As soon as it was dark the admiral
prepared for the attack. From the prisoners he
had learned all details as to the fort, and found that
while almost impregnable from the river face, the
flank of the fort was defended chiefly by a strong
palisading. He detached a small party of marines,
under Ensign Vidal, to endeavour to enter at that point.
Another party then silently moved forward to the direct
attack of the fort, and as soon as it had taken up
its position under the wall, the main body advanced,
cheering and firing. The enemy at once opened
a heavy fire of artillery and musketry, but in the
dark they were unable to take aim, and but little
damage was caused by their fire. The movement
had the result intended-of occupying the
whole attention of the eight hundred men in the fort,
and of drowning any noise that might be made by those
tearing down the palisades.
With great exertions Ensign Vidal
succeeded in getting up a couple of the beams; he
and his men passed through the opening, used the beams
as a bridge across a wet ditch inside the palisade,
and then advanced noiselessly until near the Spaniards,
into whom they fired a volley. The Spaniards
were seized with a sudden panic at finding themselves
thus unexpectedly taken in flank, and instantly took
to flight. The moment the fire of the marines
told the admiral that the flank attack had succeeded,
he led the main body round to the rear of the fort.
The Spaniards, as they poured out there, communicated
their panic to a body of three hundred troops drawn
up behind in reserve, and the whole fled toward the
next fort, followed hotly by the Chilians, who bayoneted
numbers of them, and pressed so closely on their heels
that they entered the works, one after the other,
with them, driving them from fort to fort, together
with two hundred men who had been placed with a battery
of guns on rising ground to sweep the rear of the
forts.
The last of these, the castle of Coral,
was stormed with scarcely any opposition, the enemy
thinking only of escape. Numbers of them got away
in boats to Valdivia, while the rest plunged into
the forests behind the forts. Little over a hundred
prisoners were taken, and a like number of men were
killed, their panic having been too great for anything
like resistance to be offered. On the Chilian
side the loss was seven men killed and nine wounded.
The fall of all the western forts practically entailed
that of Valdivia, for while preparations were being
made to attack the eastern forts, the O’Higgins
appeared off the mouth of the river, and the Spaniards,
seeing this reinforcement to their foes, at once abandoned
the remaining forts and the town, and retreated into
the interior. The booty taken by the Chilians
included fifty tons of gunpowder and ten thousand
cannon-shot. One hundred and seventy thousand
musket cartridges, a large number of muskets, and
one hundred and twenty-eight cannon also fell into
the hands of the victors. A large ship with valuable
stores, together with a quantity of plate taken by
the Spaniards from Chilian churches, also were captured.
The value of the conquest was not,
however, to be reckoned by the amount of spoil taken.
Its effect on the struggle was enormous. It raised
the spirits of the Chilians to the highest pitch,
whilst it brought home to the mind of the Spanish
government the hopelessness of continuing a struggle
against an enemy so well led, and capable of carrying
out the most desperate enterprises.
Although Lord Cochrane was received
with unbounded enthusiasm by the population at large
on his return to Valparaiso, his success had excited
the jealousy of the minister of marine and other officials,
and by them he was treated with the grossest ingratitude.
They even proposed to bring him to court-martial for
having exceeded his orders; and although the indignation
the proposal excited compelled them to abandon this,
it was but to resort to other measures hostile to
him.
It was months before the fleet received
their share of the prize-money of the capture of Valdivia,
in spite of the admiral’s earnest efforts on
their behalf. His own share, which was sixty-seven
thousand dollars, he never received at all. He
failed altogether in his endeavour to obtain a fleet
of sufficient force to attempt the capture of Callao,
and for many months was kept in a state of inactivity.
So irritating was the persecution to which he was
subjected, that on the 14th of May he tendered his
resignation.
The resignation was refused, but nothing
was done. O’Higgins, who was an honest
man, was practically powerless, as the entire government
was in the hands of a senate of five members, which
assumed dictatorial powers, and without whose approval
nothing whatever could be done. It was determined,
however, to raise an army for the liberation of Peru;
and although Lord Cochrane had vainly asked the year
before for a small land force to capture Callao, an
army was now raised without difficulty by the dictators,
and General San Martin was placed in command.
This man had rendered good service to Chili when,
in conjunction with O’Higgins, he had led the
movement of independence; but his success had turned
his head. He was vain and arrogant, and at the
same time dilatory and vacillating. He, like
the dictators, was jealous of the success and popularity
of Lord Cochrane, and was bent upon thwarting him
to the utmost. His army, four thousand two hundred
strong, was embarked at Valparaiso in the ships of
the squadron. Lord Cochrane proposed to him to
land at Chilka, the nearest point to Lima and Callao.
San Martin, however, chose Pisca, and the troops were
landed there on the 18th of September. For fifty
days they remained there doing nothing, the fleet
being compelled to remain inactive off the port.
On the 28th of October they were re-embarked.
San Martin again refused to listen to Lord Cochrane’s
proposal for a vigorous attack upon Callao and Lima,
and requested to be landed at Ancon, a port as unsuitable
for the purpose as was Pisca. Lord Cochrane,
however, determined that the fleet, furnished at such
expense and effort by Chili, should not be wholly
wasted, and when he sent his ships in to anchor off
the port, he retained the O’Higgins,
the Independencia, and the Lautaro, with
the professed intention of blockading Callao at a
distance. His real intention was, however, to
cut out the Esmeralda from under the guns of
the forts, and also to carry off another ship, on
board which, as he had learned, a million dollars
were embarked. The Esmeralda was a forty-four
gun frigate, and was considered the finest Spanish
war-ship in the Pacific. She lay under the protection
of three hundred guns on shore, and a strong boom
moored by chains at short intervals; while near her
lay twenty-seven gun-boats and several vessels that
had been armed for the defence of the port. Only
two or three of his officers knew of his intentions
until a few hours before his intended attack, when
he issued a proclamation to the seamen and marines,
telling them that they had now an opportunity for
dealing the enemy a mortal blow, and repeating the
triumph of Valdivia.
Volunteers were asked for, and the
whole of the sailors and marines from the three ships
offered to follow Lord Cochrane wherever he might lead
them. This was a much larger force than he required,
and one hundred and eighty sailors and eighty marines
were chosen for the work. This force was gradually
transferred to the flag-ship, and the other two vessels
sailed out of the bay just before darkness came on,
as if in chase of some ship they had sighted-a
ruse well calculated to lull the Spaniards into security.
The men intended for the service then took their places
in fourteen boats that lay hidden behind the flag-ship.
All were dressed in white, with a blue band on the
left arm, in order that they might distinguish each
other in the dark. At ten o’clock the boats
pushed off in two directions, commanded respectively
by Captain Crosby and Captain Guise, while the admiral
led the way in his launch. It was just twelve
o’clock when the boats arrived at a small opening
in the boom. The oars had been muffled, and so
perfectly had silence been observed, that the admiral’s
launch ran against a guard-boat lying at the entrance,
without its approach having been observed by the Spaniards.
There was a hasty challenge by the startled officer
in command, to which the admiral himself replied by
threatening the occupants of the boat with instant
death if they gave the slightest alarm.
The threat, and the appearance of
the boats dashing in through the opening, had its
effect. No word was spoken by the Spaniards, and
in a few minutes the flotilla of vessels, rowed down
in line upon the frigate, and boarded her at a dozen
points simultaneously. The Chilians had been
ordered not to use their pistols, but to rely wholly
on their cutlasses. The sentries on the frigate
shouted the alarm, and the Spaniards, snatching up
their arms, rushed up from below. Many were cut
down at once by the Chilians, the rest retreated to
the forecastle and made a gallant stand, and it was
not until the Chilians had made three charges upon
them that they gave way, some leaping overboard, and
others running below. The Spanish marines gathered
on the quarter-deck, and they too fought with great
bravery. Not one among them asked for quarter
or sought safety in flight, but continued the struggle
until the last man fell.
The admiral himself had been very
unfortunate. He had swung himself up into the
main-chains the moment his boat touched the frigate,
and was about to leap upon the deck of the Esmeralda
when he was struck on the head by a Spanish sentry
with his clubbed musket and fell back into the boat.
He fell upon one of the rowlocks, which entered his
back near the spine, inflicting a very severe injury,
from whose effects he suffered for several years after.
In spite of the agony caused by the wound he again
clambered up on to the deck, and was almost immediately
shot through the thigh. He bound a handkerchief
tightly round it, and managed to direct the operations
until the capture was complete. The affair occupied
but a quarter of an hour, the Chilian loss being eleven
killed and thirty wounded, while a hundred and sixty
of the Spaniards fell. While this was going on,
the garrison of the forts, awakened by the uproar,
ran to their guns and opened fire on the Esmeralda,
several of the Spaniards, among them their captain,
and two or three of the Chilians, being killed or
wounded by their shot.
It happened that in the harbour at
the time were two neutral frigates-one
British, the other an American. It had been arranged
between them and the Spanish authorities that in the
event of a night attack they were to show lights in
a particular position, so that they might not be fired
upon. This they did, but by the admiral’s
orders similar lights were at once hoisted on board
the Esmeralda, thus causing much confusion among
the Spaniards. Both the neutral frigates were
hit several times, while but few shots struck the
Esmeralda. Lord Cochrane was now forced
by his wounds to leave it to Captain Guise, the next
senior officer, to carry out the orders that he had
previously given, namely, that the brig with the bullion
on board was first to be captured, then that every
ship was to be attacked and cut adrift. The success
of these operations was certain, as the Spaniards,
directly they saw the Esmeralda captured, had
taken to their boats and made for shore, and the whole
of the Spanish vessels might have been either burnt
or captured. Captain Guise had all along thwarted
the admiral’s plans to the utmost of his power,
had fomented several mutinies, and should have been
tried and shot long before. He now, instead of
carrying out the orders, cut the Esmeralda’s
cables, hoisted her sails, and steered through the
opening in the boom.
Although marred by the treachery,
or at any rate gross misconduct of Cochrane’s
subordinates, the capture of the Esmeralda exercised
almost as great an influence on the fortunes of the
struggle as did that of Valdivia. It was a death-blow
to the Spanish naval force in the Pacific; for although
they had still two frigates and some smaller craft
in those waters, they never afterwards ventured to
put to sea, of which the Chilians now became absolute
masters. The action, in fact, ensured the success
of the Chilian effort to free Peru.
San Martin now requested Lord Cochrane
to re-embark the army once more, and carry it to Huacha.
This was done, and there San Martin remained without
doing any more than he had done at the two other ports.
After having landed him the fleet returned to Callao,
where they used every effort to tempt the Spanish
war-ships to venture out, but without success.
The effect, however, of these operations showed itself
in other ways. On the 3rd of December six hundred
and fifty Peruvian soldiers deserted from the Spanish
service, and two days later forty officers followed
them, and from that time defections took place almost
daily.
San Martin now made no secret of his
intention to assume the dictatorship of Peru.
He had for so many months kept his army inactive, in
order that he might in time be able to enforce his
authority. What he would not do, however, was
accomplished by Lord Cochrane. Weary of the long
delay he offered in the following March to capture
Lima if two thousand soldiers were assigned to him.
This offer was refused, but after some time he obtained
a force of six hundred. With these he effected
a landing at port after port along the coast, and
so harassed the Spaniards that, on the 6th of July,
Lima capitulated and Peru was free. San Martin
at once proclaimed himself protector of Peru, and
appointed two of his creatures as chief ministers.
Lord Cochrane in vain attempted to obtain from him
payment for the sailors of the fleet, who had been
very many months without receiving a penny.
San Martin insolently replied that
he would pay nothing whatever to Chili, but that he
would make Lord Cochrane a Peruvian admiral if he would
leave the service of Chili for that of Peru.
Lord Cochrane knew that Chili would decline to pay
for work that had been done to make Peru, like itself,
free and independent, since it was now as prostrate
at the feet of San Martin as it had been at those
of the Spaniards. The army it had raised had
betrayed it and taken service under San Martin, as
had the two mutinous scoundrels, Captains Guise and
Spry. Lord Cochrane, therefore, determined to
take by force the money due to the fleet. At Ancon
there was a large amount of treasure seized from the
Spaniards. It had been deposited by San Martin
there, and in the middle of September the admiral landed,
and took possession of it without opposition.
Of the two hundred and eighty-five thousand dollars
found there, he paid a year’s arrears to every
officer and man in the fleet, taking nothing, however,
for himself, and reserving the small surplus for the
pressing wants and equipments of the fleet.
In June, 1822, Lord Cochrane returned
to Valparaiso, from which he had been absent twenty
months. He was received with a popular ovation;
but his enemies were still at work, and struck at
him in the matter upon which he was most sensitive,
by refusing any payment whatever to his officers and
men, many of whom almost died of starvation.
In October a revolution broke out
in Chili, and such indignities were heaped upon the
admiral himself that upon the 12th of the month he
formally resigned his commission, and in January, 1823,
quitted Valparaiso in a vessel chartered by himself,
taking with him several European officers and gentlemen,
who, like himself, were tired of Chilian ingratitude,
and were ready to follow him in whatever service he
engaged.
Stephen had taken no part in the later
operations of the fleet. After the capture of
the Esmeralda he had been knocked down and very
severely injured by a splinter, caused by a shot from
the Spanish batteries passing through the bulwark
close to where he was standing. Lord Cochrane
had sent him, with other wounded, in one of the small
war-ships down to Valparaiso, and there he was tenderly
nursed by Lady Cochrane. It was three months
before he fairly recovered his strength, and as soon
as he was convalescent he took a berth in a craft
that was sailing with stores and provisions for the
fleet. They had been out four days when she was
caught in a storm on-shore. In vain they tried
to beat out; the vessel was a poor sailer, and drifted
to leeward faster than she could work to windward.
“What sort of ground tackle
have you?” Stephen asked the captain.
“I have two good anchors, senor
lieutenant, but the cables are rather old.”
“I should advise you to have
them brought up on deck and overhauled, and if you
find any specially bad places we can cut them out and
splice the ends again.”
The cables were brought up, but it
needed a very short examination only to show Stephen
that they were old and worn from end to end. “It
will go hard with us if we have to rely upon these,”
he said. “They would not hold a bluff-bowed
craft like this two minutes; the very first roller
that struck her would snap them like pack-threads.
The worst of it is, captain, that if we escape being
drowned we have but the inside of a prison to look
to, for we are off the Peruvian coast now, and any
of us who get to shore will be seized at once.”
“With such a sea as this, senor,
there is little chance of any of us being saved if
we once strike. We are now somewhere off the mouth
of the San Carlos river. In calm weather there
would be water enough on the bar for us to run in,
but not now; we should strike and go to pieces to a
certainty.”
“Well, that would depend; we
might bump over it. But even if we did break
up on the bar, we should have a much better chance
than we should if we went ashore anywhere else.
Instead of being dashed on the beach by the waves,
and then being swept out again, we should be likely
to be carried on into the still water behind the bar,
and so of making our way to shore. There are
eight of the crew and ourselves. You had better
get up ten small casks-those wine barrels
would do very well-let the liquor run off,
then bung them up again, and fasten life-lines round
them; with their help we should have a fair chance.”
“It is worth trying at any rate,”
the captain agreed. “The surf on the bar
will be tremendous, but if we could stick to the casks
we might get through it.”
“Do you think that you are north
or south of it now, captain?”
“North, perhaps two or three miles.”
“Well, we will go on fighting
as long as we can, captain; it is of no use throwing
away a chance, and the wind may possibly drop or shift
so as to enable us to make off shore; but if we do
not see the land before three o’clock I would
turn and run in towards it, and then when we get near
enough to see objects plainer, head for the south until
you see the entrance. When you do we will go
straight for it. It is better at any rate to
do it while there is daylight to help us.”
The barrels were got up and prepared
to serve as life-buoys. They had just finished
when Stephen made his way a short distance up the rigging.
“I can see the line of surf, captain; it is
not more than three miles away. You had better
take a look at it-you may be able to tell
where we are. I think I can make out a place
of some size a short distance along.”
The captain joined him. “Just
as I thought,” he said; “that is San Carlos,
and the mouth of the river is about a mile beyond it.”
“Then you may as well bear away
for it at once-the sooner we get it over
the better.”
“Make your casks fast to something,
men,” the captain ordered, as he stepped on
deck. “The surf will get higher as we get
inshore, and will, I have no doubt, sweep our decks.
When the time comes let each man go to his barrel
with his knife in his hand ready to cut the lashings
just before we strike.”
In half an hour the captain made out
the entrance to the river and headed the ship for
it.
“There is a heavy sea indeed
on the bar,” Stephen said as they neared the
line of breakers. “You see, I have changed
my togs since the gale began, for I saw that unless
the wind changed we should find ourselves in difficulties.
We have not much mercy to expect as Chilian sailors.
I should have none if it were known that I am a naval
officer. Will you tell the men that if we get
ashore and I too am saved, they had best hold their
tongue about my rank. In the first place it would
do me harm, and in the next it would damage you all
were it known you had one of Cochrane’s officers
on board, for it would show at once that you were on
your way to our fleet; whereas if it is supposed that
you are merely an ordinary coaster you may be let
off unharmed.”
“There is not much chance for
us either way,” the captain said. “If
we fall into the hands of the Spaniards they will
probably hang us at once, while the country people
may cut our throats so as to save themselves the trouble
of handing us over to the Spaniards. We are no
more than a hundred miles from the frontier, and if
we do get to shore our best chance will be to try
and make our way down the coast, travelling at night
and lying up in the daytime. But anyhow I will
tell the men what you say.”
“Get all the sail upon her you
can, captain-the faster she is travelling
the more chance she has of getting over the bar.”
“I will shake out the mainsail,”
the captain said. “Then all hands had better
gather aft-the masts are sure to fall over
her bows as soon as she strikes.”
In a few minutes the ship was nearing
the breakers at a high rate of speed. The men
were all gathered aft, each with his barrel. Stephen
held his breath as they mounted the last great wave
outside the surf. Borne along by the great wind
and the impetus of the waves, the vessel plunged head-foremost
into the surf, which poured in cataracts on to her
deck. There was a slight shock, which caused
the vessel to tremble, but she was swept along by
the fury of the surf. Another wave lifted her
high into the air, and as it passed from under her
she struck again. This time the shock was tremendous.
Every man was thrown off his feet, the masts went over
with a crash, and most of the hands were swept overboard
by the torrent that poured in over the stern.
Stephen had grasped one of the back-stays, and though
it seemed to him for a moment that his arms were being
pulled from their sockets, he still maintained his
grasp. Another and even greater sea than those
that had preceded it thundered down upon them.
There was a forward move and then another crash, and
Stephen felt himself floating in the water, holding
on to the keg. Glancing round he saw that the
ship had gone altogether. She had broken up completely,
and the sea was covered with floating timbers.
The danger from this was greater than
from the waves, and he let go his hold of the barrel
and dived, swimming under water at right angles to
the run of the waves as long as he could hold his
breath. When he came up he looked round.
He was beyond the wreckage, and was also inside the
line of surf. Had the wave carried the ship her
own length farther she would have been out of danger.
The river bank was but a couple of hundred yards away.
The water was still rough, but it was a long heavy
swell rather than a stormy sea, and Stephen, who had
kicked off his shoes before the ship struck, at once
swam for the shore, and was not long in reaching it.
After resting for a minute or two he walked along
the bank, and soon made out four barrels that had
men still clinging to them. Gradually, too, these
made their way ashore; the swimmers were all men who
had been carried away by the first wave that had swept
over the boat. Of the others he could see no
signs. He thought he could make out two or three
barrels in the middle of the wreckage, but of this
he was not sure, and had little doubt that those who
were with him at the time the ship went to pieces had
all been killed by the floating timber.
“Now, men,” he said, when
the four survivors had joined him, “shall we
keep together or try to make our way separately?”
The men consulted together, and then
said that they thought they would have more chance
of making their way south were they to separate.
Stephen was glad of this decision, which, he had no
doubt was arrived at from the fear that if they were
taken, and he was recognized to be an Englishman,
it would make their treatment worse than it would otherwise
be. He himself much preferred to go alone; he
had no authority over these men, and five men together
were more likely to attract attention than one alone.
Looking across the river they saw a number of people
on the opposite bank. They were evidently inhabitants
of the town, who, having seen the ship running for
shore, had come down to watch her fate, and to give
any assistance in their power. Stephen saw that
they were waving their hands for them to make up the
bank, where there might be a ferry-boat to take them
over. He pointed this out to the men, and said,
“I am afraid we shall be pursued ere long.
Of course, at present they take us for their own people;
but when they see that we do not cross, they will
suspect the truth, and will send over to see whether
we have taken shelter in some village there may be
on this side. When they hear that we have not
done so, they will guess that we are Chilians, and
there will be a hot pursuit for us. We will walk
together for a little way along the bank as if going
in the direction that they point to. They are
not likely to stay long where they are; some will
go back to the town now that there is nothing to see,
others will no doubt remain on the bank to collect
wreckage that may be washed ashore, a few may go on
to the ferry and wait there for us. If there are
any boats in the river you may be sure they will soon
put out to collect floating casks and bales.”
The little crowd was indeed just beginning
to break up, and after going a short distance Stephen
and his companions left the river and started south.
After going two or three hundred yards they shook hands
and separated, the sailors striking more inland, while
Stephen took for the present a course that ran parallel
with the sea-coast. It was already growing dark,
and Stephen was worn out with the excitement of the
day, so that after going on for an hour, he lay down
in a clump of trees and went to sleep. It was
broad daylight when he awoke, and on walking to the
edge of the trees he saw a village a few hundred yards
in front of him. He made a long detour to pass
it, and was proceeding along a well-beaten path when
he heard the sound of horses’ hoofs behind, and
looking round saw four Spanish troopers riding towards
him. Escape was out of the question, and he walked
quietly on in the faint hope that they might pass without
stopping him. This, however, was improbable; his
hair was matted with sea water, his clothes still
wet-his whole appearance too evidently that
of a shipwrecked man. They stopped when they
reached him.
“You are one of the men who
were cast ashore last night?” a sergeant said.
“I am,” Stephen replied frankly.
“My orders are to take you back to San Carlos.
Where are your companions?”
“I do not know,” Stephen
replied. “We separated at once; I went my
way and they went theirs.”
“You are a Chilian,” the man said; “anyone
can tell it by your speech.”
Stephen by this time spoke the language
so fluently indeed that he could have passed as a
native. There was, however, sufficient difference
between the dialects of Peru and Chili for it to be
seen at once that he was not a Peruvian. He did
not reply directly to the question.
“We were on a trader,”
he said. “The captain and four of the men
were lost; five of us gained the shore. We were
not on an armed ship, and cannot be considered enemies.”
“The whole race of you are enemies,”
the sergeant said. “You are rebels and
traitors every one of you. Gomez, do you and Martinez
take this man back to San Carlos, and hand him over
to the governor. I will ride on with Sancho and
see if we can come up with the other fellows; as there
are half a dozen parties out in search we are pretty
sure to lay hands on them before nightfall.”
On the way back Stephen, as he walked
between the two horsemen, debated whether it would
be better to allow them to remain under the impression
that he was a Chilian, or declare himself an English
officer. In the former case he would most likely
be shot without ceremony, in the latter he might probably
be sent up to Callao or Lima. It might make no
difference in his fate, but at least might delay it;
and if he could but manage to communicate his position
to Lord Cochrane, the latter would certainly take
instant steps to offer one or more of the many Spanish
officers who were prisoners in his hands in exchange
for him, or would threaten that if any harm came to
him he would give no quarter to Spanish officers in
future. At any rate the latter seemed to promise
him the better chance, and accordingly when on his
arrival at San Carlos he was taken before the governor,
he replied boldly to the question, “Who are
you?”
“I am Lieutenant Stephen Embleton,
flag officer to Admiral Cochrane.”
The words created a sensation among
the officers standing behind the governor.
“You dare to say this!” the governor exclaimed
furiously.
“I am giving a simple answer
to your question, senor,” Stephen said quietly.
“When we ask the Spanish officers who fall into
our hands what their names are, they reply as I have
done, truthfully, and they are treated as I expect
to be treated, honourably; especially as I have not
been captured by you when in arms, but have simply
had the misfortune to be shipwrecked on your coast.”
The quiet tone of the reply had its
effect. The officers spoke a few words together
in a low tone, and the governor said more calmly than
he had before spoken:
“How am I to know that this story is true?”
“I have no means of proving
it now,” Stephen replied; “but if I am
taken to Callao, a message sent to Lord Cochrane under
a flag of truce would speedily bring back a letter
verifying my story.”
“But how did you come to be
on board that craft that was wrecked?”
“I was wounded, senor, at the
action in the port of Callao. A splinter caused
by a shot from one of your batteries struck me when
on the deck of the Esmeralda. I was sent
down to Valparaiso. Your surgeon can examine
me and will find that the wound has but lately healed.
Being anxious to rejoin my ship as soon as possible,
I did not wait for a ship of war going up, but took
passage in a Chilian trader.”
“Doubtless conveying stores
to the Chilian fleet,” the governor remarked.
“She may have had stores of
that kind on board,” Stephen said, “but
that was no affair of mine. I simply took a passage
in her, and paid for it. The admiral is expecting
me, and will, I am sure, be ready to exchange an officer
of superior rank for me.”
By the governor’s orders Stephen
was now taken into another room. In a quarter
of an hour he was brought back again. The governor
had left the room, but a Spanish colonel said to him:
“It has been decided to send
you to Callao, where, no doubt, inquiries will be
made into the truth of your story, and his excellency
the Viceroy will himself decide upon your fate.”
Stephen bowed.
“I can have no doubt, senor,
that his excellency will treat me with the same courtesy
with which some score of Spanish officers are at present
treated by Lord Cochrane; especially as he will know
that were I,-which I cannot for a moment
believe,-badly treated, it is in the power
of our admiral to carry out wholesale reprisals.”
The colonel made no reply, but ordered
the guards to remove the prisoner. An hour later
a young Spanish officer entered.
“I have been ordered to accompany
you to Callao,” he said courteously. “I
take four men with me, and I am told that I am to be
responsible for your safety. It would be painful
indeed for me to have to take any stringent measures
to prevent you from escaping on the road, and if you
will give me your parole not to attempt evasion it
will be far more pleasant for us both.”
“If you will give me a little
time to think it over,” Stephen replied, “I
will give you an answer. It is too serious a matter
for me to decide at once. However, whether I
accept or refuse I thank you greatly for your courtesy
in making me the offer.”
“We shall start in an hour’s
time,” the Spaniard said. “A meal,
of which you are doubtless much in need, will be brought
to you at once, and when you have concluded it I will
return for your reply.”
He then left the room, and in two
or three minutes a soldier entered with a substantial
meal. As he ate it Stephen thought the matter
over. It did not seem to him that with four soldiers
and an officer watching him he could have much chance
of making his escape, and, even did he succeed in
doing so, he would almost certainly be retaken, as
he could have but a short start, and his dress and
Chilian Speech would attract instant attention.
If overtaken he might be shot at once, and he therefore
decided that his chances would be better as a prisoner
at Callao than as a fugitive in a hostile country.
Accordingly when the officer returned he at once gave
him his parole not to attempt to escape upon the journey.
“I am very glad that you have
so decided,” the Spaniard said. “I
will send you at once a suit of clothes to ride in.
Your attire would at once attract attention and might
lead to unpleasantness. We have a long journey
before us, and may as well make it as agreeable as
we can under the circumstances.”
Stephen thanked him heartily for the
offer, which he gladly accepted, for he felt ashamed
of his appearance in his rough clothes, now shrunk
and water-stained. The servant who brought the
suit of clothes brought also a large basin of water,
soap, and a towel, and Stephen was therefore able to
make his toilet in comfort. The suit was an undress
uniform-white breeches, jacket of the same
material, with white braid, a pair of high riding-boots,
and a broad-brimmed hat. As soon as he dressed
himself, his guard conducted him downstairs.
The officer and the four troopers were already mounted,
and a horse stood ready for Stephen. Without a
word he mounted, the officer took his place beside
him, and the troopers falling in behind, he rode out
through the gate.
“I thank you heartily for your
thoughtfulness in providing me with the means of making
myself respectable.”
“You certainly look better,”
the young officer said. “Now permit me to
introduce myself. My name is Filippo Conchas;
my uncle is the governor here, and it is to that I
owe the pleasure of this excursion with you.”
“I should not have thought that
a ride of five or six hundred miles was a pleasure,
Don Filippo.”
“Oh, yes, it is, when one can
go one’s own pace, and travel only in the morning
and evening. Moreover, one gets terribly tired
of a small provincial town, especially in times like
these, when things are not going quite so pleasantly
as one might wish, and one knows that half the inhabitants
are bitterly hostile to one. Besides, senor, I
have an attraction at Callao, and in fact am betrothed
to a fair cousin, the daughter of another uncle who
is the chief naval authority at the port. My
uncle, that is the one here, is a strict disciplinarian,
and as all leave is stopped owing to the doings of
your admiral’s ships, I am kept here; so, of
course, directly I heard that you were to be sent to
Callao I applied to him to appoint me to command the
escort, and as I was the first applicant he had no
excuse for refusing, although he was not in the most
pleasant of humours. However, that I did not care
about as long as I got my leave. He has gone
down to the river with several of his officers to
inspect the goods, of which a large quantity has been
cast ashore. If he had been here I should not
have ventured to effect this transformation in your
appearance until to-morrow. Are you a good rider,
senor?”
“No, indeed,” Stephen
replied, “I have had no opportunities for practice.”
“It does not matter much,”
Don Filippo said; “I daresay you will be a good
rider at the end of our journey, and your not being
so at present will afford me an excuse for not making
fatiguing journeys; so all is for the best, you see.”