“Hail and farewell.”
Supper was served in the inner room
opening from the corridor lit by a few swinging lanterns
of polished horn and a dozen wax candles of sacerdotal
size and suggestion. The apartment, though spacious,
was low and crypt-like, and was not relieved by the
two deep oven-like hearths that warmed it without
the play of firelight. But when the company had
assembled it was evident that the velvet jackets, gold
lace, silver buttons, and red sashes of the entertainers
not only lost their tawdry and theatrical appearance
in the half decorous and thoughtful gloom, but actually
seemed more in harmony with it than the modern dresses
of the guests. It was the Excelsior party who
looked strange and bizarre in these surroundings;
to the sensitive fancy of Miss Keene, Mrs. Brimmer’s
Parisian toilet had an air of provincial assumption;
her own pretty Zouave jacket and black silk skirt
horrified her with its apparent ostentatious eccentricity;
and Mrs. Markham and Miss Chubb seemed dowdy and overdressed
beside the satin mantillas and black lace
of the Señoritas. Nor were the gentlemen
less outres: the stiff correctness of Mr. Banks,
and the lighter foppishness of Winslow and Crosby,
not to mention Senor Perkins’ more pronounced
unconventionality, appeared as burlesques of their
own characters in a play. The crowning contrast
was reached by Captain Bunker, who, in accordance
with the habits of the mercantile marine of that period
when in port, wore a shore-going suit of black broadcloth,
with a tall hat, high shirt collar, and diamond pin.
Seated next to the Commander, it was no longer Don
Miguel who looked old-fashioned, it was Captain Bunker
who appeared impossible.
Nevertheless, as the meal progressed,
lightened by a sweet native wine made from the Mission
grape, and stimulated by champagne a present
of Captain Bunker from the cabin lockers of the Excelsior this
contrast, and much of the restraint that it occasioned,
seemed to melt away. The passengers became talkative;
the Commander and his friends unbent, and grew sympathetic
and inquiring. The temptation to recite the news
of the last half century, and to recount the wonderful
strides of civilization in that time, was too great
to be resisted by the Excelsior party. That some
of them notwithstanding the caution of Senor
Perkins approached dangerously near the
subject of the late war between the United States
and Mexico, of which Todos Santos was supposed to be
still ignorant, or that Crosby in particular seized
upon this opportunity for humorous exaggeration, may
be readily imagined. But as the translation of
the humorist’s speech, as well as the indiscretions
of his companions, were left to the Senor, in Spanish,
and to Mrs. Brimmer and Miss Keene, in French, any
imminent danger to the harmony of the evening was averted.
Don Ramon Ramirez, the Alcalde, a youngish man of evident
distinction, sat next to Miss Keene, and monopolized
her conversation with a certain curiosity that was
both grave and childish in its frank trustfulness.
Some of his questions were so simple and incompatible
with his apparent intelligence that she unconsciously
lowered her voice in answering them, in dread of the
ridicule of her companions. She could not resist
the impression, which repeatedly obtruded upon her
imagination, that the entire population of Todos Santos
were a party of lost children, forgotten by their
parents, and grown to man and womanhood in utter ignorance
of the world.
The Commander had, half informally,
drunk the health of Captain Bunker, without rising
from his seat, when, to Miss Keene’s alarm, Captain
Bunker staggered to his feet. He had been drinking
freely, as usual; but he was bent on indulging a loquacity
which his discipline on shipboard had hitherto precluded,
and which had, perhaps, strengthened his solitary
habit. His speech was voluble and incoherent,
complimentary and tactless, kindly and aggressive,
courteous and dogmatic. It was left to Senor
Perkins to translate it to the eye and ear of his host
without incongruity or offense. This he did so
admirably as to elicit not only the applause of the
foreigners who did not understand English, but of
his own countrymen who did not understand Spanish.
“I feel,” said Senor Perkins,
in graceful peroration, “that I have done poor
justice to the eloquence of this gallant sailor.
My unhappy translation cannot offer you that voice,
at times trembling with generous emotion, and again
inaudible from excessive modesty in the presence of
this illustrious assembly those limbs that
waver and bend under the undulations of the chivalrous
sentiment which carries him away as if he were still
on that powerful element he daily battles with and
conquers.”
But when coffee and sweets were reached,
the crowning triumph of Senor Perkins’ oratory
was achieved. After an impassioned burst of enthusiasm
towards his hosts in their own tongue, he turned towards
his own party with bland felicity.
“And how is it with us, dear
friends? We find ourselves not in the port we
were seeking; not in the goal of our ambition, the
haven of our hopes; but on the shores of the decaying
past. ‘Ever drifting’ on one of those
’Shifting
Currents of the restless
main,’
if our fascinating friend Mrs. Brimmer
will permit us to use the words of her accomplished
fellow-townsman, H. W. Longfellow, of Boston we
find ourselves borne not to the busy hum and clatter
of modern progress, but to the soft cadences of a
dying crusade, and the hush of ecclesiastical repose.
In place of the busy marts of commerce and the towering
chimneys of labor, we have the ruined embattlements
of a warlike age, and the crumbling church of an ancient
Mission. Towards the close of an eventful voyage,
during which we have been guided by the skillful hand
and watchful eye of that gallant navigator Captain
Bunker, we have turned aside from our onward course
of progress to look back for a moment upon the faded
footprints of those who have so long preceded us,
who have lived according to their lights, and whose
record is now before us. As I have just stated,
our journey is near its end, and we may, in some sense,
look upon this occasion, with its sumptuous entertainment,
and its goodly company of gallant men and fair women,
as a parting banquet. Our voyage has been a successful
one. I do not now especially speak of the daring
speculations of the distinguished husband of a beautiful
lady whose delightful society is known to us all need
I say I refer to Quincy Brimmer, Esq., of Boston”
(loud applause) “whose successful
fulfillment of a contract with the Peruvian Government,
and the landing of munitions of war at Callao, has
checked the uprising of the Quinquinambo insurgents?
I do not refer especially to our keen-sighted business
friend Mr. Banks” (applause), “who, by
buying up all the flour in Callao, and shipping it
to California, has virtually starved into submission
the revolutionary party of Ariquipa I do
not refer to these admirable illustrations of the
relations of commerce and politics, for this, my friends this
is history, and beyond my feeble praise. Let
me rather speak of the social and literary triumphs
of our little community, of our floating Arcadia may
I say Olympus? Where shall we find another Minerva
like Mrs. Markham, another Thalia like Miss Chubb,
another Juno like Mrs. Brimmer, worthy of the Jove-like
Quincy Brimmer; another Queen of Love and Beauty like like” continued
the gallant Senor, with an effective oratorical pause,
and a profound obeisance to Miss Keene, “like
one whose mantling maiden blushes forbid me to name?”
(Prolonged applause.) “Where shall we find more
worthy mortals to worship them than our young friends,
the handsome Brace, the energetic Winslow, the humorous
Crosby? When we look back upon our concerts and
plays, our minstrel entertainments, with the incomparable
performances of our friend Crosby as Brother Bones;
our recitations, to which the genius of Mrs. M’Corkle,
of Peoria, Illinois, has lent her charm and her manuscript”
(a burlesque start of terror from Crosby), “I
am forcibly impelled to quote the impassioned words
from that gifted woman,
’When idly Life’s
barque on the billows of Time,
Drifts hither
and yon by eternity’s sea;
On the swift feet of
verse and the pinions of rhyme
My thoughts,
Ulricardo, fly ever to thee!’”
“Who’s Ulricardo?”
interrupted Crosby, with assumed eagerness, followed
by a “hush!” from the ladies.
“Perhaps I should have anticipated
our friend’s humorous question,” said
Senor Perkins, with unassailable good-humor. “Ulricardo,
though not my own name, is a poetical substitute for
it, and a mere figure of apostrophe. The poem
is personal to myself,” he continued, with a
slight increase of color in his smooth cheek which
did not escape the attention of the ladies, “purely
as an exigency of verse, and that the inspired authoress
might more easily express herself to a friend.
My acquaintance with Mrs. M’Corkle has been
only epistolary. Pardon this digression, my friends,
but an allusion to the muse of poetry did not seem
to me to be inconsistent with our gathering here.
Let me briefly conclude by saying that the occasion
is a happy and memorable one; I think I echo the sentiment
of all present when I add that it is one which will
not be easily forgotten by either the grateful guests,
whose feelings I have tried to express, or the chivalrous
hosts, whose kindness I have already so feebly translated.”
In the applause that followed, and
the clicking of glasses, Senor Perkins slipped away.
He mingled a moment with some of the other guests
who had already withdrawn to the corridor, lit a cigar,
and then passed through a narrow doorway on to the
ramparts. Here he strolled to some distance,
as if in deep thought, until he reached a spot where
the crumbling wall and its fallen debris afforded
an easy descent into the ditch. Following the
ditch, he turned an angle, and came upon the beach,
and the low sound of oars in the invisible offing.
A whistle brought the boat to his feet, and without
a word he stepped into the stern sheets. A few
strokes of the oars showed him that the fog had lifted
slightly from the water, and a green light hanging
from the side of the Excelsior could be plainly seen.
Ten minutes’ more steady pulling placed him on
her deck, where the second officer stood with a number
of the sailors listlessly grouped around him.
“The landing has been completed?”
said Senor Perkins interrogatively.
“All except one boat-load more,
which waits to take your final instructions,”
said the mate. “The men have growled a little
about it,” he added, in a lower tone. “They
don’t want to lose anything, it seems,”
he continued, with a half sarcastic laugh.
Senor Perkins smiled peculiarly.
“I am sorry to disappoint them.
Who’s that in the boat?” he asked suddenly.
The mate followed the Senor’s glance.
“It is Yoto. He says he is going ashore,
and you will not forbid him.”
Senor Perkins approached the ship’s side.
“Come here,” he said to the man.
The Peruvian sailor rose, but did
not make the slightest movement to obey the command.
“You say you are going ashore?” said Perkins
blandly.
“Yes, Patrono.”
“What for?”
“To follow him the
thief, the assassin who struck me here;”
he pointed to his head. “He has escaped
again with his booty.”
“You are very foolish, my Yoto;
he is no thief, and has no booty. They will put
you in prison, not him.”
“You say so,” said
the man surlily. “Perhaps they will hear
me for other things,” he added significantly.
“And for this you would abandon the cause?”
The man shrugged his shoulders.
“Why not?” he glanced
meaningly at two of his companions, who had approached
the side; “perhaps others would. Who is
sending the booty ashore, eh?”
“Come out of that boat,”
said the Senor, leaning over the bulwarks with folded
arms, and his eyes firmly fixed on the man.
The man did not move. But the
Senor’s hand suddenly flew to the back of his
neck, smote violently downwards, and sent eighteen
inches of glittering steel hurtling through the air.
The bowie-knife entered the upturned throat of the
man and buried itself halfway to the hilt. Without
a gasp or groan he staggered forward, caught wildly
at the side of the ship, and disappeared between the
boat and the vessel.
“My lads,” said Senor
Perkins, turning with a gentle smile towards the faces
that in the light of the swinging lantern formed a
ghastly circle around him, “when I boarded this
ship that had brought aid and succor to our oppressors
at Callao, I determined to take possession of it peacefully,
without imperiling the peace and property of the innocent
passengers who were intrusted to its care, and without
endangering your own lives or freedom. But I
made no allowance for traitors. The blood
that has been shed to-night has not been spilt in obedience
to my orders, nor to the cause that we serve; it was
from defiance of it; and the real and only culprit
has just atoned for it.”
He stopped, and then stepped back
from the gangway, as if to leave it open to the men.
“What I have done,” he
continued calmly, “I do not ask you to consider
either as an example or a warning. You are free
to do what he would have done,” he repeated,
with a wave of his hand towards the open gangway and
the empty boat. “You are free to break your
contract and leave the ship, and I give you my word
that I will not lift a hand to prevent it. But
if you stay with me,” he said, suddenly turning
upon them a face as livid as their own, “I swear
by the living God, that, if between this and the accomplishment
of my design, you as much as shirk or question any
order given by me, you shall die the death of that
dog who went before you. Choose as you please but
quickly.”
The mate was the first to move.
Without a word, he crossed over to the Senor’s
side. The men hesitated a moment longer, until
one, with a strange foreign cry, threw himself on
his knees before the Senor, ejaculating, “Pardon!
pardon!” The others followed, some impulsively
catching at the hand that had just slain their comrade,
and covering it with kisses!
“Pardon, Patrono we are yours.”
“You are the State’s,”
said Senor Perkins coldly, with every vestige of his
former urbanity gone from his colorless face.
“Enough! Go back to your duty.”
He watched them slink away, and then turned to the
mate. “Get the last boat-load ready, and
report to me.”
From that moment another power seemed
to dominate the ship. The men no longer moved
listlessly, or slunk along the deck with perfunctory
limbs; a feverish haste and eagerness possessed them;
the boat was quickly loaded, and the mysterious debarkation
completed in rapidity and silence. This done,
the fog once more appeared to rise from the water
and softly encompass the ship, until she seemed to
be obliterated from its face. In this vague obscurity,
from time to time, the faint rattling of chains was
heard, the soft creaking of blocks, and later on, the
regular rise and fall of oars. And then the darkness
fell heavier, the sounds became more and more indistinct
and were utterly lost.
Ashore, however, the lanterns still
glittered brightly in the courtyard of the Presidio;
the noise of laughter and revel still came from the
supper-room, and, later, the tinkling of guitars and
rhythmical clapping hands showed that the festivities
were being wound up by a characteristic fandango.
Captain Bunker succumbed early to his potations of
fiery aguardiente, and was put to bed in the room
of the Commander, to whom he had sworn eternal friendship
and alliance. It was long past midnight before
the other guests were disposed of in the various quarters
of the Presidio; but to the ladies were reserved the
more ostentatious hospitalities of the Alcalde himself,
the walls of whose ambitious hacienda raised themselves
across the plaza and overlooked the gardens of the
Mission.
It was from one of the deep, quaintly
barred windows of the hacienda that Miss Keene gazed
thoughtfully on the night, unable to compose herself
to sleep. An antique guest-chamber had been assigned
to her in deference to her wish to be alone, for which
she had declined the couch and vivacious prattle of
her new friend, Dona Isabel. The events of the
day had impressed her more deeply than they had her
companions, partly from her peculiar inexperience
of the world, and partly from her singular sensitiveness
to external causes. The whole quaint story of
the forgotten and isolated settlement, which had seemed
to the other passengers as a trivial and half humorous
incident, affected her imagination profoundly.
When she could escape the attentions of her entertainers,
or the frivolities of her companions, she tried to
touch the far-off past on the wings of her fancy;
she tried to imagine the life of those people, forgetting
the world and forgotten by it; she endeavored to picture
the fifty years of solitude amidst these decaying
ruins, over which even ambition had crumbled and fallen.
It seemed to her the true conventual seclusion from
the world without the loss of kinship or home influences;
she contrasted it with her boarding-school life in
the fashionable seminary; she wondered what she would
have become had she been brought up here; she thought
of the happy ignorance of Dona Isabel, and shuddered;
and yet she felt herself examining the odd furniture
of the room with an equally childlike and admiring
curiosity. And these people looked upon her
as a superior being!
From the deep embrasure of the window
she could see the tops of the pear and olive trees,
in the misty light of an invisible moon that suffused
the old Mission garden with an ineffable and angelic
radiance. To her religious fancy it seemed to
be a spiritual effusion of the church itself, enveloping
the two gray dome-shaped towers with an atmosphere
and repose of its own, until it became the incarnate
mystery and passion where it stood.
She was suddenly startled by a moving
shadow beside the wall, almost immediately below her the
figure of a man! He was stealing cautiously towards
the church, as if to gain the concealment of the shrubbery
that grew beside it, and, furtively glancing from side
to side, looked towards her window. She unconsciously
drew back, forgetting at the moment that her light
was extinguished, and that it was impossible for the
stranger to see her. But she had seen him,
and in that instant recognized Mr. Hurlstone!
Then he had come ashore, and
secretly, for the other passengers believed him still
on the ship! But what was he doing there? and
why had he not appeared with the others at the entertainment?
She could understand his avoidance of them from what
she knew of his reserved and unsocial habits; but
when he could so naturally have remained on shipboard,
she could not, at first, conceive why he should wish
to prowl around the town at the risk of detection.
The idea suddenly occurred to her that he had had
another attack of his infirmity and was walking in
his sleep, and for an instant she thought of alarming
the house, that some one might go to his assistance.
But his furtive movements had not the serene impassibility
of the somnambulist. Another thought withheld
her; he had looked up at her window! Did he know
she was there? A faint stirring of shame and
pleasure sent a slight color to her cheek. But
he had gained the corner of the shrubbery and was
lost in the shadow. She turned from the window.
A gentle sense of vague and half maternal pity suffused
her soft eyes as she at last sought her couch and
fell into a deep slumber.
Towards daybreak a wind arose over
the sleeping town and far outlying waters. It
breathed through the leaves of the Mission garden,
brushed away the clinging mists from the angles of
the towers, and restored the sharp outlines of the
ruined fortifications. It swept across the unruffled
sea to where the Excelsior, cradled in the softly heaving
bay, had peacefully swung at anchor on the previous
night, and lifted the snowy curtain of the fog to
seaward as far as the fringe of surf, a league away.
But the cradle of the deep was empty the
ship was gone!