Myra was infinitely glad to escape,
and she flung herself down in a chair with a sigh
that was half a sob when she reached her bedroom.
“You may go, Dolores,”
she said, and motioned away the old woman, who had
been murmuring congratulations.
“Si, maestra, buena maestra,”
said Dolores smilingly, as she withdrew.
“’Maestra?’ That
means ‘mistress,’” ruminated Myra.
“In what sense is it used? He used the
word when he addressed his men after the mock-marriage.
‘Nueva maestra,’ I think he called me.
That must mean ‘new mistress.’
His new mistress! How many mistresses have there
been and what is going to happen to me?
... Oh, why didn’t Tony play the man!”
Time passed and the suspense was becoming
almost unbearable when the sound of heavy footsteps
in the rocky corridor made Myra’s heart jump
convulsively. She started to her feet as the
door opened to reveal Don Carlos, still wearing his
cowl. Behind him were Garcilaso and Mendoza
with Standish, now fully dressed and with a bandage
round his eyes, between them.
“Does the Senora Cojuelo wish
to say farewell to the lover who renounced her?”
inquired Don Carlos, with a note of mockery in his
voice. “I am now about to redeem my promise
and have him escorted back unharmed to the Castillo
de Ruiz.”
“Why are his eyes bandaged?”
asked Myra sharply. “What has happened
to him?”
“Nothing has happened,”
Don Carlos assured her. “The bandage is
merely a precautionary measure. He was brought
here blindfolded, so that he might have no idea as
to the location of my mountain nest. He leaves
blindfolded for the same reason. Don Carlos de
Ruiz will follow him when I so choose. Have
you anything to say to Senor Standish?”
“Nothing,” answered Myra, after a moment
of hesitation.
“Myra, if only ”
said Standish hoarsely, and paused, gulping as if
he were choking. “I suppose it isn’t
any use attempting to say anything,” he added
weakly.
“Except farewell,” remarked
Don Carlos ironically, and laid his hand on Myra’s
arm. “Permit me to escort you to the door,
senora mia, to witness the departure of Senor
Standish.”
In the wake of Standish and his escort,
he led Myra along the corridor to the outer hall,
and Myra, her senses acute, watched him closely as
he manipulated knobs which looked like part of the
rocky wall and the great door that looked like rock
itself swung open.
“Lead the English senor forward
carefully, and remember I have pledged my word that
he shall be returned safely to the castle of Don Carlos
de Ruiz,” said Don Carlos in Spanish.
“Farewell, senor,” he added in English.
“You will have great stories to tell on your
return to England of your encounter with El Diablo
Cojuelo and how you escaped from him!”
Standish’s face contorted in
momentary passion, then with a sigh and a gesture
of utter despair he submitted himself to be led away
by Mendoza and Garcilaso. Myra, her face tense
and white, took an involuntary step forward, and instantly
Don Carlos’s hand closed on her arm.
“You forget, dear lady, that
you are the price of his freedom, and your place is
with your husband,” he said, as he drew her back
into the hall and touched a lever which released the
door.
To Myra the clang of the door as it
shut seemed like a death-knell.
Don Carlos took off his cowl and flung
it aside, smoothed his jet-black hair with his hands,
and drew a long breath. His eyes and expression
were inscrutable as he gazed fixedly at Myra.
“Exit Mr. Antony Standish,”
he said slowly, after a pause. “One chapter
of your life is closed, Myra. Now another opens,
the most wonderful chapter of all, in which you will
fulfil your destiny.”
Myra suddenly found herself cold and
trembling, and to gain time and avoid Don Carlos’s
eyes she crossed the room to the radiator and held
out her shaking hands to its warmth.
“Are you frightened, Myra mine?”
asked Don Carlos gently crossing to her side.
“Are you still afraid of love?”
“If this is your idea of love,
I hate it!” responded Myra with sudden passion.
“You have humiliated me until I feel that I
am less than the dust. What greater humiliation
could you inflict on any woman than to prove to her
that the man who professed to love her would surrender
her to a bandit? You have humiliated me as much
as Tony Standish, and perhaps you have further humiliations
in store.”
“If you have a sense of proportion,
you should thank me instead of reproaching me for
proving Standish to be at heart a knave,” Don
Carlos retorted, the hard note creeping into his voice
again. “If you tell me you still love
him, and prefer him to me, I will send you back to
him at once. Can you truthfully say that you
still love him and would marry him if you were free?”
Myra shook her red-gold head despairingly,
and sank down into a corner of the couch with a sigh.
“If he were the only man on
earth, I would not marry him now,” she answered.
“But that does not alter the case or excuse
your conduct.”
“I do not understand, Myra,”
said Don Carlos. “It was only because you
had promised to marry Standish that you hardened your
heart against love and me. You have surrendered
to love now, at last, and ”
“I have not,” interrupted
Myra. “I hate you for what has happened.”
“Yet, hating me, you have become
my wife,” Don Carlos commented, with an air
of perplexity.
“I am not your wife,”
protested Myra. “You have fooled me before,
but you cannot fool me into believing that the farcical
service, gabbled in a language I do not understand
by one of your men masquerading as a monk, constitutes
a marriage.”
“Padre Sancho is an ordained
priest. The ceremony was not a farce. You
are now my wife the wife of El Diablo Cojuelo,
the outlaw. Later on, when you marry Don Carlos if
Don Carlos still desires you you shall
have a more elaborate ceremony, if you wish it, and
you will be doubly married without being a bigamist.”
There came an interruption at that
moment. Madre Dolores appeared, murmuring apologies,
with a tall glass of wine in her skinny hand, and
seemingly made some appeal to Don Carlos.
“Myra, some of my men are holding
festival to celebrate our marriage, and they have
sent Mother Dolores to ask us to do them the honour
of taking wine with them and allowing them to toast
us,” Don Carlos explained. “It would
be a gracious act, which will endear you to all my
men, to consent.”
“But I have told you I cannot
believe the marriage ceremony was other than a farce,”
objected Myra. “Is this another trick to
humiliate me and make it appear I have surrendered?”
“Again you misjudge me,”
replied Don Carlos abruptly. “It is a
compliment, and should be proof to you that my men
know the marriage ceremony was no farce. They
will take it as an affront if you refuse their invitation.”
“What does that matter to me?”
exclaimed Myra rebelliously.
Don Carlos’s brows drew together and he looked
chagrined.
“Tell the men, Mother Dolores,
that the senora is either as lacking in courage as
the Englishman, or considers them such a gang of cut-throat
ruffians, that she cannot be persuaded to nerve herself
to face them,” he said, addressing the old woman.
“Tell them she is aware she is affronting them
and ”
“How dare you suggest I am a
coward?” interrupted Myra, starting to her feet.
“Tell them nothing of the sort, Dolores.
I am not afraid to face them ”
“So we will be graciously pleased
to accept the invitation,” added Don Carlos
as she paused.
“Yes,” said Myra.
“Otherwise, I suppose, you will taunt me with
being a coward.”
“I think I managed that rather
cleverly, Myra,” Don Carlos said, his face crinkling
into a mischievous smile. “I thought you
would not notice that I was giving my instructions
to Mother Dolores in English, of which she scarcely
understands a word!”
Myra crimsoned in annoyance, but she
made no retort, nor did she offer any protest when
Don Carlos, after a few words of thanks to the puzzled
Dolores, who scurried away, drew her hand through his
arm and led her through the corridors to the great
cave.
Dolores had spread the news of their
coming, and every man was on his feet, glass or flagon
in hand. Myra and Don Carlos were each handed
a tall glass of wine, and the band drank their health
with enthusiasm, shouting all sorts of good wishes.
Don Carlos toasted them in turn, drained his glass,
and called to Myra to follow his example.
“Drink to me and to love, Myra mine,”
he cried.
Myra was so confused by the shouting
and by the men pressing around with uplifted glasses
and flagons that she scarcely knew what she was doing
and hurriedly swallowed the wine.
“Thank you, beloved,”
said Don Carlos, drawing her hand into the crook of
his arm again. “We will go now.”
Through the corridors they went again,
and Myra’s heart seemed to miss a beat as he
paused at her bedroom and opened the door. She
looked up at him with dread and appeal in her dilated
blue eyes, to see him smiling exultantly.
“Mine! Mine at last, Myra!”
he said in a low, vibrant voice, as he slipped his
arm around her waist and drew her into the room.
“The hour for which I have waited and craved.”
“Don Carlos, is it useless to
appeal to you to let me go?” gasped Myra.
“Surely I have suffered enough without without this ?”
“Darling, why should you fear
love now?” responded Don Carlos tenderly, enfolding
her in his arms. “Let me fire your heart
with the burning ardour of my passion. I have
won you, and I swore I would, and I claim my reward.
Myra, mia, I want you want you!”
His dark eyes were ablaze with ardour,
his lean face was flushed, and his breath was coming
and going pantingly as he crushed Myra to him and
kissed her until his kisses seemed to be burning her
very Soul and her senses were reeling. All power
of resistance had gone from her. She felt dazedly
as if she were encompassed by flames and no hope of
escape. She was conquered....
Languidly Myra opened her eyes and
sat up with an involuntary cry of consternation, for
she could see nothing, and the terrifying thought
flashed through her mind that she had gone blind.
Then she remembered that the rocky apartment was
dark as a tomb when the electric lights were not burning,
and she groped for the switch.
As the lights sprang to life, realisation
of what had happened burned its way into her horrified
consciousness, and a burning blush stained her pale,
lovely face. She was alone in the bedroom, but
she knew instinctively that she had not been alone
for long. Her hands went convulsively to her
breast, and she shuddered violently and moaned in
anguish.
Then followed anger fierce,
passionate fury against the man who had imposed his
will on her, and with clenched fists she beat the pillow
on which she knew his head had rested. The fury
of rage speedily exhausted itself, and Myra buried
her face in her hands and sobbed fearlessly.
“He will come back,” she
thought distractedly. “He will come back
to make mock of me, to gloat over me. Oh, if
only I could get away! If only I could die!”
She sprang out of bed and began to
dress in frantic haste, starting at every sound.
She could not have explained what she intended to
do or the reason for her haste. All she knew
was that she must get out of the bedroom before Don
Carlos returned.
Her hurried toilet completed, Myra
with trembling fingers cautiously opened the bedroom
door and peeped out. The rocky corridor was
deserted, no sound came from the great cave, and the
whole place seemed almost uncannily silent.
With an effort of will Myra mastered her panic and
tiptoed silently along the corridor towards the outer
hall.
The corridor was lighted, but she
found the hall, when she reached it, in darkness,
save for one tiny light above the electric switch on
the wall near the entrance. Myra pressed the
switch and at once the apartment was flooded with
light.
“Oh, God, help me to remember!”
breathed Myra, after a swift glance around, to assure
herself the place was untenanted. “Help
me to get away if only it is to die among
the mountains.”
She had watched Don Carlos closely
a few hours previously as he manipulated the levers
which opened the secret door when giving Standish
his freedom, and the thought had flashed into her mind
that she could manipulate the levers as he had done,
and escape into the outer world.
Her first attempt was a failure, and
she bit her lips in chagrin and hurt her delicate
hands tugging vainly at various knobs and slides.
But again and again she tried, and at last, when she
was about to give up in despair, she heard a sudden
click and the great door swung open!