PART SECOND: THE ISABELS
1. CHAPTER ONE
 
THROUGH good and evil report in the varying fortune of that
 
struggle which Don Jose had characterized in the phrase, "the
 
fate of national honesty trembles in the balance," the Gould
 
Concession, "Imperium in Imperio," had gone on working; the
 
square mountain had gone on pouring its treasure down the wooden
 
shoots to the unresting batteries of stamps; the lights of San
 
Tome had twinkled night after night upon the great, limitless
 
shadow of the Campo; every three months the silver escort had
 
gone down to the sea as if neither the war nor its consequences
 
could ever affect the ancient Occidental State secluded beyond
 
its high barrier of the Cordillera. All the fighting took place
 
on the other side of that mighty wall of serrated peaks lorded
 
over by the white dome of Higuerota and as yet unbreached by the
 
railway, of which only the first part, the easy Campo part from
 
Sulaco to the Ivie Valley at the foot of the pass, had been laid.
 
Neither did the telegraph line cross the mountains yet; its
 
poles, like slender beacons on the plain, penetrated into the
 
forest fringe of the foot-hills cut by the deep avenue of the
 
track; and its wire ended abruptly in the construction camp at a
 
white deal table supporting a Morse apparatus, in a long hut of
 
planks with a corrugated iron roof overshadowed by gigantic cedar
 
trees--the quarters of the engineer in charge of the advance
 
section. 
 
The harbour was busy, too, with the traffic in railway material,
 
and with the movements of troops along the coast. The O.S.N.
 
Company found much occupation for its fleet. Costaguana had no
 
navy, and, apart from a few coastguard cutters, there were no
 
national ships except a couple of old merchant steamers used as
 
transports. 
 
Captain Mitchell, feeling more and more in the thick of history,
 
found time for an hour or so during an afternoon in the
 
drawing-room of the Casa Gould, where, with a strange ignorance
 
of the real forces at work around him, he professed himself
 
delighted to get away from the strain of affairs. He did not know
 
what he would have done without his invaluable Nostromo, he
 
declared. Those confounded Costaguana politics gave him more
 
work--he confided to Mrs. Gould--than he had bargained for. 
 
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