[Forward, March by Kirk Munroe]@TWC D-Link bookForward, March CHAPTER XII 3/8
I speak Spanish perfectly, am dark of complexion, possess the countersign of the Junta for Cubans, and letters from the chief of the Spanish secret service for Spaniards. Why, then, may I not succeed as well as another ?" "You _had_ those things; but, with the exception of your ability to speak Spanish, your darkness of skin, and the countersign, all of them have been taken from you." "But you will restore them ?" "And if I should, would they serve you? Do you imagine that any true Cuban would disclose to an utter stranger the military secrets of his country for money? If you do, you are sadly mistaken.
Could you fight an enemy who would lie in ambush and shoot you in the back, reserving the examination of your despatches until you were dead? Even should you succeed in presenting those same despatches to a Spanish general, do you not know that he would hold you prisoner, or at least delay your departure until he had transmitted them to Havana for verification? Yet you hope to gain a complete knowledge of the military situation in this great province, and rejoin your friends more than a hundred miles away within a week.
Amigo, you are very ignorant." "Possibly I am," admitted Ridge, "but I have learned much from you within a short time; and if you will let me go, I will still undertake to accomplish my task within the time allotted to me." "I admire your spirit," replied del Concha, "and will gladly release you, with all your property restored; but before so doing I wish to make some suggestions.
In the first place, your people should have chosen an intelligent Cuban for this work--a man like myself, for instance." Ridge was on the point of saying that his superior officers had feared to trust a Cuban, but prudently refrained from so doing. "As they did not have the sense for that," continued the speaker, "it is most fortunate that you have met me, for I can give you, in a few words, the position and strength of every Spanish force in the province, as well as the location and condition of the Cuban armies, to which I will also gladly forward news of the anticipated American landing.
Thus you will be free to make your way, directed by guides whom I will furnish, straight to Santiago without encountering any dangers other than those incident to travel through a rough country." "While thanking you for your kind offer," replied Ridge, "I must still decline it.
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