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Authors: W.P. Kinsella

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SEVENTY-FIVE
THE GRINGO JOURNALIST

T
here are certain protocols even to a revolution. El Presidente, even when it was Dr. Noir holding the office, was given sufficient notice of his overthrow that he had time to make an unhurried escape to the jungle, taking with him a sufficient amount of treasure and cash to eventually finance his return to power.

There were other protocols to follow concerning the Insurgents, whose forces were in a particularly pitiful condition, consisting of only a few dozen physically and mentally ravaged soldiers, short of courage, weapons, and leadership. Dr. Noir had done something unprecedented. When he overthrew El Presidente, he had also killed the Insurgent leader General Bravura and his highest ranking lieutenants. One of the escaped baseball martyrs, Jose Rincon Valenzuela, had taken command of the Insurgents almost by default. He had not even promoted himself; he was still Sergeant Valenzuela, and his piteous group had no plans to attack Dr. Noir and friends.

Julio called the President of the United States who promised five hundred military advisors, who united with Julio, Esteban, and their friends, along with Sergeant Valenzeula’s bearded and moldy two dozen, should be able to turn out Dr. Noir.

But the Doctor did something else unprecedented; he gathered his army and his secret police and determined that they would defend the capitol to the death. This had never happened before. No matter how often the government and insurgents changed places, all warfare was conducted in the jungle. San Barnabas never suffered any damage. Both El Presidente, whoever he might be, and the leader of the insurgents were gentlemen and an outmanned El Presidente retreated safely to the jungle and awaited his turn at power to come.

The Wizard remained in the background, letting Sergeant Valenzuela lead the Insurgents; the Wizard wanted no part of responsibility for a failed coup, if it indeed failed, and the prospects of success diminished one hundred percent when the American advisors failed to arrive as scheduled. Someone in the
CIA
forgot that Courteguay was landlocked. The advisors were turned away at the border of first Haiti and later the Dominican Republic. They had to retreat to a hastily summoned aircraft carrier, where forty-eight hours after their estimated time of arrival, they took off in a fleet of helicopters for San Barnabas.

Dr. Noir in one of his most resplendent uniforms stood on the balcony of the Presidential Palace and appeared to unleash spirals of smoke from his short, black fingers. The helicopters froze in position where they circled the palace. The aircraft idled absently, as they became fixtures in the sky.

The squads of secret police and soldiers sworn to loyalty to Dr. Noir prepared to attack Julio and Esteban and their ragged collection of baseball martyrs.

SEVENTY-SIX
THE GRINGO JOURNALIST

“T
hey say there are no atheists in battle,” said Esteban. “Have you had a change of heart?”

“I see no reason to change my beliefs simply because my life is about to end,” said Julio. “I will take as many of Dr. Noir’s secret police with me as possible. Where is that damned Wizard?”

“This will be my third time to die,” said Esteban, “and I think I may be turning more to your point of view, particularly the premise that there is no need for God in a warm climate.”

As Dr. Noir’s soldiers moved forward, Julio and Esteban raised their weapons, and their compatriots, already sensing the best option was to live to fight another day, had already begun retreating when a mammoth spiral of butterflies darkened first the sun, then the windows of the Presidential Palace.

The Secret Police understood firepower, but not the silent river of butterflies. The hired help fled like thieves as the butterflies piled in drifts against the doors and windows of the Presidential Palace until a latch gave way and a spiral of spun gold the size of a muscled arm bore into the palace. Hour after hour the unending horde filled the
palace to overflowing. Window after window groaned, cracked, glass toppled inward and a flat tunnel of butterflies the circumference of the missing pane plunged into the palace.

Dr. Noir in his scarlet and white general’s uniform with the crossed bandoleers full of bullets, stayed on the balcony as long as possible, urging his forces to annihilate the scrubby army led by the Pimental brothers.

But for the first time in years there was a tinge of fear in Dr. Noir’s heart as he paced the empty palace, batting aside the onslaught of butterflies. They must be harmless, he thought. Not poisonous. What could butterflies do to Dr. Lucius Noir? Still, their sheer numbers frightened him. Could they take up all the air? Her remembered stories of cats curling on the faces of babies, sucking the air out of them. Suddenly a butterfly entered a nostril. Dr. Noir swatted his large nose. The fluttering stopped. He blew the dead butterfly onto the marble floor of the palace.

SEVENTY-SEVEN
THE GRINGO JOURNALIST

D
r. Noir died, not at all as he deserved to die, not at all in keeping with his life, but smothered by millions of curiously soft and beautiful butterflies. With his death Courteguay was in momentary chaos. Until someone remembered the Wizard’s dictum that “It matters not what your qualifications are, it is only important that you look like a leader,” and it was looking like a leader that led to the Wizard becoming President of the Republic of Courteguay.

The Wizard loved to tell the story of the Chinese warlord who was so huge and scary in his full military regalia that armies often bolted when he came into view. The warlord was stricken, perhaps with cholera, and died a few days later, just as his army was preparing to face yet another battle and feared defeat without the old warlord to lead them. Desperate, his officers dressed the corpse in its finest regalia, strapped him to his horse, and set him at the head of their army. The opposing army stared across a small valley at the imposing figure of the warlord, turned, and quietly slunk away.

With Dr. Noir dead, the army and civil service was in chaos. General Bravura was gone, in fact all of the military who showed
any signs of leadership were gone, so tight had Dr. Noir’s grip been on Courteguay. The Wizard sent a message for Julio and Esteban and Hector to meet him at his home. There, the Wizard had all three help him dress in his finest and brightest uniform.

“Once, in America, I saw the world covered in snow,” said Julio, “and it was not as white as the linen of your uniform.”

The Wizard beamed.

“These crossed ammunition belts are heavy,” grumbled the Wizard, “but it is what is expected of me. Politicians have to sacrifice so much for their country.” His tunic had a scarlet sash that put fresh blood to shame. His epaulets were of flamingo feathers, his cap the ice blue and white of an airline pilot. The Wizard preened in front of his mirror, which no longer showed the reflection of Dr. Noir.

SEVENTY-EIGHT
THE WIZARD

T
he tabloid story, so far as I know strictly a rumor, which I may have had some small something to do with, stated that when Julio returned to Courteguay he was accompanied by four women, all beautiful, all former models, all natural blondes, none of whom could speak a word of Courteguayan, all of whom were pregnant.

Fernandella was happy at the prospect of a houseful of grandchildren. Fernandella’s youngest, Jorge, was nearly two years of age, and she often lost track of the number of her children all together, as Hector had never stopped hoping for and trying to produce another set of magical offspring.

The Wizard, even though he was now President of the Republic, still booked bets on baseball games, and still cheated Hector out of his allowance, even though he now had the ability to steal from the public purse, which he was not hesitant to do. The Wizard calculated that his winnings from Hector Pimental paid for the precious metals on his uniforms.


IS THERE LIFE AFTER BASEBALL
?” a reporter asked Julio.

“It leaves a great void,” said Julio, making a circle of his arms, to show how his insides were missing. “But we must go on. My brother is still tuned to the mysteries of religion for solace, although not so much as before. While I have taken on a far greater challenge; I have turned to the mysteries of women.”

“There are many rumors about your women,” said the reporter.

“Most of them created by the Wizard,” replied Julio.

“Rumors are so much more wonderful than truth. I’ve heard that you have five wives, all pregnant, that you bring your women to the office of the President of the Republic so he can examine their bellies. And that his fee for the examination was enough for him to add another balloon to his fleet.”

“I notice,” said Julio, “that you speak of the Wizard and El Presidente in the same breath as if they are one and the same.”

“I am a slow learner,” replied the reporter.

WHAT THE TABLOIDS
reported is this.

“An infield,” said the Wizard, smiling broadly, after he had poked and prodded the quartet of taut-skinned beauties.

“First base, second base, third base, shortstop,” he proclaimed. “The greatest infield in the history of baseball. And they will be born on the day their father is inducted into the American Baseball Hall of Fame.” The Wizard’s epaulets fluttered about the room, beat enthusiastically against the window for a few seconds before returning to their place on the shoulders of his uniform.

“But I am not eligible for induction for nearly five years, if I’m elected on the first ballot,” said an alarmed Julio.

“The infield will be worth waiting for,” said the Wizard, ending his audience.

The tabloids also reported that Julio called his women, not by name but by their place of origin: I-owa, I-DA-ho, Tenn-Essee, and the Blessed Virginia. The women grew to full term, and waited, and waited, and waited. They went for a walk each afternoon in the rose garden
of the Pimental mansion, and blurry photos of what might have been four pregnant women in a row in a garden appeared on the covers of more than one magazine. The tabloids reported that they walked in single file, led by Julio, the women pale and beautiful, looking like magazine models displaying maternity clothes.

The Wizard who claimed the Presidency upon the death of Dr. Noir knew the secret of adequate government. In addition to his spectacular appearance there was the delegation of authority; he also knew that there was no such thing as good government. He knew that eventually he would be overthrown, and deciding that he was too old to head for the jungles and become the guerrilla leader, his policy would be to make hay while the sun shone, so to speak. The Wizard loved foreign bank accounts. He felt that anything Ferdinand Marcos, Idi Amin, or Baby Doc Duvalier could do, he could do better.


TELL ME THE TRUTH
about your women,” The Gringo Journalist said. “Better yet introduce me. Can it be true that they are all pregnant? Can it be that the births have been postponed until you are elected to the American Baseball Hall of Fame?”

“That all could be,” said Julio, smiling enigmatically. “Of course the Wizard and I might have also dreamed the whole thing up, with the help of a few tabloid journalists. As someone once said, my mother’s mansion has many rooms.”

The Gringo Journalist was allowed to stay in a wing of Fernandella’s mansion that faced on acres of vegetable gardens. His meals were sent to him and Julio came for an hour each afternoon to continue their interview.

Though he asked many times, he did not see Julio’s women, until one midnight a sound awakened him and he walked to the window to see an acre of cabbages waltzing in the moonlight, pair by pair, rock solid, so green they appeared blue in the moonglow. As the cabbages swirled to the unheard music, the Gringo Journalist heard a giggle and noticed four women standing at the edge of the dancers, they were young and lithe, dressed in trailing dresses that appeared to be made
of gossamer. All were extravagantly pregnant. The women murmured, giggled. Julio appeared, smiling, and one after another waltzed his women about the garden, swirling to the ethereal music, as if dancing in a marble-floored ballroom to a Strauss waltz.

The next day when Julio arrived for his interview the Gringo Journalist brought up the subject of what he had seen the previous night.

“Are you going to believe your eyes or what I tell you?” asked Julio. “I have only one woman, Celestina, whom I have known for many years, though she is able to take on many forms. She is a Gypsy girl with a green scarf in her hair, she is a revolutionary in fatigues, dirt smeared on her beautiful face, a bazooka pressed against her shoulder, she is pregnant with a quartet of my handsome sons. When I make love with her she is Quita Garza and no one else, although she does not know that. The rest is rumor. Or so they say.”

AS THE TIME FOR JULIO

S ELECTION
and induction into the Hall of Fame approached, there was a frenzy of activity around both San Barnabas and San Cristobel. The Wizard hissed from one edge of the country to the other making plans for the celebrations. He granted amnesty to hundreds of political prisoners. He announced that the surviving priests were free to come out from behind their chain-link fences, though the priests hastily declined, having found life much easier when not having to deal with parishioners except through protective fencing. Since their incarceration the incidence of sex crimes in Courteguay dropped to practically zero, although the Wizard did his best to suppress that information. Though when it was seized upon by the scurrilous tabloids, he did not deny it.

It was also reported that Julio was seen in San Barnabas’ finest department stores buying large quantities of stuffed toys and miniature baseball uniforms.

Hector Pimental, the father of the twins, had secretly been in touch with Jerry Springer and several of the most outrageous trash television shows offering to sell rights to the approaching births.

Then, the events had to be postponed for at least a year when Julio fell three votes short of election for the American Baseball Hall of Fame on the first ballot. His nonelection generated little interest in America, for although a complete baseball player Julio was after all a foreigner, and a foreigner who had returned to his native country after retirement.

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