All around the office couriers walked briskly to and fro, bringing news of accomplishments, and occasional setbacks. One such placed a file folder in front of the governor. Busy preparing to address the state legislature, the governor simply shrugged and said, 'Later.'
Outside of the governor's office, the air at the capitol building was tense beyond anything known in the history of Texas since they had fought for independence from Mexico in the 1830s. Even secession in 1861 had not brought with it the sense of sheer
Still preparing her speech, the governor continued to pay little notice to the comings and goings of those around her. An occasional voice called out the name of an arrestee, which name the governor subconsciously filed away.
One name, however, did get her attention. Juanita heard, 'San Antonio City Police caught Harold Forsythe trying to get a flight out of the state in company with his 'legal advisor.' Our erstwhile 'Commissioner for the State of Texas' was dressed in drag. 'Kind of tastefully,' ' said the arresting officer. At the name, Forsythe, Juanita immediately took notice.
Even as Nagy said, 'Put the shark and the Kommissar on the flight,' Juanita countermanded, '
At that moment Schmidt, returned from Fort Worth by helicopter, burst in. 'We've got it, Juani, we've got it.'
The room erupted in cheers.
'We took it intact, too. Everything we need for months of operation: presses, paper, ink; the
Ralph Minden spoke up, 'That's a weapon in our hands, Governor. Whatever Washington decides to do, they'll do it with the specters of runaway inflation or economic stagnation looking over their shoulders.'
Schmidt added, 'It'll pay for a better defense, too, Juani, if and when we actually have to fight.'
Juanita shrugged. 'We agreed, Jack, that if we fight, we lose. Leaving aside the economic consequences, if Rottemeyer wins, a President who fought and won on her own authority, this country will be in a lockdown like we have never even had nightmares about.'
'Sure Juani, we agreed. Even I agree. But if nothing else we have planned works, we'll end up fighting anyway. I'd rather do it better armed than worse.'
Juanita didn't answer. She had every intention of ordering her own forces to lay down their arms before it came to fighting if that was the only way to end things short of bloodshed. Of course, she didn't intend to tell anyone that.
'Fine, then,' she told Schmidt. 'What do you need? Where do you think you can get it? What will it cost? And how will we pay?'
Schmidt, scratching beside his nose, answered, 'Well . . . with a federal mint to do our purchasing, I don't see a problem with paying,' He grinned. A mint couldn't
'All right. When you know what you need, bring it to me and we'll see. And now, if you will forgive me, I have a speech to prepare.'
Chapter Nine
From the transcript at trial: Commonwealth of
Virginia v. Alvin Scheer
DIRECT EXAMINATION, CONTINUED
BY MR. STENNINGS:
Q. Alvin, what did you think about the things Texas started doing after the massacre . . .
MS. CAPUTO: Objection, Your Honor. That kind of inflammatory language—
MR. STENNINGS: Withdrawn, Judge.
Q. After the mission, Alvin. What did you think about what Texas did after the mission was destroyed?
A. I've got to confess, I was so sheerly tickled when the governor went to the legislature and asked for a law declaring income tax withholding for the feds illegal in the state. Didn't change the withholding, mind you, just sent it straight to the state.
Now, I didn't see the TV when the governor spoke. I was a little busy fixing up my truck, packin' a few things, figurin' out the map and all. Well, I never was too good with a map. So I missed the governor when she came on TV.
But my friends who saw it told me about it. Said the governor used some mighty strong words speakin' to the legislature about federal income tax. 'No matter what the Supreme Court may have said, tyranny long endured does not equal law . . . 'Disobedience to tyranny is obedience to God.' ' They told me she said that the income tax was illegal from the beginning, never properly made part of the Constitution. Never . . . ratified? Is that the word, Mr. Stennings? Well, if that really was true, I guess that means they were pickin' my pocket every two weeks for most of my life.
The other thing was, she and the legislature said no Texas corporation could pay corporate income tax either. That didn't sit too well with me, the fat cats getting over and all. But my friends said that when the governor explained it, it made sense. See, the corporations never did pay any tax. It was all smoke and mirrors, a sales tax—we were used to that in Texas, of course—pretending to be an income tax. The big corporations? They just raised their prices to cover the tax they paid, plus a little more profit for themselves. So it was just me and folks like me that were payin' the big corporations' income tax. 'Obtaining money under false pretenses,' the governor said it was. That, and 'We aren't going to roll for their scam, anymore, either.'
Anyway, the governor's bill passed by a pretty good margin.
* * *