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The rat-trap

Chapter 21: FOOTNOTES:
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About This Book

The story centers on the administration of a small tropical island where civil disturbances prompt an official inquiry. The narrative follows the investigator and a cast of colonial officials, military officers, planters, and families as the inquiry exposes social tensions, competing interests, and administrative shortcomings. Domestic episodes show how personal relationships and the island landscape influence public decisions. Episodic chapters alternate between political maneuvering, investigative procedure, and scenes of local life, producing a compact portrait of imperial governance, community conflict, and the everyday forces that lead to unrest.

FOOTNOTES:

1 Cého means simply “call”—the sarcastic inference in the native mind being that an Englishman’s most universal call is for strong drink. There being no bells in Key Island a shout brings the servant—usually with the ingredients for a Cého, which order he takes for granted.