"We see now who has the power." Corazon looked at the soldiers around him. "Who is the all-powerful?" he demanded.
"El Presidente, Generalissimo Corazon," they shouted in unison.
"That's right," he said. "Me. The power."
He looked down at the two unconscious men.
"What you want down with them, Generalissimo?-" Major Estrada asked.
"I want them put in cages. Put them in cages and then drive them back to my palace. I want them at my palace. Got it?"
Estrada nodded. He pointed to a lieutenant of the guards and told him to take care of it.
Corazon stepped toward the helicopter.
"You going back to the palace?" Estrada asked.
"Sure thing," said Corazon. "I got to break off the relations with the United States." He chuckled as he clambered onto the ' helicopter. "The power. I the power. Me."
He did not hear the voodoo drums begin thumping again in the nearby hills.
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CHAPTER NINE
Route 1 back to Ciudad Natividado was pitted and broken and the jeep bumped up and down off the roadway as its driver moved along. Although Baqia produced 29 percent of the world's asphalt through giant pitch lakes that dotted the island, it apparently never occurred to anyone in government to use the asphalt to pave the roadway.
In the back of the jeep, the bodies of Remo and Chiun were jammed into two small iron cages barely three feet high by two feet wide and deep. Guards sat on the back of the vehicle, their eyes scanning the barren countryside as if expecting an attack on foot any moment from Ruby Gonzalez.
And underneath the jeep Ruby Gonzalez kept her right arm hooked around the rifle she had jammed up into the vehicle's chassis and her legs over the jeep's frame.
Rocks from the pitted road kicked up and abraded
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her back, but she had been careful to get on the side away from the muffler, so she would not be burned by the heat. She figured she was good for forty-five minutes under the jeep before she couldn't hang on anymore. If that happened, she planned to release her rifle, slide out from under the jeep, blow out a tire with her first shot and hope to catch the three soldiers with her next shots before they got her. Risky, she thought, but better than nothing. Best of all, though, would be getting back to Ciudad Natividado.
Thirty minutes after leaving the prison compound, she could tell they had entered the capital city by the increase in people noise. When the jeep stopped for something, Ruby could hear voices crowding near. They were speaking island Spanish and talking about Remo and Chiun.
Ruby quietly let herself down into the dirt roadway under the jeep and lay there. As soon as the jeep pulled away and its wheels passed on either side of her, she scrambled to her feet and took a step into the crowd of people.
"Only way to get ride from de soldiers, okay?" she said in a passable imitation of the island's Spanish. Before anyone could answer she had walked away and headed for the outdoor peddlers' stalls.
The chances were that the Baqian soldiers would not remember to put a guard on her room to catch her if she came back, but she couldn't afford to take the chance.
The presidential helicopter already had landed inside the palace compound and Corazon was in his reception room talking to Estrada.
"Machine worked good on them," he said.
"They alive," Major Estrada pointed out.
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"Yeah, but I not hit them square. It was a wing shot," Corazon said.
"When you knock them out, why you not melt them then? When you got them close?"
"That's why I president for life and you never be," Corazon said. "First I keep them alive and the United States got to be careful how it deals with me. Maybe I parade these two into a war crimes trial and mess up America if they give me any more trouble."
"As long as they alive, you got trouble. Remember what you cousin Juanita she say."
"She say some power gonna give me trouble with the holy man from the mountains. But I gonna take care of that a different way."
"What different way?"
"I gonna go to the mountains and do what I shoulda do a long time ago. I gonna get rid of that old man. I the president for life, I should be the leader of the religion, too."
"No president ever did that before," Estrada cautioned.
"No president ever as glorious as Generalissimo Corazon," the president said modestly.
"Hokay," said Estrada. "So what's you want to do?"
"I want you to put those cages in the middle of the town. Put guards around them. Put a sign on them that this is how Baqia treats CIA troublemakers. Then you drop everything else and go call the United States and tell them we breaking off the relations."
"Again? I did that yesterday."
"And I undid it today. You go do it."
"Why we do that, General?"
"Generalissimo," said Corazon.
"Right, Generalissimo. Why we do that?" Estrada asked,
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"Because we better off dealing with Russians. If I breaks with America, they yell a lot but they leave me alone. If I stays break with Russia, they send somebody to kill me. That's no fun. And it better to be communist. Nobody start yelling at us for having political prisons and no food for the peasants and like that. Only countries that line up with America has to feed people. Look at the Arabs. They got all that money but they don't pay for nothing in the United Nations. Only American allies got to pay."
"Shrewd, Generalissimo," said Estrada. "That all you want me to do?"
"No. When you gets that all done, get the limousine ready. We gonna go out into the mountains and we gonna get that old man and kill him dead."
"People not like that, killing the religious leader."
"People not know anything about it," Corazon said. "Stop worrying. Now I gotta go take a nap and when I wake up, then we go. Any new women around?"
"I haven't seen any."
"Okay, I go to sleep by myself. Go put them cages in the square. And don't forget the guards."
Ruby Gonzalez traded her trousers and shirt, even up, for a Caribbean-style mumu, a long shapeless flowered green gown. But the belt wasn't part of the deal, she insisted.
When the woman in the peddler's stall agreed, Ruby went in the back of the stall, put on the gown, and underneath it took off her other clothes. She buckled her trousers belt around her bare waist. It would be handy to jam a gun into if she could get to her room to get a gun.
Then she sat on the dirt floor, out of sight of anyone on the street, and began running her fingers
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through her Afro, pulling it straight up from her head. When she had finished, the pure circular outline of the Afro was gone. Hair stuck up in clumps, straight away from her head, as if she were continuously being jolted with electricity.
Then, with practiced fingers, she parted her hair into sections and began braiding it into tight neat rows that lay close to her head. It took her five minutes. When she was done, she stood up and gave her trousers and shirt to the peddler.
With the corn rows and the shapeless dress, Ruby looked enough like a native Baqian to pass. She would have had to smile that wide, even smile for someone to have suspected otherwise, because her teeth were white and perfect and no one else on the island that she had yet seen had a halfway decent mouth of teeth. No problem, she realized. Not much to smile about.
While she had worked on her hair, Ruby had been thinking. The white dodo and the old Oriental had come to free her. But she had not been in prison long enough for them to have been sent from the States on that mission. They must have been in Baqia already and had gotten the assignment while there. How? The most logical way was by telephone, although she knew the CIA was so lunatic sometimes that they might have used skywriters to send their secret agents their secret assignments.