Clouds and change.
The earthquake shock, although the
first experienced by the Americans, had been a yearly
phenomenon to the people of Todos Santos, and was so
slight as to leave little impression upon either the
low adobe walls of the pueblo or the indolent population.
“If it’s a provision of Nature for shaking
up these Rip Van Winkle Latin races now and then, it’s
a dead failure, as far as Todos Santos is concerned,”
Crosby had said, with a yawn. “Brace, who’s
got geology on the brain ever since he struck cinnabar
ore, says he isn’t sure the Injins ain’t
right when they believe that the Pacific Ocean used
to roll straight up to the Presidio, and there wasn’t
any channel and that reef of rocks was upheaved
in their time. But what’s the use of it?
it never really waked them up.” “Perhaps
they’re waiting for another kind of earthquake,”
Winslow had responded sententiously.
In six weeks it had been forgotten,
except by three people Miss Keene, James
Hurlstone, and Padre Esteban. Since Hurlstone
had parted with Miss Keene on that memorable afternoon
he had apparently lapsed into his former reserve.
Without seeming to avoid her timid advances, he met
her seldom, and then only in the presence of the Padre
or Mrs. Markham. Although uneasy at the deprivation
of his society, his present shyness did not affect
her as it had done at first: she knew it was no
longer indifference; she even fancied she understood
it from what had been her own feelings. If he
no longer raised his eyes to hers as frankly as he
had that day, she felt a more delicate pleasure in
the consciousness of his lowered eyelids when they
met, and the instinct that told her when his melancholy
glance followed her unobserved. The sex of these
lovers if we may call them so who had never
exchanged a word of love seemed to be changed.
It was Miss Keene who now sought him with a respectful
and frank admiration; it was Hurlstone who now tried
to avoid it with a feminine dread of reciprocal display.
Once she had even adverted to the episode of the cross.
They were standing under the arch of the refectory
door, waiting for Padre Esteban, and looking towards
the sea.
“Do you think we were ever in
any real danger, down there, on the shore that
day?” she said timidly.
“No; not from the sea,”
he replied, looking at her with a half defiant resolution.
“From what then?” she
asked, with a naïveté that was yet a little conscious.
“Do you remember the children
giving you their offerings that day?” he asked
abruptly.
“I do,” she replied, with smiling eyes.
“Well, it appears that it is
the custom for the betrothed couples to come to the
cross to exchange their vows. They mistook us
for lovers.”
All the instinctive delicacy of Miss
Keene’s womanhood resented the rude infelicity
of this speech and the flippant manner of its utterance.
She did not blush, but lifted her clear eyes calmly
to his.
“It was an unfortunate mistake,”
she said coldly, “the more so as they were your
pupils. Ah! here is Father Esteban,” she
added, with a marked tone of relief, as she crossed
over to the priest’s side.
When Father Esteban returned to the
refectory that evening, Hurlstone was absent.
When it grew later, becoming uneasy, the good Father
sought him in the garden. At the end of the avenue
of pear-trees there was a break in the sea-wall, and
here, with his face to the sea, Hurlstone was leaning
gloomily. Father Esteban’s tread was noiseless,
and he had laid his soft hand on the young man’s
shoulder before Hurlstone was aware of his presence.
He started slightly, his gloomy eyes fell before the
priest’s.
“My son,” said the old
man gravely, “this must go on no longer.”
“I don’t understand you,” Hurlstone
replied coldly.
“Do not try to deceive yourself,
nor me. Above all, do not try to deceive her.
Either you are or are not in love with this countrywoman
of yours. If you are not, my respect for her and
my friendship for you prompts me to save you both
from a foolish intimacy that may ripen into a misplaced
affection; if you are already in love with her”
“I have never spoken a word
of love to her!” interrupted Hurlstone quickly.
“I have even tried to avoid her since”
“Since you found that you loved
her! Ah, foolish boy! and you think that because
the lips speak not, the passions of the heart are stilled!
Do you think your silence in her presence is not a
protestation that she, even she, child as she is,
can read, with the cunning of her sex?”
“Well if I am in
love with her, what then?” said Hurlstone doggedly.
“It is no crime to love a pure and simple girl.
Am I not free? You yourself, in yonder church,
told me”
“Silence, Diego,” said
the priest sternly. “Silence, before you
utter the thought that shall disgrace you to speak
and me to hear!”
“Forgive me, Father Esteban,”
said the young man hurriedly, grasping both hands
of the priest. “Forgive me I
am mad distracted but I swear
to you I only meant”
“Hush!” interrupted the
priest more gently. “So; that will do.”
He stopped, drew out his snuff-box, rapped the lid,
and took a pinch of snuff slowly. “We will
not recur to that point. Then you have told her
the story of your life?”
“No; but I will, She shall know
all everything before I utter
a word of love to her.”
“Ah! bueno! muy bueno!”
said the Padre, wiping his nose ostentatiously.
“Ah! let me see! Then, when we have shown
her that we cannot possibly marry her, we will begin
to make love to her! Eh, eh! that is the American
fashion. Ah, pardon!” he continued, in response
to a gesture of protestation from Hurlstone; “I
am wrong. It is when we have told her that we
cannot marry her as a Protestant, that we will make
love as a Catholic. Is that it?”
“Hear me,” said Hurlstone
passionately. “You have saved me from madness
and, perhaps, death. Your care your
kindness your teachings have given me life
again. Don’t blame me, Father Esteban, if,
in casting off my old self, you have given me hopes
of a new and fresher life of”
“A newer and fresher love, you
would say,” said the Padre, with a sad smile.
“Be it so. You will at least do justice
to the old priest, when you remember that he never
pressed you to take vows that would have prevented
this forever.”
“I know it,” said Hurlstone,
taking the old man’s hand. “And you
will remember, too, that I was happy and contented
before this came upon me. Tell me what I shall
do. Be my guide my friend, Father Esteban.
Put me where I was a few months ago before
I learned to love her.”
“Do you mean it, Diego?”
said the old man, grasping his hand tightly, and fixing
his eyes upon him.
“I do.”
“Then listen to me, for it is
my turn to speak. When, eight months ago, you
sought the shelter of that blessed roof, it was for
refuge from a woman that had cursed your life.
It was given you. You would leave it now to commit
an act that would bring another woman, as mad as yourself,
clamoring at its doors for protection from you.
For what you are proposing to this innocent girl is
what you accepted from the older and wickeder woman.
You have been cursed because a woman divided for you
what was before God an indivisible right; and you,
Diego, would now redivide that with another, whom
you dare to say you love! You would use
the opportunity of her helplessness and loneliness
here to convince her; you would tempt her with sympathy,
for she is unhappy; with companionship, for she has
no longer the world to choose from with
everything that should make her sacred from your pursuit.”
“Enough,” said Hurlstone
hoarsely; “say no more. Only I implore you
tell me what to do now to save her. I will if
you tell me to do it leave her forever.”
“Why should you go?”
said the priest quietly. “Her absence
will be sufficient.”
“Her absence?” echoed Hurlstone.
“Hers alone. The conditions
that brought you here are unchanged. You
are still in need of an asylum from the world and the
wife you have repudiated. Why should you abandon
it? For the girl, there is no cause why she should
remain beyond yourself. She has a brother
whom she loves who wants her who
has the right to claim her at any time. She will
go to him.”
“But how?”
“That has been my secret, and
will be my sacrifice to you, Diego, my son. I
have foreseen all this; I have expected it from the
day that girl sent you her woman’s message,
that was half a challenge, from her school I
have known it from the day you walked together on the
sea-shore. I was blind before that for
I am weak in my way, too, and I had dreamed of other
things. God has willed it otherwise.”
He paused, and returning the pressure of Hurlstone’s
hand, went on. “My secret and my sacrifice
for you is this. For the last two hundred years
the Church has had a secret and trusty messenger from
the See at Guadalajara in a ship that touches
here for a few hours only every three years. Her
arrival and departure is known only to myself and my
brothers of the Council. By this wisdom and the
provision of God, the integrity of the Holy Church
and the conversion of the heathen have been maintained
without interruption and interference. You know
now, my son, why your comrades were placed under surveillance;
why it was necessary that the people should believe
in a political conspiracy among yourselves, rather
than the facts as they existed, which might have bred
a dangerous curiosity among them. I have given
you our secret, Diego that is but a part
of my sacrifice. When that ship arrives, and she
is expected daily, I will secretly place Miss Keene
and her friend on board, with explanatory letters
to the Archbishop, and she will be assisted to rejoin
her brother. It will be against the wishes of
the Council; but my will,” continued the old
man, with a gesture of imperiousness, “is the
will of the Church, and the law that overrides all.”
He had stopped, with a strange fire
in his eyes. It still continued to burn as he
went on rapidly,
“You will understand the sacrifice
I am making in telling you this, when you know that
I could have done all that I propose without your leave
or hindrance. Yes, Diego; I had but to stretch
out my hand thus, and that foolish fire-brand of a
heretic muchacha would have vanished from Todos Santos
forever. I could have left you in your fool’s
paradise, and one morning you would have found her
gone. I should have condoled with you, and consoled
you, and you would have forgotten her as you did the
other. I should not have hesitated; it is the
right of the Church through all time to break through
those carnal ties without heed of the suffering flesh,
and I ought to have done so. This, and this alone,
would have been worthy of Las Casas and Junipero Serra!
But I am weak and old I am no longer fit
for His work. Far better that the ship which takes
her away should bring back my successor and one more
worthy Todos Santos than I.”
He stopped, his eyes dimmed, he buried
his face in his hands.
“You have done right, Father
Esteban,” said Hurlstone, gently putting his
arm round the priest’s shoulders, “and
I swear to you your secret is as safe as if you had
never revealed it to me. Perhaps,” he added,
with a sigh, “I should have been happier if
I had not known it if she had passed out
of my life as mysteriously as she had entered it; but
you will try to accept my sacrifice as some return
for yours. I shall see her no more.”
“But will you swear it?”
said the priest eagerly. “Will you swear
that you will not even seek her to say farewell; for
in that moment the wretched girl may shake your resolution?”
“I shall not see her,” repeated the young
man slowly.
“But if she asks an interview,”
persisted the priest, “on the pretense of having
your advice?”
“She will not,” returned
Hurlstone, with a half bitter recollection of their
last parting. “You do not know her pride.”
“Perhaps,” said the priest
musingly. “But I have your word, Diego.
And now let us return to the Mission, for there is
much to prepare, and you shall assist me.”
Meantime, Hurlstone was only half
right in his estimate of Miss Keene’s feelings,
although the result was the same. The first shock
to her delicacy in his abrupt speech had been succeeded
by a renewal of her uneasiness concerning his past
life or history. While she would, in her unselfish
attachment for him, have undoubtingly accepted any
explanation he might have chosen to give her, his
continued reserve and avoidance of her left full scope
to her imaginings. Rejecting any hypothesis of
his history except that of some unfortunate love episode,
she began to think that perhaps he still loved this
nameless woman. Had anything occurred to renew
his affection? It was impossible, in their isolated
condition, that he would hear from her. But perhaps
the priest might have been a confidant of his past,
and had recalled the old affection in rivalry of her?
Or had she herself been unfortunate through any idle
word to reopen the wound? Had there been any
suggestion? she checked herself suddenly
at a thought that benumbed and chilled her! perhaps
that happy hour at the cross might have reminded him
of some episode with another? That was the real
significance of his rude speech. With this first
taste of the poison of jealousy upon her virgin lips,
she seized the cup and drank it eagerly. Ah,
well he should keep his blissful recollections
of the past undisturbed by her. Perhaps he might
even see though she had no past that
her present life might be as disturbing to him!
She recalled, with a foolish pleasure, his solitary
faint sneer at the devotion of the Commander’s
Secretary. Why shouldn’t she, hereafter,
encourage that devotion as well as that sneer from
this complacently beloved Mr. Hurlstone? Why
should he be so assured of her past? The fair
and gentle reader who may be shocked at this revelation
of Eleanor Keene’s character will remember that
she has not been recorded as an angel in these pages but
as a very human, honest, inexperienced girl, for the
first time struggling with the most diplomatic, Machiavellian,
and hypocritical of all the passions.
In pursuance of this new resolution,
she determined to accept an invitation from Mrs. Markham
to accompany her and the Commander to a reception
at the Alcalde’s house the happy Secretary
being of the party. Mrs. Markham, who was under
promise to the Comandante not to reveal his plan for
the escape of herself and Miss Keene until the arrival
of the expected transport, had paid little attention
to the late vagaries of her friend, and had contented
herself by once saying, with a marked emphasis, that
the more free they kept themselves from any entanglements
with other people, the more prepared they would be
for A change.
“Perhaps it’s just as
well not to be too free, even with those Jesuits over
at the Mission. Your brother, you know, might
not like it.”
“Those Jesuits!”
repeated Miss Keene indignantly. “Father
Esteban, to begin with, is a Franciscan, and Mr. Hurlstone
is as orthodox as you or I.”
“Don’t be too sure of
that, my dear,” returned Mrs. Markham sententiously.
“Heaven only knows what disguises they assume.
Why, Hurlstone and the priest are already as thick
as two peas; and you can’t make me believe they
didn’t know of each other before we came here.
He was the first one ashore, you remember, before
the mutiny; and where did he turn up? at
the Mission, of course! And have you forgotten
that sleepwalking affair all Jesuitical!
Why, poor dear Markham used to say we were surrounded
by ramifications of that society everywhere.
The very waiter at your hotel table might belong to
the Order.”
The hour of the siesta was just past,
and the corridor and gardens of the Alcalde’s
house were grouped with friends and acquaintances as
the party from the Presidio entered. Mrs. Brimmer,
who had apparently effected a temporary compromise
with her late instincts of propriety, was still doing
the honors of the Alcalde’s house, and had once
more assumed the Mexican dishabille, even to the slight
exposure of her small feet, stockingless, in white
satin slippers. The presence of the Comandante
and his Secretary guaranteed the two ladies of their
party a reception at least faultless in form and respect,
whatever may have been the secret feelings of the
hostess and her friends. The Alcalde received
Mrs. Markham and Miss Keene with unruffled courtesy,
and conducted them to the place of honor beside him.
As Eleanor Keene, slightly flushed
and beautiful in her unwonted nervous excitement,
took her seat, a flutter went around the corridor,
and, with the single exception of Dona Isabel, an
almost imperceptible drawing together of the other
ladies, in offensive alliance. Miss Keene had
never abandoned her own style of dress; and that afternoon
her delicate and closely-fitting white muslin, gathered
in at the waist with a broad blue belt of ribbon,
seemed to accentuate somewhat unflatteringly the tropical
néglige of Mrs. Brimmer and Miss Chubb. Brace,
who was in attendance, with Crosby, on the two Ramirez
girls, could not help being uneasily conscious of
this, in addition to the awkwardness of meeting Miss
Keene after the transfer of his affections elsewhere.
Nor was his embarrassment relieved by Crosby’s
confidences to him, in a half audible whisper,
“I say, old man, after all,
the regular straight-out American style lays over
all their foreign flops and fandoodles. I wonder
what old Brimmer would say to his wife’s full-dress
nightgown eh?”
But at this moment the long-drawn,
slightly stridulous utterances of Mrs. Brimmer rose
through the other greetings like a lazy east wind.
“I shall never forgive the Commander
for making the Presidio so attractive to you, dear
Miss Keene, that you cannot really find time to see
your own countrymen. Though, of course, you’re
not to blame for not coming to see two frights as
we must look not having been educated to
be able to do up our dresses in that faultless style and
perhaps not having the entire control over an establishment
like you; yet, I suppose that, even if the Alcalde
did give us carte blanche of the laundry
here, we couldn’t do it, unaided even by
Mrs. Markham. Yes, dear; you must let me compliment
you on your skill, and the way you make things last.
As for me and Miss Chubb, we’ve only found our
things fit to be given away to the poor of the Mission.
But I suppose even that charity would look as shabby
to you as our clothes, in comparison with the really
good missionary work you and Mr. Hurlstone or
is it Mr. Brace? I always confound your
admirers, my dear are doing now. At
least, so says that good Father Esteban.”
But with the exception of the Alcalde
and Miss Chubb, Mrs. Brimmer’s words fell on
unheeding ears, and Miss Keene did not prejudice the
triumph of her own superior attractions by seeming
to notice Mrs. Brimmer’s innuendo. She
answered briefly, and entered into lively conversation
with Crosby and the Secretary, holding the hand of
Dona Isabel in her own, as if to assure her that she
was guiltless of any design against her former admirer.
This was quite unnecessary, as the gentle Isabel,
after bidding Brace, with a rap on the knuckles, to
“go and play,” contented herself with
curling up like a kitten beside Miss Keene, and left
that gentleman to wander somewhat aimlessly in the
patio.
Nevertheless, Miss Keene, whose eyes
and ears were nervously alert, and who had indulged
a faint hope of meeting Padre Esteban and hearing news
of Hurlstone, glanced from time to time towards the
entrance of the patio. A singular presentiment
that some outcome of this present visit would determine
her relations with Hurlstone had already possessed
her. Consequently she was conscious, before it
had attracted the attention of the others, of some
vague stirring in the plaza beyond. Suddenly
the clatter of hoofs was heard before the gateway.
There was a moment’s pause of dismounting, a
gruff order given in Spanish, and the next moment
three strangers entered the patio.
They were dressed in red shirts, their
white trousers tucked in high boots, and wore slouched
hats. They were so travel-stained, dusty, and
unshaven, that their features were barely distinguishable.
One, who appeared to be the spokesman of the party,
cast a perfunctory glance around the corridor, and,
in fluent Spanish, began with the mechanical air of
a man repeating some formula,
“We are the bearers of a despatch
to the Comandante of Todos Santos from the Governor
of Mazatlan. The officer and the escort who came
with us are outside the gate. We have been told
that the Comandante is in this house. The case
is urgent, or we would not intrude”
He was stopped by the voice of Mrs.
Markham from the corridor. “Well, I don’t
understand Spanish much I may be a fool,
or crazy, or perhaps both but if that isn’t
James Markham’s voice, I’ll bet a
cooky!”
The three strangers turned quickly
toward the corridor. The next moment the youngest
of their party advanced eagerly towards Miss Keene,
who had arisen with a half frightened joy, and with
the cry of “Why, it’s Nell!” ran
towards her. The third man came slowly forward
as Mrs. Brimmer slipped hastily from the hammock and
stood erect.
“In the name of goodness, Barbara,”
said Mr. Brimmer, closing upon her, in a slow, portentous
whisper, “where are your stockings?”