her what he'd done she went into hysterics be-cause the ring was a family heirloom and very valuable. On hearing this, the Rabbi ran through the streets looking for the beggar."
"To get his ring back?"
"No, to warn him of its true value in case anyone tried to cheat him when he sold it."
I laughed out loud, puzzled. "What's that got to do with Avila?"
"Nothing much, I suppose." He grinned wryly. "Except that he isn't like that."
We turned into the alley at the side of the hotel and paused again. "You'll find the kitchen door just round the corner as I described,' he said. 'Straight through to the bar. You can't miss it."
There was another burst of laughter from inside, "They seem to be enjoying themselves."
"I've heard laughter like that before. I didn't like it then and I don't like it now. Good luck," he added briefly and went round to the front of the hotel.
The kitchen door he had mentioned stood open and Figueiredo's wife was seated on a chair slicing vegetables into a bowl on her knee. I stepped past her, ignoring her look of astonishment and walked across the kitchen to the opposite door.
There was a short passage with the entrance to the bar at the far end and Figueiredo was standing on this side of the bead curtain peering through presumably keeping out of the way.
He glanced over his shoulder at my approach. I motioned him to silence and peered through. They were still grouped around the table, Hannah in the chair next to Avila. He was face-down across the table, quite obviously hopelessly drunk. As I watched, Avila pulled him upright by the hair, jerking the head back so that the mouth gaped.
He picked up a jug ofcachaca and poured in about a pint "You like that, senhor? The wine of the country, eh?"
Hannah started to choke and Avila released him so that he fell back across the table. The rest of them seemed to find this enormously funny and one of them emptied a glass over the American's head.
There was a sudden silence as Mannie moved into view from the right In the old sou'wester and yellow oilskin he could easily have looked ridiculoussyet didn't, which was a strange tiling. He walked towards the group at the same steady pace and paused.
Avila said, "Go away, there is nothing for you here."
Mannie's face was paler than ever. "Not without Captain Hannah."
Avila's hand came up holding a revolver. He cocked it very deliberately so I produced the automatic shotgun I had been holding under my oilskin coat and shoved Figueriedo out of the way. There was a wooden post on the far side of Avila, one of several set into the floor to help support the plank ceiling. It was the kind of target that even I couldn't miss. I took care-ful aim and fired. The post disintegrated in the centre and part of the ceiling sagged.
I have seldom seen men scatter faster than they did and when I stepped through the bead curtain, shotgun ready, they were all flat on the floor except for Avila who crouched on one knee beside Hannah, revolver ready.
"I'd put it down if I were you,' I told him. 'This is a six-shot automatic and I'm using steel ball cartridges."
He placed his gun very carefully on the table and stood back, eyeing me balefully. I went round the end of the bar and handed the shotgun to Mannie. Then I dropped to one knee beside Hannah, heaved him over my shoulder and stood up.
Avila said, "I will remember this, senhors. My turn will come."
I didn't bother to answer, simply turned and walked out and Mannie followed, the shotgun under one arm.
Hannah started to vomit halfway down the street and by the time we reached the house, there couldn't have been much left him him. We stripped him between us and got him into the shower which revived him a little, but the truth was that he was saturated with alcohol and partly out of his mind, I think, as we put him to
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