100%: the Story of a Patriot
your story, d’you see?” continued Guffey. “Now take it and read it.”  

 So Peter took the paper in his trembling hand, the one which had not been twisted lame. He tried to read it, but his hand shook so that he had to put it on his knee, and then he discovered that his eyes had not yet got used to the light. He could not see the print. “I c-c-can’t,” he wailed. 

 And the other man took the paper from him. “I’ll read it to you,” he said. “Now you listen, and put your mind on it, and make sure I’ve got it all right.”  

 And so Guffey started to read an elaborate legal document: “I, Peter Gudge, being duly sworn do depose and declare—” and so on. It was an elaborate and detailed story about a man named Jim Goober, and his wife and three other men, and how they had employed Peter to buy for them certain materials to make bombs, and how Peter had helped them to make the bombs in a certain room at a certain given address, and how they had put the bombs in a suit-case, with a time clock to set them off, and how Isaacs, the jitney driver, had driven them to a certain corner on Main Street, and how they had left the suit-case with the bombs on the street in front of the Preparedness Day parade. 

 It was very simple and clear, and Peter, as he listened, was almost ready to cry with delight, realizing that this was all he had to do to escape from his horrible predicament. He knew now what he was supposed to know; and he knew it. Why had not Guffey told him long ago, so that he might have known it without having his fingers bent out of place and his wrist twisted off? 

 “Now then,” said Guffey, “that’s your confession, is it?”  

 “Y-y-yes,” said Peter. 

 “And you’ll stand by it to the end?”  

 “Y-y-yes, sir.”  

 “We can count on you now? No more nonsense?”  

 “Y-y-yes, sir.”  

 “You swear it’s all true?”  

 “I do.”  


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