Don Filippo did all in his power to
make the journey a pleasant one for Stephen.
They travelled on an average about twenty-four miles
a day, twelve in the morning soon after sunrise and
as much in the cool of the evening. During the
heat of the day they halted, sometimes in the shade
of a grove, sometimes at the hacienda where they breakfasted.
The young officer chatted freely to Stephen about
himself and his life, and as they lay in the shade
during the long hours of the heat, Stephen related
his own adventures on his first cruise, and in reply
to questions of the Spaniard, repeated to him what
he had heard from his father of Cochrane’s exploits.
Don Filippo treated him in every way as a friend and
an equal, and no one who saw them together would have
dreamt that he was a prisoner. Even at night
no guard was placed at the door of his chamber, the
Spaniard having absolute faith in the honour of an
English officer. The journey occupied nearly
three weeks, by the end of which time Stephen was
perfectly at home on horseback. As they approached
Callao Don Filippo’s gaiety deserted him.
“I do not conceal from you,
Don Estevan, that I am anxious about you, very anxious.
You can hardly understand the deep and bitter hostility
that has been excited in the minds of my countrymen
by the doings of your admiral. Our hold on Peru
when you arrived here was absolute, and it was morally
certain that, with the aid of the ships and men on
their way out, we should have very soon recaptured
Chili again. All that has changed. Our armies
have been defeated, our ships captured by inferior
forces, our prestige destroyed; we find ourselves
insulted in our ports, our ships cut out from under
our guns, the Peruvians ready at any moment to revolt,
our flag almost swept from the Pacific, and with every
prospect that the broad dominions won for Spain by
Pizarro and Cortez will be wrested from us. You
can hardly imagine the wrath and humiliation of every
Spaniard at the misfortunes that have fallen upon
us, the more so that these misfortunes have been inflicted
by a naval force that we deemed absolutely contemptible.
“All this is due to Admiral
Cochrane and his English officers. In the next
place, in addition to the political hate there is the
religious one. It is by heretics that we have
been defeated, as we were defeated centuries ago by
your people and the Dutch. You know how great
is the power that the priests wield. We have
still the Inquisition among us, and though its power
in Spain is comparatively slight, the institution still
flourishes on this side of the Atlantic. All
this makes me anxious for you. No doubt your
admiral would exchange some of his prisoners for you,
or might, did he learn it, retaliate upon them for
any ill-treatment dealt to you, but you see he may
never get to know in time. He may hear that the
ship in which you sailed was lost, but he may suppose
that all hands were lost with it, for the four Chilian
sailors were captured an hour or two after you were,
and were at once shot. I am sorry now that I undertook
this journey. We have been friends and comrades
since we started, and I cannot bear the thought that
any evil should befall you. You have an absolute
right to good treatment, for your admiral has always
treated his prisoners with the greatest kindness and
consideration, but I regret to say that in the present
state of the feelings of the Spaniards I am not certain
that such treatment will be meted out to you.”
“We must hope for the best,
Don Filippo,” Stephen replied. “I
do not blind myself to the fact that my position is
not free from danger, but I confide in the honour
of your countrymen.”
“Unhappily,” the young
officer said gloomily, “the ideas of honour on
this side of the Atlantic differ materially from those
in the old country. It has been so ever since
we set foot in this country. Acts of treachery
have been performed by men who at home would shrink
from any deed that savoured of dishonour; and although
even here one Spaniard would not transgress the code
towards another, there are too many who feel no scruples
whatever as to any course that they may pursue towards
one of another race and another religion.”
Stephen nodded.
“I understand that, Don Filippo,
and I own that, while I have no great fear of ill-treatment
on the part of the military and civil authorities,
I feel that should I fall into the hands of the Inquisition
my chance would be a slight one. From what I
have heard I know that its power is so great that
even the most powerful of the civil authorities have
to give way to it. Of course, being a British
subject, they have no shadow of right to meddle with
me, and if they do so and it becomes known in England,
it will be a very serious matter; but my fate might
never be known, and even did it come to the admiral’s
ears that I had been brought a prisoner here, any
application on his part might be met by a statement
that I had been shot while attempting to escape, or
that I died of fever in prison, and he would never
be able to obtain any proof to the contrary.”
“I am but too well aware of
it,” the young Spaniard replied. “Men
are constantly missing-not military men,
but merchants, land-owners, and others who have been
known to entertain liberal opinions. No one knows
what has become of them. No one dares to make
inquiry. I tell you, senor, that I, a Spaniard,
acknowledge that the state of affairs here is detestable,
and I am not surprised at the efforts of the colonies
to break away from us. Even in the middle ages
in Spain priestly tyranny was never carried to a greater
point than still prevails here. We have been here
for centuries, and what have we done for the countries
under our sway? So far from enriching, we have
impoverished them. The great proportion of the
population are little more than slaves, and we are
hated as bitterly as Cortez was hated by the Mexicans
when he overthrew the empire of Montezuma. It
is three years since I came out here full of enthusiasm,
and eager to bear a part in putting down the rebellion
of Chili. Now I feel that Chili was more than
justified, and that ere long we shall lose all the
possessions that the swords of our ancestors won for
us, and which were regarded with so much natural pride
by Spaniards; and the worst of it is, that it is the
outcome of our own work, our own oppression and misgovernment.
Were I to speak like this in public, not even the influence
of my two uncles could save me. I too should disappear
and be heard of no more. I have been thinking,”
he went on after a few minutes’ silence, “for
the last two or three days whether it would not be
better for me to give you back your parole and to
suffer you to escape. Of course I should be blamed,
but the offence would not be a tithe of the gravity
of that of speaking as I have just spoken to you.”
“I would not think of such a
thing, Don Filippo,” Stephen replied warmly.
“I would not take my freedom at the cost of involving
in my trouble one who has behaved so kindly to me.
I have still a great hope that everything will turn
out well, and that I shall be exchanged for some officer
in the admiral’s hands. He is sure to hear
of my being at Callao, for his last letter said that
many deserters were coming in, and from some of these
he is likely to learn that I am a prisoner; and in
that case he would not, I am sure, lose a day in sending
in a flag of truce with a request for my exchange,
and a notice that if this was refused he would quickly
follow it by retributive measures if any harm befell
me.”
The Spaniard did not reply. He
felt sure that every pains would be taken by the authorities
to prevent the news of his companion’s capture
becoming public; and his uncle, on appointing him
Stephen’s escort, had laid strict injunctions
on him to say nothing of the matter on his arrival
at Callao until he had delivered his prisoner over
to the authorities, and had received permission from
them to speak of it. On the following day they
entered the town. As they rode to the house of
the military governor no one paid any heed to their
passage; it was but two young officers returning perhaps
from Lima or from some other station. On reaching
the governor Filippo went up alone to make his report,
leaving Stephen in charge of the soldiers. He
was absent half an hour.
“I have said all I could for
you,” he said gloomily on his return. “The
governor is one of the old type, obstinate, bigoted,
and arrogant. I have not been all this time with
him; in fact only a few minutes. He dismissed
all I had to say with a wave of the hand:
“’You will take the prisoner,
Lieutenant Conchas, to the military prison, and hand
him over to the governor there. Until you hear
further you will maintain an absolute silence as to
his arrival here, and will simply state that you are
here on a short leave.’
“I had nothing to do but to
bow and retire, but if possible I will send a message
to your admiral that you are here. At present,
however, that is out of the question; for while I
was waiting in the anteroom I learned that the blockading
fleet has sailed away, and that there is no news whatever
as to the direction which it has taken. It is
very unfortunate, but you may be assured that, as
soon as it returns, I will somehow or other communicate
with the admiral.”
Remounting they rode to the prison.
They said good-bye to each other before they reached
its door, for, as Filippo said, it would be better
that he should part ceremoniously.
“We must not show any affection
for each other,” he said, “or, should the
English admiral learn that you are here, or should
you manage to make your escape, suspicion would at
once light upon me. Believe me, Don Estevan, I
shall do all in my power to aid you.”
The parting inside was therefore brief.
Don Filippo handed Stephen over to the chief official
of the prison, saying that the orders of the governor
were, that he was to be kept apart from all other prisoners
and allowed no communication with anyone.
“Adieu, senor. I trust
that you have had no cause to complain of your treatment
during your journey hither.”
“None whatever,” Stephen
said gravely. “You have treated me with
the courtesy that an officer has a right to expect
at the hands of his captors.”
The young Spaniard bowed, saluted
the prison officer, and left without another word.
The governor struck a bell, and on an assistant entering
he gave Stephen into his charge. “Place
him in the end cell of the long corridor,” he
said. “If it is occupied at present, remove
whoever is there to another cell. This prisoner
is to hold no communication with others, and an extra
strict watch must be kept on him. He is one of
the heretic officers of the Chilian fleet, and will
want looking after closely.”
The cell happened to be untenanted,
and Stephen was at once conducted there. It was
apparently intended as a place of confinement for officers
who had fallen into disgrace. It was some twelve
feet square, and contained a table and a chair.
From the window, which was very closely barred, a
view of the bay could be obtained, and Stephen felt
that his quarters were better than he had expected.
As soon as he was alone he examined the apartment
more closely. Looking down as well as he could
between the bars he could see the top of a wall some
twenty yards away, and decided that a courtyard surrounded
the building, so that even could he find any means
of descending from his window it would be necessary
afterwards for him to climb this wall. At present,
however, he had no idea of trying to escape.
To do so would, were he caught, greatly prejudice his
case, and might be used as an excuse for his instant
execution. However, he concluded that if he could
loosen the bars it would be as well to do so without
loss of time, as it might be necessary to make the
attempt at very short notice.
Upon examining the bars he found that
they were so strongly built into the wall that it
would be a task demanding a very long time to execute.
Turning from this he examined the door. The framework
was massive, and he had noticed as he had entered
that it was fastened outside by two heavy iron bolts.
“There is not much to be done that way,”
he said. “Now I must wait to see how my
meals are brought in. The only possible way that
I can think of is that of overpowering the warder
and getting out in his clothes. I don’t
suppose that there is much order or discipline in a
Spanish prison, and if I could once get down into the
yard after dark, I might walk quietly out if there
is a gate open, or climb that wall if there isn’t.”
That evening his supper was brought
in by the warder into whose charge he had been given.
He was accompanied by another armed with sword and
musket.
“Two of them,” Stephen
said to himself, as, after retiring without having
spoken a word, his guards closed and bolted the door
behind them. “I think I could manage them
at a pinch. It seems to me that an escape is possible,
but the question is what should I do with myself when
I got out. If the fleet had been still off the
town I might have made along the shore, stolen a boat,
and rowed out; but as it has gone there is nothing
to be done that way. A journey on foot from here
to the frontier and down through Chili would be a
tremendous affair. I should be pursued, and as
it would be guessed that I had gone that way, orders
would be sent to every town and village to look after
me, and a man in the dress of a Spanish officer on
foot would be remarked by every soul I met.”
Three days passed without incident,
but at dinner-time on the fourth he thought that the
warder, as he placed the hunch of bread on the table,
gave him a significant glance. As soon as the
door was closed he seized the bread and pulled it
to pieces. Inside was a tiny pellet of paper.
He opened and smoothed it out. In a female hand
was written in tiny characters: “The
Inquisition has demanded you. You will be handed
over to-morrow. If it be possible, make an escape
to-night. If you can do so, turn to your right
from the front of the prison, take the second street
on the left, and knock three times on the fifth door
on the right-hand side. A friend will be awaiting
you. If you cannot escape, hope still. We
will try other means. Destroy this when read.”
Stephen read it through three or four
times to be sure that he had his instructions by heart,
then he put the paper into his mouth, chewed it up
and swallowed it.
“It must be done when they bring
in my supper,” he said to himself. “I
know that I am the last to be served in this corridor,
for I can hear them stop at the door next to me before
they come here. That is an advantage, as they
would go straight down the corridor on leaving me.
The first thing is to tear up these two rugs into
strips, and make ropes for binding them. Of course
I shall have to tackle the soldier first. The
warder has evidently been bribed and he will make
no resistance. When I have once overpowered the
soldier, I may get some hints from the other as to
which is my best way of getting out of this.
Of course this is Filippo’s doing. What
a good fellow he is to run such a risk! There
is one thing, if I once get fairly out of the cell
I will be killed rather than be taken and handed over
to the Inquisition.”
Although he had not once been visited
between meals, he thought it prudent not to begin
the work of making his rope until the sun was getting
low. When it did so he tore up the blankets,
twisted and knotted together the strips, and then
sat down to await the coming of the jailers. He
had already tried to wrench off one of the legs of
the table, but it was too heavy and strongly made
for him to succeed. He then thought of using the
chair, but he could not feel certain of stunning the
soldier with the first blow, and the latter might
fire off his musket, or shout so loudly as to give
the alarm; he therefore determined to trust to his
hands alone. He knew that he was greatly superior
in strength to any of the little Spanish soldiers,
and that with the advantage of surprise he ought to
be able to succeed without noise.
About an hour after it became dark
he heard the footsteps come to the next cell, then
he took his place close against the wall by the side
of his door and waited.
As the bolts were drawn back he took
a deep breath. The warder as usual came in first,
followed closely by the armed guard. As the latter
entered, Stephen sprang upon him, and his hands closed
upon the man’s throat with so fierce a grip
that the musket fell instantly from the fellow’s
hands. Without losing his grasp in the slightest
Stephen whirled him round and threw him against the
warder, whom the shock brought to the ground, Stephen
hurling the already almost insensible soldier upon
him. Seizing the musket he brought the butt end
down upon the soldier’s head with a force amply
sufficient to stun him; then he rolled him off the
warder’s body and helped the latter to his feet.
“I was obliged to be rough with
you,” he said, “in order that that fellow
when he comes to his senses may confirm your story
that you were at once knocked down. Of course
I shall tie and gag you both.”
“Yes, and before you go you
had better give me a tap with that musket. You
need not hit me quite so hard as you did him, but it
must be hard enough to make a good bump. You
needn’t be afraid of hurting me. I am well
paid for anything that may happen, though indeed I
did not expect it to come like this.”
“In the first place I am going
to take your clothes,” Stephen said. “You
can say that you were insensible when I stripped you;
but first I want you to tell me how I can get out.”
“You won’t have much difficulty
about that,” the man replied. “When
we have taken round supper our work is done for the
night, and half of us are free to go out and spend
the evening. You turn down the first staircase
you come to, follow it to the bottom, then take the
corridor to the right and go on until you come to
an open door. Two soldiers will be standing there
on sentry, but they ask no questions of the warders.
You had better wait when you get in sight of the door
till you see that no one else is going out, or it
might be noticed that you were a stranger and questions
might be asked you. Now you had better lose no
time, or the others may be out before you get there,
and the door be shut.”
As he spoke he was taking off his
uniform, which consisted of a dark jacket, trousers,
and cap, and a brown belt from which hung a sword.
Stephen put them on, then tightly bound the insensible
man, whose lungs were now playing, stuffed a portion
of the rug into his mouth and fastened it there with
a strip tied at the back of the head. Then he
similarly bound and gagged the warder, and then gave
him a heavy blow on the head, feeling that it was
best for the man himself that it should be a severe
one. Then he took the sentry’s musket and
hid it under the bed, so that, if by any chance he
managed to free himself of his bonds, he could not
fire it to give the alarm. Then putting the cap
on his head Stephen went out, bolted the door, and
proceeded down the corridor. Following the instructions
that had been given him he made his way towards the
door. Just as he neared it he saw a group of
three or four warders going out together, and waiting
for a moment till they had disappeared boldly followed
them, and passed between the sentries into the open
air. So rapidly and easily had the escape been
managed that he could scarcely believe that he had
escaped from the hands of the military authorities,
still less from the fate that would have awaited him
had he fallen into the hands of the Inquisition.
Not knowing which was the front of the building, he
followed the lane, upon which the side door opened,
to its end, and then finding that he was now at the
rear of the prison he returned; and gaining the street
in which was the main entrance, followed out his instructions
and tapped three times at the door of the house indicated.
There was a little pause and then it was opened a short
distance.
“Is it you, senor?” a female voice asked.
“It is the man whom you are,
I believe, expecting, and who received your message.”
With an exclamation of gladness the
woman opened the door and, as he entered, closed it
behind him.
“Follow me, senor,” she
said; “there is nothing in the passage to run
against.”
A few steps further Stephen heard
a door open, a flood of light poured into the passage,
and his guide said “Quick!” He entered
and she closed the door behind him.
“Thanks to the saints that you
have escaped, senor!” a voice said. “It
seemed to us well-nigh impossible that you could do
so; but, knowing how brave and enterprising you English
are, Filippo said that he had great faith that you
might manage it.”
Stephen now saw that the speaker was
a young and very pretty girl.
“I am speaking to the Senorita
Inez Conchas,” he said respectfully. “How
can I thank you and Don Filippo sufficiently for your
action in my behalf. You have saved my life,
for assuredly had I not known that I should be handed
over to the Inquisition no thought of making my escape
to-night would have entered my mind.”
“It is all Filippo’s doing,”
she said. “He made me write the letter,
and got me to come here because he could not come
himself,-I and my old nurse with me.
She is sitting in the front room on watch; it was she
who opened the door to you. You see, we could
not be sure whether the note would reach you; the
man whom we bribed might have turned traitor and given
it to the governor. My nurse arranged it; for
it would never have done for Filippo to have appeared
in the matter, and I am so well known in the place
that it would have been very dangerous. However,
we hoped that all would be well, for half the man’s
bribe was not to be paid to him until you were free.
However, we placed her at the corner of the street
this afternoon in order to watch if anyone came to
this house or stopped to look at it earnestly.
The people are away in the country, and my nurse,
who knew the woman who is left in charge here, got
her to lend her the key until to-morrow morning, on
some excuse or other. Filippo brought me round
just before dark; there is an entertainment to-night
at the Viceroy’s, and he had to be there.
Indeed, it was the best place he could be, as no suspicion
can now fall upon him of having aided in your escape.
How did you manage it, senor?”
Stephen briefly related how it had been brought about.
“That was well done indeed!”
the girl said, clapping her hands merrily. “I
scarce thought that it could be your knock when you
came, for we had agreed that if you did manage to
make your escape it would not be until very late,
and it seemed impossible that you could have got out
so early. However, that is all the better, as
you will now have a long start. Now, senor, the
first thing for you to do will be to put on the disguise
Filippo has prepared for you in that bag on the table.
Here is a piece of burnt cork for darkening your eyebrows
and eyelashes, and a false moustache that will quite
change your appearance. I will go into the next
room with nurse; when you are dressed you can call,
and I will come back.”
As soon as he was alone Stephen opened
the bag and drew out an attire such as would be worn
by a respectable Peruvian merchant. This he put
on, darkened his eyebrows, and stuck on the moustache,
and acknowledged when he viewed himself in a small
mirror that he should not have known himself.
On his opening the door the girl came in from the other
room again.
“We have talked over, Filippo
and I, the way you had best go, and we both agree
that the journey south would be altogether too dangerous.
It will naturally be supposed that you have gone that
way, and the news will be sent down by horsemen, so
that the troops and the authorities will be on the
look-out for you everywhere. We both think that,
although the journey is very long and toilsome, your
best plan will be to ride straight inland, cross the
Andes, and come down into Brazil. You are not
likely to be questioned on that line, which no one
would imagine that you would be likely to take.
You may meet with adventures on the way, but you English
people are fond of adventures. At any rate that
plan will be safer for you, and indeed for us.”
“Why for you, senorita?”
“If you were to be captured,”
she said, “you would be questioned as to who
aided you, and there are means in these prisons by
which they can wring the truth from the strongest
and bravest. There are tortures, senor, that
flesh and blood could not withstand.”
“You are right, Donna Inez,”
Stephen said gravely. “For myself I should
be ready to run the risk of getting through to the
south, but what you have said decides me. I would
die rather than say a word that could betray you and
your cousin. But no one can say what one would
do under fiendish tortures; therefore I at once accept
your plan.”
“That is right,” the girl
said. “Filippo said that he was sure that
for our sake you would consent to it. Now for
your instructions. Nurse will, in the first place,
take me home; then she will return here; she will be
back in half an hour. She will take away with
her the things that you have worn, and will to-night
cut them up and burn them, so that no trace may remain
of your visit here. When she returns she will
guide you through the town. At a cottage a quarter
of a mile outside a muleteer with two animals is awaiting
you; he does not know who you are, but believes you
to be a Brazilian who has been on this side of the
continent for some years, chiefly in Chili, and so
speak that language, and now, being afraid to proceed
by water, are about to return by the passes. How
far you will be able to get him to accompany you I
cannot say, but at present he has promised to take
you over the Andes. The best course to take then
you can talk over with the muleteer. You will
find many details of the various routes in a letter
Filippo has given him for you. And now adieu,
senor. We shall think of you often, and I shall
pray for your safe return to your friends. Possibly
we may meet again some day, for Filippo has a powerful
relation who, it is expected, may some day be the Spanish
ambassador in London, and he says that he shall try
and get him to take him on his staff.”
“I should indeed be glad if
it could be so, senorita. I shall to the end
of my life entertain the liveliest feelings of gratitude
to you and Don Filippo for your kindness. Have
you a pencil and paper?”
The girl pointed to the table, on
which stood writing materials. Stephen wrote
his father’s address upon it and handed it to
her.
“That is my address in England,”
he said. “I pray you, when you return to
Spain, to beg Don Filippo to write to me there, and
I am sure to get it sooner or later. Directly
I receive his letter I shall make a point of taking
a passage for Spain in order to thank you more fully
and heartily than I can now do. It would be dangerous
were I to write to you here.”
She nodded. “Adieu, senor.”
“Adieu, senorita. May your
life with Don Filippo be as happy as you both deserve!”
He put the hand she gave him to his
lips. A minute later she and her nurse left the
house, and Stephen remained wondering over the events
that had happened.
“It is certainly the best plan,”
he said to himself. “I daresay there will
be lots of hardships to go through, but it will be
a glorious trip. Fancy going down the Amazon
from almost its source to the sea! The senorita
said nothing about money, but Filippo has shown himself
so thoughtful in every other way that I have no doubt
he has not forgotten that for such a journey some
money at least will be required. Happily I am
now in a position to pay anything he may advance me,
so I need not scruple to take it. He told me
that his father was very rich, but that money was very
little good to him in Peru, and that he had a very
handsome allowance, but no means whatever of spending
it, especially in such a place as San Carlos.
I will write him a line or two now, and will give it
to the old woman after I have read his letter.”
He sat down and wrote a note expressive
of his warmest gratitude to Filippo, and concluded:
“In other matters too I am deeply your debtor,
but this fortunately I can, as I told you, discharge
far more easily than I can my debt of gratitude.
As soon as I reach England I will pay in the amount
to a house having connections in Spain, and order them
to have it placed to your account with some good firm
there, with instructions to write to you saying that
they hold it payable to your order. My name will
not be mentioned, so that in case of any accident the
money will not be traceable to me. My other and
greater debt must for ever remain unpaid, but to the
end of my life I shall remain the debtor of you and
Donna Inez. Wishing you both a long life and
every happiness together, I remain always your grateful
friend.”
He folded the letter up and put it
into his pocket, and then waited until he heard the
three knocks on the door. Stephen blew out the
candle, went along the passage to the front door,
opened it, and went out. Without a word the old
woman turned and walked along the street. He followed
at a short distance, and was presently in a busy thoroughfare.
Twenty minutes walking took them beyond the town,
and they presently stopped at a cottage where a candle
was burning in the window.
“This is the house, senor,”
she said, speaking for the first time.
She went up to the door and tapped
at it. It was opened by a man in the attire of
a muleteer.
“This is the senor who will
accompany you, Gomez,” she said. “Now,
senor, my work is done.” And she turned
to go.
“Wait a moment,” he said.
“Gomez has a letter for me, and I want to read
it before I give you a note that I wish you to take
back and to hand to Donna Inez.”
“Here is the letter, senor,” the muleteer
said.
Stephen took it to the light and opened
it. It was a long one, but he skipped the first
part, which was full of directions and hints for the
journey. Running his eye down it fell upon some
figures, and he read: “Gomez will hand
you a bag containing eight hundred dollars. This,
I have no doubt, will be sufficient for your journey
down the Amazon and to pay your passage-money home.
You are heartily welcome to it. Some day, if it
please you, you can pay me back; but if aught befalls
you on your way down do not let the thought of this
paltry debt trouble you in any way. I know not
whether this will ever reach your hands, but pray that
it may do so, and that I may have the satisfaction
of knowing that Inez and I have had some part in saving
the life of a brave English gentleman.” Then
with a few more words of adieu the letter closed.
Stephen had already felt that there
was some money in the pockets of his trousers, and
he now handed his letter to the old woman and pulled
out some gold.
“No,” she said, drawing
back; “I would die to please my young mistress,
but not one penny would I touch from the hand of a
foreign heretic.”
A minute later and she was gone.
The muleteer laughed at her outbreak. “Well,
well,” he said, “how people differ; now,
for my part, when I receive payment for the work of
my mules I care not in the least whether it comes
from a heretic’s pockets or those of a good Catholic.
But I did not know that you Brazilians were heretics,
senor.”
“As a rule we are not,”
Stephen said, “but my case is an exception; I
will tell you more about it on the journey. Callao
is not the town where it is safe to be a heretic.”
“No, indeed,” the muleteer
said with a laugh; “however, it is no business
of mine, senor. A gentleman whose name I know
not, but to whom I was recommended by a cousin of
mine, who is a relation of the old woman who has just
left us, made a bargain with me to take you to the
Amazon or a river running into it. He agreed
to give me my own terms. He paid me a third of
the money in advance, and said that you would pay me
the remainder at the end of the journey. He said
that you were a Brazilian, and spoke Chilian better
than our tongue; though, indeed, they are so much
alike that one passes as well as the other, or did
till this war began. That account of you may
be true or it may not, it is no business whatever
of mine. A man says to me, I want you to carry
a bag of salt to such a place. I agree as to
the terms, and it is no matter to me whether the sack
contains salt or sand as long as the weight is the
same. Your things all came up here to-day, senor-your
wallet, and your sword, and a brace of pistols, a
rifle and a bird gun. You will find everything
right. I understood that it was your wish, for
some reason which was again no business of mine, to
start as soon as you arrived, and I have three mules
standing saddled in the stable if you are ready to
start.”
“I should certainly be glad
to do so, Gomez. I have, as you say, my reasons
for wanting to be off as soon as possible.”
Accordingly the three mules were at
once brought round, the baggage divided between them,
and five minutes later, after blowing out the candle
and locking the door behind him, the muleteer mounted
and rode off with Stephen.