A more important arrival.
The Commander was the first to recover
his presence of mind. Taking the despatch from
the hands of the unlooked-for husband of the woman
he loved, he opened it with an immovable face and
habitual precision. Then, turning with a military
salute to the strangers, he bade them join him in
half an hour at the Presidio; and, bowing gravely to
the assembled company, stepped from the corridor.
But Mrs. Markham was before him, stopped him with
a gesture, and turned to her husband.
“James Markham where’s your
hand?”
Markham, embarrassed but subjugated,
disengaged it timidly from his wife’s waist.
“Give it to that gentleman for
a gentleman he is, from the crown of his head to the
soles of his boots! There! Shake his hand!
You don’t get such a chance every day.
You can thank him again, later.”
As the two men’s hands parted,
after this perfunctory grasp, and the Commander passed
on, she turned again to her husband.
“Now, James, I am ready to hear
all about it. Perhaps you’ll tell me where
you have been?”
There was a moment of embarrassing
silence. The Doctor and Secretary had discreetly
withdrawn; the Alcalde, after a brief introduction
to Mr. Brimmer, and an incomprehensible glance from
the wife, had retired with a colorless face.
Dona Isabel had lingered last to blow a kiss across
her fan to Eleanor Keene that half mischievously included
her brother. The Americans were alone.
Thus appealed to, Mr. Markham hastily
began his story. But, as he progressed, a slight
incoherency was noticeable: he occasionally contradicted
himself, and was obliged to be sustained, supplemented,
and, at times, corrected, by Keene and Brimmer.
Substantially, it appeared that they had come from
San Francisco to Mazatlan, and, through the influence
of Mr. Brimmer on the Mexican authorities, their party,
with an escort of dragoons, had been transported across
the gulf and landed on the opposite shore, where they
had made a forced march across the desert to Todos
Santos. Literally interpreted, however, by the
nervous Markham, it would seem that they had conceived
this expedition long ago, and yet had difficulties
because they only thought of it the day before the
steamer sailed; that they had embarked for the isthmus
of Nicaragua, and yet had stopped at Mazatlan; that
their information was complete in San Francisco, and
only picked up at Mazatlan; that “friends” sometimes
contradictorily known as “he” and “she” had
overpowering influence with the Mexican Government,
and alone had helped them, and yet that they were
utterly dependent upon the efforts of Senor Perkins,
who had compromised matters with the Mexican Government
and everybody.
“Do you mean to say, James Markham,
that you’ve seen Perkins, and it was he who
told you we were here?”
“No not him exactly.”
“Let me explain,” said
Mr. Brimmer hastily. “It appears,”
he corrected his haste with practical businesslike
precision, “that the filibuster Perkins, after
debarking you here, and taking the Excelsior to Quinquinambo,
actually established the Quinquinambo Government, and
got Mexico and the other confederacies to recognize
its independence. Quinquinambo behaved very handsomely,
and not only allowed the Mexican Government indemnity
for breaking the neutrality of Todos Santos by the
seizure, but even compromised with our own Government
their claim to confiscate the Excelsior for treaty
violation, and paid half the value of the vessel,
besides giving information to Mexico and Washington
of your whereabouts. We consequently represent
a joint commission from both countries to settle the
matter and arrange for your return.”
“But what I want to know is
this: Is it to Senor Perkins that we ought to
be thankful for seeing you here at all?” asked
Mrs. Markham impatiently.
“No, no not that,
exactly,” stammered Markham. “Oh,
come now, Susannah”
“No,” said Richard Keene
earnestly; “by Jove! some thanks ought to go
to Belle Montgomery” He checked himself
in sudden consternation.
There was a chilly silence. Even
Miss Keene looked anxiously at her brother, as the
voice of Mrs. Brimmer for the first time broke the
silence.
“May we be permitted to know
who is this person to whom we owe so great an obligation?”
“Certainly,” said Brimmer,
“She was as I have already intimated a
friend; possibly, you know,” he added, turning
lightly to his companions, as if to corroborate an
impression that had just struck him, “perhaps
a a a sweetheart of the Senor
Perkins.”
“And how was she so interested
in us, pray?” said Mrs. Markham.
“Well, you see, she had an idea
that a former husband was on board of the Excelsior.”
He stopped suddenly, remembering from
the astonished faces of Keene and Markham that the
secret was not known to them, while they, impressed
with the belief that the story was a sudden invention
of Brimmer’s, with difficulty preserved their
composure. But the women were quick to notice
their confusion, and promptly disbelieved Brimmer’s
explanation.
“Well, as there’s no Mister
Montgomery here, she’s probably mistaken,”
said Mrs. Markham, with decision, “though it
strikes me that she’s very likely had the
same delusion on board of some other ship. Come
along, James; perhaps after you’ve had a bath
and some clean clothes, you may come out a little
more like the man I once knew. I don’t know
how Mrs. Brimmer feels, but I feel more as if I required
to be introduced to you than your friend’s
friend, Mrs. Montgomery. At any rate, try and
look and behave a little more decent when you go over
to the Presidio.”
With these words she dragged him away.
Mr. Brimmer, after a futile attempt to appear at his
ease, promptly effected the usual marital diversion
of carrying the war into the enemy’s camp.
“For heaven’s sake, Barbara,”
he said, with ostentatious indignation, “go
and dress yourself properly. Had you neither money
nor credit to purchase clothes? I declare I didn’t
know you at first; and when I did, I was shocked;
before Mrs. Markham, too!”
“Mrs. Markham, I fear, has quite
enough to occupy her now,” said Mrs. Brimmer
shortly, as she turned away, with hysterically moist
eyes, leaving her husband to follow her.
Oblivious of this comedy, Richard
Keene and Eleanor had already wandered back, hand
in hand, to their days of childhood. But even
in the joy that filled the young girl’s heart
in the presence of her only kinsman, there was a strange
reservation. The meeting that she had looked forward
to with eager longing had brought all she expected;
more than that, it seemed to have been providentially
anticipated at the moment of her greatest need, and
yet it was incomplete. She was ashamed that after
the first recognition, a wild desire to run to Hurlstone
and tell him her happiness was her only thought.
She was shocked that the bright joyous face of this
handsome lovable boy could not shut out the melancholy
austere features of Hurlstone, which seemed to rise
reproachfully between them. When, for the third
and fourth time, they had recounted their past history,
exchanged their confidences and feelings, Dick, passing
his arm around his sister’s waist, looked down
smilingly in her eyes.
“And so, after all, little Nell,
everybody has been good to you, and you have been
happy!”
“Everybody has been kind to
me, Dick, far kinder than I deserved. Even if
I had really been the great lady that little Dona Isabel
thought I was, or the important person the Commander
believed me to be, I couldn’t have been treated
more kindly. I have met with nothing but respect
and attention. I have been very happy, Dick,
very happy.”
And with a little cry she threw herself
on her brother’s neck and burst into a childlike
flood of inconsistent tears.
Meantime the news of the arrival of
the relief-party had penetrated even the peaceful
cloisters of the Mission, and Father Esteban had been
summoned in haste to the Council. He returned
with an eager face to Hurlstone, who had been anxiously
awaiting him. When the Padre had imparted the
full particulars of the event to his companion, he
added gravely,
“You see, my son, how Providence,
which has protected you since you first claimed the
Church’s sanctuary, has again interfered to spare
me the sacrifice of using the power of the Church in
purely mundane passions. I weekly accept the
rebuke of His better-ordained ways, and you, Diego,
may comfort yourself that this girl is restored directly
to her brother’s care, without any deviousness
of plan or human responsibility. You do not speak,
my son!” continued the priest anxiously; “can
it be possible that, in the face of this gracious
approval of Providence to your resolution, you are
regretting it?”
The young man replied, with a half reproachful gesture:
“Do you, then, think me still
so weak? No, Father Esteban; I have steeled myself
against my selfishness for her sake. I could have
resigned her to the escape you had planned, believing
her happier for it, and ignorant of the real condition
of the man she had learnt to to pity.
But,” he added, turning suddenly and almost rudely
upon the priest, “do you know the meaning of
this irruption of the outer world to me?
Do you reflect that these men probably know my miserable
story? that, as one of the passengers of
the Excelsior, they will be obliged to seek me and
to restore me,” he added, with a bitter laugh,
“to my home, my kindred to
the world I loathe?”
“But you need not follow them. Remain here.”
“Here! with the door
thrown open to any talebearer or perhaps
to my wife herself? Never!
Hear me, Father,” he went on hurriedly:
“these men have come from San Francisco have
been to Mazatlan. Can you believe that it is
possible that they have never heard of this woman’s
search for me? No! The quest of hate is
as strong as the quest of love, and more merciless
to the hunted.”
“But if that were so, foolish
boy, she would have accompanied them.”
“You are wrong! It would
have been enough for her to have sent my exposure
by them to have driven me from this refuge.”
“This is but futile fancy, Diego,”
said Father Esteban, with a simulated assurance he
was far from feeling. “Nothing has yet been
said nothing may be said. Wait, my
child.”
“Wait!” he echoed bitterly.
“Ay, wait until the poor girl shall hear perhaps
from her brother’s lips the story
of my marriage as bandied about by others; wait for
her to know that the man who would have made her love
him was another’s, and unworthy of her respect?
No! it is I who must leave this place, and at once.”
“You?” echoed the Padre. “How?”
“By the same means you would
have used for her departure. I must take her
place in that ship you are expecting. You will
give me letters to your friends. Perhaps,
when this is over, I may return if I still
live.”
Padre Esteban became thoughtful.
“You will not refuse me?”
said the young man, taking the Padre’s hand.
“It is for the best, believe me. I will
remain secret here until then. You will invent
some excuse illness, or what you like to
keep them from penetrating here. Above all, to
spare me from the misery of ever reading my secret
in her face.”
Father Esteban remained still absorbed in thought.
“You will take a letter from
me to the Archbishop, and put yourself under his care?”
he asked at last, after a long pause. “You
will promise me that?”
“I do!”
“Then we shall see what can
be done. They talk, those Americanos,”
continued the priest, “of making their way up
the coast to Punta St. Jago, where the ship they have
already sent for to take them away can approach the
shore; and the Comandante has orders to furnish them
escort and transport to that point. It is a foolish
indiscretion of the Government, and I warrant without
the sanction of the Church. Already there is
curiosity, discontent, and wild talk among the people.
Ah! thou sayest truly, my son,” said the old
man, gloomily; “the doors of Todos Santos are
open. The Comandante will speed these heretics
quickly on their way; but the doors by which they
came and whence they go will never close again.
But God’s will be done! And if the open
doors bring thee back, my son, I shall not question
His will!”
It would seem, however, as if Hurlstone’s
fears had been groundless. For in the excitement
of the succeeding days, and the mingling of the party
from San Antonio with the new-comers, the recluse had
been forgotten. So habitual, had been his isolation
from the others, that, except for the words of praise
and gratitude hesitatingly dropped by Miss Keene to
her brother, his name was not mentioned, and it might
have been possible for the relieving party to have
left him behind unnoticed. Mr. Brimmer,
for domestic reasons, was quite willing to allow the
episode of Miss Montgomery’s connection with
their expedition to drop for the present. Her
name was only recalled once by Miss Keene. When
Dick had professed a sudden and violent admiration
for the coquettish Dona Isabel, Eleanor had looked
up in her brother’s face with a half troubled
air.
“Who was this queer Montgomery woman, Dick?”
she said.
Dick laughed a frank, reassuring, heart-free
laugh.
“Perfectly stunning, Nell.
Such a figure in tights! You ought to have seen
her dance my!”
“Hush! I dare say she was horrid!”
“Not at all! She wasn’t
such a bad fellow, if you left out her poetry and
gush, which I didn’t go in for much, though
the other fellows” he stopped, from
a sudden sense of loyalty to Brimmer and Markham.
“No; you see, Nell, she was regularly ridiculously
struck after that man Perkins, whom she’d
never seen, a kind of schoolgirl worship
for a pirate. You know how you women go in for
those fellows with a mystery about ’em.”
“No, I don’t!” said
Miss Keene sharply, with a slight rise of color; “and
I don’t see what that’s got to do with
you and her.”
“Everything! She was in
correspondence with Perkins, and knows about the Excelsior
affair, and wants to help him get out of it with clean
hands, don’t you see! That’s why
she made up to us. There, Nell; she ain’t
your style, of course; but you owe a heap to her for
giving us points as to where you were. But that’s
all over now; she left us at Mazatlan, and went on
to Nicaragua to meet Perkins somewhere there for
the fellow has always got some Central American revolution
on hand, it appears. Until they garrote or shoot
him some day, he’ll go on in the liberating
business forever.”
“Then there wasn’t any
Mr. Montgomery, of course?” said Eleanor.
“Oh, Mr. Montgomery,”
said Dick, hesitating. “Well, you see, Nell,
I think that, knowing how correct and all that sort
of thing Brimmer is, she sort of invented the husband
to make her interest look more proper.”
“It’s shameful!” said Miss Keene
indignantly.
“Come, Nell; one would think
you had a personal dislike to her. Let her go;
she won’t trouble you nor, I reckon,
anybody, much longer.”
“What do you mean, Dick?”
“I mean she has regularly exhausted
and burnt herself out with her hysterics and excitements,
and the drugs she’s taken to subdue them to
say nothing of the Panama fever she got last spring.
If she don’t go regularly crazy at last she’ll
have another attack of fever, hanging round the isthmus
waiting for Perkins.”
Meanwhile, undisturbed by excitement
or intrusion of the outer world, the days had passed
quietly at the Mission. But one evening, at twilight,
a swift-footed, lightly-clad Indian glided into the
sacristy as if he had slipped from the outlying fog,
and almost immediately as quietly glided away again
and disappeared. The next moment Father Esteban’s
gaunt and agitated face appeared at Hurlstone’s
door.
“My son, God has been merciful,
and cut short your probation. The signal of the
ship has just been made. Her boat will be waiting
on the beach two leagues from here an hour hence.
Are you ready? and are you still resolved?”
“I am,” said Hurlstone,
rising. “I have been prepared since you
first assented.”
The old man’s lips quivered
slightly, and the great brown hand laid upon the table
trembled for an instant; with a strong effort he recovered
himself, and said hurriedly,
“Concho’s mule is saddled
and ready for you at the foot of the garden.
You will follow the beach a league beyond the Indians’
cross. In the boat will await you the trusty
messenger of the Church. You will say to him,
‘Guadalajara,’ and give him these letters.
One is to the captain. You will require no other
introduction.” He laid the papers on the
table, and, turning to Hurlstone, lifted his tremulous
hands in the air. “And now, my son, may
the grace of God”
He faltered and stopped, his uplifted
arms falling helplessly on Hurlstone’s shoulders.
For an instant the young man supported him in his
arms, then placed him gently in the chair he had just
quitted, and for the first time in their intimacy
dropped upon his knee before him. The old man,
with a faint smile, placed his hand upon his companion’s
head. A breathless pause followed; Father Esteban’s
lips moved silently. Suddenly the young man rose,
pressed his lips hurriedly to the Father’s hand,
and passed out into the night.
The moon was already suffusing the
dropping veil of fog above him with that nebulous,
mysterious radiance he had noticed the first night
he had approached the Mission. When he reached
the cross he dismounted, and gathering a few of the
sweet-scented blossoms that crept around its base,
placed them in his breast. Then, remounting, he
continued his way until he came to the spot designated
by Concho as a fitting place to leave his tethered
mule. This done, he proceeded on foot about a
mile further along the hard, wet sand, his eyes fixed
on the narrow strip of water and shore before him
that was yet uninvaded by the fog on either side.
The misty, nebulous light, the strange
silence, broken only by the occasional low hurried
whisper of some spent wave that sent its film of spume
across his path, or filled his footprints behind him,
possessed him with vague presentiments and imaginings.
At times he fancied he heard voices at his side; at
times indistinct figures loomed through the mist before
him. At last what seemed to be his own shadow
faintly impinged upon the mist at one side impressed
him so strongly that he stopped; the apparition stopped
too. Continuing a few hundred paces further,
he stopped again; but this time the ghostly figure
passed on, and convinced him that it was no shadow,
but some one actually following him. With an
angry challenge he advanced towards it. It quickly
retreated inland, and was lost. Irritated and
suspicious he turned back towards the water, and was
amazed to see before him, not twenty yards away, the
object of his quest a boat, with two men
in it, kept in position by the occasional lazy dip
of an oar. In the pursuit of his mysterious shadow
he had evidently overlooked it. As his own figure
emerged from the fog, the boat pulled towards him.
The priest’s password was upon his lips, when
he perceived that the two men were common foreign
sailors; the messenger of the Church was evidently
not there. Could it have been he who had haunted
him? He paused irresolutely. “Is there
none other coming?” he asked. The two men
looked at each other. One said, “Quien
sabe!” and shrugged his shoulders. Hurlstone
without further hesitation leaped aboard.
The same dull wall of vapor at
times thickening to an almost impenetrable barrier,
and again half suffocating him in its soft embrace which
he had breasted on the night he swam ashore, carried
back his thoughts to that time, now so remote and
unreal. And when, after a few moments’
silent rowing, the boat approached a black hulk that
seemed to have started forward out of the gloom to
meet them, his vague recollection began to take a
more definite form. As he climbed up the companion-ladder
and boarded the vessel, an inexplicable memory came
over him. A petty officer on the gangway advanced
silently and ushered him, half dazed and bewildered,
into the cabin. He glanced hurriedly around:
the door of a state-room opened, and disclosed the
indomitable and affable Senor Perkins! A slight
expression of surprise, however, crossed the features
of the Liberator of Quinquinambo as he advanced with
outstretched hand.
“This is really a surprise,
my dear fellow! I had no idea that you were
in this affair. But I am delighted to welcome
you once more to the Excelsior!”