Part 39 (1/2)

Before my mind arose a scene: Manuel, the night before, pulled out of the water into a boat--raging, half-drowned, eloquent, inspired. The contemptible beast _was_ inspired, as a politician is, a demagogue.

He could sway his fellows, as I had heard enough to know. And I felt a slight chill on the warmth of my hope, because that bright sail, brilliantly and furtively dodging along in our wake, must be the product of Manuel's inspiration, urged to perseverance by the fear of O'Brien.

The mate continued, staring knowingly at it:

”You know I am putting two and two together, like the old maids that come to see my aunt when they want to take away a woman's character.

The Dagos are out and no mistake. The question is, Why? You must know whether those schooners can sail anything; but don't forget the old _Lion_ is pretty smart. Is it likely they'll attempt the s.h.i.+p again?”

I negatived that at once. I explained to Sebright that the store of ammunition in Rio Medio would not run to it; that the _Lugarenos_ were cowardly, divided by faction, incapable, by themselves, of combining for any length of time, and still less of following a plan requiring perseverance and hardihood.

”They can't mean anything in the nature of open attack,” I affirmed.

”They may have attempted something of the sort in Nichols' time, but it isn't in their nature.”

Sebright said that was practically Castro's opinion, too--except that Castro had emphasized his remarks by spitting all the time, ”like an old tomcat. He seems a very spiteful man, with no great love for you, Mr.

Kemp. Do you think it safe to have him about you? What are all these grievances of his?”

Castro seemed to have spouted his bile like a volcano, and had rather confused Sebright. He had said much about being a friend of the Spanish lord--Carlos; and that now he had no place on earth to hide his head.

”As far as I could make out, he's wanted in England,” said Sebright, ”for some matter of a stolen watch, years ago in Liverpool, I think. And your cousin, the grandee, was mixed up in that, too. That sounds funny; you didn't tell us about that. Damme if he didn't seem to imply that you, too... But you have never been in Liverpool. Of course not....”

But that had not been precisely Castro's point. He had affirmed he had enemies in Spain; he shuddered at the idea of going to France, and now my English fancifulness had made it impossible for him to live in Rio Medio, where he had had the care of a good _pad-rona_.

”I suppose he means a landlady,” Sebright chuckled. ”Old but good, he says. He expected to die there in peace, a good Christian. And what's that about the priests getting hold of his very last bit of silver? I must say that sounded truest of all his rigmarole. For the salvation of his soul, I suppose?”

”No, my cousin's soul,” I said gloomily.

”Humbugs. I only understood one word in three.”

Just then Tomas himself stalked into sight among the men forward. Coming round the corner of the deck-house, he stopped at the galley door like a crow outside a hut, waiting. We watched him getting a light for his cigarette at the galley door with much dignified pantomime. The negro cook of the _Lion_, holding out to him in the doorway a live coal in a pair of tongs, turned his Ethiopian face and white ivories towards a group of sailors lost in the contemplation of the proceedings.' And, when Castro had pa.s.sed them, spurting jets of smoke, they swung about to look after his short figure, upon whose draped blackness the sunlight brought out reddish streaks as if bucketfuls of rusty water had been thrown over him from hat to toe. The end of his broken plume hung forward aggressively.

”Look how the fellow struts! Night and thunder! Hey, Don Tenebroso!

Would your wors.h.i.+p hasten hither....” Sebright hailed jocularly.

Castro, without altering his pace, came up to us.

”What do you think of her now?” asked Sebright, pointing to the strange sail. ”She's grown a bit plainer, now she is out of the glare.”

Castro, wrapping his chin, stood still, face to the sea. After a long while:

”Malediction,” he p.r.o.nounced slowly, and without moving his head shot a sidelong glance at me.

”It's clear enough how _he_ feels about our friends over there.

Malediction. Just so. Very proper. But it seems as though he had a bone to pick with all the world,” drawled Sebright, a little sleepily.

Then, resuming his briskness, he bantered, ”So you don't want to go to England, Mr. Castro? No friends there? _Sus. per col._, and that sort of thing?”

Castro, contemptuous, staring straight away, nodded impatiently.

”But this gentleman you are so devoted to is going to England--to his friends.”

Castro's arms shook under the mantle falling all round him straight from the neck. His whole body seemed convulsed. From his puckered dark lips issued a fiendish and derisive squeal.