PROLOGUE
It was noon of the 10th of August,
1838. The monotonous coast line between Monterey
and San Diego had set its hard outlines against the
steady glare of the Californian sky and the metallic
glitter of the Pacific Ocean. The weary succession
of rounded, dome-like hills obliterated all sense
of distance; the rare whaling vessel or still rarer
trader, drifting past, saw no change in these rusty
undulations, barren of distinguishing peak or headland,
and bald of wooded crest or timbered ravine.
The withered ranks of wild oats gave a dull procession
of uniform color to the hills, unbroken by any relief
of shadow in their smooth, round curves. As far
as the eye could reach, sea and shore met in one bleak
monotony, flecked by no passing cloud, stirred by no
sign of life or motion. Even sound was absent;
the Angelus, rung from the invisible Mission tower
far inland, was driven back again by the steady northwest
trades, that for half the year had swept the coast
line and left it abraded of all umbrage and color.
But even this monotony soon gave way
to a change and another monotony as uniform and depressing.
The western horizon, slowly contracting before a wall
of vapor, by four o’clock had become a mere cold,
steely strip of sea, into which gradually the northern
trend of the coast faded and was lost. As the
fog stole with soft step southward, all distance, space,
character, and locality again vanished; the hills upon
which the sun still shone bore the same monotonous
outlines as those just wiped into space. Last
of all, before the red sun sank like the descending
host, it gleamed upon the sails of a trading vessel
close in shore. It was the last object visible.
A damp breath breathed upon it, a soft hand passed
over the slate, the sharp pencilling of the picture
faded and became a confused gray cloud.
The wind and waves, too, went down
in the fog; the now invisible and hushed breakers
occasionally sent the surf over the sand in a quick
whisper, with grave intervals of silence, but with
no continuous murmur as before. In a curving
bight of the shore the creaking of oars in their rowlocks
began to be distinctly heard, but the boat itself,
although apparently only its length from the sands,
was invisible.
“Steady, now; way enough.”
The voice came from the sea, and was low, as if unconsciously
affected by the fog. “Silence!”
The sound of a keel grating the sand
was followed by the order, “Stern all!”
from the invisible speaker.
“Shall we beach her?” asked another vague
voice.
“Not yet. Hail again, and all together.”
“Ah hoy oi oi oy!”
There were four voices, but the hail
appeared weak and ineffectual, like a cry in a dream,
and seemed hardly to reach beyond the surf before
it was suffocated in the creeping cloud. A silence
followed, but no response.
“It’s no use to beach
her and go ashore until we find the boat,” said
the first voice, gravely; “and we’ll do
that if the current has brought her here. Are
you sure you’ve got the right bearings?”
“As near as a man could off
a shore with not a blasted pint to take his bearings
by.”
There was a long silence again, broken
only by the occasional dip of oars, keeping the invisible
boat-head to the sea.
“Take my word for it, lads,
it’s the last we’ll see of that boat again,
or of Jack Cranch, or the captain’s baby.”
“It does look mighty queer
that the painter should slip. Jack Cranch ain’t
the man to tie a granny knot.”
“Silence!” said the invisible leader.
“Listen.”
A hail, so faint and uncertain that
it might have been the long-deferred, far-off echo
of their own, came from the sea, abreast of them.
“It’s the captain.
He hasn’t found anything, or he couldn’t
be so far north. Hark!”
The hail was repeated again faintly,
dreamily. To the seamen’s trained ears
it seemed to have an intelligent significance, for
the first voice gravely responded, “Aye, aye!”
and then said softly, “Oars.”
The word was followed by a splash.
The oars clicked sharply and simultaneously in the
rowlocks, then more faintly, then still fainter, and
then passed out into the darkness.
The silence and shadow both fell together;
for hours sea and shore were impenetrable. Yet
at times the air was softly moved and troubled, the
surrounding gloom faintly lightened as with a misty
dawn, and then was dark again; or drowsy, far-off
cries and confused noises seemed to grow out of the
silence, and, when they had attracted the weary ear,
sank away as in a mocking dream, and showed themselves
unreal. Nebulous gatherings in the fog seemed
to indicate stationary objects that, even as one gazed,
moved away; the recurring lap and ripple on the shingle
sometimes took upon itself the semblance of faint articulate
laughter or spoken words. But towards morning
a certain monotonous grating on the sand, that had
for many minutes alternately cheated and piqued the
ear, asserted itself more strongly, and a moving,
vacillating shadow in the gloom became an opaque object
on the shore.
With the first rays of the morning
light the fog lifted. As the undraped hills one
by one bared their cold bosoms to the sun, the long
line of coast struggled back to life again. Everything
was unchanged, except that a stranded boat lay upon
the sands, and in its stern sheets a sleeping child.
CHAPTER I.
The 10th of August, 1852, brought
little change to the dull monotony of wind, fog, and
treeless coast line. Only the sea was occasionally
flecked with racing sails that outstripped the old,
slow-creeping trader, or was at times streaked and
blurred with the trailing smoke of a steamer.
There were a few strange footprints on those virgin
sands, and a fresh track, that led from the beach
over the rounded hills, dropped into the bosky recesses
of a hidden valley beyond the coast range.
It was here that the refectory windows
of the Mission of San Carmel had for years looked
upon the reverse of that monotonous picture presented
to the sea. It was here that the trade winds,
shorn of their fury and strength in the heated, oven-like
air that rose from the valley, lost their weary way
in the tangled recesses of the wooded slopes, and
breathed their last at the foot of the stone cross
before the Mission. It was on the crest of those
slopes that the fog halted and walled in the sun-illumined
plain below; it was in this plain that limitless fields
of grain clothed the fat adobe soil; here the Mission
garden smiled over its hedges of fruitful vines, and
through the leaves of fig and gnarled pear trees:
and it was here that Father Pedro had lived for fifty
years, found the prospect good, and had smiled also.
Father Pedro’s smile was rare.
He was not a Las Casas, nor a Junípero Serra,
but he had the deep seriousness of all disciples laden
with the responsible wording of a gospel not their
own. And his smile had an ecclesiastical as well
as a human significance, the pleasantest object in
his prospect being the fair and curly head of his boy
acolyte and chorister, Francisco, which appeared among
the vines, and his sweetest pastoral music, the high
soprano humming of a chant with which the boy accompanied
his gardening.
Suddenly the acolyte’s
chant changed to a cry of terror. Running
rapidly to Father Pedro’s side, he grasped his
sotana, and even tried to hide his curls among
its folds.
“’St! ’st!”
said the Padre, disengaging himself with some impatience.
“What new alarm is this? Is it Luzbel hiding
among our Catalan vines, or one of those heathen Americanos
from Monterey? Speak!”
“Neither, holy father,”
said the boy, the color struggling back into his pale
cheeks, and an apologetic, bashful smile lighting his
clear eyes. “Neither; but oh! such a gross,
lethargic toad! And it almost leaped upon me.”
“A toad leaped upon thee!”
repeated the good father with evident vexation.
“What next? I tell thee, child, those foolish
fears are most unmeet for thee, and must be overcome,
if necessary, with prayer and penance. Frightened
by a toad! Blood of the Martyrs! ’Tis
like any foolish girl!”
Father Pedro stopped and coughed.
“I am saying that no Christian
child should shrink from any of God’s harmless
creatures. And only last week thou wast disdainful
of poor Murieta’s pig, forgetting that San Antonio
himself did elect one his faithful companion, even
in glory.”
“Yes, but it was so fat, and
so uncleanly, holy father,” replied the young
acolyte, “and it smelt so.”
“Smelt so?” echoed the
father doubtfully. “Have a care, child,
that this is not luxuriousness of the senses.
I have noticed of late you gather overmuch of roses
and syringa, excellent in their way and in moderation,
but still not to be compared with the flower of Holy
Church, the lily.”
“But lilies don’t look
well on the refectory table, and against the adobe
wall,” returned the acolyte, with a pout of a
spoilt child; “and surely the flowers cannot
help being sweet, any more than myrrh or incense.
And I am not frightened of the heathen Americanos either
now. There was a small one in the garden
yesterday, a boy like me, and he spoke kindly and
with a pleasant face.”
“What said he to thee, child?”
asked Father Pedro, anxiously.
“Nay, the matter of his speech
I could not understand,” laughed the boy, “but
the manner was as gentle as thine, holy father.”
“’St, child,” said
the Padre impatiently. “Thy likings are
as unreasonable as thy fears. Besides, have I
not told thee it ill becomes a child of Christ to
chatter with those sons of Belial? But canst thou
not repeat the words the words he said?”
he continued suspiciously.
“’Tis a harsh tongue the
Americanos speak in their throat,” replied the
boy. “But he said ‘Devilishnisse’
and ‘pretty-as-a-girl,’ and looked at
me.”
The good father made the boy repeat
the words gravely, and as gravely repeated them after
him with infinite simplicity. “They are
but heretical words,” he replied in answer to
the boy’s inquiring look; “it is well
you understand not English. Enough. Run away,
child, and be ready for the Angelus. I will commune
with myself awhile under the pear trees.”
Glad to escape so easily, the young
acolyte disappeared down the alley of fig trees, not
without a furtive look at the patches of chickweed
around their roots, the possible ambuscade of creeping
or saltant vermin. The good priest heaved a sigh
and glanced round the darkening prospect. The
sun had already disappeared over the mountain wall
that lay between him and the sea, rimmed with a faint
white line of outlying fog. A cool zephyr fanned
his cheek; it was the dying breath of the vientos
generales beyond the wall. As Father Pedro’s
eyes were raised to this barrier, which seemed to
shut out the boisterous world beyond, he fancied he
noticed for the first time a slight breach in the parapet,
over which an advanced banner of the fog was fluttering.
Was it an omen? His speculations were cut short
by a voice at his very side.
He turned quickly and beheld one of
those “heathens” against whom he had just
warned his young acolyte; one of that straggling band
of adventurers whom the recent gold discoveries had
scattered along the coast. Luckily the fertile
alluvium of these valleys, lying parallel with the
sea, offered no “indications” to attract
the gold seekers. Nevertheless to Father Pedro
even the infrequent contact with the Americanos was
objectionable; they were at once inquisitive and careless;
they asked questions with the sharp perspicacity of
controversy; they received his grave replies with the
frank indifference of utter worldliness. Powerful
enough to have been tyrannical oppressors, they were
singularly tolerant and gentle, contenting themselves
with a playful, good-natured irreverence, which tormented
the good father more than opposition. They were
felt to be dangerous and subversive.
The Americano, however, who stood
before him did not offensively suggest these national
qualities. A man of middle height, strongly built,
bronzed and slightly gray from the vicissitudes of
years and exposure, he had an air of practical seriousness
that commended itself to Father Pedro. To his
religious mind it suggested self-consciousness; expressed
in the dialect of the stranger it only meant “business.”
“I’m rather glad I found
you out here alone,” began the latter; “it
saves time. I haven’t got to take my turn
with the rest, in there” he indicated
the church with his thumb “and you
haven’t got to make an appointment. You
have got a clear forty minutes before the Angelus
rings,” he added, consulting a large silver chronometer,
“and I reckon I kin git through my part of the
job inside of twenty, leaving you ten minutes for
remarks. I want to confess.”
Father Pedro drew back with a gesture
of dignity. The stranger, however, laid his hand
upon the Padre’s sleeve with the air of a man
anticipating objection, but never refusal, and went
on.
“Of course, I know. You
want me to come at some other time, and in there.
You want it in the reg’lar style. That’s
your way and your time. My answer is: it
ain’t my way and my time. The
main idea of confession, I take it, is gettin’
at the facts. I’m ready to give ’em
if you’ll take ’em out here, now.
If you’re willing to drop the Church and confessional,
and all that sort o’ thing, I, on my side, am
willing to give up the absolution, and all that sort
o’ thing. You might,” he added, with
an unconscious touch of pathos in the suggestion, “heave
in a word or two of advice after I get through; for
instance, what you’d do in the circumstances,
you see! That’s all. But that’s
as you please. It ain’t part of the business.”
Irreverent as this speech appeared,
there was really no trace of such intention in his
manner, and his evident profound conviction that his
suggestion was practical, and not at all inconsistent
with ecclesiastical dignity, would alone have been
enough to touch the Padre, had not the stranger’s
dominant personality already overridden him. He
hesitated. The stranger seized the opportunity
to take his arm, and lead him with the half familiarity
of powerful protection to a bench beneath the refectory
window. Taking out his watch again, he put it
in the passive hands of the astonished priest, saying,
“Time me,” cleared his throat, and began:
“Fourteen years ago there was
a ship cruisin’ in the Pacific, jest off this
range, that was ez nigh on to a Hell afloat as anything
rigged kin be. If a chap managed to dodge the
cap’en’s belayin-pin for a time, he was
bound to be fetched up in the ribs at last by the mate’s
boots. There was a chap knocked down the fore
hatch with a broken leg in the Gulf, and another jumped
overboard off Cape Corrientes, crazy as a loon, along
a clip of the head from the cap’en’s trumpet.
Them’s facts. The ship was a brigantine,
trading along the Mexican coast. The cap’en
had his wife aboard, a little timid Mexican woman he’d
picked up at Mazatlan. I reckon she didn’t
get on with him any better than the men, for she ups
and dies one day, leavin’ her baby, a year-old
gal. One of the crew was fond o’ that baby.
He used to get the black nurse to put it in the dingy,
and he’d tow it astern, rocking it with the painter
like a cradle. He did it hatin’
the cap’en all the same. One day the black
nurse got out of the dingy for a moment, when the baby
was asleep, leavin’ him alone with it.
An idea took hold on him, jest from cussedness, you’d
say, but it was partly from revenge on the cap’en
and partly to get away from the ship. The ship
was well inshore, and the current settin’ towards
it. He slipped the painter that man and
set himself adrift with the baby. It was a crazy
act, you’d reckon, for there wasn’t any
oars in the boat; but he had a crazy man’s luck,
and he contrived, by sculling the boat with one of
the seats he tore out, to keep her out of the breakers,
till he could find a bight in the shore to run her
in. The alarm was given from the ship, but the
fog shut down upon him; he could hear the other boats
in pursuit. They seemed to close in on him, and
by the sound he judged the cap’en was just abreast
of him in the gig, bearing down upon him in the fog.
He slipped out of the dingy into the water without
a splash, and struck out for the breakers. He
got ashore after havin’ been knocked down and
dragged in four times by the undertow. He had
only one idea then, thankfulness that he had not taken
the baby with him in the surf. You kin put that
down for him: it’s a fact. He got
off into the hills, and made his way up to Monterey.”
“And the child?” asked
the Padre, with a sudden and strange asperity that
boded no good to the penitent; “the child thus
ruthlessly abandoned what became of it?”
“That’s just it, the child,”
assented the stranger, gravely. “Well, if
that man was on his death-bed instead of being here
talking to you, he’d swear that he thought the
cap’en was sure to come up to it the next minit.
That’s a fact. But it wasn’t until
one day that he that’s me ran
across one of that crew in Frisco. ‘Hallo,
Cranch,’ sez he to me, ’so you got away,
didn’t you? And how’s the cap’en’s
baby? Grown a young gal by this time, ain’t
she?’ ‘What are you talkin about,’
ez I; ‘how should I know?’ He draws away
from me, and sez, ‘D – it,’
sez he, ‘you don’t mean that you’
. . . I grabs him by the throat and makes him
tell me all. And then it appears that the boat
and the baby were never found again, and every man
of that crew, cap’en and all, believed I had
stolen it.”
He paused. Father Pedro was staring
at the prospect with an uncompromising rigidity of
head and shoulder.
“It’s a bad lookout for
me, ain’t it?” the stranger continued,
in serious reflection.
“How do I know,” said
the priest harshly, without turning his head, “that
you did not make away with this child?”
“Beg pardon.”
“That you did not complete your
revenge by by killing it, as
your comrade suspected you? Ah! Holy Trinity,”
continued Father Pedro, throwing out his hands with
an impatient gesture, as if to take the place of unutterable
thought.
“How do you know?” echoed the stranger
coldly.
“Yes.”
The stranger linked his fingers together
and threw them over his knee, drew it up to his chest
caressingly, and said quietly, “Because you do
know.”
The Padre rose to his feet.
“What mean you?” he said,
sternly fixing his eyes upon the speaker. Their
eyes met. The stranger’s were gray and persistent,
with hanging corner lids that might have concealed
even more purpose than they showed. The Padre’s
were hollow, open, and the whites slightly brown, as
if with tobacco stains. Yet they were the first
to turn away.
“I mean,” returned the
stranger, with the same practical gravity, “that
you know it wouldn’t pay me to come here, if
I’d killed the baby, unless I wanted you to
fix things right with me up there,” pointing
skywards, “and get absolution; and I’ve
told you that wasn’t in my line.”
“Why do you seek me, then?”
demanded the Padre, suspiciously.
“Because I reckon I thought
a man might be allowed to confess something short
of a murder. If you’re going to draw the
line below that ”
“This is but sacrilegious levity,”
interrupted Father Pedro, turning as if to go.
But the stranger did not make any movement to detain
him.
“Have you implored forgiveness
of the father the man you wronged before
you came here?” asked the priest, lingering.
“Not much. It wouldn’t
pay if he was living, and he died four years ago.”
“You are sure of that?”
“I am.”
“There are other relations, perhaps?”
“None.”
Father Pedro was silent. When
he spoke again, it was with a changed voice.
“What is your purpose, then?” he asked,
with the first indication of priestly sympathy in
his manner. “You cannot ask forgiveness
of the earthly father you have injured, you refuse
the intercession of holy Church with the Heavenly
Father you have disobeyed. Speak, wretched man!
What is it you want?”
“I want to find the child.”
“But if it were possible, if
she were still living, are you fit to seek her, to
even make yourself known to her, to appear before her?”
“Well, if I made it profitable to her, perhaps.”
“Perhaps,” echoed the priest, scornfully.
“So be it. But why come here?”
“To ask your advice. To
know how to begin my search. You know this country.
You were here when that boat drifted ashore beyond
that mountain.”
“Ah, indeed. I have much
to do with it. It is an affair of the alcalde the
authorities of your your police.”
“Is it?”
The Padre again met the stranger’s
eyes. He stopped, with the snuff box he had somewhat
ostentatiously drawn from his pocket still open in
his hand.
“Why is it not, Senor?” he demanded.
“If she lives, she is a young
lady by this time, and might not want the details
of her life known to any one.”
“And how will you recognize
your baby in this young lady?” asked Father
Pedro, with a rapid gesture, indicating the comparative
heights of a baby and an adult.
“I reckon I’ll know her,
and her clothes too; and whoever found her wouldn’t
be fool enough to destroy them.”
“After fourteen years! Good! you have faith,
Senor ”
“Cranch,” supplied the
stranger, consulting his watch. “But time’s
up. Business is business. Good-by; don’t
let me keep you.”
He extended his hand.
The Padre met it with a dry, unsympathetic
palm, as sere and yellow as the hills. When their
hands separated, the father still hesitated, looking
at Cranch. If he expected further speech or entreaty
from him he was mistaken, for the American, without
turning his head, walked in the same serious, practical
fashion down the avenue of fig trees, and disappeared
beyond the hedge of vines. The outlines of the
mountain beyond were already lost in the fog.
Father Pedro turned into the refectory.
“Antonio.”
A strong flavor of leather, onions,
and stable preceded the entrance of a short, stout
vaquero from the little patio.
“Saddle Pinto and thine own
mule to accompany Francisco, who will take letters
from me to the Father Superior at San Jose to-morrow
at daybreak.”
“At daybreak, reverend father?”
“At daybreak. Hark ye,
go by the mountain trails and avoid the highway.
Stop at no posada nor fonda, but if the child is weary,
rest then awhile at Don Juan Briones’ or at
the rancho of the Blessed Fisherman. Have no
converse with stragglers, least of all those gentile
Americanos. So . . .”
The first strokes of the Angelus came
from the nearer tower. With a gesture Father
Pedro waved Antonio aside, and opened the door of the
sacristy.
“Ad Majorem Dei Gloria.”
CHAPTER II
The hacienda of Don Juan Briones,
nestling in a wooded cleft of the foot-hills, was
hidden, as Father Pedro had wisely reflected, from
the straying feet of travelers along the dusty highway
to San Jose. As Francisco, emerging from the
canada, put spurs to his mule at the sight of
the whitewashed walls, Antonio grunted.
“Oh aye, little priest! thou
wast tired enough a moment ago, and though we are
not three leagues from the Blessed Fisherman, thou
couldst scarce sit thy saddle longer. Mother
of God! and all to see that little mongrel, Juanita.”
“But, good Antonio, Juanita
was my play-fellow, and I may not soon again chance
this way. And Juanita is not a mongrel, no more
than I am.”
“She is a mestiza, and thou
art a child of the Church, though this following of
gypsy wenches does not show it.”
“But Father Pedro does not object,” urged
the boy.
“The reverend father has forgotten
he was ever young,” replied Antonio, sententiously,
“or he wouldn’t set fire and tow together.”
“What sayest thou, good Antonio?”
asked Francisco quickly, opening his blue eyes in
frank curiosity; “who is fire, and who is tow?”
The worthy muleteer, utterly abashed
and confounded by this display of the acolyte’s
direct simplicity, contented himself by shrugging his
shoulders, and a vague “Quién sabe?”
“Come,” said the boy,
gayly, “confess it is only the aguardiente
of the Blessed Fisherman thou missest. Never
fear, Juanita will find thee some. And see! here
she comes.”
There was a flash of white flounces
along the dark brown corridor, the twinkle of satin
slippers, the flying out of long black braids, and
with a cry of joy a young girl threw herself upon
Francisco as he entered the patio, and nearly dragged
him from his mule.
“Have a care, little sister,”
laughed the acolyte, looking at Antonio, “or
there will be a conflagration. Am I the fire?”
he continued, submitting to the two sounding kisses
the young girl placed upon either cheek, but still
keeping his mischievous glance upon the muleteer.
“Quién sabe?” repeated
Antonio, gruffly, as the young girl blushed under
his significant eyes. “It is no affair of
mine,” he added to himself, as he led Pinto
away. “Perhaps Father Pedro is right, and
this young twig of the Church is as dry and sapless
as himself. Let the mestiza burn if she likes.”
“Quick, Pancho,” said
the young girl, eagerly leading him along the corridor.
“This way. I must talk with thee before
thou seest Don Juan; that is why I ran to intercept
thee, and not as that fool Antonio would signify,
to shame thee. Wast thou ashamed, my Pancho?”
The boy threw his arm familiarly round
the supple, stayless little waist, accented only by
the belt of the light flounced saya, and said,
“But why this haste and feverishness, ’Nita?
And now I look at thee, thou hast been crying.”
They had emerged from a door in the
corridor into the bright sunlight of a walled garden.
The girl dropped her eyes, cast a quick glance around
her, and said,
“Not here, to the arroyo,”
and half leading, half dragging him, made her way
through a copse of manzanita and alder until they heard
the faint tinkling of water. “Dost thou
remember,” said the girl, “it was here,”
pointing to an embayed pool in the dark current, “that
I baptized thee, when Father Pedro first brought thee
here, when we both played at being monks? They
were dear old days, for Father Pedro would trust no
one with thee but me, and always kept us near him.”
“Aye and he said I would be
profaned by the touch of any other, and so himself
always washed and dressed me, and made my bed near
his.”
“And took thee away again, and
I saw thee not till thou camest with Antonio, over
a year ago, to the cattle branding. And now, my
Pancho, I may never see thee again.” She
buried her face in her hands and sobbed aloud.
The little acolyte tried to comfort
her, but with such abstraction of manner and inadequacy
of warmth that she hastily removed his caressing hand.
“But why? What has happened?” he
asked eagerly.
The girl’s manner had changed.
Her eyes flashed, and she put her brown fist on her
waist and began to rock from side to side.
“But I’ll not go,” she said viciously.
“Go where?” asked the boy.
“Oh, where?” she echoed,
impatiently. “Hear me, Francisco; thou knowest
I am, like thee, an orphan; but I have not, like thee,
a parent in the Holy Church. For, alas,”
she added, bitterly, “I am not a boy, and have
not a lovely voice borrowed from the angels. I
was, like thee, a foundling, kept by the charity of
the reverend fathers, until Don Juan, a childless
widower, adopted me. I was happy, not knowing
and caring who were the parents who had abandoned
me, happy only in the love of him who became my adopted
father. And now ” She paused.
“And now?” echoed Francisco, eagerly.
“And now they say it is discovered who are my
parents.”
“And they live?”
“Mother of God! no,” said
the girl, with scarcely filial piety. “There
is some one, a thing, a mere Don Fulano, who knows
it all, it seems, who is to be my guardian.”
“But how? tell me all, dear
Juanita,” said the boy with a feverish interest,
that contrasted so strongly with his previous abstraction
that Juanita bit her lips with vexation.
“Ah! How? Santa Barbara!
an extravaganza for children. A necklace of lies.
I am lost from a ship of which my father Heaven
rest him is General, and I am picked up
among the weeds on the sea-shore, like Moses in the
bulrushes. A pretty story, indeed.”
“Oh, how beautiful!” exclaimed
Francisco, enthusiastically. “Ah, Juanita,
would it had been me.”
“Thee!” said the
girl bitterly, “thee! No! it
was a girl wanted. Enough, it was me.”
“And when does the guardian
come?” persisted the boy, with sparkling eyes.
“He is here even now, with that
pompous fool the American alcalde from Monterey, a
wretch who knows nothing of the country or the people,
but who helped the other American to claim me.
I tell thee, Francisco, like as not it is all a folly,
some senseless blunder of those Americanos that imposes
upon Don Juan’s simplicity and love for them.”
“How looks he, this Americano
who seeks thee?” asked Francisco.
“What care I how he looks,”
said Juanita, “or what he is? He may have
the four S’s, for all I care. Yet,”
she added with a slight touch of coquetry, “he
is not bad to look upon, now I recall him.”
“Had he a long moustache and
a sad, sweet smile, and a voice so gentle and yet
so strong that you felt he ordered you to do things
with out saying it? And did his eye read your
thoughts? that very thought that you must
obey him?”
“Saints preserve thee, Pancho! Of whom
dost thou speak?”
“Listen, Juanita. It was
a year ago, the eve of Natividad, he was in the church
when I sang. Look where I would, I always met
his eye. When the canticle was sung and I was
slipping into the sacristy, he was beside me.
He spoke kindly, but I understood him not. He
put into my hand gold for an aguinaldo.
I pretended I understood not that also, and put it
into the box for the poor. He smiled and went
away. Often have I seen him since, and last night,
when I left the Mission, he was there again with Father
Pedro.”
“And Father Pedro, what said he of him?”
asked Juanita.
“Nothing.” The boy
hesitated. “Perhaps because I
said nothing of the stranger.”
Juanita laughed. “So thou
canst keep a secret from the good father when thou
carest. But why dost thou think this stranger
is my new guardian?”
“Dost thou not see, little sister?
he was even then seeking thee,” said the boy
with joyous excitement. “Doubtless he knew
we were friends and playmates may be the
good father has told him thy secret. For it is
no idle tale of the alcalde, believe me. I see
it all! It is true!”
“Then thou wilt let him take
me away,” exclaimed the girl bitterly, withdrawing
the little hand he had clasped in his excitement.
“Alas, Juanita, what avails
it now? I am sent to San Jose, charged with a
letter to the Father Superior, who will give me further
orders. What they are, or how long I must stay,
I know not. But I know this: the good Father
Pedro’s eyes were troubled when he gave me his
blessing, and he held me long in his embrace.
Pray Heaven I have committed no fault. Still
it may be that the reputation of my gift hath reached
the Father Superior, and he would advance me.”
And Francisco’s eyes lit up with youthful pride
at the thought.
Not so Juanita. Her black eyes
snapped suddenly with suspicion, she drew in her breath,
and closed her little mouth firmly. Then she began
a crescendo.
Mother of God! was that all?
Was he a child, to be sent away for such time or for
such purpose as best pleased the fathers? Was
he to know no more than that? With such gifts
as God had given him, was he not at least to have
some word in disposing of them? Ah! She
would not stand it.
The boy gazed admiringly at the piquant
energy of the little figure before him, and envied
her courage. “It is the mestizo blood,”
he murmured to himself. Then aloud, “Thou
shouldst have been a man, ’Nita.”
“And thou a woman.”
“Or a priest. Eh, what is that?”
They had both risen, Juanita defiantly,
her black braids flying as she wheeled and suddenly
faced the thicket, Francisco clinging to her with
trembling hands and whitened lips. A stone, loosened
from the hillside, had rolled to their feet; there
was a crackling in the alders on the slope above them.
“Is it a bear, or a brigand?”
whispered Francisco, hurriedly, sounding the uttermost
depths of his terror in the two words.
“It is an eavesdropper,”
said Juanita, impetuously; “and who and why,
I intend to know,” and she started towards the
thicket.
“Do not leave me, good Juanita,”
said the young acolyte, grasping the girl’s
skirt.
“Nay; run to the hacienda quickly,
and leave me to search the thicket. Run!”
The boy did not wait for a second
injunction, but scuttled away, his long coat catching
in the brambles, while Juanita darted like a kitten
into the bushes. Her search was fruitless, however,
and she was returning impatiently when her quick eye
fell upon a letter lying amidst the dried grass where
she and Francisco had been seated the moment before.
It had evidently fallen from his breast when he had
risen suddenly, and been overlooked in his alarm.
It was Father Pedro’s letter to the Father Superior
of San Jose.
In an instant she had pounced upon
it as viciously as if it had been the interloper she
was seeking. She knew that she held in her fingers
the secret of Francisco’s sudden banishment.
She felt instinctively that this yellowish envelope,
with its red string and its blotch of red seal, was
his sentence and her own. The little mestiza had
not been brought up to respect the integrity of either
locks or seals, both being unknown in the patriarchal
life of the hacienda. Yet with a certain feminine
instinct she looked furtively around her, and even
managed to dislodge the clumsy wax without marring
the pretty effigy of the crossed keys impressed upon
it. Then she opened the letter and read.
Suddenly she stopped and put back
her hair from her brown temples. Then a succession
of burning blushes followed each other in waves from
her neck up, and died in drops of moisture in her
eyes. This continued until she was fairly crying,
dropping the letter from her hands and rocking to
and fro. In the midst of this she quickly stopped
again; the clouds broke, a sunshine of laughter started
from her eyes, she laughed shyly, she laughed loudly,
she laughed hysterically. Then she stopped again
as suddenly, knitted her brows, swooped down once
more upon the letter, and turned to fly. But
at the same moment the letter was quietly but firmly
taken from her hand, and Mr. Jack Cranch stood beside
her.
Juanita was crimson, but unconquered.
She mechanically held out her hand for the letter;
the American took her little fingers, kissed them,
and said:
“How are you again?”
“The letter,” replied
Juanita, with a strong disposition to stamp her foot.
“But,” said Cranch, with
business directness, “you’ve read enough
to know it isn’t for you.”
“Nor for you either,” responded Juanita.
“True. It is for the Reverend
Father Superior of San Jose Mission. I’ll
give it to him.”
Juanita was becoming alarmed, first
at this prospect, second at the power the stranger
seemed to be gaining over her. She recalled Francisco’s
description of him with something like superstitious
awe.
“But it concerns Francisco.
It contains a secret he should know.”
“Then you can tell him it.
Perhaps it would come easier from you.”
Juanita blushed again. “Why?”
she asked, half dreading his reply.
“Because,” said the American,
quietly, “you are old playmates; you are attached
to each other.”
Juanita bit her lips. “Why
don’t you read it yourself?” she asked
bluntly.
“Because I don’t read
other people’s letters, and if it concerns me
you’ll tell me.”
“What if I don’t?”
“Then the Father Superior will.”
“I believe you know Francisco’s secret
already,” said the girl, boldly.
“Perhaps.”
“Then, Mother of God! Senor Crancho, what
do you want?”
“I do not want to separate two such good friends
as you and Francisco.”
“Perhaps you’d like to
claim us both,” said the girl, with a sneer that
was not devoid of coquetry.
“I should be delighted.”
“Then here is your occasion,
Senor, for here comes my adopted father, Don Juan,
and your friend, Senor Br r own,
the American alcalde.”
Two men appeared in the garden path
below them. The stiff, glazed, broad-brimmed
black hat, surmounting a dark face of Quixotic gravity
and romantic rectitude, indicated Don Juan Briones.
His companion, lazy, specious, and red-faced, was
Senor Brown, the American alcalde.
“Well, I reckon we kin about
call the thing fixed,” said Senor Brown, with
a large wave of the hand, suggesting a sweeping away
of all trivial details. “Ez I was saying
to the Don yer, when two high-toned gents like you
and him come together in a delicate matter of this
kind, it ain’t no hoss trade nor sharp practice.
The Don is that lofty in principle that he’s
willin’ to sacrifice his affections for the good
of the gal; and you, on your hand, kalkilate to see
all he’s done for her, and go your whole pile
better. You’ll make the legal formalities
good. I reckon that old Injin woman who can swear
to the finding of the baby on the shore will set things
all right yet. For the matter o’ that, if
you want anything in the way of a certificate, I’m
on hand always.”
“Juanita and myself are at your
disposition, caballeros,” said Don Juan, with
a grave exaltation. “Never let it be said
that the Mexican nation was outdone by the great Americanos
in deeds of courtesy and affection. Let it rather
stand that Juanita was a sacred trust put into my hands
years ago by the goddess of American liberty, and nurtured
in the Mexican eagle’s nest. Is it not
so, my soul?” he added, more humanly, to the
girl, when he had quite recovered from the intoxication
of his own speech. “We love thee, little
one, but we keep our honor.”
“There’s nothing mean
about the old man,” said Brown, admiringly, with
a slight dropping of his left eyelid; “his head
is level, and he goes with his party.”
“Thou takest my daughter, Senor
Cranch,” continued the old man, carried away
by his emotion; “but the American nation gives
me a son.”
“You know not what you say,
father,” said the young girl, angrily, exasperated
by a slight twinkle in the American’s eye.
“Not so,” said Cranch.
“Perhaps one of the American nation may take
him at his word.”
“Then, caballeros, you will,
for the moment at least, possess yourselves of the
house and its poor hospitality,” said Don Juan,
with time-honored courtesy, producing the rustic key
of the gate of the patio. “It is at your
disposition, caballeros,” he repeated, leading
the way as his guests passed into the corridor.
Two hours passed. The hills were
darkening on their eastern slopes; the shadows of
the few poplars that sparsedly dotted the dusty highway
were falling in long black lines that looked like
ditches on the dead level of the tawny fields; the
shadows of slowly moving cattle were mingling with
their own silhouettes, and becoming more and more grotesque.
A keen wind rising in the hills was already creeping
from the canada as from the mouth of a funnel,
and sweeping the plains. Antonio had forgathered
with the servants, had pinched the ears of the maids,
had partaken of aguardiente, had saddled the
mules, Antonio was becoming impatient.
And then a singular commotion disturbed
the peaceful monotony of the patriarchal household
of Don Juan Briones. The stagnant courtyard was
suddenly alive with péons and servants, running
hither and thither. The alleys and gardens were
filled with retainers. A confusion of questions,
orders, and outcrys rent the air, the plains shook
with the galloping of a dozen horsemen. For the
acolyte Francisco, of the Mission San Carmel, had
disappeared and vanished, and from that day the hacienda
of Don Juan Briones knew him no more.
CHAPTER III
When Father Pedro saw the yellow mules
vanish under the low branches of the oaks beside the
little graveyard, caught the last glitter of the morning
sun on Pinto’s shining headstall, and heard the
last tinkle of Antonio’s spurs, something very
like a mundane sigh escaped him. To the simple
wonder of the majority of early worshipers the
half-breed converts who rigorously attended the spiritual
ministrations of the Mission, and ate the temporal
provisions of the reverend fathers he deputed
the functions of the first mass to a coadjutor, and,
breviary in hand, sought the orchard of venerable
pear trees. Whether there was any occult sympathy
in his reflections with the contemplation of their
gnarled, twisted, gouty, and knotty limbs, still bearing
gracious and goodly fruit, I know not, but it was
his private retreat, and under one of the most rheumatic
and misshapen trunks there was a rude seat. Here
Father Pedro sank, his face towards the mountain wall
between him and the invisible sea. The relentless,
dry, practical Californian sunlight falling on his
face grimly pointed out a night of vigil and suffering.
The snuffy yellow of his eyes was injected yet burning,
his temples were ridged and veined like a tobacco
leaf; the odor of desiccation which his garments always
exhaled was hot and feverish, as if the fire had suddenly
awakened among the ashes.
Of what was Father Pedro thinking?
He was thinking of his youth, a youth
spent under the shade of those pear trees, even then
venerable as now. He was thinking of his youthful
dreams of heathen conquest, emulating the sacrifices
and labors of Junípero Serra; a dream cut short
by the orders of the archbishop, that sent his companion,
Brother Diego, north on a mission to strange lands,
and condemned him to the isolation of San Carmel.
He was thinking of that fierce struggle with envy
of a fellow creature’s better fortune that,
conquered by prayer and penance, left him patient,
submissive, and devoted to his humble work; how he
raised up converts to the faith, even taking them
from the breast of heretic mothers.
He recalled how once, with the zeal
of propagandism quickening in the instincts of a childless
man, he had dreamed of perpetuating his work through
some sinless creation of his own; of dedicating some
virgin soul, one over whom he could have complete
control, restricted by no human paternal weakness,
to the task he had begun. But how? Of all
the boys eagerly offered to the Church by their parents
there seemed none sufficiently pure and free from
parental taint. He remembered how one night,
through the intercession of the Blessed Virgin herself,
as he firmly then believed, this dream was fulfilled.
An Indian woman brought him a Waugee child a
baby-girl that she had picked up on the sea-shore.
There were no parents to divide the responsibility,
the child had no past to confront, except the memory
of the ignorant Indian woman, who deemed her duty
done, and whose interest ceased in giving it to the
Padre. The austere conditions of his monkish life
compelled him to the first step in his adoption of
it the concealment of its sex. This
was easy enough, as he constituted himself from that
moment its sole nurse and attendant, and boldly baptized
it among the other children by the name of Francisco.
No others knew its origin, nor cared to know.
Father Pedro had taken a muchacho foundling for
adoption; his jealous seclusion of it and his personal
care was doubtless some sacerdotal formula at once
high and necessary.
He remembered with darkening eyes
and impeded breath how his close companionship and
daily care of this helpless child had revealed to him
the fascinations of that paternity denied to him; how
he had deemed it his duty to struggle against the
thrill of baby fingers laid upon his yellow cheeks,
the pleading of inarticulate words, the eloquence of
wonder-seeing and mutely questioning eyes; how he had
succumbed again and again, and then struggled no more,
seeing only in them the suggestion of childhood made
incarnate in the Holy Babe. And yet, even as
he thought, he drew from his gown a little shoe, and
laid it beside his breviary. It was Francisco’s
baby slipper, a duplicate to those worn by the miniature
waxen figure of the Holy Virgin herself in her niche
in the transept.
Had he felt during these years any
qualms of conscience at this concealment of the child’s
sex? None. For to him the babe was sexless,
as most befitted one who was to live and die at the
foot of the altar. There was no attempt to deceive
God; what mattered else? Nor was he withholding
the child from the ministrations of the sacred sisters;
there was no convent near the Mission, and as each
year passed, the difficulty of restoring her to the
position and duties of her sex became greater and
more dangerous. And then the acolyte’s
destiny was sealed by what again appeared to Father
Pedro as a direct interposition of Providence.
The child developed a voice of such exquisite sweetness
and purity that an angel seemed to have strayed into
the little choir, and kneeling worshipers below, transported,
gazed upwards, half expectant of a heavenly light
breaking through the gloom of the raftered ceiling.
The fame of the little singer filled the valley of
San Carmel; it was a miracle vouchsafed the Mission;
Don Jose Peralta remembered, ah yes, to have heard
in old Spain of boy choristers with such voices!
And was this sacred trust to be withdrawn
from him? Was this life which he had brought
out of an unknown world of sin, unstained and pure,
consecrated and dedicated to God, just in the dawn
of power and promise for the glory of the Mother Church,
to be taken from his side? And at the word of
a self-convicted man of sin a man whose
tardy repentance was not yet absolved by the Holy
Church. Never! never! Father Pedro dwelt
upon the stranger’s rejection of the ministrations
of the Church with a pitiable satisfaction; had he
accepted it, he would have had a sacred claim upon
Father Pedro’s sympathy and confidence.
Yet he rose again, uneasily and with irregular steps
returned to the corridor, passing the door of the
familiar little cell beside his own. The window,
the table, and even the scant toilette utensils were
filled with the flowers of yesterday, some of them
withered and dry; the white gown of the little chorister
was hanging emptily against the wall. Father Pedro
started and trembled; it seemed as if the spiritual
life of the child had slipped away with its garments.
In that slight chill, which even in
the hottest days in California always invests any
shadow cast in that white sunlight, Father Pedro shivered
in the corridor. Passing again into the garden,
he followed in fancy the wayfaring figure of Francisco,
saw the child arrive at the rancho of Don Juan, and
with the fateful blindness of all dreamers projected
a picture most unlike the reality. He followed
the pilgrims even to San Jose, and saw the child deliver
the missive which gave the secret of her sex and condition
to the Father Superior. That the authority at
San Jose might dissent with the Padre of San Carmel,
or decline to carry out his designs, did not occur
to the one-idea’d priest. Like all solitary
people, isolated from passing events, he made no allowances
for occurrences outside of his routine. Yet at
this moment a sudden thought whitened his yellow cheek.
What if the Father Superior deemed it necessary to
impart the secret to Francisco? Would the child
recoil at the deception, and, perhaps, cease to love
him? It was the first time, in his supreme selfishness,
he had taken the acolyte’s feelings into
account. He had thought of him only as one owing
implicit obedience to him as a temporal and spiritual
guide.
“Reverend Father!”
He turned impatiently. It was
his muleteer, Jose. Father Pedro’s sunken
eye brightened.
“Ah, Jose! Quickly, then; hast thou found
Sanchicha?”
“Truly, your reverence!
And I have brought her with me, just as she is; though
if your reverence make more of her than to fill the
six-foot hole and say a prayer over her, I’ll
give the mule that brought her here for food for the
bull’s horns. She neither hears nor speaks,
but whether from weakness or sheer wantonness, I know
not.”
“Peace, then! and let thy tongue
take example from hers. Bring her with thee into
the sacristy and attend without. Go!”
Father Pedro watched the disappearing
figure of the muleteer and hurriedly swept his thin,
dry hand, veined and ribbed like a brown November
leaf, over his stony forehead, with a sound that seemed
almost a rustle. Then he suddenly stiffened his
fingers over his breviary, dropped his arms perpendicularly
before him, and with a rigid step returned to the
corridor and passed into the sacristy.
For a moment in the half-darkness
the room seemed to be empty. Tossed carelessly
in the corner appeared some blankets topped by a few
straggling black horse tails, like an unstranded riata.
A trembling agitated the mass as Father Pedro approached.
He bent over the heap and distinguished in its midst
the glowing black eyes of Sanchicha, the Indian centenarian
of the Mission San Carmel. Only her eyes lived.
Helpless, boneless, and jelly-like, old age had overtaken
her with a mild form of deliquescence.
“Listen, Sanchicha,” said
the father, gravely. “It is important that
thou shouldst refresh thy memory for a moment.
Look back fourteen years, mother; it is but yesterday
to thee. Thou dost remember the baby a
little muchacha thou broughtest me then fourteen
years ago?”
The old woman’s eyes became
intelligent, and turned with a quick look towards
the open door of the church, and thence towards the
choir.
The Padre made a motion of irritation.
“No, no! Thou dost not understand; thou
dost not attend me. Knowest thou of any mark of
clothing, trinket, or amulet found upon the babe?”
The light of the old woman’s
eyes went out. She might have been dead.
Father Pedro waited a moment, and then laid his hand
impatiently on her shoulder.
“Dost thou mean there are none?”
A ray of light struggled back into her eyes.
“None.”
“And thou hast kept back or
put away no sign nor mark of her parentage? Tell
me, on this crucifix.”
The eyes caught the crucifix, and
became as empty as the orbits of the carven Christ
upon it.
Father Pedro waited patiently.
A moment passed; only the sound of the muleteer’s
spurs was heard in the courtyard.
“It is well,” he said
at last, with a sigh of relief. “Pepita
shall give thee some refreshment, and Jose will bring
thee back again. I will summon him.”
He passed out of the sacristy door,
leaving it open. A ray of sunlight darted eagerly
in, and fell upon the grotesque heap in the corner.
Sanchicha’s eyes lived again; more than that,
a singular movement came over her face. The hideous
caverns of her toothless mouth opened she
laughed. The step of Jose was heard in the corridor,
and she became again inert.
The third day, which should have brought
the return of Antonio, was nearly spent. Father
Pedro was impatient but not alarmed. The good
fathers at San Jose might naturally detain Antonio
for the answer, which might require deliberation.
If any mischance had occurred to Francisco, Antonio
would have returned or sent a special messenger.
At sunset he was in his accustomed seat in the orchard,
his hands clasped over the breviary in his listless
lap, his eyes fixed upon the mountain between him
and that mysterious sea that had brought so much into
his life. He was filled with a strange desire
to see it, a vague curiosity hitherto unknown to his
preoccupied life; he wished to gaze upon that strand,
perhaps the very spot where she had been found; he
doubted not his questioning eyes would discover some
forgotten trace of her; under his persistent will
and aided by the Holy Virgin, the sea would give up
its secret. He looked at the fog creeping along
the summit, and recalled the latest gossip of San
Carmel; how that since the advent of the Americanos
it was gradually encroaching on the Mission. The
hated name vividly recalled to him the features of
the stranger as he had stood before him three nights
ago, in this very garden; so vividly that he sprang
to his feet with an exclamation. It was no fancy,
but Senor Cranch himself advancing from under the
shadow of a pear tree.
“I reckoned I’d catch
you here,” said Mr. Cranch, with the same dry,
practical business fashion, as if he was only resuming
an interrupted conversation, “and I reckon I
ain’t going to keep you a minit longer than
I did t’other day.” He mutely referred
to his watch, which he already held in his hand, and
then put it back in his pocket. “Well! we
found her!”
“Francisco,” interrupted
the priest with a single stride, laying his hand upon
Cranch’s arm, and staring into his eyes.
Mr. Cranch quietly removed Father
Pedro’s hand. “I reckon that wasn’t
the name as I caught it,” he returned dryly.
“Hadn’t you better sit down?”
“Pardon me pardon
me, Senor,” said the priest, hastily sinking
back upon his bench, “I was thinking of other
things. You you came upon
me suddenly. I thought it was the acolyte.
Go on, Senor! I am interested.”
“I thought you’d be,”
said Cranch, quietly. “That’s why
I came. And then you might be of service too.”
“True, true,” said the
priest, with rapid accents; “and this girl,
Senor, this girl is ”
“Juanita, the mestiza, adopted
daughter of Don Juan Briones, over on the Santa Clare
Valley,” replied Cranch, jerking his thumb over
his shoulder, and then sitting down upon the bench
beside Father Pedro.
The priest turned his feverish eyes
piercingly upon his companion for a few seconds, and
then doggedly fixed them upon the ground. Cranch
drew a plug of tobacco from his pocket, cut off a
portion, placed it in his cheek, and then quietly
began to strap the blade of his jack-knife upon his
boot. Father Pedro saw it from under his eyelids,
and even in his preoccupation despised him.
“Then you are certain she is
the babe you seek?” said the father, without
looking up.
“I reckon as near as you can
be certain of anything. Her age tallies; she
was the only foundling girl baby baptized by you, you
know,” he partly turned round appealingly
to the Padre, “that year. Injin
woman says she picked up a baby. Looks like a
pretty clear case, don’t it?”
“And the clothes, friend Cranch?”
said the priest, with his eyes still on the ground,
and a slight assumption of easy indifference.
“They will be forthcoming, like
enough, when the time comes,” said Cranch; “the
main thing at first was to find the girl; that was
my job; the lawyers, I reckon, can fit the proofs
and say what’s wanted, later on.”
“But why lawyers,” continued
Padre Pedro, with a slight sneer he could not repress,
“if the child is found and Senor Cranch is satisfied?”
“On account of the property. Business is
business!”
“The property?”
Mr. Cranch pressed the back of his
knife-blade on his boot, shut it up with a click,
and putting it in his pocket said calmly,
“Well, I reckon the million
of dollars that her father left when he died, which
naturally belongs to her, will require some proof that
she is his daughter.”
He had placed both his hands in his
pockets, and turned his eyes full upon Father Pedro.
The priest arose hurriedly.
“But you said nothing of this
before, Senor Cranch,” said he, with a gesture
of indignation, turning his back quite upon Cranch,
and taking a step towards the refectory.
“Why should I? I was looking
after the girl, not the property,” returned
Cranch, following the Padre with watchful eyes, but
still keeping his careless, easy attitude.
“Ah, well! Will it be said
so, think you? Eh! Bueno. What will
the world think of your sacred quest, eh?” continued
the Padre Pedro, forgetting himself in his excitement,
but still averting his face from his companion.
“The world will look after the
proofs, and I reckon not bother if the proofs are
all right,” replied Cranch, carelessly; “and
the girl won’t think the worse of me for helping
her to a fortune. Hallo! you’ve dropped
something.” He leaped to his feet, picked
up the breviary which had fallen from the Padre’s
fingers, and returned it to him with a slight touch
of gentleness that was unsuspected in the man.
The priest’s dry, tremulous
hand grasped the volume without acknowledgment.
“But these proofs?” he
said hastily; “these proofs, Senor?”
“Oh, well, you’ll testify to the baptism,
you know.”
“But if I refuse; if I will
have nothing to do with this thing! If I will
not give my word that there is not some mistake,”
said the priest, working himself into a feverish indignation.
“That there are not slips of memory, eh?
Of so many children baptized, is it possible for me
to know which, eh? And if this Juanita is not
your girl, eh?”
“Then you’ll help me to
find who is,” said Cranch, coolly.
Father Pedro turned furiously on his
tormentor. Overcome by his vigil and anxiety.
He was oblivious of everything but the presence of
the man who seemed to usurp the functions of his own
conscience. “Who are you, who speak thus?”
he said hoarsely, advancing upon Cranch with outstretched
and anathematizing fingers. “Who are you,
Senor Heathen, who dare to dictate to me, a Father
of Holy Church? I tell you, I will have none
of this. Never! I will not. From this
moment, you understand nothing. I
will never . . .”
He stopped. The first stroke
of the Angelus rang from the little tower. The
first stroke of that bell before whose magic exorcism
all human passions fled, the peaceful bell that had
for fifty years lulled the little fold of San Carmel
to prayer and rest, came to his throbbing ear.
His trembling hands groped for the crucifix, carried
it to his left breast; his lips moved in prayer.
His eyes were turned to the cold, passionless sky,
where a few faint, far-spaced stars had silently stolen
to their places. The Angelus still rang, his trembling
ceased, he remained motionless and rigid.
The American, who had uncovered in
deference to the worshiper rather than the rite, waited
patiently. The eyes of Father Pedro returned
to the earth, moist as if with dew caught from above.
He looked half absently at Cranch.
“Forgive me, my son,”
he said, in a changed voice. “I am only
a worn old man. I must talk with thee more of
this but not to-night not to-night; to-morrow to-morrow to-morrow.”
He turned slowly and appeared to glide
rather than move under the trees, until the dark shadow
of the Mission tower met and encompassed him.
Cranch followed him with anxious eyes. Then he
removed the quid of tobacco from his cheek.
“Just as I reckoned,”
remarked he, quite audibly. “He’s
clean gold on the bed rock after all!”
CHAPTER IV
That night Father Pedro dreamed a
strange dream. How much of it was reality, how
long it lasted, or when he awoke from it, he could
not tell. The morbid excitement of the previous
day culminated in a febrile exaltation in which he
lived and moved as in a separate existence.
This is what he remembered. He
thought he had risen at night in a sudden horror of
remorse, and making his way to the darkened church
had fallen upon his knees before the high altar, when
all at once the acolyte’s voice broke from
the choir, but in accents so dissonant and unnatural
that it seemed a sacrilege, and he trembled. He
thought he had confessed the secret of the child’s
sex to Cranch, but whether the next morning or a week
later he did not know. He fancied, too, that Cranch
had also confessed some trifling deception to him,
but what, or why, he could not remember; so much greater
seemed the enormity of his own transgression.
He thought Cranch had put in his hands the letter he
had written to the Father Superior, saying that his
secret was still safe, and that he had been spared
the avowal and the scandal that might have ensued.
But through all, and above all, he was conscious of
one fixed idea: to seek the seashore with Sanchicha,
and upon the spot where she had found Francisco, meet
the young girl who had taken his place, and so part
from her forever. He had a dim recollection that
this was necessary to some legal identification of
her, as arranged by Cranch, but how or why he did
not understand; enough that it was a part of his penance.
It was early morning when the faithful
Antonio, accompanied by Sanchicha and Jose, rode forth
with him from the Mission of San Carmel. Except
on the expressionless features of the old woman, there
was anxiety and gloom upon the faces of the little
cavalcade. He did not know how heavily his strange
abstraction and hallucinations weighed upon their
honest hearts. As they wound up the ascent of
the mountain he noticed that Antonio and Jose conversed
with bated breath and many pious crossings of themselves,
but with eyes always wistfully fixed upon him.
He wondered if, as part of his penance, he ought not
to proclaim his sin and abase himself before them;
but he knew that his devoted followers would insist
upon sharing his punishment; and he remembered his
promise to Cranch, that for her sake he would
say nothing. Before they reached the summit he
turned once or twice to look back upon the Mission.
How small it looked, lying there in the peaceful valley,
contrasted with the broad sweep of the landscape beyond,
stopped at the further east only by the dim, ghost-like
outlines of the Sierras. But the strong breath
of the sea was beginning to be felt; in a few moments
more they were facing it with lowered sombreros
and flying serapes, and the vast, glittering, illimitable
Pacific opened out beneath them.
Dazed and blinded, as it seemed to
him, by the shining, restless expanse, Father Pedro
rode forward as if still in a dream. Suddenly
he halted, and called Antonio to his side.
“Tell me, child, didst thou
not say that this coast was wild and desolate of man,
beast, and habitation?”
“Truly I did, reverend father.”
“Then what is that?” pointing to the shore.
Almost at their feet nestled a cluster
of houses, at the head of an arroyo reaching up from
the beach. They looked down upon the smoke of
a manufactory chimney, upon strange heaps of material
and curious engines scattered along the sands, with
here and there moving specks of human figures.
In a little bay a schooner swung at her cables.
The vaquero crossed himself in stupefied
alarm. “I know not, your reverence; it
is only two years ago, before the rodeo, that I was
here for strayed colts, and I swear by the blessed
bones of San Antonio that it was as I said.”
“Ah! it is like these Americanos,”
responded the muleteer. “I have it from
my brother Diego that he went from San Jose to Pescadero
two months ago, across the plains, with never a hut
nor fonda to halt at all the way. He returned
in seven days, and in the midst of the plain there
were three houses and a mill, and many people.
And why was it? Ah! Mother of God! one had
picked up in the creek where he drank that much of
gold;” and the muleteer tapped one of the silver
coins that fringed his jacket sleeves in place of
buttons.
“And they are washing the sands
for gold there now,” said Antonio, eagerly pointing
to some men gathered round a machine like an enormous
cradle. “Let us hasten on.”
Father Pedro’s momentary interest
had passed. The words of his companions fell
dull and meaningless upon his dreaming ears. He
was conscious only that the child was more a stranger
to him as an outcome of this hard, bustling life,
than when he believed her borne to him over the mysterious
sea. It perplexed his dazed, disturbed mind to
think that if such an antagonistic element could exist
within a dozen miles of the Mission, and he not know
it, could not such an atmosphere have been around
him, even in his monastic isolation, and he remain
blind to it? Had he really lived in the world
without knowing it? Had it been in his blood?
Had it impelled him to He shuddered and
rode on.
They were at the last slope of the
zigzag descent to the shore, when he saw the figures
of a man and woman moving slowly through a field of
wild oats, not far from the trail. It seemed
to his distorted fancy that the man was Cranch.
The woman! His heart stopped beating. Ah!
could it be? He had never seen her in her proper
garb: would she look like that? Would she
be as tall? He thought he bade Jose and Antonio
go on slowly before with Sanchicha, and dismounted,
walking slowly between the high stalks of grain, lest
he should disturb them. They evidently did not
hear his approach, but were talking earnestly.
It seemed to Father Pedro that they had taken each
other’s hands, and as he looked Cranch slipped
his arm round her waist. With only a blind instinct
of some dreadful sacrilege in this act, Father Pedro
would have rushed forward, when the girl’s voice
struck his ear. He stopped, breathless. It
was not Francisco, but Juanita, the little mestiza.
“But are you sure you are not
pretending to love me now, as you pretended to think
I was the muchacha you had run away with and lost?
Are you sure it is not pity for the deceit you practiced
upon me upon Don Juan upon poor
Father Pedro?”
It seemed as if Cranch had tried to
answer with a kiss, for the girl drew suddenly away
from him with a coquettish fling of the black braids,
and whipped her little brown hands behind her.
“Well, look here,” said
Cranch, with the same easy, good-natured, practical
directness which the priest remembered, and which would
have passed for philosophy in a more thoughtful man,
“put it squarely, then. In the first place,
it was Don Juan and the alcalde who first suggested
you might be the child.”
“But you have said you knew
it was Francisco all the time,” interrupted
Juanita.
“I did; but when I found the
priest would not assist me at first, and admit that
the acolyte was a girl, I preferred to let him think
I was deceived in giving a fortune to another, and
leave it to his own conscience to permit it or frustrate
it. I was right. I reckon it was pretty
hard on the old man, at his time of life, and wrapped
up as he was in the girl; but at the moment he came
up to the scratch like a man.”
“And to save him you have deceived
me? Thank you, Senor,” said the girl with
a mock curtsey.
“I reckon I preferred to have
you for a wife than a daughter,” said Cranch,
“if that’s what you mean. When you
know me better, Juanita,” he continued, gravely,
“you’ll know that I would never have let
you believe I sought in you the one if I had not hoped
to find in you the other.”
“Bueno! And when did you have that pretty
hope?”
“When I first saw you.”
“And that was two weeks ago.”
“A year ago, Juanita. When
Francisco visited you at the rancho. I followed
and saw you.”
Juanita looked at him a moment, and
then suddenly darted at him, caught him by the lapels
of his coat and shook him like a terrier.
“Are you sure that you did not
love that Francisco? Speak!” (She shook
him again.) “Swear that you did not follow her!”
“But I did,”
said Cranch, laughing and shaking between the clenching
of the little hands.
“Judas Iscariot! Swear
you do not love her all this while.”
“But, Juanita!”
“Swear!”
Cranch swore. Then to Father
Pedro’s intense astonishment she drew the American’s
face towards her own by the ears and kissed him.
“But you might have loved her,
and married a fortune,” said Juanita, after
a pause.
“Where would have been my reparation my
duty?” returned Cranch, with a laugh.
“Reparation enough for her to
have had you,” said Juanita, with that rapid
disloyalty of one loving woman to another in an emergency.
This provoked another kiss from Cranch, and then Juanita
said demurely,
“But we are far from the trail.
Let us return, or we shall miss Father Pedro.
Are you sure he will come?”
“A week ago he promised to be
here to see the proofs to-day.”
The voices were growing fainter and
fainter; they were returning to the trail.
Father Pedro remained motionless.
A week ago! Was it a week ago since since
what? And what had he been doing here? Listening!
He! Father Pedro, listening like an idle peon
to the confidences of two lovers. But they had
talked of him, of his crime, and the man had pitied
him. Why did he not speak? Why did he not
call after them? He tried to raise his voice.
It sank in his throat with a horrible choking sensation.
The nearest heads of oats began to nod to him, he felt
himself swaying backwards and forwards. He fell heavily,
down, down, down, from the summit of the mountain
to the floor of the Mission chapel, and there he lay
in the dark.
“He moves.”
“Blessed Saint Anthony preserve him!”
It was Antonio’s voice, it was
Jose’s arm, it was the field of wild oats, the
sky above his head, all unchanged.
“What has happened?” said the priest feebly.
“A giddiness seized your reverence
just now, as we were coming to seek you.”
“And you met no one?”
“No one, your reverence.”
Father Pedro passed his hand across his forehead.
“But who are these?” he
said, pointing to two figures who now appeared upon
the trail.
Antonio turned.
“It is the Americano, Senor
Cranch, and his adopted daughter, the mestiza Juanita,
seeking your reverence, methinks.”
“Ah!” said Father Pedro.
Cranch came forward and greeted the
priest cordially. “It was kind of you,
Father Pedro,” he said, meaningly, with a significant
glance at Jose and Antonio, “to come so far
to bid me and my adopted daughter farewell. We
depart when the tide serves, but not before you partake
of our hospitality in yonder cottage.”
Father Pedro gazed at Cranch and then at Juanita.
“I see,” he stammered.
“But she goes not alone. She will be strange
at first. She takes some friend, perhaps some
companion?” he continued, tremulously.
“A very old and dear one, Father Pedro, who
is waiting for us now.”
He led the way to a little white cottage,
so little and white and recent, that it seemed a mere
fleck of sea foam cast on the sands. Disposing
of Jose and Antonio in the neighboring workshop and
outbuildings, he assisted the venerable Sanchicha to
dismount, and, together with Father Pedro and Juanita,
entered a white palisaded enclosure beside the cottage,
and halted before what appeared to be a large, folding
trap-door, covering a slight, sandy mound. It
was locked with a padlock; beside it stood the American
alcalde and Don Juan Briones. Father Pedro looked
hastily around for another figure, but it was not
there.
“Gentlemen,” began Cranch,
in his practical business way, “I reckon you
all know we’ve come here to identify a young
lady, who” he hesitated “was
lately under the care of Father Pedro, with a foundling
picked up on this shore fifteen years ago by an Indian
woman. How this foundling came here, and how
I was concerned in it, you all know. I’ve
told everybody here how I scrambled ashore, leaving
that baby in the dingy, supposing it would be picked
up by the boat pursuing me. I’ve told some
of you,” he looked at Father Pedro, “how
I first discovered, from one of the men, three years
ago, that the child was not found by its father.
But I have never told any one, before now, I knew
it was picked up here.
“I never could tell the exact
locality where I came ashore, for the fog was coming
on as it is now. But two years ago I came up with
a party of gold hunters to work these sands.
One day, digging near this creek, I struck something
embedded deep below the surface. Well, gentlemen,
it wasn’t gold, but something worth more to
me than gold or silver. Here it is.”
At a sign the alcalde unlocked the
doors and threw them open. They disclosed an
irregular trench, in which, filled with sand, lay the
half-excavated stern of a boat.
“It was the dingy of the Trinidad,
gentlemen; you can still read her name. I found
hidden away, tucked under the stern sheets, mouldy
and water-worn, some clothes that I recognized to
be the baby’s. I knew then that the child
had been taken away alive for some purpose, and the
clothes were left so that she should carry no trace
with her. I recognized the hand of an Indian.
I set to work quietly. I found Sanchicha here,
she confessed to finding a baby, but what she had done
with it she would not at first say. But since
then she has declared before the alcalde that she
gave it to Father Pedro, of San Carmel, and that here
it stands Francisco that was! Francisca
that it is!”
He stepped aside to make way for a
tall girl, who had approached from the cottage.
Father Pedro had neither noticed the
concluding words nor the movement of Cranch.
His eyes were fixed upon the imbecile Sanchicha, Sanchicha,
on whom, to render his rebuke more complete, the Deity
seemed to have worked a miracle, and restored intelligence
to eye and lip. He passed his hand tremblingly
across his forehead, and turned away, when his eye
fell upon the last comer.
It was she. The moment he had
longed for and dreaded had come. She stood there,
animated, handsome, filled with a hurtful consciousness
in her new charms, her fresh finery, and the pitiable
trinkets that had supplanted her scapulary, and which
played under her foolish fingers. The past had
no place in her preoccupied mind; her bright eyes were
full of eager anticipation of a substantial future.
The incarnation of a frivolous world, even as she
extended one hand to him in half-coquettish embarrassment
she arranged the folds of her dress with the other.
At the touch of her fingers, he felt himself growing
old and cold. Even the penance of parting, which
he had looked forward to, was denied him; there was
no longer sympathy enough for sorrow. He thought
of the empty chorister’s robe in the little
cell, but not now with regret. He only trembled
to think of the flesh that he had once caused to inhabit
it.
“That’s all, gentlemen,”
broke in the practical voice of Cranch. “Whether
there are proofs enough to make Francisca the heiress
of her father’s wealth, the lawyers must say.
I reckon it’s enough for me that they give me
the chance of repairing a wrong by taking her father’s
place. After all, it was a mere chance.”
“It was the will of God,” said Father
Pedro, solemnly.
They were the last words he addressed
them. For when the fog had begun to creep inshore,
hastening their departure, he only answered their
farewells by a silent pressure of the hand, mute lips,
and far-off eyes.
When the sound of their laboring oars
grew fainter, he told Antonio to lead him and Sanchicha
again to the buried boat. There he bade her kneel
beside him. “We will do penance here, thou
and I, daughter,” he said gravely. When
the fog had drawn its curtain gently around the strange
pair, and sea and shore were blotted out, he whispered,
“Tell me, it was even so, was it not, daughter,
on the night she came?” When the distant clatter
of blocks and rattle of cordage came from the unseen
vessel, now standing out to sea, he whispered again,
“So, this is what thou didst hear, even then.”
And so during the night he marked, more or less audibly
to the half-conscious woman at his side, the low whisper
of the waves, the murmur of the far-off breakers,
the lightening and thickening of the fog, the phantoms
of moving shapes, and the slow coming of the dawn.
And when the morning sun had rent the veil over land
and sea, Antonio and Jose found him, haggard, but
erect, beside the trembling old woman, with a blessing
on his lips, pointing to the horizon where a single
sail still glimmered:
“Va Usted con Dios.”