Part 20 (1/2)
There was no answer. The woman drew back. She would have closed the door, but a slim, active figure sprang across the threshold. She shrieked in terror. The new-comer was a Brazilian officer, one of those glittering beings whom she had seen lounging outside the Prindio[1] during her rare visits to the town. She was hoping to greet her Manoel, she half expected to find Marcel, but to be faced by an officer was the last thing she had thought of. In abject fear, she broke into a wild appeal to the Virgin; the officer merely laughed, though not loudly.
”Be not afraid, senhora--I am a friend,” he said with quiet confidence, and the fact that he addressed her so courteously was a wondrously soothing thing in itself. But he raised a fresh wave of dread in her soul when he peered into the cabin and spoke words she did not understand.
”I think you are here, mademoiselle,” he said in French. ”I am come to share your retreat for a little while. Perchance by daybreak I may arrive at some plan. At present, you and I are in difficulties, is it not?”
Iris recognized the voluble, jerky speech. A wild foreboding gripped her heart until she was like to shudder under its fierce anguish.
”You, Captain San Benavides?” she asked, and her utterance was unnaturally calm.
”I, mademoiselle,” he said, ”and, alas! I am alone. May I come in?
It is not well to show a light at this hour, seeing that the island is overrun with infuriated soldiers.”
The concluding sentence was addressed to Luisa Gomez in Portuguese.
Realizing instinctively that the man came as a friend, she stood aside, trembling, on the verge of tears. He entered, and the door was closed behind him. The yellow gleam of the lamp fell on his smart uniform, and gilded the steel scabbard of his sword. In that dim interior the signs of his three days' sojourn on Grand-pere were not in evidence, and he had not been harmed during the struggle on the main road or in the rush for the launch.
He doffed his rakish-looking kepi and bowed low before Iris. Perhaps the white misery in her face touched him more deeply than he had counted on. Be that as it may, a note of genuine sympathy vibrated in his voice as he said:
”I am the only man who escaped, mademoiselle. The others? Well, it is war, and war is a lottery.”
”Do you mean that they have been killed, all killed?” she murmured with a pitiful sob.
”I--I think so.”
”You . . . think? Do you not know?”
He sighed. His hand sought an empty cigarette case. Such was the correct military air, he fancied--to treat misfortunes rather as jests.
He frowned because the case was empty, but smiled at Iris.
”It is so hard, mademoiselle, when one speaks these things in a strange tongue. Permit me to explain that which has arrived. We encountered a picket, and surprised it. Having secured some weapons and accouterments, we hastened to the quay, where was moored the little steams.h.i.+p. Unhappily, she was crowded with soldiers. They fired, and there was a short fight. I was knocked down, and, what do you call it?--_etourdi_--while one might count ten. I rose, half blinded, and what do I see? The vessel leaving the quay--full of men engaged in combat, while, just beyond the point, a wars.h.i.+p is signaling her arrival. It was a Brazilian wars.h.i.+p, mademoiselle. She showed two red rockets followed by a white one. It was only a matter of minutes before she met the little steams.h.i.+p. I tell you that it was bad luck, that--a vile blow. I was angry, yes. I stamp my foot and say foolish things. Then I run!”
Iris made no reply. She hid her face in her hands. She could frame no more questions. San Benavides was trying to tell her that Hozier and the rest had been overwhelmed by fate at the very instant escape seemed to be within reach. The Brazilian, probably because of difficulties that beset him in using a foreign language, did not make it clear that he had flung himself flat in the dust when he heard the order to fire given by someone on board the launch. He said nothing of a tragic incident wherein Marcel, shot through the lungs, fell over him, and he, San Benavides, mistaking the convict for an a.s.sailant, wrestled furiously with a dying man. He even forgot to state that had he charged home with the others, he would either have met a bullet or gained the deck of the launch, and that his failure to reach the vessel was due to his own careful self-respect. For San Benavides was not a coward. He could be brave spectacularly, but he had no stomach for a fight in the dark, when stark hazard chooses some to triumph and some to die. That sort of devilish courage might be well enough for those crude sailors; a Portuguese gentleman of high lineage and proved mettle demanded a worthier field for his deeds of derring-do. Saperlotte! If one had a cigarette one could talk more fluently!
”Believe me, mademoiselle,” he went on, speaking with a proud humility that was creditable to his powers as an actor, ”the tears came to my eyes when I understood what had happened. For myself, what do I care?
I would gladly have given my life to save my brave companions. But I thought of you, solitary, waiting here in distress, so I hurried into the village, and my uniform secured me from interruption until I was able to leave the road and cross the hills.”
Then the lightning of a woman's intuition pierced the abyss of despair.
Surely there were curious blanks in this thrilling narrative. As was her way when thoroughly aroused, Iris stood up and seized San Benavides almost roughly by the arm. Her distraught eyes searched his face with a pathetic earnestness.
”Why do you think that the launch did not get away?” she cried. ”It was dark. The moon might have been in shadow. If the launch met the wars.h.i.+p and was seen, there must have been firing----”
”Chere mademoiselle, there was much firing,” he protested.
”At sea?”
The words came dully. She was stricken again, even more shrewdly. The gloom was closing in on her, yet she forced herself to drag the truth from his unwilling lips.
”Yes. Of course, I could not wait there in that open place. I was compelled to seek shelter. Troops were running from town and citadel.
I avoided them by a miracle. And my sole concern then was your safety.”