Part 10 (2/2)

Still, it was not for him to object. That the G.o.ds had found fit to send her there was, to Roddy, sufficient in itself, and he was extremely grateful. But that fact was too apparent. Though he was unconscious of it, the pleasure in his eyes was evident. He still was too startled to conceal his admiration.

The girl frowned, her slight, boyish figure grew more erect.

”My name is Rojas,” she said. ”My father is General Rojas. I was told you wished to help him, and last night I sent you a note asking you to meet me here.”

She spoke in even, matter-of-fact tones. As she spoke she regarded Roddy steadily. When, the night before, Inez had sent the note, she had been able only to guess as to what manner of man it might be with whom she was making a rendezvous at daybreak, in a lonely road. And she had been more than anxious. Now that she saw him she recognized the type and was rea.s.sured. But that he was worthy of the secret she wished to confide in him she had yet to determine. As she waited for him to disclose himself she was to all outward appearances tranquilly studying him. But inwardly her heart was trembling, and it was with real relief that, when she told him her name, she saw his look of admiration disappear, and in his eyes come pity and genuine feeling.

”Oh!” gasped Roddy unhappily, his voice filled with concern. ”Oh, I am sorry!”

The girl slightly inclined her head.

”I came to ask you,” she began, speaking with abrupt directness, ”what you propose to do?”

It was a most disconcerting question. Not knowing what he proposed to do, Roddy, to gain time, slipped to the ground and, hat in hand, moved close to the pommel of her saddle. As he did not answer, the girl spoke again, this time in a tone more kindly. ”And to ask why you wish to help us?”

As though carefully considering his reply, Roddy scowled, but made no answer. In a flash it had at last come to him that what to Peter and to himself had seemed a most fascinating game was to others a struggle, grim and momentous. He recognized that until now General Rojas had never been to him a flesh-and-blood person, that he had not appreciated that his rescue meant actual life and happiness. He had considered him rather as one of the pieces in a game of chess, which Peter and himself were secretly playing against the Commandant of the San Carlos prison. And now, here, confronting him, was a human being, living, breathing, suffering, the daughter of this chessman, bone of his bone, flesh of his flesh, demanding of the stranger by what right he made himself her father's champion, by what right he pushed himself into the tragedy of the Rojas family. In his embarra.s.sment Roddy decided desperately to begin at the very beginning, to tell the exact truth, to omit nothing, and then to throw himself upon the mercy of the court.

The gray mist of the morning had lifted. Under the first warm rays of the sun, like objects developing on a photographer's plate, the cactus points stood out sharp and clear, the branches of the orange trees separated, a.s.suming form and outline, the cl.u.s.ters of fruit took on a faint touch of yellow. From the palace yard in distant Willemstad there drifted toward them the boom of the morning gun.

With his reins over his arm, his sombrero crumpled in his hands, his face lifted to the face of the girl, Roddy stood in the road at attention, like a trooper reporting to his superior officer.

”We were in the tea-house of the Hundred and One Steps,” said Roddy.

”We called ourselves the White Mice.”

Speaking quickly he brought his story down to the present moment. When he had finished, Inez, who had been bending toward him, straightened herself in the saddle and sat rigidly erect. Her lips and brows were drawn into two level lines, her voice came to him from an immeasurable distance.

”Then it was a joke?” she said.

”A joke!” cried Roddy hotly. ”That's most unfair. If you will only give us permission we'll prove to you that it is no joke. Perhaps, as I told it, it sounded heartless. I told it badly. What could I say--that I am sorry? Could I, a stranger, offer sympathy to you? But we _are_ sorry. Ever since Peter proposed it, ever since I saw your father----”

The girl threw herself forward, trembling. Her eyes opened wide.

”You saw my father!” she exclaimed. ”Tell me,” she begged, ”did he look well? Did he speak to you? When did you--” she stopped suddenly, and turning her face from him, held her arm across her eyes.

”It was four months ago,” said Roddy. ”I was not allowed to speak to him. We bowed to each other. That was all.”

”I must tell them,” cried the girl, ”they must know that I have seen some one who has seen him. But if they know I have seen you----”

She paused; as though asking advice she looked questioningly at Roddy.

He shook his head.

”I don't understand,” he said.

”My mother and sister don't know that I am here,” Inez told him. ”If they did they would be very angry. No one,” she added warningly, ”must know. They are afraid of you. They cannot understand why you offer to help us. And they mistrust you. That is why I had to see you here in this way.” With a shrug of distaste the girl glanced about her.

”Fortunately,” she added, ”you understand.”

”Why, yes,” Roddy a.s.sented doubtfully. ”I understand your doing what _you_ did, but I don't understand the others. Who is it,” he asked, ”who mistrusts me? Who,” he added smiling, ”besides yourself?”

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