The gentle CASTAWAYS.
Miss Keene was awakened from a heavy
sleep by a hurried shake of her shoulder and an indefinite
feeling of alarm. Opening her eyes, she was momentarily
dazed by the broad light of day, and the spectacle
of Mrs. Brimmer, pale and agitated, in a half-Spanish
dishabille, standing at her bedside.
“Get up and dress yourself,
my dear, at once,” she said hurriedly, but at
the same time attentively examining Miss Keene’s
clothes, that were lying on the chair: “and
thank Heaven you came here in an afternoon dress,
and not in an evening costume like mine! For something
awful has happened, and Heaven only knows whether
we’ll ever see a stitch of our clothes again.”
“What has happened?”
asked Miss Keene impatiently, sitting up in bed, more
alarmed at the unusual circumstance of Mrs. Brimmer’s
unfinished toilet than at her incomplete speech.
“What, indeed! Nobody knows;
but it’s something awful a mutiny,
or shipwreck, or piracy. But there’s your
friend, the Commander, calling out the troops; and
such a set of Christy Minstrels you never saw before!
There’s the Alcalde summoning the Council; there’s
Mr. Banks raving, and running round for a steamboat as
if these people ever heard of such a thing! and
Captain Bunker, what with rage and drink, gone off
in a fit of delirium tremens, and locked up in his
room! And the Excelsior gone the Lord
knows where!”
“Gone!” repeated Miss
Keene, hurrying on her clothes. “Impossible!
What does Father Esteban tell you? What does
Dona Isabel say?”
“That’s the most horrible
part of it! Do you know those wretched idiots
believe it’s some political revolution among
ourselves, like their own miserable government.
I believe that baby Isabel thinks that King George
and Washington have something to do with it; at any
rate, they’re anxious to know to what side you
belong! So; for goodness’ sake! if you
have to humor them, say we’re all on the same
side I mean, don’t you and Mrs. Markham
go against Miss Chubb and me.”
Scarcely knowing whether to laugh
or cry at Mrs. Brimmer’s incoherent statement,
Miss Keene hastily finished dressing as the door flew
open to admit the impulsive Dona Isabel and her sister
Juanita. The two Mexican girls threw themselves
in Miss Keene’s arms, and then suddenly drew
back with a movement of bashful and diffident respect.
“Do, pray, ask them, for I daren’t,”
whispered Mrs. Brimmer, trying to clasp a mantilla
around her, “how this thing is worn, and if they
haven’t got something like a decent bonnet to
lend me for a day or two?”
“The Senora has not then heard
that her goods, and all the goods of the Senores and
Señoras, have been discovered safely put ashore
at the Embarcadero?”
“No?” said Mrs. Brimmer eagerly.
“Ah, yes!” responded Dona
Isabel. “Since the Senora is not of the
revolutionary party.”
Mrs. Brimmer cast a supplicatory look
at Miss Keene, and hastily quitted the room.
Miss Keene would have as quickly followed her, but
the young Ramirez girls threw themselves again tragically
upon her breast, and, with a mysterious gesture of
silence, whispered,
“Fear nothing, Excellencia!
We are yours we will die for you, no matter
what Don Ramon, or the Comandante, or the Ayuntamiento,
shall decide. Trust us, little one! pardon Excellencia,
we mean.”
“What is the matter?”
said Miss Keene, now thoroughly alarmed, and releasing
herself from the twining arms about her. “For
Heaven’s sake let me go! I must see somebody!
Where is where is Mrs. Markham?”
“The Markham? Is it the
severe one? as thus,” said
Dona Isabel, striking an attitude of infantine portentousness.
“Yes,” said Miss Keene, smiling in spite
of her alarm.
“She is arrested.”
“Arrested!” said Eleanor
Keene, her cheeks aflame with indignation. “For
what? Who dare do this thing?”
“The Comandante. She has
a missive a despatch from the insurrectionaries.”
Without another word, and feeling
that she could stand the suspense no longer, Miss
Keene forced her way past the young girls, unheeding
their cries of consternation and apology, and quickly
reached the patio. A single glance showed her
that Mrs. Brimmer was gone. With eyes and cheeks
still burning, she swept past the astounded péons,
through the gateway, into the open plaza. Only
one idea filled her mind to see the Commander,
and demand the release of her friend. How she
should do it, with what arguments she should enforce
her demand, never occurred to her. She did not
even think of asking the assistance of Mr. Brace, Mr.
Crosby, or any of her fellow-passengers. The consciousness
of some vague crisis that she alone could meet possessed
her completely.
The plaza was swarming with a strange
rabble of péons and soldiery; of dark, lowering
faces, odd-looking weapons and costumes, mules, mustangs,
and cattle a heterogeneous mass, swayed
by some fierce excitement. That she saw none
of the Excelsior party among them did not surprise
her; an instinct of some catastrophe more serious
than Mrs. Brimmer’s vague imaginings frightened
but exalted her. With head erect, leveled brows,
and bright, determined eyes she walked deliberately
into the square. The crowd parted and gave way
before this beautiful girl, with her bared head and
its invincible crest of chestnut curls. Presently
they began to follow her, with a compressed murmur
of admiration, until, before she was halfway across
the plaza, the sentries beside the gateway of the
Presidio were astonished at the vision of a fair-haired
and triumphant Pallas, who appeared to be leading
the entire population of Todos Santos to victorious
attack. In vain a solitary bugle blew, in vain
the rolling drum beat an alarm, the sympathetic guard
only presented arms as Miss Keene, flushed and excited,
her eyes darkly humid with gratified pride, swept
past them into the actual presence of the bewildered
and indignant Comandante.
The only feminine consciousness she
retained was that she was more relieved at her deliverance
from the wild cattle and unbroken horses of her progress
than from the Indians and soldiers.
“I want to see Mrs. Markham,
and to know by what authority she is arrested,”
said Miss Keene boldly.
“The Senor Comandante can hold
no conference with you until you disperse your party,”
interpreted the secretary.
She was about to hurriedly reply that
she knew nothing of the crowd that had accompanied
her; but she was withheld by a newly-born instinct
of tact.
“How do I know that I shall
not be arrested, like my friend?” she said quickly.
“She is as innocent as myself.”
“The Comandante pledges himself,
as a hidalgo, that you shall not be harmed.”
Her first impulse was to advance to
the nearest intruders at the gate and say, “Do
go away, please;” but she was doubtful of its
efficiency, and was already too exalted by the situation
to be satisfied with its prosaic weakness. But
her newly developed diplomacy again came to her aid.
“You may tell them so, if you choose, I cannot
answer for them,” she said, with apparent dark
significance.
The secretary advanced on the corridor
and exchanged a few words with her more impulsive
followers. Miss Keene, goddess-like and beautiful,
remained erect behind him, and sent them a dazzling
smile and ravishing wave of her little hand.
The crowd roared with an effusive and bovine delight
that half frightened her, and with a dozen “Viva
la Reyna Americanas!” she was hurried by the
Comandante into the guard-room.
“You ask to know of what the
Senora Markham is accused,” said the Commander,
more gently. “She has received correspondence
from the pirate Perkins!”
“The pirate Perkins?”
said Miss Keene, with indignant incredulity.
“The buccaneer who wrote that
letter. Read it to her, Manuel.”
The secretary took his eyes from the
young girl’s glowing face, coughed slightly,
and then read as follows:
“On board the
Excelsior, of the Quinquinambo Independent States
Navy, August 8, 1854.
“To Captain Bunker. Sir,” .
. .
“But this is not addressed to you!”
interrupted Miss Keene indignantly.
“The Captain Bunker is a raving
madman,” said the Commander gravely. “Read
on!”
The color gradually faded from the
young girl’s cheek as the secretary continued,
in a monotonous voice:
“I have the honor to inform
you that the barque Excelsior was, on the 8th of July,
1854, and the first year of the Quinquinambo Independence,
formally condemned by the Federal Council of Quinquinambo,
for having aided and assisted the enemy with munitions
of war and supplies, against the law of nations, and
the tacit and implied good-will between the Republic
of the United States and the struggling Confederacies
of South America; and that, in pursuance thereof,
and under the law of reprisals and letters of marque,
was taken possession of by me yesterday. The
goods and personal effects belonging to the passengers
and yourself have been safely landed at the Embarcadero
of Todos Santos a neutral port by
my directions; my interpretation of the orders of the
Federal Council excepting innocent non-combatants
and their official protector from confiscation or
amercement.
“I take the liberty of requesting
you to hand the inclosed order on the Treasury of
the Quinquinambo Confederate States to Don Miguel Briones,
in payment of certain stores and provisions, and of
a piece of ordnance known as the saluting cannon of
the Presidio of Todos Santos. Vigilancia!
“Your obedient servant,
“Leonidas Bolivar Perkins,
“Generalissimo Commanding Land
and Sea Forces, Quinquinambo Independent States.”
In her consternation at this fuller
realization of the vague catastrophe, Miss Keene still
clung to the idea that had brought her there.
“But Mrs. Markham has nothing to do with all
this?”
“Then why does she refuse to
give up her secret correspondence with the pirate
Perkins?” returned the secretary.
Miss Keene hesitated. Had Mrs.
Markham any previous knowledge of the Senor’s
real character?
“Why don’t you arrest
the men?” she said scornfully. “There
is Mr. Banks, Mr. Crosby, Mr. Winslow, and Mr. Brace.”
She uttered the last name more contemptuously, as
she thought of that young gentleman’s protestations
and her present unprotected isolation.
“They are already arrested and
removed to San Antonio, a league hence,” returned
the secretary. “It is fact enough that they
have confessed that their Government has seized the
Mexican province of California, and that they were
on their way to take possession of it.”
Miss Keene’s heart sank.
“But you knew all this yesterday,”
she faltered; “and our war with Mexico is all
over years ago.”
“We did not know it last night
at the banquet, Senora; nor would we have known it
but for this treason and division in your own party.”
A sudden light flashed upon Miss Keene’s
mind. She now comprehended the advances of Dona
Isabel. Extravagant and monstrous as it seemed,
these people evidently believed that a revolution
had taken place in the United States; that the two
opposing parties had been represented by the passengers
of the Excelsior; and that one party had succeeded,
headed by the indomitable Perkins. If she could
be able to convince them of their blunder, would it
be wise to do so? She thought of Mrs. Brimmer’s
supplication to be ranged “on her side,”
and realized with feminine quickness that the situation
might be turned to her countrymen’s advantage.
But which side had Todos Santos favored? It was
left to her woman’s wit to discover this, and
conceive a plan to rescue her helpless companions.
Her suspense was quickly relieved.
The Commander and his secretary exchanged a few words.
“The Comandante will grant Dona
Leonora’s request,” said the secretary,
“if she will answer a question.”
“What is it?” responded
Miss Keene, with inward trepidation.
“The Senora Markham is perhaps
beloved by the Pirate Perkins?”
In spite of her danger, in spite of
the uncertain fate hanging over her party, Miss Keene
could with difficulty repress a half hysterical inclination
to laugh. Even then, it escaped in a sudden twinkle
of her eye, which both the Commander and his subordinate
were quick to notice, as she replied demurely, “Perhaps.”
It was enough for the Commander.
A gleam of antique archness and venerable raillery
lit up his murky, tobacco-colored pupils; a spasm of
gallantry crossed the face of the secretary.
“Ah what would you? it
is the way of the world,” said the Commander.
“We comprehend. Come!”
He led the way across the corridor,
and suddenly opened a small barred door. Whatever
preconceived idea Miss Keene may have had of her unfortunate
country-woman immured in a noisome cell, and guarded
by a stern jailer, was quite dissipated by the soft
misty sunshine that flowed in through the open door.
The prison of Mrs. Markham was a part of the old glacis
which had been allowed to lapse into a wild garden
that stretched to the edge of the sea. There was
a summer-house built on and partly from a
crumbling bastion, and here, under the shade of tropical
creepers, the melancholy captive was comfortably writing,
with her portable desk on her knee, and a traveling-bag
at her feet. A Saratoga trunk of obtrusive proportions
stood in the centre of the peaceful vegetation, like
a newly raised altar to an unknown deity. The
only suggestion of martial surveillance was an Indian
soldier, whose musket, reposing on the ground near
Mrs. Markham, he had exchanged for the rude mattock
with which he was quietly digging.
The two women, with a cry of relief,
flew into each other’s arms. The Commander
and his secretary discreetly retired to an angle of
the wall.
“I find everything as I left
it, my dear, even to my slipper-bag,” said Mrs.
Markham. “They’ve forgotten nothing.”
“But you are a captive!”
said Eleanor. “What does it mean?”
“Nothing, my dear. I gave
them a piece of my mind,” said Mrs. Markham,
looking, however, as if that mental offering had by
no means exhausted her capital, “and I have
written six pages to the Governor at Mazatlan, and
a full account to Mr. Markham.”
“And they won’t get them
in thirty years!” said Miss Keene impetuously.
“But where is this letter from Senor Perkins.
And, for Heaven’s sake, tell me if you had the
least suspicion before of anything that has happened.”
“Not in the least. The
man is mad, my dear, and I really believe driven so
by that absurd Illinois woman’s poetry.
Did you ever see anything so ridiculous and
shameful, too as the ‘Ulricardo’
business? I don’t wonder he colored so.”
Miss Keene winced with annoyance.
Was everybody going crazy, or was there anything more
in this catastrophe that had only enfeebled the minds
of her countrywomen! For here was the severe,
strong-minded Mrs. Markham actually preoccupied, like
Mrs. Brimmer, with utterly irrelevant particulars,
and apparently powerless to grasp the fact that they
were abandoned on a half hostile strand, and cut off
by half a century from the rest of the world.
“As to the letter,” said
Mrs. Markham, quietly, “there it is. There’s
nothing in it that might not have been written by a
friend.”
Miss Keene took the letter. It
was written in a delicate, almost feminine hand.
She could not help noticing that in one or two instances
corrections had been made and blots carefully removed
with an eraser.
“Midnight, on the Excelsior.
“My friend: When
you receive this I shall probably be once more on the
bosom of that mysterious and mighty element whose majesty
has impressed us, whose poetry we have loved, and
whose moral lessons, I trust, have not been entirely
thrown away upon us. I go to the deliverance of
one of those oppressed nations whose history I have
often recited to you, and in whose destiny you have
from time to time expressed a womanly sympathy.
While it is probable, therefore, that my motives
may not be misunderstood by you, or even other dear
friends of the Excelsior, it is by no means impossible
that the celerity and unexpectedness of my action
may not be perfectly appreciated by the careless mind,
and may seem to require some explanation. Let
me then briefly say that the idea of debarking your
goods and chattels, and parting from your delightful
company at Todos Santos, only occurred to me on our
unexpected shall I say providential? arrival
at that spot; and the necessity of expedition forbade
me either inviting your cooperation or soliciting your
confidence. Human intelligence is variously constituted or,
to use a more homely phrase, ’many men have
many minds’ and it is not impossible
that a premature disclosure of my plans might have
jeopardized that harmony which you know it has been
my desire to promote. It was my original intention
to have landed you at Mazatlan, a place really inferior
in climate and natural attractions to Todo Santos,
although, perhaps, more easy of access and egress;
but the presence of an American steamer in the offing
would have invested my enterprise with a certain publicity
foreign, I think, to all our tastes. Taking advantage,
therefore, of my knowledge of the peninsular coast,
and the pardonable ignorance of Captain Bunker, I
endeavored, through my faithful subordinates, to reach
a less known port, and a coast rarely frequented by
reason of its prevailing fog. Here occurred one
of those dispensations of an overruling power which,
dear friend, we have so often discussed. We fell
in with an unknown current, and were guided by a mysterious
hand into the bay of Todos Santos!
“You know of my belief in the
infinite wisdom and benignity of events; you have,
dear friend, with certain feminine limitations, shared
it with me. Could there have been a more perfect
illustration of it than the power that led us here?
On a shore, historic in interest, beautiful in climate,
hospitable in its people, utterly freed from external
influences, and absolutely without a compromising future,
you are landed, my dear friend, with your youthful
companions. From the crumbling ruins of a decaying
Past you are called to construct an Arcadia of your
own; the rudiments of a new civilization are within
your grasp; the cost of existence is comparatively
trifling; the various sums you have with you, which
even in the chaos of revolution I have succeeded in
keeping intact, will more than suffice to your natural
wants for years to come. Were I not already devoted
to the task of freeing Quinquinambo, I should willingly
share this Elysium with you all. But, to use
the glowing words of Mrs. M’Corkle, slightly
altering the refrain
’Ah, stay me not!
With flying feet
O’er desert sands,
I rush to greet
My fate, my love, my
life, my sweet
Quinquinambo!’
“I venture to intrust to your
care two unpublished manuscripts of that gifted woman.
The dangers that may environ my present mission, the
vicissitudes of battle by sea or land, forbid my imperiling
their natural descent to posterity. You, my dear
friend, will preserve them for the ages to come, occasionally
refreshing yourself, from time to time, from that
Parnassian spring.
“Adieu! my friend. I look
around the familiar cabin, and miss your gentle faces.
I feel as Jason might have felt, alone on the deck
of the Argo when his companions were ashore, except
that I know of no Circean influences to mar their
destiny. In examining the state-rooms to see if
my orders for the complete restoration of passengers’
property had been carried out, I allowed myself to
look into yours. Lying alone, forgotten and overlooked,
I saw a peculiar jet hair-pin which I think I have
observed in the coils of your tresses. May I venture
to keep this gentle instrument as a reminder of the
superior intellect it has so often crowned? Adieu,
my friend.
“Ever yours, Leonidas Bolivar Perkins.”
“Well?” said Mrs. Markham
impatiently, as Miss Keene remained motionless with
the letter in her hand.
“It seems like a ridiculous
nightmare! I can’t understand it at all.
The man that wrote this letter may be mad but
he is neither a pirate nor a thief and
yet”
“He a pirate?” echoed
Mrs. Markham indignantly; “He’s nothing
of the kind! It’s not even his fault!”
“Not his fault?” repeated Miss Keene;
“are you mad, too?”
“No nor a fool, my
dear! Don’t you see? It’s all
the fault of Banks and Brimmer for compromising the
vessel: of that stupid, drunken captain for permitting
it. Senor Perkins is a liberator, a patriot, who
has periled himself and his country to treat us magnanimously.
Don’t you see it? It’s like that
Banks and that Mrs. Brimmer to call him a pirate!
I’ve a good mind to give the Commander my opinion
of them.”
“Hush!” said Miss Keene,
with a sudden recollection of the Commander’s
suspicions, “for Heaven’s sake; you do
not know what you are saying. Look! they were
talking with that strange man, and now they are coming
this way.”
The Commander and his secretary approached
them. They were both more than usually grave;
but the look of inquiry and suspicion with which they
regarded the two women was gone from their eyes.
“The Senor Comandante says you
are free, Señoras, and begs you will only decide
whether you will remain his guests or the guests of
the Alcalde. But for the present he cannot allow
you any communication with the prisoners of San Antonio.”
“There is further news?”
said Miss Keene faintly, with a presentiment of worse
complications.
“There is! A body from
the Excelsior has been washed on shore.”
The two women turned pale.
“In the pocket of the murdered
man is an accusation against one Senor Hurlstone,
who was concealed on the ship; who came not ashore
openly with the other passengers, but who escaped
in secret, and is now hiding somewhere in Todos Santos.”
“And you suspect him of this
infamous act?” said Eleanor, forgetting all
prudence in her indignation. “You are deceiving
yourself. He is as innocent as I am!”
The Commander and the secretary smiled
sapiently, but gently.
“The Senor Comandante believes
you, Dona Leonora: the Senor Hurlstone is innocent
of the piracy. He is, of a surety, the leader
of the Opposition.”