Part 16 (1/2)
Father Esteban's face lightened.
”I only ask because I think you would have known it. Thank you for the a.s.surance all the same, and in return I promise you I will use my best endeavors with the Comandante for your friend the Captain Bunker. Adieu, my daughter. Adieu, Madame Markham,” he said, as, taking the arm of Don Miguel, he turned with him and the doctor towards the guard-room. The secretary lingered behind for a moment.
”Fear nothing,” he said, in whispered English to Miss Keene. ”I, Ruy Sanchez, shall make you free of Capitano Bunker's cell,” and pa.s.sed on.
”Well,” said Mrs. Markham, when the two women were alone again. ”I don't pretend to fathom the befogged brains of Todos Santos; but as far as I can understand their grown-up child's play, they are making believe this unfortunate Mr. Hurlstone, who may be dead for all we know, is in revolt against the United States Government, which is supposed to be represented by Senor Perkins and the Excelsior--think of that!”
”But Perkins signed himself of the Quinquinambo navy!” said Miss Keene wonderingly.
”That is firmly believed by those idiots to be one of OUR States.
Remember they know nothing of what has happened anywhere in the last fifty years. I dare say they never heard of filibusters like Perkins, and they couldn't comprehend him if they had. I've given up trying to enlighten them, and I think they're grateful for it. It makes their poor dear heads ache.”
”And it is turning mine! But, for Heaven's sake, tell me what part I am supposed to act in this farce!” said Miss Keene.
”You are the friend and colleague of Hurlstone, don't you see?” said Mrs. Markham. ”You are two beautiful young patriots--don't blush, my dear!--endeared to each other and a common cause, and ready to die for your country in opposition to Perkins, and the faint-heartedness of such neutrals as Mrs. Brimmer, Miss Chubb, the poor Captain, and all the men whom they have packed off to San Antonio.”
”Impossible!” said Miss Keene, yet with an uneasy feeling that it not only was possible, but that she herself had contributed something to the delusion. ”But how do they account for my friends.h.i.+p with YOU--you, who are supposed to be a correspondent--an accomplice of Perkins?”
”No, no,” returned Mrs. Markham, with a half serious smile, ”I am not allowed that honor. I am presumed to be only the disconsolate Dulcinea of Perkins, abandoned by HIM, pitied by you, and converted to the true faith--at least, that is what I make out from the broken English of that little secretary of the Commander.”
Miss Keene winced.
”That's all my fault, dear,” she said, suddenly entwining her arms round Mrs. Markham, and hiding her half embarra.s.sed smile on the shoulder of her strong-minded friend; ”they suggested it to me, and I half a.s.sented, to save you. Please forgive me.”
”Don't think I am blaming you, my dear Eleanor,” said Mrs. Markham. ”For Heaven's sake a.s.sent to the wildest and most extravagant hypothesis they can offer, if it will leave us free to arrange our own plans for getting away. I begin to think we were not a very harmonious party on the Excelsior, and most of our troubles here are owing to that. We forget we have fallen among a lot of original saints, as guileless and as unsophisticated as our first parents, who know nothing of our customs and antecedents. They have accepted us on what they believe to be our own showing. From first to last we've underrated them, forgetting they are in the majority. We can't expect to correct the ignorance of fifty years in twenty-four hours, and I, for one, sha'n't attempt it. I'd much rather trust to the character those people would conceive of me from their own consciousness than to one Mrs. Brimmer or Mr. Winslow would give of me. From this moment I've taken a firm resolve to leave my reputation and the reputation of my friends entirely in their hands.
If you are wise you will do the same. They are inclined to wors.h.i.+p you--don't hinder them. My belief is, if we only take things quietly, we might find worse places to be stranded on than Todos Santos. If Mrs.
Brimmer and those men of ours, who, I dare say, have acted as silly as the Mexicans themselves, will only be quiet, we can have our own way here yet.”
”And poor Captain Bunker?” said Miss Keene.
”It seems hard to say it, but, in my opinion, he is better under lock and key, for everybody's good, at present. He'd be a firebrand in the town if he got away. Meantime, let us go to our room. It is about the time when everybody is taking a siesta, and for two hours, thank Heaven!
we're certain nothing more can happen.”
”I'll join you in a moment,” said Miss Keene.
Her quick ear had caught the sound of voices approaching. As Mrs.
Markham disappeared in the pa.s.sage, the Commander and his party reappeared from the guard-room, taking leave of Padre Esteban. The secretary, as he pa.s.sed Miss Keene, managed to add to his formal salutation the whispered words,--”When the Angelus rings I will await you before the grating of his prison.”
Padre Esteban was too preoccupied to observe this incident. As soon as he quitted the Presidio, he hastened to the Mission with a disquieting fear that his strange guest might have vanished. But, crossing the silent refectory, and opening the door of the little apartment, he was relieved to find him stretched on the pallet in a profound slumber.
The peacefulness of the venerable walls had laid a gentle finger on his weary eyelids.
The Padre glanced round the little cell, and back again at the handsome suffering face that seemed to have found surcease and rest in the narrow walls, with a stirring of regret. But the next moment he awakened the sleeper, and in the briefest, almost frigid, sentences, related the events of the morning.
The young man rose to his feet with a bitter laugh.