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"From the ferry dock the subject went directly to the Hotel Inglaterra, where he registered and left his belongings, a bedroll and a saddle. He spent almost two hours in the bar among the newspaper correspondents before going out again. His associate, the one named Burke, remained."

He had caught Palenzuela getting dressed for the evening, suspenders hanging, buttoning his shirt, a collar not yet attached, the chief's mind apparently on something else, the reason he said, "Who?"

"Charlie Burke," Rudi said, always patient with his chief, and explained that they already had a file on Burke, a dealer. in cattle who had been here several times before. "The subject went out again accompanied by Victor Fuentes and proceeded to la Habana Vieja, where they dined in a cafe and then visited stores, selecting new clothes for the subject. Shirts, trousers, a suit coat, good boots and a very fine panama." "He bought a suit?" Palenzuela said. "Only the coat, a black one." "Expensive?"

"I believe alpaca."

"Where did he go for the boots?"

"Naranjo y Vazquez."

"They're all right, but not the best."

"He removed his spurs from the old boots and put them on the new ones."

"Why? If he wasn't riding?"

"No, I think because he's used to wearing them. Or he likes to hear himself walk."

"A cowboy," Palenzuela said. "And where did he buy his hat?"

"Viadero's."

"Of course."

"He put on the clothes, the black suit coat and pants the color of sand, or perhaps more of a cinnamon shade." "How did it look?"

"Elegant, with a white shirt and a kerchief of a light blue shade, the kerchief his own."

Palenzuela said, "Hmmmm," nodding. "I like a kerchief sometimes."

"He had something he brought with him wrapped in newspaper," Rudi Calvo said. "I had been wondering, what is that he's carrying? Well, he unwrapped it now in the store. It was a revolver, I believe a Smith amp; Wesson. 44, the one with the spur beneath the trigger guard for the second finger."

"The. 44 Russian," Palenzuela said, "originally designed for a grand duke. I have a pair."

"He carried it," Rudi said, "in a shoulder holster."

"If he isn't a spy," Palenzuela said, "he could be an assassin."

"He put on the holstered pistol beneath the suit coat and stood in front of a mirror to look at himself this way and that, pausing to adjust the hat, getting a slight but very smart curve to the brim. He stood there it seemed for several minutes." "Admiring himself."

"Perhaps, though it seemed more as if he was surprised at his appearance, not used to seeing himself dressed this way."

"Or to see if the revolver was noticeable," Palenzuela said.

"I can't believe the customhouse would allow him to have it."

"I'm sure he didn't declare it," Rudi said, "and because he was with Fuentes they didn't search him."

"Yes, Fuentes would handle it," Palenzuela said. "Then what?"

"The subject returned with Fuentes to the Inglaterra, to the hotel bar where the other one, Burke, was drinking with one of the newspaper correspondents."

"Which one?"

"Neely Tucker, of Chicago."

"Is he an important one?"

"Not as important as the ones with the New York papers.

If you aren't certain how important they are, ask them. This Neely Tucker has gone into the country a few times. He wrote about visiting General Gomez, but I don't believe he's a spy."

"Is he the one who said Gomez looks like an Egyptian mummy?"

"I believe that was the correspondent who wrote Facts and Fakes about Cuba, a very popular book in America. Did you read it?"

"Why would I?"

"It's very good. It tells how much of the war news is made up in Tampa and Key West, the correspondents too lazy to come here."

"Or afraid," Palenzuela said.

"Yes, and write stories from communiquSs they receive. Skirmishes become battles."

"Well, soon we won't have to worry about the correspondents, the ones here will be going home."

"Why is that?"

"Why? Because we'll be at war. The Americans have an excuse now, the ship blowing up."

"Did we do it?" Rudi said.

"Who do you mean we? We can be we with the Spanish when it suits us, but not when they blow up an American battleship."

"Did they?" "How do I know? They don't tell me things like that and I don't ask."

"It could have been accidental, a fire."

"If you want to believe that. Anyway," Palenzuela said, "perhaps the horses are the only business of this Ben Tyler. The customhouse said his bill of sale is to Senor Boudreaux."

The American planter, the same Senor Roland Boudreaux who had presented Andres Palenzuela with a matched pair of palominos for his carriage and had been to this house with his own American mistress, who was a good friend of the police chief's American mistress.

"And the other one, Burke," Rudi said, "has sold cattle to Senor Boudreaux. I believe livestock is their only business." Rudi paused. "At least it would seem to be so."

Palenzuela had learned to listen to Rudi Cairo and trust him, since it was necessary to trust at least someone.

"But what?"

"Several times I noticed the same individual, an officer of the regular army, lingering in the vicinity, on one street and then another, twice in the same shop we were in but trying not to show himself in a conspicuous way."

"Lingering," Palenzuela said. "Not simply loitering, passing the time."

"I could be mistaken," Rudi said, "but I was given the feeling, from his manner, we were both observing the same subject."

"He was following the American?"

"I believe so."

"Do you know this officer?"

"He's with a hussar regiment, one of those peacocks in the bright uniform, Lieutenant Teobaldo Barban."

"Why is that name familiar?"

A woman's voice came from somewhere in the house, in English. "Will you be much longer?"

Rudi watched Palenzuela look up at the ceiling. "We are nearly finished."

"We don't want to be late."

"No, we won't be."

Rudi waited to see if the woman kept here was satisfied with that reply from the chief of the municipal police of the city of Havana. She seemed to be, having nothing else to say, so Rudi sakf, "You want to know why the name Teobaldo Barban is familiar. He's the officer who enjoys fighting duels." Palenzuela nodded. "I remember now, easily insulted." "And from what I understand," Rudi said, "it's difficult not to insult him. Barban is Madrilefio, from a good family. In the time he's been here he's called out three men to satisfy his honor."

"Other officers?"

"Cubans of class, not military. He didn't hesitate to shoot each one through the heart."

"On the beach at dawn?"

"On the Prado at dawn, before the statue of Queen Isabella."

"God protect us from patriots," Palenzuela said. Again the woman's voice: "Andres, are you ready?"

"Am I ready," the chief said, not to Rudi Calvo, maybe to himself.

FIVE

The whores in Havana Fuentes said to Tyler, won't take money from the common Spanish soldier, the sol dado raso, who's paid next to nothing. What they do, they charge one hundred Mauser cartridges to go to bed with them, which to the soldier is like getting it for nothing. Fuentes said the whores gave the cartridges to the insurrectos and this was one of the ways they got bullets for their Mausers, the rifles they took from Spanish soldiers they killed. Tyler said, "You know it for a fact?"

"Maybe not asking so many bullets," Fuentes said, "but it happens, yes."

The soldiers were in every street, in groups or pairs, boys in blue-striped seersucker and straw hats with regimental badges, like tourists taking in the sights of the city. Many of these boys, Fuentes said, from Andalusia and the Canary Is lands. The somewhat older men in light gray uniforms were Guardia Civil. They stood about with thumbs hooked in their black leather belts waiting to be noticed, or daring you to look them in the face. That was the feeling Tyler got seeing them again on the street and remembering how they would ride into the mill looking for a fugitive-a man who might have committed only a minor crimemransack the workers' living quarters, chase down suspects and sympathizers and beat them. They threatened to shoot his dad one time, when he tried to keep them off the mill property.