland," said the Major, "who's been let in over a horse, and I don't pity him."
"I do," said Dr. O'Grady, "I pitied you, Major, when you were stuck and I helped you to get out I don't see why I shouldn't pity Doyle too."
"How do you mean to get him out?" said the Major. "Perhaps you intend to palm off that filly on your American."
"Not at all," said Dr. O'Grady. "My idea is to get Doyle's money back for him out of the statue."
The Major thought this statement over and gradually came to suspect that O'Grady contemplated some dishonourable use of public money. He was just beginning to make a violent protest when the door of the room in which they were sitting opened, and Gallagher came in.
"Doctor," he said, "will you oblige me by coming over to the hotel at once and pacifying the American gentleman?"
"I thought as much," said Dr. O'Grady, jumping up. "You've muddled things somehow, Thady."
"I did the best I could," said Gallagher, "but he wouldn't rest content with young Kerrigan's wife."
"Good heavens!" said Dr. O'Grady, "what on earth have you said? Young Kerrigan hasn't got a wife."
"Sure I know that. But what was I to do? What I said was for the best.
But anyway you'd better come round to the hotel, till you see for yourself the way we're in."