Liberated.
The revolution was, indeed, ended.
The unexpected arrival of a relieving garrison in
the bay of Todos Santos had completed what the dissensions
in the insurgents’ councils had begun; the discontents,
led by Brace and Winslow, had united with the Government
against Perkins and his aliens; but a compromise had
been effected by the treacherous giving up of the
Liberator himself in return for an amnesty granted
to his followers. The part that Bunker had played
in bringing about this moral catastrophe was, however,
purely adventitious. When he had recovered his
health, and subsequent events had corroborated the
truth of his story, the Mexican Government, who had
compromised with Quinquinambo, was obliged to recognize
his claims by offering him command of the missionary
ship, and permission to rediscover the channel, the
secret of which had been lost for half a century to
the Government. He had arrived at the crucial
moment when Perkins’ command were scattered along
the seashore, and the dragoons had invested Todos
Santos without opposition.
Such was the story substantially told
to Hurlstone and confirmed on his debarkation with
the ladies at Todos Santos, the Excelsior being now
in the hands of the authorities. Hurlstone did
not hesitate to express to Padre Esteban his disgust
at the treachery which had made a scapegoat of Senor
Perkins. But to his surprise the cautious priest
only shrugged his shoulders as he took a complacent
pinch of snuff.
“Have a care, Diego! You
are of necessity grateful to this man for the news
he has brought nay, more, for possibly being
the instrument elected by Providence to precipitate
the denouement of that miserable woman’s life but
let it not close your eyes to his infamous political
career. I admit that he was opposed to the revolt
of the heathen against us, but it was his emissaries
and his doctrines that poisoned with heresy the fountains
from which they drank. Enough! Be grateful!
but do not expect me to intercede for Baal and
Ashtaroth!”
“Intercede!” echoed Hurlstone,
alarmed at the sudden sacerdotal hardness that had
overspread the old priest’s face. “Surely
the Council will not be severe with the man who was
betrayed into their power by others equally guilty?”
Padre Esteban avoided Hurlstone’s
eyes as he answered with affected coolness, “Quien
sabe? There will be expulsados, no doubt.
The Excelsior, which is confiscated, will be sent
to Mexico with them.”
“I must see Senor Perkins,” said Hurlstone
suddenly.
The priest hesitated.
“When?” he asked cautiously.
“At once.”
“Good.” He wrote
a hurried line on a piece of paper, folded it, sealed
it, and gave it to Hurlstone. “You will
hand that to the Comandante. He will give you
access to the prisoner.”
In less than half an hour Hurlstone
presented himself before the Commander. The events
of the last twenty-four hours had evidently affected
Don Miguel, for although he received Hurlstone courteously,
there was a singular reflection of the priest’s
harshness in his face as he glanced over the missive.
He took out his watch.
“I give you ten minutes with the prisoner, Don
Diego. More, I cannot.”
A little awed by the manner of the
Commander, Hurlstone bowed and followed him across
the courtyard. It was filled with soldiers, and
near the gateway a double file of dragoons, with loaded
carbines, were standing at ease. Two sentries
were ranged on each side of an open door which gave
upon the courtyard. The Commander paused before
it, and with a gesture invited him to enter.
It was a large square apartment, lighted only by the
open door and a grated enclosure above it. Seated
in his shirtsleeves, before a rude table, Senor Perkins
was quietly writing. The shadow of Hurlstone’s
figure falling across his paper caused him to look
up.
Whatever anxiety Hurlstone had begun
to feel, it was quickly dissipated by the hearty,
affable, and even happy greeting of the prisoner.
“Ah! what! my young friend Hurlstone!
Again an unexpected pleasure,” he said, extending
his white hands. “And again you find me
wooing the Muse, in, I fear, hesitating numbers.”
He pointed to the sheet of paper before him, which
showed some attempts at versification. “But
I confess to a singular fascination in the exercise
of poetic composition, in instants of leisure like
this a fascination which, as a man of imagination
yourself, you can appreciate.”
“And I am sorry to find you
here, Senor Perkins,” began Hurlstone frankly;
“but I believe it will not be for long.”
“My opinion,” said the
Senor, with a glance of gentle contemplation at the
distant Comandante, “as far as I may express
it, coincides with your own.”
“I have come,” continued
Hurlstone earnestly, “to offer you my services.
I am ready,” he raised his voice, with a view
of being overheard, “to bear testimony that
you had no complicity in the baser part of the late
conspiracy, the revolt of the savages, and
that you did your best to counteract the evil, although
in doing so you have sacrificed yourself. I shall
claim the right to speak from my own knowledge of the
Indians and from their admission to me that they were
led away by the vague representations of Martinez,
Brace, and Winslow.”
“Pardon pardon me,”
said Senor Perkins deprecatingly, “you are mistaken.
My general instructions, no doubt, justified these
young gentlemen in taking, I shall not say extreme,
but injudicious measures.” He glanced meaningly
in the direction of the Commander, as if to warn Hurlstone
from continuing, and said gently, “But let us
talk of something else. I thank you for your
gracious intentions, but you remember that we agreed
only yesterday that you knew nothing of politics,
and did not concern yourself with them. I do not
know but you are wise. Politics and the science
of self-government, although dealing with general
principles, are apt to be defined by the individual
limitations of the enthusiast. What is good for
himself he too often deems is applicable to the
general public, instead of wisely understanding that
what is good for them must be good for himself.
But,” said the Senor lightly, “we are
again transgressing. We were to choose another
topic. Let it be yourself, Mr. Hurlstone.
You are looking well, sir; indeed, I may say I never
saw you looking so well! Let me congratulate
you. Health is the right of youth. May you
keep both!”
He shook Hurlstone’s hand again with singular
fervor.
There was a slight bustle and commotion
at the door of the guard-room, and the Commander’s
attention was called in that direction. Hurlstone
profited by the opportunity to say in a hurried whisper:
“Tell me what I can do for you;”
and he hesitated to voice his renewed uneasiness “tell
me if if if your case is urgent!”
Senor Perkins lifted his shoulders
and smiled with grateful benevolence.
“You have already promised me
to deliver those papers and manuscripts of my deceased
friend, and to endeavor to find her relations.
I do not think it is urgent, however.”
“I do not mean that,”
said Hurlstone eagerly. “I” but
Perkins stopped him with a sign that the Commander
was returning.
Don Miguel approached them with disturbed
and anxious looks.
“I have yielded to the persuasions
of two ladies, Dona Leonor and the Senora Markham,
to ask you to see them for a moment,” he said
to Senor Perkins. “Shall it be so?
I have told them the hour is nearly spent.”
“You have told them nothing
more?” asked the Senor, in a whisper unheard
by Hurlstone.
“No.”
“Let them come, then.”
The Commander made a gesture to the
sentries at the guard-room, who drew back to allow
Mrs. Markham and Eleanor to pass. A little child,
one of Eleanor’s old Presidio pupils, who, recognizing
her, had followed her into the guard-room, now emerged
with her, and momentarily disconcerted at the presence
of the Commander, ran, with the unerring instinct of
childhood, to the Senor for protection. The filibuster
smiled, and lifting the child with a paternal gesture
to his shoulder by one hand, he extended the other
to the ladies.
“The Commander,” said
Mrs. Markham briskly, “says it’s against
the rules; that visiting time is up; and you’ve
already got a friend with you, and all that sort of
thing; but I told him that I was bound to see you,
if only to say that if there’s any meanness going
on, Susannah and James Markham ain’t in it!
No! But we’re going to see you put right
and square in the matter; and if we can’t do
it here, we’ll do it, if we have to follow you
to Mexico! that’s all!”
“And I,” said Eleanor,
grasping the Senor’s hand, and half blushing
as she glanced at Hurlstone, “see that I have
already a friend here who will help me to put in action
all the sympathy I feel.”
Senor Perkins drew himself up, and
cast a faint look of pride towards the Commander.
“To hear such assurances
from beautiful and eloquent lips like those before
me,” he said, with his old oratorical wave of
the hand, but a passing shadow across his mild eyes,
“is more than sufficient. In my experience
of life I have been favored, at various emergencies,
by the sympathy and outspoken counsel of your noble
sex; the last time by Mrs. Euphemia M’Corkle,
of Peoria, Illinois, a lady of whom you have heard
me speak alas! now lately deceased.
A few lines at present lying on yonder table a
tribute to her genius will be forwarded
to you, dear Mrs. Markham. But let us change
the theme. You are looking well and
you, too, Miss Keene. From the roses that bloom
on your cheeks nourished by the humid air
of Todos Santos I am gratified in thinking
you have forgiven me your enforced detention here.”
At a gesture from the Commander he
ceased, stepped back, bowed gravely, and the ladies
recognized that their brief audience had terminated.
As they passed through the gateway, looking back they
saw Perkins still standing with the child on his shoulder
and smiling affably upon them. Then the two massive
doors of the gateway swung to with a crash, the bolts
were shot, and the courtyard was impenetrable.
A few moments later, the three friends
had passed the outermost angle of the fortifications,
and were descending towards the beach. By the
time they had reached the sands they had fallen into
a vague silence.
A noise like the cracking and fall
of some slight scaffolding behind them arrested their
attention. Hurlstone turned quickly. A light
smoke, drifting from the courtyard, was mingling with
the fog. A faint cry of “Dios y Libertad!”
rose with it.
With a hurried excuse to his companions,
Hurlstone ran rapidly back, and reached the gate as
it slowly rolled upon its hinges to a file of men
that issued from the courtyard. The first object
that met his eyes was the hat of Senor Perkins lying
on the ground near the wall, with a terrible suggestion
in its helpless and pathetic vacuity. A few paces
further lay its late owner, with twenty Mexican bullets
in his breast, his benevolent forehead bared meekly
to the sky, as if even then mutely appealing to the
higher judgment. He was dead! The soul of
the Liberator of Quinquinambo, and of various other
peoples more or less distressed and more or less ungrateful,
was itself liberated!
With the death of Senor Perkins ended
the Crusade of the Excelsior. Under charge of
Captain Bunker the vessel was sent to Mazatlan by the
authorities, bearing the banished and proscribed Americans,
Banks, Brace, Winslow, and Crosby; and, by permission
of the Council, also their friends, Markham and Brimmer,
and the ladies, Mrs. Brimmer, Chubb, and Markham.
Hurlstone and Miss Keene alone were invited to remain,
but, on later representations, the Council graciously
included Richard Keene in the invitation, with the
concession of the right to work the mines and control
the ranches he and Hurlstone had purchased from their
proscribed countrymen. The complacency of the
Council of Todos Santos may be accounted for when
it is understood that on the day the firm of Hurlstone
& Keene was really begun under the title of Mr. and
Mrs. Hurlstone, Richard had prevailed upon the Alcalde
to allow him to add the piquant Dona Isabel also to
the firm under the title of Mrs. Keene. Although
the port of Todos Santos was henceforth open to all
commerce, the firm of Hurlstone & Keene long retained
the monopoly of trade, and was a recognized power
of intelligent civilization and honest progress on
the Pacific coast. And none contributed more to
that result than the clever and beautiful hostess
of Excelsior Lodge, the charming country home of James
Hurlstone, Esq., senior partner of the firm. Under
the truly catholic shelter of its veranda Padre Esteban
and the heretic stranger mingled harmoniously, and
the dissensions of local and central Government were
forgotten.
“I said that you were a dama
de grandeza, you remember,” said the
youthful Mrs. Keene to Mrs. Hurlstone, “and,
you see, you are!”