Part 29 (1/2)

”I suppose they pay me the respect of considering me a friend of the old priest. So be it! I hope they will let the responsibility fall on me alone.”

”The Padre is already proscribed as one of the Council,” said Senor Perkins quietly.

”Do you mean to say,” said Hurlstone impetuously, ”that you will permit a hair of that innocent old man's head to be harmed by those wretches?”

”You are generous but hasty, my friend,” said Senor Perkins, in gentle deprecation. ”Allow me to put your question in another way. Ask me if I intend to perpetuate the Catholic Church in Todos Santos by adding another martyr to its roll, and I will tell you--No! I need not say that I am equally opposed to any proceedings against Banks, Crosby, and yourself, for diplomatic reasons, apart from the kindly memories of our old a.s.sociations on this s.h.i.+p. I have therefore been obliged to return to the excellent Martinez his little list, with the remark that I should hold HIM personally responsible if any of you are molested. There is, however, no danger. Messrs. Banks and Crosby are with the other Americans, whom we have guaranteed to protect, at the Mission, in the care of your friend the Padre. You are surprised! Equally so was the Padre. Had you delayed your departure an hour you would have met them, and I should have been debarred the pleasure of your company.

”By to-morrow,” continued Perkins, placing the tips of his fingers together reflectively, ”the Government of Todos Santos will have changed hands, and without bloodshed. You look incredulous! My dear young friend, it has been a part of my professional pride to show the world that these revolutions can be accomplished as peacefully as our own changes of administration. But for a few infelicitous accidents, this would have been the case of the late liberation of Quinquinambo. The only risk run is to myself--the leader, and that is as it should be. But all this personal explanation is, doubtless, uninteresting to you, my young friend. I meant only to say that, if you prefer not to remain here, you can accompany me when I leave the s.h.i.+p at nine o'clock with a small reconnoitring party, and I will give you safe escort back to your friends at the Mission.”

This amicable proposition produced a sudden revulsion of feeling in Hurlstone. To return to those people from whom he was fleeing, in what was scarcely yet a serious emergency, was not to be thought of! Yet, where could he go? How could he be near enough to a.s.sist HER without again openly casting his lot among them? And would they not consider his return an act of cowardice? He could not restrain a gesture of irritation as he rose impatiently to his feet.

”You are agitated, my dear fellow. It is not unworthy of your youth; but, believe me, it is unnecessary,” said Perkins, in his most soothing manner. ”Sit down. You have an hour yet to make your decision. If you prefer to remain, you will accompany the s.h.i.+p to Todos Santos and join me.”

”I don't comprehend you,” interrupted Hurlstone suspiciously.

”I forgot,” said Perkins, with a bland smile, ”that you are unaware of our plan of campaign. After communicating with the insurgents, I land here with a small force to a.s.sist them. I do this to antic.i.p.ate any action and prevent the interference of the Mexican coaster, now due, which always touches here through ignorance of the channel leading to the Bay of Todos Santos and the Presidio. I then send the Excelsior, that does know the channel, to Todos Santos, to appear before the Presidio, take the enemy in flank, and cooperate with us. The arrival of the Excelsior there is the last move of this little game, if I may so call it: it is 'checkmate to the King,' the clerical Government of Todos Santos.”

A little impressed, in spite of himself, with the calm forethought and masterful security of the Senor, Hurlstone thanked him with a greater show of respect than he had hitherto evinced. The Senor looked gratified, but unfortunately placed that respect the next moment in peril.

”You were possibly glancing over these verses,” he said, with a hesitating and almost awkward diffidence, indicating the ma.n.u.script Hurlstone had just thrown aside. ”It is merely the first rough draft of a little tribute I had begun to a charming friend. I sometimes,” he interpolated, with an apologetic smile, ”trifle with the Muse. Perhaps I ought not to use the word 'trifle' in connection with a composition of a threnodial and dirge-like character,” he continued deprecatingly.

”Certainly not in the presence of a gentleman as accomplished and educated as yourself, to whom recreation of this kind is undoubtedly familiar. My occupations have been, unfortunately, of a nature not favorable to the indulgence of verse. As a college man yourself, my dear sir, you will probably forgive the lucubrations of an old graduate of William and Mary's, who has forgotten his 'ars poetica.' The verses you have possibly glanced at are crude, I am aware, and perhaps show the difficulty of expressing at once the dictates of the heart and the brain. They refer to a dear friend now at peace. You have perhaps, in happier and more careless hours, heard me speak of Mrs. Euphemia M'Corkle, of Illinois?”

Hurlstone remembered indistinctly to have heard, even in his reserved exclusiveness on the Excelsior, the current badinage of the pa.s.sengers concerning Senor Perkins' extravagant adulation of this unknown poetess.

As a part of the staple monotonous humor of the voyage, it had only disgusted him. With a feeling that he was unconsciously sharing the burlesque relief of the pa.s.sengers, he said, with a polite attempt at interest,

”Then the lady is--no more?”

”If that term can be applied to one whose work is immortal,” corrected Senor Perkins gently. ”All that was finite of this gifted woman was lately forwarded by Adams's Express Company from San Juan, to receive sepulture among her kindred at Keokuk, Iowa.”

”Did she say she was from that place?” asked Hurlstone, with half automatic interest.

”The Consul says she gave that request to the priest.”

”Then you were not with her when she died?” said Hurlstone absently.

”I was NEVER with her, neither then nor before,” returned Senor Perkins gravely. Seeing Hurlstone's momentary surprise, he went on, ”The late Mrs. M'Corkle and I never met--we were personally unknown to each other.

You may have observed the epithet 'unmet' in the first line of the first stanza; you will then understand that the privation of actual contact with this magnetic soul would naturally impart more difficulty into elegiac expression.”

”Then you never really saw the lady you admire?” said Hurlstone vacantly.

”Never. The story is a romantic one,” said Perkins, with a smile that was half complacent and yet half embarra.s.sed. ”May I tell it to you?

Thanks. Some three years ago I contributed some verses to the columns of a Western paper edited by a friend of mine. The subject chosen was my favorite one, 'The Liberation of Mankind,' in which I may possibly have expressed myself with some poetic fervor on a theme so dear to my heart.

I may remark without vanity, that it received high encomiums--perhaps at some more opportune moment you may be induced to cast your eyes over a copy I still retain--but no praise touched me as deeply as a tribute in verse in another journal from a gifted unknown, who signed herself 'Euphemia.' The subject of the poem, which was dedicated to myself, was on the liberation of women--from--er--I may say certain domestic shackles; treated perhaps vaguely, but with grace and vigor. I replied a week later in a larger poem, recording more fully my theories and aspirations regarding a struggling Central American confederacy, addressed to 'Euphemia.' She rejoined with equal elaboration and detail, referring to a more definite form of tyranny in the relations of marriage, and alluding with some feeling to uncongenial experiences of her own. An instinct of natural delicacy, veiled under the hyperbole of 'want of s.p.a.ce,' prevented my editorial friend from encouraging the repet.i.tion of this charming interchange of thought and feeling. But I procured the fair stranger's address; we began a correspondence, at once imaginative and sympathetic in expression, if not always poetical in form. I was called to South America by the Macedonian cry of 'Quinquinambo!' I still corresponded with her. When I returned to Quinquinambo I received letters from her, dated from San Francisco. I feel that my words could only fail, my dear Hurlstone, to convey to you the strength and support I derived from those impa.s.sioned breathings of aid and sympathy at that time. Enough for me to confess that it was mainly due to the deep womanly interest that SHE took in the fortunes of the pa.s.sengers of the Excelsior that I gave the Mexican authorities early notice of their whereabouts. But, pardon me,”--he stopped hesitatingly, with a slight flush, as he noticed the utterly inattentive face and att.i.tude of Hurlstone,--”I am boring you. I am forgetting that this is only important to myself,” he added, with a sigh. ”I only intended to ask your advice in regard to the disposition of certain ma.n.u.scripts and effects of hers, which are unconnected with our acquaintance. I thought, perhaps, I might entrust them to your delicacy and consideration. They are here, if you choose to look them over; and here is also what I believe to be a daguerreotype of the lady herself, but in which I fail to recognize her soul and genius.”

He laid a bundle of letters and a morocco case on the table with a carelessness that was intended to hide a slight shade of disappointment in his face--and rose.

”I beg your pardon,” said Hurlstone, in confused and remorseful apology; ”but I frankly confess that my thoughts WERE preoccupied. Pray forgive me. If you will leave these papers with me, I promise to devote myself to them another time.”