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-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 43716 ***
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 43716 ***
THE ADVENTURERS
@@ -12207,5 +12207,4 @@ THE END.
End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Adventurers, by Gustave Aimard
-
*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 43716 ***
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Adventurers, by Gustave Aimard
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: The Adventurers
-
-Author: Gustave Aimard
-
-Release Date: September 14, 2013 [EBook #43716]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ADVENTURERS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Marc D'Hooghe at http://www.freeliterature.org
-
-
-
-
-THE ADVENTURERS
-
-A Story of a Love-Chase
-
-BY
-
-GUSTAVE AIMARD
-
-AUTHOR OF
-
-"LAST OF THE INCAS," "QUEEN OF THE SAVANNAH,"
-
-ETC.
-
-LONDON
-
-WARD AND LOCK, 158, FLEET STREET.
-
-1863.
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-With the publication of the present and the ensuing volume, "The Pearl
-of the Andes," I am enabled to perfect the most important series of
-Aimard's Tales of Indian Life and Adventure. To preserve uniformity, the
-volumes of this series should be arranged in the following order on the
-book-shelf;--
-
- 1. THE ADVENTURERS.
- 2. THE PEARL OF THE ANDES.
- 3. THE TRAIL-HUNTER.
- 4. PIRATES OF THE PRAIRIES.
- 5. THE TRAPPER'S BRIDE.
- 6. THE TIGER SLAYER.
- 7. THE GOLD SEEKERS.
- 8. THE INDIAN CHIEF.
- 9. THE RED TRACK.
-
-Gustave Aimard has a precedent in Fenimore Cooper for introducing the
-same hero in a long range of volumes, and, like his great predecessor,
-he has so arranged, that each work should be complete in itself, and
-not necessitate the purchase of another. But Aimard has one marked
-advantage over Cooper; for while "Leather-Stocking" is but a creation
-of the fancy, or, at the most, the type of the Backwoodsman, the Count
-Louis who figures as the hero of Aimard's series, is a real man. Count
-de Raousset Boulbon, had he succeeded in his daring attempt of founding
-an independent kingdom in Mexico, would in all probability have become
-the Napoleon of the West. A gallant adventurer and thorough gentleman,
-he staked his life upon the issue, and ended his career the victim
-of unparalleled treachery, as Aimard has faithfully recorded. Hence
-Aimard's romances have the great merit of being founded on an historic
-basis, and but little fiction was required to heighten the startling
-interest of the narrative.
-
-Valentine Guillois, there is very little doubt, is intended for the
-Author himself, with all his qualities and defects. When he first
-reached the New World, he was the true, reckless Parisian; but constant
-intercourse with nature rendered him a generous and thoughtful friend
-of humanity. So soon as he returned to civilization, he began recording
-the history of his past life; not so much as a livelihood, as for
-the pleasure he felt in living once again the life of excitement and
-adventure which he had known among the Indians. Hence his books are
-written without an effort; they flow spontaneously from his pen; and the
-absence of artistic effect is the best guarantee of their truthfulness.
-
-It is not surprising, consequently, that M. Aimard's books have met
-with such extensive popularity. They have been translated into nearly
-every modern language, and the Author is now generally recognised as the
-French Cooper. The reception given to his stories in this country has
-been most flattering, and each day heightens their popularity. Hence
-it is not too much to assume that they will become standard works,
-especially with young readers, for whom they are especially adapted;
-because M. Aimard has never yet written a line which could prove
-offensive to the most delicate mind.
-
- L.W.
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- I. THE CHAPARRAL
- II. THE FOSTER BROTHERS
- III. THE RESOLUTION
- IV. THE EXECUTION
- V. THE PASSAGE
- VI. THE LINDA
- VII. HUSBAND AND WIFE
- VIII. THE DARK-HEARTS
- IX. IN THE STREET
- X. SWORD-THRUSTS
- XI. GENERAL BUSTAMENTE
- XII. THE SPY
- XIII. LOVE
- XIV. THE QUINTA VERDE
- XV. THE DEPARTURE
- XVI. THE MEETING
- XVII. THE PUELCHES
- XVIII. THE BLACK JACKAL
- XIX. TWO OLD FRIENDS
- XX. THE SORCERER
- XXI. THE OBSEQUIES OF AN APO-ULMEN
- XXII. EXPLANATIONS
- XXIII. THE CHINGANA.
- XXIV. THE TWO ULMENS
- XXV. THE SUN-TIGER
- XXVI. THE MATRICIDE
- XXVII. THE JUSTICE OF THE DARK-HEARTS
- XXVIII. THE TREATY OF PEACE
- XXIX. THE ABDUCTION
- XXX. THE PROTEST
- XXXI. SPANIARD AND INDIAN
- XXXII. IN THE MOUNTAIN
- XXXIII. ON THE WATCH
- XXXIV. FACE TO FACE
- XXXV. THE REVOLT
- XXXVI. THE LION AT BAY
- XXXVII. THE TRUCE
- XXXVIII. TWO ROGUISH PROFILES
- XXXIX. THE WOUNDED MAN
- XL. ARAUCANIAN DIPLOMACY
- XLI. THE COUNCIL
- XLII. THE NIGHT JOURNEY
- XLIII. TWO HATREDS
- XLIV. THE RETURN TO VALDIVIA
- XLV. THE FATHER REVEALS HIMSELF
- XLVI. CURUMILLA
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-THE CHAPARRAL.
-
-
-
-During my last sojourn in America, chance, or rather my good star, led
-me to form an acquaintance with one of those hunters, or wood rangers,
-the type of whom has been immortalized by Cooper, in his poetical
-personage, _Leather-Stockings_.
-
-The strange circumstance by which we were brought together was as
-follows. Towards the end of July, 1855, I had left Galveston, terrified
-at the fevers prevalent there, which are so fatal to Europeans, with the
-intention of visiting the north-west portion of Texas, a country I was
-then unacquainted with.
-
-A Spanish proverb somewhere says, "It is better to go alone than in
-bad company;" and, like all other proverbs, this possesses a certain
-foundation of truth, particularly in America, where the traveller is
-exposed at each instant to the chance of meeting rogues of every hue,
-who, thanks to their seducing exterior, charm him, win his confidence,
-and take advantage of the first occasion to remorselessly plunder and
-assassinate him.
-
-I had profited by the proverb, and, like a shrewd old traveller of the
-prairies, as I knew no one who inspired me with sufficient sympathy
-to lead me to make him my travelling companion, I had bravely set out
-alone, clothed in the picturesque dress of the inhabitants of the
-country, armed to the teeth, and mounted upon an excellent half wild
-horse, which had cost me twenty-five piastres--an enormous sum in those
-countries, where horses are considered as worth little or nothing.
-
-I carelessly wandered here and there, living that nomadic life which
-is so full of attractions; at times stopping at a _toldería_, at
-others encamping in the desert, hunting wild animals, and plunging
-deeper and deeper into unknown regions. I had, in this fashion, passed
-through, without any untoward accident, Fredericksburgh, the Llana
-Braunfels, and had just left Castroville, on my way to Quichi. Like
-all Spanish-American villages, Castroville is nothing but a miserable
-agglomeration of ruined cabins, cut at right angles by streets choked
-with weeds, growing undisturbed, and concealing multitudes of ants,
-reptiles, and even rabbits of a very small breed, which spring up
-beneath the feet of the few passengers. The _pueblo_ is bounded on the
-west by the Medina, a slender thread of water, almost dry in the great
-heat seasons; and on the east by thickly-wooded hills, the dark green of
-which forms a pleasing contrast with the pale blue of the sky.
-
-At Galveston I had undertaken to deliver a letter to an inhabitant of
-Castroville. The worthy man lived in this village like La Fontaine's rat
-in the depths of its Dutch cheese. Charmed by the arrival of a stranger,
-who, no doubt, brought him news for which he had been long anxious, he
-received me in the most cordial manner, and thought of every expedient
-to detain me. Unfortunately, the little I had seen of Castroville had
-sufficed to completely disgust me with it, and my only wish was to get
-out of it as quickly as possible. My host, in despair at seeing all
-his advances repulsed, at length consented to allow me to continue my
-journey.
-
-"Adieu, then," he said, warmly pressing my hand, with a sigh of regret;
-"since you are determined to go, may God protect you! You are wrong
-in setting out so late; the road you have to travel is dangerous; the
-_Indios bravos_ are up; they assassinate without mercy all the whites
-who fall into their hands--beware!"
-
-I smiled at this warning, which I took for a last effort of the worthy
-man to detain me.
-
-"Bah!" I replied gaily; "the Indians and I are too old acquaintances for
-me to fear anything on their account."
-
-My host shook his head sorrowfully, and retreated into his hut, making
-me a last farewell greeting. I again set forward. I soon began to
-reflect that it was full late, and pressed my horse, in order to pass,
-before nightfall, a _chaparral_, or large thicket of underwood, of at
-least two miles in length, against which my host had particularly warned
-me. This ill-famed spot had a very sinister aspect. The mezquite, the
-acacia, and the cactus constituted its sole vegetation, while here and
-there, whitened bones and planted crosses plainly designated places
-where murders had been committed. Beyond that extended a vast plain,
-called the Leona, peopled by animals of every description. This plain,
-covered by grass at least two feet in height, was dotted at intervals
-with thickets of trees, upon which warbled thousands of golden-throated
-starlings, cardinals, and bluebirds. I was anxious to reach the
-Leona, which I saw in the distance; but ere I did so, I had to cross
-the chaparral. After examining my weapons, and looking carefully in
-all directions, as I could perceive nothing positively suspicious, I
-resolutely spurred my horse forward, determined, if attacked, to sell my
-life as dearly as possible.
-
-The sun, in the meantime, was sinking rapidly towards the horizon, the
-ruddy hues of closing day tinged with their changing reflections the
-summits of the wooded hills, and a fresh breeze agitated the branches
-of the trees with mysterious murmurs. In this country, where there is
-no twilight, night was not long in enveloping me in thick darkness, and
-that before I had passed through two-thirds of the chaparral.
-
-I was beginning to hope I should reach the Leona safe and sound, when,
-all at once, my horse made a violent bound on one side, pricking up its
-ears, and snorting loudly. The sudden shock almost threw me out of the
-saddle, and it was not without trouble that I recovered the mastery
-over my horse, which displayed signs of the greatest terror. As always
-happens in such cases, I instinctively looked round me for the cause of
-this panic; and soon the truth was revealed to me. A cold perspiration
-bedewed my brow, and a shudder of terror ran through my whole frame, at
-the horrible spectacle which met my eyes. Five dead human bodies lay
-stretched beneath the trees, within ten paces of me. Among them was
-one of a woman, and one of a girl about fourteen years of age. They
-all belonged to the white race. They appeared to have fought long and
-obstinately before they fell; they were literally covered with wounds;
-and long arrows, with jagged barbs, and painted red, stood out from the
-bodies, which they had pierced through and through. The victims had all
-been scalped. It was evidently the work of Indians, marked with their
-sanguinary rage, and their inveterate hatred for the white race. The
-form and colour of the arrows told me that the perpetrators of this
-atrocity were the Apaches, the most cruel plunderers of the desert.
-Around the bodies I observed fragments of both wagons and furniture. The
-unfortunate beings, assassinated with refined cruelty, had, no doubt,
-been poor emigrants on their way to Castroville.
-
-At the aspect of this heartbreaking spectacle, I cannot express the pity
-and grief which weighed upon my spirits; high in the air, urubus and
-vultures hovered with lazy wings over the bodies, uttering lugubrious
-cries of joy, whilst in the depths of the chaparral the wolves and
-jaguars began to growl portentously.
-
-I cast a melancholy glance around: all immediately near to me was quiet.
-The Apaches had, according to all appearances, surprised the emigrants
-during a halt. Gutted bales were still ranged in a symmetrical circle,
-and a fire, near which was a heap of dry wood, was not yet extinguished.
-
-"No!" said I to myself, "whatever may happen, I will not leave
-Christians without burial, to become, in this desert, the prey of wild
-beasts."
-
-My resolution, once formed, was soon carried into execution. Springing
-to the ground, I hobbled my horse, gave it some provender, and cast some
-branches of wood upon the fire, which soon sparkled and sent into the
-air a column of bright flame. Among the necessaries of the emigrants
-were spades, pickaxes, and other agricultural instruments, which, being
-of no use to the Indians, they had disdainfully left behind them. I
-seized a spade, and, after having carefully explored the environs
-of my encampment, to assure myself that no immediate danger need be
-apprehended, I set to work to dig a grave.
-
-The night had now set in; one of those American nights, clear,
-silent, full of intoxicating odours, and mysterious melodies chanted
-by the desert in praise of God. Extraordinary to say, all my fears
-had vanished, as if by enchantment! Though alone in this sinister
-place, close to these frightfully-mutilated carcasses, watched in the
-darkness, no doubt, by the unseen eyes of wild beasts, and, perhaps,
-of the murderous Indians, some incomprehensible influence sustained
-me, and gave me strength to accomplish the rude but sacred task I had
-undertaken. Instead of thinking of the dangers which surrounded me, I
-found myself yielding to a pensive melancholy. I thought of these poor
-people, who had come from distant lands, full of hope for the future,
-to seek in the New World a little of the comfort and well-being which
-were denied to them at home, and who, scarcely landed, had fallen, in an
-obscure corner of the desert, by the hands of ferocious savages. They
-had left in their own country friends, perhaps relations, to whom their
-fate would for ever remain a mystery, and who would for years reckon
-the hours with anxiety, looking for their much-wished return, or for
-intelligence of their success in their bold undertaking.
-
-Except two or three alarms caused by the rustling of the leaves in the
-bushes, nothing occurred to interrupt my melancholy duty. In less than
-three-quarters of an hour I had dug a grave large enough to contain the
-five bodies. After extracting the arrows by which they were transfixed,
-I raised them one after the other in my arms, and laid them gently
-side by side at the bottom of the grave. I then hastened to throw in
-the mould again, till it was level with the sod; and that being done,
-I dragged upon the surface all the large stones I could find, to keep
-wild beasts from profaning the dead. This religious duty accomplished,
-I breathed a deep sigh of satisfaction, and bowing my head towards the
-ground, I mentally addressed a short prayer to the Almighty, for the
-unfortunate beings I had buried.
-
-Upon raising my head, I uttered a cry of surprise and terror, while at
-the same time mechanically feeling for my revolver; for, without the
-least noise having given me warning of his approach, a man was standing
-within four paces of me, watching me earnestly, and leaning on his long
-rifle. Two magnificent Newfoundland dogs were lying carelessly but
-quietly at his feet. On observing my gesture, the unknown smiled with a
-kindly expression, and holding out his hand to me over the grave, said--
-
-"Fear nothing! I am a friend. You have buried these poor people; _I_
-have avenged them--their assassins are dead!"
-
-I silently pressed the hand that was so frankly extended to me.
-Acquaintance was formed--we were friends--we are so still! A few minutes
-later we were seated near the fire, supping together with a good
-appetite, while the dogs kept watch against intruders.
-
-The companion I had fallen in with in so curious a manner was a man of
-about forty-five years of age, although he did not appear to be more
-than thirty-two. He was tall and well made; his broad shoulders and
-muscular limbs denoting extraordinary strength and agility. He wore the
-picturesque hunter's costume in all its purity, that is to say, the
-_capote_, or surtout (which is nothing but a kind of blanket worn as a
-robe, fastened to the shoulders, and falling in long folds behind), a
-shirt of striped cotton, large _mitasses_ (drawers of doeskin, stitched
-with hair, fastened at distances, and ornamented with little bells),
-leather gaiters, moccasins of elk skin, braided with beads and porcupine
-quills, and a checked woollen belt, from which hung his knife, tobacco
-pouch, powder horn, pistols, and medicine bag. His headdress consisted
-of a cap made of the skin of a beaver, the tail of which fell between
-his shoulders. This man was a type of a hardy race of adventurers who
-traverse America in all directions. A primitive race, longing for
-open air, space, and liberty, opposed to our ideas of civilization,
-and consequently destined to disappear before the immigration of the
-laborious races, whose powerful agents of conquest are steam and the
-application of mechanical inventions of all kinds.
-
-This hunter was a Frenchman, and his frank, manly countenance, his
-picturesque language, his open and engaging manners, notwithstanding
-his long abode in America, had preserved a reflex of the mother country
-which awakened sympathy and created interest.
-
-All the countries of the New World were familiar to him; he had lived
-more than twenty years in the depths of the woods, and had been engaged
-in dangerous and distant excursions among the Indian tribes. Hence,
-although myself well initiated in the customs of the redskins, and
-though a great part of my existence had been passed in the desert, I
-have felt myself often shudder involuntarily at the recital of his
-adventures. When seated beside him on the banks of the Rio Gila, during
-an excursion we had undertaken into the prairies, he would at times
-allow himself to be carried away by his remembrances, and relate to me,
-as he smoked his Indian pipe, the strange history of the early days
-of his abode in the New World. It is one of these recitals I am about
-to lay before my readers--the first in order of date, since it is the
-history of the events which led him to become a wood ranger. I do not
-venture to hope that my readers will take the interest in it which it
-excited in me; but I beg them to have the kindness to recollect that
-this narrative was told me in the desert, amidst that grand, vast, and
-powerful nature, unknown to the inhabitants of old Europe, and that I
-had it from the lips of the man who had been the hero.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-THE FOSTER BROTHERS.
-
-
-On the 31st of December, 1834, at eleven o'clock in the evening, a man
-of about twenty-five years of age, of handsome person and countenance,
-and aristocratic appearance, was sitting, or rather reclining, in a
-luxurious easy chair, near the mantelpiece, within which sparkled a
-fire that the advanced season rendered indispensable. This personage
-was the Count Maxime Edouard Louis de Prébois-Crancé. His countenance,
-of a cadaverous paleness, formed a striking contrast with his black
-curly hair, which fell in disorder upon his shoulders, covered by
-a large-patterned damask dressing gown. His brows were contracted,
-and his eyes were fixed with feverish impatience upon the dial of a
-charming Louis Quinze clock, whilst his left hand, hanging carelessly
-by his side, played with the silky ears of a magnificent Newfoundland
-dog which lay by his side. The room in which the Count was sitting was
-furnished with all the refinement of comfort invented by modern luxury.
-A four-branched chandelier, with rose-coloured wax candles, placed upon
-a table, was scarcely sufficient to enliven the room, and only spread
-around a dim, uncertain light. Without, the rain was dashing against
-the windows violently; and the wind sighed in mysterious murmurs, which
-disposed the mind to melancholy. When the clock struck the hour the
-Count started up, as if aroused from a dream. He passed his thin white
-hand across his moist brow, and said, in a dissatisfied tone--
-
-"He will not come!"
-
-But at that moment the dog, which had been so motionless, sprang up and
-bounded towards the door, wagging its tail with joy. The door opened,
-the _portière_ was lifted by a firm hand, and a man appeared.
-
-"Here you are at last!" the Count exclaimed, advancing towards the
-newcomer, who had great trouble to get rid of the caresses of the dog.
-"I had begun to be afraid that you, like the rest, had forgotten me."
-
-"I do not understand you, brother, but trust you will explain yourself,"
-the other replied. "Come, that will do, Cæsar; lie down! you are a very
-good dog, but lie down!"
-
-And drawing an easy chair towards the fire, he sat down at the other
-side of the fire, in front of the Count, who had resumed his place. The
-dog lay down between them.
-
-The personage so anxiously expected by the Count formed a strange
-contrast with him; for, just as M. de Prébois-Crancé united in himself
-all the qualities which physically distinguish nobility of race, the
-other displayed all the lively, energetic strength of a true child of
-the people. He was a man of twenty-six years of age; tall, thin, and
-perfectly well proportioned; while his face, bronzed by the sun, and
-his marked features, lit up by blue eyes sparkling with intelligence,
-wore an expression of bravery, mildness, and loyalty of character that
-created sympathy at first sight. He was dressed in the elegant uniform
-of a quartermaster sergeant of the Spahis, and the cross of the legion
-of honour glittered on his breast. With his head leaning on his right
-hand, a pensive brow and a thoughtful eye, he examined his friend
-attentively, whilst twisting his long, silky light-coloured moustache
-with the other hand.
-
-The Count, shrinking before his earnest look, which appeared trying to
-read his most secret thoughts, broke the silence abruptly.
-
-"You have been a long time in responding to my message," he said.
-
-"This is the second time you have addressed that reproach to me, Louis,"
-the soldier replied, taking a paper from his breast; "you forget the
-terms of the note which your groom brought yesterday to my quarters."
-
-And he was preparing to read.
-
-"It is useless to read it," said the Count, with a melancholy smile. "I
-acknowledge I am in the wrong."
-
-"Well, then, let us see," said the Spahi gaily, "what this serious
-affair is which makes you stand in need of me. Explain: is there a woman
-to be carried off?--Have you a duel on hand?--Tell me."
-
-"Nothing that you can possibly imagine," the Count interrupted him
-bitterly; "therefore do not waste time in useless surmises."
-
-"What the devil is it, then?"
-
-"I am going to blow out my brains."
-
-The young man uttered these words with so firm and resolute an accent,
-that the soldier started in spite of himself, and bent an anxious glance
-upon the speaker.
-
-"You believe me mad, do you not?" the Count continued, who guessed his
-friend's thoughts. "No, I am not mad, Valentine; I am only at the bottom
-of an abyss from which I can only escape by death or infamy, and I
-prefer death."
-
-The soldier made no reply. With an energetic gesture he pushed back his
-chair, and began to walk about the room with hurried steps. The Count
-had allowed his head to sink upon his breast in a state of perfect
-prostration of mind. After a long silence, during which the fury of the
-storm without increased, Valentine resumed his seat.
-
-"A very strong reason must have obliged you to take such a
-determination," he said coolly; "I will not endeavour to combat it; but
-I command you, by our friendship, to tell me fully what has led you to
-form it. I am your foster brother, Louis; we have grown up together; our
-ideas have been too long in common, our friendship is too strong and too
-fervent for you to refuse to satisfy me."
-
-"To what purpose?" cried the Count, impatiently; "my sorrows are of a
-nature which none but he who experiences them can comprehend."
-
-"A bad pretext, brother," replied the soldier, in a rough tone; "the
-sorrows we dare not avow are of a kind that make us blush."
-
-"Valentine," said the Count, with a flashing eye, "it is ill judged to
-speak so."
-
-"On the contrary, it is quite right," replied the young man, warmly. "I
-love you, I owe you the truth; why should I deceive you? No, you know my
-frankness; therefore do not hope that I shall listen to you with my eyes
-shut. If you want to be flattered in your last moments, why send for me?
-Is it to applaud your death? If so, brother, farewell! I will retire,
-for I have nothing to do here. You great gentlemen, who have only known
-the trouble of coming into the world, know nothing of life but its joys;
-at the first roseleaf which chance happens to ruffle in your bed of
-happiness, you think yourselves lost, and appeal to that greatest of all
-cowardices, suicide."
-
-"Valentine!" the Count cried angrily.
-
-"Yes," continued the young man, with increased energy, "I repeat, that
-supreme cowardice! Man is no more at liberty to quit life when he
-fancies he is tired of it, than the soldier is to quit his post when he
-comes face to face with his country's enemy. Your sorrows, indeed! I
-know well what they are."
-
-"You know?" demanded the Count with astonishment.
-
-"All--listen to me; and when I have told you my thoughts, why, kill
-yourself if you like. Pardieu! do you think when I came here I did not
-know why you summoned me? A gladiator, far too weak to fight the good
-fight, you have cast yourself defencelessly among the wild beasts of
-this terrible arena called Paris--and you have fallen, as was sure to
-be the case. But remember, the death you contemplate will complete your
-dishonour in the eyes of all, instead of reinstating you or surrounding
-you with the halo of false glory you are ambitious of."
-
-"Valentine! Valentine!" cried the Count, striking the table forcibly
-with his clenched hand, "what gives you a right to speak to me thus?"
-
-"My friendship," the soldier replied, energetically, "and the position
-you have yourself placed me in by sending for me. Two causes reduce you
-to despair. These two causes are, in the first place, your love for
-a coquettish woman, a Creole, who has played with your heart as the
-panther of her own savannahs plays with the inoffensive animals she is
-preparing to devour.--Is that true?"
-
-The young man made no reply. With his elbows on the table, his face
-buried in his hands, he remained motionless, apparently insensible to
-the reproaches of his foster brother. Valentine continued--
-
-"Secondly, when, in order to win favour in her eyes, you have
-compromised your fortune, and squandered all that your father had left
-you, this woman flits away as she came, rejoicing over the mischief
-she has done, over the victims she has left on the path she has trod,
-leaving to you and to so many others the despair and the shame of having
-been the sport of a coquette. What urges you to seek refuge in death is
-not the loss of fortune, but the impossibility of following this woman,
-the sole cause of all your misfortunes. I defy you to contradict me."
-
-"Well, I admit all that is true. It is that alone which kills me. What
-care I for the loss of fortune? She alone is the object of my ambition!
-I love her--I love her--I tell you, so that I could struggle against
-the whole world to obtain her!" the young man exclaimed with great
-excitement. "Oh, if I could but hope! Hope--a word void of meaning,
-invented by the ambitious, always implying something unattainable! Do
-you not plainly see the truth of what I say? There is nothing left me
-but to die!"
-
-Valentine contemplated him for some minutes with a sad countenance.
-Suddenly his brow cleared, his eye sparkled; he laid his hand upon the
-Count's shoulder.
-
-"Is this, then, more than a caprice? Do you really love this woman?" he
-said.
-
-"Have I not told you that I am ready to die for her?"
-
-"Ay; and you told me at the same time that you would struggle with the
-whole world to obtain her."
-
-"I did--and would."
-
-"Well, then," continued Valentine, fixing his eyes earnestly upon him,
-"I can help you to find this woman again--I can."
-
-"You can?"
-
-"Yes, I can."
-
-"Oh! you are mad! She has left Paris, and no one knows into what region
-of America she has retreated."
-
-"Of what consequence is that?"
-
-"And then, besides, I am ruined!"
-
-"So much the better."
-
-"Valentine, be careful of what you say," the young man remarked with a
-sigh; "in spite of my reason, I allow myself to believe you."
-
-"Hope, man! hope, I tell you."
-
-"Oh, no; no, that is impossible!"
-
-"Nothing is impossible; that is a word invented by the impotent and the
-cowardly. I repeat that I not only will find this woman for you again,
-but that she--she herself, mind--shall be afraid lest you should despise
-her love."
-
-"Oh!"
-
-"Who knows? You yourself may then, perhaps, reject it."
-
-"Valentine! Valentine!"
-
-"Well, to obtain this glorious result, I only ask two years."
-
-"So long?"
-
-"Oh, such is man!" cried the soldier, with a faint, pitying laugh. "But
-an instant ago, and you were anxious to die, because the word had never
-stood in its true light before you; and now you have not the courage to
-look forward, or wait two years, which constitute only a few minutes of
-human life!"
-
-"Yes, but----"
-
-"Be satisfied, brother--be satisfied! If in two years I have not
-fulfilled my promise, I myself will load your pistols--and then----"
-
-"Well, and then?"
-
-"And then you shall not die alone," he said coolly.
-
-The Count looked at him. Valentine seemed transfigured: his countenance
-wore an expression of indomitable energy, which his foster brother had
-never observed in it before; his eyes sparkled with unwonted brilliancy.
-The young man avowed himself conquered; he took his friend's hand, and
-pressing it warmly, said--
-
-"I agree!"
-
-"You now, then, belong to me?"
-
-"I give myself entirely up to you."
-
-"That's well!"
-
-"But what will you do?"
-
-"Listen to me attentively," the soldier said, sinking back into his
-chair, and motioning to his friend to resume his seat. At this moment
-the clock struck the hour of midnight, and, from a feeling for which
-they could not account, the young men listened silently and reflectively
-to the twelve strokes which resounded at equal intervals upon the bell.
-
-When the echo of the last stroke had ceased to vibrate, Valentine lit a
-cigar, and turning towards Louis, whose eyes were intensely fixed upon
-him, "Now, then," he said slowly, emitting a puff of thin blue smoke,
-which went curling gracefully up towards the ceiling.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-THE RESOLUTION.
-
-
-"I am listening," said Louis, leaning forward as if to hear the better.
-
-Valentine resumed with a melancholy smile.
-
-"We have now reached the 1st of January, 1835," said he; "with the last
-vibration of midnight your existence as a gentleman has come to an end.
-From this time you are about to commence a life of trials and struggles;
-in a word, you are about to become a man!"
-
-The Count gave him an inquiring glance.
-
-"I will explain myself," Valentine continued; "but in order to do that,
-you must, in the first place, allow me, in a few words, to recall your
-history to you."
-
-"Surely, I am well enough acquainted with that," interrupted the Count,
-in a tone that displayed impatience.
-
-"Well, perhaps you are; but, at all events, listen to my version of it;
-if I err, put me right."
-
-"Follow your own humour," the Count replied, sinking back into his chair
-with the air of a man whom politeness obliges to listen to a tiresome
-discourse.
-
-Though he saw it, Valentine appeared to take no notice of this movement
-on the part of his foster brother. He relit his cigar, which he had
-allowed to go out, patted the dog, whose great head was lying upon his
-knees, and began, as if convinced that Louis gave him the most profound
-attention.
-
-"Your history is that of almost every man of your rank," said he. "Your
-ancestors, whose name can be traced to the Crusades, left you at your
-birth a noble title, and a hundred thousand francs a year. Rich, without
-having had occasion to employ your faculties to gain your fortune,
-and consequently ignorant of the real value of money, you spent it
-heedlessly, believing it to be inexhaustible. This is just what has
-happened; only, one day, when you least expected it, the hideous spectre
-of ruin rose up suddenly before you, and you had a glimpse of want,
-that is, of the necessity for labour; and then you drew back terrified,
-declaring there was no refuge but in death."
-
-"All that is perfectly true," the Count interrupted; "but you forget to
-mention, that before forming this last resolution, I took care to put
-my affairs in order, and to pay all my creditors. I then became my own
-master, and had a right to dispose of my life as I thought fit."
-
-"Not at all. And it is this which your education as a gentleman has
-prevented you from understanding. Your life is not your own; it is
-a loan which God has made you. It is, consequently, nothing but an
-expectation, a _waiting_, a passage: for this reason it is short,
-but the profit of it is due to humanity. Every man who wastes the
-faculties which he holds from God in orgies and debaucheries, commits a
-robbery upon the great human family. Remember that we are all mutually
-responsible for one another, and that we ought to employ our faculties
-for the advantage of the whole."
-
-"For Heaven's sake, brother, a truce to your sermons! Such theories,
-more or less paradoxical, may succeed with certain people, but----"
-
-"Brother," Valentine interrupted, "do not speak so. In spite of
-yourself, your pride of race dictates words which you will ere long
-regret. Certain people! there you have let slip the great word. Oh,
-Louis, Louis! how many things you have yet to learn! But that we may
-know what we are about, reckoning all your resources, how much have you
-left?"
-
-"Oh, I scarcely know! A pitiful sum."
-
-"Well, but how much?"
-
-"Good Heavens! some forty thousand francs, I suppose, at most, which may
-amount to sixty thousand by the sale of these luxurious trifles," the
-Count said carelessly.
-
-Valentine started up in his chair.
-
-"Sixty thousand francs!" he cried; "and you are in despair! and have
-made up your mind to die! Senseless fellow! why, these sixty thousand
-francs, well employed, are a fortune! they will enable you to find the
-woman you love! How many poor devils would fancy themselves rich with
-such a sum!"
-
-"What do you mean to do, then?"
-
-"You shall see. What is the name of the lady you are in love with?"
-
-"Doña Rosario del Valle."
-
-"Very well. She has, you say, gone to America?"
-
-"Ten days ago; but I, in justice, must observe to you, that Doña
-Rosario, whom you do not know, is a noble and amiable girl, who has
-never lent an ear to one of my flatteries, or given favourable heed to
-the ruinous extravagances which I committed to please her."
-
-"Ah, that is very possible! why, then, should I seek to rob you of this
-sweet illusion? Only it makes me the more puzzled to perceive how, under
-these circumstances, you could manage to melt your fortune, which was
-considerable, like a lump of butter in the sun."
-
-"Here! read this note from my broker."
-
-"Oh!" said Valentine, pushing back the paper; "you have been dabbling
-on the Stock Exchange, have you! Everything is now easily explained, my
-poor pigeon; the kites have plucked you nicely! Well, brother, you must
-take your revenge."
-
-"Oh, I ask nothing better!" said the young man, knitting his brows.
-
-"We are of the same age; my mother's milk nourished us both; in the
-eyes of God we are brothers! I will make a man of you! I will help
-you to put on that armour of brass which will render you invincible.
-Whilst you, protected by your name and your fortune, allowed life to
-glide luxuriously away, only plucking its flowers as it passed, I, a
-poor wretch wandering over the rough pavement of Paris, carried on a
-gigantic struggle to obtain a mere existence; a struggle of every hour
-and every minute, where the victory for me was a morsel of bread, and
-experience most dearly bought; for often, when I held horses, sold
-theatre checks, or acted clown to a mountebank--in fact, when I went
-through the thousand impossible shifts of the Bohemian, depression and
-discouragement nearly choked me; often and often have I felt my burning
-brow and throbbing temples clasped in the pinching vice of want; but I
-resisted, I girded myself up against adversity; never did I allow myself
-to be conquered, although I left upon the thorns of my rugged path many
-of the rags of my most fondly-cherished illusions; while my heart,
-writhing with despair, has bled from twenty wounds at once! Courage,
-Louis! henceforth there will be two of us to fight the battle! You shall
-be the head to conceive, I the arm to execute; you the intelligence, I
-the strength! Now the struggle will be equal, for we will sustain one
-another. Trust in me, my brother; a day will come when success will
-crown our efforts!"
-
-"I can fully appreciate your devotion, and I accept it. Am I not, at
-present, your property? Entertain no fear of my resisting you. But I
-cannot help telling you that I fear all my attempts will be in vain, and
-that we shall be forced, sooner or later, to fall back upon that last
-means which you now prevent me having recourse to."
-
-"Oh, thou man of little faith!" Valentine said, cheerfully; "on the road
-which we are about to take, fortune will be our slave!"
-
-Louis could not repress a smile.
-
-"We must, at all events, depend upon the aid of chance in what we are
-about to undertake," he said.
-
-"Chance! chance is the hope of fools; the strong man commands it."
-
-"Well, but what do you mean to do?"
-
-"The lady you love is in America, is she not?"
-
-"I have already told you so several times."
-
-"Very well, then, we must go thither."
-
-"But I do not know even in what part of America she resides."
-
-"Of what consequence is that? The New World is the country of gold--the
-true region of adventurers! We shall retrieve our fortunes whilst
-searching for her; and is that so disagreeable a thing? Tell me--this
-lady was born somewhere?"
-
-"She is a Chilian."
-
-"Good! she has gone back to Chili, then; and it is there we shall find
-her."
-
-Louis looked at his foster brother for a moment, with a species of
-respectful admiration.
-
-"What! do you seriously mean that you will do this, brother?" he said,
-in an agitated voice.
-
-"Without hesitation."
-
-"Abandon the military career which offers you so many chances of
-success? I know that in three months you will be an officer."
-
-"I have ceased to be a soldier since the morning; I have found a
-substitute."
-
-"Oh, that is not possible!"
-
-"Ay, but it is done."
-
-"But your old mother, my nurse, whose only support you are!"
-
-"Out of what you have left we will give her a few thousand francs,
-which, joined to my pension, will suffice for her to live on till we
-come back."
-
-"Oh," said the young man, "I cannot accept of such a sacrifice--my
-honour forbids it!"
-
-"Unfortunately, brother," Valentine said, in a tone which silenced the
-Count, "you have it not in your power to prevent it. In acting as I
-propose to do I am only discharging a sacred duty."
-
-"I do not understand you."
-
-"What is the use of explaining it to you?"
-
-"I insist."
-
-"Very good; and, perhaps, it will be better. Listen:--When, after
-having nursed you, my mother restored you to your family, my father fell
-sick, and died at the end of an illness of eight months, leaving my
-mother and myself in the greatest want; the little we possessed had been
-spent in medicines, and in paying the doctor for his visits. We ought to
-have had recourse to your family, who would, no doubt, have relieved us;
-but my mother would never consent to it. 'The Count de Prébois-Crancé
-has done as much as he ought,' she remarked, 'he shall not be troubled
-any more.'"
-
-"She was wrong," said Louis.
-
-"I know she was," Valentine replied. "In the meantime, hunger soon began
-to be felt. It was then I undertook all those impossible trades of which
-I just now spoke to you. One day, as I was carrying my cap round in the
-Place du Trône, after swallowing sabres and eating fire, to the great
-delight of the crowd, I found myself face to face with an officer of the
-Chasseurs d'Afrique, who looked at me with an air of pity and kindness
-that melted my heart within me. He led me away with him, made me relate
-my history, and insisted upon being conducted to the shed where I and
-my mother lived. At the sight of our misery the old soldier was much
-affected; a tear, which he could not restrain, flowed silently down his
-sunburnt cheek. Louis, that officer was your father."
-
-"My noble and good father!" the Count exclaimed, pressing his foster
-brother's hand.
-
-"Yes! yes, noble and good! he secured my mother a little annuity which
-enables her to live, and took me into his own regiment. Two years ago,
-during the last expedition against the Rey of Constantine, your father
-was struck by a bullet in his chest, and died at the end of two hours,
-calling upon his son."
-
-"Yes," the young man said, with tears in his eyes, "I know he did."
-
-"But what you do not know, Louis, is, that at the point of death your
-father turned towards me--for, from the moment he had received his wound
-I had never left him."
-
-Louis again silently pressed the hand of Valentine, whilst the latter
-continued--
-
-"'Valentine,' he said to me, in a faint voice, broken by the rattle of
-death, for the mortal agony had commenced, 'my son is left alone, and
-without experience; he has nobody but you, his foster brother. Watch
-over him--never abandon him! May I depend upon your promise? it will
-mitigate the pain of dying.' I knelt down beside him, and respectfully
-seizing the hand he held out to me, exclaimed--'Die in peace! in the
-hour of adversity I will be always by the side of your Louis. Two tears
-of joy at that awful hour dropped from your father's eyes; he said, in a
-faltering voice--'God has heard your oath and murmuring your name, and
-clasping my hand, he expired. Louis, I owe to your father the comfort
-my mother enjoys; I owe to your father the feelings that make me a man,
-and this cross which glitters on my breast. Can you not now comprehend,
-then, why I have spoken to you as I have done? While you held your
-course in your strength, I kept aloof; but now that the hour has arrived
-for accomplishing my vow, no human power can prevent me from doing so."
-
-The two young men were silent for a moment, and then Louis, laying his
-face on the soldier's honest chest, said, with a burst of tears--
-
-"When shall we set out, brother?"
-
-The latter looked at him earnestly--
-
-"You are fully resolved to commence a new life?"
-
-"Entirely!" Louis replied, in a firm tone.
-
-"Do you leave no regrets behind you?"
-
-"None."
-
-"You are ready to pass bravely through all the trials to which I may
-expose you?"
-
-"I am."
-
-"That is well, brother! it is thus I wish you to be. We will set out as
-soon as we have settled the balance of your past life. You must enter
-on the new existence I am about to open to you quite free from clogs or
-remembrances."
-
- * * * * *
-
-On the 2nd of February, 1835, a packet boat belonging to the
-Trans-Atlantic Company left Havre, directing its course towards
-Valparaiso. On board this vessel, as passengers, were the Count de
-Prébois-Crancé, Valentine Guillois his foster brother, and Cæsar their
-Newfoundland dog--Cæsar, the only friend who had remained faithful to
-them, and whom they could not think of leaving behind. Upon the quay
-a woman of about sixty years of age, her face bathed in tears, stood
-with her eyes intently fixed upon the vessel as long as it remained in
-sight. When it had disappeared below the horizon, she cast a desponding
-glance around her, and with a heavy heart bent her steps towards a house
-situated at a small distance from the beach, where she remained three
-days.
-
-"Do what is right, happen what may!" she said, in a voice stifled by
-grief.
-
-This woman was the mother of Valentine Guillois. She was the most to be
-pitied, for she was left alone!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-THE EXECUTION.
-
-
-Towards the end of the year 1450, Chili was invaded by Prince
-Sinchiroca, afterwards Inca, who gained possession of the valley of
-Mapocho, then called Promocaces, that is to say, the place of dancing
-and rejoicing. The Peruvian government, however, was never able to
-establish itself in the country, on account of the armed opposition of
-the Promocians, then encamped between the rivers Rapel and Maulé. Hence,
-though the historian Garcilasso de la Vega may place the limits of the
-territory conquered by the Incas upon the river Maulé, everything proves
-they were upon the Rapel, for, near the confluence of the Cachapeul with
-the Tingerica, which from this point takes the name of Rapel, start the
-ruins of an ancient Peruvian fortress, constructed exactly like those of
-Callao and Asseray, in the province of Quito. These fortresses served to
-mark the frontier.
-
-The Spanish conqueror, Don Pedro de Valdivia, founded, on the 24th of
-February, 1541, the city of Santiago in a delightful position upon the
-left bank of the Rio Mapocho, at the entrance of a plain a hundred miles
-in extent, bounded by the Rio Parahuel, and the mountain of El Pardo,
-which has an elevation of not less than four thousand feet. This plain,
-which is also bathed by the Rio Maypo, forms a natural reservoir, in
-which the light soil brought down from the neighbouring heights has
-found a level, and created one of the richest territories of the New
-World.
-
-Santiago, which at a later period became the capital of Chili, is one of
-the finest cities in Spanish America. Its streets are broad, built in
-straight lines, and refreshed by _acequias_; or rivulets of clear and
-limpid water; while the houses, built of _adobes_, only one story high,
-on account of the earthquakes so frequent in this country, are vast,
-airy, and well situated. It possesses a great number of monuments, the
-most remarkable of which are the stone bridge of five arches, thrown
-over the Mapocho, and the Tajamar, or breakwater, formed of two brick
-walls, the interior one of which is filled with earth, and serves to
-protect the inhabitants from inundations. The Cordilleras, with their
-eternally snow-crowned summits, although eighty miles distant from
-the city, appear suspended over it, and present an aspect of the most
-majestic and imposing kind.
-
-On the 5th of May, 1835, towards ten o'clock in the evening, stifling
-heat oppressed the city; there was not a breath in the air, or a cloud
-in the heavens. Santiago, generally so joyous at this hour of the
-night, when beams from black eyes and smiles from rosy lips are seen at
-every balcony, and each window seems to challenge the passer-by with
-the twanging of _sambecuejas,_ and snatches of Creole songs, appeared
-plunged in the deepest sadness. The balconies and the windows were
-filled, it is true, with the heads of men and women, packed together as
-closely as possible, but the expression of every face was serious, every
-look was thoughtful and uneasy: no smile, no joy could be witnessed; but
-on all sides were sorrowful brows, pale cheeks, and eyes filled with
-tears.
-
-Here and there in the streets numerous groups were stationed in the
-middle of the causeway, or upon the steps of the doors, conversing in a
-low voice, but with great vivacity. At every instant, orderly officers
-left the government palace, and galloped off in various directions.
-Detachments of troops quitted their barracks, and marched, with drums
-beating, to the Plaza Mayor, where they formed in line, passing silently
-amidst the terrified inhabitants. The Plaza Mayor on this evening
-afforded an exceptional appearance. Torches, waved about by individuals
-mixed with the crowd, threw their red dull reflections upon the
-assembled people, who seemed to be in expectation of some great event.
-
-But among all these people assembled on one spot, and whose number
-increased every second, not a cry, not a word could be heard. Only, at
-intervals, there arose a nameless murmur--a noise of the sea before a
-tempest--the whisper of a whole anxious people--the hoarse fury of a
-storm lashing all these oppressed breasts. The clock of the cathedral
-heavily and slowly struck ten.
-
-Scarce had the _serenos_, according to custom, chanted the hour, ere
-military commands were heard, and the crowd violently driven back in all
-directions, with cries and oaths, accompanied by blows from gunstocks,
-divided in two nearly equal parts, leaving between them a wide, free
-space. At this moment arose the sounds of religious chants, murmured in
-a low, monotonous tone, and a long procession of monks debouched upon
-the square. These monks all belonged to the order of the Brothers of
-Mercy. They walked slowly in two lines, with their hoods pulled down
-over their faces, their arms crossed upon their breasts, their heads
-hanging down, and chanting the _De Profundis_. In the middle of them ten
-penitents each bore an open coffin. Then came a squadron of cavalry,
-preceding a battalion of militiamen, in the centre of which body, ten
-men, bare headed, with their arms bound behind them, were conducted,
-each riding with his face toward the tail of a donkey, whose bridle
-was held by a monk of the order of Mercy; a detachment of lancers came
-immediately after, and closed this lugubrious procession.
-
-At the cry of halt, given by the commander of the troops drawn up
-upon the Plaza, the monks separated to the right and left, without
-interrupting their funeral chant, and the condemned remained alone in
-the middle of the space left free for them. These men were patriots,
-who had attempted to overthrow the established government, in order to
-substitute another, the more broad and democratic basis of which would
-be, as they thought, in better accordance with ideas of progress and the
-welfare of the nation. These patriots belonged to the first families of
-the country.
-
-The population of Santiago viewed with sullen despair the death of
-the men whom they considered as martyrs. It is even probable that a
-rising in their favour would have taken place, if General Don Poncho
-Bustamente, the minister at war, had not drawn out a military force
-capable of imposing upon the most determined, and obliging them to be
-silent spectators of the execution of men whom they could not save, but
-whom they entertained a fierce hope of avenging at a future day.
-
-The condemned alighted; they piously knelt, and confessed themselves to
-the monks of Mercy nearest to them, whilst a platoon of fifty soldiers
-took up a position within twenty paces of them. When their confession
-was completed, they rose up bravely, and taking each other by the hand,
-ranged themselves in a single line in front of the soldiers appointed
-to put them to death. In spite, however, of the great numbers of troops
-assembled on the Plaza, an ominous fermentation prevailed among the
-people. The crowd rocked about in all directions. Murmurs of sinister
-augury and curses, pronounced aloud against the agents of power, seemed
-to remind the latter that they had better finish the affair at once, if
-they did not wish to have their victims torn from their hands.
-
-General Bustamente, who calmly and stoically presided over this
-dismal ceremony, smiled with disdain at this expression of popular
-disapprobation. He waved his sword over his head and commanded "right
-about face," which was executed with the rapidity of lightning. The
-troops faced the insurgents on all sides; the front rank pointing their
-muskets at the citizens crowded together before them, whilst the others
-appeared to take aim at the balconies encumbered with people. This was
-followed by so dead a silence, that not a word was lost of the sentence
-read by the proper officer to the patriots--a sentence which condemned
-them to be shot as traitors, or accomplices in a conspiracy designed
-to overthrow the constituted government, and plunge their country into
-anarchy.
-
-The conspirators listened to their sentence with silent firmness; but
-when the officer, who trembled in every limb, had finished reading it,
-they all cried, as with one voice,
-
-"Viva la Patria! Viva la Libertad!"
-
-The General gave a signal, and a loud rolling of the drums drowned the
-voices of the condemned. A discharge of musketry resounded like a clap
-of thunder, and the ten martyrs fell, once again shouting their cry of
-liberty, a cry doomed to find an echo in the hearts of their terrified
-compatriots.
-
-The troops filed off, with shouldered arms, ensigns flying, and band at
-their head, past the dead bodies, and regained their barracks. When the
-General had disappeared with his escort, and the troops had left the
-Plaza, the people rushed in a mass towards the spot where the martyrs
-of their cause lay in a confused heap. Every one wished to offer them a
-last farewell, and to swear over their bodies to avenge them, or to fall
-in their turn.
-
-At length, by degrees, the crowd became less compact, the groups
-dispersed, the last torches were extinguished, and the spot where,
-scarce an hour before, an awful drama had been accomplished, was left
-completely deserted. A considerable time elapsed before any noise
-disturbed the solemn silence which brooded over the Plaza Mayor.
-
-Suddenly, a heavy sigh escaped from the heap of bodies, and a pale head,
-disfigured by the blood and dirt which stained it, arose slowly from
-this human slaughterhouse, pushing aside with difficulty the carcasses
-which had covered it. The victim, who, by a miracle, survived this
-bloody hecatomb, cast an anxious look around him, and passing his hand
-over his brow, which was bathed in a dark perspiration, said vehemently--
-
-"My God! my God! grant me strength to live, that I may avenge myself and
-my country!"
-
-Then, with incredible courage, this man, too weak from the blood he had
-lost, and was still losing, to stand, or to escape by walking away,
-began to crawl along upon his hands and knees, leaving behind him a long
-wet track, and directing his course towards the cathedral. At every yard
-he stopped to take breath, and to place his hands upon his wounds, which
-motion rendered more painful. Scarce had he left the centre of the Plaza
-and its horrid sacrifice fifty paces behind him, and that with immense
-difficulty, when, from a street which opened just before him, issued two
-men, who advanced with hasty steps towards him.
-
-"Oh!" the unhappy man cried, in utter despair, "I am lost! I am lost!
-Heaven is not just!"--And he fainted.
-
-The two men, on coming up to him, stopped with great surprise; they
-leant over him, and examined him with care and in an anxious manner.
-
-"Well?" said one of them, at the end of a minute or two.
-
-"He is alive!" the other replied, in a tone of conviction.
-
-Without uttering another word, they rolled up the wounded man in a
-_poncho_, lifted him on their shoulders, and disappeared in the gloomy
-depths of the street by which they had come, and which led to the
-Canadilla suburb.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-THE PASSAGE.
-
-
-It is a long voyage from Havre to Chili. The man accustomed to the
-thousand agitations and the intoxicating whirlwind of the atmosphere of
-Paris, necessarily finds the life on shipboard, the calm and regular
-life, insipid and monotonous. It is certainly tedious to remain months
-together in a vessel, confined to a cabin a few feet square, without
-air and without sun, almost without light, and to have no walk but the
-narrow deck of the ship, no horizon but the rolling or the tranquil
-sea--at all times and everywhere nothing but sea.
-
-The transition is very trying. The Parisian, accustomed to the noise
-and perpetual motion of a great city, cannot at once enter into or
-comprehend the poetry of the sailor's life, of which he knows nothing,
-or the sublime pleasures and keen enjoyments which those granite-hearted
-men, exposed incessantly to a struggle with the elements, constantly
-experience; men who laugh at the tempest and brave the hurricane; who,
-twenty times a minute, stand face to face with death, and at last feel
-such a contempt for it that they end by not believing in it. The hours
-are of interminable length to the passenger who pines for the land;
-every day appears an age to him. With his eyes constantly turned toward
-a point which he begins to imagine he shall never gain, he sinks, in
-spite of himself, into a species of gloomy nostalgia, which the sight of
-the wished for port is alone powerful enough to dissipate.
-
-The Count de Prébois-Crancé and Valentine Guillois had, then, undergone
-the dispersion of all the illusions and all the ennuis attendant upon a
-first sea voyage. During the first days they were employed in recalling
-the vivid remembrance of that other life from which they had parted
-for ever. They talked over the surprise which the sudden disappearance
-of the Count would cause in the fashionable society from which he
-had fled without warning, and without leaving any means of tracing
-him. Forgetting for awhile the distance which separated them from the
-America to which they were bound, they dwelt at great length upon the
-unknown pleasures which awaited them upon that golden soil, that land
-of promise for all sorts of adventurers, but which, alas! often offers
-those who go thither in the hope of gaining an easy fortune, nothing but
-disappointment and sorrow.
-
-As every subject, however interesting it may be, must in the end grow
-exhausted, the two young men, to escape the fatiguing monotony of the
-voyage, had the good sense so to arrange their existence as to prevent
-tedium from gaining the influence over them which it had upon the
-other passengers. Twice a day, morning and evening, the Count, who was
-perfectly well acquainted with Spanish, gave his foster brother lessons
-in that language, lessons by which he profited so well, that after two
-months' study, he was able to carry on a conversation in Spanish. When
-he had made such progress, the young men employed no other language,
-either between themselves or with the persons on board who understood
-it. This habit produced the desired result; that is to say, Valentine,
-in a very short time, spoke Spanish, which is not difficult to acquire,
-as fluently as French; and then, in return, Valentine occasionally
-became the professor. He made Louis go through gymnastic exercises, in
-order to develop his natural strength, accustom his body to fatigue, and
-render him capable of supporting the rude exigencies of his new position.
-
-We will here, for a moment, return to the character of Valentine
-Guillois, a character of which the reader, from the young man's manner
-of acting and speaking, might form a completely erroneous opinion, and
-this we think it our duty to rectify. Morally, Valentine Guillois was
-a young fellow quite unacquainted with himself; hot-headed, giddy in
-the extreme, the surface had been slightly vitiated by reading chosen
-without discernment; but the foundation was essentially good. He
-united in himself all the characteristics of a class whose knowledge
-of the world is obtained from romances and the dramas of the Faubourg
-du Temple. He had sprung up like a mushroom upon _the pavé_ of Paris,
-performing for bread, as he himself said, the most eccentric and
-impossible things. As a soldier, he had lived from hand to mouth,
-happy in the present, and careless of a future whose existence was so
-uncertain for him. But in the heart of this thoughtless _gamin_ a new
-sentiment had germinated, and, in a very short time, taken deep root,--a
-hearty devotion to the man who had held out his hand to him, had had
-pity on his mother, and who, by dragging him from the slough in which he
-was plunged, without hope of ever rising, had given him a consciousness
-of his own personal value. The death of this benefactor had struck
-him like a clap of thunder. He felt all the importance of the mission
-with which his dying colonel had charged him, the responsible burden
-he imposed upon him, and he swore, with the firm resolution of keeping
-his oath, cost what it might, to watch, like an attentive and devoted
-brother, over the son of him who had made a man of him equal to other
-men. The two most prominent points of Valentine's character were, an
-energy which obstacles only augmented instead of depressing, and an iron
-will.
-
-With these two qualities, employed to the extent to which Valentine
-carried them, a man is sure to accomplish great things, and, if death
-does not surprise him on the road, to attain, at a given moment, the
-object, whatever it may be, which he has marked out for himself. In the
-present circumstances, these qualities were invaluable to the Count de
-Prébois-Crancé, a man of a dreamy, poetical nature, weak character, and
-timid mind, who, accustomed from his birth to the easy life of people
-of fortune, was entirely ignorant of the incessant difficulties of the
-new life into which he found himself suddenly cast. As always happens,
-when two men gifted with such opposite qualities meet, Valentine was
-not long in gaining over his foster brother a great moral influence, an
-influence which he employed with infinite tact, without ever rendering
-his companion aware of it; he appeared to do everything according to
-his will, whilst imposing his own upon him. In short, these two men,
-who loved each other thoroughly, and had but one head and one heart,
-perfected each other.
-
-The mode of speaking employed by Valentine in the early chapters of
-this history, was not at all habitual to him, and had truly astonished
-himself. Rising to the level of the situation in which the resolution of
-the young man he wished to save placed him, he had comprehended, with
-that sound common sense which he unwittingly possessed, that instead
-of desponding over the misfortune which struck his foster brother so
-unexpectedly, it was his duty, on the contrary, to endeavour to impart
-to him the courage he was deficient in. Thus, as we have seen, he
-found in his heart arguments so peremptorily decisive, that the Count
-consented to live, and gave himself up to his counsels. Valentine did
-not hesitate. The departure of Doña Rosario furnished him with the
-excuse he needed for dragging his foster brother from the Parisian gulf
-which, after having swallowed up his fortune, threatened to swallow up
-himself. Perceiving, before all else, the necessity for expatriating
-him, he persuaded Louis to follow the object of his love to America; and
-both set out gaily for the New World, abandoning the country which, like
-other emigrants, they fancied had been so ungrateful to them.
-
-Often during the passage the young Count had felt his courage flag,
-and his faith in the future abandon him, when thinking of the life of
-struggles and trials that awaited him in America. But Valentine, by
-his inexhaustible gaiety, his incredible store of anecdotes, and his
-incessant sallies, always succeeded in smoothing the wrinkles from the
-brow of his companion, who, with his habitual carelessness and want of
-energy, allowed himself to sink under that occult influence of Valentine
-which remoulded him, without his cognizance, and gradually made a new
-man of him.
-
-Such was the state of mind in which our two personages found themselves
-when the packet boat cast anchor in the roads of Valparaiso. Valentine,
-with his imperturbable assurance, doubted of nothing: he was persuaded
-that the people he was about to have to do with were very much beneath
-him in intelligence, and that he could manage very well to attain the
-double object which he aimed at. The Count entirely depended upon his
-foster brother for finding for him the woman he loved, and whom he had
-come so far to seek. As to retrieving his fortune, he did not even dream
-of that.
-
-Valparaiso--Valley of Paradise--so named probably by antiphrasis, for it
-is the filthiest and ugliest city of Spanish America--is nothing but a
-depot for foreigners, whom commercial interests do not call into Chili.
-Our young men only remained there long enough to equip themselves in
-the costume of the country; that is to say, to assume the Panama hat,
-the _poncho_, and _polenas_; then, each armed with two double-barrelled
-pistols, a rifle, and a long knife in his belt, they left the port, and,
-mounted on excellent horses, took their course towards Santiago, on the
-evening preceding the day on which the execution we have described in
-the preceding chapter was to take place. The weather was magnificent;--
-the rays of a burning sun rendered the very dust golden, and made the
-stones of the road shine like jewels.
-
-"Ah!" said Valentine, as soon as they found themselves upon the superb
-road which leads to the capital of Chili; "it does one good to breathe
-the air of the land--_caramba_, as they say here. Well, now, here we
-are in this boasted America, and now we must set about collecting our
-harvest of gold."
-
-"And Doña Rosario?" said his foster brother, in a melancholy tone.
-
-"Oh! we shall have found her within a fortnight," replied Valentine,
-with astounding confidence.
-
-With these consolatory words, he animated his horse with the spur, and
-the distance before them rapidly diminished.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-THE LINDA.[1]
-
-
-The night was gloomy; no star glittered in the heavens; the moon,
-concealed by clouds, only spread a wan, pale light, which, when it
-disappeared, rendered the darkness the denser. The streets were
-deserted; but at regular intervals the furtive steps of the serenos, who
-alone watched at this hour, were audible.
-
-The two men whom we have seen upon the Plaza Mayor, bearing away the
-wounded man, walked for a long time, loaded with their strange burthen,
-stopping at the least noise, and concealing themselves in the depths of
-a doorway, or in the angle of a street, to allow the serenos to pass, as
-they would be sure to require a reason for their being in the streets
-at that unusual hour. Since the discovery of the conspiracy, orders had
-been given that at eleven o'clock every citizen should be within doors.
-After many turnings and windings, the strangers stopped in the street El
-Mercado, one of the most secluded and narrow in Santiago. They appeared
-to be expected, for a door was opened at the sound of their steps, and
-a woman, dressed in white, and holding a candle, the light of which
-she shaded with her left hand, appeared on the threshold. The two men
-stopped, and one of them, taking a steel from his pocket, struck the
-flint so as to produce as few sparks as possible. At this signal--for it
-evidently was one--the woman extinguished the light, saying with a loud
-voice, but as if speaking to herself--
-
-"Dios proteja a Chile (May God protect Chili)!"
-
-"Dios lo ha protegido (God has protected it)," the man with the flint
-and steel replied, as he replaced his utensils in his pocket.
-
-The woman uttered a cry of joy, which her prudence suddenly repressed.
-
-"Come in, come in," she said in a low voice; and in an instant the two
-men were beside her.
-
-"Is he alive?" she asked, with intense anxiety.
-
-"He is alive," one of the strangers laconically replied.
-
-"In Heaven's name, come in!" she exclaimed.
-
-The bearers, guided by the woman, who had relighted her candle,
-disappeared in the house, the door of which was immediately and softly
-closed after them. All the houses of Santiago are alike, with respect
-to their internal arrangements. To describe one is to describe all.
-A wide doorway, ornamented with pilasters, leads to _the patio_, or
-great entrance court, at the end of which is the principal apartment,
-generally the dining room. On each side are bed chambers, reception
-rooms, and cabinets for labour or study. Behind these apartments is the
-_huerta_, or garden, laid out with taste, ornamented with fountains, and
-planted with orange trees, citron trees, pomegranates, limes, cedars,
-and palm trees, which grow with incredible luxuriance. Behind the garden
-is the _corral_--a vast enclosure appropriated to horses and carriages.
-
-The house into which we have introduced the reader, only differed from
-the others in the princely luxury of its furniture, which seemed to
-indicate that its inhabitant was a person of importance. The two men,
-still preceded by the woman, who served them as guide, entered a little
-room, whose window opened on the garden. They laid their burthen down
-upon a bed, and retired without speaking a word, but bowing respectfully.
-
-The woman remained for a moment motionless, listening to the sound
-of their retreating footsteps; and when all was silent, she sprang
-with a bound towards the door, the bolts of which she fastened with
-an impetuous gesture; then, returning and placing herself beside the
-wounded man, she fixed upon him a long and melancholy look.
-
-This woman, though really thirty-five years of age, appeared to be
-scarcely more than five-and-twenty. She was of an extraordinary, but a
-strange style of beauty; it attracted attention, commanded admiration,
-but created an instinctive repulsion. In spite of the majestic splendour
-of her graceful form, the elegance of her carriage, the freedom of her
-motions, full of voluptuous ease,--in spite of the purity of the lines
-of her fair face, slightly tinged by the warm rays of an American sun,
-which the magnificent tresses of her black hair beautifully enframed,
-her large black eyes, ornamented with long velvety lashes, and crowned
-by perfectly-arched brows, her straight nose, with its mobile and rosy
-nostrils, her little mouth, whose blood-red lips contrasted admirably
-with her pearl-white teeth--in spite of all these rich endowments,
-there was in this splendid creature something fatal, which chilled the
-heart as you contemplated her. Her searching glance, the satirical
-smile, which almost always contracted the corners of her lips, the
-slight wrinkle, which formed a harsh, deep line along her white
-brow--everything about her, even to the melodious sound of her voice,
-with its strongly-accentuated pitch, destroyed sympathy, and produced a
-feeling of hatred, rather than respect.
-
-Alone in that chamber, dimly lighted by one flickering taper, in that
-calm and silent night, face to face with that pale, bleeding man, whom
-she contemplated with stern, contracted brows, she resembled, with her
-long, black hair falling in disorder from her shoulders on to her white
-robe, a Thessalian witch, preparing herself to accomplish some terrible
-and mysterious work.
-
-The stranger was a man of, at most, forty-five years of age, of lofty
-stature, strongly built, and well proportioned. His features were
-handsome, his brow noble, and the expression of his countenance proud,
-but frank and resolute.
-
-The woman remained for a considerable time in mute contemplation.
-Her bosom heaved, her brows became more and more contracted, and she
-appeared to watch the too slow progress of the return to sensibility
-of the man her emissaries had saved from death. At length words forced
-their way through her compressed lips, and she murmured in a low, broken
-voice,--
-
-"Here he is, then; this time, at least, he is in my power! Will he
-consent to answer me? Oh! perhaps I had better have left him to die."
-
-She paused to breathe a deep, broken sigh, but almost immediately
-continued:--
-
-"My daughter! my daughter! of whom this man has bereaved me! and whom,
-in spite of all my researches, he has hitherto concealed in some
-inviolable asylum! My daughter! he must restore her to me; it is my
-will!" she added with inexpressible energy. "He shall, even if I had
-to deliver him up again to the executioners from whom I have ravished
-their prey! These wounds are nothing; loss of blood and terror are the
-sole causes of this insensibility. But time passes--my absence may be
-noticed. Why should I hesitate longer? Let me at once know what I have
-to hope from him. Perhaps he will allow himself to be softened by my
-tears and prayers. What, he! he to whom all human feeling is unknown!
-Better for me to implore the most implacable Indian! He will laugh at my
-grief, he will reply by sarcasms to my cries of despair;--oh! woe, woe
-be to him if he do so!"
-
-She looked earnestly at the wounded man, who was still motionless, for
-another instant, and then, adding resolutely, "I will try," she drew
-from her bosom a small crystal phial, curiously cut, and raising the
-head of the unknown, made him inhale the contents. This was followed by
-a moment of intense expectation; the woman watching with an anxious eye
-the convulsive movements which are the precursors of the return to life,
-as they agitated the body of the wounded man. At length, with a deep
-sigh, he opened his eyes.
-
-"Where am I?" he murmured in a faint voice, then sank back, and closed
-his eyes again.
-
-"In safety," the woman replied.
-
-The sound of the voice produced upon the wounded man the effect of an
-electric shock. He raised himself quickly, and looking around him with a
-mixture of disgust, terror, and anger, asked in a hollow voice,--
-
-"Who spoke?"
-
-"I!" the woman replied haughtily, placing herself before him.
-
-"Ah!" he said with a gesture of disgust, and sinking back upon the bed;
-"you again! ever you!"
-
-"Yes, I! still I, Don Tadeo! I, whose will, in spite of your disdain
-and your hatred, has never faltered! I, in short, whose assistance you
-have always obstinately refused, and who have saved you, in spite of
-yourself."
-
-"Oh! that is an easy matter for you, madam; are you not on the best
-possible terms with my executioners?"
-
-At this reply the woman could not repress a movement of anger; a sudden
-redness flitted across her face.
-
-"No insults, Don Tadeo de Leon!" she said, stamping her foot; "I have
-saved you! I am a woman, and you are under my roof!"
-
-"That is true," he replied, rising and bowing to her with ironical
-respect; "I had forgotten that, madam; I am in your house. Have the
-goodness, then, to direct me the way out, that I may be gone as quickly
-as possible."
-
-"Do not be in such haste, Don Tadeo--you have not yet sufficiently
-recovered your strength. Within a few steps, you perhaps would fall
-again, to be raised up by the agents of the power which, this time, I
-swear to you, would not let you escape."
-
-"And who told you, madam, that I should not prefer being retaken and
-executed a second time, to the chance of remaining longer in your
-presence?"
-
-There was a moment of silence, during which the two interlocutors
-observed each other attentively. The woman was the first to speak.
-
-"Listen to me, Don Tadeo," she said. "In spite of all your efforts,
-destiny, or, speaking more correctly, woman's genius, which nothing can
-resist, has brought us together once again. If you live, if you have
-received only slight wounds, it is because I lavished my gold upon the
-soldiers charged with your execution; I wished to force you to that
-explanation which I have so long demanded of you, which you so often
-have refused me, but which you can now no longer avoid. Submit, then,
-with a good grace. We will afterwards separate, if not good friends,
-at least indifferent, never to meet again. Though I do not wish to
-establish any claim upon your gratitude, you certainly owe your life to
-me; were it for that service alone, you are bound to hear me."
-
-"What! madam," Don Tadeo replied, proudly, "do you think that I consider
-what you have done was rendering me a service? By what right have you
-saved my life? You know me but ill if you fancied I should allow myself
-to be softened by your tears. No, no, I have been too long your dupe and
-your slave to do so. Heaven be praised! I know you well now; and the
-Linda, the mistress of General Bustamente, the tyrant of my country, the
-executioner of my brothers and myself, has nothing to expect from me!
-All that you can say, all that you can do, will be to no purpose. Spare
-yourself, then, I advise you, the trouble of pretending a gentleness
-which neither accords with your character nor your mode of life. I
-madly loved you, a young, pure, and prudent girl, in the cabin of the
-worthy _guaso,_ your father, whose death was caused by your scandalous
-life; you were then called Maria. At that period, would I not have
-sacrificed my life and my happiness for you?--you know I would. Many
-times have I given you proofs of that boundless love; but the Linda, the
-shameless courtezan, the Linda, the woman branded on the brow like Cain
-with the seal of infamy, the miserable creature--I know her not. Away,
-madam!--away! There can be nothing in common between you and me."
-
-And with a gesture of proud authority he waved her from him.
-
-The woman had listened to him with flashing eyes and heaving bosom,
-trembling with rage and shame. Drops of perspiration stood upon her
-face, which glowed with a feverish redness. When he had finished, she
-seized his arm, pressed it with her utmost strength, and placed her face
-close to his.
-
-"Have you said all?" she muttered from between her teeth. "Have you
-heaped insults enough upon me? Have you cast sufficient mire in my face?
-Have you nothing more to add?"
-
-"Nothing, madam," he replied, in a tone of cool contempt. "You can, when
-you please, summon your assassins--I am ready to receive them."
-
-And throwing himself upon the bed, he waited with an air of the most
-insolent indifference.
-
-
-[1] This word, which has no equivalent in English or French, is in the
-Spanish language the highest expression of physical beauty in woman.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-HUSBAND AND WIFE.
-
-
-Doña Maria, notwithstanding the fresh and bitter insult she had just
-received from Don Tadeo, did not yet renounce the hope of softening
-him. When she recalled to her mind the early years, already so distant,
-of her love for Don Tadeo, his devotion to her smallest caprices, when
-she could bring him trembling and prostrate to her feet by a glance or
-a smile, and the entire abnegation he had made of his will, in order
-to live for her and by her; notwithstanding all that had since taken
-place between them, she could not persuade herself that the violent
-and deeply-seated passion he had entertained for her, the species of
-worship he had vowed to her, could have entirely disappeared without
-leaving some slight traces behind. Her pride revolted at the idea of
-having lost all her empire over the lofty nature which she so long had
-moulded at her pleasure like soft wax, under the burning impression of
-wild caprices. She fancied that, like most other men, Don Tadeo, deeply
-wounded in his pride, loved her still without being willing to admit it,
-and that the virulent reproaches he had addressed to her, were flashes
-of that ill-extinguished fire which still smouldered in his heart, and
-whose flame she should succeed in reviving.
-
-Unfortunately Doña Maria had never given herself the trouble to study
-the man she had married, and whom her beauty had so long held in
-subjection. Don Tadeo had been nothing in her eyes but an attentive,
-submissive slave, and, under the apparent weakness of the loving man,
-she had not discovered the powerful energy which formed the foundation
-of his character. And yet the history itself of their love had been a
-proof of that energy, and of a will which nothing could control. Doña
-Maria, then fifteen years of age, dwelt with her father in a _hacienda_,
-in the neighbourhood of Santiago. Deprived of her mother, who had died
-in giving her birth, she was brought up under the care of an old aunt,
-an incorruptible Argus, who allowed no lover to come near her niece.
-The young girl, ignorant as all girls brought up in the country are,
-but whose warm aspirations led her to desire to know the world, and to
-launch into that whirlwind of pleasures the sound of which died without
-an echo in her ears, waited impatiently the arrival of the man who
-should introduce her to these delights, of which, although unknown, she
-had formed seducing ideas. Don Tadeo had only been the guide charged
-with initiating her into the pleasures for which she thirsted. She
-had never loved him; she had only said to herself, on seeing him and
-learning he was of a noble family, "That is the man I have been looking
-for."
-
-This hideous and selfish calculation is made by more girls than
-we may fancy. Don Tadeo was handsome. Doña Maria's self-love was
-flattered by the conquest; but if he had been ugly and disagreeable,
-it would not have altered her course. In her extraordinary character,
-a strange conjunction of the most abject passions, among which shone
-here and there, like diamonds gleaming in the mire, a few feelings
-which attached her to humanity, there was the spirit of two women
-of ancient Rome; Locusta and Messalina were united in her: ardent,
-passionate and ambitious, covetous and prodigal, this demon, concealed
-under the outward form of an angel, acknowledged no other laws but her
-own caprices; and all means, by which she could satisfy them, to her
-appeared good.
-
-For a long time, Don Tadeo, blinded by passion, had submitted without
-complaining to the iron yoke of this infernal genius; but when the day
-arrived that the scales fell from his eyes, he measured with terror the
-depth of the abyss into which this woman had cast him. The frightful
-disorders to which, under the sanction of his name, she had abandoned
-herself, imprinted on his blushing brow a stigma of infamy: the world
-believed him to be her accomplice.
-
-Don Tadeo had by Maria an only daughter, a fair girl of angelic beauty,
-at the period of our history fifteen years of age, whom he loved in
-proportion to the sufferings her mother had inflicted upon him. He
-trembled to think of the frightful future which lay before this innocent
-creature. For four years he had been separated from his wife; and
-during that time she had set no bounds on her irregularities. One day,
-Don Tadeo presented himself unexpectedly at the house of his wife, and
-without saying a word as to his ulterior intentions, took away his
-daughter. From that time--nearly ten years--Doña Maria had never seen
-her child.
-
-A strange revolution was effected by this step in the mother's feelings;
-a new sentiment, so to say, germinated in her soul. A thing, till that
-time unknown to her, happened; she felt the pulses of her heart beat
-for another--she grieved at the remembrance of the little angel who had
-been ravished from her. What was the sentiment? She, herself, knew not;
-she only ardently wished to see her child again. During six years she
-contended, publicly and privately, with Don Tadeo, to have her daughter
-restored to her. The father was deaf and dumb; she could never learn
-what had become of her. Don Tadeo, who, since he ceased to love her, had
-studied the character of the woman of whom he had made an implacable
-enemy, had taken his precautions so prudently that all Doña Maria's
-researches proved fruitless, and all her attempts to obtain an interview
-remained without a result. She imagined that he was afraid of yielding,
-if face to face with her; and she resolved, cost what it might, to force
-him to grant her the interview to which nothing had been able to make
-him consent.
-
-Such was, at the moment we bring them on the scene, the position of
-the two personages who now doubtless met for the last time. It was an
-extraordinary position for both; an unequal contest between a wounded
-and proscribed man, and an ardent, insulted woman, who, like a lioness
-deprived of her whelps, was resolved to succeed, whatever might happen,
-and compel the man whom she had forced to hear her, to restore her
-daughter to her.
-
-Don Tadeo turned towards her.
-
-"I am waiting," he said.
-
-"You are waiting?" she replied, with a friendly smile. "What do you
-expect, then?"
-
-"The assassins whom you doubtless have at hand, in case I should be
-unwilling to reply to your questions concerning your daughter."
-
-"Oh!" she said, with an air of repulsion, "how can you, Don Tadeo, have
-so bad an opinion of me? How can you pretend to believe that, after
-having saved you, I should deliver you up to those who have proscribed
-you?"
-
-"Who knows?" he replied, in a strongly ironical tone. "The heart of
-women of your class, Linda, is an abyss which no man can pretend to
-sound. You, who are incessantly seeking eccentric pleasures, perhaps
-would find an unknown enjoyment and a charm in this second execution,
-which, besides, would not at all compromise you, as I am already legally
-dead to the world."
-
-"Don Tadeo, I know how unworthy my conduct towards you has been, and
-how little I deserve your pity; but you are a gentleman, and, as such,
-do you think it does you honour to load with insults, however merited,
-a woman who is your wife, and who, after saving your life, with no
-intention of reinstating herself in your favour, merely makes a claim,
-at least upon your pity, if not on your esteem?"
-
-"Very well, madam; nothing can be more just than your observations, and
-I subscribe to them with all my heart. I beg you to pardon me for having
-allowed myself to utter certain words; but, at the first movement, I
-was not master of myself, and I could not keep down in the depths of my
-heart the feelings which were stifling me. Now, accept my sincere thanks
-for the immense service you have rendered me, and permit me to retire.
-A longer sojourn, on my part, in this house, is a robbery of which I
-render myself guilty towards your numerous adorers."
-
-And, bowing with ironical courtesy to his infuriated wife, he made a
-movement towards one of the doors of the room.
-
-"One word more," she said.
-
-"Speak, madam."
-
-"Are you resolved to leave me ignorant of the fate of my daughter?"
-
-"She is dead."
-
-"Dead!" she cried, in a voice of terror.
-
-"For you--yes," he replied, with a cold smile.
-
-"Oh, you are implacable!" she shrieked, stamping her foot with rage.
-
-He bowed, without making any reply.
-
-"Well, then," she resumed, "it is now no longer a favour I implore--it
-is a bargain I propose to you."
-
-"A bargain?"
-
-"Yes, a bargain."
-
-"The idea strikes me as original."
-
-"Perhaps it is; you shall judge for yourself."
-
-"I listen, but time presses, and I--"
-
-"Oh, I will be brief," she interrupted.
-
-"I am at your service," and he reseated himself, smiling, exactly like a
-friend on a visit. The Linda followed his motions with her eye, without
-appearing to attach any importance to them.
-
-"Don Tadeo," she said, "during the many years we have been separated a
-great number of events has taken place."
-
-"Quite correct," said he, with a gesture of polite assent.
-
-"I will say nothing to you of myself--my life is known to you."
-
-"Very little of it, madam."
-
-She cast a savage look at him.
-
-"Let that pass," she said, "it is of you I would speak."
-
-"Of me?"
-
-"Yes, of you, whose moments are not so completely absorbed by patriotism
-and the effervescence of political ideas as not to leave you a few for
-more intimate joys and emotions."
-
-"What do you mean?"
-
-"Why do you feign ignorance?" she said, with a perfidious smile; "I am
-sure you understand me."
-
-"Madam!"
-
-"Do not deny it, Tadeo! Tired of the ephemeral love of women of my
-class, as you have just now so well said, you seek in the pure heart of
-a young girl emotions more in accordance with your tastes; in a word,
-I know you are in love with a charming young creature, worthy in all
-respects of being the wife of your choice, if I, unfortunately, did not
-exist."
-
-Don Tadeo fixed upon his wife a scrutinizing look while she was
-pronouncing these words. As she finished, a sigh escaped him.
-
-"What, are you aware?" he exclaimed, with well-feigned surprise. "You
-know--"
-
-"I know that her name is Doña Rosario del Valle," she replied, satisfied
-of the effect she thought she had produced upon her husband; "why, it is
-the freshest news in Santiago! all the world is talking of it. How was
-it likely it should escape me, when I take such an interest in you?"
-
-The Linda interrupted herself, and laid her hand on his arm.
-
-"It is of very little consequence," she added; "restore me my daughter,
-Don Tadeo, and this new love of yours shall be sacred to me--if not--"
-
-"You are mistaken, madam, I tell you."
-
-"Beware, Don Tadeo!" she remarked, with a glance at the clock; "by this
-time the woman we were speaking of is in the hands of my agents."
-
-"What do you mean?" he cried, in great agitation.
-
-"Yes," she replied, in a husky tone, "I have had her carried off. In a
-few minutes she will be here. Beware! I repeat, Don Tadeo! if you do not
-tell me where my daughter is, and if you continue to refuse to restore
-her to me--"
-
-"Well," he said, haughtily, looking her full in the face, and crossing
-his arms, "what then will you do?"
-
-"I will kill this woman!" she replied, in a gloomy but firm tone.
-
-Don Tadeo looked at her for a moment with an undefinable expression, and
-then burst into a dry, nervous laugh, which chilled the woman with fear.
-
-"You will kill her!" he cried, "unhappy woman! Well!--kill that innocent
-creature!--Call in your executioners--I will be mute."
-
-The Linda sprang up like a lioness, and rushed towards the door, which
-she opened violently.
-
-"This is too much!--Come in!" she called out, loudly.
-
-The two men who had brought in Don Tadeo appeared, poniard in hand.
-
-"Ah!" the gentleman said, with a contemptuous smile, "I know you again
-at last."
-
-At a motion from the Linda the assassins advanced towards him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-THE DARK-HEARTS.
-
-
-As we have seen, the people had dispersed almost immediately after the
-execution of the patriots. Everyone carried away in the depths of his
-heart the hope of avenging, at an early day, the victims who had so
-nobly died, with the cry for a time left without an echo, of Viva la
-patria! A cry checked by the bayonets of the soldiers of Bustamente, but
-which must soon give birth to fresh martyrs.
-
-And yet the square, though it seemed a desert, was not so. Several
-men, folded in dark cloaks, and with broad-brimmed hats, pulled down
-over their eyes, were grouped in the recess of the coach entrance of a
-house, and were conversing earnestly together in a low voice, keeping an
-anxious look-out the meanwhile. These men were patriots.
-
-In spite of the terror which hovered over the city, they had, by dint of
-prayers, obtained from the archbishop of Santiago, who was a true priest
-according to the gospel, and at heart devoted to the liberal cause,
-permission to pay the last rites to their unfortunate brethren.
-
-No part of the dismal drama which followed the execution had escaped
-them. They had seen Don Tadeo rise like a phantom from the heap of
-carcasses which covered him; they had heard the words he had pronounced,
-and were preparing to go to his succour, when the two strangers,
-appearing suddenly, raised his body and bore it away. This carrying off
-of a half dead man had surprised them exceedingly. After exchanging a
-few words, two of them went in pursuit of the mysterious strangers,
-probably in order to learn to what house the wounded man was taken,
-whilst the others, twelve in number, advanced to the middle of the
-square.
-
-They anxiously bent down and examined the bodies stretched at their
-feet, hoping, perhaps, that another victim might have escaped the
-slaughter. Unfortunately, Don Tadeo was the only one saved by some
-inexplicable mystery. The nine other victims were all dead. After a long
-examination, the patriots stood up again with a painful sigh of regret,
-and one of them went and knocked at a lower door of the cathedral.
-
-"Who is there?" was immediately asked from the interior.
-
-"_One for whom the night hath no darkness_," the man who had knocked
-replied.
-
-"What do you want?" the voice asked again.
-
-"_Is it not written: Knock and it shall be opened to thee_?" the
-stranger added.
-
-"_Our country!_" said the voice.
-
-"_Or vengeance!_" the man promptly replied.
-
-The door opened, and a monk appeared. His cowl pulled down over his
-face, prevented his features being seen.
-
-"Well," he said, "what do the _Dark-Hearts_ require?"
-
-"A prayer for their murdered brothers."
-
-"Return to those who sent you; they shall be satisfied."
-
-"Thanks for all!" the unknown replied; and, after bowing respectfully to
-the monk, he rejoined his companions. During his absence they had not
-been idle, but had placed the bodies upon hand barrows concealed under
-the arcades of the place.
-
-At the expiration of a few minutes a brilliant light inundated the
-place; the cathedral doors were opened. The interior was seen to be
-splendidly illuminated, and from the principal door issued a long
-procession of monks, each bearing a wax light in his hand; they chanted,
-as they walked, the service of the dead. At the same moment the gates
-of the government palace were thrown open as if by enchantment, and a
-squadron of the Ceras, with General Bustamente at their head, advanced,
-at a trot, towards the procession.
-
-When the monks and soldiers met, they stopped as of one accord. The
-twelve unknown men, folded in their cloaks, and grouped round the
-fountain which forms the centre of the square, anxiously awaited the
-denouement of the scene about to take place.
-
-"What is the meaning of this procession, at such an unusual hour?" the
-general haughtily demanded.
-
-"It means that we have come," the monk who walked first replied, with a
-firm voice, but in a melancholy tone, "to take up the victims you have
-struck down, and give them honourable burial."
-
-"And who, pray, are you?" the general asked, sharply.
-
-"I?" the monk replied, in the same firm tone, and throwing back his
-cowl upon his shoulders--"I am the archbishop of Santiago, primate of
-Chili, invested by his holiness the Pope with the power of binding and
-unbinding on earth."
-
-In Spanish America, all persons yield without hesitation to the religion
-of Christ. The only power that is real is that of the priests. No one,
-however high he may be placed, ventures to struggle against it: he knows
-beforehand that, if he did, he would be sure to be crushed. The general
-knitted his brows, struck his forehead forcibly with his hand, but was
-constrained to admit himself conquered.
-
-"My lord!" he said, with a bow; "pardon me! In these times of civil
-discord, we often, in spite of ourselves, confound our friends with our
-enemies. I was ignorant that your lordship had given orders for prayers
-to be offered up for these criminals, and still more so that you would
-deign to perform this task in person--I beg leave to retire."
-
-During this scene, the patriots had concealed themselves behind the
-pillars of the place, where, thanks to the darkness, they remained
-unseen by the general. As soon as the military had disappeared, at a
-sign from the archbishop the bodies were borne into the cathedral.
-
-"Beware of that man, my lord," whispered one of the unknown in the
-archbishop's ear; "he darted at you the glance of a tiger as he retired."
-
-"Brother!" the priest replied calmly; "I am prepared for martyrdom."
-
-The service commenced. As soon as it was terminated, the patriots
-retired, after warmly thanking the archbishop for his kindness towards
-their dead brethren. Scarce had they proceeded a few steps along a
-narrow street, edged by mean dwellings, when two men rose from behind an
-overturned cart which concealed them, and coming towards them, said in a
-low voice--
-
-"Our country!"
-
-"Vengeance!" one of the unknown replied. "Come on!"
-
-The two men approached.
-
-"Well!" said he who appeared to be the chief. "What have you learnt?"
-
-"All that it is possible to know," one of the newcomers replied.
-
-"Whither have they transported Don Tadeo?"
-
-"To the mansion of the Linda."
-
-"To the residence of his wife! Of the woman who is now the mistress
-of the General Bustamente!" the chief replied anxiously. "By the holy
-Virgin! my comrades, he is lost, for she hates him mortally. Shall we
-allow him to be assassinated without an effort to save him?"
-
-"That would be base cowardice," they replied unanimously.
-
-"But how can we introduce ourselves into the house?"
-
-"Nothing more easy; the garden walls are very low."
-
-"Come on, then! there is not a minute to be lost!"
-
-Without another word, they all hastened off in the direction of the
-Linda's house, which, as we have said, was situated in the faubourg
-of the Canadilla, the handsomest quarter in Santiago. The windows,
-hermetically closed, did not allow one ray of light to pass; not a
-sound could be heard, and the house seemed deserted. The patriots stole
-silently round the walls, and when they reached the back, they easily
-climbed the fence by sticking their poniards between the bricks, and
-sprang into the garden. Here they looked carefully about them, and,
-after a short pause, proceeded with stealthy steps towards a pale,
-trembling light, which sent a feeble beam through the chink of a
-shutter. They were within a few paces of this window, when they suddenly
-heard the noise of what appeared a scuffle, and a terrible cry was
-uttered, mingled with the crash of furniture and imprecations of rage
-and pain. Bounding forward like panthers, the strangers, who had covered
-their faces with masks of black velvet, dashed at the window, which flew
-in a thousand fragments around them, and entered the salon.
-
-And it was time for them to arrive. Don Tadeo, with a stool, had split
-the head of one of the bandits, who lay lifeless upon the floor; but
-the other had got him down, and, with his knee upon his breast, was on
-the point of stabbing him. With a pistol shot, one of the unknown blew
-out his brains, and the wretch rolled in his agony close to his dead
-companion. Don Tadeo sprang up quickly, exclaiming--
-
-"By the Virgin! I thought my hour was come!" Then, turning towards the
-masked men, he said--"Thanks, caballeros! thanks for your very timely
-succour! One minute more, and it would have been all over with me! The
-Linda is expeditious!"
-
-The courtesan, with features contracted by rage, and clenched teeth,
-looked on without appearing to see, overwhelmed, confounded by the scene
-which had so rapidly taken place, and which had, in a few minutes,
-ravished from her the vengeance which she thought had this time been so
-certain.
-
-"Without bearing malice, madam," said Don Tadeo in a jeering tone, "this
-is a match deferred. Your fertile imagination will no doubt soon furnish
-you with the means of taking your revenge!"
-
-"I hope so," she said with a sardonic smile.
-
-"Seize this woman," the leader of the unknown commanded; "gag her, and
-bind her securely to the bed."
-
-"Bind me!" she cried in a paroxysm of anger; "me! do you know who I am?"
-
-"Perfectly well, madam," the stranger replied drily. "You are a woman
-for whom honourable people have no name. Libertines have given you that
-of the Linda, and your present lover is General Bustamente. You see,
-madam, that we are not unacquainted with you."
-
-"Beware, sir," she hissed; "I am not to be insulted with impunity."
-
-"We do not insult you, madam; we only wish, for a time, to put it out
-of your power to do mischief. In a few days," he continued, in a quiet,
-firm tone, "we will determine what shall be done with you."
-
-"Done with me!--me!--who then are you, with faces you dare not reveal,
-and who presume to speak to me thus?"
-
-"Who we are,--learn!--We are the _Dark-Hearts!_" At this terrible
-announcement, a convulsive trembling shook the limbs of the woman, who,
-retreating to the wall, a prey to intense terror, exclaimed in a faint
-voice; "My God! my God! I am lost," and sank down fainting.
-
-At a sign from the leader, one of his companions bound her securely, and
-after gagging her, fastened her to the foot of the bed. Then, taking Don
-Tadeo with them, they departed by the same way they had entered, without
-taking any heed of the two assassins lying upon the floor. Before he
-left the room, the chief pinned a piece of parchment to a table with
-a dagger. Upon this parchment were written a few words of terrible
-import:--
-
-"_The traitor Pancho Bustamente is cited at the expiration of
-ninety-three days!"_
-
- THE DARK-HEARTS.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-IN THE STREET.
-
-
-As soon as they were outside of the house, the masked men, at a sign
-from the leader, dispersed in various directions. When they had
-disappeared round the corners of the neighbouring streets, the chief
-turned towards Don Tadeo, who, scarce recovered from the trying emotions
-he had successively gone through, and weakened by the blood he had lost,
-as well as by the prodigious efforts his last struggle had cost him,
-was leaning, half fainting against the wall of the house he had been so
-fortunately enabled to quit. A flood of bitter reflections rushed upon
-his brain; the incidents of that terrible night almost unsettled his
-reason: in vain he tried to recover the train of his ideas which had
-been so often and so violently broken. The stranger looked at him for
-a few minutes with profound attention; then approaching him, he laid
-his hand quietly upon his shoulder. At this sudden touch, the gentleman
-started as if he had received an electric shock.
-
-"What!" the unknown said in a tone of reproach, "scarcely entered on the
-good fight, and you despair already, Don Tadeo?"
-
-The wounded man shook his head.
-
-"You, Don Tadeo, whose lofty brow has never bent before revolutionary
-storms; you, who in the most trying circumstances have always remained
-firm, are now pale and cast down, without faith in the present, or hope
-in the future, and have lost strength and courage through the vain
-threats of a woman!"
-
-"That woman," he replied mournfully, "has always been my evil genius.
-She is a demon!"
-
-"And suppose," the unknown exclaimed energetically, "that this woman
-should succeed in getting up another of the infamous schemes in which
-her brain is so fertile, a man of heart takes courage in a struggle?
-Forget these impotent hatreds that can never reach you; remember what
-you are; look boldly at the glorious mission which is imposed upon you."
-
-"What do you mean?"
-
-"Do you not understand me? Can you believe that God, who has this night
-allowed you so miraculously to escape death, has not great designs
-in store for you? Brother," he added, in a tone of authority, "the
-existence that has been restored to you is not your own, it belongs to
-your country!"
-
-A moment of silence followed this appeal, during which Don Tadeo
-appeared a prey to profound despair. At length, looking at the unknown,
-he said with bitter despondency--
-
-"What is to be done? Heaven is my witness that my only desire, my sole
-happiness, would be to see my country free. But during the twenty years
-we have been struggling we have done nothing, alas! but pass from one
-tyranny to another, each time riveting afresh the chains which bind
-us. No! Heaven itself seems to forbid our contending longer against an
-implacable destiny. You know well from experience that citizens cannot
-be improvised from slaves. Servitude destroys moral virtue, abases the
-soul, and degrades the heart. Many generations must pass away before the
-inhabitants of this unfortunate country will be fit to form a people!"
-
-"By what right do you presume to fathom the designs of Providence?"
-the unknown replied, in an imposing tone of voice. "Do you know what
-is reserved for you? Who tells you that the passing triumph of our
-oppressors is not granted by God, in His boundless wisdom, in order to
-render their future fall more terrible?"
-
-Don Tadeo, restored to himself by the manly words of his disguised
-friend, drew himself up proudly, and looked attentively at the speaker.
-
-"And who are you," he said, "whose sympathetic voice has stirred the
-most secret fibres of my heart? Who authorizes you to speak thus?
-Answer! Who are you?"
-
-"Of what importance is it who I am," the unknown remarked, calmly, "if
-I succeed in persuading you that all is far from being lost--that the
-liberty which you believe for ever destroyed has never been so near
-triumphing, and that it only perhaps requires one sublime effort to
-recover it!"
-
-"But still?" the wounded man said, persistently.
-
-"I am he who, a few minutes ago, saved your life. That ought to suffice."
-
-"Not so," Don Tadeo said, warmly, "for you conceal your features under a
-mask, and the very circumstance you named gives me a right to see them."
-
-"Perhaps it does," the unknown said, slowly removing his mask, and
-revealing to Don Tadeo, in the pale beams of the moon, a countenance
-with manly, marked features, and wearing a frank and loyal expression.
-
-"Oh! my heart did not deceive me!" Tadeo cried--"Don Gregorio Peralta!"
-
-"Yes, it is I, Don Tadeo!" the young man, he was scarcely thirty,
-replied--"and cannot comprehend the depression of the man whom the
-avengers have chosen as their chief."
-
-"How do you know? Notwithstanding our friendship, I have always
-concealed from you--"
-
-"Were you not condemned to death?" Don Gregorio interrupted. "Your
-companions elected me _King of Darkness_ in your place, that is, they
-placed in my hands an immense power, as they had done in yours, of
-which I was left the uncontrolled disposal. Death unbound the oath of
-silence imposed upon the brethren. Your name was unknown to all; I was
-as ignorant that you were the energetic chief who had made our society
-a power, as you were, my dear friend, that I was one of your soldiers.
-But, thanks be to God, you are saved, Don Tadeo! Resume your place.
-You alone, under present circumstances, are able to fill worthily the
-post which our confidence has assigned you. Become again the King of
-Darkness! But," he added, in a deep, concentrated tone, "remember that
-we are the avengers; that we ought to be without pity for ourselves
-as for others; that one feeling, and one alone, ought to live in our
-souls--the love of our country!"
-
-Then followed a short silence; the two men appeared to be reflecting
-deeply. At length Don Tadeo raised his head proudly.
-
-"Thanks, Don Gregorio!" he said, in a firm voice, and pressing his
-hand--"thanks for your rough words; they have restored me to myself. I
-will prove myself worthy of you. Don Tadeo de Leon no longer exists;
-the hired assassins of a tyrant have shot him tonight upon the Plaza
-Mayor. No one is left but the King of Darkness! the implacable leader
-of the Dark-Hearts! Woe be to them whom God shall bring across my path!
-for I will crush them without pity. We shall triumph, Don Gregorio;
-for from this day I am no longer a man, I am the avenging sword, the
-exterminating angel, fighting for our country!"
-
-While uttering these words, Don Tadeo had drawn his imposing stature up
-to its full height; his handsome, noble features became animated, and
-his eyes sparkled in accordance with his speech.
-
-"Oh," Don Gregorio exclaimed, cheerfully, "I have found my friend again!
-Thank God! thank God!"
-
-"Yes, my brother," the leader continued, "from this moment the real
-struggle between us and the tyrant begins--a struggle without pity,
-without truce, and without mercy, which can only terminate in the
-complete extinction of our enemies. Woe be to them! Woe!"
-
-"No time is to be lost; let us begone!" Don Gregorio said.
-
-"But whither am I to go?" Don Tadeo asked, with a sardonic smile. "Am I
-not legally dead in the eyes of all? My house is no longer mine."
-
-"That is true," the lieutenant of the Dark-Hearts murmured. "Well, never
-mind that! Tomorrow the news of your miraculous resurrection will be a
-thunderclap to our enemies! Their awaking will be terrible! They will
-learn with stupor that the invincible athlete, whom they thought they
-had for ever crushed beneath their feet, is up again, and ready to renew
-the contest."
-
-"And this time, I solemnly swear," Don Tadeo cried, with energy, "the
-fall of the tyrant alone shall terminate it. But you are right; we
-cannot remain longer here. Come home with me; for a time you will be
-there in safety; unless," he added, with a smile, "you prefer asking an
-asylum of Doña Rosario?"
-
-Don Tadeo, who had taken Don Gregorio's arm, stopped suddenly at this
-question, of which his friend did not suspect the terrible extent.
-A convulsive shudder darted through his frame, a cold perspiration
-inundated his face.
-
-"Oh," he exclaimed, in a tone of agony, "my God! I had forgotten!"
-
-Don Gregorio was terrified at the state he beheld him in.
-
-"In heaven's name, what is the matter?" he asked.
-
-"What is the matter!" the chief replied, in a voice choked with emotion,
-"that woman--that serpent whom we have weakly failed to crush--"
-
-"Well, what of her?"
-
-"Oh, I have but this moment recollected a horrible threat she made. Good
-heavens! good heavens! What is to be done?"
-
-"Explain yourself, my friend; you quite terrify me."
-
-"By her orders, Doña Rosario this very night, was to be carried off; and
-who knows if, furious at my escape from her assassins, that woman has
-not by this time put her to death?"
-
-"Oh, that is frightful!" Don Gregorio cried. "What is to be done?"
-
-"Oh, that woman!" the wounded man replied; "and not to be able to act,
-or to know how to thwart her horrible schemes."
-
-"Let us fly to Doña Rosario's residence!" Don Gregorio said.
-
-"Alas! you see I am wounded; I can scarcely support myself."
-
-"Well, when you can no longer walk, I will carry you," his friend said,
-resolutely.
-
-"Thanks, brother! May God help us!"
-
-And the two men, the one leaning upon the other, set off, as fast as the
-state of Don Tadeo would permit, towards the residence of the lady whom
-they were so anxious to save. But, in spite of the earnest will that
-animated him, Don Tadeo felt his strength fail him; and, notwithstanding
-all his efforts, it was with extreme difficulty he sustained himself.
-Whilst labouring on thus, the noise of horses' footsteps reached them
-from a distance. Torches gleamed up the street, and a troop of horsemen
-appeared in sight.
-
-"Oh, oh!" Don Gregorio said, stopping, and endeavouring to make out who
-those persons could be, who, in defiance of the police regulations,
-dared to be passing along the streets at this hour of the night.
-
-"Let us stop," Don Tadeo replied; "I see the glitter of uniforms. They
-are the spies of the minister of war."
-
-"By Saint Jago!" cried Don Gregorio, "it is General Bustamente himself!
-The two accomplices are going to have a little chat together."
-
-"Yes," the wounded man said, in a faltering voice; "he is going towards
-the residence of the Linda."
-
-As the horsemen were but at a short distance, the two men, fearing to be
-surprised, turned quickly into a side street, and the General and his
-suite passed by without seeing them.
-
-"Let us begone as fast as possible," Don Gregorio said; and his
-companion, aware of the urgency for prompt flight, made a desperate
-effort. They resumed their course, and had walked for about ten minutes,
-when they heard the steps of more horses coming towards them.
-
-"What can this mean?" the wounded man said, endeavouring to smile; "Are
-all the people of Santiago running about the streets tonight?"
-
-"Hum!" said Don Gregorio, "I will find out this time."
-
-All at once a female voice was heard in a lamentable tone imploring help.
-
-"Make her hold her tongue, _carajas!_" a man said, coarsely.
-
-But the sound of that voice had reached the ears of Don Tadeo and his
-friend. At that voice, which both had recognized, they were roused to
-feelings of deep interest and anger. They pressed each other's hand
-firmly; their resolution was formed--to die or to save her who called
-upon them for help.
-
-"Holloa! what is this about?" another individual said, pulling up his
-horse.
-
-Two men, standing firmly in the middle of the street, seemed determined
-to bar the passage of the horsemen, of whom there were five. One of them
-held a woman before him on his horse.
-
-"Holloa!" cried the one who had just spoken, "get out of the way, if you
-don't wish to be ridden over."
-
-"You shall not pass," a deep voice replied, "unless you release the
-woman you are bearing off."
-
-"Shan't we?" the horseman remarked with a laugh.
-
-"Try," said Don Gregorio, cocking his pistol; a movement silently
-imitated by Don Tadeo, whom he had supplied with firearms.
-
-"For the last time, stand out of the way!" the horseman shouted.
-
-"We will not!"
-
-"We will ride over you, then!" and turning towards his companions,
-"Forward!" he cried angrily.
-
-The five horsemen advanced with uplifted sabres upon the two men, who,
-firmly fixed in the middle of the street, made no effort to avoid them.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-SWORD-THRUSTS.
-
-
-In order to make the facts that follow intelligible, we must leave Don
-Tadeo and his friend in their critical position, and return to the two
-principal personages of this history, whom we have so long neglected.
-We saw in a preceding chapter the two foster brothers gaily leaving
-Valparaiso, to repair to the capital of Chili, like Bias, carrying all
-their fortune with them, but possessing over the philosophical Greek the
-immense advantage of being amply furnished with hopes and illusions, two
-words which, in this life, have but too frequently the same meaning.
-
-After a rather long ride, the young men had stopped for the night in
-a miserable _rancho_ constructed of mud and dry branches, the dismal
-skeleton of which stood out on one side of the road. The inhabitant of
-this miserable dwelling, a poor devil of a peon, whose life was passed
-in guarding a few head of lean cattle, gave our travellers a frank and
-hospitable reception. Quite delighted at having something to offer them,
-he had cheerfully shared with them his _charqui_--strips of meat, dried
-in the sun--and his _harina tostada_--roasted corn--the whole washed
-down with cups of detestable _chicha_.
-
-The Frenchmen, who had been literally dying of hunger, were glad of even
-these humble viands, however little savoury they might be, and after
-ascertaining that their horses were comfortably provided for, they lay
-down, wrapped in their ponchos, upon a heap of dry leaves, a delicious
-bed for fatigued men, and upon which they slept soundly till morning.
-
-At daybreak, our two adventurers, still accompanied by their dog Cæsar,
-who, whatever he might think, expressed no astonishment at this new kind
-of life, but trotted seriously beside them, saddled their horses, bade
-farewell to their host, to whom they gave a few reals in return for
-his hospitality, and set forward again, looking with earnest curiosity
-at every object that presented itself to their view, and surprised to
-find so little difference between the New World and the Old. The life
-they were beginning, so different from that they had hitherto led, was,
-for them, full of unexpected charms, and they felt like schoolboys in
-holiday time. Their lungs seemed to expand to inhale the fresh, sharp
-breeze of the mountains. Everything, in their eyes, wore a smiling
-aspect; in a word, they felt they lived.
-
-It is about thirty-five leagues from Valparaiso to Chili, as the people
-of the country are accustomed to call the capital of the Republic. The
-handsome, broad, and well-kept up road, which was formerly cut through
-the mountain by the Spaniards, is rather monotonous, and completely
-devoid of interest for tourists. Vegetation is rare and poor; a fine
-and almost impalpable dust arises with the least puff of wind. The few
-trees, which stand at long distances from each other, are slender,
-stunted, dried up by both wind and sun, and seem, by their wretched
-appearance, to protest against the efforts at cultivation which have
-been made on this plateau, which is rendered sterile by the strong sea
-breezes and the cold winds of the Cordilleras which sweep over it.
-
-At times may be seen, at an immense height, like a black dot in space,
-the great condor of Chili, the eagle of the Andes, or the savage vulture
-in search of prey. At long intervals pass _recuas_ of mules, headed by
-the _yegua madrina_, whose sonorous bells are heard to a great distance,
-accompanying, well or ill, the dismal chant of the muleteer, who thus
-endeavours to keep his beasts going. Or else it is a _guaso_ of the
-interior, hastening to his chacra or his hacienda, and who, proudly
-mounted upon a half wild horse, passes like a whirlwind, favouring you
-as he goes by, with the eternal "Santas tardes, caballero!"
-
-With the exception of what we have described, the road is dull, dusty,
-and solitary. There is not, as with us, a single hostelry affording
-accommodation for horse and foot; these would be useless establishments
-in a country where the stranger enters every house as if it were his
-own home. Nothing! Solitude everywhere and always; hunger, thirst, and
-fatigue must be expected and endured.
-
-But our young men perceived nothing of this. Enthusiasm supplied the
-place of all they wanted; the road appeared charming to them; the
-journey they were making, delightful! They were in America; beneath
-their feet was the soil of the New World, that privileged land, of which
-so many surprising accounts are given; of which so many people talk, and
-about which so few know anything. Having landed only a few days before,
-while still under the impressions of an endless passage, the weariness
-of which had weighed down their spirits like a mantle of lead, they
-beheld Chili through the enchanting prism of their hopes; reality did
-not yet exist for them. What we have here said may appear a paradox to
-many people; and yet, we are satisfied that all travellers of good faith
-will acknowledge the exact truth.
-
-At times travelling at a steady foot pace, at others enjoying a laugh
-and a gallop, our young men, to whom the political events of the Chilian
-Republic were very uninteresting, and who, consequently, knew nothing of
-what was going on, arrived quietly within a league of Santiago, at about
-eleven o'clock in the evening, just at the moment when the ten Chilian
-patriots were falling on the Plaza Mayor, beneath the balls of General
-Bustamente's soldiers.
-
-"Let us pull up here," Valentine said cheerfully; "it will give our
-horses time to breathe."
-
-"Pull up! what for?" Louis asked. "It is late; we shall not find a
-single hotel open."
-
-"My dear friend," Valentine replied, with a laugh, "you are still a
-Parisian to the backbone! You forget that we are in America. In that
-city, of which the numerous steeples dimly stand out on the horizon
-before us, everybody is long since asleep, and all the doors are closed."
-
-"What shall we do, then?"
-
-"Pardieu! why, we will bivouac. The night is magnificent. The heavens
-display all their jewelry; the air is warm and balmy; what better could
-we desire?"
-
-"Oh, nothing, of course!" Louis replied, laughingly.
-
-"Well, then, we have, as you see, time to chat a little."
-
-"Chat, brother! why, we have done nothing else since morning."
-
-"Pardon me, I don't agree with you. We have talked much, about all sorts
-of things, of the country in which we are, and of the manners of the
-inhabitants, little as we know about them; but we have not talked in the
-manner I mean."
-
-"Explain yourself more clearly."
-
-"Look you, brother; an idea has just struck me. We know not what
-adventures await us in that city, yonder, before us. Well! before we
-enter it, I should like to have a sort of final conversation with you."
-
-The young men took off their horses' bridles, that the animals might
-have the advantage of a few tufts of grass which sprang up here and
-there; and, stretching themselves luxuriously upon the ground, they lit
-their cigars.
-
-"We are in America," Valentine resumed; "in the country of gold, upon
-that soil where, with intelligence and courage, men of our age can in a
-few years amass princely fortunes!"
-
-"Do you know, my friend----" interrupted Louis.
-
-"Oh, perfectly!" said Valentine, cutting him short. "You are in love,
-and you are seeking the object of your love; that's understood: but that
-does not at all interfere with our projects--quite the contrary."
-
-"How is that?"
-
-"Pardieu! that's plain enough. You know, do you not, that Doña
-Rosario--that's her name, I think--"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Very well, then; you know she is rich, do you not?"
-
-"There's no doubt of that."
-
-"Ay, ay! but be it understood, not rich as with us: that is to say, some
-fifty thousand francs a year--a paltry pittance!--but rich as people are
-here--a dozen times over millionaires!"
-
-"Probably she may be," the young man said impatiently.
-
-"That's capital! You must understand, then, that when we have found her,
-for we _shall_ find her, and that soon, you can only demand her hand by
-producing a fortune equal to her own."
-
-"The devil! I never thought of that," said the young man.
-
-"I know you did not; you are in love; and, like all other men afflicted
-with that disease, you think of nothing but the person you love.
-Fortunately, however, I am with you, to think for both; and whenever you
-have spoken to me of love, I have replied by reminding you of fortune."
-
-"That is true. But how is fortune to be made so promptly?"
-
-"Ah! ah! you have come to that question at last," Valentine said,
-laughing.
-
-"I know no profession," Louis continued, following his own idea.
-
-"Nor I either. But let not that alarm you; people succeed best in things
-they don't understand."
-
-"What's to be done?"
-
-"I will think of it; so set your mind at rest. But you must be well
-convinced of one thing, and that is, that we have set foot in a land
-where the ideas are quite different from those of the country we have
-left; where the manners and customs are diametrically opposite."
-
-"You mean to say--"
-
-"I mean to say that we must forget all we have learnt, in order that
-we may remember but one thing--our desire quickly to make a colossal
-fortune."
-
-"By honourable means?"
-
-"I am acquainted with no other," Valentine replied, seriously. "And
-remember, brother, that in the country in which we at present are, the
-point of honour is not at all the same as in France, and many things
-which with us would appear false coin are here deemed good and passable.
-On this point a word to the wise! You understand me, don't you?"
-
-"Nearly, I think."
-
-"Very well! Imagine we are in an enemy's country, and must act
-accordingly."
-
-"But----"
-
-"Do you wish to marry the woman you love:"
-
-"Can you ask me such a question?"
-
-"Allow me to act, then, as I see best! But, above all, when chance
-throws a good opportunity in our way, let us be careful not to miss it."
-
-"Act just as you please."
-
-"Well, that is all I had to say to you;" and throwing away the remains
-of his cigar, he rose from his recumbent position.
-
-They were soon again in the saddle, and, at a foot's pace, resumed their
-way towards the city, chatting as they went.
-
-Midnight was striking by the clock of the Cabildo at the moment when
-they entered Santiago by the Canada. The streets were deserted and
-silent.
-
-"Everybody is asleep," said Louis.
-
-"So it seems," Valentine replied. "Let us look out, notwithstanding. If
-we find no door open, we can then but compound for a night's bivouac, as
-I suggested."
-
-At this moment two pistol shots were heard, mingled with the gallop of
-horses.
-
-"What can that be?" said Louis. "Assassination is going on here!"
-
-"Forward! cordieu!" replied Valentine.
-
-They clapped spurs to their horses, and galloped at full speed in the
-direction whence the sound proceeded. They soon reached a narrow street,
-in the middle of which two men on foot were bravely contending with five
-on horseback.
-
-"Have at the horsemen!" Valentine shouted; "help the weaker party!"
-
-"Be of good heart, gentlemen!" said Louis; "help is at hand!"
-
-And timely help it was for Don Gregorio and his friend. A minute later,
-and they must have succumbed. The providential arrival of the Frenchmen
-quickly changed the appearance of the fight. Two horsemen fell dead from
-pistol shots fired by the young men; while a third, knocked down by Don
-Gregorio, was silently strangled by Cæsar. The other two thought it
-high time to decamp, leaving their fair prisoner behind them. She had
-fainted; and Don Tadeo, leaning against the wall of a house, was upon
-the point of following her example. Valentine, with the presence of mind
-acquired in his old profession of a Spahi, secured the horses of the
-bandits killed in the skirmish.
-
-"Quick, gentlemen! to the saddle!" Valentine said to the Chilians.
-
-Louis had already dismounted, and was attending to the young lady.
-
-"Do not leave us," Don Gregorio remarked; "we are surrounded by enemies."
-
-"Fear nothing!" said Valentine, "we are quite at your service."
-
-"Many thanks!--A little assistance, if you please, to place my friend,
-who is wounded, on horseback."
-
-Once in the saddle, Don Tadeo declared he felt sufficiently strong to
-keep his seat without help. Don Gregorio placed the still inanimate
-young lady before him.
-
-"Now, gentlemen," he said, "nothing remains for me but to thank you most
-cordially, if your business will not allow you to remain longer with us."
-
-"I beg to repeat, caballeros, that we are at your service."
-
-"We have no pressing demand upon our time; we will not leave you till we
-are assured you are in safety," Louis said, with animation.
-
-"Follow me, then," said Don Gregorio, with a bow; "and do not spare the
-horses; it is an affair of life and death."
-
-And the four horsemen set off as fast as their horses could bear them.
-
-"Eh! eh!" said Valentine, in an undertone to his foster brother. "Here
-is an adventure that promises something! We are losing no time at
-Santiago! What think you?"
-
-"We shall see!" Louis replied, in a more thoughtful tone.
-
-No light had gleamed out, no window had been opened, during the combat.
-The streets remained silent and gloomy; the city seemed abandoned.
-Nothing was to be heard but the clatter of the horses' feet upon the
-rough pavement of the streets through which they galloped. The cathedral
-clock struck two as they passed across the Plaza Mayor. Don Tadeo could
-not repress a sigh of relief when glancing at the spot where on, only a
-few hours before, he had so miraculously escaped death.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-GENERAL BUSTAMENTE.
-
-
-Don Tadeo was right, when, on seeing General Bustamente pass, he said he
-was on his way to visit his mistress. It was, in fact, to the residence
-of the Linda the General was going. On arriving at the gate, one of his
-men dismounted, and knocked. But no one answered; and at a sign from
-the General, the soldier knocked louder. But still all remained silent;
-there was no movement within. He began to feel uneasy. This silence was
-the more extraordinary from the General's visit having been announced,
-and he was, consequently, expected. "Oh! oh!" he said, "What is going on
-here? Knock again, Diego, and knock in a way to make yourself heard!"
-
-The soldier knocked with all his strength, but still uselessly. Don
-Pancho's brow contracted; he began to fancy some misfortune must have
-occurred.
-
-"Break open the door!" he cried.
-
-The order was instantly obeyed; and the General, followed by his escort,
-entered the house. In the Patio all dismounted.
-
-"Be prudent," said the General in a low voice to the corporal who
-commanded the escort; "place sentinels everywhere, and keep a sharp
-look-out whilst I search the house."
-
-After giving these orders, the General took his pistols from his
-holsters, and, followed by some of his lancers, entered the house;
-but everywhere the silence of death prevailed. After passing through
-several apartments, he arrived at a door, which, being a little ajar,
-allowed a stream of light to pass. From the other side of this door
-proceeded something like stifled groans. With a kick of his foot, one
-of the lancers dashed open the door; the General entered, and a strange
-spectacle presented itself to his astonished eyes! Doña Maria, tightly
-bound, and gagged, was fastened to the foot of a damask bed, saturated
-with blood. The furniture was broken and disordered, whilst two dead
-bodies, lying in a pool of blood, made it evident that the room had been
-the scene of a desperate conflict.
-
-The general ordered the dead bodies to be removed, and then desired to
-be left alone with the lady. As soon as the lancers had departed he shut
-the door, and approaching the Linda, he hastened to release her from her
-bonds. She was senseless.
-
-On turning round to place the pistols he had retained in his hands on
-the table, he drew back with astonishment, and almost with terror, as
-he perceived the dagger standing erect in the middle of it. But this
-instinctive feeling lasted only a moment. He went quickly up to the
-table, seized the dagger, which he carefully drew out, and eagerly took
-up the paper it had pinned down.
-
-"_The tyrant Don Pancho Bustamente is cited at the expiration of
-ninety-three days!
-
- _"THE DARK-HEARTS."_
-
-he read in a loud, harsh tone, and then crushed the paper violently in
-his hand. "Sangre de Dios! Will these demons always make a mock of me?
-Oh! they know that I show no mercy, and that those who fall into my
-hands----"
-
-"Escape!" said a hollow voice, which made him start involuntarily.
-
-He turned sharply round, and beheld the Linda, with her vicious eye
-fixed upon him with a demoniacal expression. He sprang towards her.
-
-"Thank God!" he cried warmly, "you are again restored to your senses.
-Are you sufficiently recovered to explain the scene that has taken place
-here?"
-
-"A terrible scene, Don Pancho!" she replied, in a tremulous voice; "a
-scene, the bare remembrance of which still freezes me with terror."
-
-"Are you strong enough to describe it to me?"
-
-"I hope so," she replied. "Listen to me attentively, Don Pancho, for
-what I have to tell concerns you, perhaps, more than me."
-
-"You mean this insolent summons, I suppose?" he remarked, showing it.
-
-She glanced over it, and replied--
-
-"I did not even know that such a paper had been addressed to you. But
-listen to me attentively."
-
-"In the first place, have the goodness to explain to me what you just
-now said."
-
-"Everything in its turn, General; I will not fail to explain everything,
-for the vengeance I thirst for must be complete."
-
-"Oh!" he said, a flash of hatred gleaming from his eye, "set your heart
-at ease on that head,--whilst avenging myself, I will avenge you."
-
-The Linda related to the General what had passed between her and Don
-Tadeo in the fullest details--how the Dark-Hearts had snatched him from
-her hands, and the threats they had addressed to her on leaving her.
-But, with that talent which all women possess, of making themselves
-appear innocent in everything, she represented as a miraculous piece of
-awkwardness on the part of the soldiers charged to shoot him, the fact
-of Don Tadeo being alive after his execution. She said that, attracted
-by the hope of avenging himself upon her, whom he suspected of being no
-stranger to his condemnation, he had introduced himself unseen into her
-house, where by a strange chance she happened to be alone, having that
-evening permitted her servants to be present at a _romeria_ (a fête),
-from which they were not to return before three o'clock.
-
-The General had not for an instant the idea of doubting the veracity of
-his mistress. The situation in which he had found her,--the incredible
-news of the resurrection of his most implacable enemy, altogether so
-confused his thoughts, that suspicion had no time to enter his mind.
-He strode about the room with hasty steps, revolving in his head the
-most extravagant projects for seizing Don Tadeo, and, above all, for
-annihilating the Dark-Hearts,--those never-to-be-caught Proteuses, who
-so incessantly crossed his path, thwarted all his plans, and always
-escaped him. He plainly saw what additional strength the escape of Don
-Tadeo would give to the patriots, and how much it would complicate his
-political embarrassments, by placing at their head a resolute man who
-could have no longer any considerations to preserve, but would wage war
-to the knife with him. His perplexity was extreme; he instinctively
-felt that the ground beneath him was mined, that he was walking over
-a volcano, but he had no power to denounce to public opprobrium the
-enemies who conspired his ruin. The recital made by his mistress had
-produced the effect of a thunderclap upon him; he knew not what measures
-to employ in order to counteract the numerous plots in action against
-him on all sides, and simultaneously. The Linda did not take her eyes
-off him for a moment, but watched upon his countenance the various
-feelings aroused by what she told him.
-
-We will, in a few words, introduce to the reader this personage, who
-will play so important a part in the course of the following history.[1]
-General Don Pancho Bustamente, who has left in Chili a reputation for
-cruelty so terrible that he is generally called _El Verdugo_, or the
-executioner, was a man of from thirty-five to thirty-six years of age,
-although he looked near fifty, a little above the middle height, well
-made, and of good carriage, announcing altogether great corporeal
-strength. His features were tolerably regular, but his prominent
-forehead, his grey eyes deeply set beneath the brows, and close to his
-hook nose, his large mouth and high cheek bones, gave him something of
-a resemblance to a bird of prey. His chin was square, an indication
-of obstinacy; his hair and moustache, beginning to be streaked with
-grey, were trained and cut in military fashion. He wore the magnificent
-uniform, covered at every seam with gold embroidery, of a general
-officer.
-
-Don Bustamente was the son of his own works, which was in his favour.
-At first a simple soldier, he had, by exemplary conduct and more than
-common talents, raised himself, step by step, to the highest rank of the
-army, and had in the last instance been named minister-at-war. Then the
-jealousy which had been silent whilst he was confounded with the crowd,
-was unchained against him. The General, instead of despising calumnies
-which might have died out of themselves, gave them some degree of
-foundation, by inaugurating a system of severity and cruelty. Devoured
-by an ambition which nothing could satisfy, all means were deemed good
-by him for the attainment of an object he secretly aimed at, which was
-the overthrow of the republic and government of Chili, and the formation
-of Bolivia and Araucania into one state, of which he would cause
-himself to be proclaimed Protector--an object which, besides the almost
-insurmountable difficulties it presented, ever appeared--owing to the
-universal hatred which the General had aroused against himself--to slip
-further from his grasp each time he thought he was about grasping it.
-
-At the moment we bring him on the scene, he found himself in one of the
-most critical circumstances of his political career. He had in vain
-shot the patriots _en masse_--conspiracies, as always happens in such
-cases, succeeded each other without interruption, and the system of
-terror which he had inaugurated, far from intimidating the population,
-appeared, on the contrary, to urge them on to revolt. Secret societies
-were formed; and one of these, the most powerful and the most terrible,
-that of the Dark-Hearts, enveloped him in invisible nets in which he
-struggled in vain. He foresaw that if he did not hasten on the _coup
-d'état_ he meditated, he should be lost beyond redemption. After a
-rather long silence, the General placed himself by the side of the Linda.
-
-"We will be avenged!" he said, in a deep tone; "be but patient."
-
-"Oh!" she replied, bitterly, "my vengeance has commenced!"
-
-"What do you mean by that?"
-
-"I have caused Doña Rosario del Valle, the woman Don Tadeo de Leon loves
-so passionately, to be carried off."
-
-"You have _done_ that?" said the General.
-
-"Yes, and in ten minutes she will be here."
-
-"Oh! oh!" he exclaimed; "and do you mean to keep her with you?"
-
-"With me!" she cried; "No, I thank you, General. I hear that the
-Pehuenches are very fond of white women; I will make them a present of
-her."
-
-"Oh!" Don Pancho muttered, "women will be always our masters! they alone
-know how to revenge themselves! But," he added aloud, "have you no fear
-lest the man to whom you have confided this mission should betray you?"
-
-She smiled with terrible irony,
-
-"No," she said; "that man hates Don Tadeo more than I do, if that be
-possible; he is working out his own vengeance."
-
-At the same instant steps were heard in the chamber preceding the room.
-
-"You will see, General--here is my emissary. Come in!" the Linda cried.
-
-A man appeared; his face was pale and haggard; and his clothes, torn and
-disordered, were stained in various places with blood.
-
-"Well!" she exclaimed, in a tone of intense anxiety.
-
-"All has failed," answered the man, breathless with haste and terror.
-
-"What!" the Linda shouted, with a cry like that of a wild beast.
-
-"There were five of us," the man continued, quite unmoved, "and we
-carried off the _señorita_. All went on well till within a short
-distance from this house, when we were attacked by four demons, who came
-I know not whence."
-
-"And you did not defend yourselves, miserable cowards!" interrupted the
-General violently.
-
-The bandit gave him a cold look, and continued impassively--
-
-"Three of our number are dead, and the leader and myself wounded."
-
-"And the girl?" the Linda asked passionately.
-
-"The girl was recaptured by our opponents. The Englishman has sent me to
-you to learn if you still wish him to carry off Doña Rosario?"
-
-"Would he attempt it again?"
-
-"Yes. And this time, he says, he is certain to succeed if the conditions
-are the same."
-
-A smile of contempt played round the lips of the courtezan.
-
-"Repeat to him this," she replied; "not only shall he receive the
-hundred ounces if he succeeds, but, still further, he shall have a
-hundred more; and that he may be in no doubt of my promise," she added,
-rising and taking from a drawer a rather heavy bag which she handed to
-the bandit, "give him this; there is the half of the sum, but bid him
-despatch!"
-
-The man bowed.
-
-"As to you, Juanito," she continued, "as soon as you have acquitted
-yourself of this mission, return, for I shall, perhaps, want you here.
-Begone!"
-
-The bandit disappeared instantly.
-
-"Who is that man?" the General asked.
-
-"A poor devil whom I saved some years ago from certain death. He is
-devoted to me, body and soul."
-
-"Hum!" said the general, "he has rather too cunning an eye not to be a
-rogue."
-
-The Linda shrugged her shoulders.
-
-"You are mistrustful of everybody," she said.
-
-"That is the way not to be deceived."
-
-"Or to be deceived the more easily."
-
-"Perhaps so. Well, you see this abduction, so admirably planned, and the
-success of which was certain, has failed."
-
-"I can only repeat what you yourself said to me just now."
-
-"What is that?"
-
-"Patience! But, pray, what are your present plans?" The General rose.
-
-"Whilst you are carrying on against our enemies," he said, in a low,
-stern tone, "a guerilla warfare of ambuscades and treacheries, I, on my
-part, will wage an open war against them--a war in the face of the sun,
-but as merciless as yours. Their blood shall flow in streams over all
-the territories of the Republic. The Dark-Hearts have summoned me in
-ninety-three days. Well, I take up the gauntlet they have thrown to me."
-
-"That is well!" the Linda replied. "And now let us so arrange our plans
-that they may not fail like their predecessors. We must come to an end
-with these miserable plotters, and in doing so, take a revenge that will
-make an impression on others."
-
-"It shall be a vengeance! I will stake my head on the game. Oh," he
-added, "I hold them! I have found the means I sought to make them all
-fall into my hands; let them sleep for a while in deceitful security,
-but their awakening shall be terrible!"
-
-And, having saluted the Linda with the greatest courtesy, the General
-retired.
-
-"I leave you a few soldiers to watch over your safety till the return of
-your servants," he said, as he went out.
-
-"Thank you, thank you!" she replied, with a bland smile.
-
-The Linda, when left alone, instead of seeking the repose so necessary
-after the excitement of the night, remained plunged in deep thought.
-At sunrise she was still in the same place, in the same position. She
-was still reflecting, but her features became animated; a sinister
-smile curled her pale lips; and her eyes, though apparently fixed upon
-vacancy, emitted portentous flashes. Suddenly she sprang up, and passing
-her hand rapidly over her brow, as if to efface its wrinkles, she cried,
-in a tone of triumph--
-
-"And I, too, will succeed!"
-
-
-[1] Reasons of the highest consideration oblige us to change the names
-and the portraits of the personages of this history, as the majority
-still exist. But we vouch for the correctness of the facts we relate.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-THE SPY.
-
-
-When the young lady was delivered, the four men set off as fast as they
-could go, with regard to her ease. In ten minutes they were out of the
-city, and with the change of the road their speed was increased. The
-route they took was that which leads to Talca.
-
-"Eh, eh!" Valentine said, laughing, to his foster brother; "we seem to
-be playing at prisoners' bars. We enter the city by one gate, to leave
-it immediately by another. We shall not have an opportunity of seeing
-the capital of Chili this time."
-
-With the exception of these few words, to which Louis only replied by a
-careless shrug of the shoulders, no other conversation took place during
-the hour which their rapid journey lasted. By the pale light of the moon
-the trees on each side of the road seemed to defile like a legion of
-melancholy phantoms. Ere long the white walls of a _chacra_ (large farm)
-stood out upon the horizon.
-
-"Here we are," said Don Gregorio, pointing with his finger.
-
-They reached the house in a few minutes. The gate was open, but a
-man was standing evidently on the watch. The fugitives dashed like a
-hurricane into the _patio_, and the gates were immediately closed behind
-them.
-
-"What has happened, Tio Pepito?" Don Gregorio asked, before he was quite
-off his horse, of the man who appeared to have expected him.
-
-"Nothing, _mi amo_" (my master), "nothing of consequence," replied Tio
-Pepito, a little thick-set man, with a round face, lit up by two grey
-eyes, sparkling with cunning.
-
-"Have not the persons I expected arrived?"
-
-"Pardon me, _mi amo_. They have been at the _chacra_ more than an
-hour. They say they must begone immediately; they are waiting for you
-impatiently."
-
-"That's well. Announce my arrival to them, and tell them I shall be at
-their service in two or three minutes."
-
-The mayoral, for this man was the major-domo of the _chacra_, entered
-the house without reply. Don Tadeo also, who seemed to know perfectly
-well where he was, disappeared, bearing the young girl in his arms. The
-two Frenchmen were left alone with the chacrero, who advanced towards
-them.
-
-"Now that you are, as we suppose, for the present at least, in safety,
-sir," said Valentine, "we have only to take our leave of you."
-
-"Not so!" Don Gregorio exclaimed; "it must not be so. _Diable_! as you
-Frenchmen say," he added, smiling; "chance does not so often procure
-us such friends as you, to allow us to part with you thus when we have
-met you. You will remain here, if you please. Our acquaintance must not
-terminate so."
-
-"If our continuing here can be of any service to you," Louis replied,
-courteously, "we are at your command."
-
-"Thank you," he said, in a slightly agitated voice, and pressing their
-hands warmly; "I shall never forget that I owe to you the lives of
-myself and my friend. In what way can I be of service to you?"
-
-"Well," Valentine said, laughing, "in every way, and no way, as it may
-happen, caballero."
-
-"Explain yourself," Don Gregorio replied.
-
-"_Dame!_ it is clear enough; we are strangers in this country."
-
-"When did you arrive?" the Chilian said, examining them attentively.
-
-"Faith! very recently. You are the first persons we have spoken to."
-
-"That is well," Gregorio said, slowly. "I told you that I was at your
-service, did I not?"
-
-"Yes, and we sincerely thank you; although we hope never to have
-occasion to remind you of this obliging offer."
-
-"I perfectly appreciate your delicacy; but a service like the one you
-have rendered me and my friend is an eternal bond. Take no heed of your
-future fortune, it is made."
-
-"Pardon me, pardon me!" said Valentine, earnestly; "we do not understand
-one another at all; you mistake us. We are not men who expect to be paid
-for having acted as our hearts dictated. You owe us nothing."
-
-"I do not propose or pretend to pay you, gentlemen. I only wish, in
-order to attach you to me, to propose to you to share my good or evil
-fortune; in a word, I offer myself to you as a brother."
-
-"In that case we at once accede," said Louis, "and will endeavour to
-prove ourselves worthy of such an offer."
-
-"I have no doubt you will. Only I beg you not to be misled by my words;
-the life I am leading at present is full of perils."
-
-"I can suppose that," said Valentine, with a laugh. "The scene at which
-we have been present, and the _denoûment_ of which we perhaps hastened,
-makes it pretty evident that your existence is not of the most peaceful
-nature."
-
-"What you have as yet seen is nothing. Do you know nobody in this
-country?"
-
-"Nobody."
-
-"Your political opinions, then, are unformed?"
-
-"As regards Chili, completely."
-
-"Bravo!" Don Gregorio exclaimed, with delight; "if we agree on that
-point our compact will be for life and death."
-
-"We do agree," said Valentine, laughing; "and if you conspire--"
-
-"Well?" the Chilian asked, fixing an inquiring look upon him.
-
-"Why, we will conspire, too, pardieu! That is agreed."
-
-The three men exchanged a cordial pressure of the hand, and then Don
-Gregorio called the major-domo to conduct them to the chamber which was
-prepared for them.
-
-"Good night! or rather good morning!" he said, on quitting them.
-
-"Come!" said Valentine, rubbing his hands, "matters are going on well.
-We shall not want for amusement here."
-
-"Hum!" Louis replied, with a tone of something like uneasiness;
-"conspire!"
-
-"Well, and what better?" said Valentine. "Does that frighten you?
-Remember, my friend, that the best fishing is in troubled waters."
-
-"In that case," Louis remarked, taking up the gay humour of his
-companion, "if my presentiments are just, ours will be miraculous."
-
-"I expect so, firmly," said Valentine, bidding good night to the
-major-domo, who retired, after bowing respectfully.
-
-The _cuarto_ (chamber) in which the young men found themselves, was
-whitewashed, and entirely destitute of furniture, with the exception of
-two oak frames furnished with dressed hides, which served as beds, a
-massive table with twisted feet, and four seats covered with leather.
-In a corner of the room burned a little green wax light before a
-badly-engraved print supposed to represent the Virgin.
-
-"Eh!" said Louis, casting a glance around him, "our friends, the
-Chilians, do not seem to consult comfort much."
-
-"Bah!" Valentine replied, "we have all that we require. A man can sleep
-soundly anywhere when he is fatigued. This chamber is better than the
-bivouac we were threatened with."
-
-"You are right. Let us take a little rest then, for we don't know what
-tomorrow has in reserve for us."
-
-In a quarter of an hour they were both fast asleep. At the moment the
-Frenchmen went into the house with the major-domo, Don Tadeo came out by
-another door.
-
-"Well?" Don Gregorio asked, anxiously.
-
-"She is asleep. Her terror is abated," Don Tadeo replied. "The joy she
-experienced at seeing me, whom she believed dead, brought about a very
-salutary crisis."
-
-"I am glad to hear it! In that quarter, then, we may be at ease?"
-
-"Completely."
-
-"Do you feel yourself strong enough to be present at an important
-interview?"
-
-"Is it necessary that I should be present?"
-
-"I think it quite right that you should hear the communications that one
-of my emissaries is about to make me."
-
-"It is very imprudent of you," said Don Tadeo, "to receive such a man in
-your own house!"
-
-"Oh! do not alarm yourself! I have known him for a long time. Besides,
-he is not aware whose house he is in; he was brought hither blinded, by
-two of our brethren. In addition to which, we shall be masked."
-
-"Well! since you desire it, I am at your commands."
-
-The two friends, after having covered their faces with black velvet
-masks, entered the apartment in which were the persons who waited for
-them. This apartment, which served as a dining room, was very large, and
-furnished with a long table; it was faintly illumined by two sconces,
-in which burned small candles of yellow tallow, yielding so doubtful a
-light that objects could be seen but indistinctly. Three men, wrapped
-in variegated ponchos, and with broad-brimmed hats pulled down over
-their eyes, were carelessly smoking their slender papelitos, whilst
-warming themselves round a copper _brasero,_ placed in the middle of the
-apartment, and in which some olive-stones were slowly burning. At the
-entrance of the leaders of the Dark-Hearts, these men rose.
-
-"Why," asked Don Tadeo, who at the first glance recognized the emissary,
-"why did you not wait, Don Pedro, for the meeting tomorrow, at the
-_Quinta Verde,_ to communicate to the council the revelations you have
-to make?"
-
-The man thus named as Don Pedro bowed respectfully. He was an individual
-of about thirty-five years of age. He was tall, and his countenance, as
-sharp as the blade of a knife, wore a cunning, roguish expression.
-
-"What I have to state only indirectly concerns the Dark-Hearts," he said.
-
-"Then, of what importance is it to us?" Don Gregorio interrupted him.
-
-"But it greatly concerns the leaders, particularly the King of Darkness."
-
-"Explain yourself then, for he is before you," Don Tadeo remarked,
-taking a step forward.
-
-Pedro darted a look at him which seemed to endeavour to penetrate
-through the tissue of his mask.
-
-"What I have to say will be brief," he replied,--"I leave to you the
-care of judging of its importance. General Don Bustamente will be
-present at the meeting tomorrow."
-
-"Are you sure of that?" the two conspirators exclaimed with a degree of
-astonishment that denoted incredulity.
-
-"It was I who persuaded him to do so."
-
-"You?"
-
-"Yes, I."
-
-"Are you ignorant, then," Don Tadeo exclaimed with great warmth, "in
-what manner we punish traitors?"
-
-"I am no traitor; on the contrary, I deliver into your hands your most
-implacable enemy."
-
-Don Tadeo replied only by a suspicious glance.
-
-"The General then is ignorant?"
-
-"Of everything," said Don Pedro.
-
-"With what purpose, then, does he wish to introduce himself among us?"
-
-"Can you not guess? For that of obtaining your secret."
-
-"But he risks his life."
-
-"Do you forget that every adept must be introduced by a sponsor, who
-alone knows him? No one sees his face. Well, _I_ introduce him," he
-added, with a smile of strange significance.
-
-"That is true. But if he should suspect you of treachery?"
-
-"I must undergo the consequences; but he will not suspect me."
-
-"Why not?" Don Gregorio asked.
-
-"Because," the spy replied, with a cynical smile, "for ten years the
-General has employed me, and during those ten years he has had only
-cause to praise me for the services I have rendered him."
-
-A momentary silence followed.
-
-"Here!" said Don Gregorio, after a long pause, "this time it is not ten
-ounces, but twenty, that you have earned. Continue to be faithful to us."
-
-And he placed a heavy purse in his hands. The spy seized it with a
-gesture of avidity, and concealed it quickly under his poncho.
-
-"You shall have no reproach to make me," he replied, with a bow.
-
-"I hope we shall not," said Don Tadeo, with difficulty repressing an
-expression of disgust. "Only remember, we should be merciless."
-
-"I know it."
-
-"In that case, farewell."
-
-"Farewell till tomorrow."
-
-The men who had brought him, and who during the conversation had
-remained motionless, at a sign from Don Gregorio approached the spy,
-bandaged his eyes again, and led him away.
-
-"Is that fellow a traitor?" asked Don Gregorio, as he listened to the
-retreating steps of the horses.
-
-"It is our duty to suppose him one," the King of Darkness replied,
-gravely.
-
-The two friends, instead of seeking the repose which must have been
-so necessary to them, talked together for a long time, in order to
-arrange all the measures of safety which were required by the importance
-of the scene about to take place on the morrow at the meeting of the
-conspirators. In the meantime Don Pedro had been quickly led back
-to Santiago. On arriving at one of the gates, his guides left him,
-disappearing in opposite directions. As soon as he was alone, he removed
-the handkerchief from his eyes.
-
-"Hum!" he said, with a sinister smile, as he tossed up in his right hand
-the purse Don Gregorio had given him. "Twenty ounces make a purse of
-gold. Now let us see if General Bustamente is as liberal as his enemies.
-By the Virgin! the news I carry him are worth something to him! Let us
-try to get the best price for them."
-
-After having cast his eyes around to see if the coast was clear, he set
-off at a sharp trot towards the government palace, muttering to himself--
-
-"Bah! times are hard. If a man did not manoeuvre a little, he would find
-no means of bringing up his family honestly."
-
-This reflection, of a rather dubious morality, was accompanied by a
-grimace, the expression of which would have given Don Tadeo cause for
-suspicion if he had seen it.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-LOVE.
-
-
-On the morrow the two Frenchmen were awakened by the rays of the sun.
-The day promised to be a brilliant one, for there was not a cloud in
-the heavens. A light vapour, full of penetrating odours, arose slowly
-from the earth, drawn up by the beams of the sun, whose warm influence
-increased every minute. The morning breeze refreshed the air, and
-invited them to inhale it. The young men, perfectly recovered from their
-fatigue, sprang cheerfully from their humble beds and dressed themselves
-in haste.
-
-The chacra, of which they had only a glimpse the night before by
-moonlight, was an immense farm, consisting of extensive buildings,
-and surrounded by fields in full cultivation. The greatest animation
-prevailed everywhere. Peons, mounted on half wild horses, were driving
-out the cattle to the artificial meadows, whilst others were running
-about after the horses they were getting together, in order to lead
-them to the drinking place. In the patio the major-domo was overlooking
-the women and girls engaged in milking. In short, this residence, which
-had appeared to them so silent and dismal the night before, assumed
-by daylight an appearance of life and cheerfulness delightful to
-contemplate.
-
-The cries of the peons mingled with the lowing of the cattle, the
-barking of the dogs, and the crowing of the cocks, and formed that
-melodious concert which is only to be heard on a farm, and which always
-rejoices the heart.
-
-It is a justice that we willingly render here to the Chilian republic
-when we say that it alone of the southern states of America appears
-to understand that the wealth of a country consists not in the number
-of its mines, but in the encouragement given to cultivation; and that
-this country, while possessing rich mines of gold, silver, and precious
-stones, only places their produce in the second rank, whilst it reserves
-its principal solicitude for agriculture. Chili is as yet young as a
-nation. There manufactures and the arts are in their infancy; but the
-farms are numerous, the fields well cultivated, and soon this country
-will be called upon, there is no doubt, through its system of labour,
-to become the entrepôt of the other American powers, which it already
-provides in a great measure with corn and wine, from Cape Horn to
-California.
-
-Behind the chacra extended a well-kept up garden, in which oranges,
-pomegranates, and citrons, planted in the open ground, grew amidst
-limes, apples, plums, and all the other fruits of Europe. Louis was
-agreeably surprised at the aspect of this garden, with its numerous
-alleys, in which a thousand birds of brilliant colours warbled gaily
-under the foliage of the tufted thickets of jasmine and honeysuckle.
-Whilst Valentine went, followed by Cæsar, to look at the operations of
-the peons and smoke his cigar in the patio, Louis felt himself led by
-his dreamy spirit to indulge in poetical reveries, and to seek a few
-minutes' solitude in the Eden which lay before him. Urged by an unknown
-power, intoxicated by the sweet odours which embalmed the atmosphere, he
-glided into the garden, casting around him a vaguely questioning look.
-
-The young man went dreaming along the garden walks, mechanically pulling
-to pieces with his fingers a rose which he had gathered. He had walked
-thus for nearly an hour, when he was roused by a slight noise among
-the leaves, at a short distance from him. He instinctively raised his
-head, just in time to catch a glimpse of a light white robe which was
-disappearing among the trees, but too late to completely distinguish the
-person who wore it, and who appeared to trip over the dewy grass like
-a white phantom. At the sight of this mysterious apparition the young
-man felt his heart bound in his breast; he stopped trembling, and the
-emotion he felt was so powerful, that he was forced to lean against a
-tree for support.
-
-"What can be the matter with me?" he murmured to himself, as he wiped
-the cold perspiration from his brow. "I am mad!" he continued, with a
-forced smile. "I think I see her everywhere. Heavens! I love her so
-deeply that, in spite of myself, my imagination brings her before me
-unceasingly. That girl, of whom I just caught a glimpse, is probably the
-same we last night so miraculously saved. Poor child! Fortunately she
-did not see me; I should have frightened her. Better avoid her by going
-out of the garden; in my present state I should alarm her."
-
-And, as always happens in such cases, he set off, on the contrary, in
-the very footsteps of her he had only caught a glimpse of, but whom, by
-one of the instinctive feelings of sympathy which come from God, and
-which science can never explain, he had nevertheless recognized.
-
-The young girl, reclining in the depths of an arbour, like a hummingbird
-in its bed of muss, with a pale face, and her eyes cast down to the
-earth, was listening, pensive and sad, to the joyous melodies which the
-birds chanted in her absent ear. All at once, a slight noise made her
-start and raise her head. The Count was before her! She uttered a faint
-cry, and endeavoured to fly.
-
-"Don Louis!" she exclaimed.
-
-She had recognized him. The young man sank on his knees at the entrance
-of the arbour.
-
-"Oh!" he cried, in a voice trembling with emotion, and with an accent of
-the most earnest entreaty, "for pity's sake, remain, madam!"
-
-"Don Louis!" she repeated, already recovered, and feigning the most
-perfect indifference. Young girls, even the purest, possess in a high
-degree the talent of concealing their feelings, and of deceiving persons
-with regard to the emotions they really experience.
-
-"Yes, it is I, madam," he continued, with an accent of the most
-respectful passion; "I, who, to see you again, have abandoned
-everything!"
-
-The young lady displayed some slight surprise.
-
-"For Heaven's sake!" he resumed, "allow me once more, if but for an
-instant, to contemplate your adored features! Oh!" he added, with a look
-of deep affection, "my heart had told me you were here, before my eyes
-had perceived you."
-
-"Caballero," she said, in a tremulous voice, "I do not understand you."
-
-"Oh, fear nothing from me, madam!" he interrupted her vehemently; "my
-respect for you is as profound as----
-
-"Pray, caballero," she said, earnestly, "rise; if anyone should surprise
-you thus!"
-
-"Madam," he replied, "the avowal I have to make to you, requires me to
-remain in the position of a suppliant!"
-
-"Oh, caballero!"
-
-"I love you, madam!" he said, in broken accents; "I know not what gives
-me the boldness to pronounce a word which in France I did not venture
-to breathe in your ear, and which I have never allowed to pass from my
-heart to my lips. But even if you banished me from your presence for
-ever, once again I must tell you that I love you, madam; and if you do
-not return my love, I shall die!"
-
-The maiden looked at him for a moment with a melancholy air; a tear
-trembled on her long eyelashes; she took a step towards him, and holding
-out her hand, upon which he imprinted a burning kiss, said softly,--
-
-"Rise."
-
-The Count obeyed. Doña Rosario sunk back upon the bench behind her,
-and appeared plunged in profound and painful meditation. Both remained
-silent, Louis watching her with intense anxiety, and a throbbing heart.
-At length she raised her head, and exhibited a countenance bathed in
-tears.
-
-"Caballero," she said in a melancholy tone, "if God has permitted us to
-meet once again, it is because, in His divine goodness, He has judged
-that a decisive explanation should take place between us."
-
-The young man appeared anxious to speak.
-
-"Do not interrupt me," she continued, "or I shall not have the courage
-to finish what I have to say to you. You love me, Louis; your presence
-here is an incontestable proof of it--you love me; and yet how many
-times, during my short residence in France, have you cursed me in
-secret, accusing me of coquetry, or, at least, of unaccountable levity!"
-
-"Madam!"
-
-"Oh!" she said, with a faint smile, "since you have avowed your love
-for me, I will be frank with you, Louis; and although it be my duty to
-deprive you of all future hope, I am at least anxious to justify the
-past, and leave you a remembrance of me that nothing can tarnish!"
-
-"Oh, madam! why do you repeat such things to me?"
-
-"Why?" she said, with a look full of melancholy, and in a voice
-harmonious as the sigh of an Æolian harp, "because I have faith in that
-love, so warm, so young, so true; which neither daily indignities nor
-vast distances have been able to conquer--because, in short, I also love
-you! do you not plainly see that, Louis?"
-
-On hearing this confession, so ingenuous, and made in a tone so
-sorrowful that the young girl appeared no longer to belong to earth, the
-Count felt struck by a terrible presentiment; his heart was wrung with
-doubtful agony. Trembling, bewildered, he gazed on her with the fixed
-and desperate eye of one condemned to death, who is listening to the
-reading of his sentence.
-
-"Yes!" she resumed, with feverish eagerness; "yes, I love you, Louis, I
-shall always love you; but never, never, can we be united."
-
-"Oh, that is impossible!" he cried, raising his head vehemently.
-
-"Listen to me," she said, in a tone of authority; "I do not order you to
-forget me, Louis; a love like yours is eternal: alas! I feel that mine
-will last as long as my life. You see, my friend, I am frank; I do not
-speak to you as a maiden ought to speak; I unfold my heart before you,
-leaving you to read it as you would your own. Well, this love, which
-would be for us the height of felicity,--this communion of two spirits,
-which blend with each other to form one blissful whole,--this boundless
-happiness must be dispersed for ever, without chance of recovery,
-without hesitation!"
-
-"Oh, I cannot consent!" he exclaimed, in a voice broken by sobs.
-
-"But it must be so, I tell you!" she continued, wild with anguish.
-"Great Heaven! what more do you require of me? Must I confess everything
-to you? Well, then, since it must be so, know that I am a miserable
-creature, condemned from my birth, pursued by a terrible hatred,
-which follows me step by step, which watches me incessantly; and some
-day--tomorrow, perhaps today--will crush me without mercy! Obliged
-to change my name constantly; flying from city to city, from country
-to country; wherever I may go, this implacable enemy, whom I do not
-know, and against whom I cannot defend myself, pursues me without
-intermission."
-
-"But I will defend you!" the young man said, with confident energy.
-
-"And I, on my part, am not willing that you should die!" she replied,
-with an accent of ineffable tenderness. "To attach yourself to me is
-to court destruction. I went to France to seek a place of refuge. I
-was obliged to quit that hospitable land with the greatest suddenness.
-Arrived here only a few weeks since, but for you, last night, I should
-have been lost! No, no, I am condemned; I know I am, and I am resigned;
-but I will not drag you down in my fall! Alas! I am, perhaps, doomed to
-suffer tortures still more horrible than those I have hitherto endured!
-Oh, Louis, in the name of the love which you have for me, and which I
-fully share, leave me the supreme consolation in my wretchedness of
-knowing that you are safe from the torments which overwhelm me!"
-
-At this moment Valentine's voice was heard at a short distance, and
-Cæsar came wagging his tail to his master. Doña Rosario gathered a
-blossom of the _suchil_ which grew close to them, and presented it to
-the young man, after having for a moment inhaled its sweet odour.
-
-"Here," she said, "my friend, accept this flower, the only memorial,
-alas! that will remain with you of me."
-
-The young man concealed the flower in his bosom.
-
-"Someone is coming," she continued, in broken accents. "Swear, Louis!
-swear to quit this country as soon as possible, without endeavouring to
-see me again."
-
-The Count hesitated.
-
-"Oh!" he cried, "some day, perhaps,----"
-
-"Never on earth. Have I not told you that I am condemned? Swear, Louis,
-that at least I may hope to meet you again in heaven."
-
-She pronounced these words with such a tone of despair, that the young
-man, overcome, in spite of himself, made a gesture of assent, and let
-the almost inarticulate words escape his lips,--
-
-"I swear to do so!"
-
-"Thanks! thanks!" she cried wildly, and hurriedly imprinting a kiss upon
-the brow of her prostrated lover, she disappeared with the lightness of
-a fawn amidst a thicket of standard roses, at the moment when Valentine
-became visible at the turning of the walk.
-
-"Why brother," the soldier said gaily, "what the deuce are you about
-here, at the bottom of the garden? Breakfast is waiting for you. I have
-been looking for you this hour; and if it had not been for Cæsar, I
-should not have found you now."
-
-The Count turned towards him, his face lathed in tears, and threw his
-arms round his neck.
-
-"Brother! brother!" he cried, in an accent of despair; "I am the most
-unhappy of men!"
-
-Valentine looked at him in astonishment. The Count had fainted.
-
-"What on earth is all this about?" said the soldier, casting a
-suspicious look around him, and laying his foster brother, who was
-motionless as a corpse, gently upon a grassy bank.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-THE QUINTA VERDE.
-
-
-Not far from Rio Claro, a charming little city, built in a delicious
-situation between Santiago and Talca, there was then, and probably is
-still, upon a hill commanding an extensive view, a pretty _quinta_, with
-white walls and green shutters, coquettishly concealed from indiscreet
-eyes by a thicket of trees of various sorts--oaks, acajous, maples,
-palms, aloes, cactus, &c, which sprang up and intertwined within each
-other in such a fashion around it as to form an almost impregnable
-rampart. It is difficult to explain how, in such a period of convulsions
-and overthrows, this delicious habitation had hitherto escaped, as if by
-a miracle, from the devastation and pillage which incessantly menaced
-it, and which fell without intermission around it, enveloping it, as
-it were, in a network of ruins, without, however, having ever troubled
-that tranquil dwelling, although the human tempest had frequently howled
-beneath its walls, and, in the shade of night, it had often seen the red
-torches of incendiaries gleam; all at once, though no one knew why, and
-as if by enchantment, the cries of murder ceased, and the torches became
-extinguished and harmless in the hands of the men who, a minute before,
-had waved them about madly. This habitation was named the "Quinta Verde."
-
-By what prodigy had this house, so simple in appearance, and so like
-the rest, avoided the common fate and remained alone, perhaps, of all
-the houses of the Chilian plains, calm and tranquil in the midst of
-general confusion, equally respected by the two parties contending for
-power, and surveying carelessly from the top of its pretty _mirador_ the
-revolution raging at its feet, which carried away, as in an infernal
-whirlwind, cities, villages, houses, fortunes, and families? This is
-what many people, at various periods, had been anxious to know, though
-they had never been able to find out. Nobody ostensibly inhabited this
-quinta, in which, on certain days, noises were heard which filled with a
-superstitious terror the worthy _guasos_ living in the neighbourhood.
-
-The day after that on which the events occurred which open this history,
-the heat had been oppressive, the atmosphere heavy, and the sun had
-gone down amidst a flood of purple vapour, the precursors of a storm
-which burst with fury as soon as night had completely closed in. The
-wind bent down the trees as it whistled through them, the collision of
-the branches producing a melancholy sound; the heavens were black, not
-a star was to be seen; and large grey clouds coursed rapidly across
-the zenith, covering all nature with a leaden pall. In the distance
-resounded the howlings of wild beasts, among which was occasionally
-mingled the hoarse, sharp barking of stray dogs.
-
-Nine o'clock struck slowly from a distant steeple; the sound of the
-metal, repeated by the echoes from the hills, vibrated with a plaintive
-tone over the deserted landscape. The moon, fitfully emerging from
-behind the clouds which veiled her, spread for a few seconds a pale
-and trembling light over the scene, giving it a fantastic aspect. This
-fugitive ray of doubtful light, nevertheless, enabled a small troop of
-horsemen, who were painfully ascending a winding path on the side of a
-mountain, to distinguish, at a few paces before them, the black outline
-of a house, from the top window of which beamed like a pharos a red,
-uncertain light. This house was the "Quinta Verde."
-
-At about four or five paces in advance of the troop rode two horsemen,
-muffled carefully in their cloaks, the flaps of their hats pulled down
-over their eyes, appeared, in the darkness, to be a needless precaution;
-but it, nevertheless, showed that these personages were very anxious not
-to be recognized.
-
-"Heaven be praised!" said one of these horsemen to his companion, as
-he pulled up his horse, to look searchingly around him, as far as the
-darkness would permit; "I hope we shall soon be there."
-
-"In a quarter of an hour, at latest, General, we shall be at the end of
-our journey."
-
-"Do not let us stop, then," the one addressed as General said; "I am
-impatient to penetrate into this abominable den."
-
-"One moment, General!" the first speaker continued. "It is my duty to
-warn your Excellency that there is still time to retreat; and that
-would, perhaps, be the more prudent step."
-
-"Please to observe this, Diego," said the General, fixing upon his
-companion a look which gleamed in the semi-obscurity like that of a
-tiger-cat--"in the circumstances in which I am placed, prudence, as you
-understand the word, would be cowardice. I am quite aware what I am
-called upon to do by the confidence placed in me by my fellow citizens;
-our position is most critical: the liberal reaction is raising its head
-in all quarters, and we must put an end to this ever-reviving hydra.
-The news of Don Tadeo's escape from death has spread with the rapidity
-of a train of gunpowder; all the malcontents of whom he is the leader,
-are in almost open action; if I were to hesitate to strike a great blow
-and crush the head of the serpent which hisses in my ears, it would
-tomorrow, perhaps, be too late; hesitation has always been the ruin of
-statesmen in affairs of importance."
-
-"And yet, General, if the man who has furnished you with this
-information should--"
-
-"Be a traitor? Well, that is possible--ay, even probable; therefore,
-I have neglected nothing that may neutralize the consequences of a
-treachery which I foresee."
-
-"By the Virgin! General, in your place, however--"
-
-"Thank you, old comrade, thank you for your solicitude; but enough of
-this subject, you ought to know me well enough to be sure that I shall
-never flinch from my duty."
-
-"I have nothing more to do, then, but to wish your Excellency well
-through your undertaking; for you know you must arrive alone at the
-Quinta Verde, and I can escort you no farther."
-
-"Very well, wait here then; make your men dismount for a time, keep a
-sharp watch, and execute punctually the orders I have given you. I am
-going on."
-
-Diego bowed respectfully, but with an air of anxiety, and withdrew his
-hand, which had been placed on the bridle of the General's horse. The
-latter more carefully enveloped himself in his cloak, the folds of which
-had become too loose, and gave the usual jockey signal to excite his
-horse. At this well-known sound the horse pricked up its ears, and being
-thoroughbred, although fatigued, set off at a gallop.
-
-After a few minutes of this rapid travelling, the General stopped; but
-it appeared as if his journey was completed, for, dismounting, he threw
-the bridle on his horse's neck, with as little care what became of it as
-if it had been a hack post-horse, and walked with a firm step towards
-the house, which he had held in view some time, and from which he was
-now not more than ten paces distant. This was soon cleared. When he
-reached the gate, he stood for a second and looked around him, as if
-endeavouring to penetrate the darkness; but all was calm and silent.
-In spite of himself, the General was seized with that vague fear which
-takes possession of the most courageous man when in face of the unknown.
-But General Bustamente, whom the reader has no doubt recognized, was too
-old a soldier to suffer himself to be mastered long by an impression,
-however strong it might be; with him this had lasted but an instant, and
-he almost immediately recovered his usual coolness.
-
-"What the devil! am _I_ afraid?" he murmured, with an ironical smile,
-and going boldly up to the gate, he knocked three times at equal
-intervals with the pummel of his sword. In an instant his arms were
-seized by invisible hands, a bandage was placed over his eyes, and a
-voice, faint as a breath, murmured in his ear--
-
-"Make no resistance, twenty poniards are at your breast; at the first
-cry, at the least opposition, you are a dead man. Reply categorically to
-our questions."
-
-"All these threats are needless," the General replied, in a calm
-voice; "as I came here of my own free will, I can have no intention of
-resisting--ask, and I will answer."
-
-"What do you come to seek here?" the voice said.
-
-"The Dark-Hearts."
-
-"Are you ready to appear in their presence?"
-
-"I am," the General replied, still impassive.
-
-"Do you dread nothing?"
-
-"Nothing."
-
-"Let your sword fall."
-
-The General quitted his hold of his sword, and felt at the same moment
-that his pistols were taken from him.
-
-"Now, step forward without fear," said the voice.
-
-The prisoner found himself instantly at liberty.
-
-"In the name of Christ, who died upon the cross for the salvation of the
-world, Dark-Hearts, receive me among the number of your brethren!" the
-General then said, in a low and firm voice.
-
-The double gates of the Quinta Verde flew open before him, and two
-masked men, each holding a dark lantern in his hand, the focus of which
-he directed on the stranger's face, appeared in the entrance.
-
-"There is still time," said one of the unknown; "if your heart be not
-firm, you may retreat."
-
-"My heart is firm."
-
-"Come on, then, as you think yourself worthy to share our glorious task,
-but tremble if you have the least intention of betraying us," said the
-masked man, in a deep, sonorous voice.
-
-The General felt, notwithstanding the recklessness of his character,
-a cold shudder run through his limbs at these words; but he quickly
-surmounted this involuntary emotion.
-
-"It is for traitors to tremble," he replied; "for my part, I have
-nothing to fear."
-
-And he boldly stepped into the Quinta Verde, the doors of which closed
-after him with a dull, heavy sound. The bandage which covered his eyes,
-and which had prevented those who had interrogated him from recognizing
-him, notwithstanding their efforts to do so, was then removed. After
-proceeding for more than a quarter of an hour along a circular corridor,
-lighted only by the red flickering flame of the torch carried by the
-guide through this labyrinth, the General was suddenly stopped by a door
-in front of him. He turned hesitatingly towards the masked men, who had
-followed him step by step.
-
-"What do you wait for?" said one of them in reply to his mute
-interrogation. "Is it not written, _Knock and it shall be opened unto
-you?_"
-
-The General bowed in sign of acquiescence, and knocked loudly at the
-door. The folding panels drew back silently into the wall, and the
-General found himself at the entrance of a vast hall, whose walls were
-covered with long red draperies, gloomily enlightened by a bronze lamp
-and several chandeliers suspended from the ceiling, which shone in an
-uncertain manner upon the countenances of about a hundred men, who,
-with naked swords in their hands, fixed their eyes upon him through the
-black masks which concealed their faces. At the bottom of this hall was
-a table covered with a green cloth, at which were seated three men. Not
-only were those three men masked, but, as a further precaution, before
-each of them a lighted torch was planted on the table, the dazzling
-flame of which allowed them to be but vaguely seen. Against the wall was
-a crucifix, between two hourglasses surmounted by a death's-head with a
-poniard run through it.
-
-The General manifested no emotion at this imposing _mise en scène_. A
-smile of disdain curled his lip, and he stepped boldly forward. At this
-moment he felt a light touch on the shoulder, and, on turning round,
-perceived that one of the guides was holding out a mask to him. In spite
-of the precautions he had taken to disguise his features, he eagerly
-seized it, placed it on his face, folded his cloak round him, and
-entered.
-
-"_In nomine Patris, et Filii, et Spiritus Sancti!_" he said.
-
-"_Amen_!" all present replied, in a sepulchral tone.
-
-"_Exaudiat te Dominus, in die Tribulationis,_" said one of the
-personages behind the table.
-
-"_Impleat Dominus omnes petitiones tuas_," the General replied, without
-hesitation.
-
-"_La Patria!_" the first speaker rejoined.
-
-"_O la Muerte!_" replied the General.
-
-"What is your purpose in coming here?" the man who up to this time alone
-had spoken, asked.
-
-"I wish to be admitted into the bosom of the elect."
-
-There was a momentary silence.
-
-"Is there anyone among us who can or will answer for you?" the masked
-man then asked.
-
-"I cannot say; for I do not know the persons among whom I find myself."
-
-"How know you that?"
-
-"I suppose so, as they, as well as I, are masked."
-
-"The Dark-Hearts," said the interrogator in a deep tone, "consider not
-the countenance; they search souls."
-
-The General bowed at this sentence, which appeared to him to border upon
-the ridiculous. The interrogator continued:--"Do you know the conditions
-of your affiliation?"
-
-"I know them."
-
-"What are they?"
-
-"To sacrifice mother, father, brothers, relations, friends, and myself,
-without hesitation, to the cause which I swear to defend."
-
-"What next?"
-
-"At the first signal, whether it be by day or night, even at the foot of
-the altar, in whatever circumstance I may be placed, to quit everything,
-in order to accomplish immediately the orders that shall be given me, in
-whatever manner they may be given, and whatever may be the tenor of that
-order."
-
-"Do you subscribe to these conditions?"
-
-"I subscribe to them."
-
-"Are you prepared to swear to submit yourself to them?"
-
-"I am prepared."
-
-"Repeat, then, after me, with your hand upon the Gospels, the words I am
-about to dictate to you."
-
-"Dictate!"
-
-The three men behind the table rose; a Bible was brought, and the
-General resolutely placed his hand upon the book. A faint murmur ran
-through the ranks of the assembly. The president struck the table with
-the hilt of his dagger, and silence was re-established. This man then
-pronounced in a slow and deep toned voice the following words, which the
-General repeated after him without hesitation:--
-
-"I swear to sacrifice myself, my family, my property, and all that I
-can hope for in this world, for the safety of the cause defended by
-the Dark-Hearts. I swear to kill every man, be he my father, be he my
-brother, who shall be pointed out to me. If I fail in my faith, if I
-betray those who accept me as their brother, I acknowledge myself to
-be worthy of death; and I, beforehand, pardon the Dark-Hearts who may
-inflict it upon me."
-
-"So far well!" replied the president, when the General had pronounced
-the oath. "You are now our brother."
-
-He then rose, and stepping across the hall, stood full in front of the
-General.
-
-"Now," he said in a solemn threatening voice, "answer me, Don Pancho
-Bustamente. As you, of your own free will, take a false oath before a
-hundred persons, do you think we should commit a crime in condemning
-you, since you have had the audacity to place yourself in our power?"
-
-In spite of his assurance, the General could not repress a start of
-terror.
-
-"Remove the mask which covers this man's face, so that everyone may know
-that it is he! Ah! General; you have entered the lion's den, and you
-will be devoured."
-
-The noise of a distant commotion was heard.
-
-"Your soldiers are coming to your rescue," the president resumed, "but
-they will come too late, General; prepare to die!"
-
-These words fell like the blow of a mace upon the brow of him who found
-himself thus outwitted; he, nevertheless, did not yet lose heart; the
-noise evidently approached; and there could be no doubt but that his
-troops, who surrounded the Quinta Verde on all sides, would soon gain
-possession of it; all he wanted was time.
-
-"By what right," he said haughtily, "do you constitute yourselves judges
-and executioners of your own sentence?"
-
-"You are one of us, and are bound by our sentence," the president
-replied, with an ironical smile.
-
-"Beware of what you are about to do, gentlemen," the General added in a
-haughty tone; "remember I am minister-at-war!"
-
-"And I am King of Darkness," the president cried in a voice that froze
-the very blood of the General; "my dagger is more sure than the muskets
-of your soldiers; it does not let its victims escape. Brethren, what
-chastisement does this man deserve?"
-
-"Death!" the conspirators replied.
-
-The General saw that he was lost.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-THE DEPARTURE.
-
-
-Sergeant Diego, when left by General Bustamente a few paces from the
-Quinta Verde, was very uneasy regarding the fate of his leader, and
-entertained dismal presentiments. He was an old soldier, and well
-acquainted with all the machinations and treacheries practised in this
-country between inveterate enemies. He had been far from approving of
-the General's undertaking, for he knew better than anyone how little
-confidence ought to be placed in spies. Constrained, ostensibly, to
-obey the order he had received, he had resolved, _in petto_, not to
-leave his leader without help in the wasps' nest into which he had
-cast himself headlong. Diego entertained for General Bustamente, under
-whose orders he had served ten years, a profound regard, which entitled
-him to certain freedoms, and his entire confidence. He immediately
-placed himself in relation with two other officers of the detachment,
-ordered, like himself, to watch the mysterious house whose dark outline
-cut gloomily across the cloudy sky, and around which there was a close
-blockade. He was walking about, biting his moustache, and swearing to
-himself, determined, if the General did not come out within half an
-hour, to obtain an entrance by force, if necessary, when a heavy hand
-was laid upon his shoulder. He turned sharply round, stopping short in
-an oath that was passing his lips, and saw a man standing before him: it
-was Don Pedro.
-
-"Is that you?" he asked, as soon as he recognised him.
-
-"Myself," the spy replied.
-
-"But where the devil do you come from?"
-
-"No matter; do you wish to save the General?"
-
-"Is he in danger?"
-
-"In danger of death."
-
-"_Demonios!_" the sergeant shouted; "he must be saved!"
-
-"For that purpose I am here; but don't speak so loud."
-
-"I will speak as you like, provided you will tell me."
-
-"Nothing!" Don Pedro replied, "for there is not a minute to be lost."
-
-"What is to be done?"
-
-"Listen! A detachment must feign an attack upon the gate by which the
-General entered; another will watch the environs, for the Dark-Hearts
-have roads known only to themselves; you, with a third detachment, will
-follow me; I will undertake to introduce you into the house--is that
-agreed upon?"
-
-"Perfectly."
-
-"Make haste, then, to inform your colleagues; time presses."
-
-"Instantly; where shall I find you again?"
-
-"Here."
-
-"Very well; I only ask five minutes," and he strode away in haste.
-
-"Hem!" thought Don Pedro, as soon as he was alone; "we should be
-prudent when we wish affairs to be profitable; from what I heard, they
-will condemn the General, and they must not be allowed to go as far as
-that, for my interests would suffer too seriously; I have manoeuvred
-so as to be safe from all suspicion; if I succeed, I shall be more in
-favour with the General than ever, without losing the confidence of the
-conspirators."
-
-"Well!" he said, as he saw Diego coming towards him.
-
-"Everything is done," replied the sergeant, out of breath. "I am ready."
-
-"Come on, then, and God grant it may not be too late!"
-
-"Amen!" said the soldier.
-
-Everything was done as had been arranged; whilst one detachment
-vigorously attacked the gate of the Quinta Verde, Don Pedro led the
-troops commanded by Diego to the opposite side of the house, where a
-low window was open; this window was grated, but several bars had been
-removed beforehand, which left the entrance easy. Pedro commanded the
-soldiers to be silent, and they entered the house one by one. Guided by
-the spy, they advanced stealthily, without meeting with obstacles of any
-kind. At the end of a few minutes they came to a closed door.
-
-"This is it!" said Pedro, in a low voice.
-
-At a sign from the sergeant, the door was beaten in with the butt end
-of their muskets, and the soldiers rushed into the room. It was nearly
-empty, its only occupant being a man stretched motionless upon the
-floor. The sergeant sprang towards him, but recoiled with a cry of
-horror--he had recognised his leader--General Bustamente lay with a
-dagger sticking upright in his breast. To the hilt of the dagger was
-tied a long black strip, upon which were written these words in red ink:
-
-"_The Justice of the Dark-Hearts!_"
-
-"Oh!" cried Diego; "Vengeance! Vengeance!"
-
-"Vengeance!" the soldiers repeated, with rage, mingled with terror.
-
-The sergeant turned round towards Pedro, whom he believed to be still by
-his side; but the spy, who alone could guide them in their researches,
-had thought it prudent to steal away. As soon as he saw that what he
-dreaded had happened, he had disappeared without anybody observing his
-departure.
-
-"No matter!" said Diego. "If I demolish this den of assassins, from
-bottom to top, and don't leave stone upon stone, I swear I will find
-these demons, if they are buried in the centre of the earth."
-
-The old soldier began searching in all directions, whilst a surgeon who
-had followed the detachment paid attention to the wounded man, whom he
-endeavoured to restore to his senses.
-
-The Dark-Hearts, as the spy had truly said, had paths known only
-to themselves, by which they had quietly departed, after having
-accomplished their terrible vengeance, or executed their severe justice,
-according to the point of view in which an act of this nature and
-importance is viewed. They were already far off in the country, safe
-from all danger, while the soldiers were still ferociously searching for
-them in and about the house.
-
-Don Tadeo and Don Gregorio returned together to the chacra, and were
-astonished, on their arrival, to find Valentine, whom they supposed to
-be in bed and asleep long before, waiting for them at that late hour,
-to request a few minutes' conversation. In spite of the very natural
-surprise which the demand at such a singular hour excited, the two
-gentlemen, who supposed the Frenchman had serious reasons for acting
-thus, granted his request, without making the least observation. The
-conversation was long--so long, that we think it useless to repeat it
-here in detail, but will satisfy ourselves with giving our readers the
-end of it, which sums it up perfectly.
-
-"I will not insist," said Don Tadeo, "although you will not tell us
-your motives. I believe you to be too considerate a man, Don Valentine,
-not to be convinced that the reasons which force you to leave us are
-serious."
-
-"Of the greatest seriousness," the young man replied.
-
-"Very well. But on leaving this place, in which direction do you intend
-to bend your steps?"
-
-"Faith! I own frankly--besides, you know already that I and my friend
-are in search of fortune--that all directions are the same to us, since
-we must, above everything, depend upon chance."
-
-"I am of your opinion," replied Don Tadeo, smiling. "Listen to me,
-then. I possess large estates in the province of Valdivia, which it
-is my intention to visit shortly. What prevents you going that way in
-preference to any other?"
-
-"Nothing, that I know of."
-
-"I, at this moment, stand in need of a man whom I can depend upon, to
-undertake an important mission into Araucania, to one of the principal
-chiefs of the people of that country. If you are going to the province
-of Valdivia, you will be obliged to traverse Araucania in its whole
-length. Are you willing to undertake this commission? Will that
-inconvenience you?"
-
-"Why should I not?" said Valentine. "I have never come face to face with
-savages; I should like to see what sort of people they are."
-
-"Very well; now is your opportunity. That is agreed upon then. You wish
-to start tomorrow, do you not?"
-
-"Tomorrow! Today, if you please--in a few hours, for it will not be long
-before the sun will be up."
-
-"That is true. Very well, then; at the moment of your departure, my
-major-domo shall place, on my part, written instructions in your hands."
-
-"Caramba!" said Valentine, laughing; "here am I transformed into an
-ambassador!"
-
-"Do not joke, my friend," said Don Tadeo, seriously. "The mission I
-confide to you is delicate--dangerous, even; I do not conceal that from
-you. If the papers of which you will be the bearer are found upon you,
-you will be exposed to great dangers. Are you still willing to be my
-emissary?"
-
-"Pardieu! Wherever there is danger there is pleasure. And what is the
-name of the person to whom I am to remit these despatches?"
-
-"They are of two descriptions. The latter only concerns yourself; during
-the course of your journey you can make yourself acquainted with them;
-they will instruct you in certain matters you should know in order to
-secure the success of your mission."
-
-"I understand--and the others?"
-
-"The others are for Antinahuel, that is, the Tiger Sun, and must be
-delivered into his own hands."
-
-"A queer name that!" Valentine replied, with a laugh. "And where am I to
-find the gentleman rejoicing in such a formidable title?"
-
-"By my faith, my friend," replied Don Tadeo, "I know no more than you
-do."
-
-"The Araucano Indians," interrupted Don Gregorio, "are a rather
-wandering race, and it is sometimes difficult to find the one you are in
-search of."
-
-"Bah! I shall find him, be assured of that."
-
-"We do entirely rely upon you."
-
-"In a few hours, as I have told you, I shall myself set out to place in
-a convent in Valdivia the young lady whom you so fortunately saved; it
-will, therefore, be in Valdivia I shall await your answer."
-
-"I beg your pardon, but I have not the least idea where Valdivia is,"
-observed Valentine.
-
-"Don't be uneasy on that account; any child in this country can direct
-you the way thither," Don Gregorio replied.
-
-"Thanks."
-
-"And now, if you change your mind when we meet again, and consent to
-remain among us, remember we are brothers, and do not hesitate to inform
-me of your new determination."
-
-"I can neither, reply yes or no, sir; if it depended upon me, we should
-continue to see each other frequently."
-
-After exchanging a few more friendly expressions, the three men
-separated. At sunrise, Louis and Valentine, mounted on magnificent
-horses, which Don Tadeo had forced them to accept, rode away from the
-chacra, followed by Cæsar. Valentine had received his despatches from
-the hands of the major-domo. As they were quitting the farm Louis
-turned round instinctively, as if to salute with a last look a spot
-he abandoned for ever, and which contained all that was dear to him.
-A window was gently opened, and the face of the fair girl appeared
-through the small interval, bathed in tears. The two young men bowed
-respectfully towards the necks of their horses, and with a deep sigh
-from Louis, they moved on as the window closed.
-
-"Adieu! oh, adieu for ever!" murmured Louis, choking with emotion.
-
-"Ah, perhaps!" said Valentine; and, to rouse his friend from his grief,
-he put his horse into a gallop, and they soon lost sight of the chacra
-in the windings of the road.
-
-Within four hours from their departure Don Tadeo and Don Gregorio
-likewise set out on their journey to Valdivia, for the purpose of
-placing Doña Rosario in the convent. But the enemy of whom they thought
-they had relieved themselves at the Quinta Verde, was not dead; the
-dagger of the King of Darkness had not proved more sure than the bullets
-of the General. The two enemies were destined soon to meet again.
-Notwithstanding the seriousness of the wound he had received, thanks
-to the intelligent cares lavished upon him, but more particularly,
-thanks to his excellent constitution, General Bustamente was soon in a
-convalescent state. Don Pancho and the Linda, from that time united by
-the strongest of ties--a common personal hatred--prepared to take their
-revenge upon Don Tadeo, and that of the bitterest nature. The General
-signalized his restoration to health by cruelties of the most flagrant
-kind towards every man suspected of liberalism, and by inaugurating
-throughout the republic a pitiless system of terror. Don Tadeo was
-pronounced outlawed; his friends were cast into dungeons, and their
-property was confiscated; and then, when the General thought that all
-these vexations must bring his enemy to bay, and he had nothing to dread
-from him or his partizans, under the pretence of visiting the provinces
-of the Republic, he set out for Valdivia, accompanied by his mistress.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-THE MEETING.
-
-
-As the principal incidents of this history are now about to take place
-in Araucania, we think it necessary to give our readers some account of
-this people, who alone of all the nations the Spaniards encountered in
-America, succeeded in resisting them, and had, up to the time we treat
-of, preserved intact their liberty and almost all their territory. The
-Araucanos or Moluchos inhabit the beautiful country situated between the
-rivers Biobio and Valdivia, having on one side the sea, and on the other
-the great Cordilleras of the Andes. They are thus completely enclosed
-within the Chilian republic, and yet, as we have said, have always
-remained independent. It would be a great error to suppose these Indians
-savages. The Araucanos have adopted as much of European civilization as
-suited their character and their mode of living, and have rejected the
-rest. From the most remote times these peoples had formed a national
-body, strong and compact, governed by wise laws rigorously executed. The
-first Spanish conquerors were quite astonished to find in this remote
-corner of America, a powerful aristocratic republic, and a feudalism
-organized almost upon the same plan as that which prevailed in Europe
-in the thirteenth century. We will here enter into a few details of the
-government of the Araucanos, who proudly style themselves _Aucas_--free
-men. These details concerning a people too little known, up to this day,
-cannot fail to interest the reader.
-
-The principal chiefs of the Araucanos are the Toquis,[1] the Apo-Ulmens,
-and the Ulmens. There are four Toquis, one for each territorial
-division; they have under their orders the Apo-Ulmens, who, in their
-turn, command the Ulmens. The Toquis are independent of each other, but
-confederated for the public good. Titles are hereditary, and pass from
-males to males. The vassals or Mosotones are free; in time of war alone
-they are subject to military service; but, in this country, and it is
-this which constitutes its strength, every man in a condition to bear
-arms is a soldier. It may easily be understood what the chiefs are when
-we state that the people consider them only as the first among their
-equals, and that their authority is consequently rather precarious;
-and if, now and then, certain Toquis have endeavoured to extend their
-authority, the people, jealous of their privileges, have always found
-means to keep them within the bounds prescribed by their ancient usages.
-
-A society whose manners are so simple, and interests so little
-complicated, which is governed by wise laws, and all the members of
-which have an ardent love of liberty, is invincible, as the Spaniards
-have many times found to their cost. After having, in several attempts,
-endeavoured to subdue this little corner of land, isolated amidst their
-own territory; they have ended by acknowledging the futility of their
-efforts, and have tacitly admitted their defeat by renouncing for ever
-their projects of obtaining dominion over the Araucanos, with whom
-they have contracted alliances, and across whose territory they now
-peacefully pass on their road from Santiago to Valdivia.
-
-The Carampangue--in the Araucano idiom, refuge of lions--is a charming
-stream, half torrent, half river, which comes bounding down from the
-inaccessible summits of the Andes, and, after many capricious windings,
-loses itself in the sea two leagues to the north of Arauco. Nothing
-can be more beautiful than the banks of the Carampangue, bordered by
-smiling valleys, covered with woods, with apple trees loaded with fruit,
-rich pastures in which animals of all kinds range and feed at liberty,
-and high mountains, from the verdant sides of which hang, in the most
-picturesque positions, clusters of cabins, whose whitewashed walls shine
-in the sun, and give life to this enchanting landscape.
-
-On the day when we resume our narrative, that is, on a beautiful morning
-in July--called by the Indians the month of the sun--two horsemen,
-followed by a magnificent black and white Newfoundland dog, were
-ascending, at a sharp trot, the course of the river, following what is
-called a wild beast's track, scarcely marked in the high grass. These
-men, dressed in the Chilian costume, surging up suddenly amidst this
-wild natural scene, formed, by their manners and their vestments, a
-contrast with everything which surrounded them; a contrast of which
-they probably had no idea, for they rode as carelessly through this
-barbarous country, abounding in perils and ambushes without number, as
-they would have done along the road from Paris to Saint-Cloud. These two
-men, whom the reader has, no doubt, recognized, were the Count Louis
-de Prébois-Crancé and Valentine Guillois, his foster brother. They had
-passed in turn through Maulé, Talca, and Concepción; and on the day we
-meet them again, in the middle of Araucania, they had been full two
-months on the road, travelling philosophically along with their dog
-Cæsar upon the banks of the Carampangue. This was the 14th of July,
-1837, at eleven o'clock in the morning.
-
-The young men had passed the night in an abandoned _rancho_ which
-they had fallen in with on their way, and at sunrise resumed their
-journey; so that they now began to be sensible of the calls of hunger.
-Upon taking a survey of the spot where they found themselves, they
-perceived a clump of apple trees, which intercepted the rays of the
-sun, and offered them a shelter for their repast and a little rest.
-They dismounted and sat down at the foot of a large apple tree, leaving
-their horses to browse upon the young branches so abundant around
-them. Valentine knocked down a few apples with a stick, opened his
-_alforjas_--large cloth pockets placed behind the saddle--drew out some
-sea biscuit, a piece of bacon, and a goat's milk cheese, and the two
-young men began eating gaily, sharing their provisions with Cæsar in a
-brotherly way, whilst he, seated gravely in front of them, followed with
-his eyes every morsel they put into their mouths.
-
-"Caramba!" said Valentine, with a satisfied smile; "it is comfortable to
-have a little rest, after having been on horseback from four o'clock in
-the morning."
-
-"Well, to tell the truth, I must own I am a little fatigued," Louis
-confessed.
-
-"My poor friend, you are not, as I am, accustomed to long journeys. It
-was stupid of me not to remember that."
-
-"Bah! on the contrary, I am getting accustomed to them very well; and
-besides," he added, with a sigh, "physical fatigue makes me forget----"
-
-"Ah! that's true," Valentine interrupted; "come! I am happy to hear you
-speak thus--I see you are becoming a man!"
-
-Louis shook his head sorrowfully.
-
-"No," he said, "you are mistaken. As the malady which undermines me is
-without remedy, I endeavour to play a manly part."
-
-"Yes, hope is one of the supreme illusions of love; when it can no
-longer exist, love dies."
-
-"Or he who experiences it," said the young man, with a melancholy smile.
-
-This was followed by a silence, which Valentine at length broke.
-
-"What a charming country!" he cried, with feigned enthusiasm, for the
-purpose of giving the conversation another direction, as he swallowed,
-with delectation, an enormous piece of bacon.
-
-"Yes, but the roads are very bad."
-
-"Who knows?" said Valentine, with a smile: "they say the roads to
-Paradise are of that kind; this may be the way thither." Then addressing
-the dog, "And you, Cæsar, what do you think of our journey, old boy?"
-
-The dog wagged his tail, fixing his eyes, sparkling with intelligence,
-upon the speaker's face, whilst he eagerly devoured all that was given
-to him. But he stopped suddenly in his masticating operations, pricked
-up his ears, turned his head sharply round, and balked furiously.
-
-"Silence, Cæsar!" said Valentine; "what do you bark in that manner for?
-You know right well we are in a desert, and that in a desert there is
-nobody but the devil!"
-
-But Cæsar continued to bark without heeding his master.
-
-"Hum!" said Louis, "I do not agree with you; I think that the deserts of
-America are thickly peopled."
-
-"Well, perhaps you are right."
-
-"The dog's barking is not usual; we ought to take precautions."
-
-"I will see," said Valentine; and addressing the Newfoundland, "Come!
-come! hold your tongue, Cæsar! You are tiresome! What's the matter with
-you? What teases you? Do you scent a stag? Caramba! That would be a
-glorious godsend for us."
-
-Here he rose, and cast an inquiring glance around, but he immediately
-stopped, and seized his rifle, making a sign to Louis to do the same, in
-order to be prepared for whatever might happen.
-
-"Diable!" he said, "Cæsar was right, and I must confess myself a stupid
-fellow. Look yonder, Louis!"
-
-The other turned his eyes as directed.
-
-"Oh! oh!" he said; "what is this?"
-
-"Hum! I believe we shall soon discover."
-
-"With God's help!" Louis replied, cocking his rifle.
-
-Ten Indians in war costume, and mounted on magnificent horses, were
-drawn up within twenty paces of the travellers, though the latter were
-quite unable to comprehend how they had succeeded in approaching so near
-to them without being discovered. Notwithstanding Valentine's efforts,
-Cæsar continued to bark furiously, and endeavoured to rush upon the
-Indians. The American warriors, motionless and impassible, made neither
-gesture nor movement, but they surveyed the Frenchmen so closely and
-persistently, that Valentine, not very patient in his nature, began to
-find himself excessively annoyed.
-
-
-[1] This word comes from the verb _toquin_, which means to _judge_, to
-_command._
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.
-
-THE PUELCHES.
-
-
-"Eh! eh!" said Valentine, whistling sharply to his dog, who immediately
-came to him; "these fellows do not seem to have friendly intentions; we
-must be upon our guard: who knows what may happen?"
-
-"They are Araucanos," said Louis.
-
-"Do you think so? Then they are devilish ugly!"
-
-"Well, now, for my part, I think them very handsome."
-
-"Ah, yes; that may be in an artistic point of view. But, ugly or
-handsome, we will await their coming."
-
-The Indians talked among themselves, and continued to look at the young
-men.
-
-"They are consulting to determine with what sauce they shall eat us,"
-said Valentine.
-
-"Not at all----"
-
-"Bah! I tell you they are."
-
-"Pardieu! they are not cannibals!"
-
-"No? So much the worse; that's a defect. In Paris, all the savages
-exhibited in public are cannibals."
-
-"You madman! you laugh at everything."
-
-"Would you prefer my weeping a little? It appears to me that at this
-moment our position is not so seducing in itself that we should seek to
-make it more dismal."
-
-These Indians were for the most part men of from forty to forty-five
-years of age, clothed in the costume of the Puelches, one of the most
-warlike tribes of Upper Araucania; they wore the poncho floating from
-the shoulders, the calzoneras fastened round the hips and falling to
-the ankle, the head bare, the hair long, straight, and greasy, gathered
-together by a red ribbon, which encircled the brow like a diadem, and
-the face painted of various colours. Their arms consisted of a long
-lance, a knife, a gun hanging from the saddle, and a round buckler,
-covered with leather, ornamented with horsehair and human scalps.
-
-The man who appeared to be their chief was a man of lofty stature,
-expressive features, hard and haughty, but still displayed a certain
-frankness, a very rare quality among Indians. The only thing which
-distinguished him from his companions was a feather of the eagle of the
-Andes, planted upright on the left side of his head, in the bright red
-ribbon that confined his hair.
-
-After having consulted with his companions for a few minutes, the chief
-advanced towards the travellers, making his horse curvet with inimitable
-grace, and lowered the point of his lance in sign of peace. When
-within three paces of Valentine, he stopped, and, after saluting him
-ceremoniously, in the Indian fashion, by placing his right hand on his
-breast, and slowly bowing his head twice, he said to him in Spanish:--
-
-"My brothers are Muruches--foreigners,--and not Culme-Huinca--despicable
-Spaniards. Why are they so far from the men of their own nation?"
-
-This question, asked in the guttural accent, and with the emphatic tone
-peculiar to the Indians, was perfectly understood by the young men, who,
-as we have before observed, generally spoke Spanish themselves.
-
-"Hum!" Valentine said to his companion, "here is a savage who appears to
-have a little curiosity about him--what think you?"
-
-"Bah!" Louis replied, "answer him, at all events that will do no harm."
-
-"Why, no, that is true; we cannot easily be more compromised than we are
-already."
-
-And turning towards the chief, who waited impassibly,
-
-"We are travelling," he said, laconically.
-
-"What! alone, thus?" asked the chief.
-
-"Does that astonish you, my friend?"
-
-"Do my brothers fear nothing?"
-
-"What should we fear?" said the Parisian in a bantering tone. "We have
-nothing to lose."
-
-"What! not even your hair?"
-
-Louis could not refrain from laughing, as he looked at Valentine.
-
-"Ah! ah! what, he is laughing at the disordered state of my hair, is he,
-the ugly wretch?" Valentine grumbled, vexed at the observation of the
-chief, and quite mistaking his intentions. "Stop a bit!" then he added,
-in a loud voice, "Have the goodness to pass on, gentlemen savages. Your
-remarks are not pleasant, I can assure you."
-
-He cocked his rifle, and lifted it to his shoulder, as if taking aim
-at the chief. Louis, who had attentively followed the progress of the
-conversation, without saying a word imitated the action of his friend,
-directing the barrel of his rifle towards the group of Indians. The
-chief had, doubtless, understood but little of the speeches of his
-adversaries, but far from appearing terrified at the menacing attitude
-they assumed, he seemed to contemplate with pleasure the martial and
-firm deportment of the Frenchmen; and putting gently on one side the
-weapon pointed against his breast, said in a conciliatory tone:
-
-"My friend is mistaken. I have no intention of insulting him. I am his
-_penni_--brother--and his companion's likewise. Were not the palefaces
-eating when I and my young men came up?"
-
-"Faith! yes, chief, you say true," interrupted Louis, with a smile;
-"your sudden appearance stopped the progress of our humble repast."
-
-"Part of which is very much at your service," continued Valentine,
-pointing with his finger to the provisions spread upon the grass.
-
-"I accept your offer," said the Indian, cordially.
-
-"Bravo!" cried Valentine, throwing down his rifle, and preparing to
-resume his seat on the grass; "to table, then!"
-
-"Yes," replied the chief, "but upon one condition."
-
-"What is that?" the young men asked together.
-
-"That I shall furnish my part."
-
-"Agreed," said Louis.
-
-"Well, that is but fair," Valentine added; "and it will be the more
-acceptable, from our not being rich, and having but meagre fare to offer
-you."
-
-"The bread of a friend is always good," the chief said, sententiously.
-
-"That is admirably answered! But, at this moment, unfortunately, our
-bread is only stale biscuit."
-
-"I will remedy that;" and the chief said a few words in the Molucho
-language to his companions, who began to rummage in their alforjas, and
-quickly produced maize tortillas, some charqui, and several leathern
-bottles filled with chica--a sort of cider made of apples and Indian
-corn. The whole was placed upon the grass before the two Frenchmen, who
-were wonderstruck at the sudden abundance which had succeeded without
-any transition to their late short commons. The Indians dismounted,
-and sat down in a circle round the travellers. The chief, then turning
-towards his guests, said with a pleasant smile--
-
-"Now, then, let my brothers eat."
-
-The young men did not require the cordial invitation to be repeated, but
-vigorously attacked the provisions so frankly offered. For the first few
-minutes silence prevailed among the party, for all were too well engaged
-to talk; but as soon as appetite was a little appeased, conversation was
-resumed.
-
-Of all men, Indians, perhaps, understand the laws of hospitality
-the best. They have an instinct of social conventions, if such an
-expression may be allowed, which makes them divine at once, with
-infallible correctness, what the questions are that may be properly
-addressed to their guests, and the point at which they should stop to
-avoid committing any indiscretion. The two Frenchmen, who for the first
-time found themselves in contact with Araucanos, could not overcome
-the surprise caused by the knowledge of life, and the noble and frank
-manners of these men, whom, on the faith of accounts more or less false,
-they were accustomed, in common with all Europeans, to consider as gross
-savages, almost destitute of intelligence, and quite incapable of any
-delicacy of behaviour.
-
-"My brothers are not Spaniards?" the chief said, half interrogatively.
-
-"That is true," Louis replied; "but how did you discover that?"
-
-"Oh!" he said, with a disdainful smile, "we are well acquainted with
-those _chiaplos_--wicked soldiers. They are too old enemies to allow us
-to commit an error with regard to them. From what island do my brothers
-come?"
-
-"Our country is not an island," Valentine observed.
-
-"My brother is mistaken," the chief said emphatically; "there is but one
-country that is not an island, and that is the great land of the Aucas."
-
-The two young men bowed their heads before an opinion so peremptorily
-put forth--all discussion became impossible.
-
-"We are Frenchmen," Louis replied.
-
-"Frenchmen! ah! a good brave nation! We had several French warriors in
-the time of the great war."
-
-"What!" said Louis, with excited curiosity, "have French warriors fought
-with you?"
-
-"Yes," the chief remarked, proudly; "warriors with grey beards, and
-breasts marked with honourable scars, which they received in the wars of
-their island, when they fought under the orders of their great chief,
-Zaléon."
-
-"Napoleon?" said Valentine, quite astonished.
-
-"Yes; I believe it is so the palefaces pronounce his name. Did my
-brother know him?" the chief added, with ill-concealed curiosity.
-
-"No," replied the young man. "Although born in his reign, I was never
-able to get sight of him, and he is now dead."
-
-"My brother is mistaken," said the Puelche, solemnly; "such warriors as
-he do not die. When they have performed their task upon earth they go to
-Paradise--to hunt with Pillian, the master of the world."
-
-The young men bowed, as if convinced.
-
-"It is very singular," said Louis, "that the reputation of that powerful
-genius should have spread to the most remote and unknown regions of the
-globe, and be preserved pure and brilliant among these rude men; whilst
-in that France, for which he did everything men invariably seek to
-lessen it, and even to destroy it."
-
-"Like all their compatriots, who, from time to time, traverse our
-hunting grounds, our brothers have, doubtless, trading purposes in
-coming among us. Where are your goods?" said the chief.
-
-"We are not traders," replied Valentine; "we came to visit our brothers,
-the Araucanos, of whose wisdom and hospitality we have heard much."
-
-"The Moluchos love the French," the chief said, flattered by the
-compliment; "my brothers will be well received in our villages."
-
-"To what tribe does my brother belong?" asked Valentine, inwardly
-delighted at the good opinion the Indians entertained of his compatriots.
-
-"I am one of the principal Ulmens of the sacred tribe of the Great
-Hare," the chief said, proudly.
-
-"Thank you--one word more."
-
-"Let my brother speak; my ears are open."
-
-"We are in search of a Molucho chief, to whom we have a message from a
-friend of his, with whom he has had much dealing."
-
-"What is the chief's name?"
-
-"Antinahuel."
-
-"Good!"
-
-"Does my brother know him?"
-
-"I know him. If my brothers will follow me they shall see the toldo of
-a chief in which they shall be received like pennis. When they have
-rested, if they desire it, I will myself conduct them to Antinahuel, the
-most powerful Toqui of the four Uthal-Mapus of the Araucano confederacy."
-
-"What province is governed by Antinahuel?"
-
-"The Piré-Mapus, that is to say, the interior of the Andes."
-
-"Thanks, brother."
-
-"Will my brothers accept the offer I have made them?"
-
-"Why should we not accept it, chief, if, as I believe, it is made in
-earnest?"
-
-"Let my brothers come, then," the chief said, with a smile; "my toldería
-is not far off."
-
-The breakfast was over, and the Indians were mounting.
-
-"We may as well go," said Valentine, in French. "This Indian appears to
-speak cordially and honestly, and it will give us a capital opportunity
-of studying interesting manners and customs. What do you think,
-Louis?--It may prove very amusing."
-
-"Well, I see no harm that accepting the invitation can do."
-
-"God speed us, then!"
-
-And with a bound he was in his saddle, imitated by Louis.
-
-"Forward!" cried the chief, and the party set off at a gallop.
-
-"Well, it must be allowed," said Valentine, in his cheerful way, "that
-these savages, if savages they are, have some redeeming qualities
-belonging to them. I begin to take a warm interest in them. They are
-true Scotch mountaineers for hospitality. I wonder what my regimental
-comrades, and more particularly my old friends of the Boulevard du
-Temple, would say if they could see me now! Houp! After me, the end of
-the world!"
-
-Louis laughed at this outburst of the incorrigible _gamin_, and, without
-further inquiries, the young men gaily abandoned themselves to the
-guidance of their new friends, who, after leaving the banks of the
-river, directed their course towards the mountains.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-
-THE BLACK JACKAL.
-
-
-In order to make the facts which follow intelligible, we are obliged
-here to relate an adventure which happened more than twenty years before
-the period at which our history commences.
-
-Towards the end of the month of December, 1816, on a cold, rainy night,
-a traveller, mounted on an excellent horse, and carefully wrapped in
-the folds of an ample cloak, was following at a round trot the road,
-or rather the blind path, on the mountains which leads from Cruces to
-San-José. This man was a rich landowner, who was making a journey into
-Araucania, for the purpose of treating with the Indians for a large
-number of cattle and sheep. Having left Cruces about two o'clock in the
-afternoon, he had been delayed on his way by settling some business with
-various _guasos_, and he was hastening to gain a hacienda he possessed
-at some leagues from the spot where he then was, and where he reckoned
-upon passing the night.
-
-The country at the time was not in a state of tranquillity. For several
-days past the Puelches had appeared in arms upon the frontiers of Chili,
-and made incursions into the territories of the republic, burning the
-chacras, and carrying off the families they surprised. These marauders
-were commanded by a chief named The Black Jackal, whose cruelty spread
-terror among the people exposed to his depredations.
-
-It was, therefore, with some anxiety, mixed with secret apprehensions,
-that the man we have spoken of made all speed along the desolate road
-which led to his hacienda. Every minute only added to his fears. The
-storm, which had threatened all day, burst forth at last with a fury
-of which we have no conception in our climates. The wind roared loudly
-through the trees, bending some, and uprooting others. The rain fell in
-torrents, and the lightning became so vivid, that the horse began to
-plunge and rear, and refused to advance. The rider spurred the restive
-animal, and endeavoured, as well as the darkness would permit, to
-discover whereabouts he was. After surmounting immense difficulties, he
-saw at length, in the distance, the shadow of the walls of his hacienda,
-and the lights which shone like guiding stars, when suddenly his horse
-bounded on one side in such a way as almost to unseat him. When, with
-much trouble, he had recovered his command of the animal, he looked
-round to see what could have frightened it so, and perceived, with
-terror equal to the horse's, several men of sinister appearance standing
-motionless before him. The horseman's first movement was to seize his
-pistols, in order to sell his life as dearly as he could, for he had no
-doubt he had fallen into an ambuscade of bandits.
-
-"Keep your hands from your weapons, Don Antonio Quintana," said a rough
-voice; "we desire neither your life nor your money."
-
-"What do you want then?" he replied, in a tone that showed he was a
-little reassured by that frank declaration, though he still kept on the
-defensive.
-
-"Hospitality for this night, in the first place," said the other.
-
-Don Antonio endeavoured to ascertain if he knew the man who was speaking
-to him, but he could not distinguish his features through the darkness.
-
-"The doors of my dwelling always fly open to the stranger," he remarked;
-"why have you not knocked at them?"
-
-"Knowing you must come this way, I preferred waiting for you."
-
-"What else do you desire of me, then?"
-
-"I will tell you under your own roof; the open road is a place ill
-adapted for imparting confidence."
-
-"If you have nothing more to say to me now, and are as willing as I am
-to get under shelter, we will continue our journey."
-
-"Go on, then; we will follow you."
-
-Without exchanging another word, they directed their course towards the
-hacienda. Don Antonio Quintana was a resolute man, as the manner in
-which he had replied to the men who had so rudely barred his passage
-proved him. In spite of the fluency with which the one who had spoken
-employed the Spanish language, he had, at the first word, by his
-guttural accent, perceived he was an Indian; and with him fear had
-immediately given way to curiosity, and he had not hesitated to grant
-the hospitality asked, knowing that the Araucano, Puelches, Hueliches,
-or Moluchos, never violate the roof under which they are welcomed, and
-that the hosts who shelter them are held sacred.
-
-On arriving at the hacienda, Don Antonio found he was not mistaken; the
-men who had accosted him in so strange a manner were really Indians.
-There were four of them, and with them was a young woman with a child
-at the breast. The hacendero welcomed them to his dwelling with all the
-minute forms of Castilian courtesy, and gave orders to his peones or
-Indian domestics, terrified at the savage appearance of the strangers,
-to assist them with everything they might desire.
-
-"Eat and drink," he said, "you are at home, here."
-
-"Thanks!" replied the man, who had till that time been spokesman. "We
-accept your offer with as good a will as you give it, as far as regards
-food, of which we stand most in need."
-
-"Will you not rest till day?" asked Don Antonio; "the night is dark, and
-the weather frightful for travelling."
-
-"A black night is what we desire; besides, we must depart immediately.
-Now, allow me to put my second request to you."
-
-"Explain yourself," said the Spaniard, examining the speaker attentively.
-
-The latter was a tall, well-made man, of about forty; his
-strongly-marked features and his commanding eye proclaimed that he was
-accustomed to exercise authority.
-
-"It was I," he said, without preamble, "who directed the last invasion
-made upon the palefaces of the frontiers. My mosotones were all killed
-yesterday in an ambuscade by your lanceros; the three you see with me
-are all that remain of a troop of two hundred warriors; the others are
-dead. I myself am wounded, hunted, tracked like a wild beast; we are
-without horses to rejoin our tribe, without weapons to defend ourselves
-if we are attacked on the plain. I come to ask of you the means of
-escape from our pursuers. I will neither deceive nor surprise your good
-faith. I am bound to tell you the name of the man whose safety you hold
-in your hands. I am the greatest enemy of the Spaniards; my life has
-been passed in contending with them. In a word, I am The Black Jackal,
-the Apo-Ulmen of the Black Serpents."
-
-On hearing this redoubtable name the Chilian could not suppress a start
-of terror; but immediately recovering his self-possession, he replied in
-a calm voice, and in a kind tone.
-
-"You are my guest, and you are unfortunate, two titles sacred with me. I
-desire to know nothing more; you shall have horses and arms."
-
-A smile of ineffable sweetness lit up the countenance of the Indian.
-
-"One last prayer," he said.
-
-"Speak."
-
-The chief took by the hand the young Indian squaw, who had remained
-cowering and weeping in a corner, rocking her child in her arms, and
-presented her to Don Antonio.
-
-"This woman belongs to me; this child is mine," he said, "and I confide
-them both to you."
-
-"I will take charge of them; the woman shall be my sister, the child my
-son," the hacendero replied kindly, and after the Indian fashion.
-
-"The Apo-Ulmen will remember!" said the Puelche chief, in a voice
-trembling with emotion.
-
-He imprinted a kiss upon the brow of the poor little creature, who
-smiled upon him, cast upon the woman a look beaming with tenderness,
-and rushed out of the house, followed by his companions. Don Antonio
-supplied them with arms and horses, and the four Indians disappeared in
-the darkness.
-
-Many years passed away ere Don Antonio heard anything of the Black
-Jackal; the woman and the child remained at the hacienda, and were
-treated as if they had been members of the Chilian's family. The
-hacendero had been married; but, unfortunately, after a year, which
-promised to be the commencement of a long and happy union, the wife died
-when giving birth to a beautiful little girl, whom her father named
-Maria. The two children grew up together, watched over by the anxious
-solicitude of the Indian woman, loving each other like brother and
-sister.
-
-At length, one day, a numerous troop of Puelches, magnificently equipped
-and mounted, arrived at Rio-Claro, the town in which Don Antonio
-resided. The chief of these Indians was the Black Jackal, who came to
-redemand his wife and son of him to whom he had intrusted them. The
-interview was very affecting. The chief forgot his Indian stoicism; he
-gave himself up to the feelings which agitated him, and enjoyed the
-happiness of finding again, after such a length of time, the two beings
-he held dearest in the world. When it became necessary to depart, and
-the children learnt they were to be separated, they shed abundance of
-tears. They had been accustomed from their infancy to live together, and
-they could not comprehend why they were not to continue to do so.
-
-Don Antonio had extended his traffic over different parts of the
-frontiers; he possessed chacras, in which the breeding of cattle
-was carried on upon a vast scale. The Black Jackal, who had sworn
-a perpetual friendship, became of great use to him in his business
-transactions; he often put him in the way of making excellent bargains
-with his compatriots, and, what was still more serviceable, protected
-his property from the depredations of plunderers. Every year Don Antonio
-visited all his chacras in Araucania, and passed a couple of months
-among the tribe of the Black Serpents, with his friend, the Black
-Jackal. His daughter accompanied him in all these journeys, on account
-of the friendship that existed between the children. Things went on thus
-for many years.
-
-At the period when our history commences, the Black Jackal was dead:
-he had fallen, like a brave warrior, with his weapons in his hand, in
-a combat on the frontier; his son, Antinahuel, now about thirty-five
-years of age, who promised to tread in his footsteps, had been elected
-Apo-Ulmen in his place, and afterwards Toqui of his Uthal-Mapus or
-province, which made him one of the principal men of Araucania. Don
-Antonio had likewise died, shortly after the marriage of his daughter,
-Doña Maria, with Don Tadeo de Leon, brought to an untimely grave by his
-grief at her misconduct, which had produced terrible scandal in the
-upper classes of Santiago.
-
-Doña Maria for some years past had only seen Antinahuel at long
-intervals; but between them their friendship remained as warm as in
-the days of their childhood; and, on the part of the Indian warrior,
-it was carried so far that he obeyed the least caprice of the young
-woman as an imperative duty. Great, then, was the astonishment of the
-warriors of the tribe of the Black Serpents, when, in the evening of
-the day on which we have resumed our story, they saw Doña Maria arrive
-on horseback, accompanied only by two peons, at their toldería, and go
-straight towards the rancho of the Toqui. On perceiving her, the usually
-gloomy face of the chief was suddenly lighted up with an expression of
-gladness.
-
-"Eglantine of the Woods!" he cried, in a joyous tone, "does my sister
-then still remember the poor Indian?"
-
-"I have come to visit the toldo of my brother," she said, turning her
-brow towards him, upon which he impressed a kiss; "my heart is sad,
-grief devours me--and I have remembered my brother."
-
-The chief cast a look upon her of anxiety, mingled with sorrow.
-
-"Although it be to trouble that I owe the visit of my sister, I am,
-nevertheless, rejoiced to see her."
-
-"Yes," she resumed, "when we are in trouble we think of our friends."
-
-"My sister has done well in thinking of me; what can I do for her?"
-
-"My brother can render me a great service."
-
-"My life is my sister's; she knows she can dispose of it at her
-pleasure."
-
-"Thank you! I was certain I could depend upon my brother."
-
-"Everywhere, and at all times."
-
-After bowing respectfully to Doña Maria, he led her into his rancho,
-where his mother had prepared everything worthy of the visit of one whom
-for so many years she had loved as a daughter.
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.
-
-TWO OLD FRIENDS.
-
-
-Antinahuel--the Tiger Sun--was at this time a man of about thirty-five
-years of age. In stature he was tall, and in his carriage majestic;
-everything in his person announced a man accustomed to command, and made
-to rule over his fellows. As a warrior, his reputation was immense,
-and his mosotones held him in superstitious veneration. Such was,
-physically, the man whom Doña Maria de Leon came to visit; what he was,
-morally, we shall soon see.
-
-The cloth was laid in the toldo,--we make use of the expression, the
-cloth was laid, advisedly, because the Araucano chiefs are perfectly
-well acquainted with European customs, and almost all possess dishes,
-plates, and silver spoons and forks. It is true, they only make use of
-these upon great occasions, and for the purpose of display; for, as
-to themselves, they carry frugality and plainness to an excess, and
-when they are alone with their families, are content to eat with their
-fingers.
-
-Doña Maria seated herself at the table, and made a sign to Antinahuel,
-who stood respectfully beside her, to keep her company, and to take his
-place opposite to her. It was clear to the Indian chief that his sister,
-as he called her, who for some years had completely neglected him, must
-have been induced by some powerful interest to seek him thus in his
-remote village. But what could the interest be which led a delicate
-woman, accustomed to all the luxurious comforts of life, to undertake a
-long and perilous journey in order to come and talk with an Indian in a
-miserable toldería, hidden in the midst of the desert?
-
-On her side, the young woman was a prey to still greater uneasiness,
-for she was anxious to discover whether, in spite of her neglect of the
-chief, she had preserved the boundless power she had formerly exercised
-over that Indian nature, which civilization had softened rather than
-subdued; she feared lest the long forgetfulness in which she had left
-him had made her lose her prestige in his eyes, and that coolness and
-indifference might have succeeded to the warm friendship of early days.
-
-When the repast was ended, a peon brought in the _maté_[1] the infusion
-of the Paraguay herb which, with the Chilians, takes the place of tea,
-and of which they are very fond. Two chased cups, placed upon a filagree
-salver, were presented to Doña Maria and the chief; they lit their maize
-_pajillos_, and smoked, whilst sipping their _maté_, reflectively. After
-a few minutes' silence, which was beginning to be embarrassing to both,
-Doña Maria, who perceived that Antinahuel was resolved to act on the
-defensive, determined to open the attack.
-
-"My brother," she said, with a smile, "is surprised at my sudden arrival
-at his toldería."
-
-"It is true; the Eglantine of the Woods has appeared unexpectedly
-amongst us, but she is not the less welcome on that account."
-
-And he bowed.
-
-"I am glad to observe that my brother is as gallant as ever."
-
-"No; I love my sister, and I am happy to see her, after being so long
-deprived of her presence."
-
-"I know your friendship for me, Penni; our childhood was passed
-together, but it is a long time since that time. You are now one of the
-caraskens, whilst I am only, as formerly, a poor woman."
-
-"The Eglantine of the Woods is my sister, her least wishes shall always
-be sacred with me."
-
-"Thanks, Penni! But let us drop this conversation, and talk of our early
-years, which, alas! so quickly glided away."
-
-"Yesterday exists no longer," he said, sententiously.
-
-"That's true," she replied, with a sigh; "why, indeed, should we talk of
-times that can never come back?"
-
-"Does my sister intend to return to Chili?"
-
-"No; I have left Santiago for a time; I intend, for a season, to take up
-my abode in Valdivia; I left my friends to continue their route, whilst
-I came on to pay my respects to my brother."
-
-"Yes, I know that the man whom the palefaces call General Bustamente,
-though scarcely cured of a dangerous wound, set off, a month ago, to
-visit the province of Valdivia, I, myself, intend shortly to visit that
-city."
-
-"There are many palefaces from the South there at present."
-
-"Among these strangers are there any that I know?"
-
-"Good heavens! how can I tell? Yes, there is one, Don Tadeo, my husband."
-
-Antinahuel raised his head in astonishment.
-
-"I thought he had been shot!" he said.
-
-"He was."
-
-"Well?"
-
-"He escaped death, though grievously wounded."
-
-The artful woman endeavoured to read what impression the news she had so
-coolly imparted made upon the stoical face of the Indian.
-
-"Listen to me, my sister," he resumed, after a minute's pause; "Don
-Tadeo is still your enemy, is he not?"
-
-"More so than ever."
-
-"Good!"
-
-"Not content with having basely abandoned me, and having torn from me
-my child, the innocent creature who alone consoled me and enabled me to
-support the sorrows with which he has overwhelmed me, he has crowned
-his insults by publicly paying his addresses to another woman, whom he
-takes with him everywhere, and who is at this moment his companion at
-Valdivia."
-
-"Hum!" the chief said, carelessly.
-
-Accustomed to Araucanian manners, which permit every man to take as many
-wives as he can support, he found the action of Don Tadeo perfectly
-natural. This did not escape Doña Maria: an ironical smile curled for
-a second the corners of her lips, and she continued, negligently, but
-looking earnestly in the face of the chief--
-
-"Yes, the woman is called, as I hear, Doña Rosario de Mendoz; and is,
-they say, a beautiful creature!"
-
-That name, pronounced with such apparent indifference, produced the
-effect of a clap of thunder upon the chief; he sprang up, his face
-inflamed, and his eyes sparkling.
-
-"Rosario de Mendoz, did you say, my sister?" he shouted.
-
-"Good heavens! I hardly know," she replied. "I have only heard her
-name--I believe that may be it--but," she added, "what interest can my
-brother take in it?"
-
-"Oh! none," he said, as he quietly resumed his seat. "Why does not my
-sister avenge herself upon the man who has abandoned her?"
-
-"To what purpose? and, besides, what vengeance can I hope for? I am but
-a weak and timid woman, without friends, without support; in short,
-alone."
-
-"And I?" said the chief; "what am I, then?"
-
-"Oh!" she replied, warmly; "I would not on any account that my brother
-should constitute himself the avenger of an insult which is personal to
-myself."
-
-"My sister is mistaken; in attacking this man I avenge my own insult."
-
-"My brother must explain himself--I do not understand him."
-
-"That is what I am going to do."
-
-"I am all attention."
-
-At this moment Antinahuel's mother entered the toldo, and, approaching
-the chief, said in a humble, but sad tone,--
-
-"My son is wrong in thus recalling old remembrances, and opening ancient
-wounds again."
-
-"Woman!" the Indian replied, "Retire! I am a warrior! My father left me
-a vengeance. I have sworn, and I will accomplish my oath!"
-
-The poor mother left the toldo with a sigh. The Linda, whose curiosity
-was excited to the highest degree, awaited impatiently the chief's
-explanation. Without, the rain fell pattering upon the leaves of the
-trees; at intervals a blast of night wind, loaded with uncertain sounds,
-came whistling through the ill-joined boards of the toldo, and caused
-the flame of the torch which lighted it to waver unsteadily. The two
-speakers, though absorbed in their own reflections, involuntarily lent
-an ear to these nameless sounds, and felt a depression of spirits they
-could not account for. The chief raised his head, and inhaling, one
-after another, several mouthfuls of smoke from his pajillo, which he
-puffed out brusquely, commenced in a low voice,--
-
-"Although my sister is almost a child of the nation, as my mother nursed
-her, she has never been made acquainted with the history of my family.
-The history I am about to relate will reveal to her that I have against
-Don Tadeo de Leon an old hatred, ever kept alive; and which, if I have
-to the present moment appeared to allow to slumber, it has been because
-that man was the husband of my sister: the conduct of Don Tadeo towards
-my sister frees me from the promise I had made myself, and leaves me
-liberty of action."
-
-Doña Maria bowed assentingly.
-
-"When the vile Spaniards," he continued, "conquered Chili, and reduced
-its cowardly inhabitants to slavery, they dreamt of subjugating
-Araucania in its turn, and marched against the Aucas, whose frontiers
-they violated. My sister sees that I take up my recital from the
-beginning. The Toqui Cadegual was one of the first to convoke a grand
-council of the nation, on the plain of the Carampangue. Named Toqui, one
-of the four Uthal-Mapus, he gave battle to the palefaces. The conflict
-was terrible! It lasted from the rising to the setting of the sun. Many
-Molucho warriors departed for the happy prairies of the Eskennane, but
-Pillian did not abandon the Aucas; they were conquerors, and the Chiaplo
-fled like timid hares before the terrible lances of our warriors.
-Numbers of palefaces fell into our hands; among them was a powerful
-chief, named Don Estevan de Leon. The Toqui Cadegual might have employed
-his rights, and have killed him, but he did nothing of the kind: so far
-from it, he led him to his toldo, and treated him with kindness, as a
-brother. But when did Spaniards ever show themselves grateful for a
-kindness? Don Estevan, forgetful of the sacred duties of hospitality,
-seduced the daughter of the man to whom he owed his life, and, one
-day, disappeared with her. The grief of the Toqui was immense at this
-unworthy and disloyal treachery. He swore to wage from that time a
-pitiless war against the palefaces, and he kept his oath: all Spaniards
-taken by them, whatever their age or sex, were massacred. These terrible
-reprisals were just, were they not?"
-
-"Yes," said the Linda laconically.
-
-"One day, Cadegual, surprised by his ferocious enemies, fell, covered
-with wounds, into their hands, after a heroic resistance, during which
-all his brave Mosotones had allowed themselves to be killed by his side.
-In his turn, as it happened, Cadegual was in the power of Don Estevan de
-Leon. The Spanish chief recollected the man who had, years before, saved
-his life. He was merciful. After cutting off the hands, and scooping out
-the eyes of his prisoner, he restored to him his daughter, of whom he
-was tired, and sent him back to his nation. The Toqui was led back by
-his child, whom he pardoned. When he joined his tribe, Cadegual called
-together his relations, related to them what he had suffered, showed
-them his bleeding and mutilated arms, and, after having made his sons
-and all his relations swear to avenge him, he allowed himself to die of
-hunger, that he might not survive his shame."
-
-"Oh, that is frightful!" Doña Maria cried, affected, in spite of herself.
-
-"That is nothing yet!" the chief resumed, with a bitter smile; "let
-my sister listen to the sequel. From that time, an implacable destiny
-has always hung over the two families, and continually brought the
-descendants of the Toqui Cadegual in contact with those of Captain
-Don Estevan de Leon. During three centuries, this ardent, inveterate
-struggle has lasted between the two families, and will never terminate
-but by the extinction of one, or perhaps both of them. Up to the present
-time, the advantage has almost always been on the side of the Leons;
-the sons of the Toqui have very often been conquered, but they have
-always remained firm and implacable, ready to re-commence the combat at
-the first signal. At the present day, the family of Don Estevan has but
-one representative, Don Tadeo--a representative formidable through his
-courage, his fortune, and the immense influence, he exercises over his
-compatriots. He, personally, has never injured the Aucas; he seems even
-to be ignorant of the inveterate hatred which exists between his family
-and that of the Toqui; but the descendants of Cadegual do not forget
-it: they are strong, numerous, and powerful in their turn; the hour
-of vengeance has struck, they will not let it escape! My sister," he
-continued, in a voice almost rising to a shout; "my sister, my ancestor
-was the Toqui Cadegual, and I thank you for having warned me that not
-only my enemy is not dead, but that he is within my reach!"
-
-"Your mother asked you properly, Penni, why should you revive old
-hatreds? Peace now reigns between the Chilians and the Aucas: let
-my brother beware; the whites are numerous; they have many warlike,
-disciplined soldiers."
-
-"Oh," he replied, with a sinister look; "I am sure of succeeding, for I
-have my nymph."
-
-Indians of high rank all entertain a firm belief that they have a
-familiar genius, who is bound to obey them.
-
-Doña Maria feigned to yield to this reason; she had succeeded in putting
-the hunter upon the scent of the game she wished to destroy, and it was
-of very little importance to her what motive made him obey her. She knew
-perfectly well that the hatred alleged by the chief was nothing but a
-pretext, and that the real cause remained hidden in the depths of his
-heart. Although she had a clear idea of what it was, she affected not to
-have the least suspicion of it.
-
-She continued talking with Antinahuel for some time longer about
-indifferent subjects, and then retired to a chamber which had been
-prepared for her. It was late, and she wished to set out for Valdivia at
-daybreak. She was sufficiently well acquainted with the companion of her
-childhood to know that, now the tiger was roused, it would not be long
-before he started in quest of the prey which she had marked down for him.
-
-As for the Toqui, the whole night passed away without his thinking of
-taking a moment's repose; he remained plunged in profound and agitating
-reflections.
-
-
-[1] The Chilians borrowed the mate from the Araucanos, who think it a
-great delicacy, and have a particular talent for making it. This is the
-manner in which they prepare it:--They put into a coffee cup a spoonful
-of the Paraguay herb, to which they add a lump of sugar, which they
-leave upon the fire till it is a little burnt; they squeeze a few drops
-of lemon juice into it, with some cinnamon and a clove; they then fill
-the cup up with boiling water. The maté being now ready, they introduce
-a silver tube of the thickness of a quill, pierced with small holes at
-its lower end, by means of which the maté is drawn up,--at the risk,
-be it remembered, of horribly scalding the mouth, as always happens to
-strangers when they first partake of the luxury, to the great amusement
-of the Chilians. Drinking maté is so common in Chili, as to be what
-coffee is in the East; it is taken after every repast, and presented to
-every visitor. In ceremonial parties, a single tube serves for all the
-persons assembled.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX.
-
-THE SORCERER.
-
-
-On the same day, a toldería, situated at some miles from Orano, on the
-banks of the Carampangue, was a scene of the greatest commotion. The
-women and warriors assembled in front of a toldo, on the threshold of
-which was exposed a corpse, lying as it were in state, upon a bed of
-branches, were uttering cries and groans, which were mingled with the
-deafening sound of drums and flutes in most dismal discord, and the
-continuous howling of dogs, whom all this din rendered furious. In the
-middle of the crowd, by the side of the body, stood a man advanced
-in years, tall in stature, and clothed in the costume of a woman,
-who appeared to direct the ceremony, making extraordinary gestures
-and contortions, accompanied by scarcely human yells. This man, of a
-ferocious aspect, was the machi, or sorcerer of the tribe; the motions
-he affected, the cries he uttered, were intended to protect the body
-against the attacks of the evil genius, supposed to be eager to get
-possession of it. At a sign from him the music and groans ceased; the
-evil genius, conquered by the power of the machi, had given up the
-contest, after a sharp struggle, and abandoned the body which it was
-beyond his power to obtain. The sorcerer then turned towards a man of
-lofty stature and commanding countenance, who stood near him leaning
-upon a long lance.
-
-"Ulmen of the powerful tribe of the Great Hare," he said, in a
-sepulchral tone, "thy father, the valiant Ulmen, who has been ravished
-from us by Pillian, is no longer in dread of the influence of the
-evil genius, whom I have forced to depart; he now hunts in the happy
-prairies of the Eskennane with the just warriors: all the rites are
-accomplished--the hour for surrendering his body to the earth has
-arrived!"
-
-"Stop!" the chief replied, warmly; "my father is dead, but who has
-killed him? A warrior does not succumb thus, in a few hours, unless some
-secret influence has weighed upon him, and dried up the springs of life
-in his heart. Answer me, O machi, inspired by Pillian! Tell me the name
-of the assassin! My heart is sad, and can only be comforted by avenging
-my father."
-
-At these words, pronounced in a firm voice, a shudder crept through the
-ranks of the people assembled in a group round the body. The machi,
-after having looked searchingly round, cast down his eyes, crossed his
-arms upon his breast, and appeared to reflect.
-
-The Araucanos only think one sort of death possible--that on the field
-of battle; they do not suppose any one can lose his life by either
-accident or disease; in these two cases they always attribute death to
-the action of an occult power, and are persuaded that some enemy of
-the defunct has cast the charm upon him that has killed him. In this
-persuasion, at the period of the funeral ceremonies, the relations and
-friends of the dead person call upon the machi to denounce the assassin
-to them. The machi is obliged to point him out; it would be in vain
-for him to endeavour to make them comprehend that the death of their
-relation is natural, for their fury would be immediately turned against
-him, and he would become their victim.
-
-In this hard alternative, the machi takes good care not to hesitate; the
-murderer is the more easily pointed out through his non-existence, and
-from the sorcerer being in no danger of being suspected of deception.
-Generally, in order to make his own interests agree with those of the
-relations who claim a victim, he gives up one of his own personal
-enemies to their vengeance; when--but that is rare--the machi has no
-enemies, he fixes upon someone at hazard. The pretended murderer, in
-spite of his protestations of innocence, is immolated without mercy.
-
-It may be easily understood how perilous such a custom is, and what
-an influence it gives the sorcerer in the tribe; an influence we are
-obliged to admit which he abuses under all circumstances, without the
-least scruple.
-
-Fresh personages, among whom were Valentine and his friend, had arrived
-at the village, and, attracted by curiosity, mingled with the crowd
-collected round the body. The two Frenchmen could not comprehend
-anything of this scene till their guide had briefly explained it to
-them; then they followed the different phases of it with great interest.
-
-"Speak!" said the Ulmen, after a short pause. "Does not my father know
-the name of the man of whom we must demand an account of this murder?"
-
-"I know him," the sorcerer replied, in a solemn tone.
-
-"Why, then, does the inspired machi preserve silence, when the dead body
-cries for vengeance?"
-
-"Because," the machi said, looking this time the newly-arrived chief
-full in the face, "there are powerful men who laugh at human justice."
-
-The eyes of the crowd turned to the man whom the sorcerer appeared
-indirectly to point out.
-
-"The guilty man," the Ulmen cried, in a loud voice, "whatever be his
-rank in the tribe, shall not escape my just vengeance; speak without
-fear, priest of fate! I swear that the man whose name passes your lips
-shall die!"
-
-The machi drew himself up majestically; he raised his arm slowly, and,
-amidst the general anxious curiosity, he, with his finger, pointed to
-the chief who had offered such cordial hospitality to the strangers,
-saying, in a loud, ringing voice--
-
-"Accomplish your oath, then, Ulmen--that is the assassin of your father,
-Trangoil-Lanec cast the charm upon him which has killed him!"
-
-And the machi veiled his face with the corner of his poncho, as if
-overwhelmed with grief at making the revelation.
-
-The sorcerer's terrible words were succeeded by the silence of
-astonishment. Trangoil-Lanec was the last man in the tribe who would
-have been suspected. He was beloved and venerated by all for his
-courage, frankness, and generosity. The first sensation of surprise
-over, a general movement took place in the crowd; all drew back from
-the supposed murderer, leaving him face to face with the chief of whose
-death he was accused. Trangoil-Lanec remained impassive, a smile of
-disdain passed over his lips, he dismounted from his horse, and waited.
-
-The Ulmen walked slowly towards him, and when within a few paces, asked,
-in a sorrowful voice--
-
-"Why didst thou kill my father, Trangoil-Lanec? He loved thee, and I,
-was not I thy Penni?"
-
-"I have not killed thy father, Curumilla," the chief replied, with a
-tone of frankness that would have convinced a man less prejudiced than
-the one he addressed.
-
-"The machi has said so."
-
-"The machi lies."
-
-"No, the machi cannot lie--he is inspired by Pillian; thou, thy wife,
-and thy children must die; the law decrees that it shall be so."
-
-Without deigning to reply, the chief threw down his arms, and went
-and placed himself beside the stake of blood, planted in front of the
-medicine toldo, which contains the sacred idol. A circle was formed, of
-which the stake formed the centre; the wife and children of the chief
-were brought up, and were prepared immediately for the sacrifice; for
-the funeral ceremony of the chief could not be completed before the
-execution of his murderer. The machi was triumphant. One man alone in
-the tribe had ventured to hold up his hand against his robberies and
-rogueries, and that man was about to die and leave him absolute master.
-Upon a sign from Curumilla, two Indians seized the chief, and, in spite
-of the tears and sobs of his wives and children, they prepared to fasten
-him to the stake.
-
-The two Frenchmen had anxiously watched the spectacle of this infamous
-drama; Louis was disgusted with the rascality of the machi and the
-credulity of the Indians.
-
-"Oh!" he said, to his friend, "we cannot allow this murder to be
-accomplished."
-
-"Hum!" muttered Valentine, stroking the ends of his light moustache, and
-casting a glance around him, "hum! there is a great number of them."
-
-"What matters it how many?" Louis replied, impetuously; "I will not
-be the witness of such iniquity, if I die for it. I will attempt to
-save the life of that unfortunate man, who so frankly offered us his
-friendship."
-
-"The fact is," Valentine said, pensively, "this Trangoil-Lanec, as they
-call him, is a very worthy fellow, for whom I feel a warm sympathy; but
-what can we do?"
-
-"Pardieu!" Louis said, seizing his pistols, "throw ourselves between him
-and his enemies; we can each of us kill five or six."
-
-"Yes, and the others will kill us, without our having succeeded in
-saving the man for whom we devote ourselves. A bad means that! Let us
-try to find some other."
-
-"We must be quick, then; the torture is about to commence."
-
-Valentine struck his forehead, and cried, with a jeering laugh--
-
-"Bah! I have it! Trick must serve our turn--leave it to me; my old trade
-of a mountebank will do! Help me, if I want it; but, for heaven's sake,
-swear to remain calm!"
-
-"I swear I will, if you save him."
-
-"Be satisfied--against rogue I'll play rogue and a half; these savages
-shall see I can be more cunning than they."
-
-Valentine urged his horse into the middle of the circle, and shouted--
-
-"Stop a minute!"
-
-At the unexpected appearance of this man, whom nobody had yet observed,
-all turned round and looked at him with astonishment. Louis, with his
-hands on his pistols, watched his movements with anxiety, ready to fly
-to his succour, if he needed it.
-
-"We will not joke," continued Valentine, "we have not time for that.
-You are a set of fools, and your machi is laughing at you. What! would
-you kill a man without a moment's reflection, because a rogue bids you
-do so? Caramba! I have taken it into my head to prevent your committing
-such a folly--I will do it, too!"
-
-And placing his hand upon his hip, he looked round with an intrepid
-glance. The Indians, according to their strange custom, listened to
-this speech without evincing surprise, even by a gesture. Curumilla
-approached him.
-
-"My pale brother must retire," he said, calmly; "he is unacquainted with
-the laws of the Puelches; this man is condemned, he must die; the machi
-has pointed him out as a murderer."
-
-"I repeat to you, you are fools!" said Valentine shrugging his
-shoulders; "your machi is no more a conjurer than I am; I again tell
-you, he is cheating you, and I will prove it, if you will let me."
-
-"What says my father?" said Curumilla to the machi, who stood cold and
-motionless by the side of the body.
-
-The machi smiled disdainfully.
-
-"When did the white man ever speak truth?" he replied, with a sneer.
-"Let this one prove what he asserts, if he is able."
-
-"Good!" the Ulmen said; "the Murucho may speak."
-
-"Pardieu!" cried Valentine. "Notwithstanding the bold-faced assurance of
-this individual, I shall find it no difficult matter to prove that he is
-an impostor."
-
-"We are attentive," said Curumilla.
-
-The Indians drew round with intense curiosity. Louis could not at all
-make out what his friend proposed to do. He could only suppose that some
-extravagant idea had crossed his brain, and was as impatient as the rest
-to see how he would come through his dangerous undertaking with honour.
-
-"One moment!" said the machi, with perfect assurance. "What will my
-brothers do if I prove my accusation true?"
-
-"The stranger must die," said Curumilla, coolly.
-
-"I accept the terms," Valentine replied, resolutely. Placed thus in the
-necessity of explaining himself, the Frenchman drew himself up to his
-full height, and, knitting his brows, exclaimed pompously--
-
-"I, too, am a great medicine man!"
-
-The Indians bowed reverentially. The science of Europeans is perfectly
-established among them; they respect without disputing it.
-
-"It was not Trangoil-Lanec," continued the Frenchman, with the greatest
-audacity, "who killed the chief; it was the machi himself."
-
-A start of astonishment pervaded the assembly.
-
-"I!" cried the machi, in a voice of amazement.
-
-"You, yourself, and you know it well," replied Valentine, giving him a
-look that made him tremble.
-
-"Stranger," said Trangoil-Lanec, with the majesty of a martyr, "it is
-no use to interpose in my favour; my brothers believe me guilty, and
-innocent though I am, I must die."
-
-"Your devotion to your laws is noble, but in this case it is absurd,"
-Valentine replied.
-
-"This man is guilty," the machi persisted.
-
-"Let us put an end to this, then," replied Trangoil-Lanec; "kill me!"
-
-"What say my brothers?" Curumilla asked of the crowd, who pressed
-anxiously around him.
-
-"That the Murucho medicine-man be allowed to prove the truth of his
-words," replied the warriors with one voice.
-
-They loved Trangoil-Lanec, and in their hearts desired that he should
-not die. On the other hand, they entertained for the machi a hatred
-which the profound terror he inspired them with scarcely sufficed to
-make them conceal.
-
-"Very well," said Valentine, "this is what I propose."
-
-All were silent as the grave. The Frenchman drew his sword, and waved
-the bright blade before the eyes of the spectators.
-
-"You see this weapon," said he, in a pompous tone; "I will put it into
-my mouth, and swallow it up to the hilt. If Trangoil-Lanec is guilty, I
-shall die; if he is innocent, as I affirm, Pillian will help me, and I
-shall draw forth the sword from my body without suffering a wound."
-
-"My brother speaks like a courageous warrior," said Curumilla; "we are
-ready to behold."
-
-"I will not suffer it!" Trangoil-Lanec shouted. "Does my brother want to
-kill himself?"
-
-"Pillian is judge!" Valentine replied, with a smile of strange
-expression, and with an air of conviction admirably well played.
-
-The two Frenchmen exchanged a glance. The Indians are perfect children
-in their love of spectacle, and the extraordinary proposal of the
-Parisian seemed to them to admit of no reply.
-
-"The trial! the trial!" they shouted.
-
-"Very well," said Valentine; "let my brothers behold, then."
-
-He first placed himself in the proper position adopted by jugglers when
-they exhibit this feat in public places; then introducing the blade of
-the sword into his mouth, in a few seconds the whole of it disappeared.
-During the performance of this trick, which in their eyes was a
-miracle, the Puelches watched the bold Frenchman in breathless terror.
-They could not comprehend how a man could perform such an operation
-without deliberately killing himself. Valentine turned on all sides,
-so that everyone might be convinced of the reality of the fact; then
-he deliberately withdrew the blade from his mouth, as bright as when
-it came from the sheath. A cry of enthusiasm burst from the crowd: the
-miracle was evident.
-
-"One minute more," he said; "I have still something to demand of you."
-
-Silence was in an instant re-established.
-
-"I have proved to you, in an incontrovertible manner, that the chief is
-not guilty--have I not?"
-
-"Yes! yes!" they shouted simultaneously; "the paleface is a great
-medicine man! he is beloved by Pillian!"
-
-"Very well. Now, then," he added, with a sardonic smile directed towards
-the machi, "your machi should prove in his turn that I have calumniated
-him, and that it was not he who killed the Apo-Ulmen of your tribe. The
-dead chief was a great warrior; it ought to be avenged."
-
-"Yes," the warriors cried, "he ought to be avenged."
-
-"My brother speaks well," observed Curumilla; "let the machi be put to
-the proof."
-
-The unfortunate machi perceived at once that he was lost. He became
-livid, and a cold perspiration bathed his temples, whilst a convulsive
-tremor shook his limbs.
-
-"This man is an impostor," he muttered, in a voice scarcely audible; "he
-abuses your good faith."
-
-"Perhaps I am," said Valentine; "but, in the meantime, imitate me."
-
-"Here," said Curumilla, holding out the sword to the machi, "if you are
-innocent, Pillian will protect you, as he has protected my brother."
-
-"Caramba! that is certain; Pillian always protects the innocent, and you
-are about to be a proof of it," said the Parisian, in whom the revived
-spirit of the _gamin_ was now triumphant.
-
-The machi cast around a look of despair; all eyes were expressive of
-impatience and curiosity; the unhappy wretch perceived but too plainly
-that he could look for help to nobody, and he formed his resolution
-instantly--he determined to die as he had lived, deceiving the crowd to
-the last minute.
-
-"I fear nothing," he said, in a firm voice; "this steel will be harmless
-to me. You desire that I should go through the trial--I will obey. But,
-beware! Pillian is angry with your conduct towards me; the humiliation
-you impose upon me will be avenged by the terrible scourges which he
-will inflict upon you."
-
-At these words of their prophet the Puelches were moved. They hesitated.
-For many long years they had been accustomed to place entire faith in
-his predictions, and they experienced a kind of fear in thus daring to
-accuse him of imposture. Valentine saw at a glance what was passing in
-their hearts.
-
-"Capitally well played," he said, replying by a knowing wink to the
-triumphant smile of the machi; "now it is my turn. Let my brothers take
-heart!" he added, in a loud, firm voice. "No misfortune threatens them;
-this man speaks thus because he is afraid to die; he knows he is guilty,
-and that Pillian will not protect him."
-
-The machi darted a glance at him gleaming with hatred, seized the
-sword, and, imitating as well as he knew how what he had seen, with
-desperate quickness plunged the blade down his throat. A stream of black
-blood sprang from his mouth, his eyes glared hideously, his arms shook
-convulsively, he staggered two steps forward, and fell flat upon his
-face. The people crowded round him--he was dead.
-
-"Let this lying dog be thrown to the vultures," said Curumilla, kicking
-the lifeless body with contempt.
-
-"We are brothers for life and death," cried Trangoil-Lanec, embracing
-Valentine.
-
-"Well," the young man said with a smile, to his friend, "I think I
-have not got very badly through that affair--eh? You see, it is well,
-sometimes, to have practised many trades; even that of a mountebank may
-serve at need."
-
-"Do not calumniate your heart and courage," Louis replied, warmly
-pressing his hand; "you have; saved the life of a man."
-
-"Aye; but I have killed another."
-
-"Oh, he was a guilty wretch!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI.
-
-THE OBSEQUIES OF AN APO-ULMEN.
-
-
-The emotion caused by the death of the machi gradually died away, and
-order was re-established. Curumilla and Trangoil-Lanec, abjuring any
-feeling of enmity, exchanged a fraternal embrace, amidst the frantic
-applause of the warriors, who loved both the chiefs.
-
-"Now my father is avenged, we can restore his body to the earth,"
-Curumilla observed. Then, advancing towards the strangers, he bowed to
-them, saying--
-
-"Will the palefaces assist at the obsequies?"
-
-"We will," Louis replied.
-
-"My toldo is large," the chief continued; "my brothers will do me honour
-by consenting to inhabit it during their sojourn with the tribe."
-
-Louis was about to reply, but Trangoil-Lanec hastily prevented him.
-
-"My brothers the palefaces," he said, "have deigned to accept my poor
-hospitality."
-
-The young men bowed in silence.
-
-"Good!" the Ulmen continued. "Of what consequence is that? Whichever be
-the toldo the Muruches may choose, I shall consider them as my guests."
-
-"Many thanks, chief," Valentine replied; "be assured that we are
-grateful for your kindness."
-
-The Ulmen then took leave of the Frenchmen, and resumed his place by the
-side of his father's corpse, and the ceremonies commenced. The Araucanos
-are not, as some travellers have led us to believe, a people destitute
-of any faith; on the contrary, their faith is warm, and their religion
-rests upon bases which are not deficient in grandeur. They have no
-dogma, and yet they recognize two principles--that of good and that of
-evil.
-
-The first, named Pillian, is the Creating God; the second, named
-Guécubu, is the Destroying God. Guécubu is in a state of continual
-struggle with Pillian, endeavouring to disturb the harmony of the world,
-and destroy what exists; by which we see that the doctrine of Manicheism
-was embraced by the barbarians of both the old and the new world, who,
-being unable to penetrate the causes of good and evil, have imagined two
-contrary principles. In addition to these two principal deities, the
-Araucanos recognize a considerable number of secondary genii, who assist
-Pillian in his contest with Guécubu. These genii are males and females;
-the latter are all virgins, for--and it is a refined idea which we could
-not expect in a barbarous people--procreation is not necessary in the
-supernatural world. The male gods are named Géru, or lords; the females,
-Amey-Malghen, or spiritual nymphs.
-
-The Araucanos believe in the immortality of the soul, and, consequently,
-in a future life, in which the warriors who have distinguished
-themselves on earth hunt in game-abounding prairies, surrounded by
-everything they have loved. Like all American aborigines, the Araucanos
-are extremely superstitious. Their worship consists in assembling in
-the medicine toldo, where there is a shapeless idol, said to represent
-Pillian. They weep; they utter loud cries, with numberless contortions;
-and sacrifice to him a sheep, a cow, a horse, or a _chilihuegue_.
-
-At a signal from Curumilla, the warriors drew back to give place to the
-women, who surrounded the body, and began to walk in a circle, singing
-in a low and plaintive tone the noble feats of the deceased. At the
-expiration of about an hour, the cortege moved off after the corpse,
-which was borne by the four most renowned warriors of the tribe, and
-directed its course towards a hill where the place of sepulture was
-prepared. Behind followed the women, casting handfuls of hot ashes over
-the traces left by the passage of the funeral train; so that if the soul
-of the defunct should have any inclination to return to its body, it
-would not be able to find the way to his toldo, or come and trouble his
-heirs.
-
-When the body was laid in the grave, Curumilla cut the throats of his
-father's dogs and horses, which were placed near him, to enable him
-to hunt in the happy prairies. Within reach of his hand was placed a
-certain quantity of provisions for the nourishment of himself and the
-_tempulazzy_, or boatman, appointed to convey him to the other country,
-and into the presence of Pillian, where he is to be judged according
-to his good or evil actions. Earth was then thrown in upon the body.
-But, as the defunct had been a renowned warrior, a heap of stones was
-collected, of which a pyramid was formed; then everyone walked slowly
-once more round the tomb, pouring upon it a great quantity of chica. The
-relations and friends returned dancing and singing to the village, where
-awaited them one of those Homeric repasts of Araucanian funerals called
-cahuins, which last till all the partakers lie upon the ground utterly
-intoxicated.
-
-Beyond a little natural curiosity, our travellers did not take much
-interest in the ceremony or feast; they were fatigued, and preferred a
-short repose. Trangoil-Lanec guessed their thoughts; and, as soon as the
-procession returned, he left his companions, and offered to conduct the
-young men to his dwelling. They availed themselves of his kindness with
-alacrity. Like all Araucanian huts, this was a vast wooden building,
-covered with whitewashed mud, in the form of a rectangle, the roof being
-a terrace. This simple, airy residence displayed, in its interior, a
-perfect Dutch cleanliness.
-
-Trangoil-Lanec, as we have said, was one of the richest and most
-respected chiefs of his tribe, and had eight wives. Polygamy is allowed
-among the Moluches. When an Indian is desirous of marrying a woman, he
-declares his purpose to her parent, and fixes the number of animals he
-is willing to give. His conditions being accepted, he comes with a few
-friends, carries off the young woman, throws her on the saddle behind
-him, and gallops off to the woods, in the depths of which the couple
-remain three days. On the fourth they return; he slaughters a young
-mare in front of the hut of the father of his bride, and the marriage
-festivities begin. The abduction of the bride, and the sacrifice of
-the mare, take the place of a civil contract. After this fashion an
-Araucano is at liberty to marry as many wives as he can support. And
-yet, the first wife, who bears the title of unem domo, or legitimate
-wife, is most honoured; she has the direction of the household, and
-is the superior of the others, who are called inam domo, or secondary
-wives. All inhabit the same toldo, but in different apartments, where
-they employ themselves in bringing up their children, in weaving
-ponchos with the wool of guanacos and chilihuegues, and in preparing
-the dish which an Indian woman is bound to place every day on the table
-of her husband. Marriage is held sacred, and adultery is considered
-the greatest of crimes; the man and woman who should commit it would
-inevitably be assassinated by the husband and his relations, unless they
-redeemed their lives by means of a compensation imposed by the injured
-husband. When an Araucano leaves his home, he confides his wives to
-his relations, and, on his return, if he can prove that they have been
-unfaithful to him, he has the right of demanding of the guardians all he
-thinks proper to ask; so that the relations are interested in watching
-them. This strictness of morals only regards married women; others
-enjoy the greatest liberty, and take advantage of it without any person
-presuming to find fault with them.
-
-The two Frenchmen, thrown so suddenly into the midst of these strange
-manners and customs, were some time before they could comprehend Indian
-life. Valentine, in particular, was completely at a loss; he was in
-a state of perpetual astonishment, which, however, he took good care
-should not appear in his words or in his actions; for the adventure of
-the machi had raised him so high in the estimation of the inhabitants
-of the toldero, that he dreaded, with reason, lest the smallest
-indiscretion should cast him down from the pedestal upon which he
-maintained his erect position.
-
-One evening, when Louis was preparing, as he frequently did, to visit
-the various toldos, in order to inquire after the sick, and administer
-to them all the relief his limited knowledge of medicine permitted,
-Curumilla came to the two strangers to invite them to be present at the
-cahuin given by the new machi, who had been elected that day, in place
-of the dead one. Valentine promised that they would come. From what
-we have said before, it may easily be comprehended what an enormous
-influence a sorcerer possesses over the members of the tribe; the choice
-is therefore difficult to make, and is seldom a good one. The sorcerer
-is generally a woman: when it is a man, he assumes the female costume,
-which he wears for the rest of his life. In almost all cases the science
-is inherited.
-
-After smoking a considerable number of pipes, and making endless
-speeches, the Araucanos had chosen, as a successor to the machi, an old
-man, of a mild, kindly character, who, during the course of his long
-existence, had only made friends. The repast was, as may be supposed,
-copious, abundantly furnished with ulpo, the national dish of the
-Araucans, and moistened with an incalculable number of couis of chica.
-Among the other delicacies which figured at the feast was a large basket
-filled with hard eggs, which the Ulmens swallowed in emulation of each
-other.
-
-"Why don't you eat some eggs?" said Curumilla to Valentine. "Do you not
-like them?"
-
-"On the contrary, chief, I am very fond of eggs, but not cooked in that
-fashion; I have no inclination to choke myself, thank you."
-
-"Oh! yes," the Ulmen said; "I understand; you prefer them raw."
-
-Valentine burst into a Homeric fit of laughter.
-
-"Not better than these," he said, when he had recovered his gravity;
-"I like eggs boiled in the shell; I like omelettes, or pancakes, but
-neither hard nor raw, if you please."
-
-"What do you mean by that? Cooked eggs must be hard."
-
-The young man looked at him with astonishment, and then said to him in a
-tone of profound compassion--
-
-"Now, really, chief, do you mean to say you are only acquainted with
-hard eggs?"
-
-"Our fathers have always eaten them thus," the Ulmen replied, quietly.
-
-"Poor people! how I pity them! They have been ignorant of one of the
-greatest enjoyments of life. Well, my friend," he exclaimed, raising his
-voice with jocular enthusiasm, "I am determined you shall adore me as
-a benefactor to humanity! In short, I will endow you with soft-boiled
-eggs, and with omelettes; at least, the remembrance of me shall not die
-from among you. When I am gone, and you eat one of those two dishes, you
-will think of me."
-
-In spite of his sadness, Louis could not help laughing at the burlesque
-humour and inexhaustible cheerfulness of his foster brother, in whom,
-at every minute, the gamin prevailed over the serious man. The chiefs
-welcomed with joy the offer of the spahi, and asked, with loud cries, on
-what day he would carry his promise into execution.
-
-"Oh, I will not make you wait long," he said; "tomorrow, on the square
-of the toldería, and before all the assembled tribe of the Great Hare,
-I will show you how you must set about boiling an egg, and making an
-omelette."
-
-At this promise, the satisfaction of the chiefs mounted to the highest
-pitch, the couis of the chica circulated with increased vivacity, and
-the Ulmens soon found themselves sufficiently intoxicated to begin to
-sing as loud as they could shout, and all together,--a sort of music
-that produced such an effect upon the two Frenchmen, that they made
-their escape, stopping their ears. The feast was kept up long after
-their departure.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII.
-
-EXPLANATIONS.
-
-
-We will now return to the chacra of Don Gregorio Peralta, to which
-Doña Rosario had been conducted after her miraculous deliverance.
-The first days that followed the departure of the two Frenchmen were
-sufficiently devoid of incident: Doña Rosario, shut up in her bedroom,
-remained almost continually alone. The poor girl, like all wounded
-spirits, sought to forget reality, by taking refuge in dreams, in order
-to collect and preserve piously in the depths of her heart the few
-happy remembrances which had so rarely gilded with a ray of sunshine
-the sadness of her existence. Don Tadeo, completely absorbed in his
-imperative political combinations, could only see her now and then, and
-but for a few minutes at a time. Before him, she endeavoured to appear
-cheerful, but she suffered the more from being obliged to conceal in her
-own bosom the sorrow which consumed her. She occasionally crept down
-into the garden; she stopped under the arbour in which her meeting with
-Louis had taken place, and remained hours together thinking of him she
-loved, and whom she had driven from her for ever.
-
-This poor child, so beautiful, so mild, so pure, so worthy of being
-loved, was condemned by an implacable destiny continually to lead a
-life of suffering and isolation; without a relation, without a friend
-to whom she might impart the secret of her grief. She was little more
-than sixteen, and already her bruised heart shrank back upon itself; her
-colour faded, her step became languid, her large blue eyes, swimming in
-tears, were incessantly raised towards heaven, as the only refuge that
-remained for her; she appeared to hold to the earth only by a slight
-thread, which the least fresh shock of adversity would snap.
-
-The maiden's story was a strange one. She had never known her parents;
-she had no remembrance of the kisses of her mother--those warm caresses
-of childhood, which make even mature age tremble with joy. From her
-earliest days, she could only remember being alone, always alone, in the
-hands of the mercenary and indifferent. The innocent joys of childhood
-remained unknown to her; she had known nothing of them but their
-weariness and sadness, and had ever been deprived of those friendships
-of early youth which, by insensibly preparing the mind for affectionate
-expansion, give birth to smiles in the midst of tears, and console with
-a kiss.
-
-Don Tadeo was the only person who was attached to her; he had never
-abandoned her, but watched with the greatest care over her material
-well-being, smiled upon her, and ever gave her good and pleasant
-counsels: but Don Tadeo was much too serious a man to comprehend the
-thousand little cares which the education of a young girl requires. She
-could only entertain for him that profound, yet respectful friendship
-which forbids those ingenuous confidences which can only be made to a
-mother, or to a companion of the same age. The visits of Don Tadeo were
-surrounded by an incomprehensible mystery; sometimes, without apparent
-cause, he made her suddenly quit people to whom he had confided her,
-and took her away with him, after ordering her to change her name,
-upon long tours. It was thus she had been to France: then, he quite as
-unexpectedly brought her back to Chili, sometimes to one city, sometimes
-to another, without ever condescending to explain to her the reasons for
-her leading such a wandering life.
-
-Constrained by her isolation to depend only upon herself, forced to
-reflect as soon as the first rays of reason enlightened her brain, the
-maiden, though so delicate and fragile in appearance, was endowed with
-an energy and firmness of character of which she was ignorant, but
-which supported her unconsciously; and if the hour of danger arrived,
-would be of infinite use to her. She had often, urged by the instinct
-of curiosity so natural to her age in the exceptional position in which
-she was placed, sought by adroit questions to seize the thread that
-might guide her in this labyrinth; but all had proved useless--Don Tadeo
-remained mute. One day only, after having for a long time contemplated
-her with an expression of sadness, he had pressed her to his heart, and
-said in a trembling voice,--
-
-"Poor child! I will protect you against your enemies!"
-
-Who could those formidable enemies be? Why were they so inveterate
-against a girl of sixteen, who knew nothing of the world, and had
-never injured a human being? These questions, which Doña Rosario was
-continually asking herself, always remained unanswered. She only caught
-a glimpse in her life, of one of those terrible mysteries which bring
-death to the imprudent who persist in endeavouring to discover them;
-her days, therefore, were passed in continual fears, engendered by her
-imagination.
-
-One evening, when, sad and thoughtful as usual, and buried in the depths
-of an easy chair, in her bedchamber, she was turning over the leaves of
-a book which she was not reading, Don Tadeo entered the room. He saluted
-her, as he always did, by a kiss on her brow, took a seat, placed
-himself in front of her, and after looking at her for a moment with a
-melancholy smile, said quietly,--
-
-"I wish to speak with you, Rosario."
-
-"I am all attention, dear friend," she replied, endeavouring to smile.
-
-But before we report this conversation, we must present our readers
-with a few necessary explanations. Like all the other countries of
-South America, Chili, for a long time depressed beneath the Spanish
-yoke, had conquered its independence, more through the weakness of its
-ancient master than by its own proper strength. The system followed by
-the Spanish authorities from the beginning had checked in the people
-of these countries the development of the philosophical ideas which
-give man a consciousness of his own value, render him one day apt to
-achieve liberty, and ripe to enjoy it within just limits. We have said,
-in a preceding work, that the Americans of the South have none of the
-virtues of their ancestors, but, to make up for it, they possess all
-their vices. Destitute of that early education without which it is
-impossible to do or even to conceive great things, the Chilian nation,
-free by an unexpected chance, found itself immediately the sport of
-a few intriguing men, who concealed beneath high-sounding words of
-patriotism a boundless ambition. The newly-freed country struggled in
-vain; the innate carelessness of its inhabitants, and the levity of
-their character, formed an invincible object to any amelioration.
-
-At the epoch at which we have arrived, Chili was labouring under the
-oppression of General Bustamente. This man, not contented with being
-minister of a republic, dreamt of nothing less than causing himself
-to be proclaimed the chief of it, under the title of protector. The
-realization of this idea was not impossible. From its geographical
-position, Chili is almost independent of those troublesome neighbours
-who, in the states of the old world, keep watch over all the acts of
-a nation, and are, ready to put in their _veto_ as soon as their own
-interest appears to be threatened. On one side separated from Upper
-Peru by the vast and almost impassable desert of Atacama, Bolivia alone
-might hazard some timid observations; but the General cherished secret
-hopes of including that republic itself in the new confederation; on
-the other side, immense solitudes and the Cordilleras separated it from
-Buenos Aires, which had neither the will nor the power to oppose his
-projects. One people alone could make a war with him, which he should
-dread, and they were the Araucanos; that little nation, driven like
-an iron wedge into Chili, disturbed the General's plans seriously. He
-resolved to treat with the Araucano Toqui, while determined, at the same
-time, when his projects should have succeeded, to unite all his forces
-to conquer that country which had so long resisted the Spanish power. In
-a word, General Bustamente dreamt of creating at the southern extremity
-of America, with Chili, Araucania, and Bolivia confederated, a rival
-nationality to the United States. Unfortunately for the General, there
-was not in him the stuff to make a great man; he was simply a _parvenu_,
-an ignorant and cruel soldier.
-
-When America raised the standard of revolt against the mother country,
-numerous secret societies were formed at all points of the territory,
-the most redoubtable, beyond contradiction, being that of the
-Dark-Hearts. The men who placed themselves at the head of this society
-were all intelligent and well informed, mostly educated in Europe, who,
-having seen in the field of action the great principles of the French
-revolution, wished, by applying them in their own country, to regenerate
-the nation. After the proclamation of Chilian independence, the secret
-societies, having no longer an object, disappeared. One alone persisted
-in remaining permanent--that of the Dark-Hearts. This society was not
-willing that license should assume the mantle of liberty: it felt that
-it had a great and holy mission to fulfil, and that its task, so far
-from being terminated, was scarcely commenced. It was necessary to
-instruct the people, to render them worthy of taking their place among
-nations, and, above all, to deliver them from the tyrants who wished
-to enslave them. This mission the society of the Dark-Hearts laboured
-incessantly to carry out, struggling constantly against oppressive
-powers, which succeeded each other, and destroying them without mercy.
-Proteus-like and intangible, the members of this society escaped the
-most active researches: if by chance some few of them fell in the arena,
-they died with head erect, confident in the future, and leaving to their
-brethren the care of continuing their task.
-
-The recovery of General Bustamente caused the Dark-Hearts a momentary
-stupor; but Don Tadeo, who had caused the news of the miraculous manner
-in which he had survived his execution to be spread universally,
-revived their spirits by placing himself again at their head. Not that
-either courage or hope had failed them. However great the skill of the
-machinations employed by the General to insure the success of his plans,
-the Loyal-Hearts, who had confederates everywhere, foresaw and defeated
-them. They watched all his movements with the greatest care, for they
-were quite aware that the moment was drawing near when their enemy would
-throw off the mask. They had heard of the departure of the convalescent
-General for Valdivia. For what reason, as his health was still so
-uncertain, and repose so necessary, had he gone to that remote province?
-That must be learnt at any price, and they must prepare against any
-eventuality.
-
-In a meeting of the society, future measures were agreed upon; it was
-moreover resolved that the King of Darkness should at the same time
-repair to Valdivia, in order, if advisable, to take the initiative in
-resistance. But Don Tadeo could not think of leaving Doña Rosario behind
-him, exposed to the unprincipled attacks of the Linda. He alone could
-defend the young girl; was he not her only support? As soon, then, as
-the Dark-Hearts had dispersed, Don Tadeo returned to the chacra, and
-went straight to Doña Rosario's chamber.
-
-"My dear child," he said, "I have sad news to inform you of."
-
-"Speak, my kind friend," she replied.
-
-"Urgent affairs require my presence as soon as possible in Valdivia."
-
-"Oh!" she cried, with an expression of terror, "you will not leave me
-here, will you?"
-
-"At first I intended to do so, this retreat appearing to me to unite all
-the guarantees for security; but cheer up, my child! I have changed my
-mind; I have fancied you would prefer accompanying me?"
-
-"Oh, yes," she said, eagerly; "you are always kind. When do we set out?"
-
-"Tomorrow, dear child, at sunrise."
-
-"I shall be ready," she replied, holding up her pretty face towards him,
-that he might impress his customary kiss upon her brow.
-
-Don Tadeo retired, and Rosario immediately set about the preparations
-for her journey. Of what consequence was it to her whether she were in
-one place or another, since she was doomed to suffer everywhere? And who
-can say whether the poor girl, without daring to avow it to herself, did
-not entertain the hope of again seeing him she loved? Love is a divine
-sunbeam that illumines the darkest nights.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII.
-
-THE CHINGANA.
-
-
-Valdivia, founded in 1551 by the Spanish conqueror Don Pedro de
-Valdivia, is a charming city, two leagues from the sea, upon the left
-bank of a river, which large vessels can easily ascend into the fertile
-valley of Guadallanguen. The aspect of the city, the advanced post of
-civilization in these remote countries, is most agreeable; the streets
-are large, uniformly built; the white houses, only one story high,
-on account of the frequency of earthquakes, are terrace-roofed. Here
-and there rise in the air the steeples of the numerous churches and
-convents, which occupy more than a third of the city. It is astonishing
-to what an extent convents are multiplied in South America. It might
-be supposed that the New World was the land of promise for monks; they
-appear to rise out of the earth at every step. Thanks to the extensive
-commerce which Valdivia carries on by means of its port, which is
-visited by the numerous whalers fishing in those seas, and ships which
-come there to refit, after doubling Cape Horn, or before passing
-it,--its streets have more animation than is generally to be met with in
-American cities.
-
-Don Tadeo arrived in Valdivia, accompanied by Don Gregorio and Doña
-Rosario, on the evening of the sixteenth day after his departure from
-his friend's chacra. They had used all diligence, and for that country,
-where there are no other means of travelling but on horseback, it might
-be considered a quick journey. If the two gentlemen had thought proper
-to do so, they might have entered the city about three o'clock in the
-afternoon, but they deemed it advisable that no one in a place where
-so many people knew them should be made aware of their arrival: in the
-first place, because the causes which brought them there required the
-greatest secrecy; and, further, because Don Tadeo was forced to conceal
-himself, in order to avoid the police agents of the president of the
-republic, who had orders to arrest him wherever they might meet with
-him. Fortunately, in these countries the police never arrest anybody
-when not absolutely compelled, unless those whom they pursue come and
-deliver themselves up into their hands--an event, we may safely say,
-that rarely happens.
-
-As during his sojourn at Valdivia, his manner of living must be
-regulated by the affairs which brought him there, he could not openly
-keep house or appear in public, Don Tadeo went straight to the convent
-of the Ursulines, and committed the young lady he had brought with him
-to the care of the abbess, who was not only his relation, but was a
-worthy person, in whom he had perfect confidence. Doña Rosario accepted
-without hesitation the asylum which was offered to her, and where she
-fancied she should be safe from the attacks of her invisible enemies.
-Don Tadeo took an affectionate leave of her and the venerable abbess,
-and hastened to a house of the calle San-Xavier, where Don Gregorio, who
-had left him on entering the city, to avoid observation, awaited his
-coming.
-
-"Well?" asked Don Gregorio, as soon as he saw him.
-
-"She is in safety; at least I suppose so," Don Tadeo replied, with a
-sigh.
-
-"So much the better, for we must redouble our precautions."
-
-"Why so?"
-
-"After leaving you I made inquiries; I observed, I questioned people as
-I walked about and loitered at the port and the Almeda."
-
-"Well, what have you learnt?"
-
-"As we imagined, General Bustamente is here."
-
-"Already?"
-
-"He arrived three days ago."
-
-"What reason could be so important as to bring him here?" said Don
-Tadeo, with an uneasy expression. "Oh, I will know!"
-
-"Another thing: who do you think accompanies him?"
-
-"The executioner, no doubt!" said Don Tadeo, with an ironical smile.
-
-"Almost as bad," Don Gregorio replied.
-
-"Whom do you mean, then?"
-
-"The Linda!"
-
-The chief of the Dark-Hearts turned deadly pale.
-
-"Oh," he said, "that woman! for ever that woman! you must be mistaken,
-my friend; it is impossible!"
-
-"I have seen her."
-
-Don Tadeo walked about in great agitation for several minutes; then,
-stopping short in front of his friend, said, in a husky voice--
-
-"Dear Don Gregorio, are you certain you have not been misled by a
-resemblance? Are you quite sure it was she?"
-
-"You had just left me, and I was coming hither, when the sound of horses
-made me turn my head, and I saw, I repeat I saw, the Linda; she also
-appeared to have just arrived at Valdivia; two lancers escorted her, and
-an arriero led the baggage mules.
-
-"Oh!" said Don Tadeo, "will the infernal malice of that demon ever
-pursue me?"
-
-"My friend," Don Gregorio remarked, "in the path we have undertaken to
-tread, every obstacle must, unhesitatingly, be destroyed."
-
-"What, kill a woman?" the gentleman said, with horror.
-
-"I do not say that, but place her in such a position that she cannot
-possibly injure anyone. Remember, we are Dark-Hearts, and, as such, we
-ought to be without pity."
-
-"Silence!" Don Tadeo murmured, as two low, quick taps were struck on the
-door.
-
-"Come in!" cried Don Gregorio.
-
-The door opened, and Don Pedro showed his polecat face. He did not
-recognize the two men whom, in the various meetings he had had with
-them, he had always seen masked.
-
-"God preserve you, gentlemen!" he said, with a profound bow.
-
-"What is your pleasure, sir?" Don Gregorio asked, in a coldly-polite
-tone, while returning his salutation.
-
-"Sir," said Don Pedro, looking about for a seat which was not offered
-him, "I have just arrived from Santiago."
-
-Don Gregorio bowed again.
-
-"On my departure from that city, a banker in whose hands I had placed
-funds, gave me several bills; among others this, addressed to Don
-Gregorio Peratla, payable at sight."
-
-"That is my name, sir; be so kind as to hand it to me."
-
-"As you see, sir, the bill is for twenty-three ounces."
-
-"Very well, sir," replied Don Gregorio, as he took it, "allow me to
-examine it."
-
-Don Pedro bowed in his turn, whilst Don Gregorio, approaching a
-flambeau, looked attentively at the bill of exchange, put it into his
-pocket, and took some money from his purse.
-
-"Here are the twenty-three ounces, sir," he said, giving them.
-
-The spy took them, counted the gold pieces, examining them attentively,
-and then put them into his pocket.
-
-"It is very singular, sir," he said, just as the two gentlemen thought
-they were about to be relieved of his presence.
-
-"What is it, sir?" asked Don Gregorio; "do you not find the amount
-right?"
-
-"Oh, pardon me, perfectly right; but," he added, with a slight
-hesitation, "I thought you had been a merchant?"
-
-"And what leads you to think otherwise?"
-
-"Because I see no desks."
-
-"They are in another part of the house," Don Gregorio replied; "I am a
-private trader."
-
-"Oh, very well, sir."
-
-"And, if I had not thought you had pressing need of the money--"
-
-"Very pressing!" the other interrupted.
-
-"I should have begged you to call again tomorrow, for, at this late
-hour, my cashbox is closed."
-
-And thereupon he waved his hand, rather haughtily, as dismissing him.
-Don Pedro retired, visibly disappointed.
-
-"That is a double-faced fellow, I am sure," said Don Gregorio; "I should
-not wonder if he were a spy of the General."
-
-"Oh, I know him!" Don Tadeo replied; "I have about me proofs of his
-treachery. He has been a necessary instrument; at present he may injure
-us. He must be crushed."
-
-Don Gregorio drew from his pocket the bill which had been presented to
-him, and holding it to Don Tadeo--
-
-"Look at this," he said.
-
-This bill, payable at sight, appeared perfectly like others. It was
-drawn in the usual form: _At sight, please pay_, &c. &c.; but, in two
-or three places, the pen, too hard, no doubt, had spluttered and formed
-a certain number of little black spots, of which some were almost
-imperceptible. It appeared that these black spots had a meaning for the
-two men; for as soon as Don Tadeo had cast his eyes over the bill, he
-seized his cloak, and folded himself in it.
-
-"It is Heaven that protects us!" he said; "we must go thither without
-delay."
-
-"That is my opinion, likewise," Don Gregorio replied, holding the bill
-to the light, and burning it till there was not a particle of it left.
-The two men took each a long dagger and a brace of pistols, which they
-concealed under their clothes--the conspirators were too well acquainted
-with their country to neglect these precautions--they pulled the flaps
-of their hats over their faces, and wrapping themselves up to the very
-eyes, like two lovers or seekers of adventures, they descended into the
-street.
-
-It was one of those splendid nights unknown in our foggy climates; the
-sky, of a dark blue, was thickly studded with an infinite number of
-stars, among which conspicuously shone the brilliant Southern Cross;
-the air was embalmed with a thousand odours, and a light sea breeze
-refreshed the atmosphere, which had been heated by the torrid sunbeams
-during the past day. The two men passed silently and rapidly through
-the joyous groups which traversed the streets in all directions. It is
-in the evening that the Americans leave their homes to take the air and
-enjoy the freshness.
-
-The conspirators appeared to hear neither the enticing sounds of the
-vihuela which vibrated in their ears, nor the refrains of sambacuejas
-which flew in gusts from the chinganas, nor the bursts of fresh, silvery
-laughter of the black-eyed, rosy-lipped girls, who elbowed them on
-their way. They walked thus for a long time, turning round at intervals
-to ascertain if they were followed, plunging by degrees into the
-lowest quarters of the city, and at length stopped at a house of mean
-appearance, from which issued the loud but not very melodious strains of
-music eminently national.
-
-This house was a chingana, a name which has no equivalent in French
-or English. A Chilian chingana presents so eccentrically droll an
-appearance, that it would defy the pencil of Callot, and is beyond all
-description. Let the reader figure to himself a low room, with smoky
-walls, the floor of which is but beaten earth, and rendered filthy by
-the detritus left by the feet of incessantly arriving and departing
-visitors. In the centre of this den, lighted only by a smoky lamp called
-a _candil_, by which it is impossible to distinguish more than the
-shadows of the customers, are seated four men upon stools. Two of them
-are twanging wretched guitars, which have lost most of their strings,
-with the backs of their hands; the third plays the tambourine with his
-thumbs upon a crippled table, striking it with all his might; whilst
-the fourth rolls between his hands a piece of bamboo six feet long,
-split into several strips, which yield the most discordant sound that
-can possibly be imagined. The four musicians, not content with the
-formidable clatter made by their instruments, shout, at the very top of
-their voices, songs which we can neither venture to repeat nor translate.
-
-All this infernal noise is made to excite the dancers, who flutter
-about, assuming the most lascivious postures they can invent, amidst the
-hearty applause of the spectators, who writhe with delight, stamp their
-feet with pleasure, and sometimes, carried away by the harmony, thunder
-out all together, the burthen of the song, with the musicians and
-dancers. Amidst this disturbance, these cries and stampings, wind in and
-out the master of the establishment and his waiters, armed with couis of
-chicha, bottles of aguardiente, and even guarapo, to slake the thirst
-of the customers, who, to do them justice, the more they drink the more
-thirsty they become, and the more they wish to drink.
-
-Twice or thrice in the course of an evening, it may happen that some
-of the guests, more heated than the rest, or seized by the demon of
-jealousy, take it into their heads to quarrel. Then knives are drawn
-from the polena, ponchos are rolled round the left arm to serve as
-bucklers, the music ceases, and a circle is formed round the combatants.
-The sanguinary contest begins, and when one of the combatants has
-fallen, he is carried into the street, the music is resumed, the dance
-recommences, and no more is thought of the poor wounded or dying man.
-
-It was in front of one of these establishments that the chief of the
-Dark-Hearts and his friend had stopped; they did not hesitate. Pulling
-up the folds of their cloaks so as to completely conceal their faces,
-they entered the chingana: in spite of the pestilential atmosphere which
-nearly choked them, they passed unnoticed through the drinkers, and
-gained the further end of the room. The cellar door stood ajar; they
-opened it softly, and disappeared down the steps. After descending ten
-of these, they found themselves in a cellar, where a man, leaning over a
-barrel, which he appeared to be occupied in putting in its place, said
-to them, without interrupting his work--
-
-"Would you like some aguardiente de pesco, some mescal, or some chica?"
-
-"Neither the one nor the other," Don Tadeo replied; "we wish for some
-French wine."
-
-The man sprang up as if moved by a spring. The two adventurers had put
-on their masks.
-
-"Do you wish to have it white or red?" the man asked.
-
-"Red--as red as blood," said Don Tadeo.
-
-"Of what year?" the unknown rejoined.
-
-"Of that vintaged on the 5th of April, 1817," said Don Tadeo.
-
-"Then you must come this way, gentlemen," the man replied, with a
-respectful bow; "the wine you do me the honour to call for is extremely
-valuable; it is kept in a separate cellar."
-
-"To be drunk at Martinmas," Don Tadeo remarked.
-
-The man, who seemed only to wait for this last reply to his question,
-smiled with an air of intelligence, and laid his hand lightly on the
-wall. A stone turned slowly round upon itself, without the least noise,
-and opened a passage to the conspirators, which they immediately
-entered, and the stone instantly returned to its place.
-
-In the chingana, the cries, the songs, and the music had acquired an
-intensity really formidable; the joy of the tipplers was at its height.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV.
-
-THE TWO ULMENS.
-
-
-If we were writing a romance instead of a true history, there are
-certain scenes of the recital which we would pass over in silence. The
-one which follows would certainly be of this number; and yet, though of
-a rather hazardous puerility, it carries with it its lesson, by showing
-what is the influence of the early habits of a miserable life, even upon
-natures the best endowed, and how difficult it is, at a later period, to
-shake them off. We will add, to the praise of Valentine, the man of whom
-we are speaking, that his gaminism, if we may be allowed to employ such
-a term, was much more feigned than real, and that his aim, in allowing
-himself to be sometimes led away by it, was to bring a smile to the lips
-of his foster brother, and thus cheat the sorrow that was undermining
-his peace.
-
-This necessary preamble being gone through, we will resume the course
-of our narrative, and, abandoning for a time Don Tadeo and his friend,
-we will request the reader to follow us back to the tribe of the Great
-Hare. The looked-for morrow was a great day for the tribe, a day
-expected with impatience by all housekeepers, who were about to learn
-how to discover, to use Valentine's word, a new dish, which promised
-to please the palates of their race. As soon as it was daylight, men,
-women, and children assembled on the great Square of the village, and
-formed numerous groups, in which the merit of the unknown dish about
-to be revealed to them was discussed. Louis, for whom the experiment
-his friend was going to make had very little interest, wished to remain
-in the toldo; but Valentine insisted upon his being present at the
-experiment, and much against his will, he consented.
-
-The Parisian was already at his post, standing in an open spot, in
-the middle of the Square, watching with a laughing eye the anxious
-or incredulous expression by turn displayed upon the faces directed
-towards him. A table, which was to serve for his culinary preparations,
-a lighted brasier, upon which boiled an iron pot filled with water, a
-kitchen knife, an enormous frying-pan, found I know not where, a sort
-of tub, a wooden spoon, some parsley, a bit of bacon, some salt, some
-pepper, and a basket full of fresh eggs, had been prepared at his desire
-by the cares of Trangoil-Lanec.
-
-All eagerly looked for the arrival of the Apo-Ulmen of the tribe, with
-which the exhibition was to commence. A kind of dais had been erected
-for him in front of the operator, and when he had taken his lighted
-calumet from the hands of his pipe-bearer, he bent a little on one
-side and whispered a few words in the ear of Curumilla, who stood
-respectfully beside him. The Ulmen bowed, came down from the dais, went
-straight to the Parisian to tell him he might begin, and then resumed
-his post.
-
-Valentine returned the salutation of this master of the ceremonies,
-took off his poncho, which he folded up and laid carefully at his feet,
-and turning up his sleeves above his elbows with the studied grace of
-a performer, he leant slightly forward, placed his right hand upon the
-table, and assuming the tone of a vendor of quack medicines who boasts
-of the efficacy of his nostrums to gaping clowns, he thus commenced his
-demonstration in a loud voice and with a perfectly clear utterance:--
-
-"Illustrious Ulmens, and you redoubtable warriors of the noble and
-sacred tribe of the Great Hare, listen attentively to what I have the
-honour of explaining to you. In the beginning of time the world did
-not exist; water and clouds, which continually clashed against each
-other in space, then formed the universe. When Pillian created the
-world, as soon as at his voice man had issued from the bosom of the red
-mountain, he took him by the hand, and pointing to all the productions
-of the earth, the air, and the water, he said to him,--'Thou art the
-king of creation: consequently, animals, plants, and fishes all belong
-to thee, and are, each in proportion with its strength, instincts, or
-conformation, to minister to thy welfare and thy happiness in the world
-in which I have placed thee; thus the horse shall bear thee with fiery
-speed across the deserts, fleecy lamas and sheep clothe thee with their
-wool, and nourish thee with their succulent flesh.' When Pillian had
-analyzed, one after the other, the diverse qualities of the animals,
-before proceeding to the plants and fishes, he stopped at the hen, which
-was moving carelessly about, and picking up the grains of corn scattered
-on the ground. Pillian took her by the wings, and showing her to man,
-said, 'Here is one of the most useful animals I have created for thy
-service; boiled in a pot, the hen will afford thee an excellent broth
-when thou art sick; roasted, its white flesh will acquire a delicious
-flavour; of her eggs thou canst make omelettes with herbs, omelettes
-with mushrooms, omelettes with ham, and, above all others, with bacon.
-If thou art indisposed, and solid food should be too heavy for thy weak
-stomach, thou canst boil her eggs in the shell, and then thou wilt say
-something, indeed!'
-
-"Thus," continued Valentine, attitudinizing before the Indians, who,
-with open mouths and staring eyes, lost not a single word he uttered,
-whether they understood it or not, whilst, in spite of his secret
-grief, Louis literally writhed with laughter; "thus it was that Pillian
-spoke to the first man at the commencement of ages; you were not there,
-Araucano warriors, it is therefore not astonishing that you know nothing
-about it; neither was I there, it is true; but, thanks to the talent
-we white men possess of transmitting our thoughts from age to age, by
-means of writing, these words of the Great Spirit have been carefully
-collected, and have come down to us in their purity. Without further
-prelude, I am going to have the honour of producing before you a boiled
-egg! Listen to me; it is as simple as saying good-day, and within the
-reach of the most limited capacity. In order to enjoy a boiled egg,
-two things are necessary--in the first place, an egg, and then, some
-boiling water! You take the egg in your fingers, thus, you uncover your
-saucepan, you place the egg in a spoon and deposit it carefully in the
-saucepan, where you allow it to boil gently three minutes. Mind, three
-minutes, neither more nor less: pay attention to that important detail,
-for a longer time would compromise the success of your operation. There
-it is!"
-
-The action suited the word; the three minutes were past: Valentine
-took out the egg, beheaded it, sprinkled a little salt on it, and
-presented it to the Ulmen with some long strips of maize bread. All
-this was performed with the most imperturbable seriousness, amidst the
-profound silence of the attentive crowd. The Apo-Ulmen proceeded to
-taste this wonderful egg with the most deliberate gravity. An air of
-doubt appeared for a second on his lips, as he raised the first mouthful
-towards them; but, by degrees, the features of his broad face expanded
-under the influence of joy and pleasure, and he at last exclaimed
-enthusiastically,--
-
-"Wah! It is good! Very good!"
-
-Valentine returned to his brasier with a modest smile, and set about
-boiling eggs, which he distributed among the Ulmens and principal
-warriors, who quickly mingled their felicitations with those of the
-Apo-Ulmen. A delirious joy took possession of the poor Indians, and
-Valentine could hardly keep his ground, so eagerly did they press round
-him, to examine closely his mysterious mode of cooking the eggs. At
-length, calm was re-established, and the curiosity of the majority was
-satisfied. The Apo-Ulmen, who had not been able to make his voice heard
-in the tumult, was able to restore a little order, and obtain silence.
-Valentine looked at his public with an air of satisfaction. From that
-moment the Indians were believers--the most incredulous were convinced,
-and all awaited with impatience the continuation of his experiments.
-
-"Listen to me!" he continued, striking a sharp blow on the table with
-the knife he held in his hand; "listen to me, but, above all, observe
-closely how I proceed. A boiled egg was child's play to me, but the
-omelette requires to be considered seriously, and executed with care, in
-order to obtain that finish, that smoothness, flavour, and perfection
-so much prized by real judges. I am about to make a bacon-omelette, and
-when I name that, I name the most exquisite dish in the world! Whilst
-explaining to you the manner in which you should set about it, I will
-produce it: follow my reasonings closely, and observe attentively the
-manner in which I mingle the various ingredients which enter into the
-composition of this dish. To make a bacon omelette, I must have bacon,
-eggs, salt, pepper, parsley, and some butter--there they are, as you
-see, all on that table. Now I will mix them."
-
-Then, with incredible address, and the greatest quickness, he commenced
-a monster bacon-omelette, of at least sixty eggs, while continuing his
-explanation with inexpressible freedom and copiousness. The interest of
-the Indians was warmly excited, their enthusiasm betraying itself by
-shouts, leaps, and laughter; but it was carried to its height, and the
-stamping, crying, and screaming became terrific, when the Puelches saw
-Valentine seize the long handle of the frying-pan with a firm grasp,
-and toss the omelette three different times into the air, without any
-apparent effort, and with the style and ease of a finished cook. When
-the omelette was done to the moment, the Frenchman placed it upon a
-dish, taking care to double it with the talent which _cordons bleus_
-alone possess, and was then preparing to carry it smoking to the
-Apo-Ulmen, but he, enticed by the flavour of the boiled egg, and with
-appetite excited to the highest pitch, spared him that trouble; for
-he forgot all decorum, and rushed towards the table, followed by the
-principal Ulmens of the tribe. The success of the Parisian was enormous.
-Never, in the history of the divine art, did a cook obtain such a
-glorious triumph! Valentine, with the modesty peculiar to men of real
-talent, stole away from the honours they wished to pay him, and hastened
-to conceal himself with his friend in the toldo of Trangoil-Lanec.
-
-On the morrow of this eventful day, at the moment when the young men
-were about to leave the quarters they inhabited in common, their host
-presented himself, followed by Curumilla. The two chiefs saluted them,
-sat down upon the beaten earth which served instead of flooring, and lit
-their pipes. Louis, already accustomed to the ceremonious habits of the
-Araucanos, and convinced that their friends had something of importance
-to say, reseated himself, as did also his foster brother, and awaited
-patiently the expected communication. When the chiefs had deliberately
-smoked out their pipes, and shaken the last ashes upon their nails,
-they replaced them in their belts, and, after exchanging a glance,
-Trangoil-Lanec began:--
-
-"Are my pale brothers still resolved to leave us?"
-
-"Yes," replied Louis.
-
-"Has Indian hospitality been wanting towards them?"
-
-"So far from that, chief," the young man said, warmly pressing his
-hands, "you have treated us like children of your own tribe."
-
-"Then why leave us?" Trangoil-Lanec asked; "we know not what we lose, do
-we ever know what we shall find?"
-
-"You are right, chief; but you know we came into this country for the
-purpose of visiting Antinahuel," Louis observed.
-
-"And does my golden-haired brother," for so he called Valentine,
-"absolutely wish to see him?"
-
-"Absolutely," replied the young man.
-
-The two chiefs exchanged a second glance.
-
-"He shall see him," replied Trangoil-Lanec; "Antinahuel is at his
-village."
-
-"Good!" said Valentine. "In that case we will set out tomorrow."
-
-"My brothers shall not go alone."
-
-"What do you mean by that?" Valentine asked.
-
-"The Indian soil is not safe for palefaces; my brother has saved my
-life, I shall follow him."
-
-"My brother has preserved me a friend," said Curumilla, who had till
-that time preserved silence; "I shall follow him."
-
-"You cannot think of such a thing, chief," Valentine remarked. "We are
-travellers whom chance knocks about at its pleasure; we know not what
-destiny has in reserve for us, nor whither it will conduct us, after
-having seen the man to whom we are sent."
-
-"What does it signify?" Curumilla replied; "where you go, we will go."
-
-The young men were greatly moved by such frank and noble devotion.
-
-"Oh!" Louis exclaimed, warmly, "it is impossible! your friends, your
-wives, and your children."
-
-"Our wives and children will be taken care of by our relations until our
-return."
-
-"My friends, my good friends," said Valentine, with emotion, "you are
-wrong; we cannot impose such a sacrifice upon you, we will not consent
-to it for your sake; I have already told you, we are ignorant of what
-awaits us, or what we shall do; allow us to go alone."
-
-"We will follow our pale brothers," Trangoil-Lanec said in a tone that
-admitted of no reply; "my brothers are not acquainted with the llanos;
-four men are a force in the desert--two men are dead."
-
-The Frenchmen contested the matter no longer, they accepted the offer
-of the Ulmens, and did so the more readily, because they plainly
-perceived what an immense advantage these men would be to them. They
-were accustomed to a life in the woods, they knew all its mysteries,
-and had fathomed all its depths. The chiefs took leave of their guests,
-to prepare for their departure, which was irrevocably fixed for the
-next day. At sunrise, a small party, composed of Louis, Valentine,
-Trangoil-Lanec, and Curumilla, all four mounted upon excellent horses of
-that mixed Andalusian and Arabian breed, which the Spaniards imported
-into America, and Cæsar, who trotted at their side in close file, left
-the toldería, escorted by all the members of the tribe shouting: "Come
-back again! come back again!--A good journey! a good journey!"
-
-After repeated farewells to these worthy people, the four travellers
-directed their course towards the toldería of the Black-Serpents, and
-soon disappeared in the numberless defiles formed by the quebradas.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV.
-
-THE SUN-TIGER.
-
-
-In the state of anarchy in which Chili was plunged at the period of our
-history, the parties were numerous, and everyone was manoeuvring in the
-shade, as skilfully as possible, in order to gain possession of power.
-General Bustamente, as we have stated, aimed at nothing less than the
-protectorate of a confederation similar to that of the United States,
-which, then but little understood, dazzled his ambition. He could not
-divine that those ancient outlaws, those sectarian fanatics exiled from
-Europe, those thriving merchants, had already begun to dream in America
-of a universal monarchy, a senseless Utopia, the application of which
-will one day cost them the loss of that so-called nationality of which
-they are so proud, and which, in reality, does not exist. Probably
-General Bustamente did not look so far into the future, or, if he did
-divine the tendencies of the Anglo-Americans, perhaps he dreamt of
-himself following also that ambitious aim, as soon as his power should
-repose upon solid bases.
-
-The Dark-Hearts, the only true patriots in this unhappy country, on
-their side, wished that the government should adopt measures of a
-rather democratic nature, but they had no intention to overturn it,
-for they were persuaded that a revolution could only be prejudicial
-to the general welfare of the nation. Beside General Bustamente and
-the society of the Dark-Hearts, a third party, more powerful, perhaps,
-than the two first, was at work silently, but active. This party was
-represented by Antinahuel, the toqui of the most important Uthal-Mapus
-of the Araucanian confederacy. We have said that from its geographical
-position, this little insignificant republic is placed like a wedge
-in the Chilian territory, which it separates sharply in two. This
-position gave Antinahuel immense power. All Araucanos are soldiers; at
-a signal from their chiefs, they take up arms, and are able, in a few
-days, to get together an army of experienced warriors. The republicans
-and the partizans of Bustamente were fully aware how much it was to
-their interest to attach the Araucanos to their party; with the aid
-of these ferocious soldiers victory would be certain. Already had the
-King of Darkness and Bustamente made proposals to Antinahuel,--of
-course, unknown to each other. These overtures the redoubtable toqui
-had appeared to listen to, and had feigned to reply to both, for the
-following reasons:--
-
-Antinahuel, in addition to the hereditary hatred which his ancestors
-had bequeathed to him against the white race, or perhaps on account of
-that hatred, had dreamt, since he had been elected supreme chief of an
-Uthal-Mapus, not only of the complete independence of his country, but
-moreover of re-conquering all the territory which the Spaniards had
-deprived it of; he hoped to drive them back to the other side of the
-Cordilleras of the Andes, and restore to his nation the splendour it had
-enjoyed before the arrival of the whites in Chili. And this patriotic
-project Antinahuel was just the man to carry through. Endowed with
-vast intelligence, at once daring and subtle, he allowed himself to be
-stopped by no obstacle, conquered by no reverse. Almost entirely brought
-up in Chili, he spoke Spanish perfectly, was thoroughly acquainted with
-the manners of his enemies, and by means of numberless spies spread
-everywhere, he was well informed with regard to the Chilian policy,
-and of the precarious situation of those whom he wished to conquer; he
-habitually took advantage of the dissensions which separated them, and
-feigned to lend an ear to the propositions made to him on all parts, in
-order, when the moment should arrive, to crush his enemies one after the
-other, and be left alone standing.
-
-He wanted a plausible pretext for keeping his Uthal-Mapus under arms,
-without inspiring the Chilians with mistrust: and this pretext General
-Bustamente and the Dark-Hearts supplied him with by their preparations.
-No one could be surprised, for this reason, at seeing, in a time
-of peace, the toqui gather together a numerous army on the Chilian
-frontiers, since, _in petto_, either party flattered itself that this
-army was destined to aid its cause. The conduct of the toqui was,
-therefore, most skilful; for he not only inspired mistrust in no one,
-but, on the contrary, gave hopes to all. The position was becoming
-serious; the hour for action could not long be delayed; and Antinahuel,
-whose measures were all prepared, awaited impatiently the moment for
-beginning the struggle.
-
-Things were at this point on the day when Doña Maria came to the
-toldería of the Black-Serpents, to visit the friend of her childhood. As
-soon as she awoke, the Linda gave orders for her departure.
-
-"Is my sister going to leave me already?" said Antinahuel, in a tone of
-mild reproach.
-
-"Yes," Doña Maria replied, "my brother knows that I must reach Valdivia
-as quickly as possible."
-
-The chief did not press her stay; a furtive smile played round his lips.
-After Doña Maria was on horseback, she turned towards the toqui.
-
-"Did not my brother say he should be soon in Valdivia?" she asked, in a
-perfectly well-played tone of indifference.
-
-"I shall be there as soon as my sister," he replied.
-
-"We shall see each other again, then?"
-
-"Perhaps we may."
-
-"We must!"
-
-This was said in a positive tone.
-
-"Very well," the chief replied, after a moment's pause; "my sister may
-depart--she shall see me again."
-
-"Till then, farewell, then," she said, and rode away at a quick pace.
-
-She soon disappeared in a cloud of dust, and the chief returned
-thoughtfully to his toldo.
-
-"Woman," he said, to his mother, "I am going to the great toldería of
-the palefaces."
-
-"I heard everything last night," the Indian woman replied, sorrowfully;
-"my son is wrong."
-
-"Wrong! how, or why?" he asked, passionately.
-
-"My son is a great chief; my sister deceives him, and makes him
-subservient to her vengeance."
-
-"Or rather my own," he replied, in a singular tone.
-
-"The young white girl has a right to the protection of my son."
-
-"I will protect the Pearl of the Andes."
-
-"My son forgets that she of whom he speaks saved his life."
-
-"Silence, woman!" he shouted, in a passionate tone.
-
-The Indian woman held her peace, but sighed deeply.
-
-The chief summoned his mosotones, and selecting from among them a score
-of warriors upon whom he could place entire reliance, ordered them to
-be ready to follow him within an hour. He then threw himself upon a
-bench, and sank into serious and agitating reflections. Suddenly a great
-noise was heard from without, and the chief sprang from his recumbent
-position, and went to the door of his toldo. He was surprised to see two
-strangers, mounted upon excellent horses, and preceded by an Indian,
-advancing towards him. These strangers were Valentine and Louis, who had
-left their friends a short distance from the toldería.
-
-Valentine, on leaving the village of the Puelches, had opened the letter
-addressed to himself, and placed in his hands by the major-domo, with a
-recommendation not to open it till the last minute. The young man was
-far from expecting the contents of this strange missive. After carefully
-reading it, he communicated it to his friend, saying--
-
-"Here, read this, Louis;--hem! who knows but that this singular letter
-is the first step to our fortune?"
-
-Like all men in love, Louis was sceptical upon every subject that did
-not bear some relation to his passion, and he returned the paper,
-shaking his head.
-
-"Politics burn the fingers," he said.
-
-"Yes, of those who don't know how to handle them," Valentine replied,
-with a shrug of the shoulders. "Now, it is my opinion that in this
-country, in which it has pleased fate to drop us, the most promising
-element of fortune we have at command happens to be those very politics
-which you so much disdain."
-
-"I must confess, my friend, that I care very little for these
-Dark-Hearts, of whom I know nothing, and who have done us the honour to
-affiliate us."
-
-"I do not share your opinion at all; I believe them to be resolute,
-intelligent men, and am persuaded they will, some day, gain the upper
-hand."
-
-"Much good may it do them! But of what consequence is that to us
-Frenchmen?"
-
-"More than you may think for; and I am determined, immediately after
-my interview with this said Antinahuel, to go directly to Valdivia, in
-order to be present at the meeting they appoint."
-
-"As you please," said the Count, carelessly. "As such is your advice,
-we will go thither; only I warn you that we shall risk our heads. If we
-lose them, it will be all very well; but I wash my hands of the matter
-beforehand."
-
-"I will be prudent, caramba! My head is the only thing I can call my
-own," Valentine replied, laughing, "and be assured I will not risk it
-for nothing. Besides, do you not partake of my curiosity to see how
-these people understand politics, and in what a fashion they set about
-conspiring?"
-
-"Well, that may become interesting; we travel partly for instruction;
-let us gain it, then, when it offers itself."
-
-"Bravo! that's the way in which I like to hear a man speak. Let us go
-and seek the redoubtable chief to whom we have a letter to deliver."
-
-Trangoil-Lanec and Curumilla were too prudent to venture to let
-Antinahuel know of the friendship which bound them to the two Frenchmen.
-Without suspecting the reasons which induced their friends to present
-themselves to the toqui, they foresaw that a day might come when it
-would be advantageous that their relations should be unknown. When they
-arrived, therefore, at a short distance from the toldería, the Indian
-warriors remained concealed in a secluded corner, keeping Cæsar with
-them, and allowing the two Frenchmen to continue their route to the
-village of the Black-Serpents, with whom, in addition, they had not
-lately been upon the best terms.
-
-The reception given to the Frenchmen was most friendly; for in time
-of peace the Araucanos are exceedingly hospitable. As soon as they
-perceived the strangers, they crowded round them; and as all the Indians
-speak Spanish with astonishing facility, Valentine had no difficulty in
-making himself understood. One warrior, more polite than the rest, took
-upon himself to be their guide through the village, in which, of course,
-they were at a loss. He led them to the toldo of the chief, in front of
-which were drawn up twenty horsemen, armed, and apparently waiting.
-
-"That is Antinahuel, the great toqui of the Inapire-Mapu," said the
-guide, emphatically, pointing with his finger at the chief, who at that
-moment came out of his toldo, attracted by the noise.
-
-"Thank you," said Valentine; and the two Frenchmen advanced rapidly
-towards the toqui, who, on his part, made a few steps to meet them.
-
-"Eh, eh!" Valentine said, in a subdued voice, to his companion; "here
-is a man with a good bearing, and with a rather intelligent air for an
-Indian."
-
-"Yes," Louis replied, in the same tone, "but he has a contracted brow,
-a sinister look, and compressed lips--he inspires me with very little
-confidence."
-
-"Bah!" said Valentine, "you are too difficult by half; did you expect to
-find an Indian an Antinous or an Apollo Belvedere?"
-
-"No; but I should like a little more open frankness in his look."
-
-"Well, well, we shall see."
-
-"I do not know why, but that man produces the effect of a reptile upon
-me; he inspires me with invincible repulsion."
-
-"Oh, nonsense! you are too impressionable. I am sure that the man, who,
-I cannot deny, has the air of a thorough rascal, is, at bottom, one of
-the best fellows in the world."
-
-"God grant I may be deceived! But I experience, on seeing him, a feeling
-for which I cannot account; it seems as if a kind of presentiment warned
-me to be on my guard against that man, and that he will be fatal to me."
-
-"All folly! What relations can you ever have with this individual? We
-are charged with a mission to him; who knows whether we may ever see him
-again? and then what interests can connect us with him hereafter?"
-
-"You are right; and I do not know what makes me think as I have
-said; besides, we shall soon know what we have to trust to on his
-account--here he is."
-
-The adventurers were, in fact, at that moment in front of the chief's
-toldo. Antinahuel stood before them; and, although appearing to be
-giving orders to his men, examined them very attentively. He stepped
-towards them quickly, and, bowing with perfect politeness, said, in a
-pleasant tone, and with a graceful gesture--
-
-"Strangers, you are welcome to my toldo. Your presence rejoices my
-heart. Condescend to pass over the threshold of this poor hut, which
-will be yours as long as you deign to remain among us."
-
-"Thanks for the kind words of welcome you address to us, powerful
-chief," Valentine replied. "The persons who sent us to you assured us of
-the kind reception we might expect."
-
-"If the strangers come on the part of my friends, that is a further
-reason why I should endeavour to make their abode here as agreeable as
-my humble means will allow me."
-
-The two Frenchmen bowed ceremoniously, and alighted from their horses.
-At a sign from the toqui, two peons led the horses away to a vast corral
-behind the toldo.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI.
-
-THE MATRICIDE.
-
-
-We have repeatedly said that in times of peace the Araucanos are
-exceedingly hospitable. This hospitality, which on the part of
-the warriors is cordial and simple, on that of the chiefs becomes
-extravagant. Antinahuel was far from being a rude Indian, attached
-though he was to the customs of his fathers; and although in his heart
-he hated not only the Spaniards, but indiscriminately all belonging to
-the white race, the half-civilized education he had received had given
-him ideas of comfort completely above Indian habits. Many of the richest
-Chilian farmers would have found it impossible to display greater luxury
-than he exhibited when his caprice or his interest led him to do so.
-On the present occasion, he was not sorry to show strangers that the
-Araucanos were not so barbarous as their arrogant neighbours wished it
-to be supposed, and that they could, when necessary, rival even them.
-At the first glance, Antinahuel had discovered that his guests were not
-Spaniards; but, with the circumspection which forms the foundation of
-the Indian character, he confined his observations to his own breast. It
-was with the kindest air and in the most winning tone of voice that he
-pressed them to enter his toldo.
-
-The Frenchmen followed him in, and with a gesture he requested them
-to be seated. Peons placed a profusion of cigars and cigarettes upon
-the table, near a tasty filigree brasero. In a few minutes other
-peons entered with the maté, which they respectfully presented to the
-chief and his guests. Then, without the silence being broken--for the
-Araucanian laws of hospitality require that no question should be
-addressed to strangers until they think proper to speak themselves--each
-sipped the herb of Paraguay, while smoking. This preliminary operation
-being gone through, Valentine rose.
-
-"I thank you, chief, in the name of myself and my friend, for your
-cordial hospitality."
-
-"Hospitality is a duty which every Araucano is jealous to fulfil!"
-
-"But," replied Valentine, "as I have been given to understand that the
-chief is about to set out on a journey, I do not wish to detain him."
-
-"I am at the orders of my guests; my journey is not so pressing as not
-to admit of being put off for a few hours."
-
-"I thank the chief for his courtesy, but I hope he will soon be at
-liberty."
-
-Antinahuel bowed.
-
-"A Spaniard has charged me with a letter for the chief."
-
-"Ah!" the toqui exclaimed, with a singular intonation, and fixing a
-piercing look upon the face of the young man.
-
-"Yes," the Frenchman continued; "and that letter I am about to have the
-honour of handing to you."
-
-And he put his hand to his breast, to take out the letter.
-
-"Stop!" said the chief, laying his hand upon his arm, as he turned
-towards his servants; adding, "leave the room." The three men were left
-alone.
-
-"Now you may give me the letter," he continued.
-
-The chief took it, looked carefully at the superscription, turned the
-paper in all directions in his hand, and then, with some hesitation,
-presented it to the young man.
-
-"Let my brother read it," he said; "the whites are more learned than we
-poor Indians: they know everything."
-
-Valentine gave his countenance the most silly expression possible.
-
-"I cannot read this," he said, with well-assumed embarrassment.
-
-"Does my brother then refuse to render me this service?" the chief
-pressed him.
-
-"I do not refuse you, chief; only I am prevented doing what you request
-by a very simple reason."
-
-"And what is that reason?"
-
-"It is that my companion and I are both Frenchmen."
-
-"Well, and what then?"
-
-"We speak a little Spanish, but we cannot read it."
-
-"Ah!" said the chief, in a tone of doubt; but, after walking about, and
-reflecting a minute, he added,--"Hem! that is possible."
-
-He then turned towards the two Frenchmen, who, on their part, were, in
-appearance, impassive and indifferent.
-
-"Let my brothers wait an instant," he said; "I know a man in my tribe
-who understands the marks which the whites make upon paper: I will go
-and order him to translate this letter."
-
-The young men bowed, and the chief left the apartment.
-
-"Why the devil did you refuse to read the letter?" Louis asked.
-
-"In good truth," Valentine replied, "I can scarcely tell you why; but
-what you said of the expression of this man's countenance, produced a
-certain effect upon me. He inspires me with no confidence, and I am not
-anxious to be the depository of secrets which he may some day reclaim in
-a disagreeable manner."
-
-"Yes, you are right! We may, some day, congratulate ourselves upon this
-circumspection. Hush! I hear footsteps."
-
-And the chief re-entered the room.
-
-"I know the contents of the letter," he said; "if my brothers see the
-man who charged them with it, they will inform him that I am setting out
-this very day for Valdivia."
-
-"We would, with pleasure, take charge of that message," replied
-Valentine; "but we do not know the person who gave us the letter, and it
-is more than probable we may never see him again."
-
-The chief darted at them a stolen and deeply suspicious glance.
-
-"Good! Will my brothers remain here, then?"
-
-"It would give us infinite pleasure to pass a few hours in the agreeable
-society of the chief, but with us time presses; with his permission, we
-will take our leave."
-
-"My brothers are perfectly free; my toldo is open for those who leave
-it, as well as for those who enter it."
-
-The young men rose to depart.
-
-"In what direction are my brothers going?"
-
-"We are bound for Concepción."
-
-"Let my brothers go in peace, then! If their course lay towards
-Valdivia, I would have offered to journey with them."
-
-"A thousand thanks, chief, for your kind offer; unfortunately we cannot
-profit by it, for our road lies in a completely opposite direction."
-
-The three men exchanged a few more words of courtesy, and left the
-toldo. The Frenchmen's horses had been brought round; they mounted, and
-after having saluted the chief once more, they set off. As soon as they
-were out of the village, Louis, turning to Valentine, said,--
-
-"We have not an instant to lose. If we wish to reach Valdivia before
-that man, we must make all speed. Who knows whether Don Tadeo may not be
-awaiting our arrival impatiently?"
-
-They soon rejoined their friends, who looked for them anxiously, and all
-four set off at full speed in the direction of Valdivia, without being
-able to explain to themselves why they used such diligence. Antinahuel
-accompanied his guests a few paces out of his toldo. When he had taken
-leave of them, he followed them with his eyes as far as he could see
-them, and when they disappeared at the extremity of the village, he
-returned thoughtfully and slowly to his toldo, saying to himself,--
-
-"It is evident to me that these men are deceiving me; their refusal to
-read the letter was nothing but a pretext. What can be their object? Can
-they be enemies? I will watch them!"
-
-When he arrived in front of his toldo, he found his mosotones mounted,
-and awaiting his orders.
-
-"I must set out at once," he said; "I shall learn all yonder, and,
-perhaps," he added, in a voice so low that he could hardly hear it
-himself, "perhaps I shall find _her_ again. If Doña Maria breaks her
-promise, and does not give her up to me, woe, woe be to her!"
-
-He raised his head, and saw his mother standing before him. "What do you
-want, woman?" he asked, harshly; "this is not your place!"
-
-"My place is near you when you are suffering, my son," she mildly
-replied.
-
-"I suffering! You are mad, mother! age has turned your brain! Go back
-into the toldo, and, during my absence, keep a good watch over all that
-belongs to me."
-
-"Are you, then, really going, my son?"
-
-"This moment," he said, and sprang into his saddle.
-
-"Where are you going?" she asked, and seized his horse's bridle.
-
-"What is that to you?" he replied, with an ugly glance.
-
-"Beware! my son; you are entering on a bad course. Guérubu, the spirit
-of evil, is master of your heart."
-
-"I am the best and sole judge of my actions."
-
-"You shall not go!" she exclaimed, as she placed herself resolutely in
-front of his horse.
-
-The Indians collected round the speakers looked on with mute terror at
-this scene; they were too well acquainted with the violent and imperious
-character of Antinahuel not to dread something fatal, if his mother
-persisted in endeavouring to prevent his departure.
-
-The brows of the chief lowered--his eyes gleamed like lightning--and it
-was not without a great effort that he mastered the passion boiling in
-his breast.
-
-"I will go!" he said, in a loud voice, and trembling with rage; "I will
-go, if I trample you beneath my horse's hoofs!"
-
-The woman clung convulsively to the saddle, and looked her son in the
-face.
-
-"Do so," she cried; "for, by the soul of your father, who now hunts in
-the blessed prairies with Pillian, I swear I will not stir, even if you
-pass over my body!"
-
-The face of the Indian became horribly contracted; he cast around a
-glance which made the hearts of the bravest tremble with fear.
-
-"Woman! woman!" he shouted, grinding his teeth with rage; "get out of my
-way, or I shall crush you like a reed!"
-
-"I will not stir, I tell you!" she repeated, with wild energy.
-
-"Take care! take care!" he said again; "I shall forget you are my
-mother!"
-
-"I will not stir!"
-
-A nervous tremor shook the limbs of the chief, who had now attained the
-highest paroxysm of fury.
-
-"If you will have it so," he cried, in a husky, but loud voice, "your
-blood be upon your own head!"
-
-And he dug the spurs into the sides of his horse, which plunged with
-pain, and then sprung forward like an arrow, dragging along the poor
-woman, whose body was soon but one huge wound. A cry of horror burst
-from the quivering lips of the terrified Indians. After a few minutes
-of this senseless course, during which she had left fragments of her
-flesh on every sharp point of the road, the strength of the Indian woman
-abandoned her; she left her hold of the bridle, and sank dying.
-
-"Oh!" she said, in a faint voice, and following, with a look dimmed by
-agony, her son, as he was borne away like a whirlwind, "my unhappy son!
-my unhappy----"
-
-She raised her eyes towards heaven, clasped her mangled hands, as if to
-offer up a last prayer, and fell back.
-
-She died pitying the matricide, and pardoning him. The women of the
-tribe took up the body respectfully, and carried it, weeping, into the
-toldo. At the sight of the corpse, an old Indian shook his head several
-times, murmuring in a prophetic tone,--
-
-"Antinahuel has killed his mother! Pillian will avenge her!"
-
-And all bowed down their heads sorrowfully: this atrocious crime made
-them dread horrible misfortunes in the future.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII.
-
-THE JUSTICE OF THE DARK-HEARTS.
-
-
-Don Tadeo and his friend Don Gregorio were introduced, after exchanging
-several passwords, into a subterraneous apartment, the entrance to which
-was perfectly concealed in the wall. The door closed immediately after
-them; the two men turned round sharply, but all signs of an opening
-had disappeared. Without taking further notice of this circumstance,
-which they no doubt had expected, they cast an inquiring glance around
-them, in order to obtain some knowledge of the locality. The place
-was admirably chosen for a meeting of conspirators. It was an immense
-apartment, which must have served for a long time as a cellar, as was
-made evident by the essentially alcoholic emanations still floating in
-the air; the walls were low and thick, and of a dirty red colour; a
-lamp with three jets, hanging from the roof, far from dispersing the
-darkness, seemed only to render it in a manner visible. In a recess
-stood a table, behind which a man in a mask was seated, near to two
-empty seats. Men enveloped in cloaks, and all wearing black velvet
-masks, were gliding about in the darkness, silent as phantoms.
-
-Don Tadeo and his friend exchanged a glance, and without speaking a
-word, proceeded to take their places in the empty seats. As soon as
-they were seated, a change came over the meeting: the low whispering
-which had been heard till that moment ceased all at once, as if by
-enchantment. All the conspirators gathered in a single group in front of
-the table, and with arms crossed upon their chests, waited earnestly.
-The man who before the arrival of Don Tadeo had appeared to preside over
-the meeting arose, and casting round a confident glance on the attentive
-crowd, said--
-
-"On this day the seventy-two _ventas_ of the Dark-Hearts, spread over
-the territories of the republic, are assembled in council. In all of
-them the taking up of arms, of which we, the _venta_ of Valdivia, will
-instantly give the signal, will be decreed. Everywhere men faithful to
-the good cause, true lovers of liberty, are preparing to commence the
-struggle with Bustamente. Will you all, comrades, who are here present,
-when the hour strikes, descend frankly and boldly into the arena? Will
-you sacrifice, without reserve, your family, your fortune, and even your
-life, if necessary, for the public good?"
-
-He ceased, and a funereal silence prevailed in the assembly.
-
-"Answer!" he resumed; "what will you do?"
-
-"We will die!" the band of conspirators murmured, like a sinister and
-terrible echo.
-
-"That is well, my brothers," Don Tadeo said, rising suddenly. "I
-expected no less from you, and I thank you. I have long known you all,
-and felt that I could depend upon you--I, whom none of you know. These
-masks which conceal you one from another, are but transparent gauze
-for the chief of the Dark-Hearts--and I am the King of Darkness! I
-have sworn that you shall live as free men, or that I will die! Before
-twenty-four hours have passed away, you will hear the signal you have
-so long waited for, and then will commence that terrible struggle which
-can only end in the death of the tyrant; all the provinces, all the
-cities, all the towns will rise _en masse_ at the same instant; courage,
-then! You have only a few hours longer to suffer. The war of ambushes,
-surprises, of subterranean treacheries is ended; war, frank, loyal,
-open, in the face of the sun, is about to begin; let us show ourselves
-what we always have been, firm in our faith, and ready to die for our
-opinions! Let the chiefs of sections draw near."
-
-Ten men left the ranks, and placed themselves silently ten paces from
-the table.
-
-"Let the corporal of chiefs of sections answer for all," said Don Tadeo.
-
-"I am the corporal," said one of the masked men; "the orders expedited
-from the Quinta Verde have been executed; all the sections are warned;
-they are all ready to rise at the first signal; each will take
-possession of the posts that are assigned it."
-
-"So far well! How many men have you at your disposal?"
-
-"Seven thousand three hundred and seventy-seven."
-
-"Can you depend upon them all?"
-
-"No."
-
-"How many are there lukewarm or irresolute?"
-
-"Four thousand."
-
-"How many firm and convinced?"
-
-"Nearly three thousand; but for these I will be answerable."
-
-"That is well! we have even more than we want; the brave will attract
-others. Return to your places."
-
-The chiefs of sections drew back,
-
-"Now," Don Tadeo continued, "before we separate, I have to call down
-your justice upon one of our brothers, who, having entered deeply into
-our secrets, has been false to the society several times for a little
-gold; I have the proofs in my hands. The circumstances are of the utmost
-importance; one word--a single word--may ruin our cause and us! Say,
-what chastisement does this man deserve?"
-
-"Death!" the conspirators responded, coolly, but simultaneously.
-
-"I know this man," Don Tadeo continued; "let him come forth from the
-ranks, and not oblige me to tear off his mask, and hurl his name in his
-face."
-
-No one stirred.
-
-"This man is here--I can see him; for the last time, let him step forth,
-and not crown his baseness by seeking to avoid the punishment he merits."
-
-The conspirators cast suspicious glances at each other; the assembly
-seemed moved by an extreme anxiety; the man, however, upon whom the
-King of Darkness called, persisted in remaining confounded amongst his
-companions.
-
-Don Tadeo waited for an instant, but finding that the man whom he
-summoned imagined he should remain unknown, and not be discovered
-beneath his mask, he made a signal, and Don Gregorio rose and advanced
-towards the group of conspirators, which opened at his approach, and
-laid his hand roughly on the shoulder of a man who had instinctively
-retreated before him, until the wall forced him to stop.
-
-"Come with me, Don Pedro," he said, and he dragged rather than led him
-to the table, behind which stood Don Tadeo, calm and implacable.
-
-The guilty spy was seized with a convulsive trembling, his teeth
-chattered, and he fell upon his knees, crying with terror:
-
-"Mercy, my lord, mercy!"
-
-Don Gregorio tore off his mask, and revealed the face of the spy, whose
-features, horribly contracted by fear, and of an ashy paleness, were
-really hideous.
-
-"Don Pedro," Don Tadeo said, in a stern voice, "you have several times
-sought to sell your brothers of the society; it was you who caused
-the death of the ten patriots shot upon the Place of Santiago; it was
-you who betrayed the secret of the Quinta Verde to the soldiers of
-Bustamente; this very day, even, scarcely two hours ago, you held a long
-conversation with General Bustamente, in which you agreed to deliver up
-to him tomorrow the principal chiefs of the Dark-Hearts: is that true?"
-
-The miserable wretch had not a word to say in his defence; confounded,
-overwhelmed by the irresistible proofs accumulated against him, he hung
-down his head in utter abandonment.
-
-"Is this true?" Don Tadeo reiterated.
-
-"It is true," he murmured, in a scarcely audible voice.
-
-"You acknowledge yourself guilty?"
-
-"Yes," he said, with a heart-stifling sob; "but grant me life, noble
-seigneur, and I swear----"
-
-"Silence!"
-
-The spy was struck with mute despair.
-
-"You have heard, companions and friends, how this man confesses his own
-crimes; for the last time, what punishment does he deserve for having
-sold his brothers?"
-
-"Death!" replied the Dark-Hearts, without hesitation.
-
-"In the name of the Dark-Hearts, of whom I am king, I condemn you,
-Don Pedro Saldillo, to death, for treachery and felony towards your
-brethren. You have five minutes to make your peace with Heaven," Don
-Tadeo said, sternly.
-
-He placed his watch upon the table, and drawing a pistol from his belt,
-cocked it deliberately. The sharp noise of the hammer made the condemned
-man shudder with fear. A profound silence prevailed in the vault; the
-hearts of these implacable men might be heard beating in their breasts.
-The spy cast around wild, despairing glances, but beheld nothing but
-angry eyes gleaming upon him through hideous masks. Over the vault, in
-the chingana, they continued dancing, and faint puffs of _sambacuejas_
-penetrated, at intervals, mixed with uproarious bursts of laughter, even
-to the awful scene beneath. The contrast of this riotous mirth with
-the terrible act of justice which was being carried out, had something
-appalling in it.
-
-"The five minutes are past," said Don Tadeo, in a firm voice.
-
-"A few minutes more! a few minutes, my lord!" the spy implored, wringing
-his hands in despair. "I am not prepared; you cannot kill me thus! In
-the name of all you hold most dear, let me live!"
-
-Without appearing to hear him, Don Tadeo lifted his pistol, and the
-miserable culprit rolled upon the ground, with his brains scattered
-around him.
-
-"Oh!" he cried, as the pistol was aimed, "be accursed, ye assassins!"
-His death prevented the utterance of more.
-
-The conspirators stood cold, impassive spectators of the scene. As soon
-as the stern act of justice was completed, at a signal from the chief,
-several men opened a trap in the floor which covered a hole half filled
-with quick lime; the body was thrown into it, and the trap closed again.
-
-"Justice has been done, brothers," said Don Tadeo, solemnly; "go in
-peace, the King of Darkness watches over you."
-
-The conspirators bowed respectfully, and disappeared one after the
-other, without uttering a word. At the end of a quarter of an hour no
-one remained in the vault but Don Tadeo and Don Gregorio.
-
-"Oh!" said Don Tadeo, "Shall we always have thus to combat treachery?"
-
-"Courage! my friend; you have yourself said, in a few hours war will
-commence in the face of day."
-
-"God grant I may not be deceived! This contest in the dark makes
-frightful demands upon the mind; my heart begins to fail me!"
-
-The two conspirators regained the chingana, in which the dancing,
-laughing, and drinking were going on with undiminished spirit; they
-passed through so as not to be observed, and came out into the street.
-They had hardly walked fifty steps when they were joined by a man, who,
-to their great surprise, proved to be Valentine Guillois.
-
-"God be praised for bringing you here so opportunely!" said Don Tadeo.
-
-"I hope I am punctual," the Parisian remarked, with a gay laugh.
-
-Don Tadeo pressed his hand warmly, and drew him towards his residence,
-where our three personages soon arrived.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII.
-
-THE TREATY OF PEACE.
-
-
-General Bustamente had come to Valdivia under the pretence of himself
-renewing the treaties which existed between the republic of Chili
-and the Araucanian Confederation. This pretext was excellent in the
-sense that it permitted him to concentrate a considerable force in the
-provinces, and gave him, besides, a plausible reason for receiving the
-most powerful Ulmens of the Indians, who would not fail to come to the
-meeting, accompanied by a great number of mosotones. Every time a new
-president is elected in Chili, the minister at war renews the treaties
-in his name. General Bustamente had, up to this moment, neglected to do
-so: he had good reasons for that.--
-
-This ceremony, in which a great retinue is purposely displayed,
-generally takes place in a vast plain situated upon the Araucanian
-territories, and not at a great distance from Valdivia. By a curious
-coincidence, the pretext of the General suited equally well the
-interests of the three factions which, at this period, divided this
-unhappy country. The Dark-Hearts had skilfully profited by it to prepare
-the resistance they meditated, and Antinahuel, feigning to wish to
-pay the greatest honours to the war minister of the President of the
-republic, had collected a real army of his best warriors in the environs
-of the place chosen for the solemnity.
-
-Such was the state of things, and of the various parties with regard to
-each other, at the time we resume our narrative. The enemies were about
-to come face to face; it was evident that each, being well prepared,
-would endeavour to take advantage of the opportunity, and that a shock
-was imminent; but how would it be brought about? Who would set fire to
-the mine, and cause all those passions, those grudges, those ambitions,
-so long restrained, to explode? Nobody could say!
-
-The plain on which the ceremony was to take place was vast, covered
-with high grass, and belted by mountains verdant with lofty trees. The
-plain, crossed by woods and lines of apple trees, loaded with fruit,
-was divided in two by a meandering river, which flowed gently along,
-balancing on its silver waters numerous troops of black-headed swans;
-here and there, through the breaks of the thickets, might be seen the
-pointed nose of a vicuna, which, with ear erect, and eye on the watch,
-seemed to sniff the breeze, and all at once bounded away into the
-distance.
-
-The sun was rising majestically in the horizon when a measured noise
-of tinkling bells proceeded from a wood of apple trees, and a troop of
-half a score mules, led by the mother mare, and driven by an arriero,
-debouched into the plain. These mules carried diverse objects for an
-encampment, provisions, and even some bales of clothes and linen. At
-twenty paces behind the mules, came a rather numerous troop of horsemen.
-When they arrived at the banks of the little river we have spoken of,
-the arriero stopped his mules, and the party dismounted. In an instant
-the bales were unpacked and arranged with care, so as to form a perfect
-circle, in the centre of which a fire was lighted. Then a tent was
-erected in this temporary camp, and the horses and mules were hobbled.
-
-This party, whom, no doubt, our readers have already recognized, were
-Don Tadeo, his friends the Frenchmen, the Indian Ulmens, with Doña
-Rosario, and three servants. By a strange coincidence, at the same time
-that they were arranging their camp, another party nearly as numerous
-established theirs on the opposite bank of the river, exactly in face
-of them. The leader of this was Doña Maria. As frequently happens, it
-had pleased chance to bring into propinquity irreconcilable enemies, who
-were only separated from each other by a distance of fifty yards at the
-most. But was this entirely owing to chance?
-
-Don Tadeo had no suspicion of this dangerous proximity, or he would
-probably have done everything in his power to avoid it. He had cast a
-vacant glance at the caravan opposite to him, without taking any further
-heed of it, being absorbed in thoughts of the highest importance. Doña
-Maria, on the contrary, knew perfectly well, what she was about, and
-had placed herself where she was with the skill of an able tactician.
-In the mean time, as the morning advanced, the number of travellers
-kept increasing on the plain; by nine o'clock it was literally covered
-with tents; a free space only being reserved around an old half ruined
-chapel, in which mass was to be celebrated before the commencement of
-the ceremony.
-
-The Puelches, who had descended from their mountains in great numbers,
-had passed the night in making joyous libations around their campfires;
-many of them were sleeping in a state of complete intoxication;
-nevertheless, as soon as the arrival of the minister of the Chilian
-republic was announced, they all sprang up tumultuously, and began to
-dance, and utter cries of joy. On one side arrived General Bustamente
-at a canter, surrounded by a brilliant staff, all glittering with gold
-lace, and followed by a numerous troop of lancers; whilst on the other
-side came, at a gallop, the four Araucano Toquis, followed by the
-principal Ulmens of their nation, and a great number of mosotones.
-
-These two troops, which hastened to meet each other amidst the _vivas_
-and cries of joy of the crowd, raised immense clouds of dust, in which
-they disappeared. The Araucanos in particular, who are excellent
-jinetes, a term used in this country to designate good horsemen,
-indulged in equestrian eccentricities, of which the so-much vaunted Arab
-fantasias can give but a faint idea; for they are nothing in comparison
-with the incredible feats performed by these men, who seem born to
-manage a horse. The Chilians had a much more serious bearing, from
-which they would gladly have freed themselves, if human respect had not
-restrained them.
-
-As soon as the two troops met, the chiefs dismounted and ranged
-themselves, the Ulmens, armed with their long, silver-headed canes,
-behind Antinahuel, and the three other Toquis and the Chilians behind
-General Bustamente. It was the first time the Tiger-Sun and the General
-had met. Each of these two men, therefore, equally good politicians,
-equally false and equally ambitious, and who, at the first glance,
-understood one another, contemplated his rival with intense earnestness.
-
-After exchanging a few salutes, impressed with a rather suspicious
-cordiality, the two bands retrograded from each other a few paces, to
-afford room for the commissary-general and four Capitanes de Amigos.
-These officers are what they call in the United States Indian agents;
-they serve as interpreters and agents to the Araucanos, for trade, and
-all that concerns their transactions with the Chilians. It must be
-observed that all these Indians speak Spanish perfectly well; but they
-never will use it in appointed meetings. These Capitanes de Amigos, who,
-for the most part, are half-breeds, are much beloved and respected.
-They arrived, leading a score of mules loaded with presents, destined
-by the President of the Republic for the principal Ulmens. For, be it
-noted, when Indians treat with Christians, they consider nothing settled
-till they have received presents: it is for them a proof that the other
-party does not wish to deceive them; they constitute an earnest which
-they require to bind the bargain, and prove that they are treated in
-good faith. The Chilians, who, unfortunately for them, had long been
-accustomed to Araucanian habits, had taken good care not to forget this
-important condition.
-
-Whilst the commissary-general was distributing the presents, General
-Bustamente repaired to the chapel, where a priest, who had come
-purposely from Valdivia, celebrated mass. After mass, the speeches
-commenced, as soon as the minister of the republic and the four Toquis
-of the Uthal-Mapus had embraced. These speeches, which were very long,
-resulted in mutual assurances that they were satisfied with the peace
-which reigned between the two peoples, and that they would do all in
-their power to maintain it as long as possible. We think it our duty to
-beg our readers to observe, in justice to the two speakers, that one was
-not more sincere than the other, and that they did not mean one word
-they said, since in their hearts they determined to break their promises
-as soon as possible. They appeared, however, very well satisfied with
-the comedy they were playing, and they terminated it by a final embrace,
-more close and warm than the first, but equally false.
-
-"Now," said the General, "if my brothers, the great chiefs, will please
-to follow me, we will plant the cross."
-
-"No," Antinahuel replied, with a honied smile, "the cross must not be
-planted in front of the stone toldo."
-
-"Why not?" the General asked, with astonishment.
-
-"Because," the Indian replied, in a tone of decision, "the words we
-have exchanged must remain buried on the spot where they have been
-pronounced."
-
-"That is just!" said the General, bowing his head in sign of assent. "It
-shall be done as my brother desires."
-
-Antinahuel smiled proudly.
-
-"Have I spoken well, powerful men?" he asked, looking at the Ulmens.
-
-"Our father, the Toqui of the Inapire-Mapu, has spoken well," the Ulmens
-replied.
-
-The Indian peons then went to fetch from the chapel, upon the floor of
-which it lay, a cross of at least thirty feet in height, which they
-brought to the spot where the conferences had been held. All the chiefs
-and the Chilian officers ranged themselves around it; the troops forming
-a vast circle at a respectful distance. After the pause of an instant,
-of which the priest took advantage to bless the cross with that off-hand
-carelessness which distinguishes the Spanish clergy in America, it was
-planted in the ground. At the moment it was about to gain its upright
-position, Antinahuel interposed.
-
-"Stop!" he said to the Indians armed with spades; and turning towards
-the General, "Peace is well assured between us, is it not?" he asked.
-
-"Yes, certainly," the General replied.
-
-"All our words are buried under this cross?"
-
-"All of them."
-
-"Cover them with earth then," he said to the peons, "that they may not
-escape, and that war may not be rekindled between us."
-
-"When this ceremony was accomplished, Antinahuel caused a young lamb to
-be brought, which the machi slaughtered near the cross. All the Indian
-chiefs bathed their hands in the still warm blood of the quivering
-animal, and daubed the cross with hieroglyphic signs, destined to keep
-away Guécubu, the genius of evil, and prevent the words from escaping
-from the spot in which they were buried. In conclusion, the Araucans
-and the Chilians discharged their firearms in the air, and the ceremony
-was ended. General Bustamente then coming up to the Toqui of the
-Inapire-Mapu, passed his arm through the chiefs in a friendly manner,
-saying in an ingratiating tone--
-
-"Will not my brother, Antinahuel, come for an instant in my tent, to
-taste a glass of aguardiente de Pisco and take maté?--he would render
-his friend happy."
-
-"Why should I not?" the chief replied, smiling, and in the most
-good-humoured tone.
-
-"My brother will accompany me!"
-
-"Lead on, then."
-
-Both moved off, chatting upon indifferent subjects, directing their
-course towards the General's tent, which had been pitched within gunshot
-of the place where the ceremony had taken place. The General had given
-his orders beforehand, so that everything was prepared to receive the
-guest he brought with him magnificently, as for the success of his
-projects he had so great an interest in pleasing him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIX.
-
-THE ABDUCTION.
-
-
-Whilst the ceremony we have described was being accomplished, a terrible
-event was passing not far from it, on the banks of the river, in the
-camp of Don Tadeo de Leon. The three parties which divided Chili, and
-aimed at governing it, had, as if of one accord, chosen the day for the
-renewal of the treaty to throw off the mask and give their partisans the
-signal of revolt. Don Tadeo, who feared everything from Doña Maria and
-the General's spies, had consented, but with regret, that Rosario should
-accompany him to the plain, to be present at the ceremony; he had taken
-her from the convent, and brought the young girl with him, inwardly
-pleased that she would thus not be in Valdivia during the serious events
-that were there preparing.
-
-Doña Rosario, to tell the truth, had only consulted her love in the
-request she had made of her guardian; the desire of seeing unobserved,
-for a few hours, the object of her affections, had dictated it. Don
-Tadeo, who could not on any account be present at the ceremony, being
-obliged to conceal himself, took the two young Frenchmen aside as soon
-as his little encampment was arranged. It was then about seven o'clock
-in the morning, and the crowd began to flock to the plain. The King of
-Darkness cast a prudent and searching look around, but, reassured by the
-complete solitude that prevailed, he at length decided upon explaining
-to the young men, who were astonished at this strange proceeding, all
-that appeared so unusual and inconsistent in his conduct.
-
-"Caballeros," he said, "since I have had the honour of knowing you, I
-have concealed nothing from you, and you know all my secrets; this day
-must decide the question of life or death to which, from my boyhood,
-I have devoted all the energies of my mind. I must leave this spot
-instantly, and return to Valdivia. It is in that city that the first
-blow will be struck, within a few hours, against the tyrant, and the
-struggle I expect will be terrible. I am not willing to expose the
-young lady whom you know, and whose life you have already saved, to the
-chances of it. I confide the care of her to one of you, the other will
-accompany me to the city. In the event of any fatal mischance happening
-to me, I will place in his hands a paper, which will inform you both of
-my intentions, and of what I wish you to do with that poor child, who is
-all I hold dear on earth, and whom I leave with the greatest pain. Which
-of you, gentlemen, will take charge of Doña Rosario during my absence?"
-
-"Be at ease, Don Tadeo, go where your duty calls you," Louis answered,
-in a solemn but agitated tone; "I swear that while I live no danger,
-either near or distant, shall assail her; to reach her it must pass over
-my dead body."
-
-"Receive my warmest thanks, Don Louis," the Dark-Heart replied, somewhat
-surprised, and yet affected by the manner of the Frenchman; "I place
-implicit faith in your words; I know you will keep your vow at all
-risks; besides, in a few hours I hope I shall be back, and here she can
-have nothing to dread."
-
-"I will watch over her," the young man said, quietly.
-
-"Once again I thank you."
-
-Don Tadeo left the young men, and returned to the tent where Doña
-Rosario, reclining in a hammock, was gently swinging herself, and
-indulging in perhaps pleasing reveries. On seeing her guardian, she
-sprang up eagerly.
-
-"Do not disturb yourself, my child," said Don Tadeo, putting her back
-with a gentle hand, "I have but two words to say to you."
-
-"I am always attentive to you, my kind friend."
-
-"I have come to bid you farewell."
-
-"Farewell, Don Tadeo!" she exclaimed, in great terror.
-
-"Oh! comfort yourself, timid darling! only for a few hours."
-
-"Ah! that is all!" she said, with a smile of satisfaction.
-
-"Certainly, all! There is in this neighbourhood an exceedingly curious
-grotto. I was foolish enough to let some words slip concerning it this
-morning before Don Valentine, and that demon of a Frenchman," he added,
-with a smile, "insists upon my showing it to him; so that, in order to
-get rid of his importunities, I have been obliged to comply."
-
-"You have done quite right," she said, eagerly; "we are under great
-obligations to those two French caballeros, and what he asked is such a
-trifle!"
-
-"That it would have been uncourteous on my part to refuse him," Don
-Tadeo interrupted, "therefore I have not. We shall set off directly,
-in order to be the sooner back. Be as cheerful as you can during our
-absence, dear child."
-
-"I will endeavour," she said, absently.
-
-"Besides, I shall leave Don Louis to take care of you; you can chat
-together, and the time will quickly pass away."
-
-The young girl blushed as she stammered--"Come back soon, dear friend."
-
-"Time to go and return, that is all; adieu, then, darling!"
-
-Don Tadeo left the tent, and rejoined the young men.
-
-"Adieu, Don Louis!" he said. "Are you ready, Don Valentine?"
-
-"Ready!" the Frenchman replied, laughing; "Caramba! I should be in
-despair at losing such an opportunity of judging whether you understand
-getting up revolutions as well as we Frenchmen do."
-
-"Oh! We are but young at the work yet," Don Tadeo remarked; "and yet we
-begin to have some idea of the matter, I assure you."
-
-"Good-bye, Louis, for a time," said Valentine, pressing his friend's
-hand; and stooping towards his ear, he added--"Be thankful to your
-stars, do you not see that Heaven protects your love?" The young man
-only replied by shaking his head despondingly, and sighing deeply. A
-peon had brought the horses for the two Chilians and the Frenchman,
-and they were soon in the saddle. They set off at a quick pace, and
-were quickly lost in the high grass and the windings of the road. Louis
-returned pensively to the camp, where he found Doña Rosario alone in her
-tent; the two Indian chiefs, attracted by curiosity, having gone in the
-direction of the chapel, where, mingled with the crowd, they might be
-present at the ceremony. The arrieros and the peons had not been long in
-following their example.
-
-The young girl was seated on a heap of dyed sheepskins in front of
-the tent, dreamily looking at, but without seeing, the clouds which
-were driven across the heavens by a strong breeze. Doña Rosario was
-a charming girl of sixteen, slender, fragile, and delicate, small in
-person, whose least gestures and least movements possessed inexpressible
-attractions. Of a rare kind of beauty in America, she was fair; her
-long silky hair was of the colour of ripe golden corn; her blue eyes,
-in which were reflected the azure of the heavens, had that melancholy,
-dreamy expression which we attribute only to angels, and young girls who
-are beginning to love; her nose, with its pinky nostrils, was inclined
-to be aquiline; while her mouth, rather serious, with rosy lips set
-off by teeth of dazzling whiteness, and her skin of pearl-like purity,
-altogether made her a charming creature.
-
-The noise of the approaching young man's steps roused her from her
-reverie. She turned her head in the direction, and looked at him with
-inexpressible sadness, although a faint smile played upon her lips.
-
-"It is I," said the Count, in a low, inarticulate voice, bowing
-respectfully.
-
-"I knew of your coming," she replied, in a sweetly-toned voice. "Oh! why
-did you return to me at all?"
-
-"Be not angry with me for drawing near you once more. I endeavoured to
-obey you; I left the spot you resided in, without, alas! even the hope
-of seeing you again; but destiny has decided otherwise."
-
-She gave him a long and eloquent look.
-
-"Unfortunately," he continued, with a melancholy smile, "you are
-condemned for some hours to endure my presence."
-
-"I must resign myself to it," she said, extending her hand to him
-cordially.
-
-The young man imprinted a burning kiss upon the white, soft hand he held.
-
-"And so we are left alone!" she said gaily, but withdrawing her hand.
-
-"Good heavens! yes, nearly so," he replied, falling in with her humour.
-"The Indian chiefs and the peons, overcome by curiosity, have joined the
-crowds, and kindly procured us a _tête-à-tête_."
-
-"In the midst of ten thousand people!" she said, smiling.
-
-"That is all the better; everyone is engaged with his own affairs,
-without troubling himself about those of others; and we can speak to
-each other without the fear of being interrupted by importunate persons."
-
-"True," she said, thoughtfully; "it is frequently amidst a crowd that we
-find the greatest solitude."
-
-"Does not the heart possess that great faculty of being able to isolate
-itself when it pleases--to fold itself, as it were, within itself?"
-
-"And is not that faculty often a misfortune?"
-
-"Perhaps it is," he replied, with a sigh.
-
-"But how comes it?" she said, with a half-smiling air, in order to
-change the conversation, which was becoming a little too serious.
-"Pardon my giddy impertinence! How comes it, I say, that you, of whom I
-sometimes caught a glimpse at Paris, during my short sojourn there, and
-who then enjoyed, if I was not mistaken, a brilliant position, should
-meet me here so far from your country?"
-
-"Alas! madam, my history is that of many young men, and may be summed up
-in two words--weakness and ignorance."
-
-"That is but too true; that is the history of nearly all the world, in
-Europe as well as in America."
-
-At this moment a great noise reached them from the camp. Doña Rosario
-and the Count were placed so as not to be able to see what was passing
-in the plain.
-
-"What is that noise?" she asked.
-
-"Probably the tumult of the festival which reaches us: should you like
-to be present at this ceremony?"
-
-"To what purpose? Those cries and that tumult terrify me."
-
-"And yet, I thought it was you who asked Don Tadeo to see this."
-
-"A silly girl's caprice," she said, "which passed away as soon as
-conceived."
-
-"But was it not Don Tadeo's intention to----"
-
-"Who can tell Don Tadeo's intention?" she interrupted, with a sigh.
-
-"He appears to love you tenderly?" Louis hazarded, timidly.
-
-"Sometimes I am on the point of believing so; he pays me the most
-delicate attentions, shews me the tenderest care; then at other times he
-appears to endure me with, pain--he repulses me--my caresses annoy him."
-
-"Singular conduct!" the Count observed; "this gentleman is your
-relation, there can be no doubt."
-
-"I do not know," she replied ingenuously; "when alone and pensive, my
-thoughts stray back to my early years. I have some vague remembrance of
-a young and handsome woman, whose black eyes smiled upon me constantly,
-and whose rosy lips lavished affectionate kisses upon me; and then, all
-at once, a complete darkness comes over my brain, and memory entirely
-fails me. As far back as I can recollect, I find nobody but Don Tadeo
-watching over me, everywhere and always, as a father would do over his
-daughter."
-
-"Perhaps, then," said the Count, "he is your father."
-
-"Listen. One day, after a long and dangerous illness which I had just
-gone through, and in which Don Tadeo had night and day watched over
-my pillow for more than a month, happy at seeing me restored to life,
-for he had been fearful he should lose me, he smiled upon me tenderly,
-kissed my brow and my hands, and appeared to experience the most
-lively joy. 'Oh!' I said, as a sudden thought rushed across my mind;
-'oh! you are my father! None but a father could devote himself with
-such abnegation for his child!' and throwing my arms round his neck,
-I concealed my tear-laden face on his chest. Don Tadeo arose, his
-countenance was lividly pale, his features were frightfully contracted;
-he repulsed me roughly, and strode hastily about the chamber. I Your
-father! I! Doña Rosario!' he cried, in a husky voice, 'you are a silly,
-poor child! Never repeat those words again; your father is dead, and
-your mother, likewise, long, long ago. I am not your father--never
-repeat that word--I am only your friend. Yes, your father, at the point
-of death, confided you to my care, and that is why I am bringing you up,
-that is why I watch over you; as to me, I am not even your relation!'
-His agitation was extreme; he said many other things which I do not now
-remember, and then he left me. Alas! from that day I have never ventured
-to ask him for any account of my family."
-
-A silence ensued; the two young people were pensively thoughtful: the
-simple and touching recital of Doña Rosario had strongly affected the
-Count. At length he said, in a tremulous voice,--
-
-"Let _me_ love you, Doña Rosario!"
-
-The maiden sighed.
-
-"To what could that love lead, Don Louis?" she said sadly,--"to death,
-perhaps!"
-
-"Oh!" he exclaimed madly; "and it would be welcome, if it came in your
-defence!"
-
-At this very instant, several individuals rushed into the tent, uttering
-discordant cries. Quick as thought, the Count threw himself before the
-young girl, a pistol in each hand. But, as if Heaven had decreed that he
-should accomplish the wish he had just uttered, before he had time to
-defend himself, he was struck to the earth, stabbed by several machetes.
-In falling, he saw, as if in a dream, Doña Rosario seized by two
-individuals, who fled away with her in their arms. With an incredible
-effort, the young man succeeded in getting on his knees, and afterwards
-in rising altogether. He beheld the ravishers hastening towards their
-horses, which were being held at a short distance by an Indian. He
-took aim at the flying wretches, crying, with a faint voice, "Murder!
-Murder!" and fired.
-
-One of the ravishers fell, uttering an imprecation of rage. The Count,
-exhausted by the superhuman effort he had made, staggered like a drunken
-man; the blood gushed from his ears, his sight grew dim, and he rolled
-senseless upon the ground.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXX.
-
-THE PROTEST.
-
-
-The three travellers returned with such speed to Valdivia, that it
-scarcely took them an hour and a half to traverse the distance which
-divided the plain from the city. They passed on their way General
-Don Pancho Bustamente, at the head of a detachment of lanceros, and
-attended by a numerous staff; but the Dark-Hearts, employing their usual
-precautions, escaped notice. Don Tadeo cast an ironical glance at his
-enemy.
-
-"Look," he said, with a somewhat malignant smile, to Don Gregorio,
-"at our worthy general; he fancies himself already protector. What a
-majestic bearing he affects!"
-
-"Yes," said Don Gregorio, with the same expression; "but between the cup
-and the lip he may find there is room for a mischance."
-
-It was striking ten as they entered Valdivia. The city was almost
-deserted: for all who were not detained at home by urgent business had
-gone to the plain, to be present at the renewal of the treaties between
-the Chilians and the Araucanos. This ceremony strongly interested the
-inhabitants of the province: it was for them a guarantee of tranquillity
-for the future; that is to say, the liberty of carrying on with safety
-their commercial transactions with the Indians. More than all the other
-provinces of Chili, Valdivia had cause to dread hostilities with its
-redoubtable neighbours. Separated entirely from the territory of the
-republic, when left to its own resources, the least movement among
-the Moluchos annihilated its commerce. If the inhabitants appeared to
-have emigrated for a time, it was not the same with the soldiers; the
-numerous garrison, composed--a thing unheard of in time of peace--of
-fifteen hundred men, had been still further increased within the last
-two days, principally in the course of the preceding night, by two
-regiments of cavalry, and a battery of artillery.
-
-For what purpose was this calling together of forces, which nothing
-appeared to justify? The few inhabitants who remained in the city
-experienced a vague uneasiness on this head, for which they could not
-account. There is a singular fact that we wish to point out here, but
-which we by no means take upon ourselves to explain, because it has
-always seemed to us inexplicable. When a great event, whatever it may
-be, is about to be accomplished in a country, a vague presentiment
-seems to warn the inhabitants; men and things assume an unusual aspect;
-nature itself, associating with this disposition of men's minds, grows
-sensibly darker; a magnetic fluid rushes through the veins; a painful
-pressure weighs upon every breast; the atmosphere becomes heavy; the
-sun loses its brilliancy; and people only communicate their impressions
-to each other in a suppressed voice; in short, there is in the air
-something incomprehensible, but I know not what, which says to man in
-a dismal tone, "Beware! a catastrophe threatens thee!" And this fatal
-presentiment is so general, that when the event takes place, and the
-crisis is over, every one instinctively cries, "I felt it!" And yet no
-one could say why he foresaw the cataclysm.
-
-It is the sentiment of self-preservation which God has placed in the
-heart of man--that sentiment which constitutes his safeguard, and is
-so strong, that when danger approaches him, it cries to him, "Beware!"
-Valdivia was at this moment oppressed by the weight of an unknown
-apprehension. The few citizens who remained in the city hastened to
-regain their homes. Numerous patrols of cavalry and infantry traversed
-the streets in all directions; cannon rolled along with portentous
-noise, and were planted at the comers of all the principal places. At
-the cabildo a crowd of officers and soldiers went in and out with a
-busy air; couriers succeeded each other unceasingly, and after having
-delivered the orders with which they were charged, set off again at full
-speed.
-
-At the same time, at the corners of streets, men wrapped in large
-cloaks, and with hats pulled down over their eyes, harangued the workmen
-and the sailors of the port, and formed groups, which every instant
-became more numerous. In these groups, arms, gun barrels, bayonets,
-and pike heads began to glitter in the sun. When these mysterious men
-were satisfied that they had accomplished their task in one place, they
-went to another. Immediately after their departure, as if by magic,
-barricades were raised behind them, and impeded the passage. As soon as
-a barricade was terminated, an energetic-looking sentinel, a workman
-with bare arms, but with a callous hand, brandishing a gun, an axe, or
-a sabre, placed himself at its summit, and bade all who approached go
-another way.
-
-On entering the city, Don Tadeo and his companions found themselves
-completely barricaded. Don Tadeo smiled triumphantly. The three men
-cleared the barricades, which were thrown open at their approach, and
-the sentinels bowed to them as they passed. We have forgotten to say
-that all three were masked. There was something striking in the march
-of these three phantoms, before whom all obstacles gave way. If now and
-then a stray citizen ventured to ask timidly who those three masked
-men were, he received for answer, "It is the King of Darkness and his
-lieutenants;" and the citizen, trembling with fear, crossed himself, and
-went his way hastily.
-
-The three men thus arrived at the entrance of the Plaza Mayor. There
-two pieces of mounted cannon barred their passage, and the artillerymen
-were at their guns waiting, match in hand. At a sign from Don Tadeo, the
-officer who commanded approached him. He leant down upon the neck of his
-horse and said a few words to the officer in a whisper; the latter bowed
-respectfully, and, turning to his soldiers, said--
-
-"Let these gentlemen pass."
-
-In all the cities of Spanish America there is a monumental fountain in
-the centre of the Plaza Mayor. It was towards this fountain that Don
-Tadeo conducted his companions. A hundred individuals, scattered here
-and there, and who appeared to expect him, drew together at his approach.
-
-"Well," Don Tadeo asked Valentine, "how do you like our ride?"
-
-"Delightful," the other replied, "only I fancy we shall shortly come to
-blows, and hear the hissing of bullets."
-
-"I hope so," said the conspirator, coolly.
-
-"Ah! ah!" the young man remarked, "all is for the best, then?"
-
-"You are about to be present at a very interesting spectacle."
-
-"Oh! I depend upon you for that. For my part, I am glad at not having
-lost such an opportunity."
-
-"Is it not one?"
-
-"Pardieu!--yes. It is astonishing how travelling instructs one," he
-added, in the form of a parenthesis.
-
-The individuals assembled near the fountain surrounded them with
-every mark of the profoundest respect. These were the faithful--the
-Dark-Hearts--upon whom perfect dependence was to be placed.
-
-"Gentlemen," said Don Tadeo, "the struggle is about to commence. I
-desire at length that you should know me, that you should be informed
-who the man is who commands you."
-
-And he threw off his mask. A burst of enthusiasm broke from the ranks
-of the conspirators. "Don Tadeo de Leon!" they cried with astonishment,
-mingled with a species of veneration for the man who had suffered so
-much for the common cause.
-
-"Yes, gentlemen," Don Tadeo replied, "the man whom the creatures of the
-tyrant condemned to death, and whom God has miraculously preserved, in
-order to be the instrument of His vengeance today."
-
-All the conspirators pressed tumultuously round him. These men of
-spontaneous impressions, and essentially superstitious, no longer
-doubted of victory, since they had at their head the man whom God, as
-they believed, had so manifestly protected. Don Tadeo had calculated
-upon this manifestation to heighten the ardour of the conspirators,
-and to augment still further the prestige he enjoyed. The result had
-answered his expectations.
-
-"Is everyone at his post?" he asked.
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Are arms and ammunition distributed?"
-
-"To everybody."
-
-"Are all the barricades completed?--all the gates of the city guarded?"
-
-"All."
-
-"That is well. Now wait."
-
-And quiet was re-established.
-
-All these men had known Don Tadeo for a long time; they appreciated his
-character at its true value; they had already vowed to him a boundless
-friendship; and now they knew that Don Tadeo and the King of Darkness
-were the same person, they were ready to lay down their lives for him.
-The news of the revelation which had been made near the fountain spread
-through the city with the rapidity of a train of gunpowder, and added
-greatly to the fermentation which already prevailed. Whilst the few
-words were being exchanged between the chief of the conspirators and
-his party, a regiment of infantry had formed in front of the cabildo,
-flanked right and left by two squadrons of horse.
-
-"Attention!" Don Tadeo commanded.
-
-A sensation of impatience pervaded the men grouped around him.
-
-"Eh! eh!" Valentine murmured, with that mocking, short laugh that was
-peculiar to him; "this is going on capitally! Caramba! we shall soon
-have some fun!"
-
-The gates of the cabildo were thrown open violently, and a general,
-followed by a brilliant staff, took his station on the top step of the
-great staircase; next several senators made their appearance in full
-costume, and formed a group round him. At a signal from the general, the
-drums beat for a time, to secure attention and silence. When all was
-quiet, a senator, who held a roll of paper in his hand, came forward a
-few steps, and prepared to read.
-
-"Bah!" said the General, seizing his arm, "Why lose your time in reading
-that rubbish? Leave it to me."
-
-The senator, who asked no better than to be freed from the dangerous
-commission with which, very much against his will, he had been charged,
-rolled up his papers, and retreated to the rear. The general assumed a
-commanding posture, placed his hand upon his hip, with the point of his
-sword on the ground, and said in a voice audible in every corner of the
-place--
-
-"People of the province of Valdivia, the sovereign senate, assembled
-in congress at Santiago de Chili, has unanimously passed the following
-resolutions:--
-
-"1st. The various provinces of the Chilian republic shall be composed of
-independent states united under the title of the Confederation of the
-United States of South America.
-
-"2nd. The valiant and most excellent general, Don Pancho Bustamente, has
-been elected Protector of the Chilian Confederation."
-
-"People, cry with me--'Long live the Protector Don Pancho Bustamente!'"
-
-The officers grouped round the General, and the soldiers drawn up in the
-place, shouted--
-
-"Long live the Protector!"
-
-But the people were mute.
-
-"Hum!" the general murmured to himself; "they do not display much
-enthusiasm."
-
-A man came forward from the group collected round the fountain, and
-advanced boldly to within twenty paces of the soldiers. This man was
-Don Tadeo de Leon; his countenance was calm and his bearing firm and
-collected. He made a sign with his hand.
-
-"What is your will?" the general shouted.
-
-"To reply to your proclamation," the King of Darkness said, intrepidly.
-
-"Speak! I hear you," the general replied.
-
-Don Tadeo bowed with a significant smile.
-
-"In the name of the Chilian people," he said, in a loud, clear voice,
-"the senate of Santiago de Chili, composed of creatures sold to the
-tyrant, is declared traitorous to its country."
-
-"Miserable fellow! what do you dare to say?" the General cried, angrily.
-
-"No insults, if you please! Allow me to terminate the answer I have to
-give you," Don Tadeo replied, coolly.
-
-The General, involuntarily brow-beaten by the heroic courage of this
-man, who, alone, unarmed before a triple row of muskets ready to be
-directed towards his breast, had dared to speak in this loud, firm
-tone, and overcome by that ascendancy which a great character always
-exercises, bit the pommel of his sword with rage.
-
-"In the name of the people," Don Tadeo, still calm and stoical,
-continued, "Don Pancho Bustamente is declared a traitor to his country,
-and as such is degraded from his titles and his power. Liberty! Chili!"
-
-"Liberty! Chili!" the populace assembled on the square shouted with the
-greatest enthusiasm.
-
-"Oh, this is too audacious!" the General cried, pale with anger.
-"Soldiers, seize that rebel!"
-
-Several soldiers stepped forward; but, quicker than thought, Don
-Gregorio and Valentine had sprung to Don Tadeo's side, and dragged him
-back with them among the people.
-
-"Cordieu!" cried Valentine, pressing his hands enough to crush them,
-"you are a troublesome man! but I love you the better for it."
-
-The General, outrageous at seeing his enemy escape, shouted silence. "In
-the name of the Protector," he said, "I command that rebel to be given
-up!"
-
-Hisses and hootings were the only reply.
-
-"Fire!" the General commanded, who, even before the last insulting
-manifestation, had perceived that no half measures were possible. The
-muskets were lowered, and a formidable discharge pealed like thunder.
-Several men fell, killed or wounded.
-
-"Chili! Liberty! down with the oppressor!" the people shouted, arming
-themselves with everything they could lay their hands on. A second
-discharge resounded, followed closely by a third. The ground was, in an
-instant, strewed with the dead and dying; but the patriots showed no
-disposition to disperse; on the contrary, under the incessant fire of
-the soldiers, they organized a resistance, and soon replied by a few
-shots to the incessant platoon firing which was decimating them. The
-combat became mutual; the revolution had commenced.
-
-"Hum!" the General muttered to himself, "I have undertaken a rather
-awkward mission."
-
-But, essentially a soldier, and endowed to the highest degree with that
-spirit of passive obedience which distinguishes all who have grown old
-in harness, he prepared either to chastise the insurgents severely, or
-die at his post.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXI.
-
-SPANIARD AND INDIAN.
-
-
-It was not, as may well be believed, through fear, that General
-Bustamente had absented himself from Valdivia at the moment when one
-of his lieutenants so boldly proclaimed him from the top of the steps
-of the cabildo, before the populace. No, General Bustamente was one
-of those soldiers of fortune of whom so many are found in America,
-accustomed to set his life upon a cast of the die, and to be turned
-aside by nothing in the world from the accomplishment of his projects.
-He had hoped, by the means of the forces he had concentrated in this
-remote province of the republic, that the inhabitants, taken unawares,
-would only offer an insignificant resistance, and that he should be
-able, by joining his troops with those of Antinahuel, to make a forced
-march through Araucania, gain possession of Concepción, and thence,
-keeping the gathering snowball in motion, and dragging his companions
-after him, arrive at Santiago in time to prevent any movement, and
-oblige the inhabitants to capitulate and accept, as an accomplished
-fact, the change of government inaugurated by him in the distant
-provinces of the republic.
-
-This plan was not deficient in audacity, or even in a certain degree of
-policy; it comprised great chances of success. Unfortunately for General
-Bustamente, the Dark-Hearts, whose spies were everywhere, had got wind
-of this project, and had countermined it by taking advantage of the
-opportunity offered them by their enemy to unmask their own batteries.
-We have seen under what conditions the struggle between the two parties
-had commenced in Valdivia. The General, who was ignorant of what was
-passing, felt in a state of perfect security. As soon as he was in his
-tent with Antinahuel, he let fall the curtain which closed it behind
-them, and, by a gesture, invited the toqui to be seated.
-
-"Sit down, chief," he said, "I have something to say to you."
-
-"I am at the orders of my white brother," the Indian replied, with a bow.
-
-The General attentively examined the man before him; he endeavoured to
-read on his countenance the various feelings that acted upon him; but
-the features of the Indian were marble; no impression was reflected by
-them.
-
-"Let us speak frankly, loyally, and as friends who wish no better than
-to understand each other plainly," he said.
-
-Antinahuel bowed reservedly to this appeal to frankness, and the General
-continued--
-
-"At this moment the people of Valdivia are constituting me, by
-acclamation, protector of a new confederation, formed of all the states."
-
-"Good!" said the chief, with an almost imperceptible shake of the head;
-"is my father sure of that?"
-
-"Certainly I am. The Chilians are tired of the continual agitations
-which disturb the country; they have forced this heavy burden upon me;
-but I owe myself to my country, and I will not disappoint the hopes my
-compatriots place in me."
-
-These words were pronounced in a hypocritical tone of self-denial, of
-which the Indian was not in the least the dupe. A smile flitted across
-the lips of the chief, which the General affected not to perceive.
-
-"To be brief," he continued, quitting the mild, conciliatory tone in
-which he had till that time spoken, to assume a more decided and abrupt
-manner, "are you prepared to keep your engagements?"
-
-"Why should I not keep them?" Antinahuel remarked.
-
-"Will you march with me to assure the success of my projects?"
-
-"Let my father order, I will obey."
-
-This readiness was displeasing to the General.
-
-"Come," he said, angrily, "let us put an end to this; I have not time to
-enter into a contest of wits with you, or follow you through a labyrinth
-of Indian circumlocutions."
-
-"I do not understand my father," Antinahuel replied, impassively.
-
-"We shall never get to the end, chief," the General said, stamping his
-foot, "if you will not answer me categorically."
-
-"I listen to my father; let him ask, I will reply."
-
-"How many men can you have under arms within twenty-four hours?"
-
-"Ten thousand," the chief said, drawing himself up proudly.
-
-"All experienced warriors?"
-
-"All."
-
-"What do you require of me for them?"
-
-"My father knows."
-
-"I accept of all your conditions but one."
-
-"Which is that?"
-
-"The surrender of the province of Valdivia to you."
-
-"Is not my father going to make up for that province on another side?"
-
-"How so?"
-
-"Am I not to assist my father in conquering Bolivia?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Well, then?"
-
-"You are mistaken, chief, it is not the same thing; I may enlarge the
-Chilian territory, but honour forbids me to diminish it."
-
-"Let my father reflect; the province of Valdivia was anciently an
-Araucanian Uthal-Mapus."
-
-"Very possibly, chief; but, according to that principle, all Chili was
-Araucanian previous to the discovery of America."
-
-"My father is mistaken; the Inca Sinchiroca had, a hundred years before,
-conquered the Chilian land as far as the Rio-Maulé."
-
-"You seem to be well acquainted with the history of your country,
-chief," the General observed.
-
-"Does not my father know the history of his?"
-
-"That is not the question, now; do you accept my proposals or not?"
-
-The chief appeared to reflect for an instant.
-
-"Well!" the General exclaimed, impatiently, "time presses."
-
-"That is true; I will, therefore, go and command a council, composed
-of the Apo-Ulmens and Ulmens of my nation, and submit the words of my
-father to them."
-
-The General with difficulty suppressed an expression of anger.
-
-"You must, doubtless, be joking, chief," he said--"your words cannot be
-serious."
-
-"Antinahuel is the first toqui of his nation," the Indian replied,
-haughtily; "he never jokes."
-
-"But you must give me your answer now--at once--in a few minutes!" cried
-the General; "who knows whether we may not be obliged to march within an
-hour from this time?"
-
-"It is my duty, as much as it is my father's, to enlarge the territory
-of my people."
-
-At this moment the gallop of a horse was heard approaching; the General
-flew to the entrance of the tent, where an orderly officer appeared. The
-face of this officer was bathed with perspiration, and spots of blood
-stained his uniform.
-
-"General!" he said breathlessly.
-
-"Silence!" the latter hissed, pointing to the chief, who, though
-apparently indifferent, followed all his movements attentively. The
-General turned towards Antinahuel.
-
-"Chief," he said, "I have orders to give to this officer--pressing
-orders; if you will permit me, we will resume our conversation
-presently."
-
-"Good!" replied the chief; "my father need not inconvenience himself; I
-can wait."
-
-And after bowing, he left the tent slowly.
-
-"Oh!" said the General to himself, "you demon! if, some day, I have you
-in my power!"
-
-But perceiving that anger was making him forget himself, he turned
-towards the officer, who stood motionless:
-
-"Well, Diego," he said, "what news have you?--are we conquerors?"
-
-"No," the officer replied, shaking his head; "the people, excited by
-those incarnate demons, the Dark-Hearts, have rebelled."
-
-"Oh!" the General cried, "shall I never be able to crush them? What has
-taken place?"
-
-"The people have raised barricades; and Don Tadeo de Leon is at the head
-of the movement."
-
-"Don Tadeo de Leon!" said the General.
-
-"Yes, he who was so clumsily shot."
-
-"Oh! this is war to the death then!"
-
-"A part of the troops, seduced by their officers, who have sold
-themselves to the Dark-Hearts, have passed over to their side; at
-this moment they are fighting in all the streets with the fiercest
-inveteracy. I had to pass through a shower of bullets to come and inform
-you."
-
-"We have not an instant to lose."
-
-"No; for though the soldiers who have remained faithful to you are
-fighting like lions, I can assure you they are closely pressed."
-
-"Maldición!" the General howled; "I will not leave stone upon stone of
-that accursed city!"
-
-"Yes, but, in the first place, we must reconquer it, General, and that
-will prove rather a rough job, I promise you," replied the old soldier,
-who had preserved his blunt speech throughout.
-
-"Very well!" said Bustamente; "let 'boot and saddle' be sounded, and
-every horseman take a foot soldier behind him."
-
-Don Pancho Bustamente was a prey to the most violent rage; for several
-instants he stamped about his tent, like a wild beast in its cage. This
-unexpected resistance, in spite of all the measures of precaution he had
-taken, exasperated him. Suddenly the curtain of his tent was raised.
-"Who is there?" he cried. "Ah! chief, is that you? Well, what do you
-say?"
-
-"I saw the chief come out, and I thought that perhaps my father would
-not be sorry to see me," the other replied, courteously.
-
-"And you were right; I am delighted to see you; forget all we have said,
-chief; I accept all your conditions; are you satisfied, this time?"
-
-"Yes. Including Valdivia?"
-
-"That above all!" said the General, with concentrated rage.
-
-"Ah!"
-
-"Yes, and as that province has revolted, in order to be able to give it
-to you, I must bring it back to its duty, must I not?"
-
-"To be sure you must!"
-
-"Well, as I have it at my heart to fulfil all my engagements to you,
-I am going instantly to march against that city; will you help me to
-subdue it?"
-
-"That will be but just, as I shall labour for myself."
-
-"How many horsemen have you at hand?"
-
-"Twelve hundred."
-
-"Good!" said the General, "they will be more than we shall want."
-
-"The troops are ready," said Diego, entering the tent, "and only await
-your Excellency's orders."
-
-"To saddle, then; let us be gone! let us be gone! And you, chief, will
-you not accompany us?"
-
-"Let my father move onward! my mosotones and I will tread in his steps
-quickly."
-
-Ten minutes later, General Bustamente, with his soldiers, was again
-galloping along the road to Valdivia. Antinahuel followed him with his
-eyes attentively; then he rejoined his Ulmens, saying between his teeth,
-"Let us leave these Moro-Huincas to slaughter each other a little while;
-it will always be time enough to fall into the party."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXII.
-
-IN THE MOUNTAIN.
-
-
-Doña Rosario was so terrified, and such mortal anguish assailed her
-on beholding the Count fall under the knives of the assassins, that
-she fainted. When she recovered her senses, it was dark night. For
-several minutes her confused thoughts whirled about in her brain; and
-she endeavoured, but for a long time in vain, to recover the violently
-broken thread of her ideas. At length light returned to her mind; she
-breathed a deep sigh, and murmured in a low voice full of terror:
-
-"My God! my God! what has happened to me?"
-
-She then opened her eyes, and cast around a despairing look. We have
-said it was a dark night; but what made the darkness more complete
-for the poor girl, was a heavy covering of some kind which was spread
-over her face, as well as her person. Then, with that patience which
-characterizes all prisoners, and which is merely the instinct of
-liberty, the poor child endeavoured to ascertain what her position was.
-As well as she could judge, she was lying upon the back of a mule,
-between two bales; a cord, which passed round her waist, prevented her
-from rising, but her hands were free. The mule had that rough, irregular
-trot, peculiar to its species, which made the young girl suffer terribly
-at every step. Some horse cloths had been thrown over her, no doubt to
-protect her from the heavy dews of the night, or perhaps to prevent her
-from making out what road she was going. Doña Rosario, gently, and with
-great precaution, slipped the covering down from her face: after a few
-efforts her head was completely free. She then looked around her; but
-all was dark. The moon, closely veiled by the clouds which passed over
-its pale disc, only yielded, at rare intervals, a weak, uncertain light.
-By lifting her head softly, the young girl could distinguish several
-horsemen, riding before and behind the mule which carried her. As well
-as she could make out, from the obscurity which surrounded her, these
-horsemen were Indians.
-
-The rather numerous party--it apparently consisted of a score of
-individuals--followed a narrow road deeply inclosed between two abrupt
-mountains, the rocky masses of which, throwing their shadow over the
-road, augmented the darkness. This road rose with a gentle ascent; and
-the horses and mules, probably fatigued with a long journey, travelled
-at a foot pace. The young girl, scarcely recovered from her fainting,
-had not been able to judge of the time that had elapsed since her
-abduction; and yet, by collecting her remembrances, and thinking at what
-hour she had been the victim of this odious attempt, she calculated
-that twelve hours must have passed away since she was made a prisoner.
-Overcome by the effort she had been forced to make in order to look
-around her, the poor girl let her head sink back again, stifling a sigh
-of despondency; and closing her eyes, as if to isolate herself the more,
-she plunged into sad and deep meditations.
-
-She was at least ignorant of whom she was with. Many times, it was true,
-Don Tadeo had spoken to her of an inveterate enemy, inveterate for her
-destruction; of a woman whose hatred watched her incessantly, ready to
-sacrifice her on the first favourable opportunity. But who was this
-woman? What cause had she for her hatred? Was she in the hands of this
-woman at that moment? And if so, why had she not already sacrificed
-her to her vengeance? From what motive had she been spared? For what
-punishment was she reserved?
-
-These thoughts and many others came in crowds to assail the maiden's
-bewildered mind. This uncertainty was for her an atrocious torture; at
-that moment, the truth would, perhaps, have been a consolation. Man is
-so constructed, that what he is most in dread of is the unknown; what he
-is ignorant of, assumes instinctively, in the prepossessed eyes of one
-whom a terrible danger menaces, gigantic proportions, a thousand times
-more terrific than the danger itself. The diseased imagination creates
-for itself phantoms which reality, however horrible it may be, puts
-to flight. In a word, the condemned prisoner who is led to punishment
-suffers more from the apprehensions which the fear of the death awaiting
-him inspires him with, than the physical pain of that death itself will
-cause him. Such was, at this moment, the situation of Doña Rosario; her
-mind, filled with inquietude and dark presentiments, made her dread
-nameless sufferings, the mere thought of which froze the young blood in
-her veins.
-
-The caravan still proceeded; it had left the ravine, and was climbing
-a path traced along the edge of a precipice, at the base of which
-could be heard the dull murmur of invisible water. At times, a stone,
-half-broken beneath the hoof of a mule, became detached, and rolled with
-a sinister noise down the side of the mountain, to engulf itself in the
-waters, into which it plunged with a dull plash, the sound of which
-ascended from the abyss. The wind howled through the pines and larches,
-the clashing branches of which showered a deluge of dry cones upon the
-travellers. At intervals the owl, and the screech owl, concealed in
-the crevices of the rocks, poured out into the night their plaintive
-notes, breaking the silence dismally. Furious barkings were heard in the
-distance; by degrees they grew nearer, and ended by forming a frightful
-concert, broken by the sharp voices of women and children, endeavouring
-to quiet them; lights appeared, and the caravan stopped. They had
-evidently arrived at the halt, at which they were to pass the rest of
-the night.
-
-The maiden cast an anxious but cautious look around her; but the flame
-of the torches agitated by the wind would not permit her to see anything
-but the dark outlines of some buildings and the shadows of several
-individuals who flitted about her, with cries and laughter--nothing
-more. The people of the escort were busily employed in unsaddling the
-horses and unloading the mules, amidst cries and oaths, and did not
-appear to bestow the least attention upon the young girl.
-
-A considerable time passed away; Doña Rosario did not know to what to
-attribute this unaccountable forgetfulness. At length she felt that
-someone took the mule by the bridle, and she heard him shout in a hoarse
-voice, _Arrea!_--the word with which the arrieros are accustomed to
-excite their beasts. Had she, then, been deceived? Was it not here they
-were to stop? What was the meaning of the halt, then? Why did a portion
-of the escort leave her?
-
-Her uncertainty was not of long duration; at the end of ten minutes at
-most, the mule stopped again, and the man who led it approached Doña
-Rosario. This man, clothed in the costume of the Chilian peasantry, wore
-an old straw Panama hat, the large brim of which, pulled down over his
-face, prevented her distinguishing his features. At the sight of this
-individual, the young girl felt an involuntary shudder run through her
-frame. The peasant, or pretended peasant, without addressing a word to
-her, withdrew the covering which enfolded her, untied the cord which
-bound her to the mule, and taking her in his arms, carried her with as
-much ease as if she had been a child, into a detached cabin a few paces
-distant, the door of which, standing open, seemed to invite them to
-enter.
-
-The interior of this cabin was dark. The young girl was laid upon the
-ground with a care and attention she did not expect. At the moment when
-he let her sink softly down from his arms to the ground, the man bent
-his head down towards her, and in a voice as inaudible as a breath, he
-whispered, "Courage! and hope!" and recovering himself quickly, went
-hastily out of the cabin, closing the door after him.
-
-As soon as he was gone, Doña Rosario sprang upon her feet. The two words
-pronounced by the unknown had sufficed to restore her presence of mind,
-and remove all her terrors. Hope, that universal panacea, that supreme
-good, which God, in His infinite mercy, has given to the unfortunate
-to help them to suffer, had suddenly re-entered her heart; she felt
-herself become strong, and ready to engage in the struggle with her
-unknown enemies. She knew now that a friend watched in secret over her,
-and, if required, his assistance would not be wanting; therefore it was
-almost with impatience, though still with fear, that she waited for her
-ravishers to signify their intentions.
-
-The place in which she was confined was completely dark. At the first
-moment she in vain endeavoured to distinguish anything in this chaos;
-but, by degrees, her eyes became accustomed to the darkness, and, in
-front of her, she perceived a faint light, which flitted between the
-badly-joined boards of a door. She then, with great precaution, for
-fear of arousing her invisible guardians, and stretching out her hand
-to keep her from contact with any obstacle she could not see, advanced
-cautiously, and listening attentively, towards the side from which came
-the light--a light which attracted her as instinctively as a flame
-attracts the imprudent moth whose wings it burns.
-
-The nearer she approached, the more distinct the light became, and the
-sound of a voice reached her ears. At length her extended hands touched
-the door, and leaning forward, she applied her eye to the chink. She
-stifled a cry of surprise, and, as at that moment the conversation,
-which had been for a short time interrupted, recommenced, she listened
-with intensity.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIII.
-
-ON THE WATCH.
-
-
-What she heard, but still more what she saw, necessarily powerfully
-interested Doña Rosario. In a vast room, dimly lighted by one of those
-yellow candles which the Chilians call _velas de cebo_, fastened to
-the wall by means of a ring, a woman, still young, and very handsome,
-attired in a riding dress of great richness, was seated on an ebony
-chair, covered with Cordova leather. With her right hand she played
-with a gold headed whip, and was speaking in an animated tone to a man
-who stood respectfully before her, hat in hand. This man, as well as
-Doña Rosario could make out, was the same who had carried her into the
-_cuarto_. The woman, whom Doña Rosario did not recollect ever to have
-seen, was no other than Doña Maria, the shameless courtesan, who, under
-the name of the Linda, enjoyed such a scandalous celebrity.
-
-Doña Maria's position threw the light of the candle full upon her face,
-and gave Doña Rosario an opportunity of distinguishing her features.
-She contemplated them with deep interest, for she felt instinctively
-that this woman was the enemy who, from her birth, had fatally followed
-her steps. She imagined that a decisive conference between her and
-the unknown was about to take place, and that in a few minutes her
-fate would be made known to her. And yet, at the aspect of this woman,
-whose bent brows, clear and haughty look, coldly compressed lips,
-and cruel words, revealed with the hatred which devoured her, it was
-neither a feeling of terror, nor a feeling of hatred, that the young
-girl experienced. Without knowing why, a sadness and an undefined pity
-for the very woman who was giving orders that made her shudder, took
-possession of her. She listened breathlessly, fascinated, scarcely
-knowing whether what she heard was really true, and fancying herself at
-times under the influence of some terrible hallucination.
-
-The two speakers, who knew not that they were either watched or
-overheard, resumed their conversation in an unrestrained voice. Doña
-Rosario, we may well suppose, did not lose a single word.
-
-"How is it," said the Linda, "that Joan has not come? I expected him."
-
-The man thus questioned cast a sharp look around him, and rolling up
-the broad brim of his hat in his fingers, replied with ill-dissembled
-embarrassment--
-
-"Joan sent me in his place."
-
-"And by what right," said the Linda, in a haughty tone, "does the fellow
-presume to confide to others the care of accomplishing the orders I give
-him?"
-
-"Joan is my friend," the man replied.
-
-"What are the ties that unite you to me:" she asked, contemptuously.
-
-"The mission you charged him with is accomplished."
-
-"Ay--but faithfully?"
-
-"The woman is there," he said, pointing to the room in which Doña
-Rosario was; "during the journey she has spoken to nobody, and I can
-guarantee that she does not know to what place she has been brought."
-
-At this assurance the look of Doña Maria softened a little, and it was
-in a less sharp and haughty tone she continued--
-
-"But why did Joan give up his place to you?"
-
-"Oh!" the man said with a feigned bluntness, belied by his cunning eye,
-"for a very simple reason; Joan is at this moment attracted towards the
-plain by the black eyes of the wife of a paleface, which sparkle like
-fireflies in the night. The woman's toldo is built in the country, near
-the toldería which you call, I think, Concepción. Although such conduct
-be unworthy of a warrior, his heart is flying constantly towards this
-woman, in spite of himself, and until he gain possession of her, he will
-never be in his senses."
-
-"Well, then," the Linda interrupted, stamping her foot with vexation,
-"why does not the fool carry her off?"
-
-"I proposed that to him."
-
-"And what did he say?"
-
-"He refused."
-
-Doña Maria shrugged her shoulders with a smile of disdain. "Still," she
-remarked, "all that does not tell me who you are."
-
-"I! I am an Ulmen in my tribe; a great warrior among the Puelches," he
-replied, proudly.
-
-"Ah!" she said, with an air of satisfaction, "you are an Ulmen of the
-Puelches, are you? Good! then I can depend upon your fidelity."
-
-"I am the friend of Joan," he remarked simply, with a respectful bow.
-
-"Do you know the woman whom you have brought here?" the Linda asked,
-darting at him a mistrustful glance.
-
-"How should I know her?"
-
-"Are you ready to obey me in everything?"
-
-"My obedience will depend on my sister; let her speak, and I will
-answer."
-
-"This woman is my enemy," said the Linda.
-
-"Must she die?" he asked, roughly, without lowering his eyes before the
-searching glances of the Linda.
-
-"Oh, no!" she cried eagerly; "these Indians are brutes--they understand
-nothing of vengeance! What use would her death be to me? It is her life
-I want."
-
-"Let my sister explain; I do not comprehend."
-
-"Death! that is nothing but a few instants of suffering, then all is
-over."
-
-"White death may be so, but an Indian death must be called for many
-hours before it answers."
-
-"I wish her to live, I tell you!"
-
-"She shall live. Ah!" he added, with a sigh, "the toldo of a chief is
-empty, its fires are extinguished."
-
-"Oh! oh!" the Linda interrupted; "have you no wives?"
-
-"They are dead."
-
-"And where is your tribe at this moment?"
-
-"Oh!" said the Indian, "far from here--ten suns' march, at least. I was
-returning to rejoin the warriors of my toldería, when Joan charged me
-with this mission."
-
-There was a short silence, during which the Linda appeared to be
-reflecting. Doña Rosario redoubled her attention--she felt she was about
-to know her fate.
-
-"And pray," Doña Maria resumed, fixing her keen eyes upon the Indian,
-"what great interest detained you on the plains near the seashore?"
-
-"None; I came, as the other Ulmens did, to renew the treaties."
-
-"Had you no other reasons?"
-
-"None at all."
-
-"Listen to me, chief. You have, doubtless, admired the four horses
-fastened at the gate of this house?"
-
-"They are noble beasts," the Indian replied, his eyes glistening with
-the desire of possessing them.
-
-"Well, it only depends upon yourself that I should give them to you."
-
-"Oh! oh!" he cried, joyfully, "what must I do for that?"
-
-"Obey me," said the Linda, with a smile.
-
-"I will obey," he replied.
-
-"Whatever I command you?"
-
-"Whatever my sister commands."
-
-"That is well; but remember what I am going to say to you. If you
-deceive me, my vengeance will be terrible--it will follow you
-everywhere."
-
-"Why should I deceive my sister?"
-
-"Because your Indian race is so constituted--astute and roguish, ever
-ready to betray."
-
-A sinister flash gleamed from the downcast eye of the Puelche warrior;
-nevertheless, he replied in a calm tone--
-
-"My sister is mistaken; the Araucanos are loyal."
-
-"We shall see," she coldly remarked. "What is your name?"
-
-"The Musk Rat."
-
-"Very well; listen, Musk Rat, to what I am going to say."
-
-"My ears are open."
-
-"This woman, who, according to my orders, you brought here, must never
-again revisit the shores of the sea."
-
-"She shall never see them again."
-
-"I do not wish her to die--understand that; she must suffer," the Linda
-added, in a tone which made the unhappy girl tremble with fear.
-
-"She shall suffer."
-
-"Yes," said Doña Maria, with sparkling eyes, "I wish that, during a
-long course of years, she may suffer a martyrdom at every instant; she
-is young, she will have time to call upon death to deliver her from her
-misery before it deigns to listen to her. Beyond the mountains, far in
-the deserts, in the virgin forests of the Grou-Chaco, I am told that
-hordes of Indians exist who are ferocious and sanguinary, and bear a
-deadly hatred towards all of the white race."
-
-"Yes," said the Puelche, in a melancholy tone, "I have heard of these
-men from the chiefs of my tribe; they live only for murder."
-
-"That is it!" she said, with sinister delight. "Well, chief, do you
-think yourself able to traverse these vast deserts, and reach the
-Grou-Chaco?"
-
-"Why should I not?" the Indian replied, raising his head proudly, "Do
-there exist obstacles strong enough to resist the Araucano warrior in
-his course? The puma is the king of the forests, the vulture that of the
-heavens; but the Aucas is the king of the puma and the eagle; the desert
-is his--Guatechu has given it to him; his horse and his lance render him
-invincible and master of immensity."
-
-"Then my brother will accomplish this journey, which is impossible?"
-
-A disdainful smile played for an instant round the lips of the savage
-warrior.
-
-"I will accomplish it," he said.
-
-"Good! my brother is a chief--I perceive he is one now."
-
-The Puelche bowed modestly.
-
-"My brother will go there, then, and when he arrives in the Chaco, he
-will sell the pale girl to the Guayacuras."
-
-The Indian did not allow any mark of astonishment to be perceived upon
-his face.
-
-"I will sell her," he replied.
-
-"That is well!--my brother will be faithful?"
-
-"I am a chief; I have but one word, my tongue is not forked; but why
-should I take this pale woman so far?"
-
-Doña Maria cast a penetrating glance at him--a suspicion crossed her
-mind--the Indian perceived it.
-
-"I only made a simple observation to my sister; it concerns me little,
-and she need not answer me if she does not think proper," he said, with
-indifference.
-
-The brow of the Linda became serene again.
-
-"The remark is just, chief; I will answer it. Why take her so far, you
-asked me; because Antinahuel loves this woman--his heart is softened by
-her--and perhaps he will suffer himself to be moved by her prayers, and
-restore her to her family. But it shall not happen; she shall weep tears
-of blood; her heart shall break under the incessant pangs of grief; she
-shall lose everything, even hope!"
-
-After uttering these words, Doña Maria arose, with head erect, sparkling
-eyes, and extended arm; there was in her aspect something fatal and
-terrible, which terrified even the Indian, by nature so difficult to
-move.
-
-"Go," she cried, in a tone of command, "before she departs for ever,
-I will see this woman once--only once, and speak with her for a few
-minutes; she shall at least know me: bring her hither!"
-
-The Indian went out silently; this woman, so beautiful and so cruel,
-terrified him--she inspired him with horror.
-
-Doña Rosario, on hearing this atrocious sentence pronounced against her,
-fell senseless to the ground.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIV.
-
-FACE TO FACE.
-
-
-The door of the cuarto in which Doña Rosario was confined was thrown
-open, and the Puelche warrior appeared; he held in his hand a rude
-earthen lamp, the flame of which, although feeble, sufficed to
-distinguish objects. He had replaced his shabby hat upon his head, and
-its wide brim served as a mask to his features.
-
-"Come with me!" he said, in a rough voice, to the maiden.
-
-Conscious of the inutility of a resistance which could only be dangerous
-to her amidst the bandits who surrounded her, and bowing her head with
-resignation, she followed her guide in silence. Doña Maria had resumed
-her place in the ebony chair; with arms crossed, and her head hanging
-upon her bosom, she was buried in dark meditations. At the slight noise
-made by the footsteps of the young lady, she drew herself up, a flash of
-hatred gleamed from her dark eyes, and with, a gesture she commanded the
-Indian to retire. The Puelche obeyed.
-
-The two women examined each other intensely; their looks crossed; the
-hawk and the dove were face to face. A deathlike silence reigned in the
-apartment; at intervals the wind came in gusts and dismal moanings,
-through the ill-joined boards of the doors, shook the old building to
-its foundation, and agitated the flame of the only candle that illumined
-the vast gloomy room in which the two women were. After a sufficiently
-long pause, the Linda, who, with that instinct which women possess in
-such a high degree, had examined in detail, one by one, the numerous
-beauties of the charming girl who stood pale and trembling before her,
-at length spoke--
-
-"Yes," she said, in a hollow voice, as if speaking to herself, and
-overcome by the evidence of the fact, "yes, this girl is beautiful; she
-has everything to make her an object of love--to see her must be to
-love her; well, this beauty, which up to this time has been her joy and
-her pride, grief shall wither rapidly; before one year has passed away
-I am resolved that she shall become an object of pity and contempt for
-all. Oh!" she added, in a piercing, shrill voice, "I have her at length
-within the power of my vengeance!"
-
-"What have I done to you, madam, that you should hate me thus?" the
-maiden asked, in a plaintive voice, the sweet and melodious accent of
-which would have softened anyone but her to whom she spoke.
-
-"What have you done to me, silly creature?" the Linda cried, bounding
-up like a wounded lioness, and placing herself close in front of Doña
-Rosario--"what have you done to me?" and then added, with a loud
-laugh--"Ah! ah! that's true, _you_ have done nothing to me!"
-
-"Alas, madam! I do not even know you; this is the first time I have been
-in your presence; I, a poor young girl, whose life to the present time
-has passed away in retirement--how can I have offended you?"
-
-"Yes, I allow it," the Linda replied; "you have done nothing to me; and,
-personally, as you have just said, I have nothing to reproach you with;
-but, by making you suffer, learn that it is upon _him_ I avenge myself."
-
-"I do not understand what you mean, madam," the maiden said, simply.
-
-"Senseless fool, do not play with the lioness who is ready to devour
-you, or pretend to feign an ignorance of which I am not the dupe; if you
-have not already divined my name, I will tell it you--I am Doña Maria,
-whom they call the Linda--do you understand me now?"
-
-"Not more than I did before, madam," replied Doña Rosario, with an
-accent of frankness that shook the belief of her persecutor, in spite of
-herself; "I have never even heard that name."
-
-"Can that be true?" she cried, doubtingly.
-
-"I swear it is."
-
-Doña Linda strode about the apartment with long, hasty steps. Doña
-Rosario, more and more astonished, looked stealthily at this woman,
-without being able to account to herself for the emotion which her
-presence, and the sound of her voice, caused her to experience; it
-was not fear, still less was it joy, but an incomprehensible mixture
-of sadness, joy, pity, and terror; an undefinable feeling, which,
-far from creating repulsion, drew her towards a woman whose odious
-projects were no secret to her, and from whom she knew she had so much
-to dread. Singular sympathy; what Doña Rosario felt towards the Linda,
-the Linda felt towards Doña Rosario: in vain she called to her aid the
-remembrance of all the wrongs with which she fancied she had to reproach
-the man whom she wished to strike in the person of the young girl; in
-the innermost recesses of her heart, a voice, which constantly gained
-strength, spoke to her in favour of the maiden whom she was about to
-sacrifice to her hatred; the more she endeavoured to overcome this
-sentiment, for which she could not account, the more powerless she found
-her efforts become; at length, she was on the point of being softened.
-
-"Oh!" she murmured, passionately, "what is going on within me? Am I
-weak enough to allow myself to be subdued by the tears of that paltry
-creature?"
-
-Like Indian warriors, who, when fastened to the stake of blood, sing
-their own exploits to encourage them to endure bravely the tortures
-which their executioners silently prepare, the Linda recalled the
-maddening remembrance of all the outrages Don Tadeo had loaded her with;
-and with flashing eyes and trembling lips, she stopped short in front of
-Doña Rosario.
-
-"Listen to me, girl," she said, in a voice which passion caused to
-tremble, "this is the first and last time we shall be in the presence of
-each other; and you shall know why I bear you such hatred. What you will
-learn will be hereafter, perhaps, a consolation to you, and help you to
-bear with courage the miseries I reserve for you," she added, with the
-laugh of a demon.
-
-"I will listen to you, madam," Rosario replied, meekly, "although I am
-certain that what you are about to say cannot, in any sense, render me
-guilty with respect to you."
-
-"Do you think so?" the Linda said, in a tone of ironical compassion;
-"well, then, listen; we have time to talk, as you will not leave this
-place for an hour."
-
-This allusion to her approaching departure made the poor girl shudder,
-by recalling to her all that the departure threatened.
-
-"A woman," the Linda continued, "a young and beautiful woman, more
-beautiful than you, fragile child of cities, whom the least storm
-bends like a weak reed--a woman, I say, had for love married a man,
-also young, and handsome as the evil angel before his fall, who with
-perfidiously golden words, by opening before her immense and unknown
-horizons, had so seduced her, the poor, poor girl, that in a few days
-he induced her to abandon stealthily the roof which had sheltered her
-infancy, and to which her aged father in vain recalled her up to the day
-of his death, that he might bless and pardon her."
-
-"Oh, that is frightful!" cried Doña Rosario.
-
-"Why so? as he had married her, morality was satisfied, in the eyes
-of the world. This woman was pure, and could thenceforward move with
-head erect before the crowd which had hailed her fall with laughter and
-contempt. But everything passes away in this world, and most quickly of
-all, the love of the most passionate man. Only a year after marriage
-this woman, alone in the most retired room of her dwelling, wept over
-the remembrance of the happiness which had left her for ever. Her
-husband had deserted her! A child born of this union, a little fair
-girl, a rosy-lipped cherub, whose eyes reflected the azure of the
-heavens, was the sole consolation which in her misfortunes was left to
-the poor abandoned mother. One night, when she was plunged in sleep, her
-husband stole like a thief into her house, seized the child, in spite
-of the cries of the desolate mother, who threw herself in tears at his
-feet, and implored him by all he held sacred in the world. After roughly
-repulsing the despairing mother, who sank dying on the cold slabs of the
-floor, this heartless and pitiless man disappeared with the child."
-
-"And the mother?" Doña Rosario anxiously asked, much affected by the
-story which the Linda told, entirely to her own advantage.
-
-"The mother," she continued, in a low, broken voice, "the mother was
-doomed never to see her child again. She never has seen her! Prayers,
-threats, everything in turn, have been employed without success. And
-now, this mother, who adores her child, and would sacrifice her life
-for her,--this mother has vowed a hatred against this man, whom she so
-fondly loved, and who showed no pity to her, which no vengeance can
-satisfy! Now, then, young girl, do you know the name of this mother?
-Say, do you know it? No, you do not? Well, then, I am this mother! and
-the man who ravished from her all her happiness--the man whom she hates
-as she does the demon whose heart he bears, is Don Tadeo de Leon!"
-
-"Don Tadeo!" Rosario cried, starting back with surprise.
-
-"Yes!" the Linda said, furiously; "yes, Don Tadeo, your lover!"
-
-The maiden sprang towards Doña Maria, and seizing her arm violently, and
-placing her face, inflamed with anger, close to that of the courtezan,
-who was stupefied at the energy she could not have expected from this
-delicate creature, cried indignantly,--
-
-"What have you dared to say, madam? Don Tadeo my lover! It is false,
-madam!"
-
-"Can this be true?" the Linda asked, eagerly. "Can I have been so
-grossly mistaken? But then," she added, mistrustfully, "who are you? and
-by what title does he keep you always with him?"
-
-"I will tell you who I am, madam!" Rosario replied, proudly.
-
-All at once the hasty gallop of several horses was heard from without,
-mingled with cries and oaths.
-
-"What can the matter be?" said Doña Maria, turning pale.
-
-"Oh!" said Doña Rosario, clasping her hands fervently; "oh, my God! are
-you sending me liberators?"
-
-"You are not free yet," the Linda said, with a bitter smile.
-
-The tumult increased greatly; the door, violently pushed from without,
-flew open, and several men rushed into the room.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXV.
-
-THE REVOLT.
-
-
-The multiplicity of the scenes we have to describe, and the exigencies
-of our story, compel us to abandon Doña Rosario and the Linda,
-and return to Valdivia, where the revolt had assumed the gigantic
-proportions of a revolution. Electrified by the heroic conduct of the
-King of Darkness, the patriots fought with the greatest obstinacy.
-The Dark-Hearts appeared to have the gift of ubiquity; their numbers
-increased, they were everywhere at the head of the insurgents, exciting
-them by gesture and voice; but, above all, by their example. The city
-was completely cut up by barricades, against which the few troops who
-remained faithful to General Bustamente struggled in vain. Beaten back
-by the enemies who on all sides rose up against them to the thousand
-times repeated cries of "Our country!" "Chili Liberty!" the soldiers
-retreated, step by step, abandoning, one after another, the different
-posts of which they had been in possession at the commencement of the
-action, and rallied upon the Plaza Mayor, the outlets of which they had
-barricaded in their turn.
-
-The city was in the power of the insurgents; for as the battle from this
-moment was concentrated at one point, it was not difficult to foresee
-with which party the victory would remain; for the soldiers, discouraged
-by the ill success of their _coup de main_, and sensible of being the
-champions of a lost cause, only fought to obtain honourable conditions.
-General Bustamente's officers, and the senators whom he had brought
-with him as partizans, trembled when thinking of the fate that awaited
-them if they fell into the hands of their enemies. Success justifies
-everything: from the moment they failed to succeed they became traitors
-to their country, and, as such, had no right to a capitulation. They
-therefore excited their soldiers to fight valiantly, promising them
-speedy assistance, and trying to revive their courage by telling them
-that their adversaries were merely citizens, whom they could easily
-overcome if they made a bold attempt, or even resisted for an hour
-longer.
-
-The general who commanded the garrison, and whom we saw upon the steps
-of the cabildo read with so much arrogance the decree which changed the
-form of government, bit his lips with rage and performed prodigies of
-valour, to give Bustamente time to arrive. As soon as he saw the turn
-things had taken, he sent off an express for the General with the utmost
-promptitude. This express was Diego, the old soldier who was so devoted
-to General Bustamente.
-
-"Lieutenant," he said, in conclusion, "you see in what a position we
-are; you must reach the General at all risks."
-
-"I will reach him, General; be at ease on that head!" Diego replied,
-intrepidly.
-
-"And I will endeavour to hold out till your return."
-
-Don Diego, before he finished speaking, had ridden desperately at
-the ranks of the insurgents, spurring on his horse, and waving
-his sword with menacing rapidity round his head. The Dark-Hearts,
-astonished by such an attack on the part of a single man, at the first
-moment unconsciously opened their ranks before him as to a canister
-shot, incapable of resisting the impetuous shock of this apparently
-invulnerable demon, who mowed down all that came in his way. Diego
-skilfully took advantage of the disorder produced on the enemy by his
-furious assault; he kept pushing on, and, after incredible efforts,
-succeeded in getting out of the city. As soon as he was in safety, the
-overexcitement which till that time had sustained him, suddenly sank,
-and at a few paces from the gates he was forced to stop to take breath,
-and restore his confused ideas to a little order. The old soldier washed
-the sides and nostrils of his horse with a little brandy and water;
-and as soon as this duty was performed, aware that the fate of his
-companions depended upon his speed, he sprang into his saddle and set
-off with the fleetness of an arrow.
-
-The General did not delay his return to Valdivia a minute, for he felt
-that success would be an immense advantage to him; and a check, if he
-were beaten, irreparable. As a conqueror, his march to Santiago would
-be nothing but a triumphant march; the authorities of the cities he
-passed through would rival each other in ranging themselves beneath his
-standard; whereas, if he were forced to abandon Valdivia as a fugitive,
-he would be tracked like a wild beast, and obliged to seek safety in
-a prompt flight, either in Bolivia or Buenos Aires, and the projects
-he had nourished so long, and of which he believed he had beforehand
-assured the success, would be deferred, or perhaps destroyed for ever.
-Thus the General was a prey to one of those cold furies, which are so
-much more terrible, because they cannot be exhibited outwardly.
-
-The horsemen advanced amidst a cloud of dust raised by their precipitate
-course, rushing along the road like a whirlwind, and with a noise like
-thunder. Two lances' length in advance of the soldiers, Don Pancho,
-bending over the neck of his horse, with pale brow and clenched teeth,
-galloped at full speed, keeping his eyes fixed upon the lofty steeples
-of Valdivia, whose dark shadows became more enlarged on the horizon
-every minute. Within half a mile of the city he halted his squadron. The
-sharp pattering of musketry resounded strongly, mingled at intervals
-with the dismal, rolling bass of cannon; the battle, therefore, must
-still be going on. The General hastened to make his last preparations
-before attempting an attack he hoped would prove decisive. The foot
-soldiers dismounted, and formed in platoons, and firearms of all kinds
-were loaded.
-
-The troops brought up by the General were not numerous from the European
-point of view, according to which we are accustomed to see great masses
-in conflict; they, at most, did not exceed eight hundred men. In Europe
-it is customary to say that victory is most likely to attend large
-battalions: in America, where the largest armies are frequently of not
-more than three thousand men, this idea becomes naturally modified,
-and it is generally the most skilful or the most brave man who remains
-master of the field of battle.
-
-Don Pancho was a rough soldier, accustomed to the struggles of civil
-wars, which, for the most part, consist of audacious _coups de main_.
-Endowed with courage bordering on rashness, and devoured by ambition, he
-prepared, with the greatest coolness, to re-establish his compromised
-affairs by an irresistible attack. The country in the neighbourhood of
-Valdivia is a real English garden, interspersed with thickets, apple
-orchards, copses, and slender streams of water rippling away to the
-river. It was very easy for the General to conceal his arrival. Two
-soldiers were detached as scouts, in order to learn the state of things.
-At the expiration of a few minutes they returned. The outskirts of the
-city were deserted, the insurgents had driven the troops back into the
-centre, and, according to the scouts, with the imprudence of citizens
-metamorphosed suddenly into soldiers, they had left no reserve, or even
-placed sentinels, to secure their rear against a surprise.
-
-This information, instead of restoring confidence to the General, made
-him knit his brows; he thought it must be a manoeuvre, and whilst his
-officers were laughing with all their might at the able tactics of
-the insurgents, he judged it necessary to redouble his precautions.
-The troops were divided into two bodies, which, in case of need, were
-to support each other; and, as they were attacking a city entirely
-barricaded, the lancers were ordered to dismount, and reinforce the
-infantry. Only one squadron of a hundred horsemen remained in the
-saddle, concealed about a quarter of a mile from the place, in order to
-support a retreat, or to put the fugitives to the sword, if the surprise
-succeeded. These arrangements made, the General made an earnest address
-to his soldiers, to whom he promised, in the event of success, the
-pillage of the city. He then placed himself at the head of the first
-detachment, and gave the order, "March! Forward!"
-
-The troops advanced in the Indian fashion, taking advantage of every
-inequality in the ground, and of every tree to conceal themselves, and
-arrived thus, without giving alarm, to within pistol shot of the city.
-The dead silence which continued to prevail around him, contrasted in
-a dismal manner with the musketry and cannon which became more audible
-as they advanced, and greatly increased the General's anxiety. A dark
-presentiment warned him that he was threatened by some great danger,
-which he knew not how to avoid, from being ignorant of what kind it
-might be. The least hesitation at this critical minute might bring on
-irreparable misfortunes. The General grasped the hilt of his sword
-firmly in his clenched hand, and turning towards his soldiers, shouted
-in a loud, clear voice, "Forward!"
-
-The detachment, which only awaited this order, rushed forward shouting,
-and, at double-quick time, cleared the space between them and the city.
-Windows, doors, all were closed; and had it not been for the distant
-report of musketry, the city might have been thought deserted. The first
-detachment, finding no obstacles before them, continued their march;
-and the second detachment also entered. But then, all at once, behind,
-before, and on the flanks of the troops, a loud cry burst forth; and
-at every window appeared men with muskets in their hands. Don Pancho
-Bustamente was surrounded, he had allowed himself to be taken--pardon us
-the triviality of the comparison--like a rat in a trap. The soldiers,
-astonished for a second, soon recovered themselves; they faced front and
-rear, and attacked the double barrier that enclosed them: but though
-they desperately rushed against it, they could not force it. They then
-plainly perceived they were lost, that they could expect no quarter, and
-prepared to die like brave men.
-
-The General cast fierce and desperate glances around him, looking,
-but unsuccessfully, for a point of issue from the menacing forest of
-bayonets crossed before him, and which enclosed him as in a steel
-network. Some authors have amused themselves at the expense of the
-wars and battles of the Americans, in which they say the two armies
-always take care to place themselves out of reach of cannon shot, so as
-never to have a single man killed. This pleasantry, which is in very
-bad taste, has assumed the proportions of a calumny it is but just
-to refute, for it attacks the honour of the Americans of the South,
-who, I unhesitatingly assert, are endowed with intrepid courage--a
-courage that was brilliantly displayed during the wars of independence
-against the Spaniards. Unhappily, at present this courage is employed
-in fratricidal struggles, without any understood object. Thrice the
-soldiers rushed upon the insurgents, and thrice were they repulsed
-with enormous loss. The battle was horrible, without mercy on either
-side; they fought hand to hand, foot to foot, breast to breast, to
-the last breath, only falling to die. The troops, decimated by this
-frightful carnage, gradually gave ground; the space they occupied
-became narrower and narrower, and the moment did not appear distant
-when they would disappear under the popular flood which continued to
-ascend, and threatened to engulf them under its irresistible mass. The
-General collected about fifty men resolved to die or open a passage, and
-he made a desperate attempt. It was a collision of giants. For a few
-minutes, the two masses launched one against the other remained almost
-motionless, from the force of the blow with which they met; Don Pancho,
-flourishing his sword around him, and standing in his stirrups, struck
-down all who opposed his passage.
-
-Suddenly a man placed himself before him, like a rock which rises from
-the depths of the sea. At the sight of him the General paused, in spite
-of himself, with a stifled cry of surprise and rage. This man was Don
-Tadeo de Leon, his mortal enemy; whom he had once condemned to death,
-and who had, in a miraculous manner, survived his execution. But, now!
-God seemed to place him fatally before him, to be the instrument of his
-vengeance, and the cause of his ruin and his shame.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVI.
-
-THE LION AT BAY.
-
-
-"My God!" said the General, "am I the dupe of an hallucination?"
-
-"Ah! ah!" the King of Darkness exclaimed, with an ironical smile, "you
-recognize me then, General?"
-
-"Don Tadeo de Leon!" Don Pancho cried, in horror. "Do the dead then
-arise from the tomb? Oh! I hoped that what I heard was false. It is you!"
-
-"Yes," Don Tadeo replied, in a stern voice, "you are not mistaken, Don
-Pancho; I am Don Tadeo de Leon, whom you caused to be shot upon the
-Plaza Mayor of Santiago. Your spies have informed you correctly."
-
-"Man or demon," the General shouted, half choking with rage, "I will not
-yield to you! I will fight you as a man, and send you back again to the
-hell from which you have escaped!"
-
-His enemy smiled disdainfully.
-
-"Your hour has arrived, Don Pancho," he said; "you are due to the
-justice of the Dark-Hearts."
-
-"You do not hold me yet, wretched traitor! If I cannot conquer, I can
-die, weapon in hand, like a soldier."
-
-"No, your hour has struck, I tell you; you are ours, you shall die, but
-not the death of a soldier; you shall be executed by our justice!"
-
-"If that be the case," the General yelled, brandishing his sword, "come
-and take me!"
-
-Don Tadeo did not deign a reply; he gave a signal, and a lasso whizzed
-through the air, launched by an invisible hand, and fell round the
-General's shoulders. Astonished by this unexpected attack, before he
-could make the least possible resistance, he received a terrific shock,
-lost his stirrups, was pulled from his horse, and dragged amongst
-the insurgents. The astounded General, half mad with rage and shame,
-exhausted himself in vain efforts; nearly strangled by the lasso which
-flayed his neck, his face assumed a purple tint; his eyes, injected with
-blood, seemed starting from their sockets, and a white foam flowed from
-the corners of his discoloured lips. Don Tadeo contemplated him for a
-moment with a mixture of pity and triumph.
-
-"Free him from that slipknot," he said. "Secure his person, but treat
-him with respect."
-
-The soldiers, terrified at this prompt capture, which they had not at
-all expected, stood downcast and silent; in their stupor forgetting even
-the use of their arms. Don Tadeo turned towards them:
-
-"Surrender," he shouted, "surrender! the man who misled you is in our
-power; your lives shall be spared."
-
-The soldiers consulted each other for an instant with their eyes; and
-then, as if by a spontaneous movement, they threw down their muskets,
-crying aloud:
-
-"Chili! Chili! liberty! liberty!"
-
-"That is well!" said Don Tadeo; "leave the city, encamp at the distance
-of a mile, and await the orders which shall soon be transmitted to you."
-
-The conquered soldiers, with downcast looks, followed the road they had
-traversed an hour before; they passed through the silent ranks of the
-insurgents, which opened to give them passage. Without loss of time,
-Don Tadeo, followed by a crowd of his partisans, directed his course
-towards the Plaza Mayor, where the battle still raged. The soldiers,
-solidly intrenched in the Plaza, and masters of the cabildo, fought
-valiantly, hoping still for the assistance of General Bustamente, of
-whose fate they were ignorant. Although reduced to a small number, these
-troops occupied a formidable position, in which it was almost impossible
-to force them, without resolving to suffer great loss. Persuaded that
-they only required to gain time, the soldiers fought with the energy of
-despair, defending inch by inch the barricade behind which they were
-sheltered.
-
-But the day was passing away, their ammunition was growing exhausted, a
-great number of their comrades were stretched dead at their feet, and
-nothing could support them but the hope that the succour so impatiently
-expected was at hand. In the heat of their own contest they had not
-heard the noise of the battle fought by Don Pancho at the city gates, in
-which but few shots had been fired, as it had been principally decided
-by cold steel. Discouragement, however, began to affect the bravest,
-the general who commanded even felt his energy diminish, and he looked
-around him with great anxiety.
-
-Dejected, and with downcast eyes, the senator, who had been the bearer
-of the fatal proclamation, trembled in all his limbs; he regretted,
-but too late, having thrown himself into this hornet's nest; and he
-offered up the most magnificent vows to the innumerable saints of the
-golden Spanish legend, if they would bring him safe and sound through
-the perils which surrounded him. The worthy man had not any warlike
-instincts; and we can safely affirm, without fear of contradiction, that
-if he had had the slightest suspicion that things would have taken the
-turn they did, he would have remained quiet in his charming quinta of
-Corro-Azul, in the environs of Santiago, where his life glided away so
-softly, so happily, and, above all, so free from care. Unfortunately,
-as it sometimes happens in this nether world, where, whatever Candide
-may say, everything is not for the best, in the best of worlds, Don
-Ramón Sandias--so the worthy senator was named--had not been able duly
-to appreciate the charms of that calm life; ambition had gnawed at his
-heart, though he had nothing to wish for; and he had, as we have seen,
-plunged up to the neck in a hornet's nest, from which he did not know
-how to emerge.
-
-At every shot he heard, the poor senator jumped like a Guanaco, with
-startled eyes; and when, now and then, in spite of the precautions he
-had taken, the sinister hissing of a bullet resounded in his ear, he
-threw himself flat on his face, murmuring all the prayers that his
-troubled memory could recall.
-
-At first, the contortions and cries of Don Ramón had very much amused
-the officers and soldiers among whom accident had placed him; they had
-even taken delight in augmenting his terrors; but, at length, as happens
-more frequently in such cases than people fancy, the pleasantries had
-ceased; Don Ramón's terrors had communicated themselves to the laughers,
-who saw, with fright, that their position was becoming every minute more
-desperate.
-
-"The devil take the poltroon!" the General at length cried, angrily;
-"cannot you keep your trembling limbs still? Caspita! console yourself,
-they won't kill you more than once."
-
-"Ah! that is very easy for you to say," the senator replied, in a broken
-voice; "I am no soldier; it is your trade to be killed, it is all one to
-you."
-
-"Hum!" said the General, "not quite so much so as you may think; but
-comfort yourself; if this goes on a little longer, we shall all go
-together."
-
-"What is that you say?" the poor man muttered, with redoubled fear.
-
-"Caramba! it is clear as day, if Don Pancho does not make haste and
-come, all of us here will die."
-
-"But I do not wish to die!" said the senator, bursting into tears; "I
-am no soldier. Oh! I implore you, my good, my inestimable Don Tiburcio
-Cornejo, let me go away!"
-
-The General shrugged his shoulders.
-
-"What consequence can it be to you?" the senator continued, in a
-supplicating tone; "do save my life! show me which way I can get out of
-this cursed confusion."
-
-"Eh! how the devil do I know?"' the General said, impatiently.
-
-"Well, now, look here," said the senator; "you owe me two thousand
-piastres, which I won of you at Monte, do you not?"
-
-"What then?" the General, vexed at this ill-timed remark, said, sharply.
-
-"Get me away from here, and I will cry quits."
-
-"You are a fool, Don Ramón; do you think if I could get safely away from
-here, that I would remain?"
-
-"I see what you are," said the senator, despondingly; "you are but a
-false friend, you desire my death, you thirst for my blood."
-
-In short, the poor man was almost mad; he knew not what he said,
-terror had deprived him of the little sense he ever possessed. But, in
-reality, the position became every instant more critical; the carnage
-was horrible, the soldiers fell one after another beneath the bullets
-of the insurgents, who were sheltered by every corner of the plaza. Two
-or three sorties attempted by the troops had been vigorously repulsed;
-and hence, decimated as they were, all they could possibly do now was to
-prevent their intrenchments from being carried.
-
-All at once the senator bounded forward like a chamois; he made directly
-to the General, and seized his arm.
-
-"We are saved!" he cried; "thanks be to God! we are saved!"
-
-"Hilloh! what's the matter now, Don Ramón? What bee has stung you? are
-you really mad?"
-
-"I have not been stung," the senator replied, as fast as he could speak,
-"nor am I mad; we are saved; I tell you, we are saved!"
-
-"Well, how? what is it? Is Don Pancho coming at last?"
-
-"Don Pancho, indeed! I wish he were at the devil!" "Well, what is it,
-then?"
-
-"Why, do you not see, yonder? look, behind the barricade which blocks
-the entrance of the Calle de la Merced."
-
-"What is there to see?"
-
-"Why, a flag of truce! a white flag!"
-
-"Ah!" said the General, eagerly, "let us look! let us look!"
-
-And he did look.
-
-"True!" he said, at the expiration of a minute. "Success to all cowards,
-say I, for having good eyes; I did not see it."
-
-"Ay, but I did," said Don Ramón, rubbing his hands, quite revived, and
-marching off with great glee. But, at that moment, a nearly spent ball
-came ricocheting and whizzing close to his ear.
-
-"Lord, have mercy upon me!" he cried, falling flat on his face, and
-so remaining, as motionless as if he were dead, although he had not
-received a scratch.
-
-In the meantime, the General had likewise caused a flag of truce to be
-hoisted on his intrenchments, and had given orders for the firing to
-cease. The noise of the combat being hushed, the senator, like a rabbit
-relieved from alarm, raised his head a little; reassured by the silence
-which prevailed, he sat up, looking on all sides with the greatest
-anxiety, and, at length, convinced that the peril was over, he contrived
-to get upon his legs, which, however, trembled so frightfully under him,
-that they could scarcely support him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVII.
-
-THE TRUCE.
-
-
-As soon as the flag of truce was hoisted, firing at once ceased on both
-sides. The troops at bay, who had ceased to hope for succour, were not
-sorry to find that the insurgents saved their military honour by being
-the first to demand a parley. General Cornejo, in particular, was tired
-of the hopeless combat, which he had bravely maintained all the morning.
-
-"Well, Don Ramón," he said, addressing the senator in a more cordial
-tone than he had before employed, "I think I have found means to enable
-you to escape without striking a blow; so what we agreed to stands good,
-does it not?"
-
-The senator looked at him with a bewildered air; the worthy man had not
-the least recollection of what he had either said or done while the
-balls were whistling round him.
-
-"I do not at all understand you, General," he replied.
-
-"Poor man! pretend to be innocent, do!" said the General, laughing, and
-slapping him on the shoulder; "do you wish to persuade me you are like
-the Guanacos, which lose their memory through trembling with fear?"
-
-"Upon my honour," said the senator, "I swear, Don Tiburcio, that I have
-not the least remembrance of having promised you anything."
-
-"Ah! well, it is possible, for you were devilishly frightened. Come, I
-will refresh your memory: pay attention!"
-
-"You will give me great pleasure."
-
-"Well, I doubt that! but that is of no consequence. You said to me, on
-the spot where we now stand, not more than half an hour ago, that if I
-found the means of securing your escape, safe and sound, you would hold
-me quits for the two thousand piastres I lost to you, and owed you."
-
-"Do you flatter yourself that that is the truth?" said the senator,
-whose avaricious instincts began to revive, as fear departed.
-
-"I am sure it is. Ask these gentlemen," the General asked, turning
-towards some officers who stood by.
-
-"Oh, certainly! true to the letter," they said, with a laugh.
-
-"Ah! ah!"
-
-"Yes, and as I would not listen to you, you added--"
-
-"What!" Don Ramón, who knew of old the man he had to deal with, said,
-with a start--"do you mean to say that I added something?"
-
-"The devil! yes," said the other. "You added this; and I repeat your
-own words. You said, as plainly as you could speak--'And I will give a
-thousand piastres in addition.'"
-
-"Oh, that is not possible!" the senator ejaculated, quite beside himself.
-
-"Perhaps I did not understand you?"
-
-"That must be it."
-
-"Do you admit you mentioned the two thousand?" asked the General,
-quietly.
-
-"Not at all! not at all!" replied Don Ramón, quite confounded by the
-laughter of the bystanders.
-
-"Perhaps you meant more; well, we will not haggle about that."
-
-"I never said a word of the kind!" the exasperated senator exclaimed.
-
-"In that case," said the General, with a stern frown, and surveying him
-coolly, "you mean to say that I have told a falsehood."
-
-Don Ramón became aware that he had made a false move, and drew back.
-
-"Pardon me, my dear General," he said, in the most amiable voice
-possible, "you are perfectly right; I do now remember it was two
-thousand piastres I promised you in addition."
-
-It was now the General's turn to be at a loss, for this generosity on
-the part of the senator, whose avarice was proverbial, confused him; he
-was suspicious of some snare or trick.
-
-"But," Don Ramón added, with an air of triumph, "you have not saved me."
-
-"What do you mean by that?"
-
-"Why, Santiago! as we are going to hold a parley, you are too late, and
-our bargain is void."
-
-"Oh! oh!" said Don Tiburcio, with a jeering smile, "you think so, do
-you?"
-
-"Caspita! I am sure of it."
-
-"And yet you are deceived, my dear friend, as you shall judge: come with
-me, the flag of truce is now crossing the barricades, and in an instant
-you will learn that you have never been so near death as now."
-
-"You are joking."
-
-"I never joke about serious circumstances."
-
-"In Heaven's name explain yourself!" said the poor senator, whose fears
-had all returned.
-
-"Lord! it is the simplest thing in the world," said the General,
-carelessly; "I have but to declare to the leader of the revolt, and be
-assured I will not fail to do so, that I only acted by your orders."
-
-"Well, but that is not true," interrupted Don Ramón, in great alarm.
-
-"I know that," the General replied, bluntly; "but, as you are a senator,
-they will believe me, and you will be fully and fairly shot, and that
-will be a pity."
-
-Don Ramón was thunder-struck by this piece of implacable logic; he found
-that he was in a hobble, from which he could not possibly escape without
-paying handsomely. He looked at his _friend_, who surveyed him with a
-pitilessly ironical smile, whilst the officers bit their lips to keep
-from laughing; he stifled a sigh, and resolving to make the best of
-it, very much against his will, he said, inwardly cursing the man who
-exposed him in such a cynical fashion--
-
-"Well, Don Tiburcio, I admit that I owe you two thousand piastres, but
-_I_ will pay you."
-
-This was the only epigram he ventured to indulge in regarding the
-General's willingness to pay; but the latter was magnanimous, he took
-no notice of the offensive part of the speech, and rendered quite
-cheerful by the bargain he had concluded, he prepared to listen to the
-propositions of the officer with the flag of truce, who was brought to
-him with his eyes bandaged. This officer was Don Tadeo de Leon.
-
-"What do you come here for?" the General asked.
-
-"To offer you good terms, if you will surrender," Don Tadeo replied, in
-a firm voice.
-
-"Surrender!" the General shouted with a laugh; "you must be mad, sir!"
-and, turning towards the soldiers who had brought Don Tadeo, he added,
-"Remove the bandage from the eyes of this caballero."
-
-The bandage fell accordingly.
-
-"Look round you," said the General, haughtily, "do we look like people
-asking for a favour?"
-
-"No, General, you are a stout soldier, and your troops are brave; you
-ask no favour of us, it is we who come to you to offer to lay down our
-arms on both sides, and put an end to this fratricidal contest," Don
-Tadeo replied, with an air of grandeur.
-
-"Who are you, may I ask, sir?" said the General, struck with the noble
-bearing of the man who was speaking to him.
-
-"I am Don Tadeo de Leon, whom your leader ordered to be shot."
-
-"You!" cried the General, "you here!"
-
-"I, myself; and I have another name."
-
-"Tell it to me, sir."
-
-"I am called the King of Darkness."
-
-"The leader of the Dark-Hearts!" the General murmured, starting, in
-spite of himself, and surveying the speaker with uneasy curiosity.
-
-"Yes, General, I am the leader of the Dark-Hearts, but I am still
-something more."
-
-"Explain yourself, sir," the General asked, who began to be in doubt how
-to behave toward the strange personage who was speaking to him.
-
-"I am the leader of the men whom you term insurgents, but who have,
-in reality, only taken up arms to defend the institutions you have
-overthrown, and the constitution you have violated."
-
-"Sir!" said the General, "your words----"
-
-"Are severe, but just," continued Don Tadeo; "ask your own loyal,
-soldier's heart, General, and then tell me which side is right."
-
-"I am not a lawyer, sir," Don Tiburcio replied impatiently; "you have
-yourself said that I am a soldier, and, as such, I confine myself to
-obeying, without discussion, the orders I receive from my leaders."
-
-"Let us not lose time uselessly in idle speeches, sir; will you, or will
-you not, lay down your arms?"
-
-"By what right do you make me such a proposal?" the General asked, whose
-pride revolted at being forced to hold a parley with a citizen.
-
-"I could answer you," replied Don Tadeo, sternly, "that it is by the
-right of the stronger, and that you know as well as I do that you
-are combating for a lost cause, and that you are persisting without
-advantage in a senseless struggle; but I prefer addressing myself to
-your heart, and saying, why should brothers and fellow countrymen
-continue to cut each other's throats?--why should we any longer shed
-such precious blood? Make your conditions, General, and be assured that
-for the sake of protecting your soldier's honour, that honour which is
-ours also, as among the troops against whom we fight are our relations,
-friends, and countrymen, we will grant them as extensively as you can
-desire."
-
-The General felt himself moved, this noble language had found an echo
-in his heart; he looked down on the ground, and reflected for several
-minutes; at length, raising his head, he replied--
-
-"Sir, believe me it costs me much not to answer as I could wish what you
-have done me the honour to say to me; but I have a leader above me."
-
-"In your turn please to explain yourself, sir," said Don Tadeo.
-
-"I have sworn to Don Pancho Bustamente to defend his cause to the death."
-
-"Well?"
-
-"Well, sir, unless Don Pancho Bustamente were killed or a prisoner,--in
-either of which cases I should consider myself freed from my oath to
-him,--I will lay down my life for him."
-
-"Is that the only reason that prevents you, General?"
-
-"Yes, the only one."
-
-"In case General Bustamente should be either killed or a prisoner, you
-would surrender?"
-
-"Instantly, I repeat."
-
-"Well," replied Don Tadeo, stretching out his arm in the direction of
-the barricade by which he had come, "look yonder, General."
-
-Don Tiburcio looked in the direction indicated, and uttered a cry of
-surprise and sorrow. Don Pancho Bustamente appeared at the top of
-the barricade; his head was bare, and two armed men watched all his
-movements.
-
-"Do you see him?" Don Tadeo asked.
-
-"Yes," replied the General, sorrowfully; "we all surrender, sir;" and
-turning the point of his sword to the ground, he bent the blade with the
-intention of breaking it. Don Tadeo stopped him by seizing the sword,
-which he, however, returned to him immediately, saying--
-
-"General, keep that weapon, it will serve you against the enemies of our
-country."
-
-The General made no reply; he silently pressed the hand which the King
-of Darkness held out to him, and turning away to conceal the emotion
-which agitated him, he wiped away a tear that had fallen upon his grey
-moustache.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVIII.
-
-TWO ROGUISH PROFILES.
-
-
-The city was quiet, the revolt was over, or, to speak more logically,
-the revolution was complete. The soldiers, after laying down their arms,
-had evacuated Valdivia, which was left completely in the power of the
-Dark-Hearts. As soon as peace was re-established, the Dark-Hearts gave
-orders that the barricades should be destroyed, and that all traces of
-the sanguinary struggle should be removed as quickly as possible. By the
-force of accomplished facts alone, Don Tadeo de Leon found himself quite
-naturally invested with power, and in command of the province, with the
-faculties of a dictator.
-
-"Well," he asked Valentine, "what do you think of what you have seen?"
-
-"Faith," the Parisian replied, with characteristic bluntness, "I think
-people must come to America to see how men can be caught with hook and
-line like simple gudgeons."
-
-Don Tadeo could not refrain from smiling at this whimsical answer.
-
-"Do not leave me," he said; "all is not over yet."
-
-"I ask no better; but, our friends yonder, don't you think they will be
-very uneasy at our long absence?"
-
-"Can you for a moment imagine that I have forgotten them? Within an hour
-you will be at liberty. Come with me; I want to show you two faces to
-which our victory has given an expression very different from that which
-they generally wear."
-
-"That will be curious," said Valentine.
-
-"Yes," Don Tadeo replied, "or hideous, whichever you please."
-
-"Hum! man is not perfect," said Valentine, philosophically.
-
-"Fortunately not; if he were, he would be execrable," Don Tadeo remarked.
-
-They entered the cabildo, the doors of which were guarded by a
-detachment of Dark-Hearts. The vast saloons of the palace were invaded
-by an eager crowd, who came to salute the rising sun; that is to say,
-they came to offer the spectacle of their baseness to the fortunate man,
-whom, no doubt, they would have stoned if success had not crowned his
-audacious attempt. Don Tadeo passed, without seeing them, through the
-ranks of these sycophants, the sworn courtiers of every authority, as
-void of honour as of shame, possessing but one single talent--that of
-making bendings to which it would seem impossible that the vertebral
-column of a man could attain, however flexible it may be. Valentine, who
-followed the footsteps of his friend, feigned to take for himself the
-greater part of the genuflexions meant for Don Tadeo, and bowed to the
-right and left with imperturbable coolness and assurance.
-
-The two gentlemen, after many delays caused by the increasing crowd,
-which closed around them, reached at last a retired apartment, in which
-there were only two persons. These two persons were General Tiburcio
-and Senator Don Ramón Sandias. The physiognomy of these persons offered
-a striking contrast. The General, with a sad face and a pensive step,
-walked about the apartment, whilst the senator, luxuriantly reclining
-on a fauteuil, with a smile upon his lips, his visage expanded, and
-one leg thrown over the other, was fanning himself carelessly with an
-embroidered handkerchief of the finest cambric. At the sight of Don
-Tadeo, the General advanced rapidly towards him; as for the senator, he
-sat upright in his chair, assumed a serious look, and waited.
-
-"Sir," the General said, in a low voice, "two words."
-
-"Speak, General," replied Don Tadeo; "I am entirely at your disposal."
-
-"I have some questions which I wish to put to you."
-
-"You may be assured, General, that if it be in my power to answer you, I
-will not hesitate to satisfy you."
-
-"I am convinced of that, and it is that which emboldens me to speak."
-
-"I am all attention."
-
-The General hesitated for a moment, but seemed at length determined.
-
-"Good heavens, sir!" said he, "I am an old soldier, unacquainted with
-diplomacy; I had a friend, almost a brother, and I am a prey to mortal
-uneasiness on his account."
-
-"And that friend?"
-
-"Is General Bustamente. You must know," he added, warmly, "that we have
-been fellow soldiers thirty years; and I should wish--" here he stopped,
-as if in doubt, looking earnestly at the person he was addressing.
-
-"You would like?" said Don Tadeo, quietly.
-
-"To know the fate that is reserved for him."
-
-Don Tadeo gave the General a melancholy glance.
-
-"To what purpose?" he murmured.
-
-"I beg of you."
-
-"You insist on knowing?"
-
-"I do."
-
-"General Bustamente is a great criminal. While a leader in power, he
-wished to change the form of government against the will of the people
-from whom he held his position, and in contempt of the laws, which he
-shamelessly trampled underfoot."
-
-"That is but too true," said the General, whose brow turned crimson.
-
-"General Bustamente has been implacable during the course of his too
-long career; you know that he who sows the wind can only hope to reap
-the tempest."
-
-"Hence!"
-
-"The same implacability will be shown to him that he has shown to
-others."
-
-"That is to say?"
-
-"He will, in all probability, be condemned to death."
-
-"Alas! I expected as much; but will this condemnation of which you
-speak, be long delayed?"
-
-"Two days at most; the commission which must try him will be formed
-today."
-
-"Poor friend!" said the General, piteously; "and that's the end! Will
-you grant me a favour, sir?"
-
-"Name it."
-
-"As the General must die, it would be a consolation to him to have a
-friend by his side."
-
-"No doubt it would."
-
-"Allow me to be his guard. I am sure he will be happy to know that it is
-I who have the duty of watching over him and leading him to death. And
-then I shall not, at least, abandon him till the last minute."
-
-"So be it,--your request is granted. Have you anything else to say? I
-shall be happy to serve you."
-
-"No, I thank you, sir; that is all I desired,--Ah! one word more!"
-
-"Speak."
-
-"Can I be allowed to take this guard soon?"
-
-"Immediately, if you like."
-
-"I thank you, sir."
-
-And after profoundly bowing to Don Tadeo, the General quitted the room
-with a hasty step.
-
-"Poor man!" said Valentine.
-
-"Eh?" cried Don Tadeo.
-
-"I said, poor man!"
-
-"Oh, yes; I heard you plainly enough, but of whom were you speaking?"
-
-"Of the unfortunate man who has just left us."
-
-Don Tadeo shrugged his shoulders, and Valentine looked at him with
-surprise.
-
-"Do you think you know whence the solicitude of this poor man, as you
-call him, for his friend arises?"
-
-"Why, from his friendship for him; that is clear."
-
-"You think so, do you?"
-
-"I can think nothing else."
-
-"Well, then, allow me to tell you you are completely mistaken; the poor
-General is only desirous to be near his companion in arms, that he may
-have the opportunity of suppressing the proofs of his complicity in the
-rash enterprise of yesterday; proofs which Don Pancho most likely has
-about him, and which the other wishes to destroy at all hazards."
-
-"Can that be possible?"
-
-"By Saint Jago, yes! He desires to be constantly with him, that he may
-not communicate with anyone--why, he would kill him, if necessary."
-
-"Oh! this is infamous!"
-
-"But so it is."
-
-"Bah! it gives me a nausea."
-
-"Well, do not be sick yet."
-
-"Why not?"
-
-"Because," Don Tadeo continued, pointing to the senator, "I think we
-have something here that will bring the agreeable feeling to its height."
-
-As soon as Don Ramón saw the General leave the apartment, he quitted his
-easy chair, and advanced towards Don Tadeo, bowing obsequiously.
-
-"To whom have I the honour of speaking?" said the King of Darkness, with
-studied politeness.
-
-"Sir," the other replied, with a jaunty, gentlemanly air, "my name is
-Don Ramón Sandias, and I am a senator."
-
-"How can I be of service to you, sir?" said Don Tadeo, bowing.
-
-"Oh," Don Ramón replied, affectedly; "as regards myself, personally, I
-ask nothing."
-
-"Indeed!"
-
-"Caspita! no; I am rich, what more can I want? But I am a Chilian, a
-patriot, sir; and, what is more, a senator. Placed in an exceptional
-position, I am bound to give my fellow citizens unequivocal proofs of my
-devotion to the holy cause of liberty. Are you not of my opinion, sir?"
-
-"Entirely."
-
-"I have heard, sir, that the wretched cabecilla, the cause of this silly
-movement, which brought the republic within two inches of ruin, is in
-your hands."
-
-"Yes, sir," replied Don Tadeo, with imperturbable coolness, "we have
-been fortunate enough to obtain possession of his person."
-
-"You are, doubtless, going to bring this man to trial?" Don Ramón asked,
-in a somewhat familiar tone.
-
-"Within forty-eight hours, sir."
-
-"That is right, sir. It is thus that justice should be dealt to these
-shameless agitators, who, in contempt of the sacred laws of humanity,
-seek to plunge our beautiful country into the gulf of revolutions."
-
-"Sir!"
-
-"Pardon me for speaking thus," said Don Ramón, with well-feigned
-enthusiasm; "I feel that my freedom goes rather far, but my indignation
-carries me away, sir; it is quite time that these makers of widows and
-orphans should receive the exemplary chastisement they merit. I cannot
-think, without trembling, of the manifold evils that would have fallen
-upon us, if this miserable adventurer had succeeded."
-
-"Sir, this man is not yet condemned."
-
-"And that is exactly what brings me to you, sir. As a senator, and
-a devoted patriot, I claim of you the right which belongs to me, of
-presiding over the commission whose duty it is to sit in judgment upon
-him."
-
-"Your request is granted, sir," Don Tadeo replied, who was unable to
-repress a smile of contempt.
-
-"Thank you, sir!" said the senator, with an expression of joy; "however
-painful the duty may be, I shall know how to perform it."
-
-After bowing deeply to Don Tadeo, the senator left the room in high
-spirits.
-
-"You see," said Don Tadeo, turning to Valentine, "Don Pancho had two
-friends upon whom he thought he could depend: one took upon him to
-proclaim him, the other to defend him. Well, in one he finds a gaoler,
-in the other an executioner."
-
-"It is monstrous!" said Valentine, with disgust.
-
-"No," replied Don Tadeo; "it is logical, that's all;--he has failed."
-
-"I have had enough of your politic men, with two faces, and neither of
-them a true one," replied Valentine; "allow me to return to our friends."
-
-"Begone, then, since you wish it."
-
-"Thanks!"
-
-"You will come back to Valdivia immediately, will you not?"
-
-"Pardieu, will I!"
-
-"Will you have an escort?"
-
-"For what purpose?"
-
-"Ah! that is true; I am always forgetting that you never apprehend
-danger."
-
-"I am only anxious about our friends; that is why I leave you."
-
-"Have you any cause for apprehension?"
-
-"None; but yet, a vague uneasiness, which I can not account for, compels
-me to remain no longer away from them."
-
-"Begone, then, as quickly as you please, my friend; but pray be watchful
-over the poor child, Rosario."
-
-"Be at ease on that score; within three hours she shall be here."
-
-"That is understood: a pleasant ride to you, and remember that I shall
-look for you with impatience."
-
-"Time to go and return, that is all."
-
-"Till then, adieu!"
-
-Valentine left the room, went straight to the stables, saddled his horse
-himself, and set off at a gallop. He had told Don Tadeo the truth: a
-vague uneasiness disturbed him, he had a presentiment of some misfortune
-or another.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIX.
-
-THE WOUNDED MAN.
-
-
-Let us return to the Count de Prébois Crancé. When the abduction was
-committed, that part of the plain where Don Tadeo had pitched his camp
-was deserted. The crowd, attracted by curiosity, had all gone to the
-side where the renewal of the treaties was taking place. Besides, the
-measures of the ravishers had been so judiciously taken, all had passed
-so quickly, without resistance, without cries or tumult, that no alarm
-had been given, and no one could suspect what was going on. The cries of
-"murder!" uttered by the wounded young man were too faint to be heard,
-and the pistol shots he had fired were confounded with the other noises
-of the festival.
-
-Louis remained for a considerable time lying senseless in front of the
-tent, the blood flowing from two wounds. By a singular chance, the
-peons, the arrieros, and even the two Indian chiefs, who could not think
-there was anything to be dreaded, had all gone, as we have said, to be
-present at the ceremony. When the cross had been planted, and the toqui
-and the General had gone, arm in arm, to the tent of the latter, the
-crowd began to separate into little groups, and soon dispersed, each
-returning to the spot where he had established his temporary camp.
-
-The Indian chiefs were the first to quit the scene; now that their
-curiosity was satisfied, they reproached themselves for having been so
-long absent from their friend. On approaching the little camp, they were
-surprised at not seeing Louis, and a certain appearance of disorder in
-the baggage filled them with uneasiness. They quickened their pace, and
-the nearer they drew the more evident this disorder became in their
-eyes, accustomed to remark those thousands of signs which escape the
-eyes of the white man. In fact, the passage left free in the inclosure
-formed by the bales, seemed to have been the scene of a struggle; the
-footmarks of several horses were strongly imprinted in the moist earth,
-and some bales had even been removed, as if to widen the entrance, and
-lay scattered about. All these indications were more than sufficient for
-the chiefs; they exchanged an anxious glance, and rushed into the camp.
-
-Louis was still lying where the assassins had left him, stretched across
-the entrance of the tent, his discharged pistols in his hands, his head
-thrown back, his mouth half open, and his teeth clenched. The blood had
-ceased to flow. The two men looked at him for a moment with a feeling of
-stupor. His countenance was of a livid paleness.
-
-"He is dead!" said Curumilla, in a voice stifled by emotion.
-
-"He seems so," Trangoil-Lanec replied as he knelt down by the body.
-
-He raised the young man's senseless head, untied his cravat, and opened
-his vest; then they perceived the two gaping wounds.
-
-"This is a revenge!" he murmured.
-
-"What is to be done?" said Curumilla, shaking his head discouragingly.
-
-"Let us try to recover him--I hope he is not dead."
-
-And then, with infinite address and incredible celerity, the two Indians
-bestowed upon the wounded man the most intelligent and most effective
-cares. For a long time all were useless. At length a sigh, faint as a
-breath, exhaled painfully from the oppressed breast of the young man; a
-slight flush tinted his cheeks, and, after several efforts, he opened
-his eyes. Curumilla, after having washed the wounds with clean cold
-water, applied a cataplasm to them of bruised oregano leaves.
-
-"Loss of blood alone has made him faint," he said; "the wounds are wide,
-but not deep, and not at all dangerous."
-
-"But what has been going on here?" Trangoil-Lanec asked.
-
-"Hush!" said Curumilla, laying his hand upon his comrade's arm; "he
-speaks."
-
-Indeed, the young man's lips did move silently; but, at length, he
-pronounced with a great effort, and in a voice so low that the Indians
-scarcely heard it--that single word which for him contained everything--
-
-"Rosario!"
-
-Then he sank back again.
-
-"Ah!" cried Curumilla, as if a sudden light had broken upon him,
-"where is the young palefaced maiden?" and he sprang into the tent, "I
-understand it all now!" he said, returning quickly to his friend.
-
-The Indians lifted up the wounded man gently in their arms, and carried
-him into the tent, where they placed him in Rosario's empty hammock.
-Louis recovered his senses, but almost immediately was overcome by
-a profound drowsiness. After having made him as comfortable as they
-could, the two Indians left the tent, and began, with the instinct of
-their race, to seek on the ground for indications they could ask of no
-witness, but which would show them traces they could understand. Now
-that the murder and the abduction had taken place, it became necessary
-to get upon the track of the ravishers, and endeavour, if possible, to
-save the young girl. After minute researches, which did not last less
-than two hours, the Indians returned to the front of the tent; they sat
-down, face to face, and smoked for a few minutes in silence.
-
-The peons and arrieros had returned from the ceremony, and expressed
-the greatest terror on learning what had taken place during their
-absence. The poor people did not know what to do; they trembled when
-they reflected upon the responsibility which rested upon them, and upon
-the terrible account Don Tadeo would require of them. After the two
-chiefs had smoked a few minutes, they extinguished their pipes, and
-Trangoil-Lanec began:
-
-"My brother is a wise chief, let him say what he has seen."
-
-"I will speak, since my brother desires it," Curumilla replied, bowing
-his head; "the pale maiden with the blue eyes has been carried off by
-five horsemen."
-
-To this Trangoil-Lanec made a sign of assent.
-
-"These five horsemen came from the other side of the river; their
-footmarks are strongly imprinted on the ground, which was wetted in the
-places where the horses trod with their dripping hoofs; four of these
-horsemen are Huiliches, the fifth is a paleface; when they reached the
-entrance of the camp, they stopped and consulted an instant, then four
-of them dismounted; the trace of their footsteps is visible."
-
-"Good!" said Trangoil-Lanec, "my brother has the eyes of a Quanaco;
-nothing escapes him."
-
-"Of the four horsemen who dismounted, three are Indians, as is easily
-perceived by the impression of their naked feet, the great toe of which,
-accustomed to the stirrup, is very wide apart from the other toes; but
-the fourth is a Muruche, for the rowels of his spurs have left deep
-marks all around. The three first have crept up to the tent, where Don
-Louis was talking with the young blue-eyed maiden, and, consequently,
-with his back towards those who came towards him; he was attacked
-unexpectedly, and fell without having time to defend himself: then the
-fourth horseman sprang forward like a puma, seized the maiden in his
-arms, and after jumping a second time over the body of Don Louis, went
-straight to his horse, followed by the three Indians. But Don Louis
-got up, first on his knees, and then on his feet; he fired his pistols
-at the ravishers, and one of them fell mortally wounded. It was the
-paleface, for a pool of blood marks the place of his fall, and, in
-his agony, he pulled up the grass with his clenched hands; then his
-companions dismounted again, took him up, and fled. Don Louis, after
-discharging his pistols, had a faintness come over him, and fell down
-again: that is what I have learnt."
-
-"Good!" Trangoil-Lanec replied, "my brother knows everything; after
-taking up the body of their comrade, the ravishers crossed the river,
-and went in the direction of the mountains. Now, what will my brother
-do?"
-
-"Trangoil-Lanec is an experienced chief, he will wait for Don Valentine;
-Curumilla is younger, he will go upon the track of the ravishers."
-
-"My brother has spoken well; he is wise and prudent; he will find them."
-
-"Yes, Curumilla will find them," the chief replied, laconically.
-
-After saying these words, he arose, saddled his horse, and left the
-camp; Trangoil-Lanec soon lost sight of him. He then returned and took
-his place by the wounded man. The day passed away thus. The Spaniards
-had all left the plain; the Indians, for the most part, had followed
-their example; there only remained a few tardy Araucanos; but these,
-also, were preparing to depart. Towards evening, Louis found himself
-much better; he was able, in a few words, to relate to the Indian what
-had passed; but he told him nothing new, he had divined it all.
-
-"Oh!" said the young man, as he ended, "Rosario! poor Rosario is lost!"
-
-"My brother must not be depressed with grief," Trangoil-Lanec replied
-softly; "Curumilla is upon the track of the ravishers; the young pale
-maiden will be saved!"
-
-"Do you seriously tell me that, chief? Is Curumilla really in pursuit
-of them?" the young man asked, fixing his anxious eyes upon the Indian;
-"can I indeed hope that?"
-
-"Trangoil-Lanec is an Ulmen," the Araucano replied proudly: "no lie has
-ever soiled his lips, his tongue is not forked; I repeat that Curumilla
-is in pursuit of the ravishers. Let my brother hope; he will see again
-the little bird which sings such sweet songs in his heart."
-
-A sudden flush crossed the young man's face at these words; a sad smile
-curled his pale lips; he gently pressed the hand of the chief, and
-closing his eyes, he sank gently back in the hammock. All at once the
-furious galloping of a horse was heard from without.
-
-"Good!" Trangoil-Lanec murmured, looking at the wounded man, whose
-regular breathing proclaimed that he was sleeping peacefully: "what will
-Don Valentine say to all this?"
-
-And he strode out hastily to meet the Parisian, whose face was the
-picture of anxiety.
-
-"Chief!" he cried, in a tremulous voice, "can what the peons say be
-true?"
-
-"Yes!" the chief replied coolly.
-
-The young man sank down, as if thunder-struck. The Indian seated him
-gently upon a bale, and placing himself beside him, pressed his hand,
-saying in a soothing tone:
-
-"My brother has much courage."
-
-"Alas!" the young man exclaimed, in an agonized voice, "Louis, my poor
-Louis, dead, assassinated! Oh!" he added, with a terrible gesture, "I
-will avenge him! I will solely live to accomplish that sacred duty!"
-
-The chief looked at him for an instant attentively.
-
-"What does my brother mean?" he asked; "his friend is not dead."
-
-"Oh! why do you seek to deceive me, chief?"
-
-"I speak the truth; Don Louis is not dead," the Ulmen replied, in such
-an imposing voice that it carried conviction to the wounded heart of the
-young man.
-
-"Oh!" he cried, impetuously, and springing up, "he lives!--is that
-possible?"
-
-"He has received two wounds."
-
-"Two wounds!"
-
-"Yes, but my brother can be comforted, they are not dangerous; in a
-week, at latest, they will be cured."
-
-Valentine remained for an instant stupefied by this good news, after the
-catastrophe which the peons and arrieros had announced to him.
-
-"Oh!" he exclaimed, throwing himself into the arms of the chief, whom
-he pressed with a kind of frenzy to his breast, "it is true, is it
-not?--his life is not in danger?"
-
-"No, no, my brother can reassure himself; loss of blood alone reduced
-him to the state of torpor into which he fell. I will answer for his
-recovery."
-
-"Thanks! thanks, chief! I can see him, may I not?"
-
-"He is asleep."
-
-"Oh! I will not wake him, be assured of that; I only wish to see him."
-
-"See him, then," Trangoil-Lanec replied, smiling.
-
-Valentine went in. He looked at his friend, peacefully sleeping; he
-leant softly over him, and impressing a kiss upon his brow, whispered--
-
-"Sleep, dear brother, I will watch."
-
-The lips of the wounded man moved; he murmured--
-
-"Valentine, save her!"
-
-The Parisian knitted his brow, and drew himself up again.
-
-"Come here, chief," he said to Trangoil-Lanec, "and tell me the details
-of what has passed, that I may know how to avenge my brother, and save
-her he loves."
-
-The two men quitted the tent.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XL.
-
-AHAUCANIAN DIPLOMACY.
-
-
-Antinahuel had not remained long inactive. Scarce had General
-Bustamente's escort disappeared in the cloud of dust, ere he remounted
-his horse, and, followed by all the Araucano chiefs, crossed the river.
-When he arrived on the other bank, he planted his lance in the ground,
-and turned towards the herald who was beside him, ready to execute his
-orders.
-
-"Let the three toquis, the Ulmens, and the Apo-Ulmens meet here in an
-hour," he said; "the fire of council shall be lighted on this spot for a
-grand council. Begone!"
-
-The herald bowed down to his horse's neck and set off at full speed.
-Antinahuel cast a glance around him. All the chiefs had regained their
-huts; one warrior alone remained. On perceiving him a smile stole over
-the lips of the toqui. This warrior was a man of lofty stature, proud
-carriage, and haughty countenance, whose piercing look conveyed a fierce
-and cruel expression. He appeared to be in the prime of life, that is to
-say, about forty years of age; he wore a poncho of exceedingly fine lama
-wool, striped with striking colours, while the long silver-headed cane
-which he held in his hand proclaimed him an Apo-Ulmen. He replied to the
-toqui's smile by a look of intelligence, and, bending to his ear, said,
-with an accent of gratified hatred--
-
-"When the cougars tear each other to pieces, they prepare a rich quarry
-for the eagles of the Andes."
-
-"The Puelches are eagles," Antinahuel replied; "they are masters of the
-other side of the mountains; they leave to the Huiliche women the care
-of weaving their ponchos."
-
-At this sarcasm, launched against the Huiliches, a fraction of the
-Araucano people, who devote themselves principally to agriculture and
-the breeding of cattle, the Apo-Ulmen frowned.
-
-"My father is severe with his sons," he said, in a husky voice.
-
-"The Black-Stag is a formidable chief in his nation," Antinahuel
-remarked, in a conciliatory tone; "he is the first of the Apo-Ulmens
-of the province of the maritime country. His heart is Puelche; my soul
-rejoices when he is at my side. Why is it that the Ulmens are not of the
-same temper as he?"
-
-"My brother has explained the reason. Obliged to live in continual trade
-relations with the miserable Spaniards, the tribes of the flat country
-have laid down the lance to take up the pickaxe: they have become
-cultivators; but let not my father be deceived,--the old spirit of their
-race still dwells within them, and on the day when they are called on to
-fight for their independence, all will rise at once to punish those who
-would attempt to enslave them."
-
-"Can that be true?" Antinahuel cried, stopping his horse short, and
-looking in the speaker's face; "may they be depended upon?"
-
-"What is the use of speaking of the subject at this moment?" said the
-Apo-Ulmen, with a bantering smile; "has not my father just come from
-renewing the treaties with the palefaces?"
-
-"That is true," said the toqui, darting a keen look at the Indian
-warrior: "peace is secured for a long time."
-
-"My father is a wise chief, that which he does is well done," the other
-replied, casting down his eyes.
-
-Antinahuel was preparing to reply, when an Indian arrived at full speed,
-and, with a prodigy of skill which these matchless horsemen alone
-can execute, he stopped suddenly before the two chiefs, and stood as
-motionless as a statue of bronze. The panting sides of his horse, which
-ejected clouds from his nostrils, and was spotted with white foam,
-showed that he had ridden far and fast. Antinahuel looked at him for an
-instant.
-
-"My son Theg-teg--the thunderer--has made a rapid journey."
-
-"I have executed the orders of my father."
-
-At these words, out of politeness, the Apo-Ulmen pressed the sides of
-his horse to retire, but Antinahuel laid his hand upon his arm.
-
-"Black-Stag may remain," he said; "is he not my friend?"
-
-"I will remain if my father wishes it," the chief answered, quietly.
-
-"Let him remain, then; his brother has no secrets from him;" and turning
-to the still motionless warrior, he added, "my brother can speak."
-
-"The Chiaplos are fighting," the latter replied; "they have dug up the
-hatchet and turned it against their own breasts."
-
-"Oh!" the toqui exclaimed with feigned astonishment; "my brother must be
-mistaken, the palefaces are not cougars, to devour each other."
-
-And he turned towards Black-Stag, with a smile of undefinable expression.
-
-"Theg-teg is not mistaken," the Indian warrior replied, gravely; "his
-eyes have seen clearly: the stone toldería, which the palefaces call
-Valdivia, is at this moment a more ardent furnace than the volcano of
-Autaco, which serves as a retreat for Guécubu, the genius of evil."
-
-"Good!" the toqui remarked, coldly, "my son has seen well; he is a
-warrior brave in battle, but he is likewise prudent; did he stand apart
-to rejoice, without seeking to learn which side prevailed?"
-
-"Theg-teg is prudent, but when he looks he means to see; he knows all,
-my father may question him."
-
-"Good! the great warrior of the palefaces set out from here to fly to
-the help of his soldiers; the advantage is with him."
-
-The Indian smiled, but made no reply.
-
-"Let my brother speak!" Antinahuel resumed; "the toqui of his nation
-interrogates him."
-
-"He whom my brother names as the great warrior of the palefaces, is the
-prisoner of his enemies; his soldiers are dispersed like grains of wheat
-scattered over the field."
-
-"Wah!" Antinahuel cried with feigned anger, "my brother has a lying
-tongue, what he says cannot be true; does the eagle become the prey of
-the owl? The great warrior has an arm strong as the thunder of Pillian.
-Nothing can resist it."
-
-"That arm, however powerful, has not been able to save him; the eagle
-is captive: the courageous puma was surprised by cunning foxes; he has
-fallen, treacherously overcome, into the snare they had laid before his
-feet."
-
-"But his soldiers? the great toqui of the whites had a numerous army."
-
-"I have told my father; the chief being made captive, the soldiers,
-bewildered and struck with fear by Guécubu, fell beneath the blows of
-their angry enemies."
-
-"The chiefs who were conquerors, no doubt, pursued them."
-
-"What for? The palefaces are women without courage: as soon as their
-enemies weep and pray for pardon they forgive them."
-
-At this news the toqui could not repress a movement of impatience, but
-he soon recovered himself.
-
-"Brothers ought not to be inexorable," he said, "when they lift the
-hatchet against each other: they may wound a friend without wishing it.
-The pale warriors have done well."
-
-The Indian bowed if as assenting.
-
-"What are the palefaces doing now?" the chief continued.
-
-"They are assembled round the council fire."
-
-"Good! They are wise men. I am satisfied with my son," Antinahuel
-added, with a gracious smile; "he is a warrior, as skilful as brave;
-he may retire, and take the repose necessary after so long a journey."
-"Theg-teg is not fatigued; his life is my father's," the warrior said
-with a bow; "he may dispose of it at his pleasure."
-
-"Antinahuel will remember his son," the toqui said with a sign of
-dismissal.
-
-The Indian bowed respectfully to his chief, and pressing his knees
-whilst shortening the bridle, he made his horse perform a curvet,
-brought it to the ground with an extraordinary bound, and went off
-caracoling. The toqui looked after him in apparent abstraction; then
-addressing the Apo-Ulmen--
-
-"What does my brother think of that which this man has said?" he asked.
-
-"My father is the wisest of the toquis of his nation, the chief the most
-venerated by the Araucanian tribes; Pillian will breathe words into his
-mind which will mount to his lips, and which we shall listen to with
-respect," Black-Stag replied, evasively, fearing to compromise himself
-by too frank a reply.
-
-"My brother is right," the toqui said, with a haughty glance; "I have my
-nymph!"
-
-The Apo-Ulmen bowed with an air of conviction. We beg our readers to
-observe, with regard to this expression, which for the first time
-has fallen from our pen, that in the Araucanian mythology, besides
-an infinite number of gods and goddesses, there are what are called
-spiritual nymphs, who perform towards man the office of familiar genii.
-There is not a renowned chief among the Araucanos who does not glorify
-himself with the idea of having one of these in his service. Hence,
-what Antinahuel said, instead of disturbing Black-Stag, gave him, on
-the contrary, a greater veneration for his chief; for he also flattered
-himself with having a familiar spirit at his command, although he did
-not dare to proclaim it aloud. At this moment the Araucanian drums and
-trumpets sounded loudly--the _chasquis_ were calling the chiefs to
-council.
-
-"What will my father do?" asked the Apo-Ulmen.
-
-"Man is weak," Antinahuel replied; "but Pillian loves his sons, the
-Moluchos, he will inspire the words I shall pronounce; my only desire is
-the happiness of the Araucano nation."
-
-"My father has convoked the great Auca-coyog of the nation; did he then
-suspect the news he has just received?"
-
-"Antinahuel knows everything," he answered, with a smile.
-
-"Good! I know what my father thinks."
-
-"Perhaps."
-
-"Let my father remember the words I have spoken."
-
-"My ears are open, my son may repeat them,"
-
-"When cougars tear each other to pieces, they prepare a rich quarry for
-the eagles of the Andes."
-
-"Good!" said Antinahuel, with a laugh; "my son is a great chief, let him
-follow me to the Auca-coyog, the warriors are waiting for us."
-
-The two warriors exchanged a look of undefinable meaning; these two men,
-so cunning and dissimulating, had compromised themselves to each other
-without avowing anything. They directed their course at a gallop towards
-the spot where the principal chiefs awaited them, drawn up in a circle
-around a fierce fire, the smoke of which ascended in graceful eddies
-towards heaven.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLI.
-
-THE COUNCIL
-
-
-The Araucanos, whom certain travellers, either ill-informed or of
-bad faith, persist in representing as savage men plunged in the most
-frightful barbarism, are, on the contrary, a relatively civilized
-people. Their government, the origin of which is lost in the night of
-time, and which, at the period of the Spanish conquest, was as well
-organized and carried out as easily as at the present day, is, as
-we have said in a preceding chapter, an aristocratic republic, with
-essentially feudal tendencies. This government, which affects all the
-appearances of the feudal system, has all its good qualities and all its
-defects. Hence, except in time of war, the toquis possess but the shadow
-of sovereignty, and the power resides in the entire body of the chiefs,
-who, in questions of importance, decide in a general diet, called the
-_Auca-coyog_, the great council, or council of free men, for such is
-the name they claim for themselves, and very justly, for no power has
-yet been able to subdue them. These councils are generally held in the
-presence of all, in a vast prairie.
-
-Antinahuel had eagerly seized the pretext of the renewal of the treaties
-to try and obtain from the chiefs authority to carry into execution the
-projects which had been so long ripening in his brain. The Araucanian
-code, which contains all the laws of the nation, created an obligation
-for his doing so, from which even his renown and popularity were
-powerless to release him. But he hoped to overcome the opposition of
-the chiefs, or their repugnance to submit to his will, by means of his
-eloquence and the influence which, under many circumstances, he had
-exercised over the minds of the Ulmens, even those most determined to
-resist him.
-
-The Araucanos cultivate with success the art of speaking, which among
-them leads to public honours. They make it a point to speak their own
-language well, and to preserve its purity by guarding particularly
-against the introduction of foreign words. They carry this so far,
-that when a white establishes himself amongst them, they oblige him
-to abandon his own name and take one of their country. The style of
-their speeches is figurative and allegorical. They call the style of
-parliamentary harangues _coyagtucan;_ and it must be observed that these
-speeches contain all the essential parts of true rhetoric, and are
-almost all divided into three heads.
-
-The few words we have said will suffice to show that the Araucanos are
-not so savage as we have been led to suppose. In short, a small people,
-who, without allies, isolated at the extremity of the continent, have
-since the landing of the Spaniards on their coasts, that is to say,
-during three hundred years, constantly and alone resisted European
-armies composed of experienced soldiers and greedy adventurers, whom no
-difficulty was likely to stop, and who have preserved their independence
-and their nationality intact, are, in our opinion, respectable in
-every point of view, and ought not to be stigmatized as barbarians
-with impunity--the sad, despicable vengeance of those proud and
-impotent Spaniards, who have never been able to conquer them, and whose
-degenerate sons at this very day pay them a tribute, under the lying
-excuse of an annual offering.
-
-We who, thrown by the chance of our adventurous travels among these
-indomitable tribes, have lived many days with them, have had an
-opportunity of judging soundly of these ill-understood people. We have
-been able to appreciate all that is really simple, great, and generous
-in their character. Terminating here this somewhat long digression, a
-tribute of gratitude paid to ancient and dearly-beloved friends, we will
-resume our narrative.
-
-Antinahuel and Black-Stag arrived at the place where the chiefs were
-assembled. They dismounted and joined the groups of Ulmens. The chiefs,
-who were peacefully chatting together, at their arrival became silent,
-and, for a few minutes, not a word was heard in the assembly. At length
-Cathicara, the toqui of the Piré-Mapus, made a few steps towards the
-centre of the circle, and took the initiative.
-
-Cathicara was an old man of seventy, of majestic bearing, and imposing
-countenance. A renowned warrior in his youth, now that many winters had
-wrinkled his brow and silvered his long hair, he enjoyed, by just title,
-a great reputation for wisdom in his nation. Descended from an old race
-of Ulmens, continually opposed to the whites, he was an inveterate enemy
-of the Chilians, against whom he had long waged war. He was acquainted
-with the secret views of Antinahuel, of whom he was the most devoted
-friend and partisan.
-
-"Toquis, Apo-Ulmens and Ulmens of the valiant nation of the Aucas, whose
-immense hunting grounds cover the surface of the earth," he said, "my
-heart is sad; a cloud covers my mind, and my eyes, filled with tears,
-are constantly cast towards the ground; whence comes it that grief
-devours me? Why does the joyous song of the goldfinch no longer sound
-cheerfully in my ears? why do the rays of the sun seem less warm to me?
-why, in short, does nature appear less beautiful to me? Will you tell
-me, my brothers? You are silent; shame covers your brows; your humbled
-eyes are cast down--have you nothing to reply? It is because you are a
-degenerate people! your warriors are women, who instead of the lance
-take up the spindle; because you bow basely beneath the yoke of these
-Chiaplos, these Huincas, who laugh at you, for they know that you have
-no longer blood red enough to contend with them! When, Aucas warriors,
-did impure owls and screech owls begin to make their nests in the eyrie
-of eagles? Of what use is this stone hatchet, the symbol of strength;
-this hatchet, which you have given me to defend you, if it is to remain
-inactive in my hands, and if I must descend into the tomb, towards
-which I am already hastening, without having been able to do anything
-for your enfranchisement?--Take it back again, warriors, if it is to be
-nothing but a vain, honorary ornament; for myself, my life has been too
-long--let me retire to my toldo, where, to my last days, it will be at
-least permitted me to weep over our independence, which is compromised
-by your weakness, and our glory eclipsed for ever by your cowardice!"
-
-After uttering these words, the old man made a few paces backwards,
-staggering as if overcome by grief. Antinahuel sprang towards him, and
-appeared to lavish consolations upon him in a low voice. The speech had
-strongly moved the assembly, for the toqui was beloved and venerated
-by all. The Ulmens remained apparently silent and stoical; but their
-feelings of hatred had been powerfully stirred, and passion began to
-gleam from their eyes in ominous flashes. Black-Stag stepped forward.
-
-"Father," he said, in a low, insinuating tone, and with a quiet air,
-"your words are rough; they have plunged our hearts in sadness; why have
-you been so severe with your children? Pillian alone is acquainted with
-the intentions of men. What do you reproach us with? with having done
-today what our fathers have always done before us, while they did not
-believe themselves in a position to contend victoriously against their
-enemies! No, owls and impure birds do not make their nests in the eyries
-of eagles. No, the Aucas are not women! They are valiant and invincible
-warriors, as their fathers were before them. Listen! listen to what
-the spirit reveals to me: the council with the Spaniards of today is
-null and void, because it has not taken place as the Admapu requires.
-The toqui has not presented to the chief of the palefaces the branch
-of the Cinnamon tree, the symbol of peace; the canes of the Apo-Ulmens
-have not been bound in a sheaf with the sword of the Huinca chief;
-the oath and the speeches have been pronounced upon the cross of the
-palefaces, and not upon the sheaf, as the law requires. I repeat, then,
-the Huinca-coyog is a nullity, nothing but a vain, laughable ceremony,
-to which we ought to attach no importance. Have I spoken well, powerful
-men?"
-
-"Yes! yes!" the chiefs cried, brandishing their arms, "the Huinca-coyog
-is null!"
-
-Antinahuel then took a few steps forward within the circle, with his
-head advanced, his eyes fixed on vacancy, and his arms extended, as if
-he heard and saw things which he alone could see and hear.
-
-"Silence!" Black-Stag cried, pointing to him with his finger; "the great
-toqui is holding conference with his nymph!"
-
-The chiefs experienced a sensation of terror while looking at the toqui.
-A solemn silence prevailed in the assembly. On his part, Antinahuel did
-not stir.
-
-Black-Stag approached him softly, and, stooping towards his ear, asked,--
-
-"What does my father see?"
-
-"I see the warriors of the palefaces; they have dug up the war hatchet,
-and are fighting with one another."
-
-"What more does my father see?" Black-Stag resumed.
-
-"I see streams of blood, which redden the soil; the odour of that blood
-rejoices my heart, for it is the blood of palefaces shed by their
-brothers!"
-
-"Does my father see anything more?"
-
-"I see the great chief of the whites! he fights valiantly at the head
-of his soldiers! he is surrounded, he fights still! he is nearly
-falling--he falls--he is down--he is conquered! His enemies seize him!"
-
-The Ulmens present at this scene looked on in stupefied amazement; it
-was incomprehensible to them. A smile of disdain curled the lips of
-Black-Stag, as he continued,--
-
-"Does my father hear anything?"
-
-"I hear the cries of the dying demanding vengeance upon their brothers!"
-
-"Does my father hear anything else?"
-
-"Yes; I hear the cries of Aucas warriors, long since dead, and they
-freeze me with terror!"
-
-"What do they say?" the chiefs exclaimed unanimously, a prey to intense
-anxiety. "What do the Aucas warriors say?"
-
-"They say, 'Brothers, the hour is come! To arms! To arms!'"
-
-"To arms!" the chiefs shouted, as with one voice. "To arms! Death to the
-palefaces!"
-
-The impulse was given, enthusiasm had seized all hearts; from this
-moment Antinahuel was able to raise the passions of the crowd to
-delirium at his pleasure. A smile of supreme satisfaction lighted his
-haughty countenance as he recovered apparently from his vision.
-
-"Chiefs of the Aucas," he said, "what do you order me to do?"
-
-"Antinahuel," Cathicara replied, throwing his stone hatchet into the
-fire, in which he was directly imitated by the other toquis; "there is
-now but one supreme hatchet in the nation, it is in your hands; let
-it be red up to the hilt in the blood of the vile Huincas; lead our
-Uthal-Mapus to battle--you have the supreme command! We give you the
-power of life and death over our persons. From this hour, you alone in
-the nation have the right to command us; whatever be your orders, we
-will accomplish them."
-
-Antinahuel raised his lofty head, his brow radiant with pride:
-brandishing in his nervous hand his powerful war hatchet, the symbol of
-the dictatorial and boundless power which had just been conferred upon
-him, he said haughtily,--
-
-"Aucas, I accept the honour you do me; I will prove worthy of the
-confidence you place in me. This hatchet shall never be buried till
-my body has served for food to the vultures of the Andes, or till the
-cowardly palefaces, against whom we are about to combat, shall have come
-upon their knees to implore pardon!"
-
-The chiefs replied to these words by cries of joy and ferocious
-howlings. The Auca-coyog was terminated. Tables were placed, and a
-banquet gathered together all the warriors present at the council.
-At the moment when Antinahuel was seating himself in the high place
-reserved for him, an Indian, covered with perspiration and dust,
-approached him, and whispered a few words in his ear. The chief started;
-a nervous paroxysm shook his whole frame, and he arose a prey to the
-most lively agitation.
-
-"Oh!" he cried, passionately, "it is to me alone that woman should
-belong!" and, addressing the Indian who had spoken to him, he added,
-"Bid my mosotones mount, and be prepared to follow me instantly."
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLII.
-
-THE NIGHT JOURNEY.
-
-
-Antinahuel beckoned Black-Stag to come to him, and the Apo-Ulmen did not
-delay. Notwithstanding the number and copiousness of the libations in
-which he had indulged, the face of the Araucano chief was as impassive,
-and his step as steady, as if he had only drunk water. When he arrived
-in front of the toqui, he bowed respectfully, and waited in silence till
-he was spoken to. The toqui, with his eyes fixed on the ground, and
-buried in serious reflections, was some time before he was aware of his
-presence. At length he raised his eyes; his countenance was dark, his
-eyes seemed to dart lightning, a nervous tremour agitated all his limbs.
-
-"Is my father suffering?" Black-Stag asked, mildly and affectionately.
-
-"I am," the chief replied.
-
-"Guécubu has breathed upon the heart of my father; but let him take
-courage, Pillian will support him."
-
-"No," Antinahuel replied; "the breath which dries my breast is a breath
-of fear."
-
-"Of fear?"
-
-"Yes; the Huincas are powerful. I dread the strength of their arms for
-my young men!"
-
-Black-Stag surveyed him with astonishment.
-
-"What signifies the power of the palefaces," he said, "when my father is
-at the head of the four Uthal-Mapus?"
-
-"This war will be terrible; and I would conquer."
-
-"My father will conquer. Do not all the warriors listen to his voice?"
-
-"No," said Antinahuel, sorrowfully; "the Ulmens of the Puelches were not
-present at the council."
-
-"That is true," Black-Stag murmured.
-
-"The Puelches are the first among Aucas warriors."
-
-"That is true, too," said Black-Stag.
-
-"I suffer!" Antinahuel repeated.
-
-Black-Stag laid his hand upon his shoulder.
-
-"My father," he said, in an insinuating tone, "is a great chief; nothing
-is impossible to him!"
-
-"What does my son mean?"
-
-"War is declared. Whilst we attempt incursions into the Chilian
-territory, to keep our enemies in a state of uncertainty as to our
-plans, let my father mount with his mosotones upon his coursers more
-fleet than the wind, and fly upon the wings of the tempest to the
-Puelches. His words will convince them; the warriors will abandon
-everything to follow him and fight under his orders. With their
-assistance we shall conquer the Huincas, and the heart of my father will
-swell with joy and pride!"
-
-"My son is wise! I will follow his counsels," the toqui answered, with a
-smile of mysterious expression; "but he has said war is resolved upon;
-the interests of my nation must not suffer from the short absence I am
-forced to make."
-
-"My father will provide for that."
-
-"I have provided for it," Antinahuel said, with a courteous smile; "let
-my son listen to me."
-
-"My ears are open to receive the words of my father."
-
-"At sunrise, when the fumes of the water fire are dissipated, the chiefs
-will ask for Antinahuel." Black-Stag nodded assent.
-
-"I will place in the hands of my son," the chief continued, "the stone
-hatchet, the sign of my dignity. Black-Stag is a part of my soul, his
-heart is devoted to me; I name him my vice-toqui--he will take my place."
-
-The Apo-Ulmen bowed respectfully before Antinahuel, and kissed his hand.
-
-"Whatever my father orders shall be instantly executed," he said.
-
-"The chiefs are of a proud character; their courage is fiery: my son
-must not give them time to cool, he must make them so compromise
-themselves, that they cannot afterwards retract."
-
-"What are the names of these chiefs, that I may keep them in my memory?"
-
-"They are the most powerful Ulmens of the nation. Let my son remember
-they are eight in number; each of them must make an incursion on the
-frontier, in order to prove to the Chiaplos that hostilities have
-commenced. The four principal among them will immediately repair to
-Valdivia, to proclaim the declaration of war to the palefaces."
-
-"Good!"
-
-"These are the names of the Ulmens: Tangol, Qud-pal, Auchanguer,
-Colfunguin, Trumau, Cuyumil, and Pailapen. Does my son hear these names
-distinctly?"
-
-"I have heard them."
-
-"Has my son understood the sense of my words? Have they entered into his
-brain?"
-
-"The words of my father are here," said Black-Stag, pointing to his
-forehead; "he may banish all uneasiness, and fly towards her who has
-taken possession of his heart."
-
-"Good!" Antinahuel replied; "my son loves me, he will remember; after
-two suns he will find me at the toldería of the Black Serpents."
-
-"The Black-Stag will be there, accompanied by his most valiant warriors;
-may Pillian guide the steps of my father, and may the god of war grant
-him success."
-
-"Farewell, brother!" Antinahuel murmured, taking leave of his lieutenant.
-
-Black-Stag bowed to the toqui and retired. As soon as he was alone,
-Antinahuel made a sign to the Indian whose news had caused his
-departure. During the conference of the two chiefs this man had stood
-motionless, at a sufficient distance to prevent his hearing what they
-said, but near enough to execute immediately the orders that might be
-given him. He drew near in obedience to the sign.
-
-"Is my son fatigued?" the toqui asked.
-
-"No; my horse alone wants rest."
-
-"Well, my son shall have another horse; he will guide us."
-
-Antinahuel, followed by the scout, advanced, without more words, towards
-a group of horsemen, who, leaning on their long lances, cast their black
-shadows gloomily into the night. These horsemen, about thirty in number,
-were the mosotones of the toqui. Antinahuel, at a bound, sprang upon a
-magnificent horse, held by the bridle by two Indians.
-
-"Forward!" he cried, settling himself in his saddle, and plunging his
-spurs into the sides of the horse, which set off with the speed of an
-arrow.
-
-The mosotones followed as quickly after, and the troop of horsemen
-glided through the darkness like a legion of gloomy phantoms, preceded
-by the scout. Who can express the terrible poetry of a night ride in
-the American deserts? The midnight wind had swept the heavens clear of
-clouds, and its vault, of a dark blue, appeared to be, like a monarch's
-robe, splendidly adorned with an infinite number of stars. The night
-had that velvety transparency peculiar to warm climates. At intervals,
-a puff of wind, loaded with indistinct sounds, scattered the dry leaves
-into the air, and was lost in the distance like a sigh.
-
-The Araucanos, bending over the necks of their horses, whose nostrils
-emitted dense clouds of smoke, rode on, and on, and ever on, without
-casting even a look around them. And yet the desert they were
-traversing, so silently and so rapidly, poured floods of splendid
-harmonies into space. The murmur of water among the lianas and the
-glayeuls, the moaning of the wind among the leaves, or the confused
-noise of a thousand invisible insects, could be heard; at times, lights,
-fluttering through the foliage, danced upon the grass in the manner of
-wild fires; at distances were to be seen old trees, at the angles of
-ravines or the brink of precipices, standing like spectres, shaking
-their winding sheets of parasitical plants; a thousand rumours hovered
-in the air; nameless cries issued from dens hollowed under vast roots;
-stifled sighs descended from the hoary summits of the mountains: an
-unknown and mysterious world could be felt existing around. Everywhere,
-on the earth, in the air, was to be heard the great flood of life, which
-comes from God, passes away, and is incessantly renewed.
-
-The Araucanos still continued their furious course, clearing torrents
-and ravines, and crushing under the hoofs of their flying coursers
-stones, the fragments of which rolled with a splash into the barrancas.
-At two lances, length, in front, by the side of the scout, Antinahuel,
-with his eyes ardently directed forward, kept urging on his horse, whose
-hard and loud breathing proclaimed fatigue. All at once a dark mass
-surged up in the distance, and then a voice was heard.
-
-"We have arrived," the guide exclaimed.
-
-"At last!" Antinahuel said, pulling up his horse, which could no longer
-stand when the impetus had ceased. They found themselves in a miserable
-village, composed of five or six huts falling to ruins, and which,
-at every gust of wind, threatened to tumble to pieces. Antinahuel,
-who expected the fall of his horse, disengaged himself quickly, and
-addressing the guide, who had likewise dismounted, asked--
-
-"In which toldo is she?"
-
-"Come," the Indian replied, laconically.
-
-Antinahuel followed him.
-
-They walked some steps without exchanging a word; the chief pressing
-his hand strongly on his breast, as if to keep down the beatings of his
-heart. After a hasty march of ten minutes, the two men found themselves
-in front of an isolated cabin, from the interior of which glimmered a
-feeble light. The Indian stopped, and turned towards Antinahuel.
-
-"That is it," he said, stretching out his arm in the direction of the
-cabin.
-
-The toqui turned round to ascertain whether his mosotones, whom, in his
-rapid course, he had left far behind, were rejoining him; and then,
-after the hesitation of a second, he approached the door and pushed it,
-saying in a low but determined voice--
-
-"An end must be put to this!"
-
-The door opened, and he entered.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLIII.
-
-TWO HATREDS.
-
-
-Antinahuel found himself face to face with Doña Maria; by an instinctive
-movement each drew back a step, stifling a cry; a cry of stupor on the
-part of Antinahuel, of surprise on the part of the Linda.
-
-"Oh!" sighed Doña Rosario, quite overcome, and bowing her head to avoid
-the ardent glance of the Indian chief--"Oh, Heaven! now I am really
-lost, indeed!"
-
-Doña Maria had in a few seconds driven back to her heart the feelings
-which raged within her; and with a mild voice and a smiling face she
-addressed Antinahuel--
-
-"My brother is welcome," she said, inviting him by a gesture to enter
-the cuarto; "to what happy chance do I owe his presence?"
-
-"A happy chance for me, particularly," he replied, with a satirical
-smile, and endeavouring to compose his features.
-
-The toqui was too well acquainted with the companion of his childhood
-not to know that he had in her a formidable adversary, with whom he must
-play close, in order to bring her to do his will.
-
-"Well!" the Linda resumed, "will my brother deign to do me the pleasure
-of explaining the cause of his sudden appearance, which, not the less,
-fills me with delight?"
-
-"Oh! the cause is very simple indeed, not worth mentioning; I did not
-hope, in any way, to meet my sister here; I must even confess, with all
-humility that I did not seek her."
-
-"Ah!" said Doña Maria, feigning to be imposed upon, "I am doubly
-fortunate, then."
-
-The chief bowed.
-
-"It is the truth," he said.
-
-"Good!" she thought; "now he is going to lie, let us see what villainy
-the demon will invent;" and then she added aloud, with a seducing smile,
-which displayed thirty-two little teeth of the purest pearl--"I am all
-ears, my brother can speak."
-
-"As my sister knows, this village is on the route which leads to my
-toldería, I have naturally traversed it in returning to my tribe; the
-night is advanced, my mosotones require a few hours' rest; I resolved
-to encamp here. I entered the first rancho which presented itself to
-my view, this rancho in which you are temporarily sojourning, and I am
-grateful to the chance which, as I have told you, has done all this, and
-is alone guilty."
-
-"Not bad for an Indian," murmured Doña Maria; "well, we will say no more
-about that."
-
-"Eh!" said Antinahuel, feigning for the first time to perceive Doña
-Rosario, and advancing towards her; "who is this charming young woman?"
-
-"A slave, not worthy of your notice," the Linda replied, sternly.
-
-"A slave!" Antinahuel cried.
-
-"Yes, a slave." The Linda clapped her hands, and the Indian we have seen
-talking with her entered.
-
-"Take away this woman!" she said.
-
-"Oh, madam!" Rosario exclaimed, falling on her knees, "can you be
-inexorable towards a poor girl who has never injured you?"
-
-The Linda gave her a fiery glance, and repulsed her with her foot.
-
-"I ordered this girl to be taken away," she said, perilously.
-
-At this flagrant insult, the blood rushed to the heart of the poor
-girl; her pallid brow flushed with scarlet, and drawing herself up
-majestically and proudly, she said in a piercing voice, the prophetic
-tone of which struck the Linda to the heart--
-
-"Beware, madam! God will punish you! As you today are without pity for
-me, so the day will come when there will be no pity for you!"
-
-And she left the room, after darting a look at her implacable enemy that
-made even her blench.
-
-When Antinahuel and the Linda were left alone, a long silence ensued.
-The last words of Rosario had wounded the Linda like the stroke of a
-poniard; it was in vain she endeavoured to steel herself against the
-emotion she experienced. She felt herself conquered by the weak girl.
-She, however, gradually overcame the incomprehensible sensation that
-oppressed her. Passing her hand across her brow, as if to drive away the
-importunate idea that pursued her, she turned towards Antinahuel--
-
-"No diplomacy between us, brother," she said, "we know each other too
-well to lose time in manoeuvring."
-
-"My sister is right; let us speak frankly."
-
-"The story of your return to your tribe is very clever, Antinahuel, but
-I do not believe a word of it."
-
-"Good! then my sister knows the reason that brings me here."
-
-"I do know it," she said, with an arch smile, which played like a
-sunbeam round her rosy lips.
-
-Antinahuel made no reply. He began to walk in great agitation about the
-room, casting looks of anger and vexation towards the door by which
-Rosario had gone out. The Linda followed him with a keen and mocking eye.
-
-"Well," she said, at the end of a minute, "will not my brother speak?"
-
-"Why should I not speak?" he angrily replied. "Antinahuel is the most
-redoubtable chief of his nation, the proudest warriors bend their lofty
-brows without hesitation before him!"
-
-"I am waiting," she said, in a calm voice.
-
-"A chief explains himself clearly, no one imposes upon him. My sister
-knows my hatred for the chief of the palefaces, of whom she has so much
-reason to complain."
-
-"Yes, I know that man is the personal enemy of my brother."
-
-"Well, then, my sister has in her hands the blue-eyed maiden, and she
-will give her to me, so that I may, in making her suffer, revenge myself
-on my enemy."
-
-"My brother is a man, he does not know how to avenge himself: why
-should I give my prisoner up to him? Women alone possess the secret of
-torturing those they hate. Let my brother leave it to me," she added,
-with a vindictive smile; "the torments I shall invent will suffice, I
-swear, to satisfy a hatred much deeper than any he can feel."
-
-Antinahuel, although his face remained impassive, shuddered inwardly at
-these odious words.
-
-"My sister is boastful," he replied, "her skin is white, her heart knows
-not how to hate, let her leave it to the Indian chief."
-
-"No," she passionately exclaimed, "I have fixed the fate of this woman;
-I will not give her to my brother."
-
-"Will my sister then forget her promise, and falsify her oaths?"
-
-"Of what promises and of what oaths do you speak, chief?"
-
-"Of those," the Indian replied haughtily, "which my sister pronounced in
-the toldo of Antinahuel, when she came among his tribe to implore his
-assistance."
-
-The Linda smiled.
-
-"Woman is a mockingbird," she said, "the man who pays attention to her
-words is----"
-
-"Good!" Antinahuel interrupted, "my sister shall keep her prisoner. Let
-my sister do her will; I will continue my route towards the toldería of
-my tribe."
-
-The Linda looked at him with astonishment; the facility with which
-Antinahuel apparently renounced his projects seemed to her the more
-incomprehensible, from her knowing with what pertinacity he pursued
-his enterprises, when once he believed he had a chance of success. She
-resolved to know what she had to trust to. At the moment when the chief
-made a step towards the door, she said.
-
-"Is my brother going?"
-
-"I am going," he replied.
-
-"Has he, then, already terminated the affairs about which General
-Bustamente requested him to come and consult with him?"
-
-"General Bustamente no longer stands in need of Antinahuel or of anyone
-else."
-
-"Has he then succeeded so quickly?"
-
-"Yes," he answered in an equivocal tone.
-
-"Then," the Linda exclaimed, joyfully, "he is master of the city, and
-triumphs at last!"
-
-Antinahuel appeared to hesitate for a minute--an ironical smile flitted
-across his lips.
-
-"Will not my brother answer?" the Linda continued, with an impatience
-mingled with uneasiness.
-
-"He whom my sister calls General Bustamente," he replied in a sharp
-tone, "no longer needs the assistance of anyone: he is a prisoner."
-
-The Linda sprang up like a wounded lioness.
-
-"A prisoner!" she cried. "Oh! my brother must be mistaken."
-
-"He is a prisoner, and within three days will be dead."
-
-The Linda was struck with stupor; this frightful news crushed all her
-hopes.
-
-"Oh!" she murmured at length, "he shall not die!"
-
-"He will die!" Antinahuel replied; "who can save him?"
-
-"You, chief!" she said, emphatically grasping his arm.
-
-"Why should I do it?" he remarked carelessly; "of what consequence is
-the life of the man to me?--the palefaces are not my brothers."
-
-"No; but his life is precious to me, for the sake of my vengeance! He
-alone can deliver up my enemy to me! He shall live, I tell you!"
-
-"Good! My sister will deliver him, then, as she is so anxious to save
-him."
-
-"You alone could do it, chief, if you would," she observed.
-
-Antinahuel fixed his eyes upon her.
-
-"What makes you suppose I would?" he said.
-
-"Listen to me, chief!" the Linda cried. "You love that woman--that puny,
-palefaced thing, do you not?"
-
-The Indian started, but made no reply.
-
-"Oh! do not endeavour to deceive me; you cannot blind the eyes of a
-woman. The hatred you bear to Don Tadeo is changed into love in your
-heart at the sight of this creature."
-
-"Well! and suppose it should be so?" he said, evidently moved.
-
-"An even-handed bargain with you then; give me General Bustamente," she
-remarked earnestly, "and I will deliver her up to you."
-
-"Oh!" said Antinahuel, with a bantering smile, "a woman is but a
-mockingbird; the man who puts faith in her words----"
-
-On hearing the chief throw in her face the words she herself had uttered
-only a few minutes before, she stamped with impatience.
-
-"Well, then," she cried, almost bursting with rage, "take her
-then!--take the woman! and may my curses cling to her!"
-
-Antinahuel uttered a tiger-like roar, and rushed out of the room.
-
-"Ah!" cried the Linda in a hoarse voice, and with an expression
-impossible to be described, "may not the love of this wretch avenge me
-better than all the tortures I could have invented!"
-
-In a few minutes the chief returned precipitately, his features
-distorted by fury and disappointment.
-
-"She has fled!" he shouted. It was true. Rosario and the Indian to whose
-charge the Linda had given her had both disappeared. No one knew what
-had become of them. Antinahuel immediately dispatched his mosotones in
-all directions in search of them. The Linda was left in the toldo a
-prey to indescribable rage; she was cheated of her vengeance! She felt
-crushed under the weight of the helplessness to which she was reduced.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLIV.
-
-THE RETURN TO VALDIVIA.
-
-
-Night was come; bending over the pillow of his friend, who was still
-buried in that lethargic sleep which generally follows great loss of
-blood, Valentine watched with anxious tenderness the changes which at
-times darkened his pale countenance.
-
-"Oh!" he said, in a suppressed voice, clenching his hands with anger,
-"be thy assassins who they may, brother, they shall pay for their crime
-dearly."
-
-The curtain of the tent was slowly raised, and a hand was laid upon the
-young man's shoulder. He turned quickly round; Trangoil-Lanec was before
-him. The face of the Ulmen was dark as night, and he appeared a prey to
-strong emotion.
-
-"What is the matter, chief?" asked Valentine, terrified at his manner;
-"what has happened, in the name of Heaven? Have you any fresh misfortune
-to announce?"
-
-"Misfortune incessantly watches over man," the chief remarked
-sententiously; "he should be ready to receive it at all hours, like an
-expected guest."
-
-"Speak then!" the young man asked, in a firm voice; "whatever may
-happen, I will not falter."
-
-"Good, my brother is strong, he is a great warrior, he will not suffer
-himself to be cast down. Let my brother hasten; we must be gone!"
-
-"Be gone!" cried Valentine, with a nervous start; "and my friend?"
-
-"Our brother Louis will accompany us."
-
-"Is it possible to move him?"
-
-"It must be," the Indian said peremptorily; "the war hatchet is dug up
-against the palefaces, the Aucas chiefs have drunk firewater, the genius
-of evil is master of their hearts; we must depart before they think of
-us; in an hour it will be too late."
-
-"Let us depart then," the young man replied, sorrowfully, convinced that
-Trangoil-Lanec knew more than he was willing to tell, and that some
-great danger threatened them, since the chief, who was a man of tried
-courage, had let fall that mask of stoicism which scarcely ever abandons
-the Indian.
-
-Preparations for departure were made in all haste, and were soon
-terminated. The hammock in which Louis reposed was solidly fastened to
-two long cross pieces of wood, and then, as it was, harnessed upon two
-mules without awakening him. The little band set out, employing the
-greatest precautions. They proceeded thus for more than an hour, without
-exchanging a word; the campfires of the Indians became every minute more
-faint in the distance, and they were, at least for the present, out of
-danger. Valentine approached Trangoil-Lanec, who rode at the head of the
-convoy.
-
-"Where are we going?" he asked.
-
-"To Valdivia," the chief replied; "it is there alone that Don Louis will
-be able to recover in safety."
-
-"You are right," said Valentine; "but shall we remain inactive?"
-
-"I will do what my brother the paleface wishes; am I not his penni?
-where he goes I will go--his will shall be mine!"
-
-"Thank you, chief," the Frenchman replied, with emotion; "you have a
-brave and worthy heart."
-
-"My brother saved my life," said the Ulmen earnestly; "that life is no
-longer mine, it belongs to him."
-
-Whether it was that the Araucano chiefs did not perceive the departure
-of the strangers, or that, as is more probable, they did not think it
-worthwhile to pursue them, the little troop was not interrupted in its
-flight--for what other name could be given to this night march amidst
-the desert? They advanced slowly, on account of the wounded man, who
-could not, in his state of weakness and prostration, have supported the
-shaking of a more rapid pace.
-
-Towards three o'clock in the morning, a few fugitive and uncertain
-lights, which flitted across the horizon, and with difficulty pierced
-through the fog, which at that hour of the night envelopes the earth
-like a winding sheet, announced to the party that they were approaching
-the city, and should soon be there. At the end of three quarters of an
-hour, they reached the gardens which envelope Valdivia like an immense
-bouquet of flowers, from the centre of which it seems to spring up. The
-party made a short halt, in order not to attract observation on entering
-the city, through the state of the horses and mules. From that time they
-had nothing to fear from the Indians.
-
-"Is my brother acquainted with the city?" Trangoil-Lanec asked.
-
-"Why do you ask that question?"
-
-"For a very simple reason. In the desert, by night or by day, I can
-serve as a guide to my brother; but here, in this toldería of the
-whites, my eyes close--I am blind; my brother must conduct us."
-
-"The devil!" said Valentine, quite disconcerted; "in that sense I am as
-blind as you, chief; it was only yesterday that I entered the city for
-the first time: and," he added, laughingly, "the bullets then whistled
-round in such a merry fashion, I had scarcely time to look about me, or
-to ask my way."
-
-"Don't let that disturb you, señor," said one of the peons, who had
-heard the few words pronounced by the two men; "only tell me where you
-want to go, and I will undertake to conduct you."
-
-"Hum!" Valentine replied; "where I want to go to? Caspeta! I cannot
-exactly say; all places are alike to me, provided my friend be in
-safety."
-
-"Pardon me, señor," the arriero replied, "if I dare----"
-
-"Oh, dare! dare! there's a good fellow! your idea is probably excellent;
-for myself, I confess at this moment my mind is as empty as a drum."
-
-"Why, señor, should you not go to the residence of Don Tadeo de Leon, my
-master?"
-
-"Pardieu!" cried Valentine, vexed at his own want of thought. "On my
-word, you are something like a guide! I do not go to Don Tadeo, because,
-simply, I don't know how to find the place, that's all."
-
-"I know, señor; Don Tadeo is most likely at the cabildo."
-
-"By Jove! that's true again; my powers of thought seem to have been
-driven out of my head; but which is the way to the cabildo?"
-
-"I will show you, señor."
-
-"That's well! this is an intelligent lad. Let us be moving, my friend."
-
-"Forward, then!" cried the arriero. "_Ea! arrea mula!_" he shouted to
-his beasts.
-
-In a few minutes they debouched upon the Plaza Mayor, opposite the
-cabildo. The city was still and silent; here and there traces of the
-sanguinary contest of the preceding day, heaps of broken furniture, or
-large trenches cut in the ground, gave evidence of the ravages caused by
-the insurrection. A soldier was marching with slow steps in front of the
-cabildo. At sight of the little party, he stopped, and cocked his musket.
-
-"Who goes there?" he shouted sharply.
-
-"_La Patria!_" Valentine replied.
-
-"Go on, then!" said the soldier.
-
-"Hum!" the young man murmured; "it appears not to be such an easy matter
-to obtain entrance; never mind," he added, "let us try. My friend," he
-said, in an insinuating voice, to the sentinel, who stood motionless
-before him; "we have business in the palace."
-
-"Have you the password?"
-
-"Santiago! no," Valentine answered, frankly.
-
-"Then you cannot enter."
-
-"And yet I wish very much to enter."
-
-"Very possibly; but as you have not the password, I advise you to go
-on your way; for I swear, if you were the devil in person, I would not
-afford you a passage."
-
-"My friend," said the Parisian, in a jeering tone, "you do not talk
-logically; if I were the devil, I should stand in no need of the
-password--I should get in in spite of you."
-
-"Take care, señor," whispered the arriero; "that soldier is not unlikely
-to fire at you."
-
-"Pardieu! that's what I reckon upon," said Valentine, laughing.
-
-The peon looked at him in astonishment; he thought he was mad. The
-soldier, annoyed by this long conversation, and believing it of no use
-to stand wrangling with these jokers, presented his musket, crying
-angrily,--
-
-"For the last time, go on, or I will fire!"
-
-"I am determined I will go in!" Valentine replied, resolutely.
-
-"To arms!" the soldier cried, and fired. Valentine, who had watched
-attentively all the soldier's movements, had slipped quickly from his
-horse, and the bullet whistled harmlessly over his head. At the cry
-of the soldier and the report of his piece, several armed soldiers,
-followed by an officer with a lighted lantern in his hand, rushed
-tumultuously out of the palace.
-
-"What is going on here?" the officer asked, in a loud voice.
-
-"Ah!" Valentine cried, to whom the voice was not unknown, "is that you,
-Don Gregorio?"
-
-"Who calls me?" said the latter; for, in fact, it was he.
-
-"I, Valentine!"
-
-"What! is it you, my friend, who are making all this disturbance?"
-replied Don Gregorio, advancing; "I thought it was nothing less than an
-attack."
-
-"What the devil was I to do?" said the young man, laughing; "I had not
-the password, and I wanted to get in."
-
-"Hum! none but a Frenchman would have such an idea as that."
-
-"Is it not original?"
-
-"Yes, but you risked being killed."
-
-"Bah! we are always risking being killed, and yet we are not," said
-Valentine, carelessly; "I recommend my plan to you, under similar
-circumstances."
-
-"Much obliged! but I do not think I shall ever try it."
-
-"Ah! there you are wrong."
-
-"Well, then, come in! come in!"
-
-"That is all I want; particularly as I must see Don Tadeo instantly."
-
-"I believe he is asleep."
-
-"He must be awakened."
-
-"Do you bring interesting news, then?"
-
-"Yes," Valentine replied, becoming suddenly serious; "terrible news!"
-
-Don Gregorio, struck with the tone in which the Frenchman had pronounced
-these words, had a presentiment of some misfortune, and asked no
-further. The arrieros bore the hammock, with Don Louis still asleep,
-into the cabildo. By the care of Don Gregorio he was carried to a
-bedchamber, and placed in a bed hastily provided.
-
-"What does all this mean?" Don Gregorio said, in astonishment; "is Don
-Louis wounded?"
-
-"Yes," Valentine replied, in a husky voice; "he has received two dagger
-wounds."
-
-"But how did it all happen?"
-
-"You will soon learn; but pray conduct me instantly to Don Tadeo."
-
-"In heaven's name, come, then! your reserve alarms me."
-
-And, followed by Valentine and Trangoil-Lanec, Don Gregorio plunged into
-the labyrinth formed by the numerous corridors of the palace, with which
-he seemed well acquainted.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLV.
-
-THE FATHER REVEALS HIMSELF.
-
-
-Don Tadeo had passed the greater part of the night in giving orders
-for the clearing away of the hideous traces left by the combat. He
-had named the magistrates charged with the police of the city. After
-having assured, as far as possible, the tranquillity and safety of the
-citizens, and sent several couriers to Santiago, and other centres
-of population, to inform them of what had taken place, worn out with
-fatigue, sinking with sleep, he had thrown himself, clothed as he was,
-upon a camp bed, to take a little repose. He had slept scarcely an hour
-that agitated sleep which is the lot of men upon whom the destinies of
-empires rest, when the door of the chamber was pushed violently open, a
-strong light gleamed in his eyes, and several men surrounded him. Don
-Tadeo awoke suddenly.
-
-"Who is there?" he cried, endeavouring to recognise, in spite of the
-light which dazzled his eyes, the persons who so inopportunely disturbed
-his repose.
-
-"It is I," replied Don Gregorio.
-
-"Well, but you do not seem to be alone?"
-
-"No, Don Valentine accompanies me."
-
-"Don Valentine!" cried Don Tadeo, starting up, and passing his hand over
-his brow, to drive away the clouds which still obscured his ideas; "why,
-I did not expect Don Valentine before morning, at soonest; what serious
-reason can have induced him to travel by night?"
-
-"A powerful reason, Don Tadeo," the young man remarked, in a melancholy
-voice.
-
-"In Heaven's name! speak, then!" cried Don Tadeo.
-
-"Be a man! be firm! collect all your courage to bear worthily the blow
-you are about to receive."
-
-Don Tadeo walked two or three times round the room, with his head
-cast down, and his brow contracted; then stopped suddenly in front of
-Valentine with a pale brow, but with a stoical countenance. This man
-of iron had subdued nature within him; as if aware of the rudeness of
-the shock he was about to receive, he had ordered his heart not to
-break--his muscles not to quiver.
-
-"Speak!" he said, "I am ready to hear you."
-
-While uttering these words his voice was firm, his features calm.
-Valentine, though well acquainted with his courage, was struck with
-admiration.
-
-"Is the misfortune you are about to announce to me personal?" said Don
-Tadeo.
-
-"Yes," the young man replied, in a tremulous voice.
-
-"God be praised! Go on, then; I listen to you."
-
-Valentine perceived that he must not put the soul of this man to too
-hard a trial; he determined to speak.
-
-"Doña Rosario has disappeared," he said; "she has been carried off
-during our absence; Louis, my foster brother, in endeavouring to defend
-her, has fallen, pierced by two sword thrusts."
-
-The King of Darkness appeared a statue of marble; no emotion was
-perceptible upon his austere countenance.
-
-"Is Don Louis dead?" he asked, earnestly.
-
-"No," Valentine answered, more and more astonished; "I even hope that in
-a few days he will be cured."
-
-"So much the better," said Don Tadeo, feelingly; "I am indeed glad to
-hear that."
-
-And, crossing his arms upon his broad chest, he resumed his hasty walk
-about the room. The three men looked at each other, surprised at this
-stoicism, which to them was unintelligible.
-
-"Will you then abandon Doña Rosario to her ravishers?" Don Gregorio
-asked, in a reproachful tone.
-
-
-Don Tadeo darted at him a look charged with such bitter irony, that Don
-Gregorio quailed beneath it.
-
-"Were the ravishers concealed in the entrails of the earth, I would
-discover them, be they who they may!" Don Tadeo replied.
-
-"A man is on their track," said Trangoil-Lanec, advancing; "that man is
-Curumilla. He will discover them."
-
-A flash of joy for a moment shot from the eye of the King of Darkness.
-
-"Oh!" he murmured, with clenched teeth, "beware, Doña Maria, beware!"
-
-He at once had divined the author of the abduction of Rosario.
-
-"What do you intend to do?" said Don Gregorio.
-
-"Nothing, till the return of our scout," he replied, coldly; and then
-turning towards Valentine, added--"Well, my friend, have you nothing
-else to announce to me?"
-
-"What leads you to suppose I have not told you all?" said the young man.
-
-"Ah!" Don Tadeo replied, with a melancholy smile, "you know, my friend,
-that we Spanish Americans, however civilized we may appear, are still
-semi-barbarians, and, as such, horribly superstitious."
-
-"Well?"
-
-"Well, then, among other follies of the same kind, we place faith in
-proverbs; and is there not one which somewhere says, that a misfortune
-never comes singly?"
-
-"Good Heavens! do you take me for a bird of ill omen, Don Tadeo?"
-
-"God forbid, my friend! only search in your memory, I am sure I am not
-mistaken, and that you have still something else to inform me of."
-
-"Well, you are right, I have other news to announce to you; whether good
-or bad, I leave you to judge."
-
-"I knew there was something more behind," said Don Tadeo, with a sad
-smile; "go on, my friend, let us hear this news, I am listening to you."
-
-"Yesterday, as you know, General Bustamente renewed the treaties of
-peace with the Araucano chiefs."
-
-"He did."
-
-"I cannot tell what fugitive or what scout gave them information of what
-had taken place here; but by evening they had learnt the defeat and
-capture of the General."
-
-"I can understand that; go on."
-
-"A kind of furious madness immediately seemed to possess them, and they
-held a great war council."
-
-"In which, I suppose, they decided upon breaking the treaties; is not
-that it?"
-
-"Exactly."
-
-"And most likely determined upon war with us?"
-
-"I suppose so; the four toquis cast the hatchet into the fire, and a
-supreme toqui was elected in their place."
-
-"Ah! ah!" said Don Tadeo, "and do you know the name of this supreme
-toqui?"
-
-"Yes; Antinahuel."
-
-"I suspected as much," Don Tadeo cried, angrily; "that man has deceived
-us. He is a scoundrel only living by cunning, and whose devouring
-ambition leads him to sacrifice, when occasion offers, the dearest
-interests, and falsify the most sacred oaths. He has been playing a
-double game; he feigned to be the partisan of General Bustamente, as he
-appeared to be ours, building upon our mutual ruin his own fortunes and
-his future elevation. But he has thrown off the mask too hastily. By
-heaven! I will inflict a chastisement upon him, of which his compatriots
-shall preserve the remembrance, and which a century hence shall make
-them tremble with fear."
-
-"Beware of the ears that, listen to you," said Don Gregorio, directing
-his attention by a look to the Ulmen, who stood quietly before him.
-
-"Eh! what care I?" Don Tadeo replied, warmly; "if I speak thus, it is
-because I wish to be heard. I am a Spanish noble, and what my heart
-thinks my lips give utterance to; the Ulmen is welcome, if it seems good
-to him, to repeat my words to his chief."
-
-"The Great Eagle of the Whites is unjust towards his son," replied
-Trangoil-Lanec, in a serious tone; "all Araucanos have not the same
-heart; Antinahuel is only responsible for his own acts. Trangoil-Lanec
-is an Ulmen in his tribe; he knows how to be present at a council of
-chiefs: what his eyes see, what his ears hear, his heart forgets, his
-mouth repeats it not: why should my father address such unkind words to
-me, who am ready to devote myself to restore to him her he has lost?"
-
-"That is true; I am unjust, chief, I was wrong in speaking so; your
-heart is true, your tongue is unacquainted with falsehood. Pardon me,
-and let me clasp your loyal hand in mine."
-
-Trangoil-Lanec pressed warmly the hand Don Tadeo held out to him.
-
-"My father is good," he said; "his heart is at this moment darkened by
-the great misfortune that has fallen upon him; but let my father be
-comforted, Trangoil-Lanec will restore the blue-eyed maiden to him."
-
-"Thanks, chief! I accept your offer, you may depend upon my gratitude."
-
-"Trangoil-Lanec does not sell his services, he is repaid when his
-friends are happy."
-
-"Caramba!" cried Valentine, shaking the hand of the chief with all his
-might, "you are a worthy man, Trangoil-Lanec--I am proud of being your
-friend."
-
-Then, turning towards Don Tadeo, he said--"I must bid you farewell, for
-a time. I confide my brother Louis to your care."
-
-"Why do you leave me?" Don Tadeo asked, warmly.
-
-"I must. I see your heart is breaking, in spite of the incredible
-efforts you make to appear impassive. I know not the nature of the tie
-which binds you to the unfortunate girl who has been the victim of an
-odious crime; but I can see the loss of her is killing you--now, with
-the assistance of Heaven, I will restore her to you, Don Tadeo; I will,
-or I will die in the endeavour."
-
-"Don Valentine!" the gentleman exclaimed, strongly moved, "what do you
-propose to do? your project is wild; I cannot accept such devotion."
-
-"Leave it to me. Caramba! I am a Parisian--that is to say, as obstinate
-as a mule; and when once an idea, good or bad, has entered into my
-brain, it has no chance of getting out, I swear to you. I shall only
-take the time to embrace my poor brother, and set off immediately. Come,
-chief, let us set ourselves upon the track of the ravishers."
-
-"Let us be gone," said the Ulmen.
-
-Don Tadeo remained for a moment motionless, his eyes fixed upon the
-young man with a strange expression; a violent conflict appeared to be
-going on within him; at length nature prevailed, he burst into tears;
-and, throwing himself into the arms of the Frenchman, he murmured, in a
-voice choked by grief--
-
-"Valentine! Valentine! restore me my daughter!"
-
-The father had at length revealed himself; the stoicism of the statesman
-had sunk before paternal love!--But human nature has its limits, beyond
-which it cannot go; the moral shock which Don Tadeo had received, the
-immense efforts he had made to conceal it, had completely exhausted
-his strength, and he sank upon the slabs of the floor like a proud oak
-struck by thunder. He had fainted. Valentine contemplated him for a
-moment with pity and grief.
-
-"Poor father!" he said, "take courage, thy child shall be restored to
-thee!"
-
-And he left the room with hasty steps, followed by Trangoil-Lanec,
-whilst Don Gregorio, kneeling by his friend, gave him the most earnest
-and kind attentions for the recovery of his senses.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLVI.
-
-CURUMILLA.
-
-
-In order to explain to the reader the miraculous disappearance of
-Rosario, we are obliged to make a few retrograde steps, and return to
-Curumilla, at the moment when the Ulmen, after his conversation with
-Trangoil-Lanec, had thrown himself, like a staunch bloodhound, upon the
-track of the young girl. Curumilla was a warrior as renowned for his
-prudence and wisdom in council, as for his bravery in fight. Having
-crossed the river, he left his horse in the care of a peon who had
-accompanied him, as it would not only be useless to him, but, still
-further, because it might even be injurious by betraying his presence by
-the clatter of its hoofs upon the ground. Indians are expert horsemen,
-but they are indefatigable walkers. Nature has endowed them with
-incredible strength of muscles of the legs and hams; and they possess in
-the highest degree the knowledge of that rising and sinking gymnastic
-step, which, for some years past, has been introduced into Europe,
-particularly into France, in the marching of troops. They accomplish
-with incredible swiftness journeys which horses could hardly perform,
-always directing their course in a straight line, or as the bird flies,
-without regard to the difficulties that may arise in their way, no
-obstacle being sufficient to turn them from their course. This quality
-renders them particularly formidable to the Spanish Americans, who
-cannot obtain this facility of locomotion, and who, in time of war, find
-the redskins always before them at the moment they least expect them,
-and that almost always at considerable distances from the spots where,
-logically, they ought to be.
-
-Curumilla, after having carefully studied the prints made by the
-ravishers, at once divined the route they had taken, and the place they
-were bound to. He did not amuse himself with following them, for that
-would have been losing precious time; on the contrary, he resolved to
-cut across country, and wait for them at an elbow of the road he was
-acquainted with, where, at all events, he could ascertain their numbers,
-and, perhaps, save the young girl. This being determined, the Ulmen
-set off. He walked for several hours without rest, eye and ear on the
-watch, trying to penetrate the darkness, and listening patiently to the
-various noises of the desert. These noises, which are to us white men
-a dead letter, have for the Indians, who are accustomed to interrogate
-them, a special signification, in which they are never deceived; they
-analyse them, they decompose them, and often learn by this means things
-which their enemies have the greatest interest in concealing from them.
-However inexplicable this fact may at first appear, it is very simple.
-There exists no noise in the desert without a cause. The flight of
-birds, the passage of wild beasts, the rustling of leaves, the rolling
-of a stone down a ravine, the undulation of high grass, the friction of
-branches in the woods, are for the Indian valuable indications.
-
-At a certain point with which he was acquainted, Curumilla laid himself
-down flat on his face, behind a block of rock, and remained motionless
-among the grass and bushes that bordered the route. He remained thus for
-more than an hour, without making the least movement. Whoever might have
-perceived him would have taken him for a dead body. The practised ear of
-the Indian, ever on the watch, at length caught in the distance the dull
-sound of the feet of horses and mules upon the dry and sonorous road.
-This noise grew rapidly nearer, and soon, from his hiding place, he
-perceived about twenty horsemen passing slowly along in the dark, within
-two lance lengths of him. The ravishers, emboldened by their numbers,
-and believing themselves secure from all danger, rode along in perfect
-security. The Indian raised his head softly, and leaning on his hands,
-followed them with his anxious eyes, and waited. They passed without
-seeing him. At some paces behind the troop, a horseman came along,
-leaving himself carelessly to the measured pace of his horse. His head
-occasionally sank upon his breast, and his hands had but a feeble hold
-of the reins. It was evident that this man was asleep in his saddle.
-
-A sudden idea rushed like lightning through Curumilla's brain; gathering
-himself up, he stiffened the iron muscles of his legs, and, bounding
-like a tiger, leaped up behind the horseman. Before the latter,
-surprised by this unexpected attack, had time to utter a cry, he pressed
-his throat in such a manner as, for the time, to render him incapable
-of calling for help. In the twinkling of an eye the horseman was gagged
-and thrown to the ground: then, securing the horse, Curumilla fastened
-it to a bush, and returned to his prisoner. The latter, with the stoical
-and disdainful courage peculiar to the aborigines of America, finding
-himself conquered, attempted no useless resistance; he looked at his
-conqueror with a smile of contempt, and waited for him to speak to him.
-
-"Oh!" said Curumilla, who, upon leaning over him, recognised him, "is it
-you, Joan?"
-
-"Curumilla!" the other replied.
-
-"Hum!" the Ulmen murmured to himself, "I would rather it had been
-somebody else. What is my brother doing on this path?" he asked.
-
-"Of what consequence is that to my brother?" said the Indian, replying
-to one question by another.
-
-"We have no time to waste," the chief replied, unsheathing his knife;
-"let my brother speak."
-
-Joan started; a shudder ran through his limbs at the blue light
-reflected by the long, sharp blade of the knife.
-
-"The chief can question me," he said, in a husky voice.
-
-"Where is my brother going?"
-
-"To the toldería of San Miguel."
-
-"Good! and for what purpose is my brother going there?"
-
-"To place in the hands of the sister of the grand toqui a woman whom we
-have carried off this morning."
-
-"Who ordered you to do so?"
-
-"She whom we are going to meet."
-
-"Who had the direction of this affair?"
-
-"I had."
-
-"Good! where does this woman expect the prisoner?"
-
-"I have told the chief; at the toldería of San Miguel."
-
-"In which casa?"
-
-"In the last; the one which stands a little apart from the others."
-
-"That is well! Let my brother exchange poncho and hat with me."
-
-The Indian obeyed without a word, and when the exchange was made,
-Curumilla said--
-
-"I could kill my brother; prudence would even require me to do so, but
-pity has entered my heart--Joan has wives and children, he is one of the
-brave warriors of his tribe; if I let him live, will he be grateful?"
-
-The Indian had expected that he was going to die, but these words
-restored him to hope. He was not a bad man at bottom; the Ulmen knew him
-well, and was satisfied he would keep his promises.
-
-"My father holds my life in his hands," Joan replied; "if he does not
-take it today, I shall remain his debtor--I will lay down my life at a
-sign from him."
-
-"Very well!" said Curumilla, returning his knife to its sheath, "my
-brother may rise, a chief keeps his word."
-
-The Indian sprang upon his feet, and fervently kissed the hand of the
-man who had spared him.
-
-"What does my father command?" he asked.
-
-"My brother must repair as fast as possible to the toldería which the
-Huincas name Valdivia. He will seek Don Tadeo, the Great Eagle of the
-Whites, and relate to him what has passed between us, adding, that I
-will save the prisoner, or die."
-
-"Is that all?"
-
-"Yes. If the Great Eagle requires the services of my brother, he will
-place himself without hesitation at his orders. Farewell! May Pillian
-guide my brother! and let him never forget that I was not willing to
-take the life that was in my power!"
-
-"Joan will not forget," the Indian replied.
-
-At a sign from Curumilla, he bent down in the high grass, crept along
-like a serpent, and disappeared in the direction of Valdivia. The chief,
-without losing an instant, jumped into the saddle and soon joined the
-little troop, who had continued jogging quietly along, without dreaming
-of the substitution that had just taken place. It was Curumilla who,
-while carrying the young girl into the house, had whispered hope and
-courage. These three words, in announcing to her that she had a friend
-watching over her, had restored her the strength necessary for the
-struggle that awaited her.
-
-After the unexpected arrival of Antinahuel, when, at the order of Doña
-Maria, Curumilla led away the prisoner, instead of reconducting her
-to the apartment in which she had been, he threw a poncho over her to
-disguise her.
-
-"Follow me," he said in a low voice; "step out boldly, I will endeavour
-to save you."
-
-The maiden hesitated; she was fearful of a snare. The Ulmen comprehended
-her feeling, and said quickly, in a low voice--
-
-"I am Curumilla, one of the Ulmens devoted to the two Frenchmen, the
-friends of Don Tadeo."
-
-Rosario startled imperceptibly.
-
-"Go on," she replied in a firm tone; "happen what may, I will follow
-you."
-
-And they left the hut together. The Indians, dispersed here and there,
-were busily talking over the events of the day, and did not observe
-them. The two fugitives proceeded for ten minutes without exchanging a
-word. The village was soon lost in the darkness; at length Curumilla
-stopped at a thick clump of cactus, behind which two horses stood,
-saddled and bridled.
-
-"Does my sister find herself strong enough to mount on horseback, and
-ride a long distance?" he asked.
-
-"To escape from my persecutors," she replied, in a broken voice, "I feel
-I have strength to do anything."
-
-"Good!" said Curumilla, "my sister is courageous. Her God will help her!"
-
-"It is in Him alone I place my hope," she said, with a sigh.
-
-"To horse, then, and let us begone! minutes are ages!"
-
-He unfastened the horses, they mounted, and set of at full speed,
-without any sound being produced upon the road by their hoofs, which
-Curumilla had covered with pieces of sheepskin. The maiden breathed
-a sigh of relief on feeling herself once more free, and under the
-protection of a devoted friend. The fugitives continued to ride at a
-rapid pace, in a direction diametrically opposite to the one they should
-have taken to return to Valdivia. Prudence required that they should not
-yet take any route on which, according to all possibilities, they would
-be looked for.
-
-We must leave our friends in this critical position for the present;
-but those readers who feel an interest in the loves of Don Louis and
-Doña Rosario, will find their curiosity fully satisfied in the following
-volume of this series, called "The Pearl of the Andes."
-
-
-
-THE END.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Adventurers, by Gustave Aimard
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ADVENTURERS ***
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-{
- "DATA": {
- "CREDIT": "Produced by Marc D'Hooghe"
- }
-}
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Adventurers, by Gustave Aimard
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: The Adventurers
-
-Author: Gustave Aimard
-
-Release Date: September 14, 2013 [EBook #43716]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ADVENTURERS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Marc D'Hooghe at http://www.freeliterature.org
-
-
-
-
-THE ADVENTURERS
-
-A Story of a Love-Chase
-
-BY
-
-GUSTAVE AIMARD
-
-AUTHOR OF
-
-"LAST OF THE INCAS," "QUEEN OF THE SAVANNAH,"
-
-ETC.
-
-LONDON
-
-WARD AND LOCK, 158, FLEET STREET.
-
-1863.
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-With the publication of the present and the ensuing volume, "The Pearl
-of the Andes," I am enabled to perfect the most important series of
-Aimard's Tales of Indian Life and Adventure. To preserve uniformity, the
-volumes of this series should be arranged in the following order on the
-book-shelf;--
-
- 1. THE ADVENTURERS.
- 2. THE PEARL OF THE ANDES.
- 3. THE TRAIL-HUNTER.
- 4. PIRATES OF THE PRAIRIES.
- 5. THE TRAPPER'S BRIDE.
- 6. THE TIGER SLAYER.
- 7. THE GOLD SEEKERS.
- 8. THE INDIAN CHIEF.
- 9. THE RED TRACK.
-
-Gustave Aimard has a precedent in Fenimore Cooper for introducing the
-same hero in a long range of volumes, and, like his great predecessor,
-he has so arranged, that each work should be complete in itself, and
-not necessitate the purchase of another. But Aimard has one marked
-advantage over Cooper; for while "Leather-Stocking" is but a creation
-of the fancy, or, at the most, the type of the Backwoodsman, the Count
-Louis who figures as the hero of Aimard's series, is a real man. Count
-de Raousset Boulbon, had he succeeded in his daring attempt of founding
-an independent kingdom in Mexico, would in all probability have become
-the Napoleon of the West. A gallant adventurer and thorough gentleman,
-he staked his life upon the issue, and ended his career the victim
-of unparalleled treachery, as Aimard has faithfully recorded. Hence
-Aimard's romances have the great merit of being founded on an historic
-basis, and but little fiction was required to heighten the startling
-interest of the narrative.
-
-Valentine Guillois, there is very little doubt, is intended for the
-Author himself, with all his qualities and defects. When he first
-reached the New World, he was the true, reckless Parisian; but constant
-intercourse with nature rendered him a generous and thoughtful friend
-of humanity. So soon as he returned to civilization, he began recording
-the history of his past life; not so much as a livelihood, as for
-the pleasure he felt in living once again the life of excitement and
-adventure which he had known among the Indians. Hence his books are
-written without an effort; they flow spontaneously from his pen; and the
-absence of artistic effect is the best guarantee of their truthfulness.
-
-It is not surprising, consequently, that M. Aimard's books have met
-with such extensive popularity. They have been translated into nearly
-every modern language, and the Author is now generally recognised as the
-French Cooper. The reception given to his stories in this country has
-been most flattering, and each day heightens their popularity. Hence
-it is not too much to assume that they will become standard works,
-especially with young readers, for whom they are especially adapted;
-because M. Aimard has never yet written a line which could prove
-offensive to the most delicate mind.
-
- L.W.
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- I. THE CHAPARRAL
- II. THE FOSTER BROTHERS
- III. THE RESOLUTION
- IV. THE EXECUTION
- V. THE PASSAGE
- VI. THE LINDA
- VII. HUSBAND AND WIFE
- VIII. THE DARK-HEARTS
- IX. IN THE STREET
- X. SWORD-THRUSTS
- XI. GENERAL BUSTAMENTE
- XII. THE SPY
- XIII. LOVE
- XIV. THE QUINTA VERDE
- XV. THE DEPARTURE
- XVI. THE MEETING
- XVII. THE PUELCHES
- XVIII. THE BLACK JACKAL
- XIX. TWO OLD FRIENDS
- XX. THE SORCERER
- XXI. THE OBSEQUIES OF AN APO-ULMEN
- XXII. EXPLANATIONS
- XXIII. THE CHINGANA.
- XXIV. THE TWO ULMENS
- XXV. THE SUN-TIGER
- XXVI. THE MATRICIDE
- XXVII. THE JUSTICE OF THE DARK-HEARTS
- XXVIII. THE TREATY OF PEACE
- XXIX. THE ABDUCTION
- XXX. THE PROTEST
- XXXI. SPANIARD AND INDIAN
- XXXII. IN THE MOUNTAIN
- XXXIII. ON THE WATCH
- XXXIV. FACE TO FACE
- XXXV. THE REVOLT
- XXXVI. THE LION AT BAY
- XXXVII. THE TRUCE
- XXXVIII. TWO ROGUISH PROFILES
- XXXIX. THE WOUNDED MAN
- XL. ARAUCANIAN DIPLOMACY
- XLI. THE COUNCIL
- XLII. THE NIGHT JOURNEY
- XLIII. TWO HATREDS
- XLIV. THE RETURN TO VALDIVIA
- XLV. THE FATHER REVEALS HIMSELF
- XLVI. CURUMILLA
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-THE CHAPARRAL.
-
-
-
-During my last sojourn in America, chance, or rather my good star, led
-me to form an acquaintance with one of those hunters, or wood rangers,
-the type of whom has been immortalized by Cooper, in his poetical
-personage, _Leather-Stockings_.
-
-The strange circumstance by which we were brought together was as
-follows. Towards the end of July, 1855, I had left Galveston, terrified
-at the fevers prevalent there, which are so fatal to Europeans, with the
-intention of visiting the north-west portion of Texas, a country I was
-then unacquainted with.
-
-A Spanish proverb somewhere says, "It is better to go alone than in
-bad company;" and, like all other proverbs, this possesses a certain
-foundation of truth, particularly in America, where the traveller is
-exposed at each instant to the chance of meeting rogues of every hue,
-who, thanks to their seducing exterior, charm him, win his confidence,
-and take advantage of the first occasion to remorselessly plunder and
-assassinate him.
-
-I had profited by the proverb, and, like a shrewd old traveller of the
-prairies, as I knew no one who inspired me with sufficient sympathy
-to lead me to make him my travelling companion, I had bravely set out
-alone, clothed in the picturesque dress of the inhabitants of the
-country, armed to the teeth, and mounted upon an excellent half wild
-horse, which had cost me twenty-five piastres--an enormous sum in those
-countries, where horses are considered as worth little or nothing.
-
-I carelessly wandered here and there, living that nomadic life which
-is so full of attractions; at times stopping at a _tolderia_, at
-others encamping in the desert, hunting wild animals, and plunging
-deeper and deeper into unknown regions. I had, in this fashion, passed
-through, without any untoward accident, Fredericksburgh, the Llana
-Braunfels, and had just left Castroville, on my way to Quichi. Like
-all Spanish-American villages, Castroville is nothing but a miserable
-agglomeration of ruined cabins, cut at right angles by streets choked
-with weeds, growing undisturbed, and concealing multitudes of ants,
-reptiles, and even rabbits of a very small breed, which spring up
-beneath the feet of the few passengers. The _pueblo_ is bounded on the
-west by the Medina, a slender thread of water, almost dry in the great
-heat seasons; and on the east by thickly-wooded hills, the dark green of
-which forms a pleasing contrast with the pale blue of the sky.
-
-At Galveston I had undertaken to deliver a letter to an inhabitant of
-Castroville. The worthy man lived in this village like La Fontaine's rat
-in the depths of its Dutch cheese. Charmed by the arrival of a stranger,
-who, no doubt, brought him news for which he had been long anxious, he
-received me in the most cordial manner, and thought of every expedient
-to detain me. Unfortunately, the little I had seen of Castroville had
-sufficed to completely disgust me with it, and my only wish was to get
-out of it as quickly as possible. My host, in despair at seeing all
-his advances repulsed, at length consented to allow me to continue my
-journey.
-
-"Adieu, then," he said, warmly pressing my hand, with a sigh of regret;
-"since you are determined to go, may God protect you! You are wrong
-in setting out so late; the road you have to travel is dangerous; the
-_Indios bravos_ are up; they assassinate without mercy all the whites
-who fall into their hands--beware!"
-
-I smiled at this warning, which I took for a last effort of the worthy
-man to detain me.
-
-"Bah!" I replied gaily; "the Indians and I are too old acquaintances for
-me to fear anything on their account."
-
-My host shook his head sorrowfully, and retreated into his hut, making
-me a last farewell greeting. I again set forward. I soon began to
-reflect that it was full late, and pressed my horse, in order to pass,
-before nightfall, a _chaparral_, or large thicket of underwood, of at
-least two miles in length, against which my host had particularly warned
-me. This ill-famed spot had a very sinister aspect. The mezquite, the
-acacia, and the cactus constituted its sole vegetation, while here and
-there, whitened bones and planted crosses plainly designated places
-where murders had been committed. Beyond that extended a vast plain,
-called the Leona, peopled by animals of every description. This plain,
-covered by grass at least two feet in height, was dotted at intervals
-with thickets of trees, upon which warbled thousands of golden-throated
-starlings, cardinals, and bluebirds. I was anxious to reach the
-Leona, which I saw in the distance; but ere I did so, I had to cross
-the chaparral. After examining my weapons, and looking carefully in
-all directions, as I could perceive nothing positively suspicious, I
-resolutely spurred my horse forward, determined, if attacked, to sell my
-life as dearly as possible.
-
-The sun, in the meantime, was sinking rapidly towards the horizon, the
-ruddy hues of closing day tinged with their changing reflections the
-summits of the wooded hills, and a fresh breeze agitated the branches
-of the trees with mysterious murmurs. In this country, where there is
-no twilight, night was not long in enveloping me in thick darkness, and
-that before I had passed through two-thirds of the chaparral.
-
-I was beginning to hope I should reach the Leona safe and sound, when,
-all at once, my horse made a violent bound on one side, pricking up its
-ears, and snorting loudly. The sudden shock almost threw me out of the
-saddle, and it was not without trouble that I recovered the mastery
-over my horse, which displayed signs of the greatest terror. As always
-happens in such cases, I instinctively looked round me for the cause of
-this panic; and soon the truth was revealed to me. A cold perspiration
-bedewed my brow, and a shudder of terror ran through my whole frame, at
-the horrible spectacle which met my eyes. Five dead human bodies lay
-stretched beneath the trees, within ten paces of me. Among them was
-one of a woman, and one of a girl about fourteen years of age. They
-all belonged to the white race. They appeared to have fought long and
-obstinately before they fell; they were literally covered with wounds;
-and long arrows, with jagged barbs, and painted red, stood out from the
-bodies, which they had pierced through and through. The victims had all
-been scalped. It was evidently the work of Indians, marked with their
-sanguinary rage, and their inveterate hatred for the white race. The
-form and colour of the arrows told me that the perpetrators of this
-atrocity were the Apaches, the most cruel plunderers of the desert.
-Around the bodies I observed fragments of both wagons and furniture. The
-unfortunate beings, assassinated with refined cruelty, had, no doubt,
-been poor emigrants on their way to Castroville.
-
-At the aspect of this heartbreaking spectacle, I cannot express the pity
-and grief which weighed upon my spirits; high in the air, urubus and
-vultures hovered with lazy wings over the bodies, uttering lugubrious
-cries of joy, whilst in the depths of the chaparral the wolves and
-jaguars began to growl portentously.
-
-I cast a melancholy glance around: all immediately near to me was quiet.
-The Apaches had, according to all appearances, surprised the emigrants
-during a halt. Gutted bales were still ranged in a symmetrical circle,
-and a fire, near which was a heap of dry wood, was not yet extinguished.
-
-"No!" said I to myself, "whatever may happen, I will not leave
-Christians without burial, to become, in this desert, the prey of wild
-beasts."
-
-My resolution, once formed, was soon carried into execution. Springing
-to the ground, I hobbled my horse, gave it some provender, and cast some
-branches of wood upon the fire, which soon sparkled and sent into the
-air a column of bright flame. Among the necessaries of the emigrants
-were spades, pickaxes, and other agricultural instruments, which, being
-of no use to the Indians, they had disdainfully left behind them. I
-seized a spade, and, after having carefully explored the environs
-of my encampment, to assure myself that no immediate danger need be
-apprehended, I set to work to dig a grave.
-
-The night had now set in; one of those American nights, clear,
-silent, full of intoxicating odours, and mysterious melodies chanted
-by the desert in praise of God. Extraordinary to say, all my fears
-had vanished, as if by enchantment! Though alone in this sinister
-place, close to these frightfully-mutilated carcasses, watched in the
-darkness, no doubt, by the unseen eyes of wild beasts, and, perhaps,
-of the murderous Indians, some incomprehensible influence sustained
-me, and gave me strength to accomplish the rude but sacred task I had
-undertaken. Instead of thinking of the dangers which surrounded me, I
-found myself yielding to a pensive melancholy. I thought of these poor
-people, who had come from distant lands, full of hope for the future,
-to seek in the New World a little of the comfort and well-being which
-were denied to them at home, and who, scarcely landed, had fallen, in an
-obscure corner of the desert, by the hands of ferocious savages. They
-had left in their own country friends, perhaps relations, to whom their
-fate would for ever remain a mystery, and who would for years reckon
-the hours with anxiety, looking for their much-wished return, or for
-intelligence of their success in their bold undertaking.
-
-Except two or three alarms caused by the rustling of the leaves in the
-bushes, nothing occurred to interrupt my melancholy duty. In less than
-three-quarters of an hour I had dug a grave large enough to contain the
-five bodies. After extracting the arrows by which they were transfixed,
-I raised them one after the other in my arms, and laid them gently
-side by side at the bottom of the grave. I then hastened to throw in
-the mould again, till it was level with the sod; and that being done,
-I dragged upon the surface all the large stones I could find, to keep
-wild beasts from profaning the dead. This religious duty accomplished,
-I breathed a deep sigh of satisfaction, and bowing my head towards the
-ground, I mentally addressed a short prayer to the Almighty, for the
-unfortunate beings I had buried.
-
-Upon raising my head, I uttered a cry of surprise and terror, while at
-the same time mechanically feeling for my revolver; for, without the
-least noise having given me warning of his approach, a man was standing
-within four paces of me, watching me earnestly, and leaning on his long
-rifle. Two magnificent Newfoundland dogs were lying carelessly but
-quietly at his feet. On observing my gesture, the unknown smiled with a
-kindly expression, and holding out his hand to me over the grave, said--
-
-"Fear nothing! I am a friend. You have buried these poor people; _I_
-have avenged them--their assassins are dead!"
-
-I silently pressed the hand that was so frankly extended to me.
-Acquaintance was formed--we were friends--we are so still! A few minutes
-later we were seated near the fire, supping together with a good
-appetite, while the dogs kept watch against intruders.
-
-The companion I had fallen in with in so curious a manner was a man of
-about forty-five years of age, although he did not appear to be more
-than thirty-two. He was tall and well made; his broad shoulders and
-muscular limbs denoting extraordinary strength and agility. He wore the
-picturesque hunter's costume in all its purity, that is to say, the
-_capote_, or surtout (which is nothing but a kind of blanket worn as a
-robe, fastened to the shoulders, and falling in long folds behind), a
-shirt of striped cotton, large _mitasses_ (drawers of doeskin, stitched
-with hair, fastened at distances, and ornamented with little bells),
-leather gaiters, moccasins of elk skin, braided with beads and porcupine
-quills, and a checked woollen belt, from which hung his knife, tobacco
-pouch, powder horn, pistols, and medicine bag. His headdress consisted
-of a cap made of the skin of a beaver, the tail of which fell between
-his shoulders. This man was a type of a hardy race of adventurers who
-traverse America in all directions. A primitive race, longing for
-open air, space, and liberty, opposed to our ideas of civilization,
-and consequently destined to disappear before the immigration of the
-laborious races, whose powerful agents of conquest are steam and the
-application of mechanical inventions of all kinds.
-
-This hunter was a Frenchman, and his frank, manly countenance, his
-picturesque language, his open and engaging manners, notwithstanding
-his long abode in America, had preserved a reflex of the mother country
-which awakened sympathy and created interest.
-
-All the countries of the New World were familiar to him; he had lived
-more than twenty years in the depths of the woods, and had been engaged
-in dangerous and distant excursions among the Indian tribes. Hence,
-although myself well initiated in the customs of the redskins, and
-though a great part of my existence had been passed in the desert, I
-have felt myself often shudder involuntarily at the recital of his
-adventures. When seated beside him on the banks of the Rio Gila, during
-an excursion we had undertaken into the prairies, he would at times
-allow himself to be carried away by his remembrances, and relate to me,
-as he smoked his Indian pipe, the strange history of the early days
-of his abode in the New World. It is one of these recitals I am about
-to lay before my readers--the first in order of date, since it is the
-history of the events which led him to become a wood ranger. I do not
-venture to hope that my readers will take the interest in it which it
-excited in me; but I beg them to have the kindness to recollect that
-this narrative was told me in the desert, amidst that grand, vast, and
-powerful nature, unknown to the inhabitants of old Europe, and that I
-had it from the lips of the man who had been the hero.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-THE FOSTER BROTHERS.
-
-
-On the 31st of December, 1834, at eleven o'clock in the evening, a man
-of about twenty-five years of age, of handsome person and countenance,
-and aristocratic appearance, was sitting, or rather reclining, in a
-luxurious easy chair, near the mantelpiece, within which sparkled a
-fire that the advanced season rendered indispensable. This personage
-was the Count Maxime Edouard Louis de Prebois-Crance. His countenance,
-of a cadaverous paleness, formed a striking contrast with his black
-curly hair, which fell in disorder upon his shoulders, covered by
-a large-patterned damask dressing gown. His brows were contracted,
-and his eyes were fixed with feverish impatience upon the dial of a
-charming Louis Quinze clock, whilst his left hand, hanging carelessly
-by his side, played with the silky ears of a magnificent Newfoundland
-dog which lay by his side. The room in which the Count was sitting was
-furnished with all the refinement of comfort invented by modern luxury.
-A four-branched chandelier, with rose-coloured wax candles, placed upon
-a table, was scarcely sufficient to enliven the room, and only spread
-around a dim, uncertain light. Without, the rain was dashing against
-the windows violently; and the wind sighed in mysterious murmurs, which
-disposed the mind to melancholy. When the clock struck the hour the
-Count started up, as if aroused from a dream. He passed his thin white
-hand across his moist brow, and said, in a dissatisfied tone--
-
-"He will not come!"
-
-But at that moment the dog, which had been so motionless, sprang up and
-bounded towards the door, wagging its tail with joy. The door opened,
-the _portiere_ was lifted by a firm hand, and a man appeared.
-
-"Here you are at last!" the Count exclaimed, advancing towards the
-newcomer, who had great trouble to get rid of the caresses of the dog.
-"I had begun to be afraid that you, like the rest, had forgotten me."
-
-"I do not understand you, brother, but trust you will explain yourself,"
-the other replied. "Come, that will do, Caesar; lie down! you are a very
-good dog, but lie down!"
-
-And drawing an easy chair towards the fire, he sat down at the other
-side of the fire, in front of the Count, who had resumed his place. The
-dog lay down between them.
-
-The personage so anxiously expected by the Count formed a strange
-contrast with him; for, just as M. de Prebois-Crance united in himself
-all the qualities which physically distinguish nobility of race, the
-other displayed all the lively, energetic strength of a true child of
-the people. He was a man of twenty-six years of age; tall, thin, and
-perfectly well proportioned; while his face, bronzed by the sun, and
-his marked features, lit up by blue eyes sparkling with intelligence,
-wore an expression of bravery, mildness, and loyalty of character that
-created sympathy at first sight. He was dressed in the elegant uniform
-of a quartermaster sergeant of the Spahis, and the cross of the legion
-of honour glittered on his breast. With his head leaning on his right
-hand, a pensive brow and a thoughtful eye, he examined his friend
-attentively, whilst twisting his long, silky light-coloured moustache
-with the other hand.
-
-The Count, shrinking before his earnest look, which appeared trying to
-read his most secret thoughts, broke the silence abruptly.
-
-"You have been a long time in responding to my message," he said.
-
-"This is the second time you have addressed that reproach to me, Louis,"
-the soldier replied, taking a paper from his breast; "you forget the
-terms of the note which your groom brought yesterday to my quarters."
-
-And he was preparing to read.
-
-"It is useless to read it," said the Count, with a melancholy smile. "I
-acknowledge I am in the wrong."
-
-"Well, then, let us see," said the Spahi gaily, "what this serious
-affair is which makes you stand in need of me. Explain: is there a woman
-to be carried off?--Have you a duel on hand?--Tell me."
-
-"Nothing that you can possibly imagine," the Count interrupted him
-bitterly; "therefore do not waste time in useless surmises."
-
-"What the devil is it, then?"
-
-"I am going to blow out my brains."
-
-The young man uttered these words with so firm and resolute an accent,
-that the soldier started in spite of himself, and bent an anxious glance
-upon the speaker.
-
-"You believe me mad, do you not?" the Count continued, who guessed his
-friend's thoughts. "No, I am not mad, Valentine; I am only at the bottom
-of an abyss from which I can only escape by death or infamy, and I
-prefer death."
-
-The soldier made no reply. With an energetic gesture he pushed back his
-chair, and began to walk about the room with hurried steps. The Count
-had allowed his head to sink upon his breast in a state of perfect
-prostration of mind. After a long silence, during which the fury of the
-storm without increased, Valentine resumed his seat.
-
-"A very strong reason must have obliged you to take such a
-determination," he said coolly; "I will not endeavour to combat it; but
-I command you, by our friendship, to tell me fully what has led you to
-form it. I am your foster brother, Louis; we have grown up together; our
-ideas have been too long in common, our friendship is too strong and too
-fervent for you to refuse to satisfy me."
-
-"To what purpose?" cried the Count, impatiently; "my sorrows are of a
-nature which none but he who experiences them can comprehend."
-
-"A bad pretext, brother," replied the soldier, in a rough tone; "the
-sorrows we dare not avow are of a kind that make us blush."
-
-"Valentine," said the Count, with a flashing eye, "it is ill judged to
-speak so."
-
-"On the contrary, it is quite right," replied the young man, warmly. "I
-love you, I owe you the truth; why should I deceive you? No, you know my
-frankness; therefore do not hope that I shall listen to you with my eyes
-shut. If you want to be flattered in your last moments, why send for me?
-Is it to applaud your death? If so, brother, farewell! I will retire,
-for I have nothing to do here. You great gentlemen, who have only known
-the trouble of coming into the world, know nothing of life but its joys;
-at the first roseleaf which chance happens to ruffle in your bed of
-happiness, you think yourselves lost, and appeal to that greatest of all
-cowardices, suicide."
-
-"Valentine!" the Count cried angrily.
-
-"Yes," continued the young man, with increased energy, "I repeat, that
-supreme cowardice! Man is no more at liberty to quit life when he
-fancies he is tired of it, than the soldier is to quit his post when he
-comes face to face with his country's enemy. Your sorrows, indeed! I
-know well what they are."
-
-"You know?" demanded the Count with astonishment.
-
-"All--listen to me; and when I have told you my thoughts, why, kill
-yourself if you like. Pardieu! do you think when I came here I did not
-know why you summoned me? A gladiator, far too weak to fight the good
-fight, you have cast yourself defencelessly among the wild beasts of
-this terrible arena called Paris--and you have fallen, as was sure to
-be the case. But remember, the death you contemplate will complete your
-dishonour in the eyes of all, instead of reinstating you or surrounding
-you with the halo of false glory you are ambitious of."
-
-"Valentine! Valentine!" cried the Count, striking the table forcibly
-with his clenched hand, "what gives you a right to speak to me thus?"
-
-"My friendship," the soldier replied, energetically, "and the position
-you have yourself placed me in by sending for me. Two causes reduce you
-to despair. These two causes are, in the first place, your love for
-a coquettish woman, a Creole, who has played with your heart as the
-panther of her own savannahs plays with the inoffensive animals she is
-preparing to devour.--Is that true?"
-
-The young man made no reply. With his elbows on the table, his face
-buried in his hands, he remained motionless, apparently insensible to
-the reproaches of his foster brother. Valentine continued--
-
-"Secondly, when, in order to win favour in her eyes, you have
-compromised your fortune, and squandered all that your father had left
-you, this woman flits away as she came, rejoicing over the mischief
-she has done, over the victims she has left on the path she has trod,
-leaving to you and to so many others the despair and the shame of having
-been the sport of a coquette. What urges you to seek refuge in death is
-not the loss of fortune, but the impossibility of following this woman,
-the sole cause of all your misfortunes. I defy you to contradict me."
-
-"Well, I admit all that is true. It is that alone which kills me. What
-care I for the loss of fortune? She alone is the object of my ambition!
-I love her--I love her--I tell you, so that I could struggle against
-the whole world to obtain her!" the young man exclaimed with great
-excitement. "Oh, if I could but hope! Hope--a word void of meaning,
-invented by the ambitious, always implying something unattainable! Do
-you not plainly see the truth of what I say? There is nothing left me
-but to die!"
-
-Valentine contemplated him for some minutes with a sad countenance.
-Suddenly his brow cleared, his eye sparkled; he laid his hand upon the
-Count's shoulder.
-
-"Is this, then, more than a caprice? Do you really love this woman?" he
-said.
-
-"Have I not told you that I am ready to die for her?"
-
-"Ay; and you told me at the same time that you would struggle with the
-whole world to obtain her."
-
-"I did--and would."
-
-"Well, then," continued Valentine, fixing his eyes earnestly upon him,
-"I can help you to find this woman again--I can."
-
-"You can?"
-
-"Yes, I can."
-
-"Oh! you are mad! She has left Paris, and no one knows into what region
-of America she has retreated."
-
-"Of what consequence is that?"
-
-"And then, besides, I am ruined!"
-
-"So much the better."
-
-"Valentine, be careful of what you say," the young man remarked with a
-sigh; "in spite of my reason, I allow myself to believe you."
-
-"Hope, man! hope, I tell you."
-
-"Oh, no; no, that is impossible!"
-
-"Nothing is impossible; that is a word invented by the impotent and the
-cowardly. I repeat that I not only will find this woman for you again,
-but that she--she herself, mind--shall be afraid lest you should despise
-her love."
-
-"Oh!"
-
-"Who knows? You yourself may then, perhaps, reject it."
-
-"Valentine! Valentine!"
-
-"Well, to obtain this glorious result, I only ask two years."
-
-"So long?"
-
-"Oh, such is man!" cried the soldier, with a faint, pitying laugh. "But
-an instant ago, and you were anxious to die, because the word had never
-stood in its true light before you; and now you have not the courage to
-look forward, or wait two years, which constitute only a few minutes of
-human life!"
-
-"Yes, but----"
-
-"Be satisfied, brother--be satisfied! If in two years I have not
-fulfilled my promise, I myself will load your pistols--and then----"
-
-"Well, and then?"
-
-"And then you shall not die alone," he said coolly.
-
-The Count looked at him. Valentine seemed transfigured: his countenance
-wore an expression of indomitable energy, which his foster brother had
-never observed in it before; his eyes sparkled with unwonted brilliancy.
-The young man avowed himself conquered; he took his friend's hand, and
-pressing it warmly, said--
-
-"I agree!"
-
-"You now, then, belong to me?"
-
-"I give myself entirely up to you."
-
-"That's well!"
-
-"But what will you do?"
-
-"Listen to me attentively," the soldier said, sinking back into his
-chair, and motioning to his friend to resume his seat. At this moment
-the clock struck the hour of midnight, and, from a feeling for which
-they could not account, the young men listened silently and reflectively
-to the twelve strokes which resounded at equal intervals upon the bell.
-
-When the echo of the last stroke had ceased to vibrate, Valentine lit a
-cigar, and turning towards Louis, whose eyes were intensely fixed upon
-him, "Now, then," he said slowly, emitting a puff of thin blue smoke,
-which went curling gracefully up towards the ceiling.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-THE RESOLUTION.
-
-
-"I am listening," said Louis, leaning forward as if to hear the better.
-
-Valentine resumed with a melancholy smile.
-
-"We have now reached the 1st of January, 1835," said he; "with the last
-vibration of midnight your existence as a gentleman has come to an end.
-From this time you are about to commence a life of trials and struggles;
-in a word, you are about to become a man!"
-
-The Count gave him an inquiring glance.
-
-"I will explain myself," Valentine continued; "but in order to do that,
-you must, in the first place, allow me, in a few words, to recall your
-history to you."
-
-"Surely, I am well enough acquainted with that," interrupted the Count,
-in a tone that displayed impatience.
-
-"Well, perhaps you are; but, at all events, listen to my version of it;
-if I err, put me right."
-
-"Follow your own humour," the Count replied, sinking back into his chair
-with the air of a man whom politeness obliges to listen to a tiresome
-discourse.
-
-Though he saw it, Valentine appeared to take no notice of this movement
-on the part of his foster brother. He relit his cigar, which he had
-allowed to go out, patted the dog, whose great head was lying upon his
-knees, and began, as if convinced that Louis gave him the most profound
-attention.
-
-"Your history is that of almost every man of your rank," said he. "Your
-ancestors, whose name can be traced to the Crusades, left you at your
-birth a noble title, and a hundred thousand francs a year. Rich, without
-having had occasion to employ your faculties to gain your fortune,
-and consequently ignorant of the real value of money, you spent it
-heedlessly, believing it to be inexhaustible. This is just what has
-happened; only, one day, when you least expected it, the hideous spectre
-of ruin rose up suddenly before you, and you had a glimpse of want,
-that is, of the necessity for labour; and then you drew back terrified,
-declaring there was no refuge but in death."
-
-"All that is perfectly true," the Count interrupted; "but you forget to
-mention, that before forming this last resolution, I took care to put
-my affairs in order, and to pay all my creditors. I then became my own
-master, and had a right to dispose of my life as I thought fit."
-
-"Not at all. And it is this which your education as a gentleman has
-prevented you from understanding. Your life is not your own; it is
-a loan which God has made you. It is, consequently, nothing but an
-expectation, a _waiting_, a passage: for this reason it is short,
-but the profit of it is due to humanity. Every man who wastes the
-faculties which he holds from God in orgies and debaucheries, commits a
-robbery upon the great human family. Remember that we are all mutually
-responsible for one another, and that we ought to employ our faculties
-for the advantage of the whole."
-
-"For Heaven's sake, brother, a truce to your sermons! Such theories,
-more or less paradoxical, may succeed with certain people, but----"
-
-"Brother," Valentine interrupted, "do not speak so. In spite of
-yourself, your pride of race dictates words which you will ere long
-regret. Certain people! there you have let slip the great word. Oh,
-Louis, Louis! how many things you have yet to learn! But that we may
-know what we are about, reckoning all your resources, how much have you
-left?"
-
-"Oh, I scarcely know! A pitiful sum."
-
-"Well, but how much?"
-
-"Good Heavens! some forty thousand francs, I suppose, at most, which may
-amount to sixty thousand by the sale of these luxurious trifles," the
-Count said carelessly.
-
-Valentine started up in his chair.
-
-"Sixty thousand francs!" he cried; "and you are in despair! and have
-made up your mind to die! Senseless fellow! why, these sixty thousand
-francs, well employed, are a fortune! they will enable you to find the
-woman you love! How many poor devils would fancy themselves rich with
-such a sum!"
-
-"What do you mean to do, then?"
-
-"You shall see. What is the name of the lady you are in love with?"
-
-"Dona Rosario del Valle."
-
-"Very well. She has, you say, gone to America?"
-
-"Ten days ago; but I, in justice, must observe to you, that Dona
-Rosario, whom you do not know, is a noble and amiable girl, who has
-never lent an ear to one of my flatteries, or given favourable heed to
-the ruinous extravagances which I committed to please her."
-
-"Ah, that is very possible! why, then, should I seek to rob you of this
-sweet illusion? Only it makes me the more puzzled to perceive how, under
-these circumstances, you could manage to melt your fortune, which was
-considerable, like a lump of butter in the sun."
-
-"Here! read this note from my broker."
-
-"Oh!" said Valentine, pushing back the paper; "you have been dabbling
-on the Stock Exchange, have you! Everything is now easily explained, my
-poor pigeon; the kites have plucked you nicely! Well, brother, you must
-take your revenge."
-
-"Oh, I ask nothing better!" said the young man, knitting his brows.
-
-"We are of the same age; my mother's milk nourished us both; in the
-eyes of God we are brothers! I will make a man of you! I will help
-you to put on that armour of brass which will render you invincible.
-Whilst you, protected by your name and your fortune, allowed life to
-glide luxuriously away, only plucking its flowers as it passed, I, a
-poor wretch wandering over the rough pavement of Paris, carried on a
-gigantic struggle to obtain a mere existence; a struggle of every hour
-and every minute, where the victory for me was a morsel of bread, and
-experience most dearly bought; for often, when I held horses, sold
-theatre checks, or acted clown to a mountebank--in fact, when I went
-through the thousand impossible shifts of the Bohemian, depression and
-discouragement nearly choked me; often and often have I felt my burning
-brow and throbbing temples clasped in the pinching vice of want; but I
-resisted, I girded myself up against adversity; never did I allow myself
-to be conquered, although I left upon the thorns of my rugged path many
-of the rags of my most fondly-cherished illusions; while my heart,
-writhing with despair, has bled from twenty wounds at once! Courage,
-Louis! henceforth there will be two of us to fight the battle! You shall
-be the head to conceive, I the arm to execute; you the intelligence, I
-the strength! Now the struggle will be equal, for we will sustain one
-another. Trust in me, my brother; a day will come when success will
-crown our efforts!"
-
-"I can fully appreciate your devotion, and I accept it. Am I not, at
-present, your property? Entertain no fear of my resisting you. But I
-cannot help telling you that I fear all my attempts will be in vain, and
-that we shall be forced, sooner or later, to fall back upon that last
-means which you now prevent me having recourse to."
-
-"Oh, thou man of little faith!" Valentine said, cheerfully; "on the road
-which we are about to take, fortune will be our slave!"
-
-Louis could not repress a smile.
-
-"We must, at all events, depend upon the aid of chance in what we are
-about to undertake," he said.
-
-"Chance! chance is the hope of fools; the strong man commands it."
-
-"Well, but what do you mean to do?"
-
-"The lady you love is in America, is she not?"
-
-"I have already told you so several times."
-
-"Very well, then, we must go thither."
-
-"But I do not know even in what part of America she resides."
-
-"Of what consequence is that? The New World is the country of gold--the
-true region of adventurers! We shall retrieve our fortunes whilst
-searching for her; and is that so disagreeable a thing? Tell me--this
-lady was born somewhere?"
-
-"She is a Chilian."
-
-"Good! she has gone back to Chili, then; and it is there we shall find
-her."
-
-Louis looked at his foster brother for a moment, with a species of
-respectful admiration.
-
-"What! do you seriously mean that you will do this, brother?" he said,
-in an agitated voice.
-
-"Without hesitation."
-
-"Abandon the military career which offers you so many chances of
-success? I know that in three months you will be an officer."
-
-"I have ceased to be a soldier since the morning; I have found a
-substitute."
-
-"Oh, that is not possible!"
-
-"Ay, but it is done."
-
-"But your old mother, my nurse, whose only support you are!"
-
-"Out of what you have left we will give her a few thousand francs,
-which, joined to my pension, will suffice for her to live on till we
-come back."
-
-"Oh," said the young man, "I cannot accept of such a sacrifice--my
-honour forbids it!"
-
-"Unfortunately, brother," Valentine said, in a tone which silenced the
-Count, "you have it not in your power to prevent it. In acting as I
-propose to do I am only discharging a sacred duty."
-
-"I do not understand you."
-
-"What is the use of explaining it to you?"
-
-"I insist."
-
-"Very good; and, perhaps, it will be better. Listen:--When, after
-having nursed you, my mother restored you to your family, my father fell
-sick, and died at the end of an illness of eight months, leaving my
-mother and myself in the greatest want; the little we possessed had been
-spent in medicines, and in paying the doctor for his visits. We ought to
-have had recourse to your family, who would, no doubt, have relieved us;
-but my mother would never consent to it. 'The Count de Prebois-Crance
-has done as much as he ought,' she remarked, 'he shall not be troubled
-any more.'"
-
-"She was wrong," said Louis.
-
-"I know she was," Valentine replied. "In the meantime, hunger soon began
-to be felt. It was then I undertook all those impossible trades of which
-I just now spoke to you. One day, as I was carrying my cap round in the
-Place du Trone, after swallowing sabres and eating fire, to the great
-delight of the crowd, I found myself face to face with an officer of the
-Chasseurs d'Afrique, who looked at me with an air of pity and kindness
-that melted my heart within me. He led me away with him, made me relate
-my history, and insisted upon being conducted to the shed where I and
-my mother lived. At the sight of our misery the old soldier was much
-affected; a tear, which he could not restrain, flowed silently down his
-sunburnt cheek. Louis, that officer was your father."
-
-"My noble and good father!" the Count exclaimed, pressing his foster
-brother's hand.
-
-"Yes! yes, noble and good! he secured my mother a little annuity which
-enables her to live, and took me into his own regiment. Two years ago,
-during the last expedition against the Rey of Constantine, your father
-was struck by a bullet in his chest, and died at the end of two hours,
-calling upon his son."
-
-"Yes," the young man said, with tears in his eyes, "I know he did."
-
-"But what you do not know, Louis, is, that at the point of death your
-father turned towards me--for, from the moment he had received his wound
-I had never left him."
-
-Louis again silently pressed the hand of Valentine, whilst the latter
-continued--
-
-"'Valentine,' he said to me, in a faint voice, broken by the rattle of
-death, for the mortal agony had commenced, 'my son is left alone, and
-without experience; he has nobody but you, his foster brother. Watch
-over him--never abandon him! May I depend upon your promise? it will
-mitigate the pain of dying.' I knelt down beside him, and respectfully
-seizing the hand he held out to me, exclaimed--'Die in peace! in the
-hour of adversity I will be always by the side of your Louis. Two tears
-of joy at that awful hour dropped from your father's eyes; he said, in a
-faltering voice--'God has heard your oath and murmuring your name, and
-clasping my hand, he expired. Louis, I owe to your father the comfort
-my mother enjoys; I owe to your father the feelings that make me a man,
-and this cross which glitters on my breast. Can you not now comprehend,
-then, why I have spoken to you as I have done? While you held your
-course in your strength, I kept aloof; but now that the hour has arrived
-for accomplishing my vow, no human power can prevent me from doing so."
-
-The two young men were silent for a moment, and then Louis, laying his
-face on the soldier's honest chest, said, with a burst of tears--
-
-"When shall we set out, brother?"
-
-The latter looked at him earnestly--
-
-"You are fully resolved to commence a new life?"
-
-"Entirely!" Louis replied, in a firm tone.
-
-"Do you leave no regrets behind you?"
-
-"None."
-
-"You are ready to pass bravely through all the trials to which I may
-expose you?"
-
-"I am."
-
-"That is well, brother! it is thus I wish you to be. We will set out as
-soon as we have settled the balance of your past life. You must enter
-on the new existence I am about to open to you quite free from clogs or
-remembrances."
-
- * * * * *
-
-On the 2nd of February, 1835, a packet boat belonging to the
-Trans-Atlantic Company left Havre, directing its course towards
-Valparaiso. On board this vessel, as passengers, were the Count de
-Prebois-Crance, Valentine Guillois his foster brother, and Caesar their
-Newfoundland dog--Caesar, the only friend who had remained faithful to
-them, and whom they could not think of leaving behind. Upon the quay
-a woman of about sixty years of age, her face bathed in tears, stood
-with her eyes intently fixed upon the vessel as long as it remained in
-sight. When it had disappeared below the horizon, she cast a desponding
-glance around her, and with a heavy heart bent her steps towards a house
-situated at a small distance from the beach, where she remained three
-days.
-
-"Do what is right, happen what may!" she said, in a voice stifled by
-grief.
-
-This woman was the mother of Valentine Guillois. She was the most to be
-pitied, for she was left alone!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-THE EXECUTION.
-
-
-Towards the end of the year 1450, Chili was invaded by Prince
-Sinchiroca, afterwards Inca, who gained possession of the valley of
-Mapocho, then called Promocaces, that is to say, the place of dancing
-and rejoicing. The Peruvian government, however, was never able to
-establish itself in the country, on account of the armed opposition of
-the Promocians, then encamped between the rivers Rapel and Maule. Hence,
-though the historian Garcilasso de la Vega may place the limits of the
-territory conquered by the Incas upon the river Maule, everything proves
-they were upon the Rapel, for, near the confluence of the Cachapeul with
-the Tingerica, which from this point takes the name of Rapel, start the
-ruins of an ancient Peruvian fortress, constructed exactly like those of
-Callao and Asseray, in the province of Quito. These fortresses served to
-mark the frontier.
-
-The Spanish conqueror, Don Pedro de Valdivia, founded, on the 24th of
-February, 1541, the city of Santiago in a delightful position upon the
-left bank of the Rio Mapocho, at the entrance of a plain a hundred miles
-in extent, bounded by the Rio Parahuel, and the mountain of El Pardo,
-which has an elevation of not less than four thousand feet. This plain,
-which is also bathed by the Rio Maypo, forms a natural reservoir, in
-which the light soil brought down from the neighbouring heights has
-found a level, and created one of the richest territories of the New
-World.
-
-Santiago, which at a later period became the capital of Chili, is one of
-the finest cities in Spanish America. Its streets are broad, built in
-straight lines, and refreshed by _acequias_; or rivulets of clear and
-limpid water; while the houses, built of _adobes_, only one story high,
-on account of the earthquakes so frequent in this country, are vast,
-airy, and well situated. It possesses a great number of monuments, the
-most remarkable of which are the stone bridge of five arches, thrown
-over the Mapocho, and the Tajamar, or breakwater, formed of two brick
-walls, the interior one of which is filled with earth, and serves to
-protect the inhabitants from inundations. The Cordilleras, with their
-eternally snow-crowned summits, although eighty miles distant from
-the city, appear suspended over it, and present an aspect of the most
-majestic and imposing kind.
-
-On the 5th of May, 1835, towards ten o'clock in the evening, stifling
-heat oppressed the city; there was not a breath in the air, or a cloud
-in the heavens. Santiago, generally so joyous at this hour of the
-night, when beams from black eyes and smiles from rosy lips are seen at
-every balcony, and each window seems to challenge the passer-by with
-the twanging of _sambecuejas,_ and snatches of Creole songs, appeared
-plunged in the deepest sadness. The balconies and the windows were
-filled, it is true, with the heads of men and women, packed together as
-closely as possible, but the expression of every face was serious, every
-look was thoughtful and uneasy: no smile, no joy could be witnessed; but
-on all sides were sorrowful brows, pale cheeks, and eyes filled with
-tears.
-
-Here and there in the streets numerous groups were stationed in the
-middle of the causeway, or upon the steps of the doors, conversing in a
-low voice, but with great vivacity. At every instant, orderly officers
-left the government palace, and galloped off in various directions.
-Detachments of troops quitted their barracks, and marched, with drums
-beating, to the Plaza Mayor, where they formed in line, passing silently
-amidst the terrified inhabitants. The Plaza Mayor on this evening
-afforded an exceptional appearance. Torches, waved about by individuals
-mixed with the crowd, threw their red dull reflections upon the
-assembled people, who seemed to be in expectation of some great event.
-
-But among all these people assembled on one spot, and whose number
-increased every second, not a cry, not a word could be heard. Only, at
-intervals, there arose a nameless murmur--a noise of the sea before a
-tempest--the whisper of a whole anxious people--the hoarse fury of a
-storm lashing all these oppressed breasts. The clock of the cathedral
-heavily and slowly struck ten.
-
-Scarce had the _serenos_, according to custom, chanted the hour, ere
-military commands were heard, and the crowd violently driven back in all
-directions, with cries and oaths, accompanied by blows from gunstocks,
-divided in two nearly equal parts, leaving between them a wide, free
-space. At this moment arose the sounds of religious chants, murmured in
-a low, monotonous tone, and a long procession of monks debouched upon
-the square. These monks all belonged to the order of the Brothers of
-Mercy. They walked slowly in two lines, with their hoods pulled down
-over their faces, their arms crossed upon their breasts, their heads
-hanging down, and chanting the _De Profundis_. In the middle of them ten
-penitents each bore an open coffin. Then came a squadron of cavalry,
-preceding a battalion of militiamen, in the centre of which body, ten
-men, bare headed, with their arms bound behind them, were conducted,
-each riding with his face toward the tail of a donkey, whose bridle
-was held by a monk of the order of Mercy; a detachment of lancers came
-immediately after, and closed this lugubrious procession.
-
-At the cry of halt, given by the commander of the troops drawn up
-upon the Plaza, the monks separated to the right and left, without
-interrupting their funeral chant, and the condemned remained alone in
-the middle of the space left free for them. These men were patriots,
-who had attempted to overthrow the established government, in order to
-substitute another, the more broad and democratic basis of which would
-be, as they thought, in better accordance with ideas of progress and the
-welfare of the nation. These patriots belonged to the first families of
-the country.
-
-The population of Santiago viewed with sullen despair the death of
-the men whom they considered as martyrs. It is even probable that a
-rising in their favour would have taken place, if General Don Poncho
-Bustamente, the minister at war, had not drawn out a military force
-capable of imposing upon the most determined, and obliging them to be
-silent spectators of the execution of men whom they could not save, but
-whom they entertained a fierce hope of avenging at a future day.
-
-The condemned alighted; they piously knelt, and confessed themselves to
-the monks of Mercy nearest to them, whilst a platoon of fifty soldiers
-took up a position within twenty paces of them. When their confession
-was completed, they rose up bravely, and taking each other by the hand,
-ranged themselves in a single line in front of the soldiers appointed
-to put them to death. In spite, however, of the great numbers of troops
-assembled on the Plaza, an ominous fermentation prevailed among the
-people. The crowd rocked about in all directions. Murmurs of sinister
-augury and curses, pronounced aloud against the agents of power, seemed
-to remind the latter that they had better finish the affair at once, if
-they did not wish to have their victims torn from their hands.
-
-General Bustamente, who calmly and stoically presided over this
-dismal ceremony, smiled with disdain at this expression of popular
-disapprobation. He waved his sword over his head and commanded "right
-about face," which was executed with the rapidity of lightning. The
-troops faced the insurgents on all sides; the front rank pointing their
-muskets at the citizens crowded together before them, whilst the others
-appeared to take aim at the balconies encumbered with people. This was
-followed by so dead a silence, that not a word was lost of the sentence
-read by the proper officer to the patriots--a sentence which condemned
-them to be shot as traitors, or accomplices in a conspiracy designed
-to overthrow the constituted government, and plunge their country into
-anarchy.
-
-The conspirators listened to their sentence with silent firmness; but
-when the officer, who trembled in every limb, had finished reading it,
-they all cried, as with one voice,
-
-"Viva la Patria! Viva la Libertad!"
-
-The General gave a signal, and a loud rolling of the drums drowned the
-voices of the condemned. A discharge of musketry resounded like a clap
-of thunder, and the ten martyrs fell, once again shouting their cry of
-liberty, a cry doomed to find an echo in the hearts of their terrified
-compatriots.
-
-The troops filed off, with shouldered arms, ensigns flying, and band at
-their head, past the dead bodies, and regained their barracks. When the
-General had disappeared with his escort, and the troops had left the
-Plaza, the people rushed in a mass towards the spot where the martyrs
-of their cause lay in a confused heap. Every one wished to offer them a
-last farewell, and to swear over their bodies to avenge them, or to fall
-in their turn.
-
-At length, by degrees, the crowd became less compact, the groups
-dispersed, the last torches were extinguished, and the spot where,
-scarce an hour before, an awful drama had been accomplished, was left
-completely deserted. A considerable time elapsed before any noise
-disturbed the solemn silence which brooded over the Plaza Mayor.
-
-Suddenly, a heavy sigh escaped from the heap of bodies, and a pale head,
-disfigured by the blood and dirt which stained it, arose slowly from
-this human slaughterhouse, pushing aside with difficulty the carcasses
-which had covered it. The victim, who, by a miracle, survived this
-bloody hecatomb, cast an anxious look around him, and passing his hand
-over his brow, which was bathed in a dark perspiration, said vehemently--
-
-"My God! my God! grant me strength to live, that I may avenge myself and
-my country!"
-
-Then, with incredible courage, this man, too weak from the blood he had
-lost, and was still losing, to stand, or to escape by walking away,
-began to crawl along upon his hands and knees, leaving behind him a long
-wet track, and directing his course towards the cathedral. At every yard
-he stopped to take breath, and to place his hands upon his wounds, which
-motion rendered more painful. Scarce had he left the centre of the Plaza
-and its horrid sacrifice fifty paces behind him, and that with immense
-difficulty, when, from a street which opened just before him, issued two
-men, who advanced with hasty steps towards him.
-
-"Oh!" the unhappy man cried, in utter despair, "I am lost! I am lost!
-Heaven is not just!"--And he fainted.
-
-The two men, on coming up to him, stopped with great surprise; they
-leant over him, and examined him with care and in an anxious manner.
-
-"Well?" said one of them, at the end of a minute or two.
-
-"He is alive!" the other replied, in a tone of conviction.
-
-Without uttering another word, they rolled up the wounded man in a
-_poncho_, lifted him on their shoulders, and disappeared in the gloomy
-depths of the street by which they had come, and which led to the
-Canadilla suburb.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-THE PASSAGE.
-
-
-It is a long voyage from Havre to Chili. The man accustomed to the
-thousand agitations and the intoxicating whirlwind of the atmosphere of
-Paris, necessarily finds the life on shipboard, the calm and regular
-life, insipid and monotonous. It is certainly tedious to remain months
-together in a vessel, confined to a cabin a few feet square, without
-air and without sun, almost without light, and to have no walk but the
-narrow deck of the ship, no horizon but the rolling or the tranquil
-sea--at all times and everywhere nothing but sea.
-
-The transition is very trying. The Parisian, accustomed to the noise
-and perpetual motion of a great city, cannot at once enter into or
-comprehend the poetry of the sailor's life, of which he knows nothing,
-or the sublime pleasures and keen enjoyments which those granite-hearted
-men, exposed incessantly to a struggle with the elements, constantly
-experience; men who laugh at the tempest and brave the hurricane; who,
-twenty times a minute, stand face to face with death, and at last feel
-such a contempt for it that they end by not believing in it. The hours
-are of interminable length to the passenger who pines for the land;
-every day appears an age to him. With his eyes constantly turned toward
-a point which he begins to imagine he shall never gain, he sinks, in
-spite of himself, into a species of gloomy nostalgia, which the sight of
-the wished for port is alone powerful enough to dissipate.
-
-The Count de Prebois-Crance and Valentine Guillois had, then, undergone
-the dispersion of all the illusions and all the ennuis attendant upon a
-first sea voyage. During the first days they were employed in recalling
-the vivid remembrance of that other life from which they had parted
-for ever. They talked over the surprise which the sudden disappearance
-of the Count would cause in the fashionable society from which he
-had fled without warning, and without leaving any means of tracing
-him. Forgetting for awhile the distance which separated them from the
-America to which they were bound, they dwelt at great length upon the
-unknown pleasures which awaited them upon that golden soil, that land
-of promise for all sorts of adventurers, but which, alas! often offers
-those who go thither in the hope of gaining an easy fortune, nothing but
-disappointment and sorrow.
-
-As every subject, however interesting it may be, must in the end grow
-exhausted, the two young men, to escape the fatiguing monotony of the
-voyage, had the good sense so to arrange their existence as to prevent
-tedium from gaining the influence over them which it had upon the
-other passengers. Twice a day, morning and evening, the Count, who was
-perfectly well acquainted with Spanish, gave his foster brother lessons
-in that language, lessons by which he profited so well, that after two
-months' study, he was able to carry on a conversation in Spanish. When
-he had made such progress, the young men employed no other language,
-either between themselves or with the persons on board who understood
-it. This habit produced the desired result; that is to say, Valentine,
-in a very short time, spoke Spanish, which is not difficult to acquire,
-as fluently as French; and then, in return, Valentine occasionally
-became the professor. He made Louis go through gymnastic exercises, in
-order to develop his natural strength, accustom his body to fatigue, and
-render him capable of supporting the rude exigencies of his new position.
-
-We will here, for a moment, return to the character of Valentine
-Guillois, a character of which the reader, from the young man's manner
-of acting and speaking, might form a completely erroneous opinion, and
-this we think it our duty to rectify. Morally, Valentine Guillois was
-a young fellow quite unacquainted with himself; hot-headed, giddy in
-the extreme, the surface had been slightly vitiated by reading chosen
-without discernment; but the foundation was essentially good. He
-united in himself all the characteristics of a class whose knowledge
-of the world is obtained from romances and the dramas of the Faubourg
-du Temple. He had sprung up like a mushroom upon _the pave_ of Paris,
-performing for bread, as he himself said, the most eccentric and
-impossible things. As a soldier, he had lived from hand to mouth,
-happy in the present, and careless of a future whose existence was so
-uncertain for him. But in the heart of this thoughtless _gamin_ a new
-sentiment had germinated, and, in a very short time, taken deep root,--a
-hearty devotion to the man who had held out his hand to him, had had
-pity on his mother, and who, by dragging him from the slough in which he
-was plunged, without hope of ever rising, had given him a consciousness
-of his own personal value. The death of this benefactor had struck
-him like a clap of thunder. He felt all the importance of the mission
-with which his dying colonel had charged him, the responsible burden
-he imposed upon him, and he swore, with the firm resolution of keeping
-his oath, cost what it might, to watch, like an attentive and devoted
-brother, over the son of him who had made a man of him equal to other
-men. The two most prominent points of Valentine's character were, an
-energy which obstacles only augmented instead of depressing, and an iron
-will.
-
-With these two qualities, employed to the extent to which Valentine
-carried them, a man is sure to accomplish great things, and, if death
-does not surprise him on the road, to attain, at a given moment, the
-object, whatever it may be, which he has marked out for himself. In the
-present circumstances, these qualities were invaluable to the Count de
-Prebois-Crance, a man of a dreamy, poetical nature, weak character, and
-timid mind, who, accustomed from his birth to the easy life of people
-of fortune, was entirely ignorant of the incessant difficulties of the
-new life into which he found himself suddenly cast. As always happens,
-when two men gifted with such opposite qualities meet, Valentine was
-not long in gaining over his foster brother a great moral influence, an
-influence which he employed with infinite tact, without ever rendering
-his companion aware of it; he appeared to do everything according to
-his will, whilst imposing his own upon him. In short, these two men,
-who loved each other thoroughly, and had but one head and one heart,
-perfected each other.
-
-The mode of speaking employed by Valentine in the early chapters of
-this history, was not at all habitual to him, and had truly astonished
-himself. Rising to the level of the situation in which the resolution of
-the young man he wished to save placed him, he had comprehended, with
-that sound common sense which he unwittingly possessed, that instead
-of desponding over the misfortune which struck his foster brother so
-unexpectedly, it was his duty, on the contrary, to endeavour to impart
-to him the courage he was deficient in. Thus, as we have seen, he
-found in his heart arguments so peremptorily decisive, that the Count
-consented to live, and gave himself up to his counsels. Valentine did
-not hesitate. The departure of Dona Rosario furnished him with the
-excuse he needed for dragging his foster brother from the Parisian gulf
-which, after having swallowed up his fortune, threatened to swallow up
-himself. Perceiving, before all else, the necessity for expatriating
-him, he persuaded Louis to follow the object of his love to America; and
-both set out gaily for the New World, abandoning the country which, like
-other emigrants, they fancied had been so ungrateful to them.
-
-Often during the passage the young Count had felt his courage flag,
-and his faith in the future abandon him, when thinking of the life of
-struggles and trials that awaited him in America. But Valentine, by
-his inexhaustible gaiety, his incredible store of anecdotes, and his
-incessant sallies, always succeeded in smoothing the wrinkles from the
-brow of his companion, who, with his habitual carelessness and want of
-energy, allowed himself to sink under that occult influence of Valentine
-which remoulded him, without his cognizance, and gradually made a new
-man of him.
-
-Such was the state of mind in which our two personages found themselves
-when the packet boat cast anchor in the roads of Valparaiso. Valentine,
-with his imperturbable assurance, doubted of nothing: he was persuaded
-that the people he was about to have to do with were very much beneath
-him in intelligence, and that he could manage very well to attain the
-double object which he aimed at. The Count entirely depended upon his
-foster brother for finding for him the woman he loved, and whom he had
-come so far to seek. As to retrieving his fortune, he did not even dream
-of that.
-
-Valparaiso--Valley of Paradise--so named probably by antiphrasis, for it
-is the filthiest and ugliest city of Spanish America--is nothing but a
-depot for foreigners, whom commercial interests do not call into Chili.
-Our young men only remained there long enough to equip themselves in
-the costume of the country; that is to say, to assume the Panama hat,
-the _poncho_, and _polenas_; then, each armed with two double-barrelled
-pistols, a rifle, and a long knife in his belt, they left the port, and,
-mounted on excellent horses, took their course towards Santiago, on the
-evening preceding the day on which the execution we have described in
-the preceding chapter was to take place. The weather was magnificent;--
-the rays of a burning sun rendered the very dust golden, and made the
-stones of the road shine like jewels.
-
-"Ah!" said Valentine, as soon as they found themselves upon the superb
-road which leads to the capital of Chili; "it does one good to breathe
-the air of the land--_caramba_, as they say here. Well, now, here we
-are in this boasted America, and now we must set about collecting our
-harvest of gold."
-
-"And Dona Rosario?" said his foster brother, in a melancholy tone.
-
-"Oh! we shall have found her within a fortnight," replied Valentine,
-with astounding confidence.
-
-With these consolatory words, he animated his horse with the spur, and
-the distance before them rapidly diminished.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-THE LINDA.[1]
-
-
-The night was gloomy; no star glittered in the heavens; the moon,
-concealed by clouds, only spread a wan, pale light, which, when it
-disappeared, rendered the darkness the denser. The streets were
-deserted; but at regular intervals the furtive steps of the serenos, who
-alone watched at this hour, were audible.
-
-The two men whom we have seen upon the Plaza Mayor, bearing away the
-wounded man, walked for a long time, loaded with their strange burthen,
-stopping at the least noise, and concealing themselves in the depths of
-a doorway, or in the angle of a street, to allow the serenos to pass, as
-they would be sure to require a reason for their being in the streets
-at that unusual hour. Since the discovery of the conspiracy, orders had
-been given that at eleven o'clock every citizen should be within doors.
-After many turnings and windings, the strangers stopped in the street El
-Mercado, one of the most secluded and narrow in Santiago. They appeared
-to be expected, for a door was opened at the sound of their steps, and
-a woman, dressed in white, and holding a candle, the light of which
-she shaded with her left hand, appeared on the threshold. The two men
-stopped, and one of them, taking a steel from his pocket, struck the
-flint so as to produce as few sparks as possible. At this signal--for it
-evidently was one--the woman extinguished the light, saying with a loud
-voice, but as if speaking to herself--
-
-"Dios proteja a Chile (May God protect Chili)!"
-
-"Dios lo ha protegido (God has protected it)," the man with the flint
-and steel replied, as he replaced his utensils in his pocket.
-
-The woman uttered a cry of joy, which her prudence suddenly repressed.
-
-"Come in, come in," she said in a low voice; and in an instant the two
-men were beside her.
-
-"Is he alive?" she asked, with intense anxiety.
-
-"He is alive," one of the strangers laconically replied.
-
-"In Heaven's name, come in!" she exclaimed.
-
-The bearers, guided by the woman, who had relighted her candle,
-disappeared in the house, the door of which was immediately and softly
-closed after them. All the houses of Santiago are alike, with respect
-to their internal arrangements. To describe one is to describe all.
-A wide doorway, ornamented with pilasters, leads to _the patio_, or
-great entrance court, at the end of which is the principal apartment,
-generally the dining room. On each side are bed chambers, reception
-rooms, and cabinets for labour or study. Behind these apartments is the
-_huerta_, or garden, laid out with taste, ornamented with fountains, and
-planted with orange trees, citron trees, pomegranates, limes, cedars,
-and palm trees, which grow with incredible luxuriance. Behind the garden
-is the _corral_--a vast enclosure appropriated to horses and carriages.
-
-The house into which we have introduced the reader, only differed from
-the others in the princely luxury of its furniture, which seemed to
-indicate that its inhabitant was a person of importance. The two men,
-still preceded by the woman, who served them as guide, entered a little
-room, whose window opened on the garden. They laid their burthen down
-upon a bed, and retired without speaking a word, but bowing respectfully.
-
-The woman remained for a moment motionless, listening to the sound
-of their retreating footsteps; and when all was silent, she sprang
-with a bound towards the door, the bolts of which she fastened with
-an impetuous gesture; then, returning and placing herself beside the
-wounded man, she fixed upon him a long and melancholy look.
-
-This woman, though really thirty-five years of age, appeared to be
-scarcely more than five-and-twenty. She was of an extraordinary, but a
-strange style of beauty; it attracted attention, commanded admiration,
-but created an instinctive repulsion. In spite of the majestic splendour
-of her graceful form, the elegance of her carriage, the freedom of her
-motions, full of voluptuous ease,--in spite of the purity of the lines
-of her fair face, slightly tinged by the warm rays of an American sun,
-which the magnificent tresses of her black hair beautifully enframed,
-her large black eyes, ornamented with long velvety lashes, and crowned
-by perfectly-arched brows, her straight nose, with its mobile and rosy
-nostrils, her little mouth, whose blood-red lips contrasted admirably
-with her pearl-white teeth--in spite of all these rich endowments,
-there was in this splendid creature something fatal, which chilled the
-heart as you contemplated her. Her searching glance, the satirical
-smile, which almost always contracted the corners of her lips, the
-slight wrinkle, which formed a harsh, deep line along her white
-brow--everything about her, even to the melodious sound of her voice,
-with its strongly-accentuated pitch, destroyed sympathy, and produced a
-feeling of hatred, rather than respect.
-
-Alone in that chamber, dimly lighted by one flickering taper, in that
-calm and silent night, face to face with that pale, bleeding man, whom
-she contemplated with stern, contracted brows, she resembled, with her
-long, black hair falling in disorder from her shoulders on to her white
-robe, a Thessalian witch, preparing herself to accomplish some terrible
-and mysterious work.
-
-The stranger was a man of, at most, forty-five years of age, of lofty
-stature, strongly built, and well proportioned. His features were
-handsome, his brow noble, and the expression of his countenance proud,
-but frank and resolute.
-
-The woman remained for a considerable time in mute contemplation.
-Her bosom heaved, her brows became more and more contracted, and she
-appeared to watch the too slow progress of the return to sensibility
-of the man her emissaries had saved from death. At length words forced
-their way through her compressed lips, and she murmured in a low, broken
-voice,--
-
-"Here he is, then; this time, at least, he is in my power! Will he
-consent to answer me? Oh! perhaps I had better have left him to die."
-
-She paused to breathe a deep, broken sigh, but almost immediately
-continued:--
-
-"My daughter! my daughter! of whom this man has bereaved me! and whom,
-in spite of all my researches, he has hitherto concealed in some
-inviolable asylum! My daughter! he must restore her to me; it is my
-will!" she added with inexpressible energy. "He shall, even if I had
-to deliver him up again to the executioners from whom I have ravished
-their prey! These wounds are nothing; loss of blood and terror are the
-sole causes of this insensibility. But time passes--my absence may be
-noticed. Why should I hesitate longer? Let me at once know what I have
-to hope from him. Perhaps he will allow himself to be softened by my
-tears and prayers. What, he! he to whom all human feeling is unknown!
-Better for me to implore the most implacable Indian! He will laugh at my
-grief, he will reply by sarcasms to my cries of despair;--oh! woe, woe
-be to him if he do so!"
-
-She looked earnestly at the wounded man, who was still motionless, for
-another instant, and then, adding resolutely, "I will try," she drew
-from her bosom a small crystal phial, curiously cut, and raising the
-head of the unknown, made him inhale the contents. This was followed by
-a moment of intense expectation; the woman watching with an anxious eye
-the convulsive movements which are the precursors of the return to life,
-as they agitated the body of the wounded man. At length, with a deep
-sigh, he opened his eyes.
-
-"Where am I?" he murmured in a faint voice, then sank back, and closed
-his eyes again.
-
-"In safety," the woman replied.
-
-The sound of the voice produced upon the wounded man the effect of an
-electric shock. He raised himself quickly, and looking around him with a
-mixture of disgust, terror, and anger, asked in a hollow voice,--
-
-"Who spoke?"
-
-"I!" the woman replied haughtily, placing herself before him.
-
-"Ah!" he said with a gesture of disgust, and sinking back upon the bed;
-"you again! ever you!"
-
-"Yes, I! still I, Don Tadeo! I, whose will, in spite of your disdain
-and your hatred, has never faltered! I, in short, whose assistance you
-have always obstinately refused, and who have saved you, in spite of
-yourself."
-
-"Oh! that is an easy matter for you, madam; are you not on the best
-possible terms with my executioners?"
-
-At this reply the woman could not repress a movement of anger; a sudden
-redness flitted across her face.
-
-"No insults, Don Tadeo de Leon!" she said, stamping her foot; "I have
-saved you! I am a woman, and you are under my roof!"
-
-"That is true," he replied, rising and bowing to her with ironical
-respect; "I had forgotten that, madam; I am in your house. Have the
-goodness, then, to direct me the way out, that I may be gone as quickly
-as possible."
-
-"Do not be in such haste, Don Tadeo--you have not yet sufficiently
-recovered your strength. Within a few steps, you perhaps would fall
-again, to be raised up by the agents of the power which, this time, I
-swear to you, would not let you escape."
-
-"And who told you, madam, that I should not prefer being retaken and
-executed a second time, to the chance of remaining longer in your
-presence?"
-
-There was a moment of silence, during which the two interlocutors
-observed each other attentively. The woman was the first to speak.
-
-"Listen to me, Don Tadeo," she said. "In spite of all your efforts,
-destiny, or, speaking more correctly, woman's genius, which nothing can
-resist, has brought us together once again. If you live, if you have
-received only slight wounds, it is because I lavished my gold upon the
-soldiers charged with your execution; I wished to force you to that
-explanation which I have so long demanded of you, which you so often
-have refused me, but which you can now no longer avoid. Submit, then,
-with a good grace. We will afterwards separate, if not good friends,
-at least indifferent, never to meet again. Though I do not wish to
-establish any claim upon your gratitude, you certainly owe your life to
-me; were it for that service alone, you are bound to hear me."
-
-"What! madam," Don Tadeo replied, proudly, "do you think that I consider
-what you have done was rendering me a service? By what right have you
-saved my life? You know me but ill if you fancied I should allow myself
-to be softened by your tears. No, no, I have been too long your dupe and
-your slave to do so. Heaven be praised! I know you well now; and the
-Linda, the mistress of General Bustamente, the tyrant of my country, the
-executioner of my brothers and myself, has nothing to expect from me!
-All that you can say, all that you can do, will be to no purpose. Spare
-yourself, then, I advise you, the trouble of pretending a gentleness
-which neither accords with your character nor your mode of life. I
-madly loved you, a young, pure, and prudent girl, in the cabin of the
-worthy _guaso,_ your father, whose death was caused by your scandalous
-life; you were then called Maria. At that period, would I not have
-sacrificed my life and my happiness for you?--you know I would. Many
-times have I given you proofs of that boundless love; but the Linda, the
-shameless courtezan, the Linda, the woman branded on the brow like Cain
-with the seal of infamy, the miserable creature--I know her not. Away,
-madam!--away! There can be nothing in common between you and me."
-
-And with a gesture of proud authority he waved her from him.
-
-The woman had listened to him with flashing eyes and heaving bosom,
-trembling with rage and shame. Drops of perspiration stood upon her
-face, which glowed with a feverish redness. When he had finished, she
-seized his arm, pressed it with her utmost strength, and placed her face
-close to his.
-
-"Have you said all?" she muttered from between her teeth. "Have you
-heaped insults enough upon me? Have you cast sufficient mire in my face?
-Have you nothing more to add?"
-
-"Nothing, madam," he replied, in a tone of cool contempt. "You can, when
-you please, summon your assassins--I am ready to receive them."
-
-And throwing himself upon the bed, he waited with an air of the most
-insolent indifference.
-
-
-[1] This word, which has no equivalent in English or French, is in the
-Spanish language the highest expression of physical beauty in woman.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-HUSBAND AND WIFE.
-
-
-Dona Maria, notwithstanding the fresh and bitter insult she had just
-received from Don Tadeo, did not yet renounce the hope of softening
-him. When she recalled to her mind the early years, already so distant,
-of her love for Don Tadeo, his devotion to her smallest caprices, when
-she could bring him trembling and prostrate to her feet by a glance or
-a smile, and the entire abnegation he had made of his will, in order
-to live for her and by her; notwithstanding all that had since taken
-place between them, she could not persuade herself that the violent
-and deeply-seated passion he had entertained for her, the species of
-worship he had vowed to her, could have entirely disappeared without
-leaving some slight traces behind. Her pride revolted at the idea of
-having lost all her empire over the lofty nature which she so long had
-moulded at her pleasure like soft wax, under the burning impression of
-wild caprices. She fancied that, like most other men, Don Tadeo, deeply
-wounded in his pride, loved her still without being willing to admit it,
-and that the virulent reproaches he had addressed to her, were flashes
-of that ill-extinguished fire which still smouldered in his heart, and
-whose flame she should succeed in reviving.
-
-Unfortunately Dona Maria had never given herself the trouble to study
-the man she had married, and whom her beauty had so long held in
-subjection. Don Tadeo had been nothing in her eyes but an attentive,
-submissive slave, and, under the apparent weakness of the loving man,
-she had not discovered the powerful energy which formed the foundation
-of his character. And yet the history itself of their love had been a
-proof of that energy, and of a will which nothing could control. Dona
-Maria, then fifteen years of age, dwelt with her father in a _hacienda_,
-in the neighbourhood of Santiago. Deprived of her mother, who had died
-in giving her birth, she was brought up under the care of an old aunt,
-an incorruptible Argus, who allowed no lover to come near her niece.
-The young girl, ignorant as all girls brought up in the country are,
-but whose warm aspirations led her to desire to know the world, and to
-launch into that whirlwind of pleasures the sound of which died without
-an echo in her ears, waited impatiently the arrival of the man who
-should introduce her to these delights, of which, although unknown, she
-had formed seducing ideas. Don Tadeo had only been the guide charged
-with initiating her into the pleasures for which she thirsted. She
-had never loved him; she had only said to herself, on seeing him and
-learning he was of a noble family, "That is the man I have been looking
-for."
-
-This hideous and selfish calculation is made by more girls than
-we may fancy. Don Tadeo was handsome. Dona Maria's self-love was
-flattered by the conquest; but if he had been ugly and disagreeable,
-it would not have altered her course. In her extraordinary character,
-a strange conjunction of the most abject passions, among which shone
-here and there, like diamonds gleaming in the mire, a few feelings
-which attached her to humanity, there was the spirit of two women
-of ancient Rome; Locusta and Messalina were united in her: ardent,
-passionate and ambitious, covetous and prodigal, this demon, concealed
-under the outward form of an angel, acknowledged no other laws but her
-own caprices; and all means, by which she could satisfy them, to her
-appeared good.
-
-For a long time, Don Tadeo, blinded by passion, had submitted without
-complaining to the iron yoke of this infernal genius; but when the day
-arrived that the scales fell from his eyes, he measured with terror the
-depth of the abyss into which this woman had cast him. The frightful
-disorders to which, under the sanction of his name, she had abandoned
-herself, imprinted on his blushing brow a stigma of infamy: the world
-believed him to be her accomplice.
-
-Don Tadeo had by Maria an only daughter, a fair girl of angelic beauty,
-at the period of our history fifteen years of age, whom he loved in
-proportion to the sufferings her mother had inflicted upon him. He
-trembled to think of the frightful future which lay before this innocent
-creature. For four years he had been separated from his wife; and
-during that time she had set no bounds on her irregularities. One day,
-Don Tadeo presented himself unexpectedly at the house of his wife, and
-without saying a word as to his ulterior intentions, took away his
-daughter. From that time--nearly ten years--Dona Maria had never seen
-her child.
-
-A strange revolution was effected by this step in the mother's feelings;
-a new sentiment, so to say, germinated in her soul. A thing, till that
-time unknown to her, happened; she felt the pulses of her heart beat
-for another--she grieved at the remembrance of the little angel who had
-been ravished from her. What was the sentiment? She, herself, knew not;
-she only ardently wished to see her child again. During six years she
-contended, publicly and privately, with Don Tadeo, to have her daughter
-restored to her. The father was deaf and dumb; she could never learn
-what had become of her. Don Tadeo, who, since he ceased to love her, had
-studied the character of the woman of whom he had made an implacable
-enemy, had taken his precautions so prudently that all Dona Maria's
-researches proved fruitless, and all her attempts to obtain an interview
-remained without a result. She imagined that he was afraid of yielding,
-if face to face with her; and she resolved, cost what it might, to force
-him to grant her the interview to which nothing had been able to make
-him consent.
-
-Such was, at the moment we bring them on the scene, the position of
-the two personages who now doubtless met for the last time. It was an
-extraordinary position for both; an unequal contest between a wounded
-and proscribed man, and an ardent, insulted woman, who, like a lioness
-deprived of her whelps, was resolved to succeed, whatever might happen,
-and compel the man whom she had forced to hear her, to restore her
-daughter to her.
-
-Don Tadeo turned towards her.
-
-"I am waiting," he said.
-
-"You are waiting?" she replied, with a friendly smile. "What do you
-expect, then?"
-
-"The assassins whom you doubtless have at hand, in case I should be
-unwilling to reply to your questions concerning your daughter."
-
-"Oh!" she said, with an air of repulsion, "how can you, Don Tadeo, have
-so bad an opinion of me? How can you pretend to believe that, after
-having saved you, I should deliver you up to those who have proscribed
-you?"
-
-"Who knows?" he replied, in a strongly ironical tone. "The heart of
-women of your class, Linda, is an abyss which no man can pretend to
-sound. You, who are incessantly seeking eccentric pleasures, perhaps
-would find an unknown enjoyment and a charm in this second execution,
-which, besides, would not at all compromise you, as I am already legally
-dead to the world."
-
-"Don Tadeo, I know how unworthy my conduct towards you has been, and
-how little I deserve your pity; but you are a gentleman, and, as such,
-do you think it does you honour to load with insults, however merited,
-a woman who is your wife, and who, after saving your life, with no
-intention of reinstating herself in your favour, merely makes a claim,
-at least upon your pity, if not on your esteem?"
-
-"Very well, madam; nothing can be more just than your observations, and
-I subscribe to them with all my heart. I beg you to pardon me for having
-allowed myself to utter certain words; but, at the first movement, I
-was not master of myself, and I could not keep down in the depths of my
-heart the feelings which were stifling me. Now, accept my sincere thanks
-for the immense service you have rendered me, and permit me to retire.
-A longer sojourn, on my part, in this house, is a robbery of which I
-render myself guilty towards your numerous adorers."
-
-And, bowing with ironical courtesy to his infuriated wife, he made a
-movement towards one of the doors of the room.
-
-"One word more," she said.
-
-"Speak, madam."
-
-"Are you resolved to leave me ignorant of the fate of my daughter?"
-
-"She is dead."
-
-"Dead!" she cried, in a voice of terror.
-
-"For you--yes," he replied, with a cold smile.
-
-"Oh, you are implacable!" she shrieked, stamping her foot with rage.
-
-He bowed, without making any reply.
-
-"Well, then," she resumed, "it is now no longer a favour I implore--it
-is a bargain I propose to you."
-
-"A bargain?"
-
-"Yes, a bargain."
-
-"The idea strikes me as original."
-
-"Perhaps it is; you shall judge for yourself."
-
-"I listen, but time presses, and I--"
-
-"Oh, I will be brief," she interrupted.
-
-"I am at your service," and he reseated himself, smiling, exactly like a
-friend on a visit. The Linda followed his motions with her eye, without
-appearing to attach any importance to them.
-
-"Don Tadeo," she said, "during the many years we have been separated a
-great number of events has taken place."
-
-"Quite correct," said he, with a gesture of polite assent.
-
-"I will say nothing to you of myself--my life is known to you."
-
-"Very little of it, madam."
-
-She cast a savage look at him.
-
-"Let that pass," she said, "it is of you I would speak."
-
-"Of me?"
-
-"Yes, of you, whose moments are not so completely absorbed by patriotism
-and the effervescence of political ideas as not to leave you a few for
-more intimate joys and emotions."
-
-"What do you mean?"
-
-"Why do you feign ignorance?" she said, with a perfidious smile; "I am
-sure you understand me."
-
-"Madam!"
-
-"Do not deny it, Tadeo! Tired of the ephemeral love of women of my
-class, as you have just now so well said, you seek in the pure heart of
-a young girl emotions more in accordance with your tastes; in a word,
-I know you are in love with a charming young creature, worthy in all
-respects of being the wife of your choice, if I, unfortunately, did not
-exist."
-
-Don Tadeo fixed upon his wife a scrutinizing look while she was
-pronouncing these words. As she finished, a sigh escaped him.
-
-"What, are you aware?" he exclaimed, with well-feigned surprise. "You
-know--"
-
-"I know that her name is Dona Rosario del Valle," she replied, satisfied
-of the effect she thought she had produced upon her husband; "why, it is
-the freshest news in Santiago! all the world is talking of it. How was
-it likely it should escape me, when I take such an interest in you?"
-
-The Linda interrupted herself, and laid her hand on his arm.
-
-"It is of very little consequence," she added; "restore me my daughter,
-Don Tadeo, and this new love of yours shall be sacred to me--if not--"
-
-"You are mistaken, madam, I tell you."
-
-"Beware, Don Tadeo!" she remarked, with a glance at the clock; "by this
-time the woman we were speaking of is in the hands of my agents."
-
-"What do you mean?" he cried, in great agitation.
-
-"Yes," she replied, in a husky tone, "I have had her carried off. In a
-few minutes she will be here. Beware! I repeat, Don Tadeo! if you do not
-tell me where my daughter is, and if you continue to refuse to restore
-her to me--"
-
-"Well," he said, haughtily, looking her full in the face, and crossing
-his arms, "what then will you do?"
-
-"I will kill this woman!" she replied, in a gloomy but firm tone.
-
-Don Tadeo looked at her for a moment with an undefinable expression, and
-then burst into a dry, nervous laugh, which chilled the woman with fear.
-
-"You will kill her!" he cried, "unhappy woman! Well!--kill that innocent
-creature!--Call in your executioners--I will be mute."
-
-The Linda sprang up like a lioness, and rushed towards the door, which
-she opened violently.
-
-"This is too much!--Come in!" she called out, loudly.
-
-The two men who had brought in Don Tadeo appeared, poniard in hand.
-
-"Ah!" the gentleman said, with a contemptuous smile, "I know you again
-at last."
-
-At a motion from the Linda the assassins advanced towards him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-THE DARK-HEARTS.
-
-
-As we have seen, the people had dispersed almost immediately after the
-execution of the patriots. Everyone carried away in the depths of his
-heart the hope of avenging, at an early day, the victims who had so
-nobly died, with the cry for a time left without an echo, of Viva la
-patria! A cry checked by the bayonets of the soldiers of Bustamente, but
-which must soon give birth to fresh martyrs.
-
-And yet the square, though it seemed a desert, was not so. Several
-men, folded in dark cloaks, and with broad-brimmed hats, pulled down
-over their eyes, were grouped in the recess of the coach entrance of a
-house, and were conversing earnestly together in a low voice, keeping an
-anxious look-out the meanwhile. These men were patriots.
-
-In spite of the terror which hovered over the city, they had, by dint of
-prayers, obtained from the archbishop of Santiago, who was a true priest
-according to the gospel, and at heart devoted to the liberal cause,
-permission to pay the last rites to their unfortunate brethren.
-
-No part of the dismal drama which followed the execution had escaped
-them. They had seen Don Tadeo rise like a phantom from the heap of
-carcasses which covered him; they had heard the words he had pronounced,
-and were preparing to go to his succour, when the two strangers,
-appearing suddenly, raised his body and bore it away. This carrying off
-of a half dead man had surprised them exceedingly. After exchanging a
-few words, two of them went in pursuit of the mysterious strangers,
-probably in order to learn to what house the wounded man was taken,
-whilst the others, twelve in number, advanced to the middle of the
-square.
-
-They anxiously bent down and examined the bodies stretched at their
-feet, hoping, perhaps, that another victim might have escaped the
-slaughter. Unfortunately, Don Tadeo was the only one saved by some
-inexplicable mystery. The nine other victims were all dead. After a long
-examination, the patriots stood up again with a painful sigh of regret,
-and one of them went and knocked at a lower door of the cathedral.
-
-"Who is there?" was immediately asked from the interior.
-
-"_One for whom the night hath no darkness_," the man who had knocked
-replied.
-
-"What do you want?" the voice asked again.
-
-"_Is it not written: Knock and it shall be opened to thee_?" the
-stranger added.
-
-"_Our country!_" said the voice.
-
-"_Or vengeance!_" the man promptly replied.
-
-The door opened, and a monk appeared. His cowl pulled down over his
-face, prevented his features being seen.
-
-"Well," he said, "what do the _Dark-Hearts_ require?"
-
-"A prayer for their murdered brothers."
-
-"Return to those who sent you; they shall be satisfied."
-
-"Thanks for all!" the unknown replied; and, after bowing respectfully to
-the monk, he rejoined his companions. During his absence they had not
-been idle, but had placed the bodies upon hand barrows concealed under
-the arcades of the place.
-
-At the expiration of a few minutes a brilliant light inundated the
-place; the cathedral doors were opened. The interior was seen to be
-splendidly illuminated, and from the principal door issued a long
-procession of monks, each bearing a wax light in his hand; they chanted,
-as they walked, the service of the dead. At the same moment the gates
-of the government palace were thrown open as if by enchantment, and a
-squadron of the Ceras, with General Bustamente at their head, advanced,
-at a trot, towards the procession.
-
-When the monks and soldiers met, they stopped as of one accord. The
-twelve unknown men, folded in their cloaks, and grouped round the
-fountain which forms the centre of the square, anxiously awaited the
-denouement of the scene about to take place.
-
-"What is the meaning of this procession, at such an unusual hour?" the
-general haughtily demanded.
-
-"It means that we have come," the monk who walked first replied, with a
-firm voice, but in a melancholy tone, "to take up the victims you have
-struck down, and give them honourable burial."
-
-"And who, pray, are you?" the general asked, sharply.
-
-"I?" the monk replied, in the same firm tone, and throwing back his
-cowl upon his shoulders--"I am the archbishop of Santiago, primate of
-Chili, invested by his holiness the Pope with the power of binding and
-unbinding on earth."
-
-In Spanish America, all persons yield without hesitation to the religion
-of Christ. The only power that is real is that of the priests. No one,
-however high he may be placed, ventures to struggle against it: he knows
-beforehand that, if he did, he would be sure to be crushed. The general
-knitted his brows, struck his forehead forcibly with his hand, but was
-constrained to admit himself conquered.
-
-"My lord!" he said, with a bow; "pardon me! In these times of civil
-discord, we often, in spite of ourselves, confound our friends with our
-enemies. I was ignorant that your lordship had given orders for prayers
-to be offered up for these criminals, and still more so that you would
-deign to perform this task in person--I beg leave to retire."
-
-During this scene, the patriots had concealed themselves behind the
-pillars of the place, where, thanks to the darkness, they remained
-unseen by the general. As soon as the military had disappeared, at a
-sign from the archbishop the bodies were borne into the cathedral.
-
-"Beware of that man, my lord," whispered one of the unknown in the
-archbishop's ear; "he darted at you the glance of a tiger as he retired."
-
-"Brother!" the priest replied calmly; "I am prepared for martyrdom."
-
-The service commenced. As soon as it was terminated, the patriots
-retired, after warmly thanking the archbishop for his kindness towards
-their dead brethren. Scarce had they proceeded a few steps along a
-narrow street, edged by mean dwellings, when two men rose from behind an
-overturned cart which concealed them, and coming towards them, said in a
-low voice--
-
-"Our country!"
-
-"Vengeance!" one of the unknown replied. "Come on!"
-
-The two men approached.
-
-"Well!" said he who appeared to be the chief. "What have you learnt?"
-
-"All that it is possible to know," one of the newcomers replied.
-
-"Whither have they transported Don Tadeo?"
-
-"To the mansion of the Linda."
-
-"To the residence of his wife! Of the woman who is now the mistress
-of the General Bustamente!" the chief replied anxiously. "By the holy
-Virgin! my comrades, he is lost, for she hates him mortally. Shall we
-allow him to be assassinated without an effort to save him?"
-
-"That would be base cowardice," they replied unanimously.
-
-"But how can we introduce ourselves into the house?"
-
-"Nothing more easy; the garden walls are very low."
-
-"Come on, then! there is not a minute to be lost!"
-
-Without another word, they all hastened off in the direction of the
-Linda's house, which, as we have said, was situated in the faubourg
-of the Canadilla, the handsomest quarter in Santiago. The windows,
-hermetically closed, did not allow one ray of light to pass; not a
-sound could be heard, and the house seemed deserted. The patriots stole
-silently round the walls, and when they reached the back, they easily
-climbed the fence by sticking their poniards between the bricks, and
-sprang into the garden. Here they looked carefully about them, and,
-after a short pause, proceeded with stealthy steps towards a pale,
-trembling light, which sent a feeble beam through the chink of a
-shutter. They were within a few paces of this window, when they suddenly
-heard the noise of what appeared a scuffle, and a terrible cry was
-uttered, mingled with the crash of furniture and imprecations of rage
-and pain. Bounding forward like panthers, the strangers, who had covered
-their faces with masks of black velvet, dashed at the window, which flew
-in a thousand fragments around them, and entered the salon.
-
-And it was time for them to arrive. Don Tadeo, with a stool, had split
-the head of one of the bandits, who lay lifeless upon the floor; but
-the other had got him down, and, with his knee upon his breast, was on
-the point of stabbing him. With a pistol shot, one of the unknown blew
-out his brains, and the wretch rolled in his agony close to his dead
-companion. Don Tadeo sprang up quickly, exclaiming--
-
-"By the Virgin! I thought my hour was come!" Then, turning towards the
-masked men, he said--"Thanks, caballeros! thanks for your very timely
-succour! One minute more, and it would have been all over with me! The
-Linda is expeditious!"
-
-The courtesan, with features contracted by rage, and clenched teeth,
-looked on without appearing to see, overwhelmed, confounded by the scene
-which had so rapidly taken place, and which had, in a few minutes,
-ravished from her the vengeance which she thought had this time been so
-certain.
-
-"Without bearing malice, madam," said Don Tadeo in a jeering tone, "this
-is a match deferred. Your fertile imagination will no doubt soon furnish
-you with the means of taking your revenge!"
-
-"I hope so," she said with a sardonic smile.
-
-"Seize this woman," the leader of the unknown commanded; "gag her, and
-bind her securely to the bed."
-
-"Bind me!" she cried in a paroxysm of anger; "me! do you know who I am?"
-
-"Perfectly well, madam," the stranger replied drily. "You are a woman
-for whom honourable people have no name. Libertines have given you that
-of the Linda, and your present lover is General Bustamente. You see,
-madam, that we are not unacquainted with you."
-
-"Beware, sir," she hissed; "I am not to be insulted with impunity."
-
-"We do not insult you, madam; we only wish, for a time, to put it out
-of your power to do mischief. In a few days," he continued, in a quiet,
-firm tone, "we will determine what shall be done with you."
-
-"Done with me!--me!--who then are you, with faces you dare not reveal,
-and who presume to speak to me thus?"
-
-"Who we are,--learn!--We are the _Dark-Hearts!_" At this terrible
-announcement, a convulsive trembling shook the limbs of the woman, who,
-retreating to the wall, a prey to intense terror, exclaimed in a faint
-voice; "My God! my God! I am lost," and sank down fainting.
-
-At a sign from the leader, one of his companions bound her securely, and
-after gagging her, fastened her to the foot of the bed. Then, taking Don
-Tadeo with them, they departed by the same way they had entered, without
-taking any heed of the two assassins lying upon the floor. Before he
-left the room, the chief pinned a piece of parchment to a table with
-a dagger. Upon this parchment were written a few words of terrible
-import:--
-
-"_The traitor Pancho Bustamente is cited at the expiration of
-ninety-three days!"_
-
- THE DARK-HEARTS.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-IN THE STREET.
-
-
-As soon as they were outside of the house, the masked men, at a sign
-from the leader, dispersed in various directions. When they had
-disappeared round the corners of the neighbouring streets, the chief
-turned towards Don Tadeo, who, scarce recovered from the trying emotions
-he had successively gone through, and weakened by the blood he had lost,
-as well as by the prodigious efforts his last struggle had cost him,
-was leaning, half fainting against the wall of the house he had been so
-fortunately enabled to quit. A flood of bitter reflections rushed upon
-his brain; the incidents of that terrible night almost unsettled his
-reason: in vain he tried to recover the train of his ideas which had
-been so often and so violently broken. The stranger looked at him for
-a few minutes with profound attention; then approaching him, he laid
-his hand quietly upon his shoulder. At this sudden touch, the gentleman
-started as if he had received an electric shock.
-
-"What!" the unknown said in a tone of reproach, "scarcely entered on the
-good fight, and you despair already, Don Tadeo?"
-
-The wounded man shook his head.
-
-"You, Don Tadeo, whose lofty brow has never bent before revolutionary
-storms; you, who in the most trying circumstances have always remained
-firm, are now pale and cast down, without faith in the present, or hope
-in the future, and have lost strength and courage through the vain
-threats of a woman!"
-
-"That woman," he replied mournfully, "has always been my evil genius.
-She is a demon!"
-
-"And suppose," the unknown exclaimed energetically, "that this woman
-should succeed in getting up another of the infamous schemes in which
-her brain is so fertile, a man of heart takes courage in a struggle?
-Forget these impotent hatreds that can never reach you; remember what
-you are; look boldly at the glorious mission which is imposed upon you."
-
-"What do you mean?"
-
-"Do you not understand me? Can you believe that God, who has this night
-allowed you so miraculously to escape death, has not great designs
-in store for you? Brother," he added, in a tone of authority, "the
-existence that has been restored to you is not your own, it belongs to
-your country!"
-
-A moment of silence followed this appeal, during which Don Tadeo
-appeared a prey to profound despair. At length, looking at the unknown,
-he said with bitter despondency--
-
-"What is to be done? Heaven is my witness that my only desire, my sole
-happiness, would be to see my country free. But during the twenty years
-we have been struggling we have done nothing, alas! but pass from one
-tyranny to another, each time riveting afresh the chains which bind
-us. No! Heaven itself seems to forbid our contending longer against an
-implacable destiny. You know well from experience that citizens cannot
-be improvised from slaves. Servitude destroys moral virtue, abases the
-soul, and degrades the heart. Many generations must pass away before the
-inhabitants of this unfortunate country will be fit to form a people!"
-
-"By what right do you presume to fathom the designs of Providence?"
-the unknown replied, in an imposing tone of voice. "Do you know what
-is reserved for you? Who tells you that the passing triumph of our
-oppressors is not granted by God, in His boundless wisdom, in order to
-render their future fall more terrible?"
-
-Don Tadeo, restored to himself by the manly words of his disguised
-friend, drew himself up proudly, and looked attentively at the speaker.
-
-"And who are you," he said, "whose sympathetic voice has stirred the
-most secret fibres of my heart? Who authorizes you to speak thus?
-Answer! Who are you?"
-
-"Of what importance is it who I am," the unknown remarked, calmly, "if
-I succeed in persuading you that all is far from being lost--that the
-liberty which you believe for ever destroyed has never been so near
-triumphing, and that it only perhaps requires one sublime effort to
-recover it!"
-
-"But still?" the wounded man said, persistently.
-
-"I am he who, a few minutes ago, saved your life. That ought to suffice."
-
-"Not so," Don Tadeo said, warmly, "for you conceal your features under a
-mask, and the very circumstance you named gives me a right to see them."
-
-"Perhaps it does," the unknown said, slowly removing his mask, and
-revealing to Don Tadeo, in the pale beams of the moon, a countenance
-with manly, marked features, and wearing a frank and loyal expression.
-
-"Oh! my heart did not deceive me!" Tadeo cried--"Don Gregorio Peralta!"
-
-"Yes, it is I, Don Tadeo!" the young man, he was scarcely thirty,
-replied--"and cannot comprehend the depression of the man whom the
-avengers have chosen as their chief."
-
-"How do you know? Notwithstanding our friendship, I have always
-concealed from you--"
-
-"Were you not condemned to death?" Don Gregorio interrupted. "Your
-companions elected me _King of Darkness_ in your place, that is, they
-placed in my hands an immense power, as they had done in yours, of
-which I was left the uncontrolled disposal. Death unbound the oath of
-silence imposed upon the brethren. Your name was unknown to all; I was
-as ignorant that you were the energetic chief who had made our society
-a power, as you were, my dear friend, that I was one of your soldiers.
-But, thanks be to God, you are saved, Don Tadeo! Resume your place.
-You alone, under present circumstances, are able to fill worthily the
-post which our confidence has assigned you. Become again the King of
-Darkness! But," he added, in a deep, concentrated tone, "remember that
-we are the avengers; that we ought to be without pity for ourselves
-as for others; that one feeling, and one alone, ought to live in our
-souls--the love of our country!"
-
-Then followed a short silence; the two men appeared to be reflecting
-deeply. At length Don Tadeo raised his head proudly.
-
-"Thanks, Don Gregorio!" he said, in a firm voice, and pressing his
-hand--"thanks for your rough words; they have restored me to myself. I
-will prove myself worthy of you. Don Tadeo de Leon no longer exists;
-the hired assassins of a tyrant have shot him tonight upon the Plaza
-Mayor. No one is left but the King of Darkness! the implacable leader
-of the Dark-Hearts! Woe be to them whom God shall bring across my path!
-for I will crush them without pity. We shall triumph, Don Gregorio;
-for from this day I am no longer a man, I am the avenging sword, the
-exterminating angel, fighting for our country!"
-
-While uttering these words, Don Tadeo had drawn his imposing stature up
-to its full height; his handsome, noble features became animated, and
-his eyes sparkled in accordance with his speech.
-
-"Oh," Don Gregorio exclaimed, cheerfully, "I have found my friend again!
-Thank God! thank God!"
-
-"Yes, my brother," the leader continued, "from this moment the real
-struggle between us and the tyrant begins--a struggle without pity,
-without truce, and without mercy, which can only terminate in the
-complete extinction of our enemies. Woe be to them! Woe!"
-
-"No time is to be lost; let us begone!" Don Gregorio said.
-
-"But whither am I to go?" Don Tadeo asked, with a sardonic smile. "Am I
-not legally dead in the eyes of all? My house is no longer mine."
-
-"That is true," the lieutenant of the Dark-Hearts murmured. "Well, never
-mind that! Tomorrow the news of your miraculous resurrection will be a
-thunderclap to our enemies! Their awaking will be terrible! They will
-learn with stupor that the invincible athlete, whom they thought they
-had for ever crushed beneath their feet, is up again, and ready to renew
-the contest."
-
-"And this time, I solemnly swear," Don Tadeo cried, with energy, "the
-fall of the tyrant alone shall terminate it. But you are right; we
-cannot remain longer here. Come home with me; for a time you will be
-there in safety; unless," he added, with a smile, "you prefer asking an
-asylum of Dona Rosario?"
-
-Don Tadeo, who had taken Don Gregorio's arm, stopped suddenly at this
-question, of which his friend did not suspect the terrible extent.
-A convulsive shudder darted through his frame, a cold perspiration
-inundated his face.
-
-"Oh," he exclaimed, in a tone of agony, "my God! I had forgotten!"
-
-Don Gregorio was terrified at the state he beheld him in.
-
-"In heaven's name, what is the matter?" he asked.
-
-"What is the matter!" the chief replied, in a voice choked with emotion,
-"that woman--that serpent whom we have weakly failed to crush--"
-
-"Well, what of her?"
-
-"Oh, I have but this moment recollected a horrible threat she made. Good
-heavens! good heavens! What is to be done?"
-
-"Explain yourself, my friend; you quite terrify me."
-
-"By her orders, Dona Rosario this very night, was to be carried off; and
-who knows if, furious at my escape from her assassins, that woman has
-not by this time put her to death?"
-
-"Oh, that is frightful!" Don Gregorio cried. "What is to be done?"
-
-"Oh, that woman!" the wounded man replied; "and not to be able to act,
-or to know how to thwart her horrible schemes."
-
-"Let us fly to Dona Rosario's residence!" Don Gregorio said.
-
-"Alas! you see I am wounded; I can scarcely support myself."
-
-"Well, when you can no longer walk, I will carry you," his friend said,
-resolutely.
-
-"Thanks, brother! May God help us!"
-
-And the two men, the one leaning upon the other, set off, as fast as the
-state of Don Tadeo would permit, towards the residence of the lady whom
-they were so anxious to save. But, in spite of the earnest will that
-animated him, Don Tadeo felt his strength fail him; and, notwithstanding
-all his efforts, it was with extreme difficulty he sustained himself.
-Whilst labouring on thus, the noise of horses' footsteps reached them
-from a distance. Torches gleamed up the street, and a troop of horsemen
-appeared in sight.
-
-"Oh, oh!" Don Gregorio said, stopping, and endeavouring to make out who
-those persons could be, who, in defiance of the police regulations,
-dared to be passing along the streets at this hour of the night.
-
-"Let us stop," Don Tadeo replied; "I see the glitter of uniforms. They
-are the spies of the minister of war."
-
-"By Saint Jago!" cried Don Gregorio, "it is General Bustamente himself!
-The two accomplices are going to have a little chat together."
-
-"Yes," the wounded man said, in a faltering voice; "he is going towards
-the residence of the Linda."
-
-As the horsemen were but at a short distance, the two men, fearing to be
-surprised, turned quickly into a side street, and the General and his
-suite passed by without seeing them.
-
-"Let us begone as fast as possible," Don Gregorio said; and his
-companion, aware of the urgency for prompt flight, made a desperate
-effort. They resumed their course, and had walked for about ten minutes,
-when they heard the steps of more horses coming towards them.
-
-"What can this mean?" the wounded man said, endeavouring to smile; "Are
-all the people of Santiago running about the streets tonight?"
-
-"Hum!" said Don Gregorio, "I will find out this time."
-
-All at once a female voice was heard in a lamentable tone imploring help.
-
-"Make her hold her tongue, _carajas!_" a man said, coarsely.
-
-But the sound of that voice had reached the ears of Don Tadeo and his
-friend. At that voice, which both had recognized, they were roused to
-feelings of deep interest and anger. They pressed each other's hand
-firmly; their resolution was formed--to die or to save her who called
-upon them for help.
-
-"Holloa! what is this about?" another individual said, pulling up his
-horse.
-
-Two men, standing firmly in the middle of the street, seemed determined
-to bar the passage of the horsemen, of whom there were five. One of them
-held a woman before him on his horse.
-
-"Holloa!" cried the one who had just spoken, "get out of the way, if you
-don't wish to be ridden over."
-
-"You shall not pass," a deep voice replied, "unless you release the
-woman you are bearing off."
-
-"Shan't we?" the horseman remarked with a laugh.
-
-"Try," said Don Gregorio, cocking his pistol; a movement silently
-imitated by Don Tadeo, whom he had supplied with firearms.
-
-"For the last time, stand out of the way!" the horseman shouted.
-
-"We will not!"
-
-"We will ride over you, then!" and turning towards his companions,
-"Forward!" he cried angrily.
-
-The five horsemen advanced with uplifted sabres upon the two men, who,
-firmly fixed in the middle of the street, made no effort to avoid them.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-SWORD-THRUSTS.
-
-
-In order to make the facts that follow intelligible, we must leave Don
-Tadeo and his friend in their critical position, and return to the two
-principal personages of this history, whom we have so long neglected.
-We saw in a preceding chapter the two foster brothers gaily leaving
-Valparaiso, to repair to the capital of Chili, like Bias, carrying all
-their fortune with them, but possessing over the philosophical Greek the
-immense advantage of being amply furnished with hopes and illusions, two
-words which, in this life, have but too frequently the same meaning.
-
-After a rather long ride, the young men had stopped for the night in
-a miserable _rancho_ constructed of mud and dry branches, the dismal
-skeleton of which stood out on one side of the road. The inhabitant of
-this miserable dwelling, a poor devil of a peon, whose life was passed
-in guarding a few head of lean cattle, gave our travellers a frank and
-hospitable reception. Quite delighted at having something to offer them,
-he had cheerfully shared with them his _charqui_--strips of meat, dried
-in the sun--and his _harina tostada_--roasted corn--the whole washed
-down with cups of detestable _chicha_.
-
-The Frenchmen, who had been literally dying of hunger, were glad of even
-these humble viands, however little savoury they might be, and after
-ascertaining that their horses were comfortably provided for, they lay
-down, wrapped in their ponchos, upon a heap of dry leaves, a delicious
-bed for fatigued men, and upon which they slept soundly till morning.
-
-At daybreak, our two adventurers, still accompanied by their dog Caesar,
-who, whatever he might think, expressed no astonishment at this new kind
-of life, but trotted seriously beside them, saddled their horses, bade
-farewell to their host, to whom they gave a few reals in return for
-his hospitality, and set forward again, looking with earnest curiosity
-at every object that presented itself to their view, and surprised to
-find so little difference between the New World and the Old. The life
-they were beginning, so different from that they had hitherto led, was,
-for them, full of unexpected charms, and they felt like schoolboys in
-holiday time. Their lungs seemed to expand to inhale the fresh, sharp
-breeze of the mountains. Everything, in their eyes, wore a smiling
-aspect; in a word, they felt they lived.
-
-It is about thirty-five leagues from Valparaiso to Chili, as the people
-of the country are accustomed to call the capital of the Republic. The
-handsome, broad, and well-kept up road, which was formerly cut through
-the mountain by the Spaniards, is rather monotonous, and completely
-devoid of interest for tourists. Vegetation is rare and poor; a fine
-and almost impalpable dust arises with the least puff of wind. The few
-trees, which stand at long distances from each other, are slender,
-stunted, dried up by both wind and sun, and seem, by their wretched
-appearance, to protest against the efforts at cultivation which have
-been made on this plateau, which is rendered sterile by the strong sea
-breezes and the cold winds of the Cordilleras which sweep over it.
-
-At times may be seen, at an immense height, like a black dot in space,
-the great condor of Chili, the eagle of the Andes, or the savage vulture
-in search of prey. At long intervals pass _recuas_ of mules, headed by
-the _yegua madrina_, whose sonorous bells are heard to a great distance,
-accompanying, well or ill, the dismal chant of the muleteer, who thus
-endeavours to keep his beasts going. Or else it is a _guaso_ of the
-interior, hastening to his chacra or his hacienda, and who, proudly
-mounted upon a half wild horse, passes like a whirlwind, favouring you
-as he goes by, with the eternal "Santas tardes, caballero!"
-
-With the exception of what we have described, the road is dull, dusty,
-and solitary. There is not, as with us, a single hostelry affording
-accommodation for horse and foot; these would be useless establishments
-in a country where the stranger enters every house as if it were his
-own home. Nothing! Solitude everywhere and always; hunger, thirst, and
-fatigue must be expected and endured.
-
-But our young men perceived nothing of this. Enthusiasm supplied the
-place of all they wanted; the road appeared charming to them; the
-journey they were making, delightful! They were in America; beneath
-their feet was the soil of the New World, that privileged land, of which
-so many surprising accounts are given; of which so many people talk, and
-about which so few know anything. Having landed only a few days before,
-while still under the impressions of an endless passage, the weariness
-of which had weighed down their spirits like a mantle of lead, they
-beheld Chili through the enchanting prism of their hopes; reality did
-not yet exist for them. What we have here said may appear a paradox to
-many people; and yet, we are satisfied that all travellers of good faith
-will acknowledge the exact truth.
-
-At times travelling at a steady foot pace, at others enjoying a laugh
-and a gallop, our young men, to whom the political events of the Chilian
-Republic were very uninteresting, and who, consequently, knew nothing of
-what was going on, arrived quietly within a league of Santiago, at about
-eleven o'clock in the evening, just at the moment when the ten Chilian
-patriots were falling on the Plaza Mayor, beneath the balls of General
-Bustamente's soldiers.
-
-"Let us pull up here," Valentine said cheerfully; "it will give our
-horses time to breathe."
-
-"Pull up! what for?" Louis asked. "It is late; we shall not find a
-single hotel open."
-
-"My dear friend," Valentine replied, with a laugh, "you are still a
-Parisian to the backbone! You forget that we are in America. In that
-city, of which the numerous steeples dimly stand out on the horizon
-before us, everybody is long since asleep, and all the doors are closed."
-
-"What shall we do, then?"
-
-"Pardieu! why, we will bivouac. The night is magnificent. The heavens
-display all their jewelry; the air is warm and balmy; what better could
-we desire?"
-
-"Oh, nothing, of course!" Louis replied, laughingly.
-
-"Well, then, we have, as you see, time to chat a little."
-
-"Chat, brother! why, we have done nothing else since morning."
-
-"Pardon me, I don't agree with you. We have talked much, about all sorts
-of things, of the country in which we are, and of the manners of the
-inhabitants, little as we know about them; but we have not talked in the
-manner I mean."
-
-"Explain yourself more clearly."
-
-"Look you, brother; an idea has just struck me. We know not what
-adventures await us in that city, yonder, before us. Well! before we
-enter it, I should like to have a sort of final conversation with you."
-
-The young men took off their horses' bridles, that the animals might
-have the advantage of a few tufts of grass which sprang up here and
-there; and, stretching themselves luxuriously upon the ground, they lit
-their cigars.
-
-"We are in America," Valentine resumed; "in the country of gold, upon
-that soil where, with intelligence and courage, men of our age can in a
-few years amass princely fortunes!"
-
-"Do you know, my friend----" interrupted Louis.
-
-"Oh, perfectly!" said Valentine, cutting him short. "You are in love,
-and you are seeking the object of your love; that's understood: but that
-does not at all interfere with our projects--quite the contrary."
-
-"How is that?"
-
-"Pardieu! that's plain enough. You know, do you not, that Dona
-Rosario--that's her name, I think--"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Very well, then; you know she is rich, do you not?"
-
-"There's no doubt of that."
-
-"Ay, ay! but be it understood, not rich as with us: that is to say, some
-fifty thousand francs a year--a paltry pittance!--but rich as people are
-here--a dozen times over millionaires!"
-
-"Probably she may be," the young man said impatiently.
-
-"That's capital! You must understand, then, that when we have found her,
-for we _shall_ find her, and that soon, you can only demand her hand by
-producing a fortune equal to her own."
-
-"The devil! I never thought of that," said the young man.
-
-"I know you did not; you are in love; and, like all other men afflicted
-with that disease, you think of nothing but the person you love.
-Fortunately, however, I am with you, to think for both; and whenever you
-have spoken to me of love, I have replied by reminding you of fortune."
-
-"That is true. But how is fortune to be made so promptly?"
-
-"Ah! ah! you have come to that question at last," Valentine said,
-laughing.
-
-"I know no profession," Louis continued, following his own idea.
-
-"Nor I either. But let not that alarm you; people succeed best in things
-they don't understand."
-
-"What's to be done?"
-
-"I will think of it; so set your mind at rest. But you must be well
-convinced of one thing, and that is, that we have set foot in a land
-where the ideas are quite different from those of the country we have
-left; where the manners and customs are diametrically opposite."
-
-"You mean to say--"
-
-"I mean to say that we must forget all we have learnt, in order that
-we may remember but one thing--our desire quickly to make a colossal
-fortune."
-
-"By honourable means?"
-
-"I am acquainted with no other," Valentine replied, seriously. "And
-remember, brother, that in the country in which we at present are, the
-point of honour is not at all the same as in France, and many things
-which with us would appear false coin are here deemed good and passable.
-On this point a word to the wise! You understand me, don't you?"
-
-"Nearly, I think."
-
-"Very well! Imagine we are in an enemy's country, and must act
-accordingly."
-
-"But----"
-
-"Do you wish to marry the woman you love:"
-
-"Can you ask me such a question?"
-
-"Allow me to act, then, as I see best! But, above all, when chance
-throws a good opportunity in our way, let us be careful not to miss it."
-
-"Act just as you please."
-
-"Well, that is all I had to say to you;" and throwing away the remains
-of his cigar, he rose from his recumbent position.
-
-They were soon again in the saddle, and, at a foot's pace, resumed their
-way towards the city, chatting as they went.
-
-Midnight was striking by the clock of the Cabildo at the moment when
-they entered Santiago by the Canada. The streets were deserted and
-silent.
-
-"Everybody is asleep," said Louis.
-
-"So it seems," Valentine replied. "Let us look out, notwithstanding. If
-we find no door open, we can then but compound for a night's bivouac, as
-I suggested."
-
-At this moment two pistol shots were heard, mingled with the gallop of
-horses.
-
-"What can that be?" said Louis. "Assassination is going on here!"
-
-"Forward! cordieu!" replied Valentine.
-
-They clapped spurs to their horses, and galloped at full speed in the
-direction whence the sound proceeded. They soon reached a narrow street,
-in the middle of which two men on foot were bravely contending with five
-on horseback.
-
-"Have at the horsemen!" Valentine shouted; "help the weaker party!"
-
-"Be of good heart, gentlemen!" said Louis; "help is at hand!"
-
-And timely help it was for Don Gregorio and his friend. A minute later,
-and they must have succumbed. The providential arrival of the Frenchmen
-quickly changed the appearance of the fight. Two horsemen fell dead from
-pistol shots fired by the young men; while a third, knocked down by Don
-Gregorio, was silently strangled by Caesar. The other two thought it
-high time to decamp, leaving their fair prisoner behind them. She had
-fainted; and Don Tadeo, leaning against the wall of a house, was upon
-the point of following her example. Valentine, with the presence of mind
-acquired in his old profession of a Spahi, secured the horses of the
-bandits killed in the skirmish.
-
-"Quick, gentlemen! to the saddle!" Valentine said to the Chilians.
-
-Louis had already dismounted, and was attending to the young lady.
-
-"Do not leave us," Don Gregorio remarked; "we are surrounded by enemies."
-
-"Fear nothing!" said Valentine, "we are quite at your service."
-
-"Many thanks!--A little assistance, if you please, to place my friend,
-who is wounded, on horseback."
-
-Once in the saddle, Don Tadeo declared he felt sufficiently strong to
-keep his seat without help. Don Gregorio placed the still inanimate
-young lady before him.
-
-"Now, gentlemen," he said, "nothing remains for me but to thank you most
-cordially, if your business will not allow you to remain longer with us."
-
-"I beg to repeat, caballeros, that we are at your service."
-
-"We have no pressing demand upon our time; we will not leave you till we
-are assured you are in safety," Louis said, with animation.
-
-"Follow me, then," said Don Gregorio, with a bow; "and do not spare the
-horses; it is an affair of life and death."
-
-And the four horsemen set off as fast as their horses could bear them.
-
-"Eh! eh!" said Valentine, in an undertone to his foster brother. "Here
-is an adventure that promises something! We are losing no time at
-Santiago! What think you?"
-
-"We shall see!" Louis replied, in a more thoughtful tone.
-
-No light had gleamed out, no window had been opened, during the combat.
-The streets remained silent and gloomy; the city seemed abandoned.
-Nothing was to be heard but the clatter of the horses' feet upon the
-rough pavement of the streets through which they galloped. The cathedral
-clock struck two as they passed across the Plaza Mayor. Don Tadeo could
-not repress a sigh of relief when glancing at the spot where on, only a
-few hours before, he had so miraculously escaped death.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-GENERAL BUSTAMENTE.
-
-
-Don Tadeo was right, when, on seeing General Bustamente pass, he said he
-was on his way to visit his mistress. It was, in fact, to the residence
-of the Linda the General was going. On arriving at the gate, one of his
-men dismounted, and knocked. But no one answered; and at a sign from
-the General, the soldier knocked louder. But still all remained silent;
-there was no movement within. He began to feel uneasy. This silence was
-the more extraordinary from the General's visit having been announced,
-and he was, consequently, expected. "Oh! oh!" he said, "What is going on
-here? Knock again, Diego, and knock in a way to make yourself heard!"
-
-The soldier knocked with all his strength, but still uselessly. Don
-Pancho's brow contracted; he began to fancy some misfortune must have
-occurred.
-
-"Break open the door!" he cried.
-
-The order was instantly obeyed; and the General, followed by his escort,
-entered the house. In the Patio all dismounted.
-
-"Be prudent," said the General in a low voice to the corporal who
-commanded the escort; "place sentinels everywhere, and keep a sharp
-look-out whilst I search the house."
-
-After giving these orders, the General took his pistols from his
-holsters, and, followed by some of his lancers, entered the house;
-but everywhere the silence of death prevailed. After passing through
-several apartments, he arrived at a door, which, being a little ajar,
-allowed a stream of light to pass. From the other side of this door
-proceeded something like stifled groans. With a kick of his foot, one
-of the lancers dashed open the door; the General entered, and a strange
-spectacle presented itself to his astonished eyes! Dona Maria, tightly
-bound, and gagged, was fastened to the foot of a damask bed, saturated
-with blood. The furniture was broken and disordered, whilst two dead
-bodies, lying in a pool of blood, made it evident that the room had been
-the scene of a desperate conflict.
-
-The general ordered the dead bodies to be removed, and then desired to
-be left alone with the lady. As soon as the lancers had departed he shut
-the door, and approaching the Linda, he hastened to release her from her
-bonds. She was senseless.
-
-On turning round to place the pistols he had retained in his hands on
-the table, he drew back with astonishment, and almost with terror, as
-he perceived the dagger standing erect in the middle of it. But this
-instinctive feeling lasted only a moment. He went quickly up to the
-table, seized the dagger, which he carefully drew out, and eagerly took
-up the paper it had pinned down.
-
-"_The tyrant Don Pancho Bustamente is cited at the expiration of
-ninety-three days!
-
- _"THE DARK-HEARTS."_
-
-he read in a loud, harsh tone, and then crushed the paper violently in
-his hand. "Sangre de Dios! Will these demons always make a mock of me?
-Oh! they know that I show no mercy, and that those who fall into my
-hands----"
-
-"Escape!" said a hollow voice, which made him start involuntarily.
-
-He turned sharply round, and beheld the Linda, with her vicious eye
-fixed upon him with a demoniacal expression. He sprang towards her.
-
-"Thank God!" he cried warmly, "you are again restored to your senses.
-Are you sufficiently recovered to explain the scene that has taken place
-here?"
-
-"A terrible scene, Don Pancho!" she replied, in a tremulous voice; "a
-scene, the bare remembrance of which still freezes me with terror."
-
-"Are you strong enough to describe it to me?"
-
-"I hope so," she replied. "Listen to me attentively, Don Pancho, for
-what I have to tell concerns you, perhaps, more than me."
-
-"You mean this insolent summons, I suppose?" he remarked, showing it.
-
-She glanced over it, and replied--
-
-"I did not even know that such a paper had been addressed to you. But
-listen to me attentively."
-
-"In the first place, have the goodness to explain to me what you just
-now said."
-
-"Everything in its turn, General; I will not fail to explain everything,
-for the vengeance I thirst for must be complete."
-
-"Oh!" he said, a flash of hatred gleaming from his eye, "set your heart
-at ease on that head,--whilst avenging myself, I will avenge you."
-
-The Linda related to the General what had passed between her and Don
-Tadeo in the fullest details--how the Dark-Hearts had snatched him from
-her hands, and the threats they had addressed to her on leaving her.
-But, with that talent which all women possess, of making themselves
-appear innocent in everything, she represented as a miraculous piece of
-awkwardness on the part of the soldiers charged to shoot him, the fact
-of Don Tadeo being alive after his execution. She said that, attracted
-by the hope of avenging himself upon her, whom he suspected of being no
-stranger to his condemnation, he had introduced himself unseen into her
-house, where by a strange chance she happened to be alone, having that
-evening permitted her servants to be present at a _romeria_ (a fete),
-from which they were not to return before three o'clock.
-
-The General had not for an instant the idea of doubting the veracity of
-his mistress. The situation in which he had found her,--the incredible
-news of the resurrection of his most implacable enemy, altogether so
-confused his thoughts, that suspicion had no time to enter his mind.
-He strode about the room with hasty steps, revolving in his head the
-most extravagant projects for seizing Don Tadeo, and, above all, for
-annihilating the Dark-Hearts,--those never-to-be-caught Proteuses, who
-so incessantly crossed his path, thwarted all his plans, and always
-escaped him. He plainly saw what additional strength the escape of Don
-Tadeo would give to the patriots, and how much it would complicate his
-political embarrassments, by placing at their head a resolute man who
-could have no longer any considerations to preserve, but would wage war
-to the knife with him. His perplexity was extreme; he instinctively
-felt that the ground beneath him was mined, that he was walking over
-a volcano, but he had no power to denounce to public opprobrium the
-enemies who conspired his ruin. The recital made by his mistress had
-produced the effect of a thunderclap upon him; he knew not what measures
-to employ in order to counteract the numerous plots in action against
-him on all sides, and simultaneously. The Linda did not take her eyes
-off him for a moment, but watched upon his countenance the various
-feelings aroused by what she told him.
-
-We will, in a few words, introduce to the reader this personage, who
-will play so important a part in the course of the following history.[1]
-General Don Pancho Bustamente, who has left in Chili a reputation for
-cruelty so terrible that he is generally called _El Verdugo_, or the
-executioner, was a man of from thirty-five to thirty-six years of age,
-although he looked near fifty, a little above the middle height, well
-made, and of good carriage, announcing altogether great corporeal
-strength. His features were tolerably regular, but his prominent
-forehead, his grey eyes deeply set beneath the brows, and close to his
-hook nose, his large mouth and high cheek bones, gave him something of
-a resemblance to a bird of prey. His chin was square, an indication
-of obstinacy; his hair and moustache, beginning to be streaked with
-grey, were trained and cut in military fashion. He wore the magnificent
-uniform, covered at every seam with gold embroidery, of a general
-officer.
-
-Don Bustamente was the son of his own works, which was in his favour.
-At first a simple soldier, he had, by exemplary conduct and more than
-common talents, raised himself, step by step, to the highest rank of the
-army, and had in the last instance been named minister-at-war. Then the
-jealousy which had been silent whilst he was confounded with the crowd,
-was unchained against him. The General, instead of despising calumnies
-which might have died out of themselves, gave them some degree of
-foundation, by inaugurating a system of severity and cruelty. Devoured
-by an ambition which nothing could satisfy, all means were deemed good
-by him for the attainment of an object he secretly aimed at, which was
-the overthrow of the republic and government of Chili, and the formation
-of Bolivia and Araucania into one state, of which he would cause
-himself to be proclaimed Protector--an object which, besides the almost
-insurmountable difficulties it presented, ever appeared--owing to the
-universal hatred which the General had aroused against himself--to slip
-further from his grasp each time he thought he was about grasping it.
-
-At the moment we bring him on the scene, he found himself in one of the
-most critical circumstances of his political career. He had in vain
-shot the patriots _en masse_--conspiracies, as always happens in such
-cases, succeeded each other without interruption, and the system of
-terror which he had inaugurated, far from intimidating the population,
-appeared, on the contrary, to urge them on to revolt. Secret societies
-were formed; and one of these, the most powerful and the most terrible,
-that of the Dark-Hearts, enveloped him in invisible nets in which he
-struggled in vain. He foresaw that if he did not hasten on the _coup
-d'etat_ he meditated, he should be lost beyond redemption. After a
-rather long silence, the General placed himself by the side of the Linda.
-
-"We will be avenged!" he said, in a deep tone; "be but patient."
-
-"Oh!" she replied, bitterly, "my vengeance has commenced!"
-
-"What do you mean by that?"
-
-"I have caused Dona Rosario del Valle, the woman Don Tadeo de Leon loves
-so passionately, to be carried off."
-
-"You have _done_ that?" said the General.
-
-"Yes, and in ten minutes she will be here."
-
-"Oh! oh!" he exclaimed; "and do you mean to keep her with you?"
-
-"With me!" she cried; "No, I thank you, General. I hear that the
-Pehuenches are very fond of white women; I will make them a present of
-her."
-
-"Oh!" Don Pancho muttered, "women will be always our masters! they alone
-know how to revenge themselves! But," he added aloud, "have you no fear
-lest the man to whom you have confided this mission should betray you?"
-
-She smiled with terrible irony,
-
-"No," she said; "that man hates Don Tadeo more than I do, if that be
-possible; he is working out his own vengeance."
-
-At the same instant steps were heard in the chamber preceding the room.
-
-"You will see, General--here is my emissary. Come in!" the Linda cried.
-
-A man appeared; his face was pale and haggard; and his clothes, torn and
-disordered, were stained in various places with blood.
-
-"Well!" she exclaimed, in a tone of intense anxiety.
-
-"All has failed," answered the man, breathless with haste and terror.
-
-"What!" the Linda shouted, with a cry like that of a wild beast.
-
-"There were five of us," the man continued, quite unmoved, "and we
-carried off the _senorita_. All went on well till within a short
-distance from this house, when we were attacked by four demons, who came
-I know not whence."
-
-"And you did not defend yourselves, miserable cowards!" interrupted the
-General violently.
-
-The bandit gave him a cold look, and continued impassively--
-
-"Three of our number are dead, and the leader and myself wounded."
-
-"And the girl?" the Linda asked passionately.
-
-"The girl was recaptured by our opponents. The Englishman has sent me to
-you to learn if you still wish him to carry off Dona Rosario?"
-
-"Would he attempt it again?"
-
-"Yes. And this time, he says, he is certain to succeed if the conditions
-are the same."
-
-A smile of contempt played round the lips of the courtezan.
-
-"Repeat to him this," she replied; "not only shall he receive the
-hundred ounces if he succeeds, but, still further, he shall have a
-hundred more; and that he may be in no doubt of my promise," she added,
-rising and taking from a drawer a rather heavy bag which she handed to
-the bandit, "give him this; there is the half of the sum, but bid him
-despatch!"
-
-The man bowed.
-
-"As to you, Juanito," she continued, "as soon as you have acquitted
-yourself of this mission, return, for I shall, perhaps, want you here.
-Begone!"
-
-The bandit disappeared instantly.
-
-"Who is that man?" the General asked.
-
-"A poor devil whom I saved some years ago from certain death. He is
-devoted to me, body and soul."
-
-"Hum!" said the general, "he has rather too cunning an eye not to be a
-rogue."
-
-The Linda shrugged her shoulders.
-
-"You are mistrustful of everybody," she said.
-
-"That is the way not to be deceived."
-
-"Or to be deceived the more easily."
-
-"Perhaps so. Well, you see this abduction, so admirably planned, and the
-success of which was certain, has failed."
-
-"I can only repeat what you yourself said to me just now."
-
-"What is that?"
-
-"Patience! But, pray, what are your present plans?" The General rose.
-
-"Whilst you are carrying on against our enemies," he said, in a low,
-stern tone, "a guerilla warfare of ambuscades and treacheries, I, on my
-part, will wage an open war against them--a war in the face of the sun,
-but as merciless as yours. Their blood shall flow in streams over all
-the territories of the Republic. The Dark-Hearts have summoned me in
-ninety-three days. Well, I take up the gauntlet they have thrown to me."
-
-"That is well!" the Linda replied. "And now let us so arrange our plans
-that they may not fail like their predecessors. We must come to an end
-with these miserable plotters, and in doing so, take a revenge that will
-make an impression on others."
-
-"It shall be a vengeance! I will stake my head on the game. Oh," he
-added, "I hold them! I have found the means I sought to make them all
-fall into my hands; let them sleep for a while in deceitful security,
-but their awakening shall be terrible!"
-
-And, having saluted the Linda with the greatest courtesy, the General
-retired.
-
-"I leave you a few soldiers to watch over your safety till the return of
-your servants," he said, as he went out.
-
-"Thank you, thank you!" she replied, with a bland smile.
-
-The Linda, when left alone, instead of seeking the repose so necessary
-after the excitement of the night, remained plunged in deep thought.
-At sunrise she was still in the same place, in the same position. She
-was still reflecting, but her features became animated; a sinister
-smile curled her pale lips; and her eyes, though apparently fixed upon
-vacancy, emitted portentous flashes. Suddenly she sprang up, and passing
-her hand rapidly over her brow, as if to efface its wrinkles, she cried,
-in a tone of triumph--
-
-"And I, too, will succeed!"
-
-
-[1] Reasons of the highest consideration oblige us to change the names
-and the portraits of the personages of this history, as the majority
-still exist. But we vouch for the correctness of the facts we relate.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-THE SPY.
-
-
-When the young lady was delivered, the four men set off as fast as they
-could go, with regard to her ease. In ten minutes they were out of the
-city, and with the change of the road their speed was increased. The
-route they took was that which leads to Talca.
-
-"Eh, eh!" Valentine said, laughing, to his foster brother; "we seem to
-be playing at prisoners' bars. We enter the city by one gate, to leave
-it immediately by another. We shall not have an opportunity of seeing
-the capital of Chili this time."
-
-With the exception of these few words, to which Louis only replied by a
-careless shrug of the shoulders, no other conversation took place during
-the hour which their rapid journey lasted. By the pale light of the moon
-the trees on each side of the road seemed to defile like a legion of
-melancholy phantoms. Ere long the white walls of a _chacra_ (large farm)
-stood out upon the horizon.
-
-"Here we are," said Don Gregorio, pointing with his finger.
-
-They reached the house in a few minutes. The gate was open, but a
-man was standing evidently on the watch. The fugitives dashed like a
-hurricane into the _patio_, and the gates were immediately closed behind
-them.
-
-"What has happened, Tio Pepito?" Don Gregorio asked, before he was quite
-off his horse, of the man who appeared to have expected him.
-
-"Nothing, _mi amo_" (my master), "nothing of consequence," replied Tio
-Pepito, a little thick-set man, with a round face, lit up by two grey
-eyes, sparkling with cunning.
-
-"Have not the persons I expected arrived?"
-
-"Pardon me, _mi amo_. They have been at the _chacra_ more than an
-hour. They say they must begone immediately; they are waiting for you
-impatiently."
-
-"That's well. Announce my arrival to them, and tell them I shall be at
-their service in two or three minutes."
-
-The mayoral, for this man was the major-domo of the _chacra_, entered
-the house without reply. Don Tadeo also, who seemed to know perfectly
-well where he was, disappeared, bearing the young girl in his arms. The
-two Frenchmen were left alone with the chacrero, who advanced towards
-them.
-
-"Now that you are, as we suppose, for the present at least, in safety,
-sir," said Valentine, "we have only to take our leave of you."
-
-"Not so!" Don Gregorio exclaimed; "it must not be so. _Diable_! as you
-Frenchmen say," he added, smiling; "chance does not so often procure
-us such friends as you, to allow us to part with you thus when we have
-met you. You will remain here, if you please. Our acquaintance must not
-terminate so."
-
-"If our continuing here can be of any service to you," Louis replied,
-courteously, "we are at your command."
-
-"Thank you," he said, in a slightly agitated voice, and pressing their
-hands warmly; "I shall never forget that I owe to you the lives of
-myself and my friend. In what way can I be of service to you?"
-
-"Well," Valentine said, laughing, "in every way, and no way, as it may
-happen, caballero."
-
-"Explain yourself," Don Gregorio replied.
-
-"_Dame!_ it is clear enough; we are strangers in this country."
-
-"When did you arrive?" the Chilian said, examining them attentively.
-
-"Faith! very recently. You are the first persons we have spoken to."
-
-"That is well," Gregorio said, slowly. "I told you that I was at your
-service, did I not?"
-
-"Yes, and we sincerely thank you; although we hope never to have
-occasion to remind you of this obliging offer."
-
-"I perfectly appreciate your delicacy; but a service like the one you
-have rendered me and my friend is an eternal bond. Take no heed of your
-future fortune, it is made."
-
-"Pardon me, pardon me!" said Valentine, earnestly; "we do not understand
-one another at all; you mistake us. We are not men who expect to be paid
-for having acted as our hearts dictated. You owe us nothing."
-
-"I do not propose or pretend to pay you, gentlemen. I only wish, in
-order to attach you to me, to propose to you to share my good or evil
-fortune; in a word, I offer myself to you as a brother."
-
-"In that case we at once accede," said Louis, "and will endeavour to
-prove ourselves worthy of such an offer."
-
-"I have no doubt you will. Only I beg you not to be misled by my words;
-the life I am leading at present is full of perils."
-
-"I can suppose that," said Valentine, with a laugh. "The scene at which
-we have been present, and the _denoument_ of which we perhaps hastened,
-makes it pretty evident that your existence is not of the most peaceful
-nature."
-
-"What you have as yet seen is nothing. Do you know nobody in this
-country?"
-
-"Nobody."
-
-"Your political opinions, then, are unformed?"
-
-"As regards Chili, completely."
-
-"Bravo!" Don Gregorio exclaimed, with delight; "if we agree on that
-point our compact will be for life and death."
-
-"We do agree," said Valentine, laughing; "and if you conspire--"
-
-"Well?" the Chilian asked, fixing an inquiring look upon him.
-
-"Why, we will conspire, too, pardieu! That is agreed."
-
-The three men exchanged a cordial pressure of the hand, and then Don
-Gregorio called the major-domo to conduct them to the chamber which was
-prepared for them.
-
-"Good night! or rather good morning!" he said, on quitting them.
-
-"Come!" said Valentine, rubbing his hands, "matters are going on well.
-We shall not want for amusement here."
-
-"Hum!" Louis replied, with a tone of something like uneasiness;
-"conspire!"
-
-"Well, and what better?" said Valentine. "Does that frighten you?
-Remember, my friend, that the best fishing is in troubled waters."
-
-"In that case," Louis remarked, taking up the gay humour of his
-companion, "if my presentiments are just, ours will be miraculous."
-
-"I expect so, firmly," said Valentine, bidding good night to the
-major-domo, who retired, after bowing respectfully.
-
-The _cuarto_ (chamber) in which the young men found themselves, was
-whitewashed, and entirely destitute of furniture, with the exception of
-two oak frames furnished with dressed hides, which served as beds, a
-massive table with twisted feet, and four seats covered with leather.
-In a corner of the room burned a little green wax light before a
-badly-engraved print supposed to represent the Virgin.
-
-"Eh!" said Louis, casting a glance around him, "our friends, the
-Chilians, do not seem to consult comfort much."
-
-"Bah!" Valentine replied, "we have all that we require. A man can sleep
-soundly anywhere when he is fatigued. This chamber is better than the
-bivouac we were threatened with."
-
-"You are right. Let us take a little rest then, for we don't know what
-tomorrow has in reserve for us."
-
-In a quarter of an hour they were both fast asleep. At the moment the
-Frenchmen went into the house with the major-domo, Don Tadeo came out by
-another door.
-
-"Well?" Don Gregorio asked, anxiously.
-
-"She is asleep. Her terror is abated," Don Tadeo replied. "The joy she
-experienced at seeing me, whom she believed dead, brought about a very
-salutary crisis."
-
-"I am glad to hear it! In that quarter, then, we may be at ease?"
-
-"Completely."
-
-"Do you feel yourself strong enough to be present at an important
-interview?"
-
-"Is it necessary that I should be present?"
-
-"I think it quite right that you should hear the communications that one
-of my emissaries is about to make me."
-
-"It is very imprudent of you," said Don Tadeo, "to receive such a man in
-your own house!"
-
-"Oh! do not alarm yourself! I have known him for a long time. Besides,
-he is not aware whose house he is in; he was brought hither blinded, by
-two of our brethren. In addition to which, we shall be masked."
-
-"Well! since you desire it, I am at your commands."
-
-The two friends, after having covered their faces with black velvet
-masks, entered the apartment in which were the persons who waited for
-them. This apartment, which served as a dining room, was very large, and
-furnished with a long table; it was faintly illumined by two sconces,
-in which burned small candles of yellow tallow, yielding so doubtful a
-light that objects could be seen but indistinctly. Three men, wrapped
-in variegated ponchos, and with broad-brimmed hats pulled down over
-their eyes, were carelessly smoking their slender papelitos, whilst
-warming themselves round a copper _brasero,_ placed in the middle of the
-apartment, and in which some olive-stones were slowly burning. At the
-entrance of the leaders of the Dark-Hearts, these men rose.
-
-"Why," asked Don Tadeo, who at the first glance recognized the emissary,
-"why did you not wait, Don Pedro, for the meeting tomorrow, at the
-_Quinta Verde,_ to communicate to the council the revelations you have
-to make?"
-
-The man thus named as Don Pedro bowed respectfully. He was an individual
-of about thirty-five years of age. He was tall, and his countenance, as
-sharp as the blade of a knife, wore a cunning, roguish expression.
-
-"What I have to state only indirectly concerns the Dark-Hearts," he said.
-
-"Then, of what importance is it to us?" Don Gregorio interrupted him.
-
-"But it greatly concerns the leaders, particularly the King of Darkness."
-
-"Explain yourself then, for he is before you," Don Tadeo remarked,
-taking a step forward.
-
-Pedro darted a look at him which seemed to endeavour to penetrate
-through the tissue of his mask.
-
-"What I have to say will be brief," he replied,--"I leave to you the
-care of judging of its importance. General Don Bustamente will be
-present at the meeting tomorrow."
-
-"Are you sure of that?" the two conspirators exclaimed with a degree of
-astonishment that denoted incredulity.
-
-"It was I who persuaded him to do so."
-
-"You?"
-
-"Yes, I."
-
-"Are you ignorant, then," Don Tadeo exclaimed with great warmth, "in
-what manner we punish traitors?"
-
-"I am no traitor; on the contrary, I deliver into your hands your most
-implacable enemy."
-
-Don Tadeo replied only by a suspicious glance.
-
-"The General then is ignorant?"
-
-"Of everything," said Don Pedro.
-
-"With what purpose, then, does he wish to introduce himself among us?"
-
-"Can you not guess? For that of obtaining your secret."
-
-"But he risks his life."
-
-"Do you forget that every adept must be introduced by a sponsor, who
-alone knows him? No one sees his face. Well, _I_ introduce him," he
-added, with a smile of strange significance.
-
-"That is true. But if he should suspect you of treachery?"
-
-"I must undergo the consequences; but he will not suspect me."
-
-"Why not?" Don Gregorio asked.
-
-"Because," the spy replied, with a cynical smile, "for ten years the
-General has employed me, and during those ten years he has had only
-cause to praise me for the services I have rendered him."
-
-A momentary silence followed.
-
-"Here!" said Don Gregorio, after a long pause, "this time it is not ten
-ounces, but twenty, that you have earned. Continue to be faithful to us."
-
-And he placed a heavy purse in his hands. The spy seized it with a
-gesture of avidity, and concealed it quickly under his poncho.
-
-"You shall have no reproach to make me," he replied, with a bow.
-
-"I hope we shall not," said Don Tadeo, with difficulty repressing an
-expression of disgust. "Only remember, we should be merciless."
-
-"I know it."
-
-"In that case, farewell."
-
-"Farewell till tomorrow."
-
-The men who had brought him, and who during the conversation had
-remained motionless, at a sign from Don Gregorio approached the spy,
-bandaged his eyes again, and led him away.
-
-"Is that fellow a traitor?" asked Don Gregorio, as he listened to the
-retreating steps of the horses.
-
-"It is our duty to suppose him one," the King of Darkness replied,
-gravely.
-
-The two friends, instead of seeking the repose which must have been
-so necessary to them, talked together for a long time, in order to
-arrange all the measures of safety which were required by the importance
-of the scene about to take place on the morrow at the meeting of the
-conspirators. In the meantime Don Pedro had been quickly led back
-to Santiago. On arriving at one of the gates, his guides left him,
-disappearing in opposite directions. As soon as he was alone, he removed
-the handkerchief from his eyes.
-
-"Hum!" he said, with a sinister smile, as he tossed up in his right hand
-the purse Don Gregorio had given him. "Twenty ounces make a purse of
-gold. Now let us see if General Bustamente is as liberal as his enemies.
-By the Virgin! the news I carry him are worth something to him! Let us
-try to get the best price for them."
-
-After having cast his eyes around to see if the coast was clear, he set
-off at a sharp trot towards the government palace, muttering to himself--
-
-"Bah! times are hard. If a man did not manoeuvre a little, he would find
-no means of bringing up his family honestly."
-
-This reflection, of a rather dubious morality, was accompanied by a
-grimace, the expression of which would have given Don Tadeo cause for
-suspicion if he had seen it.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-LOVE.
-
-
-On the morrow the two Frenchmen were awakened by the rays of the sun.
-The day promised to be a brilliant one, for there was not a cloud in
-the heavens. A light vapour, full of penetrating odours, arose slowly
-from the earth, drawn up by the beams of the sun, whose warm influence
-increased every minute. The morning breeze refreshed the air, and
-invited them to inhale it. The young men, perfectly recovered from their
-fatigue, sprang cheerfully from their humble beds and dressed themselves
-in haste.
-
-The chacra, of which they had only a glimpse the night before by
-moonlight, was an immense farm, consisting of extensive buildings,
-and surrounded by fields in full cultivation. The greatest animation
-prevailed everywhere. Peons, mounted on half wild horses, were driving
-out the cattle to the artificial meadows, whilst others were running
-about after the horses they were getting together, in order to lead
-them to the drinking place. In the patio the major-domo was overlooking
-the women and girls engaged in milking. In short, this residence, which
-had appeared to them so silent and dismal the night before, assumed
-by daylight an appearance of life and cheerfulness delightful to
-contemplate.
-
-The cries of the peons mingled with the lowing of the cattle, the
-barking of the dogs, and the crowing of the cocks, and formed that
-melodious concert which is only to be heard on a farm, and which always
-rejoices the heart.
-
-It is a justice that we willingly render here to the Chilian republic
-when we say that it alone of the southern states of America appears
-to understand that the wealth of a country consists not in the number
-of its mines, but in the encouragement given to cultivation; and that
-this country, while possessing rich mines of gold, silver, and precious
-stones, only places their produce in the second rank, whilst it reserves
-its principal solicitude for agriculture. Chili is as yet young as a
-nation. There manufactures and the arts are in their infancy; but the
-farms are numerous, the fields well cultivated, and soon this country
-will be called upon, there is no doubt, through its system of labour,
-to become the entrepot of the other American powers, which it already
-provides in a great measure with corn and wine, from Cape Horn to
-California.
-
-Behind the chacra extended a well-kept up garden, in which oranges,
-pomegranates, and citrons, planted in the open ground, grew amidst
-limes, apples, plums, and all the other fruits of Europe. Louis was
-agreeably surprised at the aspect of this garden, with its numerous
-alleys, in which a thousand birds of brilliant colours warbled gaily
-under the foliage of the tufted thickets of jasmine and honeysuckle.
-Whilst Valentine went, followed by Caesar, to look at the operations of
-the peons and smoke his cigar in the patio, Louis felt himself led by
-his dreamy spirit to indulge in poetical reveries, and to seek a few
-minutes' solitude in the Eden which lay before him. Urged by an unknown
-power, intoxicated by the sweet odours which embalmed the atmosphere, he
-glided into the garden, casting around him a vaguely questioning look.
-
-The young man went dreaming along the garden walks, mechanically pulling
-to pieces with his fingers a rose which he had gathered. He had walked
-thus for nearly an hour, when he was roused by a slight noise among
-the leaves, at a short distance from him. He instinctively raised his
-head, just in time to catch a glimpse of a light white robe which was
-disappearing among the trees, but too late to completely distinguish the
-person who wore it, and who appeared to trip over the dewy grass like
-a white phantom. At the sight of this mysterious apparition the young
-man felt his heart bound in his breast; he stopped trembling, and the
-emotion he felt was so powerful, that he was forced to lean against a
-tree for support.
-
-"What can be the matter with me?" he murmured to himself, as he wiped
-the cold perspiration from his brow. "I am mad!" he continued, with a
-forced smile. "I think I see her everywhere. Heavens! I love her so
-deeply that, in spite of myself, my imagination brings her before me
-unceasingly. That girl, of whom I just caught a glimpse, is probably the
-same we last night so miraculously saved. Poor child! Fortunately she
-did not see me; I should have frightened her. Better avoid her by going
-out of the garden; in my present state I should alarm her."
-
-And, as always happens in such cases, he set off, on the contrary, in
-the very footsteps of her he had only caught a glimpse of, but whom, by
-one of the instinctive feelings of sympathy which come from God, and
-which science can never explain, he had nevertheless recognized.
-
-The young girl, reclining in the depths of an arbour, like a hummingbird
-in its bed of muss, with a pale face, and her eyes cast down to the
-earth, was listening, pensive and sad, to the joyous melodies which the
-birds chanted in her absent ear. All at once, a slight noise made her
-start and raise her head. The Count was before her! She uttered a faint
-cry, and endeavoured to fly.
-
-"Don Louis!" she exclaimed.
-
-She had recognized him. The young man sank on his knees at the entrance
-of the arbour.
-
-"Oh!" he cried, in a voice trembling with emotion, and with an accent of
-the most earnest entreaty, "for pity's sake, remain, madam!"
-
-"Don Louis!" she repeated, already recovered, and feigning the most
-perfect indifference. Young girls, even the purest, possess in a high
-degree the talent of concealing their feelings, and of deceiving persons
-with regard to the emotions they really experience.
-
-"Yes, it is I, madam," he continued, with an accent of the most
-respectful passion; "I, who, to see you again, have abandoned
-everything!"
-
-The young lady displayed some slight surprise.
-
-"For Heaven's sake!" he resumed, "allow me once more, if but for an
-instant, to contemplate your adored features! Oh!" he added, with a look
-of deep affection, "my heart had told me you were here, before my eyes
-had perceived you."
-
-"Caballero," she said, in a tremulous voice, "I do not understand you."
-
-"Oh, fear nothing from me, madam!" he interrupted her vehemently; "my
-respect for you is as profound as----
-
-"Pray, caballero," she said, earnestly, "rise; if anyone should surprise
-you thus!"
-
-"Madam," he replied, "the avowal I have to make to you, requires me to
-remain in the position of a suppliant!"
-
-"Oh, caballero!"
-
-"I love you, madam!" he said, in broken accents; "I know not what gives
-me the boldness to pronounce a word which in France I did not venture
-to breathe in your ear, and which I have never allowed to pass from my
-heart to my lips. But even if you banished me from your presence for
-ever, once again I must tell you that I love you, madam; and if you do
-not return my love, I shall die!"
-
-The maiden looked at him for a moment with a melancholy air; a tear
-trembled on her long eyelashes; she took a step towards him, and holding
-out her hand, upon which he imprinted a burning kiss, said softly,--
-
-"Rise."
-
-The Count obeyed. Dona Rosario sunk back upon the bench behind her,
-and appeared plunged in profound and painful meditation. Both remained
-silent, Louis watching her with intense anxiety, and a throbbing heart.
-At length she raised her head, and exhibited a countenance bathed in
-tears.
-
-"Caballero," she said in a melancholy tone, "if God has permitted us to
-meet once again, it is because, in His divine goodness, He has judged
-that a decisive explanation should take place between us."
-
-The young man appeared anxious to speak.
-
-"Do not interrupt me," she continued, "or I shall not have the courage
-to finish what I have to say to you. You love me, Louis; your presence
-here is an incontestable proof of it--you love me; and yet how many
-times, during my short residence in France, have you cursed me in
-secret, accusing me of coquetry, or, at least, of unaccountable levity!"
-
-"Madam!"
-
-"Oh!" she said, with a faint smile, "since you have avowed your love
-for me, I will be frank with you, Louis; and although it be my duty to
-deprive you of all future hope, I am at least anxious to justify the
-past, and leave you a remembrance of me that nothing can tarnish!"
-
-"Oh, madam! why do you repeat such things to me?"
-
-"Why?" she said, with a look full of melancholy, and in a voice
-harmonious as the sigh of an AEolian harp, "because I have faith in that
-love, so warm, so young, so true; which neither daily indignities nor
-vast distances have been able to conquer--because, in short, I also love
-you! do you not plainly see that, Louis?"
-
-On hearing this confession, so ingenuous, and made in a tone so
-sorrowful that the young girl appeared no longer to belong to earth, the
-Count felt struck by a terrible presentiment; his heart was wrung with
-doubtful agony. Trembling, bewildered, he gazed on her with the fixed
-and desperate eye of one condemned to death, who is listening to the
-reading of his sentence.
-
-"Yes!" she resumed, with feverish eagerness; "yes, I love you, Louis, I
-shall always love you; but never, never, can we be united."
-
-"Oh, that is impossible!" he cried, raising his head vehemently.
-
-"Listen to me," she said, in a tone of authority; "I do not order you to
-forget me, Louis; a love like yours is eternal: alas! I feel that mine
-will last as long as my life. You see, my friend, I am frank; I do not
-speak to you as a maiden ought to speak; I unfold my heart before you,
-leaving you to read it as you would your own. Well, this love, which
-would be for us the height of felicity,--this communion of two spirits,
-which blend with each other to form one blissful whole,--this boundless
-happiness must be dispersed for ever, without chance of recovery,
-without hesitation!"
-
-"Oh, I cannot consent!" he exclaimed, in a voice broken by sobs.
-
-"But it must be so, I tell you!" she continued, wild with anguish.
-"Great Heaven! what more do you require of me? Must I confess everything
-to you? Well, then, since it must be so, know that I am a miserable
-creature, condemned from my birth, pursued by a terrible hatred,
-which follows me step by step, which watches me incessantly; and some
-day--tomorrow, perhaps today--will crush me without mercy! Obliged
-to change my name constantly; flying from city to city, from country
-to country; wherever I may go, this implacable enemy, whom I do not
-know, and against whom I cannot defend myself, pursues me without
-intermission."
-
-"But I will defend you!" the young man said, with confident energy.
-
-"And I, on my part, am not willing that you should die!" she replied,
-with an accent of ineffable tenderness. "To attach yourself to me is
-to court destruction. I went to France to seek a place of refuge. I
-was obliged to quit that hospitable land with the greatest suddenness.
-Arrived here only a few weeks since, but for you, last night, I should
-have been lost! No, no, I am condemned; I know I am, and I am resigned;
-but I will not drag you down in my fall! Alas! I am, perhaps, doomed to
-suffer tortures still more horrible than those I have hitherto endured!
-Oh, Louis, in the name of the love which you have for me, and which I
-fully share, leave me the supreme consolation in my wretchedness of
-knowing that you are safe from the torments which overwhelm me!"
-
-At this moment Valentine's voice was heard at a short distance, and
-Caesar came wagging his tail to his master. Dona Rosario gathered a
-blossom of the _suchil_ which grew close to them, and presented it to
-the young man, after having for a moment inhaled its sweet odour.
-
-"Here," she said, "my friend, accept this flower, the only memorial,
-alas! that will remain with you of me."
-
-The young man concealed the flower in his bosom.
-
-"Someone is coming," she continued, in broken accents. "Swear, Louis!
-swear to quit this country as soon as possible, without endeavouring to
-see me again."
-
-The Count hesitated.
-
-"Oh!" he cried, "some day, perhaps,----"
-
-"Never on earth. Have I not told you that I am condemned? Swear, Louis,
-that at least I may hope to meet you again in heaven."
-
-She pronounced these words with such a tone of despair, that the young
-man, overcome, in spite of himself, made a gesture of assent, and let
-the almost inarticulate words escape his lips,--
-
-"I swear to do so!"
-
-"Thanks! thanks!" she cried wildly, and hurriedly imprinting a kiss upon
-the brow of her prostrated lover, she disappeared with the lightness of
-a fawn amidst a thicket of standard roses, at the moment when Valentine
-became visible at the turning of the walk.
-
-"Why brother," the soldier said gaily, "what the deuce are you about
-here, at the bottom of the garden? Breakfast is waiting for you. I have
-been looking for you this hour; and if it had not been for Caesar, I
-should not have found you now."
-
-The Count turned towards him, his face lathed in tears, and threw his
-arms round his neck.
-
-"Brother! brother!" he cried, in an accent of despair; "I am the most
-unhappy of men!"
-
-Valentine looked at him in astonishment. The Count had fainted.
-
-"What on earth is all this about?" said the soldier, casting a
-suspicious look around him, and laying his foster brother, who was
-motionless as a corpse, gently upon a grassy bank.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-THE QUINTA VERDE.
-
-
-Not far from Rio Claro, a charming little city, built in a delicious
-situation between Santiago and Talca, there was then, and probably is
-still, upon a hill commanding an extensive view, a pretty _quinta_, with
-white walls and green shutters, coquettishly concealed from indiscreet
-eyes by a thicket of trees of various sorts--oaks, acajous, maples,
-palms, aloes, cactus, &c, which sprang up and intertwined within each
-other in such a fashion around it as to form an almost impregnable
-rampart. It is difficult to explain how, in such a period of convulsions
-and overthrows, this delicious habitation had hitherto escaped, as if by
-a miracle, from the devastation and pillage which incessantly menaced
-it, and which fell without intermission around it, enveloping it, as
-it were, in a network of ruins, without, however, having ever troubled
-that tranquil dwelling, although the human tempest had frequently howled
-beneath its walls, and, in the shade of night, it had often seen the red
-torches of incendiaries gleam; all at once, though no one knew why, and
-as if by enchantment, the cries of murder ceased, and the torches became
-extinguished and harmless in the hands of the men who, a minute before,
-had waved them about madly. This habitation was named the "Quinta Verde."
-
-By what prodigy had this house, so simple in appearance, and so like
-the rest, avoided the common fate and remained alone, perhaps, of all
-the houses of the Chilian plains, calm and tranquil in the midst of
-general confusion, equally respected by the two parties contending for
-power, and surveying carelessly from the top of its pretty _mirador_ the
-revolution raging at its feet, which carried away, as in an infernal
-whirlwind, cities, villages, houses, fortunes, and families? This is
-what many people, at various periods, had been anxious to know, though
-they had never been able to find out. Nobody ostensibly inhabited this
-quinta, in which, on certain days, noises were heard which filled with a
-superstitious terror the worthy _guasos_ living in the neighbourhood.
-
-The day after that on which the events occurred which open this history,
-the heat had been oppressive, the atmosphere heavy, and the sun had
-gone down amidst a flood of purple vapour, the precursors of a storm
-which burst with fury as soon as night had completely closed in. The
-wind bent down the trees as it whistled through them, the collision of
-the branches producing a melancholy sound; the heavens were black, not
-a star was to be seen; and large grey clouds coursed rapidly across
-the zenith, covering all nature with a leaden pall. In the distance
-resounded the howlings of wild beasts, among which was occasionally
-mingled the hoarse, sharp barking of stray dogs.
-
-Nine o'clock struck slowly from a distant steeple; the sound of the
-metal, repeated by the echoes from the hills, vibrated with a plaintive
-tone over the deserted landscape. The moon, fitfully emerging from
-behind the clouds which veiled her, spread for a few seconds a pale
-and trembling light over the scene, giving it a fantastic aspect. This
-fugitive ray of doubtful light, nevertheless, enabled a small troop of
-horsemen, who were painfully ascending a winding path on the side of a
-mountain, to distinguish, at a few paces before them, the black outline
-of a house, from the top window of which beamed like a pharos a red,
-uncertain light. This house was the "Quinta Verde."
-
-At about four or five paces in advance of the troop rode two horsemen,
-muffled carefully in their cloaks, the flaps of their hats pulled down
-over their eyes, appeared, in the darkness, to be a needless precaution;
-but it, nevertheless, showed that these personages were very anxious not
-to be recognized.
-
-"Heaven be praised!" said one of these horsemen to his companion, as
-he pulled up his horse, to look searchingly around him, as far as the
-darkness would permit; "I hope we shall soon be there."
-
-"In a quarter of an hour, at latest, General, we shall be at the end of
-our journey."
-
-"Do not let us stop, then," the one addressed as General said; "I am
-impatient to penetrate into this abominable den."
-
-"One moment, General!" the first speaker continued. "It is my duty to
-warn your Excellency that there is still time to retreat; and that
-would, perhaps, be the more prudent step."
-
-"Please to observe this, Diego," said the General, fixing upon his
-companion a look which gleamed in the semi-obscurity like that of a
-tiger-cat--"in the circumstances in which I am placed, prudence, as you
-understand the word, would be cowardice. I am quite aware what I am
-called upon to do by the confidence placed in me by my fellow citizens;
-our position is most critical: the liberal reaction is raising its head
-in all quarters, and we must put an end to this ever-reviving hydra.
-The news of Don Tadeo's escape from death has spread with the rapidity
-of a train of gunpowder; all the malcontents of whom he is the leader,
-are in almost open action; if I were to hesitate to strike a great blow
-and crush the head of the serpent which hisses in my ears, it would
-tomorrow, perhaps, be too late; hesitation has always been the ruin of
-statesmen in affairs of importance."
-
-"And yet, General, if the man who has furnished you with this
-information should--"
-
-"Be a traitor? Well, that is possible--ay, even probable; therefore,
-I have neglected nothing that may neutralize the consequences of a
-treachery which I foresee."
-
-"By the Virgin! General, in your place, however--"
-
-"Thank you, old comrade, thank you for your solicitude; but enough of
-this subject, you ought to know me well enough to be sure that I shall
-never flinch from my duty."
-
-"I have nothing more to do, then, but to wish your Excellency well
-through your undertaking; for you know you must arrive alone at the
-Quinta Verde, and I can escort you no farther."
-
-"Very well, wait here then; make your men dismount for a time, keep a
-sharp watch, and execute punctually the orders I have given you. I am
-going on."
-
-Diego bowed respectfully, but with an air of anxiety, and withdrew his
-hand, which had been placed on the bridle of the General's horse. The
-latter more carefully enveloped himself in his cloak, the folds of which
-had become too loose, and gave the usual jockey signal to excite his
-horse. At this well-known sound the horse pricked up its ears, and being
-thoroughbred, although fatigued, set off at a gallop.
-
-After a few minutes of this rapid travelling, the General stopped; but
-it appeared as if his journey was completed, for, dismounting, he threw
-the bridle on his horse's neck, with as little care what became of it as
-if it had been a hack post-horse, and walked with a firm step towards
-the house, which he had held in view some time, and from which he was
-now not more than ten paces distant. This was soon cleared. When he
-reached the gate, he stood for a second and looked around him, as if
-endeavouring to penetrate the darkness; but all was calm and silent.
-In spite of himself, the General was seized with that vague fear which
-takes possession of the most courageous man when in face of the unknown.
-But General Bustamente, whom the reader has no doubt recognized, was too
-old a soldier to suffer himself to be mastered long by an impression,
-however strong it might be; with him this had lasted but an instant, and
-he almost immediately recovered his usual coolness.
-
-"What the devil! am _I_ afraid?" he murmured, with an ironical smile,
-and going boldly up to the gate, he knocked three times at equal
-intervals with the pummel of his sword. In an instant his arms were
-seized by invisible hands, a bandage was placed over his eyes, and a
-voice, faint as a breath, murmured in his ear--
-
-"Make no resistance, twenty poniards are at your breast; at the first
-cry, at the least opposition, you are a dead man. Reply categorically to
-our questions."
-
-"All these threats are needless," the General replied, in a calm
-voice; "as I came here of my own free will, I can have no intention of
-resisting--ask, and I will answer."
-
-"What do you come to seek here?" the voice said.
-
-"The Dark-Hearts."
-
-"Are you ready to appear in their presence?"
-
-"I am," the General replied, still impassive.
-
-"Do you dread nothing?"
-
-"Nothing."
-
-"Let your sword fall."
-
-The General quitted his hold of his sword, and felt at the same moment
-that his pistols were taken from him.
-
-"Now, step forward without fear," said the voice.
-
-The prisoner found himself instantly at liberty.
-
-"In the name of Christ, who died upon the cross for the salvation of the
-world, Dark-Hearts, receive me among the number of your brethren!" the
-General then said, in a low and firm voice.
-
-The double gates of the Quinta Verde flew open before him, and two
-masked men, each holding a dark lantern in his hand, the focus of which
-he directed on the stranger's face, appeared in the entrance.
-
-"There is still time," said one of the unknown; "if your heart be not
-firm, you may retreat."
-
-"My heart is firm."
-
-"Come on, then, as you think yourself worthy to share our glorious task,
-but tremble if you have the least intention of betraying us," said the
-masked man, in a deep, sonorous voice.
-
-The General felt, notwithstanding the recklessness of his character,
-a cold shudder run through his limbs at these words; but he quickly
-surmounted this involuntary emotion.
-
-"It is for traitors to tremble," he replied; "for my part, I have
-nothing to fear."
-
-And he boldly stepped into the Quinta Verde, the doors of which closed
-after him with a dull, heavy sound. The bandage which covered his eyes,
-and which had prevented those who had interrogated him from recognizing
-him, notwithstanding their efforts to do so, was then removed. After
-proceeding for more than a quarter of an hour along a circular corridor,
-lighted only by the red flickering flame of the torch carried by the
-guide through this labyrinth, the General was suddenly stopped by a door
-in front of him. He turned hesitatingly towards the masked men, who had
-followed him step by step.
-
-"What do you wait for?" said one of them in reply to his mute
-interrogation. "Is it not written, _Knock and it shall be opened unto
-you?_"
-
-The General bowed in sign of acquiescence, and knocked loudly at the
-door. The folding panels drew back silently into the wall, and the
-General found himself at the entrance of a vast hall, whose walls were
-covered with long red draperies, gloomily enlightened by a bronze lamp
-and several chandeliers suspended from the ceiling, which shone in an
-uncertain manner upon the countenances of about a hundred men, who,
-with naked swords in their hands, fixed their eyes upon him through the
-black masks which concealed their faces. At the bottom of this hall was
-a table covered with a green cloth, at which were seated three men. Not
-only were those three men masked, but, as a further precaution, before
-each of them a lighted torch was planted on the table, the dazzling
-flame of which allowed them to be but vaguely seen. Against the wall was
-a crucifix, between two hourglasses surmounted by a death's-head with a
-poniard run through it.
-
-The General manifested no emotion at this imposing _mise en scene_. A
-smile of disdain curled his lip, and he stepped boldly forward. At this
-moment he felt a light touch on the shoulder, and, on turning round,
-perceived that one of the guides was holding out a mask to him. In spite
-of the precautions he had taken to disguise his features, he eagerly
-seized it, placed it on his face, folded his cloak round him, and
-entered.
-
-"_In nomine Patris, et Filii, et Spiritus Sancti!_" he said.
-
-"_Amen_!" all present replied, in a sepulchral tone.
-
-"_Exaudiat te Dominus, in die Tribulationis,_" said one of the
-personages behind the table.
-
-"_Impleat Dominus omnes petitiones tuas_," the General replied, without
-hesitation.
-
-"_La Patria!_" the first speaker rejoined.
-
-"_O la Muerte!_" replied the General.
-
-"What is your purpose in coming here?" the man who up to this time alone
-had spoken, asked.
-
-"I wish to be admitted into the bosom of the elect."
-
-There was a momentary silence.
-
-"Is there anyone among us who can or will answer for you?" the masked
-man then asked.
-
-"I cannot say; for I do not know the persons among whom I find myself."
-
-"How know you that?"
-
-"I suppose so, as they, as well as I, are masked."
-
-"The Dark-Hearts," said the interrogator in a deep tone, "consider not
-the countenance; they search souls."
-
-The General bowed at this sentence, which appeared to him to border upon
-the ridiculous. The interrogator continued:--"Do you know the conditions
-of your affiliation?"
-
-"I know them."
-
-"What are they?"
-
-"To sacrifice mother, father, brothers, relations, friends, and myself,
-without hesitation, to the cause which I swear to defend."
-
-"What next?"
-
-"At the first signal, whether it be by day or night, even at the foot of
-the altar, in whatever circumstance I may be placed, to quit everything,
-in order to accomplish immediately the orders that shall be given me, in
-whatever manner they may be given, and whatever may be the tenor of that
-order."
-
-"Do you subscribe to these conditions?"
-
-"I subscribe to them."
-
-"Are you prepared to swear to submit yourself to them?"
-
-"I am prepared."
-
-"Repeat, then, after me, with your hand upon the Gospels, the words I am
-about to dictate to you."
-
-"Dictate!"
-
-The three men behind the table rose; a Bible was brought, and the
-General resolutely placed his hand upon the book. A faint murmur ran
-through the ranks of the assembly. The president struck the table with
-the hilt of his dagger, and silence was re-established. This man then
-pronounced in a slow and deep toned voice the following words, which the
-General repeated after him without hesitation:--
-
-"I swear to sacrifice myself, my family, my property, and all that I
-can hope for in this world, for the safety of the cause defended by
-the Dark-Hearts. I swear to kill every man, be he my father, be he my
-brother, who shall be pointed out to me. If I fail in my faith, if I
-betray those who accept me as their brother, I acknowledge myself to
-be worthy of death; and I, beforehand, pardon the Dark-Hearts who may
-inflict it upon me."
-
-"So far well!" replied the president, when the General had pronounced
-the oath. "You are now our brother."
-
-He then rose, and stepping across the hall, stood full in front of the
-General.
-
-"Now," he said in a solemn threatening voice, "answer me, Don Pancho
-Bustamente. As you, of your own free will, take a false oath before a
-hundred persons, do you think we should commit a crime in condemning
-you, since you have had the audacity to place yourself in our power?"
-
-In spite of his assurance, the General could not repress a start of
-terror.
-
-"Remove the mask which covers this man's face, so that everyone may know
-that it is he! Ah! General; you have entered the lion's den, and you
-will be devoured."
-
-The noise of a distant commotion was heard.
-
-"Your soldiers are coming to your rescue," the president resumed, "but
-they will come too late, General; prepare to die!"
-
-These words fell like the blow of a mace upon the brow of him who found
-himself thus outwitted; he, nevertheless, did not yet lose heart; the
-noise evidently approached; and there could be no doubt but that his
-troops, who surrounded the Quinta Verde on all sides, would soon gain
-possession of it; all he wanted was time.
-
-"By what right," he said haughtily, "do you constitute yourselves judges
-and executioners of your own sentence?"
-
-"You are one of us, and are bound by our sentence," the president
-replied, with an ironical smile.
-
-"Beware of what you are about to do, gentlemen," the General added in a
-haughty tone; "remember I am minister-at-war!"
-
-"And I am King of Darkness," the president cried in a voice that froze
-the very blood of the General; "my dagger is more sure than the muskets
-of your soldiers; it does not let its victims escape. Brethren, what
-chastisement does this man deserve?"
-
-"Death!" the conspirators replied.
-
-The General saw that he was lost.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-THE DEPARTURE.
-
-
-Sergeant Diego, when left by General Bustamente a few paces from the
-Quinta Verde, was very uneasy regarding the fate of his leader, and
-entertained dismal presentiments. He was an old soldier, and well
-acquainted with all the machinations and treacheries practised in this
-country between inveterate enemies. He had been far from approving of
-the General's undertaking, for he knew better than anyone how little
-confidence ought to be placed in spies. Constrained, ostensibly, to
-obey the order he had received, he had resolved, _in petto_, not to
-leave his leader without help in the wasps' nest into which he had
-cast himself headlong. Diego entertained for General Bustamente, under
-whose orders he had served ten years, a profound regard, which entitled
-him to certain freedoms, and his entire confidence. He immediately
-placed himself in relation with two other officers of the detachment,
-ordered, like himself, to watch the mysterious house whose dark outline
-cut gloomily across the cloudy sky, and around which there was a close
-blockade. He was walking about, biting his moustache, and swearing to
-himself, determined, if the General did not come out within half an
-hour, to obtain an entrance by force, if necessary, when a heavy hand
-was laid upon his shoulder. He turned sharply round, stopping short in
-an oath that was passing his lips, and saw a man standing before him: it
-was Don Pedro.
-
-"Is that you?" he asked, as soon as he recognised him.
-
-"Myself," the spy replied.
-
-"But where the devil do you come from?"
-
-"No matter; do you wish to save the General?"
-
-"Is he in danger?"
-
-"In danger of death."
-
-"_Demonios!_" the sergeant shouted; "he must be saved!"
-
-"For that purpose I am here; but don't speak so loud."
-
-"I will speak as you like, provided you will tell me."
-
-"Nothing!" Don Pedro replied, "for there is not a minute to be lost."
-
-"What is to be done?"
-
-"Listen! A detachment must feign an attack upon the gate by which the
-General entered; another will watch the environs, for the Dark-Hearts
-have roads known only to themselves; you, with a third detachment, will
-follow me; I will undertake to introduce you into the house--is that
-agreed upon?"
-
-"Perfectly."
-
-"Make haste, then, to inform your colleagues; time presses."
-
-"Instantly; where shall I find you again?"
-
-"Here."
-
-"Very well; I only ask five minutes," and he strode away in haste.
-
-"Hem!" thought Don Pedro, as soon as he was alone; "we should be
-prudent when we wish affairs to be profitable; from what I heard, they
-will condemn the General, and they must not be allowed to go as far as
-that, for my interests would suffer too seriously; I have manoeuvred
-so as to be safe from all suspicion; if I succeed, I shall be more in
-favour with the General than ever, without losing the confidence of the
-conspirators."
-
-"Well!" he said, as he saw Diego coming towards him.
-
-"Everything is done," replied the sergeant, out of breath. "I am ready."
-
-"Come on, then, and God grant it may not be too late!"
-
-"Amen!" said the soldier.
-
-Everything was done as had been arranged; whilst one detachment
-vigorously attacked the gate of the Quinta Verde, Don Pedro led the
-troops commanded by Diego to the opposite side of the house, where a
-low window was open; this window was grated, but several bars had been
-removed beforehand, which left the entrance easy. Pedro commanded the
-soldiers to be silent, and they entered the house one by one. Guided by
-the spy, they advanced stealthily, without meeting with obstacles of any
-kind. At the end of a few minutes they came to a closed door.
-
-"This is it!" said Pedro, in a low voice.
-
-At a sign from the sergeant, the door was beaten in with the butt end
-of their muskets, and the soldiers rushed into the room. It was nearly
-empty, its only occupant being a man stretched motionless upon the
-floor. The sergeant sprang towards him, but recoiled with a cry of
-horror--he had recognised his leader--General Bustamente lay with a
-dagger sticking upright in his breast. To the hilt of the dagger was
-tied a long black strip, upon which were written these words in red ink:
-
-"_The Justice of the Dark-Hearts!_"
-
-"Oh!" cried Diego; "Vengeance! Vengeance!"
-
-"Vengeance!" the soldiers repeated, with rage, mingled with terror.
-
-The sergeant turned round towards Pedro, whom he believed to be still by
-his side; but the spy, who alone could guide them in their researches,
-had thought it prudent to steal away. As soon as he saw that what he
-dreaded had happened, he had disappeared without anybody observing his
-departure.
-
-"No matter!" said Diego. "If I demolish this den of assassins, from
-bottom to top, and don't leave stone upon stone, I swear I will find
-these demons, if they are buried in the centre of the earth."
-
-The old soldier began searching in all directions, whilst a surgeon who
-had followed the detachment paid attention to the wounded man, whom he
-endeavoured to restore to his senses.
-
-The Dark-Hearts, as the spy had truly said, had paths known only
-to themselves, by which they had quietly departed, after having
-accomplished their terrible vengeance, or executed their severe justice,
-according to the point of view in which an act of this nature and
-importance is viewed. They were already far off in the country, safe
-from all danger, while the soldiers were still ferociously searching for
-them in and about the house.
-
-Don Tadeo and Don Gregorio returned together to the chacra, and were
-astonished, on their arrival, to find Valentine, whom they supposed to
-be in bed and asleep long before, waiting for them at that late hour,
-to request a few minutes' conversation. In spite of the very natural
-surprise which the demand at such a singular hour excited, the two
-gentlemen, who supposed the Frenchman had serious reasons for acting
-thus, granted his request, without making the least observation. The
-conversation was long--so long, that we think it useless to repeat it
-here in detail, but will satisfy ourselves with giving our readers the
-end of it, which sums it up perfectly.
-
-"I will not insist," said Don Tadeo, "although you will not tell us
-your motives. I believe you to be too considerate a man, Don Valentine,
-not to be convinced that the reasons which force you to leave us are
-serious."
-
-"Of the greatest seriousness," the young man replied.
-
-"Very well. But on leaving this place, in which direction do you intend
-to bend your steps?"
-
-"Faith! I own frankly--besides, you know already that I and my friend
-are in search of fortune--that all directions are the same to us, since
-we must, above everything, depend upon chance."
-
-"I am of your opinion," replied Don Tadeo, smiling. "Listen to me,
-then. I possess large estates in the province of Valdivia, which it
-is my intention to visit shortly. What prevents you going that way in
-preference to any other?"
-
-"Nothing, that I know of."
-
-"I, at this moment, stand in need of a man whom I can depend upon, to
-undertake an important mission into Araucania, to one of the principal
-chiefs of the people of that country. If you are going to the province
-of Valdivia, you will be obliged to traverse Araucania in its whole
-length. Are you willing to undertake this commission? Will that
-inconvenience you?"
-
-"Why should I not?" said Valentine. "I have never come face to face with
-savages; I should like to see what sort of people they are."
-
-"Very well; now is your opportunity. That is agreed upon then. You wish
-to start tomorrow, do you not?"
-
-"Tomorrow! Today, if you please--in a few hours, for it will not be long
-before the sun will be up."
-
-"That is true. Very well, then; at the moment of your departure, my
-major-domo shall place, on my part, written instructions in your hands."
-
-"Caramba!" said Valentine, laughing; "here am I transformed into an
-ambassador!"
-
-"Do not joke, my friend," said Don Tadeo, seriously. "The mission I
-confide to you is delicate--dangerous, even; I do not conceal that from
-you. If the papers of which you will be the bearer are found upon you,
-you will be exposed to great dangers. Are you still willing to be my
-emissary?"
-
-"Pardieu! Wherever there is danger there is pleasure. And what is the
-name of the person to whom I am to remit these despatches?"
-
-"They are of two descriptions. The latter only concerns yourself; during
-the course of your journey you can make yourself acquainted with them;
-they will instruct you in certain matters you should know in order to
-secure the success of your mission."
-
-"I understand--and the others?"
-
-"The others are for Antinahuel, that is, the Tiger Sun, and must be
-delivered into his own hands."
-
-"A queer name that!" Valentine replied, with a laugh. "And where am I to
-find the gentleman rejoicing in such a formidable title?"
-
-"By my faith, my friend," replied Don Tadeo, "I know no more than you
-do."
-
-"The Araucano Indians," interrupted Don Gregorio, "are a rather
-wandering race, and it is sometimes difficult to find the one you are in
-search of."
-
-"Bah! I shall find him, be assured of that."
-
-"We do entirely rely upon you."
-
-"In a few hours, as I have told you, I shall myself set out to place in
-a convent in Valdivia the young lady whom you so fortunately saved; it
-will, therefore, be in Valdivia I shall await your answer."
-
-"I beg your pardon, but I have not the least idea where Valdivia is,"
-observed Valentine.
-
-"Don't be uneasy on that account; any child in this country can direct
-you the way thither," Don Gregorio replied.
-
-"Thanks."
-
-"And now, if you change your mind when we meet again, and consent to
-remain among us, remember we are brothers, and do not hesitate to inform
-me of your new determination."
-
-"I can neither, reply yes or no, sir; if it depended upon me, we should
-continue to see each other frequently."
-
-After exchanging a few more friendly expressions, the three men
-separated. At sunrise, Louis and Valentine, mounted on magnificent
-horses, which Don Tadeo had forced them to accept, rode away from the
-chacra, followed by Caesar. Valentine had received his despatches from
-the hands of the major-domo. As they were quitting the farm Louis
-turned round instinctively, as if to salute with a last look a spot
-he abandoned for ever, and which contained all that was dear to him.
-A window was gently opened, and the face of the fair girl appeared
-through the small interval, bathed in tears. The two young men bowed
-respectfully towards the necks of their horses, and with a deep sigh
-from Louis, they moved on as the window closed.
-
-"Adieu! oh, adieu for ever!" murmured Louis, choking with emotion.
-
-"Ah, perhaps!" said Valentine; and, to rouse his friend from his grief,
-he put his horse into a gallop, and they soon lost sight of the chacra
-in the windings of the road.
-
-Within four hours from their departure Don Tadeo and Don Gregorio
-likewise set out on their journey to Valdivia, for the purpose of
-placing Dona Rosario in the convent. But the enemy of whom they thought
-they had relieved themselves at the Quinta Verde, was not dead; the
-dagger of the King of Darkness had not proved more sure than the bullets
-of the General. The two enemies were destined soon to meet again.
-Notwithstanding the seriousness of the wound he had received, thanks
-to the intelligent cares lavished upon him, but more particularly,
-thanks to his excellent constitution, General Bustamente was soon in a
-convalescent state. Don Pancho and the Linda, from that time united by
-the strongest of ties--a common personal hatred--prepared to take their
-revenge upon Don Tadeo, and that of the bitterest nature. The General
-signalized his restoration to health by cruelties of the most flagrant
-kind towards every man suspected of liberalism, and by inaugurating
-throughout the republic a pitiless system of terror. Don Tadeo was
-pronounced outlawed; his friends were cast into dungeons, and their
-property was confiscated; and then, when the General thought that all
-these vexations must bring his enemy to bay, and he had nothing to dread
-from him or his partizans, under the pretence of visiting the provinces
-of the Republic, he set out for Valdivia, accompanied by his mistress.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-THE MEETING.
-
-
-As the principal incidents of this history are now about to take place
-in Araucania, we think it necessary to give our readers some account of
-this people, who alone of all the nations the Spaniards encountered in
-America, succeeded in resisting them, and had, up to the time we treat
-of, preserved intact their liberty and almost all their territory. The
-Araucanos or Moluchos inhabit the beautiful country situated between the
-rivers Biobio and Valdivia, having on one side the sea, and on the other
-the great Cordilleras of the Andes. They are thus completely enclosed
-within the Chilian republic, and yet, as we have said, have always
-remained independent. It would be a great error to suppose these Indians
-savages. The Araucanos have adopted as much of European civilization as
-suited their character and their mode of living, and have rejected the
-rest. From the most remote times these peoples had formed a national
-body, strong and compact, governed by wise laws rigorously executed. The
-first Spanish conquerors were quite astonished to find in this remote
-corner of America, a powerful aristocratic republic, and a feudalism
-organized almost upon the same plan as that which prevailed in Europe
-in the thirteenth century. We will here enter into a few details of the
-government of the Araucanos, who proudly style themselves _Aucas_--free
-men. These details concerning a people too little known, up to this day,
-cannot fail to interest the reader.
-
-The principal chiefs of the Araucanos are the Toquis,[1] the Apo-Ulmens,
-and the Ulmens. There are four Toquis, one for each territorial
-division; they have under their orders the Apo-Ulmens, who, in their
-turn, command the Ulmens. The Toquis are independent of each other, but
-confederated for the public good. Titles are hereditary, and pass from
-males to males. The vassals or Mosotones are free; in time of war alone
-they are subject to military service; but, in this country, and it is
-this which constitutes its strength, every man in a condition to bear
-arms is a soldier. It may easily be understood what the chiefs are when
-we state that the people consider them only as the first among their
-equals, and that their authority is consequently rather precarious;
-and if, now and then, certain Toquis have endeavoured to extend their
-authority, the people, jealous of their privileges, have always found
-means to keep them within the bounds prescribed by their ancient usages.
-
-A society whose manners are so simple, and interests so little
-complicated, which is governed by wise laws, and all the members of
-which have an ardent love of liberty, is invincible, as the Spaniards
-have many times found to their cost. After having, in several attempts,
-endeavoured to subdue this little corner of land, isolated amidst their
-own territory; they have ended by acknowledging the futility of their
-efforts, and have tacitly admitted their defeat by renouncing for ever
-their projects of obtaining dominion over the Araucanos, with whom
-they have contracted alliances, and across whose territory they now
-peacefully pass on their road from Santiago to Valdivia.
-
-The Carampangue--in the Araucano idiom, refuge of lions--is a charming
-stream, half torrent, half river, which comes bounding down from the
-inaccessible summits of the Andes, and, after many capricious windings,
-loses itself in the sea two leagues to the north of Arauco. Nothing
-can be more beautiful than the banks of the Carampangue, bordered by
-smiling valleys, covered with woods, with apple trees loaded with fruit,
-rich pastures in which animals of all kinds range and feed at liberty,
-and high mountains, from the verdant sides of which hang, in the most
-picturesque positions, clusters of cabins, whose whitewashed walls shine
-in the sun, and give life to this enchanting landscape.
-
-On the day when we resume our narrative, that is, on a beautiful morning
-in July--called by the Indians the month of the sun--two horsemen,
-followed by a magnificent black and white Newfoundland dog, were
-ascending, at a sharp trot, the course of the river, following what is
-called a wild beast's track, scarcely marked in the high grass. These
-men, dressed in the Chilian costume, surging up suddenly amidst this
-wild natural scene, formed, by their manners and their vestments, a
-contrast with everything which surrounded them; a contrast of which
-they probably had no idea, for they rode as carelessly through this
-barbarous country, abounding in perils and ambushes without number, as
-they would have done along the road from Paris to Saint-Cloud. These two
-men, whom the reader has, no doubt, recognized, were the Count Louis
-de Prebois-Crance and Valentine Guillois, his foster brother. They had
-passed in turn through Maule, Talca, and Concepcion; and on the day we
-meet them again, in the middle of Araucania, they had been full two
-months on the road, travelling philosophically along with their dog
-Caesar upon the banks of the Carampangue. This was the 14th of July,
-1837, at eleven o'clock in the morning.
-
-The young men had passed the night in an abandoned _rancho_ which
-they had fallen in with on their way, and at sunrise resumed their
-journey; so that they now began to be sensible of the calls of hunger.
-Upon taking a survey of the spot where they found themselves, they
-perceived a clump of apple trees, which intercepted the rays of the
-sun, and offered them a shelter for their repast and a little rest.
-They dismounted and sat down at the foot of a large apple tree, leaving
-their horses to browse upon the young branches so abundant around
-them. Valentine knocked down a few apples with a stick, opened his
-_alforjas_--large cloth pockets placed behind the saddle--drew out some
-sea biscuit, a piece of bacon, and a goat's milk cheese, and the two
-young men began eating gaily, sharing their provisions with Caesar in a
-brotherly way, whilst he, seated gravely in front of them, followed with
-his eyes every morsel they put into their mouths.
-
-"Caramba!" said Valentine, with a satisfied smile; "it is comfortable to
-have a little rest, after having been on horseback from four o'clock in
-the morning."
-
-"Well, to tell the truth, I must own I am a little fatigued," Louis
-confessed.
-
-"My poor friend, you are not, as I am, accustomed to long journeys. It
-was stupid of me not to remember that."
-
-"Bah! on the contrary, I am getting accustomed to them very well; and
-besides," he added, with a sigh, "physical fatigue makes me forget----"
-
-"Ah! that's true," Valentine interrupted; "come! I am happy to hear you
-speak thus--I see you are becoming a man!"
-
-Louis shook his head sorrowfully.
-
-"No," he said, "you are mistaken. As the malady which undermines me is
-without remedy, I endeavour to play a manly part."
-
-"Yes, hope is one of the supreme illusions of love; when it can no
-longer exist, love dies."
-
-"Or he who experiences it," said the young man, with a melancholy smile.
-
-This was followed by a silence, which Valentine at length broke.
-
-"What a charming country!" he cried, with feigned enthusiasm, for the
-purpose of giving the conversation another direction, as he swallowed,
-with delectation, an enormous piece of bacon.
-
-"Yes, but the roads are very bad."
-
-"Who knows?" said Valentine, with a smile: "they say the roads to
-Paradise are of that kind; this may be the way thither." Then addressing
-the dog, "And you, Caesar, what do you think of our journey, old boy?"
-
-The dog wagged his tail, fixing his eyes, sparkling with intelligence,
-upon the speaker's face, whilst he eagerly devoured all that was given
-to him. But he stopped suddenly in his masticating operations, pricked
-up his ears, turned his head sharply round, and balked furiously.
-
-"Silence, Caesar!" said Valentine; "what do you bark in that manner for?
-You know right well we are in a desert, and that in a desert there is
-nobody but the devil!"
-
-But Caesar continued to bark without heeding his master.
-
-"Hum!" said Louis, "I do not agree with you; I think that the deserts of
-America are thickly peopled."
-
-"Well, perhaps you are right."
-
-"The dog's barking is not usual; we ought to take precautions."
-
-"I will see," said Valentine; and addressing the Newfoundland, "Come!
-come! hold your tongue, Caesar! You are tiresome! What's the matter with
-you? What teases you? Do you scent a stag? Caramba! That would be a
-glorious godsend for us."
-
-Here he rose, and cast an inquiring glance around, but he immediately
-stopped, and seized his rifle, making a sign to Louis to do the same, in
-order to be prepared for whatever might happen.
-
-"Diable!" he said, "Caesar was right, and I must confess myself a stupid
-fellow. Look yonder, Louis!"
-
-The other turned his eyes as directed.
-
-"Oh! oh!" he said; "what is this?"
-
-"Hum! I believe we shall soon discover."
-
-"With God's help!" Louis replied, cocking his rifle.
-
-Ten Indians in war costume, and mounted on magnificent horses, were
-drawn up within twenty paces of the travellers, though the latter were
-quite unable to comprehend how they had succeeded in approaching so near
-to them without being discovered. Notwithstanding Valentine's efforts,
-Caesar continued to bark furiously, and endeavoured to rush upon the
-Indians. The American warriors, motionless and impassible, made neither
-gesture nor movement, but they surveyed the Frenchmen so closely and
-persistently, that Valentine, not very patient in his nature, began to
-find himself excessively annoyed.
-
-
-[1] This word comes from the verb _toquin_, which means to _judge_, to
-_command._
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.
-
-THE PUELCHES.
-
-
-"Eh! eh!" said Valentine, whistling sharply to his dog, who immediately
-came to him; "these fellows do not seem to have friendly intentions; we
-must be upon our guard: who knows what may happen?"
-
-"They are Araucanos," said Louis.
-
-"Do you think so? Then they are devilish ugly!"
-
-"Well, now, for my part, I think them very handsome."
-
-"Ah, yes; that may be in an artistic point of view. But, ugly or
-handsome, we will await their coming."
-
-The Indians talked among themselves, and continued to look at the young
-men.
-
-"They are consulting to determine with what sauce they shall eat us,"
-said Valentine.
-
-"Not at all----"
-
-"Bah! I tell you they are."
-
-"Pardieu! they are not cannibals!"
-
-"No? So much the worse; that's a defect. In Paris, all the savages
-exhibited in public are cannibals."
-
-"You madman! you laugh at everything."
-
-"Would you prefer my weeping a little? It appears to me that at this
-moment our position is not so seducing in itself that we should seek to
-make it more dismal."
-
-These Indians were for the most part men of from forty to forty-five
-years of age, clothed in the costume of the Puelches, one of the most
-warlike tribes of Upper Araucania; they wore the poncho floating from
-the shoulders, the calzoneras fastened round the hips and falling to
-the ankle, the head bare, the hair long, straight, and greasy, gathered
-together by a red ribbon, which encircled the brow like a diadem, and
-the face painted of various colours. Their arms consisted of a long
-lance, a knife, a gun hanging from the saddle, and a round buckler,
-covered with leather, ornamented with horsehair and human scalps.
-
-The man who appeared to be their chief was a man of lofty stature,
-expressive features, hard and haughty, but still displayed a certain
-frankness, a very rare quality among Indians. The only thing which
-distinguished him from his companions was a feather of the eagle of the
-Andes, planted upright on the left side of his head, in the bright red
-ribbon that confined his hair.
-
-After having consulted with his companions for a few minutes, the chief
-advanced towards the travellers, making his horse curvet with inimitable
-grace, and lowered the point of his lance in sign of peace. When
-within three paces of Valentine, he stopped, and, after saluting him
-ceremoniously, in the Indian fashion, by placing his right hand on his
-breast, and slowly bowing his head twice, he said to him in Spanish:--
-
-"My brothers are Muruches--foreigners,--and not Culme-Huinca--despicable
-Spaniards. Why are they so far from the men of their own nation?"
-
-This question, asked in the guttural accent, and with the emphatic tone
-peculiar to the Indians, was perfectly understood by the young men, who,
-as we have before observed, generally spoke Spanish themselves.
-
-"Hum!" Valentine said to his companion, "here is a savage who appears to
-have a little curiosity about him--what think you?"
-
-"Bah!" Louis replied, "answer him, at all events that will do no harm."
-
-"Why, no, that is true; we cannot easily be more compromised than we are
-already."
-
-And turning towards the chief, who waited impassibly,
-
-"We are travelling," he said, laconically.
-
-"What! alone, thus?" asked the chief.
-
-"Does that astonish you, my friend?"
-
-"Do my brothers fear nothing?"
-
-"What should we fear?" said the Parisian in a bantering tone. "We have
-nothing to lose."
-
-"What! not even your hair?"
-
-Louis could not refrain from laughing, as he looked at Valentine.
-
-"Ah! ah! what, he is laughing at the disordered state of my hair, is he,
-the ugly wretch?" Valentine grumbled, vexed at the observation of the
-chief, and quite mistaking his intentions. "Stop a bit!" then he added,
-in a loud voice, "Have the goodness to pass on, gentlemen savages. Your
-remarks are not pleasant, I can assure you."
-
-He cocked his rifle, and lifted it to his shoulder, as if taking aim
-at the chief. Louis, who had attentively followed the progress of the
-conversation, without saying a word imitated the action of his friend,
-directing the barrel of his rifle towards the group of Indians. The
-chief had, doubtless, understood but little of the speeches of his
-adversaries, but far from appearing terrified at the menacing attitude
-they assumed, he seemed to contemplate with pleasure the martial and
-firm deportment of the Frenchmen; and putting gently on one side the
-weapon pointed against his breast, said in a conciliatory tone:
-
-"My friend is mistaken. I have no intention of insulting him. I am his
-_penni_--brother--and his companion's likewise. Were not the palefaces
-eating when I and my young men came up?"
-
-"Faith! yes, chief, you say true," interrupted Louis, with a smile;
-"your sudden appearance stopped the progress of our humble repast."
-
-"Part of which is very much at your service," continued Valentine,
-pointing with his finger to the provisions spread upon the grass.
-
-"I accept your offer," said the Indian, cordially.
-
-"Bravo!" cried Valentine, throwing down his rifle, and preparing to
-resume his seat on the grass; "to table, then!"
-
-"Yes," replied the chief, "but upon one condition."
-
-"What is that?" the young men asked together.
-
-"That I shall furnish my part."
-
-"Agreed," said Louis.
-
-"Well, that is but fair," Valentine added; "and it will be the more
-acceptable, from our not being rich, and having but meagre fare to offer
-you."
-
-"The bread of a friend is always good," the chief said, sententiously.
-
-"That is admirably answered! But, at this moment, unfortunately, our
-bread is only stale biscuit."
-
-"I will remedy that;" and the chief said a few words in the Molucho
-language to his companions, who began to rummage in their alforjas, and
-quickly produced maize tortillas, some charqui, and several leathern
-bottles filled with chica--a sort of cider made of apples and Indian
-corn. The whole was placed upon the grass before the two Frenchmen, who
-were wonderstruck at the sudden abundance which had succeeded without
-any transition to their late short commons. The Indians dismounted,
-and sat down in a circle round the travellers. The chief, then turning
-towards his guests, said with a pleasant smile--
-
-"Now, then, let my brothers eat."
-
-The young men did not require the cordial invitation to be repeated, but
-vigorously attacked the provisions so frankly offered. For the first few
-minutes silence prevailed among the party, for all were too well engaged
-to talk; but as soon as appetite was a little appeased, conversation was
-resumed.
-
-Of all men, Indians, perhaps, understand the laws of hospitality
-the best. They have an instinct of social conventions, if such an
-expression may be allowed, which makes them divine at once, with
-infallible correctness, what the questions are that may be properly
-addressed to their guests, and the point at which they should stop to
-avoid committing any indiscretion. The two Frenchmen, who for the first
-time found themselves in contact with Araucanos, could not overcome
-the surprise caused by the knowledge of life, and the noble and frank
-manners of these men, whom, on the faith of accounts more or less false,
-they were accustomed, in common with all Europeans, to consider as gross
-savages, almost destitute of intelligence, and quite incapable of any
-delicacy of behaviour.
-
-"My brothers are not Spaniards?" the chief said, half interrogatively.
-
-"That is true," Louis replied; "but how did you discover that?"
-
-"Oh!" he said, with a disdainful smile, "we are well acquainted with
-those _chiaplos_--wicked soldiers. They are too old enemies to allow us
-to commit an error with regard to them. From what island do my brothers
-come?"
-
-"Our country is not an island," Valentine observed.
-
-"My brother is mistaken," the chief said emphatically; "there is but one
-country that is not an island, and that is the great land of the Aucas."
-
-The two young men bowed their heads before an opinion so peremptorily
-put forth--all discussion became impossible.
-
-"We are Frenchmen," Louis replied.
-
-"Frenchmen! ah! a good brave nation! We had several French warriors in
-the time of the great war."
-
-"What!" said Louis, with excited curiosity, "have French warriors fought
-with you?"
-
-"Yes," the chief remarked, proudly; "warriors with grey beards, and
-breasts marked with honourable scars, which they received in the wars of
-their island, when they fought under the orders of their great chief,
-Zaleon."
-
-"Napoleon?" said Valentine, quite astonished.
-
-"Yes; I believe it is so the palefaces pronounce his name. Did my
-brother know him?" the chief added, with ill-concealed curiosity.
-
-"No," replied the young man. "Although born in his reign, I was never
-able to get sight of him, and he is now dead."
-
-"My brother is mistaken," said the Puelche, solemnly; "such warriors as
-he do not die. When they have performed their task upon earth they go to
-Paradise--to hunt with Pillian, the master of the world."
-
-The young men bowed, as if convinced.
-
-"It is very singular," said Louis, "that the reputation of that powerful
-genius should have spread to the most remote and unknown regions of the
-globe, and be preserved pure and brilliant among these rude men; whilst
-in that France, for which he did everything men invariably seek to
-lessen it, and even to destroy it."
-
-"Like all their compatriots, who, from time to time, traverse our
-hunting grounds, our brothers have, doubtless, trading purposes in
-coming among us. Where are your goods?" said the chief.
-
-"We are not traders," replied Valentine; "we came to visit our brothers,
-the Araucanos, of whose wisdom and hospitality we have heard much."
-
-"The Moluchos love the French," the chief said, flattered by the
-compliment; "my brothers will be well received in our villages."
-
-"To what tribe does my brother belong?" asked Valentine, inwardly
-delighted at the good opinion the Indians entertained of his compatriots.
-
-"I am one of the principal Ulmens of the sacred tribe of the Great
-Hare," the chief said, proudly.
-
-"Thank you--one word more."
-
-"Let my brother speak; my ears are open."
-
-"We are in search of a Molucho chief, to whom we have a message from a
-friend of his, with whom he has had much dealing."
-
-"What is the chief's name?"
-
-"Antinahuel."
-
-"Good!"
-
-"Does my brother know him?"
-
-"I know him. If my brothers will follow me they shall see the toldo of
-a chief in which they shall be received like pennis. When they have
-rested, if they desire it, I will myself conduct them to Antinahuel, the
-most powerful Toqui of the four Uthal-Mapus of the Araucano confederacy."
-
-"What province is governed by Antinahuel?"
-
-"The Pire-Mapus, that is to say, the interior of the Andes."
-
-"Thanks, brother."
-
-"Will my brothers accept the offer I have made them?"
-
-"Why should we not accept it, chief, if, as I believe, it is made in
-earnest?"
-
-"Let my brothers come, then," the chief said, with a smile; "my tolderia
-is not far off."
-
-The breakfast was over, and the Indians were mounting.
-
-"We may as well go," said Valentine, in French. "This Indian appears to
-speak cordially and honestly, and it will give us a capital opportunity
-of studying interesting manners and customs. What do you think,
-Louis?--It may prove very amusing."
-
-"Well, I see no harm that accepting the invitation can do."
-
-"God speed us, then!"
-
-And with a bound he was in his saddle, imitated by Louis.
-
-"Forward!" cried the chief, and the party set off at a gallop.
-
-"Well, it must be allowed," said Valentine, in his cheerful way, "that
-these savages, if savages they are, have some redeeming qualities
-belonging to them. I begin to take a warm interest in them. They are
-true Scotch mountaineers for hospitality. I wonder what my regimental
-comrades, and more particularly my old friends of the Boulevard du
-Temple, would say if they could see me now! Houp! After me, the end of
-the world!"
-
-Louis laughed at this outburst of the incorrigible _gamin_, and, without
-further inquiries, the young men gaily abandoned themselves to the
-guidance of their new friends, who, after leaving the banks of the
-river, directed their course towards the mountains.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-
-THE BLACK JACKAL.
-
-
-In order to make the facts which follow intelligible, we are obliged
-here to relate an adventure which happened more than twenty years before
-the period at which our history commences.
-
-Towards the end of the month of December, 1816, on a cold, rainy night,
-a traveller, mounted on an excellent horse, and carefully wrapped in
-the folds of an ample cloak, was following at a round trot the road,
-or rather the blind path, on the mountains which leads from Cruces to
-San-Jose. This man was a rich landowner, who was making a journey into
-Araucania, for the purpose of treating with the Indians for a large
-number of cattle and sheep. Having left Cruces about two o'clock in the
-afternoon, he had been delayed on his way by settling some business with
-various _guasos_, and he was hastening to gain a hacienda he possessed
-at some leagues from the spot where he then was, and where he reckoned
-upon passing the night.
-
-The country at the time was not in a state of tranquillity. For several
-days past the Puelches had appeared in arms upon the frontiers of Chili,
-and made incursions into the territories of the republic, burning the
-chacras, and carrying off the families they surprised. These marauders
-were commanded by a chief named The Black Jackal, whose cruelty spread
-terror among the people exposed to his depredations.
-
-It was, therefore, with some anxiety, mixed with secret apprehensions,
-that the man we have spoken of made all speed along the desolate road
-which led to his hacienda. Every minute only added to his fears. The
-storm, which had threatened all day, burst forth at last with a fury
-of which we have no conception in our climates. The wind roared loudly
-through the trees, bending some, and uprooting others. The rain fell in
-torrents, and the lightning became so vivid, that the horse began to
-plunge and rear, and refused to advance. The rider spurred the restive
-animal, and endeavoured, as well as the darkness would permit, to
-discover whereabouts he was. After surmounting immense difficulties, he
-saw at length, in the distance, the shadow of the walls of his hacienda,
-and the lights which shone like guiding stars, when suddenly his horse
-bounded on one side in such a way as almost to unseat him. When, with
-much trouble, he had recovered his command of the animal, he looked
-round to see what could have frightened it so, and perceived, with
-terror equal to the horse's, several men of sinister appearance standing
-motionless before him. The horseman's first movement was to seize his
-pistols, in order to sell his life as dearly as he could, for he had no
-doubt he had fallen into an ambuscade of bandits.
-
-"Keep your hands from your weapons, Don Antonio Quintana," said a rough
-voice; "we desire neither your life nor your money."
-
-"What do you want then?" he replied, in a tone that showed he was a
-little reassured by that frank declaration, though he still kept on the
-defensive.
-
-"Hospitality for this night, in the first place," said the other.
-
-Don Antonio endeavoured to ascertain if he knew the man who was speaking
-to him, but he could not distinguish his features through the darkness.
-
-"The doors of my dwelling always fly open to the stranger," he remarked;
-"why have you not knocked at them?"
-
-"Knowing you must come this way, I preferred waiting for you."
-
-"What else do you desire of me, then?"
-
-"I will tell you under your own roof; the open road is a place ill
-adapted for imparting confidence."
-
-"If you have nothing more to say to me now, and are as willing as I am
-to get under shelter, we will continue our journey."
-
-"Go on, then; we will follow you."
-
-Without exchanging another word, they directed their course towards the
-hacienda. Don Antonio Quintana was a resolute man, as the manner in
-which he had replied to the men who had so rudely barred his passage
-proved him. In spite of the fluency with which the one who had spoken
-employed the Spanish language, he had, at the first word, by his
-guttural accent, perceived he was an Indian; and with him fear had
-immediately given way to curiosity, and he had not hesitated to grant
-the hospitality asked, knowing that the Araucano, Puelches, Hueliches,
-or Moluchos, never violate the roof under which they are welcomed, and
-that the hosts who shelter them are held sacred.
-
-On arriving at the hacienda, Don Antonio found he was not mistaken; the
-men who had accosted him in so strange a manner were really Indians.
-There were four of them, and with them was a young woman with a child
-at the breast. The hacendero welcomed them to his dwelling with all the
-minute forms of Castilian courtesy, and gave orders to his peones or
-Indian domestics, terrified at the savage appearance of the strangers,
-to assist them with everything they might desire.
-
-"Eat and drink," he said, "you are at home, here."
-
-"Thanks!" replied the man, who had till that time been spokesman. "We
-accept your offer with as good a will as you give it, as far as regards
-food, of which we stand most in need."
-
-"Will you not rest till day?" asked Don Antonio; "the night is dark, and
-the weather frightful for travelling."
-
-"A black night is what we desire; besides, we must depart immediately.
-Now, allow me to put my second request to you."
-
-"Explain yourself," said the Spaniard, examining the speaker attentively.
-
-The latter was a tall, well-made man, of about forty; his
-strongly-marked features and his commanding eye proclaimed that he was
-accustomed to exercise authority.
-
-"It was I," he said, without preamble, "who directed the last invasion
-made upon the palefaces of the frontiers. My mosotones were all killed
-yesterday in an ambuscade by your lanceros; the three you see with me
-are all that remain of a troop of two hundred warriors; the others are
-dead. I myself am wounded, hunted, tracked like a wild beast; we are
-without horses to rejoin our tribe, without weapons to defend ourselves
-if we are attacked on the plain. I come to ask of you the means of
-escape from our pursuers. I will neither deceive nor surprise your good
-faith. I am bound to tell you the name of the man whose safety you hold
-in your hands. I am the greatest enemy of the Spaniards; my life has
-been passed in contending with them. In a word, I am The Black Jackal,
-the Apo-Ulmen of the Black Serpents."
-
-On hearing this redoubtable name the Chilian could not suppress a start
-of terror; but immediately recovering his self-possession, he replied in
-a calm voice, and in a kind tone.
-
-"You are my guest, and you are unfortunate, two titles sacred with me. I
-desire to know nothing more; you shall have horses and arms."
-
-A smile of ineffable sweetness lit up the countenance of the Indian.
-
-"One last prayer," he said.
-
-"Speak."
-
-The chief took by the hand the young Indian squaw, who had remained
-cowering and weeping in a corner, rocking her child in her arms, and
-presented her to Don Antonio.
-
-"This woman belongs to me; this child is mine," he said, "and I confide
-them both to you."
-
-"I will take charge of them; the woman shall be my sister, the child my
-son," the hacendero replied kindly, and after the Indian fashion.
-
-"The Apo-Ulmen will remember!" said the Puelche chief, in a voice
-trembling with emotion.
-
-He imprinted a kiss upon the brow of the poor little creature, who
-smiled upon him, cast upon the woman a look beaming with tenderness,
-and rushed out of the house, followed by his companions. Don Antonio
-supplied them with arms and horses, and the four Indians disappeared in
-the darkness.
-
-Many years passed away ere Don Antonio heard anything of the Black
-Jackal; the woman and the child remained at the hacienda, and were
-treated as if they had been members of the Chilian's family. The
-hacendero had been married; but, unfortunately, after a year, which
-promised to be the commencement of a long and happy union, the wife died
-when giving birth to a beautiful little girl, whom her father named
-Maria. The two children grew up together, watched over by the anxious
-solicitude of the Indian woman, loving each other like brother and
-sister.
-
-At length, one day, a numerous troop of Puelches, magnificently equipped
-and mounted, arrived at Rio-Claro, the town in which Don Antonio
-resided. The chief of these Indians was the Black Jackal, who came to
-redemand his wife and son of him to whom he had intrusted them. The
-interview was very affecting. The chief forgot his Indian stoicism; he
-gave himself up to the feelings which agitated him, and enjoyed the
-happiness of finding again, after such a length of time, the two beings
-he held dearest in the world. When it became necessary to depart, and
-the children learnt they were to be separated, they shed abundance of
-tears. They had been accustomed from their infancy to live together, and
-they could not comprehend why they were not to continue to do so.
-
-Don Antonio had extended his traffic over different parts of the
-frontiers; he possessed chacras, in which the breeding of cattle
-was carried on upon a vast scale. The Black Jackal, who had sworn
-a perpetual friendship, became of great use to him in his business
-transactions; he often put him in the way of making excellent bargains
-with his compatriots, and, what was still more serviceable, protected
-his property from the depredations of plunderers. Every year Don Antonio
-visited all his chacras in Araucania, and passed a couple of months
-among the tribe of the Black Serpents, with his friend, the Black
-Jackal. His daughter accompanied him in all these journeys, on account
-of the friendship that existed between the children. Things went on thus
-for many years.
-
-At the period when our history commences, the Black Jackal was dead:
-he had fallen, like a brave warrior, with his weapons in his hand, in
-a combat on the frontier; his son, Antinahuel, now about thirty-five
-years of age, who promised to tread in his footsteps, had been elected
-Apo-Ulmen in his place, and afterwards Toqui of his Uthal-Mapus or
-province, which made him one of the principal men of Araucania. Don
-Antonio had likewise died, shortly after the marriage of his daughter,
-Dona Maria, with Don Tadeo de Leon, brought to an untimely grave by his
-grief at her misconduct, which had produced terrible scandal in the
-upper classes of Santiago.
-
-Dona Maria for some years past had only seen Antinahuel at long
-intervals; but between them their friendship remained as warm as in
-the days of their childhood; and, on the part of the Indian warrior,
-it was carried so far that he obeyed the least caprice of the young
-woman as an imperative duty. Great, then, was the astonishment of the
-warriors of the tribe of the Black Serpents, when, in the evening of
-the day on which we have resumed our story, they saw Dona Maria arrive
-on horseback, accompanied only by two peons, at their tolderia, and go
-straight towards the rancho of the Toqui. On perceiving her, the usually
-gloomy face of the chief was suddenly lighted up with an expression of
-gladness.
-
-"Eglantine of the Woods!" he cried, in a joyous tone, "does my sister
-then still remember the poor Indian?"
-
-"I have come to visit the toldo of my brother," she said, turning her
-brow towards him, upon which he impressed a kiss; "my heart is sad,
-grief devours me--and I have remembered my brother."
-
-The chief cast a look upon her of anxiety, mingled with sorrow.
-
-"Although it be to trouble that I owe the visit of my sister, I am,
-nevertheless, rejoiced to see her."
-
-"Yes," she resumed, "when we are in trouble we think of our friends."
-
-"My sister has done well in thinking of me; what can I do for her?"
-
-"My brother can render me a great service."
-
-"My life is my sister's; she knows she can dispose of it at her
-pleasure."
-
-"Thank you! I was certain I could depend upon my brother."
-
-"Everywhere, and at all times."
-
-After bowing respectfully to Dona Maria, he led her into his rancho,
-where his mother had prepared everything worthy of the visit of one whom
-for so many years she had loved as a daughter.
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.
-
-TWO OLD FRIENDS.
-
-
-Antinahuel--the Tiger Sun--was at this time a man of about thirty-five
-years of age. In stature he was tall, and in his carriage majestic;
-everything in his person announced a man accustomed to command, and made
-to rule over his fellows. As a warrior, his reputation was immense,
-and his mosotones held him in superstitious veneration. Such was,
-physically, the man whom Dona Maria de Leon came to visit; what he was,
-morally, we shall soon see.
-
-The cloth was laid in the toldo,--we make use of the expression, the
-cloth was laid, advisedly, because the Araucano chiefs are perfectly
-well acquainted with European customs, and almost all possess dishes,
-plates, and silver spoons and forks. It is true, they only make use of
-these upon great occasions, and for the purpose of display; for, as
-to themselves, they carry frugality and plainness to an excess, and
-when they are alone with their families, are content to eat with their
-fingers.
-
-Dona Maria seated herself at the table, and made a sign to Antinahuel,
-who stood respectfully beside her, to keep her company, and to take his
-place opposite to her. It was clear to the Indian chief that his sister,
-as he called her, who for some years had completely neglected him, must
-have been induced by some powerful interest to seek him thus in his
-remote village. But what could the interest be which led a delicate
-woman, accustomed to all the luxurious comforts of life, to undertake a
-long and perilous journey in order to come and talk with an Indian in a
-miserable tolderia, hidden in the midst of the desert?
-
-On her side, the young woman was a prey to still greater uneasiness,
-for she was anxious to discover whether, in spite of her neglect of the
-chief, she had preserved the boundless power she had formerly exercised
-over that Indian nature, which civilization had softened rather than
-subdued; she feared lest the long forgetfulness in which she had left
-him had made her lose her prestige in his eyes, and that coolness and
-indifference might have succeeded to the warm friendship of early days.
-
-When the repast was ended, a peon brought in the _mate_[1] the infusion
-of the Paraguay herb which, with the Chilians, takes the place of tea,
-and of which they are very fond. Two chased cups, placed upon a filagree
-salver, were presented to Dona Maria and the chief; they lit their maize
-_pajillos_, and smoked, whilst sipping their _mate_, reflectively. After
-a few minutes' silence, which was beginning to be embarrassing to both,
-Dona Maria, who perceived that Antinahuel was resolved to act on the
-defensive, determined to open the attack.
-
-"My brother," she said, with a smile, "is surprised at my sudden arrival
-at his tolderia."
-
-"It is true; the Eglantine of the Woods has appeared unexpectedly
-amongst us, but she is not the less welcome on that account."
-
-And he bowed.
-
-"I am glad to observe that my brother is as gallant as ever."
-
-"No; I love my sister, and I am happy to see her, after being so long
-deprived of her presence."
-
-"I know your friendship for me, Penni; our childhood was passed
-together, but it is a long time since that time. You are now one of the
-caraskens, whilst I am only, as formerly, a poor woman."
-
-"The Eglantine of the Woods is my sister, her least wishes shall always
-be sacred with me."
-
-"Thanks, Penni! But let us drop this conversation, and talk of our early
-years, which, alas! so quickly glided away."
-
-"Yesterday exists no longer," he said, sententiously.
-
-"That's true," she replied, with a sigh; "why, indeed, should we talk of
-times that can never come back?"
-
-"Does my sister intend to return to Chili?"
-
-"No; I have left Santiago for a time; I intend, for a season, to take up
-my abode in Valdivia; I left my friends to continue their route, whilst
-I came on to pay my respects to my brother."
-
-"Yes, I know that the man whom the palefaces call General Bustamente,
-though scarcely cured of a dangerous wound, set off, a month ago, to
-visit the province of Valdivia, I, myself, intend shortly to visit that
-city."
-
-"There are many palefaces from the South there at present."
-
-"Among these strangers are there any that I know?"
-
-"Good heavens! how can I tell? Yes, there is one, Don Tadeo, my husband."
-
-Antinahuel raised his head in astonishment.
-
-"I thought he had been shot!" he said.
-
-"He was."
-
-"Well?"
-
-"He escaped death, though grievously wounded."
-
-The artful woman endeavoured to read what impression the news she had so
-coolly imparted made upon the stoical face of the Indian.
-
-"Listen to me, my sister," he resumed, after a minute's pause; "Don
-Tadeo is still your enemy, is he not?"
-
-"More so than ever."
-
-"Good!"
-
-"Not content with having basely abandoned me, and having torn from me
-my child, the innocent creature who alone consoled me and enabled me to
-support the sorrows with which he has overwhelmed me, he has crowned
-his insults by publicly paying his addresses to another woman, whom he
-takes with him everywhere, and who is at this moment his companion at
-Valdivia."
-
-"Hum!" the chief said, carelessly.
-
-Accustomed to Araucanian manners, which permit every man to take as many
-wives as he can support, he found the action of Don Tadeo perfectly
-natural. This did not escape Dona Maria: an ironical smile curled for
-a second the corners of her lips, and she continued, negligently, but
-looking earnestly in the face of the chief--
-
-"Yes, the woman is called, as I hear, Dona Rosario de Mendoz; and is,
-they say, a beautiful creature!"
-
-That name, pronounced with such apparent indifference, produced the
-effect of a clap of thunder upon the chief; he sprang up, his face
-inflamed, and his eyes sparkling.
-
-"Rosario de Mendoz, did you say, my sister?" he shouted.
-
-"Good heavens! I hardly know," she replied. "I have only heard her
-name--I believe that may be it--but," she added, "what interest can my
-brother take in it?"
-
-"Oh! none," he said, as he quietly resumed his seat. "Why does not my
-sister avenge herself upon the man who has abandoned her?"
-
-"To what purpose? and, besides, what vengeance can I hope for? I am but
-a weak and timid woman, without friends, without support; in short,
-alone."
-
-"And I?" said the chief; "what am I, then?"
-
-"Oh!" she replied, warmly; "I would not on any account that my brother
-should constitute himself the avenger of an insult which is personal to
-myself."
-
-"My sister is mistaken; in attacking this man I avenge my own insult."
-
-"My brother must explain himself--I do not understand him."
-
-"That is what I am going to do."
-
-"I am all attention."
-
-At this moment Antinahuel's mother entered the toldo, and, approaching
-the chief, said in a humble, but sad tone,--
-
-"My son is wrong in thus recalling old remembrances, and opening ancient
-wounds again."
-
-"Woman!" the Indian replied, "Retire! I am a warrior! My father left me
-a vengeance. I have sworn, and I will accomplish my oath!"
-
-The poor mother left the toldo with a sigh. The Linda, whose curiosity
-was excited to the highest degree, awaited impatiently the chief's
-explanation. Without, the rain fell pattering upon the leaves of the
-trees; at intervals a blast of night wind, loaded with uncertain sounds,
-came whistling through the ill-joined boards of the toldo, and caused
-the flame of the torch which lighted it to waver unsteadily. The two
-speakers, though absorbed in their own reflections, involuntarily lent
-an ear to these nameless sounds, and felt a depression of spirits they
-could not account for. The chief raised his head, and inhaling, one
-after another, several mouthfuls of smoke from his pajillo, which he
-puffed out brusquely, commenced in a low voice,--
-
-"Although my sister is almost a child of the nation, as my mother nursed
-her, she has never been made acquainted with the history of my family.
-The history I am about to relate will reveal to her that I have against
-Don Tadeo de Leon an old hatred, ever kept alive; and which, if I have
-to the present moment appeared to allow to slumber, it has been because
-that man was the husband of my sister: the conduct of Don Tadeo towards
-my sister frees me from the promise I had made myself, and leaves me
-liberty of action."
-
-Dona Maria bowed assentingly.
-
-"When the vile Spaniards," he continued, "conquered Chili, and reduced
-its cowardly inhabitants to slavery, they dreamt of subjugating
-Araucania in its turn, and marched against the Aucas, whose frontiers
-they violated. My sister sees that I take up my recital from the
-beginning. The Toqui Cadegual was one of the first to convoke a grand
-council of the nation, on the plain of the Carampangue. Named Toqui, one
-of the four Uthal-Mapus, he gave battle to the palefaces. The conflict
-was terrible! It lasted from the rising to the setting of the sun. Many
-Molucho warriors departed for the happy prairies of the Eskennane, but
-Pillian did not abandon the Aucas; they were conquerors, and the Chiaplo
-fled like timid hares before the terrible lances of our warriors.
-Numbers of palefaces fell into our hands; among them was a powerful
-chief, named Don Estevan de Leon. The Toqui Cadegual might have employed
-his rights, and have killed him, but he did nothing of the kind: so far
-from it, he led him to his toldo, and treated him with kindness, as a
-brother. But when did Spaniards ever show themselves grateful for a
-kindness? Don Estevan, forgetful of the sacred duties of hospitality,
-seduced the daughter of the man to whom he owed his life, and, one
-day, disappeared with her. The grief of the Toqui was immense at this
-unworthy and disloyal treachery. He swore to wage from that time a
-pitiless war against the palefaces, and he kept his oath: all Spaniards
-taken by them, whatever their age or sex, were massacred. These terrible
-reprisals were just, were they not?"
-
-"Yes," said the Linda laconically.
-
-"One day, Cadegual, surprised by his ferocious enemies, fell, covered
-with wounds, into their hands, after a heroic resistance, during which
-all his brave Mosotones had allowed themselves to be killed by his side.
-In his turn, as it happened, Cadegual was in the power of Don Estevan de
-Leon. The Spanish chief recollected the man who had, years before, saved
-his life. He was merciful. After cutting off the hands, and scooping out
-the eyes of his prisoner, he restored to him his daughter, of whom he
-was tired, and sent him back to his nation. The Toqui was led back by
-his child, whom he pardoned. When he joined his tribe, Cadegual called
-together his relations, related to them what he had suffered, showed
-them his bleeding and mutilated arms, and, after having made his sons
-and all his relations swear to avenge him, he allowed himself to die of
-hunger, that he might not survive his shame."
-
-"Oh, that is frightful!" Dona Maria cried, affected, in spite of herself.
-
-"That is nothing yet!" the chief resumed, with a bitter smile; "let
-my sister listen to the sequel. From that time, an implacable destiny
-has always hung over the two families, and continually brought the
-descendants of the Toqui Cadegual in contact with those of Captain
-Don Estevan de Leon. During three centuries, this ardent, inveterate
-struggle has lasted between the two families, and will never terminate
-but by the extinction of one, or perhaps both of them. Up to the present
-time, the advantage has almost always been on the side of the Leons;
-the sons of the Toqui have very often been conquered, but they have
-always remained firm and implacable, ready to re-commence the combat at
-the first signal. At the present day, the family of Don Estevan has but
-one representative, Don Tadeo--a representative formidable through his
-courage, his fortune, and the immense influence, he exercises over his
-compatriots. He, personally, has never injured the Aucas; he seems even
-to be ignorant of the inveterate hatred which exists between his family
-and that of the Toqui; but the descendants of Cadegual do not forget
-it: they are strong, numerous, and powerful in their turn; the hour
-of vengeance has struck, they will not let it escape! My sister," he
-continued, in a voice almost rising to a shout; "my sister, my ancestor
-was the Toqui Cadegual, and I thank you for having warned me that not
-only my enemy is not dead, but that he is within my reach!"
-
-"Your mother asked you properly, Penni, why should you revive old
-hatreds? Peace now reigns between the Chilians and the Aucas: let
-my brother beware; the whites are numerous; they have many warlike,
-disciplined soldiers."
-
-"Oh," he replied, with a sinister look; "I am sure of succeeding, for I
-have my nymph."
-
-Indians of high rank all entertain a firm belief that they have a
-familiar genius, who is bound to obey them.
-
-Dona Maria feigned to yield to this reason; she had succeeded in putting
-the hunter upon the scent of the game she wished to destroy, and it was
-of very little importance to her what motive made him obey her. She knew
-perfectly well that the hatred alleged by the chief was nothing but a
-pretext, and that the real cause remained hidden in the depths of his
-heart. Although she had a clear idea of what it was, she affected not to
-have the least suspicion of it.
-
-She continued talking with Antinahuel for some time longer about
-indifferent subjects, and then retired to a chamber which had been
-prepared for her. It was late, and she wished to set out for Valdivia at
-daybreak. She was sufficiently well acquainted with the companion of her
-childhood to know that, now the tiger was roused, it would not be long
-before he started in quest of the prey which she had marked down for him.
-
-As for the Toqui, the whole night passed away without his thinking of
-taking a moment's repose; he remained plunged in profound and agitating
-reflections.
-
-
-[1] The Chilians borrowed the mate from the Araucanos, who think it a
-great delicacy, and have a particular talent for making it. This is the
-manner in which they prepare it:--They put into a coffee cup a spoonful
-of the Paraguay herb, to which they add a lump of sugar, which they
-leave upon the fire till it is a little burnt; they squeeze a few drops
-of lemon juice into it, with some cinnamon and a clove; they then fill
-the cup up with boiling water. The mate being now ready, they introduce
-a silver tube of the thickness of a quill, pierced with small holes at
-its lower end, by means of which the mate is drawn up,--at the risk,
-be it remembered, of horribly scalding the mouth, as always happens to
-strangers when they first partake of the luxury, to the great amusement
-of the Chilians. Drinking mate is so common in Chili, as to be what
-coffee is in the East; it is taken after every repast, and presented to
-every visitor. In ceremonial parties, a single tube serves for all the
-persons assembled.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX.
-
-THE SORCERER.
-
-
-On the same day, a tolderia, situated at some miles from Orano, on the
-banks of the Carampangue, was a scene of the greatest commotion. The
-women and warriors assembled in front of a toldo, on the threshold of
-which was exposed a corpse, lying as it were in state, upon a bed of
-branches, were uttering cries and groans, which were mingled with the
-deafening sound of drums and flutes in most dismal discord, and the
-continuous howling of dogs, whom all this din rendered furious. In the
-middle of the crowd, by the side of the body, stood a man advanced
-in years, tall in stature, and clothed in the costume of a woman,
-who appeared to direct the ceremony, making extraordinary gestures
-and contortions, accompanied by scarcely human yells. This man, of a
-ferocious aspect, was the machi, or sorcerer of the tribe; the motions
-he affected, the cries he uttered, were intended to protect the body
-against the attacks of the evil genius, supposed to be eager to get
-possession of it. At a sign from him the music and groans ceased; the
-evil genius, conquered by the power of the machi, had given up the
-contest, after a sharp struggle, and abandoned the body which it was
-beyond his power to obtain. The sorcerer then turned towards a man of
-lofty stature and commanding countenance, who stood near him leaning
-upon a long lance.
-
-"Ulmen of the powerful tribe of the Great Hare," he said, in a
-sepulchral tone, "thy father, the valiant Ulmen, who has been ravished
-from us by Pillian, is no longer in dread of the influence of the
-evil genius, whom I have forced to depart; he now hunts in the happy
-prairies of the Eskennane with the just warriors: all the rites are
-accomplished--the hour for surrendering his body to the earth has
-arrived!"
-
-"Stop!" the chief replied, warmly; "my father is dead, but who has
-killed him? A warrior does not succumb thus, in a few hours, unless some
-secret influence has weighed upon him, and dried up the springs of life
-in his heart. Answer me, O machi, inspired by Pillian! Tell me the name
-of the assassin! My heart is sad, and can only be comforted by avenging
-my father."
-
-At these words, pronounced in a firm voice, a shudder crept through the
-ranks of the people assembled in a group round the body. The machi,
-after having looked searchingly round, cast down his eyes, crossed his
-arms upon his breast, and appeared to reflect.
-
-The Araucanos only think one sort of death possible--that on the field
-of battle; they do not suppose any one can lose his life by either
-accident or disease; in these two cases they always attribute death to
-the action of an occult power, and are persuaded that some enemy of
-the defunct has cast the charm upon him that has killed him. In this
-persuasion, at the period of the funeral ceremonies, the relations and
-friends of the dead person call upon the machi to denounce the assassin
-to them. The machi is obliged to point him out; it would be in vain
-for him to endeavour to make them comprehend that the death of their
-relation is natural, for their fury would be immediately turned against
-him, and he would become their victim.
-
-In this hard alternative, the machi takes good care not to hesitate; the
-murderer is the more easily pointed out through his non-existence, and
-from the sorcerer being in no danger of being suspected of deception.
-Generally, in order to make his own interests agree with those of the
-relations who claim a victim, he gives up one of his own personal
-enemies to their vengeance; when--but that is rare--the machi has no
-enemies, he fixes upon someone at hazard. The pretended murderer, in
-spite of his protestations of innocence, is immolated without mercy.
-
-It may be easily understood how perilous such a custom is, and what
-an influence it gives the sorcerer in the tribe; an influence we are
-obliged to admit which he abuses under all circumstances, without the
-least scruple.
-
-Fresh personages, among whom were Valentine and his friend, had arrived
-at the village, and, attracted by curiosity, mingled with the crowd
-collected round the body. The two Frenchmen could not comprehend
-anything of this scene till their guide had briefly explained it to
-them; then they followed the different phases of it with great interest.
-
-"Speak!" said the Ulmen, after a short pause. "Does not my father know
-the name of the man of whom we must demand an account of this murder?"
-
-"I know him," the sorcerer replied, in a solemn tone.
-
-"Why, then, does the inspired machi preserve silence, when the dead body
-cries for vengeance?"
-
-"Because," the machi said, looking this time the newly-arrived chief
-full in the face, "there are powerful men who laugh at human justice."
-
-The eyes of the crowd turned to the man whom the sorcerer appeared
-indirectly to point out.
-
-"The guilty man," the Ulmen cried, in a loud voice, "whatever be his
-rank in the tribe, shall not escape my just vengeance; speak without
-fear, priest of fate! I swear that the man whose name passes your lips
-shall die!"
-
-The machi drew himself up majestically; he raised his arm slowly, and,
-amidst the general anxious curiosity, he, with his finger, pointed to
-the chief who had offered such cordial hospitality to the strangers,
-saying, in a loud, ringing voice--
-
-"Accomplish your oath, then, Ulmen--that is the assassin of your father,
-Trangoil-Lanec cast the charm upon him which has killed him!"
-
-And the machi veiled his face with the corner of his poncho, as if
-overwhelmed with grief at making the revelation.
-
-The sorcerer's terrible words were succeeded by the silence of
-astonishment. Trangoil-Lanec was the last man in the tribe who would
-have been suspected. He was beloved and venerated by all for his
-courage, frankness, and generosity. The first sensation of surprise
-over, a general movement took place in the crowd; all drew back from
-the supposed murderer, leaving him face to face with the chief of whose
-death he was accused. Trangoil-Lanec remained impassive, a smile of
-disdain passed over his lips, he dismounted from his horse, and waited.
-
-The Ulmen walked slowly towards him, and when within a few paces, asked,
-in a sorrowful voice--
-
-"Why didst thou kill my father, Trangoil-Lanec? He loved thee, and I,
-was not I thy Penni?"
-
-"I have not killed thy father, Curumilla," the chief replied, with a
-tone of frankness that would have convinced a man less prejudiced than
-the one he addressed.
-
-"The machi has said so."
-
-"The machi lies."
-
-"No, the machi cannot lie--he is inspired by Pillian; thou, thy wife,
-and thy children must die; the law decrees that it shall be so."
-
-Without deigning to reply, the chief threw down his arms, and went
-and placed himself beside the stake of blood, planted in front of the
-medicine toldo, which contains the sacred idol. A circle was formed, of
-which the stake formed the centre; the wife and children of the chief
-were brought up, and were prepared immediately for the sacrifice; for
-the funeral ceremony of the chief could not be completed before the
-execution of his murderer. The machi was triumphant. One man alone in
-the tribe had ventured to hold up his hand against his robberies and
-rogueries, and that man was about to die and leave him absolute master.
-Upon a sign from Curumilla, two Indians seized the chief, and, in spite
-of the tears and sobs of his wives and children, they prepared to fasten
-him to the stake.
-
-The two Frenchmen had anxiously watched the spectacle of this infamous
-drama; Louis was disgusted with the rascality of the machi and the
-credulity of the Indians.
-
-"Oh!" he said, to his friend, "we cannot allow this murder to be
-accomplished."
-
-"Hum!" muttered Valentine, stroking the ends of his light moustache, and
-casting a glance around him, "hum! there is a great number of them."
-
-"What matters it how many?" Louis replied, impetuously; "I will not
-be the witness of such iniquity, if I die for it. I will attempt to
-save the life of that unfortunate man, who so frankly offered us his
-friendship."
-
-"The fact is," Valentine said, pensively, "this Trangoil-Lanec, as they
-call him, is a very worthy fellow, for whom I feel a warm sympathy; but
-what can we do?"
-
-"Pardieu!" Louis said, seizing his pistols, "throw ourselves between him
-and his enemies; we can each of us kill five or six."
-
-"Yes, and the others will kill us, without our having succeeded in
-saving the man for whom we devote ourselves. A bad means that! Let us
-try to find some other."
-
-"We must be quick, then; the torture is about to commence."
-
-Valentine struck his forehead, and cried, with a jeering laugh--
-
-"Bah! I have it! Trick must serve our turn--leave it to me; my old trade
-of a mountebank will do! Help me, if I want it; but, for heaven's sake,
-swear to remain calm!"
-
-"I swear I will, if you save him."
-
-"Be satisfied--against rogue I'll play rogue and a half; these savages
-shall see I can be more cunning than they."
-
-Valentine urged his horse into the middle of the circle, and shouted--
-
-"Stop a minute!"
-
-At the unexpected appearance of this man, whom nobody had yet observed,
-all turned round and looked at him with astonishment. Louis, with his
-hands on his pistols, watched his movements with anxiety, ready to fly
-to his succour, if he needed it.
-
-"We will not joke," continued Valentine, "we have not time for that.
-You are a set of fools, and your machi is laughing at you. What! would
-you kill a man without a moment's reflection, because a rogue bids you
-do so? Caramba! I have taken it into my head to prevent your committing
-such a folly--I will do it, too!"
-
-And placing his hand upon his hip, he looked round with an intrepid
-glance. The Indians, according to their strange custom, listened to
-this speech without evincing surprise, even by a gesture. Curumilla
-approached him.
-
-"My pale brother must retire," he said, calmly; "he is unacquainted with
-the laws of the Puelches; this man is condemned, he must die; the machi
-has pointed him out as a murderer."
-
-"I repeat to you, you are fools!" said Valentine shrugging his
-shoulders; "your machi is no more a conjurer than I am; I again tell
-you, he is cheating you, and I will prove it, if you will let me."
-
-"What says my father?" said Curumilla to the machi, who stood cold and
-motionless by the side of the body.
-
-The machi smiled disdainfully.
-
-"When did the white man ever speak truth?" he replied, with a sneer.
-"Let this one prove what he asserts, if he is able."
-
-"Good!" the Ulmen said; "the Murucho may speak."
-
-"Pardieu!" cried Valentine. "Notwithstanding the bold-faced assurance of
-this individual, I shall find it no difficult matter to prove that he is
-an impostor."
-
-"We are attentive," said Curumilla.
-
-The Indians drew round with intense curiosity. Louis could not at all
-make out what his friend proposed to do. He could only suppose that some
-extravagant idea had crossed his brain, and was as impatient as the rest
-to see how he would come through his dangerous undertaking with honour.
-
-"One moment!" said the machi, with perfect assurance. "What will my
-brothers do if I prove my accusation true?"
-
-"The stranger must die," said Curumilla, coolly.
-
-"I accept the terms," Valentine replied, resolutely. Placed thus in the
-necessity of explaining himself, the Frenchman drew himself up to his
-full height, and, knitting his brows, exclaimed pompously--
-
-"I, too, am a great medicine man!"
-
-The Indians bowed reverentially. The science of Europeans is perfectly
-established among them; they respect without disputing it.
-
-"It was not Trangoil-Lanec," continued the Frenchman, with the greatest
-audacity, "who killed the chief; it was the machi himself."
-
-A start of astonishment pervaded the assembly.
-
-"I!" cried the machi, in a voice of amazement.
-
-"You, yourself, and you know it well," replied Valentine, giving him a
-look that made him tremble.
-
-"Stranger," said Trangoil-Lanec, with the majesty of a martyr, "it is
-no use to interpose in my favour; my brothers believe me guilty, and
-innocent though I am, I must die."
-
-"Your devotion to your laws is noble, but in this case it is absurd,"
-Valentine replied.
-
-"This man is guilty," the machi persisted.
-
-"Let us put an end to this, then," replied Trangoil-Lanec; "kill me!"
-
-"What say my brothers?" Curumilla asked of the crowd, who pressed
-anxiously around him.
-
-"That the Murucho medicine-man be allowed to prove the truth of his
-words," replied the warriors with one voice.
-
-They loved Trangoil-Lanec, and in their hearts desired that he should
-not die. On the other hand, they entertained for the machi a hatred
-which the profound terror he inspired them with scarcely sufficed to
-make them conceal.
-
-"Very well," said Valentine, "this is what I propose."
-
-All were silent as the grave. The Frenchman drew his sword, and waved
-the bright blade before the eyes of the spectators.
-
-"You see this weapon," said he, in a pompous tone; "I will put it into
-my mouth, and swallow it up to the hilt. If Trangoil-Lanec is guilty, I
-shall die; if he is innocent, as I affirm, Pillian will help me, and I
-shall draw forth the sword from my body without suffering a wound."
-
-"My brother speaks like a courageous warrior," said Curumilla; "we are
-ready to behold."
-
-"I will not suffer it!" Trangoil-Lanec shouted. "Does my brother want to
-kill himself?"
-
-"Pillian is judge!" Valentine replied, with a smile of strange
-expression, and with an air of conviction admirably well played.
-
-The two Frenchmen exchanged a glance. The Indians are perfect children
-in their love of spectacle, and the extraordinary proposal of the
-Parisian seemed to them to admit of no reply.
-
-"The trial! the trial!" they shouted.
-
-"Very well," said Valentine; "let my brothers behold, then."
-
-He first placed himself in the proper position adopted by jugglers when
-they exhibit this feat in public places; then introducing the blade of
-the sword into his mouth, in a few seconds the whole of it disappeared.
-During the performance of this trick, which in their eyes was a
-miracle, the Puelches watched the bold Frenchman in breathless terror.
-They could not comprehend how a man could perform such an operation
-without deliberately killing himself. Valentine turned on all sides,
-so that everyone might be convinced of the reality of the fact; then
-he deliberately withdrew the blade from his mouth, as bright as when
-it came from the sheath. A cry of enthusiasm burst from the crowd: the
-miracle was evident.
-
-"One minute more," he said; "I have still something to demand of you."
-
-Silence was in an instant re-established.
-
-"I have proved to you, in an incontrovertible manner, that the chief is
-not guilty--have I not?"
-
-"Yes! yes!" they shouted simultaneously; "the paleface is a great
-medicine man! he is beloved by Pillian!"
-
-"Very well. Now, then," he added, with a sardonic smile directed towards
-the machi, "your machi should prove in his turn that I have calumniated
-him, and that it was not he who killed the Apo-Ulmen of your tribe. The
-dead chief was a great warrior; it ought to be avenged."
-
-"Yes," the warriors cried, "he ought to be avenged."
-
-"My brother speaks well," observed Curumilla; "let the machi be put to
-the proof."
-
-The unfortunate machi perceived at once that he was lost. He became
-livid, and a cold perspiration bathed his temples, whilst a convulsive
-tremor shook his limbs.
-
-"This man is an impostor," he muttered, in a voice scarcely audible; "he
-abuses your good faith."
-
-"Perhaps I am," said Valentine; "but, in the meantime, imitate me."
-
-"Here," said Curumilla, holding out the sword to the machi, "if you are
-innocent, Pillian will protect you, as he has protected my brother."
-
-"Caramba! that is certain; Pillian always protects the innocent, and you
-are about to be a proof of it," said the Parisian, in whom the revived
-spirit of the _gamin_ was now triumphant.
-
-The machi cast around a look of despair; all eyes were expressive of
-impatience and curiosity; the unhappy wretch perceived but too plainly
-that he could look for help to nobody, and he formed his resolution
-instantly--he determined to die as he had lived, deceiving the crowd to
-the last minute.
-
-"I fear nothing," he said, in a firm voice; "this steel will be harmless
-to me. You desire that I should go through the trial--I will obey. But,
-beware! Pillian is angry with your conduct towards me; the humiliation
-you impose upon me will be avenged by the terrible scourges which he
-will inflict upon you."
-
-At these words of their prophet the Puelches were moved. They hesitated.
-For many long years they had been accustomed to place entire faith in
-his predictions, and they experienced a kind of fear in thus daring to
-accuse him of imposture. Valentine saw at a glance what was passing in
-their hearts.
-
-"Capitally well played," he said, replying by a knowing wink to the
-triumphant smile of the machi; "now it is my turn. Let my brothers take
-heart!" he added, in a loud, firm voice. "No misfortune threatens them;
-this man speaks thus because he is afraid to die; he knows he is guilty,
-and that Pillian will not protect him."
-
-The machi darted a glance at him gleaming with hatred, seized the
-sword, and, imitating as well as he knew how what he had seen, with
-desperate quickness plunged the blade down his throat. A stream of black
-blood sprang from his mouth, his eyes glared hideously, his arms shook
-convulsively, he staggered two steps forward, and fell flat upon his
-face. The people crowded round him--he was dead.
-
-"Let this lying dog be thrown to the vultures," said Curumilla, kicking
-the lifeless body with contempt.
-
-"We are brothers for life and death," cried Trangoil-Lanec, embracing
-Valentine.
-
-"Well," the young man said with a smile, to his friend, "I think I
-have not got very badly through that affair--eh? You see, it is well,
-sometimes, to have practised many trades; even that of a mountebank may
-serve at need."
-
-"Do not calumniate your heart and courage," Louis replied, warmly
-pressing his hand; "you have; saved the life of a man."
-
-"Aye; but I have killed another."
-
-"Oh, he was a guilty wretch!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI.
-
-THE OBSEQUIES OF AN APO-ULMEN.
-
-
-The emotion caused by the death of the machi gradually died away, and
-order was re-established. Curumilla and Trangoil-Lanec, abjuring any
-feeling of enmity, exchanged a fraternal embrace, amidst the frantic
-applause of the warriors, who loved both the chiefs.
-
-"Now my father is avenged, we can restore his body to the earth,"
-Curumilla observed. Then, advancing towards the strangers, he bowed to
-them, saying--
-
-"Will the palefaces assist at the obsequies?"
-
-"We will," Louis replied.
-
-"My toldo is large," the chief continued; "my brothers will do me honour
-by consenting to inhabit it during their sojourn with the tribe."
-
-Louis was about to reply, but Trangoil-Lanec hastily prevented him.
-
-"My brothers the palefaces," he said, "have deigned to accept my poor
-hospitality."
-
-The young men bowed in silence.
-
-"Good!" the Ulmen continued. "Of what consequence is that? Whichever be
-the toldo the Muruches may choose, I shall consider them as my guests."
-
-"Many thanks, chief," Valentine replied; "be assured that we are
-grateful for your kindness."
-
-The Ulmen then took leave of the Frenchmen, and resumed his place by the
-side of his father's corpse, and the ceremonies commenced. The Araucanos
-are not, as some travellers have led us to believe, a people destitute
-of any faith; on the contrary, their faith is warm, and their religion
-rests upon bases which are not deficient in grandeur. They have no
-dogma, and yet they recognize two principles--that of good and that of
-evil.
-
-The first, named Pillian, is the Creating God; the second, named
-Guecubu, is the Destroying God. Guecubu is in a state of continual
-struggle with Pillian, endeavouring to disturb the harmony of the world,
-and destroy what exists; by which we see that the doctrine of Manicheism
-was embraced by the barbarians of both the old and the new world, who,
-being unable to penetrate the causes of good and evil, have imagined two
-contrary principles. In addition to these two principal deities, the
-Araucanos recognize a considerable number of secondary genii, who assist
-Pillian in his contest with Guecubu. These genii are males and females;
-the latter are all virgins, for--and it is a refined idea which we could
-not expect in a barbarous people--procreation is not necessary in the
-supernatural world. The male gods are named Geru, or lords; the females,
-Amey-Malghen, or spiritual nymphs.
-
-The Araucanos believe in the immortality of the soul, and, consequently,
-in a future life, in which the warriors who have distinguished
-themselves on earth hunt in game-abounding prairies, surrounded by
-everything they have loved. Like all American aborigines, the Araucanos
-are extremely superstitious. Their worship consists in assembling in
-the medicine toldo, where there is a shapeless idol, said to represent
-Pillian. They weep; they utter loud cries, with numberless contortions;
-and sacrifice to him a sheep, a cow, a horse, or a _chilihuegue_.
-
-At a signal from Curumilla, the warriors drew back to give place to the
-women, who surrounded the body, and began to walk in a circle, singing
-in a low and plaintive tone the noble feats of the deceased. At the
-expiration of about an hour, the cortege moved off after the corpse,
-which was borne by the four most renowned warriors of the tribe, and
-directed its course towards a hill where the place of sepulture was
-prepared. Behind followed the women, casting handfuls of hot ashes over
-the traces left by the passage of the funeral train; so that if the soul
-of the defunct should have any inclination to return to its body, it
-would not be able to find the way to his toldo, or come and trouble his
-heirs.
-
-When the body was laid in the grave, Curumilla cut the throats of his
-father's dogs and horses, which were placed near him, to enable him
-to hunt in the happy prairies. Within reach of his hand was placed a
-certain quantity of provisions for the nourishment of himself and the
-_tempulazzy_, or boatman, appointed to convey him to the other country,
-and into the presence of Pillian, where he is to be judged according
-to his good or evil actions. Earth was then thrown in upon the body.
-But, as the defunct had been a renowned warrior, a heap of stones was
-collected, of which a pyramid was formed; then everyone walked slowly
-once more round the tomb, pouring upon it a great quantity of chica. The
-relations and friends returned dancing and singing to the village, where
-awaited them one of those Homeric repasts of Araucanian funerals called
-cahuins, which last till all the partakers lie upon the ground utterly
-intoxicated.
-
-Beyond a little natural curiosity, our travellers did not take much
-interest in the ceremony or feast; they were fatigued, and preferred a
-short repose. Trangoil-Lanec guessed their thoughts; and, as soon as the
-procession returned, he left his companions, and offered to conduct the
-young men to his dwelling. They availed themselves of his kindness with
-alacrity. Like all Araucanian huts, this was a vast wooden building,
-covered with whitewashed mud, in the form of a rectangle, the roof being
-a terrace. This simple, airy residence displayed, in its interior, a
-perfect Dutch cleanliness.
-
-Trangoil-Lanec, as we have said, was one of the richest and most
-respected chiefs of his tribe, and had eight wives. Polygamy is allowed
-among the Moluches. When an Indian is desirous of marrying a woman, he
-declares his purpose to her parent, and fixes the number of animals he
-is willing to give. His conditions being accepted, he comes with a few
-friends, carries off the young woman, throws her on the saddle behind
-him, and gallops off to the woods, in the depths of which the couple
-remain three days. On the fourth they return; he slaughters a young
-mare in front of the hut of the father of his bride, and the marriage
-festivities begin. The abduction of the bride, and the sacrifice of
-the mare, take the place of a civil contract. After this fashion an
-Araucano is at liberty to marry as many wives as he can support. And
-yet, the first wife, who bears the title of unem domo, or legitimate
-wife, is most honoured; she has the direction of the household, and
-is the superior of the others, who are called inam domo, or secondary
-wives. All inhabit the same toldo, but in different apartments, where
-they employ themselves in bringing up their children, in weaving
-ponchos with the wool of guanacos and chilihuegues, and in preparing
-the dish which an Indian woman is bound to place every day on the table
-of her husband. Marriage is held sacred, and adultery is considered
-the greatest of crimes; the man and woman who should commit it would
-inevitably be assassinated by the husband and his relations, unless they
-redeemed their lives by means of a compensation imposed by the injured
-husband. When an Araucano leaves his home, he confides his wives to
-his relations, and, on his return, if he can prove that they have been
-unfaithful to him, he has the right of demanding of the guardians all he
-thinks proper to ask; so that the relations are interested in watching
-them. This strictness of morals only regards married women; others
-enjoy the greatest liberty, and take advantage of it without any person
-presuming to find fault with them.
-
-The two Frenchmen, thrown so suddenly into the midst of these strange
-manners and customs, were some time before they could comprehend Indian
-life. Valentine, in particular, was completely at a loss; he was in
-a state of perpetual astonishment, which, however, he took good care
-should not appear in his words or in his actions; for the adventure of
-the machi had raised him so high in the estimation of the inhabitants
-of the toldero, that he dreaded, with reason, lest the smallest
-indiscretion should cast him down from the pedestal upon which he
-maintained his erect position.
-
-One evening, when Louis was preparing, as he frequently did, to visit
-the various toldos, in order to inquire after the sick, and administer
-to them all the relief his limited knowledge of medicine permitted,
-Curumilla came to the two strangers to invite them to be present at the
-cahuin given by the new machi, who had been elected that day, in place
-of the dead one. Valentine promised that they would come. From what
-we have said before, it may easily be comprehended what an enormous
-influence a sorcerer possesses over the members of the tribe; the choice
-is therefore difficult to make, and is seldom a good one. The sorcerer
-is generally a woman: when it is a man, he assumes the female costume,
-which he wears for the rest of his life. In almost all cases the science
-is inherited.
-
-After smoking a considerable number of pipes, and making endless
-speeches, the Araucanos had chosen, as a successor to the machi, an old
-man, of a mild, kindly character, who, during the course of his long
-existence, had only made friends. The repast was, as may be supposed,
-copious, abundantly furnished with ulpo, the national dish of the
-Araucans, and moistened with an incalculable number of couis of chica.
-Among the other delicacies which figured at the feast was a large basket
-filled with hard eggs, which the Ulmens swallowed in emulation of each
-other.
-
-"Why don't you eat some eggs?" said Curumilla to Valentine. "Do you not
-like them?"
-
-"On the contrary, chief, I am very fond of eggs, but not cooked in that
-fashion; I have no inclination to choke myself, thank you."
-
-"Oh! yes," the Ulmen said; "I understand; you prefer them raw."
-
-Valentine burst into a Homeric fit of laughter.
-
-"Not better than these," he said, when he had recovered his gravity;
-"I like eggs boiled in the shell; I like omelettes, or pancakes, but
-neither hard nor raw, if you please."
-
-"What do you mean by that? Cooked eggs must be hard."
-
-The young man looked at him with astonishment, and then said to him in a
-tone of profound compassion--
-
-"Now, really, chief, do you mean to say you are only acquainted with
-hard eggs?"
-
-"Our fathers have always eaten them thus," the Ulmen replied, quietly.
-
-"Poor people! how I pity them! They have been ignorant of one of the
-greatest enjoyments of life. Well, my friend," he exclaimed, raising his
-voice with jocular enthusiasm, "I am determined you shall adore me as
-a benefactor to humanity! In short, I will endow you with soft-boiled
-eggs, and with omelettes; at least, the remembrance of me shall not die
-from among you. When I am gone, and you eat one of those two dishes, you
-will think of me."
-
-In spite of his sadness, Louis could not help laughing at the burlesque
-humour and inexhaustible cheerfulness of his foster brother, in whom,
-at every minute, the gamin prevailed over the serious man. The chiefs
-welcomed with joy the offer of the spahi, and asked, with loud cries, on
-what day he would carry his promise into execution.
-
-"Oh, I will not make you wait long," he said; "tomorrow, on the square
-of the tolderia, and before all the assembled tribe of the Great Hare,
-I will show you how you must set about boiling an egg, and making an
-omelette."
-
-At this promise, the satisfaction of the chiefs mounted to the highest
-pitch, the couis of the chica circulated with increased vivacity, and
-the Ulmens soon found themselves sufficiently intoxicated to begin to
-sing as loud as they could shout, and all together,--a sort of music
-that produced such an effect upon the two Frenchmen, that they made
-their escape, stopping their ears. The feast was kept up long after
-their departure.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII.
-
-EXPLANATIONS.
-
-
-We will now return to the chacra of Don Gregorio Peralta, to which
-Dona Rosario had been conducted after her miraculous deliverance.
-The first days that followed the departure of the two Frenchmen were
-sufficiently devoid of incident: Dona Rosario, shut up in her bedroom,
-remained almost continually alone. The poor girl, like all wounded
-spirits, sought to forget reality, by taking refuge in dreams, in order
-to collect and preserve piously in the depths of her heart the few
-happy remembrances which had so rarely gilded with a ray of sunshine
-the sadness of her existence. Don Tadeo, completely absorbed in his
-imperative political combinations, could only see her now and then, and
-but for a few minutes at a time. Before him, she endeavoured to appear
-cheerful, but she suffered the more from being obliged to conceal in her
-own bosom the sorrow which consumed her. She occasionally crept down
-into the garden; she stopped under the arbour in which her meeting with
-Louis had taken place, and remained hours together thinking of him she
-loved, and whom she had driven from her for ever.
-
-This poor child, so beautiful, so mild, so pure, so worthy of being
-loved, was condemned by an implacable destiny continually to lead a
-life of suffering and isolation; without a relation, without a friend
-to whom she might impart the secret of her grief. She was little more
-than sixteen, and already her bruised heart shrank back upon itself; her
-colour faded, her step became languid, her large blue eyes, swimming in
-tears, were incessantly raised towards heaven, as the only refuge that
-remained for her; she appeared to hold to the earth only by a slight
-thread, which the least fresh shock of adversity would snap.
-
-The maiden's story was a strange one. She had never known her parents;
-she had no remembrance of the kisses of her mother--those warm caresses
-of childhood, which make even mature age tremble with joy. From her
-earliest days, she could only remember being alone, always alone, in the
-hands of the mercenary and indifferent. The innocent joys of childhood
-remained unknown to her; she had known nothing of them but their
-weariness and sadness, and had ever been deprived of those friendships
-of early youth which, by insensibly preparing the mind for affectionate
-expansion, give birth to smiles in the midst of tears, and console with
-a kiss.
-
-Don Tadeo was the only person who was attached to her; he had never
-abandoned her, but watched with the greatest care over her material
-well-being, smiled upon her, and ever gave her good and pleasant
-counsels: but Don Tadeo was much too serious a man to comprehend the
-thousand little cares which the education of a young girl requires. She
-could only entertain for him that profound, yet respectful friendship
-which forbids those ingenuous confidences which can only be made to a
-mother, or to a companion of the same age. The visits of Don Tadeo were
-surrounded by an incomprehensible mystery; sometimes, without apparent
-cause, he made her suddenly quit people to whom he had confided her,
-and took her away with him, after ordering her to change her name,
-upon long tours. It was thus she had been to France: then, he quite as
-unexpectedly brought her back to Chili, sometimes to one city, sometimes
-to another, without ever condescending to explain to her the reasons for
-her leading such a wandering life.
-
-Constrained by her isolation to depend only upon herself, forced to
-reflect as soon as the first rays of reason enlightened her brain, the
-maiden, though so delicate and fragile in appearance, was endowed with
-an energy and firmness of character of which she was ignorant, but
-which supported her unconsciously; and if the hour of danger arrived,
-would be of infinite use to her. She had often, urged by the instinct
-of curiosity so natural to her age in the exceptional position in which
-she was placed, sought by adroit questions to seize the thread that
-might guide her in this labyrinth; but all had proved useless--Don Tadeo
-remained mute. One day only, after having for a long time contemplated
-her with an expression of sadness, he had pressed her to his heart, and
-said in a trembling voice,--
-
-"Poor child! I will protect you against your enemies!"
-
-Who could those formidable enemies be? Why were they so inveterate
-against a girl of sixteen, who knew nothing of the world, and had
-never injured a human being? These questions, which Dona Rosario was
-continually asking herself, always remained unanswered. She only caught
-a glimpse in her life, of one of those terrible mysteries which bring
-death to the imprudent who persist in endeavouring to discover them;
-her days, therefore, were passed in continual fears, engendered by her
-imagination.
-
-One evening, when, sad and thoughtful as usual, and buried in the depths
-of an easy chair, in her bedchamber, she was turning over the leaves of
-a book which she was not reading, Don Tadeo entered the room. He saluted
-her, as he always did, by a kiss on her brow, took a seat, placed
-himself in front of her, and after looking at her for a moment with a
-melancholy smile, said quietly,--
-
-"I wish to speak with you, Rosario."
-
-"I am all attention, dear friend," she replied, endeavouring to smile.
-
-But before we report this conversation, we must present our readers
-with a few necessary explanations. Like all the other countries of
-South America, Chili, for a long time depressed beneath the Spanish
-yoke, had conquered its independence, more through the weakness of its
-ancient master than by its own proper strength. The system followed by
-the Spanish authorities from the beginning had checked in the people
-of these countries the development of the philosophical ideas which
-give man a consciousness of his own value, render him one day apt to
-achieve liberty, and ripe to enjoy it within just limits. We have said,
-in a preceding work, that the Americans of the South have none of the
-virtues of their ancestors, but, to make up for it, they possess all
-their vices. Destitute of that early education without which it is
-impossible to do or even to conceive great things, the Chilian nation,
-free by an unexpected chance, found itself immediately the sport of
-a few intriguing men, who concealed beneath high-sounding words of
-patriotism a boundless ambition. The newly-freed country struggled in
-vain; the innate carelessness of its inhabitants, and the levity of
-their character, formed an invincible object to any amelioration.
-
-At the epoch at which we have arrived, Chili was labouring under the
-oppression of General Bustamente. This man, not contented with being
-minister of a republic, dreamt of nothing less than causing himself
-to be proclaimed the chief of it, under the title of protector. The
-realization of this idea was not impossible. From its geographical
-position, Chili is almost independent of those troublesome neighbours
-who, in the states of the old world, keep watch over all the acts of
-a nation, and are, ready to put in their _veto_ as soon as their own
-interest appears to be threatened. On one side separated from Upper
-Peru by the vast and almost impassable desert of Atacama, Bolivia alone
-might hazard some timid observations; but the General cherished secret
-hopes of including that republic itself in the new confederation; on
-the other side, immense solitudes and the Cordilleras separated it from
-Buenos Aires, which had neither the will nor the power to oppose his
-projects. One people alone could make a war with him, which he should
-dread, and they were the Araucanos; that little nation, driven like
-an iron wedge into Chili, disturbed the General's plans seriously. He
-resolved to treat with the Araucano Toqui, while determined, at the same
-time, when his projects should have succeeded, to unite all his forces
-to conquer that country which had so long resisted the Spanish power. In
-a word, General Bustamente dreamt of creating at the southern extremity
-of America, with Chili, Araucania, and Bolivia confederated, a rival
-nationality to the United States. Unfortunately for the General, there
-was not in him the stuff to make a great man; he was simply a _parvenu_,
-an ignorant and cruel soldier.
-
-When America raised the standard of revolt against the mother country,
-numerous secret societies were formed at all points of the territory,
-the most redoubtable, beyond contradiction, being that of the
-Dark-Hearts. The men who placed themselves at the head of this society
-were all intelligent and well informed, mostly educated in Europe, who,
-having seen in the field of action the great principles of the French
-revolution, wished, by applying them in their own country, to regenerate
-the nation. After the proclamation of Chilian independence, the secret
-societies, having no longer an object, disappeared. One alone persisted
-in remaining permanent--that of the Dark-Hearts. This society was not
-willing that license should assume the mantle of liberty: it felt that
-it had a great and holy mission to fulfil, and that its task, so far
-from being terminated, was scarcely commenced. It was necessary to
-instruct the people, to render them worthy of taking their place among
-nations, and, above all, to deliver them from the tyrants who wished
-to enslave them. This mission the society of the Dark-Hearts laboured
-incessantly to carry out, struggling constantly against oppressive
-powers, which succeeded each other, and destroying them without mercy.
-Proteus-like and intangible, the members of this society escaped the
-most active researches: if by chance some few of them fell in the arena,
-they died with head erect, confident in the future, and leaving to their
-brethren the care of continuing their task.
-
-The recovery of General Bustamente caused the Dark-Hearts a momentary
-stupor; but Don Tadeo, who had caused the news of the miraculous manner
-in which he had survived his execution to be spread universally,
-revived their spirits by placing himself again at their head. Not that
-either courage or hope had failed them. However great the skill of the
-machinations employed by the General to insure the success of his plans,
-the Loyal-Hearts, who had confederates everywhere, foresaw and defeated
-them. They watched all his movements with the greatest care, for they
-were quite aware that the moment was drawing near when their enemy would
-throw off the mask. They had heard of the departure of the convalescent
-General for Valdivia. For what reason, as his health was still so
-uncertain, and repose so necessary, had he gone to that remote province?
-That must be learnt at any price, and they must prepare against any
-eventuality.
-
-In a meeting of the society, future measures were agreed upon; it was
-moreover resolved that the King of Darkness should at the same time
-repair to Valdivia, in order, if advisable, to take the initiative in
-resistance. But Don Tadeo could not think of leaving Dona Rosario behind
-him, exposed to the unprincipled attacks of the Linda. He alone could
-defend the young girl; was he not her only support? As soon, then, as
-the Dark-Hearts had dispersed, Don Tadeo returned to the chacra, and
-went straight to Dona Rosario's chamber.
-
-"My dear child," he said, "I have sad news to inform you of."
-
-"Speak, my kind friend," she replied.
-
-"Urgent affairs require my presence as soon as possible in Valdivia."
-
-"Oh!" she cried, with an expression of terror, "you will not leave me
-here, will you?"
-
-"At first I intended to do so, this retreat appearing to me to unite all
-the guarantees for security; but cheer up, my child! I have changed my
-mind; I have fancied you would prefer accompanying me?"
-
-"Oh, yes," she said, eagerly; "you are always kind. When do we set out?"
-
-"Tomorrow, dear child, at sunrise."
-
-"I shall be ready," she replied, holding up her pretty face towards him,
-that he might impress his customary kiss upon her brow.
-
-Don Tadeo retired, and Rosario immediately set about the preparations
-for her journey. Of what consequence was it to her whether she were in
-one place or another, since she was doomed to suffer everywhere? And who
-can say whether the poor girl, without daring to avow it to herself, did
-not entertain the hope of again seeing him she loved? Love is a divine
-sunbeam that illumines the darkest nights.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII.
-
-THE CHINGANA.
-
-
-Valdivia, founded in 1551 by the Spanish conqueror Don Pedro de
-Valdivia, is a charming city, two leagues from the sea, upon the left
-bank of a river, which large vessels can easily ascend into the fertile
-valley of Guadallanguen. The aspect of the city, the advanced post of
-civilization in these remote countries, is most agreeable; the streets
-are large, uniformly built; the white houses, only one story high,
-on account of the frequency of earthquakes, are terrace-roofed. Here
-and there rise in the air the steeples of the numerous churches and
-convents, which occupy more than a third of the city. It is astonishing
-to what an extent convents are multiplied in South America. It might
-be supposed that the New World was the land of promise for monks; they
-appear to rise out of the earth at every step. Thanks to the extensive
-commerce which Valdivia carries on by means of its port, which is
-visited by the numerous whalers fishing in those seas, and ships which
-come there to refit, after doubling Cape Horn, or before passing
-it,--its streets have more animation than is generally to be met with in
-American cities.
-
-Don Tadeo arrived in Valdivia, accompanied by Don Gregorio and Dona
-Rosario, on the evening of the sixteenth day after his departure from
-his friend's chacra. They had used all diligence, and for that country,
-where there are no other means of travelling but on horseback, it might
-be considered a quick journey. If the two gentlemen had thought proper
-to do so, they might have entered the city about three o'clock in the
-afternoon, but they deemed it advisable that no one in a place where
-so many people knew them should be made aware of their arrival: in the
-first place, because the causes which brought them there required the
-greatest secrecy; and, further, because Don Tadeo was forced to conceal
-himself, in order to avoid the police agents of the president of the
-republic, who had orders to arrest him wherever they might meet with
-him. Fortunately, in these countries the police never arrest anybody
-when not absolutely compelled, unless those whom they pursue come and
-deliver themselves up into their hands--an event, we may safely say,
-that rarely happens.
-
-As during his sojourn at Valdivia, his manner of living must be
-regulated by the affairs which brought him there, he could not openly
-keep house or appear in public, Don Tadeo went straight to the convent
-of the Ursulines, and committed the young lady he had brought with him
-to the care of the abbess, who was not only his relation, but was a
-worthy person, in whom he had perfect confidence. Dona Rosario accepted
-without hesitation the asylum which was offered to her, and where she
-fancied she should be safe from the attacks of her invisible enemies.
-Don Tadeo took an affectionate leave of her and the venerable abbess,
-and hastened to a house of the calle San-Xavier, where Don Gregorio, who
-had left him on entering the city, to avoid observation, awaited his
-coming.
-
-"Well?" asked Don Gregorio, as soon as he saw him.
-
-"She is in safety; at least I suppose so," Don Tadeo replied, with a
-sigh.
-
-"So much the better, for we must redouble our precautions."
-
-"Why so?"
-
-"After leaving you I made inquiries; I observed, I questioned people as
-I walked about and loitered at the port and the Almeda."
-
-"Well, what have you learnt?"
-
-"As we imagined, General Bustamente is here."
-
-"Already?"
-
-"He arrived three days ago."
-
-"What reason could be so important as to bring him here?" said Don
-Tadeo, with an uneasy expression. "Oh, I will know!"
-
-"Another thing: who do you think accompanies him?"
-
-"The executioner, no doubt!" said Don Tadeo, with an ironical smile.
-
-"Almost as bad," Don Gregorio replied.
-
-"Whom do you mean, then?"
-
-"The Linda!"
-
-The chief of the Dark-Hearts turned deadly pale.
-
-"Oh," he said, "that woman! for ever that woman! you must be mistaken,
-my friend; it is impossible!"
-
-"I have seen her."
-
-Don Tadeo walked about in great agitation for several minutes; then,
-stopping short in front of his friend, said, in a husky voice--
-
-"Dear Don Gregorio, are you certain you have not been misled by a
-resemblance? Are you quite sure it was she?"
-
-"You had just left me, and I was coming hither, when the sound of horses
-made me turn my head, and I saw, I repeat I saw, the Linda; she also
-appeared to have just arrived at Valdivia; two lancers escorted her, and
-an arriero led the baggage mules.
-
-"Oh!" said Don Tadeo, "will the infernal malice of that demon ever
-pursue me?"
-
-"My friend," Don Gregorio remarked, "in the path we have undertaken to
-tread, every obstacle must, unhesitatingly, be destroyed."
-
-"What, kill a woman?" the gentleman said, with horror.
-
-"I do not say that, but place her in such a position that she cannot
-possibly injure anyone. Remember, we are Dark-Hearts, and, as such, we
-ought to be without pity."
-
-"Silence!" Don Tadeo murmured, as two low, quick taps were struck on the
-door.
-
-"Come in!" cried Don Gregorio.
-
-The door opened, and Don Pedro showed his polecat face. He did not
-recognize the two men whom, in the various meetings he had had with
-them, he had always seen masked.
-
-"God preserve you, gentlemen!" he said, with a profound bow.
-
-"What is your pleasure, sir?" Don Gregorio asked, in a coldly-polite
-tone, while returning his salutation.
-
-"Sir," said Don Pedro, looking about for a seat which was not offered
-him, "I have just arrived from Santiago."
-
-Don Gregorio bowed again.
-
-"On my departure from that city, a banker in whose hands I had placed
-funds, gave me several bills; among others this, addressed to Don
-Gregorio Peratla, payable at sight."
-
-"That is my name, sir; be so kind as to hand it to me."
-
-"As you see, sir, the bill is for twenty-three ounces."
-
-"Very well, sir," replied Don Gregorio, as he took it, "allow me to
-examine it."
-
-Don Pedro bowed in his turn, whilst Don Gregorio, approaching a
-flambeau, looked attentively at the bill of exchange, put it into his
-pocket, and took some money from his purse.
-
-"Here are the twenty-three ounces, sir," he said, giving them.
-
-The spy took them, counted the gold pieces, examining them attentively,
-and then put them into his pocket.
-
-"It is very singular, sir," he said, just as the two gentlemen thought
-they were about to be relieved of his presence.
-
-"What is it, sir?" asked Don Gregorio; "do you not find the amount
-right?"
-
-"Oh, pardon me, perfectly right; but," he added, with a slight
-hesitation, "I thought you had been a merchant?"
-
-"And what leads you to think otherwise?"
-
-"Because I see no desks."
-
-"They are in another part of the house," Don Gregorio replied; "I am a
-private trader."
-
-"Oh, very well, sir."
-
-"And, if I had not thought you had pressing need of the money--"
-
-"Very pressing!" the other interrupted.
-
-"I should have begged you to call again tomorrow, for, at this late
-hour, my cashbox is closed."
-
-And thereupon he waved his hand, rather haughtily, as dismissing him.
-Don Pedro retired, visibly disappointed.
-
-"That is a double-faced fellow, I am sure," said Don Gregorio; "I should
-not wonder if he were a spy of the General."
-
-"Oh, I know him!" Don Tadeo replied; "I have about me proofs of his
-treachery. He has been a necessary instrument; at present he may injure
-us. He must be crushed."
-
-Don Gregorio drew from his pocket the bill which had been presented to
-him, and holding it to Don Tadeo--
-
-"Look at this," he said.
-
-This bill, payable at sight, appeared perfectly like others. It was
-drawn in the usual form: _At sight, please pay_, &c. &c.; but, in two
-or three places, the pen, too hard, no doubt, had spluttered and formed
-a certain number of little black spots, of which some were almost
-imperceptible. It appeared that these black spots had a meaning for the
-two men; for as soon as Don Tadeo had cast his eyes over the bill, he
-seized his cloak, and folded himself in it.
-
-"It is Heaven that protects us!" he said; "we must go thither without
-delay."
-
-"That is my opinion, likewise," Don Gregorio replied, holding the bill
-to the light, and burning it till there was not a particle of it left.
-The two men took each a long dagger and a brace of pistols, which they
-concealed under their clothes--the conspirators were too well acquainted
-with their country to neglect these precautions--they pulled the flaps
-of their hats over their faces, and wrapping themselves up to the very
-eyes, like two lovers or seekers of adventures, they descended into the
-street.
-
-It was one of those splendid nights unknown in our foggy climates; the
-sky, of a dark blue, was thickly studded with an infinite number of
-stars, among which conspicuously shone the brilliant Southern Cross;
-the air was embalmed with a thousand odours, and a light sea breeze
-refreshed the atmosphere, which had been heated by the torrid sunbeams
-during the past day. The two men passed silently and rapidly through
-the joyous groups which traversed the streets in all directions. It is
-in the evening that the Americans leave their homes to take the air and
-enjoy the freshness.
-
-The conspirators appeared to hear neither the enticing sounds of the
-vihuela which vibrated in their ears, nor the refrains of sambacuejas
-which flew in gusts from the chinganas, nor the bursts of fresh, silvery
-laughter of the black-eyed, rosy-lipped girls, who elbowed them on
-their way. They walked thus for a long time, turning round at intervals
-to ascertain if they were followed, plunging by degrees into the
-lowest quarters of the city, and at length stopped at a house of mean
-appearance, from which issued the loud but not very melodious strains of
-music eminently national.
-
-This house was a chingana, a name which has no equivalent in French
-or English. A Chilian chingana presents so eccentrically droll an
-appearance, that it would defy the pencil of Callot, and is beyond all
-description. Let the reader figure to himself a low room, with smoky
-walls, the floor of which is but beaten earth, and rendered filthy by
-the detritus left by the feet of incessantly arriving and departing
-visitors. In the centre of this den, lighted only by a smoky lamp called
-a _candil_, by which it is impossible to distinguish more than the
-shadows of the customers, are seated four men upon stools. Two of them
-are twanging wretched guitars, which have lost most of their strings,
-with the backs of their hands; the third plays the tambourine with his
-thumbs upon a crippled table, striking it with all his might; whilst
-the fourth rolls between his hands a piece of bamboo six feet long,
-split into several strips, which yield the most discordant sound that
-can possibly be imagined. The four musicians, not content with the
-formidable clatter made by their instruments, shout, at the very top of
-their voices, songs which we can neither venture to repeat nor translate.
-
-All this infernal noise is made to excite the dancers, who flutter
-about, assuming the most lascivious postures they can invent, amidst the
-hearty applause of the spectators, who writhe with delight, stamp their
-feet with pleasure, and sometimes, carried away by the harmony, thunder
-out all together, the burthen of the song, with the musicians and
-dancers. Amidst this disturbance, these cries and stampings, wind in and
-out the master of the establishment and his waiters, armed with couis of
-chicha, bottles of aguardiente, and even guarapo, to slake the thirst
-of the customers, who, to do them justice, the more they drink the more
-thirsty they become, and the more they wish to drink.
-
-Twice or thrice in the course of an evening, it may happen that some
-of the guests, more heated than the rest, or seized by the demon of
-jealousy, take it into their heads to quarrel. Then knives are drawn
-from the polena, ponchos are rolled round the left arm to serve as
-bucklers, the music ceases, and a circle is formed round the combatants.
-The sanguinary contest begins, and when one of the combatants has
-fallen, he is carried into the street, the music is resumed, the dance
-recommences, and no more is thought of the poor wounded or dying man.
-
-It was in front of one of these establishments that the chief of the
-Dark-Hearts and his friend had stopped; they did not hesitate. Pulling
-up the folds of their cloaks so as to completely conceal their faces,
-they entered the chingana: in spite of the pestilential atmosphere which
-nearly choked them, they passed unnoticed through the drinkers, and
-gained the further end of the room. The cellar door stood ajar; they
-opened it softly, and disappeared down the steps. After descending ten
-of these, they found themselves in a cellar, where a man, leaning over a
-barrel, which he appeared to be occupied in putting in its place, said
-to them, without interrupting his work--
-
-"Would you like some aguardiente de pesco, some mescal, or some chica?"
-
-"Neither the one nor the other," Don Tadeo replied; "we wish for some
-French wine."
-
-The man sprang up as if moved by a spring. The two adventurers had put
-on their masks.
-
-"Do you wish to have it white or red?" the man asked.
-
-"Red--as red as blood," said Don Tadeo.
-
-"Of what year?" the unknown rejoined.
-
-"Of that vintaged on the 5th of April, 1817," said Don Tadeo.
-
-"Then you must come this way, gentlemen," the man replied, with a
-respectful bow; "the wine you do me the honour to call for is extremely
-valuable; it is kept in a separate cellar."
-
-"To be drunk at Martinmas," Don Tadeo remarked.
-
-The man, who seemed only to wait for this last reply to his question,
-smiled with an air of intelligence, and laid his hand lightly on the
-wall. A stone turned slowly round upon itself, without the least noise,
-and opened a passage to the conspirators, which they immediately
-entered, and the stone instantly returned to its place.
-
-In the chingana, the cries, the songs, and the music had acquired an
-intensity really formidable; the joy of the tipplers was at its height.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV.
-
-THE TWO ULMENS.
-
-
-If we were writing a romance instead of a true history, there are
-certain scenes of the recital which we would pass over in silence. The
-one which follows would certainly be of this number; and yet, though of
-a rather hazardous puerility, it carries with it its lesson, by showing
-what is the influence of the early habits of a miserable life, even upon
-natures the best endowed, and how difficult it is, at a later period, to
-shake them off. We will add, to the praise of Valentine, the man of whom
-we are speaking, that his gaminism, if we may be allowed to employ such
-a term, was much more feigned than real, and that his aim, in allowing
-himself to be sometimes led away by it, was to bring a smile to the lips
-of his foster brother, and thus cheat the sorrow that was undermining
-his peace.
-
-This necessary preamble being gone through, we will resume the course
-of our narrative, and, abandoning for a time Don Tadeo and his friend,
-we will request the reader to follow us back to the tribe of the Great
-Hare. The looked-for morrow was a great day for the tribe, a day
-expected with impatience by all housekeepers, who were about to learn
-how to discover, to use Valentine's word, a new dish, which promised
-to please the palates of their race. As soon as it was daylight, men,
-women, and children assembled on the great Square of the village, and
-formed numerous groups, in which the merit of the unknown dish about
-to be revealed to them was discussed. Louis, for whom the experiment
-his friend was going to make had very little interest, wished to remain
-in the toldo; but Valentine insisted upon his being present at the
-experiment, and much against his will, he consented.
-
-The Parisian was already at his post, standing in an open spot, in
-the middle of the Square, watching with a laughing eye the anxious
-or incredulous expression by turn displayed upon the faces directed
-towards him. A table, which was to serve for his culinary preparations,
-a lighted brasier, upon which boiled an iron pot filled with water, a
-kitchen knife, an enormous frying-pan, found I know not where, a sort
-of tub, a wooden spoon, some parsley, a bit of bacon, some salt, some
-pepper, and a basket full of fresh eggs, had been prepared at his desire
-by the cares of Trangoil-Lanec.
-
-All eagerly looked for the arrival of the Apo-Ulmen of the tribe, with
-which the exhibition was to commence. A kind of dais had been erected
-for him in front of the operator, and when he had taken his lighted
-calumet from the hands of his pipe-bearer, he bent a little on one
-side and whispered a few words in the ear of Curumilla, who stood
-respectfully beside him. The Ulmen bowed, came down from the dais, went
-straight to the Parisian to tell him he might begin, and then resumed
-his post.
-
-Valentine returned the salutation of this master of the ceremonies,
-took off his poncho, which he folded up and laid carefully at his feet,
-and turning up his sleeves above his elbows with the studied grace of
-a performer, he leant slightly forward, placed his right hand upon the
-table, and assuming the tone of a vendor of quack medicines who boasts
-of the efficacy of his nostrums to gaping clowns, he thus commenced his
-demonstration in a loud voice and with a perfectly clear utterance:--
-
-"Illustrious Ulmens, and you redoubtable warriors of the noble and
-sacred tribe of the Great Hare, listen attentively to what I have the
-honour of explaining to you. In the beginning of time the world did
-not exist; water and clouds, which continually clashed against each
-other in space, then formed the universe. When Pillian created the
-world, as soon as at his voice man had issued from the bosom of the red
-mountain, he took him by the hand, and pointing to all the productions
-of the earth, the air, and the water, he said to him,--'Thou art the
-king of creation: consequently, animals, plants, and fishes all belong
-to thee, and are, each in proportion with its strength, instincts, or
-conformation, to minister to thy welfare and thy happiness in the world
-in which I have placed thee; thus the horse shall bear thee with fiery
-speed across the deserts, fleecy lamas and sheep clothe thee with their
-wool, and nourish thee with their succulent flesh.' When Pillian had
-analyzed, one after the other, the diverse qualities of the animals,
-before proceeding to the plants and fishes, he stopped at the hen, which
-was moving carelessly about, and picking up the grains of corn scattered
-on the ground. Pillian took her by the wings, and showing her to man,
-said, 'Here is one of the most useful animals I have created for thy
-service; boiled in a pot, the hen will afford thee an excellent broth
-when thou art sick; roasted, its white flesh will acquire a delicious
-flavour; of her eggs thou canst make omelettes with herbs, omelettes
-with mushrooms, omelettes with ham, and, above all others, with bacon.
-If thou art indisposed, and solid food should be too heavy for thy weak
-stomach, thou canst boil her eggs in the shell, and then thou wilt say
-something, indeed!'
-
-"Thus," continued Valentine, attitudinizing before the Indians, who,
-with open mouths and staring eyes, lost not a single word he uttered,
-whether they understood it or not, whilst, in spite of his secret
-grief, Louis literally writhed with laughter; "thus it was that Pillian
-spoke to the first man at the commencement of ages; you were not there,
-Araucano warriors, it is therefore not astonishing that you know nothing
-about it; neither was I there, it is true; but, thanks to the talent
-we white men possess of transmitting our thoughts from age to age, by
-means of writing, these words of the Great Spirit have been carefully
-collected, and have come down to us in their purity. Without further
-prelude, I am going to have the honour of producing before you a boiled
-egg! Listen to me; it is as simple as saying good-day, and within the
-reach of the most limited capacity. In order to enjoy a boiled egg,
-two things are necessary--in the first place, an egg, and then, some
-boiling water! You take the egg in your fingers, thus, you uncover your
-saucepan, you place the egg in a spoon and deposit it carefully in the
-saucepan, where you allow it to boil gently three minutes. Mind, three
-minutes, neither more nor less: pay attention to that important detail,
-for a longer time would compromise the success of your operation. There
-it is!"
-
-The action suited the word; the three minutes were past: Valentine
-took out the egg, beheaded it, sprinkled a little salt on it, and
-presented it to the Ulmen with some long strips of maize bread. All
-this was performed with the most imperturbable seriousness, amidst the
-profound silence of the attentive crowd. The Apo-Ulmen proceeded to
-taste this wonderful egg with the most deliberate gravity. An air of
-doubt appeared for a second on his lips, as he raised the first mouthful
-towards them; but, by degrees, the features of his broad face expanded
-under the influence of joy and pleasure, and he at last exclaimed
-enthusiastically,--
-
-"Wah! It is good! Very good!"
-
-Valentine returned to his brasier with a modest smile, and set about
-boiling eggs, which he distributed among the Ulmens and principal
-warriors, who quickly mingled their felicitations with those of the
-Apo-Ulmen. A delirious joy took possession of the poor Indians, and
-Valentine could hardly keep his ground, so eagerly did they press round
-him, to examine closely his mysterious mode of cooking the eggs. At
-length, calm was re-established, and the curiosity of the majority was
-satisfied. The Apo-Ulmen, who had not been able to make his voice heard
-in the tumult, was able to restore a little order, and obtain silence.
-Valentine looked at his public with an air of satisfaction. From that
-moment the Indians were believers--the most incredulous were convinced,
-and all awaited with impatience the continuation of his experiments.
-
-"Listen to me!" he continued, striking a sharp blow on the table with
-the knife he held in his hand; "listen to me, but, above all, observe
-closely how I proceed. A boiled egg was child's play to me, but the
-omelette requires to be considered seriously, and executed with care, in
-order to obtain that finish, that smoothness, flavour, and perfection
-so much prized by real judges. I am about to make a bacon-omelette, and
-when I name that, I name the most exquisite dish in the world! Whilst
-explaining to you the manner in which you should set about it, I will
-produce it: follow my reasonings closely, and observe attentively the
-manner in which I mingle the various ingredients which enter into the
-composition of this dish. To make a bacon omelette, I must have bacon,
-eggs, salt, pepper, parsley, and some butter--there they are, as you
-see, all on that table. Now I will mix them."
-
-Then, with incredible address, and the greatest quickness, he commenced
-a monster bacon-omelette, of at least sixty eggs, while continuing his
-explanation with inexpressible freedom and copiousness. The interest of
-the Indians was warmly excited, their enthusiasm betraying itself by
-shouts, leaps, and laughter; but it was carried to its height, and the
-stamping, crying, and screaming became terrific, when the Puelches saw
-Valentine seize the long handle of the frying-pan with a firm grasp,
-and toss the omelette three different times into the air, without any
-apparent effort, and with the style and ease of a finished cook. When
-the omelette was done to the moment, the Frenchman placed it upon a
-dish, taking care to double it with the talent which _cordons bleus_
-alone possess, and was then preparing to carry it smoking to the
-Apo-Ulmen, but he, enticed by the flavour of the boiled egg, and with
-appetite excited to the highest pitch, spared him that trouble; for
-he forgot all decorum, and rushed towards the table, followed by the
-principal Ulmens of the tribe. The success of the Parisian was enormous.
-Never, in the history of the divine art, did a cook obtain such a
-glorious triumph! Valentine, with the modesty peculiar to men of real
-talent, stole away from the honours they wished to pay him, and hastened
-to conceal himself with his friend in the toldo of Trangoil-Lanec.
-
-On the morrow of this eventful day, at the moment when the young men
-were about to leave the quarters they inhabited in common, their host
-presented himself, followed by Curumilla. The two chiefs saluted them,
-sat down upon the beaten earth which served instead of flooring, and lit
-their pipes. Louis, already accustomed to the ceremonious habits of the
-Araucanos, and convinced that their friends had something of importance
-to say, reseated himself, as did also his foster brother, and awaited
-patiently the expected communication. When the chiefs had deliberately
-smoked out their pipes, and shaken the last ashes upon their nails,
-they replaced them in their belts, and, after exchanging a glance,
-Trangoil-Lanec began:--
-
-"Are my pale brothers still resolved to leave us?"
-
-"Yes," replied Louis.
-
-"Has Indian hospitality been wanting towards them?"
-
-"So far from that, chief," the young man said, warmly pressing his
-hands, "you have treated us like children of your own tribe."
-
-"Then why leave us?" Trangoil-Lanec asked; "we know not what we lose, do
-we ever know what we shall find?"
-
-"You are right, chief; but you know we came into this country for the
-purpose of visiting Antinahuel," Louis observed.
-
-"And does my golden-haired brother," for so he called Valentine,
-"absolutely wish to see him?"
-
-"Absolutely," replied the young man.
-
-The two chiefs exchanged a second glance.
-
-"He shall see him," replied Trangoil-Lanec; "Antinahuel is at his
-village."
-
-"Good!" said Valentine. "In that case we will set out tomorrow."
-
-"My brothers shall not go alone."
-
-"What do you mean by that?" Valentine asked.
-
-"The Indian soil is not safe for palefaces; my brother has saved my
-life, I shall follow him."
-
-"My brother has preserved me a friend," said Curumilla, who had till
-that time preserved silence; "I shall follow him."
-
-"You cannot think of such a thing, chief," Valentine remarked. "We are
-travellers whom chance knocks about at its pleasure; we know not what
-destiny has in reserve for us, nor whither it will conduct us, after
-having seen the man to whom we are sent."
-
-"What does it signify?" Curumilla replied; "where you go, we will go."
-
-The young men were greatly moved by such frank and noble devotion.
-
-"Oh!" Louis exclaimed, warmly, "it is impossible! your friends, your
-wives, and your children."
-
-"Our wives and children will be taken care of by our relations until our
-return."
-
-"My friends, my good friends," said Valentine, with emotion, "you are
-wrong; we cannot impose such a sacrifice upon you, we will not consent
-to it for your sake; I have already told you, we are ignorant of what
-awaits us, or what we shall do; allow us to go alone."
-
-"We will follow our pale brothers," Trangoil-Lanec said in a tone that
-admitted of no reply; "my brothers are not acquainted with the llanos;
-four men are a force in the desert--two men are dead."
-
-The Frenchmen contested the matter no longer, they accepted the offer
-of the Ulmens, and did so the more readily, because they plainly
-perceived what an immense advantage these men would be to them. They
-were accustomed to a life in the woods, they knew all its mysteries,
-and had fathomed all its depths. The chiefs took leave of their guests,
-to prepare for their departure, which was irrevocably fixed for the
-next day. At sunrise, a small party, composed of Louis, Valentine,
-Trangoil-Lanec, and Curumilla, all four mounted upon excellent horses of
-that mixed Andalusian and Arabian breed, which the Spaniards imported
-into America, and Caesar, who trotted at their side in close file, left
-the tolderia, escorted by all the members of the tribe shouting: "Come
-back again! come back again!--A good journey! a good journey!"
-
-After repeated farewells to these worthy people, the four travellers
-directed their course towards the tolderia of the Black-Serpents, and
-soon disappeared in the numberless defiles formed by the quebradas.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV.
-
-THE SUN-TIGER.
-
-
-In the state of anarchy in which Chili was plunged at the period of our
-history, the parties were numerous, and everyone was manoeuvring in the
-shade, as skilfully as possible, in order to gain possession of power.
-General Bustamente, as we have stated, aimed at nothing less than the
-protectorate of a confederation similar to that of the United States,
-which, then but little understood, dazzled his ambition. He could not
-divine that those ancient outlaws, those sectarian fanatics exiled from
-Europe, those thriving merchants, had already begun to dream in America
-of a universal monarchy, a senseless Utopia, the application of which
-will one day cost them the loss of that so-called nationality of which
-they are so proud, and which, in reality, does not exist. Probably
-General Bustamente did not look so far into the future, or, if he did
-divine the tendencies of the Anglo-Americans, perhaps he dreamt of
-himself following also that ambitious aim, as soon as his power should
-repose upon solid bases.
-
-The Dark-Hearts, the only true patriots in this unhappy country, on
-their side, wished that the government should adopt measures of a
-rather democratic nature, but they had no intention to overturn it,
-for they were persuaded that a revolution could only be prejudicial
-to the general welfare of the nation. Beside General Bustamente and
-the society of the Dark-Hearts, a third party, more powerful, perhaps,
-than the two first, was at work silently, but active. This party was
-represented by Antinahuel, the toqui of the most important Uthal-Mapus
-of the Araucanian confederacy. We have said that from its geographical
-position, this little insignificant republic is placed like a wedge
-in the Chilian territory, which it separates sharply in two. This
-position gave Antinahuel immense power. All Araucanos are soldiers; at
-a signal from their chiefs, they take up arms, and are able, in a few
-days, to get together an army of experienced warriors. The republicans
-and the partizans of Bustamente were fully aware how much it was to
-their interest to attach the Araucanos to their party; with the aid
-of these ferocious soldiers victory would be certain. Already had the
-King of Darkness and Bustamente made proposals to Antinahuel,--of
-course, unknown to each other. These overtures the redoubtable toqui
-had appeared to listen to, and had feigned to reply to both, for the
-following reasons:--
-
-Antinahuel, in addition to the hereditary hatred which his ancestors
-had bequeathed to him against the white race, or perhaps on account of
-that hatred, had dreamt, since he had been elected supreme chief of an
-Uthal-Mapus, not only of the complete independence of his country, but
-moreover of re-conquering all the territory which the Spaniards had
-deprived it of; he hoped to drive them back to the other side of the
-Cordilleras of the Andes, and restore to his nation the splendour it had
-enjoyed before the arrival of the whites in Chili. And this patriotic
-project Antinahuel was just the man to carry through. Endowed with
-vast intelligence, at once daring and subtle, he allowed himself to be
-stopped by no obstacle, conquered by no reverse. Almost entirely brought
-up in Chili, he spoke Spanish perfectly, was thoroughly acquainted with
-the manners of his enemies, and by means of numberless spies spread
-everywhere, he was well informed with regard to the Chilian policy,
-and of the precarious situation of those whom he wished to conquer; he
-habitually took advantage of the dissensions which separated them, and
-feigned to lend an ear to the propositions made to him on all parts, in
-order, when the moment should arrive, to crush his enemies one after the
-other, and be left alone standing.
-
-He wanted a plausible pretext for keeping his Uthal-Mapus under arms,
-without inspiring the Chilians with mistrust: and this pretext General
-Bustamente and the Dark-Hearts supplied him with by their preparations.
-No one could be surprised, for this reason, at seeing, in a time
-of peace, the toqui gather together a numerous army on the Chilian
-frontiers, since, _in petto_, either party flattered itself that this
-army was destined to aid its cause. The conduct of the toqui was,
-therefore, most skilful; for he not only inspired mistrust in no one,
-but, on the contrary, gave hopes to all. The position was becoming
-serious; the hour for action could not long be delayed; and Antinahuel,
-whose measures were all prepared, awaited impatiently the moment for
-beginning the struggle.
-
-Things were at this point on the day when Dona Maria came to the
-tolderia of the Black-Serpents, to visit the friend of her childhood. As
-soon as she awoke, the Linda gave orders for her departure.
-
-"Is my sister going to leave me already?" said Antinahuel, in a tone of
-mild reproach.
-
-"Yes," Dona Maria replied, "my brother knows that I must reach Valdivia
-as quickly as possible."
-
-The chief did not press her stay; a furtive smile played round his lips.
-After Dona Maria was on horseback, she turned towards the toqui.
-
-"Did not my brother say he should be soon in Valdivia?" she asked, in a
-perfectly well-played tone of indifference.
-
-"I shall be there as soon as my sister," he replied.
-
-"We shall see each other again, then?"
-
-"Perhaps we may."
-
-"We must!"
-
-This was said in a positive tone.
-
-"Very well," the chief replied, after a moment's pause; "my sister may
-depart--she shall see me again."
-
-"Till then, farewell, then," she said, and rode away at a quick pace.
-
-She soon disappeared in a cloud of dust, and the chief returned
-thoughtfully to his toldo.
-
-"Woman," he said, to his mother, "I am going to the great tolderia of
-the palefaces."
-
-"I heard everything last night," the Indian woman replied, sorrowfully;
-"my son is wrong."
-
-"Wrong! how, or why?" he asked, passionately.
-
-"My son is a great chief; my sister deceives him, and makes him
-subservient to her vengeance."
-
-"Or rather my own," he replied, in a singular tone.
-
-"The young white girl has a right to the protection of my son."
-
-"I will protect the Pearl of the Andes."
-
-"My son forgets that she of whom he speaks saved his life."
-
-"Silence, woman!" he shouted, in a passionate tone.
-
-The Indian woman held her peace, but sighed deeply.
-
-The chief summoned his mosotones, and selecting from among them a score
-of warriors upon whom he could place entire reliance, ordered them to
-be ready to follow him within an hour. He then threw himself upon a
-bench, and sank into serious and agitating reflections. Suddenly a great
-noise was heard from without, and the chief sprang from his recumbent
-position, and went to the door of his toldo. He was surprised to see two
-strangers, mounted upon excellent horses, and preceded by an Indian,
-advancing towards him. These strangers were Valentine and Louis, who had
-left their friends a short distance from the tolderia.
-
-Valentine, on leaving the village of the Puelches, had opened the letter
-addressed to himself, and placed in his hands by the major-domo, with a
-recommendation not to open it till the last minute. The young man was
-far from expecting the contents of this strange missive. After carefully
-reading it, he communicated it to his friend, saying--
-
-"Here, read this, Louis;--hem! who knows but that this singular letter
-is the first step to our fortune?"
-
-Like all men in love, Louis was sceptical upon every subject that did
-not bear some relation to his passion, and he returned the paper,
-shaking his head.
-
-"Politics burn the fingers," he said.
-
-"Yes, of those who don't know how to handle them," Valentine replied,
-with a shrug of the shoulders. "Now, it is my opinion that in this
-country, in which it has pleased fate to drop us, the most promising
-element of fortune we have at command happens to be those very politics
-which you so much disdain."
-
-"I must confess, my friend, that I care very little for these
-Dark-Hearts, of whom I know nothing, and who have done us the honour to
-affiliate us."
-
-"I do not share your opinion at all; I believe them to be resolute,
-intelligent men, and am persuaded they will, some day, gain the upper
-hand."
-
-"Much good may it do them! But of what consequence is that to us
-Frenchmen?"
-
-"More than you may think for; and I am determined, immediately after
-my interview with this said Antinahuel, to go directly to Valdivia, in
-order to be present at the meeting they appoint."
-
-"As you please," said the Count, carelessly. "As such is your advice,
-we will go thither; only I warn you that we shall risk our heads. If we
-lose them, it will be all very well; but I wash my hands of the matter
-beforehand."
-
-"I will be prudent, caramba! My head is the only thing I can call my
-own," Valentine replied, laughing, "and be assured I will not risk it
-for nothing. Besides, do you not partake of my curiosity to see how
-these people understand politics, and in what a fashion they set about
-conspiring?"
-
-"Well, that may become interesting; we travel partly for instruction;
-let us gain it, then, when it offers itself."
-
-"Bravo! that's the way in which I like to hear a man speak. Let us go
-and seek the redoubtable chief to whom we have a letter to deliver."
-
-Trangoil-Lanec and Curumilla were too prudent to venture to let
-Antinahuel know of the friendship which bound them to the two Frenchmen.
-Without suspecting the reasons which induced their friends to present
-themselves to the toqui, they foresaw that a day might come when it
-would be advantageous that their relations should be unknown. When they
-arrived, therefore, at a short distance from the tolderia, the Indian
-warriors remained concealed in a secluded corner, keeping Caesar with
-them, and allowing the two Frenchmen to continue their route to the
-village of the Black-Serpents, with whom, in addition, they had not
-lately been upon the best terms.
-
-The reception given to the Frenchmen was most friendly; for in time
-of peace the Araucanos are exceedingly hospitable. As soon as they
-perceived the strangers, they crowded round them; and as all the Indians
-speak Spanish with astonishing facility, Valentine had no difficulty in
-making himself understood. One warrior, more polite than the rest, took
-upon himself to be their guide through the village, in which, of course,
-they were at a loss. He led them to the toldo of the chief, in front of
-which were drawn up twenty horsemen, armed, and apparently waiting.
-
-"That is Antinahuel, the great toqui of the Inapire-Mapu," said the
-guide, emphatically, pointing with his finger at the chief, who at that
-moment came out of his toldo, attracted by the noise.
-
-"Thank you," said Valentine; and the two Frenchmen advanced rapidly
-towards the toqui, who, on his part, made a few steps to meet them.
-
-"Eh, eh!" Valentine said, in a subdued voice, to his companion; "here
-is a man with a good bearing, and with a rather intelligent air for an
-Indian."
-
-"Yes," Louis replied, in the same tone, "but he has a contracted brow,
-a sinister look, and compressed lips--he inspires me with very little
-confidence."
-
-"Bah!" said Valentine, "you are too difficult by half; did you expect to
-find an Indian an Antinous or an Apollo Belvedere?"
-
-"No; but I should like a little more open frankness in his look."
-
-"Well, well, we shall see."
-
-"I do not know why, but that man produces the effect of a reptile upon
-me; he inspires me with invincible repulsion."
-
-"Oh, nonsense! you are too impressionable. I am sure that the man, who,
-I cannot deny, has the air of a thorough rascal, is, at bottom, one of
-the best fellows in the world."
-
-"God grant I may be deceived! But I experience, on seeing him, a feeling
-for which I cannot account; it seems as if a kind of presentiment warned
-me to be on my guard against that man, and that he will be fatal to me."
-
-"All folly! What relations can you ever have with this individual? We
-are charged with a mission to him; who knows whether we may ever see him
-again? and then what interests can connect us with him hereafter?"
-
-"You are right; and I do not know what makes me think as I have
-said; besides, we shall soon know what we have to trust to on his
-account--here he is."
-
-The adventurers were, in fact, at that moment in front of the chief's
-toldo. Antinahuel stood before them; and, although appearing to be
-giving orders to his men, examined them very attentively. He stepped
-towards them quickly, and, bowing with perfect politeness, said, in a
-pleasant tone, and with a graceful gesture--
-
-"Strangers, you are welcome to my toldo. Your presence rejoices my
-heart. Condescend to pass over the threshold of this poor hut, which
-will be yours as long as you deign to remain among us."
-
-"Thanks for the kind words of welcome you address to us, powerful
-chief," Valentine replied. "The persons who sent us to you assured us of
-the kind reception we might expect."
-
-"If the strangers come on the part of my friends, that is a further
-reason why I should endeavour to make their abode here as agreeable as
-my humble means will allow me."
-
-The two Frenchmen bowed ceremoniously, and alighted from their horses.
-At a sign from the toqui, two peons led the horses away to a vast corral
-behind the toldo.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI.
-
-THE MATRICIDE.
-
-
-We have repeatedly said that in times of peace the Araucanos are
-exceedingly hospitable. This hospitality, which on the part of
-the warriors is cordial and simple, on that of the chiefs becomes
-extravagant. Antinahuel was far from being a rude Indian, attached
-though he was to the customs of his fathers; and although in his heart
-he hated not only the Spaniards, but indiscriminately all belonging to
-the white race, the half-civilized education he had received had given
-him ideas of comfort completely above Indian habits. Many of the richest
-Chilian farmers would have found it impossible to display greater luxury
-than he exhibited when his caprice or his interest led him to do so.
-On the present occasion, he was not sorry to show strangers that the
-Araucanos were not so barbarous as their arrogant neighbours wished it
-to be supposed, and that they could, when necessary, rival even them.
-At the first glance, Antinahuel had discovered that his guests were not
-Spaniards; but, with the circumspection which forms the foundation of
-the Indian character, he confined his observations to his own breast. It
-was with the kindest air and in the most winning tone of voice that he
-pressed them to enter his toldo.
-
-The Frenchmen followed him in, and with a gesture he requested them
-to be seated. Peons placed a profusion of cigars and cigarettes upon
-the table, near a tasty filigree brasero. In a few minutes other
-peons entered with the mate, which they respectfully presented to the
-chief and his guests. Then, without the silence being broken--for the
-Araucanian laws of hospitality require that no question should be
-addressed to strangers until they think proper to speak themselves--each
-sipped the herb of Paraguay, while smoking. This preliminary operation
-being gone through, Valentine rose.
-
-"I thank you, chief, in the name of myself and my friend, for your
-cordial hospitality."
-
-"Hospitality is a duty which every Araucano is jealous to fulfil!"
-
-"But," replied Valentine, "as I have been given to understand that the
-chief is about to set out on a journey, I do not wish to detain him."
-
-"I am at the orders of my guests; my journey is not so pressing as not
-to admit of being put off for a few hours."
-
-"I thank the chief for his courtesy, but I hope he will soon be at
-liberty."
-
-Antinahuel bowed.
-
-"A Spaniard has charged me with a letter for the chief."
-
-"Ah!" the toqui exclaimed, with a singular intonation, and fixing a
-piercing look upon the face of the young man.
-
-"Yes," the Frenchman continued; "and that letter I am about to have the
-honour of handing to you."
-
-And he put his hand to his breast, to take out the letter.
-
-"Stop!" said the chief, laying his hand upon his arm, as he turned
-towards his servants; adding, "leave the room." The three men were left
-alone.
-
-"Now you may give me the letter," he continued.
-
-The chief took it, looked carefully at the superscription, turned the
-paper in all directions in his hand, and then, with some hesitation,
-presented it to the young man.
-
-"Let my brother read it," he said; "the whites are more learned than we
-poor Indians: they know everything."
-
-Valentine gave his countenance the most silly expression possible.
-
-"I cannot read this," he said, with well-assumed embarrassment.
-
-"Does my brother then refuse to render me this service?" the chief
-pressed him.
-
-"I do not refuse you, chief; only I am prevented doing what you request
-by a very simple reason."
-
-"And what is that reason?"
-
-"It is that my companion and I are both Frenchmen."
-
-"Well, and what then?"
-
-"We speak a little Spanish, but we cannot read it."
-
-"Ah!" said the chief, in a tone of doubt; but, after walking about, and
-reflecting a minute, he added,--"Hem! that is possible."
-
-He then turned towards the two Frenchmen, who, on their part, were, in
-appearance, impassive and indifferent.
-
-"Let my brothers wait an instant," he said; "I know a man in my tribe
-who understands the marks which the whites make upon paper: I will go
-and order him to translate this letter."
-
-The young men bowed, and the chief left the apartment.
-
-"Why the devil did you refuse to read the letter?" Louis asked.
-
-"In good truth," Valentine replied, "I can scarcely tell you why; but
-what you said of the expression of this man's countenance, produced a
-certain effect upon me. He inspires me with no confidence, and I am not
-anxious to be the depository of secrets which he may some day reclaim in
-a disagreeable manner."
-
-"Yes, you are right! We may, some day, congratulate ourselves upon this
-circumspection. Hush! I hear footsteps."
-
-And the chief re-entered the room.
-
-"I know the contents of the letter," he said; "if my brothers see the
-man who charged them with it, they will inform him that I am setting out
-this very day for Valdivia."
-
-"We would, with pleasure, take charge of that message," replied
-Valentine; "but we do not know the person who gave us the letter, and it
-is more than probable we may never see him again."
-
-The chief darted at them a stolen and deeply suspicious glance.
-
-"Good! Will my brothers remain here, then?"
-
-"It would give us infinite pleasure to pass a few hours in the agreeable
-society of the chief, but with us time presses; with his permission, we
-will take our leave."
-
-"My brothers are perfectly free; my toldo is open for those who leave
-it, as well as for those who enter it."
-
-The young men rose to depart.
-
-"In what direction are my brothers going?"
-
-"We are bound for Concepcion."
-
-"Let my brothers go in peace, then! If their course lay towards
-Valdivia, I would have offered to journey with them."
-
-"A thousand thanks, chief, for your kind offer; unfortunately we cannot
-profit by it, for our road lies in a completely opposite direction."
-
-The three men exchanged a few more words of courtesy, and left the
-toldo. The Frenchmen's horses had been brought round; they mounted, and
-after having saluted the chief once more, they set off. As soon as they
-were out of the village, Louis, turning to Valentine, said,--
-
-"We have not an instant to lose. If we wish to reach Valdivia before
-that man, we must make all speed. Who knows whether Don Tadeo may not be
-awaiting our arrival impatiently?"
-
-They soon rejoined their friends, who looked for them anxiously, and all
-four set off at full speed in the direction of Valdivia, without being
-able to explain to themselves why they used such diligence. Antinahuel
-accompanied his guests a few paces out of his toldo. When he had taken
-leave of them, he followed them with his eyes as far as he could see
-them, and when they disappeared at the extremity of the village, he
-returned thoughtfully and slowly to his toldo, saying to himself,--
-
-"It is evident to me that these men are deceiving me; their refusal to
-read the letter was nothing but a pretext. What can be their object? Can
-they be enemies? I will watch them!"
-
-When he arrived in front of his toldo, he found his mosotones mounted,
-and awaiting his orders.
-
-"I must set out at once," he said; "I shall learn all yonder, and,
-perhaps," he added, in a voice so low that he could hardly hear it
-himself, "perhaps I shall find _her_ again. If Dona Maria breaks her
-promise, and does not give her up to me, woe, woe be to her!"
-
-He raised his head, and saw his mother standing before him. "What do you
-want, woman?" he asked, harshly; "this is not your place!"
-
-"My place is near you when you are suffering, my son," she mildly
-replied.
-
-"I suffering! You are mad, mother! age has turned your brain! Go back
-into the toldo, and, during my absence, keep a good watch over all that
-belongs to me."
-
-"Are you, then, really going, my son?"
-
-"This moment," he said, and sprang into his saddle.
-
-"Where are you going?" she asked, and seized his horse's bridle.
-
-"What is that to you?" he replied, with an ugly glance.
-
-"Beware! my son; you are entering on a bad course. Guerubu, the spirit
-of evil, is master of your heart."
-
-"I am the best and sole judge of my actions."
-
-"You shall not go!" she exclaimed, as she placed herself resolutely in
-front of his horse.
-
-The Indians collected round the speakers looked on with mute terror at
-this scene; they were too well acquainted with the violent and imperious
-character of Antinahuel not to dread something fatal, if his mother
-persisted in endeavouring to prevent his departure.
-
-The brows of the chief lowered--his eyes gleamed like lightning--and it
-was not without a great effort that he mastered the passion boiling in
-his breast.
-
-"I will go!" he said, in a loud voice, and trembling with rage; "I will
-go, if I trample you beneath my horse's hoofs!"
-
-The woman clung convulsively to the saddle, and looked her son in the
-face.
-
-"Do so," she cried; "for, by the soul of your father, who now hunts in
-the blessed prairies with Pillian, I swear I will not stir, even if you
-pass over my body!"
-
-The face of the Indian became horribly contracted; he cast around a
-glance which made the hearts of the bravest tremble with fear.
-
-"Woman! woman!" he shouted, grinding his teeth with rage; "get out of my
-way, or I shall crush you like a reed!"
-
-"I will not stir, I tell you!" she repeated, with wild energy.
-
-"Take care! take care!" he said again; "I shall forget you are my
-mother!"
-
-"I will not stir!"
-
-A nervous tremor shook the limbs of the chief, who had now attained the
-highest paroxysm of fury.
-
-"If you will have it so," he cried, in a husky, but loud voice, "your
-blood be upon your own head!"
-
-And he dug the spurs into the sides of his horse, which plunged with
-pain, and then sprung forward like an arrow, dragging along the poor
-woman, whose body was soon but one huge wound. A cry of horror burst
-from the quivering lips of the terrified Indians. After a few minutes
-of this senseless course, during which she had left fragments of her
-flesh on every sharp point of the road, the strength of the Indian woman
-abandoned her; she left her hold of the bridle, and sank dying.
-
-"Oh!" she said, in a faint voice, and following, with a look dimmed by
-agony, her son, as he was borne away like a whirlwind, "my unhappy son!
-my unhappy----"
-
-She raised her eyes towards heaven, clasped her mangled hands, as if to
-offer up a last prayer, and fell back.
-
-She died pitying the matricide, and pardoning him. The women of the
-tribe took up the body respectfully, and carried it, weeping, into the
-toldo. At the sight of the corpse, an old Indian shook his head several
-times, murmuring in a prophetic tone,--
-
-"Antinahuel has killed his mother! Pillian will avenge her!"
-
-And all bowed down their heads sorrowfully: this atrocious crime made
-them dread horrible misfortunes in the future.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII.
-
-THE JUSTICE OF THE DARK-HEARTS.
-
-
-Don Tadeo and his friend Don Gregorio were introduced, after exchanging
-several passwords, into a subterraneous apartment, the entrance to which
-was perfectly concealed in the wall. The door closed immediately after
-them; the two men turned round sharply, but all signs of an opening
-had disappeared. Without taking further notice of this circumstance,
-which they no doubt had expected, they cast an inquiring glance around
-them, in order to obtain some knowledge of the locality. The place
-was admirably chosen for a meeting of conspirators. It was an immense
-apartment, which must have served for a long time as a cellar, as was
-made evident by the essentially alcoholic emanations still floating in
-the air; the walls were low and thick, and of a dirty red colour; a
-lamp with three jets, hanging from the roof, far from dispersing the
-darkness, seemed only to render it in a manner visible. In a recess
-stood a table, behind which a man in a mask was seated, near to two
-empty seats. Men enveloped in cloaks, and all wearing black velvet
-masks, were gliding about in the darkness, silent as phantoms.
-
-Don Tadeo and his friend exchanged a glance, and without speaking a
-word, proceeded to take their places in the empty seats. As soon as
-they were seated, a change came over the meeting: the low whispering
-which had been heard till that moment ceased all at once, as if by
-enchantment. All the conspirators gathered in a single group in front of
-the table, and with arms crossed upon their chests, waited earnestly.
-The man who before the arrival of Don Tadeo had appeared to preside over
-the meeting arose, and casting round a confident glance on the attentive
-crowd, said--
-
-"On this day the seventy-two _ventas_ of the Dark-Hearts, spread over
-the territories of the republic, are assembled in council. In all of
-them the taking up of arms, of which we, the _venta_ of Valdivia, will
-instantly give the signal, will be decreed. Everywhere men faithful to
-the good cause, true lovers of liberty, are preparing to commence the
-struggle with Bustamente. Will you all, comrades, who are here present,
-when the hour strikes, descend frankly and boldly into the arena? Will
-you sacrifice, without reserve, your family, your fortune, and even your
-life, if necessary, for the public good?"
-
-He ceased, and a funereal silence prevailed in the assembly.
-
-"Answer!" he resumed; "what will you do?"
-
-"We will die!" the band of conspirators murmured, like a sinister and
-terrible echo.
-
-"That is well, my brothers," Don Tadeo said, rising suddenly. "I
-expected no less from you, and I thank you. I have long known you all,
-and felt that I could depend upon you--I, whom none of you know. These
-masks which conceal you one from another, are but transparent gauze
-for the chief of the Dark-Hearts--and I am the King of Darkness! I
-have sworn that you shall live as free men, or that I will die! Before
-twenty-four hours have passed away, you will hear the signal you have
-so long waited for, and then will commence that terrible struggle which
-can only end in the death of the tyrant; all the provinces, all the
-cities, all the towns will rise _en masse_ at the same instant; courage,
-then! You have only a few hours longer to suffer. The war of ambushes,
-surprises, of subterranean treacheries is ended; war, frank, loyal,
-open, in the face of the sun, is about to begin; let us show ourselves
-what we always have been, firm in our faith, and ready to die for our
-opinions! Let the chiefs of sections draw near."
-
-Ten men left the ranks, and placed themselves silently ten paces from
-the table.
-
-"Let the corporal of chiefs of sections answer for all," said Don Tadeo.
-
-"I am the corporal," said one of the masked men; "the orders expedited
-from the Quinta Verde have been executed; all the sections are warned;
-they are all ready to rise at the first signal; each will take
-possession of the posts that are assigned it."
-
-"So far well! How many men have you at your disposal?"
-
-"Seven thousand three hundred and seventy-seven."
-
-"Can you depend upon them all?"
-
-"No."
-
-"How many are there lukewarm or irresolute?"
-
-"Four thousand."
-
-"How many firm and convinced?"
-
-"Nearly three thousand; but for these I will be answerable."
-
-"That is well! we have even more than we want; the brave will attract
-others. Return to your places."
-
-The chiefs of sections drew back,
-
-"Now," Don Tadeo continued, "before we separate, I have to call down
-your justice upon one of our brothers, who, having entered deeply into
-our secrets, has been false to the society several times for a little
-gold; I have the proofs in my hands. The circumstances are of the utmost
-importance; one word--a single word--may ruin our cause and us! Say,
-what chastisement does this man deserve?"
-
-"Death!" the conspirators responded, coolly, but simultaneously.
-
-"I know this man," Don Tadeo continued; "let him come forth from the
-ranks, and not oblige me to tear off his mask, and hurl his name in his
-face."
-
-No one stirred.
-
-"This man is here--I can see him; for the last time, let him step forth,
-and not crown his baseness by seeking to avoid the punishment he merits."
-
-The conspirators cast suspicious glances at each other; the assembly
-seemed moved by an extreme anxiety; the man, however, upon whom the
-King of Darkness called, persisted in remaining confounded amongst his
-companions.
-
-Don Tadeo waited for an instant, but finding that the man whom he
-summoned imagined he should remain unknown, and not be discovered
-beneath his mask, he made a signal, and Don Gregorio rose and advanced
-towards the group of conspirators, which opened at his approach, and
-laid his hand roughly on the shoulder of a man who had instinctively
-retreated before him, until the wall forced him to stop.
-
-"Come with me, Don Pedro," he said, and he dragged rather than led him
-to the table, behind which stood Don Tadeo, calm and implacable.
-
-The guilty spy was seized with a convulsive trembling, his teeth
-chattered, and he fell upon his knees, crying with terror:
-
-"Mercy, my lord, mercy!"
-
-Don Gregorio tore off his mask, and revealed the face of the spy, whose
-features, horribly contracted by fear, and of an ashy paleness, were
-really hideous.
-
-"Don Pedro," Don Tadeo said, in a stern voice, "you have several times
-sought to sell your brothers of the society; it was you who caused
-the death of the ten patriots shot upon the Place of Santiago; it was
-you who betrayed the secret of the Quinta Verde to the soldiers of
-Bustamente; this very day, even, scarcely two hours ago, you held a long
-conversation with General Bustamente, in which you agreed to deliver up
-to him tomorrow the principal chiefs of the Dark-Hearts: is that true?"
-
-The miserable wretch had not a word to say in his defence; confounded,
-overwhelmed by the irresistible proofs accumulated against him, he hung
-down his head in utter abandonment.
-
-"Is this true?" Don Tadeo reiterated.
-
-"It is true," he murmured, in a scarcely audible voice.
-
-"You acknowledge yourself guilty?"
-
-"Yes," he said, with a heart-stifling sob; "but grant me life, noble
-seigneur, and I swear----"
-
-"Silence!"
-
-The spy was struck with mute despair.
-
-"You have heard, companions and friends, how this man confesses his own
-crimes; for the last time, what punishment does he deserve for having
-sold his brothers?"
-
-"Death!" replied the Dark-Hearts, without hesitation.
-
-"In the name of the Dark-Hearts, of whom I am king, I condemn you,
-Don Pedro Saldillo, to death, for treachery and felony towards your
-brethren. You have five minutes to make your peace with Heaven," Don
-Tadeo said, sternly.
-
-He placed his watch upon the table, and drawing a pistol from his belt,
-cocked it deliberately. The sharp noise of the hammer made the condemned
-man shudder with fear. A profound silence prevailed in the vault; the
-hearts of these implacable men might be heard beating in their breasts.
-The spy cast around wild, despairing glances, but beheld nothing but
-angry eyes gleaming upon him through hideous masks. Over the vault, in
-the chingana, they continued dancing, and faint puffs of _sambacuejas_
-penetrated, at intervals, mixed with uproarious bursts of laughter, even
-to the awful scene beneath. The contrast of this riotous mirth with
-the terrible act of justice which was being carried out, had something
-appalling in it.
-
-"The five minutes are past," said Don Tadeo, in a firm voice.
-
-"A few minutes more! a few minutes, my lord!" the spy implored, wringing
-his hands in despair. "I am not prepared; you cannot kill me thus! In
-the name of all you hold most dear, let me live!"
-
-Without appearing to hear him, Don Tadeo lifted his pistol, and the
-miserable culprit rolled upon the ground, with his brains scattered
-around him.
-
-"Oh!" he cried, as the pistol was aimed, "be accursed, ye assassins!"
-His death prevented the utterance of more.
-
-The conspirators stood cold, impassive spectators of the scene. As soon
-as the stern act of justice was completed, at a signal from the chief,
-several men opened a trap in the floor which covered a hole half filled
-with quick lime; the body was thrown into it, and the trap closed again.
-
-"Justice has been done, brothers," said Don Tadeo, solemnly; "go in
-peace, the King of Darkness watches over you."
-
-The conspirators bowed respectfully, and disappeared one after the
-other, without uttering a word. At the end of a quarter of an hour no
-one remained in the vault but Don Tadeo and Don Gregorio.
-
-"Oh!" said Don Tadeo, "Shall we always have thus to combat treachery?"
-
-"Courage! my friend; you have yourself said, in a few hours war will
-commence in the face of day."
-
-"God grant I may not be deceived! This contest in the dark makes
-frightful demands upon the mind; my heart begins to fail me!"
-
-The two conspirators regained the chingana, in which the dancing,
-laughing, and drinking were going on with undiminished spirit; they
-passed through so as not to be observed, and came out into the street.
-They had hardly walked fifty steps when they were joined by a man, who,
-to their great surprise, proved to be Valentine Guillois.
-
-"God be praised for bringing you here so opportunely!" said Don Tadeo.
-
-"I hope I am punctual," the Parisian remarked, with a gay laugh.
-
-Don Tadeo pressed his hand warmly, and drew him towards his residence,
-where our three personages soon arrived.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII.
-
-THE TREATY OF PEACE.
-
-
-General Bustamente had come to Valdivia under the pretence of himself
-renewing the treaties which existed between the republic of Chili
-and the Araucanian Confederation. This pretext was excellent in the
-sense that it permitted him to concentrate a considerable force in the
-provinces, and gave him, besides, a plausible reason for receiving the
-most powerful Ulmens of the Indians, who would not fail to come to the
-meeting, accompanied by a great number of mosotones. Every time a new
-president is elected in Chili, the minister at war renews the treaties
-in his name. General Bustamente had, up to this moment, neglected to do
-so: he had good reasons for that.--
-
-This ceremony, in which a great retinue is purposely displayed,
-generally takes place in a vast plain situated upon the Araucanian
-territories, and not at a great distance from Valdivia. By a curious
-coincidence, the pretext of the General suited equally well the
-interests of the three factions which, at this period, divided this
-unhappy country. The Dark-Hearts had skilfully profited by it to prepare
-the resistance they meditated, and Antinahuel, feigning to wish to
-pay the greatest honours to the war minister of the President of the
-republic, had collected a real army of his best warriors in the environs
-of the place chosen for the solemnity.
-
-Such was the state of things, and of the various parties with regard to
-each other, at the time we resume our narrative. The enemies were about
-to come face to face; it was evident that each, being well prepared,
-would endeavour to take advantage of the opportunity, and that a shock
-was imminent; but how would it be brought about? Who would set fire to
-the mine, and cause all those passions, those grudges, those ambitions,
-so long restrained, to explode? Nobody could say!
-
-The plain on which the ceremony was to take place was vast, covered
-with high grass, and belted by mountains verdant with lofty trees. The
-plain, crossed by woods and lines of apple trees, loaded with fruit,
-was divided in two by a meandering river, which flowed gently along,
-balancing on its silver waters numerous troops of black-headed swans;
-here and there, through the breaks of the thickets, might be seen the
-pointed nose of a vicuna, which, with ear erect, and eye on the watch,
-seemed to sniff the breeze, and all at once bounded away into the
-distance.
-
-The sun was rising majestically in the horizon when a measured noise
-of tinkling bells proceeded from a wood of apple trees, and a troop of
-half a score mules, led by the mother mare, and driven by an arriero,
-debouched into the plain. These mules carried diverse objects for an
-encampment, provisions, and even some bales of clothes and linen. At
-twenty paces behind the mules, came a rather numerous troop of horsemen.
-When they arrived at the banks of the little river we have spoken of,
-the arriero stopped his mules, and the party dismounted. In an instant
-the bales were unpacked and arranged with care, so as to form a perfect
-circle, in the centre of which a fire was lighted. Then a tent was
-erected in this temporary camp, and the horses and mules were hobbled.
-
-This party, whom, no doubt, our readers have already recognized, were
-Don Tadeo, his friends the Frenchmen, the Indian Ulmens, with Dona
-Rosario, and three servants. By a strange coincidence, at the same time
-that they were arranging their camp, another party nearly as numerous
-established theirs on the opposite bank of the river, exactly in face
-of them. The leader of this was Dona Maria. As frequently happens, it
-had pleased chance to bring into propinquity irreconcilable enemies, who
-were only separated from each other by a distance of fifty yards at the
-most. But was this entirely owing to chance?
-
-Don Tadeo had no suspicion of this dangerous proximity, or he would
-probably have done everything in his power to avoid it. He had cast a
-vacant glance at the caravan opposite to him, without taking any further
-heed of it, being absorbed in thoughts of the highest importance. Dona
-Maria, on the contrary, knew perfectly well, what she was about, and
-had placed herself where she was with the skill of an able tactician.
-In the mean time, as the morning advanced, the number of travellers
-kept increasing on the plain; by nine o'clock it was literally covered
-with tents; a free space only being reserved around an old half ruined
-chapel, in which mass was to be celebrated before the commencement of
-the ceremony.
-
-The Puelches, who had descended from their mountains in great numbers,
-had passed the night in making joyous libations around their campfires;
-many of them were sleeping in a state of complete intoxication;
-nevertheless, as soon as the arrival of the minister of the Chilian
-republic was announced, they all sprang up tumultuously, and began to
-dance, and utter cries of joy. On one side arrived General Bustamente
-at a canter, surrounded by a brilliant staff, all glittering with gold
-lace, and followed by a numerous troop of lancers; whilst on the other
-side came, at a gallop, the four Araucano Toquis, followed by the
-principal Ulmens of their nation, and a great number of mosotones.
-
-These two troops, which hastened to meet each other amidst the _vivas_
-and cries of joy of the crowd, raised immense clouds of dust, in which
-they disappeared. The Araucanos in particular, who are excellent
-jinetes, a term used in this country to designate good horsemen,
-indulged in equestrian eccentricities, of which the so-much vaunted Arab
-fantasias can give but a faint idea; for they are nothing in comparison
-with the incredible feats performed by these men, who seem born to
-manage a horse. The Chilians had a much more serious bearing, from
-which they would gladly have freed themselves, if human respect had not
-restrained them.
-
-As soon as the two troops met, the chiefs dismounted and ranged
-themselves, the Ulmens, armed with their long, silver-headed canes,
-behind Antinahuel, and the three other Toquis and the Chilians behind
-General Bustamente. It was the first time the Tiger-Sun and the General
-had met. Each of these two men, therefore, equally good politicians,
-equally false and equally ambitious, and who, at the first glance,
-understood one another, contemplated his rival with intense earnestness.
-
-After exchanging a few salutes, impressed with a rather suspicious
-cordiality, the two bands retrograded from each other a few paces, to
-afford room for the commissary-general and four Capitanes de Amigos.
-These officers are what they call in the United States Indian agents;
-they serve as interpreters and agents to the Araucanos, for trade, and
-all that concerns their transactions with the Chilians. It must be
-observed that all these Indians speak Spanish perfectly well; but they
-never will use it in appointed meetings. These Capitanes de Amigos, who,
-for the most part, are half-breeds, are much beloved and respected.
-They arrived, leading a score of mules loaded with presents, destined
-by the President of the Republic for the principal Ulmens. For, be it
-noted, when Indians treat with Christians, they consider nothing settled
-till they have received presents: it is for them a proof that the other
-party does not wish to deceive them; they constitute an earnest which
-they require to bind the bargain, and prove that they are treated in
-good faith. The Chilians, who, unfortunately for them, had long been
-accustomed to Araucanian habits, had taken good care not to forget this
-important condition.
-
-Whilst the commissary-general was distributing the presents, General
-Bustamente repaired to the chapel, where a priest, who had come
-purposely from Valdivia, celebrated mass. After mass, the speeches
-commenced, as soon as the minister of the republic and the four Toquis
-of the Uthal-Mapus had embraced. These speeches, which were very long,
-resulted in mutual assurances that they were satisfied with the peace
-which reigned between the two peoples, and that they would do all in
-their power to maintain it as long as possible. We think it our duty to
-beg our readers to observe, in justice to the two speakers, that one was
-not more sincere than the other, and that they did not mean one word
-they said, since in their hearts they determined to break their promises
-as soon as possible. They appeared, however, very well satisfied with
-the comedy they were playing, and they terminated it by a final embrace,
-more close and warm than the first, but equally false.
-
-"Now," said the General, "if my brothers, the great chiefs, will please
-to follow me, we will plant the cross."
-
-"No," Antinahuel replied, with a honied smile, "the cross must not be
-planted in front of the stone toldo."
-
-"Why not?" the General asked, with astonishment.
-
-"Because," the Indian replied, in a tone of decision, "the words we
-have exchanged must remain buried on the spot where they have been
-pronounced."
-
-"That is just!" said the General, bowing his head in sign of assent. "It
-shall be done as my brother desires."
-
-Antinahuel smiled proudly.
-
-"Have I spoken well, powerful men?" he asked, looking at the Ulmens.
-
-"Our father, the Toqui of the Inapire-Mapu, has spoken well," the Ulmens
-replied.
-
-The Indian peons then went to fetch from the chapel, upon the floor of
-which it lay, a cross of at least thirty feet in height, which they
-brought to the spot where the conferences had been held. All the chiefs
-and the Chilian officers ranged themselves around it; the troops forming
-a vast circle at a respectful distance. After the pause of an instant,
-of which the priest took advantage to bless the cross with that off-hand
-carelessness which distinguishes the Spanish clergy in America, it was
-planted in the ground. At the moment it was about to gain its upright
-position, Antinahuel interposed.
-
-"Stop!" he said to the Indians armed with spades; and turning towards
-the General, "Peace is well assured between us, is it not?" he asked.
-
-"Yes, certainly," the General replied.
-
-"All our words are buried under this cross?"
-
-"All of them."
-
-"Cover them with earth then," he said to the peons, "that they may not
-escape, and that war may not be rekindled between us."
-
-"When this ceremony was accomplished, Antinahuel caused a young lamb to
-be brought, which the machi slaughtered near the cross. All the Indian
-chiefs bathed their hands in the still warm blood of the quivering
-animal, and daubed the cross with hieroglyphic signs, destined to keep
-away Guecubu, the genius of evil, and prevent the words from escaping
-from the spot in which they were buried. In conclusion, the Araucans
-and the Chilians discharged their firearms in the air, and the ceremony
-was ended. General Bustamente then coming up to the Toqui of the
-Inapire-Mapu, passed his arm through the chiefs in a friendly manner,
-saying in an ingratiating tone--
-
-"Will not my brother, Antinahuel, come for an instant in my tent, to
-taste a glass of aguardiente de Pisco and take mate?--he would render
-his friend happy."
-
-"Why should I not?" the chief replied, smiling, and in the most
-good-humoured tone.
-
-"My brother will accompany me!"
-
-"Lead on, then."
-
-Both moved off, chatting upon indifferent subjects, directing their
-course towards the General's tent, which had been pitched within gunshot
-of the place where the ceremony had taken place. The General had given
-his orders beforehand, so that everything was prepared to receive the
-guest he brought with him magnificently, as for the success of his
-projects he had so great an interest in pleasing him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIX.
-
-THE ABDUCTION.
-
-
-Whilst the ceremony we have described was being accomplished, a terrible
-event was passing not far from it, on the banks of the river, in the
-camp of Don Tadeo de Leon. The three parties which divided Chili, and
-aimed at governing it, had, as if of one accord, chosen the day for the
-renewal of the treaty to throw off the mask and give their partisans the
-signal of revolt. Don Tadeo, who feared everything from Dona Maria and
-the General's spies, had consented, but with regret, that Rosario should
-accompany him to the plain, to be present at the ceremony; he had taken
-her from the convent, and brought the young girl with him, inwardly
-pleased that she would thus not be in Valdivia during the serious events
-that were there preparing.
-
-Dona Rosario, to tell the truth, had only consulted her love in the
-request she had made of her guardian; the desire of seeing unobserved,
-for a few hours, the object of her affections, had dictated it. Don
-Tadeo, who could not on any account be present at the ceremony, being
-obliged to conceal himself, took the two young Frenchmen aside as soon
-as his little encampment was arranged. It was then about seven o'clock
-in the morning, and the crowd began to flock to the plain. The King of
-Darkness cast a prudent and searching look around, but, reassured by the
-complete solitude that prevailed, he at length decided upon explaining
-to the young men, who were astonished at this strange proceeding, all
-that appeared so unusual and inconsistent in his conduct.
-
-"Caballeros," he said, "since I have had the honour of knowing you, I
-have concealed nothing from you, and you know all my secrets; this day
-must decide the question of life or death to which, from my boyhood,
-I have devoted all the energies of my mind. I must leave this spot
-instantly, and return to Valdivia. It is in that city that the first
-blow will be struck, within a few hours, against the tyrant, and the
-struggle I expect will be terrible. I am not willing to expose the
-young lady whom you know, and whose life you have already saved, to the
-chances of it. I confide the care of her to one of you, the other will
-accompany me to the city. In the event of any fatal mischance happening
-to me, I will place in his hands a paper, which will inform you both of
-my intentions, and of what I wish you to do with that poor child, who is
-all I hold dear on earth, and whom I leave with the greatest pain. Which
-of you, gentlemen, will take charge of Dona Rosario during my absence?"
-
-"Be at ease, Don Tadeo, go where your duty calls you," Louis answered,
-in a solemn but agitated tone; "I swear that while I live no danger,
-either near or distant, shall assail her; to reach her it must pass over
-my dead body."
-
-"Receive my warmest thanks, Don Louis," the Dark-Heart replied, somewhat
-surprised, and yet affected by the manner of the Frenchman; "I place
-implicit faith in your words; I know you will keep your vow at all
-risks; besides, in a few hours I hope I shall be back, and here she can
-have nothing to dread."
-
-"I will watch over her," the young man said, quietly.
-
-"Once again I thank you."
-
-Don Tadeo left the young men, and returned to the tent where Dona
-Rosario, reclining in a hammock, was gently swinging herself, and
-indulging in perhaps pleasing reveries. On seeing her guardian, she
-sprang up eagerly.
-
-"Do not disturb yourself, my child," said Don Tadeo, putting her back
-with a gentle hand, "I have but two words to say to you."
-
-"I am always attentive to you, my kind friend."
-
-"I have come to bid you farewell."
-
-"Farewell, Don Tadeo!" she exclaimed, in great terror.
-
-"Oh! comfort yourself, timid darling! only for a few hours."
-
-"Ah! that is all!" she said, with a smile of satisfaction.
-
-"Certainly, all! There is in this neighbourhood an exceedingly curious
-grotto. I was foolish enough to let some words slip concerning it this
-morning before Don Valentine, and that demon of a Frenchman," he added,
-with a smile, "insists upon my showing it to him; so that, in order to
-get rid of his importunities, I have been obliged to comply."
-
-"You have done quite right," she said, eagerly; "we are under great
-obligations to those two French caballeros, and what he asked is such a
-trifle!"
-
-"That it would have been uncourteous on my part to refuse him," Don
-Tadeo interrupted, "therefore I have not. We shall set off directly,
-in order to be the sooner back. Be as cheerful as you can during our
-absence, dear child."
-
-"I will endeavour," she said, absently.
-
-"Besides, I shall leave Don Louis to take care of you; you can chat
-together, and the time will quickly pass away."
-
-The young girl blushed as she stammered--"Come back soon, dear friend."
-
-"Time to go and return, that is all; adieu, then, darling!"
-
-Don Tadeo left the tent, and rejoined the young men.
-
-"Adieu, Don Louis!" he said. "Are you ready, Don Valentine?"
-
-"Ready!" the Frenchman replied, laughing; "Caramba! I should be in
-despair at losing such an opportunity of judging whether you understand
-getting up revolutions as well as we Frenchmen do."
-
-"Oh! We are but young at the work yet," Don Tadeo remarked; "and yet we
-begin to have some idea of the matter, I assure you."
-
-"Good-bye, Louis, for a time," said Valentine, pressing his friend's
-hand; and stooping towards his ear, he added--"Be thankful to your
-stars, do you not see that Heaven protects your love?" The young man
-only replied by shaking his head despondingly, and sighing deeply. A
-peon had brought the horses for the two Chilians and the Frenchman,
-and they were soon in the saddle. They set off at a quick pace, and
-were quickly lost in the high grass and the windings of the road. Louis
-returned pensively to the camp, where he found Dona Rosario alone in her
-tent; the two Indian chiefs, attracted by curiosity, having gone in the
-direction of the chapel, where, mingled with the crowd, they might be
-present at the ceremony. The arrieros and the peons had not been long in
-following their example.
-
-The young girl was seated on a heap of dyed sheepskins in front of
-the tent, dreamily looking at, but without seeing, the clouds which
-were driven across the heavens by a strong breeze. Dona Rosario was
-a charming girl of sixteen, slender, fragile, and delicate, small in
-person, whose least gestures and least movements possessed inexpressible
-attractions. Of a rare kind of beauty in America, she was fair; her
-long silky hair was of the colour of ripe golden corn; her blue eyes,
-in which were reflected the azure of the heavens, had that melancholy,
-dreamy expression which we attribute only to angels, and young girls who
-are beginning to love; her nose, with its pinky nostrils, was inclined
-to be aquiline; while her mouth, rather serious, with rosy lips set
-off by teeth of dazzling whiteness, and her skin of pearl-like purity,
-altogether made her a charming creature.
-
-The noise of the approaching young man's steps roused her from her
-reverie. She turned her head in the direction, and looked at him with
-inexpressible sadness, although a faint smile played upon her lips.
-
-"It is I," said the Count, in a low, inarticulate voice, bowing
-respectfully.
-
-"I knew of your coming," she replied, in a sweetly-toned voice. "Oh! why
-did you return to me at all?"
-
-"Be not angry with me for drawing near you once more. I endeavoured to
-obey you; I left the spot you resided in, without, alas! even the hope
-of seeing you again; but destiny has decided otherwise."
-
-She gave him a long and eloquent look.
-
-"Unfortunately," he continued, with a melancholy smile, "you are
-condemned for some hours to endure my presence."
-
-"I must resign myself to it," she said, extending her hand to him
-cordially.
-
-The young man imprinted a burning kiss upon the white, soft hand he held.
-
-"And so we are left alone!" she said gaily, but withdrawing her hand.
-
-"Good heavens! yes, nearly so," he replied, falling in with her humour.
-"The Indian chiefs and the peons, overcome by curiosity, have joined the
-crowds, and kindly procured us a _tete-a-tete_."
-
-"In the midst of ten thousand people!" she said, smiling.
-
-"That is all the better; everyone is engaged with his own affairs,
-without troubling himself about those of others; and we can speak to
-each other without the fear of being interrupted by importunate persons."
-
-"True," she said, thoughtfully; "it is frequently amidst a crowd that we
-find the greatest solitude."
-
-"Does not the heart possess that great faculty of being able to isolate
-itself when it pleases--to fold itself, as it were, within itself?"
-
-"And is not that faculty often a misfortune?"
-
-"Perhaps it is," he replied, with a sigh.
-
-"But how comes it?" she said, with a half-smiling air, in order to
-change the conversation, which was becoming a little too serious.
-"Pardon my giddy impertinence! How comes it, I say, that you, of whom I
-sometimes caught a glimpse at Paris, during my short sojourn there, and
-who then enjoyed, if I was not mistaken, a brilliant position, should
-meet me here so far from your country?"
-
-"Alas! madam, my history is that of many young men, and may be summed up
-in two words--weakness and ignorance."
-
-"That is but too true; that is the history of nearly all the world, in
-Europe as well as in America."
-
-At this moment a great noise reached them from the camp. Dona Rosario
-and the Count were placed so as not to be able to see what was passing
-in the plain.
-
-"What is that noise?" she asked.
-
-"Probably the tumult of the festival which reaches us: should you like
-to be present at this ceremony?"
-
-"To what purpose? Those cries and that tumult terrify me."
-
-"And yet, I thought it was you who asked Don Tadeo to see this."
-
-"A silly girl's caprice," she said, "which passed away as soon as
-conceived."
-
-"But was it not Don Tadeo's intention to----"
-
-"Who can tell Don Tadeo's intention?" she interrupted, with a sigh.
-
-"He appears to love you tenderly?" Louis hazarded, timidly.
-
-"Sometimes I am on the point of believing so; he pays me the most
-delicate attentions, shews me the tenderest care; then at other times he
-appears to endure me with, pain--he repulses me--my caresses annoy him."
-
-"Singular conduct!" the Count observed; "this gentleman is your
-relation, there can be no doubt."
-
-"I do not know," she replied ingenuously; "when alone and pensive, my
-thoughts stray back to my early years. I have some vague remembrance of
-a young and handsome woman, whose black eyes smiled upon me constantly,
-and whose rosy lips lavished affectionate kisses upon me; and then, all
-at once, a complete darkness comes over my brain, and memory entirely
-fails me. As far back as I can recollect, I find nobody but Don Tadeo
-watching over me, everywhere and always, as a father would do over his
-daughter."
-
-"Perhaps, then," said the Count, "he is your father."
-
-"Listen. One day, after a long and dangerous illness which I had just
-gone through, and in which Don Tadeo had night and day watched over
-my pillow for more than a month, happy at seeing me restored to life,
-for he had been fearful he should lose me, he smiled upon me tenderly,
-kissed my brow and my hands, and appeared to experience the most
-lively joy. 'Oh!' I said, as a sudden thought rushed across my mind;
-'oh! you are my father! None but a father could devote himself with
-such abnegation for his child!' and throwing my arms round his neck,
-I concealed my tear-laden face on his chest. Don Tadeo arose, his
-countenance was lividly pale, his features were frightfully contracted;
-he repulsed me roughly, and strode hastily about the chamber. I Your
-father! I! Dona Rosario!' he cried, in a husky voice, 'you are a silly,
-poor child! Never repeat those words again; your father is dead, and
-your mother, likewise, long, long ago. I am not your father--never
-repeat that word--I am only your friend. Yes, your father, at the point
-of death, confided you to my care, and that is why I am bringing you up,
-that is why I watch over you; as to me, I am not even your relation!'
-His agitation was extreme; he said many other things which I do not now
-remember, and then he left me. Alas! from that day I have never ventured
-to ask him for any account of my family."
-
-A silence ensued; the two young people were pensively thoughtful: the
-simple and touching recital of Dona Rosario had strongly affected the
-Count. At length he said, in a tremulous voice,--
-
-"Let _me_ love you, Dona Rosario!"
-
-The maiden sighed.
-
-"To what could that love lead, Don Louis?" she said sadly,--"to death,
-perhaps!"
-
-"Oh!" he exclaimed madly; "and it would be welcome, if it came in your
-defence!"
-
-At this very instant, several individuals rushed into the tent, uttering
-discordant cries. Quick as thought, the Count threw himself before the
-young girl, a pistol in each hand. But, as if Heaven had decreed that he
-should accomplish the wish he had just uttered, before he had time to
-defend himself, he was struck to the earth, stabbed by several machetes.
-In falling, he saw, as if in a dream, Dona Rosario seized by two
-individuals, who fled away with her in their arms. With an incredible
-effort, the young man succeeded in getting on his knees, and afterwards
-in rising altogether. He beheld the ravishers hastening towards their
-horses, which were being held at a short distance by an Indian. He
-took aim at the flying wretches, crying, with a faint voice, "Murder!
-Murder!" and fired.
-
-One of the ravishers fell, uttering an imprecation of rage. The Count,
-exhausted by the superhuman effort he had made, staggered like a drunken
-man; the blood gushed from his ears, his sight grew dim, and he rolled
-senseless upon the ground.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXX.
-
-THE PROTEST.
-
-
-The three travellers returned with such speed to Valdivia, that it
-scarcely took them an hour and a half to traverse the distance which
-divided the plain from the city. They passed on their way General
-Don Pancho Bustamente, at the head of a detachment of lanceros, and
-attended by a numerous staff; but the Dark-Hearts, employing their usual
-precautions, escaped notice. Don Tadeo cast an ironical glance at his
-enemy.
-
-"Look," he said, with a somewhat malignant smile, to Don Gregorio,
-"at our worthy general; he fancies himself already protector. What a
-majestic bearing he affects!"
-
-"Yes," said Don Gregorio, with the same expression; "but between the cup
-and the lip he may find there is room for a mischance."
-
-It was striking ten as they entered Valdivia. The city was almost
-deserted: for all who were not detained at home by urgent business had
-gone to the plain, to be present at the renewal of the treaties between
-the Chilians and the Araucanos. This ceremony strongly interested the
-inhabitants of the province: it was for them a guarantee of tranquillity
-for the future; that is to say, the liberty of carrying on with safety
-their commercial transactions with the Indians. More than all the other
-provinces of Chili, Valdivia had cause to dread hostilities with its
-redoubtable neighbours. Separated entirely from the territory of the
-republic, when left to its own resources, the least movement among
-the Moluchos annihilated its commerce. If the inhabitants appeared to
-have emigrated for a time, it was not the same with the soldiers; the
-numerous garrison, composed--a thing unheard of in time of peace--of
-fifteen hundred men, had been still further increased within the last
-two days, principally in the course of the preceding night, by two
-regiments of cavalry, and a battery of artillery.
-
-For what purpose was this calling together of forces, which nothing
-appeared to justify? The few inhabitants who remained in the city
-experienced a vague uneasiness on this head, for which they could not
-account. There is a singular fact that we wish to point out here, but
-which we by no means take upon ourselves to explain, because it has
-always seemed to us inexplicable. When a great event, whatever it may
-be, is about to be accomplished in a country, a vague presentiment
-seems to warn the inhabitants; men and things assume an unusual aspect;
-nature itself, associating with this disposition of men's minds, grows
-sensibly darker; a magnetic fluid rushes through the veins; a painful
-pressure weighs upon every breast; the atmosphere becomes heavy; the
-sun loses its brilliancy; and people only communicate their impressions
-to each other in a suppressed voice; in short, there is in the air
-something incomprehensible, but I know not what, which says to man in
-a dismal tone, "Beware! a catastrophe threatens thee!" And this fatal
-presentiment is so general, that when the event takes place, and the
-crisis is over, every one instinctively cries, "I felt it!" And yet no
-one could say why he foresaw the cataclysm.
-
-It is the sentiment of self-preservation which God has placed in the
-heart of man--that sentiment which constitutes his safeguard, and is
-so strong, that when danger approaches him, it cries to him, "Beware!"
-Valdivia was at this moment oppressed by the weight of an unknown
-apprehension. The few citizens who remained in the city hastened to
-regain their homes. Numerous patrols of cavalry and infantry traversed
-the streets in all directions; cannon rolled along with portentous
-noise, and were planted at the comers of all the principal places. At
-the cabildo a crowd of officers and soldiers went in and out with a
-busy air; couriers succeeded each other unceasingly, and after having
-delivered the orders with which they were charged, set off again at full
-speed.
-
-At the same time, at the corners of streets, men wrapped in large
-cloaks, and with hats pulled down over their eyes, harangued the workmen
-and the sailors of the port, and formed groups, which every instant
-became more numerous. In these groups, arms, gun barrels, bayonets,
-and pike heads began to glitter in the sun. When these mysterious men
-were satisfied that they had accomplished their task in one place, they
-went to another. Immediately after their departure, as if by magic,
-barricades were raised behind them, and impeded the passage. As soon as
-a barricade was terminated, an energetic-looking sentinel, a workman
-with bare arms, but with a callous hand, brandishing a gun, an axe, or
-a sabre, placed himself at its summit, and bade all who approached go
-another way.
-
-On entering the city, Don Tadeo and his companions found themselves
-completely barricaded. Don Tadeo smiled triumphantly. The three men
-cleared the barricades, which were thrown open at their approach, and
-the sentinels bowed to them as they passed. We have forgotten to say
-that all three were masked. There was something striking in the march
-of these three phantoms, before whom all obstacles gave way. If now and
-then a stray citizen ventured to ask timidly who those three masked
-men were, he received for answer, "It is the King of Darkness and his
-lieutenants;" and the citizen, trembling with fear, crossed himself, and
-went his way hastily.
-
-The three men thus arrived at the entrance of the Plaza Mayor. There
-two pieces of mounted cannon barred their passage, and the artillerymen
-were at their guns waiting, match in hand. At a sign from Don Tadeo, the
-officer who commanded approached him. He leant down upon the neck of his
-horse and said a few words to the officer in a whisper; the latter bowed
-respectfully, and, turning to his soldiers, said--
-
-"Let these gentlemen pass."
-
-In all the cities of Spanish America there is a monumental fountain in
-the centre of the Plaza Mayor. It was towards this fountain that Don
-Tadeo conducted his companions. A hundred individuals, scattered here
-and there, and who appeared to expect him, drew together at his approach.
-
-"Well," Don Tadeo asked Valentine, "how do you like our ride?"
-
-"Delightful," the other replied, "only I fancy we shall shortly come to
-blows, and hear the hissing of bullets."
-
-"I hope so," said the conspirator, coolly.
-
-"Ah! ah!" the young man remarked, "all is for the best, then?"
-
-"You are about to be present at a very interesting spectacle."
-
-"Oh! I depend upon you for that. For my part, I am glad at not having
-lost such an opportunity."
-
-"Is it not one?"
-
-"Pardieu!--yes. It is astonishing how travelling instructs one," he
-added, in the form of a parenthesis.
-
-The individuals assembled near the fountain surrounded them with
-every mark of the profoundest respect. These were the faithful--the
-Dark-Hearts--upon whom perfect dependence was to be placed.
-
-"Gentlemen," said Don Tadeo, "the struggle is about to commence. I
-desire at length that you should know me, that you should be informed
-who the man is who commands you."
-
-And he threw off his mask. A burst of enthusiasm broke from the ranks
-of the conspirators. "Don Tadeo de Leon!" they cried with astonishment,
-mingled with a species of veneration for the man who had suffered so
-much for the common cause.
-
-"Yes, gentlemen," Don Tadeo replied, "the man whom the creatures of the
-tyrant condemned to death, and whom God has miraculously preserved, in
-order to be the instrument of His vengeance today."
-
-All the conspirators pressed tumultuously round him. These men of
-spontaneous impressions, and essentially superstitious, no longer
-doubted of victory, since they had at their head the man whom God, as
-they believed, had so manifestly protected. Don Tadeo had calculated
-upon this manifestation to heighten the ardour of the conspirators,
-and to augment still further the prestige he enjoyed. The result had
-answered his expectations.
-
-"Is everyone at his post?" he asked.
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Are arms and ammunition distributed?"
-
-"To everybody."
-
-"Are all the barricades completed?--all the gates of the city guarded?"
-
-"All."
-
-"That is well. Now wait."
-
-And quiet was re-established.
-
-All these men had known Don Tadeo for a long time; they appreciated his
-character at its true value; they had already vowed to him a boundless
-friendship; and now they knew that Don Tadeo and the King of Darkness
-were the same person, they were ready to lay down their lives for him.
-The news of the revelation which had been made near the fountain spread
-through the city with the rapidity of a train of gunpowder, and added
-greatly to the fermentation which already prevailed. Whilst the few
-words were being exchanged between the chief of the conspirators and
-his party, a regiment of infantry had formed in front of the cabildo,
-flanked right and left by two squadrons of horse.
-
-"Attention!" Don Tadeo commanded.
-
-A sensation of impatience pervaded the men grouped around him.
-
-"Eh! eh!" Valentine murmured, with that mocking, short laugh that was
-peculiar to him; "this is going on capitally! Caramba! we shall soon
-have some fun!"
-
-The gates of the cabildo were thrown open violently, and a general,
-followed by a brilliant staff, took his station on the top step of the
-great staircase; next several senators made their appearance in full
-costume, and formed a group round him. At a signal from the general, the
-drums beat for a time, to secure attention and silence. When all was
-quiet, a senator, who held a roll of paper in his hand, came forward a
-few steps, and prepared to read.
-
-"Bah!" said the General, seizing his arm, "Why lose your time in reading
-that rubbish? Leave it to me."
-
-The senator, who asked no better than to be freed from the dangerous
-commission with which, very much against his will, he had been charged,
-rolled up his papers, and retreated to the rear. The general assumed a
-commanding posture, placed his hand upon his hip, with the point of his
-sword on the ground, and said in a voice audible in every corner of the
-place--
-
-"People of the province of Valdivia, the sovereign senate, assembled
-in congress at Santiago de Chili, has unanimously passed the following
-resolutions:--
-
-"1st. The various provinces of the Chilian republic shall be composed of
-independent states united under the title of the Confederation of the
-United States of South America.
-
-"2nd. The valiant and most excellent general, Don Pancho Bustamente, has
-been elected Protector of the Chilian Confederation."
-
-"People, cry with me--'Long live the Protector Don Pancho Bustamente!'"
-
-The officers grouped round the General, and the soldiers drawn up in the
-place, shouted--
-
-"Long live the Protector!"
-
-But the people were mute.
-
-"Hum!" the general murmured to himself; "they do not display much
-enthusiasm."
-
-A man came forward from the group collected round the fountain, and
-advanced boldly to within twenty paces of the soldiers. This man was
-Don Tadeo de Leon; his countenance was calm and his bearing firm and
-collected. He made a sign with his hand.
-
-"What is your will?" the general shouted.
-
-"To reply to your proclamation," the King of Darkness said, intrepidly.
-
-"Speak! I hear you," the general replied.
-
-Don Tadeo bowed with a significant smile.
-
-"In the name of the Chilian people," he said, in a loud, clear voice,
-"the senate of Santiago de Chili, composed of creatures sold to the
-tyrant, is declared traitorous to its country."
-
-"Miserable fellow! what do you dare to say?" the General cried, angrily.
-
-"No insults, if you please! Allow me to terminate the answer I have to
-give you," Don Tadeo replied, coolly.
-
-The General, involuntarily brow-beaten by the heroic courage of this
-man, who, alone, unarmed before a triple row of muskets ready to be
-directed towards his breast, had dared to speak in this loud, firm
-tone, and overcome by that ascendancy which a great character always
-exercises, bit the pommel of his sword with rage.
-
-"In the name of the people," Don Tadeo, still calm and stoical,
-continued, "Don Pancho Bustamente is declared a traitor to his country,
-and as such is degraded from his titles and his power. Liberty! Chili!"
-
-"Liberty! Chili!" the populace assembled on the square shouted with the
-greatest enthusiasm.
-
-"Oh, this is too audacious!" the General cried, pale with anger.
-"Soldiers, seize that rebel!"
-
-Several soldiers stepped forward; but, quicker than thought, Don
-Gregorio and Valentine had sprung to Don Tadeo's side, and dragged him
-back with them among the people.
-
-"Cordieu!" cried Valentine, pressing his hands enough to crush them,
-"you are a troublesome man! but I love you the better for it."
-
-The General, outrageous at seeing his enemy escape, shouted silence. "In
-the name of the Protector," he said, "I command that rebel to be given
-up!"
-
-Hisses and hootings were the only reply.
-
-"Fire!" the General commanded, who, even before the last insulting
-manifestation, had perceived that no half measures were possible. The
-muskets were lowered, and a formidable discharge pealed like thunder.
-Several men fell, killed or wounded.
-
-"Chili! Liberty! down with the oppressor!" the people shouted, arming
-themselves with everything they could lay their hands on. A second
-discharge resounded, followed closely by a third. The ground was, in an
-instant, strewed with the dead and dying; but the patriots showed no
-disposition to disperse; on the contrary, under the incessant fire of
-the soldiers, they organized a resistance, and soon replied by a few
-shots to the incessant platoon firing which was decimating them. The
-combat became mutual; the revolution had commenced.
-
-"Hum!" the General muttered to himself, "I have undertaken a rather
-awkward mission."
-
-But, essentially a soldier, and endowed to the highest degree with that
-spirit of passive obedience which distinguishes all who have grown old
-in harness, he prepared either to chastise the insurgents severely, or
-die at his post.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXI.
-
-SPANIARD AND INDIAN.
-
-
-It was not, as may well be believed, through fear, that General
-Bustamente had absented himself from Valdivia at the moment when one
-of his lieutenants so boldly proclaimed him from the top of the steps
-of the cabildo, before the populace. No, General Bustamente was one
-of those soldiers of fortune of whom so many are found in America,
-accustomed to set his life upon a cast of the die, and to be turned
-aside by nothing in the world from the accomplishment of his projects.
-He had hoped, by the means of the forces he had concentrated in this
-remote province of the republic, that the inhabitants, taken unawares,
-would only offer an insignificant resistance, and that he should be
-able, by joining his troops with those of Antinahuel, to make a forced
-march through Araucania, gain possession of Concepcion, and thence,
-keeping the gathering snowball in motion, and dragging his companions
-after him, arrive at Santiago in time to prevent any movement, and
-oblige the inhabitants to capitulate and accept, as an accomplished
-fact, the change of government inaugurated by him in the distant
-provinces of the republic.
-
-This plan was not deficient in audacity, or even in a certain degree of
-policy; it comprised great chances of success. Unfortunately for General
-Bustamente, the Dark-Hearts, whose spies were everywhere, had got wind
-of this project, and had countermined it by taking advantage of the
-opportunity offered them by their enemy to unmask their own batteries.
-We have seen under what conditions the struggle between the two parties
-had commenced in Valdivia. The General, who was ignorant of what was
-passing, felt in a state of perfect security. As soon as he was in his
-tent with Antinahuel, he let fall the curtain which closed it behind
-them, and, by a gesture, invited the toqui to be seated.
-
-"Sit down, chief," he said, "I have something to say to you."
-
-"I am at the orders of my white brother," the Indian replied, with a bow.
-
-The General attentively examined the man before him; he endeavoured to
-read on his countenance the various feelings that acted upon him; but
-the features of the Indian were marble; no impression was reflected by
-them.
-
-"Let us speak frankly, loyally, and as friends who wish no better than
-to understand each other plainly," he said.
-
-Antinahuel bowed reservedly to this appeal to frankness, and the General
-continued--
-
-"At this moment the people of Valdivia are constituting me, by
-acclamation, protector of a new confederation, formed of all the states."
-
-"Good!" said the chief, with an almost imperceptible shake of the head;
-"is my father sure of that?"
-
-"Certainly I am. The Chilians are tired of the continual agitations
-which disturb the country; they have forced this heavy burden upon me;
-but I owe myself to my country, and I will not disappoint the hopes my
-compatriots place in me."
-
-These words were pronounced in a hypocritical tone of self-denial, of
-which the Indian was not in the least the dupe. A smile flitted across
-the lips of the chief, which the General affected not to perceive.
-
-"To be brief," he continued, quitting the mild, conciliatory tone in
-which he had till that time spoken, to assume a more decided and abrupt
-manner, "are you prepared to keep your engagements?"
-
-"Why should I not keep them?" Antinahuel remarked.
-
-"Will you march with me to assure the success of my projects?"
-
-"Let my father order, I will obey."
-
-This readiness was displeasing to the General.
-
-"Come," he said, angrily, "let us put an end to this; I have not time to
-enter into a contest of wits with you, or follow you through a labyrinth
-of Indian circumlocutions."
-
-"I do not understand my father," Antinahuel replied, impassively.
-
-"We shall never get to the end, chief," the General said, stamping his
-foot, "if you will not answer me categorically."
-
-"I listen to my father; let him ask, I will reply."
-
-"How many men can you have under arms within twenty-four hours?"
-
-"Ten thousand," the chief said, drawing himself up proudly.
-
-"All experienced warriors?"
-
-"All."
-
-"What do you require of me for them?"
-
-"My father knows."
-
-"I accept of all your conditions but one."
-
-"Which is that?"
-
-"The surrender of the province of Valdivia to you."
-
-"Is not my father going to make up for that province on another side?"
-
-"How so?"
-
-"Am I not to assist my father in conquering Bolivia?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Well, then?"
-
-"You are mistaken, chief, it is not the same thing; I may enlarge the
-Chilian territory, but honour forbids me to diminish it."
-
-"Let my father reflect; the province of Valdivia was anciently an
-Araucanian Uthal-Mapus."
-
-"Very possibly, chief; but, according to that principle, all Chili was
-Araucanian previous to the discovery of America."
-
-"My father is mistaken; the Inca Sinchiroca had, a hundred years before,
-conquered the Chilian land as far as the Rio-Maule."
-
-"You seem to be well acquainted with the history of your country,
-chief," the General observed.
-
-"Does not my father know the history of his?"
-
-"That is not the question, now; do you accept my proposals or not?"
-
-The chief appeared to reflect for an instant.
-
-"Well!" the General exclaimed, impatiently, "time presses."
-
-"That is true; I will, therefore, go and command a council, composed
-of the Apo-Ulmens and Ulmens of my nation, and submit the words of my
-father to them."
-
-The General with difficulty suppressed an expression of anger.
-
-"You must, doubtless, be joking, chief," he said--"your words cannot be
-serious."
-
-"Antinahuel is the first toqui of his nation," the Indian replied,
-haughtily; "he never jokes."
-
-"But you must give me your answer now--at once--in a few minutes!" cried
-the General; "who knows whether we may not be obliged to march within an
-hour from this time?"
-
-"It is my duty, as much as it is my father's, to enlarge the territory
-of my people."
-
-At this moment the gallop of a horse was heard approaching; the General
-flew to the entrance of the tent, where an orderly officer appeared. The
-face of this officer was bathed with perspiration, and spots of blood
-stained his uniform.
-
-"General!" he said breathlessly.
-
-"Silence!" the latter hissed, pointing to the chief, who, though
-apparently indifferent, followed all his movements attentively. The
-General turned towards Antinahuel.
-
-"Chief," he said, "I have orders to give to this officer--pressing
-orders; if you will permit me, we will resume our conversation
-presently."
-
-"Good!" replied the chief; "my father need not inconvenience himself; I
-can wait."
-
-And after bowing, he left the tent slowly.
-
-"Oh!" said the General to himself, "you demon! if, some day, I have you
-in my power!"
-
-But perceiving that anger was making him forget himself, he turned
-towards the officer, who stood motionless:
-
-"Well, Diego," he said, "what news have you?--are we conquerors?"
-
-"No," the officer replied, shaking his head; "the people, excited by
-those incarnate demons, the Dark-Hearts, have rebelled."
-
-"Oh!" the General cried, "shall I never be able to crush them? What has
-taken place?"
-
-"The people have raised barricades; and Don Tadeo de Leon is at the head
-of the movement."
-
-"Don Tadeo de Leon!" said the General.
-
-"Yes, he who was so clumsily shot."
-
-"Oh! this is war to the death then!"
-
-"A part of the troops, seduced by their officers, who have sold
-themselves to the Dark-Hearts, have passed over to their side; at
-this moment they are fighting in all the streets with the fiercest
-inveteracy. I had to pass through a shower of bullets to come and inform
-you."
-
-"We have not an instant to lose."
-
-"No; for though the soldiers who have remained faithful to you are
-fighting like lions, I can assure you they are closely pressed."
-
-"Maldicion!" the General howled; "I will not leave stone upon stone of
-that accursed city!"
-
-"Yes, but, in the first place, we must reconquer it, General, and that
-will prove rather a rough job, I promise you," replied the old soldier,
-who had preserved his blunt speech throughout.
-
-"Very well!" said Bustamente; "let 'boot and saddle' be sounded, and
-every horseman take a foot soldier behind him."
-
-Don Pancho Bustamente was a prey to the most violent rage; for several
-instants he stamped about his tent, like a wild beast in its cage. This
-unexpected resistance, in spite of all the measures of precaution he had
-taken, exasperated him. Suddenly the curtain of his tent was raised.
-"Who is there?" he cried. "Ah! chief, is that you? Well, what do you
-say?"
-
-"I saw the chief come out, and I thought that perhaps my father would
-not be sorry to see me," the other replied, courteously.
-
-"And you were right; I am delighted to see you; forget all we have said,
-chief; I accept all your conditions; are you satisfied, this time?"
-
-"Yes. Including Valdivia?"
-
-"That above all!" said the General, with concentrated rage.
-
-"Ah!"
-
-"Yes, and as that province has revolted, in order to be able to give it
-to you, I must bring it back to its duty, must I not?"
-
-"To be sure you must!"
-
-"Well, as I have it at my heart to fulfil all my engagements to you,
-I am going instantly to march against that city; will you help me to
-subdue it?"
-
-"That will be but just, as I shall labour for myself."
-
-"How many horsemen have you at hand?"
-
-"Twelve hundred."
-
-"Good!" said the General, "they will be more than we shall want."
-
-"The troops are ready," said Diego, entering the tent, "and only await
-your Excellency's orders."
-
-"To saddle, then; let us be gone! let us be gone! And you, chief, will
-you not accompany us?"
-
-"Let my father move onward! my mosotones and I will tread in his steps
-quickly."
-
-Ten minutes later, General Bustamente, with his soldiers, was again
-galloping along the road to Valdivia. Antinahuel followed him with his
-eyes attentively; then he rejoined his Ulmens, saying between his teeth,
-"Let us leave these Moro-Huincas to slaughter each other a little while;
-it will always be time enough to fall into the party."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXII.
-
-IN THE MOUNTAIN.
-
-
-Dona Rosario was so terrified, and such mortal anguish assailed her
-on beholding the Count fall under the knives of the assassins, that
-she fainted. When she recovered her senses, it was dark night. For
-several minutes her confused thoughts whirled about in her brain; and
-she endeavoured, but for a long time in vain, to recover the violently
-broken thread of her ideas. At length light returned to her mind; she
-breathed a deep sigh, and murmured in a low voice full of terror:
-
-"My God! my God! what has happened to me?"
-
-She then opened her eyes, and cast around a despairing look. We have
-said it was a dark night; but what made the darkness more complete
-for the poor girl, was a heavy covering of some kind which was spread
-over her face, as well as her person. Then, with that patience which
-characterizes all prisoners, and which is merely the instinct of
-liberty, the poor child endeavoured to ascertain what her position was.
-As well as she could judge, she was lying upon the back of a mule,
-between two bales; a cord, which passed round her waist, prevented her
-from rising, but her hands were free. The mule had that rough, irregular
-trot, peculiar to its species, which made the young girl suffer terribly
-at every step. Some horse cloths had been thrown over her, no doubt to
-protect her from the heavy dews of the night, or perhaps to prevent her
-from making out what road she was going. Dona Rosario, gently, and with
-great precaution, slipped the covering down from her face: after a few
-efforts her head was completely free. She then looked around her; but
-all was dark. The moon, closely veiled by the clouds which passed over
-its pale disc, only yielded, at rare intervals, a weak, uncertain light.
-By lifting her head softly, the young girl could distinguish several
-horsemen, riding before and behind the mule which carried her. As well
-as she could make out, from the obscurity which surrounded her, these
-horsemen were Indians.
-
-The rather numerous party--it apparently consisted of a score of
-individuals--followed a narrow road deeply inclosed between two abrupt
-mountains, the rocky masses of which, throwing their shadow over the
-road, augmented the darkness. This road rose with a gentle ascent; and
-the horses and mules, probably fatigued with a long journey, travelled
-at a foot pace. The young girl, scarcely recovered from her fainting,
-had not been able to judge of the time that had elapsed since her
-abduction; and yet, by collecting her remembrances, and thinking at what
-hour she had been the victim of this odious attempt, she calculated
-that twelve hours must have passed away since she was made a prisoner.
-Overcome by the effort she had been forced to make in order to look
-around her, the poor girl let her head sink back again, stifling a sigh
-of despondency; and closing her eyes, as if to isolate herself the more,
-she plunged into sad and deep meditations.
-
-She was at least ignorant of whom she was with. Many times, it was true,
-Don Tadeo had spoken to her of an inveterate enemy, inveterate for her
-destruction; of a woman whose hatred watched her incessantly, ready to
-sacrifice her on the first favourable opportunity. But who was this
-woman? What cause had she for her hatred? Was she in the hands of this
-woman at that moment? And if so, why had she not already sacrificed
-her to her vengeance? From what motive had she been spared? For what
-punishment was she reserved?
-
-These thoughts and many others came in crowds to assail the maiden's
-bewildered mind. This uncertainty was for her an atrocious torture; at
-that moment, the truth would, perhaps, have been a consolation. Man is
-so constructed, that what he is most in dread of is the unknown; what he
-is ignorant of, assumes instinctively, in the prepossessed eyes of one
-whom a terrible danger menaces, gigantic proportions, a thousand times
-more terrific than the danger itself. The diseased imagination creates
-for itself phantoms which reality, however horrible it may be, puts
-to flight. In a word, the condemned prisoner who is led to punishment
-suffers more from the apprehensions which the fear of the death awaiting
-him inspires him with, than the physical pain of that death itself will
-cause him. Such was, at this moment, the situation of Dona Rosario; her
-mind, filled with inquietude and dark presentiments, made her dread
-nameless sufferings, the mere thought of which froze the young blood in
-her veins.
-
-The caravan still proceeded; it had left the ravine, and was climbing
-a path traced along the edge of a precipice, at the base of which
-could be heard the dull murmur of invisible water. At times, a stone,
-half-broken beneath the hoof of a mule, became detached, and rolled with
-a sinister noise down the side of the mountain, to engulf itself in the
-waters, into which it plunged with a dull plash, the sound of which
-ascended from the abyss. The wind howled through the pines and larches,
-the clashing branches of which showered a deluge of dry cones upon the
-travellers. At intervals the owl, and the screech owl, concealed in
-the crevices of the rocks, poured out into the night their plaintive
-notes, breaking the silence dismally. Furious barkings were heard in the
-distance; by degrees they grew nearer, and ended by forming a frightful
-concert, broken by the sharp voices of women and children, endeavouring
-to quiet them; lights appeared, and the caravan stopped. They had
-evidently arrived at the halt, at which they were to pass the rest of
-the night.
-
-The maiden cast an anxious but cautious look around her; but the flame
-of the torches agitated by the wind would not permit her to see anything
-but the dark outlines of some buildings and the shadows of several
-individuals who flitted about her, with cries and laughter--nothing
-more. The people of the escort were busily employed in unsaddling the
-horses and unloading the mules, amidst cries and oaths, and did not
-appear to bestow the least attention upon the young girl.
-
-A considerable time passed away; Dona Rosario did not know to what to
-attribute this unaccountable forgetfulness. At length she felt that
-someone took the mule by the bridle, and she heard him shout in a hoarse
-voice, _Arrea!_--the word with which the arrieros are accustomed to
-excite their beasts. Had she, then, been deceived? Was it not here they
-were to stop? What was the meaning of the halt, then? Why did a portion
-of the escort leave her?
-
-Her uncertainty was not of long duration; at the end of ten minutes at
-most, the mule stopped again, and the man who led it approached Dona
-Rosario. This man, clothed in the costume of the Chilian peasantry, wore
-an old straw Panama hat, the large brim of which, pulled down over his
-face, prevented her distinguishing his features. At the sight of this
-individual, the young girl felt an involuntary shudder run through her
-frame. The peasant, or pretended peasant, without addressing a word to
-her, withdrew the covering which enfolded her, untied the cord which
-bound her to the mule, and taking her in his arms, carried her with as
-much ease as if she had been a child, into a detached cabin a few paces
-distant, the door of which, standing open, seemed to invite them to
-enter.
-
-The interior of this cabin was dark. The young girl was laid upon the
-ground with a care and attention she did not expect. At the moment when
-he let her sink softly down from his arms to the ground, the man bent
-his head down towards her, and in a voice as inaudible as a breath, he
-whispered, "Courage! and hope!" and recovering himself quickly, went
-hastily out of the cabin, closing the door after him.
-
-As soon as he was gone, Dona Rosario sprang upon her feet. The two words
-pronounced by the unknown had sufficed to restore her presence of mind,
-and remove all her terrors. Hope, that universal panacea, that supreme
-good, which God, in His infinite mercy, has given to the unfortunate
-to help them to suffer, had suddenly re-entered her heart; she felt
-herself become strong, and ready to engage in the struggle with her
-unknown enemies. She knew now that a friend watched in secret over her,
-and, if required, his assistance would not be wanting; therefore it was
-almost with impatience, though still with fear, that she waited for her
-ravishers to signify their intentions.
-
-The place in which she was confined was completely dark. At the first
-moment she in vain endeavoured to distinguish anything in this chaos;
-but, by degrees, her eyes became accustomed to the darkness, and, in
-front of her, she perceived a faint light, which flitted between the
-badly-joined boards of a door. She then, with great precaution, for
-fear of arousing her invisible guardians, and stretching out her hand
-to keep her from contact with any obstacle she could not see, advanced
-cautiously, and listening attentively, towards the side from which came
-the light--a light which attracted her as instinctively as a flame
-attracts the imprudent moth whose wings it burns.
-
-The nearer she approached, the more distinct the light became, and the
-sound of a voice reached her ears. At length her extended hands touched
-the door, and leaning forward, she applied her eye to the chink. She
-stifled a cry of surprise, and, as at that moment the conversation,
-which had been for a short time interrupted, recommenced, she listened
-with intensity.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIII.
-
-ON THE WATCH.
-
-
-What she heard, but still more what she saw, necessarily powerfully
-interested Dona Rosario. In a vast room, dimly lighted by one of those
-yellow candles which the Chilians call _velas de cebo_, fastened to
-the wall by means of a ring, a woman, still young, and very handsome,
-attired in a riding dress of great richness, was seated on an ebony
-chair, covered with Cordova leather. With her right hand she played
-with a gold headed whip, and was speaking in an animated tone to a man
-who stood respectfully before her, hat in hand. This man, as well as
-Dona Rosario could make out, was the same who had carried her into the
-_cuarto_. The woman, whom Dona Rosario did not recollect ever to have
-seen, was no other than Dona Maria, the shameless courtesan, who, under
-the name of the Linda, enjoyed such a scandalous celebrity.
-
-Dona Maria's position threw the light of the candle full upon her face,
-and gave Dona Rosario an opportunity of distinguishing her features.
-She contemplated them with deep interest, for she felt instinctively
-that this woman was the enemy who, from her birth, had fatally followed
-her steps. She imagined that a decisive conference between her and
-the unknown was about to take place, and that in a few minutes her
-fate would be made known to her. And yet, at the aspect of this woman,
-whose bent brows, clear and haughty look, coldly compressed lips,
-and cruel words, revealed with the hatred which devoured her, it was
-neither a feeling of terror, nor a feeling of hatred, that the young
-girl experienced. Without knowing why, a sadness and an undefined pity
-for the very woman who was giving orders that made her shudder, took
-possession of her. She listened breathlessly, fascinated, scarcely
-knowing whether what she heard was really true, and fancying herself at
-times under the influence of some terrible hallucination.
-
-The two speakers, who knew not that they were either watched or
-overheard, resumed their conversation in an unrestrained voice. Dona
-Rosario, we may well suppose, did not lose a single word.
-
-"How is it," said the Linda, "that Joan has not come? I expected him."
-
-The man thus questioned cast a sharp look around him, and rolling up
-the broad brim of his hat in his fingers, replied with ill-dissembled
-embarrassment--
-
-"Joan sent me in his place."
-
-"And by what right," said the Linda, in a haughty tone, "does the fellow
-presume to confide to others the care of accomplishing the orders I give
-him?"
-
-"Joan is my friend," the man replied.
-
-"What are the ties that unite you to me:" she asked, contemptuously.
-
-"The mission you charged him with is accomplished."
-
-"Ay--but faithfully?"
-
-"The woman is there," he said, pointing to the room in which Dona
-Rosario was; "during the journey she has spoken to nobody, and I can
-guarantee that she does not know to what place she has been brought."
-
-At this assurance the look of Dona Maria softened a little, and it was
-in a less sharp and haughty tone she continued--
-
-"But why did Joan give up his place to you?"
-
-"Oh!" the man said with a feigned bluntness, belied by his cunning eye,
-"for a very simple reason; Joan is at this moment attracted towards the
-plain by the black eyes of the wife of a paleface, which sparkle like
-fireflies in the night. The woman's toldo is built in the country, near
-the tolderia which you call, I think, Concepcion. Although such conduct
-be unworthy of a warrior, his heart is flying constantly towards this
-woman, in spite of himself, and until he gain possession of her, he will
-never be in his senses."
-
-"Well, then," the Linda interrupted, stamping her foot with vexation,
-"why does not the fool carry her off?"
-
-"I proposed that to him."
-
-"And what did he say?"
-
-"He refused."
-
-Dona Maria shrugged her shoulders with a smile of disdain. "Still," she
-remarked, "all that does not tell me who you are."
-
-"I! I am an Ulmen in my tribe; a great warrior among the Puelches," he
-replied, proudly.
-
-"Ah!" she said, with an air of satisfaction, "you are an Ulmen of the
-Puelches, are you? Good! then I can depend upon your fidelity."
-
-"I am the friend of Joan," he remarked simply, with a respectful bow.
-
-"Do you know the woman whom you have brought here?" the Linda asked,
-darting at him a mistrustful glance.
-
-"How should I know her?"
-
-"Are you ready to obey me in everything?"
-
-"My obedience will depend on my sister; let her speak, and I will
-answer."
-
-"This woman is my enemy," said the Linda.
-
-"Must she die?" he asked, roughly, without lowering his eyes before the
-searching glances of the Linda.
-
-"Oh, no!" she cried eagerly; "these Indians are brutes--they understand
-nothing of vengeance! What use would her death be to me? It is her life
-I want."
-
-"Let my sister explain; I do not comprehend."
-
-"Death! that is nothing but a few instants of suffering, then all is
-over."
-
-"White death may be so, but an Indian death must be called for many
-hours before it answers."
-
-"I wish her to live, I tell you!"
-
-"She shall live. Ah!" he added, with a sigh, "the toldo of a chief is
-empty, its fires are extinguished."
-
-"Oh! oh!" the Linda interrupted; "have you no wives?"
-
-"They are dead."
-
-"And where is your tribe at this moment?"
-
-"Oh!" said the Indian, "far from here--ten suns' march, at least. I was
-returning to rejoin the warriors of my tolderia, when Joan charged me
-with this mission."
-
-There was a short silence, during which the Linda appeared to be
-reflecting. Dona Rosario redoubled her attention--she felt she was about
-to know her fate.
-
-"And pray," Dona Maria resumed, fixing her keen eyes upon the Indian,
-"what great interest detained you on the plains near the seashore?"
-
-"None; I came, as the other Ulmens did, to renew the treaties."
-
-"Had you no other reasons?"
-
-"None at all."
-
-"Listen to me, chief. You have, doubtless, admired the four horses
-fastened at the gate of this house?"
-
-"They are noble beasts," the Indian replied, his eyes glistening with
-the desire of possessing them.
-
-"Well, it only depends upon yourself that I should give them to you."
-
-"Oh! oh!" he cried, joyfully, "what must I do for that?"
-
-"Obey me," said the Linda, with a smile.
-
-"I will obey," he replied.
-
-"Whatever I command you?"
-
-"Whatever my sister commands."
-
-"That is well; but remember what I am going to say to you. If you
-deceive me, my vengeance will be terrible--it will follow you
-everywhere."
-
-"Why should I deceive my sister?"
-
-"Because your Indian race is so constituted--astute and roguish, ever
-ready to betray."
-
-A sinister flash gleamed from the downcast eye of the Puelche warrior;
-nevertheless, he replied in a calm tone--
-
-"My sister is mistaken; the Araucanos are loyal."
-
-"We shall see," she coldly remarked. "What is your name?"
-
-"The Musk Rat."
-
-"Very well; listen, Musk Rat, to what I am going to say."
-
-"My ears are open."
-
-"This woman, who, according to my orders, you brought here, must never
-again revisit the shores of the sea."
-
-"She shall never see them again."
-
-"I do not wish her to die--understand that; she must suffer," the Linda
-added, in a tone which made the unhappy girl tremble with fear.
-
-"She shall suffer."
-
-"Yes," said Dona Maria, with sparkling eyes, "I wish that, during a
-long course of years, she may suffer a martyrdom at every instant; she
-is young, she will have time to call upon death to deliver her from her
-misery before it deigns to listen to her. Beyond the mountains, far in
-the deserts, in the virgin forests of the Grou-Chaco, I am told that
-hordes of Indians exist who are ferocious and sanguinary, and bear a
-deadly hatred towards all of the white race."
-
-"Yes," said the Puelche, in a melancholy tone, "I have heard of these
-men from the chiefs of my tribe; they live only for murder."
-
-"That is it!" she said, with sinister delight. "Well, chief, do you
-think yourself able to traverse these vast deserts, and reach the
-Grou-Chaco?"
-
-"Why should I not?" the Indian replied, raising his head proudly, "Do
-there exist obstacles strong enough to resist the Araucano warrior in
-his course? The puma is the king of the forests, the vulture that of the
-heavens; but the Aucas is the king of the puma and the eagle; the desert
-is his--Guatechu has given it to him; his horse and his lance render him
-invincible and master of immensity."
-
-"Then my brother will accomplish this journey, which is impossible?"
-
-A disdainful smile played for an instant round the lips of the savage
-warrior.
-
-"I will accomplish it," he said.
-
-"Good! my brother is a chief--I perceive he is one now."
-
-The Puelche bowed modestly.
-
-"My brother will go there, then, and when he arrives in the Chaco, he
-will sell the pale girl to the Guayacuras."
-
-The Indian did not allow any mark of astonishment to be perceived upon
-his face.
-
-"I will sell her," he replied.
-
-"That is well!--my brother will be faithful?"
-
-"I am a chief; I have but one word, my tongue is not forked; but why
-should I take this pale woman so far?"
-
-Dona Maria cast a penetrating glance at him--a suspicion crossed her
-mind--the Indian perceived it.
-
-"I only made a simple observation to my sister; it concerns me little,
-and she need not answer me if she does not think proper," he said, with
-indifference.
-
-The brow of the Linda became serene again.
-
-"The remark is just, chief; I will answer it. Why take her so far, you
-asked me; because Antinahuel loves this woman--his heart is softened by
-her--and perhaps he will suffer himself to be moved by her prayers, and
-restore her to her family. But it shall not happen; she shall weep tears
-of blood; her heart shall break under the incessant pangs of grief; she
-shall lose everything, even hope!"
-
-After uttering these words, Dona Maria arose, with head erect, sparkling
-eyes, and extended arm; there was in her aspect something fatal and
-terrible, which terrified even the Indian, by nature so difficult to
-move.
-
-"Go," she cried, in a tone of command, "before she departs for ever,
-I will see this woman once--only once, and speak with her for a few
-minutes; she shall at least know me: bring her hither!"
-
-The Indian went out silently; this woman, so beautiful and so cruel,
-terrified him--she inspired him with horror.
-
-Dona Rosario, on hearing this atrocious sentence pronounced against her,
-fell senseless to the ground.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIV.
-
-FACE TO FACE.
-
-
-The door of the cuarto in which Dona Rosario was confined was thrown
-open, and the Puelche warrior appeared; he held in his hand a rude
-earthen lamp, the flame of which, although feeble, sufficed to
-distinguish objects. He had replaced his shabby hat upon his head, and
-its wide brim served as a mask to his features.
-
-"Come with me!" he said, in a rough voice, to the maiden.
-
-Conscious of the inutility of a resistance which could only be dangerous
-to her amidst the bandits who surrounded her, and bowing her head with
-resignation, she followed her guide in silence. Dona Maria had resumed
-her place in the ebony chair; with arms crossed, and her head hanging
-upon her bosom, she was buried in dark meditations. At the slight noise
-made by the footsteps of the young lady, she drew herself up, a flash of
-hatred gleamed from her dark eyes, and with, a gesture she commanded the
-Indian to retire. The Puelche obeyed.
-
-The two women examined each other intensely; their looks crossed; the
-hawk and the dove were face to face. A deathlike silence reigned in the
-apartment; at intervals the wind came in gusts and dismal moanings,
-through the ill-joined boards of the doors, shook the old building to
-its foundation, and agitated the flame of the only candle that illumined
-the vast gloomy room in which the two women were. After a sufficiently
-long pause, the Linda, who, with that instinct which women possess in
-such a high degree, had examined in detail, one by one, the numerous
-beauties of the charming girl who stood pale and trembling before her,
-at length spoke--
-
-"Yes," she said, in a hollow voice, as if speaking to herself, and
-overcome by the evidence of the fact, "yes, this girl is beautiful; she
-has everything to make her an object of love--to see her must be to
-love her; well, this beauty, which up to this time has been her joy and
-her pride, grief shall wither rapidly; before one year has passed away
-I am resolved that she shall become an object of pity and contempt for
-all. Oh!" she added, in a piercing, shrill voice, "I have her at length
-within the power of my vengeance!"
-
-"What have I done to you, madam, that you should hate me thus?" the
-maiden asked, in a plaintive voice, the sweet and melodious accent of
-which would have softened anyone but her to whom she spoke.
-
-"What have you done to me, silly creature?" the Linda cried, bounding
-up like a wounded lioness, and placing herself close in front of Dona
-Rosario--"what have you done to me?" and then added, with a loud
-laugh--"Ah! ah! that's true, _you_ have done nothing to me!"
-
-"Alas, madam! I do not even know you; this is the first time I have been
-in your presence; I, a poor young girl, whose life to the present time
-has passed away in retirement--how can I have offended you?"
-
-"Yes, I allow it," the Linda replied; "you have done nothing to me; and,
-personally, as you have just said, I have nothing to reproach you with;
-but, by making you suffer, learn that it is upon _him_ I avenge myself."
-
-"I do not understand what you mean, madam," the maiden said, simply.
-
-"Senseless fool, do not play with the lioness who is ready to devour
-you, or pretend to feign an ignorance of which I am not the dupe; if you
-have not already divined my name, I will tell it you--I am Dona Maria,
-whom they call the Linda--do you understand me now?"
-
-"Not more than I did before, madam," replied Dona Rosario, with an
-accent of frankness that shook the belief of her persecutor, in spite of
-herself; "I have never even heard that name."
-
-"Can that be true?" she cried, doubtingly.
-
-"I swear it is."
-
-Dona Linda strode about the apartment with long, hasty steps. Dona
-Rosario, more and more astonished, looked stealthily at this woman,
-without being able to account to herself for the emotion which her
-presence, and the sound of her voice, caused her to experience; it
-was not fear, still less was it joy, but an incomprehensible mixture
-of sadness, joy, pity, and terror; an undefinable feeling, which,
-far from creating repulsion, drew her towards a woman whose odious
-projects were no secret to her, and from whom she knew she had so much
-to dread. Singular sympathy; what Dona Rosario felt towards the Linda,
-the Linda felt towards Dona Rosario: in vain she called to her aid the
-remembrance of all the wrongs with which she fancied she had to reproach
-the man whom she wished to strike in the person of the young girl; in
-the innermost recesses of her heart, a voice, which constantly gained
-strength, spoke to her in favour of the maiden whom she was about to
-sacrifice to her hatred; the more she endeavoured to overcome this
-sentiment, for which she could not account, the more powerless she found
-her efforts become; at length, she was on the point of being softened.
-
-"Oh!" she murmured, passionately, "what is going on within me? Am I
-weak enough to allow myself to be subdued by the tears of that paltry
-creature?"
-
-Like Indian warriors, who, when fastened to the stake of blood, sing
-their own exploits to encourage them to endure bravely the tortures
-which their executioners silently prepare, the Linda recalled the
-maddening remembrance of all the outrages Don Tadeo had loaded her with;
-and with flashing eyes and trembling lips, she stopped short in front of
-Dona Rosario.
-
-"Listen to me, girl," she said, in a voice which passion caused to
-tremble, "this is the first and last time we shall be in the presence of
-each other; and you shall know why I bear you such hatred. What you will
-learn will be hereafter, perhaps, a consolation to you, and help you to
-bear with courage the miseries I reserve for you," she added, with the
-laugh of a demon.
-
-"I will listen to you, madam," Rosario replied, meekly, "although I am
-certain that what you are about to say cannot, in any sense, render me
-guilty with respect to you."
-
-"Do you think so?" the Linda said, in a tone of ironical compassion;
-"well, then, listen; we have time to talk, as you will not leave this
-place for an hour."
-
-This allusion to her approaching departure made the poor girl shudder,
-by recalling to her all that the departure threatened.
-
-"A woman," the Linda continued, "a young and beautiful woman, more
-beautiful than you, fragile child of cities, whom the least storm
-bends like a weak reed--a woman, I say, had for love married a man,
-also young, and handsome as the evil angel before his fall, who with
-perfidiously golden words, by opening before her immense and unknown
-horizons, had so seduced her, the poor, poor girl, that in a few days
-he induced her to abandon stealthily the roof which had sheltered her
-infancy, and to which her aged father in vain recalled her up to the day
-of his death, that he might bless and pardon her."
-
-"Oh, that is frightful!" cried Dona Rosario.
-
-"Why so? as he had married her, morality was satisfied, in the eyes
-of the world. This woman was pure, and could thenceforward move with
-head erect before the crowd which had hailed her fall with laughter and
-contempt. But everything passes away in this world, and most quickly of
-all, the love of the most passionate man. Only a year after marriage
-this woman, alone in the most retired room of her dwelling, wept over
-the remembrance of the happiness which had left her for ever. Her
-husband had deserted her! A child born of this union, a little fair
-girl, a rosy-lipped cherub, whose eyes reflected the azure of the
-heavens, was the sole consolation which in her misfortunes was left to
-the poor abandoned mother. One night, when she was plunged in sleep, her
-husband stole like a thief into her house, seized the child, in spite
-of the cries of the desolate mother, who threw herself in tears at his
-feet, and implored him by all he held sacred in the world. After roughly
-repulsing the despairing mother, who sank dying on the cold slabs of the
-floor, this heartless and pitiless man disappeared with the child."
-
-"And the mother?" Dona Rosario anxiously asked, much affected by the
-story which the Linda told, entirely to her own advantage.
-
-"The mother," she continued, in a low, broken voice, "the mother was
-doomed never to see her child again. She never has seen her! Prayers,
-threats, everything in turn, have been employed without success. And
-now, this mother, who adores her child, and would sacrifice her life
-for her,--this mother has vowed a hatred against this man, whom she so
-fondly loved, and who showed no pity to her, which no vengeance can
-satisfy! Now, then, young girl, do you know the name of this mother?
-Say, do you know it? No, you do not? Well, then, I am this mother! and
-the man who ravished from her all her happiness--the man whom she hates
-as she does the demon whose heart he bears, is Don Tadeo de Leon!"
-
-"Don Tadeo!" Rosario cried, starting back with surprise.
-
-"Yes!" the Linda said, furiously; "yes, Don Tadeo, your lover!"
-
-The maiden sprang towards Dona Maria, and seizing her arm violently, and
-placing her face, inflamed with anger, close to that of the courtezan,
-who was stupefied at the energy she could not have expected from this
-delicate creature, cried indignantly,--
-
-"What have you dared to say, madam? Don Tadeo my lover! It is false,
-madam!"
-
-"Can this be true?" the Linda asked, eagerly. "Can I have been so
-grossly mistaken? But then," she added, mistrustfully, "who are you? and
-by what title does he keep you always with him?"
-
-"I will tell you who I am, madam!" Rosario replied, proudly.
-
-All at once the hasty gallop of several horses was heard from without,
-mingled with cries and oaths.
-
-"What can the matter be?" said Dona Maria, turning pale.
-
-"Oh!" said Dona Rosario, clasping her hands fervently; "oh, my God! are
-you sending me liberators?"
-
-"You are not free yet," the Linda said, with a bitter smile.
-
-The tumult increased greatly; the door, violently pushed from without,
-flew open, and several men rushed into the room.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXV.
-
-THE REVOLT.
-
-
-The multiplicity of the scenes we have to describe, and the exigencies
-of our story, compel us to abandon Dona Rosario and the Linda,
-and return to Valdivia, where the revolt had assumed the gigantic
-proportions of a revolution. Electrified by the heroic conduct of the
-King of Darkness, the patriots fought with the greatest obstinacy.
-The Dark-Hearts appeared to have the gift of ubiquity; their numbers
-increased, they were everywhere at the head of the insurgents, exciting
-them by gesture and voice; but, above all, by their example. The city
-was completely cut up by barricades, against which the few troops who
-remained faithful to General Bustamente struggled in vain. Beaten back
-by the enemies who on all sides rose up against them to the thousand
-times repeated cries of "Our country!" "Chili Liberty!" the soldiers
-retreated, step by step, abandoning, one after another, the different
-posts of which they had been in possession at the commencement of the
-action, and rallied upon the Plaza Mayor, the outlets of which they had
-barricaded in their turn.
-
-The city was in the power of the insurgents; for as the battle from this
-moment was concentrated at one point, it was not difficult to foresee
-with which party the victory would remain; for the soldiers, discouraged
-by the ill success of their _coup de main_, and sensible of being the
-champions of a lost cause, only fought to obtain honourable conditions.
-General Bustamente's officers, and the senators whom he had brought
-with him as partizans, trembled when thinking of the fate that awaited
-them if they fell into the hands of their enemies. Success justifies
-everything: from the moment they failed to succeed they became traitors
-to their country, and, as such, had no right to a capitulation. They
-therefore excited their soldiers to fight valiantly, promising them
-speedy assistance, and trying to revive their courage by telling them
-that their adversaries were merely citizens, whom they could easily
-overcome if they made a bold attempt, or even resisted for an hour
-longer.
-
-The general who commanded the garrison, and whom we saw upon the steps
-of the cabildo read with so much arrogance the decree which changed the
-form of government, bit his lips with rage and performed prodigies of
-valour, to give Bustamente time to arrive. As soon as he saw the turn
-things had taken, he sent off an express for the General with the utmost
-promptitude. This express was Diego, the old soldier who was so devoted
-to General Bustamente.
-
-"Lieutenant," he said, in conclusion, "you see in what a position we
-are; you must reach the General at all risks."
-
-"I will reach him, General; be at ease on that head!" Diego replied,
-intrepidly.
-
-"And I will endeavour to hold out till your return."
-
-Don Diego, before he finished speaking, had ridden desperately at
-the ranks of the insurgents, spurring on his horse, and waving
-his sword with menacing rapidity round his head. The Dark-Hearts,
-astonished by such an attack on the part of a single man, at the first
-moment unconsciously opened their ranks before him as to a canister
-shot, incapable of resisting the impetuous shock of this apparently
-invulnerable demon, who mowed down all that came in his way. Diego
-skilfully took advantage of the disorder produced on the enemy by his
-furious assault; he kept pushing on, and, after incredible efforts,
-succeeded in getting out of the city. As soon as he was in safety, the
-overexcitement which till that time had sustained him, suddenly sank,
-and at a few paces from the gates he was forced to stop to take breath,
-and restore his confused ideas to a little order. The old soldier washed
-the sides and nostrils of his horse with a little brandy and water;
-and as soon as this duty was performed, aware that the fate of his
-companions depended upon his speed, he sprang into his saddle and set
-off with the fleetness of an arrow.
-
-The General did not delay his return to Valdivia a minute, for he felt
-that success would be an immense advantage to him; and a check, if he
-were beaten, irreparable. As a conqueror, his march to Santiago would
-be nothing but a triumphant march; the authorities of the cities he
-passed through would rival each other in ranging themselves beneath his
-standard; whereas, if he were forced to abandon Valdivia as a fugitive,
-he would be tracked like a wild beast, and obliged to seek safety in
-a prompt flight, either in Bolivia or Buenos Aires, and the projects
-he had nourished so long, and of which he believed he had beforehand
-assured the success, would be deferred, or perhaps destroyed for ever.
-Thus the General was a prey to one of those cold furies, which are so
-much more terrible, because they cannot be exhibited outwardly.
-
-The horsemen advanced amidst a cloud of dust raised by their precipitate
-course, rushing along the road like a whirlwind, and with a noise like
-thunder. Two lances' length in advance of the soldiers, Don Pancho,
-bending over the neck of his horse, with pale brow and clenched teeth,
-galloped at full speed, keeping his eyes fixed upon the lofty steeples
-of Valdivia, whose dark shadows became more enlarged on the horizon
-every minute. Within half a mile of the city he halted his squadron. The
-sharp pattering of musketry resounded strongly, mingled at intervals
-with the dismal, rolling bass of cannon; the battle, therefore, must
-still be going on. The General hastened to make his last preparations
-before attempting an attack he hoped would prove decisive. The foot
-soldiers dismounted, and formed in platoons, and firearms of all kinds
-were loaded.
-
-The troops brought up by the General were not numerous from the European
-point of view, according to which we are accustomed to see great masses
-in conflict; they, at most, did not exceed eight hundred men. In Europe
-it is customary to say that victory is most likely to attend large
-battalions: in America, where the largest armies are frequently of not
-more than three thousand men, this idea becomes naturally modified,
-and it is generally the most skilful or the most brave man who remains
-master of the field of battle.
-
-Don Pancho was a rough soldier, accustomed to the struggles of civil
-wars, which, for the most part, consist of audacious _coups de main_.
-Endowed with courage bordering on rashness, and devoured by ambition, he
-prepared, with the greatest coolness, to re-establish his compromised
-affairs by an irresistible attack. The country in the neighbourhood of
-Valdivia is a real English garden, interspersed with thickets, apple
-orchards, copses, and slender streams of water rippling away to the
-river. It was very easy for the General to conceal his arrival. Two
-soldiers were detached as scouts, in order to learn the state of things.
-At the expiration of a few minutes they returned. The outskirts of the
-city were deserted, the insurgents had driven the troops back into the
-centre, and, according to the scouts, with the imprudence of citizens
-metamorphosed suddenly into soldiers, they had left no reserve, or even
-placed sentinels, to secure their rear against a surprise.
-
-This information, instead of restoring confidence to the General, made
-him knit his brows; he thought it must be a manoeuvre, and whilst his
-officers were laughing with all their might at the able tactics of
-the insurgents, he judged it necessary to redouble his precautions.
-The troops were divided into two bodies, which, in case of need, were
-to support each other; and, as they were attacking a city entirely
-barricaded, the lancers were ordered to dismount, and reinforce the
-infantry. Only one squadron of a hundred horsemen remained in the
-saddle, concealed about a quarter of a mile from the place, in order to
-support a retreat, or to put the fugitives to the sword, if the surprise
-succeeded. These arrangements made, the General made an earnest address
-to his soldiers, to whom he promised, in the event of success, the
-pillage of the city. He then placed himself at the head of the first
-detachment, and gave the order, "March! Forward!"
-
-The troops advanced in the Indian fashion, taking advantage of every
-inequality in the ground, and of every tree to conceal themselves, and
-arrived thus, without giving alarm, to within pistol shot of the city.
-The dead silence which continued to prevail around him, contrasted in
-a dismal manner with the musketry and cannon which became more audible
-as they advanced, and greatly increased the General's anxiety. A dark
-presentiment warned him that he was threatened by some great danger,
-which he knew not how to avoid, from being ignorant of what kind it
-might be. The least hesitation at this critical minute might bring on
-irreparable misfortunes. The General grasped the hilt of his sword
-firmly in his clenched hand, and turning towards his soldiers, shouted
-in a loud, clear voice, "Forward!"
-
-The detachment, which only awaited this order, rushed forward shouting,
-and, at double-quick time, cleared the space between them and the city.
-Windows, doors, all were closed; and had it not been for the distant
-report of musketry, the city might have been thought deserted. The first
-detachment, finding no obstacles before them, continued their march;
-and the second detachment also entered. But then, all at once, behind,
-before, and on the flanks of the troops, a loud cry burst forth; and
-at every window appeared men with muskets in their hands. Don Pancho
-Bustamente was surrounded, he had allowed himself to be taken--pardon us
-the triviality of the comparison--like a rat in a trap. The soldiers,
-astonished for a second, soon recovered themselves; they faced front and
-rear, and attacked the double barrier that enclosed them: but though
-they desperately rushed against it, they could not force it. They then
-plainly perceived they were lost, that they could expect no quarter, and
-prepared to die like brave men.
-
-The General cast fierce and desperate glances around him, looking,
-but unsuccessfully, for a point of issue from the menacing forest of
-bayonets crossed before him, and which enclosed him as in a steel
-network. Some authors have amused themselves at the expense of the
-wars and battles of the Americans, in which they say the two armies
-always take care to place themselves out of reach of cannon shot, so as
-never to have a single man killed. This pleasantry, which is in very
-bad taste, has assumed the proportions of a calumny it is but just
-to refute, for it attacks the honour of the Americans of the South,
-who, I unhesitatingly assert, are endowed with intrepid courage--a
-courage that was brilliantly displayed during the wars of independence
-against the Spaniards. Unhappily, at present this courage is employed
-in fratricidal struggles, without any understood object. Thrice the
-soldiers rushed upon the insurgents, and thrice were they repulsed
-with enormous loss. The battle was horrible, without mercy on either
-side; they fought hand to hand, foot to foot, breast to breast, to
-the last breath, only falling to die. The troops, decimated by this
-frightful carnage, gradually gave ground; the space they occupied
-became narrower and narrower, and the moment did not appear distant
-when they would disappear under the popular flood which continued to
-ascend, and threatened to engulf them under its irresistible mass. The
-General collected about fifty men resolved to die or open a passage, and
-he made a desperate attempt. It was a collision of giants. For a few
-minutes, the two masses launched one against the other remained almost
-motionless, from the force of the blow with which they met; Don Pancho,
-flourishing his sword around him, and standing in his stirrups, struck
-down all who opposed his passage.
-
-Suddenly a man placed himself before him, like a rock which rises from
-the depths of the sea. At the sight of him the General paused, in spite
-of himself, with a stifled cry of surprise and rage. This man was Don
-Tadeo de Leon, his mortal enemy; whom he had once condemned to death,
-and who had, in a miraculous manner, survived his execution. But, now!
-God seemed to place him fatally before him, to be the instrument of his
-vengeance, and the cause of his ruin and his shame.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVI.
-
-THE LION AT BAY.
-
-
-"My God!" said the General, "am I the dupe of an hallucination?"
-
-"Ah! ah!" the King of Darkness exclaimed, with an ironical smile, "you
-recognize me then, General?"
-
-"Don Tadeo de Leon!" Don Pancho cried, in horror. "Do the dead then
-arise from the tomb? Oh! I hoped that what I heard was false. It is you!"
-
-"Yes," Don Tadeo replied, in a stern voice, "you are not mistaken, Don
-Pancho; I am Don Tadeo de Leon, whom you caused to be shot upon the
-Plaza Mayor of Santiago. Your spies have informed you correctly."
-
-"Man or demon," the General shouted, half choking with rage, "I will not
-yield to you! I will fight you as a man, and send you back again to the
-hell from which you have escaped!"
-
-His enemy smiled disdainfully.
-
-"Your hour has arrived, Don Pancho," he said; "you are due to the
-justice of the Dark-Hearts."
-
-"You do not hold me yet, wretched traitor! If I cannot conquer, I can
-die, weapon in hand, like a soldier."
-
-"No, your hour has struck, I tell you; you are ours, you shall die, but
-not the death of a soldier; you shall be executed by our justice!"
-
-"If that be the case," the General yelled, brandishing his sword, "come
-and take me!"
-
-Don Tadeo did not deign a reply; he gave a signal, and a lasso whizzed
-through the air, launched by an invisible hand, and fell round the
-General's shoulders. Astonished by this unexpected attack, before he
-could make the least possible resistance, he received a terrific shock,
-lost his stirrups, was pulled from his horse, and dragged amongst
-the insurgents. The astounded General, half mad with rage and shame,
-exhausted himself in vain efforts; nearly strangled by the lasso which
-flayed his neck, his face assumed a purple tint; his eyes, injected with
-blood, seemed starting from their sockets, and a white foam flowed from
-the corners of his discoloured lips. Don Tadeo contemplated him for a
-moment with a mixture of pity and triumph.
-
-"Free him from that slipknot," he said. "Secure his person, but treat
-him with respect."
-
-The soldiers, terrified at this prompt capture, which they had not at
-all expected, stood downcast and silent; in their stupor forgetting even
-the use of their arms. Don Tadeo turned towards them:
-
-"Surrender," he shouted, "surrender! the man who misled you is in our
-power; your lives shall be spared."
-
-The soldiers consulted each other for an instant with their eyes; and
-then, as if by a spontaneous movement, they threw down their muskets,
-crying aloud:
-
-"Chili! Chili! liberty! liberty!"
-
-"That is well!" said Don Tadeo; "leave the city, encamp at the distance
-of a mile, and await the orders which shall soon be transmitted to you."
-
-The conquered soldiers, with downcast looks, followed the road they had
-traversed an hour before; they passed through the silent ranks of the
-insurgents, which opened to give them passage. Without loss of time,
-Don Tadeo, followed by a crowd of his partisans, directed his course
-towards the Plaza Mayor, where the battle still raged. The soldiers,
-solidly intrenched in the Plaza, and masters of the cabildo, fought
-valiantly, hoping still for the assistance of General Bustamente, of
-whose fate they were ignorant. Although reduced to a small number, these
-troops occupied a formidable position, in which it was almost impossible
-to force them, without resolving to suffer great loss. Persuaded that
-they only required to gain time, the soldiers fought with the energy of
-despair, defending inch by inch the barricade behind which they were
-sheltered.
-
-But the day was passing away, their ammunition was growing exhausted, a
-great number of their comrades were stretched dead at their feet, and
-nothing could support them but the hope that the succour so impatiently
-expected was at hand. In the heat of their own contest they had not
-heard the noise of the battle fought by Don Pancho at the city gates, in
-which but few shots had been fired, as it had been principally decided
-by cold steel. Discouragement, however, began to affect the bravest,
-the general who commanded even felt his energy diminish, and he looked
-around him with great anxiety.
-
-Dejected, and with downcast eyes, the senator, who had been the bearer
-of the fatal proclamation, trembled in all his limbs; he regretted,
-but too late, having thrown himself into this hornet's nest; and he
-offered up the most magnificent vows to the innumerable saints of the
-golden Spanish legend, if they would bring him safe and sound through
-the perils which surrounded him. The worthy man had not any warlike
-instincts; and we can safely affirm, without fear of contradiction, that
-if he had had the slightest suspicion that things would have taken the
-turn they did, he would have remained quiet in his charming quinta of
-Corro-Azul, in the environs of Santiago, where his life glided away so
-softly, so happily, and, above all, so free from care. Unfortunately,
-as it sometimes happens in this nether world, where, whatever Candide
-may say, everything is not for the best, in the best of worlds, Don
-Ramon Sandias--so the worthy senator was named--had not been able duly
-to appreciate the charms of that calm life; ambition had gnawed at his
-heart, though he had nothing to wish for; and he had, as we have seen,
-plunged up to the neck in a hornet's nest, from which he did not know
-how to emerge.
-
-At every shot he heard, the poor senator jumped like a Guanaco, with
-startled eyes; and when, now and then, in spite of the precautions he
-had taken, the sinister hissing of a bullet resounded in his ear, he
-threw himself flat on his face, murmuring all the prayers that his
-troubled memory could recall.
-
-At first, the contortions and cries of Don Ramon had very much amused
-the officers and soldiers among whom accident had placed him; they had
-even taken delight in augmenting his terrors; but, at length, as happens
-more frequently in such cases than people fancy, the pleasantries had
-ceased; Don Ramon's terrors had communicated themselves to the laughers,
-who saw, with fright, that their position was becoming every minute more
-desperate.
-
-"The devil take the poltroon!" the General at length cried, angrily;
-"cannot you keep your trembling limbs still? Caspita! console yourself,
-they won't kill you more than once."
-
-"Ah! that is very easy for you to say," the senator replied, in a broken
-voice; "I am no soldier; it is your trade to be killed, it is all one to
-you."
-
-"Hum!" said the General, "not quite so much so as you may think; but
-comfort yourself; if this goes on a little longer, we shall all go
-together."
-
-"What is that you say?" the poor man muttered, with redoubled fear.
-
-"Caramba! it is clear as day, if Don Pancho does not make haste and
-come, all of us here will die."
-
-"But I do not wish to die!" said the senator, bursting into tears; "I
-am no soldier. Oh! I implore you, my good, my inestimable Don Tiburcio
-Cornejo, let me go away!"
-
-The General shrugged his shoulders.
-
-"What consequence can it be to you?" the senator continued, in a
-supplicating tone; "do save my life! show me which way I can get out of
-this cursed confusion."
-
-"Eh! how the devil do I know?"' the General said, impatiently.
-
-"Well, now, look here," said the senator; "you owe me two thousand
-piastres, which I won of you at Monte, do you not?"
-
-"What then?" the General, vexed at this ill-timed remark, said, sharply.
-
-"Get me away from here, and I will cry quits."
-
-"You are a fool, Don Ramon; do you think if I could get safely away from
-here, that I would remain?"
-
-"I see what you are," said the senator, despondingly; "you are but a
-false friend, you desire my death, you thirst for my blood."
-
-In short, the poor man was almost mad; he knew not what he said,
-terror had deprived him of the little sense he ever possessed. But, in
-reality, the position became every instant more critical; the carnage
-was horrible, the soldiers fell one after another beneath the bullets
-of the insurgents, who were sheltered by every corner of the plaza. Two
-or three sorties attempted by the troops had been vigorously repulsed;
-and hence, decimated as they were, all they could possibly do now was to
-prevent their intrenchments from being carried.
-
-All at once the senator bounded forward like a chamois; he made directly
-to the General, and seized his arm.
-
-"We are saved!" he cried; "thanks be to God! we are saved!"
-
-"Hilloh! what's the matter now, Don Ramon? What bee has stung you? are
-you really mad?"
-
-"I have not been stung," the senator replied, as fast as he could speak,
-"nor am I mad; we are saved; I tell you, we are saved!"
-
-"Well, how? what is it? Is Don Pancho coming at last?"
-
-"Don Pancho, indeed! I wish he were at the devil!" "Well, what is it,
-then?"
-
-"Why, do you not see, yonder? look, behind the barricade which blocks
-the entrance of the Calle de la Merced."
-
-"What is there to see?"
-
-"Why, a flag of truce! a white flag!"
-
-"Ah!" said the General, eagerly, "let us look! let us look!"
-
-And he did look.
-
-"True!" he said, at the expiration of a minute. "Success to all cowards,
-say I, for having good eyes; I did not see it."
-
-"Ay, but I did," said Don Ramon, rubbing his hands, quite revived, and
-marching off with great glee. But, at that moment, a nearly spent ball
-came ricocheting and whizzing close to his ear.
-
-"Lord, have mercy upon me!" he cried, falling flat on his face, and
-so remaining, as motionless as if he were dead, although he had not
-received a scratch.
-
-In the meantime, the General had likewise caused a flag of truce to be
-hoisted on his intrenchments, and had given orders for the firing to
-cease. The noise of the combat being hushed, the senator, like a rabbit
-relieved from alarm, raised his head a little; reassured by the silence
-which prevailed, he sat up, looking on all sides with the greatest
-anxiety, and, at length, convinced that the peril was over, he contrived
-to get upon his legs, which, however, trembled so frightfully under him,
-that they could scarcely support him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVII.
-
-THE TRUCE.
-
-
-As soon as the flag of truce was hoisted, firing at once ceased on both
-sides. The troops at bay, who had ceased to hope for succour, were not
-sorry to find that the insurgents saved their military honour by being
-the first to demand a parley. General Cornejo, in particular, was tired
-of the hopeless combat, which he had bravely maintained all the morning.
-
-"Well, Don Ramon," he said, addressing the senator in a more cordial
-tone than he had before employed, "I think I have found means to enable
-you to escape without striking a blow; so what we agreed to stands good,
-does it not?"
-
-The senator looked at him with a bewildered air; the worthy man had not
-the least recollection of what he had either said or done while the
-balls were whistling round him.
-
-"I do not at all understand you, General," he replied.
-
-"Poor man! pretend to be innocent, do!" said the General, laughing, and
-slapping him on the shoulder; "do you wish to persuade me you are like
-the Guanacos, which lose their memory through trembling with fear?"
-
-"Upon my honour," said the senator, "I swear, Don Tiburcio, that I have
-not the least remembrance of having promised you anything."
-
-"Ah! well, it is possible, for you were devilishly frightened. Come, I
-will refresh your memory: pay attention!"
-
-"You will give me great pleasure."
-
-"Well, I doubt that! but that is of no consequence. You said to me, on
-the spot where we now stand, not more than half an hour ago, that if I
-found the means of securing your escape, safe and sound, you would hold
-me quits for the two thousand piastres I lost to you, and owed you."
-
-"Do you flatter yourself that that is the truth?" said the senator,
-whose avaricious instincts began to revive, as fear departed.
-
-"I am sure it is. Ask these gentlemen," the General asked, turning
-towards some officers who stood by.
-
-"Oh, certainly! true to the letter," they said, with a laugh.
-
-"Ah! ah!"
-
-"Yes, and as I would not listen to you, you added--"
-
-"What!" Don Ramon, who knew of old the man he had to deal with, said,
-with a start--"do you mean to say that I added something?"
-
-"The devil! yes," said the other. "You added this; and I repeat your
-own words. You said, as plainly as you could speak--'And I will give a
-thousand piastres in addition.'"
-
-"Oh, that is not possible!" the senator ejaculated, quite beside himself.
-
-"Perhaps I did not understand you?"
-
-"That must be it."
-
-"Do you admit you mentioned the two thousand?" asked the General,
-quietly.
-
-"Not at all! not at all!" replied Don Ramon, quite confounded by the
-laughter of the bystanders.
-
-"Perhaps you meant more; well, we will not haggle about that."
-
-"I never said a word of the kind!" the exasperated senator exclaimed.
-
-"In that case," said the General, with a stern frown, and surveying him
-coolly, "you mean to say that I have told a falsehood."
-
-Don Ramon became aware that he had made a false move, and drew back.
-
-"Pardon me, my dear General," he said, in the most amiable voice
-possible, "you are perfectly right; I do now remember it was two
-thousand piastres I promised you in addition."
-
-It was now the General's turn to be at a loss, for this generosity on
-the part of the senator, whose avarice was proverbial, confused him; he
-was suspicious of some snare or trick.
-
-"But," Don Ramon added, with an air of triumph, "you have not saved me."
-
-"What do you mean by that?"
-
-"Why, Santiago! as we are going to hold a parley, you are too late, and
-our bargain is void."
-
-"Oh! oh!" said Don Tiburcio, with a jeering smile, "you think so, do
-you?"
-
-"Caspita! I am sure of it."
-
-"And yet you are deceived, my dear friend, as you shall judge: come with
-me, the flag of truce is now crossing the barricades, and in an instant
-you will learn that you have never been so near death as now."
-
-"You are joking."
-
-"I never joke about serious circumstances."
-
-"In Heaven's name explain yourself!" said the poor senator, whose fears
-had all returned.
-
-"Lord! it is the simplest thing in the world," said the General,
-carelessly; "I have but to declare to the leader of the revolt, and be
-assured I will not fail to do so, that I only acted by your orders."
-
-"Well, but that is not true," interrupted Don Ramon, in great alarm.
-
-"I know that," the General replied, bluntly; "but, as you are a senator,
-they will believe me, and you will be fully and fairly shot, and that
-will be a pity."
-
-Don Ramon was thunder-struck by this piece of implacable logic; he found
-that he was in a hobble, from which he could not possibly escape without
-paying handsomely. He looked at his _friend_, who surveyed him with a
-pitilessly ironical smile, whilst the officers bit their lips to keep
-from laughing; he stifled a sigh, and resolving to make the best of
-it, very much against his will, he said, inwardly cursing the man who
-exposed him in such a cynical fashion--
-
-"Well, Don Tiburcio, I admit that I owe you two thousand piastres, but
-_I_ will pay you."
-
-This was the only epigram he ventured to indulge in regarding the
-General's willingness to pay; but the latter was magnanimous, he took
-no notice of the offensive part of the speech, and rendered quite
-cheerful by the bargain he had concluded, he prepared to listen to the
-propositions of the officer with the flag of truce, who was brought to
-him with his eyes bandaged. This officer was Don Tadeo de Leon.
-
-"What do you come here for?" the General asked.
-
-"To offer you good terms, if you will surrender," Don Tadeo replied, in
-a firm voice.
-
-"Surrender!" the General shouted with a laugh; "you must be mad, sir!"
-and, turning towards the soldiers who had brought Don Tadeo, he added,
-"Remove the bandage from the eyes of this caballero."
-
-The bandage fell accordingly.
-
-"Look round you," said the General, haughtily, "do we look like people
-asking for a favour?"
-
-"No, General, you are a stout soldier, and your troops are brave; you
-ask no favour of us, it is we who come to you to offer to lay down our
-arms on both sides, and put an end to this fratricidal contest," Don
-Tadeo replied, with an air of grandeur.
-
-"Who are you, may I ask, sir?" said the General, struck with the noble
-bearing of the man who was speaking to him.
-
-"I am Don Tadeo de Leon, whom your leader ordered to be shot."
-
-"You!" cried the General, "you here!"
-
-"I, myself; and I have another name."
-
-"Tell it to me, sir."
-
-"I am called the King of Darkness."
-
-"The leader of the Dark-Hearts!" the General murmured, starting, in
-spite of himself, and surveying the speaker with uneasy curiosity.
-
-"Yes, General, I am the leader of the Dark-Hearts, but I am still
-something more."
-
-"Explain yourself, sir," the General asked, who began to be in doubt how
-to behave toward the strange personage who was speaking to him.
-
-"I am the leader of the men whom you term insurgents, but who have,
-in reality, only taken up arms to defend the institutions you have
-overthrown, and the constitution you have violated."
-
-"Sir!" said the General, "your words----"
-
-"Are severe, but just," continued Don Tadeo; "ask your own loyal,
-soldier's heart, General, and then tell me which side is right."
-
-"I am not a lawyer, sir," Don Tiburcio replied impatiently; "you have
-yourself said that I am a soldier, and, as such, I confine myself to
-obeying, without discussion, the orders I receive from my leaders."
-
-"Let us not lose time uselessly in idle speeches, sir; will you, or will
-you not, lay down your arms?"
-
-"By what right do you make me such a proposal?" the General asked, whose
-pride revolted at being forced to hold a parley with a citizen.
-
-"I could answer you," replied Don Tadeo, sternly, "that it is by the
-right of the stronger, and that you know as well as I do that you
-are combating for a lost cause, and that you are persisting without
-advantage in a senseless struggle; but I prefer addressing myself to
-your heart, and saying, why should brothers and fellow countrymen
-continue to cut each other's throats?--why should we any longer shed
-such precious blood? Make your conditions, General, and be assured that
-for the sake of protecting your soldier's honour, that honour which is
-ours also, as among the troops against whom we fight are our relations,
-friends, and countrymen, we will grant them as extensively as you can
-desire."
-
-The General felt himself moved, this noble language had found an echo
-in his heart; he looked down on the ground, and reflected for several
-minutes; at length, raising his head, he replied--
-
-"Sir, believe me it costs me much not to answer as I could wish what you
-have done me the honour to say to me; but I have a leader above me."
-
-"In your turn please to explain yourself, sir," said Don Tadeo.
-
-"I have sworn to Don Pancho Bustamente to defend his cause to the death."
-
-"Well?"
-
-"Well, sir, unless Don Pancho Bustamente were killed or a prisoner,--in
-either of which cases I should consider myself freed from my oath to
-him,--I will lay down my life for him."
-
-"Is that the only reason that prevents you, General?"
-
-"Yes, the only one."
-
-"In case General Bustamente should be either killed or a prisoner, you
-would surrender?"
-
-"Instantly, I repeat."
-
-"Well," replied Don Tadeo, stretching out his arm in the direction of
-the barricade by which he had come, "look yonder, General."
-
-Don Tiburcio looked in the direction indicated, and uttered a cry of
-surprise and sorrow. Don Pancho Bustamente appeared at the top of
-the barricade; his head was bare, and two armed men watched all his
-movements.
-
-"Do you see him?" Don Tadeo asked.
-
-"Yes," replied the General, sorrowfully; "we all surrender, sir;" and
-turning the point of his sword to the ground, he bent the blade with the
-intention of breaking it. Don Tadeo stopped him by seizing the sword,
-which he, however, returned to him immediately, saying--
-
-"General, keep that weapon, it will serve you against the enemies of our
-country."
-
-The General made no reply; he silently pressed the hand which the King
-of Darkness held out to him, and turning away to conceal the emotion
-which agitated him, he wiped away a tear that had fallen upon his grey
-moustache.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVIII.
-
-TWO ROGUISH PROFILES.
-
-
-The city was quiet, the revolt was over, or, to speak more logically,
-the revolution was complete. The soldiers, after laying down their arms,
-had evacuated Valdivia, which was left completely in the power of the
-Dark-Hearts. As soon as peace was re-established, the Dark-Hearts gave
-orders that the barricades should be destroyed, and that all traces of
-the sanguinary struggle should be removed as quickly as possible. By the
-force of accomplished facts alone, Don Tadeo de Leon found himself quite
-naturally invested with power, and in command of the province, with the
-faculties of a dictator.
-
-"Well," he asked Valentine, "what do you think of what you have seen?"
-
-"Faith," the Parisian replied, with characteristic bluntness, "I think
-people must come to America to see how men can be caught with hook and
-line like simple gudgeons."
-
-Don Tadeo could not refrain from smiling at this whimsical answer.
-
-"Do not leave me," he said; "all is not over yet."
-
-"I ask no better; but, our friends yonder, don't you think they will be
-very uneasy at our long absence?"
-
-"Can you for a moment imagine that I have forgotten them? Within an hour
-you will be at liberty. Come with me; I want to show you two faces to
-which our victory has given an expression very different from that which
-they generally wear."
-
-"That will be curious," said Valentine.
-
-"Yes," Don Tadeo replied, "or hideous, whichever you please."
-
-"Hum! man is not perfect," said Valentine, philosophically.
-
-"Fortunately not; if he were, he would be execrable," Don Tadeo remarked.
-
-They entered the cabildo, the doors of which were guarded by a
-detachment of Dark-Hearts. The vast saloons of the palace were invaded
-by an eager crowd, who came to salute the rising sun; that is to say,
-they came to offer the spectacle of their baseness to the fortunate man,
-whom, no doubt, they would have stoned if success had not crowned his
-audacious attempt. Don Tadeo passed, without seeing them, through the
-ranks of these sycophants, the sworn courtiers of every authority, as
-void of honour as of shame, possessing but one single talent--that of
-making bendings to which it would seem impossible that the vertebral
-column of a man could attain, however flexible it may be. Valentine, who
-followed the footsteps of his friend, feigned to take for himself the
-greater part of the genuflexions meant for Don Tadeo, and bowed to the
-right and left with imperturbable coolness and assurance.
-
-The two gentlemen, after many delays caused by the increasing crowd,
-which closed around them, reached at last a retired apartment, in which
-there were only two persons. These two persons were General Tiburcio
-and Senator Don Ramon Sandias. The physiognomy of these persons offered
-a striking contrast. The General, with a sad face and a pensive step,
-walked about the apartment, whilst the senator, luxuriantly reclining
-on a fauteuil, with a smile upon his lips, his visage expanded, and
-one leg thrown over the other, was fanning himself carelessly with an
-embroidered handkerchief of the finest cambric. At the sight of Don
-Tadeo, the General advanced rapidly towards him; as for the senator, he
-sat upright in his chair, assumed a serious look, and waited.
-
-"Sir," the General said, in a low voice, "two words."
-
-"Speak, General," replied Don Tadeo; "I am entirely at your disposal."
-
-"I have some questions which I wish to put to you."
-
-"You may be assured, General, that if it be in my power to answer you, I
-will not hesitate to satisfy you."
-
-"I am convinced of that, and it is that which emboldens me to speak."
-
-"I am all attention."
-
-The General hesitated for a moment, but seemed at length determined.
-
-"Good heavens, sir!" said he, "I am an old soldier, unacquainted with
-diplomacy; I had a friend, almost a brother, and I am a prey to mortal
-uneasiness on his account."
-
-"And that friend?"
-
-"Is General Bustamente. You must know," he added, warmly, "that we have
-been fellow soldiers thirty years; and I should wish--" here he stopped,
-as if in doubt, looking earnestly at the person he was addressing.
-
-"You would like?" said Don Tadeo, quietly.
-
-"To know the fate that is reserved for him."
-
-Don Tadeo gave the General a melancholy glance.
-
-"To what purpose?" he murmured.
-
-"I beg of you."
-
-"You insist on knowing?"
-
-"I do."
-
-"General Bustamente is a great criminal. While a leader in power, he
-wished to change the form of government against the will of the people
-from whom he held his position, and in contempt of the laws, which he
-shamelessly trampled underfoot."
-
-"That is but too true," said the General, whose brow turned crimson.
-
-"General Bustamente has been implacable during the course of his too
-long career; you know that he who sows the wind can only hope to reap
-the tempest."
-
-"Hence!"
-
-"The same implacability will be shown to him that he has shown to
-others."
-
-"That is to say?"
-
-"He will, in all probability, be condemned to death."
-
-"Alas! I expected as much; but will this condemnation of which you
-speak, be long delayed?"
-
-"Two days at most; the commission which must try him will be formed
-today."
-
-"Poor friend!" said the General, piteously; "and that's the end! Will
-you grant me a favour, sir?"
-
-"Name it."
-
-"As the General must die, it would be a consolation to him to have a
-friend by his side."
-
-"No doubt it would."
-
-"Allow me to be his guard. I am sure he will be happy to know that it is
-I who have the duty of watching over him and leading him to death. And
-then I shall not, at least, abandon him till the last minute."
-
-"So be it,--your request is granted. Have you anything else to say? I
-shall be happy to serve you."
-
-"No, I thank you, sir; that is all I desired,--Ah! one word more!"
-
-"Speak."
-
-"Can I be allowed to take this guard soon?"
-
-"Immediately, if you like."
-
-"I thank you, sir."
-
-And after profoundly bowing to Don Tadeo, the General quitted the room
-with a hasty step.
-
-"Poor man!" said Valentine.
-
-"Eh?" cried Don Tadeo.
-
-"I said, poor man!"
-
-"Oh, yes; I heard you plainly enough, but of whom were you speaking?"
-
-"Of the unfortunate man who has just left us."
-
-Don Tadeo shrugged his shoulders, and Valentine looked at him with
-surprise.
-
-"Do you think you know whence the solicitude of this poor man, as you
-call him, for his friend arises?"
-
-"Why, from his friendship for him; that is clear."
-
-"You think so, do you?"
-
-"I can think nothing else."
-
-"Well, then, allow me to tell you you are completely mistaken; the poor
-General is only desirous to be near his companion in arms, that he may
-have the opportunity of suppressing the proofs of his complicity in the
-rash enterprise of yesterday; proofs which Don Pancho most likely has
-about him, and which the other wishes to destroy at all hazards."
-
-"Can that be possible?"
-
-"By Saint Jago, yes! He desires to be constantly with him, that he may
-not communicate with anyone--why, he would kill him, if necessary."
-
-"Oh! this is infamous!"
-
-"But so it is."
-
-"Bah! it gives me a nausea."
-
-"Well, do not be sick yet."
-
-"Why not?"
-
-"Because," Don Tadeo continued, pointing to the senator, "I think we
-have something here that will bring the agreeable feeling to its height."
-
-As soon as Don Ramon saw the General leave the apartment, he quitted his
-easy chair, and advanced towards Don Tadeo, bowing obsequiously.
-
-"To whom have I the honour of speaking?" said the King of Darkness, with
-studied politeness.
-
-"Sir," the other replied, with a jaunty, gentlemanly air, "my name is
-Don Ramon Sandias, and I am a senator."
-
-"How can I be of service to you, sir?" said Don Tadeo, bowing.
-
-"Oh," Don Ramon replied, affectedly; "as regards myself, personally, I
-ask nothing."
-
-"Indeed!"
-
-"Caspita! no; I am rich, what more can I want? But I am a Chilian, a
-patriot, sir; and, what is more, a senator. Placed in an exceptional
-position, I am bound to give my fellow citizens unequivocal proofs of my
-devotion to the holy cause of liberty. Are you not of my opinion, sir?"
-
-"Entirely."
-
-"I have heard, sir, that the wretched cabecilla, the cause of this silly
-movement, which brought the republic within two inches of ruin, is in
-your hands."
-
-"Yes, sir," replied Don Tadeo, with imperturbable coolness, "we have
-been fortunate enough to obtain possession of his person."
-
-"You are, doubtless, going to bring this man to trial?" Don Ramon asked,
-in a somewhat familiar tone.
-
-"Within forty-eight hours, sir."
-
-"That is right, sir. It is thus that justice should be dealt to these
-shameless agitators, who, in contempt of the sacred laws of humanity,
-seek to plunge our beautiful country into the gulf of revolutions."
-
-"Sir!"
-
-"Pardon me for speaking thus," said Don Ramon, with well-feigned
-enthusiasm; "I feel that my freedom goes rather far, but my indignation
-carries me away, sir; it is quite time that these makers of widows and
-orphans should receive the exemplary chastisement they merit. I cannot
-think, without trembling, of the manifold evils that would have fallen
-upon us, if this miserable adventurer had succeeded."
-
-"Sir, this man is not yet condemned."
-
-"And that is exactly what brings me to you, sir. As a senator, and
-a devoted patriot, I claim of you the right which belongs to me, of
-presiding over the commission whose duty it is to sit in judgment upon
-him."
-
-"Your request is granted, sir," Don Tadeo replied, who was unable to
-repress a smile of contempt.
-
-"Thank you, sir!" said the senator, with an expression of joy; "however
-painful the duty may be, I shall know how to perform it."
-
-After bowing deeply to Don Tadeo, the senator left the room in high
-spirits.
-
-"You see," said Don Tadeo, turning to Valentine, "Don Pancho had two
-friends upon whom he thought he could depend: one took upon him to
-proclaim him, the other to defend him. Well, in one he finds a gaoler,
-in the other an executioner."
-
-"It is monstrous!" said Valentine, with disgust.
-
-"No," replied Don Tadeo; "it is logical, that's all;--he has failed."
-
-"I have had enough of your politic men, with two faces, and neither of
-them a true one," replied Valentine; "allow me to return to our friends."
-
-"Begone, then, since you wish it."
-
-"Thanks!"
-
-"You will come back to Valdivia immediately, will you not?"
-
-"Pardieu, will I!"
-
-"Will you have an escort?"
-
-"For what purpose?"
-
-"Ah! that is true; I am always forgetting that you never apprehend
-danger."
-
-"I am only anxious about our friends; that is why I leave you."
-
-"Have you any cause for apprehension?"
-
-"None; but yet, a vague uneasiness, which I can not account for, compels
-me to remain no longer away from them."
-
-"Begone, then, as quickly as you please, my friend; but pray be watchful
-over the poor child, Rosario."
-
-"Be at ease on that score; within three hours she shall be here."
-
-"That is understood: a pleasant ride to you, and remember that I shall
-look for you with impatience."
-
-"Time to go and return, that is all."
-
-"Till then, adieu!"
-
-Valentine left the room, went straight to the stables, saddled his horse
-himself, and set off at a gallop. He had told Don Tadeo the truth: a
-vague uneasiness disturbed him, he had a presentiment of some misfortune
-or another.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIX.
-
-THE WOUNDED MAN.
-
-
-Let us return to the Count de Prebois Crance. When the abduction was
-committed, that part of the plain where Don Tadeo had pitched his camp
-was deserted. The crowd, attracted by curiosity, had all gone to the
-side where the renewal of the treaties was taking place. Besides, the
-measures of the ravishers had been so judiciously taken, all had passed
-so quickly, without resistance, without cries or tumult, that no alarm
-had been given, and no one could suspect what was going on. The cries of
-"murder!" uttered by the wounded young man were too faint to be heard,
-and the pistol shots he had fired were confounded with the other noises
-of the festival.
-
-Louis remained for a considerable time lying senseless in front of the
-tent, the blood flowing from two wounds. By a singular chance, the
-peons, the arrieros, and even the two Indian chiefs, who could not think
-there was anything to be dreaded, had all gone, as we have said, to be
-present at the ceremony. When the cross had been planted, and the toqui
-and the General had gone, arm in arm, to the tent of the latter, the
-crowd began to separate into little groups, and soon dispersed, each
-returning to the spot where he had established his temporary camp.
-
-The Indian chiefs were the first to quit the scene; now that their
-curiosity was satisfied, they reproached themselves for having been so
-long absent from their friend. On approaching the little camp, they were
-surprised at not seeing Louis, and a certain appearance of disorder in
-the baggage filled them with uneasiness. They quickened their pace, and
-the nearer they drew the more evident this disorder became in their
-eyes, accustomed to remark those thousands of signs which escape the
-eyes of the white man. In fact, the passage left free in the inclosure
-formed by the bales, seemed to have been the scene of a struggle; the
-footmarks of several horses were strongly imprinted in the moist earth,
-and some bales had even been removed, as if to widen the entrance, and
-lay scattered about. All these indications were more than sufficient for
-the chiefs; they exchanged an anxious glance, and rushed into the camp.
-
-Louis was still lying where the assassins had left him, stretched across
-the entrance of the tent, his discharged pistols in his hands, his head
-thrown back, his mouth half open, and his teeth clenched. The blood had
-ceased to flow. The two men looked at him for a moment with a feeling of
-stupor. His countenance was of a livid paleness.
-
-"He is dead!" said Curumilla, in a voice stifled by emotion.
-
-"He seems so," Trangoil-Lanec replied as he knelt down by the body.
-
-He raised the young man's senseless head, untied his cravat, and opened
-his vest; then they perceived the two gaping wounds.
-
-"This is a revenge!" he murmured.
-
-"What is to be done?" said Curumilla, shaking his head discouragingly.
-
-"Let us try to recover him--I hope he is not dead."
-
-And then, with infinite address and incredible celerity, the two Indians
-bestowed upon the wounded man the most intelligent and most effective
-cares. For a long time all were useless. At length a sigh, faint as a
-breath, exhaled painfully from the oppressed breast of the young man; a
-slight flush tinted his cheeks, and, after several efforts, he opened
-his eyes. Curumilla, after having washed the wounds with clean cold
-water, applied a cataplasm to them of bruised oregano leaves.
-
-"Loss of blood alone has made him faint," he said; "the wounds are wide,
-but not deep, and not at all dangerous."
-
-"But what has been going on here?" Trangoil-Lanec asked.
-
-"Hush!" said Curumilla, laying his hand upon his comrade's arm; "he
-speaks."
-
-Indeed, the young man's lips did move silently; but, at length, he
-pronounced with a great effort, and in a voice so low that the Indians
-scarcely heard it--that single word which for him contained everything--
-
-"Rosario!"
-
-Then he sank back again.
-
-"Ah!" cried Curumilla, as if a sudden light had broken upon him,
-"where is the young palefaced maiden?" and he sprang into the tent, "I
-understand it all now!" he said, returning quickly to his friend.
-
-The Indians lifted up the wounded man gently in their arms, and carried
-him into the tent, where they placed him in Rosario's empty hammock.
-Louis recovered his senses, but almost immediately was overcome by
-a profound drowsiness. After having made him as comfortable as they
-could, the two Indians left the tent, and began, with the instinct of
-their race, to seek on the ground for indications they could ask of no
-witness, but which would show them traces they could understand. Now
-that the murder and the abduction had taken place, it became necessary
-to get upon the track of the ravishers, and endeavour, if possible, to
-save the young girl. After minute researches, which did not last less
-than two hours, the Indians returned to the front of the tent; they sat
-down, face to face, and smoked for a few minutes in silence.
-
-The peons and arrieros had returned from the ceremony, and expressed
-the greatest terror on learning what had taken place during their
-absence. The poor people did not know what to do; they trembled when
-they reflected upon the responsibility which rested upon them, and upon
-the terrible account Don Tadeo would require of them. After the two
-chiefs had smoked a few minutes, they extinguished their pipes, and
-Trangoil-Lanec began:
-
-"My brother is a wise chief, let him say what he has seen."
-
-"I will speak, since my brother desires it," Curumilla replied, bowing
-his head; "the pale maiden with the blue eyes has been carried off by
-five horsemen."
-
-To this Trangoil-Lanec made a sign of assent.
-
-"These five horsemen came from the other side of the river; their
-footmarks are strongly imprinted on the ground, which was wetted in the
-places where the horses trod with their dripping hoofs; four of these
-horsemen are Huiliches, the fifth is a paleface; when they reached the
-entrance of the camp, they stopped and consulted an instant, then four
-of them dismounted; the trace of their footsteps is visible."
-
-"Good!" said Trangoil-Lanec, "my brother has the eyes of a Quanaco;
-nothing escapes him."
-
-"Of the four horsemen who dismounted, three are Indians, as is easily
-perceived by the impression of their naked feet, the great toe of which,
-accustomed to the stirrup, is very wide apart from the other toes; but
-the fourth is a Muruche, for the rowels of his spurs have left deep
-marks all around. The three first have crept up to the tent, where Don
-Louis was talking with the young blue-eyed maiden, and, consequently,
-with his back towards those who came towards him; he was attacked
-unexpectedly, and fell without having time to defend himself: then the
-fourth horseman sprang forward like a puma, seized the maiden in his
-arms, and after jumping a second time over the body of Don Louis, went
-straight to his horse, followed by the three Indians. But Don Louis
-got up, first on his knees, and then on his feet; he fired his pistols
-at the ravishers, and one of them fell mortally wounded. It was the
-paleface, for a pool of blood marks the place of his fall, and, in
-his agony, he pulled up the grass with his clenched hands; then his
-companions dismounted again, took him up, and fled. Don Louis, after
-discharging his pistols, had a faintness come over him, and fell down
-again: that is what I have learnt."
-
-"Good!" Trangoil-Lanec replied, "my brother knows everything; after
-taking up the body of their comrade, the ravishers crossed the river,
-and went in the direction of the mountains. Now, what will my brother
-do?"
-
-"Trangoil-Lanec is an experienced chief, he will wait for Don Valentine;
-Curumilla is younger, he will go upon the track of the ravishers."
-
-"My brother has spoken well; he is wise and prudent; he will find them."
-
-"Yes, Curumilla will find them," the chief replied, laconically.
-
-After saying these words, he arose, saddled his horse, and left the
-camp; Trangoil-Lanec soon lost sight of him. He then returned and took
-his place by the wounded man. The day passed away thus. The Spaniards
-had all left the plain; the Indians, for the most part, had followed
-their example; there only remained a few tardy Araucanos; but these,
-also, were preparing to depart. Towards evening, Louis found himself
-much better; he was able, in a few words, to relate to the Indian what
-had passed; but he told him nothing new, he had divined it all.
-
-"Oh!" said the young man, as he ended, "Rosario! poor Rosario is lost!"
-
-"My brother must not be depressed with grief," Trangoil-Lanec replied
-softly; "Curumilla is upon the track of the ravishers; the young pale
-maiden will be saved!"
-
-"Do you seriously tell me that, chief? Is Curumilla really in pursuit
-of them?" the young man asked, fixing his anxious eyes upon the Indian;
-"can I indeed hope that?"
-
-"Trangoil-Lanec is an Ulmen," the Araucano replied proudly: "no lie has
-ever soiled his lips, his tongue is not forked; I repeat that Curumilla
-is in pursuit of the ravishers. Let my brother hope; he will see again
-the little bird which sings such sweet songs in his heart."
-
-A sudden flush crossed the young man's face at these words; a sad smile
-curled his pale lips; he gently pressed the hand of the chief, and
-closing his eyes, he sank gently back in the hammock. All at once the
-furious galloping of a horse was heard from without.
-
-"Good!" Trangoil-Lanec murmured, looking at the wounded man, whose
-regular breathing proclaimed that he was sleeping peacefully: "what will
-Don Valentine say to all this?"
-
-And he strode out hastily to meet the Parisian, whose face was the
-picture of anxiety.
-
-"Chief!" he cried, in a tremulous voice, "can what the peons say be
-true?"
-
-"Yes!" the chief replied coolly.
-
-The young man sank down, as if thunder-struck. The Indian seated him
-gently upon a bale, and placing himself beside him, pressed his hand,
-saying in a soothing tone:
-
-"My brother has much courage."
-
-"Alas!" the young man exclaimed, in an agonized voice, "Louis, my poor
-Louis, dead, assassinated! Oh!" he added, with a terrible gesture, "I
-will avenge him! I will solely live to accomplish that sacred duty!"
-
-The chief looked at him for an instant attentively.
-
-"What does my brother mean?" he asked; "his friend is not dead."
-
-"Oh! why do you seek to deceive me, chief?"
-
-"I speak the truth; Don Louis is not dead," the Ulmen replied, in such
-an imposing voice that it carried conviction to the wounded heart of the
-young man.
-
-"Oh!" he cried, impetuously, and springing up, "he lives!--is that
-possible?"
-
-"He has received two wounds."
-
-"Two wounds!"
-
-"Yes, but my brother can be comforted, they are not dangerous; in a
-week, at latest, they will be cured."
-
-Valentine remained for an instant stupefied by this good news, after the
-catastrophe which the peons and arrieros had announced to him.
-
-"Oh!" he exclaimed, throwing himself into the arms of the chief, whom
-he pressed with a kind of frenzy to his breast, "it is true, is it
-not?--his life is not in danger?"
-
-"No, no, my brother can reassure himself; loss of blood alone reduced
-him to the state of torpor into which he fell. I will answer for his
-recovery."
-
-"Thanks! thanks, chief! I can see him, may I not?"
-
-"He is asleep."
-
-"Oh! I will not wake him, be assured of that; I only wish to see him."
-
-"See him, then," Trangoil-Lanec replied, smiling.
-
-Valentine went in. He looked at his friend, peacefully sleeping; he
-leant softly over him, and impressing a kiss upon his brow, whispered--
-
-"Sleep, dear brother, I will watch."
-
-The lips of the wounded man moved; he murmured--
-
-"Valentine, save her!"
-
-The Parisian knitted his brow, and drew himself up again.
-
-"Come here, chief," he said to Trangoil-Lanec, "and tell me the details
-of what has passed, that I may know how to avenge my brother, and save
-her he loves."
-
-The two men quitted the tent.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XL.
-
-AHAUCANIAN DIPLOMACY.
-
-
-Antinahuel had not remained long inactive. Scarce had General
-Bustamente's escort disappeared in the cloud of dust, ere he remounted
-his horse, and, followed by all the Araucano chiefs, crossed the river.
-When he arrived on the other bank, he planted his lance in the ground,
-and turned towards the herald who was beside him, ready to execute his
-orders.
-
-"Let the three toquis, the Ulmens, and the Apo-Ulmens meet here in an
-hour," he said; "the fire of council shall be lighted on this spot for a
-grand council. Begone!"
-
-The herald bowed down to his horse's neck and set off at full speed.
-Antinahuel cast a glance around him. All the chiefs had regained their
-huts; one warrior alone remained. On perceiving him a smile stole over
-the lips of the toqui. This warrior was a man of lofty stature, proud
-carriage, and haughty countenance, whose piercing look conveyed a fierce
-and cruel expression. He appeared to be in the prime of life, that is to
-say, about forty years of age; he wore a poncho of exceedingly fine lama
-wool, striped with striking colours, while the long silver-headed cane
-which he held in his hand proclaimed him an Apo-Ulmen. He replied to the
-toqui's smile by a look of intelligence, and, bending to his ear, said,
-with an accent of gratified hatred--
-
-"When the cougars tear each other to pieces, they prepare a rich quarry
-for the eagles of the Andes."
-
-"The Puelches are eagles," Antinahuel replied; "they are masters of the
-other side of the mountains; they leave to the Huiliche women the care
-of weaving their ponchos."
-
-At this sarcasm, launched against the Huiliches, a fraction of the
-Araucano people, who devote themselves principally to agriculture and
-the breeding of cattle, the Apo-Ulmen frowned.
-
-"My father is severe with his sons," he said, in a husky voice.
-
-"The Black-Stag is a formidable chief in his nation," Antinahuel
-remarked, in a conciliatory tone; "he is the first of the Apo-Ulmens
-of the province of the maritime country. His heart is Puelche; my soul
-rejoices when he is at my side. Why is it that the Ulmens are not of the
-same temper as he?"
-
-"My brother has explained the reason. Obliged to live in continual trade
-relations with the miserable Spaniards, the tribes of the flat country
-have laid down the lance to take up the pickaxe: they have become
-cultivators; but let not my father be deceived,--the old spirit of their
-race still dwells within them, and on the day when they are called on to
-fight for their independence, all will rise at once to punish those who
-would attempt to enslave them."
-
-"Can that be true?" Antinahuel cried, stopping his horse short, and
-looking in the speaker's face; "may they be depended upon?"
-
-"What is the use of speaking of the subject at this moment?" said the
-Apo-Ulmen, with a bantering smile; "has not my father just come from
-renewing the treaties with the palefaces?"
-
-"That is true," said the toqui, darting a keen look at the Indian
-warrior: "peace is secured for a long time."
-
-"My father is a wise chief, that which he does is well done," the other
-replied, casting down his eyes.
-
-Antinahuel was preparing to reply, when an Indian arrived at full speed,
-and, with a prodigy of skill which these matchless horsemen alone
-can execute, he stopped suddenly before the two chiefs, and stood as
-motionless as a statue of bronze. The panting sides of his horse, which
-ejected clouds from his nostrils, and was spotted with white foam,
-showed that he had ridden far and fast. Antinahuel looked at him for an
-instant.
-
-"My son Theg-teg--the thunderer--has made a rapid journey."
-
-"I have executed the orders of my father."
-
-At these words, out of politeness, the Apo-Ulmen pressed the sides of
-his horse to retire, but Antinahuel laid his hand upon his arm.
-
-"Black-Stag may remain," he said; "is he not my friend?"
-
-"I will remain if my father wishes it," the chief answered, quietly.
-
-"Let him remain, then; his brother has no secrets from him;" and turning
-to the still motionless warrior, he added, "my brother can speak."
-
-"The Chiaplos are fighting," the latter replied; "they have dug up the
-hatchet and turned it against their own breasts."
-
-"Oh!" the toqui exclaimed with feigned astonishment; "my brother must be
-mistaken, the palefaces are not cougars, to devour each other."
-
-And he turned towards Black-Stag, with a smile of undefinable expression.
-
-"Theg-teg is not mistaken," the Indian warrior replied, gravely; "his
-eyes have seen clearly: the stone tolderia, which the palefaces call
-Valdivia, is at this moment a more ardent furnace than the volcano of
-Autaco, which serves as a retreat for Guecubu, the genius of evil."
-
-"Good!" the toqui remarked, coldly, "my son has seen well; he is a
-warrior brave in battle, but he is likewise prudent; did he stand apart
-to rejoice, without seeking to learn which side prevailed?"
-
-"Theg-teg is prudent, but when he looks he means to see; he knows all,
-my father may question him."
-
-"Good! the great warrior of the palefaces set out from here to fly to
-the help of his soldiers; the advantage is with him."
-
-The Indian smiled, but made no reply.
-
-"Let my brother speak!" Antinahuel resumed; "the toqui of his nation
-interrogates him."
-
-"He whom my brother names as the great warrior of the palefaces, is the
-prisoner of his enemies; his soldiers are dispersed like grains of wheat
-scattered over the field."
-
-"Wah!" Antinahuel cried with feigned anger, "my brother has a lying
-tongue, what he says cannot be true; does the eagle become the prey of
-the owl? The great warrior has an arm strong as the thunder of Pillian.
-Nothing can resist it."
-
-"That arm, however powerful, has not been able to save him; the eagle
-is captive: the courageous puma was surprised by cunning foxes; he has
-fallen, treacherously overcome, into the snare they had laid before his
-feet."
-
-"But his soldiers? the great toqui of the whites had a numerous army."
-
-"I have told my father; the chief being made captive, the soldiers,
-bewildered and struck with fear by Guecubu, fell beneath the blows of
-their angry enemies."
-
-"The chiefs who were conquerors, no doubt, pursued them."
-
-"What for? The palefaces are women without courage: as soon as their
-enemies weep and pray for pardon they forgive them."
-
-At this news the toqui could not repress a movement of impatience, but
-he soon recovered himself.
-
-"Brothers ought not to be inexorable," he said, "when they lift the
-hatchet against each other: they may wound a friend without wishing it.
-The pale warriors have done well."
-
-The Indian bowed if as assenting.
-
-"What are the palefaces doing now?" the chief continued.
-
-"They are assembled round the council fire."
-
-"Good! They are wise men. I am satisfied with my son," Antinahuel
-added, with a gracious smile; "he is a warrior, as skilful as brave;
-he may retire, and take the repose necessary after so long a journey."
-"Theg-teg is not fatigued; his life is my father's," the warrior said
-with a bow; "he may dispose of it at his pleasure."
-
-"Antinahuel will remember his son," the toqui said with a sign of
-dismissal.
-
-The Indian bowed respectfully to his chief, and pressing his knees
-whilst shortening the bridle, he made his horse perform a curvet,
-brought it to the ground with an extraordinary bound, and went off
-caracoling. The toqui looked after him in apparent abstraction; then
-addressing the Apo-Ulmen--
-
-"What does my brother think of that which this man has said?" he asked.
-
-"My father is the wisest of the toquis of his nation, the chief the most
-venerated by the Araucanian tribes; Pillian will breathe words into his
-mind which will mount to his lips, and which we shall listen to with
-respect," Black-Stag replied, evasively, fearing to compromise himself
-by too frank a reply.
-
-"My brother is right," the toqui said, with a haughty glance; "I have my
-nymph!"
-
-The Apo-Ulmen bowed with an air of conviction. We beg our readers to
-observe, with regard to this expression, which for the first time
-has fallen from our pen, that in the Araucanian mythology, besides
-an infinite number of gods and goddesses, there are what are called
-spiritual nymphs, who perform towards man the office of familiar genii.
-There is not a renowned chief among the Araucanos who does not glorify
-himself with the idea of having one of these in his service. Hence,
-what Antinahuel said, instead of disturbing Black-Stag, gave him, on
-the contrary, a greater veneration for his chief; for he also flattered
-himself with having a familiar spirit at his command, although he did
-not dare to proclaim it aloud. At this moment the Araucanian drums and
-trumpets sounded loudly--the _chasquis_ were calling the chiefs to
-council.
-
-"What will my father do?" asked the Apo-Ulmen.
-
-"Man is weak," Antinahuel replied; "but Pillian loves his sons, the
-Moluchos, he will inspire the words I shall pronounce; my only desire is
-the happiness of the Araucano nation."
-
-"My father has convoked the great Auca-coyog of the nation; did he then
-suspect the news he has just received?"
-
-"Antinahuel knows everything," he answered, with a smile.
-
-"Good! I know what my father thinks."
-
-"Perhaps."
-
-"Let my father remember the words I have spoken."
-
-"My ears are open, my son may repeat them,"
-
-"When cougars tear each other to pieces, they prepare a rich quarry for
-the eagles of the Andes."
-
-"Good!" said Antinahuel, with a laugh; "my son is a great chief, let him
-follow me to the Auca-coyog, the warriors are waiting for us."
-
-The two warriors exchanged a look of undefinable meaning; these two men,
-so cunning and dissimulating, had compromised themselves to each other
-without avowing anything. They directed their course at a gallop towards
-the spot where the principal chiefs awaited them, drawn up in a circle
-around a fierce fire, the smoke of which ascended in graceful eddies
-towards heaven.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLI.
-
-THE COUNCIL
-
-
-The Araucanos, whom certain travellers, either ill-informed or of
-bad faith, persist in representing as savage men plunged in the most
-frightful barbarism, are, on the contrary, a relatively civilized
-people. Their government, the origin of which is lost in the night of
-time, and which, at the period of the Spanish conquest, was as well
-organized and carried out as easily as at the present day, is, as
-we have said in a preceding chapter, an aristocratic republic, with
-essentially feudal tendencies. This government, which affects all the
-appearances of the feudal system, has all its good qualities and all its
-defects. Hence, except in time of war, the toquis possess but the shadow
-of sovereignty, and the power resides in the entire body of the chiefs,
-who, in questions of importance, decide in a general diet, called the
-_Auca-coyog_, the great council, or council of free men, for such is
-the name they claim for themselves, and very justly, for no power has
-yet been able to subdue them. These councils are generally held in the
-presence of all, in a vast prairie.
-
-Antinahuel had eagerly seized the pretext of the renewal of the treaties
-to try and obtain from the chiefs authority to carry into execution the
-projects which had been so long ripening in his brain. The Araucanian
-code, which contains all the laws of the nation, created an obligation
-for his doing so, from which even his renown and popularity were
-powerless to release him. But he hoped to overcome the opposition of
-the chiefs, or their repugnance to submit to his will, by means of his
-eloquence and the influence which, under many circumstances, he had
-exercised over the minds of the Ulmens, even those most determined to
-resist him.
-
-The Araucanos cultivate with success the art of speaking, which among
-them leads to public honours. They make it a point to speak their own
-language well, and to preserve its purity by guarding particularly
-against the introduction of foreign words. They carry this so far,
-that when a white establishes himself amongst them, they oblige him
-to abandon his own name and take one of their country. The style of
-their speeches is figurative and allegorical. They call the style of
-parliamentary harangues _coyagtucan;_ and it must be observed that these
-speeches contain all the essential parts of true rhetoric, and are
-almost all divided into three heads.
-
-The few words we have said will suffice to show that the Araucanos are
-not so savage as we have been led to suppose. In short, a small people,
-who, without allies, isolated at the extremity of the continent, have
-since the landing of the Spaniards on their coasts, that is to say,
-during three hundred years, constantly and alone resisted European
-armies composed of experienced soldiers and greedy adventurers, whom no
-difficulty was likely to stop, and who have preserved their independence
-and their nationality intact, are, in our opinion, respectable in
-every point of view, and ought not to be stigmatized as barbarians
-with impunity--the sad, despicable vengeance of those proud and
-impotent Spaniards, who have never been able to conquer them, and whose
-degenerate sons at this very day pay them a tribute, under the lying
-excuse of an annual offering.
-
-We who, thrown by the chance of our adventurous travels among these
-indomitable tribes, have lived many days with them, have had an
-opportunity of judging soundly of these ill-understood people. We have
-been able to appreciate all that is really simple, great, and generous
-in their character. Terminating here this somewhat long digression, a
-tribute of gratitude paid to ancient and dearly-beloved friends, we will
-resume our narrative.
-
-Antinahuel and Black-Stag arrived at the place where the chiefs were
-assembled. They dismounted and joined the groups of Ulmens. The chiefs,
-who were peacefully chatting together, at their arrival became silent,
-and, for a few minutes, not a word was heard in the assembly. At length
-Cathicara, the toqui of the Pire-Mapus, made a few steps towards the
-centre of the circle, and took the initiative.
-
-Cathicara was an old man of seventy, of majestic bearing, and imposing
-countenance. A renowned warrior in his youth, now that many winters had
-wrinkled his brow and silvered his long hair, he enjoyed, by just title,
-a great reputation for wisdom in his nation. Descended from an old race
-of Ulmens, continually opposed to the whites, he was an inveterate enemy
-of the Chilians, against whom he had long waged war. He was acquainted
-with the secret views of Antinahuel, of whom he was the most devoted
-friend and partisan.
-
-"Toquis, Apo-Ulmens and Ulmens of the valiant nation of the Aucas, whose
-immense hunting grounds cover the surface of the earth," he said, "my
-heart is sad; a cloud covers my mind, and my eyes, filled with tears,
-are constantly cast towards the ground; whence comes it that grief
-devours me? Why does the joyous song of the goldfinch no longer sound
-cheerfully in my ears? why do the rays of the sun seem less warm to me?
-why, in short, does nature appear less beautiful to me? Will you tell
-me, my brothers? You are silent; shame covers your brows; your humbled
-eyes are cast down--have you nothing to reply? It is because you are a
-degenerate people! your warriors are women, who instead of the lance
-take up the spindle; because you bow basely beneath the yoke of these
-Chiaplos, these Huincas, who laugh at you, for they know that you have
-no longer blood red enough to contend with them! When, Aucas warriors,
-did impure owls and screech owls begin to make their nests in the eyrie
-of eagles? Of what use is this stone hatchet, the symbol of strength;
-this hatchet, which you have given me to defend you, if it is to remain
-inactive in my hands, and if I must descend into the tomb, towards
-which I am already hastening, without having been able to do anything
-for your enfranchisement?--Take it back again, warriors, if it is to be
-nothing but a vain, honorary ornament; for myself, my life has been too
-long--let me retire to my toldo, where, to my last days, it will be at
-least permitted me to weep over our independence, which is compromised
-by your weakness, and our glory eclipsed for ever by your cowardice!"
-
-After uttering these words, the old man made a few paces backwards,
-staggering as if overcome by grief. Antinahuel sprang towards him, and
-appeared to lavish consolations upon him in a low voice. The speech had
-strongly moved the assembly, for the toqui was beloved and venerated
-by all. The Ulmens remained apparently silent and stoical; but their
-feelings of hatred had been powerfully stirred, and passion began to
-gleam from their eyes in ominous flashes. Black-Stag stepped forward.
-
-"Father," he said, in a low, insinuating tone, and with a quiet air,
-"your words are rough; they have plunged our hearts in sadness; why have
-you been so severe with your children? Pillian alone is acquainted with
-the intentions of men. What do you reproach us with? with having done
-today what our fathers have always done before us, while they did not
-believe themselves in a position to contend victoriously against their
-enemies! No, owls and impure birds do not make their nests in the eyries
-of eagles. No, the Aucas are not women! They are valiant and invincible
-warriors, as their fathers were before them. Listen! listen to what
-the spirit reveals to me: the council with the Spaniards of today is
-null and void, because it has not taken place as the Admapu requires.
-The toqui has not presented to the chief of the palefaces the branch
-of the Cinnamon tree, the symbol of peace; the canes of the Apo-Ulmens
-have not been bound in a sheaf with the sword of the Huinca chief;
-the oath and the speeches have been pronounced upon the cross of the
-palefaces, and not upon the sheaf, as the law requires. I repeat, then,
-the Huinca-coyog is a nullity, nothing but a vain, laughable ceremony,
-to which we ought to attach no importance. Have I spoken well, powerful
-men?"
-
-"Yes! yes!" the chiefs cried, brandishing their arms, "the Huinca-coyog
-is null!"
-
-Antinahuel then took a few steps forward within the circle, with his
-head advanced, his eyes fixed on vacancy, and his arms extended, as if
-he heard and saw things which he alone could see and hear.
-
-"Silence!" Black-Stag cried, pointing to him with his finger; "the great
-toqui is holding conference with his nymph!"
-
-The chiefs experienced a sensation of terror while looking at the toqui.
-A solemn silence prevailed in the assembly. On his part, Antinahuel did
-not stir.
-
-Black-Stag approached him softly, and, stooping towards his ear, asked,--
-
-"What does my father see?"
-
-"I see the warriors of the palefaces; they have dug up the war hatchet,
-and are fighting with one another."
-
-"What more does my father see?" Black-Stag resumed.
-
-"I see streams of blood, which redden the soil; the odour of that blood
-rejoices my heart, for it is the blood of palefaces shed by their
-brothers!"
-
-"Does my father see anything more?"
-
-"I see the great chief of the whites! he fights valiantly at the head
-of his soldiers! he is surrounded, he fights still! he is nearly
-falling--he falls--he is down--he is conquered! His enemies seize him!"
-
-The Ulmens present at this scene looked on in stupefied amazement; it
-was incomprehensible to them. A smile of disdain curled the lips of
-Black-Stag, as he continued,--
-
-"Does my father hear anything?"
-
-"I hear the cries of the dying demanding vengeance upon their brothers!"
-
-"Does my father hear anything else?"
-
-"Yes; I hear the cries of Aucas warriors, long since dead, and they
-freeze me with terror!"
-
-"What do they say?" the chiefs exclaimed unanimously, a prey to intense
-anxiety. "What do the Aucas warriors say?"
-
-"They say, 'Brothers, the hour is come! To arms! To arms!'"
-
-"To arms!" the chiefs shouted, as with one voice. "To arms! Death to the
-palefaces!"
-
-The impulse was given, enthusiasm had seized all hearts; from this
-moment Antinahuel was able to raise the passions of the crowd to
-delirium at his pleasure. A smile of supreme satisfaction lighted his
-haughty countenance as he recovered apparently from his vision.
-
-"Chiefs of the Aucas," he said, "what do you order me to do?"
-
-"Antinahuel," Cathicara replied, throwing his stone hatchet into the
-fire, in which he was directly imitated by the other toquis; "there is
-now but one supreme hatchet in the nation, it is in your hands; let
-it be red up to the hilt in the blood of the vile Huincas; lead our
-Uthal-Mapus to battle--you have the supreme command! We give you the
-power of life and death over our persons. From this hour, you alone in
-the nation have the right to command us; whatever be your orders, we
-will accomplish them."
-
-Antinahuel raised his lofty head, his brow radiant with pride:
-brandishing in his nervous hand his powerful war hatchet, the symbol of
-the dictatorial and boundless power which had just been conferred upon
-him, he said haughtily,--
-
-"Aucas, I accept the honour you do me; I will prove worthy of the
-confidence you place in me. This hatchet shall never be buried till
-my body has served for food to the vultures of the Andes, or till the
-cowardly palefaces, against whom we are about to combat, shall have come
-upon their knees to implore pardon!"
-
-The chiefs replied to these words by cries of joy and ferocious
-howlings. The Auca-coyog was terminated. Tables were placed, and a
-banquet gathered together all the warriors present at the council.
-At the moment when Antinahuel was seating himself in the high place
-reserved for him, an Indian, covered with perspiration and dust,
-approached him, and whispered a few words in his ear. The chief started;
-a nervous paroxysm shook his whole frame, and he arose a prey to the
-most lively agitation.
-
-"Oh!" he cried, passionately, "it is to me alone that woman should
-belong!" and, addressing the Indian who had spoken to him, he added,
-"Bid my mosotones mount, and be prepared to follow me instantly."
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLII.
-
-THE NIGHT JOURNEY.
-
-
-Antinahuel beckoned Black-Stag to come to him, and the Apo-Ulmen did not
-delay. Notwithstanding the number and copiousness of the libations in
-which he had indulged, the face of the Araucano chief was as impassive,
-and his step as steady, as if he had only drunk water. When he arrived
-in front of the toqui, he bowed respectfully, and waited in silence till
-he was spoken to. The toqui, with his eyes fixed on the ground, and
-buried in serious reflections, was some time before he was aware of his
-presence. At length he raised his eyes; his countenance was dark, his
-eyes seemed to dart lightning, a nervous tremour agitated all his limbs.
-
-"Is my father suffering?" Black-Stag asked, mildly and affectionately.
-
-"I am," the chief replied.
-
-"Guecubu has breathed upon the heart of my father; but let him take
-courage, Pillian will support him."
-
-"No," Antinahuel replied; "the breath which dries my breast is a breath
-of fear."
-
-"Of fear?"
-
-"Yes; the Huincas are powerful. I dread the strength of their arms for
-my young men!"
-
-Black-Stag surveyed him with astonishment.
-
-"What signifies the power of the palefaces," he said, "when my father is
-at the head of the four Uthal-Mapus?"
-
-"This war will be terrible; and I would conquer."
-
-"My father will conquer. Do not all the warriors listen to his voice?"
-
-"No," said Antinahuel, sorrowfully; "the Ulmens of the Puelches were not
-present at the council."
-
-"That is true," Black-Stag murmured.
-
-"The Puelches are the first among Aucas warriors."
-
-"That is true, too," said Black-Stag.
-
-"I suffer!" Antinahuel repeated.
-
-Black-Stag laid his hand upon his shoulder.
-
-"My father," he said, in an insinuating tone, "is a great chief; nothing
-is impossible to him!"
-
-"What does my son mean?"
-
-"War is declared. Whilst we attempt incursions into the Chilian
-territory, to keep our enemies in a state of uncertainty as to our
-plans, let my father mount with his mosotones upon his coursers more
-fleet than the wind, and fly upon the wings of the tempest to the
-Puelches. His words will convince them; the warriors will abandon
-everything to follow him and fight under his orders. With their
-assistance we shall conquer the Huincas, and the heart of my father will
-swell with joy and pride!"
-
-"My son is wise! I will follow his counsels," the toqui answered, with a
-smile of mysterious expression; "but he has said war is resolved upon;
-the interests of my nation must not suffer from the short absence I am
-forced to make."
-
-"My father will provide for that."
-
-"I have provided for it," Antinahuel said, with a courteous smile; "let
-my son listen to me."
-
-"My ears are open to receive the words of my father."
-
-"At sunrise, when the fumes of the water fire are dissipated, the chiefs
-will ask for Antinahuel." Black-Stag nodded assent.
-
-"I will place in the hands of my son," the chief continued, "the stone
-hatchet, the sign of my dignity. Black-Stag is a part of my soul, his
-heart is devoted to me; I name him my vice-toqui--he will take my place."
-
-The Apo-Ulmen bowed respectfully before Antinahuel, and kissed his hand.
-
-"Whatever my father orders shall be instantly executed," he said.
-
-"The chiefs are of a proud character; their courage is fiery: my son
-must not give them time to cool, he must make them so compromise
-themselves, that they cannot afterwards retract."
-
-"What are the names of these chiefs, that I may keep them in my memory?"
-
-"They are the most powerful Ulmens of the nation. Let my son remember
-they are eight in number; each of them must make an incursion on the
-frontier, in order to prove to the Chiaplos that hostilities have
-commenced. The four principal among them will immediately repair to
-Valdivia, to proclaim the declaration of war to the palefaces."
-
-"Good!"
-
-"These are the names of the Ulmens: Tangol, Qud-pal, Auchanguer,
-Colfunguin, Trumau, Cuyumil, and Pailapen. Does my son hear these names
-distinctly?"
-
-"I have heard them."
-
-"Has my son understood the sense of my words? Have they entered into his
-brain?"
-
-"The words of my father are here," said Black-Stag, pointing to his
-forehead; "he may banish all uneasiness, and fly towards her who has
-taken possession of his heart."
-
-"Good!" Antinahuel replied; "my son loves me, he will remember; after
-two suns he will find me at the tolderia of the Black Serpents."
-
-"The Black-Stag will be there, accompanied by his most valiant warriors;
-may Pillian guide the steps of my father, and may the god of war grant
-him success."
-
-"Farewell, brother!" Antinahuel murmured, taking leave of his lieutenant.
-
-Black-Stag bowed to the toqui and retired. As soon as he was alone,
-Antinahuel made a sign to the Indian whose news had caused his
-departure. During the conference of the two chiefs this man had stood
-motionless, at a sufficient distance to prevent his hearing what they
-said, but near enough to execute immediately the orders that might be
-given him. He drew near in obedience to the sign.
-
-"Is my son fatigued?" the toqui asked.
-
-"No; my horse alone wants rest."
-
-"Well, my son shall have another horse; he will guide us."
-
-Antinahuel, followed by the scout, advanced, without more words, towards
-a group of horsemen, who, leaning on their long lances, cast their black
-shadows gloomily into the night. These horsemen, about thirty in number,
-were the mosotones of the toqui. Antinahuel, at a bound, sprang upon a
-magnificent horse, held by the bridle by two Indians.
-
-"Forward!" he cried, settling himself in his saddle, and plunging his
-spurs into the sides of the horse, which set off with the speed of an
-arrow.
-
-The mosotones followed as quickly after, and the troop of horsemen
-glided through the darkness like a legion of gloomy phantoms, preceded
-by the scout. Who can express the terrible poetry of a night ride in
-the American deserts? The midnight wind had swept the heavens clear of
-clouds, and its vault, of a dark blue, appeared to be, like a monarch's
-robe, splendidly adorned with an infinite number of stars. The night
-had that velvety transparency peculiar to warm climates. At intervals,
-a puff of wind, loaded with indistinct sounds, scattered the dry leaves
-into the air, and was lost in the distance like a sigh.
-
-The Araucanos, bending over the necks of their horses, whose nostrils
-emitted dense clouds of smoke, rode on, and on, and ever on, without
-casting even a look around them. And yet the desert they were
-traversing, so silently and so rapidly, poured floods of splendid
-harmonies into space. The murmur of water among the lianas and the
-glayeuls, the moaning of the wind among the leaves, or the confused
-noise of a thousand invisible insects, could be heard; at times, lights,
-fluttering through the foliage, danced upon the grass in the manner of
-wild fires; at distances were to be seen old trees, at the angles of
-ravines or the brink of precipices, standing like spectres, shaking
-their winding sheets of parasitical plants; a thousand rumours hovered
-in the air; nameless cries issued from dens hollowed under vast roots;
-stifled sighs descended from the hoary summits of the mountains: an
-unknown and mysterious world could be felt existing around. Everywhere,
-on the earth, in the air, was to be heard the great flood of life, which
-comes from God, passes away, and is incessantly renewed.
-
-The Araucanos still continued their furious course, clearing torrents
-and ravines, and crushing under the hoofs of their flying coursers
-stones, the fragments of which rolled with a splash into the barrancas.
-At two lances, length, in front, by the side of the scout, Antinahuel,
-with his eyes ardently directed forward, kept urging on his horse, whose
-hard and loud breathing proclaimed fatigue. All at once a dark mass
-surged up in the distance, and then a voice was heard.
-
-"We have arrived," the guide exclaimed.
-
-"At last!" Antinahuel said, pulling up his horse, which could no longer
-stand when the impetus had ceased. They found themselves in a miserable
-village, composed of five or six huts falling to ruins, and which,
-at every gust of wind, threatened to tumble to pieces. Antinahuel,
-who expected the fall of his horse, disengaged himself quickly, and
-addressing the guide, who had likewise dismounted, asked--
-
-"In which toldo is she?"
-
-"Come," the Indian replied, laconically.
-
-Antinahuel followed him.
-
-They walked some steps without exchanging a word; the chief pressing
-his hand strongly on his breast, as if to keep down the beatings of his
-heart. After a hasty march of ten minutes, the two men found themselves
-in front of an isolated cabin, from the interior of which glimmered a
-feeble light. The Indian stopped, and turned towards Antinahuel.
-
-"That is it," he said, stretching out his arm in the direction of the
-cabin.
-
-The toqui turned round to ascertain whether his mosotones, whom, in his
-rapid course, he had left far behind, were rejoining him; and then,
-after the hesitation of a second, he approached the door and pushed it,
-saying in a low but determined voice--
-
-"An end must be put to this!"
-
-The door opened, and he entered.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLIII.
-
-TWO HATREDS.
-
-
-Antinahuel found himself face to face with Dona Maria; by an instinctive
-movement each drew back a step, stifling a cry; a cry of stupor on the
-part of Antinahuel, of surprise on the part of the Linda.
-
-"Oh!" sighed Dona Rosario, quite overcome, and bowing her head to avoid
-the ardent glance of the Indian chief--"Oh, Heaven! now I am really
-lost, indeed!"
-
-Dona Maria had in a few seconds driven back to her heart the feelings
-which raged within her; and with a mild voice and a smiling face she
-addressed Antinahuel--
-
-"My brother is welcome," she said, inviting him by a gesture to enter
-the cuarto; "to what happy chance do I owe his presence?"
-
-"A happy chance for me, particularly," he replied, with a satirical
-smile, and endeavouring to compose his features.
-
-The toqui was too well acquainted with the companion of his childhood
-not to know that he had in her a formidable adversary, with whom he must
-play close, in order to bring her to do his will.
-
-"Well!" the Linda resumed, "will my brother deign to do me the pleasure
-of explaining the cause of his sudden appearance, which, not the less,
-fills me with delight?"
-
-"Oh! the cause is very simple indeed, not worth mentioning; I did not
-hope, in any way, to meet my sister here; I must even confess, with all
-humility that I did not seek her."
-
-"Ah!" said Dona Maria, feigning to be imposed upon, "I am doubly
-fortunate, then."
-
-The chief bowed.
-
-"It is the truth," he said.
-
-"Good!" she thought; "now he is going to lie, let us see what villainy
-the demon will invent;" and then she added aloud, with a seducing smile,
-which displayed thirty-two little teeth of the purest pearl--"I am all
-ears, my brother can speak."
-
-"As my sister knows, this village is on the route which leads to my
-tolderia, I have naturally traversed it in returning to my tribe; the
-night is advanced, my mosotones require a few hours' rest; I resolved
-to encamp here. I entered the first rancho which presented itself to
-my view, this rancho in which you are temporarily sojourning, and I am
-grateful to the chance which, as I have told you, has done all this, and
-is alone guilty."
-
-"Not bad for an Indian," murmured Dona Maria; "well, we will say no more
-about that."
-
-"Eh!" said Antinahuel, feigning for the first time to perceive Dona
-Rosario, and advancing towards her; "who is this charming young woman?"
-
-"A slave, not worthy of your notice," the Linda replied, sternly.
-
-"A slave!" Antinahuel cried.
-
-"Yes, a slave." The Linda clapped her hands, and the Indian we have seen
-talking with her entered.
-
-"Take away this woman!" she said.
-
-"Oh, madam!" Rosario exclaimed, falling on her knees, "can you be
-inexorable towards a poor girl who has never injured you?"
-
-The Linda gave her a fiery glance, and repulsed her with her foot.
-
-"I ordered this girl to be taken away," she said, perilously.
-
-At this flagrant insult, the blood rushed to the heart of the poor
-girl; her pallid brow flushed with scarlet, and drawing herself up
-majestically and proudly, she said in a piercing voice, the prophetic
-tone of which struck the Linda to the heart--
-
-"Beware, madam! God will punish you! As you today are without pity for
-me, so the day will come when there will be no pity for you!"
-
-And she left the room, after darting a look at her implacable enemy that
-made even her blench.
-
-When Antinahuel and the Linda were left alone, a long silence ensued.
-The last words of Rosario had wounded the Linda like the stroke of a
-poniard; it was in vain she endeavoured to steel herself against the
-emotion she experienced. She felt herself conquered by the weak girl.
-She, however, gradually overcame the incomprehensible sensation that
-oppressed her. Passing her hand across her brow, as if to drive away the
-importunate idea that pursued her, she turned towards Antinahuel--
-
-"No diplomacy between us, brother," she said, "we know each other too
-well to lose time in manoeuvring."
-
-"My sister is right; let us speak frankly."
-
-"The story of your return to your tribe is very clever, Antinahuel, but
-I do not believe a word of it."
-
-"Good! then my sister knows the reason that brings me here."
-
-"I do know it," she said, with an arch smile, which played like a
-sunbeam round her rosy lips.
-
-Antinahuel made no reply. He began to walk in great agitation about the
-room, casting looks of anger and vexation towards the door by which
-Rosario had gone out. The Linda followed him with a keen and mocking eye.
-
-"Well," she said, at the end of a minute, "will not my brother speak?"
-
-"Why should I not speak?" he angrily replied. "Antinahuel is the most
-redoubtable chief of his nation, the proudest warriors bend their lofty
-brows without hesitation before him!"
-
-"I am waiting," she said, in a calm voice.
-
-"A chief explains himself clearly, no one imposes upon him. My sister
-knows my hatred for the chief of the palefaces, of whom she has so much
-reason to complain."
-
-"Yes, I know that man is the personal enemy of my brother."
-
-"Well, then, my sister has in her hands the blue-eyed maiden, and she
-will give her to me, so that I may, in making her suffer, revenge myself
-on my enemy."
-
-"My brother is a man, he does not know how to avenge himself: why
-should I give my prisoner up to him? Women alone possess the secret of
-torturing those they hate. Let my brother leave it to me," she added,
-with a vindictive smile; "the torments I shall invent will suffice, I
-swear, to satisfy a hatred much deeper than any he can feel."
-
-Antinahuel, although his face remained impassive, shuddered inwardly at
-these odious words.
-
-"My sister is boastful," he replied, "her skin is white, her heart knows
-not how to hate, let her leave it to the Indian chief."
-
-"No," she passionately exclaimed, "I have fixed the fate of this woman;
-I will not give her to my brother."
-
-"Will my sister then forget her promise, and falsify her oaths?"
-
-"Of what promises and of what oaths do you speak, chief?"
-
-"Of those," the Indian replied haughtily, "which my sister pronounced in
-the toldo of Antinahuel, when she came among his tribe to implore his
-assistance."
-
-The Linda smiled.
-
-"Woman is a mockingbird," she said, "the man who pays attention to her
-words is----"
-
-"Good!" Antinahuel interrupted, "my sister shall keep her prisoner. Let
-my sister do her will; I will continue my route towards the tolderia of
-my tribe."
-
-The Linda looked at him with astonishment; the facility with which
-Antinahuel apparently renounced his projects seemed to her the more
-incomprehensible, from her knowing with what pertinacity he pursued
-his enterprises, when once he believed he had a chance of success. She
-resolved to know what she had to trust to. At the moment when the chief
-made a step towards the door, she said.
-
-"Is my brother going?"
-
-"I am going," he replied.
-
-"Has he, then, already terminated the affairs about which General
-Bustamente requested him to come and consult with him?"
-
-"General Bustamente no longer stands in need of Antinahuel or of anyone
-else."
-
-"Has he then succeeded so quickly?"
-
-"Yes," he answered in an equivocal tone.
-
-"Then," the Linda exclaimed, joyfully, "he is master of the city, and
-triumphs at last!"
-
-Antinahuel appeared to hesitate for a minute--an ironical smile flitted
-across his lips.
-
-"Will not my brother answer?" the Linda continued, with an impatience
-mingled with uneasiness.
-
-"He whom my sister calls General Bustamente," he replied in a sharp
-tone, "no longer needs the assistance of anyone: he is a prisoner."
-
-The Linda sprang up like a wounded lioness.
-
-"A prisoner!" she cried. "Oh! my brother must be mistaken."
-
-"He is a prisoner, and within three days will be dead."
-
-The Linda was struck with stupor; this frightful news crushed all her
-hopes.
-
-"Oh!" she murmured at length, "he shall not die!"
-
-"He will die!" Antinahuel replied; "who can save him?"
-
-"You, chief!" she said, emphatically grasping his arm.
-
-"Why should I do it?" he remarked carelessly; "of what consequence is
-the life of the man to me?--the palefaces are not my brothers."
-
-"No; but his life is precious to me, for the sake of my vengeance! He
-alone can deliver up my enemy to me! He shall live, I tell you!"
-
-"Good! My sister will deliver him, then, as she is so anxious to save
-him."
-
-"You alone could do it, chief, if you would," she observed.
-
-Antinahuel fixed his eyes upon her.
-
-"What makes you suppose I would?" he said.
-
-"Listen to me, chief!" the Linda cried. "You love that woman--that puny,
-palefaced thing, do you not?"
-
-The Indian started, but made no reply.
-
-"Oh! do not endeavour to deceive me; you cannot blind the eyes of a
-woman. The hatred you bear to Don Tadeo is changed into love in your
-heart at the sight of this creature."
-
-"Well! and suppose it should be so?" he said, evidently moved.
-
-"An even-handed bargain with you then; give me General Bustamente," she
-remarked earnestly, "and I will deliver her up to you."
-
-"Oh!" said Antinahuel, with a bantering smile, "a woman is but a
-mockingbird; the man who puts faith in her words----"
-
-On hearing the chief throw in her face the words she herself had uttered
-only a few minutes before, she stamped with impatience.
-
-"Well, then," she cried, almost bursting with rage, "take her
-then!--take the woman! and may my curses cling to her!"
-
-Antinahuel uttered a tiger-like roar, and rushed out of the room.
-
-"Ah!" cried the Linda in a hoarse voice, and with an expression
-impossible to be described, "may not the love of this wretch avenge me
-better than all the tortures I could have invented!"
-
-In a few minutes the chief returned precipitately, his features
-distorted by fury and disappointment.
-
-"She has fled!" he shouted. It was true. Rosario and the Indian to whose
-charge the Linda had given her had both disappeared. No one knew what
-had become of them. Antinahuel immediately dispatched his mosotones in
-all directions in search of them. The Linda was left in the toldo a
-prey to indescribable rage; she was cheated of her vengeance! She felt
-crushed under the weight of the helplessness to which she was reduced.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLIV.
-
-THE RETURN TO VALDIVIA.
-
-
-Night was come; bending over the pillow of his friend, who was still
-buried in that lethargic sleep which generally follows great loss of
-blood, Valentine watched with anxious tenderness the changes which at
-times darkened his pale countenance.
-
-"Oh!" he said, in a suppressed voice, clenching his hands with anger,
-"be thy assassins who they may, brother, they shall pay for their crime
-dearly."
-
-The curtain of the tent was slowly raised, and a hand was laid upon the
-young man's shoulder. He turned quickly round; Trangoil-Lanec was before
-him. The face of the Ulmen was dark as night, and he appeared a prey to
-strong emotion.
-
-"What is the matter, chief?" asked Valentine, terrified at his manner;
-"what has happened, in the name of Heaven? Have you any fresh misfortune
-to announce?"
-
-"Misfortune incessantly watches over man," the chief remarked
-sententiously; "he should be ready to receive it at all hours, like an
-expected guest."
-
-"Speak then!" the young man asked, in a firm voice; "whatever may
-happen, I will not falter."
-
-"Good, my brother is strong, he is a great warrior, he will not suffer
-himself to be cast down. Let my brother hasten; we must be gone!"
-
-"Be gone!" cried Valentine, with a nervous start; "and my friend?"
-
-"Our brother Louis will accompany us."
-
-"Is it possible to move him?"
-
-"It must be," the Indian said peremptorily; "the war hatchet is dug up
-against the palefaces, the Aucas chiefs have drunk firewater, the genius
-of evil is master of their hearts; we must depart before they think of
-us; in an hour it will be too late."
-
-"Let us depart then," the young man replied, sorrowfully, convinced that
-Trangoil-Lanec knew more than he was willing to tell, and that some
-great danger threatened them, since the chief, who was a man of tried
-courage, had let fall that mask of stoicism which scarcely ever abandons
-the Indian.
-
-Preparations for departure were made in all haste, and were soon
-terminated. The hammock in which Louis reposed was solidly fastened to
-two long cross pieces of wood, and then, as it was, harnessed upon two
-mules without awakening him. The little band set out, employing the
-greatest precautions. They proceeded thus for more than an hour, without
-exchanging a word; the campfires of the Indians became every minute more
-faint in the distance, and they were, at least for the present, out of
-danger. Valentine approached Trangoil-Lanec, who rode at the head of the
-convoy.
-
-"Where are we going?" he asked.
-
-"To Valdivia," the chief replied; "it is there alone that Don Louis will
-be able to recover in safety."
-
-"You are right," said Valentine; "but shall we remain inactive?"
-
-"I will do what my brother the paleface wishes; am I not his penni?
-where he goes I will go--his will shall be mine!"
-
-"Thank you, chief," the Frenchman replied, with emotion; "you have a
-brave and worthy heart."
-
-"My brother saved my life," said the Ulmen earnestly; "that life is no
-longer mine, it belongs to him."
-
-Whether it was that the Araucano chiefs did not perceive the departure
-of the strangers, or that, as is more probable, they did not think it
-worthwhile to pursue them, the little troop was not interrupted in its
-flight--for what other name could be given to this night march amidst
-the desert? They advanced slowly, on account of the wounded man, who
-could not, in his state of weakness and prostration, have supported the
-shaking of a more rapid pace.
-
-Towards three o'clock in the morning, a few fugitive and uncertain
-lights, which flitted across the horizon, and with difficulty pierced
-through the fog, which at that hour of the night envelopes the earth
-like a winding sheet, announced to the party that they were approaching
-the city, and should soon be there. At the end of three quarters of an
-hour, they reached the gardens which envelope Valdivia like an immense
-bouquet of flowers, from the centre of which it seems to spring up. The
-party made a short halt, in order not to attract observation on entering
-the city, through the state of the horses and mules. From that time they
-had nothing to fear from the Indians.
-
-"Is my brother acquainted with the city?" Trangoil-Lanec asked.
-
-"Why do you ask that question?"
-
-"For a very simple reason. In the desert, by night or by day, I can
-serve as a guide to my brother; but here, in this tolderia of the
-whites, my eyes close--I am blind; my brother must conduct us."
-
-"The devil!" said Valentine, quite disconcerted; "in that sense I am as
-blind as you, chief; it was only yesterday that I entered the city for
-the first time: and," he added, laughingly, "the bullets then whistled
-round in such a merry fashion, I had scarcely time to look about me, or
-to ask my way."
-
-"Don't let that disturb you, senor," said one of the peons, who had
-heard the few words pronounced by the two men; "only tell me where you
-want to go, and I will undertake to conduct you."
-
-"Hum!" Valentine replied; "where I want to go to? Caspeta! I cannot
-exactly say; all places are alike to me, provided my friend be in
-safety."
-
-"Pardon me, senor," the arriero replied, "if I dare----"
-
-"Oh, dare! dare! there's a good fellow! your idea is probably excellent;
-for myself, I confess at this moment my mind is as empty as a drum."
-
-"Why, senor, should you not go to the residence of Don Tadeo de Leon, my
-master?"
-
-"Pardieu!" cried Valentine, vexed at his own want of thought. "On my
-word, you are something like a guide! I do not go to Don Tadeo, because,
-simply, I don't know how to find the place, that's all."
-
-"I know, senor; Don Tadeo is most likely at the cabildo."
-
-"By Jove! that's true again; my powers of thought seem to have been
-driven out of my head; but which is the way to the cabildo?"
-
-"I will show you, senor."
-
-"That's well! this is an intelligent lad. Let us be moving, my friend."
-
-"Forward, then!" cried the arriero. "_Ea! arrea mula!_" he shouted to
-his beasts.
-
-In a few minutes they debouched upon the Plaza Mayor, opposite the
-cabildo. The city was still and silent; here and there traces of the
-sanguinary contest of the preceding day, heaps of broken furniture, or
-large trenches cut in the ground, gave evidence of the ravages caused by
-the insurrection. A soldier was marching with slow steps in front of the
-cabildo. At sight of the little party, he stopped, and cocked his musket.
-
-"Who goes there?" he shouted sharply.
-
-"_La Patria!_" Valentine replied.
-
-"Go on, then!" said the soldier.
-
-"Hum!" the young man murmured; "it appears not to be such an easy matter
-to obtain entrance; never mind," he added, "let us try. My friend," he
-said, in an insinuating voice, to the sentinel, who stood motionless
-before him; "we have business in the palace."
-
-"Have you the password?"
-
-"Santiago! no," Valentine answered, frankly.
-
-"Then you cannot enter."
-
-"And yet I wish very much to enter."
-
-"Very possibly; but as you have not the password, I advise you to go
-on your way; for I swear, if you were the devil in person, I would not
-afford you a passage."
-
-"My friend," said the Parisian, in a jeering tone, "you do not talk
-logically; if I were the devil, I should stand in no need of the
-password--I should get in in spite of you."
-
-"Take care, senor," whispered the arriero; "that soldier is not unlikely
-to fire at you."
-
-"Pardieu! that's what I reckon upon," said Valentine, laughing.
-
-The peon looked at him in astonishment; he thought he was mad. The
-soldier, annoyed by this long conversation, and believing it of no use
-to stand wrangling with these jokers, presented his musket, crying
-angrily,--
-
-"For the last time, go on, or I will fire!"
-
-"I am determined I will go in!" Valentine replied, resolutely.
-
-"To arms!" the soldier cried, and fired. Valentine, who had watched
-attentively all the soldier's movements, had slipped quickly from his
-horse, and the bullet whistled harmlessly over his head. At the cry
-of the soldier and the report of his piece, several armed soldiers,
-followed by an officer with a lighted lantern in his hand, rushed
-tumultuously out of the palace.
-
-"What is going on here?" the officer asked, in a loud voice.
-
-"Ah!" Valentine cried, to whom the voice was not unknown, "is that you,
-Don Gregorio?"
-
-"Who calls me?" said the latter; for, in fact, it was he.
-
-"I, Valentine!"
-
-"What! is it you, my friend, who are making all this disturbance?"
-replied Don Gregorio, advancing; "I thought it was nothing less than an
-attack."
-
-"What the devil was I to do?" said the young man, laughing; "I had not
-the password, and I wanted to get in."
-
-"Hum! none but a Frenchman would have such an idea as that."
-
-"Is it not original?"
-
-"Yes, but you risked being killed."
-
-"Bah! we are always risking being killed, and yet we are not," said
-Valentine, carelessly; "I recommend my plan to you, under similar
-circumstances."
-
-"Much obliged! but I do not think I shall ever try it."
-
-"Ah! there you are wrong."
-
-"Well, then, come in! come in!"
-
-"That is all I want; particularly as I must see Don Tadeo instantly."
-
-"I believe he is asleep."
-
-"He must be awakened."
-
-"Do you bring interesting news, then?"
-
-"Yes," Valentine replied, becoming suddenly serious; "terrible news!"
-
-Don Gregorio, struck with the tone in which the Frenchman had pronounced
-these words, had a presentiment of some misfortune, and asked no
-further. The arrieros bore the hammock, with Don Louis still asleep,
-into the cabildo. By the care of Don Gregorio he was carried to a
-bedchamber, and placed in a bed hastily provided.
-
-"What does all this mean?" Don Gregorio said, in astonishment; "is Don
-Louis wounded?"
-
-"Yes," Valentine replied, in a husky voice; "he has received two dagger
-wounds."
-
-"But how did it all happen?"
-
-"You will soon learn; but pray conduct me instantly to Don Tadeo."
-
-"In heaven's name, come, then! your reserve alarms me."
-
-And, followed by Valentine and Trangoil-Lanec, Don Gregorio plunged into
-the labyrinth formed by the numerous corridors of the palace, with which
-he seemed well acquainted.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLV.
-
-THE FATHER REVEALS HIMSELF.
-
-
-Don Tadeo had passed the greater part of the night in giving orders
-for the clearing away of the hideous traces left by the combat. He
-had named the magistrates charged with the police of the city. After
-having assured, as far as possible, the tranquillity and safety of the
-citizens, and sent several couriers to Santiago, and other centres
-of population, to inform them of what had taken place, worn out with
-fatigue, sinking with sleep, he had thrown himself, clothed as he was,
-upon a camp bed, to take a little repose. He had slept scarcely an hour
-that agitated sleep which is the lot of men upon whom the destinies of
-empires rest, when the door of the chamber was pushed violently open, a
-strong light gleamed in his eyes, and several men surrounded him. Don
-Tadeo awoke suddenly.
-
-"Who is there?" he cried, endeavouring to recognise, in spite of the
-light which dazzled his eyes, the persons who so inopportunely disturbed
-his repose.
-
-"It is I," replied Don Gregorio.
-
-"Well, but you do not seem to be alone?"
-
-"No, Don Valentine accompanies me."
-
-"Don Valentine!" cried Don Tadeo, starting up, and passing his hand over
-his brow, to drive away the clouds which still obscured his ideas; "why,
-I did not expect Don Valentine before morning, at soonest; what serious
-reason can have induced him to travel by night?"
-
-"A powerful reason, Don Tadeo," the young man remarked, in a melancholy
-voice.
-
-"In Heaven's name! speak, then!" cried Don Tadeo.
-
-"Be a man! be firm! collect all your courage to bear worthily the blow
-you are about to receive."
-
-Don Tadeo walked two or three times round the room, with his head
-cast down, and his brow contracted; then stopped suddenly in front of
-Valentine with a pale brow, but with a stoical countenance. This man
-of iron had subdued nature within him; as if aware of the rudeness of
-the shock he was about to receive, he had ordered his heart not to
-break--his muscles not to quiver.
-
-"Speak!" he said, "I am ready to hear you."
-
-While uttering these words his voice was firm, his features calm.
-Valentine, though well acquainted with his courage, was struck with
-admiration.
-
-"Is the misfortune you are about to announce to me personal?" said Don
-Tadeo.
-
-"Yes," the young man replied, in a tremulous voice.
-
-"God be praised! Go on, then; I listen to you."
-
-Valentine perceived that he must not put the soul of this man to too
-hard a trial; he determined to speak.
-
-"Dona Rosario has disappeared," he said; "she has been carried off
-during our absence; Louis, my foster brother, in endeavouring to defend
-her, has fallen, pierced by two sword thrusts."
-
-The King of Darkness appeared a statue of marble; no emotion was
-perceptible upon his austere countenance.
-
-"Is Don Louis dead?" he asked, earnestly.
-
-"No," Valentine answered, more and more astonished; "I even hope that in
-a few days he will be cured."
-
-"So much the better," said Don Tadeo, feelingly; "I am indeed glad to
-hear that."
-
-And, crossing his arms upon his broad chest, he resumed his hasty walk
-about the room. The three men looked at each other, surprised at this
-stoicism, which to them was unintelligible.
-
-"Will you then abandon Dona Rosario to her ravishers?" Don Gregorio
-asked, in a reproachful tone.
-
-
-Don Tadeo darted at him a look charged with such bitter irony, that Don
-Gregorio quailed beneath it.
-
-"Were the ravishers concealed in the entrails of the earth, I would
-discover them, be they who they may!" Don Tadeo replied.
-
-"A man is on their track," said Trangoil-Lanec, advancing; "that man is
-Curumilla. He will discover them."
-
-A flash of joy for a moment shot from the eye of the King of Darkness.
-
-"Oh!" he murmured, with clenched teeth, "beware, Dona Maria, beware!"
-
-He at once had divined the author of the abduction of Rosario.
-
-"What do you intend to do?" said Don Gregorio.
-
-"Nothing, till the return of our scout," he replied, coldly; and then
-turning towards Valentine, added--"Well, my friend, have you nothing
-else to announce to me?"
-
-"What leads you to suppose I have not told you all?" said the young man.
-
-"Ah!" Don Tadeo replied, with a melancholy smile, "you know, my friend,
-that we Spanish Americans, however civilized we may appear, are still
-semi-barbarians, and, as such, horribly superstitious."
-
-"Well?"
-
-"Well, then, among other follies of the same kind, we place faith in
-proverbs; and is there not one which somewhere says, that a misfortune
-never comes singly?"
-
-"Good Heavens! do you take me for a bird of ill omen, Don Tadeo?"
-
-"God forbid, my friend! only search in your memory, I am sure I am not
-mistaken, and that you have still something else to inform me of."
-
-"Well, you are right, I have other news to announce to you; whether good
-or bad, I leave you to judge."
-
-"I knew there was something more behind," said Don Tadeo, with a sad
-smile; "go on, my friend, let us hear this news, I am listening to you."
-
-"Yesterday, as you know, General Bustamente renewed the treaties of
-peace with the Araucano chiefs."
-
-"He did."
-
-"I cannot tell what fugitive or what scout gave them information of what
-had taken place here; but by evening they had learnt the defeat and
-capture of the General."
-
-"I can understand that; go on."
-
-"A kind of furious madness immediately seemed to possess them, and they
-held a great war council."
-
-"In which, I suppose, they decided upon breaking the treaties; is not
-that it?"
-
-"Exactly."
-
-"And most likely determined upon war with us?"
-
-"I suppose so; the four toquis cast the hatchet into the fire, and a
-supreme toqui was elected in their place."
-
-"Ah! ah!" said Don Tadeo, "and do you know the name of this supreme
-toqui?"
-
-"Yes; Antinahuel."
-
-"I suspected as much," Don Tadeo cried, angrily; "that man has deceived
-us. He is a scoundrel only living by cunning, and whose devouring
-ambition leads him to sacrifice, when occasion offers, the dearest
-interests, and falsify the most sacred oaths. He has been playing a
-double game; he feigned to be the partisan of General Bustamente, as he
-appeared to be ours, building upon our mutual ruin his own fortunes and
-his future elevation. But he has thrown off the mask too hastily. By
-heaven! I will inflict a chastisement upon him, of which his compatriots
-shall preserve the remembrance, and which a century hence shall make
-them tremble with fear."
-
-"Beware of the ears that, listen to you," said Don Gregorio, directing
-his attention by a look to the Ulmen, who stood quietly before him.
-
-"Eh! what care I?" Don Tadeo replied, warmly; "if I speak thus, it is
-because I wish to be heard. I am a Spanish noble, and what my heart
-thinks my lips give utterance to; the Ulmen is welcome, if it seems good
-to him, to repeat my words to his chief."
-
-"The Great Eagle of the Whites is unjust towards his son," replied
-Trangoil-Lanec, in a serious tone; "all Araucanos have not the same
-heart; Antinahuel is only responsible for his own acts. Trangoil-Lanec
-is an Ulmen in his tribe; he knows how to be present at a council of
-chiefs: what his eyes see, what his ears hear, his heart forgets, his
-mouth repeats it not: why should my father address such unkind words to
-me, who am ready to devote myself to restore to him her he has lost?"
-
-"That is true; I am unjust, chief, I was wrong in speaking so; your
-heart is true, your tongue is unacquainted with falsehood. Pardon me,
-and let me clasp your loyal hand in mine."
-
-Trangoil-Lanec pressed warmly the hand Don Tadeo held out to him.
-
-"My father is good," he said; "his heart is at this moment darkened by
-the great misfortune that has fallen upon him; but let my father be
-comforted, Trangoil-Lanec will restore the blue-eyed maiden to him."
-
-"Thanks, chief! I accept your offer, you may depend upon my gratitude."
-
-"Trangoil-Lanec does not sell his services, he is repaid when his
-friends are happy."
-
-"Caramba!" cried Valentine, shaking the hand of the chief with all his
-might, "you are a worthy man, Trangoil-Lanec--I am proud of being your
-friend."
-
-Then, turning towards Don Tadeo, he said--"I must bid you farewell, for
-a time. I confide my brother Louis to your care."
-
-"Why do you leave me?" Don Tadeo asked, warmly.
-
-"I must. I see your heart is breaking, in spite of the incredible
-efforts you make to appear impassive. I know not the nature of the tie
-which binds you to the unfortunate girl who has been the victim of an
-odious crime; but I can see the loss of her is killing you--now, with
-the assistance of Heaven, I will restore her to you, Don Tadeo; I will,
-or I will die in the endeavour."
-
-"Don Valentine!" the gentleman exclaimed, strongly moved, "what do you
-propose to do? your project is wild; I cannot accept such devotion."
-
-"Leave it to me. Caramba! I am a Parisian--that is to say, as obstinate
-as a mule; and when once an idea, good or bad, has entered into my
-brain, it has no chance of getting out, I swear to you. I shall only
-take the time to embrace my poor brother, and set off immediately. Come,
-chief, let us set ourselves upon the track of the ravishers."
-
-"Let us be gone," said the Ulmen.
-
-Don Tadeo remained for a moment motionless, his eyes fixed upon the
-young man with a strange expression; a violent conflict appeared to be
-going on within him; at length nature prevailed, he burst into tears;
-and, throwing himself into the arms of the Frenchman, he murmured, in a
-voice choked by grief--
-
-"Valentine! Valentine! restore me my daughter!"
-
-The father had at length revealed himself; the stoicism of the statesman
-had sunk before paternal love!--But human nature has its limits, beyond
-which it cannot go; the moral shock which Don Tadeo had received, the
-immense efforts he had made to conceal it, had completely exhausted
-his strength, and he sank upon the slabs of the floor like a proud oak
-struck by thunder. He had fainted. Valentine contemplated him for a
-moment with pity and grief.
-
-"Poor father!" he said, "take courage, thy child shall be restored to
-thee!"
-
-And he left the room with hasty steps, followed by Trangoil-Lanec,
-whilst Don Gregorio, kneeling by his friend, gave him the most earnest
-and kind attentions for the recovery of his senses.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLVI.
-
-CURUMILLA.
-
-
-In order to explain to the reader the miraculous disappearance of
-Rosario, we are obliged to make a few retrograde steps, and return to
-Curumilla, at the moment when the Ulmen, after his conversation with
-Trangoil-Lanec, had thrown himself, like a staunch bloodhound, upon the
-track of the young girl. Curumilla was a warrior as renowned for his
-prudence and wisdom in council, as for his bravery in fight. Having
-crossed the river, he left his horse in the care of a peon who had
-accompanied him, as it would not only be useless to him, but, still
-further, because it might even be injurious by betraying his presence by
-the clatter of its hoofs upon the ground. Indians are expert horsemen,
-but they are indefatigable walkers. Nature has endowed them with
-incredible strength of muscles of the legs and hams; and they possess in
-the highest degree the knowledge of that rising and sinking gymnastic
-step, which, for some years past, has been introduced into Europe,
-particularly into France, in the marching of troops. They accomplish
-with incredible swiftness journeys which horses could hardly perform,
-always directing their course in a straight line, or as the bird flies,
-without regard to the difficulties that may arise in their way, no
-obstacle being sufficient to turn them from their course. This quality
-renders them particularly formidable to the Spanish Americans, who
-cannot obtain this facility of locomotion, and who, in time of war, find
-the redskins always before them at the moment they least expect them,
-and that almost always at considerable distances from the spots where,
-logically, they ought to be.
-
-Curumilla, after having carefully studied the prints made by the
-ravishers, at once divined the route they had taken, and the place they
-were bound to. He did not amuse himself with following them, for that
-would have been losing precious time; on the contrary, he resolved to
-cut across country, and wait for them at an elbow of the road he was
-acquainted with, where, at all events, he could ascertain their numbers,
-and, perhaps, save the young girl. This being determined, the Ulmen
-set off. He walked for several hours without rest, eye and ear on the
-watch, trying to penetrate the darkness, and listening patiently to the
-various noises of the desert. These noises, which are to us white men
-a dead letter, have for the Indians, who are accustomed to interrogate
-them, a special signification, in which they are never deceived; they
-analyse them, they decompose them, and often learn by this means things
-which their enemies have the greatest interest in concealing from them.
-However inexplicable this fact may at first appear, it is very simple.
-There exists no noise in the desert without a cause. The flight of
-birds, the passage of wild beasts, the rustling of leaves, the rolling
-of a stone down a ravine, the undulation of high grass, the friction of
-branches in the woods, are for the Indian valuable indications.
-
-At a certain point with which he was acquainted, Curumilla laid himself
-down flat on his face, behind a block of rock, and remained motionless
-among the grass and bushes that bordered the route. He remained thus for
-more than an hour, without making the least movement. Whoever might have
-perceived him would have taken him for a dead body. The practised ear of
-the Indian, ever on the watch, at length caught in the distance the dull
-sound of the feet of horses and mules upon the dry and sonorous road.
-This noise grew rapidly nearer, and soon, from his hiding place, he
-perceived about twenty horsemen passing slowly along in the dark, within
-two lance lengths of him. The ravishers, emboldened by their numbers,
-and believing themselves secure from all danger, rode along in perfect
-security. The Indian raised his head softly, and leaning on his hands,
-followed them with his anxious eyes, and waited. They passed without
-seeing him. At some paces behind the troop, a horseman came along,
-leaving himself carelessly to the measured pace of his horse. His head
-occasionally sank upon his breast, and his hands had but a feeble hold
-of the reins. It was evident that this man was asleep in his saddle.
-
-A sudden idea rushed like lightning through Curumilla's brain; gathering
-himself up, he stiffened the iron muscles of his legs, and, bounding
-like a tiger, leaped up behind the horseman. Before the latter,
-surprised by this unexpected attack, had time to utter a cry, he pressed
-his throat in such a manner as, for the time, to render him incapable
-of calling for help. In the twinkling of an eye the horseman was gagged
-and thrown to the ground: then, securing the horse, Curumilla fastened
-it to a bush, and returned to his prisoner. The latter, with the stoical
-and disdainful courage peculiar to the aborigines of America, finding
-himself conquered, attempted no useless resistance; he looked at his
-conqueror with a smile of contempt, and waited for him to speak to him.
-
-"Oh!" said Curumilla, who, upon leaning over him, recognised him, "is it
-you, Joan?"
-
-"Curumilla!" the other replied.
-
-"Hum!" the Ulmen murmured to himself, "I would rather it had been
-somebody else. What is my brother doing on this path?" he asked.
-
-"Of what consequence is that to my brother?" said the Indian, replying
-to one question by another.
-
-"We have no time to waste," the chief replied, unsheathing his knife;
-"let my brother speak."
-
-Joan started; a shudder ran through his limbs at the blue light
-reflected by the long, sharp blade of the knife.
-
-"The chief can question me," he said, in a husky voice.
-
-"Where is my brother going?"
-
-"To the tolderia of San Miguel."
-
-"Good! and for what purpose is my brother going there?"
-
-"To place in the hands of the sister of the grand toqui a woman whom we
-have carried off this morning."
-
-"Who ordered you to do so?"
-
-"She whom we are going to meet."
-
-"Who had the direction of this affair?"
-
-"I had."
-
-"Good! where does this woman expect the prisoner?"
-
-"I have told the chief; at the tolderia of San Miguel."
-
-"In which casa?"
-
-"In the last; the one which stands a little apart from the others."
-
-"That is well! Let my brother exchange poncho and hat with me."
-
-The Indian obeyed without a word, and when the exchange was made,
-Curumilla said--
-
-"I could kill my brother; prudence would even require me to do so, but
-pity has entered my heart--Joan has wives and children, he is one of the
-brave warriors of his tribe; if I let him live, will he be grateful?"
-
-The Indian had expected that he was going to die, but these words
-restored him to hope. He was not a bad man at bottom; the Ulmen knew him
-well, and was satisfied he would keep his promises.
-
-"My father holds my life in his hands," Joan replied; "if he does not
-take it today, I shall remain his debtor--I will lay down my life at a
-sign from him."
-
-"Very well!" said Curumilla, returning his knife to its sheath, "my
-brother may rise, a chief keeps his word."
-
-The Indian sprang upon his feet, and fervently kissed the hand of the
-man who had spared him.
-
-"What does my father command?" he asked.
-
-"My brother must repair as fast as possible to the tolderia which the
-Huincas name Valdivia. He will seek Don Tadeo, the Great Eagle of the
-Whites, and relate to him what has passed between us, adding, that I
-will save the prisoner, or die."
-
-"Is that all?"
-
-"Yes. If the Great Eagle requires the services of my brother, he will
-place himself without hesitation at his orders. Farewell! May Pillian
-guide my brother! and let him never forget that I was not willing to
-take the life that was in my power!"
-
-"Joan will not forget," the Indian replied.
-
-At a sign from Curumilla, he bent down in the high grass, crept along
-like a serpent, and disappeared in the direction of Valdivia. The chief,
-without losing an instant, jumped into the saddle and soon joined the
-little troop, who had continued jogging quietly along, without dreaming
-of the substitution that had just taken place. It was Curumilla who,
-while carrying the young girl into the house, had whispered hope and
-courage. These three words, in announcing to her that she had a friend
-watching over her, had restored her the strength necessary for the
-struggle that awaited her.
-
-After the unexpected arrival of Antinahuel, when, at the order of Dona
-Maria, Curumilla led away the prisoner, instead of reconducting her
-to the apartment in which she had been, he threw a poncho over her to
-disguise her.
-
-"Follow me," he said in a low voice; "step out boldly, I will endeavour
-to save you."
-
-The maiden hesitated; she was fearful of a snare. The Ulmen comprehended
-her feeling, and said quickly, in a low voice--
-
-"I am Curumilla, one of the Ulmens devoted to the two Frenchmen, the
-friends of Don Tadeo."
-
-Rosario startled imperceptibly.
-
-"Go on," she replied in a firm tone; "happen what may, I will follow
-you."
-
-And they left the hut together. The Indians, dispersed here and there,
-were busily talking over the events of the day, and did not observe
-them. The two fugitives proceeded for ten minutes without exchanging a
-word. The village was soon lost in the darkness; at length Curumilla
-stopped at a thick clump of cactus, behind which two horses stood,
-saddled and bridled.
-
-"Does my sister find herself strong enough to mount on horseback, and
-ride a long distance?" he asked.
-
-"To escape from my persecutors," she replied, in a broken voice, "I feel
-I have strength to do anything."
-
-"Good!" said Curumilla, "my sister is courageous. Her God will help her!"
-
-"It is in Him alone I place my hope," she said, with a sigh.
-
-"To horse, then, and let us begone! minutes are ages!"
-
-He unfastened the horses, they mounted, and set of at full speed,
-without any sound being produced upon the road by their hoofs, which
-Curumilla had covered with pieces of sheepskin. The maiden breathed
-a sigh of relief on feeling herself once more free, and under the
-protection of a devoted friend. The fugitives continued to ride at a
-rapid pace, in a direction diametrically opposite to the one they should
-have taken to return to Valdivia. Prudence required that they should not
-yet take any route on which, according to all possibilities, they would
-be looked for.
-
-We must leave our friends in this critical position for the present;
-but those readers who feel an interest in the loves of Don Louis and
-Dona Rosario, will find their curiosity fully satisfied in the following
-volume of this series, called "The Pearl of the Andes."
-
-
-
-THE END.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Adventurers, by Gustave Aimard
-
-*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ADVENTURERS ***
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Adventurers, by Gustave Aimard
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: The Adventurers
-
-Author: Gustave Aimard
-
-Release Date: September 14, 2013 [EBook #43716]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ADVENTURERS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Marc D'Hooghe at http://www.freeliterature.org
-
-
-
-
-THE ADVENTURERS
-
-A Story of a Love-Chase
-
-BY
-
-GUSTAVE AIMARD
-
-AUTHOR OF
-
-"LAST OF THE INCAS," "QUEEN OF THE SAVANNAH,"
-
-ETC.
-
-LONDON
-
-WARD AND LOCK, 158, FLEET STREET.
-
-1863.
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-With the publication of the present and the ensuing volume, "The Pearl
-of the Andes," I am enabled to perfect the most important series of
-Aimard's Tales of Indian Life and Adventure. To preserve uniformity, the
-volumes of this series should be arranged in the following order on the
-book-shelf;--
-
- 1. THE ADVENTURERS.
- 2. THE PEARL OF THE ANDES.
- 3. THE TRAIL-HUNTER.
- 4. PIRATES OF THE PRAIRIES.
- 5. THE TRAPPER'S BRIDE.
- 6. THE TIGER SLAYER.
- 7. THE GOLD SEEKERS.
- 8. THE INDIAN CHIEF.
- 9. THE RED TRACK.
-
-Gustave Aimard has a precedent in Fenimore Cooper for introducing the
-same hero in a long range of volumes, and, like his great predecessor,
-he has so arranged, that each work should be complete in itself, and
-not necessitate the purchase of another. But Aimard has one marked
-advantage over Cooper; for while "Leather-Stocking" is but a creation
-of the fancy, or, at the most, the type of the Backwoodsman, the Count
-Louis who figures as the hero of Aimard's series, is a real man. Count
-de Raousset Boulbon, had he succeeded in his daring attempt of founding
-an independent kingdom in Mexico, would in all probability have become
-the Napoleon of the West. A gallant adventurer and thorough gentleman,
-he staked his life upon the issue, and ended his career the victim
-of unparalleled treachery, as Aimard has faithfully recorded. Hence
-Aimard's romances have the great merit of being founded on an historic
-basis, and but little fiction was required to heighten the startling
-interest of the narrative.
-
-Valentine Guillois, there is very little doubt, is intended for the
-Author himself, with all his qualities and defects. When he first
-reached the New World, he was the true, reckless Parisian; but constant
-intercourse with nature rendered him a generous and thoughtful friend
-of humanity. So soon as he returned to civilization, he began recording
-the history of his past life; not so much as a livelihood, as for
-the pleasure he felt in living once again the life of excitement and
-adventure which he had known among the Indians. Hence his books are
-written without an effort; they flow spontaneously from his pen; and the
-absence of artistic effect is the best guarantee of their truthfulness.
-
-It is not surprising, consequently, that M. Aimard's books have met
-with such extensive popularity. They have been translated into nearly
-every modern language, and the Author is now generally recognised as the
-French Cooper. The reception given to his stories in this country has
-been most flattering, and each day heightens their popularity. Hence
-it is not too much to assume that they will become standard works,
-especially with young readers, for whom they are especially adapted;
-because M. Aimard has never yet written a line which could prove
-offensive to the most delicate mind.
-
- L.W.
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- I. THE CHAPARRAL
- II. THE FOSTER BROTHERS
- III. THE RESOLUTION
- IV. THE EXECUTION
- V. THE PASSAGE
- VI. THE LINDA
- VII. HUSBAND AND WIFE
- VIII. THE DARK-HEARTS
- IX. IN THE STREET
- X. SWORD-THRUSTS
- XI. GENERAL BUSTAMENTE
- XII. THE SPY
- XIII. LOVE
- XIV. THE QUINTA VERDE
- XV. THE DEPARTURE
- XVI. THE MEETING
- XVII. THE PUELCHES
- XVIII. THE BLACK JACKAL
- XIX. TWO OLD FRIENDS
- XX. THE SORCERER
- XXI. THE OBSEQUIES OF AN APO-ULMEN
- XXII. EXPLANATIONS
- XXIII. THE CHINGANA.
- XXIV. THE TWO ULMENS
- XXV. THE SUN-TIGER
- XXVI. THE MATRICIDE
- XXVII. THE JUSTICE OF THE DARK-HEARTS
- XXVIII. THE TREATY OF PEACE
- XXIX. THE ABDUCTION
- XXX. THE PROTEST
- XXXI. SPANIARD AND INDIAN
- XXXII. IN THE MOUNTAIN
- XXXIII. ON THE WATCH
- XXXIV. FACE TO FACE
- XXXV. THE REVOLT
- XXXVI. THE LION AT BAY
- XXXVII. THE TRUCE
- XXXVIII. TWO ROGUISH PROFILES
- XXXIX. THE WOUNDED MAN
- XL. ARAUCANIAN DIPLOMACY
- XLI. THE COUNCIL
- XLII. THE NIGHT JOURNEY
- XLIII. TWO HATREDS
- XLIV. THE RETURN TO VALDIVIA
- XLV. THE FATHER REVEALS HIMSELF
- XLVI. CURUMILLA
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-THE CHAPARRAL.
-
-
-
-During my last sojourn in America, chance, or rather my good star, led
-me to form an acquaintance with one of those hunters, or wood rangers,
-the type of whom has been immortalized by Cooper, in his poetical
-personage, _Leather-Stockings_.
-
-The strange circumstance by which we were brought together was as
-follows. Towards the end of July, 1855, I had left Galveston, terrified
-at the fevers prevalent there, which are so fatal to Europeans, with the
-intention of visiting the north-west portion of Texas, a country I was
-then unacquainted with.
-
-A Spanish proverb somewhere says, "It is better to go alone than in
-bad company;" and, like all other proverbs, this possesses a certain
-foundation of truth, particularly in America, where the traveller is
-exposed at each instant to the chance of meeting rogues of every hue,
-who, thanks to their seducing exterior, charm him, win his confidence,
-and take advantage of the first occasion to remorselessly plunder and
-assassinate him.
-
-I had profited by the proverb, and, like a shrewd old traveller of the
-prairies, as I knew no one who inspired me with sufficient sympathy
-to lead me to make him my travelling companion, I had bravely set out
-alone, clothed in the picturesque dress of the inhabitants of the
-country, armed to the teeth, and mounted upon an excellent half wild
-horse, which had cost me twenty-five piastres--an enormous sum in those
-countries, where horses are considered as worth little or nothing.
-
-I carelessly wandered here and there, living that nomadic life which
-is so full of attractions; at times stopping at a _toldería_, at
-others encamping in the desert, hunting wild animals, and plunging
-deeper and deeper into unknown regions. I had, in this fashion, passed
-through, without any untoward accident, Fredericksburgh, the Llana
-Braunfels, and had just left Castroville, on my way to Quichi. Like
-all Spanish-American villages, Castroville is nothing but a miserable
-agglomeration of ruined cabins, cut at right angles by streets choked
-with weeds, growing undisturbed, and concealing multitudes of ants,
-reptiles, and even rabbits of a very small breed, which spring up
-beneath the feet of the few passengers. The _pueblo_ is bounded on the
-west by the Medina, a slender thread of water, almost dry in the great
-heat seasons; and on the east by thickly-wooded hills, the dark green of
-which forms a pleasing contrast with the pale blue of the sky.
-
-At Galveston I had undertaken to deliver a letter to an inhabitant of
-Castroville. The worthy man lived in this village like La Fontaine's rat
-in the depths of its Dutch cheese. Charmed by the arrival of a stranger,
-who, no doubt, brought him news for which he had been long anxious, he
-received me in the most cordial manner, and thought of every expedient
-to detain me. Unfortunately, the little I had seen of Castroville had
-sufficed to completely disgust me with it, and my only wish was to get
-out of it as quickly as possible. My host, in despair at seeing all
-his advances repulsed, at length consented to allow me to continue my
-journey.
-
-"Adieu, then," he said, warmly pressing my hand, with a sigh of regret;
-"since you are determined to go, may God protect you! You are wrong
-in setting out so late; the road you have to travel is dangerous; the
-_Indios bravos_ are up; they assassinate without mercy all the whites
-who fall into their hands--beware!"
-
-I smiled at this warning, which I took for a last effort of the worthy
-man to detain me.
-
-"Bah!" I replied gaily; "the Indians and I are too old acquaintances for
-me to fear anything on their account."
-
-My host shook his head sorrowfully, and retreated into his hut, making
-me a last farewell greeting. I again set forward. I soon began to
-reflect that it was full late, and pressed my horse, in order to pass,
-before nightfall, a _chaparral_, or large thicket of underwood, of at
-least two miles in length, against which my host had particularly warned
-me. This ill-famed spot had a very sinister aspect. The mezquite, the
-acacia, and the cactus constituted its sole vegetation, while here and
-there, whitened bones and planted crosses plainly designated places
-where murders had been committed. Beyond that extended a vast plain,
-called the Leona, peopled by animals of every description. This plain,
-covered by grass at least two feet in height, was dotted at intervals
-with thickets of trees, upon which warbled thousands of golden-throated
-starlings, cardinals, and bluebirds. I was anxious to reach the
-Leona, which I saw in the distance; but ere I did so, I had to cross
-the chaparral. After examining my weapons, and looking carefully in
-all directions, as I could perceive nothing positively suspicious, I
-resolutely spurred my horse forward, determined, if attacked, to sell my
-life as dearly as possible.
-
-The sun, in the meantime, was sinking rapidly towards the horizon, the
-ruddy hues of closing day tinged with their changing reflections the
-summits of the wooded hills, and a fresh breeze agitated the branches
-of the trees with mysterious murmurs. In this country, where there is
-no twilight, night was not long in enveloping me in thick darkness, and
-that before I had passed through two-thirds of the chaparral.
-
-I was beginning to hope I should reach the Leona safe and sound, when,
-all at once, my horse made a violent bound on one side, pricking up its
-ears, and snorting loudly. The sudden shock almost threw me out of the
-saddle, and it was not without trouble that I recovered the mastery
-over my horse, which displayed signs of the greatest terror. As always
-happens in such cases, I instinctively looked round me for the cause of
-this panic; and soon the truth was revealed to me. A cold perspiration
-bedewed my brow, and a shudder of terror ran through my whole frame, at
-the horrible spectacle which met my eyes. Five dead human bodies lay
-stretched beneath the trees, within ten paces of me. Among them was
-one of a woman, and one of a girl about fourteen years of age. They
-all belonged to the white race. They appeared to have fought long and
-obstinately before they fell; they were literally covered with wounds;
-and long arrows, with jagged barbs, and painted red, stood out from the
-bodies, which they had pierced through and through. The victims had all
-been scalped. It was evidently the work of Indians, marked with their
-sanguinary rage, and their inveterate hatred for the white race. The
-form and colour of the arrows told me that the perpetrators of this
-atrocity were the Apaches, the most cruel plunderers of the desert.
-Around the bodies I observed fragments of both wagons and furniture. The
-unfortunate beings, assassinated with refined cruelty, had, no doubt,
-been poor emigrants on their way to Castroville.
-
-At the aspect of this heartbreaking spectacle, I cannot express the pity
-and grief which weighed upon my spirits; high in the air, urubus and
-vultures hovered with lazy wings over the bodies, uttering lugubrious
-cries of joy, whilst in the depths of the chaparral the wolves and
-jaguars began to growl portentously.
-
-I cast a melancholy glance around: all immediately near to me was quiet.
-The Apaches had, according to all appearances, surprised the emigrants
-during a halt. Gutted bales were still ranged in a symmetrical circle,
-and a fire, near which was a heap of dry wood, was not yet extinguished.
-
-"No!" said I to myself, "whatever may happen, I will not leave
-Christians without burial, to become, in this desert, the prey of wild
-beasts."
-
-My resolution, once formed, was soon carried into execution. Springing
-to the ground, I hobbled my horse, gave it some provender, and cast some
-branches of wood upon the fire, which soon sparkled and sent into the
-air a column of bright flame. Among the necessaries of the emigrants
-were spades, pickaxes, and other agricultural instruments, which, being
-of no use to the Indians, they had disdainfully left behind them. I
-seized a spade, and, after having carefully explored the environs
-of my encampment, to assure myself that no immediate danger need be
-apprehended, I set to work to dig a grave.
-
-The night had now set in; one of those American nights, clear,
-silent, full of intoxicating odours, and mysterious melodies chanted
-by the desert in praise of God. Extraordinary to say, all my fears
-had vanished, as if by enchantment! Though alone in this sinister
-place, close to these frightfully-mutilated carcasses, watched in the
-darkness, no doubt, by the unseen eyes of wild beasts, and, perhaps,
-of the murderous Indians, some incomprehensible influence sustained
-me, and gave me strength to accomplish the rude but sacred task I had
-undertaken. Instead of thinking of the dangers which surrounded me, I
-found myself yielding to a pensive melancholy. I thought of these poor
-people, who had come from distant lands, full of hope for the future,
-to seek in the New World a little of the comfort and well-being which
-were denied to them at home, and who, scarcely landed, had fallen, in an
-obscure corner of the desert, by the hands of ferocious savages. They
-had left in their own country friends, perhaps relations, to whom their
-fate would for ever remain a mystery, and who would for years reckon
-the hours with anxiety, looking for their much-wished return, or for
-intelligence of their success in their bold undertaking.
-
-Except two or three alarms caused by the rustling of the leaves in the
-bushes, nothing occurred to interrupt my melancholy duty. In less than
-three-quarters of an hour I had dug a grave large enough to contain the
-five bodies. After extracting the arrows by which they were transfixed,
-I raised them one after the other in my arms, and laid them gently
-side by side at the bottom of the grave. I then hastened to throw in
-the mould again, till it was level with the sod; and that being done,
-I dragged upon the surface all the large stones I could find, to keep
-wild beasts from profaning the dead. This religious duty accomplished,
-I breathed a deep sigh of satisfaction, and bowing my head towards the
-ground, I mentally addressed a short prayer to the Almighty, for the
-unfortunate beings I had buried.
-
-Upon raising my head, I uttered a cry of surprise and terror, while at
-the same time mechanically feeling for my revolver; for, without the
-least noise having given me warning of his approach, a man was standing
-within four paces of me, watching me earnestly, and leaning on his long
-rifle. Two magnificent Newfoundland dogs were lying carelessly but
-quietly at his feet. On observing my gesture, the unknown smiled with a
-kindly expression, and holding out his hand to me over the grave, said--
-
-"Fear nothing! I am a friend. You have buried these poor people; _I_
-have avenged them--their assassins are dead!"
-
-I silently pressed the hand that was so frankly extended to me.
-Acquaintance was formed--we were friends--we are so still! A few minutes
-later we were seated near the fire, supping together with a good
-appetite, while the dogs kept watch against intruders.
-
-The companion I had fallen in with in so curious a manner was a man of
-about forty-five years of age, although he did not appear to be more
-than thirty-two. He was tall and well made; his broad shoulders and
-muscular limbs denoting extraordinary strength and agility. He wore the
-picturesque hunter's costume in all its purity, that is to say, the
-_capote_, or surtout (which is nothing but a kind of blanket worn as a
-robe, fastened to the shoulders, and falling in long folds behind), a
-shirt of striped cotton, large _mitasses_ (drawers of doeskin, stitched
-with hair, fastened at distances, and ornamented with little bells),
-leather gaiters, moccasins of elk skin, braided with beads and porcupine
-quills, and a checked woollen belt, from which hung his knife, tobacco
-pouch, powder horn, pistols, and medicine bag. His headdress consisted
-of a cap made of the skin of a beaver, the tail of which fell between
-his shoulders. This man was a type of a hardy race of adventurers who
-traverse America in all directions. A primitive race, longing for
-open air, space, and liberty, opposed to our ideas of civilization,
-and consequently destined to disappear before the immigration of the
-laborious races, whose powerful agents of conquest are steam and the
-application of mechanical inventions of all kinds.
-
-This hunter was a Frenchman, and his frank, manly countenance, his
-picturesque language, his open and engaging manners, notwithstanding
-his long abode in America, had preserved a reflex of the mother country
-which awakened sympathy and created interest.
-
-All the countries of the New World were familiar to him; he had lived
-more than twenty years in the depths of the woods, and had been engaged
-in dangerous and distant excursions among the Indian tribes. Hence,
-although myself well initiated in the customs of the redskins, and
-though a great part of my existence had been passed in the desert, I
-have felt myself often shudder involuntarily at the recital of his
-adventures. When seated beside him on the banks of the Rio Gila, during
-an excursion we had undertaken into the prairies, he would at times
-allow himself to be carried away by his remembrances, and relate to me,
-as he smoked his Indian pipe, the strange history of the early days
-of his abode in the New World. It is one of these recitals I am about
-to lay before my readers--the first in order of date, since it is the
-history of the events which led him to become a wood ranger. I do not
-venture to hope that my readers will take the interest in it which it
-excited in me; but I beg them to have the kindness to recollect that
-this narrative was told me in the desert, amidst that grand, vast, and
-powerful nature, unknown to the inhabitants of old Europe, and that I
-had it from the lips of the man who had been the hero.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-THE FOSTER BROTHERS.
-
-
-On the 31st of December, 1834, at eleven o'clock in the evening, a man
-of about twenty-five years of age, of handsome person and countenance,
-and aristocratic appearance, was sitting, or rather reclining, in a
-luxurious easy chair, near the mantelpiece, within which sparkled a
-fire that the advanced season rendered indispensable. This personage
-was the Count Maxime Edouard Louis de Prébois-Crancé. His countenance,
-of a cadaverous paleness, formed a striking contrast with his black
-curly hair, which fell in disorder upon his shoulders, covered by
-a large-patterned damask dressing gown. His brows were contracted,
-and his eyes were fixed with feverish impatience upon the dial of a
-charming Louis Quinze clock, whilst his left hand, hanging carelessly
-by his side, played with the silky ears of a magnificent Newfoundland
-dog which lay by his side. The room in which the Count was sitting was
-furnished with all the refinement of comfort invented by modern luxury.
-A four-branched chandelier, with rose-coloured wax candles, placed upon
-a table, was scarcely sufficient to enliven the room, and only spread
-around a dim, uncertain light. Without, the rain was dashing against
-the windows violently; and the wind sighed in mysterious murmurs, which
-disposed the mind to melancholy. When the clock struck the hour the
-Count started up, as if aroused from a dream. He passed his thin white
-hand across his moist brow, and said, in a dissatisfied tone--
-
-"He will not come!"
-
-But at that moment the dog, which had been so motionless, sprang up and
-bounded towards the door, wagging its tail with joy. The door opened,
-the _portière_ was lifted by a firm hand, and a man appeared.
-
-"Here you are at last!" the Count exclaimed, advancing towards the
-newcomer, who had great trouble to get rid of the caresses of the dog.
-"I had begun to be afraid that you, like the rest, had forgotten me."
-
-"I do not understand you, brother, but trust you will explain yourself,"
-the other replied. "Come, that will do, Cæsar; lie down! you are a very
-good dog, but lie down!"
-
-And drawing an easy chair towards the fire, he sat down at the other
-side of the fire, in front of the Count, who had resumed his place. The
-dog lay down between them.
-
-The personage so anxiously expected by the Count formed a strange
-contrast with him; for, just as M. de Prébois-Crancé united in himself
-all the qualities which physically distinguish nobility of race, the
-other displayed all the lively, energetic strength of a true child of
-the people. He was a man of twenty-six years of age; tall, thin, and
-perfectly well proportioned; while his face, bronzed by the sun, and
-his marked features, lit up by blue eyes sparkling with intelligence,
-wore an expression of bravery, mildness, and loyalty of character that
-created sympathy at first sight. He was dressed in the elegant uniform
-of a quartermaster sergeant of the Spahis, and the cross of the legion
-of honour glittered on his breast. With his head leaning on his right
-hand, a pensive brow and a thoughtful eye, he examined his friend
-attentively, whilst twisting his long, silky light-coloured moustache
-with the other hand.
-
-The Count, shrinking before his earnest look, which appeared trying to
-read his most secret thoughts, broke the silence abruptly.
-
-"You have been a long time in responding to my message," he said.
-
-"This is the second time you have addressed that reproach to me, Louis,"
-the soldier replied, taking a paper from his breast; "you forget the
-terms of the note which your groom brought yesterday to my quarters."
-
-And he was preparing to read.
-
-"It is useless to read it," said the Count, with a melancholy smile. "I
-acknowledge I am in the wrong."
-
-"Well, then, let us see," said the Spahi gaily, "what this serious
-affair is which makes you stand in need of me. Explain: is there a woman
-to be carried off?--Have you a duel on hand?--Tell me."
-
-"Nothing that you can possibly imagine," the Count interrupted him
-bitterly; "therefore do not waste time in useless surmises."
-
-"What the devil is it, then?"
-
-"I am going to blow out my brains."
-
-The young man uttered these words with so firm and resolute an accent,
-that the soldier started in spite of himself, and bent an anxious glance
-upon the speaker.
-
-"You believe me mad, do you not?" the Count continued, who guessed his
-friend's thoughts. "No, I am not mad, Valentine; I am only at the bottom
-of an abyss from which I can only escape by death or infamy, and I
-prefer death."
-
-The soldier made no reply. With an energetic gesture he pushed back his
-chair, and began to walk about the room with hurried steps. The Count
-had allowed his head to sink upon his breast in a state of perfect
-prostration of mind. After a long silence, during which the fury of the
-storm without increased, Valentine resumed his seat.
-
-"A very strong reason must have obliged you to take such a
-determination," he said coolly; "I will not endeavour to combat it; but
-I command you, by our friendship, to tell me fully what has led you to
-form it. I am your foster brother, Louis; we have grown up together; our
-ideas have been too long in common, our friendship is too strong and too
-fervent for you to refuse to satisfy me."
-
-"To what purpose?" cried the Count, impatiently; "my sorrows are of a
-nature which none but he who experiences them can comprehend."
-
-"A bad pretext, brother," replied the soldier, in a rough tone; "the
-sorrows we dare not avow are of a kind that make us blush."
-
-"Valentine," said the Count, with a flashing eye, "it is ill judged to
-speak so."
-
-"On the contrary, it is quite right," replied the young man, warmly. "I
-love you, I owe you the truth; why should I deceive you? No, you know my
-frankness; therefore do not hope that I shall listen to you with my eyes
-shut. If you want to be flattered in your last moments, why send for me?
-Is it to applaud your death? If so, brother, farewell! I will retire,
-for I have nothing to do here. You great gentlemen, who have only known
-the trouble of coming into the world, know nothing of life but its joys;
-at the first roseleaf which chance happens to ruffle in your bed of
-happiness, you think yourselves lost, and appeal to that greatest of all
-cowardices, suicide."
-
-"Valentine!" the Count cried angrily.
-
-"Yes," continued the young man, with increased energy, "I repeat, that
-supreme cowardice! Man is no more at liberty to quit life when he
-fancies he is tired of it, than the soldier is to quit his post when he
-comes face to face with his country's enemy. Your sorrows, indeed! I
-know well what they are."
-
-"You know?" demanded the Count with astonishment.
-
-"All--listen to me; and when I have told you my thoughts, why, kill
-yourself if you like. Pardieu! do you think when I came here I did not
-know why you summoned me? A gladiator, far too weak to fight the good
-fight, you have cast yourself defencelessly among the wild beasts of
-this terrible arena called Paris--and you have fallen, as was sure to
-be the case. But remember, the death you contemplate will complete your
-dishonour in the eyes of all, instead of reinstating you or surrounding
-you with the halo of false glory you are ambitious of."
-
-"Valentine! Valentine!" cried the Count, striking the table forcibly
-with his clenched hand, "what gives you a right to speak to me thus?"
-
-"My friendship," the soldier replied, energetically, "and the position
-you have yourself placed me in by sending for me. Two causes reduce you
-to despair. These two causes are, in the first place, your love for
-a coquettish woman, a Creole, who has played with your heart as the
-panther of her own savannahs plays with the inoffensive animals she is
-preparing to devour.--Is that true?"
-
-The young man made no reply. With his elbows on the table, his face
-buried in his hands, he remained motionless, apparently insensible to
-the reproaches of his foster brother. Valentine continued--
-
-"Secondly, when, in order to win favour in her eyes, you have
-compromised your fortune, and squandered all that your father had left
-you, this woman flits away as she came, rejoicing over the mischief
-she has done, over the victims she has left on the path she has trod,
-leaving to you and to so many others the despair and the shame of having
-been the sport of a coquette. What urges you to seek refuge in death is
-not the loss of fortune, but the impossibility of following this woman,
-the sole cause of all your misfortunes. I defy you to contradict me."
-
-"Well, I admit all that is true. It is that alone which kills me. What
-care I for the loss of fortune? She alone is the object of my ambition!
-I love her--I love her--I tell you, so that I could struggle against
-the whole world to obtain her!" the young man exclaimed with great
-excitement. "Oh, if I could but hope! Hope--a word void of meaning,
-invented by the ambitious, always implying something unattainable! Do
-you not plainly see the truth of what I say? There is nothing left me
-but to die!"
-
-Valentine contemplated him for some minutes with a sad countenance.
-Suddenly his brow cleared, his eye sparkled; he laid his hand upon the
-Count's shoulder.
-
-"Is this, then, more than a caprice? Do you really love this woman?" he
-said.
-
-"Have I not told you that I am ready to die for her?"
-
-"Ay; and you told me at the same time that you would struggle with the
-whole world to obtain her."
-
-"I did--and would."
-
-"Well, then," continued Valentine, fixing his eyes earnestly upon him,
-"I can help you to find this woman again--I can."
-
-"You can?"
-
-"Yes, I can."
-
-"Oh! you are mad! She has left Paris, and no one knows into what region
-of America she has retreated."
-
-"Of what consequence is that?"
-
-"And then, besides, I am ruined!"
-
-"So much the better."
-
-"Valentine, be careful of what you say," the young man remarked with a
-sigh; "in spite of my reason, I allow myself to believe you."
-
-"Hope, man! hope, I tell you."
-
-"Oh, no; no, that is impossible!"
-
-"Nothing is impossible; that is a word invented by the impotent and the
-cowardly. I repeat that I not only will find this woman for you again,
-but that she--she herself, mind--shall be afraid lest you should despise
-her love."
-
-"Oh!"
-
-"Who knows? You yourself may then, perhaps, reject it."
-
-"Valentine! Valentine!"
-
-"Well, to obtain this glorious result, I only ask two years."
-
-"So long?"
-
-"Oh, such is man!" cried the soldier, with a faint, pitying laugh. "But
-an instant ago, and you were anxious to die, because the word had never
-stood in its true light before you; and now you have not the courage to
-look forward, or wait two years, which constitute only a few minutes of
-human life!"
-
-"Yes, but----"
-
-"Be satisfied, brother--be satisfied! If in two years I have not
-fulfilled my promise, I myself will load your pistols--and then----"
-
-"Well, and then?"
-
-"And then you shall not die alone," he said coolly.
-
-The Count looked at him. Valentine seemed transfigured: his countenance
-wore an expression of indomitable energy, which his foster brother had
-never observed in it before; his eyes sparkled with unwonted brilliancy.
-The young man avowed himself conquered; he took his friend's hand, and
-pressing it warmly, said--
-
-"I agree!"
-
-"You now, then, belong to me?"
-
-"I give myself entirely up to you."
-
-"That's well!"
-
-"But what will you do?"
-
-"Listen to me attentively," the soldier said, sinking back into his
-chair, and motioning to his friend to resume his seat. At this moment
-the clock struck the hour of midnight, and, from a feeling for which
-they could not account, the young men listened silently and reflectively
-to the twelve strokes which resounded at equal intervals upon the bell.
-
-When the echo of the last stroke had ceased to vibrate, Valentine lit a
-cigar, and turning towards Louis, whose eyes were intensely fixed upon
-him, "Now, then," he said slowly, emitting a puff of thin blue smoke,
-which went curling gracefully up towards the ceiling.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-THE RESOLUTION.
-
-
-"I am listening," said Louis, leaning forward as if to hear the better.
-
-Valentine resumed with a melancholy smile.
-
-"We have now reached the 1st of January, 1835," said he; "with the last
-vibration of midnight your existence as a gentleman has come to an end.
-From this time you are about to commence a life of trials and struggles;
-in a word, you are about to become a man!"
-
-The Count gave him an inquiring glance.
-
-"I will explain myself," Valentine continued; "but in order to do that,
-you must, in the first place, allow me, in a few words, to recall your
-history to you."
-
-"Surely, I am well enough acquainted with that," interrupted the Count,
-in a tone that displayed impatience.
-
-"Well, perhaps you are; but, at all events, listen to my version of it;
-if I err, put me right."
-
-"Follow your own humour," the Count replied, sinking back into his chair
-with the air of a man whom politeness obliges to listen to a tiresome
-discourse.
-
-Though he saw it, Valentine appeared to take no notice of this movement
-on the part of his foster brother. He relit his cigar, which he had
-allowed to go out, patted the dog, whose great head was lying upon his
-knees, and began, as if convinced that Louis gave him the most profound
-attention.
-
-"Your history is that of almost every man of your rank," said he. "Your
-ancestors, whose name can be traced to the Crusades, left you at your
-birth a noble title, and a hundred thousand francs a year. Rich, without
-having had occasion to employ your faculties to gain your fortune,
-and consequently ignorant of the real value of money, you spent it
-heedlessly, believing it to be inexhaustible. This is just what has
-happened; only, one day, when you least expected it, the hideous spectre
-of ruin rose up suddenly before you, and you had a glimpse of want,
-that is, of the necessity for labour; and then you drew back terrified,
-declaring there was no refuge but in death."
-
-"All that is perfectly true," the Count interrupted; "but you forget to
-mention, that before forming this last resolution, I took care to put
-my affairs in order, and to pay all my creditors. I then became my own
-master, and had a right to dispose of my life as I thought fit."
-
-"Not at all. And it is this which your education as a gentleman has
-prevented you from understanding. Your life is not your own; it is
-a loan which God has made you. It is, consequently, nothing but an
-expectation, a _waiting_, a passage: for this reason it is short,
-but the profit of it is due to humanity. Every man who wastes the
-faculties which he holds from God in orgies and debaucheries, commits a
-robbery upon the great human family. Remember that we are all mutually
-responsible for one another, and that we ought to employ our faculties
-for the advantage of the whole."
-
-"For Heaven's sake, brother, a truce to your sermons! Such theories,
-more or less paradoxical, may succeed with certain people, but----"
-
-"Brother," Valentine interrupted, "do not speak so. In spite of
-yourself, your pride of race dictates words which you will ere long
-regret. Certain people! there you have let slip the great word. Oh,
-Louis, Louis! how many things you have yet to learn! But that we may
-know what we are about, reckoning all your resources, how much have you
-left?"
-
-"Oh, I scarcely know! A pitiful sum."
-
-"Well, but how much?"
-
-"Good Heavens! some forty thousand francs, I suppose, at most, which may
-amount to sixty thousand by the sale of these luxurious trifles," the
-Count said carelessly.
-
-Valentine started up in his chair.
-
-"Sixty thousand francs!" he cried; "and you are in despair! and have
-made up your mind to die! Senseless fellow! why, these sixty thousand
-francs, well employed, are a fortune! they will enable you to find the
-woman you love! How many poor devils would fancy themselves rich with
-such a sum!"
-
-"What do you mean to do, then?"
-
-"You shall see. What is the name of the lady you are in love with?"
-
-"Doña Rosario del Valle."
-
-"Very well. She has, you say, gone to America?"
-
-"Ten days ago; but I, in justice, must observe to you, that Doña
-Rosario, whom you do not know, is a noble and amiable girl, who has
-never lent an ear to one of my flatteries, or given favourable heed to
-the ruinous extravagances which I committed to please her."
-
-"Ah, that is very possible! why, then, should I seek to rob you of this
-sweet illusion? Only it makes me the more puzzled to perceive how, under
-these circumstances, you could manage to melt your fortune, which was
-considerable, like a lump of butter in the sun."
-
-"Here! read this note from my broker."
-
-"Oh!" said Valentine, pushing back the paper; "you have been dabbling
-on the Stock Exchange, have you! Everything is now easily explained, my
-poor pigeon; the kites have plucked you nicely! Well, brother, you must
-take your revenge."
-
-"Oh, I ask nothing better!" said the young man, knitting his brows.
-
-"We are of the same age; my mother's milk nourished us both; in the
-eyes of God we are brothers! I will make a man of you! I will help
-you to put on that armour of brass which will render you invincible.
-Whilst you, protected by your name and your fortune, allowed life to
-glide luxuriously away, only plucking its flowers as it passed, I, a
-poor wretch wandering over the rough pavement of Paris, carried on a
-gigantic struggle to obtain a mere existence; a struggle of every hour
-and every minute, where the victory for me was a morsel of bread, and
-experience most dearly bought; for often, when I held horses, sold
-theatre checks, or acted clown to a mountebank--in fact, when I went
-through the thousand impossible shifts of the Bohemian, depression and
-discouragement nearly choked me; often and often have I felt my burning
-brow and throbbing temples clasped in the pinching vice of want; but I
-resisted, I girded myself up against adversity; never did I allow myself
-to be conquered, although I left upon the thorns of my rugged path many
-of the rags of my most fondly-cherished illusions; while my heart,
-writhing with despair, has bled from twenty wounds at once! Courage,
-Louis! henceforth there will be two of us to fight the battle! You shall
-be the head to conceive, I the arm to execute; you the intelligence, I
-the strength! Now the struggle will be equal, for we will sustain one
-another. Trust in me, my brother; a day will come when success will
-crown our efforts!"
-
-"I can fully appreciate your devotion, and I accept it. Am I not, at
-present, your property? Entertain no fear of my resisting you. But I
-cannot help telling you that I fear all my attempts will be in vain, and
-that we shall be forced, sooner or later, to fall back upon that last
-means which you now prevent me having recourse to."
-
-"Oh, thou man of little faith!" Valentine said, cheerfully; "on the road
-which we are about to take, fortune will be our slave!"
-
-Louis could not repress a smile.
-
-"We must, at all events, depend upon the aid of chance in what we are
-about to undertake," he said.
-
-"Chance! chance is the hope of fools; the strong man commands it."
-
-"Well, but what do you mean to do?"
-
-"The lady you love is in America, is she not?"
-
-"I have already told you so several times."
-
-"Very well, then, we must go thither."
-
-"But I do not know even in what part of America she resides."
-
-"Of what consequence is that? The New World is the country of gold--the
-true region of adventurers! We shall retrieve our fortunes whilst
-searching for her; and is that so disagreeable a thing? Tell me--this
-lady was born somewhere?"
-
-"She is a Chilian."
-
-"Good! she has gone back to Chili, then; and it is there we shall find
-her."
-
-Louis looked at his foster brother for a moment, with a species of
-respectful admiration.
-
-"What! do you seriously mean that you will do this, brother?" he said,
-in an agitated voice.
-
-"Without hesitation."
-
-"Abandon the military career which offers you so many chances of
-success? I know that in three months you will be an officer."
-
-"I have ceased to be a soldier since the morning; I have found a
-substitute."
-
-"Oh, that is not possible!"
-
-"Ay, but it is done."
-
-"But your old mother, my nurse, whose only support you are!"
-
-"Out of what you have left we will give her a few thousand francs,
-which, joined to my pension, will suffice for her to live on till we
-come back."
-
-"Oh," said the young man, "I cannot accept of such a sacrifice--my
-honour forbids it!"
-
-"Unfortunately, brother," Valentine said, in a tone which silenced the
-Count, "you have it not in your power to prevent it. In acting as I
-propose to do I am only discharging a sacred duty."
-
-"I do not understand you."
-
-"What is the use of explaining it to you?"
-
-"I insist."
-
-"Very good; and, perhaps, it will be better. Listen:--When, after
-having nursed you, my mother restored you to your family, my father fell
-sick, and died at the end of an illness of eight months, leaving my
-mother and myself in the greatest want; the little we possessed had been
-spent in medicines, and in paying the doctor for his visits. We ought to
-have had recourse to your family, who would, no doubt, have relieved us;
-but my mother would never consent to it. 'The Count de Prébois-Crancé
-has done as much as he ought,' she remarked, 'he shall not be troubled
-any more.'"
-
-"She was wrong," said Louis.
-
-"I know she was," Valentine replied. "In the meantime, hunger soon began
-to be felt. It was then I undertook all those impossible trades of which
-I just now spoke to you. One day, as I was carrying my cap round in the
-Place du Trône, after swallowing sabres and eating fire, to the great
-delight of the crowd, I found myself face to face with an officer of the
-Chasseurs d'Afrique, who looked at me with an air of pity and kindness
-that melted my heart within me. He led me away with him, made me relate
-my history, and insisted upon being conducted to the shed where I and
-my mother lived. At the sight of our misery the old soldier was much
-affected; a tear, which he could not restrain, flowed silently down his
-sunburnt cheek. Louis, that officer was your father."
-
-"My noble and good father!" the Count exclaimed, pressing his foster
-brother's hand.
-
-"Yes! yes, noble and good! he secured my mother a little annuity which
-enables her to live, and took me into his own regiment. Two years ago,
-during the last expedition against the Rey of Constantine, your father
-was struck by a bullet in his chest, and died at the end of two hours,
-calling upon his son."
-
-"Yes," the young man said, with tears in his eyes, "I know he did."
-
-"But what you do not know, Louis, is, that at the point of death your
-father turned towards me--for, from the moment he had received his wound
-I had never left him."
-
-Louis again silently pressed the hand of Valentine, whilst the latter
-continued--
-
-"'Valentine,' he said to me, in a faint voice, broken by the rattle of
-death, for the mortal agony had commenced, 'my son is left alone, and
-without experience; he has nobody but you, his foster brother. Watch
-over him--never abandon him! May I depend upon your promise? it will
-mitigate the pain of dying.' I knelt down beside him, and respectfully
-seizing the hand he held out to me, exclaimed--'Die in peace! in the
-hour of adversity I will be always by the side of your Louis. Two tears
-of joy at that awful hour dropped from your father's eyes; he said, in a
-faltering voice--'God has heard your oath and murmuring your name, and
-clasping my hand, he expired. Louis, I owe to your father the comfort
-my mother enjoys; I owe to your father the feelings that make me a man,
-and this cross which glitters on my breast. Can you not now comprehend,
-then, why I have spoken to you as I have done? While you held your
-course in your strength, I kept aloof; but now that the hour has arrived
-for accomplishing my vow, no human power can prevent me from doing so."
-
-The two young men were silent for a moment, and then Louis, laying his
-face on the soldier's honest chest, said, with a burst of tears--
-
-"When shall we set out, brother?"
-
-The latter looked at him earnestly--
-
-"You are fully resolved to commence a new life?"
-
-"Entirely!" Louis replied, in a firm tone.
-
-"Do you leave no regrets behind you?"
-
-"None."
-
-"You are ready to pass bravely through all the trials to which I may
-expose you?"
-
-"I am."
-
-"That is well, brother! it is thus I wish you to be. We will set out as
-soon as we have settled the balance of your past life. You must enter
-on the new existence I am about to open to you quite free from clogs or
-remembrances."
-
- * * * * *
-
-On the 2nd of February, 1835, a packet boat belonging to the
-Trans-Atlantic Company left Havre, directing its course towards
-Valparaiso. On board this vessel, as passengers, were the Count de
-Prébois-Crancé, Valentine Guillois his foster brother, and Cæsar their
-Newfoundland dog--Cæsar, the only friend who had remained faithful to
-them, and whom they could not think of leaving behind. Upon the quay
-a woman of about sixty years of age, her face bathed in tears, stood
-with her eyes intently fixed upon the vessel as long as it remained in
-sight. When it had disappeared below the horizon, she cast a desponding
-glance around her, and with a heavy heart bent her steps towards a house
-situated at a small distance from the beach, where she remained three
-days.
-
-"Do what is right, happen what may!" she said, in a voice stifled by
-grief.
-
-This woman was the mother of Valentine Guillois. She was the most to be
-pitied, for she was left alone!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-THE EXECUTION.
-
-
-Towards the end of the year 1450, Chili was invaded by Prince
-Sinchiroca, afterwards Inca, who gained possession of the valley of
-Mapocho, then called Promocaces, that is to say, the place of dancing
-and rejoicing. The Peruvian government, however, was never able to
-establish itself in the country, on account of the armed opposition of
-the Promocians, then encamped between the rivers Rapel and Maulé. Hence,
-though the historian Garcilasso de la Vega may place the limits of the
-territory conquered by the Incas upon the river Maulé, everything proves
-they were upon the Rapel, for, near the confluence of the Cachapeul with
-the Tingerica, which from this point takes the name of Rapel, start the
-ruins of an ancient Peruvian fortress, constructed exactly like those of
-Callao and Asseray, in the province of Quito. These fortresses served to
-mark the frontier.
-
-The Spanish conqueror, Don Pedro de Valdivia, founded, on the 24th of
-February, 1541, the city of Santiago in a delightful position upon the
-left bank of the Rio Mapocho, at the entrance of a plain a hundred miles
-in extent, bounded by the Rio Parahuel, and the mountain of El Pardo,
-which has an elevation of not less than four thousand feet. This plain,
-which is also bathed by the Rio Maypo, forms a natural reservoir, in
-which the light soil brought down from the neighbouring heights has
-found a level, and created one of the richest territories of the New
-World.
-
-Santiago, which at a later period became the capital of Chili, is one of
-the finest cities in Spanish America. Its streets are broad, built in
-straight lines, and refreshed by _acequias_; or rivulets of clear and
-limpid water; while the houses, built of _adobes_, only one story high,
-on account of the earthquakes so frequent in this country, are vast,
-airy, and well situated. It possesses a great number of monuments, the
-most remarkable of which are the stone bridge of five arches, thrown
-over the Mapocho, and the Tajamar, or breakwater, formed of two brick
-walls, the interior one of which is filled with earth, and serves to
-protect the inhabitants from inundations. The Cordilleras, with their
-eternally snow-crowned summits, although eighty miles distant from
-the city, appear suspended over it, and present an aspect of the most
-majestic and imposing kind.
-
-On the 5th of May, 1835, towards ten o'clock in the evening, stifling
-heat oppressed the city; there was not a breath in the air, or a cloud
-in the heavens. Santiago, generally so joyous at this hour of the
-night, when beams from black eyes and smiles from rosy lips are seen at
-every balcony, and each window seems to challenge the passer-by with
-the twanging of _sambecuejas,_ and snatches of Creole songs, appeared
-plunged in the deepest sadness. The balconies and the windows were
-filled, it is true, with the heads of men and women, packed together as
-closely as possible, but the expression of every face was serious, every
-look was thoughtful and uneasy: no smile, no joy could be witnessed; but
-on all sides were sorrowful brows, pale cheeks, and eyes filled with
-tears.
-
-Here and there in the streets numerous groups were stationed in the
-middle of the causeway, or upon the steps of the doors, conversing in a
-low voice, but with great vivacity. At every instant, orderly officers
-left the government palace, and galloped off in various directions.
-Detachments of troops quitted their barracks, and marched, with drums
-beating, to the Plaza Mayor, where they formed in line, passing silently
-amidst the terrified inhabitants. The Plaza Mayor on this evening
-afforded an exceptional appearance. Torches, waved about by individuals
-mixed with the crowd, threw their red dull reflections upon the
-assembled people, who seemed to be in expectation of some great event.
-
-But among all these people assembled on one spot, and whose number
-increased every second, not a cry, not a word could be heard. Only, at
-intervals, there arose a nameless murmur--a noise of the sea before a
-tempest--the whisper of a whole anxious people--the hoarse fury of a
-storm lashing all these oppressed breasts. The clock of the cathedral
-heavily and slowly struck ten.
-
-Scarce had the _serenos_, according to custom, chanted the hour, ere
-military commands were heard, and the crowd violently driven back in all
-directions, with cries and oaths, accompanied by blows from gunstocks,
-divided in two nearly equal parts, leaving between them a wide, free
-space. At this moment arose the sounds of religious chants, murmured in
-a low, monotonous tone, and a long procession of monks debouched upon
-the square. These monks all belonged to the order of the Brothers of
-Mercy. They walked slowly in two lines, with their hoods pulled down
-over their faces, their arms crossed upon their breasts, their heads
-hanging down, and chanting the _De Profundis_. In the middle of them ten
-penitents each bore an open coffin. Then came a squadron of cavalry,
-preceding a battalion of militiamen, in the centre of which body, ten
-men, bare headed, with their arms bound behind them, were conducted,
-each riding with his face toward the tail of a donkey, whose bridle
-was held by a monk of the order of Mercy; a detachment of lancers came
-immediately after, and closed this lugubrious procession.
-
-At the cry of halt, given by the commander of the troops drawn up
-upon the Plaza, the monks separated to the right and left, without
-interrupting their funeral chant, and the condemned remained alone in
-the middle of the space left free for them. These men were patriots,
-who had attempted to overthrow the established government, in order to
-substitute another, the more broad and democratic basis of which would
-be, as they thought, in better accordance with ideas of progress and the
-welfare of the nation. These patriots belonged to the first families of
-the country.
-
-The population of Santiago viewed with sullen despair the death of
-the men whom they considered as martyrs. It is even probable that a
-rising in their favour would have taken place, if General Don Poncho
-Bustamente, the minister at war, had not drawn out a military force
-capable of imposing upon the most determined, and obliging them to be
-silent spectators of the execution of men whom they could not save, but
-whom they entertained a fierce hope of avenging at a future day.
-
-The condemned alighted; they piously knelt, and confessed themselves to
-the monks of Mercy nearest to them, whilst a platoon of fifty soldiers
-took up a position within twenty paces of them. When their confession
-was completed, they rose up bravely, and taking each other by the hand,
-ranged themselves in a single line in front of the soldiers appointed
-to put them to death. In spite, however, of the great numbers of troops
-assembled on the Plaza, an ominous fermentation prevailed among the
-people. The crowd rocked about in all directions. Murmurs of sinister
-augury and curses, pronounced aloud against the agents of power, seemed
-to remind the latter that they had better finish the affair at once, if
-they did not wish to have their victims torn from their hands.
-
-General Bustamente, who calmly and stoically presided over this
-dismal ceremony, smiled with disdain at this expression of popular
-disapprobation. He waved his sword over his head and commanded "right
-about face," which was executed with the rapidity of lightning. The
-troops faced the insurgents on all sides; the front rank pointing their
-muskets at the citizens crowded together before them, whilst the others
-appeared to take aim at the balconies encumbered with people. This was
-followed by so dead a silence, that not a word was lost of the sentence
-read by the proper officer to the patriots--a sentence which condemned
-them to be shot as traitors, or accomplices in a conspiracy designed
-to overthrow the constituted government, and plunge their country into
-anarchy.
-
-The conspirators listened to their sentence with silent firmness; but
-when the officer, who trembled in every limb, had finished reading it,
-they all cried, as with one voice,
-
-"Viva la Patria! Viva la Libertad!"
-
-The General gave a signal, and a loud rolling of the drums drowned the
-voices of the condemned. A discharge of musketry resounded like a clap
-of thunder, and the ten martyrs fell, once again shouting their cry of
-liberty, a cry doomed to find an echo in the hearts of their terrified
-compatriots.
-
-The troops filed off, with shouldered arms, ensigns flying, and band at
-their head, past the dead bodies, and regained their barracks. When the
-General had disappeared with his escort, and the troops had left the
-Plaza, the people rushed in a mass towards the spot where the martyrs
-of their cause lay in a confused heap. Every one wished to offer them a
-last farewell, and to swear over their bodies to avenge them, or to fall
-in their turn.
-
-At length, by degrees, the crowd became less compact, the groups
-dispersed, the last torches were extinguished, and the spot where,
-scarce an hour before, an awful drama had been accomplished, was left
-completely deserted. A considerable time elapsed before any noise
-disturbed the solemn silence which brooded over the Plaza Mayor.
-
-Suddenly, a heavy sigh escaped from the heap of bodies, and a pale head,
-disfigured by the blood and dirt which stained it, arose slowly from
-this human slaughterhouse, pushing aside with difficulty the carcasses
-which had covered it. The victim, who, by a miracle, survived this
-bloody hecatomb, cast an anxious look around him, and passing his hand
-over his brow, which was bathed in a dark perspiration, said vehemently--
-
-"My God! my God! grant me strength to live, that I may avenge myself and
-my country!"
-
-Then, with incredible courage, this man, too weak from the blood he had
-lost, and was still losing, to stand, or to escape by walking away,
-began to crawl along upon his hands and knees, leaving behind him a long
-wet track, and directing his course towards the cathedral. At every yard
-he stopped to take breath, and to place his hands upon his wounds, which
-motion rendered more painful. Scarce had he left the centre of the Plaza
-and its horrid sacrifice fifty paces behind him, and that with immense
-difficulty, when, from a street which opened just before him, issued two
-men, who advanced with hasty steps towards him.
-
-"Oh!" the unhappy man cried, in utter despair, "I am lost! I am lost!
-Heaven is not just!"--And he fainted.
-
-The two men, on coming up to him, stopped with great surprise; they
-leant over him, and examined him with care and in an anxious manner.
-
-"Well?" said one of them, at the end of a minute or two.
-
-"He is alive!" the other replied, in a tone of conviction.
-
-Without uttering another word, they rolled up the wounded man in a
-_poncho_, lifted him on their shoulders, and disappeared in the gloomy
-depths of the street by which they had come, and which led to the
-Canadilla suburb.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-THE PASSAGE.
-
-
-It is a long voyage from Havre to Chili. The man accustomed to the
-thousand agitations and the intoxicating whirlwind of the atmosphere of
-Paris, necessarily finds the life on shipboard, the calm and regular
-life, insipid and monotonous. It is certainly tedious to remain months
-together in a vessel, confined to a cabin a few feet square, without
-air and without sun, almost without light, and to have no walk but the
-narrow deck of the ship, no horizon but the rolling or the tranquil
-sea--at all times and everywhere nothing but sea.
-
-The transition is very trying. The Parisian, accustomed to the noise
-and perpetual motion of a great city, cannot at once enter into or
-comprehend the poetry of the sailor's life, of which he knows nothing,
-or the sublime pleasures and keen enjoyments which those granite-hearted
-men, exposed incessantly to a struggle with the elements, constantly
-experience; men who laugh at the tempest and brave the hurricane; who,
-twenty times a minute, stand face to face with death, and at last feel
-such a contempt for it that they end by not believing in it. The hours
-are of interminable length to the passenger who pines for the land;
-every day appears an age to him. With his eyes constantly turned toward
-a point which he begins to imagine he shall never gain, he sinks, in
-spite of himself, into a species of gloomy nostalgia, which the sight of
-the wished for port is alone powerful enough to dissipate.
-
-The Count de Prébois-Crancé and Valentine Guillois had, then, undergone
-the dispersion of all the illusions and all the ennuis attendant upon a
-first sea voyage. During the first days they were employed in recalling
-the vivid remembrance of that other life from which they had parted
-for ever. They talked over the surprise which the sudden disappearance
-of the Count would cause in the fashionable society from which he
-had fled without warning, and without leaving any means of tracing
-him. Forgetting for awhile the distance which separated them from the
-America to which they were bound, they dwelt at great length upon the
-unknown pleasures which awaited them upon that golden soil, that land
-of promise for all sorts of adventurers, but which, alas! often offers
-those who go thither in the hope of gaining an easy fortune, nothing but
-disappointment and sorrow.
-
-As every subject, however interesting it may be, must in the end grow
-exhausted, the two young men, to escape the fatiguing monotony of the
-voyage, had the good sense so to arrange their existence as to prevent
-tedium from gaining the influence over them which it had upon the
-other passengers. Twice a day, morning and evening, the Count, who was
-perfectly well acquainted with Spanish, gave his foster brother lessons
-in that language, lessons by which he profited so well, that after two
-months' study, he was able to carry on a conversation in Spanish. When
-he had made such progress, the young men employed no other language,
-either between themselves or with the persons on board who understood
-it. This habit produced the desired result; that is to say, Valentine,
-in a very short time, spoke Spanish, which is not difficult to acquire,
-as fluently as French; and then, in return, Valentine occasionally
-became the professor. He made Louis go through gymnastic exercises, in
-order to develop his natural strength, accustom his body to fatigue, and
-render him capable of supporting the rude exigencies of his new position.
-
-We will here, for a moment, return to the character of Valentine
-Guillois, a character of which the reader, from the young man's manner
-of acting and speaking, might form a completely erroneous opinion, and
-this we think it our duty to rectify. Morally, Valentine Guillois was
-a young fellow quite unacquainted with himself; hot-headed, giddy in
-the extreme, the surface had been slightly vitiated by reading chosen
-without discernment; but the foundation was essentially good. He
-united in himself all the characteristics of a class whose knowledge
-of the world is obtained from romances and the dramas of the Faubourg
-du Temple. He had sprung up like a mushroom upon _the pavé_ of Paris,
-performing for bread, as he himself said, the most eccentric and
-impossible things. As a soldier, he had lived from hand to mouth,
-happy in the present, and careless of a future whose existence was so
-uncertain for him. But in the heart of this thoughtless _gamin_ a new
-sentiment had germinated, and, in a very short time, taken deep root,--a
-hearty devotion to the man who had held out his hand to him, had had
-pity on his mother, and who, by dragging him from the slough in which he
-was plunged, without hope of ever rising, had given him a consciousness
-of his own personal value. The death of this benefactor had struck
-him like a clap of thunder. He felt all the importance of the mission
-with which his dying colonel had charged him, the responsible burden
-he imposed upon him, and he swore, with the firm resolution of keeping
-his oath, cost what it might, to watch, like an attentive and devoted
-brother, over the son of him who had made a man of him equal to other
-men. The two most prominent points of Valentine's character were, an
-energy which obstacles only augmented instead of depressing, and an iron
-will.
-
-With these two qualities, employed to the extent to which Valentine
-carried them, a man is sure to accomplish great things, and, if death
-does not surprise him on the road, to attain, at a given moment, the
-object, whatever it may be, which he has marked out for himself. In the
-present circumstances, these qualities were invaluable to the Count de
-Prébois-Crancé, a man of a dreamy, poetical nature, weak character, and
-timid mind, who, accustomed from his birth to the easy life of people
-of fortune, was entirely ignorant of the incessant difficulties of the
-new life into which he found himself suddenly cast. As always happens,
-when two men gifted with such opposite qualities meet, Valentine was
-not long in gaining over his foster brother a great moral influence, an
-influence which he employed with infinite tact, without ever rendering
-his companion aware of it; he appeared to do everything according to
-his will, whilst imposing his own upon him. In short, these two men,
-who loved each other thoroughly, and had but one head and one heart,
-perfected each other.
-
-The mode of speaking employed by Valentine in the early chapters of
-this history, was not at all habitual to him, and had truly astonished
-himself. Rising to the level of the situation in which the resolution of
-the young man he wished to save placed him, he had comprehended, with
-that sound common sense which he unwittingly possessed, that instead
-of desponding over the misfortune which struck his foster brother so
-unexpectedly, it was his duty, on the contrary, to endeavour to impart
-to him the courage he was deficient in. Thus, as we have seen, he
-found in his heart arguments so peremptorily decisive, that the Count
-consented to live, and gave himself up to his counsels. Valentine did
-not hesitate. The departure of Doña Rosario furnished him with the
-excuse he needed for dragging his foster brother from the Parisian gulf
-which, after having swallowed up his fortune, threatened to swallow up
-himself. Perceiving, before all else, the necessity for expatriating
-him, he persuaded Louis to follow the object of his love to America; and
-both set out gaily for the New World, abandoning the country which, like
-other emigrants, they fancied had been so ungrateful to them.
-
-Often during the passage the young Count had felt his courage flag,
-and his faith in the future abandon him, when thinking of the life of
-struggles and trials that awaited him in America. But Valentine, by
-his inexhaustible gaiety, his incredible store of anecdotes, and his
-incessant sallies, always succeeded in smoothing the wrinkles from the
-brow of his companion, who, with his habitual carelessness and want of
-energy, allowed himself to sink under that occult influence of Valentine
-which remoulded him, without his cognizance, and gradually made a new
-man of him.
-
-Such was the state of mind in which our two personages found themselves
-when the packet boat cast anchor in the roads of Valparaiso. Valentine,
-with his imperturbable assurance, doubted of nothing: he was persuaded
-that the people he was about to have to do with were very much beneath
-him in intelligence, and that he could manage very well to attain the
-double object which he aimed at. The Count entirely depended upon his
-foster brother for finding for him the woman he loved, and whom he had
-come so far to seek. As to retrieving his fortune, he did not even dream
-of that.
-
-Valparaiso--Valley of Paradise--so named probably by antiphrasis, for it
-is the filthiest and ugliest city of Spanish America--is nothing but a
-depot for foreigners, whom commercial interests do not call into Chili.
-Our young men only remained there long enough to equip themselves in
-the costume of the country; that is to say, to assume the Panama hat,
-the _poncho_, and _polenas_; then, each armed with two double-barrelled
-pistols, a rifle, and a long knife in his belt, they left the port, and,
-mounted on excellent horses, took their course towards Santiago, on the
-evening preceding the day on which the execution we have described in
-the preceding chapter was to take place. The weather was magnificent;--
-the rays of a burning sun rendered the very dust golden, and made the
-stones of the road shine like jewels.
-
-"Ah!" said Valentine, as soon as they found themselves upon the superb
-road which leads to the capital of Chili; "it does one good to breathe
-the air of the land--_caramba_, as they say here. Well, now, here we
-are in this boasted America, and now we must set about collecting our
-harvest of gold."
-
-"And Doña Rosario?" said his foster brother, in a melancholy tone.
-
-"Oh! we shall have found her within a fortnight," replied Valentine,
-with astounding confidence.
-
-With these consolatory words, he animated his horse with the spur, and
-the distance before them rapidly diminished.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-THE LINDA.[1]
-
-
-The night was gloomy; no star glittered in the heavens; the moon,
-concealed by clouds, only spread a wan, pale light, which, when it
-disappeared, rendered the darkness the denser. The streets were
-deserted; but at regular intervals the furtive steps of the serenos, who
-alone watched at this hour, were audible.
-
-The two men whom we have seen upon the Plaza Mayor, bearing away the
-wounded man, walked for a long time, loaded with their strange burthen,
-stopping at the least noise, and concealing themselves in the depths of
-a doorway, or in the angle of a street, to allow the serenos to pass, as
-they would be sure to require a reason for their being in the streets
-at that unusual hour. Since the discovery of the conspiracy, orders had
-been given that at eleven o'clock every citizen should be within doors.
-After many turnings and windings, the strangers stopped in the street El
-Mercado, one of the most secluded and narrow in Santiago. They appeared
-to be expected, for a door was opened at the sound of their steps, and
-a woman, dressed in white, and holding a candle, the light of which
-she shaded with her left hand, appeared on the threshold. The two men
-stopped, and one of them, taking a steel from his pocket, struck the
-flint so as to produce as few sparks as possible. At this signal--for it
-evidently was one--the woman extinguished the light, saying with a loud
-voice, but as if speaking to herself--
-
-"Dios proteja a Chile (May God protect Chili)!"
-
-"Dios lo ha protegido (God has protected it)," the man with the flint
-and steel replied, as he replaced his utensils in his pocket.
-
-The woman uttered a cry of joy, which her prudence suddenly repressed.
-
-"Come in, come in," she said in a low voice; and in an instant the two
-men were beside her.
-
-"Is he alive?" she asked, with intense anxiety.
-
-"He is alive," one of the strangers laconically replied.
-
-"In Heaven's name, come in!" she exclaimed.
-
-The bearers, guided by the woman, who had relighted her candle,
-disappeared in the house, the door of which was immediately and softly
-closed after them. All the houses of Santiago are alike, with respect
-to their internal arrangements. To describe one is to describe all.
-A wide doorway, ornamented with pilasters, leads to _the patio_, or
-great entrance court, at the end of which is the principal apartment,
-generally the dining room. On each side are bed chambers, reception
-rooms, and cabinets for labour or study. Behind these apartments is the
-_huerta_, or garden, laid out with taste, ornamented with fountains, and
-planted with orange trees, citron trees, pomegranates, limes, cedars,
-and palm trees, which grow with incredible luxuriance. Behind the garden
-is the _corral_--a vast enclosure appropriated to horses and carriages.
-
-The house into which we have introduced the reader, only differed from
-the others in the princely luxury of its furniture, which seemed to
-indicate that its inhabitant was a person of importance. The two men,
-still preceded by the woman, who served them as guide, entered a little
-room, whose window opened on the garden. They laid their burthen down
-upon a bed, and retired without speaking a word, but bowing respectfully.
-
-The woman remained for a moment motionless, listening to the sound
-of their retreating footsteps; and when all was silent, she sprang
-with a bound towards the door, the bolts of which she fastened with
-an impetuous gesture; then, returning and placing herself beside the
-wounded man, she fixed upon him a long and melancholy look.
-
-This woman, though really thirty-five years of age, appeared to be
-scarcely more than five-and-twenty. She was of an extraordinary, but a
-strange style of beauty; it attracted attention, commanded admiration,
-but created an instinctive repulsion. In spite of the majestic splendour
-of her graceful form, the elegance of her carriage, the freedom of her
-motions, full of voluptuous ease,--in spite of the purity of the lines
-of her fair face, slightly tinged by the warm rays of an American sun,
-which the magnificent tresses of her black hair beautifully enframed,
-her large black eyes, ornamented with long velvety lashes, and crowned
-by perfectly-arched brows, her straight nose, with its mobile and rosy
-nostrils, her little mouth, whose blood-red lips contrasted admirably
-with her pearl-white teeth--in spite of all these rich endowments,
-there was in this splendid creature something fatal, which chilled the
-heart as you contemplated her. Her searching glance, the satirical
-smile, which almost always contracted the corners of her lips, the
-slight wrinkle, which formed a harsh, deep line along her white
-brow--everything about her, even to the melodious sound of her voice,
-with its strongly-accentuated pitch, destroyed sympathy, and produced a
-feeling of hatred, rather than respect.
-
-Alone in that chamber, dimly lighted by one flickering taper, in that
-calm and silent night, face to face with that pale, bleeding man, whom
-she contemplated with stern, contracted brows, she resembled, with her
-long, black hair falling in disorder from her shoulders on to her white
-robe, a Thessalian witch, preparing herself to accomplish some terrible
-and mysterious work.
-
-The stranger was a man of, at most, forty-five years of age, of lofty
-stature, strongly built, and well proportioned. His features were
-handsome, his brow noble, and the expression of his countenance proud,
-but frank and resolute.
-
-The woman remained for a considerable time in mute contemplation.
-Her bosom heaved, her brows became more and more contracted, and she
-appeared to watch the too slow progress of the return to sensibility
-of the man her emissaries had saved from death. At length words forced
-their way through her compressed lips, and she murmured in a low, broken
-voice,--
-
-"Here he is, then; this time, at least, he is in my power! Will he
-consent to answer me? Oh! perhaps I had better have left him to die."
-
-She paused to breathe a deep, broken sigh, but almost immediately
-continued:--
-
-"My daughter! my daughter! of whom this man has bereaved me! and whom,
-in spite of all my researches, he has hitherto concealed in some
-inviolable asylum! My daughter! he must restore her to me; it is my
-will!" she added with inexpressible energy. "He shall, even if I had
-to deliver him up again to the executioners from whom I have ravished
-their prey! These wounds are nothing; loss of blood and terror are the
-sole causes of this insensibility. But time passes--my absence may be
-noticed. Why should I hesitate longer? Let me at once know what I have
-to hope from him. Perhaps he will allow himself to be softened by my
-tears and prayers. What, he! he to whom all human feeling is unknown!
-Better for me to implore the most implacable Indian! He will laugh at my
-grief, he will reply by sarcasms to my cries of despair;--oh! woe, woe
-be to him if he do so!"
-
-She looked earnestly at the wounded man, who was still motionless, for
-another instant, and then, adding resolutely, "I will try," she drew
-from her bosom a small crystal phial, curiously cut, and raising the
-head of the unknown, made him inhale the contents. This was followed by
-a moment of intense expectation; the woman watching with an anxious eye
-the convulsive movements which are the precursors of the return to life,
-as they agitated the body of the wounded man. At length, with a deep
-sigh, he opened his eyes.
-
-"Where am I?" he murmured in a faint voice, then sank back, and closed
-his eyes again.
-
-"In safety," the woman replied.
-
-The sound of the voice produced upon the wounded man the effect of an
-electric shock. He raised himself quickly, and looking around him with a
-mixture of disgust, terror, and anger, asked in a hollow voice,--
-
-"Who spoke?"
-
-"I!" the woman replied haughtily, placing herself before him.
-
-"Ah!" he said with a gesture of disgust, and sinking back upon the bed;
-"you again! ever you!"
-
-"Yes, I! still I, Don Tadeo! I, whose will, in spite of your disdain
-and your hatred, has never faltered! I, in short, whose assistance you
-have always obstinately refused, and who have saved you, in spite of
-yourself."
-
-"Oh! that is an easy matter for you, madam; are you not on the best
-possible terms with my executioners?"
-
-At this reply the woman could not repress a movement of anger; a sudden
-redness flitted across her face.
-
-"No insults, Don Tadeo de Leon!" she said, stamping her foot; "I have
-saved you! I am a woman, and you are under my roof!"
-
-"That is true," he replied, rising and bowing to her with ironical
-respect; "I had forgotten that, madam; I am in your house. Have the
-goodness, then, to direct me the way out, that I may be gone as quickly
-as possible."
-
-"Do not be in such haste, Don Tadeo--you have not yet sufficiently
-recovered your strength. Within a few steps, you perhaps would fall
-again, to be raised up by the agents of the power which, this time, I
-swear to you, would not let you escape."
-
-"And who told you, madam, that I should not prefer being retaken and
-executed a second time, to the chance of remaining longer in your
-presence?"
-
-There was a moment of silence, during which the two interlocutors
-observed each other attentively. The woman was the first to speak.
-
-"Listen to me, Don Tadeo," she said. "In spite of all your efforts,
-destiny, or, speaking more correctly, woman's genius, which nothing can
-resist, has brought us together once again. If you live, if you have
-received only slight wounds, it is because I lavished my gold upon the
-soldiers charged with your execution; I wished to force you to that
-explanation which I have so long demanded of you, which you so often
-have refused me, but which you can now no longer avoid. Submit, then,
-with a good grace. We will afterwards separate, if not good friends,
-at least indifferent, never to meet again. Though I do not wish to
-establish any claim upon your gratitude, you certainly owe your life to
-me; were it for that service alone, you are bound to hear me."
-
-"What! madam," Don Tadeo replied, proudly, "do you think that I consider
-what you have done was rendering me a service? By what right have you
-saved my life? You know me but ill if you fancied I should allow myself
-to be softened by your tears. No, no, I have been too long your dupe and
-your slave to do so. Heaven be praised! I know you well now; and the
-Linda, the mistress of General Bustamente, the tyrant of my country, the
-executioner of my brothers and myself, has nothing to expect from me!
-All that you can say, all that you can do, will be to no purpose. Spare
-yourself, then, I advise you, the trouble of pretending a gentleness
-which neither accords with your character nor your mode of life. I
-madly loved you, a young, pure, and prudent girl, in the cabin of the
-worthy _guaso,_ your father, whose death was caused by your scandalous
-life; you were then called Maria. At that period, would I not have
-sacrificed my life and my happiness for you?--you know I would. Many
-times have I given you proofs of that boundless love; but the Linda, the
-shameless courtezan, the Linda, the woman branded on the brow like Cain
-with the seal of infamy, the miserable creature--I know her not. Away,
-madam!--away! There can be nothing in common between you and me."
-
-And with a gesture of proud authority he waved her from him.
-
-The woman had listened to him with flashing eyes and heaving bosom,
-trembling with rage and shame. Drops of perspiration stood upon her
-face, which glowed with a feverish redness. When he had finished, she
-seized his arm, pressed it with her utmost strength, and placed her face
-close to his.
-
-"Have you said all?" she muttered from between her teeth. "Have you
-heaped insults enough upon me? Have you cast sufficient mire in my face?
-Have you nothing more to add?"
-
-"Nothing, madam," he replied, in a tone of cool contempt. "You can, when
-you please, summon your assassins--I am ready to receive them."
-
-And throwing himself upon the bed, he waited with an air of the most
-insolent indifference.
-
-
-[1] This word, which has no equivalent in English or French, is in the
-Spanish language the highest expression of physical beauty in woman.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-HUSBAND AND WIFE.
-
-
-Doña Maria, notwithstanding the fresh and bitter insult she had just
-received from Don Tadeo, did not yet renounce the hope of softening
-him. When she recalled to her mind the early years, already so distant,
-of her love for Don Tadeo, his devotion to her smallest caprices, when
-she could bring him trembling and prostrate to her feet by a glance or
-a smile, and the entire abnegation he had made of his will, in order
-to live for her and by her; notwithstanding all that had since taken
-place between them, she could not persuade herself that the violent
-and deeply-seated passion he had entertained for her, the species of
-worship he had vowed to her, could have entirely disappeared without
-leaving some slight traces behind. Her pride revolted at the idea of
-having lost all her empire over the lofty nature which she so long had
-moulded at her pleasure like soft wax, under the burning impression of
-wild caprices. She fancied that, like most other men, Don Tadeo, deeply
-wounded in his pride, loved her still without being willing to admit it,
-and that the virulent reproaches he had addressed to her, were flashes
-of that ill-extinguished fire which still smouldered in his heart, and
-whose flame she should succeed in reviving.
-
-Unfortunately Doña Maria had never given herself the trouble to study
-the man she had married, and whom her beauty had so long held in
-subjection. Don Tadeo had been nothing in her eyes but an attentive,
-submissive slave, and, under the apparent weakness of the loving man,
-she had not discovered the powerful energy which formed the foundation
-of his character. And yet the history itself of their love had been a
-proof of that energy, and of a will which nothing could control. Doña
-Maria, then fifteen years of age, dwelt with her father in a _hacienda_,
-in the neighbourhood of Santiago. Deprived of her mother, who had died
-in giving her birth, she was brought up under the care of an old aunt,
-an incorruptible Argus, who allowed no lover to come near her niece.
-The young girl, ignorant as all girls brought up in the country are,
-but whose warm aspirations led her to desire to know the world, and to
-launch into that whirlwind of pleasures the sound of which died without
-an echo in her ears, waited impatiently the arrival of the man who
-should introduce her to these delights, of which, although unknown, she
-had formed seducing ideas. Don Tadeo had only been the guide charged
-with initiating her into the pleasures for which she thirsted. She
-had never loved him; she had only said to herself, on seeing him and
-learning he was of a noble family, "That is the man I have been looking
-for."
-
-This hideous and selfish calculation is made by more girls than
-we may fancy. Don Tadeo was handsome. Doña Maria's self-love was
-flattered by the conquest; but if he had been ugly and disagreeable,
-it would not have altered her course. In her extraordinary character,
-a strange conjunction of the most abject passions, among which shone
-here and there, like diamonds gleaming in the mire, a few feelings
-which attached her to humanity, there was the spirit of two women
-of ancient Rome; Locusta and Messalina were united in her: ardent,
-passionate and ambitious, covetous and prodigal, this demon, concealed
-under the outward form of an angel, acknowledged no other laws but her
-own caprices; and all means, by which she could satisfy them, to her
-appeared good.
-
-For a long time, Don Tadeo, blinded by passion, had submitted without
-complaining to the iron yoke of this infernal genius; but when the day
-arrived that the scales fell from his eyes, he measured with terror the
-depth of the abyss into which this woman had cast him. The frightful
-disorders to which, under the sanction of his name, she had abandoned
-herself, imprinted on his blushing brow a stigma of infamy: the world
-believed him to be her accomplice.
-
-Don Tadeo had by Maria an only daughter, a fair girl of angelic beauty,
-at the period of our history fifteen years of age, whom he loved in
-proportion to the sufferings her mother had inflicted upon him. He
-trembled to think of the frightful future which lay before this innocent
-creature. For four years he had been separated from his wife; and
-during that time she had set no bounds on her irregularities. One day,
-Don Tadeo presented himself unexpectedly at the house of his wife, and
-without saying a word as to his ulterior intentions, took away his
-daughter. From that time--nearly ten years--Doña Maria had never seen
-her child.
-
-A strange revolution was effected by this step in the mother's feelings;
-a new sentiment, so to say, germinated in her soul. A thing, till that
-time unknown to her, happened; she felt the pulses of her heart beat
-for another--she grieved at the remembrance of the little angel who had
-been ravished from her. What was the sentiment? She, herself, knew not;
-she only ardently wished to see her child again. During six years she
-contended, publicly and privately, with Don Tadeo, to have her daughter
-restored to her. The father was deaf and dumb; she could never learn
-what had become of her. Don Tadeo, who, since he ceased to love her, had
-studied the character of the woman of whom he had made an implacable
-enemy, had taken his precautions so prudently that all Doña Maria's
-researches proved fruitless, and all her attempts to obtain an interview
-remained without a result. She imagined that he was afraid of yielding,
-if face to face with her; and she resolved, cost what it might, to force
-him to grant her the interview to which nothing had been able to make
-him consent.
-
-Such was, at the moment we bring them on the scene, the position of
-the two personages who now doubtless met for the last time. It was an
-extraordinary position for both; an unequal contest between a wounded
-and proscribed man, and an ardent, insulted woman, who, like a lioness
-deprived of her whelps, was resolved to succeed, whatever might happen,
-and compel the man whom she had forced to hear her, to restore her
-daughter to her.
-
-Don Tadeo turned towards her.
-
-"I am waiting," he said.
-
-"You are waiting?" she replied, with a friendly smile. "What do you
-expect, then?"
-
-"The assassins whom you doubtless have at hand, in case I should be
-unwilling to reply to your questions concerning your daughter."
-
-"Oh!" she said, with an air of repulsion, "how can you, Don Tadeo, have
-so bad an opinion of me? How can you pretend to believe that, after
-having saved you, I should deliver you up to those who have proscribed
-you?"
-
-"Who knows?" he replied, in a strongly ironical tone. "The heart of
-women of your class, Linda, is an abyss which no man can pretend to
-sound. You, who are incessantly seeking eccentric pleasures, perhaps
-would find an unknown enjoyment and a charm in this second execution,
-which, besides, would not at all compromise you, as I am already legally
-dead to the world."
-
-"Don Tadeo, I know how unworthy my conduct towards you has been, and
-how little I deserve your pity; but you are a gentleman, and, as such,
-do you think it does you honour to load with insults, however merited,
-a woman who is your wife, and who, after saving your life, with no
-intention of reinstating herself in your favour, merely makes a claim,
-at least upon your pity, if not on your esteem?"
-
-"Very well, madam; nothing can be more just than your observations, and
-I subscribe to them with all my heart. I beg you to pardon me for having
-allowed myself to utter certain words; but, at the first movement, I
-was not master of myself, and I could not keep down in the depths of my
-heart the feelings which were stifling me. Now, accept my sincere thanks
-for the immense service you have rendered me, and permit me to retire.
-A longer sojourn, on my part, in this house, is a robbery of which I
-render myself guilty towards your numerous adorers."
-
-And, bowing with ironical courtesy to his infuriated wife, he made a
-movement towards one of the doors of the room.
-
-"One word more," she said.
-
-"Speak, madam."
-
-"Are you resolved to leave me ignorant of the fate of my daughter?"
-
-"She is dead."
-
-"Dead!" she cried, in a voice of terror.
-
-"For you--yes," he replied, with a cold smile.
-
-"Oh, you are implacable!" she shrieked, stamping her foot with rage.
-
-He bowed, without making any reply.
-
-"Well, then," she resumed, "it is now no longer a favour I implore--it
-is a bargain I propose to you."
-
-"A bargain?"
-
-"Yes, a bargain."
-
-"The idea strikes me as original."
-
-"Perhaps it is; you shall judge for yourself."
-
-"I listen, but time presses, and I--"
-
-"Oh, I will be brief," she interrupted.
-
-"I am at your service," and he reseated himself, smiling, exactly like a
-friend on a visit. The Linda followed his motions with her eye, without
-appearing to attach any importance to them.
-
-"Don Tadeo," she said, "during the many years we have been separated a
-great number of events has taken place."
-
-"Quite correct," said he, with a gesture of polite assent.
-
-"I will say nothing to you of myself--my life is known to you."
-
-"Very little of it, madam."
-
-She cast a savage look at him.
-
-"Let that pass," she said, "it is of you I would speak."
-
-"Of me?"
-
-"Yes, of you, whose moments are not so completely absorbed by patriotism
-and the effervescence of political ideas as not to leave you a few for
-more intimate joys and emotions."
-
-"What do you mean?"
-
-"Why do you feign ignorance?" she said, with a perfidious smile; "I am
-sure you understand me."
-
-"Madam!"
-
-"Do not deny it, Tadeo! Tired of the ephemeral love of women of my
-class, as you have just now so well said, you seek in the pure heart of
-a young girl emotions more in accordance with your tastes; in a word,
-I know you are in love with a charming young creature, worthy in all
-respects of being the wife of your choice, if I, unfortunately, did not
-exist."
-
-Don Tadeo fixed upon his wife a scrutinizing look while she was
-pronouncing these words. As she finished, a sigh escaped him.
-
-"What, are you aware?" he exclaimed, with well-feigned surprise. "You
-know--"
-
-"I know that her name is Doña Rosario del Valle," she replied, satisfied
-of the effect she thought she had produced upon her husband; "why, it is
-the freshest news in Santiago! all the world is talking of it. How was
-it likely it should escape me, when I take such an interest in you?"
-
-The Linda interrupted herself, and laid her hand on his arm.
-
-"It is of very little consequence," she added; "restore me my daughter,
-Don Tadeo, and this new love of yours shall be sacred to me--if not--"
-
-"You are mistaken, madam, I tell you."
-
-"Beware, Don Tadeo!" she remarked, with a glance at the clock; "by this
-time the woman we were speaking of is in the hands of my agents."
-
-"What do you mean?" he cried, in great agitation.
-
-"Yes," she replied, in a husky tone, "I have had her carried off. In a
-few minutes she will be here. Beware! I repeat, Don Tadeo! if you do not
-tell me where my daughter is, and if you continue to refuse to restore
-her to me--"
-
-"Well," he said, haughtily, looking her full in the face, and crossing
-his arms, "what then will you do?"
-
-"I will kill this woman!" she replied, in a gloomy but firm tone.
-
-Don Tadeo looked at her for a moment with an undefinable expression, and
-then burst into a dry, nervous laugh, which chilled the woman with fear.
-
-"You will kill her!" he cried, "unhappy woman! Well!--kill that innocent
-creature!--Call in your executioners--I will be mute."
-
-The Linda sprang up like a lioness, and rushed towards the door, which
-she opened violently.
-
-"This is too much!--Come in!" she called out, loudly.
-
-The two men who had brought in Don Tadeo appeared, poniard in hand.
-
-"Ah!" the gentleman said, with a contemptuous smile, "I know you again
-at last."
-
-At a motion from the Linda the assassins advanced towards him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-THE DARK-HEARTS.
-
-
-As we have seen, the people had dispersed almost immediately after the
-execution of the patriots. Everyone carried away in the depths of his
-heart the hope of avenging, at an early day, the victims who had so
-nobly died, with the cry for a time left without an echo, of Viva la
-patria! A cry checked by the bayonets of the soldiers of Bustamente, but
-which must soon give birth to fresh martyrs.
-
-And yet the square, though it seemed a desert, was not so. Several
-men, folded in dark cloaks, and with broad-brimmed hats, pulled down
-over their eyes, were grouped in the recess of the coach entrance of a
-house, and were conversing earnestly together in a low voice, keeping an
-anxious look-out the meanwhile. These men were patriots.
-
-In spite of the terror which hovered over the city, they had, by dint of
-prayers, obtained from the archbishop of Santiago, who was a true priest
-according to the gospel, and at heart devoted to the liberal cause,
-permission to pay the last rites to their unfortunate brethren.
-
-No part of the dismal drama which followed the execution had escaped
-them. They had seen Don Tadeo rise like a phantom from the heap of
-carcasses which covered him; they had heard the words he had pronounced,
-and were preparing to go to his succour, when the two strangers,
-appearing suddenly, raised his body and bore it away. This carrying off
-of a half dead man had surprised them exceedingly. After exchanging a
-few words, two of them went in pursuit of the mysterious strangers,
-probably in order to learn to what house the wounded man was taken,
-whilst the others, twelve in number, advanced to the middle of the
-square.
-
-They anxiously bent down and examined the bodies stretched at their
-feet, hoping, perhaps, that another victim might have escaped the
-slaughter. Unfortunately, Don Tadeo was the only one saved by some
-inexplicable mystery. The nine other victims were all dead. After a long
-examination, the patriots stood up again with a painful sigh of regret,
-and one of them went and knocked at a lower door of the cathedral.
-
-"Who is there?" was immediately asked from the interior.
-
-"_One for whom the night hath no darkness_," the man who had knocked
-replied.
-
-"What do you want?" the voice asked again.
-
-"_Is it not written: Knock and it shall be opened to thee_?" the
-stranger added.
-
-"_Our country!_" said the voice.
-
-"_Or vengeance!_" the man promptly replied.
-
-The door opened, and a monk appeared. His cowl pulled down over his
-face, prevented his features being seen.
-
-"Well," he said, "what do the _Dark-Hearts_ require?"
-
-"A prayer for their murdered brothers."
-
-"Return to those who sent you; they shall be satisfied."
-
-"Thanks for all!" the unknown replied; and, after bowing respectfully to
-the monk, he rejoined his companions. During his absence they had not
-been idle, but had placed the bodies upon hand barrows concealed under
-the arcades of the place.
-
-At the expiration of a few minutes a brilliant light inundated the
-place; the cathedral doors were opened. The interior was seen to be
-splendidly illuminated, and from the principal door issued a long
-procession of monks, each bearing a wax light in his hand; they chanted,
-as they walked, the service of the dead. At the same moment the gates
-of the government palace were thrown open as if by enchantment, and a
-squadron of the Ceras, with General Bustamente at their head, advanced,
-at a trot, towards the procession.
-
-When the monks and soldiers met, they stopped as of one accord. The
-twelve unknown men, folded in their cloaks, and grouped round the
-fountain which forms the centre of the square, anxiously awaited the
-denouement of the scene about to take place.
-
-"What is the meaning of this procession, at such an unusual hour?" the
-general haughtily demanded.
-
-"It means that we have come," the monk who walked first replied, with a
-firm voice, but in a melancholy tone, "to take up the victims you have
-struck down, and give them honourable burial."
-
-"And who, pray, are you?" the general asked, sharply.
-
-"I?" the monk replied, in the same firm tone, and throwing back his
-cowl upon his shoulders--"I am the archbishop of Santiago, primate of
-Chili, invested by his holiness the Pope with the power of binding and
-unbinding on earth."
-
-In Spanish America, all persons yield without hesitation to the religion
-of Christ. The only power that is real is that of the priests. No one,
-however high he may be placed, ventures to struggle against it: he knows
-beforehand that, if he did, he would be sure to be crushed. The general
-knitted his brows, struck his forehead forcibly with his hand, but was
-constrained to admit himself conquered.
-
-"My lord!" he said, with a bow; "pardon me! In these times of civil
-discord, we often, in spite of ourselves, confound our friends with our
-enemies. I was ignorant that your lordship had given orders for prayers
-to be offered up for these criminals, and still more so that you would
-deign to perform this task in person--I beg leave to retire."
-
-During this scene, the patriots had concealed themselves behind the
-pillars of the place, where, thanks to the darkness, they remained
-unseen by the general. As soon as the military had disappeared, at a
-sign from the archbishop the bodies were borne into the cathedral.
-
-"Beware of that man, my lord," whispered one of the unknown in the
-archbishop's ear; "he darted at you the glance of a tiger as he retired."
-
-"Brother!" the priest replied calmly; "I am prepared for martyrdom."
-
-The service commenced. As soon as it was terminated, the patriots
-retired, after warmly thanking the archbishop for his kindness towards
-their dead brethren. Scarce had they proceeded a few steps along a
-narrow street, edged by mean dwellings, when two men rose from behind an
-overturned cart which concealed them, and coming towards them, said in a
-low voice--
-
-"Our country!"
-
-"Vengeance!" one of the unknown replied. "Come on!"
-
-The two men approached.
-
-"Well!" said he who appeared to be the chief. "What have you learnt?"
-
-"All that it is possible to know," one of the newcomers replied.
-
-"Whither have they transported Don Tadeo?"
-
-"To the mansion of the Linda."
-
-"To the residence of his wife! Of the woman who is now the mistress
-of the General Bustamente!" the chief replied anxiously. "By the holy
-Virgin! my comrades, he is lost, for she hates him mortally. Shall we
-allow him to be assassinated without an effort to save him?"
-
-"That would be base cowardice," they replied unanimously.
-
-"But how can we introduce ourselves into the house?"
-
-"Nothing more easy; the garden walls are very low."
-
-"Come on, then! there is not a minute to be lost!"
-
-Without another word, they all hastened off in the direction of the
-Linda's house, which, as we have said, was situated in the faubourg
-of the Canadilla, the handsomest quarter in Santiago. The windows,
-hermetically closed, did not allow one ray of light to pass; not a
-sound could be heard, and the house seemed deserted. The patriots stole
-silently round the walls, and when they reached the back, they easily
-climbed the fence by sticking their poniards between the bricks, and
-sprang into the garden. Here they looked carefully about them, and,
-after a short pause, proceeded with stealthy steps towards a pale,
-trembling light, which sent a feeble beam through the chink of a
-shutter. They were within a few paces of this window, when they suddenly
-heard the noise of what appeared a scuffle, and a terrible cry was
-uttered, mingled with the crash of furniture and imprecations of rage
-and pain. Bounding forward like panthers, the strangers, who had covered
-their faces with masks of black velvet, dashed at the window, which flew
-in a thousand fragments around them, and entered the salon.
-
-And it was time for them to arrive. Don Tadeo, with a stool, had split
-the head of one of the bandits, who lay lifeless upon the floor; but
-the other had got him down, and, with his knee upon his breast, was on
-the point of stabbing him. With a pistol shot, one of the unknown blew
-out his brains, and the wretch rolled in his agony close to his dead
-companion. Don Tadeo sprang up quickly, exclaiming--
-
-"By the Virgin! I thought my hour was come!" Then, turning towards the
-masked men, he said--"Thanks, caballeros! thanks for your very timely
-succour! One minute more, and it would have been all over with me! The
-Linda is expeditious!"
-
-The courtesan, with features contracted by rage, and clenched teeth,
-looked on without appearing to see, overwhelmed, confounded by the scene
-which had so rapidly taken place, and which had, in a few minutes,
-ravished from her the vengeance which she thought had this time been so
-certain.
-
-"Without bearing malice, madam," said Don Tadeo in a jeering tone, "this
-is a match deferred. Your fertile imagination will no doubt soon furnish
-you with the means of taking your revenge!"
-
-"I hope so," she said with a sardonic smile.
-
-"Seize this woman," the leader of the unknown commanded; "gag her, and
-bind her securely to the bed."
-
-"Bind me!" she cried in a paroxysm of anger; "me! do you know who I am?"
-
-"Perfectly well, madam," the stranger replied drily. "You are a woman
-for whom honourable people have no name. Libertines have given you that
-of the Linda, and your present lover is General Bustamente. You see,
-madam, that we are not unacquainted with you."
-
-"Beware, sir," she hissed; "I am not to be insulted with impunity."
-
-"We do not insult you, madam; we only wish, for a time, to put it out
-of your power to do mischief. In a few days," he continued, in a quiet,
-firm tone, "we will determine what shall be done with you."
-
-"Done with me!--me!--who then are you, with faces you dare not reveal,
-and who presume to speak to me thus?"
-
-"Who we are,--learn!--We are the _Dark-Hearts!_" At this terrible
-announcement, a convulsive trembling shook the limbs of the woman, who,
-retreating to the wall, a prey to intense terror, exclaimed in a faint
-voice; "My God! my God! I am lost," and sank down fainting.
-
-At a sign from the leader, one of his companions bound her securely, and
-after gagging her, fastened her to the foot of the bed. Then, taking Don
-Tadeo with them, they departed by the same way they had entered, without
-taking any heed of the two assassins lying upon the floor. Before he
-left the room, the chief pinned a piece of parchment to a table with
-a dagger. Upon this parchment were written a few words of terrible
-import:--
-
-"_The traitor Pancho Bustamente is cited at the expiration of
-ninety-three days!"_
-
- THE DARK-HEARTS.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-IN THE STREET.
-
-
-As soon as they were outside of the house, the masked men, at a sign
-from the leader, dispersed in various directions. When they had
-disappeared round the corners of the neighbouring streets, the chief
-turned towards Don Tadeo, who, scarce recovered from the trying emotions
-he had successively gone through, and weakened by the blood he had lost,
-as well as by the prodigious efforts his last struggle had cost him,
-was leaning, half fainting against the wall of the house he had been so
-fortunately enabled to quit. A flood of bitter reflections rushed upon
-his brain; the incidents of that terrible night almost unsettled his
-reason: in vain he tried to recover the train of his ideas which had
-been so often and so violently broken. The stranger looked at him for
-a few minutes with profound attention; then approaching him, he laid
-his hand quietly upon his shoulder. At this sudden touch, the gentleman
-started as if he had received an electric shock.
-
-"What!" the unknown said in a tone of reproach, "scarcely entered on the
-good fight, and you despair already, Don Tadeo?"
-
-The wounded man shook his head.
-
-"You, Don Tadeo, whose lofty brow has never bent before revolutionary
-storms; you, who in the most trying circumstances have always remained
-firm, are now pale and cast down, without faith in the present, or hope
-in the future, and have lost strength and courage through the vain
-threats of a woman!"
-
-"That woman," he replied mournfully, "has always been my evil genius.
-She is a demon!"
-
-"And suppose," the unknown exclaimed energetically, "that this woman
-should succeed in getting up another of the infamous schemes in which
-her brain is so fertile, a man of heart takes courage in a struggle?
-Forget these impotent hatreds that can never reach you; remember what
-you are; look boldly at the glorious mission which is imposed upon you."
-
-"What do you mean?"
-
-"Do you not understand me? Can you believe that God, who has this night
-allowed you so miraculously to escape death, has not great designs
-in store for you? Brother," he added, in a tone of authority, "the
-existence that has been restored to you is not your own, it belongs to
-your country!"
-
-A moment of silence followed this appeal, during which Don Tadeo
-appeared a prey to profound despair. At length, looking at the unknown,
-he said with bitter despondency--
-
-"What is to be done? Heaven is my witness that my only desire, my sole
-happiness, would be to see my country free. But during the twenty years
-we have been struggling we have done nothing, alas! but pass from one
-tyranny to another, each time riveting afresh the chains which bind
-us. No! Heaven itself seems to forbid our contending longer against an
-implacable destiny. You know well from experience that citizens cannot
-be improvised from slaves. Servitude destroys moral virtue, abases the
-soul, and degrades the heart. Many generations must pass away before the
-inhabitants of this unfortunate country will be fit to form a people!"
-
-"By what right do you presume to fathom the designs of Providence?"
-the unknown replied, in an imposing tone of voice. "Do you know what
-is reserved for you? Who tells you that the passing triumph of our
-oppressors is not granted by God, in His boundless wisdom, in order to
-render their future fall more terrible?"
-
-Don Tadeo, restored to himself by the manly words of his disguised
-friend, drew himself up proudly, and looked attentively at the speaker.
-
-"And who are you," he said, "whose sympathetic voice has stirred the
-most secret fibres of my heart? Who authorizes you to speak thus?
-Answer! Who are you?"
-
-"Of what importance is it who I am," the unknown remarked, calmly, "if
-I succeed in persuading you that all is far from being lost--that the
-liberty which you believe for ever destroyed has never been so near
-triumphing, and that it only perhaps requires one sublime effort to
-recover it!"
-
-"But still?" the wounded man said, persistently.
-
-"I am he who, a few minutes ago, saved your life. That ought to suffice."
-
-"Not so," Don Tadeo said, warmly, "for you conceal your features under a
-mask, and the very circumstance you named gives me a right to see them."
-
-"Perhaps it does," the unknown said, slowly removing his mask, and
-revealing to Don Tadeo, in the pale beams of the moon, a countenance
-with manly, marked features, and wearing a frank and loyal expression.
-
-"Oh! my heart did not deceive me!" Tadeo cried--"Don Gregorio Peralta!"
-
-"Yes, it is I, Don Tadeo!" the young man, he was scarcely thirty,
-replied--"and cannot comprehend the depression of the man whom the
-avengers have chosen as their chief."
-
-"How do you know? Notwithstanding our friendship, I have always
-concealed from you--"
-
-"Were you not condemned to death?" Don Gregorio interrupted. "Your
-companions elected me _King of Darkness_ in your place, that is, they
-placed in my hands an immense power, as they had done in yours, of
-which I was left the uncontrolled disposal. Death unbound the oath of
-silence imposed upon the brethren. Your name was unknown to all; I was
-as ignorant that you were the energetic chief who had made our society
-a power, as you were, my dear friend, that I was one of your soldiers.
-But, thanks be to God, you are saved, Don Tadeo! Resume your place.
-You alone, under present circumstances, are able to fill worthily the
-post which our confidence has assigned you. Become again the King of
-Darkness! But," he added, in a deep, concentrated tone, "remember that
-we are the avengers; that we ought to be without pity for ourselves
-as for others; that one feeling, and one alone, ought to live in our
-souls--the love of our country!"
-
-Then followed a short silence; the two men appeared to be reflecting
-deeply. At length Don Tadeo raised his head proudly.
-
-"Thanks, Don Gregorio!" he said, in a firm voice, and pressing his
-hand--"thanks for your rough words; they have restored me to myself. I
-will prove myself worthy of you. Don Tadeo de Leon no longer exists;
-the hired assassins of a tyrant have shot him tonight upon the Plaza
-Mayor. No one is left but the King of Darkness! the implacable leader
-of the Dark-Hearts! Woe be to them whom God shall bring across my path!
-for I will crush them without pity. We shall triumph, Don Gregorio;
-for from this day I am no longer a man, I am the avenging sword, the
-exterminating angel, fighting for our country!"
-
-While uttering these words, Don Tadeo had drawn his imposing stature up
-to its full height; his handsome, noble features became animated, and
-his eyes sparkled in accordance with his speech.
-
-"Oh," Don Gregorio exclaimed, cheerfully, "I have found my friend again!
-Thank God! thank God!"
-
-"Yes, my brother," the leader continued, "from this moment the real
-struggle between us and the tyrant begins--a struggle without pity,
-without truce, and without mercy, which can only terminate in the
-complete extinction of our enemies. Woe be to them! Woe!"
-
-"No time is to be lost; let us begone!" Don Gregorio said.
-
-"But whither am I to go?" Don Tadeo asked, with a sardonic smile. "Am I
-not legally dead in the eyes of all? My house is no longer mine."
-
-"That is true," the lieutenant of the Dark-Hearts murmured. "Well, never
-mind that! Tomorrow the news of your miraculous resurrection will be a
-thunderclap to our enemies! Their awaking will be terrible! They will
-learn with stupor that the invincible athlete, whom they thought they
-had for ever crushed beneath their feet, is up again, and ready to renew
-the contest."
-
-"And this time, I solemnly swear," Don Tadeo cried, with energy, "the
-fall of the tyrant alone shall terminate it. But you are right; we
-cannot remain longer here. Come home with me; for a time you will be
-there in safety; unless," he added, with a smile, "you prefer asking an
-asylum of Doña Rosario?"
-
-Don Tadeo, who had taken Don Gregorio's arm, stopped suddenly at this
-question, of which his friend did not suspect the terrible extent.
-A convulsive shudder darted through his frame, a cold perspiration
-inundated his face.
-
-"Oh," he exclaimed, in a tone of agony, "my God! I had forgotten!"
-
-Don Gregorio was terrified at the state he beheld him in.
-
-"In heaven's name, what is the matter?" he asked.
-
-"What is the matter!" the chief replied, in a voice choked with emotion,
-"that woman--that serpent whom we have weakly failed to crush--"
-
-"Well, what of her?"
-
-"Oh, I have but this moment recollected a horrible threat she made. Good
-heavens! good heavens! What is to be done?"
-
-"Explain yourself, my friend; you quite terrify me."
-
-"By her orders, Doña Rosario this very night, was to be carried off; and
-who knows if, furious at my escape from her assassins, that woman has
-not by this time put her to death?"
-
-"Oh, that is frightful!" Don Gregorio cried. "What is to be done?"
-
-"Oh, that woman!" the wounded man replied; "and not to be able to act,
-or to know how to thwart her horrible schemes."
-
-"Let us fly to Doña Rosario's residence!" Don Gregorio said.
-
-"Alas! you see I am wounded; I can scarcely support myself."
-
-"Well, when you can no longer walk, I will carry you," his friend said,
-resolutely.
-
-"Thanks, brother! May God help us!"
-
-And the two men, the one leaning upon the other, set off, as fast as the
-state of Don Tadeo would permit, towards the residence of the lady whom
-they were so anxious to save. But, in spite of the earnest will that
-animated him, Don Tadeo felt his strength fail him; and, notwithstanding
-all his efforts, it was with extreme difficulty he sustained himself.
-Whilst labouring on thus, the noise of horses' footsteps reached them
-from a distance. Torches gleamed up the street, and a troop of horsemen
-appeared in sight.
-
-"Oh, oh!" Don Gregorio said, stopping, and endeavouring to make out who
-those persons could be, who, in defiance of the police regulations,
-dared to be passing along the streets at this hour of the night.
-
-"Let us stop," Don Tadeo replied; "I see the glitter of uniforms. They
-are the spies of the minister of war."
-
-"By Saint Jago!" cried Don Gregorio, "it is General Bustamente himself!
-The two accomplices are going to have a little chat together."
-
-"Yes," the wounded man said, in a faltering voice; "he is going towards
-the residence of the Linda."
-
-As the horsemen were but at a short distance, the two men, fearing to be
-surprised, turned quickly into a side street, and the General and his
-suite passed by without seeing them.
-
-"Let us begone as fast as possible," Don Gregorio said; and his
-companion, aware of the urgency for prompt flight, made a desperate
-effort. They resumed their course, and had walked for about ten minutes,
-when they heard the steps of more horses coming towards them.
-
-"What can this mean?" the wounded man said, endeavouring to smile; "Are
-all the people of Santiago running about the streets tonight?"
-
-"Hum!" said Don Gregorio, "I will find out this time."
-
-All at once a female voice was heard in a lamentable tone imploring help.
-
-"Make her hold her tongue, _carajas!_" a man said, coarsely.
-
-But the sound of that voice had reached the ears of Don Tadeo and his
-friend. At that voice, which both had recognized, they were roused to
-feelings of deep interest and anger. They pressed each other's hand
-firmly; their resolution was formed--to die or to save her who called
-upon them for help.
-
-"Holloa! what is this about?" another individual said, pulling up his
-horse.
-
-Two men, standing firmly in the middle of the street, seemed determined
-to bar the passage of the horsemen, of whom there were five. One of them
-held a woman before him on his horse.
-
-"Holloa!" cried the one who had just spoken, "get out of the way, if you
-don't wish to be ridden over."
-
-"You shall not pass," a deep voice replied, "unless you release the
-woman you are bearing off."
-
-"Shan't we?" the horseman remarked with a laugh.
-
-"Try," said Don Gregorio, cocking his pistol; a movement silently
-imitated by Don Tadeo, whom he had supplied with firearms.
-
-"For the last time, stand out of the way!" the horseman shouted.
-
-"We will not!"
-
-"We will ride over you, then!" and turning towards his companions,
-"Forward!" he cried angrily.
-
-The five horsemen advanced with uplifted sabres upon the two men, who,
-firmly fixed in the middle of the street, made no effort to avoid them.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-SWORD-THRUSTS.
-
-
-In order to make the facts that follow intelligible, we must leave Don
-Tadeo and his friend in their critical position, and return to the two
-principal personages of this history, whom we have so long neglected.
-We saw in a preceding chapter the two foster brothers gaily leaving
-Valparaiso, to repair to the capital of Chili, like Bias, carrying all
-their fortune with them, but possessing over the philosophical Greek the
-immense advantage of being amply furnished with hopes and illusions, two
-words which, in this life, have but too frequently the same meaning.
-
-After a rather long ride, the young men had stopped for the night in
-a miserable _rancho_ constructed of mud and dry branches, the dismal
-skeleton of which stood out on one side of the road. The inhabitant of
-this miserable dwelling, a poor devil of a peon, whose life was passed
-in guarding a few head of lean cattle, gave our travellers a frank and
-hospitable reception. Quite delighted at having something to offer them,
-he had cheerfully shared with them his _charqui_--strips of meat, dried
-in the sun--and his _harina tostada_--roasted corn--the whole washed
-down with cups of detestable _chicha_.
-
-The Frenchmen, who had been literally dying of hunger, were glad of even
-these humble viands, however little savoury they might be, and after
-ascertaining that their horses were comfortably provided for, they lay
-down, wrapped in their ponchos, upon a heap of dry leaves, a delicious
-bed for fatigued men, and upon which they slept soundly till morning.
-
-At daybreak, our two adventurers, still accompanied by their dog Cæsar,
-who, whatever he might think, expressed no astonishment at this new kind
-of life, but trotted seriously beside them, saddled their horses, bade
-farewell to their host, to whom they gave a few reals in return for
-his hospitality, and set forward again, looking with earnest curiosity
-at every object that presented itself to their view, and surprised to
-find so little difference between the New World and the Old. The life
-they were beginning, so different from that they had hitherto led, was,
-for them, full of unexpected charms, and they felt like schoolboys in
-holiday time. Their lungs seemed to expand to inhale the fresh, sharp
-breeze of the mountains. Everything, in their eyes, wore a smiling
-aspect; in a word, they felt they lived.
-
-It is about thirty-five leagues from Valparaiso to Chili, as the people
-of the country are accustomed to call the capital of the Republic. The
-handsome, broad, and well-kept up road, which was formerly cut through
-the mountain by the Spaniards, is rather monotonous, and completely
-devoid of interest for tourists. Vegetation is rare and poor; a fine
-and almost impalpable dust arises with the least puff of wind. The few
-trees, which stand at long distances from each other, are slender,
-stunted, dried up by both wind and sun, and seem, by their wretched
-appearance, to protest against the efforts at cultivation which have
-been made on this plateau, which is rendered sterile by the strong sea
-breezes and the cold winds of the Cordilleras which sweep over it.
-
-At times may be seen, at an immense height, like a black dot in space,
-the great condor of Chili, the eagle of the Andes, or the savage vulture
-in search of prey. At long intervals pass _recuas_ of mules, headed by
-the _yegua madrina_, whose sonorous bells are heard to a great distance,
-accompanying, well or ill, the dismal chant of the muleteer, who thus
-endeavours to keep his beasts going. Or else it is a _guaso_ of the
-interior, hastening to his chacra or his hacienda, and who, proudly
-mounted upon a half wild horse, passes like a whirlwind, favouring you
-as he goes by, with the eternal "Santas tardes, caballero!"
-
-With the exception of what we have described, the road is dull, dusty,
-and solitary. There is not, as with us, a single hostelry affording
-accommodation for horse and foot; these would be useless establishments
-in a country where the stranger enters every house as if it were his
-own home. Nothing! Solitude everywhere and always; hunger, thirst, and
-fatigue must be expected and endured.
-
-But our young men perceived nothing of this. Enthusiasm supplied the
-place of all they wanted; the road appeared charming to them; the
-journey they were making, delightful! They were in America; beneath
-their feet was the soil of the New World, that privileged land, of which
-so many surprising accounts are given; of which so many people talk, and
-about which so few know anything. Having landed only a few days before,
-while still under the impressions of an endless passage, the weariness
-of which had weighed down their spirits like a mantle of lead, they
-beheld Chili through the enchanting prism of their hopes; reality did
-not yet exist for them. What we have here said may appear a paradox to
-many people; and yet, we are satisfied that all travellers of good faith
-will acknowledge the exact truth.
-
-At times travelling at a steady foot pace, at others enjoying a laugh
-and a gallop, our young men, to whom the political events of the Chilian
-Republic were very uninteresting, and who, consequently, knew nothing of
-what was going on, arrived quietly within a league of Santiago, at about
-eleven o'clock in the evening, just at the moment when the ten Chilian
-patriots were falling on the Plaza Mayor, beneath the balls of General
-Bustamente's soldiers.
-
-"Let us pull up here," Valentine said cheerfully; "it will give our
-horses time to breathe."
-
-"Pull up! what for?" Louis asked. "It is late; we shall not find a
-single hotel open."
-
-"My dear friend," Valentine replied, with a laugh, "you are still a
-Parisian to the backbone! You forget that we are in America. In that
-city, of which the numerous steeples dimly stand out on the horizon
-before us, everybody is long since asleep, and all the doors are closed."
-
-"What shall we do, then?"
-
-"Pardieu! why, we will bivouac. The night is magnificent. The heavens
-display all their jewelry; the air is warm and balmy; what better could
-we desire?"
-
-"Oh, nothing, of course!" Louis replied, laughingly.
-
-"Well, then, we have, as you see, time to chat a little."
-
-"Chat, brother! why, we have done nothing else since morning."
-
-"Pardon me, I don't agree with you. We have talked much, about all sorts
-of things, of the country in which we are, and of the manners of the
-inhabitants, little as we know about them; but we have not talked in the
-manner I mean."
-
-"Explain yourself more clearly."
-
-"Look you, brother; an idea has just struck me. We know not what
-adventures await us in that city, yonder, before us. Well! before we
-enter it, I should like to have a sort of final conversation with you."
-
-The young men took off their horses' bridles, that the animals might
-have the advantage of a few tufts of grass which sprang up here and
-there; and, stretching themselves luxuriously upon the ground, they lit
-their cigars.
-
-"We are in America," Valentine resumed; "in the country of gold, upon
-that soil where, with intelligence and courage, men of our age can in a
-few years amass princely fortunes!"
-
-"Do you know, my friend----" interrupted Louis.
-
-"Oh, perfectly!" said Valentine, cutting him short. "You are in love,
-and you are seeking the object of your love; that's understood: but that
-does not at all interfere with our projects--quite the contrary."
-
-"How is that?"
-
-"Pardieu! that's plain enough. You know, do you not, that Doña
-Rosario--that's her name, I think--"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Very well, then; you know she is rich, do you not?"
-
-"There's no doubt of that."
-
-"Ay, ay! but be it understood, not rich as with us: that is to say, some
-fifty thousand francs a year--a paltry pittance!--but rich as people are
-here--a dozen times over millionaires!"
-
-"Probably she may be," the young man said impatiently.
-
-"That's capital! You must understand, then, that when we have found her,
-for we _shall_ find her, and that soon, you can only demand her hand by
-producing a fortune equal to her own."
-
-"The devil! I never thought of that," said the young man.
-
-"I know you did not; you are in love; and, like all other men afflicted
-with that disease, you think of nothing but the person you love.
-Fortunately, however, I am with you, to think for both; and whenever you
-have spoken to me of love, I have replied by reminding you of fortune."
-
-"That is true. But how is fortune to be made so promptly?"
-
-"Ah! ah! you have come to that question at last," Valentine said,
-laughing.
-
-"I know no profession," Louis continued, following his own idea.
-
-"Nor I either. But let not that alarm you; people succeed best in things
-they don't understand."
-
-"What's to be done?"
-
-"I will think of it; so set your mind at rest. But you must be well
-convinced of one thing, and that is, that we have set foot in a land
-where the ideas are quite different from those of the country we have
-left; where the manners and customs are diametrically opposite."
-
-"You mean to say--"
-
-"I mean to say that we must forget all we have learnt, in order that
-we may remember but one thing--our desire quickly to make a colossal
-fortune."
-
-"By honourable means?"
-
-"I am acquainted with no other," Valentine replied, seriously. "And
-remember, brother, that in the country in which we at present are, the
-point of honour is not at all the same as in France, and many things
-which with us would appear false coin are here deemed good and passable.
-On this point a word to the wise! You understand me, don't you?"
-
-"Nearly, I think."
-
-"Very well! Imagine we are in an enemy's country, and must act
-accordingly."
-
-"But----"
-
-"Do you wish to marry the woman you love:"
-
-"Can you ask me such a question?"
-
-"Allow me to act, then, as I see best! But, above all, when chance
-throws a good opportunity in our way, let us be careful not to miss it."
-
-"Act just as you please."
-
-"Well, that is all I had to say to you;" and throwing away the remains
-of his cigar, he rose from his recumbent position.
-
-They were soon again in the saddle, and, at a foot's pace, resumed their
-way towards the city, chatting as they went.
-
-Midnight was striking by the clock of the Cabildo at the moment when
-they entered Santiago by the Canada. The streets were deserted and
-silent.
-
-"Everybody is asleep," said Louis.
-
-"So it seems," Valentine replied. "Let us look out, notwithstanding. If
-we find no door open, we can then but compound for a night's bivouac, as
-I suggested."
-
-At this moment two pistol shots were heard, mingled with the gallop of
-horses.
-
-"What can that be?" said Louis. "Assassination is going on here!"
-
-"Forward! cordieu!" replied Valentine.
-
-They clapped spurs to their horses, and galloped at full speed in the
-direction whence the sound proceeded. They soon reached a narrow street,
-in the middle of which two men on foot were bravely contending with five
-on horseback.
-
-"Have at the horsemen!" Valentine shouted; "help the weaker party!"
-
-"Be of good heart, gentlemen!" said Louis; "help is at hand!"
-
-And timely help it was for Don Gregorio and his friend. A minute later,
-and they must have succumbed. The providential arrival of the Frenchmen
-quickly changed the appearance of the fight. Two horsemen fell dead from
-pistol shots fired by the young men; while a third, knocked down by Don
-Gregorio, was silently strangled by Cæsar. The other two thought it
-high time to decamp, leaving their fair prisoner behind them. She had
-fainted; and Don Tadeo, leaning against the wall of a house, was upon
-the point of following her example. Valentine, with the presence of mind
-acquired in his old profession of a Spahi, secured the horses of the
-bandits killed in the skirmish.
-
-"Quick, gentlemen! to the saddle!" Valentine said to the Chilians.
-
-Louis had already dismounted, and was attending to the young lady.
-
-"Do not leave us," Don Gregorio remarked; "we are surrounded by enemies."
-
-"Fear nothing!" said Valentine, "we are quite at your service."
-
-"Many thanks!--A little assistance, if you please, to place my friend,
-who is wounded, on horseback."
-
-Once in the saddle, Don Tadeo declared he felt sufficiently strong to
-keep his seat without help. Don Gregorio placed the still inanimate
-young lady before him.
-
-"Now, gentlemen," he said, "nothing remains for me but to thank you most
-cordially, if your business will not allow you to remain longer with us."
-
-"I beg to repeat, caballeros, that we are at your service."
-
-"We have no pressing demand upon our time; we will not leave you till we
-are assured you are in safety," Louis said, with animation.
-
-"Follow me, then," said Don Gregorio, with a bow; "and do not spare the
-horses; it is an affair of life and death."
-
-And the four horsemen set off as fast as their horses could bear them.
-
-"Eh! eh!" said Valentine, in an undertone to his foster brother. "Here
-is an adventure that promises something! We are losing no time at
-Santiago! What think you?"
-
-"We shall see!" Louis replied, in a more thoughtful tone.
-
-No light had gleamed out, no window had been opened, during the combat.
-The streets remained silent and gloomy; the city seemed abandoned.
-Nothing was to be heard but the clatter of the horses' feet upon the
-rough pavement of the streets through which they galloped. The cathedral
-clock struck two as they passed across the Plaza Mayor. Don Tadeo could
-not repress a sigh of relief when glancing at the spot where on, only a
-few hours before, he had so miraculously escaped death.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-GENERAL BUSTAMENTE.
-
-
-Don Tadeo was right, when, on seeing General Bustamente pass, he said he
-was on his way to visit his mistress. It was, in fact, to the residence
-of the Linda the General was going. On arriving at the gate, one of his
-men dismounted, and knocked. But no one answered; and at a sign from
-the General, the soldier knocked louder. But still all remained silent;
-there was no movement within. He began to feel uneasy. This silence was
-the more extraordinary from the General's visit having been announced,
-and he was, consequently, expected. "Oh! oh!" he said, "What is going on
-here? Knock again, Diego, and knock in a way to make yourself heard!"
-
-The soldier knocked with all his strength, but still uselessly. Don
-Pancho's brow contracted; he began to fancy some misfortune must have
-occurred.
-
-"Break open the door!" he cried.
-
-The order was instantly obeyed; and the General, followed by his escort,
-entered the house. In the Patio all dismounted.
-
-"Be prudent," said the General in a low voice to the corporal who
-commanded the escort; "place sentinels everywhere, and keep a sharp
-look-out whilst I search the house."
-
-After giving these orders, the General took his pistols from his
-holsters, and, followed by some of his lancers, entered the house;
-but everywhere the silence of death prevailed. After passing through
-several apartments, he arrived at a door, which, being a little ajar,
-allowed a stream of light to pass. From the other side of this door
-proceeded something like stifled groans. With a kick of his foot, one
-of the lancers dashed open the door; the General entered, and a strange
-spectacle presented itself to his astonished eyes! Doña Maria, tightly
-bound, and gagged, was fastened to the foot of a damask bed, saturated
-with blood. The furniture was broken and disordered, whilst two dead
-bodies, lying in a pool of blood, made it evident that the room had been
-the scene of a desperate conflict.
-
-The general ordered the dead bodies to be removed, and then desired to
-be left alone with the lady. As soon as the lancers had departed he shut
-the door, and approaching the Linda, he hastened to release her from her
-bonds. She was senseless.
-
-On turning round to place the pistols he had retained in his hands on
-the table, he drew back with astonishment, and almost with terror, as
-he perceived the dagger standing erect in the middle of it. But this
-instinctive feeling lasted only a moment. He went quickly up to the
-table, seized the dagger, which he carefully drew out, and eagerly took
-up the paper it had pinned down.
-
-"_The tyrant Don Pancho Bustamente is cited at the expiration of
-ninety-three days!
-
- _"THE DARK-HEARTS."_
-
-he read in a loud, harsh tone, and then crushed the paper violently in
-his hand. "Sangre de Dios! Will these demons always make a mock of me?
-Oh! they know that I show no mercy, and that those who fall into my
-hands----"
-
-"Escape!" said a hollow voice, which made him start involuntarily.
-
-He turned sharply round, and beheld the Linda, with her vicious eye
-fixed upon him with a demoniacal expression. He sprang towards her.
-
-"Thank God!" he cried warmly, "you are again restored to your senses.
-Are you sufficiently recovered to explain the scene that has taken place
-here?"
-
-"A terrible scene, Don Pancho!" she replied, in a tremulous voice; "a
-scene, the bare remembrance of which still freezes me with terror."
-
-"Are you strong enough to describe it to me?"
-
-"I hope so," she replied. "Listen to me attentively, Don Pancho, for
-what I have to tell concerns you, perhaps, more than me."
-
-"You mean this insolent summons, I suppose?" he remarked, showing it.
-
-She glanced over it, and replied--
-
-"I did not even know that such a paper had been addressed to you. But
-listen to me attentively."
-
-"In the first place, have the goodness to explain to me what you just
-now said."
-
-"Everything in its turn, General; I will not fail to explain everything,
-for the vengeance I thirst for must be complete."
-
-"Oh!" he said, a flash of hatred gleaming from his eye, "set your heart
-at ease on that head,--whilst avenging myself, I will avenge you."
-
-The Linda related to the General what had passed between her and Don
-Tadeo in the fullest details--how the Dark-Hearts had snatched him from
-her hands, and the threats they had addressed to her on leaving her.
-But, with that talent which all women possess, of making themselves
-appear innocent in everything, she represented as a miraculous piece of
-awkwardness on the part of the soldiers charged to shoot him, the fact
-of Don Tadeo being alive after his execution. She said that, attracted
-by the hope of avenging himself upon her, whom he suspected of being no
-stranger to his condemnation, he had introduced himself unseen into her
-house, where by a strange chance she happened to be alone, having that
-evening permitted her servants to be present at a _romeria_ (a fête),
-from which they were not to return before three o'clock.
-
-The General had not for an instant the idea of doubting the veracity of
-his mistress. The situation in which he had found her,--the incredible
-news of the resurrection of his most implacable enemy, altogether so
-confused his thoughts, that suspicion had no time to enter his mind.
-He strode about the room with hasty steps, revolving in his head the
-most extravagant projects for seizing Don Tadeo, and, above all, for
-annihilating the Dark-Hearts,--those never-to-be-caught Proteuses, who
-so incessantly crossed his path, thwarted all his plans, and always
-escaped him. He plainly saw what additional strength the escape of Don
-Tadeo would give to the patriots, and how much it would complicate his
-political embarrassments, by placing at their head a resolute man who
-could have no longer any considerations to preserve, but would wage war
-to the knife with him. His perplexity was extreme; he instinctively
-felt that the ground beneath him was mined, that he was walking over
-a volcano, but he had no power to denounce to public opprobrium the
-enemies who conspired his ruin. The recital made by his mistress had
-produced the effect of a thunderclap upon him; he knew not what measures
-to employ in order to counteract the numerous plots in action against
-him on all sides, and simultaneously. The Linda did not take her eyes
-off him for a moment, but watched upon his countenance the various
-feelings aroused by what she told him.
-
-We will, in a few words, introduce to the reader this personage, who
-will play so important a part in the course of the following history.[1]
-General Don Pancho Bustamente, who has left in Chili a reputation for
-cruelty so terrible that he is generally called _El Verdugo_, or the
-executioner, was a man of from thirty-five to thirty-six years of age,
-although he looked near fifty, a little above the middle height, well
-made, and of good carriage, announcing altogether great corporeal
-strength. His features were tolerably regular, but his prominent
-forehead, his grey eyes deeply set beneath the brows, and close to his
-hook nose, his large mouth and high cheek bones, gave him something of
-a resemblance to a bird of prey. His chin was square, an indication
-of obstinacy; his hair and moustache, beginning to be streaked with
-grey, were trained and cut in military fashion. He wore the magnificent
-uniform, covered at every seam with gold embroidery, of a general
-officer.
-
-Don Bustamente was the son of his own works, which was in his favour.
-At first a simple soldier, he had, by exemplary conduct and more than
-common talents, raised himself, step by step, to the highest rank of the
-army, and had in the last instance been named minister-at-war. Then the
-jealousy which had been silent whilst he was confounded with the crowd,
-was unchained against him. The General, instead of despising calumnies
-which might have died out of themselves, gave them some degree of
-foundation, by inaugurating a system of severity and cruelty. Devoured
-by an ambition which nothing could satisfy, all means were deemed good
-by him for the attainment of an object he secretly aimed at, which was
-the overthrow of the republic and government of Chili, and the formation
-of Bolivia and Araucania into one state, of which he would cause
-himself to be proclaimed Protector--an object which, besides the almost
-insurmountable difficulties it presented, ever appeared--owing to the
-universal hatred which the General had aroused against himself--to slip
-further from his grasp each time he thought he was about grasping it.
-
-At the moment we bring him on the scene, he found himself in one of the
-most critical circumstances of his political career. He had in vain
-shot the patriots _en masse_--conspiracies, as always happens in such
-cases, succeeded each other without interruption, and the system of
-terror which he had inaugurated, far from intimidating the population,
-appeared, on the contrary, to urge them on to revolt. Secret societies
-were formed; and one of these, the most powerful and the most terrible,
-that of the Dark-Hearts, enveloped him in invisible nets in which he
-struggled in vain. He foresaw that if he did not hasten on the _coup
-d'état_ he meditated, he should be lost beyond redemption. After a
-rather long silence, the General placed himself by the side of the Linda.
-
-"We will be avenged!" he said, in a deep tone; "be but patient."
-
-"Oh!" she replied, bitterly, "my vengeance has commenced!"
-
-"What do you mean by that?"
-
-"I have caused Doña Rosario del Valle, the woman Don Tadeo de Leon loves
-so passionately, to be carried off."
-
-"You have _done_ that?" said the General.
-
-"Yes, and in ten minutes she will be here."
-
-"Oh! oh!" he exclaimed; "and do you mean to keep her with you?"
-
-"With me!" she cried; "No, I thank you, General. I hear that the
-Pehuenches are very fond of white women; I will make them a present of
-her."
-
-"Oh!" Don Pancho muttered, "women will be always our masters! they alone
-know how to revenge themselves! But," he added aloud, "have you no fear
-lest the man to whom you have confided this mission should betray you?"
-
-She smiled with terrible irony,
-
-"No," she said; "that man hates Don Tadeo more than I do, if that be
-possible; he is working out his own vengeance."
-
-At the same instant steps were heard in the chamber preceding the room.
-
-"You will see, General--here is my emissary. Come in!" the Linda cried.
-
-A man appeared; his face was pale and haggard; and his clothes, torn and
-disordered, were stained in various places with blood.
-
-"Well!" she exclaimed, in a tone of intense anxiety.
-
-"All has failed," answered the man, breathless with haste and terror.
-
-"What!" the Linda shouted, with a cry like that of a wild beast.
-
-"There were five of us," the man continued, quite unmoved, "and we
-carried off the _señorita_. All went on well till within a short
-distance from this house, when we were attacked by four demons, who came
-I know not whence."
-
-"And you did not defend yourselves, miserable cowards!" interrupted the
-General violently.
-
-The bandit gave him a cold look, and continued impassively--
-
-"Three of our number are dead, and the leader and myself wounded."
-
-"And the girl?" the Linda asked passionately.
-
-"The girl was recaptured by our opponents. The Englishman has sent me to
-you to learn if you still wish him to carry off Doña Rosario?"
-
-"Would he attempt it again?"
-
-"Yes. And this time, he says, he is certain to succeed if the conditions
-are the same."
-
-A smile of contempt played round the lips of the courtezan.
-
-"Repeat to him this," she replied; "not only shall he receive the
-hundred ounces if he succeeds, but, still further, he shall have a
-hundred more; and that he may be in no doubt of my promise," she added,
-rising and taking from a drawer a rather heavy bag which she handed to
-the bandit, "give him this; there is the half of the sum, but bid him
-despatch!"
-
-The man bowed.
-
-"As to you, Juanito," she continued, "as soon as you have acquitted
-yourself of this mission, return, for I shall, perhaps, want you here.
-Begone!"
-
-The bandit disappeared instantly.
-
-"Who is that man?" the General asked.
-
-"A poor devil whom I saved some years ago from certain death. He is
-devoted to me, body and soul."
-
-"Hum!" said the general, "he has rather too cunning an eye not to be a
-rogue."
-
-The Linda shrugged her shoulders.
-
-"You are mistrustful of everybody," she said.
-
-"That is the way not to be deceived."
-
-"Or to be deceived the more easily."
-
-"Perhaps so. Well, you see this abduction, so admirably planned, and the
-success of which was certain, has failed."
-
-"I can only repeat what you yourself said to me just now."
-
-"What is that?"
-
-"Patience! But, pray, what are your present plans?" The General rose.
-
-"Whilst you are carrying on against our enemies," he said, in a low,
-stern tone, "a guerilla warfare of ambuscades and treacheries, I, on my
-part, will wage an open war against them--a war in the face of the sun,
-but as merciless as yours. Their blood shall flow in streams over all
-the territories of the Republic. The Dark-Hearts have summoned me in
-ninety-three days. Well, I take up the gauntlet they have thrown to me."
-
-"That is well!" the Linda replied. "And now let us so arrange our plans
-that they may not fail like their predecessors. We must come to an end
-with these miserable plotters, and in doing so, take a revenge that will
-make an impression on others."
-
-"It shall be a vengeance! I will stake my head on the game. Oh," he
-added, "I hold them! I have found the means I sought to make them all
-fall into my hands; let them sleep for a while in deceitful security,
-but their awakening shall be terrible!"
-
-And, having saluted the Linda with the greatest courtesy, the General
-retired.
-
-"I leave you a few soldiers to watch over your safety till the return of
-your servants," he said, as he went out.
-
-"Thank you, thank you!" she replied, with a bland smile.
-
-The Linda, when left alone, instead of seeking the repose so necessary
-after the excitement of the night, remained plunged in deep thought.
-At sunrise she was still in the same place, in the same position. She
-was still reflecting, but her features became animated; a sinister
-smile curled her pale lips; and her eyes, though apparently fixed upon
-vacancy, emitted portentous flashes. Suddenly she sprang up, and passing
-her hand rapidly over her brow, as if to efface its wrinkles, she cried,
-in a tone of triumph--
-
-"And I, too, will succeed!"
-
-
-[1] Reasons of the highest consideration oblige us to change the names
-and the portraits of the personages of this history, as the majority
-still exist. But we vouch for the correctness of the facts we relate.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-THE SPY.
-
-
-When the young lady was delivered, the four men set off as fast as they
-could go, with regard to her ease. In ten minutes they were out of the
-city, and with the change of the road their speed was increased. The
-route they took was that which leads to Talca.
-
-"Eh, eh!" Valentine said, laughing, to his foster brother; "we seem to
-be playing at prisoners' bars. We enter the city by one gate, to leave
-it immediately by another. We shall not have an opportunity of seeing
-the capital of Chili this time."
-
-With the exception of these few words, to which Louis only replied by a
-careless shrug of the shoulders, no other conversation took place during
-the hour which their rapid journey lasted. By the pale light of the moon
-the trees on each side of the road seemed to defile like a legion of
-melancholy phantoms. Ere long the white walls of a _chacra_ (large farm)
-stood out upon the horizon.
-
-"Here we are," said Don Gregorio, pointing with his finger.
-
-They reached the house in a few minutes. The gate was open, but a
-man was standing evidently on the watch. The fugitives dashed like a
-hurricane into the _patio_, and the gates were immediately closed behind
-them.
-
-"What has happened, Tio Pepito?" Don Gregorio asked, before he was quite
-off his horse, of the man who appeared to have expected him.
-
-"Nothing, _mi amo_" (my master), "nothing of consequence," replied Tio
-Pepito, a little thick-set man, with a round face, lit up by two grey
-eyes, sparkling with cunning.
-
-"Have not the persons I expected arrived?"
-
-"Pardon me, _mi amo_. They have been at the _chacra_ more than an
-hour. They say they must begone immediately; they are waiting for you
-impatiently."
-
-"That's well. Announce my arrival to them, and tell them I shall be at
-their service in two or three minutes."
-
-The mayoral, for this man was the major-domo of the _chacra_, entered
-the house without reply. Don Tadeo also, who seemed to know perfectly
-well where he was, disappeared, bearing the young girl in his arms. The
-two Frenchmen were left alone with the chacrero, who advanced towards
-them.
-
-"Now that you are, as we suppose, for the present at least, in safety,
-sir," said Valentine, "we have only to take our leave of you."
-
-"Not so!" Don Gregorio exclaimed; "it must not be so. _Diable_! as you
-Frenchmen say," he added, smiling; "chance does not so often procure
-us such friends as you, to allow us to part with you thus when we have
-met you. You will remain here, if you please. Our acquaintance must not
-terminate so."
-
-"If our continuing here can be of any service to you," Louis replied,
-courteously, "we are at your command."
-
-"Thank you," he said, in a slightly agitated voice, and pressing their
-hands warmly; "I shall never forget that I owe to you the lives of
-myself and my friend. In what way can I be of service to you?"
-
-"Well," Valentine said, laughing, "in every way, and no way, as it may
-happen, caballero."
-
-"Explain yourself," Don Gregorio replied.
-
-"_Dame!_ it is clear enough; we are strangers in this country."
-
-"When did you arrive?" the Chilian said, examining them attentively.
-
-"Faith! very recently. You are the first persons we have spoken to."
-
-"That is well," Gregorio said, slowly. "I told you that I was at your
-service, did I not?"
-
-"Yes, and we sincerely thank you; although we hope never to have
-occasion to remind you of this obliging offer."
-
-"I perfectly appreciate your delicacy; but a service like the one you
-have rendered me and my friend is an eternal bond. Take no heed of your
-future fortune, it is made."
-
-"Pardon me, pardon me!" said Valentine, earnestly; "we do not understand
-one another at all; you mistake us. We are not men who expect to be paid
-for having acted as our hearts dictated. You owe us nothing."
-
-"I do not propose or pretend to pay you, gentlemen. I only wish, in
-order to attach you to me, to propose to you to share my good or evil
-fortune; in a word, I offer myself to you as a brother."
-
-"In that case we at once accede," said Louis, "and will endeavour to
-prove ourselves worthy of such an offer."
-
-"I have no doubt you will. Only I beg you not to be misled by my words;
-the life I am leading at present is full of perils."
-
-"I can suppose that," said Valentine, with a laugh. "The scene at which
-we have been present, and the _denoûment_ of which we perhaps hastened,
-makes it pretty evident that your existence is not of the most peaceful
-nature."
-
-"What you have as yet seen is nothing. Do you know nobody in this
-country?"
-
-"Nobody."
-
-"Your political opinions, then, are unformed?"
-
-"As regards Chili, completely."
-
-"Bravo!" Don Gregorio exclaimed, with delight; "if we agree on that
-point our compact will be for life and death."
-
-"We do agree," said Valentine, laughing; "and if you conspire--"
-
-"Well?" the Chilian asked, fixing an inquiring look upon him.
-
-"Why, we will conspire, too, pardieu! That is agreed."
-
-The three men exchanged a cordial pressure of the hand, and then Don
-Gregorio called the major-domo to conduct them to the chamber which was
-prepared for them.
-
-"Good night! or rather good morning!" he said, on quitting them.
-
-"Come!" said Valentine, rubbing his hands, "matters are going on well.
-We shall not want for amusement here."
-
-"Hum!" Louis replied, with a tone of something like uneasiness;
-"conspire!"
-
-"Well, and what better?" said Valentine. "Does that frighten you?
-Remember, my friend, that the best fishing is in troubled waters."
-
-"In that case," Louis remarked, taking up the gay humour of his
-companion, "if my presentiments are just, ours will be miraculous."
-
-"I expect so, firmly," said Valentine, bidding good night to the
-major-domo, who retired, after bowing respectfully.
-
-The _cuarto_ (chamber) in which the young men found themselves, was
-whitewashed, and entirely destitute of furniture, with the exception of
-two oak frames furnished with dressed hides, which served as beds, a
-massive table with twisted feet, and four seats covered with leather.
-In a corner of the room burned a little green wax light before a
-badly-engraved print supposed to represent the Virgin.
-
-"Eh!" said Louis, casting a glance around him, "our friends, the
-Chilians, do not seem to consult comfort much."
-
-"Bah!" Valentine replied, "we have all that we require. A man can sleep
-soundly anywhere when he is fatigued. This chamber is better than the
-bivouac we were threatened with."
-
-"You are right. Let us take a little rest then, for we don't know what
-tomorrow has in reserve for us."
-
-In a quarter of an hour they were both fast asleep. At the moment the
-Frenchmen went into the house with the major-domo, Don Tadeo came out by
-another door.
-
-"Well?" Don Gregorio asked, anxiously.
-
-"She is asleep. Her terror is abated," Don Tadeo replied. "The joy she
-experienced at seeing me, whom she believed dead, brought about a very
-salutary crisis."
-
-"I am glad to hear it! In that quarter, then, we may be at ease?"
-
-"Completely."
-
-"Do you feel yourself strong enough to be present at an important
-interview?"
-
-"Is it necessary that I should be present?"
-
-"I think it quite right that you should hear the communications that one
-of my emissaries is about to make me."
-
-"It is very imprudent of you," said Don Tadeo, "to receive such a man in
-your own house!"
-
-"Oh! do not alarm yourself! I have known him for a long time. Besides,
-he is not aware whose house he is in; he was brought hither blinded, by
-two of our brethren. In addition to which, we shall be masked."
-
-"Well! since you desire it, I am at your commands."
-
-The two friends, after having covered their faces with black velvet
-masks, entered the apartment in which were the persons who waited for
-them. This apartment, which served as a dining room, was very large, and
-furnished with a long table; it was faintly illumined by two sconces,
-in which burned small candles of yellow tallow, yielding so doubtful a
-light that objects could be seen but indistinctly. Three men, wrapped
-in variegated ponchos, and with broad-brimmed hats pulled down over
-their eyes, were carelessly smoking their slender papelitos, whilst
-warming themselves round a copper _brasero,_ placed in the middle of the
-apartment, and in which some olive-stones were slowly burning. At the
-entrance of the leaders of the Dark-Hearts, these men rose.
-
-"Why," asked Don Tadeo, who at the first glance recognized the emissary,
-"why did you not wait, Don Pedro, for the meeting tomorrow, at the
-_Quinta Verde,_ to communicate to the council the revelations you have
-to make?"
-
-The man thus named as Don Pedro bowed respectfully. He was an individual
-of about thirty-five years of age. He was tall, and his countenance, as
-sharp as the blade of a knife, wore a cunning, roguish expression.
-
-"What I have to state only indirectly concerns the Dark-Hearts," he said.
-
-"Then, of what importance is it to us?" Don Gregorio interrupted him.
-
-"But it greatly concerns the leaders, particularly the King of Darkness."
-
-"Explain yourself then, for he is before you," Don Tadeo remarked,
-taking a step forward.
-
-Pedro darted a look at him which seemed to endeavour to penetrate
-through the tissue of his mask.
-
-"What I have to say will be brief," he replied,--"I leave to you the
-care of judging of its importance. General Don Bustamente will be
-present at the meeting tomorrow."
-
-"Are you sure of that?" the two conspirators exclaimed with a degree of
-astonishment that denoted incredulity.
-
-"It was I who persuaded him to do so."
-
-"You?"
-
-"Yes, I."
-
-"Are you ignorant, then," Don Tadeo exclaimed with great warmth, "in
-what manner we punish traitors?"
-
-"I am no traitor; on the contrary, I deliver into your hands your most
-implacable enemy."
-
-Don Tadeo replied only by a suspicious glance.
-
-"The General then is ignorant?"
-
-"Of everything," said Don Pedro.
-
-"With what purpose, then, does he wish to introduce himself among us?"
-
-"Can you not guess? For that of obtaining your secret."
-
-"But he risks his life."
-
-"Do you forget that every adept must be introduced by a sponsor, who
-alone knows him? No one sees his face. Well, _I_ introduce him," he
-added, with a smile of strange significance.
-
-"That is true. But if he should suspect you of treachery?"
-
-"I must undergo the consequences; but he will not suspect me."
-
-"Why not?" Don Gregorio asked.
-
-"Because," the spy replied, with a cynical smile, "for ten years the
-General has employed me, and during those ten years he has had only
-cause to praise me for the services I have rendered him."
-
-A momentary silence followed.
-
-"Here!" said Don Gregorio, after a long pause, "this time it is not ten
-ounces, but twenty, that you have earned. Continue to be faithful to us."
-
-And he placed a heavy purse in his hands. The spy seized it with a
-gesture of avidity, and concealed it quickly under his poncho.
-
-"You shall have no reproach to make me," he replied, with a bow.
-
-"I hope we shall not," said Don Tadeo, with difficulty repressing an
-expression of disgust. "Only remember, we should be merciless."
-
-"I know it."
-
-"In that case, farewell."
-
-"Farewell till tomorrow."
-
-The men who had brought him, and who during the conversation had
-remained motionless, at a sign from Don Gregorio approached the spy,
-bandaged his eyes again, and led him away.
-
-"Is that fellow a traitor?" asked Don Gregorio, as he listened to the
-retreating steps of the horses.
-
-"It is our duty to suppose him one," the King of Darkness replied,
-gravely.
-
-The two friends, instead of seeking the repose which must have been
-so necessary to them, talked together for a long time, in order to
-arrange all the measures of safety which were required by the importance
-of the scene about to take place on the morrow at the meeting of the
-conspirators. In the meantime Don Pedro had been quickly led back
-to Santiago. On arriving at one of the gates, his guides left him,
-disappearing in opposite directions. As soon as he was alone, he removed
-the handkerchief from his eyes.
-
-"Hum!" he said, with a sinister smile, as he tossed up in his right hand
-the purse Don Gregorio had given him. "Twenty ounces make a purse of
-gold. Now let us see if General Bustamente is as liberal as his enemies.
-By the Virgin! the news I carry him are worth something to him! Let us
-try to get the best price for them."
-
-After having cast his eyes around to see if the coast was clear, he set
-off at a sharp trot towards the government palace, muttering to himself--
-
-"Bah! times are hard. If a man did not manoeuvre a little, he would find
-no means of bringing up his family honestly."
-
-This reflection, of a rather dubious morality, was accompanied by a
-grimace, the expression of which would have given Don Tadeo cause for
-suspicion if he had seen it.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-LOVE.
-
-
-On the morrow the two Frenchmen were awakened by the rays of the sun.
-The day promised to be a brilliant one, for there was not a cloud in
-the heavens. A light vapour, full of penetrating odours, arose slowly
-from the earth, drawn up by the beams of the sun, whose warm influence
-increased every minute. The morning breeze refreshed the air, and
-invited them to inhale it. The young men, perfectly recovered from their
-fatigue, sprang cheerfully from their humble beds and dressed themselves
-in haste.
-
-The chacra, of which they had only a glimpse the night before by
-moonlight, was an immense farm, consisting of extensive buildings,
-and surrounded by fields in full cultivation. The greatest animation
-prevailed everywhere. Peons, mounted on half wild horses, were driving
-out the cattle to the artificial meadows, whilst others were running
-about after the horses they were getting together, in order to lead
-them to the drinking place. In the patio the major-domo was overlooking
-the women and girls engaged in milking. In short, this residence, which
-had appeared to them so silent and dismal the night before, assumed
-by daylight an appearance of life and cheerfulness delightful to
-contemplate.
-
-The cries of the peons mingled with the lowing of the cattle, the
-barking of the dogs, and the crowing of the cocks, and formed that
-melodious concert which is only to be heard on a farm, and which always
-rejoices the heart.
-
-It is a justice that we willingly render here to the Chilian republic
-when we say that it alone of the southern states of America appears
-to understand that the wealth of a country consists not in the number
-of its mines, but in the encouragement given to cultivation; and that
-this country, while possessing rich mines of gold, silver, and precious
-stones, only places their produce in the second rank, whilst it reserves
-its principal solicitude for agriculture. Chili is as yet young as a
-nation. There manufactures and the arts are in their infancy; but the
-farms are numerous, the fields well cultivated, and soon this country
-will be called upon, there is no doubt, through its system of labour,
-to become the entrepôt of the other American powers, which it already
-provides in a great measure with corn and wine, from Cape Horn to
-California.
-
-Behind the chacra extended a well-kept up garden, in which oranges,
-pomegranates, and citrons, planted in the open ground, grew amidst
-limes, apples, plums, and all the other fruits of Europe. Louis was
-agreeably surprised at the aspect of this garden, with its numerous
-alleys, in which a thousand birds of brilliant colours warbled gaily
-under the foliage of the tufted thickets of jasmine and honeysuckle.
-Whilst Valentine went, followed by Cæsar, to look at the operations of
-the peons and smoke his cigar in the patio, Louis felt himself led by
-his dreamy spirit to indulge in poetical reveries, and to seek a few
-minutes' solitude in the Eden which lay before him. Urged by an unknown
-power, intoxicated by the sweet odours which embalmed the atmosphere, he
-glided into the garden, casting around him a vaguely questioning look.
-
-The young man went dreaming along the garden walks, mechanically pulling
-to pieces with his fingers a rose which he had gathered. He had walked
-thus for nearly an hour, when he was roused by a slight noise among
-the leaves, at a short distance from him. He instinctively raised his
-head, just in time to catch a glimpse of a light white robe which was
-disappearing among the trees, but too late to completely distinguish the
-person who wore it, and who appeared to trip over the dewy grass like
-a white phantom. At the sight of this mysterious apparition the young
-man felt his heart bound in his breast; he stopped trembling, and the
-emotion he felt was so powerful, that he was forced to lean against a
-tree for support.
-
-"What can be the matter with me?" he murmured to himself, as he wiped
-the cold perspiration from his brow. "I am mad!" he continued, with a
-forced smile. "I think I see her everywhere. Heavens! I love her so
-deeply that, in spite of myself, my imagination brings her before me
-unceasingly. That girl, of whom I just caught a glimpse, is probably the
-same we last night so miraculously saved. Poor child! Fortunately she
-did not see me; I should have frightened her. Better avoid her by going
-out of the garden; in my present state I should alarm her."
-
-And, as always happens in such cases, he set off, on the contrary, in
-the very footsteps of her he had only caught a glimpse of, but whom, by
-one of the instinctive feelings of sympathy which come from God, and
-which science can never explain, he had nevertheless recognized.
-
-The young girl, reclining in the depths of an arbour, like a hummingbird
-in its bed of muss, with a pale face, and her eyes cast down to the
-earth, was listening, pensive and sad, to the joyous melodies which the
-birds chanted in her absent ear. All at once, a slight noise made her
-start and raise her head. The Count was before her! She uttered a faint
-cry, and endeavoured to fly.
-
-"Don Louis!" she exclaimed.
-
-She had recognized him. The young man sank on his knees at the entrance
-of the arbour.
-
-"Oh!" he cried, in a voice trembling with emotion, and with an accent of
-the most earnest entreaty, "for pity's sake, remain, madam!"
-
-"Don Louis!" she repeated, already recovered, and feigning the most
-perfect indifference. Young girls, even the purest, possess in a high
-degree the talent of concealing their feelings, and of deceiving persons
-with regard to the emotions they really experience.
-
-"Yes, it is I, madam," he continued, with an accent of the most
-respectful passion; "I, who, to see you again, have abandoned
-everything!"
-
-The young lady displayed some slight surprise.
-
-"For Heaven's sake!" he resumed, "allow me once more, if but for an
-instant, to contemplate your adored features! Oh!" he added, with a look
-of deep affection, "my heart had told me you were here, before my eyes
-had perceived you."
-
-"Caballero," she said, in a tremulous voice, "I do not understand you."
-
-"Oh, fear nothing from me, madam!" he interrupted her vehemently; "my
-respect for you is as profound as----
-
-"Pray, caballero," she said, earnestly, "rise; if anyone should surprise
-you thus!"
-
-"Madam," he replied, "the avowal I have to make to you, requires me to
-remain in the position of a suppliant!"
-
-"Oh, caballero!"
-
-"I love you, madam!" he said, in broken accents; "I know not what gives
-me the boldness to pronounce a word which in France I did not venture
-to breathe in your ear, and which I have never allowed to pass from my
-heart to my lips. But even if you banished me from your presence for
-ever, once again I must tell you that I love you, madam; and if you do
-not return my love, I shall die!"
-
-The maiden looked at him for a moment with a melancholy air; a tear
-trembled on her long eyelashes; she took a step towards him, and holding
-out her hand, upon which he imprinted a burning kiss, said softly,--
-
-"Rise."
-
-The Count obeyed. Doña Rosario sunk back upon the bench behind her,
-and appeared plunged in profound and painful meditation. Both remained
-silent, Louis watching her with intense anxiety, and a throbbing heart.
-At length she raised her head, and exhibited a countenance bathed in
-tears.
-
-"Caballero," she said in a melancholy tone, "if God has permitted us to
-meet once again, it is because, in His divine goodness, He has judged
-that a decisive explanation should take place between us."
-
-The young man appeared anxious to speak.
-
-"Do not interrupt me," she continued, "or I shall not have the courage
-to finish what I have to say to you. You love me, Louis; your presence
-here is an incontestable proof of it--you love me; and yet how many
-times, during my short residence in France, have you cursed me in
-secret, accusing me of coquetry, or, at least, of unaccountable levity!"
-
-"Madam!"
-
-"Oh!" she said, with a faint smile, "since you have avowed your love
-for me, I will be frank with you, Louis; and although it be my duty to
-deprive you of all future hope, I am at least anxious to justify the
-past, and leave you a remembrance of me that nothing can tarnish!"
-
-"Oh, madam! why do you repeat such things to me?"
-
-"Why?" she said, with a look full of melancholy, and in a voice
-harmonious as the sigh of an Æolian harp, "because I have faith in that
-love, so warm, so young, so true; which neither daily indignities nor
-vast distances have been able to conquer--because, in short, I also love
-you! do you not plainly see that, Louis?"
-
-On hearing this confession, so ingenuous, and made in a tone so
-sorrowful that the young girl appeared no longer to belong to earth, the
-Count felt struck by a terrible presentiment; his heart was wrung with
-doubtful agony. Trembling, bewildered, he gazed on her with the fixed
-and desperate eye of one condemned to death, who is listening to the
-reading of his sentence.
-
-"Yes!" she resumed, with feverish eagerness; "yes, I love you, Louis, I
-shall always love you; but never, never, can we be united."
-
-"Oh, that is impossible!" he cried, raising his head vehemently.
-
-"Listen to me," she said, in a tone of authority; "I do not order you to
-forget me, Louis; a love like yours is eternal: alas! I feel that mine
-will last as long as my life. You see, my friend, I am frank; I do not
-speak to you as a maiden ought to speak; I unfold my heart before you,
-leaving you to read it as you would your own. Well, this love, which
-would be for us the height of felicity,--this communion of two spirits,
-which blend with each other to form one blissful whole,--this boundless
-happiness must be dispersed for ever, without chance of recovery,
-without hesitation!"
-
-"Oh, I cannot consent!" he exclaimed, in a voice broken by sobs.
-
-"But it must be so, I tell you!" she continued, wild with anguish.
-"Great Heaven! what more do you require of me? Must I confess everything
-to you? Well, then, since it must be so, know that I am a miserable
-creature, condemned from my birth, pursued by a terrible hatred,
-which follows me step by step, which watches me incessantly; and some
-day--tomorrow, perhaps today--will crush me without mercy! Obliged
-to change my name constantly; flying from city to city, from country
-to country; wherever I may go, this implacable enemy, whom I do not
-know, and against whom I cannot defend myself, pursues me without
-intermission."
-
-"But I will defend you!" the young man said, with confident energy.
-
-"And I, on my part, am not willing that you should die!" she replied,
-with an accent of ineffable tenderness. "To attach yourself to me is
-to court destruction. I went to France to seek a place of refuge. I
-was obliged to quit that hospitable land with the greatest suddenness.
-Arrived here only a few weeks since, but for you, last night, I should
-have been lost! No, no, I am condemned; I know I am, and I am resigned;
-but I will not drag you down in my fall! Alas! I am, perhaps, doomed to
-suffer tortures still more horrible than those I have hitherto endured!
-Oh, Louis, in the name of the love which you have for me, and which I
-fully share, leave me the supreme consolation in my wretchedness of
-knowing that you are safe from the torments which overwhelm me!"
-
-At this moment Valentine's voice was heard at a short distance, and
-Cæsar came wagging his tail to his master. Doña Rosario gathered a
-blossom of the _suchil_ which grew close to them, and presented it to
-the young man, after having for a moment inhaled its sweet odour.
-
-"Here," she said, "my friend, accept this flower, the only memorial,
-alas! that will remain with you of me."
-
-The young man concealed the flower in his bosom.
-
-"Someone is coming," she continued, in broken accents. "Swear, Louis!
-swear to quit this country as soon as possible, without endeavouring to
-see me again."
-
-The Count hesitated.
-
-"Oh!" he cried, "some day, perhaps,----"
-
-"Never on earth. Have I not told you that I am condemned? Swear, Louis,
-that at least I may hope to meet you again in heaven."
-
-She pronounced these words with such a tone of despair, that the young
-man, overcome, in spite of himself, made a gesture of assent, and let
-the almost inarticulate words escape his lips,--
-
-"I swear to do so!"
-
-"Thanks! thanks!" she cried wildly, and hurriedly imprinting a kiss upon
-the brow of her prostrated lover, she disappeared with the lightness of
-a fawn amidst a thicket of standard roses, at the moment when Valentine
-became visible at the turning of the walk.
-
-"Why brother," the soldier said gaily, "what the deuce are you about
-here, at the bottom of the garden? Breakfast is waiting for you. I have
-been looking for you this hour; and if it had not been for Cæsar, I
-should not have found you now."
-
-The Count turned towards him, his face lathed in tears, and threw his
-arms round his neck.
-
-"Brother! brother!" he cried, in an accent of despair; "I am the most
-unhappy of men!"
-
-Valentine looked at him in astonishment. The Count had fainted.
-
-"What on earth is all this about?" said the soldier, casting a
-suspicious look around him, and laying his foster brother, who was
-motionless as a corpse, gently upon a grassy bank.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-THE QUINTA VERDE.
-
-
-Not far from Rio Claro, a charming little city, built in a delicious
-situation between Santiago and Talca, there was then, and probably is
-still, upon a hill commanding an extensive view, a pretty _quinta_, with
-white walls and green shutters, coquettishly concealed from indiscreet
-eyes by a thicket of trees of various sorts--oaks, acajous, maples,
-palms, aloes, cactus, &c, which sprang up and intertwined within each
-other in such a fashion around it as to form an almost impregnable
-rampart. It is difficult to explain how, in such a period of convulsions
-and overthrows, this delicious habitation had hitherto escaped, as if by
-a miracle, from the devastation and pillage which incessantly menaced
-it, and which fell without intermission around it, enveloping it, as
-it were, in a network of ruins, without, however, having ever troubled
-that tranquil dwelling, although the human tempest had frequently howled
-beneath its walls, and, in the shade of night, it had often seen the red
-torches of incendiaries gleam; all at once, though no one knew why, and
-as if by enchantment, the cries of murder ceased, and the torches became
-extinguished and harmless in the hands of the men who, a minute before,
-had waved them about madly. This habitation was named the "Quinta Verde."
-
-By what prodigy had this house, so simple in appearance, and so like
-the rest, avoided the common fate and remained alone, perhaps, of all
-the houses of the Chilian plains, calm and tranquil in the midst of
-general confusion, equally respected by the two parties contending for
-power, and surveying carelessly from the top of its pretty _mirador_ the
-revolution raging at its feet, which carried away, as in an infernal
-whirlwind, cities, villages, houses, fortunes, and families? This is
-what many people, at various periods, had been anxious to know, though
-they had never been able to find out. Nobody ostensibly inhabited this
-quinta, in which, on certain days, noises were heard which filled with a
-superstitious terror the worthy _guasos_ living in the neighbourhood.
-
-The day after that on which the events occurred which open this history,
-the heat had been oppressive, the atmosphere heavy, and the sun had
-gone down amidst a flood of purple vapour, the precursors of a storm
-which burst with fury as soon as night had completely closed in. The
-wind bent down the trees as it whistled through them, the collision of
-the branches producing a melancholy sound; the heavens were black, not
-a star was to be seen; and large grey clouds coursed rapidly across
-the zenith, covering all nature with a leaden pall. In the distance
-resounded the howlings of wild beasts, among which was occasionally
-mingled the hoarse, sharp barking of stray dogs.
-
-Nine o'clock struck slowly from a distant steeple; the sound of the
-metal, repeated by the echoes from the hills, vibrated with a plaintive
-tone over the deserted landscape. The moon, fitfully emerging from
-behind the clouds which veiled her, spread for a few seconds a pale
-and trembling light over the scene, giving it a fantastic aspect. This
-fugitive ray of doubtful light, nevertheless, enabled a small troop of
-horsemen, who were painfully ascending a winding path on the side of a
-mountain, to distinguish, at a few paces before them, the black outline
-of a house, from the top window of which beamed like a pharos a red,
-uncertain light. This house was the "Quinta Verde."
-
-At about four or five paces in advance of the troop rode two horsemen,
-muffled carefully in their cloaks, the flaps of their hats pulled down
-over their eyes, appeared, in the darkness, to be a needless precaution;
-but it, nevertheless, showed that these personages were very anxious not
-to be recognized.
-
-"Heaven be praised!" said one of these horsemen to his companion, as
-he pulled up his horse, to look searchingly around him, as far as the
-darkness would permit; "I hope we shall soon be there."
-
-"In a quarter of an hour, at latest, General, we shall be at the end of
-our journey."
-
-"Do not let us stop, then," the one addressed as General said; "I am
-impatient to penetrate into this abominable den."
-
-"One moment, General!" the first speaker continued. "It is my duty to
-warn your Excellency that there is still time to retreat; and that
-would, perhaps, be the more prudent step."
-
-"Please to observe this, Diego," said the General, fixing upon his
-companion a look which gleamed in the semi-obscurity like that of a
-tiger-cat--"in the circumstances in which I am placed, prudence, as you
-understand the word, would be cowardice. I am quite aware what I am
-called upon to do by the confidence placed in me by my fellow citizens;
-our position is most critical: the liberal reaction is raising its head
-in all quarters, and we must put an end to this ever-reviving hydra.
-The news of Don Tadeo's escape from death has spread with the rapidity
-of a train of gunpowder; all the malcontents of whom he is the leader,
-are in almost open action; if I were to hesitate to strike a great blow
-and crush the head of the serpent which hisses in my ears, it would
-tomorrow, perhaps, be too late; hesitation has always been the ruin of
-statesmen in affairs of importance."
-
-"And yet, General, if the man who has furnished you with this
-information should--"
-
-"Be a traitor? Well, that is possible--ay, even probable; therefore,
-I have neglected nothing that may neutralize the consequences of a
-treachery which I foresee."
-
-"By the Virgin! General, in your place, however--"
-
-"Thank you, old comrade, thank you for your solicitude; but enough of
-this subject, you ought to know me well enough to be sure that I shall
-never flinch from my duty."
-
-"I have nothing more to do, then, but to wish your Excellency well
-through your undertaking; for you know you must arrive alone at the
-Quinta Verde, and I can escort you no farther."
-
-"Very well, wait here then; make your men dismount for a time, keep a
-sharp watch, and execute punctually the orders I have given you. I am
-going on."
-
-Diego bowed respectfully, but with an air of anxiety, and withdrew his
-hand, which had been placed on the bridle of the General's horse. The
-latter more carefully enveloped himself in his cloak, the folds of which
-had become too loose, and gave the usual jockey signal to excite his
-horse. At this well-known sound the horse pricked up its ears, and being
-thoroughbred, although fatigued, set off at a gallop.
-
-After a few minutes of this rapid travelling, the General stopped; but
-it appeared as if his journey was completed, for, dismounting, he threw
-the bridle on his horse's neck, with as little care what became of it as
-if it had been a hack post-horse, and walked with a firm step towards
-the house, which he had held in view some time, and from which he was
-now not more than ten paces distant. This was soon cleared. When he
-reached the gate, he stood for a second and looked around him, as if
-endeavouring to penetrate the darkness; but all was calm and silent.
-In spite of himself, the General was seized with that vague fear which
-takes possession of the most courageous man when in face of the unknown.
-But General Bustamente, whom the reader has no doubt recognized, was too
-old a soldier to suffer himself to be mastered long by an impression,
-however strong it might be; with him this had lasted but an instant, and
-he almost immediately recovered his usual coolness.
-
-"What the devil! am _I_ afraid?" he murmured, with an ironical smile,
-and going boldly up to the gate, he knocked three times at equal
-intervals with the pummel of his sword. In an instant his arms were
-seized by invisible hands, a bandage was placed over his eyes, and a
-voice, faint as a breath, murmured in his ear--
-
-"Make no resistance, twenty poniards are at your breast; at the first
-cry, at the least opposition, you are a dead man. Reply categorically to
-our questions."
-
-"All these threats are needless," the General replied, in a calm
-voice; "as I came here of my own free will, I can have no intention of
-resisting--ask, and I will answer."
-
-"What do you come to seek here?" the voice said.
-
-"The Dark-Hearts."
-
-"Are you ready to appear in their presence?"
-
-"I am," the General replied, still impassive.
-
-"Do you dread nothing?"
-
-"Nothing."
-
-"Let your sword fall."
-
-The General quitted his hold of his sword, and felt at the same moment
-that his pistols were taken from him.
-
-"Now, step forward without fear," said the voice.
-
-The prisoner found himself instantly at liberty.
-
-"In the name of Christ, who died upon the cross for the salvation of the
-world, Dark-Hearts, receive me among the number of your brethren!" the
-General then said, in a low and firm voice.
-
-The double gates of the Quinta Verde flew open before him, and two
-masked men, each holding a dark lantern in his hand, the focus of which
-he directed on the stranger's face, appeared in the entrance.
-
-"There is still time," said one of the unknown; "if your heart be not
-firm, you may retreat."
-
-"My heart is firm."
-
-"Come on, then, as you think yourself worthy to share our glorious task,
-but tremble if you have the least intention of betraying us," said the
-masked man, in a deep, sonorous voice.
-
-The General felt, notwithstanding the recklessness of his character,
-a cold shudder run through his limbs at these words; but he quickly
-surmounted this involuntary emotion.
-
-"It is for traitors to tremble," he replied; "for my part, I have
-nothing to fear."
-
-And he boldly stepped into the Quinta Verde, the doors of which closed
-after him with a dull, heavy sound. The bandage which covered his eyes,
-and which had prevented those who had interrogated him from recognizing
-him, notwithstanding their efforts to do so, was then removed. After
-proceeding for more than a quarter of an hour along a circular corridor,
-lighted only by the red flickering flame of the torch carried by the
-guide through this labyrinth, the General was suddenly stopped by a door
-in front of him. He turned hesitatingly towards the masked men, who had
-followed him step by step.
-
-"What do you wait for?" said one of them in reply to his mute
-interrogation. "Is it not written, _Knock and it shall be opened unto
-you?_"
-
-The General bowed in sign of acquiescence, and knocked loudly at the
-door. The folding panels drew back silently into the wall, and the
-General found himself at the entrance of a vast hall, whose walls were
-covered with long red draperies, gloomily enlightened by a bronze lamp
-and several chandeliers suspended from the ceiling, which shone in an
-uncertain manner upon the countenances of about a hundred men, who,
-with naked swords in their hands, fixed their eyes upon him through the
-black masks which concealed their faces. At the bottom of this hall was
-a table covered with a green cloth, at which were seated three men. Not
-only were those three men masked, but, as a further precaution, before
-each of them a lighted torch was planted on the table, the dazzling
-flame of which allowed them to be but vaguely seen. Against the wall was
-a crucifix, between two hourglasses surmounted by a death's-head with a
-poniard run through it.
-
-The General manifested no emotion at this imposing _mise en scène_. A
-smile of disdain curled his lip, and he stepped boldly forward. At this
-moment he felt a light touch on the shoulder, and, on turning round,
-perceived that one of the guides was holding out a mask to him. In spite
-of the precautions he had taken to disguise his features, he eagerly
-seized it, placed it on his face, folded his cloak round him, and
-entered.
-
-"_In nomine Patris, et Filii, et Spiritus Sancti!_" he said.
-
-"_Amen_!" all present replied, in a sepulchral tone.
-
-"_Exaudiat te Dominus, in die Tribulationis,_" said one of the
-personages behind the table.
-
-"_Impleat Dominus omnes petitiones tuas_," the General replied, without
-hesitation.
-
-"_La Patria!_" the first speaker rejoined.
-
-"_O la Muerte!_" replied the General.
-
-"What is your purpose in coming here?" the man who up to this time alone
-had spoken, asked.
-
-"I wish to be admitted into the bosom of the elect."
-
-There was a momentary silence.
-
-"Is there anyone among us who can or will answer for you?" the masked
-man then asked.
-
-"I cannot say; for I do not know the persons among whom I find myself."
-
-"How know you that?"
-
-"I suppose so, as they, as well as I, are masked."
-
-"The Dark-Hearts," said the interrogator in a deep tone, "consider not
-the countenance; they search souls."
-
-The General bowed at this sentence, which appeared to him to border upon
-the ridiculous. The interrogator continued:--"Do you know the conditions
-of your affiliation?"
-
-"I know them."
-
-"What are they?"
-
-"To sacrifice mother, father, brothers, relations, friends, and myself,
-without hesitation, to the cause which I swear to defend."
-
-"What next?"
-
-"At the first signal, whether it be by day or night, even at the foot of
-the altar, in whatever circumstance I may be placed, to quit everything,
-in order to accomplish immediately the orders that shall be given me, in
-whatever manner they may be given, and whatever may be the tenor of that
-order."
-
-"Do you subscribe to these conditions?"
-
-"I subscribe to them."
-
-"Are you prepared to swear to submit yourself to them?"
-
-"I am prepared."
-
-"Repeat, then, after me, with your hand upon the Gospels, the words I am
-about to dictate to you."
-
-"Dictate!"
-
-The three men behind the table rose; a Bible was brought, and the
-General resolutely placed his hand upon the book. A faint murmur ran
-through the ranks of the assembly. The president struck the table with
-the hilt of his dagger, and silence was re-established. This man then
-pronounced in a slow and deep toned voice the following words, which the
-General repeated after him without hesitation:--
-
-"I swear to sacrifice myself, my family, my property, and all that I
-can hope for in this world, for the safety of the cause defended by
-the Dark-Hearts. I swear to kill every man, be he my father, be he my
-brother, who shall be pointed out to me. If I fail in my faith, if I
-betray those who accept me as their brother, I acknowledge myself to
-be worthy of death; and I, beforehand, pardon the Dark-Hearts who may
-inflict it upon me."
-
-"So far well!" replied the president, when the General had pronounced
-the oath. "You are now our brother."
-
-He then rose, and stepping across the hall, stood full in front of the
-General.
-
-"Now," he said in a solemn threatening voice, "answer me, Don Pancho
-Bustamente. As you, of your own free will, take a false oath before a
-hundred persons, do you think we should commit a crime in condemning
-you, since you have had the audacity to place yourself in our power?"
-
-In spite of his assurance, the General could not repress a start of
-terror.
-
-"Remove the mask which covers this man's face, so that everyone may know
-that it is he! Ah! General; you have entered the lion's den, and you
-will be devoured."
-
-The noise of a distant commotion was heard.
-
-"Your soldiers are coming to your rescue," the president resumed, "but
-they will come too late, General; prepare to die!"
-
-These words fell like the blow of a mace upon the brow of him who found
-himself thus outwitted; he, nevertheless, did not yet lose heart; the
-noise evidently approached; and there could be no doubt but that his
-troops, who surrounded the Quinta Verde on all sides, would soon gain
-possession of it; all he wanted was time.
-
-"By what right," he said haughtily, "do you constitute yourselves judges
-and executioners of your own sentence?"
-
-"You are one of us, and are bound by our sentence," the president
-replied, with an ironical smile.
-
-"Beware of what you are about to do, gentlemen," the General added in a
-haughty tone; "remember I am minister-at-war!"
-
-"And I am King of Darkness," the president cried in a voice that froze
-the very blood of the General; "my dagger is more sure than the muskets
-of your soldiers; it does not let its victims escape. Brethren, what
-chastisement does this man deserve?"
-
-"Death!" the conspirators replied.
-
-The General saw that he was lost.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-THE DEPARTURE.
-
-
-Sergeant Diego, when left by General Bustamente a few paces from the
-Quinta Verde, was very uneasy regarding the fate of his leader, and
-entertained dismal presentiments. He was an old soldier, and well
-acquainted with all the machinations and treacheries practised in this
-country between inveterate enemies. He had been far from approving of
-the General's undertaking, for he knew better than anyone how little
-confidence ought to be placed in spies. Constrained, ostensibly, to
-obey the order he had received, he had resolved, _in petto_, not to
-leave his leader without help in the wasps' nest into which he had
-cast himself headlong. Diego entertained for General Bustamente, under
-whose orders he had served ten years, a profound regard, which entitled
-him to certain freedoms, and his entire confidence. He immediately
-placed himself in relation with two other officers of the detachment,
-ordered, like himself, to watch the mysterious house whose dark outline
-cut gloomily across the cloudy sky, and around which there was a close
-blockade. He was walking about, biting his moustache, and swearing to
-himself, determined, if the General did not come out within half an
-hour, to obtain an entrance by force, if necessary, when a heavy hand
-was laid upon his shoulder. He turned sharply round, stopping short in
-an oath that was passing his lips, and saw a man standing before him: it
-was Don Pedro.
-
-"Is that you?" he asked, as soon as he recognised him.
-
-"Myself," the spy replied.
-
-"But where the devil do you come from?"
-
-"No matter; do you wish to save the General?"
-
-"Is he in danger?"
-
-"In danger of death."
-
-"_Demonios!_" the sergeant shouted; "he must be saved!"
-
-"For that purpose I am here; but don't speak so loud."
-
-"I will speak as you like, provided you will tell me."
-
-"Nothing!" Don Pedro replied, "for there is not a minute to be lost."
-
-"What is to be done?"
-
-"Listen! A detachment must feign an attack upon the gate by which the
-General entered; another will watch the environs, for the Dark-Hearts
-have roads known only to themselves; you, with a third detachment, will
-follow me; I will undertake to introduce you into the house--is that
-agreed upon?"
-
-"Perfectly."
-
-"Make haste, then, to inform your colleagues; time presses."
-
-"Instantly; where shall I find you again?"
-
-"Here."
-
-"Very well; I only ask five minutes," and he strode away in haste.
-
-"Hem!" thought Don Pedro, as soon as he was alone; "we should be
-prudent when we wish affairs to be profitable; from what I heard, they
-will condemn the General, and they must not be allowed to go as far as
-that, for my interests would suffer too seriously; I have manoeuvred
-so as to be safe from all suspicion; if I succeed, I shall be more in
-favour with the General than ever, without losing the confidence of the
-conspirators."
-
-"Well!" he said, as he saw Diego coming towards him.
-
-"Everything is done," replied the sergeant, out of breath. "I am ready."
-
-"Come on, then, and God grant it may not be too late!"
-
-"Amen!" said the soldier.
-
-Everything was done as had been arranged; whilst one detachment
-vigorously attacked the gate of the Quinta Verde, Don Pedro led the
-troops commanded by Diego to the opposite side of the house, where a
-low window was open; this window was grated, but several bars had been
-removed beforehand, which left the entrance easy. Pedro commanded the
-soldiers to be silent, and they entered the house one by one. Guided by
-the spy, they advanced stealthily, without meeting with obstacles of any
-kind. At the end of a few minutes they came to a closed door.
-
-"This is it!" said Pedro, in a low voice.
-
-At a sign from the sergeant, the door was beaten in with the butt end
-of their muskets, and the soldiers rushed into the room. It was nearly
-empty, its only occupant being a man stretched motionless upon the
-floor. The sergeant sprang towards him, but recoiled with a cry of
-horror--he had recognised his leader--General Bustamente lay with a
-dagger sticking upright in his breast. To the hilt of the dagger was
-tied a long black strip, upon which were written these words in red ink:
-
-"_The Justice of the Dark-Hearts!_"
-
-"Oh!" cried Diego; "Vengeance! Vengeance!"
-
-"Vengeance!" the soldiers repeated, with rage, mingled with terror.
-
-The sergeant turned round towards Pedro, whom he believed to be still by
-his side; but the spy, who alone could guide them in their researches,
-had thought it prudent to steal away. As soon as he saw that what he
-dreaded had happened, he had disappeared without anybody observing his
-departure.
-
-"No matter!" said Diego. "If I demolish this den of assassins, from
-bottom to top, and don't leave stone upon stone, I swear I will find
-these demons, if they are buried in the centre of the earth."
-
-The old soldier began searching in all directions, whilst a surgeon who
-had followed the detachment paid attention to the wounded man, whom he
-endeavoured to restore to his senses.
-
-The Dark-Hearts, as the spy had truly said, had paths known only
-to themselves, by which they had quietly departed, after having
-accomplished their terrible vengeance, or executed their severe justice,
-according to the point of view in which an act of this nature and
-importance is viewed. They were already far off in the country, safe
-from all danger, while the soldiers were still ferociously searching for
-them in and about the house.
-
-Don Tadeo and Don Gregorio returned together to the chacra, and were
-astonished, on their arrival, to find Valentine, whom they supposed to
-be in bed and asleep long before, waiting for them at that late hour,
-to request a few minutes' conversation. In spite of the very natural
-surprise which the demand at such a singular hour excited, the two
-gentlemen, who supposed the Frenchman had serious reasons for acting
-thus, granted his request, without making the least observation. The
-conversation was long--so long, that we think it useless to repeat it
-here in detail, but will satisfy ourselves with giving our readers the
-end of it, which sums it up perfectly.
-
-"I will not insist," said Don Tadeo, "although you will not tell us
-your motives. I believe you to be too considerate a man, Don Valentine,
-not to be convinced that the reasons which force you to leave us are
-serious."
-
-"Of the greatest seriousness," the young man replied.
-
-"Very well. But on leaving this place, in which direction do you intend
-to bend your steps?"
-
-"Faith! I own frankly--besides, you know already that I and my friend
-are in search of fortune--that all directions are the same to us, since
-we must, above everything, depend upon chance."
-
-"I am of your opinion," replied Don Tadeo, smiling. "Listen to me,
-then. I possess large estates in the province of Valdivia, which it
-is my intention to visit shortly. What prevents you going that way in
-preference to any other?"
-
-"Nothing, that I know of."
-
-"I, at this moment, stand in need of a man whom I can depend upon, to
-undertake an important mission into Araucania, to one of the principal
-chiefs of the people of that country. If you are going to the province
-of Valdivia, you will be obliged to traverse Araucania in its whole
-length. Are you willing to undertake this commission? Will that
-inconvenience you?"
-
-"Why should I not?" said Valentine. "I have never come face to face with
-savages; I should like to see what sort of people they are."
-
-"Very well; now is your opportunity. That is agreed upon then. You wish
-to start tomorrow, do you not?"
-
-"Tomorrow! Today, if you please--in a few hours, for it will not be long
-before the sun will be up."
-
-"That is true. Very well, then; at the moment of your departure, my
-major-domo shall place, on my part, written instructions in your hands."
-
-"Caramba!" said Valentine, laughing; "here am I transformed into an
-ambassador!"
-
-"Do not joke, my friend," said Don Tadeo, seriously. "The mission I
-confide to you is delicate--dangerous, even; I do not conceal that from
-you. If the papers of which you will be the bearer are found upon you,
-you will be exposed to great dangers. Are you still willing to be my
-emissary?"
-
-"Pardieu! Wherever there is danger there is pleasure. And what is the
-name of the person to whom I am to remit these despatches?"
-
-"They are of two descriptions. The latter only concerns yourself; during
-the course of your journey you can make yourself acquainted with them;
-they will instruct you in certain matters you should know in order to
-secure the success of your mission."
-
-"I understand--and the others?"
-
-"The others are for Antinahuel, that is, the Tiger Sun, and must be
-delivered into his own hands."
-
-"A queer name that!" Valentine replied, with a laugh. "And where am I to
-find the gentleman rejoicing in such a formidable title?"
-
-"By my faith, my friend," replied Don Tadeo, "I know no more than you
-do."
-
-"The Araucano Indians," interrupted Don Gregorio, "are a rather
-wandering race, and it is sometimes difficult to find the one you are in
-search of."
-
-"Bah! I shall find him, be assured of that."
-
-"We do entirely rely upon you."
-
-"In a few hours, as I have told you, I shall myself set out to place in
-a convent in Valdivia the young lady whom you so fortunately saved; it
-will, therefore, be in Valdivia I shall await your answer."
-
-"I beg your pardon, but I have not the least idea where Valdivia is,"
-observed Valentine.
-
-"Don't be uneasy on that account; any child in this country can direct
-you the way thither," Don Gregorio replied.
-
-"Thanks."
-
-"And now, if you change your mind when we meet again, and consent to
-remain among us, remember we are brothers, and do not hesitate to inform
-me of your new determination."
-
-"I can neither, reply yes or no, sir; if it depended upon me, we should
-continue to see each other frequently."
-
-After exchanging a few more friendly expressions, the three men
-separated. At sunrise, Louis and Valentine, mounted on magnificent
-horses, which Don Tadeo had forced them to accept, rode away from the
-chacra, followed by Cæsar. Valentine had received his despatches from
-the hands of the major-domo. As they were quitting the farm Louis
-turned round instinctively, as if to salute with a last look a spot
-he abandoned for ever, and which contained all that was dear to him.
-A window was gently opened, and the face of the fair girl appeared
-through the small interval, bathed in tears. The two young men bowed
-respectfully towards the necks of their horses, and with a deep sigh
-from Louis, they moved on as the window closed.
-
-"Adieu! oh, adieu for ever!" murmured Louis, choking with emotion.
-
-"Ah, perhaps!" said Valentine; and, to rouse his friend from his grief,
-he put his horse into a gallop, and they soon lost sight of the chacra
-in the windings of the road.
-
-Within four hours from their departure Don Tadeo and Don Gregorio
-likewise set out on their journey to Valdivia, for the purpose of
-placing Doña Rosario in the convent. But the enemy of whom they thought
-they had relieved themselves at the Quinta Verde, was not dead; the
-dagger of the King of Darkness had not proved more sure than the bullets
-of the General. The two enemies were destined soon to meet again.
-Notwithstanding the seriousness of the wound he had received, thanks
-to the intelligent cares lavished upon him, but more particularly,
-thanks to his excellent constitution, General Bustamente was soon in a
-convalescent state. Don Pancho and the Linda, from that time united by
-the strongest of ties--a common personal hatred--prepared to take their
-revenge upon Don Tadeo, and that of the bitterest nature. The General
-signalized his restoration to health by cruelties of the most flagrant
-kind towards every man suspected of liberalism, and by inaugurating
-throughout the republic a pitiless system of terror. Don Tadeo was
-pronounced outlawed; his friends were cast into dungeons, and their
-property was confiscated; and then, when the General thought that all
-these vexations must bring his enemy to bay, and he had nothing to dread
-from him or his partizans, under the pretence of visiting the provinces
-of the Republic, he set out for Valdivia, accompanied by his mistress.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-THE MEETING.
-
-
-As the principal incidents of this history are now about to take place
-in Araucania, we think it necessary to give our readers some account of
-this people, who alone of all the nations the Spaniards encountered in
-America, succeeded in resisting them, and had, up to the time we treat
-of, preserved intact their liberty and almost all their territory. The
-Araucanos or Moluchos inhabit the beautiful country situated between the
-rivers Biobio and Valdivia, having on one side the sea, and on the other
-the great Cordilleras of the Andes. They are thus completely enclosed
-within the Chilian republic, and yet, as we have said, have always
-remained independent. It would be a great error to suppose these Indians
-savages. The Araucanos have adopted as much of European civilization as
-suited their character and their mode of living, and have rejected the
-rest. From the most remote times these peoples had formed a national
-body, strong and compact, governed by wise laws rigorously executed. The
-first Spanish conquerors were quite astonished to find in this remote
-corner of America, a powerful aristocratic republic, and a feudalism
-organized almost upon the same plan as that which prevailed in Europe
-in the thirteenth century. We will here enter into a few details of the
-government of the Araucanos, who proudly style themselves _Aucas_--free
-men. These details concerning a people too little known, up to this day,
-cannot fail to interest the reader.
-
-The principal chiefs of the Araucanos are the Toquis,[1] the Apo-Ulmens,
-and the Ulmens. There are four Toquis, one for each territorial
-division; they have under their orders the Apo-Ulmens, who, in their
-turn, command the Ulmens. The Toquis are independent of each other, but
-confederated for the public good. Titles are hereditary, and pass from
-males to males. The vassals or Mosotones are free; in time of war alone
-they are subject to military service; but, in this country, and it is
-this which constitutes its strength, every man in a condition to bear
-arms is a soldier. It may easily be understood what the chiefs are when
-we state that the people consider them only as the first among their
-equals, and that their authority is consequently rather precarious;
-and if, now and then, certain Toquis have endeavoured to extend their
-authority, the people, jealous of their privileges, have always found
-means to keep them within the bounds prescribed by their ancient usages.
-
-A society whose manners are so simple, and interests so little
-complicated, which is governed by wise laws, and all the members of
-which have an ardent love of liberty, is invincible, as the Spaniards
-have many times found to their cost. After having, in several attempts,
-endeavoured to subdue this little corner of land, isolated amidst their
-own territory; they have ended by acknowledging the futility of their
-efforts, and have tacitly admitted their defeat by renouncing for ever
-their projects of obtaining dominion over the Araucanos, with whom
-they have contracted alliances, and across whose territory they now
-peacefully pass on their road from Santiago to Valdivia.
-
-The Carampangue--in the Araucano idiom, refuge of lions--is a charming
-stream, half torrent, half river, which comes bounding down from the
-inaccessible summits of the Andes, and, after many capricious windings,
-loses itself in the sea two leagues to the north of Arauco. Nothing
-can be more beautiful than the banks of the Carampangue, bordered by
-smiling valleys, covered with woods, with apple trees loaded with fruit,
-rich pastures in which animals of all kinds range and feed at liberty,
-and high mountains, from the verdant sides of which hang, in the most
-picturesque positions, clusters of cabins, whose whitewashed walls shine
-in the sun, and give life to this enchanting landscape.
-
-On the day when we resume our narrative, that is, on a beautiful morning
-in July--called by the Indians the month of the sun--two horsemen,
-followed by a magnificent black and white Newfoundland dog, were
-ascending, at a sharp trot, the course of the river, following what is
-called a wild beast's track, scarcely marked in the high grass. These
-men, dressed in the Chilian costume, surging up suddenly amidst this
-wild natural scene, formed, by their manners and their vestments, a
-contrast with everything which surrounded them; a contrast of which
-they probably had no idea, for they rode as carelessly through this
-barbarous country, abounding in perils and ambushes without number, as
-they would have done along the road from Paris to Saint-Cloud. These two
-men, whom the reader has, no doubt, recognized, were the Count Louis
-de Prébois-Crancé and Valentine Guillois, his foster brother. They had
-passed in turn through Maulé, Talca, and Concepción; and on the day we
-meet them again, in the middle of Araucania, they had been full two
-months on the road, travelling philosophically along with their dog
-Cæsar upon the banks of the Carampangue. This was the 14th of July,
-1837, at eleven o'clock in the morning.
-
-The young men had passed the night in an abandoned _rancho_ which
-they had fallen in with on their way, and at sunrise resumed their
-journey; so that they now began to be sensible of the calls of hunger.
-Upon taking a survey of the spot where they found themselves, they
-perceived a clump of apple trees, which intercepted the rays of the
-sun, and offered them a shelter for their repast and a little rest.
-They dismounted and sat down at the foot of a large apple tree, leaving
-their horses to browse upon the young branches so abundant around
-them. Valentine knocked down a few apples with a stick, opened his
-_alforjas_--large cloth pockets placed behind the saddle--drew out some
-sea biscuit, a piece of bacon, and a goat's milk cheese, and the two
-young men began eating gaily, sharing their provisions with Cæsar in a
-brotherly way, whilst he, seated gravely in front of them, followed with
-his eyes every morsel they put into their mouths.
-
-"Caramba!" said Valentine, with a satisfied smile; "it is comfortable to
-have a little rest, after having been on horseback from four o'clock in
-the morning."
-
-"Well, to tell the truth, I must own I am a little fatigued," Louis
-confessed.
-
-"My poor friend, you are not, as I am, accustomed to long journeys. It
-was stupid of me not to remember that."
-
-"Bah! on the contrary, I am getting accustomed to them very well; and
-besides," he added, with a sigh, "physical fatigue makes me forget----"
-
-"Ah! that's true," Valentine interrupted; "come! I am happy to hear you
-speak thus--I see you are becoming a man!"
-
-Louis shook his head sorrowfully.
-
-"No," he said, "you are mistaken. As the malady which undermines me is
-without remedy, I endeavour to play a manly part."
-
-"Yes, hope is one of the supreme illusions of love; when it can no
-longer exist, love dies."
-
-"Or he who experiences it," said the young man, with a melancholy smile.
-
-This was followed by a silence, which Valentine at length broke.
-
-"What a charming country!" he cried, with feigned enthusiasm, for the
-purpose of giving the conversation another direction, as he swallowed,
-with delectation, an enormous piece of bacon.
-
-"Yes, but the roads are very bad."
-
-"Who knows?" said Valentine, with a smile: "they say the roads to
-Paradise are of that kind; this may be the way thither." Then addressing
-the dog, "And you, Cæsar, what do you think of our journey, old boy?"
-
-The dog wagged his tail, fixing his eyes, sparkling with intelligence,
-upon the speaker's face, whilst he eagerly devoured all that was given
-to him. But he stopped suddenly in his masticating operations, pricked
-up his ears, turned his head sharply round, and balked furiously.
-
-"Silence, Cæsar!" said Valentine; "what do you bark in that manner for?
-You know right well we are in a desert, and that in a desert there is
-nobody but the devil!"
-
-But Cæsar continued to bark without heeding his master.
-
-"Hum!" said Louis, "I do not agree with you; I think that the deserts of
-America are thickly peopled."
-
-"Well, perhaps you are right."
-
-"The dog's barking is not usual; we ought to take precautions."
-
-"I will see," said Valentine; and addressing the Newfoundland, "Come!
-come! hold your tongue, Cæsar! You are tiresome! What's the matter with
-you? What teases you? Do you scent a stag? Caramba! That would be a
-glorious godsend for us."
-
-Here he rose, and cast an inquiring glance around, but he immediately
-stopped, and seized his rifle, making a sign to Louis to do the same, in
-order to be prepared for whatever might happen.
-
-"Diable!" he said, "Cæsar was right, and I must confess myself a stupid
-fellow. Look yonder, Louis!"
-
-The other turned his eyes as directed.
-
-"Oh! oh!" he said; "what is this?"
-
-"Hum! I believe we shall soon discover."
-
-"With God's help!" Louis replied, cocking his rifle.
-
-Ten Indians in war costume, and mounted on magnificent horses, were
-drawn up within twenty paces of the travellers, though the latter were
-quite unable to comprehend how they had succeeded in approaching so near
-to them without being discovered. Notwithstanding Valentine's efforts,
-Cæsar continued to bark furiously, and endeavoured to rush upon the
-Indians. The American warriors, motionless and impassible, made neither
-gesture nor movement, but they surveyed the Frenchmen so closely and
-persistently, that Valentine, not very patient in his nature, began to
-find himself excessively annoyed.
-
-
-[1] This word comes from the verb _toquin_, which means to _judge_, to
-_command._
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.
-
-THE PUELCHES.
-
-
-"Eh! eh!" said Valentine, whistling sharply to his dog, who immediately
-came to him; "these fellows do not seem to have friendly intentions; we
-must be upon our guard: who knows what may happen?"
-
-"They are Araucanos," said Louis.
-
-"Do you think so? Then they are devilish ugly!"
-
-"Well, now, for my part, I think them very handsome."
-
-"Ah, yes; that may be in an artistic point of view. But, ugly or
-handsome, we will await their coming."
-
-The Indians talked among themselves, and continued to look at the young
-men.
-
-"They are consulting to determine with what sauce they shall eat us,"
-said Valentine.
-
-"Not at all----"
-
-"Bah! I tell you they are."
-
-"Pardieu! they are not cannibals!"
-
-"No? So much the worse; that's a defect. In Paris, all the savages
-exhibited in public are cannibals."
-
-"You madman! you laugh at everything."
-
-"Would you prefer my weeping a little? It appears to me that at this
-moment our position is not so seducing in itself that we should seek to
-make it more dismal."
-
-These Indians were for the most part men of from forty to forty-five
-years of age, clothed in the costume of the Puelches, one of the most
-warlike tribes of Upper Araucania; they wore the poncho floating from
-the shoulders, the calzoneras fastened round the hips and falling to
-the ankle, the head bare, the hair long, straight, and greasy, gathered
-together by a red ribbon, which encircled the brow like a diadem, and
-the face painted of various colours. Their arms consisted of a long
-lance, a knife, a gun hanging from the saddle, and a round buckler,
-covered with leather, ornamented with horsehair and human scalps.
-
-The man who appeared to be their chief was a man of lofty stature,
-expressive features, hard and haughty, but still displayed a certain
-frankness, a very rare quality among Indians. The only thing which
-distinguished him from his companions was a feather of the eagle of the
-Andes, planted upright on the left side of his head, in the bright red
-ribbon that confined his hair.
-
-After having consulted with his companions for a few minutes, the chief
-advanced towards the travellers, making his horse curvet with inimitable
-grace, and lowered the point of his lance in sign of peace. When
-within three paces of Valentine, he stopped, and, after saluting him
-ceremoniously, in the Indian fashion, by placing his right hand on his
-breast, and slowly bowing his head twice, he said to him in Spanish:--
-
-"My brothers are Muruches--foreigners,--and not Culme-Huinca--despicable
-Spaniards. Why are they so far from the men of their own nation?"
-
-This question, asked in the guttural accent, and with the emphatic tone
-peculiar to the Indians, was perfectly understood by the young men, who,
-as we have before observed, generally spoke Spanish themselves.
-
-"Hum!" Valentine said to his companion, "here is a savage who appears to
-have a little curiosity about him--what think you?"
-
-"Bah!" Louis replied, "answer him, at all events that will do no harm."
-
-"Why, no, that is true; we cannot easily be more compromised than we are
-already."
-
-And turning towards the chief, who waited impassibly,
-
-"We are travelling," he said, laconically.
-
-"What! alone, thus?" asked the chief.
-
-"Does that astonish you, my friend?"
-
-"Do my brothers fear nothing?"
-
-"What should we fear?" said the Parisian in a bantering tone. "We have
-nothing to lose."
-
-"What! not even your hair?"
-
-Louis could not refrain from laughing, as he looked at Valentine.
-
-"Ah! ah! what, he is laughing at the disordered state of my hair, is he,
-the ugly wretch?" Valentine grumbled, vexed at the observation of the
-chief, and quite mistaking his intentions. "Stop a bit!" then he added,
-in a loud voice, "Have the goodness to pass on, gentlemen savages. Your
-remarks are not pleasant, I can assure you."
-
-He cocked his rifle, and lifted it to his shoulder, as if taking aim
-at the chief. Louis, who had attentively followed the progress of the
-conversation, without saying a word imitated the action of his friend,
-directing the barrel of his rifle towards the group of Indians. The
-chief had, doubtless, understood but little of the speeches of his
-adversaries, but far from appearing terrified at the menacing attitude
-they assumed, he seemed to contemplate with pleasure the martial and
-firm deportment of the Frenchmen; and putting gently on one side the
-weapon pointed against his breast, said in a conciliatory tone:
-
-"My friend is mistaken. I have no intention of insulting him. I am his
-_penni_--brother--and his companion's likewise. Were not the palefaces
-eating when I and my young men came up?"
-
-"Faith! yes, chief, you say true," interrupted Louis, with a smile;
-"your sudden appearance stopped the progress of our humble repast."
-
-"Part of which is very much at your service," continued Valentine,
-pointing with his finger to the provisions spread upon the grass.
-
-"I accept your offer," said the Indian, cordially.
-
-"Bravo!" cried Valentine, throwing down his rifle, and preparing to
-resume his seat on the grass; "to table, then!"
-
-"Yes," replied the chief, "but upon one condition."
-
-"What is that?" the young men asked together.
-
-"That I shall furnish my part."
-
-"Agreed," said Louis.
-
-"Well, that is but fair," Valentine added; "and it will be the more
-acceptable, from our not being rich, and having but meagre fare to offer
-you."
-
-"The bread of a friend is always good," the chief said, sententiously.
-
-"That is admirably answered! But, at this moment, unfortunately, our
-bread is only stale biscuit."
-
-"I will remedy that;" and the chief said a few words in the Molucho
-language to his companions, who began to rummage in their alforjas, and
-quickly produced maize tortillas, some charqui, and several leathern
-bottles filled with chica--a sort of cider made of apples and Indian
-corn. The whole was placed upon the grass before the two Frenchmen, who
-were wonderstruck at the sudden abundance which had succeeded without
-any transition to their late short commons. The Indians dismounted,
-and sat down in a circle round the travellers. The chief, then turning
-towards his guests, said with a pleasant smile--
-
-"Now, then, let my brothers eat."
-
-The young men did not require the cordial invitation to be repeated, but
-vigorously attacked the provisions so frankly offered. For the first few
-minutes silence prevailed among the party, for all were too well engaged
-to talk; but as soon as appetite was a little appeased, conversation was
-resumed.
-
-Of all men, Indians, perhaps, understand the laws of hospitality
-the best. They have an instinct of social conventions, if such an
-expression may be allowed, which makes them divine at once, with
-infallible correctness, what the questions are that may be properly
-addressed to their guests, and the point at which they should stop to
-avoid committing any indiscretion. The two Frenchmen, who for the first
-time found themselves in contact with Araucanos, could not overcome
-the surprise caused by the knowledge of life, and the noble and frank
-manners of these men, whom, on the faith of accounts more or less false,
-they were accustomed, in common with all Europeans, to consider as gross
-savages, almost destitute of intelligence, and quite incapable of any
-delicacy of behaviour.
-
-"My brothers are not Spaniards?" the chief said, half interrogatively.
-
-"That is true," Louis replied; "but how did you discover that?"
-
-"Oh!" he said, with a disdainful smile, "we are well acquainted with
-those _chiaplos_--wicked soldiers. They are too old enemies to allow us
-to commit an error with regard to them. From what island do my brothers
-come?"
-
-"Our country is not an island," Valentine observed.
-
-"My brother is mistaken," the chief said emphatically; "there is but one
-country that is not an island, and that is the great land of the Aucas."
-
-The two young men bowed their heads before an opinion so peremptorily
-put forth--all discussion became impossible.
-
-"We are Frenchmen," Louis replied.
-
-"Frenchmen! ah! a good brave nation! We had several French warriors in
-the time of the great war."
-
-"What!" said Louis, with excited curiosity, "have French warriors fought
-with you?"
-
-"Yes," the chief remarked, proudly; "warriors with grey beards, and
-breasts marked with honourable scars, which they received in the wars of
-their island, when they fought under the orders of their great chief,
-Zaléon."
-
-"Napoleon?" said Valentine, quite astonished.
-
-"Yes; I believe it is so the palefaces pronounce his name. Did my
-brother know him?" the chief added, with ill-concealed curiosity.
-
-"No," replied the young man. "Although born in his reign, I was never
-able to get sight of him, and he is now dead."
-
-"My brother is mistaken," said the Puelche, solemnly; "such warriors as
-he do not die. When they have performed their task upon earth they go to
-Paradise--to hunt with Pillian, the master of the world."
-
-The young men bowed, as if convinced.
-
-"It is very singular," said Louis, "that the reputation of that powerful
-genius should have spread to the most remote and unknown regions of the
-globe, and be preserved pure and brilliant among these rude men; whilst
-in that France, for which he did everything men invariably seek to
-lessen it, and even to destroy it."
-
-"Like all their compatriots, who, from time to time, traverse our
-hunting grounds, our brothers have, doubtless, trading purposes in
-coming among us. Where are your goods?" said the chief.
-
-"We are not traders," replied Valentine; "we came to visit our brothers,
-the Araucanos, of whose wisdom and hospitality we have heard much."
-
-"The Moluchos love the French," the chief said, flattered by the
-compliment; "my brothers will be well received in our villages."
-
-"To what tribe does my brother belong?" asked Valentine, inwardly
-delighted at the good opinion the Indians entertained of his compatriots.
-
-"I am one of the principal Ulmens of the sacred tribe of the Great
-Hare," the chief said, proudly.
-
-"Thank you--one word more."
-
-"Let my brother speak; my ears are open."
-
-"We are in search of a Molucho chief, to whom we have a message from a
-friend of his, with whom he has had much dealing."
-
-"What is the chief's name?"
-
-"Antinahuel."
-
-"Good!"
-
-"Does my brother know him?"
-
-"I know him. If my brothers will follow me they shall see the toldo of
-a chief in which they shall be received like pennis. When they have
-rested, if they desire it, I will myself conduct them to Antinahuel, the
-most powerful Toqui of the four Uthal-Mapus of the Araucano confederacy."
-
-"What province is governed by Antinahuel?"
-
-"The Piré-Mapus, that is to say, the interior of the Andes."
-
-"Thanks, brother."
-
-"Will my brothers accept the offer I have made them?"
-
-"Why should we not accept it, chief, if, as I believe, it is made in
-earnest?"
-
-"Let my brothers come, then," the chief said, with a smile; "my toldería
-is not far off."
-
-The breakfast was over, and the Indians were mounting.
-
-"We may as well go," said Valentine, in French. "This Indian appears to
-speak cordially and honestly, and it will give us a capital opportunity
-of studying interesting manners and customs. What do you think,
-Louis?--It may prove very amusing."
-
-"Well, I see no harm that accepting the invitation can do."
-
-"God speed us, then!"
-
-And with a bound he was in his saddle, imitated by Louis.
-
-"Forward!" cried the chief, and the party set off at a gallop.
-
-"Well, it must be allowed," said Valentine, in his cheerful way, "that
-these savages, if savages they are, have some redeeming qualities
-belonging to them. I begin to take a warm interest in them. They are
-true Scotch mountaineers for hospitality. I wonder what my regimental
-comrades, and more particularly my old friends of the Boulevard du
-Temple, would say if they could see me now! Houp! After me, the end of
-the world!"
-
-Louis laughed at this outburst of the incorrigible _gamin_, and, without
-further inquiries, the young men gaily abandoned themselves to the
-guidance of their new friends, who, after leaving the banks of the
-river, directed their course towards the mountains.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-
-THE BLACK JACKAL.
-
-
-In order to make the facts which follow intelligible, we are obliged
-here to relate an adventure which happened more than twenty years before
-the period at which our history commences.
-
-Towards the end of the month of December, 1816, on a cold, rainy night,
-a traveller, mounted on an excellent horse, and carefully wrapped in
-the folds of an ample cloak, was following at a round trot the road,
-or rather the blind path, on the mountains which leads from Cruces to
-San-José. This man was a rich landowner, who was making a journey into
-Araucania, for the purpose of treating with the Indians for a large
-number of cattle and sheep. Having left Cruces about two o'clock in the
-afternoon, he had been delayed on his way by settling some business with
-various _guasos_, and he was hastening to gain a hacienda he possessed
-at some leagues from the spot where he then was, and where he reckoned
-upon passing the night.
-
-The country at the time was not in a state of tranquillity. For several
-days past the Puelches had appeared in arms upon the frontiers of Chili,
-and made incursions into the territories of the republic, burning the
-chacras, and carrying off the families they surprised. These marauders
-were commanded by a chief named The Black Jackal, whose cruelty spread
-terror among the people exposed to his depredations.
-
-It was, therefore, with some anxiety, mixed with secret apprehensions,
-that the man we have spoken of made all speed along the desolate road
-which led to his hacienda. Every minute only added to his fears. The
-storm, which had threatened all day, burst forth at last with a fury
-of which we have no conception in our climates. The wind roared loudly
-through the trees, bending some, and uprooting others. The rain fell in
-torrents, and the lightning became so vivid, that the horse began to
-plunge and rear, and refused to advance. The rider spurred the restive
-animal, and endeavoured, as well as the darkness would permit, to
-discover whereabouts he was. After surmounting immense difficulties, he
-saw at length, in the distance, the shadow of the walls of his hacienda,
-and the lights which shone like guiding stars, when suddenly his horse
-bounded on one side in such a way as almost to unseat him. When, with
-much trouble, he had recovered his command of the animal, he looked
-round to see what could have frightened it so, and perceived, with
-terror equal to the horse's, several men of sinister appearance standing
-motionless before him. The horseman's first movement was to seize his
-pistols, in order to sell his life as dearly as he could, for he had no
-doubt he had fallen into an ambuscade of bandits.
-
-"Keep your hands from your weapons, Don Antonio Quintana," said a rough
-voice; "we desire neither your life nor your money."
-
-"What do you want then?" he replied, in a tone that showed he was a
-little reassured by that frank declaration, though he still kept on the
-defensive.
-
-"Hospitality for this night, in the first place," said the other.
-
-Don Antonio endeavoured to ascertain if he knew the man who was speaking
-to him, but he could not distinguish his features through the darkness.
-
-"The doors of my dwelling always fly open to the stranger," he remarked;
-"why have you not knocked at them?"
-
-"Knowing you must come this way, I preferred waiting for you."
-
-"What else do you desire of me, then?"
-
-"I will tell you under your own roof; the open road is a place ill
-adapted for imparting confidence."
-
-"If you have nothing more to say to me now, and are as willing as I am
-to get under shelter, we will continue our journey."
-
-"Go on, then; we will follow you."
-
-Without exchanging another word, they directed their course towards the
-hacienda. Don Antonio Quintana was a resolute man, as the manner in
-which he had replied to the men who had so rudely barred his passage
-proved him. In spite of the fluency with which the one who had spoken
-employed the Spanish language, he had, at the first word, by his
-guttural accent, perceived he was an Indian; and with him fear had
-immediately given way to curiosity, and he had not hesitated to grant
-the hospitality asked, knowing that the Araucano, Puelches, Hueliches,
-or Moluchos, never violate the roof under which they are welcomed, and
-that the hosts who shelter them are held sacred.
-
-On arriving at the hacienda, Don Antonio found he was not mistaken; the
-men who had accosted him in so strange a manner were really Indians.
-There were four of them, and with them was a young woman with a child
-at the breast. The hacendero welcomed them to his dwelling with all the
-minute forms of Castilian courtesy, and gave orders to his peones or
-Indian domestics, terrified at the savage appearance of the strangers,
-to assist them with everything they might desire.
-
-"Eat and drink," he said, "you are at home, here."
-
-"Thanks!" replied the man, who had till that time been spokesman. "We
-accept your offer with as good a will as you give it, as far as regards
-food, of which we stand most in need."
-
-"Will you not rest till day?" asked Don Antonio; "the night is dark, and
-the weather frightful for travelling."
-
-"A black night is what we desire; besides, we must depart immediately.
-Now, allow me to put my second request to you."
-
-"Explain yourself," said the Spaniard, examining the speaker attentively.
-
-The latter was a tall, well-made man, of about forty; his
-strongly-marked features and his commanding eye proclaimed that he was
-accustomed to exercise authority.
-
-"It was I," he said, without preamble, "who directed the last invasion
-made upon the palefaces of the frontiers. My mosotones were all killed
-yesterday in an ambuscade by your lanceros; the three you see with me
-are all that remain of a troop of two hundred warriors; the others are
-dead. I myself am wounded, hunted, tracked like a wild beast; we are
-without horses to rejoin our tribe, without weapons to defend ourselves
-if we are attacked on the plain. I come to ask of you the means of
-escape from our pursuers. I will neither deceive nor surprise your good
-faith. I am bound to tell you the name of the man whose safety you hold
-in your hands. I am the greatest enemy of the Spaniards; my life has
-been passed in contending with them. In a word, I am The Black Jackal,
-the Apo-Ulmen of the Black Serpents."
-
-On hearing this redoubtable name the Chilian could not suppress a start
-of terror; but immediately recovering his self-possession, he replied in
-a calm voice, and in a kind tone.
-
-"You are my guest, and you are unfortunate, two titles sacred with me. I
-desire to know nothing more; you shall have horses and arms."
-
-A smile of ineffable sweetness lit up the countenance of the Indian.
-
-"One last prayer," he said.
-
-"Speak."
-
-The chief took by the hand the young Indian squaw, who had remained
-cowering and weeping in a corner, rocking her child in her arms, and
-presented her to Don Antonio.
-
-"This woman belongs to me; this child is mine," he said, "and I confide
-them both to you."
-
-"I will take charge of them; the woman shall be my sister, the child my
-son," the hacendero replied kindly, and after the Indian fashion.
-
-"The Apo-Ulmen will remember!" said the Puelche chief, in a voice
-trembling with emotion.
-
-He imprinted a kiss upon the brow of the poor little creature, who
-smiled upon him, cast upon the woman a look beaming with tenderness,
-and rushed out of the house, followed by his companions. Don Antonio
-supplied them with arms and horses, and the four Indians disappeared in
-the darkness.
-
-Many years passed away ere Don Antonio heard anything of the Black
-Jackal; the woman and the child remained at the hacienda, and were
-treated as if they had been members of the Chilian's family. The
-hacendero had been married; but, unfortunately, after a year, which
-promised to be the commencement of a long and happy union, the wife died
-when giving birth to a beautiful little girl, whom her father named
-Maria. The two children grew up together, watched over by the anxious
-solicitude of the Indian woman, loving each other like brother and
-sister.
-
-At length, one day, a numerous troop of Puelches, magnificently equipped
-and mounted, arrived at Rio-Claro, the town in which Don Antonio
-resided. The chief of these Indians was the Black Jackal, who came to
-redemand his wife and son of him to whom he had intrusted them. The
-interview was very affecting. The chief forgot his Indian stoicism; he
-gave himself up to the feelings which agitated him, and enjoyed the
-happiness of finding again, after such a length of time, the two beings
-he held dearest in the world. When it became necessary to depart, and
-the children learnt they were to be separated, they shed abundance of
-tears. They had been accustomed from their infancy to live together, and
-they could not comprehend why they were not to continue to do so.
-
-Don Antonio had extended his traffic over different parts of the
-frontiers; he possessed chacras, in which the breeding of cattle
-was carried on upon a vast scale. The Black Jackal, who had sworn
-a perpetual friendship, became of great use to him in his business
-transactions; he often put him in the way of making excellent bargains
-with his compatriots, and, what was still more serviceable, protected
-his property from the depredations of plunderers. Every year Don Antonio
-visited all his chacras in Araucania, and passed a couple of months
-among the tribe of the Black Serpents, with his friend, the Black
-Jackal. His daughter accompanied him in all these journeys, on account
-of the friendship that existed between the children. Things went on thus
-for many years.
-
-At the period when our history commences, the Black Jackal was dead:
-he had fallen, like a brave warrior, with his weapons in his hand, in
-a combat on the frontier; his son, Antinahuel, now about thirty-five
-years of age, who promised to tread in his footsteps, had been elected
-Apo-Ulmen in his place, and afterwards Toqui of his Uthal-Mapus or
-province, which made him one of the principal men of Araucania. Don
-Antonio had likewise died, shortly after the marriage of his daughter,
-Doña Maria, with Don Tadeo de Leon, brought to an untimely grave by his
-grief at her misconduct, which had produced terrible scandal in the
-upper classes of Santiago.
-
-Doña Maria for some years past had only seen Antinahuel at long
-intervals; but between them their friendship remained as warm as in
-the days of their childhood; and, on the part of the Indian warrior,
-it was carried so far that he obeyed the least caprice of the young
-woman as an imperative duty. Great, then, was the astonishment of the
-warriors of the tribe of the Black Serpents, when, in the evening of
-the day on which we have resumed our story, they saw Doña Maria arrive
-on horseback, accompanied only by two peons, at their toldería, and go
-straight towards the rancho of the Toqui. On perceiving her, the usually
-gloomy face of the chief was suddenly lighted up with an expression of
-gladness.
-
-"Eglantine of the Woods!" he cried, in a joyous tone, "does my sister
-then still remember the poor Indian?"
-
-"I have come to visit the toldo of my brother," she said, turning her
-brow towards him, upon which he impressed a kiss; "my heart is sad,
-grief devours me--and I have remembered my brother."
-
-The chief cast a look upon her of anxiety, mingled with sorrow.
-
-"Although it be to trouble that I owe the visit of my sister, I am,
-nevertheless, rejoiced to see her."
-
-"Yes," she resumed, "when we are in trouble we think of our friends."
-
-"My sister has done well in thinking of me; what can I do for her?"
-
-"My brother can render me a great service."
-
-"My life is my sister's; she knows she can dispose of it at her
-pleasure."
-
-"Thank you! I was certain I could depend upon my brother."
-
-"Everywhere, and at all times."
-
-After bowing respectfully to Doña Maria, he led her into his rancho,
-where his mother had prepared everything worthy of the visit of one whom
-for so many years she had loved as a daughter.
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.
-
-TWO OLD FRIENDS.
-
-
-Antinahuel--the Tiger Sun--was at this time a man of about thirty-five
-years of age. In stature he was tall, and in his carriage majestic;
-everything in his person announced a man accustomed to command, and made
-to rule over his fellows. As a warrior, his reputation was immense,
-and his mosotones held him in superstitious veneration. Such was,
-physically, the man whom Doña Maria de Leon came to visit; what he was,
-morally, we shall soon see.
-
-The cloth was laid in the toldo,--we make use of the expression, the
-cloth was laid, advisedly, because the Araucano chiefs are perfectly
-well acquainted with European customs, and almost all possess dishes,
-plates, and silver spoons and forks. It is true, they only make use of
-these upon great occasions, and for the purpose of display; for, as
-to themselves, they carry frugality and plainness to an excess, and
-when they are alone with their families, are content to eat with their
-fingers.
-
-Doña Maria seated herself at the table, and made a sign to Antinahuel,
-who stood respectfully beside her, to keep her company, and to take his
-place opposite to her. It was clear to the Indian chief that his sister,
-as he called her, who for some years had completely neglected him, must
-have been induced by some powerful interest to seek him thus in his
-remote village. But what could the interest be which led a delicate
-woman, accustomed to all the luxurious comforts of life, to undertake a
-long and perilous journey in order to come and talk with an Indian in a
-miserable toldería, hidden in the midst of the desert?
-
-On her side, the young woman was a prey to still greater uneasiness,
-for she was anxious to discover whether, in spite of her neglect of the
-chief, she had preserved the boundless power she had formerly exercised
-over that Indian nature, which civilization had softened rather than
-subdued; she feared lest the long forgetfulness in which she had left
-him had made her lose her prestige in his eyes, and that coolness and
-indifference might have succeeded to the warm friendship of early days.
-
-When the repast was ended, a peon brought in the _maté_[1] the infusion
-of the Paraguay herb which, with the Chilians, takes the place of tea,
-and of which they are very fond. Two chased cups, placed upon a filagree
-salver, were presented to Doña Maria and the chief; they lit their maize
-_pajillos_, and smoked, whilst sipping their _maté_, reflectively. After
-a few minutes' silence, which was beginning to be embarrassing to both,
-Doña Maria, who perceived that Antinahuel was resolved to act on the
-defensive, determined to open the attack.
-
-"My brother," she said, with a smile, "is surprised at my sudden arrival
-at his toldería."
-
-"It is true; the Eglantine of the Woods has appeared unexpectedly
-amongst us, but she is not the less welcome on that account."
-
-And he bowed.
-
-"I am glad to observe that my brother is as gallant as ever."
-
-"No; I love my sister, and I am happy to see her, after being so long
-deprived of her presence."
-
-"I know your friendship for me, Penni; our childhood was passed
-together, but it is a long time since that time. You are now one of the
-caraskens, whilst I am only, as formerly, a poor woman."
-
-"The Eglantine of the Woods is my sister, her least wishes shall always
-be sacred with me."
-
-"Thanks, Penni! But let us drop this conversation, and talk of our early
-years, which, alas! so quickly glided away."
-
-"Yesterday exists no longer," he said, sententiously.
-
-"That's true," she replied, with a sigh; "why, indeed, should we talk of
-times that can never come back?"
-
-"Does my sister intend to return to Chili?"
-
-"No; I have left Santiago for a time; I intend, for a season, to take up
-my abode in Valdivia; I left my friends to continue their route, whilst
-I came on to pay my respects to my brother."
-
-"Yes, I know that the man whom the palefaces call General Bustamente,
-though scarcely cured of a dangerous wound, set off, a month ago, to
-visit the province of Valdivia, I, myself, intend shortly to visit that
-city."
-
-"There are many palefaces from the South there at present."
-
-"Among these strangers are there any that I know?"
-
-"Good heavens! how can I tell? Yes, there is one, Don Tadeo, my husband."
-
-Antinahuel raised his head in astonishment.
-
-"I thought he had been shot!" he said.
-
-"He was."
-
-"Well?"
-
-"He escaped death, though grievously wounded."
-
-The artful woman endeavoured to read what impression the news she had so
-coolly imparted made upon the stoical face of the Indian.
-
-"Listen to me, my sister," he resumed, after a minute's pause; "Don
-Tadeo is still your enemy, is he not?"
-
-"More so than ever."
-
-"Good!"
-
-"Not content with having basely abandoned me, and having torn from me
-my child, the innocent creature who alone consoled me and enabled me to
-support the sorrows with which he has overwhelmed me, he has crowned
-his insults by publicly paying his addresses to another woman, whom he
-takes with him everywhere, and who is at this moment his companion at
-Valdivia."
-
-"Hum!" the chief said, carelessly.
-
-Accustomed to Araucanian manners, which permit every man to take as many
-wives as he can support, he found the action of Don Tadeo perfectly
-natural. This did not escape Doña Maria: an ironical smile curled for
-a second the corners of her lips, and she continued, negligently, but
-looking earnestly in the face of the chief--
-
-"Yes, the woman is called, as I hear, Doña Rosario de Mendoz; and is,
-they say, a beautiful creature!"
-
-That name, pronounced with such apparent indifference, produced the
-effect of a clap of thunder upon the chief; he sprang up, his face
-inflamed, and his eyes sparkling.
-
-"Rosario de Mendoz, did you say, my sister?" he shouted.
-
-"Good heavens! I hardly know," she replied. "I have only heard her
-name--I believe that may be it--but," she added, "what interest can my
-brother take in it?"
-
-"Oh! none," he said, as he quietly resumed his seat. "Why does not my
-sister avenge herself upon the man who has abandoned her?"
-
-"To what purpose? and, besides, what vengeance can I hope for? I am but
-a weak and timid woman, without friends, without support; in short,
-alone."
-
-"And I?" said the chief; "what am I, then?"
-
-"Oh!" she replied, warmly; "I would not on any account that my brother
-should constitute himself the avenger of an insult which is personal to
-myself."
-
-"My sister is mistaken; in attacking this man I avenge my own insult."
-
-"My brother must explain himself--I do not understand him."
-
-"That is what I am going to do."
-
-"I am all attention."
-
-At this moment Antinahuel's mother entered the toldo, and, approaching
-the chief, said in a humble, but sad tone,--
-
-"My son is wrong in thus recalling old remembrances, and opening ancient
-wounds again."
-
-"Woman!" the Indian replied, "Retire! I am a warrior! My father left me
-a vengeance. I have sworn, and I will accomplish my oath!"
-
-The poor mother left the toldo with a sigh. The Linda, whose curiosity
-was excited to the highest degree, awaited impatiently the chief's
-explanation. Without, the rain fell pattering upon the leaves of the
-trees; at intervals a blast of night wind, loaded with uncertain sounds,
-came whistling through the ill-joined boards of the toldo, and caused
-the flame of the torch which lighted it to waver unsteadily. The two
-speakers, though absorbed in their own reflections, involuntarily lent
-an ear to these nameless sounds, and felt a depression of spirits they
-could not account for. The chief raised his head, and inhaling, one
-after another, several mouthfuls of smoke from his pajillo, which he
-puffed out brusquely, commenced in a low voice,--
-
-"Although my sister is almost a child of the nation, as my mother nursed
-her, she has never been made acquainted with the history of my family.
-The history I am about to relate will reveal to her that I have against
-Don Tadeo de Leon an old hatred, ever kept alive; and which, if I have
-to the present moment appeared to allow to slumber, it has been because
-that man was the husband of my sister: the conduct of Don Tadeo towards
-my sister frees me from the promise I had made myself, and leaves me
-liberty of action."
-
-Doña Maria bowed assentingly.
-
-"When the vile Spaniards," he continued, "conquered Chili, and reduced
-its cowardly inhabitants to slavery, they dreamt of subjugating
-Araucania in its turn, and marched against the Aucas, whose frontiers
-they violated. My sister sees that I take up my recital from the
-beginning. The Toqui Cadegual was one of the first to convoke a grand
-council of the nation, on the plain of the Carampangue. Named Toqui, one
-of the four Uthal-Mapus, he gave battle to the palefaces. The conflict
-was terrible! It lasted from the rising to the setting of the sun. Many
-Molucho warriors departed for the happy prairies of the Eskennane, but
-Pillian did not abandon the Aucas; they were conquerors, and the Chiaplo
-fled like timid hares before the terrible lances of our warriors.
-Numbers of palefaces fell into our hands; among them was a powerful
-chief, named Don Estevan de Leon. The Toqui Cadegual might have employed
-his rights, and have killed him, but he did nothing of the kind: so far
-from it, he led him to his toldo, and treated him with kindness, as a
-brother. But when did Spaniards ever show themselves grateful for a
-kindness? Don Estevan, forgetful of the sacred duties of hospitality,
-seduced the daughter of the man to whom he owed his life, and, one
-day, disappeared with her. The grief of the Toqui was immense at this
-unworthy and disloyal treachery. He swore to wage from that time a
-pitiless war against the palefaces, and he kept his oath: all Spaniards
-taken by them, whatever their age or sex, were massacred. These terrible
-reprisals were just, were they not?"
-
-"Yes," said the Linda laconically.
-
-"One day, Cadegual, surprised by his ferocious enemies, fell, covered
-with wounds, into their hands, after a heroic resistance, during which
-all his brave Mosotones had allowed themselves to be killed by his side.
-In his turn, as it happened, Cadegual was in the power of Don Estevan de
-Leon. The Spanish chief recollected the man who had, years before, saved
-his life. He was merciful. After cutting off the hands, and scooping out
-the eyes of his prisoner, he restored to him his daughter, of whom he
-was tired, and sent him back to his nation. The Toqui was led back by
-his child, whom he pardoned. When he joined his tribe, Cadegual called
-together his relations, related to them what he had suffered, showed
-them his bleeding and mutilated arms, and, after having made his sons
-and all his relations swear to avenge him, he allowed himself to die of
-hunger, that he might not survive his shame."
-
-"Oh, that is frightful!" Doña Maria cried, affected, in spite of herself.
-
-"That is nothing yet!" the chief resumed, with a bitter smile; "let
-my sister listen to the sequel. From that time, an implacable destiny
-has always hung over the two families, and continually brought the
-descendants of the Toqui Cadegual in contact with those of Captain
-Don Estevan de Leon. During three centuries, this ardent, inveterate
-struggle has lasted between the two families, and will never terminate
-but by the extinction of one, or perhaps both of them. Up to the present
-time, the advantage has almost always been on the side of the Leons;
-the sons of the Toqui have very often been conquered, but they have
-always remained firm and implacable, ready to re-commence the combat at
-the first signal. At the present day, the family of Don Estevan has but
-one representative, Don Tadeo--a representative formidable through his
-courage, his fortune, and the immense influence, he exercises over his
-compatriots. He, personally, has never injured the Aucas; he seems even
-to be ignorant of the inveterate hatred which exists between his family
-and that of the Toqui; but the descendants of Cadegual do not forget
-it: they are strong, numerous, and powerful in their turn; the hour
-of vengeance has struck, they will not let it escape! My sister," he
-continued, in a voice almost rising to a shout; "my sister, my ancestor
-was the Toqui Cadegual, and I thank you for having warned me that not
-only my enemy is not dead, but that he is within my reach!"
-
-"Your mother asked you properly, Penni, why should you revive old
-hatreds? Peace now reigns between the Chilians and the Aucas: let
-my brother beware; the whites are numerous; they have many warlike,
-disciplined soldiers."
-
-"Oh," he replied, with a sinister look; "I am sure of succeeding, for I
-have my nymph."
-
-Indians of high rank all entertain a firm belief that they have a
-familiar genius, who is bound to obey them.
-
-Doña Maria feigned to yield to this reason; she had succeeded in putting
-the hunter upon the scent of the game she wished to destroy, and it was
-of very little importance to her what motive made him obey her. She knew
-perfectly well that the hatred alleged by the chief was nothing but a
-pretext, and that the real cause remained hidden in the depths of his
-heart. Although she had a clear idea of what it was, she affected not to
-have the least suspicion of it.
-
-She continued talking with Antinahuel for some time longer about
-indifferent subjects, and then retired to a chamber which had been
-prepared for her. It was late, and she wished to set out for Valdivia at
-daybreak. She was sufficiently well acquainted with the companion of her
-childhood to know that, now the tiger was roused, it would not be long
-before he started in quest of the prey which she had marked down for him.
-
-As for the Toqui, the whole night passed away without his thinking of
-taking a moment's repose; he remained plunged in profound and agitating
-reflections.
-
-
-[1] The Chilians borrowed the mate from the Araucanos, who think it a
-great delicacy, and have a particular talent for making it. This is the
-manner in which they prepare it:--They put into a coffee cup a spoonful
-of the Paraguay herb, to which they add a lump of sugar, which they
-leave upon the fire till it is a little burnt; they squeeze a few drops
-of lemon juice into it, with some cinnamon and a clove; they then fill
-the cup up with boiling water. The maté being now ready, they introduce
-a silver tube of the thickness of a quill, pierced with small holes at
-its lower end, by means of which the maté is drawn up,--at the risk,
-be it remembered, of horribly scalding the mouth, as always happens to
-strangers when they first partake of the luxury, to the great amusement
-of the Chilians. Drinking maté is so common in Chili, as to be what
-coffee is in the East; it is taken after every repast, and presented to
-every visitor. In ceremonial parties, a single tube serves for all the
-persons assembled.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX.
-
-THE SORCERER.
-
-
-On the same day, a toldería, situated at some miles from Orano, on the
-banks of the Carampangue, was a scene of the greatest commotion. The
-women and warriors assembled in front of a toldo, on the threshold of
-which was exposed a corpse, lying as it were in state, upon a bed of
-branches, were uttering cries and groans, which were mingled with the
-deafening sound of drums and flutes in most dismal discord, and the
-continuous howling of dogs, whom all this din rendered furious. In the
-middle of the crowd, by the side of the body, stood a man advanced
-in years, tall in stature, and clothed in the costume of a woman,
-who appeared to direct the ceremony, making extraordinary gestures
-and contortions, accompanied by scarcely human yells. This man, of a
-ferocious aspect, was the machi, or sorcerer of the tribe; the motions
-he affected, the cries he uttered, were intended to protect the body
-against the attacks of the evil genius, supposed to be eager to get
-possession of it. At a sign from him the music and groans ceased; the
-evil genius, conquered by the power of the machi, had given up the
-contest, after a sharp struggle, and abandoned the body which it was
-beyond his power to obtain. The sorcerer then turned towards a man of
-lofty stature and commanding countenance, who stood near him leaning
-upon a long lance.
-
-"Ulmen of the powerful tribe of the Great Hare," he said, in a
-sepulchral tone, "thy father, the valiant Ulmen, who has been ravished
-from us by Pillian, is no longer in dread of the influence of the
-evil genius, whom I have forced to depart; he now hunts in the happy
-prairies of the Eskennane with the just warriors: all the rites are
-accomplished--the hour for surrendering his body to the earth has
-arrived!"
-
-"Stop!" the chief replied, warmly; "my father is dead, but who has
-killed him? A warrior does not succumb thus, in a few hours, unless some
-secret influence has weighed upon him, and dried up the springs of life
-in his heart. Answer me, O machi, inspired by Pillian! Tell me the name
-of the assassin! My heart is sad, and can only be comforted by avenging
-my father."
-
-At these words, pronounced in a firm voice, a shudder crept through the
-ranks of the people assembled in a group round the body. The machi,
-after having looked searchingly round, cast down his eyes, crossed his
-arms upon his breast, and appeared to reflect.
-
-The Araucanos only think one sort of death possible--that on the field
-of battle; they do not suppose any one can lose his life by either
-accident or disease; in these two cases they always attribute death to
-the action of an occult power, and are persuaded that some enemy of
-the defunct has cast the charm upon him that has killed him. In this
-persuasion, at the period of the funeral ceremonies, the relations and
-friends of the dead person call upon the machi to denounce the assassin
-to them. The machi is obliged to point him out; it would be in vain
-for him to endeavour to make them comprehend that the death of their
-relation is natural, for their fury would be immediately turned against
-him, and he would become their victim.
-
-In this hard alternative, the machi takes good care not to hesitate; the
-murderer is the more easily pointed out through his non-existence, and
-from the sorcerer being in no danger of being suspected of deception.
-Generally, in order to make his own interests agree with those of the
-relations who claim a victim, he gives up one of his own personal
-enemies to their vengeance; when--but that is rare--the machi has no
-enemies, he fixes upon someone at hazard. The pretended murderer, in
-spite of his protestations of innocence, is immolated without mercy.
-
-It may be easily understood how perilous such a custom is, and what
-an influence it gives the sorcerer in the tribe; an influence we are
-obliged to admit which he abuses under all circumstances, without the
-least scruple.
-
-Fresh personages, among whom were Valentine and his friend, had arrived
-at the village, and, attracted by curiosity, mingled with the crowd
-collected round the body. The two Frenchmen could not comprehend
-anything of this scene till their guide had briefly explained it to
-them; then they followed the different phases of it with great interest.
-
-"Speak!" said the Ulmen, after a short pause. "Does not my father know
-the name of the man of whom we must demand an account of this murder?"
-
-"I know him," the sorcerer replied, in a solemn tone.
-
-"Why, then, does the inspired machi preserve silence, when the dead body
-cries for vengeance?"
-
-"Because," the machi said, looking this time the newly-arrived chief
-full in the face, "there are powerful men who laugh at human justice."
-
-The eyes of the crowd turned to the man whom the sorcerer appeared
-indirectly to point out.
-
-"The guilty man," the Ulmen cried, in a loud voice, "whatever be his
-rank in the tribe, shall not escape my just vengeance; speak without
-fear, priest of fate! I swear that the man whose name passes your lips
-shall die!"
-
-The machi drew himself up majestically; he raised his arm slowly, and,
-amidst the general anxious curiosity, he, with his finger, pointed to
-the chief who had offered such cordial hospitality to the strangers,
-saying, in a loud, ringing voice--
-
-"Accomplish your oath, then, Ulmen--that is the assassin of your father,
-Trangoil-Lanec cast the charm upon him which has killed him!"
-
-And the machi veiled his face with the corner of his poncho, as if
-overwhelmed with grief at making the revelation.
-
-The sorcerer's terrible words were succeeded by the silence of
-astonishment. Trangoil-Lanec was the last man in the tribe who would
-have been suspected. He was beloved and venerated by all for his
-courage, frankness, and generosity. The first sensation of surprise
-over, a general movement took place in the crowd; all drew back from
-the supposed murderer, leaving him face to face with the chief of whose
-death he was accused. Trangoil-Lanec remained impassive, a smile of
-disdain passed over his lips, he dismounted from his horse, and waited.
-
-The Ulmen walked slowly towards him, and when within a few paces, asked,
-in a sorrowful voice--
-
-"Why didst thou kill my father, Trangoil-Lanec? He loved thee, and I,
-was not I thy Penni?"
-
-"I have not killed thy father, Curumilla," the chief replied, with a
-tone of frankness that would have convinced a man less prejudiced than
-the one he addressed.
-
-"The machi has said so."
-
-"The machi lies."
-
-"No, the machi cannot lie--he is inspired by Pillian; thou, thy wife,
-and thy children must die; the law decrees that it shall be so."
-
-Without deigning to reply, the chief threw down his arms, and went
-and placed himself beside the stake of blood, planted in front of the
-medicine toldo, which contains the sacred idol. A circle was formed, of
-which the stake formed the centre; the wife and children of the chief
-were brought up, and were prepared immediately for the sacrifice; for
-the funeral ceremony of the chief could not be completed before the
-execution of his murderer. The machi was triumphant. One man alone in
-the tribe had ventured to hold up his hand against his robberies and
-rogueries, and that man was about to die and leave him absolute master.
-Upon a sign from Curumilla, two Indians seized the chief, and, in spite
-of the tears and sobs of his wives and children, they prepared to fasten
-him to the stake.
-
-The two Frenchmen had anxiously watched the spectacle of this infamous
-drama; Louis was disgusted with the rascality of the machi and the
-credulity of the Indians.
-
-"Oh!" he said, to his friend, "we cannot allow this murder to be
-accomplished."
-
-"Hum!" muttered Valentine, stroking the ends of his light moustache, and
-casting a glance around him, "hum! there is a great number of them."
-
-"What matters it how many?" Louis replied, impetuously; "I will not
-be the witness of such iniquity, if I die for it. I will attempt to
-save the life of that unfortunate man, who so frankly offered us his
-friendship."
-
-"The fact is," Valentine said, pensively, "this Trangoil-Lanec, as they
-call him, is a very worthy fellow, for whom I feel a warm sympathy; but
-what can we do?"
-
-"Pardieu!" Louis said, seizing his pistols, "throw ourselves between him
-and his enemies; we can each of us kill five or six."
-
-"Yes, and the others will kill us, without our having succeeded in
-saving the man for whom we devote ourselves. A bad means that! Let us
-try to find some other."
-
-"We must be quick, then; the torture is about to commence."
-
-Valentine struck his forehead, and cried, with a jeering laugh--
-
-"Bah! I have it! Trick must serve our turn--leave it to me; my old trade
-of a mountebank will do! Help me, if I want it; but, for heaven's sake,
-swear to remain calm!"
-
-"I swear I will, if you save him."
-
-"Be satisfied--against rogue I'll play rogue and a half; these savages
-shall see I can be more cunning than they."
-
-Valentine urged his horse into the middle of the circle, and shouted--
-
-"Stop a minute!"
-
-At the unexpected appearance of this man, whom nobody had yet observed,
-all turned round and looked at him with astonishment. Louis, with his
-hands on his pistols, watched his movements with anxiety, ready to fly
-to his succour, if he needed it.
-
-"We will not joke," continued Valentine, "we have not time for that.
-You are a set of fools, and your machi is laughing at you. What! would
-you kill a man without a moment's reflection, because a rogue bids you
-do so? Caramba! I have taken it into my head to prevent your committing
-such a folly--I will do it, too!"
-
-And placing his hand upon his hip, he looked round with an intrepid
-glance. The Indians, according to their strange custom, listened to
-this speech without evincing surprise, even by a gesture. Curumilla
-approached him.
-
-"My pale brother must retire," he said, calmly; "he is unacquainted with
-the laws of the Puelches; this man is condemned, he must die; the machi
-has pointed him out as a murderer."
-
-"I repeat to you, you are fools!" said Valentine shrugging his
-shoulders; "your machi is no more a conjurer than I am; I again tell
-you, he is cheating you, and I will prove it, if you will let me."
-
-"What says my father?" said Curumilla to the machi, who stood cold and
-motionless by the side of the body.
-
-The machi smiled disdainfully.
-
-"When did the white man ever speak truth?" he replied, with a sneer.
-"Let this one prove what he asserts, if he is able."
-
-"Good!" the Ulmen said; "the Murucho may speak."
-
-"Pardieu!" cried Valentine. "Notwithstanding the bold-faced assurance of
-this individual, I shall find it no difficult matter to prove that he is
-an impostor."
-
-"We are attentive," said Curumilla.
-
-The Indians drew round with intense curiosity. Louis could not at all
-make out what his friend proposed to do. He could only suppose that some
-extravagant idea had crossed his brain, and was as impatient as the rest
-to see how he would come through his dangerous undertaking with honour.
-
-"One moment!" said the machi, with perfect assurance. "What will my
-brothers do if I prove my accusation true?"
-
-"The stranger must die," said Curumilla, coolly.
-
-"I accept the terms," Valentine replied, resolutely. Placed thus in the
-necessity of explaining himself, the Frenchman drew himself up to his
-full height, and, knitting his brows, exclaimed pompously--
-
-"I, too, am a great medicine man!"
-
-The Indians bowed reverentially. The science of Europeans is perfectly
-established among them; they respect without disputing it.
-
-"It was not Trangoil-Lanec," continued the Frenchman, with the greatest
-audacity, "who killed the chief; it was the machi himself."
-
-A start of astonishment pervaded the assembly.
-
-"I!" cried the machi, in a voice of amazement.
-
-"You, yourself, and you know it well," replied Valentine, giving him a
-look that made him tremble.
-
-"Stranger," said Trangoil-Lanec, with the majesty of a martyr, "it is
-no use to interpose in my favour; my brothers believe me guilty, and
-innocent though I am, I must die."
-
-"Your devotion to your laws is noble, but in this case it is absurd,"
-Valentine replied.
-
-"This man is guilty," the machi persisted.
-
-"Let us put an end to this, then," replied Trangoil-Lanec; "kill me!"
-
-"What say my brothers?" Curumilla asked of the crowd, who pressed
-anxiously around him.
-
-"That the Murucho medicine-man be allowed to prove the truth of his
-words," replied the warriors with one voice.
-
-They loved Trangoil-Lanec, and in their hearts desired that he should
-not die. On the other hand, they entertained for the machi a hatred
-which the profound terror he inspired them with scarcely sufficed to
-make them conceal.
-
-"Very well," said Valentine, "this is what I propose."
-
-All were silent as the grave. The Frenchman drew his sword, and waved
-the bright blade before the eyes of the spectators.
-
-"You see this weapon," said he, in a pompous tone; "I will put it into
-my mouth, and swallow it up to the hilt. If Trangoil-Lanec is guilty, I
-shall die; if he is innocent, as I affirm, Pillian will help me, and I
-shall draw forth the sword from my body without suffering a wound."
-
-"My brother speaks like a courageous warrior," said Curumilla; "we are
-ready to behold."
-
-"I will not suffer it!" Trangoil-Lanec shouted. "Does my brother want to
-kill himself?"
-
-"Pillian is judge!" Valentine replied, with a smile of strange
-expression, and with an air of conviction admirably well played.
-
-The two Frenchmen exchanged a glance. The Indians are perfect children
-in their love of spectacle, and the extraordinary proposal of the
-Parisian seemed to them to admit of no reply.
-
-"The trial! the trial!" they shouted.
-
-"Very well," said Valentine; "let my brothers behold, then."
-
-He first placed himself in the proper position adopted by jugglers when
-they exhibit this feat in public places; then introducing the blade of
-the sword into his mouth, in a few seconds the whole of it disappeared.
-During the performance of this trick, which in their eyes was a
-miracle, the Puelches watched the bold Frenchman in breathless terror.
-They could not comprehend how a man could perform such an operation
-without deliberately killing himself. Valentine turned on all sides,
-so that everyone might be convinced of the reality of the fact; then
-he deliberately withdrew the blade from his mouth, as bright as when
-it came from the sheath. A cry of enthusiasm burst from the crowd: the
-miracle was evident.
-
-"One minute more," he said; "I have still something to demand of you."
-
-Silence was in an instant re-established.
-
-"I have proved to you, in an incontrovertible manner, that the chief is
-not guilty--have I not?"
-
-"Yes! yes!" they shouted simultaneously; "the paleface is a great
-medicine man! he is beloved by Pillian!"
-
-"Very well. Now, then," he added, with a sardonic smile directed towards
-the machi, "your machi should prove in his turn that I have calumniated
-him, and that it was not he who killed the Apo-Ulmen of your tribe. The
-dead chief was a great warrior; it ought to be avenged."
-
-"Yes," the warriors cried, "he ought to be avenged."
-
-"My brother speaks well," observed Curumilla; "let the machi be put to
-the proof."
-
-The unfortunate machi perceived at once that he was lost. He became
-livid, and a cold perspiration bathed his temples, whilst a convulsive
-tremor shook his limbs.
-
-"This man is an impostor," he muttered, in a voice scarcely audible; "he
-abuses your good faith."
-
-"Perhaps I am," said Valentine; "but, in the meantime, imitate me."
-
-"Here," said Curumilla, holding out the sword to the machi, "if you are
-innocent, Pillian will protect you, as he has protected my brother."
-
-"Caramba! that is certain; Pillian always protects the innocent, and you
-are about to be a proof of it," said the Parisian, in whom the revived
-spirit of the _gamin_ was now triumphant.
-
-The machi cast around a look of despair; all eyes were expressive of
-impatience and curiosity; the unhappy wretch perceived but too plainly
-that he could look for help to nobody, and he formed his resolution
-instantly--he determined to die as he had lived, deceiving the crowd to
-the last minute.
-
-"I fear nothing," he said, in a firm voice; "this steel will be harmless
-to me. You desire that I should go through the trial--I will obey. But,
-beware! Pillian is angry with your conduct towards me; the humiliation
-you impose upon me will be avenged by the terrible scourges which he
-will inflict upon you."
-
-At these words of their prophet the Puelches were moved. They hesitated.
-For many long years they had been accustomed to place entire faith in
-his predictions, and they experienced a kind of fear in thus daring to
-accuse him of imposture. Valentine saw at a glance what was passing in
-their hearts.
-
-"Capitally well played," he said, replying by a knowing wink to the
-triumphant smile of the machi; "now it is my turn. Let my brothers take
-heart!" he added, in a loud, firm voice. "No misfortune threatens them;
-this man speaks thus because he is afraid to die; he knows he is guilty,
-and that Pillian will not protect him."
-
-The machi darted a glance at him gleaming with hatred, seized the
-sword, and, imitating as well as he knew how what he had seen, with
-desperate quickness plunged the blade down his throat. A stream of black
-blood sprang from his mouth, his eyes glared hideously, his arms shook
-convulsively, he staggered two steps forward, and fell flat upon his
-face. The people crowded round him--he was dead.
-
-"Let this lying dog be thrown to the vultures," said Curumilla, kicking
-the lifeless body with contempt.
-
-"We are brothers for life and death," cried Trangoil-Lanec, embracing
-Valentine.
-
-"Well," the young man said with a smile, to his friend, "I think I
-have not got very badly through that affair--eh? You see, it is well,
-sometimes, to have practised many trades; even that of a mountebank may
-serve at need."
-
-"Do not calumniate your heart and courage," Louis replied, warmly
-pressing his hand; "you have; saved the life of a man."
-
-"Aye; but I have killed another."
-
-"Oh, he was a guilty wretch!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI.
-
-THE OBSEQUIES OF AN APO-ULMEN.
-
-
-The emotion caused by the death of the machi gradually died away, and
-order was re-established. Curumilla and Trangoil-Lanec, abjuring any
-feeling of enmity, exchanged a fraternal embrace, amidst the frantic
-applause of the warriors, who loved both the chiefs.
-
-"Now my father is avenged, we can restore his body to the earth,"
-Curumilla observed. Then, advancing towards the strangers, he bowed to
-them, saying--
-
-"Will the palefaces assist at the obsequies?"
-
-"We will," Louis replied.
-
-"My toldo is large," the chief continued; "my brothers will do me honour
-by consenting to inhabit it during their sojourn with the tribe."
-
-Louis was about to reply, but Trangoil-Lanec hastily prevented him.
-
-"My brothers the palefaces," he said, "have deigned to accept my poor
-hospitality."
-
-The young men bowed in silence.
-
-"Good!" the Ulmen continued. "Of what consequence is that? Whichever be
-the toldo the Muruches may choose, I shall consider them as my guests."
-
-"Many thanks, chief," Valentine replied; "be assured that we are
-grateful for your kindness."
-
-The Ulmen then took leave of the Frenchmen, and resumed his place by the
-side of his father's corpse, and the ceremonies commenced. The Araucanos
-are not, as some travellers have led us to believe, a people destitute
-of any faith; on the contrary, their faith is warm, and their religion
-rests upon bases which are not deficient in grandeur. They have no
-dogma, and yet they recognize two principles--that of good and that of
-evil.
-
-The first, named Pillian, is the Creating God; the second, named
-Guécubu, is the Destroying God. Guécubu is in a state of continual
-struggle with Pillian, endeavouring to disturb the harmony of the world,
-and destroy what exists; by which we see that the doctrine of Manicheism
-was embraced by the barbarians of both the old and the new world, who,
-being unable to penetrate the causes of good and evil, have imagined two
-contrary principles. In addition to these two principal deities, the
-Araucanos recognize a considerable number of secondary genii, who assist
-Pillian in his contest with Guécubu. These genii are males and females;
-the latter are all virgins, for--and it is a refined idea which we could
-not expect in a barbarous people--procreation is not necessary in the
-supernatural world. The male gods are named Géru, or lords; the females,
-Amey-Malghen, or spiritual nymphs.
-
-The Araucanos believe in the immortality of the soul, and, consequently,
-in a future life, in which the warriors who have distinguished
-themselves on earth hunt in game-abounding prairies, surrounded by
-everything they have loved. Like all American aborigines, the Araucanos
-are extremely superstitious. Their worship consists in assembling in
-the medicine toldo, where there is a shapeless idol, said to represent
-Pillian. They weep; they utter loud cries, with numberless contortions;
-and sacrifice to him a sheep, a cow, a horse, or a _chilihuegue_.
-
-At a signal from Curumilla, the warriors drew back to give place to the
-women, who surrounded the body, and began to walk in a circle, singing
-in a low and plaintive tone the noble feats of the deceased. At the
-expiration of about an hour, the cortege moved off after the corpse,
-which was borne by the four most renowned warriors of the tribe, and
-directed its course towards a hill where the place of sepulture was
-prepared. Behind followed the women, casting handfuls of hot ashes over
-the traces left by the passage of the funeral train; so that if the soul
-of the defunct should have any inclination to return to its body, it
-would not be able to find the way to his toldo, or come and trouble his
-heirs.
-
-When the body was laid in the grave, Curumilla cut the throats of his
-father's dogs and horses, which were placed near him, to enable him
-to hunt in the happy prairies. Within reach of his hand was placed a
-certain quantity of provisions for the nourishment of himself and the
-_tempulazzy_, or boatman, appointed to convey him to the other country,
-and into the presence of Pillian, where he is to be judged according
-to his good or evil actions. Earth was then thrown in upon the body.
-But, as the defunct had been a renowned warrior, a heap of stones was
-collected, of which a pyramid was formed; then everyone walked slowly
-once more round the tomb, pouring upon it a great quantity of chica. The
-relations and friends returned dancing and singing to the village, where
-awaited them one of those Homeric repasts of Araucanian funerals called
-cahuins, which last till all the partakers lie upon the ground utterly
-intoxicated.
-
-Beyond a little natural curiosity, our travellers did not take much
-interest in the ceremony or feast; they were fatigued, and preferred a
-short repose. Trangoil-Lanec guessed their thoughts; and, as soon as the
-procession returned, he left his companions, and offered to conduct the
-young men to his dwelling. They availed themselves of his kindness with
-alacrity. Like all Araucanian huts, this was a vast wooden building,
-covered with whitewashed mud, in the form of a rectangle, the roof being
-a terrace. This simple, airy residence displayed, in its interior, a
-perfect Dutch cleanliness.
-
-Trangoil-Lanec, as we have said, was one of the richest and most
-respected chiefs of his tribe, and had eight wives. Polygamy is allowed
-among the Moluches. When an Indian is desirous of marrying a woman, he
-declares his purpose to her parent, and fixes the number of animals he
-is willing to give. His conditions being accepted, he comes with a few
-friends, carries off the young woman, throws her on the saddle behind
-him, and gallops off to the woods, in the depths of which the couple
-remain three days. On the fourth they return; he slaughters a young
-mare in front of the hut of the father of his bride, and the marriage
-festivities begin. The abduction of the bride, and the sacrifice of
-the mare, take the place of a civil contract. After this fashion an
-Araucano is at liberty to marry as many wives as he can support. And
-yet, the first wife, who bears the title of unem domo, or legitimate
-wife, is most honoured; she has the direction of the household, and
-is the superior of the others, who are called inam domo, or secondary
-wives. All inhabit the same toldo, but in different apartments, where
-they employ themselves in bringing up their children, in weaving
-ponchos with the wool of guanacos and chilihuegues, and in preparing
-the dish which an Indian woman is bound to place every day on the table
-of her husband. Marriage is held sacred, and adultery is considered
-the greatest of crimes; the man and woman who should commit it would
-inevitably be assassinated by the husband and his relations, unless they
-redeemed their lives by means of a compensation imposed by the injured
-husband. When an Araucano leaves his home, he confides his wives to
-his relations, and, on his return, if he can prove that they have been
-unfaithful to him, he has the right of demanding of the guardians all he
-thinks proper to ask; so that the relations are interested in watching
-them. This strictness of morals only regards married women; others
-enjoy the greatest liberty, and take advantage of it without any person
-presuming to find fault with them.
-
-The two Frenchmen, thrown so suddenly into the midst of these strange
-manners and customs, were some time before they could comprehend Indian
-life. Valentine, in particular, was completely at a loss; he was in
-a state of perpetual astonishment, which, however, he took good care
-should not appear in his words or in his actions; for the adventure of
-the machi had raised him so high in the estimation of the inhabitants
-of the toldero, that he dreaded, with reason, lest the smallest
-indiscretion should cast him down from the pedestal upon which he
-maintained his erect position.
-
-One evening, when Louis was preparing, as he frequently did, to visit
-the various toldos, in order to inquire after the sick, and administer
-to them all the relief his limited knowledge of medicine permitted,
-Curumilla came to the two strangers to invite them to be present at the
-cahuin given by the new machi, who had been elected that day, in place
-of the dead one. Valentine promised that they would come. From what
-we have said before, it may easily be comprehended what an enormous
-influence a sorcerer possesses over the members of the tribe; the choice
-is therefore difficult to make, and is seldom a good one. The sorcerer
-is generally a woman: when it is a man, he assumes the female costume,
-which he wears for the rest of his life. In almost all cases the science
-is inherited.
-
-After smoking a considerable number of pipes, and making endless
-speeches, the Araucanos had chosen, as a successor to the machi, an old
-man, of a mild, kindly character, who, during the course of his long
-existence, had only made friends. The repast was, as may be supposed,
-copious, abundantly furnished with ulpo, the national dish of the
-Araucans, and moistened with an incalculable number of couis of chica.
-Among the other delicacies which figured at the feast was a large basket
-filled with hard eggs, which the Ulmens swallowed in emulation of each
-other.
-
-"Why don't you eat some eggs?" said Curumilla to Valentine. "Do you not
-like them?"
-
-"On the contrary, chief, I am very fond of eggs, but not cooked in that
-fashion; I have no inclination to choke myself, thank you."
-
-"Oh! yes," the Ulmen said; "I understand; you prefer them raw."
-
-Valentine burst into a Homeric fit of laughter.
-
-"Not better than these," he said, when he had recovered his gravity;
-"I like eggs boiled in the shell; I like omelettes, or pancakes, but
-neither hard nor raw, if you please."
-
-"What do you mean by that? Cooked eggs must be hard."
-
-The young man looked at him with astonishment, and then said to him in a
-tone of profound compassion--
-
-"Now, really, chief, do you mean to say you are only acquainted with
-hard eggs?"
-
-"Our fathers have always eaten them thus," the Ulmen replied, quietly.
-
-"Poor people! how I pity them! They have been ignorant of one of the
-greatest enjoyments of life. Well, my friend," he exclaimed, raising his
-voice with jocular enthusiasm, "I am determined you shall adore me as
-a benefactor to humanity! In short, I will endow you with soft-boiled
-eggs, and with omelettes; at least, the remembrance of me shall not die
-from among you. When I am gone, and you eat one of those two dishes, you
-will think of me."
-
-In spite of his sadness, Louis could not help laughing at the burlesque
-humour and inexhaustible cheerfulness of his foster brother, in whom,
-at every minute, the gamin prevailed over the serious man. The chiefs
-welcomed with joy the offer of the spahi, and asked, with loud cries, on
-what day he would carry his promise into execution.
-
-"Oh, I will not make you wait long," he said; "tomorrow, on the square
-of the toldería, and before all the assembled tribe of the Great Hare,
-I will show you how you must set about boiling an egg, and making an
-omelette."
-
-At this promise, the satisfaction of the chiefs mounted to the highest
-pitch, the couis of the chica circulated with increased vivacity, and
-the Ulmens soon found themselves sufficiently intoxicated to begin to
-sing as loud as they could shout, and all together,--a sort of music
-that produced such an effect upon the two Frenchmen, that they made
-their escape, stopping their ears. The feast was kept up long after
-their departure.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII.
-
-EXPLANATIONS.
-
-
-We will now return to the chacra of Don Gregorio Peralta, to which
-Doña Rosario had been conducted after her miraculous deliverance.
-The first days that followed the departure of the two Frenchmen were
-sufficiently devoid of incident: Doña Rosario, shut up in her bedroom,
-remained almost continually alone. The poor girl, like all wounded
-spirits, sought to forget reality, by taking refuge in dreams, in order
-to collect and preserve piously in the depths of her heart the few
-happy remembrances which had so rarely gilded with a ray of sunshine
-the sadness of her existence. Don Tadeo, completely absorbed in his
-imperative political combinations, could only see her now and then, and
-but for a few minutes at a time. Before him, she endeavoured to appear
-cheerful, but she suffered the more from being obliged to conceal in her
-own bosom the sorrow which consumed her. She occasionally crept down
-into the garden; she stopped under the arbour in which her meeting with
-Louis had taken place, and remained hours together thinking of him she
-loved, and whom she had driven from her for ever.
-
-This poor child, so beautiful, so mild, so pure, so worthy of being
-loved, was condemned by an implacable destiny continually to lead a
-life of suffering and isolation; without a relation, without a friend
-to whom she might impart the secret of her grief. She was little more
-than sixteen, and already her bruised heart shrank back upon itself; her
-colour faded, her step became languid, her large blue eyes, swimming in
-tears, were incessantly raised towards heaven, as the only refuge that
-remained for her; she appeared to hold to the earth only by a slight
-thread, which the least fresh shock of adversity would snap.
-
-The maiden's story was a strange one. She had never known her parents;
-she had no remembrance of the kisses of her mother--those warm caresses
-of childhood, which make even mature age tremble with joy. From her
-earliest days, she could only remember being alone, always alone, in the
-hands of the mercenary and indifferent. The innocent joys of childhood
-remained unknown to her; she had known nothing of them but their
-weariness and sadness, and had ever been deprived of those friendships
-of early youth which, by insensibly preparing the mind for affectionate
-expansion, give birth to smiles in the midst of tears, and console with
-a kiss.
-
-Don Tadeo was the only person who was attached to her; he had never
-abandoned her, but watched with the greatest care over her material
-well-being, smiled upon her, and ever gave her good and pleasant
-counsels: but Don Tadeo was much too serious a man to comprehend the
-thousand little cares which the education of a young girl requires. She
-could only entertain for him that profound, yet respectful friendship
-which forbids those ingenuous confidences which can only be made to a
-mother, or to a companion of the same age. The visits of Don Tadeo were
-surrounded by an incomprehensible mystery; sometimes, without apparent
-cause, he made her suddenly quit people to whom he had confided her,
-and took her away with him, after ordering her to change her name,
-upon long tours. It was thus she had been to France: then, he quite as
-unexpectedly brought her back to Chili, sometimes to one city, sometimes
-to another, without ever condescending to explain to her the reasons for
-her leading such a wandering life.
-
-Constrained by her isolation to depend only upon herself, forced to
-reflect as soon as the first rays of reason enlightened her brain, the
-maiden, though so delicate and fragile in appearance, was endowed with
-an energy and firmness of character of which she was ignorant, but
-which supported her unconsciously; and if the hour of danger arrived,
-would be of infinite use to her. She had often, urged by the instinct
-of curiosity so natural to her age in the exceptional position in which
-she was placed, sought by adroit questions to seize the thread that
-might guide her in this labyrinth; but all had proved useless--Don Tadeo
-remained mute. One day only, after having for a long time contemplated
-her with an expression of sadness, he had pressed her to his heart, and
-said in a trembling voice,--
-
-"Poor child! I will protect you against your enemies!"
-
-Who could those formidable enemies be? Why were they so inveterate
-against a girl of sixteen, who knew nothing of the world, and had
-never injured a human being? These questions, which Doña Rosario was
-continually asking herself, always remained unanswered. She only caught
-a glimpse in her life, of one of those terrible mysteries which bring
-death to the imprudent who persist in endeavouring to discover them;
-her days, therefore, were passed in continual fears, engendered by her
-imagination.
-
-One evening, when, sad and thoughtful as usual, and buried in the depths
-of an easy chair, in her bedchamber, she was turning over the leaves of
-a book which she was not reading, Don Tadeo entered the room. He saluted
-her, as he always did, by a kiss on her brow, took a seat, placed
-himself in front of her, and after looking at her for a moment with a
-melancholy smile, said quietly,--
-
-"I wish to speak with you, Rosario."
-
-"I am all attention, dear friend," she replied, endeavouring to smile.
-
-But before we report this conversation, we must present our readers
-with a few necessary explanations. Like all the other countries of
-South America, Chili, for a long time depressed beneath the Spanish
-yoke, had conquered its independence, more through the weakness of its
-ancient master than by its own proper strength. The system followed by
-the Spanish authorities from the beginning had checked in the people
-of these countries the development of the philosophical ideas which
-give man a consciousness of his own value, render him one day apt to
-achieve liberty, and ripe to enjoy it within just limits. We have said,
-in a preceding work, that the Americans of the South have none of the
-virtues of their ancestors, but, to make up for it, they possess all
-their vices. Destitute of that early education without which it is
-impossible to do or even to conceive great things, the Chilian nation,
-free by an unexpected chance, found itself immediately the sport of
-a few intriguing men, who concealed beneath high-sounding words of
-patriotism a boundless ambition. The newly-freed country struggled in
-vain; the innate carelessness of its inhabitants, and the levity of
-their character, formed an invincible object to any amelioration.
-
-At the epoch at which we have arrived, Chili was labouring under the
-oppression of General Bustamente. This man, not contented with being
-minister of a republic, dreamt of nothing less than causing himself
-to be proclaimed the chief of it, under the title of protector. The
-realization of this idea was not impossible. From its geographical
-position, Chili is almost independent of those troublesome neighbours
-who, in the states of the old world, keep watch over all the acts of
-a nation, and are, ready to put in their _veto_ as soon as their own
-interest appears to be threatened. On one side separated from Upper
-Peru by the vast and almost impassable desert of Atacama, Bolivia alone
-might hazard some timid observations; but the General cherished secret
-hopes of including that republic itself in the new confederation; on
-the other side, immense solitudes and the Cordilleras separated it from
-Buenos Aires, which had neither the will nor the power to oppose his
-projects. One people alone could make a war with him, which he should
-dread, and they were the Araucanos; that little nation, driven like
-an iron wedge into Chili, disturbed the General's plans seriously. He
-resolved to treat with the Araucano Toqui, while determined, at the same
-time, when his projects should have succeeded, to unite all his forces
-to conquer that country which had so long resisted the Spanish power. In
-a word, General Bustamente dreamt of creating at the southern extremity
-of America, with Chili, Araucania, and Bolivia confederated, a rival
-nationality to the United States. Unfortunately for the General, there
-was not in him the stuff to make a great man; he was simply a _parvenu_,
-an ignorant and cruel soldier.
-
-When America raised the standard of revolt against the mother country,
-numerous secret societies were formed at all points of the territory,
-the most redoubtable, beyond contradiction, being that of the
-Dark-Hearts. The men who placed themselves at the head of this society
-were all intelligent and well informed, mostly educated in Europe, who,
-having seen in the field of action the great principles of the French
-revolution, wished, by applying them in their own country, to regenerate
-the nation. After the proclamation of Chilian independence, the secret
-societies, having no longer an object, disappeared. One alone persisted
-in remaining permanent--that of the Dark-Hearts. This society was not
-willing that license should assume the mantle of liberty: it felt that
-it had a great and holy mission to fulfil, and that its task, so far
-from being terminated, was scarcely commenced. It was necessary to
-instruct the people, to render them worthy of taking their place among
-nations, and, above all, to deliver them from the tyrants who wished
-to enslave them. This mission the society of the Dark-Hearts laboured
-incessantly to carry out, struggling constantly against oppressive
-powers, which succeeded each other, and destroying them without mercy.
-Proteus-like and intangible, the members of this society escaped the
-most active researches: if by chance some few of them fell in the arena,
-they died with head erect, confident in the future, and leaving to their
-brethren the care of continuing their task.
-
-The recovery of General Bustamente caused the Dark-Hearts a momentary
-stupor; but Don Tadeo, who had caused the news of the miraculous manner
-in which he had survived his execution to be spread universally,
-revived their spirits by placing himself again at their head. Not that
-either courage or hope had failed them. However great the skill of the
-machinations employed by the General to insure the success of his plans,
-the Loyal-Hearts, who had confederates everywhere, foresaw and defeated
-them. They watched all his movements with the greatest care, for they
-were quite aware that the moment was drawing near when their enemy would
-throw off the mask. They had heard of the departure of the convalescent
-General for Valdivia. For what reason, as his health was still so
-uncertain, and repose so necessary, had he gone to that remote province?
-That must be learnt at any price, and they must prepare against any
-eventuality.
-
-In a meeting of the society, future measures were agreed upon; it was
-moreover resolved that the King of Darkness should at the same time
-repair to Valdivia, in order, if advisable, to take the initiative in
-resistance. But Don Tadeo could not think of leaving Doña Rosario behind
-him, exposed to the unprincipled attacks of the Linda. He alone could
-defend the young girl; was he not her only support? As soon, then, as
-the Dark-Hearts had dispersed, Don Tadeo returned to the chacra, and
-went straight to Doña Rosario's chamber.
-
-"My dear child," he said, "I have sad news to inform you of."
-
-"Speak, my kind friend," she replied.
-
-"Urgent affairs require my presence as soon as possible in Valdivia."
-
-"Oh!" she cried, with an expression of terror, "you will not leave me
-here, will you?"
-
-"At first I intended to do so, this retreat appearing to me to unite all
-the guarantees for security; but cheer up, my child! I have changed my
-mind; I have fancied you would prefer accompanying me?"
-
-"Oh, yes," she said, eagerly; "you are always kind. When do we set out?"
-
-"Tomorrow, dear child, at sunrise."
-
-"I shall be ready," she replied, holding up her pretty face towards him,
-that he might impress his customary kiss upon her brow.
-
-Don Tadeo retired, and Rosario immediately set about the preparations
-for her journey. Of what consequence was it to her whether she were in
-one place or another, since she was doomed to suffer everywhere? And who
-can say whether the poor girl, without daring to avow it to herself, did
-not entertain the hope of again seeing him she loved? Love is a divine
-sunbeam that illumines the darkest nights.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII.
-
-THE CHINGANA.
-
-
-Valdivia, founded in 1551 by the Spanish conqueror Don Pedro de
-Valdivia, is a charming city, two leagues from the sea, upon the left
-bank of a river, which large vessels can easily ascend into the fertile
-valley of Guadallanguen. The aspect of the city, the advanced post of
-civilization in these remote countries, is most agreeable; the streets
-are large, uniformly built; the white houses, only one story high,
-on account of the frequency of earthquakes, are terrace-roofed. Here
-and there rise in the air the steeples of the numerous churches and
-convents, which occupy more than a third of the city. It is astonishing
-to what an extent convents are multiplied in South America. It might
-be supposed that the New World was the land of promise for monks; they
-appear to rise out of the earth at every step. Thanks to the extensive
-commerce which Valdivia carries on by means of its port, which is
-visited by the numerous whalers fishing in those seas, and ships which
-come there to refit, after doubling Cape Horn, or before passing
-it,--its streets have more animation than is generally to be met with in
-American cities.
-
-Don Tadeo arrived in Valdivia, accompanied by Don Gregorio and Doña
-Rosario, on the evening of the sixteenth day after his departure from
-his friend's chacra. They had used all diligence, and for that country,
-where there are no other means of travelling but on horseback, it might
-be considered a quick journey. If the two gentlemen had thought proper
-to do so, they might have entered the city about three o'clock in the
-afternoon, but they deemed it advisable that no one in a place where
-so many people knew them should be made aware of their arrival: in the
-first place, because the causes which brought them there required the
-greatest secrecy; and, further, because Don Tadeo was forced to conceal
-himself, in order to avoid the police agents of the president of the
-republic, who had orders to arrest him wherever they might meet with
-him. Fortunately, in these countries the police never arrest anybody
-when not absolutely compelled, unless those whom they pursue come and
-deliver themselves up into their hands--an event, we may safely say,
-that rarely happens.
-
-As during his sojourn at Valdivia, his manner of living must be
-regulated by the affairs which brought him there, he could not openly
-keep house or appear in public, Don Tadeo went straight to the convent
-of the Ursulines, and committed the young lady he had brought with him
-to the care of the abbess, who was not only his relation, but was a
-worthy person, in whom he had perfect confidence. Doña Rosario accepted
-without hesitation the asylum which was offered to her, and where she
-fancied she should be safe from the attacks of her invisible enemies.
-Don Tadeo took an affectionate leave of her and the venerable abbess,
-and hastened to a house of the calle San-Xavier, where Don Gregorio, who
-had left him on entering the city, to avoid observation, awaited his
-coming.
-
-"Well?" asked Don Gregorio, as soon as he saw him.
-
-"She is in safety; at least I suppose so," Don Tadeo replied, with a
-sigh.
-
-"So much the better, for we must redouble our precautions."
-
-"Why so?"
-
-"After leaving you I made inquiries; I observed, I questioned people as
-I walked about and loitered at the port and the Almeda."
-
-"Well, what have you learnt?"
-
-"As we imagined, General Bustamente is here."
-
-"Already?"
-
-"He arrived three days ago."
-
-"What reason could be so important as to bring him here?" said Don
-Tadeo, with an uneasy expression. "Oh, I will know!"
-
-"Another thing: who do you think accompanies him?"
-
-"The executioner, no doubt!" said Don Tadeo, with an ironical smile.
-
-"Almost as bad," Don Gregorio replied.
-
-"Whom do you mean, then?"
-
-"The Linda!"
-
-The chief of the Dark-Hearts turned deadly pale.
-
-"Oh," he said, "that woman! for ever that woman! you must be mistaken,
-my friend; it is impossible!"
-
-"I have seen her."
-
-Don Tadeo walked about in great agitation for several minutes; then,
-stopping short in front of his friend, said, in a husky voice--
-
-"Dear Don Gregorio, are you certain you have not been misled by a
-resemblance? Are you quite sure it was she?"
-
-"You had just left me, and I was coming hither, when the sound of horses
-made me turn my head, and I saw, I repeat I saw, the Linda; she also
-appeared to have just arrived at Valdivia; two lancers escorted her, and
-an arriero led the baggage mules.
-
-"Oh!" said Don Tadeo, "will the infernal malice of that demon ever
-pursue me?"
-
-"My friend," Don Gregorio remarked, "in the path we have undertaken to
-tread, every obstacle must, unhesitatingly, be destroyed."
-
-"What, kill a woman?" the gentleman said, with horror.
-
-"I do not say that, but place her in such a position that she cannot
-possibly injure anyone. Remember, we are Dark-Hearts, and, as such, we
-ought to be without pity."
-
-"Silence!" Don Tadeo murmured, as two low, quick taps were struck on the
-door.
-
-"Come in!" cried Don Gregorio.
-
-The door opened, and Don Pedro showed his polecat face. He did not
-recognize the two men whom, in the various meetings he had had with
-them, he had always seen masked.
-
-"God preserve you, gentlemen!" he said, with a profound bow.
-
-"What is your pleasure, sir?" Don Gregorio asked, in a coldly-polite
-tone, while returning his salutation.
-
-"Sir," said Don Pedro, looking about for a seat which was not offered
-him, "I have just arrived from Santiago."
-
-Don Gregorio bowed again.
-
-"On my departure from that city, a banker in whose hands I had placed
-funds, gave me several bills; among others this, addressed to Don
-Gregorio Peratla, payable at sight."
-
-"That is my name, sir; be so kind as to hand it to me."
-
-"As you see, sir, the bill is for twenty-three ounces."
-
-"Very well, sir," replied Don Gregorio, as he took it, "allow me to
-examine it."
-
-Don Pedro bowed in his turn, whilst Don Gregorio, approaching a
-flambeau, looked attentively at the bill of exchange, put it into his
-pocket, and took some money from his purse.
-
-"Here are the twenty-three ounces, sir," he said, giving them.
-
-The spy took them, counted the gold pieces, examining them attentively,
-and then put them into his pocket.
-
-"It is very singular, sir," he said, just as the two gentlemen thought
-they were about to be relieved of his presence.
-
-"What is it, sir?" asked Don Gregorio; "do you not find the amount
-right?"
-
-"Oh, pardon me, perfectly right; but," he added, with a slight
-hesitation, "I thought you had been a merchant?"
-
-"And what leads you to think otherwise?"
-
-"Because I see no desks."
-
-"They are in another part of the house," Don Gregorio replied; "I am a
-private trader."
-
-"Oh, very well, sir."
-
-"And, if I had not thought you had pressing need of the money--"
-
-"Very pressing!" the other interrupted.
-
-"I should have begged you to call again tomorrow, for, at this late
-hour, my cashbox is closed."
-
-And thereupon he waved his hand, rather haughtily, as dismissing him.
-Don Pedro retired, visibly disappointed.
-
-"That is a double-faced fellow, I am sure," said Don Gregorio; "I should
-not wonder if he were a spy of the General."
-
-"Oh, I know him!" Don Tadeo replied; "I have about me proofs of his
-treachery. He has been a necessary instrument; at present he may injure
-us. He must be crushed."
-
-Don Gregorio drew from his pocket the bill which had been presented to
-him, and holding it to Don Tadeo--
-
-"Look at this," he said.
-
-This bill, payable at sight, appeared perfectly like others. It was
-drawn in the usual form: _At sight, please pay_, &c. &c.; but, in two
-or three places, the pen, too hard, no doubt, had spluttered and formed
-a certain number of little black spots, of which some were almost
-imperceptible. It appeared that these black spots had a meaning for the
-two men; for as soon as Don Tadeo had cast his eyes over the bill, he
-seized his cloak, and folded himself in it.
-
-"It is Heaven that protects us!" he said; "we must go thither without
-delay."
-
-"That is my opinion, likewise," Don Gregorio replied, holding the bill
-to the light, and burning it till there was not a particle of it left.
-The two men took each a long dagger and a brace of pistols, which they
-concealed under their clothes--the conspirators were too well acquainted
-with their country to neglect these precautions--they pulled the flaps
-of their hats over their faces, and wrapping themselves up to the very
-eyes, like two lovers or seekers of adventures, they descended into the
-street.
-
-It was one of those splendid nights unknown in our foggy climates; the
-sky, of a dark blue, was thickly studded with an infinite number of
-stars, among which conspicuously shone the brilliant Southern Cross;
-the air was embalmed with a thousand odours, and a light sea breeze
-refreshed the atmosphere, which had been heated by the torrid sunbeams
-during the past day. The two men passed silently and rapidly through
-the joyous groups which traversed the streets in all directions. It is
-in the evening that the Americans leave their homes to take the air and
-enjoy the freshness.
-
-The conspirators appeared to hear neither the enticing sounds of the
-vihuela which vibrated in their ears, nor the refrains of sambacuejas
-which flew in gusts from the chinganas, nor the bursts of fresh, silvery
-laughter of the black-eyed, rosy-lipped girls, who elbowed them on
-their way. They walked thus for a long time, turning round at intervals
-to ascertain if they were followed, plunging by degrees into the
-lowest quarters of the city, and at length stopped at a house of mean
-appearance, from which issued the loud but not very melodious strains of
-music eminently national.
-
-This house was a chingana, a name which has no equivalent in French
-or English. A Chilian chingana presents so eccentrically droll an
-appearance, that it would defy the pencil of Callot, and is beyond all
-description. Let the reader figure to himself a low room, with smoky
-walls, the floor of which is but beaten earth, and rendered filthy by
-the detritus left by the feet of incessantly arriving and departing
-visitors. In the centre of this den, lighted only by a smoky lamp called
-a _candil_, by which it is impossible to distinguish more than the
-shadows of the customers, are seated four men upon stools. Two of them
-are twanging wretched guitars, which have lost most of their strings,
-with the backs of their hands; the third plays the tambourine with his
-thumbs upon a crippled table, striking it with all his might; whilst
-the fourth rolls between his hands a piece of bamboo six feet long,
-split into several strips, which yield the most discordant sound that
-can possibly be imagined. The four musicians, not content with the
-formidable clatter made by their instruments, shout, at the very top of
-their voices, songs which we can neither venture to repeat nor translate.
-
-All this infernal noise is made to excite the dancers, who flutter
-about, assuming the most lascivious postures they can invent, amidst the
-hearty applause of the spectators, who writhe with delight, stamp their
-feet with pleasure, and sometimes, carried away by the harmony, thunder
-out all together, the burthen of the song, with the musicians and
-dancers. Amidst this disturbance, these cries and stampings, wind in and
-out the master of the establishment and his waiters, armed with couis of
-chicha, bottles of aguardiente, and even guarapo, to slake the thirst
-of the customers, who, to do them justice, the more they drink the more
-thirsty they become, and the more they wish to drink.
-
-Twice or thrice in the course of an evening, it may happen that some
-of the guests, more heated than the rest, or seized by the demon of
-jealousy, take it into their heads to quarrel. Then knives are drawn
-from the polena, ponchos are rolled round the left arm to serve as
-bucklers, the music ceases, and a circle is formed round the combatants.
-The sanguinary contest begins, and when one of the combatants has
-fallen, he is carried into the street, the music is resumed, the dance
-recommences, and no more is thought of the poor wounded or dying man.
-
-It was in front of one of these establishments that the chief of the
-Dark-Hearts and his friend had stopped; they did not hesitate. Pulling
-up the folds of their cloaks so as to completely conceal their faces,
-they entered the chingana: in spite of the pestilential atmosphere which
-nearly choked them, they passed unnoticed through the drinkers, and
-gained the further end of the room. The cellar door stood ajar; they
-opened it softly, and disappeared down the steps. After descending ten
-of these, they found themselves in a cellar, where a man, leaning over a
-barrel, which he appeared to be occupied in putting in its place, said
-to them, without interrupting his work--
-
-"Would you like some aguardiente de pesco, some mescal, or some chica?"
-
-"Neither the one nor the other," Don Tadeo replied; "we wish for some
-French wine."
-
-The man sprang up as if moved by a spring. The two adventurers had put
-on their masks.
-
-"Do you wish to have it white or red?" the man asked.
-
-"Red--as red as blood," said Don Tadeo.
-
-"Of what year?" the unknown rejoined.
-
-"Of that vintaged on the 5th of April, 1817," said Don Tadeo.
-
-"Then you must come this way, gentlemen," the man replied, with a
-respectful bow; "the wine you do me the honour to call for is extremely
-valuable; it is kept in a separate cellar."
-
-"To be drunk at Martinmas," Don Tadeo remarked.
-
-The man, who seemed only to wait for this last reply to his question,
-smiled with an air of intelligence, and laid his hand lightly on the
-wall. A stone turned slowly round upon itself, without the least noise,
-and opened a passage to the conspirators, which they immediately
-entered, and the stone instantly returned to its place.
-
-In the chingana, the cries, the songs, and the music had acquired an
-intensity really formidable; the joy of the tipplers was at its height.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV.
-
-THE TWO ULMENS.
-
-
-If we were writing a romance instead of a true history, there are
-certain scenes of the recital which we would pass over in silence. The
-one which follows would certainly be of this number; and yet, though of
-a rather hazardous puerility, it carries with it its lesson, by showing
-what is the influence of the early habits of a miserable life, even upon
-natures the best endowed, and how difficult it is, at a later period, to
-shake them off. We will add, to the praise of Valentine, the man of whom
-we are speaking, that his gaminism, if we may be allowed to employ such
-a term, was much more feigned than real, and that his aim, in allowing
-himself to be sometimes led away by it, was to bring a smile to the lips
-of his foster brother, and thus cheat the sorrow that was undermining
-his peace.
-
-This necessary preamble being gone through, we will resume the course
-of our narrative, and, abandoning for a time Don Tadeo and his friend,
-we will request the reader to follow us back to the tribe of the Great
-Hare. The looked-for morrow was a great day for the tribe, a day
-expected with impatience by all housekeepers, who were about to learn
-how to discover, to use Valentine's word, a new dish, which promised
-to please the palates of their race. As soon as it was daylight, men,
-women, and children assembled on the great Square of the village, and
-formed numerous groups, in which the merit of the unknown dish about
-to be revealed to them was discussed. Louis, for whom the experiment
-his friend was going to make had very little interest, wished to remain
-in the toldo; but Valentine insisted upon his being present at the
-experiment, and much against his will, he consented.
-
-The Parisian was already at his post, standing in an open spot, in
-the middle of the Square, watching with a laughing eye the anxious
-or incredulous expression by turn displayed upon the faces directed
-towards him. A table, which was to serve for his culinary preparations,
-a lighted brasier, upon which boiled an iron pot filled with water, a
-kitchen knife, an enormous frying-pan, found I know not where, a sort
-of tub, a wooden spoon, some parsley, a bit of bacon, some salt, some
-pepper, and a basket full of fresh eggs, had been prepared at his desire
-by the cares of Trangoil-Lanec.
-
-All eagerly looked for the arrival of the Apo-Ulmen of the tribe, with
-which the exhibition was to commence. A kind of dais had been erected
-for him in front of the operator, and when he had taken his lighted
-calumet from the hands of his pipe-bearer, he bent a little on one
-side and whispered a few words in the ear of Curumilla, who stood
-respectfully beside him. The Ulmen bowed, came down from the dais, went
-straight to the Parisian to tell him he might begin, and then resumed
-his post.
-
-Valentine returned the salutation of this master of the ceremonies,
-took off his poncho, which he folded up and laid carefully at his feet,
-and turning up his sleeves above his elbows with the studied grace of
-a performer, he leant slightly forward, placed his right hand upon the
-table, and assuming the tone of a vendor of quack medicines who boasts
-of the efficacy of his nostrums to gaping clowns, he thus commenced his
-demonstration in a loud voice and with a perfectly clear utterance:--
-
-"Illustrious Ulmens, and you redoubtable warriors of the noble and
-sacred tribe of the Great Hare, listen attentively to what I have the
-honour of explaining to you. In the beginning of time the world did
-not exist; water and clouds, which continually clashed against each
-other in space, then formed the universe. When Pillian created the
-world, as soon as at his voice man had issued from the bosom of the red
-mountain, he took him by the hand, and pointing to all the productions
-of the earth, the air, and the water, he said to him,--'Thou art the
-king of creation: consequently, animals, plants, and fishes all belong
-to thee, and are, each in proportion with its strength, instincts, or
-conformation, to minister to thy welfare and thy happiness in the world
-in which I have placed thee; thus the horse shall bear thee with fiery
-speed across the deserts, fleecy lamas and sheep clothe thee with their
-wool, and nourish thee with their succulent flesh.' When Pillian had
-analyzed, one after the other, the diverse qualities of the animals,
-before proceeding to the plants and fishes, he stopped at the hen, which
-was moving carelessly about, and picking up the grains of corn scattered
-on the ground. Pillian took her by the wings, and showing her to man,
-said, 'Here is one of the most useful animals I have created for thy
-service; boiled in a pot, the hen will afford thee an excellent broth
-when thou art sick; roasted, its white flesh will acquire a delicious
-flavour; of her eggs thou canst make omelettes with herbs, omelettes
-with mushrooms, omelettes with ham, and, above all others, with bacon.
-If thou art indisposed, and solid food should be too heavy for thy weak
-stomach, thou canst boil her eggs in the shell, and then thou wilt say
-something, indeed!'
-
-"Thus," continued Valentine, attitudinizing before the Indians, who,
-with open mouths and staring eyes, lost not a single word he uttered,
-whether they understood it or not, whilst, in spite of his secret
-grief, Louis literally writhed with laughter; "thus it was that Pillian
-spoke to the first man at the commencement of ages; you were not there,
-Araucano warriors, it is therefore not astonishing that you know nothing
-about it; neither was I there, it is true; but, thanks to the talent
-we white men possess of transmitting our thoughts from age to age, by
-means of writing, these words of the Great Spirit have been carefully
-collected, and have come down to us in their purity. Without further
-prelude, I am going to have the honour of producing before you a boiled
-egg! Listen to me; it is as simple as saying good-day, and within the
-reach of the most limited capacity. In order to enjoy a boiled egg,
-two things are necessary--in the first place, an egg, and then, some
-boiling water! You take the egg in your fingers, thus, you uncover your
-saucepan, you place the egg in a spoon and deposit it carefully in the
-saucepan, where you allow it to boil gently three minutes. Mind, three
-minutes, neither more nor less: pay attention to that important detail,
-for a longer time would compromise the success of your operation. There
-it is!"
-
-The action suited the word; the three minutes were past: Valentine
-took out the egg, beheaded it, sprinkled a little salt on it, and
-presented it to the Ulmen with some long strips of maize bread. All
-this was performed with the most imperturbable seriousness, amidst the
-profound silence of the attentive crowd. The Apo-Ulmen proceeded to
-taste this wonderful egg with the most deliberate gravity. An air of
-doubt appeared for a second on his lips, as he raised the first mouthful
-towards them; but, by degrees, the features of his broad face expanded
-under the influence of joy and pleasure, and he at last exclaimed
-enthusiastically,--
-
-"Wah! It is good! Very good!"
-
-Valentine returned to his brasier with a modest smile, and set about
-boiling eggs, which he distributed among the Ulmens and principal
-warriors, who quickly mingled their felicitations with those of the
-Apo-Ulmen. A delirious joy took possession of the poor Indians, and
-Valentine could hardly keep his ground, so eagerly did they press round
-him, to examine closely his mysterious mode of cooking the eggs. At
-length, calm was re-established, and the curiosity of the majority was
-satisfied. The Apo-Ulmen, who had not been able to make his voice heard
-in the tumult, was able to restore a little order, and obtain silence.
-Valentine looked at his public with an air of satisfaction. From that
-moment the Indians were believers--the most incredulous were convinced,
-and all awaited with impatience the continuation of his experiments.
-
-"Listen to me!" he continued, striking a sharp blow on the table with
-the knife he held in his hand; "listen to me, but, above all, observe
-closely how I proceed. A boiled egg was child's play to me, but the
-omelette requires to be considered seriously, and executed with care, in
-order to obtain that finish, that smoothness, flavour, and perfection
-so much prized by real judges. I am about to make a bacon-omelette, and
-when I name that, I name the most exquisite dish in the world! Whilst
-explaining to you the manner in which you should set about it, I will
-produce it: follow my reasonings closely, and observe attentively the
-manner in which I mingle the various ingredients which enter into the
-composition of this dish. To make a bacon omelette, I must have bacon,
-eggs, salt, pepper, parsley, and some butter--there they are, as you
-see, all on that table. Now I will mix them."
-
-Then, with incredible address, and the greatest quickness, he commenced
-a monster bacon-omelette, of at least sixty eggs, while continuing his
-explanation with inexpressible freedom and copiousness. The interest of
-the Indians was warmly excited, their enthusiasm betraying itself by
-shouts, leaps, and laughter; but it was carried to its height, and the
-stamping, crying, and screaming became terrific, when the Puelches saw
-Valentine seize the long handle of the frying-pan with a firm grasp,
-and toss the omelette three different times into the air, without any
-apparent effort, and with the style and ease of a finished cook. When
-the omelette was done to the moment, the Frenchman placed it upon a
-dish, taking care to double it with the talent which _cordons bleus_
-alone possess, and was then preparing to carry it smoking to the
-Apo-Ulmen, but he, enticed by the flavour of the boiled egg, and with
-appetite excited to the highest pitch, spared him that trouble; for
-he forgot all decorum, and rushed towards the table, followed by the
-principal Ulmens of the tribe. The success of the Parisian was enormous.
-Never, in the history of the divine art, did a cook obtain such a
-glorious triumph! Valentine, with the modesty peculiar to men of real
-talent, stole away from the honours they wished to pay him, and hastened
-to conceal himself with his friend in the toldo of Trangoil-Lanec.
-
-On the morrow of this eventful day, at the moment when the young men
-were about to leave the quarters they inhabited in common, their host
-presented himself, followed by Curumilla. The two chiefs saluted them,
-sat down upon the beaten earth which served instead of flooring, and lit
-their pipes. Louis, already accustomed to the ceremonious habits of the
-Araucanos, and convinced that their friends had something of importance
-to say, reseated himself, as did also his foster brother, and awaited
-patiently the expected communication. When the chiefs had deliberately
-smoked out their pipes, and shaken the last ashes upon their nails,
-they replaced them in their belts, and, after exchanging a glance,
-Trangoil-Lanec began:--
-
-"Are my pale brothers still resolved to leave us?"
-
-"Yes," replied Louis.
-
-"Has Indian hospitality been wanting towards them?"
-
-"So far from that, chief," the young man said, warmly pressing his
-hands, "you have treated us like children of your own tribe."
-
-"Then why leave us?" Trangoil-Lanec asked; "we know not what we lose, do
-we ever know what we shall find?"
-
-"You are right, chief; but you know we came into this country for the
-purpose of visiting Antinahuel," Louis observed.
-
-"And does my golden-haired brother," for so he called Valentine,
-"absolutely wish to see him?"
-
-"Absolutely," replied the young man.
-
-The two chiefs exchanged a second glance.
-
-"He shall see him," replied Trangoil-Lanec; "Antinahuel is at his
-village."
-
-"Good!" said Valentine. "In that case we will set out tomorrow."
-
-"My brothers shall not go alone."
-
-"What do you mean by that?" Valentine asked.
-
-"The Indian soil is not safe for palefaces; my brother has saved my
-life, I shall follow him."
-
-"My brother has preserved me a friend," said Curumilla, who had till
-that time preserved silence; "I shall follow him."
-
-"You cannot think of such a thing, chief," Valentine remarked. "We are
-travellers whom chance knocks about at its pleasure; we know not what
-destiny has in reserve for us, nor whither it will conduct us, after
-having seen the man to whom we are sent."
-
-"What does it signify?" Curumilla replied; "where you go, we will go."
-
-The young men were greatly moved by such frank and noble devotion.
-
-"Oh!" Louis exclaimed, warmly, "it is impossible! your friends, your
-wives, and your children."
-
-"Our wives and children will be taken care of by our relations until our
-return."
-
-"My friends, my good friends," said Valentine, with emotion, "you are
-wrong; we cannot impose such a sacrifice upon you, we will not consent
-to it for your sake; I have already told you, we are ignorant of what
-awaits us, or what we shall do; allow us to go alone."
-
-"We will follow our pale brothers," Trangoil-Lanec said in a tone that
-admitted of no reply; "my brothers are not acquainted with the llanos;
-four men are a force in the desert--two men are dead."
-
-The Frenchmen contested the matter no longer, they accepted the offer
-of the Ulmens, and did so the more readily, because they plainly
-perceived what an immense advantage these men would be to them. They
-were accustomed to a life in the woods, they knew all its mysteries,
-and had fathomed all its depths. The chiefs took leave of their guests,
-to prepare for their departure, which was irrevocably fixed for the
-next day. At sunrise, a small party, composed of Louis, Valentine,
-Trangoil-Lanec, and Curumilla, all four mounted upon excellent horses of
-that mixed Andalusian and Arabian breed, which the Spaniards imported
-into America, and Cæsar, who trotted at their side in close file, left
-the toldería, escorted by all the members of the tribe shouting: "Come
-back again! come back again!--A good journey! a good journey!"
-
-After repeated farewells to these worthy people, the four travellers
-directed their course towards the toldería of the Black-Serpents, and
-soon disappeared in the numberless defiles formed by the quebradas.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV.
-
-THE SUN-TIGER.
-
-
-In the state of anarchy in which Chili was plunged at the period of our
-history, the parties were numerous, and everyone was manoeuvring in the
-shade, as skilfully as possible, in order to gain possession of power.
-General Bustamente, as we have stated, aimed at nothing less than the
-protectorate of a confederation similar to that of the United States,
-which, then but little understood, dazzled his ambition. He could not
-divine that those ancient outlaws, those sectarian fanatics exiled from
-Europe, those thriving merchants, had already begun to dream in America
-of a universal monarchy, a senseless Utopia, the application of which
-will one day cost them the loss of that so-called nationality of which
-they are so proud, and which, in reality, does not exist. Probably
-General Bustamente did not look so far into the future, or, if he did
-divine the tendencies of the Anglo-Americans, perhaps he dreamt of
-himself following also that ambitious aim, as soon as his power should
-repose upon solid bases.
-
-The Dark-Hearts, the only true patriots in this unhappy country, on
-their side, wished that the government should adopt measures of a
-rather democratic nature, but they had no intention to overturn it,
-for they were persuaded that a revolution could only be prejudicial
-to the general welfare of the nation. Beside General Bustamente and
-the society of the Dark-Hearts, a third party, more powerful, perhaps,
-than the two first, was at work silently, but active. This party was
-represented by Antinahuel, the toqui of the most important Uthal-Mapus
-of the Araucanian confederacy. We have said that from its geographical
-position, this little insignificant republic is placed like a wedge
-in the Chilian territory, which it separates sharply in two. This
-position gave Antinahuel immense power. All Araucanos are soldiers; at
-a signal from their chiefs, they take up arms, and are able, in a few
-days, to get together an army of experienced warriors. The republicans
-and the partizans of Bustamente were fully aware how much it was to
-their interest to attach the Araucanos to their party; with the aid
-of these ferocious soldiers victory would be certain. Already had the
-King of Darkness and Bustamente made proposals to Antinahuel,--of
-course, unknown to each other. These overtures the redoubtable toqui
-had appeared to listen to, and had feigned to reply to both, for the
-following reasons:--
-
-Antinahuel, in addition to the hereditary hatred which his ancestors
-had bequeathed to him against the white race, or perhaps on account of
-that hatred, had dreamt, since he had been elected supreme chief of an
-Uthal-Mapus, not only of the complete independence of his country, but
-moreover of re-conquering all the territory which the Spaniards had
-deprived it of; he hoped to drive them back to the other side of the
-Cordilleras of the Andes, and restore to his nation the splendour it had
-enjoyed before the arrival of the whites in Chili. And this patriotic
-project Antinahuel was just the man to carry through. Endowed with
-vast intelligence, at once daring and subtle, he allowed himself to be
-stopped by no obstacle, conquered by no reverse. Almost entirely brought
-up in Chili, he spoke Spanish perfectly, was thoroughly acquainted with
-the manners of his enemies, and by means of numberless spies spread
-everywhere, he was well informed with regard to the Chilian policy,
-and of the precarious situation of those whom he wished to conquer; he
-habitually took advantage of the dissensions which separated them, and
-feigned to lend an ear to the propositions made to him on all parts, in
-order, when the moment should arrive, to crush his enemies one after the
-other, and be left alone standing.
-
-He wanted a plausible pretext for keeping his Uthal-Mapus under arms,
-without inspiring the Chilians with mistrust: and this pretext General
-Bustamente and the Dark-Hearts supplied him with by their preparations.
-No one could be surprised, for this reason, at seeing, in a time
-of peace, the toqui gather together a numerous army on the Chilian
-frontiers, since, _in petto_, either party flattered itself that this
-army was destined to aid its cause. The conduct of the toqui was,
-therefore, most skilful; for he not only inspired mistrust in no one,
-but, on the contrary, gave hopes to all. The position was becoming
-serious; the hour for action could not long be delayed; and Antinahuel,
-whose measures were all prepared, awaited impatiently the moment for
-beginning the struggle.
-
-Things were at this point on the day when Doña Maria came to the
-toldería of the Black-Serpents, to visit the friend of her childhood. As
-soon as she awoke, the Linda gave orders for her departure.
-
-"Is my sister going to leave me already?" said Antinahuel, in a tone of
-mild reproach.
-
-"Yes," Doña Maria replied, "my brother knows that I must reach Valdivia
-as quickly as possible."
-
-The chief did not press her stay; a furtive smile played round his lips.
-After Doña Maria was on horseback, she turned towards the toqui.
-
-"Did not my brother say he should be soon in Valdivia?" she asked, in a
-perfectly well-played tone of indifference.
-
-"I shall be there as soon as my sister," he replied.
-
-"We shall see each other again, then?"
-
-"Perhaps we may."
-
-"We must!"
-
-This was said in a positive tone.
-
-"Very well," the chief replied, after a moment's pause; "my sister may
-depart--she shall see me again."
-
-"Till then, farewell, then," she said, and rode away at a quick pace.
-
-She soon disappeared in a cloud of dust, and the chief returned
-thoughtfully to his toldo.
-
-"Woman," he said, to his mother, "I am going to the great toldería of
-the palefaces."
-
-"I heard everything last night," the Indian woman replied, sorrowfully;
-"my son is wrong."
-
-"Wrong! how, or why?" he asked, passionately.
-
-"My son is a great chief; my sister deceives him, and makes him
-subservient to her vengeance."
-
-"Or rather my own," he replied, in a singular tone.
-
-"The young white girl has a right to the protection of my son."
-
-"I will protect the Pearl of the Andes."
-
-"My son forgets that she of whom he speaks saved his life."
-
-"Silence, woman!" he shouted, in a passionate tone.
-
-The Indian woman held her peace, but sighed deeply.
-
-The chief summoned his mosotones, and selecting from among them a score
-of warriors upon whom he could place entire reliance, ordered them to
-be ready to follow him within an hour. He then threw himself upon a
-bench, and sank into serious and agitating reflections. Suddenly a great
-noise was heard from without, and the chief sprang from his recumbent
-position, and went to the door of his toldo. He was surprised to see two
-strangers, mounted upon excellent horses, and preceded by an Indian,
-advancing towards him. These strangers were Valentine and Louis, who had
-left their friends a short distance from the toldería.
-
-Valentine, on leaving the village of the Puelches, had opened the letter
-addressed to himself, and placed in his hands by the major-domo, with a
-recommendation not to open it till the last minute. The young man was
-far from expecting the contents of this strange missive. After carefully
-reading it, he communicated it to his friend, saying--
-
-"Here, read this, Louis;--hem! who knows but that this singular letter
-is the first step to our fortune?"
-
-Like all men in love, Louis was sceptical upon every subject that did
-not bear some relation to his passion, and he returned the paper,
-shaking his head.
-
-"Politics burn the fingers," he said.
-
-"Yes, of those who don't know how to handle them," Valentine replied,
-with a shrug of the shoulders. "Now, it is my opinion that in this
-country, in which it has pleased fate to drop us, the most promising
-element of fortune we have at command happens to be those very politics
-which you so much disdain."
-
-"I must confess, my friend, that I care very little for these
-Dark-Hearts, of whom I know nothing, and who have done us the honour to
-affiliate us."
-
-"I do not share your opinion at all; I believe them to be resolute,
-intelligent men, and am persuaded they will, some day, gain the upper
-hand."
-
-"Much good may it do them! But of what consequence is that to us
-Frenchmen?"
-
-"More than you may think for; and I am determined, immediately after
-my interview with this said Antinahuel, to go directly to Valdivia, in
-order to be present at the meeting they appoint."
-
-"As you please," said the Count, carelessly. "As such is your advice,
-we will go thither; only I warn you that we shall risk our heads. If we
-lose them, it will be all very well; but I wash my hands of the matter
-beforehand."
-
-"I will be prudent, caramba! My head is the only thing I can call my
-own," Valentine replied, laughing, "and be assured I will not risk it
-for nothing. Besides, do you not partake of my curiosity to see how
-these people understand politics, and in what a fashion they set about
-conspiring?"
-
-"Well, that may become interesting; we travel partly for instruction;
-let us gain it, then, when it offers itself."
-
-"Bravo! that's the way in which I like to hear a man speak. Let us go
-and seek the redoubtable chief to whom we have a letter to deliver."
-
-Trangoil-Lanec and Curumilla were too prudent to venture to let
-Antinahuel know of the friendship which bound them to the two Frenchmen.
-Without suspecting the reasons which induced their friends to present
-themselves to the toqui, they foresaw that a day might come when it
-would be advantageous that their relations should be unknown. When they
-arrived, therefore, at a short distance from the toldería, the Indian
-warriors remained concealed in a secluded corner, keeping Cæsar with
-them, and allowing the two Frenchmen to continue their route to the
-village of the Black-Serpents, with whom, in addition, they had not
-lately been upon the best terms.
-
-The reception given to the Frenchmen was most friendly; for in time
-of peace the Araucanos are exceedingly hospitable. As soon as they
-perceived the strangers, they crowded round them; and as all the Indians
-speak Spanish with astonishing facility, Valentine had no difficulty in
-making himself understood. One warrior, more polite than the rest, took
-upon himself to be their guide through the village, in which, of course,
-they were at a loss. He led them to the toldo of the chief, in front of
-which were drawn up twenty horsemen, armed, and apparently waiting.
-
-"That is Antinahuel, the great toqui of the Inapire-Mapu," said the
-guide, emphatically, pointing with his finger at the chief, who at that
-moment came out of his toldo, attracted by the noise.
-
-"Thank you," said Valentine; and the two Frenchmen advanced rapidly
-towards the toqui, who, on his part, made a few steps to meet them.
-
-"Eh, eh!" Valentine said, in a subdued voice, to his companion; "here
-is a man with a good bearing, and with a rather intelligent air for an
-Indian."
-
-"Yes," Louis replied, in the same tone, "but he has a contracted brow,
-a sinister look, and compressed lips--he inspires me with very little
-confidence."
-
-"Bah!" said Valentine, "you are too difficult by half; did you expect to
-find an Indian an Antinous or an Apollo Belvedere?"
-
-"No; but I should like a little more open frankness in his look."
-
-"Well, well, we shall see."
-
-"I do not know why, but that man produces the effect of a reptile upon
-me; he inspires me with invincible repulsion."
-
-"Oh, nonsense! you are too impressionable. I am sure that the man, who,
-I cannot deny, has the air of a thorough rascal, is, at bottom, one of
-the best fellows in the world."
-
-"God grant I may be deceived! But I experience, on seeing him, a feeling
-for which I cannot account; it seems as if a kind of presentiment warned
-me to be on my guard against that man, and that he will be fatal to me."
-
-"All folly! What relations can you ever have with this individual? We
-are charged with a mission to him; who knows whether we may ever see him
-again? and then what interests can connect us with him hereafter?"
-
-"You are right; and I do not know what makes me think as I have
-said; besides, we shall soon know what we have to trust to on his
-account--here he is."
-
-The adventurers were, in fact, at that moment in front of the chief's
-toldo. Antinahuel stood before them; and, although appearing to be
-giving orders to his men, examined them very attentively. He stepped
-towards them quickly, and, bowing with perfect politeness, said, in a
-pleasant tone, and with a graceful gesture--
-
-"Strangers, you are welcome to my toldo. Your presence rejoices my
-heart. Condescend to pass over the threshold of this poor hut, which
-will be yours as long as you deign to remain among us."
-
-"Thanks for the kind words of welcome you address to us, powerful
-chief," Valentine replied. "The persons who sent us to you assured us of
-the kind reception we might expect."
-
-"If the strangers come on the part of my friends, that is a further
-reason why I should endeavour to make their abode here as agreeable as
-my humble means will allow me."
-
-The two Frenchmen bowed ceremoniously, and alighted from their horses.
-At a sign from the toqui, two peons led the horses away to a vast corral
-behind the toldo.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI.
-
-THE MATRICIDE.
-
-
-We have repeatedly said that in times of peace the Araucanos are
-exceedingly hospitable. This hospitality, which on the part of
-the warriors is cordial and simple, on that of the chiefs becomes
-extravagant. Antinahuel was far from being a rude Indian, attached
-though he was to the customs of his fathers; and although in his heart
-he hated not only the Spaniards, but indiscriminately all belonging to
-the white race, the half-civilized education he had received had given
-him ideas of comfort completely above Indian habits. Many of the richest
-Chilian farmers would have found it impossible to display greater luxury
-than he exhibited when his caprice or his interest led him to do so.
-On the present occasion, he was not sorry to show strangers that the
-Araucanos were not so barbarous as their arrogant neighbours wished it
-to be supposed, and that they could, when necessary, rival even them.
-At the first glance, Antinahuel had discovered that his guests were not
-Spaniards; but, with the circumspection which forms the foundation of
-the Indian character, he confined his observations to his own breast. It
-was with the kindest air and in the most winning tone of voice that he
-pressed them to enter his toldo.
-
-The Frenchmen followed him in, and with a gesture he requested them
-to be seated. Peons placed a profusion of cigars and cigarettes upon
-the table, near a tasty filigree brasero. In a few minutes other
-peons entered with the maté, which they respectfully presented to the
-chief and his guests. Then, without the silence being broken--for the
-Araucanian laws of hospitality require that no question should be
-addressed to strangers until they think proper to speak themselves--each
-sipped the herb of Paraguay, while smoking. This preliminary operation
-being gone through, Valentine rose.
-
-"I thank you, chief, in the name of myself and my friend, for your
-cordial hospitality."
-
-"Hospitality is a duty which every Araucano is jealous to fulfil!"
-
-"But," replied Valentine, "as I have been given to understand that the
-chief is about to set out on a journey, I do not wish to detain him."
-
-"I am at the orders of my guests; my journey is not so pressing as not
-to admit of being put off for a few hours."
-
-"I thank the chief for his courtesy, but I hope he will soon be at
-liberty."
-
-Antinahuel bowed.
-
-"A Spaniard has charged me with a letter for the chief."
-
-"Ah!" the toqui exclaimed, with a singular intonation, and fixing a
-piercing look upon the face of the young man.
-
-"Yes," the Frenchman continued; "and that letter I am about to have the
-honour of handing to you."
-
-And he put his hand to his breast, to take out the letter.
-
-"Stop!" said the chief, laying his hand upon his arm, as he turned
-towards his servants; adding, "leave the room." The three men were left
-alone.
-
-"Now you may give me the letter," he continued.
-
-The chief took it, looked carefully at the superscription, turned the
-paper in all directions in his hand, and then, with some hesitation,
-presented it to the young man.
-
-"Let my brother read it," he said; "the whites are more learned than we
-poor Indians: they know everything."
-
-Valentine gave his countenance the most silly expression possible.
-
-"I cannot read this," he said, with well-assumed embarrassment.
-
-"Does my brother then refuse to render me this service?" the chief
-pressed him.
-
-"I do not refuse you, chief; only I am prevented doing what you request
-by a very simple reason."
-
-"And what is that reason?"
-
-"It is that my companion and I are both Frenchmen."
-
-"Well, and what then?"
-
-"We speak a little Spanish, but we cannot read it."
-
-"Ah!" said the chief, in a tone of doubt; but, after walking about, and
-reflecting a minute, he added,--"Hem! that is possible."
-
-He then turned towards the two Frenchmen, who, on their part, were, in
-appearance, impassive and indifferent.
-
-"Let my brothers wait an instant," he said; "I know a man in my tribe
-who understands the marks which the whites make upon paper: I will go
-and order him to translate this letter."
-
-The young men bowed, and the chief left the apartment.
-
-"Why the devil did you refuse to read the letter?" Louis asked.
-
-"In good truth," Valentine replied, "I can scarcely tell you why; but
-what you said of the expression of this man's countenance, produced a
-certain effect upon me. He inspires me with no confidence, and I am not
-anxious to be the depository of secrets which he may some day reclaim in
-a disagreeable manner."
-
-"Yes, you are right! We may, some day, congratulate ourselves upon this
-circumspection. Hush! I hear footsteps."
-
-And the chief re-entered the room.
-
-"I know the contents of the letter," he said; "if my brothers see the
-man who charged them with it, they will inform him that I am setting out
-this very day for Valdivia."
-
-"We would, with pleasure, take charge of that message," replied
-Valentine; "but we do not know the person who gave us the letter, and it
-is more than probable we may never see him again."
-
-The chief darted at them a stolen and deeply suspicious glance.
-
-"Good! Will my brothers remain here, then?"
-
-"It would give us infinite pleasure to pass a few hours in the agreeable
-society of the chief, but with us time presses; with his permission, we
-will take our leave."
-
-"My brothers are perfectly free; my toldo is open for those who leave
-it, as well as for those who enter it."
-
-The young men rose to depart.
-
-"In what direction are my brothers going?"
-
-"We are bound for Concepción."
-
-"Let my brothers go in peace, then! If their course lay towards
-Valdivia, I would have offered to journey with them."
-
-"A thousand thanks, chief, for your kind offer; unfortunately we cannot
-profit by it, for our road lies in a completely opposite direction."
-
-The three men exchanged a few more words of courtesy, and left the
-toldo. The Frenchmen's horses had been brought round; they mounted, and
-after having saluted the chief once more, they set off. As soon as they
-were out of the village, Louis, turning to Valentine, said,--
-
-"We have not an instant to lose. If we wish to reach Valdivia before
-that man, we must make all speed. Who knows whether Don Tadeo may not be
-awaiting our arrival impatiently?"
-
-They soon rejoined their friends, who looked for them anxiously, and all
-four set off at full speed in the direction of Valdivia, without being
-able to explain to themselves why they used such diligence. Antinahuel
-accompanied his guests a few paces out of his toldo. When he had taken
-leave of them, he followed them with his eyes as far as he could see
-them, and when they disappeared at the extremity of the village, he
-returned thoughtfully and slowly to his toldo, saying to himself,--
-
-"It is evident to me that these men are deceiving me; their refusal to
-read the letter was nothing but a pretext. What can be their object? Can
-they be enemies? I will watch them!"
-
-When he arrived in front of his toldo, he found his mosotones mounted,
-and awaiting his orders.
-
-"I must set out at once," he said; "I shall learn all yonder, and,
-perhaps," he added, in a voice so low that he could hardly hear it
-himself, "perhaps I shall find _her_ again. If Doña Maria breaks her
-promise, and does not give her up to me, woe, woe be to her!"
-
-He raised his head, and saw his mother standing before him. "What do you
-want, woman?" he asked, harshly; "this is not your place!"
-
-"My place is near you when you are suffering, my son," she mildly
-replied.
-
-"I suffering! You are mad, mother! age has turned your brain! Go back
-into the toldo, and, during my absence, keep a good watch over all that
-belongs to me."
-
-"Are you, then, really going, my son?"
-
-"This moment," he said, and sprang into his saddle.
-
-"Where are you going?" she asked, and seized his horse's bridle.
-
-"What is that to you?" he replied, with an ugly glance.
-
-"Beware! my son; you are entering on a bad course. Guérubu, the spirit
-of evil, is master of your heart."
-
-"I am the best and sole judge of my actions."
-
-"You shall not go!" she exclaimed, as she placed herself resolutely in
-front of his horse.
-
-The Indians collected round the speakers looked on with mute terror at
-this scene; they were too well acquainted with the violent and imperious
-character of Antinahuel not to dread something fatal, if his mother
-persisted in endeavouring to prevent his departure.
-
-The brows of the chief lowered--his eyes gleamed like lightning--and it
-was not without a great effort that he mastered the passion boiling in
-his breast.
-
-"I will go!" he said, in a loud voice, and trembling with rage; "I will
-go, if I trample you beneath my horse's hoofs!"
-
-The woman clung convulsively to the saddle, and looked her son in the
-face.
-
-"Do so," she cried; "for, by the soul of your father, who now hunts in
-the blessed prairies with Pillian, I swear I will not stir, even if you
-pass over my body!"
-
-The face of the Indian became horribly contracted; he cast around a
-glance which made the hearts of the bravest tremble with fear.
-
-"Woman! woman!" he shouted, grinding his teeth with rage; "get out of my
-way, or I shall crush you like a reed!"
-
-"I will not stir, I tell you!" she repeated, with wild energy.
-
-"Take care! take care!" he said again; "I shall forget you are my
-mother!"
-
-"I will not stir!"
-
-A nervous tremor shook the limbs of the chief, who had now attained the
-highest paroxysm of fury.
-
-"If you will have it so," he cried, in a husky, but loud voice, "your
-blood be upon your own head!"
-
-And he dug the spurs into the sides of his horse, which plunged with
-pain, and then sprung forward like an arrow, dragging along the poor
-woman, whose body was soon but one huge wound. A cry of horror burst
-from the quivering lips of the terrified Indians. After a few minutes
-of this senseless course, during which she had left fragments of her
-flesh on every sharp point of the road, the strength of the Indian woman
-abandoned her; she left her hold of the bridle, and sank dying.
-
-"Oh!" she said, in a faint voice, and following, with a look dimmed by
-agony, her son, as he was borne away like a whirlwind, "my unhappy son!
-my unhappy----"
-
-She raised her eyes towards heaven, clasped her mangled hands, as if to
-offer up a last prayer, and fell back.
-
-She died pitying the matricide, and pardoning him. The women of the
-tribe took up the body respectfully, and carried it, weeping, into the
-toldo. At the sight of the corpse, an old Indian shook his head several
-times, murmuring in a prophetic tone,--
-
-"Antinahuel has killed his mother! Pillian will avenge her!"
-
-And all bowed down their heads sorrowfully: this atrocious crime made
-them dread horrible misfortunes in the future.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII.
-
-THE JUSTICE OF THE DARK-HEARTS.
-
-
-Don Tadeo and his friend Don Gregorio were introduced, after exchanging
-several passwords, into a subterraneous apartment, the entrance to which
-was perfectly concealed in the wall. The door closed immediately after
-them; the two men turned round sharply, but all signs of an opening
-had disappeared. Without taking further notice of this circumstance,
-which they no doubt had expected, they cast an inquiring glance around
-them, in order to obtain some knowledge of the locality. The place
-was admirably chosen for a meeting of conspirators. It was an immense
-apartment, which must have served for a long time as a cellar, as was
-made evident by the essentially alcoholic emanations still floating in
-the air; the walls were low and thick, and of a dirty red colour; a
-lamp with three jets, hanging from the roof, far from dispersing the
-darkness, seemed only to render it in a manner visible. In a recess
-stood a table, behind which a man in a mask was seated, near to two
-empty seats. Men enveloped in cloaks, and all wearing black velvet
-masks, were gliding about in the darkness, silent as phantoms.
-
-Don Tadeo and his friend exchanged a glance, and without speaking a
-word, proceeded to take their places in the empty seats. As soon as
-they were seated, a change came over the meeting: the low whispering
-which had been heard till that moment ceased all at once, as if by
-enchantment. All the conspirators gathered in a single group in front of
-the table, and with arms crossed upon their chests, waited earnestly.
-The man who before the arrival of Don Tadeo had appeared to preside over
-the meeting arose, and casting round a confident glance on the attentive
-crowd, said--
-
-"On this day the seventy-two _ventas_ of the Dark-Hearts, spread over
-the territories of the republic, are assembled in council. In all of
-them the taking up of arms, of which we, the _venta_ of Valdivia, will
-instantly give the signal, will be decreed. Everywhere men faithful to
-the good cause, true lovers of liberty, are preparing to commence the
-struggle with Bustamente. Will you all, comrades, who are here present,
-when the hour strikes, descend frankly and boldly into the arena? Will
-you sacrifice, without reserve, your family, your fortune, and even your
-life, if necessary, for the public good?"
-
-He ceased, and a funereal silence prevailed in the assembly.
-
-"Answer!" he resumed; "what will you do?"
-
-"We will die!" the band of conspirators murmured, like a sinister and
-terrible echo.
-
-"That is well, my brothers," Don Tadeo said, rising suddenly. "I
-expected no less from you, and I thank you. I have long known you all,
-and felt that I could depend upon you--I, whom none of you know. These
-masks which conceal you one from another, are but transparent gauze
-for the chief of the Dark-Hearts--and I am the King of Darkness! I
-have sworn that you shall live as free men, or that I will die! Before
-twenty-four hours have passed away, you will hear the signal you have
-so long waited for, and then will commence that terrible struggle which
-can only end in the death of the tyrant; all the provinces, all the
-cities, all the towns will rise _en masse_ at the same instant; courage,
-then! You have only a few hours longer to suffer. The war of ambushes,
-surprises, of subterranean treacheries is ended; war, frank, loyal,
-open, in the face of the sun, is about to begin; let us show ourselves
-what we always have been, firm in our faith, and ready to die for our
-opinions! Let the chiefs of sections draw near."
-
-Ten men left the ranks, and placed themselves silently ten paces from
-the table.
-
-"Let the corporal of chiefs of sections answer for all," said Don Tadeo.
-
-"I am the corporal," said one of the masked men; "the orders expedited
-from the Quinta Verde have been executed; all the sections are warned;
-they are all ready to rise at the first signal; each will take
-possession of the posts that are assigned it."
-
-"So far well! How many men have you at your disposal?"
-
-"Seven thousand three hundred and seventy-seven."
-
-"Can you depend upon them all?"
-
-"No."
-
-"How many are there lukewarm or irresolute?"
-
-"Four thousand."
-
-"How many firm and convinced?"
-
-"Nearly three thousand; but for these I will be answerable."
-
-"That is well! we have even more than we want; the brave will attract
-others. Return to your places."
-
-The chiefs of sections drew back,
-
-"Now," Don Tadeo continued, "before we separate, I have to call down
-your justice upon one of our brothers, who, having entered deeply into
-our secrets, has been false to the society several times for a little
-gold; I have the proofs in my hands. The circumstances are of the utmost
-importance; one word--a single word--may ruin our cause and us! Say,
-what chastisement does this man deserve?"
-
-"Death!" the conspirators responded, coolly, but simultaneously.
-
-"I know this man," Don Tadeo continued; "let him come forth from the
-ranks, and not oblige me to tear off his mask, and hurl his name in his
-face."
-
-No one stirred.
-
-"This man is here--I can see him; for the last time, let him step forth,
-and not crown his baseness by seeking to avoid the punishment he merits."
-
-The conspirators cast suspicious glances at each other; the assembly
-seemed moved by an extreme anxiety; the man, however, upon whom the
-King of Darkness called, persisted in remaining confounded amongst his
-companions.
-
-Don Tadeo waited for an instant, but finding that the man whom he
-summoned imagined he should remain unknown, and not be discovered
-beneath his mask, he made a signal, and Don Gregorio rose and advanced
-towards the group of conspirators, which opened at his approach, and
-laid his hand roughly on the shoulder of a man who had instinctively
-retreated before him, until the wall forced him to stop.
-
-"Come with me, Don Pedro," he said, and he dragged rather than led him
-to the table, behind which stood Don Tadeo, calm and implacable.
-
-The guilty spy was seized with a convulsive trembling, his teeth
-chattered, and he fell upon his knees, crying with terror:
-
-"Mercy, my lord, mercy!"
-
-Don Gregorio tore off his mask, and revealed the face of the spy, whose
-features, horribly contracted by fear, and of an ashy paleness, were
-really hideous.
-
-"Don Pedro," Don Tadeo said, in a stern voice, "you have several times
-sought to sell your brothers of the society; it was you who caused
-the death of the ten patriots shot upon the Place of Santiago; it was
-you who betrayed the secret of the Quinta Verde to the soldiers of
-Bustamente; this very day, even, scarcely two hours ago, you held a long
-conversation with General Bustamente, in which you agreed to deliver up
-to him tomorrow the principal chiefs of the Dark-Hearts: is that true?"
-
-The miserable wretch had not a word to say in his defence; confounded,
-overwhelmed by the irresistible proofs accumulated against him, he hung
-down his head in utter abandonment.
-
-"Is this true?" Don Tadeo reiterated.
-
-"It is true," he murmured, in a scarcely audible voice.
-
-"You acknowledge yourself guilty?"
-
-"Yes," he said, with a heart-stifling sob; "but grant me life, noble
-seigneur, and I swear----"
-
-"Silence!"
-
-The spy was struck with mute despair.
-
-"You have heard, companions and friends, how this man confesses his own
-crimes; for the last time, what punishment does he deserve for having
-sold his brothers?"
-
-"Death!" replied the Dark-Hearts, without hesitation.
-
-"In the name of the Dark-Hearts, of whom I am king, I condemn you,
-Don Pedro Saldillo, to death, for treachery and felony towards your
-brethren. You have five minutes to make your peace with Heaven," Don
-Tadeo said, sternly.
-
-He placed his watch upon the table, and drawing a pistol from his belt,
-cocked it deliberately. The sharp noise of the hammer made the condemned
-man shudder with fear. A profound silence prevailed in the vault; the
-hearts of these implacable men might be heard beating in their breasts.
-The spy cast around wild, despairing glances, but beheld nothing but
-angry eyes gleaming upon him through hideous masks. Over the vault, in
-the chingana, they continued dancing, and faint puffs of _sambacuejas_
-penetrated, at intervals, mixed with uproarious bursts of laughter, even
-to the awful scene beneath. The contrast of this riotous mirth with
-the terrible act of justice which was being carried out, had something
-appalling in it.
-
-"The five minutes are past," said Don Tadeo, in a firm voice.
-
-"A few minutes more! a few minutes, my lord!" the spy implored, wringing
-his hands in despair. "I am not prepared; you cannot kill me thus! In
-the name of all you hold most dear, let me live!"
-
-Without appearing to hear him, Don Tadeo lifted his pistol, and the
-miserable culprit rolled upon the ground, with his brains scattered
-around him.
-
-"Oh!" he cried, as the pistol was aimed, "be accursed, ye assassins!"
-His death prevented the utterance of more.
-
-The conspirators stood cold, impassive spectators of the scene. As soon
-as the stern act of justice was completed, at a signal from the chief,
-several men opened a trap in the floor which covered a hole half filled
-with quick lime; the body was thrown into it, and the trap closed again.
-
-"Justice has been done, brothers," said Don Tadeo, solemnly; "go in
-peace, the King of Darkness watches over you."
-
-The conspirators bowed respectfully, and disappeared one after the
-other, without uttering a word. At the end of a quarter of an hour no
-one remained in the vault but Don Tadeo and Don Gregorio.
-
-"Oh!" said Don Tadeo, "Shall we always have thus to combat treachery?"
-
-"Courage! my friend; you have yourself said, in a few hours war will
-commence in the face of day."
-
-"God grant I may not be deceived! This contest in the dark makes
-frightful demands upon the mind; my heart begins to fail me!"
-
-The two conspirators regained the chingana, in which the dancing,
-laughing, and drinking were going on with undiminished spirit; they
-passed through so as not to be observed, and came out into the street.
-They had hardly walked fifty steps when they were joined by a man, who,
-to their great surprise, proved to be Valentine Guillois.
-
-"God be praised for bringing you here so opportunely!" said Don Tadeo.
-
-"I hope I am punctual," the Parisian remarked, with a gay laugh.
-
-Don Tadeo pressed his hand warmly, and drew him towards his residence,
-where our three personages soon arrived.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII.
-
-THE TREATY OF PEACE.
-
-
-General Bustamente had come to Valdivia under the pretence of himself
-renewing the treaties which existed between the republic of Chili
-and the Araucanian Confederation. This pretext was excellent in the
-sense that it permitted him to concentrate a considerable force in the
-provinces, and gave him, besides, a plausible reason for receiving the
-most powerful Ulmens of the Indians, who would not fail to come to the
-meeting, accompanied by a great number of mosotones. Every time a new
-president is elected in Chili, the minister at war renews the treaties
-in his name. General Bustamente had, up to this moment, neglected to do
-so: he had good reasons for that.--
-
-This ceremony, in which a great retinue is purposely displayed,
-generally takes place in a vast plain situated upon the Araucanian
-territories, and not at a great distance from Valdivia. By a curious
-coincidence, the pretext of the General suited equally well the
-interests of the three factions which, at this period, divided this
-unhappy country. The Dark-Hearts had skilfully profited by it to prepare
-the resistance they meditated, and Antinahuel, feigning to wish to
-pay the greatest honours to the war minister of the President of the
-republic, had collected a real army of his best warriors in the environs
-of the place chosen for the solemnity.
-
-Such was the state of things, and of the various parties with regard to
-each other, at the time we resume our narrative. The enemies were about
-to come face to face; it was evident that each, being well prepared,
-would endeavour to take advantage of the opportunity, and that a shock
-was imminent; but how would it be brought about? Who would set fire to
-the mine, and cause all those passions, those grudges, those ambitions,
-so long restrained, to explode? Nobody could say!
-
-The plain on which the ceremony was to take place was vast, covered
-with high grass, and belted by mountains verdant with lofty trees. The
-plain, crossed by woods and lines of apple trees, loaded with fruit,
-was divided in two by a meandering river, which flowed gently along,
-balancing on its silver waters numerous troops of black-headed swans;
-here and there, through the breaks of the thickets, might be seen the
-pointed nose of a vicuna, which, with ear erect, and eye on the watch,
-seemed to sniff the breeze, and all at once bounded away into the
-distance.
-
-The sun was rising majestically in the horizon when a measured noise
-of tinkling bells proceeded from a wood of apple trees, and a troop of
-half a score mules, led by the mother mare, and driven by an arriero,
-debouched into the plain. These mules carried diverse objects for an
-encampment, provisions, and even some bales of clothes and linen. At
-twenty paces behind the mules, came a rather numerous troop of horsemen.
-When they arrived at the banks of the little river we have spoken of,
-the arriero stopped his mules, and the party dismounted. In an instant
-the bales were unpacked and arranged with care, so as to form a perfect
-circle, in the centre of which a fire was lighted. Then a tent was
-erected in this temporary camp, and the horses and mules were hobbled.
-
-This party, whom, no doubt, our readers have already recognized, were
-Don Tadeo, his friends the Frenchmen, the Indian Ulmens, with Doña
-Rosario, and three servants. By a strange coincidence, at the same time
-that they were arranging their camp, another party nearly as numerous
-established theirs on the opposite bank of the river, exactly in face
-of them. The leader of this was Doña Maria. As frequently happens, it
-had pleased chance to bring into propinquity irreconcilable enemies, who
-were only separated from each other by a distance of fifty yards at the
-most. But was this entirely owing to chance?
-
-Don Tadeo had no suspicion of this dangerous proximity, or he would
-probably have done everything in his power to avoid it. He had cast a
-vacant glance at the caravan opposite to him, without taking any further
-heed of it, being absorbed in thoughts of the highest importance. Doña
-Maria, on the contrary, knew perfectly well, what she was about, and
-had placed herself where she was with the skill of an able tactician.
-In the mean time, as the morning advanced, the number of travellers
-kept increasing on the plain; by nine o'clock it was literally covered
-with tents; a free space only being reserved around an old half ruined
-chapel, in which mass was to be celebrated before the commencement of
-the ceremony.
-
-The Puelches, who had descended from their mountains in great numbers,
-had passed the night in making joyous libations around their campfires;
-many of them were sleeping in a state of complete intoxication;
-nevertheless, as soon as the arrival of the minister of the Chilian
-republic was announced, they all sprang up tumultuously, and began to
-dance, and utter cries of joy. On one side arrived General Bustamente
-at a canter, surrounded by a brilliant staff, all glittering with gold
-lace, and followed by a numerous troop of lancers; whilst on the other
-side came, at a gallop, the four Araucano Toquis, followed by the
-principal Ulmens of their nation, and a great number of mosotones.
-
-These two troops, which hastened to meet each other amidst the _vivas_
-and cries of joy of the crowd, raised immense clouds of dust, in which
-they disappeared. The Araucanos in particular, who are excellent
-jinetes, a term used in this country to designate good horsemen,
-indulged in equestrian eccentricities, of which the so-much vaunted Arab
-fantasias can give but a faint idea; for they are nothing in comparison
-with the incredible feats performed by these men, who seem born to
-manage a horse. The Chilians had a much more serious bearing, from
-which they would gladly have freed themselves, if human respect had not
-restrained them.
-
-As soon as the two troops met, the chiefs dismounted and ranged
-themselves, the Ulmens, armed with their long, silver-headed canes,
-behind Antinahuel, and the three other Toquis and the Chilians behind
-General Bustamente. It was the first time the Tiger-Sun and the General
-had met. Each of these two men, therefore, equally good politicians,
-equally false and equally ambitious, and who, at the first glance,
-understood one another, contemplated his rival with intense earnestness.
-
-After exchanging a few salutes, impressed with a rather suspicious
-cordiality, the two bands retrograded from each other a few paces, to
-afford room for the commissary-general and four Capitanes de Amigos.
-These officers are what they call in the United States Indian agents;
-they serve as interpreters and agents to the Araucanos, for trade, and
-all that concerns their transactions with the Chilians. It must be
-observed that all these Indians speak Spanish perfectly well; but they
-never will use it in appointed meetings. These Capitanes de Amigos, who,
-for the most part, are half-breeds, are much beloved and respected.
-They arrived, leading a score of mules loaded with presents, destined
-by the President of the Republic for the principal Ulmens. For, be it
-noted, when Indians treat with Christians, they consider nothing settled
-till they have received presents: it is for them a proof that the other
-party does not wish to deceive them; they constitute an earnest which
-they require to bind the bargain, and prove that they are treated in
-good faith. The Chilians, who, unfortunately for them, had long been
-accustomed to Araucanian habits, had taken good care not to forget this
-important condition.
-
-Whilst the commissary-general was distributing the presents, General
-Bustamente repaired to the chapel, where a priest, who had come
-purposely from Valdivia, celebrated mass. After mass, the speeches
-commenced, as soon as the minister of the republic and the four Toquis
-of the Uthal-Mapus had embraced. These speeches, which were very long,
-resulted in mutual assurances that they were satisfied with the peace
-which reigned between the two peoples, and that they would do all in
-their power to maintain it as long as possible. We think it our duty to
-beg our readers to observe, in justice to the two speakers, that one was
-not more sincere than the other, and that they did not mean one word
-they said, since in their hearts they determined to break their promises
-as soon as possible. They appeared, however, very well satisfied with
-the comedy they were playing, and they terminated it by a final embrace,
-more close and warm than the first, but equally false.
-
-"Now," said the General, "if my brothers, the great chiefs, will please
-to follow me, we will plant the cross."
-
-"No," Antinahuel replied, with a honied smile, "the cross must not be
-planted in front of the stone toldo."
-
-"Why not?" the General asked, with astonishment.
-
-"Because," the Indian replied, in a tone of decision, "the words we
-have exchanged must remain buried on the spot where they have been
-pronounced."
-
-"That is just!" said the General, bowing his head in sign of assent. "It
-shall be done as my brother desires."
-
-Antinahuel smiled proudly.
-
-"Have I spoken well, powerful men?" he asked, looking at the Ulmens.
-
-"Our father, the Toqui of the Inapire-Mapu, has spoken well," the Ulmens
-replied.
-
-The Indian peons then went to fetch from the chapel, upon the floor of
-which it lay, a cross of at least thirty feet in height, which they
-brought to the spot where the conferences had been held. All the chiefs
-and the Chilian officers ranged themselves around it; the troops forming
-a vast circle at a respectful distance. After the pause of an instant,
-of which the priest took advantage to bless the cross with that off-hand
-carelessness which distinguishes the Spanish clergy in America, it was
-planted in the ground. At the moment it was about to gain its upright
-position, Antinahuel interposed.
-
-"Stop!" he said to the Indians armed with spades; and turning towards
-the General, "Peace is well assured between us, is it not?" he asked.
-
-"Yes, certainly," the General replied.
-
-"All our words are buried under this cross?"
-
-"All of them."
-
-"Cover them with earth then," he said to the peons, "that they may not
-escape, and that war may not be rekindled between us."
-
-"When this ceremony was accomplished, Antinahuel caused a young lamb to
-be brought, which the machi slaughtered near the cross. All the Indian
-chiefs bathed their hands in the still warm blood of the quivering
-animal, and daubed the cross with hieroglyphic signs, destined to keep
-away Guécubu, the genius of evil, and prevent the words from escaping
-from the spot in which they were buried. In conclusion, the Araucans
-and the Chilians discharged their firearms in the air, and the ceremony
-was ended. General Bustamente then coming up to the Toqui of the
-Inapire-Mapu, passed his arm through the chiefs in a friendly manner,
-saying in an ingratiating tone--
-
-"Will not my brother, Antinahuel, come for an instant in my tent, to
-taste a glass of aguardiente de Pisco and take maté?--he would render
-his friend happy."
-
-"Why should I not?" the chief replied, smiling, and in the most
-good-humoured tone.
-
-"My brother will accompany me!"
-
-"Lead on, then."
-
-Both moved off, chatting upon indifferent subjects, directing their
-course towards the General's tent, which had been pitched within gunshot
-of the place where the ceremony had taken place. The General had given
-his orders beforehand, so that everything was prepared to receive the
-guest he brought with him magnificently, as for the success of his
-projects he had so great an interest in pleasing him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIX.
-
-THE ABDUCTION.
-
-
-Whilst the ceremony we have described was being accomplished, a terrible
-event was passing not far from it, on the banks of the river, in the
-camp of Don Tadeo de Leon. The three parties which divided Chili, and
-aimed at governing it, had, as if of one accord, chosen the day for the
-renewal of the treaty to throw off the mask and give their partisans the
-signal of revolt. Don Tadeo, who feared everything from Doña Maria and
-the General's spies, had consented, but with regret, that Rosario should
-accompany him to the plain, to be present at the ceremony; he had taken
-her from the convent, and brought the young girl with him, inwardly
-pleased that she would thus not be in Valdivia during the serious events
-that were there preparing.
-
-Doña Rosario, to tell the truth, had only consulted her love in the
-request she had made of her guardian; the desire of seeing unobserved,
-for a few hours, the object of her affections, had dictated it. Don
-Tadeo, who could not on any account be present at the ceremony, being
-obliged to conceal himself, took the two young Frenchmen aside as soon
-as his little encampment was arranged. It was then about seven o'clock
-in the morning, and the crowd began to flock to the plain. The King of
-Darkness cast a prudent and searching look around, but, reassured by the
-complete solitude that prevailed, he at length decided upon explaining
-to the young men, who were astonished at this strange proceeding, all
-that appeared so unusual and inconsistent in his conduct.
-
-"Caballeros," he said, "since I have had the honour of knowing you, I
-have concealed nothing from you, and you know all my secrets; this day
-must decide the question of life or death to which, from my boyhood,
-I have devoted all the energies of my mind. I must leave this spot
-instantly, and return to Valdivia. It is in that city that the first
-blow will be struck, within a few hours, against the tyrant, and the
-struggle I expect will be terrible. I am not willing to expose the
-young lady whom you know, and whose life you have already saved, to the
-chances of it. I confide the care of her to one of you, the other will
-accompany me to the city. In the event of any fatal mischance happening
-to me, I will place in his hands a paper, which will inform you both of
-my intentions, and of what I wish you to do with that poor child, who is
-all I hold dear on earth, and whom I leave with the greatest pain. Which
-of you, gentlemen, will take charge of Doña Rosario during my absence?"
-
-"Be at ease, Don Tadeo, go where your duty calls you," Louis answered,
-in a solemn but agitated tone; "I swear that while I live no danger,
-either near or distant, shall assail her; to reach her it must pass over
-my dead body."
-
-"Receive my warmest thanks, Don Louis," the Dark-Heart replied, somewhat
-surprised, and yet affected by the manner of the Frenchman; "I place
-implicit faith in your words; I know you will keep your vow at all
-risks; besides, in a few hours I hope I shall be back, and here she can
-have nothing to dread."
-
-"I will watch over her," the young man said, quietly.
-
-"Once again I thank you."
-
-Don Tadeo left the young men, and returned to the tent where Doña
-Rosario, reclining in a hammock, was gently swinging herself, and
-indulging in perhaps pleasing reveries. On seeing her guardian, she
-sprang up eagerly.
-
-"Do not disturb yourself, my child," said Don Tadeo, putting her back
-with a gentle hand, "I have but two words to say to you."
-
-"I am always attentive to you, my kind friend."
-
-"I have come to bid you farewell."
-
-"Farewell, Don Tadeo!" she exclaimed, in great terror.
-
-"Oh! comfort yourself, timid darling! only for a few hours."
-
-"Ah! that is all!" she said, with a smile of satisfaction.
-
-"Certainly, all! There is in this neighbourhood an exceedingly curious
-grotto. I was foolish enough to let some words slip concerning it this
-morning before Don Valentine, and that demon of a Frenchman," he added,
-with a smile, "insists upon my showing it to him; so that, in order to
-get rid of his importunities, I have been obliged to comply."
-
-"You have done quite right," she said, eagerly; "we are under great
-obligations to those two French caballeros, and what he asked is such a
-trifle!"
-
-"That it would have been uncourteous on my part to refuse him," Don
-Tadeo interrupted, "therefore I have not. We shall set off directly,
-in order to be the sooner back. Be as cheerful as you can during our
-absence, dear child."
-
-"I will endeavour," she said, absently.
-
-"Besides, I shall leave Don Louis to take care of you; you can chat
-together, and the time will quickly pass away."
-
-The young girl blushed as she stammered--"Come back soon, dear friend."
-
-"Time to go and return, that is all; adieu, then, darling!"
-
-Don Tadeo left the tent, and rejoined the young men.
-
-"Adieu, Don Louis!" he said. "Are you ready, Don Valentine?"
-
-"Ready!" the Frenchman replied, laughing; "Caramba! I should be in
-despair at losing such an opportunity of judging whether you understand
-getting up revolutions as well as we Frenchmen do."
-
-"Oh! We are but young at the work yet," Don Tadeo remarked; "and yet we
-begin to have some idea of the matter, I assure you."
-
-"Good-bye, Louis, for a time," said Valentine, pressing his friend's
-hand; and stooping towards his ear, he added--"Be thankful to your
-stars, do you not see that Heaven protects your love?" The young man
-only replied by shaking his head despondingly, and sighing deeply. A
-peon had brought the horses for the two Chilians and the Frenchman,
-and they were soon in the saddle. They set off at a quick pace, and
-were quickly lost in the high grass and the windings of the road. Louis
-returned pensively to the camp, where he found Doña Rosario alone in her
-tent; the two Indian chiefs, attracted by curiosity, having gone in the
-direction of the chapel, where, mingled with the crowd, they might be
-present at the ceremony. The arrieros and the peons had not been long in
-following their example.
-
-The young girl was seated on a heap of dyed sheepskins in front of
-the tent, dreamily looking at, but without seeing, the clouds which
-were driven across the heavens by a strong breeze. Doña Rosario was
-a charming girl of sixteen, slender, fragile, and delicate, small in
-person, whose least gestures and least movements possessed inexpressible
-attractions. Of a rare kind of beauty in America, she was fair; her
-long silky hair was of the colour of ripe golden corn; her blue eyes,
-in which were reflected the azure of the heavens, had that melancholy,
-dreamy expression which we attribute only to angels, and young girls who
-are beginning to love; her nose, with its pinky nostrils, was inclined
-to be aquiline; while her mouth, rather serious, with rosy lips set
-off by teeth of dazzling whiteness, and her skin of pearl-like purity,
-altogether made her a charming creature.
-
-The noise of the approaching young man's steps roused her from her
-reverie. She turned her head in the direction, and looked at him with
-inexpressible sadness, although a faint smile played upon her lips.
-
-"It is I," said the Count, in a low, inarticulate voice, bowing
-respectfully.
-
-"I knew of your coming," she replied, in a sweetly-toned voice. "Oh! why
-did you return to me at all?"
-
-"Be not angry with me for drawing near you once more. I endeavoured to
-obey you; I left the spot you resided in, without, alas! even the hope
-of seeing you again; but destiny has decided otherwise."
-
-She gave him a long and eloquent look.
-
-"Unfortunately," he continued, with a melancholy smile, "you are
-condemned for some hours to endure my presence."
-
-"I must resign myself to it," she said, extending her hand to him
-cordially.
-
-The young man imprinted a burning kiss upon the white, soft hand he held.
-
-"And so we are left alone!" she said gaily, but withdrawing her hand.
-
-"Good heavens! yes, nearly so," he replied, falling in with her humour.
-"The Indian chiefs and the peons, overcome by curiosity, have joined the
-crowds, and kindly procured us a _tête-à-tête_."
-
-"In the midst of ten thousand people!" she said, smiling.
-
-"That is all the better; everyone is engaged with his own affairs,
-without troubling himself about those of others; and we can speak to
-each other without the fear of being interrupted by importunate persons."
-
-"True," she said, thoughtfully; "it is frequently amidst a crowd that we
-find the greatest solitude."
-
-"Does not the heart possess that great faculty of being able to isolate
-itself when it pleases--to fold itself, as it were, within itself?"
-
-"And is not that faculty often a misfortune?"
-
-"Perhaps it is," he replied, with a sigh.
-
-"But how comes it?" she said, with a half-smiling air, in order to
-change the conversation, which was becoming a little too serious.
-"Pardon my giddy impertinence! How comes it, I say, that you, of whom I
-sometimes caught a glimpse at Paris, during my short sojourn there, and
-who then enjoyed, if I was not mistaken, a brilliant position, should
-meet me here so far from your country?"
-
-"Alas! madam, my history is that of many young men, and may be summed up
-in two words--weakness and ignorance."
-
-"That is but too true; that is the history of nearly all the world, in
-Europe as well as in America."
-
-At this moment a great noise reached them from the camp. Doña Rosario
-and the Count were placed so as not to be able to see what was passing
-in the plain.
-
-"What is that noise?" she asked.
-
-"Probably the tumult of the festival which reaches us: should you like
-to be present at this ceremony?"
-
-"To what purpose? Those cries and that tumult terrify me."
-
-"And yet, I thought it was you who asked Don Tadeo to see this."
-
-"A silly girl's caprice," she said, "which passed away as soon as
-conceived."
-
-"But was it not Don Tadeo's intention to----"
-
-"Who can tell Don Tadeo's intention?" she interrupted, with a sigh.
-
-"He appears to love you tenderly?" Louis hazarded, timidly.
-
-"Sometimes I am on the point of believing so; he pays me the most
-delicate attentions, shews me the tenderest care; then at other times he
-appears to endure me with, pain--he repulses me--my caresses annoy him."
-
-"Singular conduct!" the Count observed; "this gentleman is your
-relation, there can be no doubt."
-
-"I do not know," she replied ingenuously; "when alone and pensive, my
-thoughts stray back to my early years. I have some vague remembrance of
-a young and handsome woman, whose black eyes smiled upon me constantly,
-and whose rosy lips lavished affectionate kisses upon me; and then, all
-at once, a complete darkness comes over my brain, and memory entirely
-fails me. As far back as I can recollect, I find nobody but Don Tadeo
-watching over me, everywhere and always, as a father would do over his
-daughter."
-
-"Perhaps, then," said the Count, "he is your father."
-
-"Listen. One day, after a long and dangerous illness which I had just
-gone through, and in which Don Tadeo had night and day watched over
-my pillow for more than a month, happy at seeing me restored to life,
-for he had been fearful he should lose me, he smiled upon me tenderly,
-kissed my brow and my hands, and appeared to experience the most
-lively joy. 'Oh!' I said, as a sudden thought rushed across my mind;
-'oh! you are my father! None but a father could devote himself with
-such abnegation for his child!' and throwing my arms round his neck,
-I concealed my tear-laden face on his chest. Don Tadeo arose, his
-countenance was lividly pale, his features were frightfully contracted;
-he repulsed me roughly, and strode hastily about the chamber. I Your
-father! I! Doña Rosario!' he cried, in a husky voice, 'you are a silly,
-poor child! Never repeat those words again; your father is dead, and
-your mother, likewise, long, long ago. I am not your father--never
-repeat that word--I am only your friend. Yes, your father, at the point
-of death, confided you to my care, and that is why I am bringing you up,
-that is why I watch over you; as to me, I am not even your relation!'
-His agitation was extreme; he said many other things which I do not now
-remember, and then he left me. Alas! from that day I have never ventured
-to ask him for any account of my family."
-
-A silence ensued; the two young people were pensively thoughtful: the
-simple and touching recital of Doña Rosario had strongly affected the
-Count. At length he said, in a tremulous voice,--
-
-"Let _me_ love you, Doña Rosario!"
-
-The maiden sighed.
-
-"To what could that love lead, Don Louis?" she said sadly,--"to death,
-perhaps!"
-
-"Oh!" he exclaimed madly; "and it would be welcome, if it came in your
-defence!"
-
-At this very instant, several individuals rushed into the tent, uttering
-discordant cries. Quick as thought, the Count threw himself before the
-young girl, a pistol in each hand. But, as if Heaven had decreed that he
-should accomplish the wish he had just uttered, before he had time to
-defend himself, he was struck to the earth, stabbed by several machetes.
-In falling, he saw, as if in a dream, Doña Rosario seized by two
-individuals, who fled away with her in their arms. With an incredible
-effort, the young man succeeded in getting on his knees, and afterwards
-in rising altogether. He beheld the ravishers hastening towards their
-horses, which were being held at a short distance by an Indian. He
-took aim at the flying wretches, crying, with a faint voice, "Murder!
-Murder!" and fired.
-
-One of the ravishers fell, uttering an imprecation of rage. The Count,
-exhausted by the superhuman effort he had made, staggered like a drunken
-man; the blood gushed from his ears, his sight grew dim, and he rolled
-senseless upon the ground.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXX.
-
-THE PROTEST.
-
-
-The three travellers returned with such speed to Valdivia, that it
-scarcely took them an hour and a half to traverse the distance which
-divided the plain from the city. They passed on their way General
-Don Pancho Bustamente, at the head of a detachment of lanceros, and
-attended by a numerous staff; but the Dark-Hearts, employing their usual
-precautions, escaped notice. Don Tadeo cast an ironical glance at his
-enemy.
-
-"Look," he said, with a somewhat malignant smile, to Don Gregorio,
-"at our worthy general; he fancies himself already protector. What a
-majestic bearing he affects!"
-
-"Yes," said Don Gregorio, with the same expression; "but between the cup
-and the lip he may find there is room for a mischance."
-
-It was striking ten as they entered Valdivia. The city was almost
-deserted: for all who were not detained at home by urgent business had
-gone to the plain, to be present at the renewal of the treaties between
-the Chilians and the Araucanos. This ceremony strongly interested the
-inhabitants of the province: it was for them a guarantee of tranquillity
-for the future; that is to say, the liberty of carrying on with safety
-their commercial transactions with the Indians. More than all the other
-provinces of Chili, Valdivia had cause to dread hostilities with its
-redoubtable neighbours. Separated entirely from the territory of the
-republic, when left to its own resources, the least movement among
-the Moluchos annihilated its commerce. If the inhabitants appeared to
-have emigrated for a time, it was not the same with the soldiers; the
-numerous garrison, composed--a thing unheard of in time of peace--of
-fifteen hundred men, had been still further increased within the last
-two days, principally in the course of the preceding night, by two
-regiments of cavalry, and a battery of artillery.
-
-For what purpose was this calling together of forces, which nothing
-appeared to justify? The few inhabitants who remained in the city
-experienced a vague uneasiness on this head, for which they could not
-account. There is a singular fact that we wish to point out here, but
-which we by no means take upon ourselves to explain, because it has
-always seemed to us inexplicable. When a great event, whatever it may
-be, is about to be accomplished in a country, a vague presentiment
-seems to warn the inhabitants; men and things assume an unusual aspect;
-nature itself, associating with this disposition of men's minds, grows
-sensibly darker; a magnetic fluid rushes through the veins; a painful
-pressure weighs upon every breast; the atmosphere becomes heavy; the
-sun loses its brilliancy; and people only communicate their impressions
-to each other in a suppressed voice; in short, there is in the air
-something incomprehensible, but I know not what, which says to man in
-a dismal tone, "Beware! a catastrophe threatens thee!" And this fatal
-presentiment is so general, that when the event takes place, and the
-crisis is over, every one instinctively cries, "I felt it!" And yet no
-one could say why he foresaw the cataclysm.
-
-It is the sentiment of self-preservation which God has placed in the
-heart of man--that sentiment which constitutes his safeguard, and is
-so strong, that when danger approaches him, it cries to him, "Beware!"
-Valdivia was at this moment oppressed by the weight of an unknown
-apprehension. The few citizens who remained in the city hastened to
-regain their homes. Numerous patrols of cavalry and infantry traversed
-the streets in all directions; cannon rolled along with portentous
-noise, and were planted at the comers of all the principal places. At
-the cabildo a crowd of officers and soldiers went in and out with a
-busy air; couriers succeeded each other unceasingly, and after having
-delivered the orders with which they were charged, set off again at full
-speed.
-
-At the same time, at the corners of streets, men wrapped in large
-cloaks, and with hats pulled down over their eyes, harangued the workmen
-and the sailors of the port, and formed groups, which every instant
-became more numerous. In these groups, arms, gun barrels, bayonets,
-and pike heads began to glitter in the sun. When these mysterious men
-were satisfied that they had accomplished their task in one place, they
-went to another. Immediately after their departure, as if by magic,
-barricades were raised behind them, and impeded the passage. As soon as
-a barricade was terminated, an energetic-looking sentinel, a workman
-with bare arms, but with a callous hand, brandishing a gun, an axe, or
-a sabre, placed himself at its summit, and bade all who approached go
-another way.
-
-On entering the city, Don Tadeo and his companions found themselves
-completely barricaded. Don Tadeo smiled triumphantly. The three men
-cleared the barricades, which were thrown open at their approach, and
-the sentinels bowed to them as they passed. We have forgotten to say
-that all three were masked. There was something striking in the march
-of these three phantoms, before whom all obstacles gave way. If now and
-then a stray citizen ventured to ask timidly who those three masked
-men were, he received for answer, "It is the King of Darkness and his
-lieutenants;" and the citizen, trembling with fear, crossed himself, and
-went his way hastily.
-
-The three men thus arrived at the entrance of the Plaza Mayor. There
-two pieces of mounted cannon barred their passage, and the artillerymen
-were at their guns waiting, match in hand. At a sign from Don Tadeo, the
-officer who commanded approached him. He leant down upon the neck of his
-horse and said a few words to the officer in a whisper; the latter bowed
-respectfully, and, turning to his soldiers, said--
-
-"Let these gentlemen pass."
-
-In all the cities of Spanish America there is a monumental fountain in
-the centre of the Plaza Mayor. It was towards this fountain that Don
-Tadeo conducted his companions. A hundred individuals, scattered here
-and there, and who appeared to expect him, drew together at his approach.
-
-"Well," Don Tadeo asked Valentine, "how do you like our ride?"
-
-"Delightful," the other replied, "only I fancy we shall shortly come to
-blows, and hear the hissing of bullets."
-
-"I hope so," said the conspirator, coolly.
-
-"Ah! ah!" the young man remarked, "all is for the best, then?"
-
-"You are about to be present at a very interesting spectacle."
-
-"Oh! I depend upon you for that. For my part, I am glad at not having
-lost such an opportunity."
-
-"Is it not one?"
-
-"Pardieu!--yes. It is astonishing how travelling instructs one," he
-added, in the form of a parenthesis.
-
-The individuals assembled near the fountain surrounded them with
-every mark of the profoundest respect. These were the faithful--the
-Dark-Hearts--upon whom perfect dependence was to be placed.
-
-"Gentlemen," said Don Tadeo, "the struggle is about to commence. I
-desire at length that you should know me, that you should be informed
-who the man is who commands you."
-
-And he threw off his mask. A burst of enthusiasm broke from the ranks
-of the conspirators. "Don Tadeo de Leon!" they cried with astonishment,
-mingled with a species of veneration for the man who had suffered so
-much for the common cause.
-
-"Yes, gentlemen," Don Tadeo replied, "the man whom the creatures of the
-tyrant condemned to death, and whom God has miraculously preserved, in
-order to be the instrument of His vengeance today."
-
-All the conspirators pressed tumultuously round him. These men of
-spontaneous impressions, and essentially superstitious, no longer
-doubted of victory, since they had at their head the man whom God, as
-they believed, had so manifestly protected. Don Tadeo had calculated
-upon this manifestation to heighten the ardour of the conspirators,
-and to augment still further the prestige he enjoyed. The result had
-answered his expectations.
-
-"Is everyone at his post?" he asked.
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Are arms and ammunition distributed?"
-
-"To everybody."
-
-"Are all the barricades completed?--all the gates of the city guarded?"
-
-"All."
-
-"That is well. Now wait."
-
-And quiet was re-established.
-
-All these men had known Don Tadeo for a long time; they appreciated his
-character at its true value; they had already vowed to him a boundless
-friendship; and now they knew that Don Tadeo and the King of Darkness
-were the same person, they were ready to lay down their lives for him.
-The news of the revelation which had been made near the fountain spread
-through the city with the rapidity of a train of gunpowder, and added
-greatly to the fermentation which already prevailed. Whilst the few
-words were being exchanged between the chief of the conspirators and
-his party, a regiment of infantry had formed in front of the cabildo,
-flanked right and left by two squadrons of horse.
-
-"Attention!" Don Tadeo commanded.
-
-A sensation of impatience pervaded the men grouped around him.
-
-"Eh! eh!" Valentine murmured, with that mocking, short laugh that was
-peculiar to him; "this is going on capitally! Caramba! we shall soon
-have some fun!"
-
-The gates of the cabildo were thrown open violently, and a general,
-followed by a brilliant staff, took his station on the top step of the
-great staircase; next several senators made their appearance in full
-costume, and formed a group round him. At a signal from the general, the
-drums beat for a time, to secure attention and silence. When all was
-quiet, a senator, who held a roll of paper in his hand, came forward a
-few steps, and prepared to read.
-
-"Bah!" said the General, seizing his arm, "Why lose your time in reading
-that rubbish? Leave it to me."
-
-The senator, who asked no better than to be freed from the dangerous
-commission with which, very much against his will, he had been charged,
-rolled up his papers, and retreated to the rear. The general assumed a
-commanding posture, placed his hand upon his hip, with the point of his
-sword on the ground, and said in a voice audible in every corner of the
-place--
-
-"People of the province of Valdivia, the sovereign senate, assembled
-in congress at Santiago de Chili, has unanimously passed the following
-resolutions:--
-
-"1st. The various provinces of the Chilian republic shall be composed of
-independent states united under the title of the Confederation of the
-United States of South America.
-
-"2nd. The valiant and most excellent general, Don Pancho Bustamente, has
-been elected Protector of the Chilian Confederation."
-
-"People, cry with me--'Long live the Protector Don Pancho Bustamente!'"
-
-The officers grouped round the General, and the soldiers drawn up in the
-place, shouted--
-
-"Long live the Protector!"
-
-But the people were mute.
-
-"Hum!" the general murmured to himself; "they do not display much
-enthusiasm."
-
-A man came forward from the group collected round the fountain, and
-advanced boldly to within twenty paces of the soldiers. This man was
-Don Tadeo de Leon; his countenance was calm and his bearing firm and
-collected. He made a sign with his hand.
-
-"What is your will?" the general shouted.
-
-"To reply to your proclamation," the King of Darkness said, intrepidly.
-
-"Speak! I hear you," the general replied.
-
-Don Tadeo bowed with a significant smile.
-
-"In the name of the Chilian people," he said, in a loud, clear voice,
-"the senate of Santiago de Chili, composed of creatures sold to the
-tyrant, is declared traitorous to its country."
-
-"Miserable fellow! what do you dare to say?" the General cried, angrily.
-
-"No insults, if you please! Allow me to terminate the answer I have to
-give you," Don Tadeo replied, coolly.
-
-The General, involuntarily brow-beaten by the heroic courage of this
-man, who, alone, unarmed before a triple row of muskets ready to be
-directed towards his breast, had dared to speak in this loud, firm
-tone, and overcome by that ascendancy which a great character always
-exercises, bit the pommel of his sword with rage.
-
-"In the name of the people," Don Tadeo, still calm and stoical,
-continued, "Don Pancho Bustamente is declared a traitor to his country,
-and as such is degraded from his titles and his power. Liberty! Chili!"
-
-"Liberty! Chili!" the populace assembled on the square shouted with the
-greatest enthusiasm.
-
-"Oh, this is too audacious!" the General cried, pale with anger.
-"Soldiers, seize that rebel!"
-
-Several soldiers stepped forward; but, quicker than thought, Don
-Gregorio and Valentine had sprung to Don Tadeo's side, and dragged him
-back with them among the people.
-
-"Cordieu!" cried Valentine, pressing his hands enough to crush them,
-"you are a troublesome man! but I love you the better for it."
-
-The General, outrageous at seeing his enemy escape, shouted silence. "In
-the name of the Protector," he said, "I command that rebel to be given
-up!"
-
-Hisses and hootings were the only reply.
-
-"Fire!" the General commanded, who, even before the last insulting
-manifestation, had perceived that no half measures were possible. The
-muskets were lowered, and a formidable discharge pealed like thunder.
-Several men fell, killed or wounded.
-
-"Chili! Liberty! down with the oppressor!" the people shouted, arming
-themselves with everything they could lay their hands on. A second
-discharge resounded, followed closely by a third. The ground was, in an
-instant, strewed with the dead and dying; but the patriots showed no
-disposition to disperse; on the contrary, under the incessant fire of
-the soldiers, they organized a resistance, and soon replied by a few
-shots to the incessant platoon firing which was decimating them. The
-combat became mutual; the revolution had commenced.
-
-"Hum!" the General muttered to himself, "I have undertaken a rather
-awkward mission."
-
-But, essentially a soldier, and endowed to the highest degree with that
-spirit of passive obedience which distinguishes all who have grown old
-in harness, he prepared either to chastise the insurgents severely, or
-die at his post.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXI.
-
-SPANIARD AND INDIAN.
-
-
-It was not, as may well be believed, through fear, that General
-Bustamente had absented himself from Valdivia at the moment when one
-of his lieutenants so boldly proclaimed him from the top of the steps
-of the cabildo, before the populace. No, General Bustamente was one
-of those soldiers of fortune of whom so many are found in America,
-accustomed to set his life upon a cast of the die, and to be turned
-aside by nothing in the world from the accomplishment of his projects.
-He had hoped, by the means of the forces he had concentrated in this
-remote province of the republic, that the inhabitants, taken unawares,
-would only offer an insignificant resistance, and that he should be
-able, by joining his troops with those of Antinahuel, to make a forced
-march through Araucania, gain possession of Concepción, and thence,
-keeping the gathering snowball in motion, and dragging his companions
-after him, arrive at Santiago in time to prevent any movement, and
-oblige the inhabitants to capitulate and accept, as an accomplished
-fact, the change of government inaugurated by him in the distant
-provinces of the republic.
-
-This plan was not deficient in audacity, or even in a certain degree of
-policy; it comprised great chances of success. Unfortunately for General
-Bustamente, the Dark-Hearts, whose spies were everywhere, had got wind
-of this project, and had countermined it by taking advantage of the
-opportunity offered them by their enemy to unmask their own batteries.
-We have seen under what conditions the struggle between the two parties
-had commenced in Valdivia. The General, who was ignorant of what was
-passing, felt in a state of perfect security. As soon as he was in his
-tent with Antinahuel, he let fall the curtain which closed it behind
-them, and, by a gesture, invited the toqui to be seated.
-
-"Sit down, chief," he said, "I have something to say to you."
-
-"I am at the orders of my white brother," the Indian replied, with a bow.
-
-The General attentively examined the man before him; he endeavoured to
-read on his countenance the various feelings that acted upon him; but
-the features of the Indian were marble; no impression was reflected by
-them.
-
-"Let us speak frankly, loyally, and as friends who wish no better than
-to understand each other plainly," he said.
-
-Antinahuel bowed reservedly to this appeal to frankness, and the General
-continued--
-
-"At this moment the people of Valdivia are constituting me, by
-acclamation, protector of a new confederation, formed of all the states."
-
-"Good!" said the chief, with an almost imperceptible shake of the head;
-"is my father sure of that?"
-
-"Certainly I am. The Chilians are tired of the continual agitations
-which disturb the country; they have forced this heavy burden upon me;
-but I owe myself to my country, and I will not disappoint the hopes my
-compatriots place in me."
-
-These words were pronounced in a hypocritical tone of self-denial, of
-which the Indian was not in the least the dupe. A smile flitted across
-the lips of the chief, which the General affected not to perceive.
-
-"To be brief," he continued, quitting the mild, conciliatory tone in
-which he had till that time spoken, to assume a more decided and abrupt
-manner, "are you prepared to keep your engagements?"
-
-"Why should I not keep them?" Antinahuel remarked.
-
-"Will you march with me to assure the success of my projects?"
-
-"Let my father order, I will obey."
-
-This readiness was displeasing to the General.
-
-"Come," he said, angrily, "let us put an end to this; I have not time to
-enter into a contest of wits with you, or follow you through a labyrinth
-of Indian circumlocutions."
-
-"I do not understand my father," Antinahuel replied, impassively.
-
-"We shall never get to the end, chief," the General said, stamping his
-foot, "if you will not answer me categorically."
-
-"I listen to my father; let him ask, I will reply."
-
-"How many men can you have under arms within twenty-four hours?"
-
-"Ten thousand," the chief said, drawing himself up proudly.
-
-"All experienced warriors?"
-
-"All."
-
-"What do you require of me for them?"
-
-"My father knows."
-
-"I accept of all your conditions but one."
-
-"Which is that?"
-
-"The surrender of the province of Valdivia to you."
-
-"Is not my father going to make up for that province on another side?"
-
-"How so?"
-
-"Am I not to assist my father in conquering Bolivia?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Well, then?"
-
-"You are mistaken, chief, it is not the same thing; I may enlarge the
-Chilian territory, but honour forbids me to diminish it."
-
-"Let my father reflect; the province of Valdivia was anciently an
-Araucanian Uthal-Mapus."
-
-"Very possibly, chief; but, according to that principle, all Chili was
-Araucanian previous to the discovery of America."
-
-"My father is mistaken; the Inca Sinchiroca had, a hundred years before,
-conquered the Chilian land as far as the Rio-Maulé."
-
-"You seem to be well acquainted with the history of your country,
-chief," the General observed.
-
-"Does not my father know the history of his?"
-
-"That is not the question, now; do you accept my proposals or not?"
-
-The chief appeared to reflect for an instant.
-
-"Well!" the General exclaimed, impatiently, "time presses."
-
-"That is true; I will, therefore, go and command a council, composed
-of the Apo-Ulmens and Ulmens of my nation, and submit the words of my
-father to them."
-
-The General with difficulty suppressed an expression of anger.
-
-"You must, doubtless, be joking, chief," he said--"your words cannot be
-serious."
-
-"Antinahuel is the first toqui of his nation," the Indian replied,
-haughtily; "he never jokes."
-
-"But you must give me your answer now--at once--in a few minutes!" cried
-the General; "who knows whether we may not be obliged to march within an
-hour from this time?"
-
-"It is my duty, as much as it is my father's, to enlarge the territory
-of my people."
-
-At this moment the gallop of a horse was heard approaching; the General
-flew to the entrance of the tent, where an orderly officer appeared. The
-face of this officer was bathed with perspiration, and spots of blood
-stained his uniform.
-
-"General!" he said breathlessly.
-
-"Silence!" the latter hissed, pointing to the chief, who, though
-apparently indifferent, followed all his movements attentively. The
-General turned towards Antinahuel.
-
-"Chief," he said, "I have orders to give to this officer--pressing
-orders; if you will permit me, we will resume our conversation
-presently."
-
-"Good!" replied the chief; "my father need not inconvenience himself; I
-can wait."
-
-And after bowing, he left the tent slowly.
-
-"Oh!" said the General to himself, "you demon! if, some day, I have you
-in my power!"
-
-But perceiving that anger was making him forget himself, he turned
-towards the officer, who stood motionless:
-
-"Well, Diego," he said, "what news have you?--are we conquerors?"
-
-"No," the officer replied, shaking his head; "the people, excited by
-those incarnate demons, the Dark-Hearts, have rebelled."
-
-"Oh!" the General cried, "shall I never be able to crush them? What has
-taken place?"
-
-"The people have raised barricades; and Don Tadeo de Leon is at the head
-of the movement."
-
-"Don Tadeo de Leon!" said the General.
-
-"Yes, he who was so clumsily shot."
-
-"Oh! this is war to the death then!"
-
-"A part of the troops, seduced by their officers, who have sold
-themselves to the Dark-Hearts, have passed over to their side; at
-this moment they are fighting in all the streets with the fiercest
-inveteracy. I had to pass through a shower of bullets to come and inform
-you."
-
-"We have not an instant to lose."
-
-"No; for though the soldiers who have remained faithful to you are
-fighting like lions, I can assure you they are closely pressed."
-
-"Maldición!" the General howled; "I will not leave stone upon stone of
-that accursed city!"
-
-"Yes, but, in the first place, we must reconquer it, General, and that
-will prove rather a rough job, I promise you," replied the old soldier,
-who had preserved his blunt speech throughout.
-
-"Very well!" said Bustamente; "let 'boot and saddle' be sounded, and
-every horseman take a foot soldier behind him."
-
-Don Pancho Bustamente was a prey to the most violent rage; for several
-instants he stamped about his tent, like a wild beast in its cage. This
-unexpected resistance, in spite of all the measures of precaution he had
-taken, exasperated him. Suddenly the curtain of his tent was raised.
-"Who is there?" he cried. "Ah! chief, is that you? Well, what do you
-say?"
-
-"I saw the chief come out, and I thought that perhaps my father would
-not be sorry to see me," the other replied, courteously.
-
-"And you were right; I am delighted to see you; forget all we have said,
-chief; I accept all your conditions; are you satisfied, this time?"
-
-"Yes. Including Valdivia?"
-
-"That above all!" said the General, with concentrated rage.
-
-"Ah!"
-
-"Yes, and as that province has revolted, in order to be able to give it
-to you, I must bring it back to its duty, must I not?"
-
-"To be sure you must!"
-
-"Well, as I have it at my heart to fulfil all my engagements to you,
-I am going instantly to march against that city; will you help me to
-subdue it?"
-
-"That will be but just, as I shall labour for myself."
-
-"How many horsemen have you at hand?"
-
-"Twelve hundred."
-
-"Good!" said the General, "they will be more than we shall want."
-
-"The troops are ready," said Diego, entering the tent, "and only await
-your Excellency's orders."
-
-"To saddle, then; let us be gone! let us be gone! And you, chief, will
-you not accompany us?"
-
-"Let my father move onward! my mosotones and I will tread in his steps
-quickly."
-
-Ten minutes later, General Bustamente, with his soldiers, was again
-galloping along the road to Valdivia. Antinahuel followed him with his
-eyes attentively; then he rejoined his Ulmens, saying between his teeth,
-"Let us leave these Moro-Huincas to slaughter each other a little while;
-it will always be time enough to fall into the party."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXII.
-
-IN THE MOUNTAIN.
-
-
-Doña Rosario was so terrified, and such mortal anguish assailed her
-on beholding the Count fall under the knives of the assassins, that
-she fainted. When she recovered her senses, it was dark night. For
-several minutes her confused thoughts whirled about in her brain; and
-she endeavoured, but for a long time in vain, to recover the violently
-broken thread of her ideas. At length light returned to her mind; she
-breathed a deep sigh, and murmured in a low voice full of terror:
-
-"My God! my God! what has happened to me?"
-
-She then opened her eyes, and cast around a despairing look. We have
-said it was a dark night; but what made the darkness more complete
-for the poor girl, was a heavy covering of some kind which was spread
-over her face, as well as her person. Then, with that patience which
-characterizes all prisoners, and which is merely the instinct of
-liberty, the poor child endeavoured to ascertain what her position was.
-As well as she could judge, she was lying upon the back of a mule,
-between two bales; a cord, which passed round her waist, prevented her
-from rising, but her hands were free. The mule had that rough, irregular
-trot, peculiar to its species, which made the young girl suffer terribly
-at every step. Some horse cloths had been thrown over her, no doubt to
-protect her from the heavy dews of the night, or perhaps to prevent her
-from making out what road she was going. Doña Rosario, gently, and with
-great precaution, slipped the covering down from her face: after a few
-efforts her head was completely free. She then looked around her; but
-all was dark. The moon, closely veiled by the clouds which passed over
-its pale disc, only yielded, at rare intervals, a weak, uncertain light.
-By lifting her head softly, the young girl could distinguish several
-horsemen, riding before and behind the mule which carried her. As well
-as she could make out, from the obscurity which surrounded her, these
-horsemen were Indians.
-
-The rather numerous party--it apparently consisted of a score of
-individuals--followed a narrow road deeply inclosed between two abrupt
-mountains, the rocky masses of which, throwing their shadow over the
-road, augmented the darkness. This road rose with a gentle ascent; and
-the horses and mules, probably fatigued with a long journey, travelled
-at a foot pace. The young girl, scarcely recovered from her fainting,
-had not been able to judge of the time that had elapsed since her
-abduction; and yet, by collecting her remembrances, and thinking at what
-hour she had been the victim of this odious attempt, she calculated
-that twelve hours must have passed away since she was made a prisoner.
-Overcome by the effort she had been forced to make in order to look
-around her, the poor girl let her head sink back again, stifling a sigh
-of despondency; and closing her eyes, as if to isolate herself the more,
-she plunged into sad and deep meditations.
-
-She was at least ignorant of whom she was with. Many times, it was true,
-Don Tadeo had spoken to her of an inveterate enemy, inveterate for her
-destruction; of a woman whose hatred watched her incessantly, ready to
-sacrifice her on the first favourable opportunity. But who was this
-woman? What cause had she for her hatred? Was she in the hands of this
-woman at that moment? And if so, why had she not already sacrificed
-her to her vengeance? From what motive had she been spared? For what
-punishment was she reserved?
-
-These thoughts and many others came in crowds to assail the maiden's
-bewildered mind. This uncertainty was for her an atrocious torture; at
-that moment, the truth would, perhaps, have been a consolation. Man is
-so constructed, that what he is most in dread of is the unknown; what he
-is ignorant of, assumes instinctively, in the prepossessed eyes of one
-whom a terrible danger menaces, gigantic proportions, a thousand times
-more terrific than the danger itself. The diseased imagination creates
-for itself phantoms which reality, however horrible it may be, puts
-to flight. In a word, the condemned prisoner who is led to punishment
-suffers more from the apprehensions which the fear of the death awaiting
-him inspires him with, than the physical pain of that death itself will
-cause him. Such was, at this moment, the situation of Doña Rosario; her
-mind, filled with inquietude and dark presentiments, made her dread
-nameless sufferings, the mere thought of which froze the young blood in
-her veins.
-
-The caravan still proceeded; it had left the ravine, and was climbing
-a path traced along the edge of a precipice, at the base of which
-could be heard the dull murmur of invisible water. At times, a stone,
-half-broken beneath the hoof of a mule, became detached, and rolled with
-a sinister noise down the side of the mountain, to engulf itself in the
-waters, into which it plunged with a dull plash, the sound of which
-ascended from the abyss. The wind howled through the pines and larches,
-the clashing branches of which showered a deluge of dry cones upon the
-travellers. At intervals the owl, and the screech owl, concealed in
-the crevices of the rocks, poured out into the night their plaintive
-notes, breaking the silence dismally. Furious barkings were heard in the
-distance; by degrees they grew nearer, and ended by forming a frightful
-concert, broken by the sharp voices of women and children, endeavouring
-to quiet them; lights appeared, and the caravan stopped. They had
-evidently arrived at the halt, at which they were to pass the rest of
-the night.
-
-The maiden cast an anxious but cautious look around her; but the flame
-of the torches agitated by the wind would not permit her to see anything
-but the dark outlines of some buildings and the shadows of several
-individuals who flitted about her, with cries and laughter--nothing
-more. The people of the escort were busily employed in unsaddling the
-horses and unloading the mules, amidst cries and oaths, and did not
-appear to bestow the least attention upon the young girl.
-
-A considerable time passed away; Doña Rosario did not know to what to
-attribute this unaccountable forgetfulness. At length she felt that
-someone took the mule by the bridle, and she heard him shout in a hoarse
-voice, _Arrea!_--the word with which the arrieros are accustomed to
-excite their beasts. Had she, then, been deceived? Was it not here they
-were to stop? What was the meaning of the halt, then? Why did a portion
-of the escort leave her?
-
-Her uncertainty was not of long duration; at the end of ten minutes at
-most, the mule stopped again, and the man who led it approached Doña
-Rosario. This man, clothed in the costume of the Chilian peasantry, wore
-an old straw Panama hat, the large brim of which, pulled down over his
-face, prevented her distinguishing his features. At the sight of this
-individual, the young girl felt an involuntary shudder run through her
-frame. The peasant, or pretended peasant, without addressing a word to
-her, withdrew the covering which enfolded her, untied the cord which
-bound her to the mule, and taking her in his arms, carried her with as
-much ease as if she had been a child, into a detached cabin a few paces
-distant, the door of which, standing open, seemed to invite them to
-enter.
-
-The interior of this cabin was dark. The young girl was laid upon the
-ground with a care and attention she did not expect. At the moment when
-he let her sink softly down from his arms to the ground, the man bent
-his head down towards her, and in a voice as inaudible as a breath, he
-whispered, "Courage! and hope!" and recovering himself quickly, went
-hastily out of the cabin, closing the door after him.
-
-As soon as he was gone, Doña Rosario sprang upon her feet. The two words
-pronounced by the unknown had sufficed to restore her presence of mind,
-and remove all her terrors. Hope, that universal panacea, that supreme
-good, which God, in His infinite mercy, has given to the unfortunate
-to help them to suffer, had suddenly re-entered her heart; she felt
-herself become strong, and ready to engage in the struggle with her
-unknown enemies. She knew now that a friend watched in secret over her,
-and, if required, his assistance would not be wanting; therefore it was
-almost with impatience, though still with fear, that she waited for her
-ravishers to signify their intentions.
-
-The place in which she was confined was completely dark. At the first
-moment she in vain endeavoured to distinguish anything in this chaos;
-but, by degrees, her eyes became accustomed to the darkness, and, in
-front of her, she perceived a faint light, which flitted between the
-badly-joined boards of a door. She then, with great precaution, for
-fear of arousing her invisible guardians, and stretching out her hand
-to keep her from contact with any obstacle she could not see, advanced
-cautiously, and listening attentively, towards the side from which came
-the light--a light which attracted her as instinctively as a flame
-attracts the imprudent moth whose wings it burns.
-
-The nearer she approached, the more distinct the light became, and the
-sound of a voice reached her ears. At length her extended hands touched
-the door, and leaning forward, she applied her eye to the chink. She
-stifled a cry of surprise, and, as at that moment the conversation,
-which had been for a short time interrupted, recommenced, she listened
-with intensity.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIII.
-
-ON THE WATCH.
-
-
-What she heard, but still more what she saw, necessarily powerfully
-interested Doña Rosario. In a vast room, dimly lighted by one of those
-yellow candles which the Chilians call _velas de cebo_, fastened to
-the wall by means of a ring, a woman, still young, and very handsome,
-attired in a riding dress of great richness, was seated on an ebony
-chair, covered with Cordova leather. With her right hand she played
-with a gold headed whip, and was speaking in an animated tone to a man
-who stood respectfully before her, hat in hand. This man, as well as
-Doña Rosario could make out, was the same who had carried her into the
-_cuarto_. The woman, whom Doña Rosario did not recollect ever to have
-seen, was no other than Doña Maria, the shameless courtesan, who, under
-the name of the Linda, enjoyed such a scandalous celebrity.
-
-Doña Maria's position threw the light of the candle full upon her face,
-and gave Doña Rosario an opportunity of distinguishing her features.
-She contemplated them with deep interest, for she felt instinctively
-that this woman was the enemy who, from her birth, had fatally followed
-her steps. She imagined that a decisive conference between her and
-the unknown was about to take place, and that in a few minutes her
-fate would be made known to her. And yet, at the aspect of this woman,
-whose bent brows, clear and haughty look, coldly compressed lips,
-and cruel words, revealed with the hatred which devoured her, it was
-neither a feeling of terror, nor a feeling of hatred, that the young
-girl experienced. Without knowing why, a sadness and an undefined pity
-for the very woman who was giving orders that made her shudder, took
-possession of her. She listened breathlessly, fascinated, scarcely
-knowing whether what she heard was really true, and fancying herself at
-times under the influence of some terrible hallucination.
-
-The two speakers, who knew not that they were either watched or
-overheard, resumed their conversation in an unrestrained voice. Doña
-Rosario, we may well suppose, did not lose a single word.
-
-"How is it," said the Linda, "that Joan has not come? I expected him."
-
-The man thus questioned cast a sharp look around him, and rolling up
-the broad brim of his hat in his fingers, replied with ill-dissembled
-embarrassment--
-
-"Joan sent me in his place."
-
-"And by what right," said the Linda, in a haughty tone, "does the fellow
-presume to confide to others the care of accomplishing the orders I give
-him?"
-
-"Joan is my friend," the man replied.
-
-"What are the ties that unite you to me:" she asked, contemptuously.
-
-"The mission you charged him with is accomplished."
-
-"Ay--but faithfully?"
-
-"The woman is there," he said, pointing to the room in which Doña
-Rosario was; "during the journey she has spoken to nobody, and I can
-guarantee that she does not know to what place she has been brought."
-
-At this assurance the look of Doña Maria softened a little, and it was
-in a less sharp and haughty tone she continued--
-
-"But why did Joan give up his place to you?"
-
-"Oh!" the man said with a feigned bluntness, belied by his cunning eye,
-"for a very simple reason; Joan is at this moment attracted towards the
-plain by the black eyes of the wife of a paleface, which sparkle like
-fireflies in the night. The woman's toldo is built in the country, near
-the toldería which you call, I think, Concepción. Although such conduct
-be unworthy of a warrior, his heart is flying constantly towards this
-woman, in spite of himself, and until he gain possession of her, he will
-never be in his senses."
-
-"Well, then," the Linda interrupted, stamping her foot with vexation,
-"why does not the fool carry her off?"
-
-"I proposed that to him."
-
-"And what did he say?"
-
-"He refused."
-
-Doña Maria shrugged her shoulders with a smile of disdain. "Still," she
-remarked, "all that does not tell me who you are."
-
-"I! I am an Ulmen in my tribe; a great warrior among the Puelches," he
-replied, proudly.
-
-"Ah!" she said, with an air of satisfaction, "you are an Ulmen of the
-Puelches, are you? Good! then I can depend upon your fidelity."
-
-"I am the friend of Joan," he remarked simply, with a respectful bow.
-
-"Do you know the woman whom you have brought here?" the Linda asked,
-darting at him a mistrustful glance.
-
-"How should I know her?"
-
-"Are you ready to obey me in everything?"
-
-"My obedience will depend on my sister; let her speak, and I will
-answer."
-
-"This woman is my enemy," said the Linda.
-
-"Must she die?" he asked, roughly, without lowering his eyes before the
-searching glances of the Linda.
-
-"Oh, no!" she cried eagerly; "these Indians are brutes--they understand
-nothing of vengeance! What use would her death be to me? It is her life
-I want."
-
-"Let my sister explain; I do not comprehend."
-
-"Death! that is nothing but a few instants of suffering, then all is
-over."
-
-"White death may be so, but an Indian death must be called for many
-hours before it answers."
-
-"I wish her to live, I tell you!"
-
-"She shall live. Ah!" he added, with a sigh, "the toldo of a chief is
-empty, its fires are extinguished."
-
-"Oh! oh!" the Linda interrupted; "have you no wives?"
-
-"They are dead."
-
-"And where is your tribe at this moment?"
-
-"Oh!" said the Indian, "far from here--ten suns' march, at least. I was
-returning to rejoin the warriors of my toldería, when Joan charged me
-with this mission."
-
-There was a short silence, during which the Linda appeared to be
-reflecting. Doña Rosario redoubled her attention--she felt she was about
-to know her fate.
-
-"And pray," Doña Maria resumed, fixing her keen eyes upon the Indian,
-"what great interest detained you on the plains near the seashore?"
-
-"None; I came, as the other Ulmens did, to renew the treaties."
-
-"Had you no other reasons?"
-
-"None at all."
-
-"Listen to me, chief. You have, doubtless, admired the four horses
-fastened at the gate of this house?"
-
-"They are noble beasts," the Indian replied, his eyes glistening with
-the desire of possessing them.
-
-"Well, it only depends upon yourself that I should give them to you."
-
-"Oh! oh!" he cried, joyfully, "what must I do for that?"
-
-"Obey me," said the Linda, with a smile.
-
-"I will obey," he replied.
-
-"Whatever I command you?"
-
-"Whatever my sister commands."
-
-"That is well; but remember what I am going to say to you. If you
-deceive me, my vengeance will be terrible--it will follow you
-everywhere."
-
-"Why should I deceive my sister?"
-
-"Because your Indian race is so constituted--astute and roguish, ever
-ready to betray."
-
-A sinister flash gleamed from the downcast eye of the Puelche warrior;
-nevertheless, he replied in a calm tone--
-
-"My sister is mistaken; the Araucanos are loyal."
-
-"We shall see," she coldly remarked. "What is your name?"
-
-"The Musk Rat."
-
-"Very well; listen, Musk Rat, to what I am going to say."
-
-"My ears are open."
-
-"This woman, who, according to my orders, you brought here, must never
-again revisit the shores of the sea."
-
-"She shall never see them again."
-
-"I do not wish her to die--understand that; she must suffer," the Linda
-added, in a tone which made the unhappy girl tremble with fear.
-
-"She shall suffer."
-
-"Yes," said Doña Maria, with sparkling eyes, "I wish that, during a
-long course of years, she may suffer a martyrdom at every instant; she
-is young, she will have time to call upon death to deliver her from her
-misery before it deigns to listen to her. Beyond the mountains, far in
-the deserts, in the virgin forests of the Grou-Chaco, I am told that
-hordes of Indians exist who are ferocious and sanguinary, and bear a
-deadly hatred towards all of the white race."
-
-"Yes," said the Puelche, in a melancholy tone, "I have heard of these
-men from the chiefs of my tribe; they live only for murder."
-
-"That is it!" she said, with sinister delight. "Well, chief, do you
-think yourself able to traverse these vast deserts, and reach the
-Grou-Chaco?"
-
-"Why should I not?" the Indian replied, raising his head proudly, "Do
-there exist obstacles strong enough to resist the Araucano warrior in
-his course? The puma is the king of the forests, the vulture that of the
-heavens; but the Aucas is the king of the puma and the eagle; the desert
-is his--Guatechu has given it to him; his horse and his lance render him
-invincible and master of immensity."
-
-"Then my brother will accomplish this journey, which is impossible?"
-
-A disdainful smile played for an instant round the lips of the savage
-warrior.
-
-"I will accomplish it," he said.
-
-"Good! my brother is a chief--I perceive he is one now."
-
-The Puelche bowed modestly.
-
-"My brother will go there, then, and when he arrives in the Chaco, he
-will sell the pale girl to the Guayacuras."
-
-The Indian did not allow any mark of astonishment to be perceived upon
-his face.
-
-"I will sell her," he replied.
-
-"That is well!--my brother will be faithful?"
-
-"I am a chief; I have but one word, my tongue is not forked; but why
-should I take this pale woman so far?"
-
-Doña Maria cast a penetrating glance at him--a suspicion crossed her
-mind--the Indian perceived it.
-
-"I only made a simple observation to my sister; it concerns me little,
-and she need not answer me if she does not think proper," he said, with
-indifference.
-
-The brow of the Linda became serene again.
-
-"The remark is just, chief; I will answer it. Why take her so far, you
-asked me; because Antinahuel loves this woman--his heart is softened by
-her--and perhaps he will suffer himself to be moved by her prayers, and
-restore her to her family. But it shall not happen; she shall weep tears
-of blood; her heart shall break under the incessant pangs of grief; she
-shall lose everything, even hope!"
-
-After uttering these words, Doña Maria arose, with head erect, sparkling
-eyes, and extended arm; there was in her aspect something fatal and
-terrible, which terrified even the Indian, by nature so difficult to
-move.
-
-"Go," she cried, in a tone of command, "before she departs for ever,
-I will see this woman once--only once, and speak with her for a few
-minutes; she shall at least know me: bring her hither!"
-
-The Indian went out silently; this woman, so beautiful and so cruel,
-terrified him--she inspired him with horror.
-
-Doña Rosario, on hearing this atrocious sentence pronounced against her,
-fell senseless to the ground.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIV.
-
-FACE TO FACE.
-
-
-The door of the cuarto in which Doña Rosario was confined was thrown
-open, and the Puelche warrior appeared; he held in his hand a rude
-earthen lamp, the flame of which, although feeble, sufficed to
-distinguish objects. He had replaced his shabby hat upon his head, and
-its wide brim served as a mask to his features.
-
-"Come with me!" he said, in a rough voice, to the maiden.
-
-Conscious of the inutility of a resistance which could only be dangerous
-to her amidst the bandits who surrounded her, and bowing her head with
-resignation, she followed her guide in silence. Doña Maria had resumed
-her place in the ebony chair; with arms crossed, and her head hanging
-upon her bosom, she was buried in dark meditations. At the slight noise
-made by the footsteps of the young lady, she drew herself up, a flash of
-hatred gleamed from her dark eyes, and with, a gesture she commanded the
-Indian to retire. The Puelche obeyed.
-
-The two women examined each other intensely; their looks crossed; the
-hawk and the dove were face to face. A deathlike silence reigned in the
-apartment; at intervals the wind came in gusts and dismal moanings,
-through the ill-joined boards of the doors, shook the old building to
-its foundation, and agitated the flame of the only candle that illumined
-the vast gloomy room in which the two women were. After a sufficiently
-long pause, the Linda, who, with that instinct which women possess in
-such a high degree, had examined in detail, one by one, the numerous
-beauties of the charming girl who stood pale and trembling before her,
-at length spoke--
-
-"Yes," she said, in a hollow voice, as if speaking to herself, and
-overcome by the evidence of the fact, "yes, this girl is beautiful; she
-has everything to make her an object of love--to see her must be to
-love her; well, this beauty, which up to this time has been her joy and
-her pride, grief shall wither rapidly; before one year has passed away
-I am resolved that she shall become an object of pity and contempt for
-all. Oh!" she added, in a piercing, shrill voice, "I have her at length
-within the power of my vengeance!"
-
-"What have I done to you, madam, that you should hate me thus?" the
-maiden asked, in a plaintive voice, the sweet and melodious accent of
-which would have softened anyone but her to whom she spoke.
-
-"What have you done to me, silly creature?" the Linda cried, bounding
-up like a wounded lioness, and placing herself close in front of Doña
-Rosario--"what have you done to me?" and then added, with a loud
-laugh--"Ah! ah! that's true, _you_ have done nothing to me!"
-
-"Alas, madam! I do not even know you; this is the first time I have been
-in your presence; I, a poor young girl, whose life to the present time
-has passed away in retirement--how can I have offended you?"
-
-"Yes, I allow it," the Linda replied; "you have done nothing to me; and,
-personally, as you have just said, I have nothing to reproach you with;
-but, by making you suffer, learn that it is upon _him_ I avenge myself."
-
-"I do not understand what you mean, madam," the maiden said, simply.
-
-"Senseless fool, do not play with the lioness who is ready to devour
-you, or pretend to feign an ignorance of which I am not the dupe; if you
-have not already divined my name, I will tell it you--I am Doña Maria,
-whom they call the Linda--do you understand me now?"
-
-"Not more than I did before, madam," replied Doña Rosario, with an
-accent of frankness that shook the belief of her persecutor, in spite of
-herself; "I have never even heard that name."
-
-"Can that be true?" she cried, doubtingly.
-
-"I swear it is."
-
-Doña Linda strode about the apartment with long, hasty steps. Doña
-Rosario, more and more astonished, looked stealthily at this woman,
-without being able to account to herself for the emotion which her
-presence, and the sound of her voice, caused her to experience; it
-was not fear, still less was it joy, but an incomprehensible mixture
-of sadness, joy, pity, and terror; an undefinable feeling, which,
-far from creating repulsion, drew her towards a woman whose odious
-projects were no secret to her, and from whom she knew she had so much
-to dread. Singular sympathy; what Doña Rosario felt towards the Linda,
-the Linda felt towards Doña Rosario: in vain she called to her aid the
-remembrance of all the wrongs with which she fancied she had to reproach
-the man whom she wished to strike in the person of the young girl; in
-the innermost recesses of her heart, a voice, which constantly gained
-strength, spoke to her in favour of the maiden whom she was about to
-sacrifice to her hatred; the more she endeavoured to overcome this
-sentiment, for which she could not account, the more powerless she found
-her efforts become; at length, she was on the point of being softened.
-
-"Oh!" she murmured, passionately, "what is going on within me? Am I
-weak enough to allow myself to be subdued by the tears of that paltry
-creature?"
-
-Like Indian warriors, who, when fastened to the stake of blood, sing
-their own exploits to encourage them to endure bravely the tortures
-which their executioners silently prepare, the Linda recalled the
-maddening remembrance of all the outrages Don Tadeo had loaded her with;
-and with flashing eyes and trembling lips, she stopped short in front of
-Doña Rosario.
-
-"Listen to me, girl," she said, in a voice which passion caused to
-tremble, "this is the first and last time we shall be in the presence of
-each other; and you shall know why I bear you such hatred. What you will
-learn will be hereafter, perhaps, a consolation to you, and help you to
-bear with courage the miseries I reserve for you," she added, with the
-laugh of a demon.
-
-"I will listen to you, madam," Rosario replied, meekly, "although I am
-certain that what you are about to say cannot, in any sense, render me
-guilty with respect to you."
-
-"Do you think so?" the Linda said, in a tone of ironical compassion;
-"well, then, listen; we have time to talk, as you will not leave this
-place for an hour."
-
-This allusion to her approaching departure made the poor girl shudder,
-by recalling to her all that the departure threatened.
-
-"A woman," the Linda continued, "a young and beautiful woman, more
-beautiful than you, fragile child of cities, whom the least storm
-bends like a weak reed--a woman, I say, had for love married a man,
-also young, and handsome as the evil angel before his fall, who with
-perfidiously golden words, by opening before her immense and unknown
-horizons, had so seduced her, the poor, poor girl, that in a few days
-he induced her to abandon stealthily the roof which had sheltered her
-infancy, and to which her aged father in vain recalled her up to the day
-of his death, that he might bless and pardon her."
-
-"Oh, that is frightful!" cried Doña Rosario.
-
-"Why so? as he had married her, morality was satisfied, in the eyes
-of the world. This woman was pure, and could thenceforward move with
-head erect before the crowd which had hailed her fall with laughter and
-contempt. But everything passes away in this world, and most quickly of
-all, the love of the most passionate man. Only a year after marriage
-this woman, alone in the most retired room of her dwelling, wept over
-the remembrance of the happiness which had left her for ever. Her
-husband had deserted her! A child born of this union, a little fair
-girl, a rosy-lipped cherub, whose eyes reflected the azure of the
-heavens, was the sole consolation which in her misfortunes was left to
-the poor abandoned mother. One night, when she was plunged in sleep, her
-husband stole like a thief into her house, seized the child, in spite
-of the cries of the desolate mother, who threw herself in tears at his
-feet, and implored him by all he held sacred in the world. After roughly
-repulsing the despairing mother, who sank dying on the cold slabs of the
-floor, this heartless and pitiless man disappeared with the child."
-
-"And the mother?" Doña Rosario anxiously asked, much affected by the
-story which the Linda told, entirely to her own advantage.
-
-"The mother," she continued, in a low, broken voice, "the mother was
-doomed never to see her child again. She never has seen her! Prayers,
-threats, everything in turn, have been employed without success. And
-now, this mother, who adores her child, and would sacrifice her life
-for her,--this mother has vowed a hatred against this man, whom she so
-fondly loved, and who showed no pity to her, which no vengeance can
-satisfy! Now, then, young girl, do you know the name of this mother?
-Say, do you know it? No, you do not? Well, then, I am this mother! and
-the man who ravished from her all her happiness--the man whom she hates
-as she does the demon whose heart he bears, is Don Tadeo de Leon!"
-
-"Don Tadeo!" Rosario cried, starting back with surprise.
-
-"Yes!" the Linda said, furiously; "yes, Don Tadeo, your lover!"
-
-The maiden sprang towards Doña Maria, and seizing her arm violently, and
-placing her face, inflamed with anger, close to that of the courtezan,
-who was stupefied at the energy she could not have expected from this
-delicate creature, cried indignantly,--
-
-"What have you dared to say, madam? Don Tadeo my lover! It is false,
-madam!"
-
-"Can this be true?" the Linda asked, eagerly. "Can I have been so
-grossly mistaken? But then," she added, mistrustfully, "who are you? and
-by what title does he keep you always with him?"
-
-"I will tell you who I am, madam!" Rosario replied, proudly.
-
-All at once the hasty gallop of several horses was heard from without,
-mingled with cries and oaths.
-
-"What can the matter be?" said Doña Maria, turning pale.
-
-"Oh!" said Doña Rosario, clasping her hands fervently; "oh, my God! are
-you sending me liberators?"
-
-"You are not free yet," the Linda said, with a bitter smile.
-
-The tumult increased greatly; the door, violently pushed from without,
-flew open, and several men rushed into the room.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXV.
-
-THE REVOLT.
-
-
-The multiplicity of the scenes we have to describe, and the exigencies
-of our story, compel us to abandon Doña Rosario and the Linda,
-and return to Valdivia, where the revolt had assumed the gigantic
-proportions of a revolution. Electrified by the heroic conduct of the
-King of Darkness, the patriots fought with the greatest obstinacy.
-The Dark-Hearts appeared to have the gift of ubiquity; their numbers
-increased, they were everywhere at the head of the insurgents, exciting
-them by gesture and voice; but, above all, by their example. The city
-was completely cut up by barricades, against which the few troops who
-remained faithful to General Bustamente struggled in vain. Beaten back
-by the enemies who on all sides rose up against them to the thousand
-times repeated cries of "Our country!" "Chili Liberty!" the soldiers
-retreated, step by step, abandoning, one after another, the different
-posts of which they had been in possession at the commencement of the
-action, and rallied upon the Plaza Mayor, the outlets of which they had
-barricaded in their turn.
-
-The city was in the power of the insurgents; for as the battle from this
-moment was concentrated at one point, it was not difficult to foresee
-with which party the victory would remain; for the soldiers, discouraged
-by the ill success of their _coup de main_, and sensible of being the
-champions of a lost cause, only fought to obtain honourable conditions.
-General Bustamente's officers, and the senators whom he had brought
-with him as partizans, trembled when thinking of the fate that awaited
-them if they fell into the hands of their enemies. Success justifies
-everything: from the moment they failed to succeed they became traitors
-to their country, and, as such, had no right to a capitulation. They
-therefore excited their soldiers to fight valiantly, promising them
-speedy assistance, and trying to revive their courage by telling them
-that their adversaries were merely citizens, whom they could easily
-overcome if they made a bold attempt, or even resisted for an hour
-longer.
-
-The general who commanded the garrison, and whom we saw upon the steps
-of the cabildo read with so much arrogance the decree which changed the
-form of government, bit his lips with rage and performed prodigies of
-valour, to give Bustamente time to arrive. As soon as he saw the turn
-things had taken, he sent off an express for the General with the utmost
-promptitude. This express was Diego, the old soldier who was so devoted
-to General Bustamente.
-
-"Lieutenant," he said, in conclusion, "you see in what a position we
-are; you must reach the General at all risks."
-
-"I will reach him, General; be at ease on that head!" Diego replied,
-intrepidly.
-
-"And I will endeavour to hold out till your return."
-
-Don Diego, before he finished speaking, had ridden desperately at
-the ranks of the insurgents, spurring on his horse, and waving
-his sword with menacing rapidity round his head. The Dark-Hearts,
-astonished by such an attack on the part of a single man, at the first
-moment unconsciously opened their ranks before him as to a canister
-shot, incapable of resisting the impetuous shock of this apparently
-invulnerable demon, who mowed down all that came in his way. Diego
-skilfully took advantage of the disorder produced on the enemy by his
-furious assault; he kept pushing on, and, after incredible efforts,
-succeeded in getting out of the city. As soon as he was in safety, the
-overexcitement which till that time had sustained him, suddenly sank,
-and at a few paces from the gates he was forced to stop to take breath,
-and restore his confused ideas to a little order. The old soldier washed
-the sides and nostrils of his horse with a little brandy and water;
-and as soon as this duty was performed, aware that the fate of his
-companions depended upon his speed, he sprang into his saddle and set
-off with the fleetness of an arrow.
-
-The General did not delay his return to Valdivia a minute, for he felt
-that success would be an immense advantage to him; and a check, if he
-were beaten, irreparable. As a conqueror, his march to Santiago would
-be nothing but a triumphant march; the authorities of the cities he
-passed through would rival each other in ranging themselves beneath his
-standard; whereas, if he were forced to abandon Valdivia as a fugitive,
-he would be tracked like a wild beast, and obliged to seek safety in
-a prompt flight, either in Bolivia or Buenos Aires, and the projects
-he had nourished so long, and of which he believed he had beforehand
-assured the success, would be deferred, or perhaps destroyed for ever.
-Thus the General was a prey to one of those cold furies, which are so
-much more terrible, because they cannot be exhibited outwardly.
-
-The horsemen advanced amidst a cloud of dust raised by their precipitate
-course, rushing along the road like a whirlwind, and with a noise like
-thunder. Two lances' length in advance of the soldiers, Don Pancho,
-bending over the neck of his horse, with pale brow and clenched teeth,
-galloped at full speed, keeping his eyes fixed upon the lofty steeples
-of Valdivia, whose dark shadows became more enlarged on the horizon
-every minute. Within half a mile of the city he halted his squadron. The
-sharp pattering of musketry resounded strongly, mingled at intervals
-with the dismal, rolling bass of cannon; the battle, therefore, must
-still be going on. The General hastened to make his last preparations
-before attempting an attack he hoped would prove decisive. The foot
-soldiers dismounted, and formed in platoons, and firearms of all kinds
-were loaded.
-
-The troops brought up by the General were not numerous from the European
-point of view, according to which we are accustomed to see great masses
-in conflict; they, at most, did not exceed eight hundred men. In Europe
-it is customary to say that victory is most likely to attend large
-battalions: in America, where the largest armies are frequently of not
-more than three thousand men, this idea becomes naturally modified,
-and it is generally the most skilful or the most brave man who remains
-master of the field of battle.
-
-Don Pancho was a rough soldier, accustomed to the struggles of civil
-wars, which, for the most part, consist of audacious _coups de main_.
-Endowed with courage bordering on rashness, and devoured by ambition, he
-prepared, with the greatest coolness, to re-establish his compromised
-affairs by an irresistible attack. The country in the neighbourhood of
-Valdivia is a real English garden, interspersed with thickets, apple
-orchards, copses, and slender streams of water rippling away to the
-river. It was very easy for the General to conceal his arrival. Two
-soldiers were detached as scouts, in order to learn the state of things.
-At the expiration of a few minutes they returned. The outskirts of the
-city were deserted, the insurgents had driven the troops back into the
-centre, and, according to the scouts, with the imprudence of citizens
-metamorphosed suddenly into soldiers, they had left no reserve, or even
-placed sentinels, to secure their rear against a surprise.
-
-This information, instead of restoring confidence to the General, made
-him knit his brows; he thought it must be a manoeuvre, and whilst his
-officers were laughing with all their might at the able tactics of
-the insurgents, he judged it necessary to redouble his precautions.
-The troops were divided into two bodies, which, in case of need, were
-to support each other; and, as they were attacking a city entirely
-barricaded, the lancers were ordered to dismount, and reinforce the
-infantry. Only one squadron of a hundred horsemen remained in the
-saddle, concealed about a quarter of a mile from the place, in order to
-support a retreat, or to put the fugitives to the sword, if the surprise
-succeeded. These arrangements made, the General made an earnest address
-to his soldiers, to whom he promised, in the event of success, the
-pillage of the city. He then placed himself at the head of the first
-detachment, and gave the order, "March! Forward!"
-
-The troops advanced in the Indian fashion, taking advantage of every
-inequality in the ground, and of every tree to conceal themselves, and
-arrived thus, without giving alarm, to within pistol shot of the city.
-The dead silence which continued to prevail around him, contrasted in
-a dismal manner with the musketry and cannon which became more audible
-as they advanced, and greatly increased the General's anxiety. A dark
-presentiment warned him that he was threatened by some great danger,
-which he knew not how to avoid, from being ignorant of what kind it
-might be. The least hesitation at this critical minute might bring on
-irreparable misfortunes. The General grasped the hilt of his sword
-firmly in his clenched hand, and turning towards his soldiers, shouted
-in a loud, clear voice, "Forward!"
-
-The detachment, which only awaited this order, rushed forward shouting,
-and, at double-quick time, cleared the space between them and the city.
-Windows, doors, all were closed; and had it not been for the distant
-report of musketry, the city might have been thought deserted. The first
-detachment, finding no obstacles before them, continued their march;
-and the second detachment also entered. But then, all at once, behind,
-before, and on the flanks of the troops, a loud cry burst forth; and
-at every window appeared men with muskets in their hands. Don Pancho
-Bustamente was surrounded, he had allowed himself to be taken--pardon us
-the triviality of the comparison--like a rat in a trap. The soldiers,
-astonished for a second, soon recovered themselves; they faced front and
-rear, and attacked the double barrier that enclosed them: but though
-they desperately rushed against it, they could not force it. They then
-plainly perceived they were lost, that they could expect no quarter, and
-prepared to die like brave men.
-
-The General cast fierce and desperate glances around him, looking,
-but unsuccessfully, for a point of issue from the menacing forest of
-bayonets crossed before him, and which enclosed him as in a steel
-network. Some authors have amused themselves at the expense of the
-wars and battles of the Americans, in which they say the two armies
-always take care to place themselves out of reach of cannon shot, so as
-never to have a single man killed. This pleasantry, which is in very
-bad taste, has assumed the proportions of a calumny it is but just
-to refute, for it attacks the honour of the Americans of the South,
-who, I unhesitatingly assert, are endowed with intrepid courage--a
-courage that was brilliantly displayed during the wars of independence
-against the Spaniards. Unhappily, at present this courage is employed
-in fratricidal struggles, without any understood object. Thrice the
-soldiers rushed upon the insurgents, and thrice were they repulsed
-with enormous loss. The battle was horrible, without mercy on either
-side; they fought hand to hand, foot to foot, breast to breast, to
-the last breath, only falling to die. The troops, decimated by this
-frightful carnage, gradually gave ground; the space they occupied
-became narrower and narrower, and the moment did not appear distant
-when they would disappear under the popular flood which continued to
-ascend, and threatened to engulf them under its irresistible mass. The
-General collected about fifty men resolved to die or open a passage, and
-he made a desperate attempt. It was a collision of giants. For a few
-minutes, the two masses launched one against the other remained almost
-motionless, from the force of the blow with which they met; Don Pancho,
-flourishing his sword around him, and standing in his stirrups, struck
-down all who opposed his passage.
-
-Suddenly a man placed himself before him, like a rock which rises from
-the depths of the sea. At the sight of him the General paused, in spite
-of himself, with a stifled cry of surprise and rage. This man was Don
-Tadeo de Leon, his mortal enemy; whom he had once condemned to death,
-and who had, in a miraculous manner, survived his execution. But, now!
-God seemed to place him fatally before him, to be the instrument of his
-vengeance, and the cause of his ruin and his shame.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVI.
-
-THE LION AT BAY.
-
-
-"My God!" said the General, "am I the dupe of an hallucination?"
-
-"Ah! ah!" the King of Darkness exclaimed, with an ironical smile, "you
-recognize me then, General?"
-
-"Don Tadeo de Leon!" Don Pancho cried, in horror. "Do the dead then
-arise from the tomb? Oh! I hoped that what I heard was false. It is you!"
-
-"Yes," Don Tadeo replied, in a stern voice, "you are not mistaken, Don
-Pancho; I am Don Tadeo de Leon, whom you caused to be shot upon the
-Plaza Mayor of Santiago. Your spies have informed you correctly."
-
-"Man or demon," the General shouted, half choking with rage, "I will not
-yield to you! I will fight you as a man, and send you back again to the
-hell from which you have escaped!"
-
-His enemy smiled disdainfully.
-
-"Your hour has arrived, Don Pancho," he said; "you are due to the
-justice of the Dark-Hearts."
-
-"You do not hold me yet, wretched traitor! If I cannot conquer, I can
-die, weapon in hand, like a soldier."
-
-"No, your hour has struck, I tell you; you are ours, you shall die, but
-not the death of a soldier; you shall be executed by our justice!"
-
-"If that be the case," the General yelled, brandishing his sword, "come
-and take me!"
-
-Don Tadeo did not deign a reply; he gave a signal, and a lasso whizzed
-through the air, launched by an invisible hand, and fell round the
-General's shoulders. Astonished by this unexpected attack, before he
-could make the least possible resistance, he received a terrific shock,
-lost his stirrups, was pulled from his horse, and dragged amongst
-the insurgents. The astounded General, half mad with rage and shame,
-exhausted himself in vain efforts; nearly strangled by the lasso which
-flayed his neck, his face assumed a purple tint; his eyes, injected with
-blood, seemed starting from their sockets, and a white foam flowed from
-the corners of his discoloured lips. Don Tadeo contemplated him for a
-moment with a mixture of pity and triumph.
-
-"Free him from that slipknot," he said. "Secure his person, but treat
-him with respect."
-
-The soldiers, terrified at this prompt capture, which they had not at
-all expected, stood downcast and silent; in their stupor forgetting even
-the use of their arms. Don Tadeo turned towards them:
-
-"Surrender," he shouted, "surrender! the man who misled you is in our
-power; your lives shall be spared."
-
-The soldiers consulted each other for an instant with their eyes; and
-then, as if by a spontaneous movement, they threw down their muskets,
-crying aloud:
-
-"Chili! Chili! liberty! liberty!"
-
-"That is well!" said Don Tadeo; "leave the city, encamp at the distance
-of a mile, and await the orders which shall soon be transmitted to you."
-
-The conquered soldiers, with downcast looks, followed the road they had
-traversed an hour before; they passed through the silent ranks of the
-insurgents, which opened to give them passage. Without loss of time,
-Don Tadeo, followed by a crowd of his partisans, directed his course
-towards the Plaza Mayor, where the battle still raged. The soldiers,
-solidly intrenched in the Plaza, and masters of the cabildo, fought
-valiantly, hoping still for the assistance of General Bustamente, of
-whose fate they were ignorant. Although reduced to a small number, these
-troops occupied a formidable position, in which it was almost impossible
-to force them, without resolving to suffer great loss. Persuaded that
-they only required to gain time, the soldiers fought with the energy of
-despair, defending inch by inch the barricade behind which they were
-sheltered.
-
-But the day was passing away, their ammunition was growing exhausted, a
-great number of their comrades were stretched dead at their feet, and
-nothing could support them but the hope that the succour so impatiently
-expected was at hand. In the heat of their own contest they had not
-heard the noise of the battle fought by Don Pancho at the city gates, in
-which but few shots had been fired, as it had been principally decided
-by cold steel. Discouragement, however, began to affect the bravest,
-the general who commanded even felt his energy diminish, and he looked
-around him with great anxiety.
-
-Dejected, and with downcast eyes, the senator, who had been the bearer
-of the fatal proclamation, trembled in all his limbs; he regretted,
-but too late, having thrown himself into this hornet's nest; and he
-offered up the most magnificent vows to the innumerable saints of the
-golden Spanish legend, if they would bring him safe and sound through
-the perils which surrounded him. The worthy man had not any warlike
-instincts; and we can safely affirm, without fear of contradiction, that
-if he had had the slightest suspicion that things would have taken the
-turn they did, he would have remained quiet in his charming quinta of
-Corro-Azul, in the environs of Santiago, where his life glided away so
-softly, so happily, and, above all, so free from care. Unfortunately,
-as it sometimes happens in this nether world, where, whatever Candide
-may say, everything is not for the best, in the best of worlds, Don
-Ramón Sandias--so the worthy senator was named--had not been able duly
-to appreciate the charms of that calm life; ambition had gnawed at his
-heart, though he had nothing to wish for; and he had, as we have seen,
-plunged up to the neck in a hornet's nest, from which he did not know
-how to emerge.
-
-At every shot he heard, the poor senator jumped like a Guanaco, with
-startled eyes; and when, now and then, in spite of the precautions he
-had taken, the sinister hissing of a bullet resounded in his ear, he
-threw himself flat on his face, murmuring all the prayers that his
-troubled memory could recall.
-
-At first, the contortions and cries of Don Ramón had very much amused
-the officers and soldiers among whom accident had placed him; they had
-even taken delight in augmenting his terrors; but, at length, as happens
-more frequently in such cases than people fancy, the pleasantries had
-ceased; Don Ramón's terrors had communicated themselves to the laughers,
-who saw, with fright, that their position was becoming every minute more
-desperate.
-
-"The devil take the poltroon!" the General at length cried, angrily;
-"cannot you keep your trembling limbs still? Caspita! console yourself,
-they won't kill you more than once."
-
-"Ah! that is very easy for you to say," the senator replied, in a broken
-voice; "I am no soldier; it is your trade to be killed, it is all one to
-you."
-
-"Hum!" said the General, "not quite so much so as you may think; but
-comfort yourself; if this goes on a little longer, we shall all go
-together."
-
-"What is that you say?" the poor man muttered, with redoubled fear.
-
-"Caramba! it is clear as day, if Don Pancho does not make haste and
-come, all of us here will die."
-
-"But I do not wish to die!" said the senator, bursting into tears; "I
-am no soldier. Oh! I implore you, my good, my inestimable Don Tiburcio
-Cornejo, let me go away!"
-
-The General shrugged his shoulders.
-
-"What consequence can it be to you?" the senator continued, in a
-supplicating tone; "do save my life! show me which way I can get out of
-this cursed confusion."
-
-"Eh! how the devil do I know?"' the General said, impatiently.
-
-"Well, now, look here," said the senator; "you owe me two thousand
-piastres, which I won of you at Monte, do you not?"
-
-"What then?" the General, vexed at this ill-timed remark, said, sharply.
-
-"Get me away from here, and I will cry quits."
-
-"You are a fool, Don Ramón; do you think if I could get safely away from
-here, that I would remain?"
-
-"I see what you are," said the senator, despondingly; "you are but a
-false friend, you desire my death, you thirst for my blood."
-
-In short, the poor man was almost mad; he knew not what he said,
-terror had deprived him of the little sense he ever possessed. But, in
-reality, the position became every instant more critical; the carnage
-was horrible, the soldiers fell one after another beneath the bullets
-of the insurgents, who were sheltered by every corner of the plaza. Two
-or three sorties attempted by the troops had been vigorously repulsed;
-and hence, decimated as they were, all they could possibly do now was to
-prevent their intrenchments from being carried.
-
-All at once the senator bounded forward like a chamois; he made directly
-to the General, and seized his arm.
-
-"We are saved!" he cried; "thanks be to God! we are saved!"
-
-"Hilloh! what's the matter now, Don Ramón? What bee has stung you? are
-you really mad?"
-
-"I have not been stung," the senator replied, as fast as he could speak,
-"nor am I mad; we are saved; I tell you, we are saved!"
-
-"Well, how? what is it? Is Don Pancho coming at last?"
-
-"Don Pancho, indeed! I wish he were at the devil!" "Well, what is it,
-then?"
-
-"Why, do you not see, yonder? look, behind the barricade which blocks
-the entrance of the Calle de la Merced."
-
-"What is there to see?"
-
-"Why, a flag of truce! a white flag!"
-
-"Ah!" said the General, eagerly, "let us look! let us look!"
-
-And he did look.
-
-"True!" he said, at the expiration of a minute. "Success to all cowards,
-say I, for having good eyes; I did not see it."
-
-"Ay, but I did," said Don Ramón, rubbing his hands, quite revived, and
-marching off with great glee. But, at that moment, a nearly spent ball
-came ricocheting and whizzing close to his ear.
-
-"Lord, have mercy upon me!" he cried, falling flat on his face, and
-so remaining, as motionless as if he were dead, although he had not
-received a scratch.
-
-In the meantime, the General had likewise caused a flag of truce to be
-hoisted on his intrenchments, and had given orders for the firing to
-cease. The noise of the combat being hushed, the senator, like a rabbit
-relieved from alarm, raised his head a little; reassured by the silence
-which prevailed, he sat up, looking on all sides with the greatest
-anxiety, and, at length, convinced that the peril was over, he contrived
-to get upon his legs, which, however, trembled so frightfully under him,
-that they could scarcely support him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVII.
-
-THE TRUCE.
-
-
-As soon as the flag of truce was hoisted, firing at once ceased on both
-sides. The troops at bay, who had ceased to hope for succour, were not
-sorry to find that the insurgents saved their military honour by being
-the first to demand a parley. General Cornejo, in particular, was tired
-of the hopeless combat, which he had bravely maintained all the morning.
-
-"Well, Don Ramón," he said, addressing the senator in a more cordial
-tone than he had before employed, "I think I have found means to enable
-you to escape without striking a blow; so what we agreed to stands good,
-does it not?"
-
-The senator looked at him with a bewildered air; the worthy man had not
-the least recollection of what he had either said or done while the
-balls were whistling round him.
-
-"I do not at all understand you, General," he replied.
-
-"Poor man! pretend to be innocent, do!" said the General, laughing, and
-slapping him on the shoulder; "do you wish to persuade me you are like
-the Guanacos, which lose their memory through trembling with fear?"
-
-"Upon my honour," said the senator, "I swear, Don Tiburcio, that I have
-not the least remembrance of having promised you anything."
-
-"Ah! well, it is possible, for you were devilishly frightened. Come, I
-will refresh your memory: pay attention!"
-
-"You will give me great pleasure."
-
-"Well, I doubt that! but that is of no consequence. You said to me, on
-the spot where we now stand, not more than half an hour ago, that if I
-found the means of securing your escape, safe and sound, you would hold
-me quits for the two thousand piastres I lost to you, and owed you."
-
-"Do you flatter yourself that that is the truth?" said the senator,
-whose avaricious instincts began to revive, as fear departed.
-
-"I am sure it is. Ask these gentlemen," the General asked, turning
-towards some officers who stood by.
-
-"Oh, certainly! true to the letter," they said, with a laugh.
-
-"Ah! ah!"
-
-"Yes, and as I would not listen to you, you added--"
-
-"What!" Don Ramón, who knew of old the man he had to deal with, said,
-with a start--"do you mean to say that I added something?"
-
-"The devil! yes," said the other. "You added this; and I repeat your
-own words. You said, as plainly as you could speak--'And I will give a
-thousand piastres in addition.'"
-
-"Oh, that is not possible!" the senator ejaculated, quite beside himself.
-
-"Perhaps I did not understand you?"
-
-"That must be it."
-
-"Do you admit you mentioned the two thousand?" asked the General,
-quietly.
-
-"Not at all! not at all!" replied Don Ramón, quite confounded by the
-laughter of the bystanders.
-
-"Perhaps you meant more; well, we will not haggle about that."
-
-"I never said a word of the kind!" the exasperated senator exclaimed.
-
-"In that case," said the General, with a stern frown, and surveying him
-coolly, "you mean to say that I have told a falsehood."
-
-Don Ramón became aware that he had made a false move, and drew back.
-
-"Pardon me, my dear General," he said, in the most amiable voice
-possible, "you are perfectly right; I do now remember it was two
-thousand piastres I promised you in addition."
-
-It was now the General's turn to be at a loss, for this generosity on
-the part of the senator, whose avarice was proverbial, confused him; he
-was suspicious of some snare or trick.
-
-"But," Don Ramón added, with an air of triumph, "you have not saved me."
-
-"What do you mean by that?"
-
-"Why, Santiago! as we are going to hold a parley, you are too late, and
-our bargain is void."
-
-"Oh! oh!" said Don Tiburcio, with a jeering smile, "you think so, do
-you?"
-
-"Caspita! I am sure of it."
-
-"And yet you are deceived, my dear friend, as you shall judge: come with
-me, the flag of truce is now crossing the barricades, and in an instant
-you will learn that you have never been so near death as now."
-
-"You are joking."
-
-"I never joke about serious circumstances."
-
-"In Heaven's name explain yourself!" said the poor senator, whose fears
-had all returned.
-
-"Lord! it is the simplest thing in the world," said the General,
-carelessly; "I have but to declare to the leader of the revolt, and be
-assured I will not fail to do so, that I only acted by your orders."
-
-"Well, but that is not true," interrupted Don Ramón, in great alarm.
-
-"I know that," the General replied, bluntly; "but, as you are a senator,
-they will believe me, and you will be fully and fairly shot, and that
-will be a pity."
-
-Don Ramón was thunder-struck by this piece of implacable logic; he found
-that he was in a hobble, from which he could not possibly escape without
-paying handsomely. He looked at his _friend_, who surveyed him with a
-pitilessly ironical smile, whilst the officers bit their lips to keep
-from laughing; he stifled a sigh, and resolving to make the best of
-it, very much against his will, he said, inwardly cursing the man who
-exposed him in such a cynical fashion--
-
-"Well, Don Tiburcio, I admit that I owe you two thousand piastres, but
-_I_ will pay you."
-
-This was the only epigram he ventured to indulge in regarding the
-General's willingness to pay; but the latter was magnanimous, he took
-no notice of the offensive part of the speech, and rendered quite
-cheerful by the bargain he had concluded, he prepared to listen to the
-propositions of the officer with the flag of truce, who was brought to
-him with his eyes bandaged. This officer was Don Tadeo de Leon.
-
-"What do you come here for?" the General asked.
-
-"To offer you good terms, if you will surrender," Don Tadeo replied, in
-a firm voice.
-
-"Surrender!" the General shouted with a laugh; "you must be mad, sir!"
-and, turning towards the soldiers who had brought Don Tadeo, he added,
-"Remove the bandage from the eyes of this caballero."
-
-The bandage fell accordingly.
-
-"Look round you," said the General, haughtily, "do we look like people
-asking for a favour?"
-
-"No, General, you are a stout soldier, and your troops are brave; you
-ask no favour of us, it is we who come to you to offer to lay down our
-arms on both sides, and put an end to this fratricidal contest," Don
-Tadeo replied, with an air of grandeur.
-
-"Who are you, may I ask, sir?" said the General, struck with the noble
-bearing of the man who was speaking to him.
-
-"I am Don Tadeo de Leon, whom your leader ordered to be shot."
-
-"You!" cried the General, "you here!"
-
-"I, myself; and I have another name."
-
-"Tell it to me, sir."
-
-"I am called the King of Darkness."
-
-"The leader of the Dark-Hearts!" the General murmured, starting, in
-spite of himself, and surveying the speaker with uneasy curiosity.
-
-"Yes, General, I am the leader of the Dark-Hearts, but I am still
-something more."
-
-"Explain yourself, sir," the General asked, who began to be in doubt how
-to behave toward the strange personage who was speaking to him.
-
-"I am the leader of the men whom you term insurgents, but who have,
-in reality, only taken up arms to defend the institutions you have
-overthrown, and the constitution you have violated."
-
-"Sir!" said the General, "your words----"
-
-"Are severe, but just," continued Don Tadeo; "ask your own loyal,
-soldier's heart, General, and then tell me which side is right."
-
-"I am not a lawyer, sir," Don Tiburcio replied impatiently; "you have
-yourself said that I am a soldier, and, as such, I confine myself to
-obeying, without discussion, the orders I receive from my leaders."
-
-"Let us not lose time uselessly in idle speeches, sir; will you, or will
-you not, lay down your arms?"
-
-"By what right do you make me such a proposal?" the General asked, whose
-pride revolted at being forced to hold a parley with a citizen.
-
-"I could answer you," replied Don Tadeo, sternly, "that it is by the
-right of the stronger, and that you know as well as I do that you
-are combating for a lost cause, and that you are persisting without
-advantage in a senseless struggle; but I prefer addressing myself to
-your heart, and saying, why should brothers and fellow countrymen
-continue to cut each other's throats?--why should we any longer shed
-such precious blood? Make your conditions, General, and be assured that
-for the sake of protecting your soldier's honour, that honour which is
-ours also, as among the troops against whom we fight are our relations,
-friends, and countrymen, we will grant them as extensively as you can
-desire."
-
-The General felt himself moved, this noble language had found an echo
-in his heart; he looked down on the ground, and reflected for several
-minutes; at length, raising his head, he replied--
-
-"Sir, believe me it costs me much not to answer as I could wish what you
-have done me the honour to say to me; but I have a leader above me."
-
-"In your turn please to explain yourself, sir," said Don Tadeo.
-
-"I have sworn to Don Pancho Bustamente to defend his cause to the death."
-
-"Well?"
-
-"Well, sir, unless Don Pancho Bustamente were killed or a prisoner,--in
-either of which cases I should consider myself freed from my oath to
-him,--I will lay down my life for him."
-
-"Is that the only reason that prevents you, General?"
-
-"Yes, the only one."
-
-"In case General Bustamente should be either killed or a prisoner, you
-would surrender?"
-
-"Instantly, I repeat."
-
-"Well," replied Don Tadeo, stretching out his arm in the direction of
-the barricade by which he had come, "look yonder, General."
-
-Don Tiburcio looked in the direction indicated, and uttered a cry of
-surprise and sorrow. Don Pancho Bustamente appeared at the top of
-the barricade; his head was bare, and two armed men watched all his
-movements.
-
-"Do you see him?" Don Tadeo asked.
-
-"Yes," replied the General, sorrowfully; "we all surrender, sir;" and
-turning the point of his sword to the ground, he bent the blade with the
-intention of breaking it. Don Tadeo stopped him by seizing the sword,
-which he, however, returned to him immediately, saying--
-
-"General, keep that weapon, it will serve you against the enemies of our
-country."
-
-The General made no reply; he silently pressed the hand which the King
-of Darkness held out to him, and turning away to conceal the emotion
-which agitated him, he wiped away a tear that had fallen upon his grey
-moustache.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVIII.
-
-TWO ROGUISH PROFILES.
-
-
-The city was quiet, the revolt was over, or, to speak more logically,
-the revolution was complete. The soldiers, after laying down their arms,
-had evacuated Valdivia, which was left completely in the power of the
-Dark-Hearts. As soon as peace was re-established, the Dark-Hearts gave
-orders that the barricades should be destroyed, and that all traces of
-the sanguinary struggle should be removed as quickly as possible. By the
-force of accomplished facts alone, Don Tadeo de Leon found himself quite
-naturally invested with power, and in command of the province, with the
-faculties of a dictator.
-
-"Well," he asked Valentine, "what do you think of what you have seen?"
-
-"Faith," the Parisian replied, with characteristic bluntness, "I think
-people must come to America to see how men can be caught with hook and
-line like simple gudgeons."
-
-Don Tadeo could not refrain from smiling at this whimsical answer.
-
-"Do not leave me," he said; "all is not over yet."
-
-"I ask no better; but, our friends yonder, don't you think they will be
-very uneasy at our long absence?"
-
-"Can you for a moment imagine that I have forgotten them? Within an hour
-you will be at liberty. Come with me; I want to show you two faces to
-which our victory has given an expression very different from that which
-they generally wear."
-
-"That will be curious," said Valentine.
-
-"Yes," Don Tadeo replied, "or hideous, whichever you please."
-
-"Hum! man is not perfect," said Valentine, philosophically.
-
-"Fortunately not; if he were, he would be execrable," Don Tadeo remarked.
-
-They entered the cabildo, the doors of which were guarded by a
-detachment of Dark-Hearts. The vast saloons of the palace were invaded
-by an eager crowd, who came to salute the rising sun; that is to say,
-they came to offer the spectacle of their baseness to the fortunate man,
-whom, no doubt, they would have stoned if success had not crowned his
-audacious attempt. Don Tadeo passed, without seeing them, through the
-ranks of these sycophants, the sworn courtiers of every authority, as
-void of honour as of shame, possessing but one single talent--that of
-making bendings to which it would seem impossible that the vertebral
-column of a man could attain, however flexible it may be. Valentine, who
-followed the footsteps of his friend, feigned to take for himself the
-greater part of the genuflexions meant for Don Tadeo, and bowed to the
-right and left with imperturbable coolness and assurance.
-
-The two gentlemen, after many delays caused by the increasing crowd,
-which closed around them, reached at last a retired apartment, in which
-there were only two persons. These two persons were General Tiburcio
-and Senator Don Ramón Sandias. The physiognomy of these persons offered
-a striking contrast. The General, with a sad face and a pensive step,
-walked about the apartment, whilst the senator, luxuriantly reclining
-on a fauteuil, with a smile upon his lips, his visage expanded, and
-one leg thrown over the other, was fanning himself carelessly with an
-embroidered handkerchief of the finest cambric. At the sight of Don
-Tadeo, the General advanced rapidly towards him; as for the senator, he
-sat upright in his chair, assumed a serious look, and waited.
-
-"Sir," the General said, in a low voice, "two words."
-
-"Speak, General," replied Don Tadeo; "I am entirely at your disposal."
-
-"I have some questions which I wish to put to you."
-
-"You may be assured, General, that if it be in my power to answer you, I
-will not hesitate to satisfy you."
-
-"I am convinced of that, and it is that which emboldens me to speak."
-
-"I am all attention."
-
-The General hesitated for a moment, but seemed at length determined.
-
-"Good heavens, sir!" said he, "I am an old soldier, unacquainted with
-diplomacy; I had a friend, almost a brother, and I am a prey to mortal
-uneasiness on his account."
-
-"And that friend?"
-
-"Is General Bustamente. You must know," he added, warmly, "that we have
-been fellow soldiers thirty years; and I should wish--" here he stopped,
-as if in doubt, looking earnestly at the person he was addressing.
-
-"You would like?" said Don Tadeo, quietly.
-
-"To know the fate that is reserved for him."
-
-Don Tadeo gave the General a melancholy glance.
-
-"To what purpose?" he murmured.
-
-"I beg of you."
-
-"You insist on knowing?"
-
-"I do."
-
-"General Bustamente is a great criminal. While a leader in power, he
-wished to change the form of government against the will of the people
-from whom he held his position, and in contempt of the laws, which he
-shamelessly trampled underfoot."
-
-"That is but too true," said the General, whose brow turned crimson.
-
-"General Bustamente has been implacable during the course of his too
-long career; you know that he who sows the wind can only hope to reap
-the tempest."
-
-"Hence!"
-
-"The same implacability will be shown to him that he has shown to
-others."
-
-"That is to say?"
-
-"He will, in all probability, be condemned to death."
-
-"Alas! I expected as much; but will this condemnation of which you
-speak, be long delayed?"
-
-"Two days at most; the commission which must try him will be formed
-today."
-
-"Poor friend!" said the General, piteously; "and that's the end! Will
-you grant me a favour, sir?"
-
-"Name it."
-
-"As the General must die, it would be a consolation to him to have a
-friend by his side."
-
-"No doubt it would."
-
-"Allow me to be his guard. I am sure he will be happy to know that it is
-I who have the duty of watching over him and leading him to death. And
-then I shall not, at least, abandon him till the last minute."
-
-"So be it,--your request is granted. Have you anything else to say? I
-shall be happy to serve you."
-
-"No, I thank you, sir; that is all I desired,--Ah! one word more!"
-
-"Speak."
-
-"Can I be allowed to take this guard soon?"
-
-"Immediately, if you like."
-
-"I thank you, sir."
-
-And after profoundly bowing to Don Tadeo, the General quitted the room
-with a hasty step.
-
-"Poor man!" said Valentine.
-
-"Eh?" cried Don Tadeo.
-
-"I said, poor man!"
-
-"Oh, yes; I heard you plainly enough, but of whom were you speaking?"
-
-"Of the unfortunate man who has just left us."
-
-Don Tadeo shrugged his shoulders, and Valentine looked at him with
-surprise.
-
-"Do you think you know whence the solicitude of this poor man, as you
-call him, for his friend arises?"
-
-"Why, from his friendship for him; that is clear."
-
-"You think so, do you?"
-
-"I can think nothing else."
-
-"Well, then, allow me to tell you you are completely mistaken; the poor
-General is only desirous to be near his companion in arms, that he may
-have the opportunity of suppressing the proofs of his complicity in the
-rash enterprise of yesterday; proofs which Don Pancho most likely has
-about him, and which the other wishes to destroy at all hazards."
-
-"Can that be possible?"
-
-"By Saint Jago, yes! He desires to be constantly with him, that he may
-not communicate with anyone--why, he would kill him, if necessary."
-
-"Oh! this is infamous!"
-
-"But so it is."
-
-"Bah! it gives me a nausea."
-
-"Well, do not be sick yet."
-
-"Why not?"
-
-"Because," Don Tadeo continued, pointing to the senator, "I think we
-have something here that will bring the agreeable feeling to its height."
-
-As soon as Don Ramón saw the General leave the apartment, he quitted his
-easy chair, and advanced towards Don Tadeo, bowing obsequiously.
-
-"To whom have I the honour of speaking?" said the King of Darkness, with
-studied politeness.
-
-"Sir," the other replied, with a jaunty, gentlemanly air, "my name is
-Don Ramón Sandias, and I am a senator."
-
-"How can I be of service to you, sir?" said Don Tadeo, bowing.
-
-"Oh," Don Ramón replied, affectedly; "as regards myself, personally, I
-ask nothing."
-
-"Indeed!"
-
-"Caspita! no; I am rich, what more can I want? But I am a Chilian, a
-patriot, sir; and, what is more, a senator. Placed in an exceptional
-position, I am bound to give my fellow citizens unequivocal proofs of my
-devotion to the holy cause of liberty. Are you not of my opinion, sir?"
-
-"Entirely."
-
-"I have heard, sir, that the wretched cabecilla, the cause of this silly
-movement, which brought the republic within two inches of ruin, is in
-your hands."
-
-"Yes, sir," replied Don Tadeo, with imperturbable coolness, "we have
-been fortunate enough to obtain possession of his person."
-
-"You are, doubtless, going to bring this man to trial?" Don Ramón asked,
-in a somewhat familiar tone.
-
-"Within forty-eight hours, sir."
-
-"That is right, sir. It is thus that justice should be dealt to these
-shameless agitators, who, in contempt of the sacred laws of humanity,
-seek to plunge our beautiful country into the gulf of revolutions."
-
-"Sir!"
-
-"Pardon me for speaking thus," said Don Ramón, with well-feigned
-enthusiasm; "I feel that my freedom goes rather far, but my indignation
-carries me away, sir; it is quite time that these makers of widows and
-orphans should receive the exemplary chastisement they merit. I cannot
-think, without trembling, of the manifold evils that would have fallen
-upon us, if this miserable adventurer had succeeded."
-
-"Sir, this man is not yet condemned."
-
-"And that is exactly what brings me to you, sir. As a senator, and
-a devoted patriot, I claim of you the right which belongs to me, of
-presiding over the commission whose duty it is to sit in judgment upon
-him."
-
-"Your request is granted, sir," Don Tadeo replied, who was unable to
-repress a smile of contempt.
-
-"Thank you, sir!" said the senator, with an expression of joy; "however
-painful the duty may be, I shall know how to perform it."
-
-After bowing deeply to Don Tadeo, the senator left the room in high
-spirits.
-
-"You see," said Don Tadeo, turning to Valentine, "Don Pancho had two
-friends upon whom he thought he could depend: one took upon him to
-proclaim him, the other to defend him. Well, in one he finds a gaoler,
-in the other an executioner."
-
-"It is monstrous!" said Valentine, with disgust.
-
-"No," replied Don Tadeo; "it is logical, that's all;--he has failed."
-
-"I have had enough of your politic men, with two faces, and neither of
-them a true one," replied Valentine; "allow me to return to our friends."
-
-"Begone, then, since you wish it."
-
-"Thanks!"
-
-"You will come back to Valdivia immediately, will you not?"
-
-"Pardieu, will I!"
-
-"Will you have an escort?"
-
-"For what purpose?"
-
-"Ah! that is true; I am always forgetting that you never apprehend
-danger."
-
-"I am only anxious about our friends; that is why I leave you."
-
-"Have you any cause for apprehension?"
-
-"None; but yet, a vague uneasiness, which I can not account for, compels
-me to remain no longer away from them."
-
-"Begone, then, as quickly as you please, my friend; but pray be watchful
-over the poor child, Rosario."
-
-"Be at ease on that score; within three hours she shall be here."
-
-"That is understood: a pleasant ride to you, and remember that I shall
-look for you with impatience."
-
-"Time to go and return, that is all."
-
-"Till then, adieu!"
-
-Valentine left the room, went straight to the stables, saddled his horse
-himself, and set off at a gallop. He had told Don Tadeo the truth: a
-vague uneasiness disturbed him, he had a presentiment of some misfortune
-or another.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIX.
-
-THE WOUNDED MAN.
-
-
-Let us return to the Count de Prébois Crancé. When the abduction was
-committed, that part of the plain where Don Tadeo had pitched his camp
-was deserted. The crowd, attracted by curiosity, had all gone to the
-side where the renewal of the treaties was taking place. Besides, the
-measures of the ravishers had been so judiciously taken, all had passed
-so quickly, without resistance, without cries or tumult, that no alarm
-had been given, and no one could suspect what was going on. The cries of
-"murder!" uttered by the wounded young man were too faint to be heard,
-and the pistol shots he had fired were confounded with the other noises
-of the festival.
-
-Louis remained for a considerable time lying senseless in front of the
-tent, the blood flowing from two wounds. By a singular chance, the
-peons, the arrieros, and even the two Indian chiefs, who could not think
-there was anything to be dreaded, had all gone, as we have said, to be
-present at the ceremony. When the cross had been planted, and the toqui
-and the General had gone, arm in arm, to the tent of the latter, the
-crowd began to separate into little groups, and soon dispersed, each
-returning to the spot where he had established his temporary camp.
-
-The Indian chiefs were the first to quit the scene; now that their
-curiosity was satisfied, they reproached themselves for having been so
-long absent from their friend. On approaching the little camp, they were
-surprised at not seeing Louis, and a certain appearance of disorder in
-the baggage filled them with uneasiness. They quickened their pace, and
-the nearer they drew the more evident this disorder became in their
-eyes, accustomed to remark those thousands of signs which escape the
-eyes of the white man. In fact, the passage left free in the inclosure
-formed by the bales, seemed to have been the scene of a struggle; the
-footmarks of several horses were strongly imprinted in the moist earth,
-and some bales had even been removed, as if to widen the entrance, and
-lay scattered about. All these indications were more than sufficient for
-the chiefs; they exchanged an anxious glance, and rushed into the camp.
-
-Louis was still lying where the assassins had left him, stretched across
-the entrance of the tent, his discharged pistols in his hands, his head
-thrown back, his mouth half open, and his teeth clenched. The blood had
-ceased to flow. The two men looked at him for a moment with a feeling of
-stupor. His countenance was of a livid paleness.
-
-"He is dead!" said Curumilla, in a voice stifled by emotion.
-
-"He seems so," Trangoil-Lanec replied as he knelt down by the body.
-
-He raised the young man's senseless head, untied his cravat, and opened
-his vest; then they perceived the two gaping wounds.
-
-"This is a revenge!" he murmured.
-
-"What is to be done?" said Curumilla, shaking his head discouragingly.
-
-"Let us try to recover him--I hope he is not dead."
-
-And then, with infinite address and incredible celerity, the two Indians
-bestowed upon the wounded man the most intelligent and most effective
-cares. For a long time all were useless. At length a sigh, faint as a
-breath, exhaled painfully from the oppressed breast of the young man; a
-slight flush tinted his cheeks, and, after several efforts, he opened
-his eyes. Curumilla, after having washed the wounds with clean cold
-water, applied a cataplasm to them of bruised oregano leaves.
-
-"Loss of blood alone has made him faint," he said; "the wounds are wide,
-but not deep, and not at all dangerous."
-
-"But what has been going on here?" Trangoil-Lanec asked.
-
-"Hush!" said Curumilla, laying his hand upon his comrade's arm; "he
-speaks."
-
-Indeed, the young man's lips did move silently; but, at length, he
-pronounced with a great effort, and in a voice so low that the Indians
-scarcely heard it--that single word which for him contained everything--
-
-"Rosario!"
-
-Then he sank back again.
-
-"Ah!" cried Curumilla, as if a sudden light had broken upon him,
-"where is the young palefaced maiden?" and he sprang into the tent, "I
-understand it all now!" he said, returning quickly to his friend.
-
-The Indians lifted up the wounded man gently in their arms, and carried
-him into the tent, where they placed him in Rosario's empty hammock.
-Louis recovered his senses, but almost immediately was overcome by
-a profound drowsiness. After having made him as comfortable as they
-could, the two Indians left the tent, and began, with the instinct of
-their race, to seek on the ground for indications they could ask of no
-witness, but which would show them traces they could understand. Now
-that the murder and the abduction had taken place, it became necessary
-to get upon the track of the ravishers, and endeavour, if possible, to
-save the young girl. After minute researches, which did not last less
-than two hours, the Indians returned to the front of the tent; they sat
-down, face to face, and smoked for a few minutes in silence.
-
-The peons and arrieros had returned from the ceremony, and expressed
-the greatest terror on learning what had taken place during their
-absence. The poor people did not know what to do; they trembled when
-they reflected upon the responsibility which rested upon them, and upon
-the terrible account Don Tadeo would require of them. After the two
-chiefs had smoked a few minutes, they extinguished their pipes, and
-Trangoil-Lanec began:
-
-"My brother is a wise chief, let him say what he has seen."
-
-"I will speak, since my brother desires it," Curumilla replied, bowing
-his head; "the pale maiden with the blue eyes has been carried off by
-five horsemen."
-
-To this Trangoil-Lanec made a sign of assent.
-
-"These five horsemen came from the other side of the river; their
-footmarks are strongly imprinted on the ground, which was wetted in the
-places where the horses trod with their dripping hoofs; four of these
-horsemen are Huiliches, the fifth is a paleface; when they reached the
-entrance of the camp, they stopped and consulted an instant, then four
-of them dismounted; the trace of their footsteps is visible."
-
-"Good!" said Trangoil-Lanec, "my brother has the eyes of a Quanaco;
-nothing escapes him."
-
-"Of the four horsemen who dismounted, three are Indians, as is easily
-perceived by the impression of their naked feet, the great toe of which,
-accustomed to the stirrup, is very wide apart from the other toes; but
-the fourth is a Muruche, for the rowels of his spurs have left deep
-marks all around. The three first have crept up to the tent, where Don
-Louis was talking with the young blue-eyed maiden, and, consequently,
-with his back towards those who came towards him; he was attacked
-unexpectedly, and fell without having time to defend himself: then the
-fourth horseman sprang forward like a puma, seized the maiden in his
-arms, and after jumping a second time over the body of Don Louis, went
-straight to his horse, followed by the three Indians. But Don Louis
-got up, first on his knees, and then on his feet; he fired his pistols
-at the ravishers, and one of them fell mortally wounded. It was the
-paleface, for a pool of blood marks the place of his fall, and, in
-his agony, he pulled up the grass with his clenched hands; then his
-companions dismounted again, took him up, and fled. Don Louis, after
-discharging his pistols, had a faintness come over him, and fell down
-again: that is what I have learnt."
-
-"Good!" Trangoil-Lanec replied, "my brother knows everything; after
-taking up the body of their comrade, the ravishers crossed the river,
-and went in the direction of the mountains. Now, what will my brother
-do?"
-
-"Trangoil-Lanec is an experienced chief, he will wait for Don Valentine;
-Curumilla is younger, he will go upon the track of the ravishers."
-
-"My brother has spoken well; he is wise and prudent; he will find them."
-
-"Yes, Curumilla will find them," the chief replied, laconically.
-
-After saying these words, he arose, saddled his horse, and left the
-camp; Trangoil-Lanec soon lost sight of him. He then returned and took
-his place by the wounded man. The day passed away thus. The Spaniards
-had all left the plain; the Indians, for the most part, had followed
-their example; there only remained a few tardy Araucanos; but these,
-also, were preparing to depart. Towards evening, Louis found himself
-much better; he was able, in a few words, to relate to the Indian what
-had passed; but he told him nothing new, he had divined it all.
-
-"Oh!" said the young man, as he ended, "Rosario! poor Rosario is lost!"
-
-"My brother must not be depressed with grief," Trangoil-Lanec replied
-softly; "Curumilla is upon the track of the ravishers; the young pale
-maiden will be saved!"
-
-"Do you seriously tell me that, chief? Is Curumilla really in pursuit
-of them?" the young man asked, fixing his anxious eyes upon the Indian;
-"can I indeed hope that?"
-
-"Trangoil-Lanec is an Ulmen," the Araucano replied proudly: "no lie has
-ever soiled his lips, his tongue is not forked; I repeat that Curumilla
-is in pursuit of the ravishers. Let my brother hope; he will see again
-the little bird which sings such sweet songs in his heart."
-
-A sudden flush crossed the young man's face at these words; a sad smile
-curled his pale lips; he gently pressed the hand of the chief, and
-closing his eyes, he sank gently back in the hammock. All at once the
-furious galloping of a horse was heard from without.
-
-"Good!" Trangoil-Lanec murmured, looking at the wounded man, whose
-regular breathing proclaimed that he was sleeping peacefully: "what will
-Don Valentine say to all this?"
-
-And he strode out hastily to meet the Parisian, whose face was the
-picture of anxiety.
-
-"Chief!" he cried, in a tremulous voice, "can what the peons say be
-true?"
-
-"Yes!" the chief replied coolly.
-
-The young man sank down, as if thunder-struck. The Indian seated him
-gently upon a bale, and placing himself beside him, pressed his hand,
-saying in a soothing tone:
-
-"My brother has much courage."
-
-"Alas!" the young man exclaimed, in an agonized voice, "Louis, my poor
-Louis, dead, assassinated! Oh!" he added, with a terrible gesture, "I
-will avenge him! I will solely live to accomplish that sacred duty!"
-
-The chief looked at him for an instant attentively.
-
-"What does my brother mean?" he asked; "his friend is not dead."
-
-"Oh! why do you seek to deceive me, chief?"
-
-"I speak the truth; Don Louis is not dead," the Ulmen replied, in such
-an imposing voice that it carried conviction to the wounded heart of the
-young man.
-
-"Oh!" he cried, impetuously, and springing up, "he lives!--is that
-possible?"
-
-"He has received two wounds."
-
-"Two wounds!"
-
-"Yes, but my brother can be comforted, they are not dangerous; in a
-week, at latest, they will be cured."
-
-Valentine remained for an instant stupefied by this good news, after the
-catastrophe which the peons and arrieros had announced to him.
-
-"Oh!" he exclaimed, throwing himself into the arms of the chief, whom
-he pressed with a kind of frenzy to his breast, "it is true, is it
-not?--his life is not in danger?"
-
-"No, no, my brother can reassure himself; loss of blood alone reduced
-him to the state of torpor into which he fell. I will answer for his
-recovery."
-
-"Thanks! thanks, chief! I can see him, may I not?"
-
-"He is asleep."
-
-"Oh! I will not wake him, be assured of that; I only wish to see him."
-
-"See him, then," Trangoil-Lanec replied, smiling.
-
-Valentine went in. He looked at his friend, peacefully sleeping; he
-leant softly over him, and impressing a kiss upon his brow, whispered--
-
-"Sleep, dear brother, I will watch."
-
-The lips of the wounded man moved; he murmured--
-
-"Valentine, save her!"
-
-The Parisian knitted his brow, and drew himself up again.
-
-"Come here, chief," he said to Trangoil-Lanec, "and tell me the details
-of what has passed, that I may know how to avenge my brother, and save
-her he loves."
-
-The two men quitted the tent.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XL.
-
-AHAUCANIAN DIPLOMACY.
-
-
-Antinahuel had not remained long inactive. Scarce had General
-Bustamente's escort disappeared in the cloud of dust, ere he remounted
-his horse, and, followed by all the Araucano chiefs, crossed the river.
-When he arrived on the other bank, he planted his lance in the ground,
-and turned towards the herald who was beside him, ready to execute his
-orders.
-
-"Let the three toquis, the Ulmens, and the Apo-Ulmens meet here in an
-hour," he said; "the fire of council shall be lighted on this spot for a
-grand council. Begone!"
-
-The herald bowed down to his horse's neck and set off at full speed.
-Antinahuel cast a glance around him. All the chiefs had regained their
-huts; one warrior alone remained. On perceiving him a smile stole over
-the lips of the toqui. This warrior was a man of lofty stature, proud
-carriage, and haughty countenance, whose piercing look conveyed a fierce
-and cruel expression. He appeared to be in the prime of life, that is to
-say, about forty years of age; he wore a poncho of exceedingly fine lama
-wool, striped with striking colours, while the long silver-headed cane
-which he held in his hand proclaimed him an Apo-Ulmen. He replied to the
-toqui's smile by a look of intelligence, and, bending to his ear, said,
-with an accent of gratified hatred--
-
-"When the cougars tear each other to pieces, they prepare a rich quarry
-for the eagles of the Andes."
-
-"The Puelches are eagles," Antinahuel replied; "they are masters of the
-other side of the mountains; they leave to the Huiliche women the care
-of weaving their ponchos."
-
-At this sarcasm, launched against the Huiliches, a fraction of the
-Araucano people, who devote themselves principally to agriculture and
-the breeding of cattle, the Apo-Ulmen frowned.
-
-"My father is severe with his sons," he said, in a husky voice.
-
-"The Black-Stag is a formidable chief in his nation," Antinahuel
-remarked, in a conciliatory tone; "he is the first of the Apo-Ulmens
-of the province of the maritime country. His heart is Puelche; my soul
-rejoices when he is at my side. Why is it that the Ulmens are not of the
-same temper as he?"
-
-"My brother has explained the reason. Obliged to live in continual trade
-relations with the miserable Spaniards, the tribes of the flat country
-have laid down the lance to take up the pickaxe: they have become
-cultivators; but let not my father be deceived,--the old spirit of their
-race still dwells within them, and on the day when they are called on to
-fight for their independence, all will rise at once to punish those who
-would attempt to enslave them."
-
-"Can that be true?" Antinahuel cried, stopping his horse short, and
-looking in the speaker's face; "may they be depended upon?"
-
-"What is the use of speaking of the subject at this moment?" said the
-Apo-Ulmen, with a bantering smile; "has not my father just come from
-renewing the treaties with the palefaces?"
-
-"That is true," said the toqui, darting a keen look at the Indian
-warrior: "peace is secured for a long time."
-
-"My father is a wise chief, that which he does is well done," the other
-replied, casting down his eyes.
-
-Antinahuel was preparing to reply, when an Indian arrived at full speed,
-and, with a prodigy of skill which these matchless horsemen alone
-can execute, he stopped suddenly before the two chiefs, and stood as
-motionless as a statue of bronze. The panting sides of his horse, which
-ejected clouds from his nostrils, and was spotted with white foam,
-showed that he had ridden far and fast. Antinahuel looked at him for an
-instant.
-
-"My son Theg-teg--the thunderer--has made a rapid journey."
-
-"I have executed the orders of my father."
-
-At these words, out of politeness, the Apo-Ulmen pressed the sides of
-his horse to retire, but Antinahuel laid his hand upon his arm.
-
-"Black-Stag may remain," he said; "is he not my friend?"
-
-"I will remain if my father wishes it," the chief answered, quietly.
-
-"Let him remain, then; his brother has no secrets from him;" and turning
-to the still motionless warrior, he added, "my brother can speak."
-
-"The Chiaplos are fighting," the latter replied; "they have dug up the
-hatchet and turned it against their own breasts."
-
-"Oh!" the toqui exclaimed with feigned astonishment; "my brother must be
-mistaken, the palefaces are not cougars, to devour each other."
-
-And he turned towards Black-Stag, with a smile of undefinable expression.
-
-"Theg-teg is not mistaken," the Indian warrior replied, gravely; "his
-eyes have seen clearly: the stone toldería, which the palefaces call
-Valdivia, is at this moment a more ardent furnace than the volcano of
-Autaco, which serves as a retreat for Guécubu, the genius of evil."
-
-"Good!" the toqui remarked, coldly, "my son has seen well; he is a
-warrior brave in battle, but he is likewise prudent; did he stand apart
-to rejoice, without seeking to learn which side prevailed?"
-
-"Theg-teg is prudent, but when he looks he means to see; he knows all,
-my father may question him."
-
-"Good! the great warrior of the palefaces set out from here to fly to
-the help of his soldiers; the advantage is with him."
-
-The Indian smiled, but made no reply.
-
-"Let my brother speak!" Antinahuel resumed; "the toqui of his nation
-interrogates him."
-
-"He whom my brother names as the great warrior of the palefaces, is the
-prisoner of his enemies; his soldiers are dispersed like grains of wheat
-scattered over the field."
-
-"Wah!" Antinahuel cried with feigned anger, "my brother has a lying
-tongue, what he says cannot be true; does the eagle become the prey of
-the owl? The great warrior has an arm strong as the thunder of Pillian.
-Nothing can resist it."
-
-"That arm, however powerful, has not been able to save him; the eagle
-is captive: the courageous puma was surprised by cunning foxes; he has
-fallen, treacherously overcome, into the snare they had laid before his
-feet."
-
-"But his soldiers? the great toqui of the whites had a numerous army."
-
-"I have told my father; the chief being made captive, the soldiers,
-bewildered and struck with fear by Guécubu, fell beneath the blows of
-their angry enemies."
-
-"The chiefs who were conquerors, no doubt, pursued them."
-
-"What for? The palefaces are women without courage: as soon as their
-enemies weep and pray for pardon they forgive them."
-
-At this news the toqui could not repress a movement of impatience, but
-he soon recovered himself.
-
-"Brothers ought not to be inexorable," he said, "when they lift the
-hatchet against each other: they may wound a friend without wishing it.
-The pale warriors have done well."
-
-The Indian bowed if as assenting.
-
-"What are the palefaces doing now?" the chief continued.
-
-"They are assembled round the council fire."
-
-"Good! They are wise men. I am satisfied with my son," Antinahuel
-added, with a gracious smile; "he is a warrior, as skilful as brave;
-he may retire, and take the repose necessary after so long a journey."
-"Theg-teg is not fatigued; his life is my father's," the warrior said
-with a bow; "he may dispose of it at his pleasure."
-
-"Antinahuel will remember his son," the toqui said with a sign of
-dismissal.
-
-The Indian bowed respectfully to his chief, and pressing his knees
-whilst shortening the bridle, he made his horse perform a curvet,
-brought it to the ground with an extraordinary bound, and went off
-caracoling. The toqui looked after him in apparent abstraction; then
-addressing the Apo-Ulmen--
-
-"What does my brother think of that which this man has said?" he asked.
-
-"My father is the wisest of the toquis of his nation, the chief the most
-venerated by the Araucanian tribes; Pillian will breathe words into his
-mind which will mount to his lips, and which we shall listen to with
-respect," Black-Stag replied, evasively, fearing to compromise himself
-by too frank a reply.
-
-"My brother is right," the toqui said, with a haughty glance; "I have my
-nymph!"
-
-The Apo-Ulmen bowed with an air of conviction. We beg our readers to
-observe, with regard to this expression, which for the first time
-has fallen from our pen, that in the Araucanian mythology, besides
-an infinite number of gods and goddesses, there are what are called
-spiritual nymphs, who perform towards man the office of familiar genii.
-There is not a renowned chief among the Araucanos who does not glorify
-himself with the idea of having one of these in his service. Hence,
-what Antinahuel said, instead of disturbing Black-Stag, gave him, on
-the contrary, a greater veneration for his chief; for he also flattered
-himself with having a familiar spirit at his command, although he did
-not dare to proclaim it aloud. At this moment the Araucanian drums and
-trumpets sounded loudly--the _chasquis_ were calling the chiefs to
-council.
-
-"What will my father do?" asked the Apo-Ulmen.
-
-"Man is weak," Antinahuel replied; "but Pillian loves his sons, the
-Moluchos, he will inspire the words I shall pronounce; my only desire is
-the happiness of the Araucano nation."
-
-"My father has convoked the great Auca-coyog of the nation; did he then
-suspect the news he has just received?"
-
-"Antinahuel knows everything," he answered, with a smile.
-
-"Good! I know what my father thinks."
-
-"Perhaps."
-
-"Let my father remember the words I have spoken."
-
-"My ears are open, my son may repeat them,"
-
-"When cougars tear each other to pieces, they prepare a rich quarry for
-the eagles of the Andes."
-
-"Good!" said Antinahuel, with a laugh; "my son is a great chief, let him
-follow me to the Auca-coyog, the warriors are waiting for us."
-
-The two warriors exchanged a look of undefinable meaning; these two men,
-so cunning and dissimulating, had compromised themselves to each other
-without avowing anything. They directed their course at a gallop towards
-the spot where the principal chiefs awaited them, drawn up in a circle
-around a fierce fire, the smoke of which ascended in graceful eddies
-towards heaven.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLI.
-
-THE COUNCIL
-
-
-The Araucanos, whom certain travellers, either ill-informed or of
-bad faith, persist in representing as savage men plunged in the most
-frightful barbarism, are, on the contrary, a relatively civilized
-people. Their government, the origin of which is lost in the night of
-time, and which, at the period of the Spanish conquest, was as well
-organized and carried out as easily as at the present day, is, as
-we have said in a preceding chapter, an aristocratic republic, with
-essentially feudal tendencies. This government, which affects all the
-appearances of the feudal system, has all its good qualities and all its
-defects. Hence, except in time of war, the toquis possess but the shadow
-of sovereignty, and the power resides in the entire body of the chiefs,
-who, in questions of importance, decide in a general diet, called the
-_Auca-coyog_, the great council, or council of free men, for such is
-the name they claim for themselves, and very justly, for no power has
-yet been able to subdue them. These councils are generally held in the
-presence of all, in a vast prairie.
-
-Antinahuel had eagerly seized the pretext of the renewal of the treaties
-to try and obtain from the chiefs authority to carry into execution the
-projects which had been so long ripening in his brain. The Araucanian
-code, which contains all the laws of the nation, created an obligation
-for his doing so, from which even his renown and popularity were
-powerless to release him. But he hoped to overcome the opposition of
-the chiefs, or their repugnance to submit to his will, by means of his
-eloquence and the influence which, under many circumstances, he had
-exercised over the minds of the Ulmens, even those most determined to
-resist him.
-
-The Araucanos cultivate with success the art of speaking, which among
-them leads to public honours. They make it a point to speak their own
-language well, and to preserve its purity by guarding particularly
-against the introduction of foreign words. They carry this so far,
-that when a white establishes himself amongst them, they oblige him
-to abandon his own name and take one of their country. The style of
-their speeches is figurative and allegorical. They call the style of
-parliamentary harangues _coyagtucan;_ and it must be observed that these
-speeches contain all the essential parts of true rhetoric, and are
-almost all divided into three heads.
-
-The few words we have said will suffice to show that the Araucanos are
-not so savage as we have been led to suppose. In short, a small people,
-who, without allies, isolated at the extremity of the continent, have
-since the landing of the Spaniards on their coasts, that is to say,
-during three hundred years, constantly and alone resisted European
-armies composed of experienced soldiers and greedy adventurers, whom no
-difficulty was likely to stop, and who have preserved their independence
-and their nationality intact, are, in our opinion, respectable in
-every point of view, and ought not to be stigmatized as barbarians
-with impunity--the sad, despicable vengeance of those proud and
-impotent Spaniards, who have never been able to conquer them, and whose
-degenerate sons at this very day pay them a tribute, under the lying
-excuse of an annual offering.
-
-We who, thrown by the chance of our adventurous travels among these
-indomitable tribes, have lived many days with them, have had an
-opportunity of judging soundly of these ill-understood people. We have
-been able to appreciate all that is really simple, great, and generous
-in their character. Terminating here this somewhat long digression, a
-tribute of gratitude paid to ancient and dearly-beloved friends, we will
-resume our narrative.
-
-Antinahuel and Black-Stag arrived at the place where the chiefs were
-assembled. They dismounted and joined the groups of Ulmens. The chiefs,
-who were peacefully chatting together, at their arrival became silent,
-and, for a few minutes, not a word was heard in the assembly. At length
-Cathicara, the toqui of the Piré-Mapus, made a few steps towards the
-centre of the circle, and took the initiative.
-
-Cathicara was an old man of seventy, of majestic bearing, and imposing
-countenance. A renowned warrior in his youth, now that many winters had
-wrinkled his brow and silvered his long hair, he enjoyed, by just title,
-a great reputation for wisdom in his nation. Descended from an old race
-of Ulmens, continually opposed to the whites, he was an inveterate enemy
-of the Chilians, against whom he had long waged war. He was acquainted
-with the secret views of Antinahuel, of whom he was the most devoted
-friend and partisan.
-
-"Toquis, Apo-Ulmens and Ulmens of the valiant nation of the Aucas, whose
-immense hunting grounds cover the surface of the earth," he said, "my
-heart is sad; a cloud covers my mind, and my eyes, filled with tears,
-are constantly cast towards the ground; whence comes it that grief
-devours me? Why does the joyous song of the goldfinch no longer sound
-cheerfully in my ears? why do the rays of the sun seem less warm to me?
-why, in short, does nature appear less beautiful to me? Will you tell
-me, my brothers? You are silent; shame covers your brows; your humbled
-eyes are cast down--have you nothing to reply? It is because you are a
-degenerate people! your warriors are women, who instead of the lance
-take up the spindle; because you bow basely beneath the yoke of these
-Chiaplos, these Huincas, who laugh at you, for they know that you have
-no longer blood red enough to contend with them! When, Aucas warriors,
-did impure owls and screech owls begin to make their nests in the eyrie
-of eagles? Of what use is this stone hatchet, the symbol of strength;
-this hatchet, which you have given me to defend you, if it is to remain
-inactive in my hands, and if I must descend into the tomb, towards
-which I am already hastening, without having been able to do anything
-for your enfranchisement?--Take it back again, warriors, if it is to be
-nothing but a vain, honorary ornament; for myself, my life has been too
-long--let me retire to my toldo, where, to my last days, it will be at
-least permitted me to weep over our independence, which is compromised
-by your weakness, and our glory eclipsed for ever by your cowardice!"
-
-After uttering these words, the old man made a few paces backwards,
-staggering as if overcome by grief. Antinahuel sprang towards him, and
-appeared to lavish consolations upon him in a low voice. The speech had
-strongly moved the assembly, for the toqui was beloved and venerated
-by all. The Ulmens remained apparently silent and stoical; but their
-feelings of hatred had been powerfully stirred, and passion began to
-gleam from their eyes in ominous flashes. Black-Stag stepped forward.
-
-"Father," he said, in a low, insinuating tone, and with a quiet air,
-"your words are rough; they have plunged our hearts in sadness; why have
-you been so severe with your children? Pillian alone is acquainted with
-the intentions of men. What do you reproach us with? with having done
-today what our fathers have always done before us, while they did not
-believe themselves in a position to contend victoriously against their
-enemies! No, owls and impure birds do not make their nests in the eyries
-of eagles. No, the Aucas are not women! They are valiant and invincible
-warriors, as their fathers were before them. Listen! listen to what
-the spirit reveals to me: the council with the Spaniards of today is
-null and void, because it has not taken place as the Admapu requires.
-The toqui has not presented to the chief of the palefaces the branch
-of the Cinnamon tree, the symbol of peace; the canes of the Apo-Ulmens
-have not been bound in a sheaf with the sword of the Huinca chief;
-the oath and the speeches have been pronounced upon the cross of the
-palefaces, and not upon the sheaf, as the law requires. I repeat, then,
-the Huinca-coyog is a nullity, nothing but a vain, laughable ceremony,
-to which we ought to attach no importance. Have I spoken well, powerful
-men?"
-
-"Yes! yes!" the chiefs cried, brandishing their arms, "the Huinca-coyog
-is null!"
-
-Antinahuel then took a few steps forward within the circle, with his
-head advanced, his eyes fixed on vacancy, and his arms extended, as if
-he heard and saw things which he alone could see and hear.
-
-"Silence!" Black-Stag cried, pointing to him with his finger; "the great
-toqui is holding conference with his nymph!"
-
-The chiefs experienced a sensation of terror while looking at the toqui.
-A solemn silence prevailed in the assembly. On his part, Antinahuel did
-not stir.
-
-Black-Stag approached him softly, and, stooping towards his ear, asked,--
-
-"What does my father see?"
-
-"I see the warriors of the palefaces; they have dug up the war hatchet,
-and are fighting with one another."
-
-"What more does my father see?" Black-Stag resumed.
-
-"I see streams of blood, which redden the soil; the odour of that blood
-rejoices my heart, for it is the blood of palefaces shed by their
-brothers!"
-
-"Does my father see anything more?"
-
-"I see the great chief of the whites! he fights valiantly at the head
-of his soldiers! he is surrounded, he fights still! he is nearly
-falling--he falls--he is down--he is conquered! His enemies seize him!"
-
-The Ulmens present at this scene looked on in stupefied amazement; it
-was incomprehensible to them. A smile of disdain curled the lips of
-Black-Stag, as he continued,--
-
-"Does my father hear anything?"
-
-"I hear the cries of the dying demanding vengeance upon their brothers!"
-
-"Does my father hear anything else?"
-
-"Yes; I hear the cries of Aucas warriors, long since dead, and they
-freeze me with terror!"
-
-"What do they say?" the chiefs exclaimed unanimously, a prey to intense
-anxiety. "What do the Aucas warriors say?"
-
-"They say, 'Brothers, the hour is come! To arms! To arms!'"
-
-"To arms!" the chiefs shouted, as with one voice. "To arms! Death to the
-palefaces!"
-
-The impulse was given, enthusiasm had seized all hearts; from this
-moment Antinahuel was able to raise the passions of the crowd to
-delirium at his pleasure. A smile of supreme satisfaction lighted his
-haughty countenance as he recovered apparently from his vision.
-
-"Chiefs of the Aucas," he said, "what do you order me to do?"
-
-"Antinahuel," Cathicara replied, throwing his stone hatchet into the
-fire, in which he was directly imitated by the other toquis; "there is
-now but one supreme hatchet in the nation, it is in your hands; let
-it be red up to the hilt in the blood of the vile Huincas; lead our
-Uthal-Mapus to battle--you have the supreme command! We give you the
-power of life and death over our persons. From this hour, you alone in
-the nation have the right to command us; whatever be your orders, we
-will accomplish them."
-
-Antinahuel raised his lofty head, his brow radiant with pride:
-brandishing in his nervous hand his powerful war hatchet, the symbol of
-the dictatorial and boundless power which had just been conferred upon
-him, he said haughtily,--
-
-"Aucas, I accept the honour you do me; I will prove worthy of the
-confidence you place in me. This hatchet shall never be buried till
-my body has served for food to the vultures of the Andes, or till the
-cowardly palefaces, against whom we are about to combat, shall have come
-upon their knees to implore pardon!"
-
-The chiefs replied to these words by cries of joy and ferocious
-howlings. The Auca-coyog was terminated. Tables were placed, and a
-banquet gathered together all the warriors present at the council.
-At the moment when Antinahuel was seating himself in the high place
-reserved for him, an Indian, covered with perspiration and dust,
-approached him, and whispered a few words in his ear. The chief started;
-a nervous paroxysm shook his whole frame, and he arose a prey to the
-most lively agitation.
-
-"Oh!" he cried, passionately, "it is to me alone that woman should
-belong!" and, addressing the Indian who had spoken to him, he added,
-"Bid my mosotones mount, and be prepared to follow me instantly."
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLII.
-
-THE NIGHT JOURNEY.
-
-
-Antinahuel beckoned Black-Stag to come to him, and the Apo-Ulmen did not
-delay. Notwithstanding the number and copiousness of the libations in
-which he had indulged, the face of the Araucano chief was as impassive,
-and his step as steady, as if he had only drunk water. When he arrived
-in front of the toqui, he bowed respectfully, and waited in silence till
-he was spoken to. The toqui, with his eyes fixed on the ground, and
-buried in serious reflections, was some time before he was aware of his
-presence. At length he raised his eyes; his countenance was dark, his
-eyes seemed to dart lightning, a nervous tremour agitated all his limbs.
-
-"Is my father suffering?" Black-Stag asked, mildly and affectionately.
-
-"I am," the chief replied.
-
-"Guécubu has breathed upon the heart of my father; but let him take
-courage, Pillian will support him."
-
-"No," Antinahuel replied; "the breath which dries my breast is a breath
-of fear."
-
-"Of fear?"
-
-"Yes; the Huincas are powerful. I dread the strength of their arms for
-my young men!"
-
-Black-Stag surveyed him with astonishment.
-
-"What signifies the power of the palefaces," he said, "when my father is
-at the head of the four Uthal-Mapus?"
-
-"This war will be terrible; and I would conquer."
-
-"My father will conquer. Do not all the warriors listen to his voice?"
-
-"No," said Antinahuel, sorrowfully; "the Ulmens of the Puelches were not
-present at the council."
-
-"That is true," Black-Stag murmured.
-
-"The Puelches are the first among Aucas warriors."
-
-"That is true, too," said Black-Stag.
-
-"I suffer!" Antinahuel repeated.
-
-Black-Stag laid his hand upon his shoulder.
-
-"My father," he said, in an insinuating tone, "is a great chief; nothing
-is impossible to him!"
-
-"What does my son mean?"
-
-"War is declared. Whilst we attempt incursions into the Chilian
-territory, to keep our enemies in a state of uncertainty as to our
-plans, let my father mount with his mosotones upon his coursers more
-fleet than the wind, and fly upon the wings of the tempest to the
-Puelches. His words will convince them; the warriors will abandon
-everything to follow him and fight under his orders. With their
-assistance we shall conquer the Huincas, and the heart of my father will
-swell with joy and pride!"
-
-"My son is wise! I will follow his counsels," the toqui answered, with a
-smile of mysterious expression; "but he has said war is resolved upon;
-the interests of my nation must not suffer from the short absence I am
-forced to make."
-
-"My father will provide for that."
-
-"I have provided for it," Antinahuel said, with a courteous smile; "let
-my son listen to me."
-
-"My ears are open to receive the words of my father."
-
-"At sunrise, when the fumes of the water fire are dissipated, the chiefs
-will ask for Antinahuel." Black-Stag nodded assent.
-
-"I will place in the hands of my son," the chief continued, "the stone
-hatchet, the sign of my dignity. Black-Stag is a part of my soul, his
-heart is devoted to me; I name him my vice-toqui--he will take my place."
-
-The Apo-Ulmen bowed respectfully before Antinahuel, and kissed his hand.
-
-"Whatever my father orders shall be instantly executed," he said.
-
-"The chiefs are of a proud character; their courage is fiery: my son
-must not give them time to cool, he must make them so compromise
-themselves, that they cannot afterwards retract."
-
-"What are the names of these chiefs, that I may keep them in my memory?"
-
-"They are the most powerful Ulmens of the nation. Let my son remember
-they are eight in number; each of them must make an incursion on the
-frontier, in order to prove to the Chiaplos that hostilities have
-commenced. The four principal among them will immediately repair to
-Valdivia, to proclaim the declaration of war to the palefaces."
-
-"Good!"
-
-"These are the names of the Ulmens: Tangol, Qud-pal, Auchanguer,
-Colfunguin, Trumau, Cuyumil, and Pailapen. Does my son hear these names
-distinctly?"
-
-"I have heard them."
-
-"Has my son understood the sense of my words? Have they entered into his
-brain?"
-
-"The words of my father are here," said Black-Stag, pointing to his
-forehead; "he may banish all uneasiness, and fly towards her who has
-taken possession of his heart."
-
-"Good!" Antinahuel replied; "my son loves me, he will remember; after
-two suns he will find me at the toldería of the Black Serpents."
-
-"The Black-Stag will be there, accompanied by his most valiant warriors;
-may Pillian guide the steps of my father, and may the god of war grant
-him success."
-
-"Farewell, brother!" Antinahuel murmured, taking leave of his lieutenant.
-
-Black-Stag bowed to the toqui and retired. As soon as he was alone,
-Antinahuel made a sign to the Indian whose news had caused his
-departure. During the conference of the two chiefs this man had stood
-motionless, at a sufficient distance to prevent his hearing what they
-said, but near enough to execute immediately the orders that might be
-given him. He drew near in obedience to the sign.
-
-"Is my son fatigued?" the toqui asked.
-
-"No; my horse alone wants rest."
-
-"Well, my son shall have another horse; he will guide us."
-
-Antinahuel, followed by the scout, advanced, without more words, towards
-a group of horsemen, who, leaning on their long lances, cast their black
-shadows gloomily into the night. These horsemen, about thirty in number,
-were the mosotones of the toqui. Antinahuel, at a bound, sprang upon a
-magnificent horse, held by the bridle by two Indians.
-
-"Forward!" he cried, settling himself in his saddle, and plunging his
-spurs into the sides of the horse, which set off with the speed of an
-arrow.
-
-The mosotones followed as quickly after, and the troop of horsemen
-glided through the darkness like a legion of gloomy phantoms, preceded
-by the scout. Who can express the terrible poetry of a night ride in
-the American deserts? The midnight wind had swept the heavens clear of
-clouds, and its vault, of a dark blue, appeared to be, like a monarch's
-robe, splendidly adorned with an infinite number of stars. The night
-had that velvety transparency peculiar to warm climates. At intervals,
-a puff of wind, loaded with indistinct sounds, scattered the dry leaves
-into the air, and was lost in the distance like a sigh.
-
-The Araucanos, bending over the necks of their horses, whose nostrils
-emitted dense clouds of smoke, rode on, and on, and ever on, without
-casting even a look around them. And yet the desert they were
-traversing, so silently and so rapidly, poured floods of splendid
-harmonies into space. The murmur of water among the lianas and the
-glayeuls, the moaning of the wind among the leaves, or the confused
-noise of a thousand invisible insects, could be heard; at times, lights,
-fluttering through the foliage, danced upon the grass in the manner of
-wild fires; at distances were to be seen old trees, at the angles of
-ravines or the brink of precipices, standing like spectres, shaking
-their winding sheets of parasitical plants; a thousand rumours hovered
-in the air; nameless cries issued from dens hollowed under vast roots;
-stifled sighs descended from the hoary summits of the mountains: an
-unknown and mysterious world could be felt existing around. Everywhere,
-on the earth, in the air, was to be heard the great flood of life, which
-comes from God, passes away, and is incessantly renewed.
-
-The Araucanos still continued their furious course, clearing torrents
-and ravines, and crushing under the hoofs of their flying coursers
-stones, the fragments of which rolled with a splash into the barrancas.
-At two lances, length, in front, by the side of the scout, Antinahuel,
-with his eyes ardently directed forward, kept urging on his horse, whose
-hard and loud breathing proclaimed fatigue. All at once a dark mass
-surged up in the distance, and then a voice was heard.
-
-"We have arrived," the guide exclaimed.
-
-"At last!" Antinahuel said, pulling up his horse, which could no longer
-stand when the impetus had ceased. They found themselves in a miserable
-village, composed of five or six huts falling to ruins, and which,
-at every gust of wind, threatened to tumble to pieces. Antinahuel,
-who expected the fall of his horse, disengaged himself quickly, and
-addressing the guide, who had likewise dismounted, asked--
-
-"In which toldo is she?"
-
-"Come," the Indian replied, laconically.
-
-Antinahuel followed him.
-
-They walked some steps without exchanging a word; the chief pressing
-his hand strongly on his breast, as if to keep down the beatings of his
-heart. After a hasty march of ten minutes, the two men found themselves
-in front of an isolated cabin, from the interior of which glimmered a
-feeble light. The Indian stopped, and turned towards Antinahuel.
-
-"That is it," he said, stretching out his arm in the direction of the
-cabin.
-
-The toqui turned round to ascertain whether his mosotones, whom, in his
-rapid course, he had left far behind, were rejoining him; and then,
-after the hesitation of a second, he approached the door and pushed it,
-saying in a low but determined voice--
-
-"An end must be put to this!"
-
-The door opened, and he entered.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLIII.
-
-TWO HATREDS.
-
-
-Antinahuel found himself face to face with Doña Maria; by an instinctive
-movement each drew back a step, stifling a cry; a cry of stupor on the
-part of Antinahuel, of surprise on the part of the Linda.
-
-"Oh!" sighed Doña Rosario, quite overcome, and bowing her head to avoid
-the ardent glance of the Indian chief--"Oh, Heaven! now I am really
-lost, indeed!"
-
-Doña Maria had in a few seconds driven back to her heart the feelings
-which raged within her; and with a mild voice and a smiling face she
-addressed Antinahuel--
-
-"My brother is welcome," she said, inviting him by a gesture to enter
-the cuarto; "to what happy chance do I owe his presence?"
-
-"A happy chance for me, particularly," he replied, with a satirical
-smile, and endeavouring to compose his features.
-
-The toqui was too well acquainted with the companion of his childhood
-not to know that he had in her a formidable adversary, with whom he must
-play close, in order to bring her to do his will.
-
-"Well!" the Linda resumed, "will my brother deign to do me the pleasure
-of explaining the cause of his sudden appearance, which, not the less,
-fills me with delight?"
-
-"Oh! the cause is very simple indeed, not worth mentioning; I did not
-hope, in any way, to meet my sister here; I must even confess, with all
-humility that I did not seek her."
-
-"Ah!" said Doña Maria, feigning to be imposed upon, "I am doubly
-fortunate, then."
-
-The chief bowed.
-
-"It is the truth," he said.
-
-"Good!" she thought; "now he is going to lie, let us see what villainy
-the demon will invent;" and then she added aloud, with a seducing smile,
-which displayed thirty-two little teeth of the purest pearl--"I am all
-ears, my brother can speak."
-
-"As my sister knows, this village is on the route which leads to my
-toldería, I have naturally traversed it in returning to my tribe; the
-night is advanced, my mosotones require a few hours' rest; I resolved
-to encamp here. I entered the first rancho which presented itself to
-my view, this rancho in which you are temporarily sojourning, and I am
-grateful to the chance which, as I have told you, has done all this, and
-is alone guilty."
-
-"Not bad for an Indian," murmured Doña Maria; "well, we will say no more
-about that."
-
-"Eh!" said Antinahuel, feigning for the first time to perceive Doña
-Rosario, and advancing towards her; "who is this charming young woman?"
-
-"A slave, not worthy of your notice," the Linda replied, sternly.
-
-"A slave!" Antinahuel cried.
-
-"Yes, a slave." The Linda clapped her hands, and the Indian we have seen
-talking with her entered.
-
-"Take away this woman!" she said.
-
-"Oh, madam!" Rosario exclaimed, falling on her knees, "can you be
-inexorable towards a poor girl who has never injured you?"
-
-The Linda gave her a fiery glance, and repulsed her with her foot.
-
-"I ordered this girl to be taken away," she said, perilously.
-
-At this flagrant insult, the blood rushed to the heart of the poor
-girl; her pallid brow flushed with scarlet, and drawing herself up
-majestically and proudly, she said in a piercing voice, the prophetic
-tone of which struck the Linda to the heart--
-
-"Beware, madam! God will punish you! As you today are without pity for
-me, so the day will come when there will be no pity for you!"
-
-And she left the room, after darting a look at her implacable enemy that
-made even her blench.
-
-When Antinahuel and the Linda were left alone, a long silence ensued.
-The last words of Rosario had wounded the Linda like the stroke of a
-poniard; it was in vain she endeavoured to steel herself against the
-emotion she experienced. She felt herself conquered by the weak girl.
-She, however, gradually overcame the incomprehensible sensation that
-oppressed her. Passing her hand across her brow, as if to drive away the
-importunate idea that pursued her, she turned towards Antinahuel--
-
-"No diplomacy between us, brother," she said, "we know each other too
-well to lose time in manoeuvring."
-
-"My sister is right; let us speak frankly."
-
-"The story of your return to your tribe is very clever, Antinahuel, but
-I do not believe a word of it."
-
-"Good! then my sister knows the reason that brings me here."
-
-"I do know it," she said, with an arch smile, which played like a
-sunbeam round her rosy lips.
-
-Antinahuel made no reply. He began to walk in great agitation about the
-room, casting looks of anger and vexation towards the door by which
-Rosario had gone out. The Linda followed him with a keen and mocking eye.
-
-"Well," she said, at the end of a minute, "will not my brother speak?"
-
-"Why should I not speak?" he angrily replied. "Antinahuel is the most
-redoubtable chief of his nation, the proudest warriors bend their lofty
-brows without hesitation before him!"
-
-"I am waiting," she said, in a calm voice.
-
-"A chief explains himself clearly, no one imposes upon him. My sister
-knows my hatred for the chief of the palefaces, of whom she has so much
-reason to complain."
-
-"Yes, I know that man is the personal enemy of my brother."
-
-"Well, then, my sister has in her hands the blue-eyed maiden, and she
-will give her to me, so that I may, in making her suffer, revenge myself
-on my enemy."
-
-"My brother is a man, he does not know how to avenge himself: why
-should I give my prisoner up to him? Women alone possess the secret of
-torturing those they hate. Let my brother leave it to me," she added,
-with a vindictive smile; "the torments I shall invent will suffice, I
-swear, to satisfy a hatred much deeper than any he can feel."
-
-Antinahuel, although his face remained impassive, shuddered inwardly at
-these odious words.
-
-"My sister is boastful," he replied, "her skin is white, her heart knows
-not how to hate, let her leave it to the Indian chief."
-
-"No," she passionately exclaimed, "I have fixed the fate of this woman;
-I will not give her to my brother."
-
-"Will my sister then forget her promise, and falsify her oaths?"
-
-"Of what promises and of what oaths do you speak, chief?"
-
-"Of those," the Indian replied haughtily, "which my sister pronounced in
-the toldo of Antinahuel, when she came among his tribe to implore his
-assistance."
-
-The Linda smiled.
-
-"Woman is a mockingbird," she said, "the man who pays attention to her
-words is----"
-
-"Good!" Antinahuel interrupted, "my sister shall keep her prisoner. Let
-my sister do her will; I will continue my route towards the toldería of
-my tribe."
-
-The Linda looked at him with astonishment; the facility with which
-Antinahuel apparently renounced his projects seemed to her the more
-incomprehensible, from her knowing with what pertinacity he pursued
-his enterprises, when once he believed he had a chance of success. She
-resolved to know what she had to trust to. At the moment when the chief
-made a step towards the door, she said.
-
-"Is my brother going?"
-
-"I am going," he replied.
-
-"Has he, then, already terminated the affairs about which General
-Bustamente requested him to come and consult with him?"
-
-"General Bustamente no longer stands in need of Antinahuel or of anyone
-else."
-
-"Has he then succeeded so quickly?"
-
-"Yes," he answered in an equivocal tone.
-
-"Then," the Linda exclaimed, joyfully, "he is master of the city, and
-triumphs at last!"
-
-Antinahuel appeared to hesitate for a minute--an ironical smile flitted
-across his lips.
-
-"Will not my brother answer?" the Linda continued, with an impatience
-mingled with uneasiness.
-
-"He whom my sister calls General Bustamente," he replied in a sharp
-tone, "no longer needs the assistance of anyone: he is a prisoner."
-
-The Linda sprang up like a wounded lioness.
-
-"A prisoner!" she cried. "Oh! my brother must be mistaken."
-
-"He is a prisoner, and within three days will be dead."
-
-The Linda was struck with stupor; this frightful news crushed all her
-hopes.
-
-"Oh!" she murmured at length, "he shall not die!"
-
-"He will die!" Antinahuel replied; "who can save him?"
-
-"You, chief!" she said, emphatically grasping his arm.
-
-"Why should I do it?" he remarked carelessly; "of what consequence is
-the life of the man to me?--the palefaces are not my brothers."
-
-"No; but his life is precious to me, for the sake of my vengeance! He
-alone can deliver up my enemy to me! He shall live, I tell you!"
-
-"Good! My sister will deliver him, then, as she is so anxious to save
-him."
-
-"You alone could do it, chief, if you would," she observed.
-
-Antinahuel fixed his eyes upon her.
-
-"What makes you suppose I would?" he said.
-
-"Listen to me, chief!" the Linda cried. "You love that woman--that puny,
-palefaced thing, do you not?"
-
-The Indian started, but made no reply.
-
-"Oh! do not endeavour to deceive me; you cannot blind the eyes of a
-woman. The hatred you bear to Don Tadeo is changed into love in your
-heart at the sight of this creature."
-
-"Well! and suppose it should be so?" he said, evidently moved.
-
-"An even-handed bargain with you then; give me General Bustamente," she
-remarked earnestly, "and I will deliver her up to you."
-
-"Oh!" said Antinahuel, with a bantering smile, "a woman is but a
-mockingbird; the man who puts faith in her words----"
-
-On hearing the chief throw in her face the words she herself had uttered
-only a few minutes before, she stamped with impatience.
-
-"Well, then," she cried, almost bursting with rage, "take her
-then!--take the woman! and may my curses cling to her!"
-
-Antinahuel uttered a tiger-like roar, and rushed out of the room.
-
-"Ah!" cried the Linda in a hoarse voice, and with an expression
-impossible to be described, "may not the love of this wretch avenge me
-better than all the tortures I could have invented!"
-
-In a few minutes the chief returned precipitately, his features
-distorted by fury and disappointment.
-
-"She has fled!" he shouted. It was true. Rosario and the Indian to whose
-charge the Linda had given her had both disappeared. No one knew what
-had become of them. Antinahuel immediately dispatched his mosotones in
-all directions in search of them. The Linda was left in the toldo a
-prey to indescribable rage; she was cheated of her vengeance! She felt
-crushed under the weight of the helplessness to which she was reduced.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLIV.
-
-THE RETURN TO VALDIVIA.
-
-
-Night was come; bending over the pillow of his friend, who was still
-buried in that lethargic sleep which generally follows great loss of
-blood, Valentine watched with anxious tenderness the changes which at
-times darkened his pale countenance.
-
-"Oh!" he said, in a suppressed voice, clenching his hands with anger,
-"be thy assassins who they may, brother, they shall pay for their crime
-dearly."
-
-The curtain of the tent was slowly raised, and a hand was laid upon the
-young man's shoulder. He turned quickly round; Trangoil-Lanec was before
-him. The face of the Ulmen was dark as night, and he appeared a prey to
-strong emotion.
-
-"What is the matter, chief?" asked Valentine, terrified at his manner;
-"what has happened, in the name of Heaven? Have you any fresh misfortune
-to announce?"
-
-"Misfortune incessantly watches over man," the chief remarked
-sententiously; "he should be ready to receive it at all hours, like an
-expected guest."
-
-"Speak then!" the young man asked, in a firm voice; "whatever may
-happen, I will not falter."
-
-"Good, my brother is strong, he is a great warrior, he will not suffer
-himself to be cast down. Let my brother hasten; we must be gone!"
-
-"Be gone!" cried Valentine, with a nervous start; "and my friend?"
-
-"Our brother Louis will accompany us."
-
-"Is it possible to move him?"
-
-"It must be," the Indian said peremptorily; "the war hatchet is dug up
-against the palefaces, the Aucas chiefs have drunk firewater, the genius
-of evil is master of their hearts; we must depart before they think of
-us; in an hour it will be too late."
-
-"Let us depart then," the young man replied, sorrowfully, convinced that
-Trangoil-Lanec knew more than he was willing to tell, and that some
-great danger threatened them, since the chief, who was a man of tried
-courage, had let fall that mask of stoicism which scarcely ever abandons
-the Indian.
-
-Preparations for departure were made in all haste, and were soon
-terminated. The hammock in which Louis reposed was solidly fastened to
-two long cross pieces of wood, and then, as it was, harnessed upon two
-mules without awakening him. The little band set out, employing the
-greatest precautions. They proceeded thus for more than an hour, without
-exchanging a word; the campfires of the Indians became every minute more
-faint in the distance, and they were, at least for the present, out of
-danger. Valentine approached Trangoil-Lanec, who rode at the head of the
-convoy.
-
-"Where are we going?" he asked.
-
-"To Valdivia," the chief replied; "it is there alone that Don Louis will
-be able to recover in safety."
-
-"You are right," said Valentine; "but shall we remain inactive?"
-
-"I will do what my brother the paleface wishes; am I not his penni?
-where he goes I will go--his will shall be mine!"
-
-"Thank you, chief," the Frenchman replied, with emotion; "you have a
-brave and worthy heart."
-
-"My brother saved my life," said the Ulmen earnestly; "that life is no
-longer mine, it belongs to him."
-
-Whether it was that the Araucano chiefs did not perceive the departure
-of the strangers, or that, as is more probable, they did not think it
-worthwhile to pursue them, the little troop was not interrupted in its
-flight--for what other name could be given to this night march amidst
-the desert? They advanced slowly, on account of the wounded man, who
-could not, in his state of weakness and prostration, have supported the
-shaking of a more rapid pace.
-
-Towards three o'clock in the morning, a few fugitive and uncertain
-lights, which flitted across the horizon, and with difficulty pierced
-through the fog, which at that hour of the night envelopes the earth
-like a winding sheet, announced to the party that they were approaching
-the city, and should soon be there. At the end of three quarters of an
-hour, they reached the gardens which envelope Valdivia like an immense
-bouquet of flowers, from the centre of which it seems to spring up. The
-party made a short halt, in order not to attract observation on entering
-the city, through the state of the horses and mules. From that time they
-had nothing to fear from the Indians.
-
-"Is my brother acquainted with the city?" Trangoil-Lanec asked.
-
-"Why do you ask that question?"
-
-"For a very simple reason. In the desert, by night or by day, I can
-serve as a guide to my brother; but here, in this toldería of the
-whites, my eyes close--I am blind; my brother must conduct us."
-
-"The devil!" said Valentine, quite disconcerted; "in that sense I am as
-blind as you, chief; it was only yesterday that I entered the city for
-the first time: and," he added, laughingly, "the bullets then whistled
-round in such a merry fashion, I had scarcely time to look about me, or
-to ask my way."
-
-"Don't let that disturb you, señor," said one of the peons, who had
-heard the few words pronounced by the two men; "only tell me where you
-want to go, and I will undertake to conduct you."
-
-"Hum!" Valentine replied; "where I want to go to? Caspeta! I cannot
-exactly say; all places are alike to me, provided my friend be in
-safety."
-
-"Pardon me, señor," the arriero replied, "if I dare----"
-
-"Oh, dare! dare! there's a good fellow! your idea is probably excellent;
-for myself, I confess at this moment my mind is as empty as a drum."
-
-"Why, señor, should you not go to the residence of Don Tadeo de Leon, my
-master?"
-
-"Pardieu!" cried Valentine, vexed at his own want of thought. "On my
-word, you are something like a guide! I do not go to Don Tadeo, because,
-simply, I don't know how to find the place, that's all."
-
-"I know, señor; Don Tadeo is most likely at the cabildo."
-
-"By Jove! that's true again; my powers of thought seem to have been
-driven out of my head; but which is the way to the cabildo?"
-
-"I will show you, señor."
-
-"That's well! this is an intelligent lad. Let us be moving, my friend."
-
-"Forward, then!" cried the arriero. "_Ea! arrea mula!_" he shouted to
-his beasts.
-
-In a few minutes they debouched upon the Plaza Mayor, opposite the
-cabildo. The city was still and silent; here and there traces of the
-sanguinary contest of the preceding day, heaps of broken furniture, or
-large trenches cut in the ground, gave evidence of the ravages caused by
-the insurrection. A soldier was marching with slow steps in front of the
-cabildo. At sight of the little party, he stopped, and cocked his musket.
-
-"Who goes there?" he shouted sharply.
-
-"_La Patria!_" Valentine replied.
-
-"Go on, then!" said the soldier.
-
-"Hum!" the young man murmured; "it appears not to be such an easy matter
-to obtain entrance; never mind," he added, "let us try. My friend," he
-said, in an insinuating voice, to the sentinel, who stood motionless
-before him; "we have business in the palace."
-
-"Have you the password?"
-
-"Santiago! no," Valentine answered, frankly.
-
-"Then you cannot enter."
-
-"And yet I wish very much to enter."
-
-"Very possibly; but as you have not the password, I advise you to go
-on your way; for I swear, if you were the devil in person, I would not
-afford you a passage."
-
-"My friend," said the Parisian, in a jeering tone, "you do not talk
-logically; if I were the devil, I should stand in no need of the
-password--I should get in in spite of you."
-
-"Take care, señor," whispered the arriero; "that soldier is not unlikely
-to fire at you."
-
-"Pardieu! that's what I reckon upon," said Valentine, laughing.
-
-The peon looked at him in astonishment; he thought he was mad. The
-soldier, annoyed by this long conversation, and believing it of no use
-to stand wrangling with these jokers, presented his musket, crying
-angrily,--
-
-"For the last time, go on, or I will fire!"
-
-"I am determined I will go in!" Valentine replied, resolutely.
-
-"To arms!" the soldier cried, and fired. Valentine, who had watched
-attentively all the soldier's movements, had slipped quickly from his
-horse, and the bullet whistled harmlessly over his head. At the cry
-of the soldier and the report of his piece, several armed soldiers,
-followed by an officer with a lighted lantern in his hand, rushed
-tumultuously out of the palace.
-
-"What is going on here?" the officer asked, in a loud voice.
-
-"Ah!" Valentine cried, to whom the voice was not unknown, "is that you,
-Don Gregorio?"
-
-"Who calls me?" said the latter; for, in fact, it was he.
-
-"I, Valentine!"
-
-"What! is it you, my friend, who are making all this disturbance?"
-replied Don Gregorio, advancing; "I thought it was nothing less than an
-attack."
-
-"What the devil was I to do?" said the young man, laughing; "I had not
-the password, and I wanted to get in."
-
-"Hum! none but a Frenchman would have such an idea as that."
-
-"Is it not original?"
-
-"Yes, but you risked being killed."
-
-"Bah! we are always risking being killed, and yet we are not," said
-Valentine, carelessly; "I recommend my plan to you, under similar
-circumstances."
-
-"Much obliged! but I do not think I shall ever try it."
-
-"Ah! there you are wrong."
-
-"Well, then, come in! come in!"
-
-"That is all I want; particularly as I must see Don Tadeo instantly."
-
-"I believe he is asleep."
-
-"He must be awakened."
-
-"Do you bring interesting news, then?"
-
-"Yes," Valentine replied, becoming suddenly serious; "terrible news!"
-
-Don Gregorio, struck with the tone in which the Frenchman had pronounced
-these words, had a presentiment of some misfortune, and asked no
-further. The arrieros bore the hammock, with Don Louis still asleep,
-into the cabildo. By the care of Don Gregorio he was carried to a
-bedchamber, and placed in a bed hastily provided.
-
-"What does all this mean?" Don Gregorio said, in astonishment; "is Don
-Louis wounded?"
-
-"Yes," Valentine replied, in a husky voice; "he has received two dagger
-wounds."
-
-"But how did it all happen?"
-
-"You will soon learn; but pray conduct me instantly to Don Tadeo."
-
-"In heaven's name, come, then! your reserve alarms me."
-
-And, followed by Valentine and Trangoil-Lanec, Don Gregorio plunged into
-the labyrinth formed by the numerous corridors of the palace, with which
-he seemed well acquainted.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLV.
-
-THE FATHER REVEALS HIMSELF.
-
-
-Don Tadeo had passed the greater part of the night in giving orders
-for the clearing away of the hideous traces left by the combat. He
-had named the magistrates charged with the police of the city. After
-having assured, as far as possible, the tranquillity and safety of the
-citizens, and sent several couriers to Santiago, and other centres
-of population, to inform them of what had taken place, worn out with
-fatigue, sinking with sleep, he had thrown himself, clothed as he was,
-upon a camp bed, to take a little repose. He had slept scarcely an hour
-that agitated sleep which is the lot of men upon whom the destinies of
-empires rest, when the door of the chamber was pushed violently open, a
-strong light gleamed in his eyes, and several men surrounded him. Don
-Tadeo awoke suddenly.
-
-"Who is there?" he cried, endeavouring to recognise, in spite of the
-light which dazzled his eyes, the persons who so inopportunely disturbed
-his repose.
-
-"It is I," replied Don Gregorio.
-
-"Well, but you do not seem to be alone?"
-
-"No, Don Valentine accompanies me."
-
-"Don Valentine!" cried Don Tadeo, starting up, and passing his hand over
-his brow, to drive away the clouds which still obscured his ideas; "why,
-I did not expect Don Valentine before morning, at soonest; what serious
-reason can have induced him to travel by night?"
-
-"A powerful reason, Don Tadeo," the young man remarked, in a melancholy
-voice.
-
-"In Heaven's name! speak, then!" cried Don Tadeo.
-
-"Be a man! be firm! collect all your courage to bear worthily the blow
-you are about to receive."
-
-Don Tadeo walked two or three times round the room, with his head
-cast down, and his brow contracted; then stopped suddenly in front of
-Valentine with a pale brow, but with a stoical countenance. This man
-of iron had subdued nature within him; as if aware of the rudeness of
-the shock he was about to receive, he had ordered his heart not to
-break--his muscles not to quiver.
-
-"Speak!" he said, "I am ready to hear you."
-
-While uttering these words his voice was firm, his features calm.
-Valentine, though well acquainted with his courage, was struck with
-admiration.
-
-"Is the misfortune you are about to announce to me personal?" said Don
-Tadeo.
-
-"Yes," the young man replied, in a tremulous voice.
-
-"God be praised! Go on, then; I listen to you."
-
-Valentine perceived that he must not put the soul of this man to too
-hard a trial; he determined to speak.
-
-"Doña Rosario has disappeared," he said; "she has been carried off
-during our absence; Louis, my foster brother, in endeavouring to defend
-her, has fallen, pierced by two sword thrusts."
-
-The King of Darkness appeared a statue of marble; no emotion was
-perceptible upon his austere countenance.
-
-"Is Don Louis dead?" he asked, earnestly.
-
-"No," Valentine answered, more and more astonished; "I even hope that in
-a few days he will be cured."
-
-"So much the better," said Don Tadeo, feelingly; "I am indeed glad to
-hear that."
-
-And, crossing his arms upon his broad chest, he resumed his hasty walk
-about the room. The three men looked at each other, surprised at this
-stoicism, which to them was unintelligible.
-
-"Will you then abandon Doña Rosario to her ravishers?" Don Gregorio
-asked, in a reproachful tone.
-
-
-Don Tadeo darted at him a look charged with such bitter irony, that Don
-Gregorio quailed beneath it.
-
-"Were the ravishers concealed in the entrails of the earth, I would
-discover them, be they who they may!" Don Tadeo replied.
-
-"A man is on their track," said Trangoil-Lanec, advancing; "that man is
-Curumilla. He will discover them."
-
-A flash of joy for a moment shot from the eye of the King of Darkness.
-
-"Oh!" he murmured, with clenched teeth, "beware, Doña Maria, beware!"
-
-He at once had divined the author of the abduction of Rosario.
-
-"What do you intend to do?" said Don Gregorio.
-
-"Nothing, till the return of our scout," he replied, coldly; and then
-turning towards Valentine, added--"Well, my friend, have you nothing
-else to announce to me?"
-
-"What leads you to suppose I have not told you all?" said the young man.
-
-"Ah!" Don Tadeo replied, with a melancholy smile, "you know, my friend,
-that we Spanish Americans, however civilized we may appear, are still
-semi-barbarians, and, as such, horribly superstitious."
-
-"Well?"
-
-"Well, then, among other follies of the same kind, we place faith in
-proverbs; and is there not one which somewhere says, that a misfortune
-never comes singly?"
-
-"Good Heavens! do you take me for a bird of ill omen, Don Tadeo?"
-
-"God forbid, my friend! only search in your memory, I am sure I am not
-mistaken, and that you have still something else to inform me of."
-
-"Well, you are right, I have other news to announce to you; whether good
-or bad, I leave you to judge."
-
-"I knew there was something more behind," said Don Tadeo, with a sad
-smile; "go on, my friend, let us hear this news, I am listening to you."
-
-"Yesterday, as you know, General Bustamente renewed the treaties of
-peace with the Araucano chiefs."
-
-"He did."
-
-"I cannot tell what fugitive or what scout gave them information of what
-had taken place here; but by evening they had learnt the defeat and
-capture of the General."
-
-"I can understand that; go on."
-
-"A kind of furious madness immediately seemed to possess them, and they
-held a great war council."
-
-"In which, I suppose, they decided upon breaking the treaties; is not
-that it?"
-
-"Exactly."
-
-"And most likely determined upon war with us?"
-
-"I suppose so; the four toquis cast the hatchet into the fire, and a
-supreme toqui was elected in their place."
-
-"Ah! ah!" said Don Tadeo, "and do you know the name of this supreme
-toqui?"
-
-"Yes; Antinahuel."
-
-"I suspected as much," Don Tadeo cried, angrily; "that man has deceived
-us. He is a scoundrel only living by cunning, and whose devouring
-ambition leads him to sacrifice, when occasion offers, the dearest
-interests, and falsify the most sacred oaths. He has been playing a
-double game; he feigned to be the partisan of General Bustamente, as he
-appeared to be ours, building upon our mutual ruin his own fortunes and
-his future elevation. But he has thrown off the mask too hastily. By
-heaven! I will inflict a chastisement upon him, of which his compatriots
-shall preserve the remembrance, and which a century hence shall make
-them tremble with fear."
-
-"Beware of the ears that, listen to you," said Don Gregorio, directing
-his attention by a look to the Ulmen, who stood quietly before him.
-
-"Eh! what care I?" Don Tadeo replied, warmly; "if I speak thus, it is
-because I wish to be heard. I am a Spanish noble, and what my heart
-thinks my lips give utterance to; the Ulmen is welcome, if it seems good
-to him, to repeat my words to his chief."
-
-"The Great Eagle of the Whites is unjust towards his son," replied
-Trangoil-Lanec, in a serious tone; "all Araucanos have not the same
-heart; Antinahuel is only responsible for his own acts. Trangoil-Lanec
-is an Ulmen in his tribe; he knows how to be present at a council of
-chiefs: what his eyes see, what his ears hear, his heart forgets, his
-mouth repeats it not: why should my father address such unkind words to
-me, who am ready to devote myself to restore to him her he has lost?"
-
-"That is true; I am unjust, chief, I was wrong in speaking so; your
-heart is true, your tongue is unacquainted with falsehood. Pardon me,
-and let me clasp your loyal hand in mine."
-
-Trangoil-Lanec pressed warmly the hand Don Tadeo held out to him.
-
-"My father is good," he said; "his heart is at this moment darkened by
-the great misfortune that has fallen upon him; but let my father be
-comforted, Trangoil-Lanec will restore the blue-eyed maiden to him."
-
-"Thanks, chief! I accept your offer, you may depend upon my gratitude."
-
-"Trangoil-Lanec does not sell his services, he is repaid when his
-friends are happy."
-
-"Caramba!" cried Valentine, shaking the hand of the chief with all his
-might, "you are a worthy man, Trangoil-Lanec--I am proud of being your
-friend."
-
-Then, turning towards Don Tadeo, he said--"I must bid you farewell, for
-a time. I confide my brother Louis to your care."
-
-"Why do you leave me?" Don Tadeo asked, warmly.
-
-"I must. I see your heart is breaking, in spite of the incredible
-efforts you make to appear impassive. I know not the nature of the tie
-which binds you to the unfortunate girl who has been the victim of an
-odious crime; but I can see the loss of her is killing you--now, with
-the assistance of Heaven, I will restore her to you, Don Tadeo; I will,
-or I will die in the endeavour."
-
-"Don Valentine!" the gentleman exclaimed, strongly moved, "what do you
-propose to do? your project is wild; I cannot accept such devotion."
-
-"Leave it to me. Caramba! I am a Parisian--that is to say, as obstinate
-as a mule; and when once an idea, good or bad, has entered into my
-brain, it has no chance of getting out, I swear to you. I shall only
-take the time to embrace my poor brother, and set off immediately. Come,
-chief, let us set ourselves upon the track of the ravishers."
-
-"Let us be gone," said the Ulmen.
-
-Don Tadeo remained for a moment motionless, his eyes fixed upon the
-young man with a strange expression; a violent conflict appeared to be
-going on within him; at length nature prevailed, he burst into tears;
-and, throwing himself into the arms of the Frenchman, he murmured, in a
-voice choked by grief--
-
-"Valentine! Valentine! restore me my daughter!"
-
-The father had at length revealed himself; the stoicism of the statesman
-had sunk before paternal love!--But human nature has its limits, beyond
-which it cannot go; the moral shock which Don Tadeo had received, the
-immense efforts he had made to conceal it, had completely exhausted
-his strength, and he sank upon the slabs of the floor like a proud oak
-struck by thunder. He had fainted. Valentine contemplated him for a
-moment with pity and grief.
-
-"Poor father!" he said, "take courage, thy child shall be restored to
-thee!"
-
-And he left the room with hasty steps, followed by Trangoil-Lanec,
-whilst Don Gregorio, kneeling by his friend, gave him the most earnest
-and kind attentions for the recovery of his senses.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLVI.
-
-CURUMILLA.
-
-
-In order to explain to the reader the miraculous disappearance of
-Rosario, we are obliged to make a few retrograde steps, and return to
-Curumilla, at the moment when the Ulmen, after his conversation with
-Trangoil-Lanec, had thrown himself, like a staunch bloodhound, upon the
-track of the young girl. Curumilla was a warrior as renowned for his
-prudence and wisdom in council, as for his bravery in fight. Having
-crossed the river, he left his horse in the care of a peon who had
-accompanied him, as it would not only be useless to him, but, still
-further, because it might even be injurious by betraying his presence by
-the clatter of its hoofs upon the ground. Indians are expert horsemen,
-but they are indefatigable walkers. Nature has endowed them with
-incredible strength of muscles of the legs and hams; and they possess in
-the highest degree the knowledge of that rising and sinking gymnastic
-step, which, for some years past, has been introduced into Europe,
-particularly into France, in the marching of troops. They accomplish
-with incredible swiftness journeys which horses could hardly perform,
-always directing their course in a straight line, or as the bird flies,
-without regard to the difficulties that may arise in their way, no
-obstacle being sufficient to turn them from their course. This quality
-renders them particularly formidable to the Spanish Americans, who
-cannot obtain this facility of locomotion, and who, in time of war, find
-the redskins always before them at the moment they least expect them,
-and that almost always at considerable distances from the spots where,
-logically, they ought to be.
-
-Curumilla, after having carefully studied the prints made by the
-ravishers, at once divined the route they had taken, and the place they
-were bound to. He did not amuse himself with following them, for that
-would have been losing precious time; on the contrary, he resolved to
-cut across country, and wait for them at an elbow of the road he was
-acquainted with, where, at all events, he could ascertain their numbers,
-and, perhaps, save the young girl. This being determined, the Ulmen
-set off. He walked for several hours without rest, eye and ear on the
-watch, trying to penetrate the darkness, and listening patiently to the
-various noises of the desert. These noises, which are to us white men
-a dead letter, have for the Indians, who are accustomed to interrogate
-them, a special signification, in which they are never deceived; they
-analyse them, they decompose them, and often learn by this means things
-which their enemies have the greatest interest in concealing from them.
-However inexplicable this fact may at first appear, it is very simple.
-There exists no noise in the desert without a cause. The flight of
-birds, the passage of wild beasts, the rustling of leaves, the rolling
-of a stone down a ravine, the undulation of high grass, the friction of
-branches in the woods, are for the Indian valuable indications.
-
-At a certain point with which he was acquainted, Curumilla laid himself
-down flat on his face, behind a block of rock, and remained motionless
-among the grass and bushes that bordered the route. He remained thus for
-more than an hour, without making the least movement. Whoever might have
-perceived him would have taken him for a dead body. The practised ear of
-the Indian, ever on the watch, at length caught in the distance the dull
-sound of the feet of horses and mules upon the dry and sonorous road.
-This noise grew rapidly nearer, and soon, from his hiding place, he
-perceived about twenty horsemen passing slowly along in the dark, within
-two lance lengths of him. The ravishers, emboldened by their numbers,
-and believing themselves secure from all danger, rode along in perfect
-security. The Indian raised his head softly, and leaning on his hands,
-followed them with his anxious eyes, and waited. They passed without
-seeing him. At some paces behind the troop, a horseman came along,
-leaving himself carelessly to the measured pace of his horse. His head
-occasionally sank upon his breast, and his hands had but a feeble hold
-of the reins. It was evident that this man was asleep in his saddle.
-
-A sudden idea rushed like lightning through Curumilla's brain; gathering
-himself up, he stiffened the iron muscles of his legs, and, bounding
-like a tiger, leaped up behind the horseman. Before the latter,
-surprised by this unexpected attack, had time to utter a cry, he pressed
-his throat in such a manner as, for the time, to render him incapable
-of calling for help. In the twinkling of an eye the horseman was gagged
-and thrown to the ground: then, securing the horse, Curumilla fastened
-it to a bush, and returned to his prisoner. The latter, with the stoical
-and disdainful courage peculiar to the aborigines of America, finding
-himself conquered, attempted no useless resistance; he looked at his
-conqueror with a smile of contempt, and waited for him to speak to him.
-
-"Oh!" said Curumilla, who, upon leaning over him, recognised him, "is it
-you, Joan?"
-
-"Curumilla!" the other replied.
-
-"Hum!" the Ulmen murmured to himself, "I would rather it had been
-somebody else. What is my brother doing on this path?" he asked.
-
-"Of what consequence is that to my brother?" said the Indian, replying
-to one question by another.
-
-"We have no time to waste," the chief replied, unsheathing his knife;
-"let my brother speak."
-
-Joan started; a shudder ran through his limbs at the blue light
-reflected by the long, sharp blade of the knife.
-
-"The chief can question me," he said, in a husky voice.
-
-"Where is my brother going?"
-
-"To the toldería of San Miguel."
-
-"Good! and for what purpose is my brother going there?"
-
-"To place in the hands of the sister of the grand toqui a woman whom we
-have carried off this morning."
-
-"Who ordered you to do so?"
-
-"She whom we are going to meet."
-
-"Who had the direction of this affair?"
-
-"I had."
-
-"Good! where does this woman expect the prisoner?"
-
-"I have told the chief; at the toldería of San Miguel."
-
-"In which casa?"
-
-"In the last; the one which stands a little apart from the others."
-
-"That is well! Let my brother exchange poncho and hat with me."
-
-The Indian obeyed without a word, and when the exchange was made,
-Curumilla said--
-
-"I could kill my brother; prudence would even require me to do so, but
-pity has entered my heart--Joan has wives and children, he is one of the
-brave warriors of his tribe; if I let him live, will he be grateful?"
-
-The Indian had expected that he was going to die, but these words
-restored him to hope. He was not a bad man at bottom; the Ulmen knew him
-well, and was satisfied he would keep his promises.
-
-"My father holds my life in his hands," Joan replied; "if he does not
-take it today, I shall remain his debtor--I will lay down my life at a
-sign from him."
-
-"Very well!" said Curumilla, returning his knife to its sheath, "my
-brother may rise, a chief keeps his word."
-
-The Indian sprang upon his feet, and fervently kissed the hand of the
-man who had spared him.
-
-"What does my father command?" he asked.
-
-"My brother must repair as fast as possible to the toldería which the
-Huincas name Valdivia. He will seek Don Tadeo, the Great Eagle of the
-Whites, and relate to him what has passed between us, adding, that I
-will save the prisoner, or die."
-
-"Is that all?"
-
-"Yes. If the Great Eagle requires the services of my brother, he will
-place himself without hesitation at his orders. Farewell! May Pillian
-guide my brother! and let him never forget that I was not willing to
-take the life that was in my power!"
-
-"Joan will not forget," the Indian replied.
-
-At a sign from Curumilla, he bent down in the high grass, crept along
-like a serpent, and disappeared in the direction of Valdivia. The chief,
-without losing an instant, jumped into the saddle and soon joined the
-little troop, who had continued jogging quietly along, without dreaming
-of the substitution that had just taken place. It was Curumilla who,
-while carrying the young girl into the house, had whispered hope and
-courage. These three words, in announcing to her that she had a friend
-watching over her, had restored her the strength necessary for the
-struggle that awaited her.
-
-After the unexpected arrival of Antinahuel, when, at the order of Doña
-Maria, Curumilla led away the prisoner, instead of reconducting her
-to the apartment in which she had been, he threw a poncho over her to
-disguise her.
-
-"Follow me," he said in a low voice; "step out boldly, I will endeavour
-to save you."
-
-The maiden hesitated; she was fearful of a snare. The Ulmen comprehended
-her feeling, and said quickly, in a low voice--
-
-"I am Curumilla, one of the Ulmens devoted to the two Frenchmen, the
-friends of Don Tadeo."
-
-Rosario startled imperceptibly.
-
-"Go on," she replied in a firm tone; "happen what may, I will follow
-you."
-
-And they left the hut together. The Indians, dispersed here and there,
-were busily talking over the events of the day, and did not observe
-them. The two fugitives proceeded for ten minutes without exchanging a
-word. The village was soon lost in the darkness; at length Curumilla
-stopped at a thick clump of cactus, behind which two horses stood,
-saddled and bridled.
-
-"Does my sister find herself strong enough to mount on horseback, and
-ride a long distance?" he asked.
-
-"To escape from my persecutors," she replied, in a broken voice, "I feel
-I have strength to do anything."
-
-"Good!" said Curumilla, "my sister is courageous. Her God will help her!"
-
-"It is in Him alone I place my hope," she said, with a sigh.
-
-"To horse, then, and let us begone! minutes are ages!"
-
-He unfastened the horses, they mounted, and set of at full speed,
-without any sound being produced upon the road by their hoofs, which
-Curumilla had covered with pieces of sheepskin. The maiden breathed
-a sigh of relief on feeling herself once more free, and under the
-protection of a devoted friend. The fugitives continued to ride at a
-rapid pace, in a direction diametrically opposite to the one they should
-have taken to return to Valdivia. Prudence required that they should not
-yet take any route on which, according to all possibilities, they would
-be looked for.
-
-We must leave our friends in this critical position for the present;
-but those readers who feel an interest in the loves of Don Louis and
-Doña Rosario, will find their curiosity fully satisfied in the following
-volume of this series, called "The Pearl of the Andes."
-
-
-
-THE END.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Adventurers, by Gustave Aimard
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Adventurers, by Gustave Aimard
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: The Adventurers
-
-Author: Gustave Aimard
-
-Release Date: September 14, 2013 [EBook #43716]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ADVENTURERS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Marc D'Hooghe at http://www.freeliterature.org
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-
-<h1>THE ADVENTURERS</h1>
-
-<h3>A Story of a Love-Chase</h3>
-
-<h3>BY</h3>
-
-<h2>GUSTAVE AIMARD</h2>
-
-<h4>AUTHOR OF</h4>
-
-<h4>"LAST OF THE INCAS," "QUEEN OF THE SAVANNAH,"</h4>
-
-<h4>ETC.</h4>
-
-<h5>LONDON</h5>
-
-<h5>WARD AND LOCK, 158, FLEET STREET.</h5>
-
-<h5>1863.</h5>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="PREFACE" id="PREFACE">PREFACE.</a></h4>
-
-
-<p>With the publication of the present and the ensuing volume, "The Pearl
-of the Andes," I am enabled to perfect the most important series of
-Aimard's Tales of Indian Life and Adventure. To preserve uniformity, the
-volumes of this series should be arranged in the following order on the
-book-shelf;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p style="margin-left: 35%;">
-<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">1. THE ADVENTURERS.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">2. THE PEARL OF THE ANDES.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">3. THE TRAIL-HUNTER.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">4. PIRATES OF THE PRAIRIES.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">5. THE TRAPPER'S BRIDE.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">6. THE TIGER SLAYER.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">7. THE GOLD SEEKERS.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">8. THE INDIAN CHIEF.</span><br />
-<span style="margin-left: 2.5em;">9. THE RED TRACK.</span><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>Gustave Aimard has a precedent in Fenimore Cooper for introducing the
-same hero in a long range of volumes, and, like his great predecessor,
-he has so arranged, that each work should be complete in itself, and
-not necessitate the purchase of another. But Aimard has one marked
-advantage over Cooper; for while "Leather-Stocking" is but a creation
-of the fancy, or, at the most, the type of the Backwoodsman, the Count
-Louis who figures as the hero of Aimard's series, is a real man. Count
-de Raousset Boulbon, had he succeeded in his daring attempt of founding
-an independent kingdom in Mexico, would in all probability have become
-the Napoleon of the West. A gallant adventurer and thorough gentleman,
-he staked his life upon the issue, and ended his career the victim
-of unparalleled treachery, as Aimard has faithfully recorded. Hence
-Aimard's romances have the great merit of being founded on an historic
-basis, and but little fiction was required to heighten the startling
-interest of the narrative.</p>
-
-<p>Valentine Guillois, there is very little doubt, is intended for the
-Author himself, with all his qualities and defects. When he first
-reached the New World, he was the true, reckless Parisian; but constant
-intercourse with nature rendered him a generous and thoughtful friend
-of humanity. So soon as he returned to civilization, he began recording
-the history of his past life; not so much as a livelihood, as for
-the pleasure he felt in living once again the life of excitement and
-adventure which he had known among the Indians. Hence his books are
-written without an effort; they flow spontaneously from his pen; and the
-absence of artistic effect is the best guarantee of their truthfulness.</p>
-
-<p>It is not surprising, consequently, that M. Aimard's books have met
-with such extensive popularity. They have been translated into nearly
-every modern language, and the Author is now generally recognised as the
-French Cooper. The reception given to his stories in this country has
-been most flattering, and each day heightens their popularity. Hence
-it is not too much to assume that they will become standard works,
-especially with young readers, for whom they are especially adapted;
-because M. Aimard has never yet written a line which could prove
-offensive to the most delicate mind.</p>
-
-<p>
-<span style="margin-left: 32em;">L.W.</span><br />
-</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4>CONTENTS.</h4>
-
-
-<div class="center" style="font-size: 0.8em;">
-<table border="0" cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" summary="">
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">I.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_I">THE CHAPARRAL</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">II.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_II">THE FOSTER BROTHERS</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">III.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_III">THE RESOLUTION</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">IV.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">THE EXECUTION</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">V.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_V">THE PASSAGE</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">VI.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">THE LINDA</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">VII.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">HUSBAND AND WIFE</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">VIII.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">THE DARK-HEARTS</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">IX.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">IN THE STREET</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">X.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_X">SWORD-THRUSTS</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">XI.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">GENERAL BUSTAMENTE</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">XII.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">THE SPY</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">XIII.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">LOVE</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">XIV.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">THE QUINTA VERDE</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">XV.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_XV">THE DEPARTURE</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">XVI.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">THE MEETING</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">XVII.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVII">THE PUELCHES</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">XVIII.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII">THE BLACK JACKAL</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">XIX.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_XIX">TWO OLD FRIENDS</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">XX.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_XX">THE SORCERER</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">XXI.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXI">THE OBSEQUIES OF AN APO-ULMEN</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">XXII.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXII">EXPLANATIONS</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">XXIII.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIII">THE CHINGANA</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">XXIV.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIV">THE TWO ULMENS</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">XXV.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXV">THE SUN-TIGER</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">XXVI.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVI">THE MATRICIDE</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">XXVII.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVII">THE JUSTICE OF THE DARK-HEARTS</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">XXVIII.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXVIII">THE TREATY OF PEACE</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">XXIX.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXIX">THE ABDUCTION</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">XXX.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXX">THE PROTEST</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">XXXI.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXI">SPANIARD AND INDIAN</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">XXXII.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXII">IN THE MOUNTAIN</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">XXXIII.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIII">ON THE WATCH</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">XXXIV.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIV">FACE TO FACE</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">XXXV.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXV">THE REVOLT</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">XXXVI.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVI">THE LION AT BAY</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">XXXVII.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVII">THE TRUCE</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">XXXVIII.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXVIII">TWO ROGUISH PROFILES</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">XXXIX.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_XXXIX">THE WOUNDED MAN</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">XL.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_XL">ARAUCANIAN DIPLOMACY</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">XLI.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_XLI">THE COUNCIL</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">XLII.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_XLII">THE NIGHT JOURNEY</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">XLIII.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_XLIII">TWO HATREDS</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">XLIV.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_XLIV">THE RETURN TO VALDIVIA</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">XLV.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_XLV">THE FATHER REVEALS HIMSELF</a></td></tr>
-<tr><td align="left"></td><td align="right">XLVI.</td><td align="left"><a href="#CHAPTER_XLVI">CURUMILLA</a></td></tr>
-</table></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h4><a id="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I.</h4>
-
-<h3>THE CHAPARRAL.</h3>
-
-
-
-<p>During my last sojourn in America, chance, or rather my good star, led
-me to form an acquaintance with one of those hunters, or wood rangers,
-the type of whom has been immortalized by Cooper, in his poetical
-personage, <i>Leather-Stockings</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The strange circumstance by which we were brought together was as
-follows. Towards the end of July, 1855, I had left Galveston, terrified
-at the fevers prevalent there, which are so fatal to Europeans, with the
-intention of visiting the north-west portion of Texas, a country I was
-then unacquainted with.</p>
-
-<p>A Spanish proverb somewhere says, "It is better to go alone than in
-bad company;" and, like all other proverbs, this possesses a certain
-foundation of truth, particularly in America, where the traveller is
-exposed at each instant to the chance of meeting rogues of every hue,
-who, thanks to their seducing exterior, charm him, win his confidence,
-and take advantage of the first occasion to remorselessly plunder and
-assassinate him.</p>
-
-<p>I had profited by the proverb, and, like a shrewd old traveller of the
-prairies, as I knew no one who inspired me with sufficient sympathy
-to lead me to make him my travelling companion, I had bravely set out
-alone, clothed in the picturesque dress of the inhabitants of the
-country, armed to the teeth, and mounted upon an excellent half wild
-horse, which had cost me twenty-five piastres&mdash;an enormous sum in those
-countries, where horses are considered as worth little or nothing.</p>
-
-<p>I carelessly wandered here and there, living that nomadic life which
-is so full of attractions; at times stopping at a <i>toldería</i>, at
-others encamping in the desert, hunting wild animals, and plunging
-deeper and deeper into unknown regions. I had, in this fashion, passed
-through, without any untoward accident, Fredericksburgh, the Llana
-Braunfels, and had just left Castroville, on my way to Quichi. Like
-all Spanish-American villages, Castroville is nothing but a miserable
-agglomeration of ruined cabins, cut at right angles by streets choked
-with weeds, growing undisturbed, and concealing multitudes of ants,
-reptiles, and even rabbits of a very small breed, which spring up
-beneath the feet of the few passengers. The <i>pueblo</i> is bounded on the
-west by the Medina, a slender thread of water, almost dry in the great
-heat seasons; and on the east by thickly-wooded hills, the dark green of
-which forms a pleasing contrast with the pale blue of the sky.</p>
-
-<p>At Galveston I had undertaken to deliver a letter to an inhabitant of
-Castroville. The worthy man lived in this village like La Fontaine's rat
-in the depths of its Dutch cheese. Charmed by the arrival of a stranger,
-who, no doubt, brought him news for which he had been long anxious, he
-received me in the most cordial manner, and thought of every expedient
-to detain me. Unfortunately, the little I had seen of Castroville had
-sufficed to completely disgust me with it, and my only wish was to get
-out of it as quickly as possible. My host, in despair at seeing all
-his advances repulsed, at length consented to allow me to continue my
-journey.</p>
-
-<p>"Adieu, then," he said, warmly pressing my hand, with a sigh of regret;
-"since you are determined to go, may God protect you! You are wrong
-in setting out so late; the road you have to travel is dangerous; the
-<i>Indios bravos</i> are up; they assassinate without mercy all the whites
-who fall into their hands&mdash;beware!"</p>
-
-<p>I smiled at this warning, which I took for a last effort of the worthy
-man to detain me.</p>
-
-<p>"Bah!" I replied gaily; "the Indians and I are too old acquaintances for
-me to fear anything on their account."</p>
-
-<p>My host shook his head sorrowfully, and retreated into his hut, making
-me a last farewell greeting. I again set forward. I soon began to
-reflect that it was full late, and pressed my horse, in order to pass,
-before nightfall, a <i>chaparral</i>, or large thicket of underwood, of at
-least two miles in length, against which my host had particularly warned
-me. This ill-famed spot had a very sinister aspect. The mezquite, the
-acacia, and the cactus constituted its sole vegetation, while here and
-there, whitened bones and planted crosses plainly designated places
-where murders had been committed. Beyond that extended a vast plain,
-called the Leona, peopled by animals of every description. This plain,
-covered by grass at least two feet in height, was dotted at intervals
-with thickets of trees, upon which warbled thousands of golden-throated
-starlings, cardinals, and bluebirds. I was anxious to reach the
-Leona, which I saw in the distance; but ere I did so, I had to cross
-the chaparral. After examining my weapons, and looking carefully in
-all directions, as I could perceive nothing positively suspicious, I
-resolutely spurred my horse forward, determined, if attacked, to sell my
-life as dearly as possible.</p>
-
-<p>The sun, in the meantime, was sinking rapidly towards the horizon, the
-ruddy hues of closing day tinged with their changing reflections the
-summits of the wooded hills, and a fresh breeze agitated the branches
-of the trees with mysterious murmurs. In this country, where there is
-no twilight, night was not long in enveloping me in thick darkness, and
-that before I had passed through two-thirds of the chaparral.</p>
-
-<p>I was beginning to hope I should reach the Leona safe and sound, when,
-all at once, my horse made a violent bound on one side, pricking up its
-ears, and snorting loudly. The sudden shock almost threw me out of the
-saddle, and it was not without trouble that I recovered the mastery
-over my horse, which displayed signs of the greatest terror. As always
-happens in such cases, I instinctively looked round me for the cause of
-this panic; and soon the truth was revealed to me. A cold perspiration
-bedewed my brow, and a shudder of terror ran through my whole frame, at
-the horrible spectacle which met my eyes. Five dead human bodies lay
-stretched beneath the trees, within ten paces of me. Among them was
-one of a woman, and one of a girl about fourteen years of age. They
-all belonged to the white race. They appeared to have fought long and
-obstinately before they fell; they were literally covered with wounds;
-and long arrows, with jagged barbs, and painted red, stood out from the
-bodies, which they had pierced through and through. The victims had all
-been scalped. It was evidently the work of Indians, marked with their
-sanguinary rage, and their inveterate hatred for the white race. The
-form and colour of the arrows told me that the perpetrators of this
-atrocity were the Apaches, the most cruel plunderers of the desert.
-Around the bodies I observed fragments of both wagons and furniture. The
-unfortunate beings, assassinated with refined cruelty, had, no doubt,
-been poor emigrants on their way to Castroville.</p>
-
-<p>At the aspect of this heartbreaking spectacle, I cannot express the pity
-and grief which weighed upon my spirits; high in the air, urubus and
-vultures hovered with lazy wings over the bodies, uttering lugubrious
-cries of joy, whilst in the depths of the chaparral the wolves and
-jaguars began to growl portentously.</p>
-
-<p>I cast a melancholy glance around: all immediately near to me was quiet.
-The Apaches had, according to all appearances, surprised the emigrants
-during a halt. Gutted bales were still ranged in a symmetrical circle,
-and a fire, near which was a heap of dry wood, was not yet extinguished.</p>
-
-<p>"No!" said I to myself, "whatever may happen, I will not leave
-Christians without burial, to become, in this desert, the prey of wild
-beasts."</p>
-
-<p>My resolution, once formed, was soon carried into execution. Springing
-to the ground, I hobbled my horse, gave it some provender, and cast some
-branches of wood upon the fire, which soon sparkled and sent into the
-air a column of bright flame. Among the necessaries of the emigrants
-were spades, pickaxes, and other agricultural instruments, which, being
-of no use to the Indians, they had disdainfully left behind them. I
-seized a spade, and, after having carefully explored the environs
-of my encampment, to assure myself that no immediate danger need be
-apprehended, I set to work to dig a grave.</p>
-
-<p>The night had now set in; one of those American nights, clear,
-silent, full of intoxicating odours, and mysterious melodies chanted
-by the desert in praise of God. Extraordinary to say, all my fears
-had vanished, as if by enchantment! Though alone in this sinister
-place, close to these frightfully-mutilated carcasses, watched in the
-darkness, no doubt, by the unseen eyes of wild beasts, and, perhaps,
-of the murderous Indians, some incomprehensible influence sustained
-me, and gave me strength to accomplish the rude but sacred task I had
-undertaken. Instead of thinking of the dangers which surrounded me, I
-found myself yielding to a pensive melancholy. I thought of these poor
-people, who had come from distant lands, full of hope for the future,
-to seek in the New World a little of the comfort and well-being which
-were denied to them at home, and who, scarcely landed, had fallen, in an
-obscure corner of the desert, by the hands of ferocious savages. They
-had left in their own country friends, perhaps relations, to whom their
-fate would for ever remain a mystery, and who would for years reckon
-the hours with anxiety, looking for their much-wished return, or for
-intelligence of their success in their bold undertaking.</p>
-
-<p>Except two or three alarms caused by the rustling of the leaves in the
-bushes, nothing occurred to interrupt my melancholy duty. In less than
-three-quarters of an hour I had dug a grave large enough to contain the
-five bodies. After extracting the arrows by which they were transfixed,
-I raised them one after the other in my arms, and laid them gently
-side by side at the bottom of the grave. I then hastened to throw in
-the mould again, till it was level with the sod; and that being done,
-I dragged upon the surface all the large stones I could find, to keep
-wild beasts from profaning the dead. This religious duty accomplished,
-I breathed a deep sigh of satisfaction, and bowing my head towards the
-ground, I mentally addressed a short prayer to the Almighty, for the
-unfortunate beings I had buried.</p>
-
-<p>Upon raising my head, I uttered a cry of surprise and terror, while at
-the same time mechanically feeling for my revolver; for, without the
-least noise having given me warning of his approach, a man was standing
-within four paces of me, watching me earnestly, and leaning on his long
-rifle. Two magnificent Newfoundland dogs were lying carelessly but
-quietly at his feet. On observing my gesture, the unknown smiled with a
-kindly expression, and holding out his hand to me over the grave, said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Fear nothing! I am a friend. You have buried these poor people; <i>I</i>
-have avenged them&mdash;their assassins are dead!"</p>
-
-<p>I silently pressed the hand that was so frankly extended to me.
-Acquaintance was formed&mdash;we were friends&mdash;we are so still! A few minutes
-later we were seated near the fire, supping together with a good
-appetite, while the dogs kept watch against intruders.</p>
-
-<p>The companion I had fallen in with in so curious a manner was a man of
-about forty-five years of age, although he did not appear to be more
-than thirty-two. He was tall and well made; his broad shoulders and
-muscular limbs denoting extraordinary strength and agility. He wore the
-picturesque hunter's costume in all its purity, that is to say, the
-<i>capote</i>, or surtout (which is nothing but a kind of blanket worn as a
-robe, fastened to the shoulders, and falling in long folds behind), a
-shirt of striped cotton, large <i>mitasses</i> (drawers of doeskin, stitched
-with hair, fastened at distances, and ornamented with little bells),
-leather gaiters, moccasins of elk skin, braided with beads and porcupine
-quills, and a checked woollen belt, from which hung his knife, tobacco
-pouch, powder horn, pistols, and medicine bag. His headdress consisted
-of a cap made of the skin of a beaver, the tail of which fell between
-his shoulders. This man was a type of a hardy race of adventurers who
-traverse America in all directions. A primitive race, longing for
-open air, space, and liberty, opposed to our ideas of civilization,
-and consequently destined to disappear before the immigration of the
-laborious races, whose powerful agents of conquest are steam and the
-application of mechanical inventions of all kinds.</p>
-
-<p>This hunter was a Frenchman, and his frank, manly countenance, his
-picturesque language, his open and engaging manners, notwithstanding
-his long abode in America, had preserved a reflex of the mother country
-which awakened sympathy and created interest.</p>
-
-<p>All the countries of the New World were familiar to him; he had lived
-more than twenty years in the depths of the woods, and had been engaged
-in dangerous and distant excursions among the Indian tribes. Hence,
-although myself well initiated in the customs of the redskins, and
-though a great part of my existence had been passed in the desert, I
-have felt myself often shudder involuntarily at the recital of his
-adventures. When seated beside him on the banks of the Rio Gila, during
-an excursion we had undertaken into the prairies, he would at times
-allow himself to be carried away by his remembrances, and relate to me,
-as he smoked his Indian pipe, the strange history of the early days
-of his abode in the New World. It is one of these recitals I am about
-to lay before my readers&mdash;the first in order of date, since it is the
-history of the events which led him to become a wood ranger. I do not
-venture to hope that my readers will take the interest in it which it
-excited in me; but I beg them to have the kindness to recollect that
-this narrative was told me in the desert, amidst that grand, vast, and
-powerful nature, unknown to the inhabitants of old Europe, and that I
-had it from the lips of the man who had been the hero.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>THE FOSTER BROTHERS.</h3>
-
-
-<p>On the 31st of December, 1834, at eleven o'clock in the evening, a man
-of about twenty-five years of age, of handsome person and countenance,
-and aristocratic appearance, was sitting, or rather reclining, in a
-luxurious easy chair, near the mantelpiece, within which sparkled a
-fire that the advanced season rendered indispensable. This personage
-was the Count Maxime Edouard Louis de Prébois-Crancé. His countenance,
-of a cadaverous paleness, formed a striking contrast with his black
-curly hair, which fell in disorder upon his shoulders, covered by
-a large-patterned damask dressing gown. His brows were contracted,
-and his eyes were fixed with feverish impatience upon the dial of a
-charming Louis Quinze clock, whilst his left hand, hanging carelessly
-by his side, played with the silky ears of a magnificent Newfoundland
-dog which lay by his side. The room in which the Count was sitting was
-furnished with all the refinement of comfort invented by modern luxury.
-A four-branched chandelier, with rose-coloured wax candles, placed upon
-a table, was scarcely sufficient to enliven the room, and only spread
-around a dim, uncertain light. Without, the rain was dashing against
-the windows violently; and the wind sighed in mysterious murmurs, which
-disposed the mind to melancholy. When the clock struck the hour the
-Count started up, as if aroused from a dream. He passed his thin white
-hand across his moist brow, and said, in a dissatisfied tone&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"He will not come!"</p>
-
-<p>But at that moment the dog, which had been so motionless, sprang up and
-bounded towards the door, wagging its tail with joy. The door opened,
-the <i>portière</i> was lifted by a firm hand, and a man appeared.</p>
-
-<p>"Here you are at last!" the Count exclaimed, advancing towards the
-newcomer, who had great trouble to get rid of the caresses of the dog.
-"I had begun to be afraid that you, like the rest, had forgotten me."</p>
-
-<p>"I do not understand you, brother, but trust you will explain yourself,"
-the other replied. "Come, that will do, Cæsar; lie down! you are a very
-good dog, but lie down!"</p>
-
-<p>And drawing an easy chair towards the fire, he sat down at the other
-side of the fire, in front of the Count, who had resumed his place. The
-dog lay down between them.</p>
-
-<p>The personage so anxiously expected by the Count formed a strange
-contrast with him; for, just as M. de Prébois-Crancé united in himself
-all the qualities which physically distinguish nobility of race, the
-other displayed all the lively, energetic strength of a true child of
-the people. He was a man of twenty-six years of age; tall, thin, and
-perfectly well proportioned; while his face, bronzed by the sun, and
-his marked features, lit up by blue eyes sparkling with intelligence,
-wore an expression of bravery, mildness, and loyalty of character that
-created sympathy at first sight. He was dressed in the elegant uniform
-of a quartermaster sergeant of the Spahis, and the cross of the legion
-of honour glittered on his breast. With his head leaning on his right
-hand, a pensive brow and a thoughtful eye, he examined his friend
-attentively, whilst twisting his long, silky light-coloured moustache
-with the other hand.</p>
-
-<p>The Count, shrinking before his earnest look, which appeared trying to
-read his most secret thoughts, broke the silence abruptly.</p>
-
-<p>"You have been a long time in responding to my message," he said.</p>
-
-<p>"This is the second time you have addressed that reproach to me, Louis,"
-the soldier replied, taking a paper from his breast; "you forget the
-terms of the note which your groom brought yesterday to my quarters."</p>
-
-<p>And he was preparing to read.</p>
-
-<p>"It is useless to read it," said the Count, with a melancholy smile. "I
-acknowledge I am in the wrong."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, then, let us see," said the Spahi gaily, "what this serious
-affair is which makes you stand in need of me. Explain: is there a woman
-to be carried off?&mdash;Have you a duel on hand?&mdash;Tell me."</p>
-
-<p>"Nothing that you can possibly imagine," the Count interrupted him
-bitterly; "therefore do not waste time in useless surmises."</p>
-
-<p>"What the devil is it, then?"</p>
-
-<p>"I am going to blow out my brains."</p>
-
-<p>The young man uttered these words with so firm and resolute an accent,
-that the soldier started in spite of himself, and bent an anxious glance
-upon the speaker.</p>
-
-<p>"You believe me mad, do you not?" the Count continued, who guessed his
-friend's thoughts. "No, I am not mad, Valentine; I am only at the bottom
-of an abyss from which I can only escape by death or infamy, and I
-prefer death."</p>
-
-<p>The soldier made no reply. With an energetic gesture he pushed back his
-chair, and began to walk about the room with hurried steps. The Count
-had allowed his head to sink upon his breast in a state of perfect
-prostration of mind. After a long silence, during which the fury of the
-storm without increased, Valentine resumed his seat.</p>
-
-<p>"A very strong reason must have obliged you to take such a
-determination," he said coolly; "I will not endeavour to combat it; but
-I command you, by our friendship, to tell me fully what has led you to
-form it. I am your foster brother, Louis; we have grown up together; our
-ideas have been too long in common, our friendship is too strong and too
-fervent for you to refuse to satisfy me."</p>
-
-<p>"To what purpose?" cried the Count, impatiently; "my sorrows are of a
-nature which none but he who experiences them can comprehend."</p>
-
-<p>"A bad pretext, brother," replied the soldier, in a rough tone; "the
-sorrows we dare not avow are of a kind that make us blush."</p>
-
-<p>"Valentine," said the Count, with a flashing eye, "it is ill judged to
-speak so."</p>
-
-<p>"On the contrary, it is quite right," replied the young man, warmly. "I
-love you, I owe you the truth; why should I deceive you? No, you know my
-frankness; therefore do not hope that I shall listen to you with my eyes
-shut. If you want to be flattered in your last moments, why send for me?
-Is it to applaud your death? If so, brother, farewell! I will retire,
-for I have nothing to do here. You great gentlemen, who have only known
-the trouble of coming into the world, know nothing of life but its joys;
-at the first roseleaf which chance happens to ruffle in your bed of
-happiness, you think yourselves lost, and appeal to that greatest of all
-cowardices, suicide."</p>
-
-<p>"Valentine!" the Count cried angrily.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," continued the young man, with increased energy, "I repeat, that
-supreme cowardice! Man is no more at liberty to quit life when he
-fancies he is tired of it, than the soldier is to quit his post when he
-comes face to face with his country's enemy. Your sorrows, indeed! I
-know well what they are."</p>
-
-<p>"You know?" demanded the Count with astonishment.</p>
-
-<p>"All&mdash;listen to me; and when I have told you my thoughts, why, kill
-yourself if you like. Pardieu! do you think when I came here I did not
-know why you summoned me? A gladiator, far too weak to fight the good
-fight, you have cast yourself defencelessly among the wild beasts of
-this terrible arena called Paris&mdash;and you have fallen, as was sure to
-be the case. But remember, the death you contemplate will complete your
-dishonour in the eyes of all, instead of reinstating you or surrounding
-you with the halo of false glory you are ambitious of."</p>
-
-<p>"Valentine! Valentine!" cried the Count, striking the table forcibly
-with his clenched hand, "what gives you a right to speak to me thus?"</p>
-
-<p>"My friendship," the soldier replied, energetically, "and the position
-you have yourself placed me in by sending for me. Two causes reduce you
-to despair. These two causes are, in the first place, your love for
-a coquettish woman, a Creole, who has played with your heart as the
-panther of her own savannahs plays with the inoffensive animals she is
-preparing to devour.&mdash;Is that true?"</p>
-
-<p>The young man made no reply. With his elbows on the table, his face
-buried in his hands, he remained motionless, apparently insensible to
-the reproaches of his foster brother. Valentine continued&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Secondly, when, in order to win favour in her eyes, you have
-compromised your fortune, and squandered all that your father had left
-you, this woman flits away as she came, rejoicing over the mischief
-she has done, over the victims she has left on the path she has trod,
-leaving to you and to so many others the despair and the shame of having
-been the sport of a coquette. What urges you to seek refuge in death is
-not the loss of fortune, but the impossibility of following this woman,
-the sole cause of all your misfortunes. I defy you to contradict me."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, I admit all that is true. It is that alone which kills me. What
-care I for the loss of fortune? She alone is the object of my ambition!
-I love her&mdash;I love her&mdash;I tell you, so that I could struggle against
-the whole world to obtain her!" the young man exclaimed with great
-excitement. "Oh, if I could but hope! Hope&mdash;a word void of meaning,
-invented by the ambitious, always implying something unattainable! Do
-you not plainly see the truth of what I say? There is nothing left me
-but to die!"</p>
-
-<p>Valentine contemplated him for some minutes with a sad countenance.
-Suddenly his brow cleared, his eye sparkled; he laid his hand upon the
-Count's shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>"Is this, then, more than a caprice? Do you really love this woman?" he
-said.</p>
-
-<p>"Have I not told you that I am ready to die for her?"</p>
-
-<p>"Ay; and you told me at the same time that you would struggle with the
-whole world to obtain her."</p>
-
-<p>"I did&mdash;and would."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, then," continued Valentine, fixing his eyes earnestly upon him,
-"I can help you to find this woman again&mdash;I can."</p>
-
-<p>"You can?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, I can."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh! you are mad! She has left Paris, and no one knows into what region
-of America she has retreated."</p>
-
-<p>"Of what consequence is that?"</p>
-
-<p>"And then, besides, I am ruined!"</p>
-
-<p>"So much the better."</p>
-
-<p>"Valentine, be careful of what you say," the young man remarked with a
-sigh; "in spite of my reason, I allow myself to believe you."</p>
-
-<p>"Hope, man! hope, I tell you."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, no; no, that is impossible!"</p>
-
-<p>"Nothing is impossible; that is a word invented by the impotent and the
-cowardly. I repeat that I not only will find this woman for you again,
-but that she&mdash;she herself, mind&mdash;shall be afraid lest you should despise
-her love."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!"</p>
-
-<p>"Who knows? You yourself may then, perhaps, reject it."</p>
-
-<p>"Valentine! Valentine!"</p>
-
-<p>"Well, to obtain this glorious result, I only ask two years."</p>
-
-<p>"So long?"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, such is man!" cried the soldier, with a faint, pitying laugh. "But
-an instant ago, and you were anxious to die, because the word had never
-stood in its true light before you; and now you have not the courage to
-look forward, or wait two years, which constitute only a few minutes of
-human life!"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, but&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Be satisfied, brother&mdash;be satisfied! If in two years I have not
-fulfilled my promise, I myself will load your pistols&mdash;and then&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Well, and then?"</p>
-
-<p>"And then you shall not die alone," he said coolly.</p>
-
-<p>The Count looked at him. Valentine seemed transfigured: his countenance
-wore an expression of indomitable energy, which his foster brother had
-never observed in it before; his eyes sparkled with unwonted brilliancy.
-The young man avowed himself conquered; he took his friend's hand, and
-pressing it warmly, said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"I agree!"</p>
-
-<p>"You now, then, belong to me?"</p>
-
-<p>"I give myself entirely up to you."</p>
-
-<p>"That's well!"</p>
-
-<p>"But what will you do?"</p>
-
-<p>"Listen to me attentively," the soldier said, sinking back into his
-chair, and motioning to his friend to resume his seat. At this moment
-the clock struck the hour of midnight, and, from a feeling for which
-they could not account, the young men listened silently and reflectively
-to the twelve strokes which resounded at equal intervals upon the bell.</p>
-
-<p>When the echo of the last stroke had ceased to vibrate, Valentine lit a
-cigar, and turning towards Louis, whose eyes were intensely fixed upon
-him, "Now, then," he said slowly, emitting a puff of thin blue smoke,
-which went curling gracefully up towards the ceiling.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>THE RESOLUTION.</h3>
-
-
-<p>"I am listening," said Louis, leaning forward as if to hear the better.</p>
-
-<p>Valentine resumed with a melancholy smile.</p>
-
-<p>"We have now reached the 1st of January, 1835," said he; "with the last
-vibration of midnight your existence as a gentleman has come to an end.
-From this time you are about to commence a life of trials and struggles;
-in a word, you are about to become a man!"</p>
-
-<p>The Count gave him an inquiring glance.</p>
-
-<p>"I will explain myself," Valentine continued; "but in order to do that,
-you must, in the first place, allow me, in a few words, to recall your
-history to you."</p>
-
-<p>"Surely, I am well enough acquainted with that," interrupted the Count,
-in a tone that displayed impatience.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, perhaps you are; but, at all events, listen to my version of it;
-if I err, put me right."</p>
-
-<p>"Follow your own humour," the Count replied, sinking back into his chair
-with the air of a man whom politeness obliges to listen to a tiresome
-discourse.</p>
-
-<p>Though he saw it, Valentine appeared to take no notice of this movement
-on the part of his foster brother. He relit his cigar, which he had
-allowed to go out, patted the dog, whose great head was lying upon his
-knees, and began, as if convinced that Louis gave him the most profound
-attention.</p>
-
-<p>"Your history is that of almost every man of your rank," said he. "Your
-ancestors, whose name can be traced to the Crusades, left you at your
-birth a noble title, and a hundred thousand francs a year. Rich, without
-having had occasion to employ your faculties to gain your fortune,
-and consequently ignorant of the real value of money, you spent it
-heedlessly, believing it to be inexhaustible. This is just what has
-happened; only, one day, when you least expected it, the hideous spectre
-of ruin rose up suddenly before you, and you had a glimpse of want,
-that is, of the necessity for labour; and then you drew back terrified,
-declaring there was no refuge but in death."</p>
-
-<p>"All that is perfectly true," the Count interrupted; "but you forget to
-mention, that before forming this last resolution, I took care to put
-my affairs in order, and to pay all my creditors. I then became my own
-master, and had a right to dispose of my life as I thought fit."</p>
-
-<p>"Not at all. And it is this which your education as a gentleman has
-prevented you from understanding. Your life is not your own; it is
-a loan which God has made you. It is, consequently, nothing but an
-expectation, a <i>waiting</i>, a passage: for this reason it is short,
-but the profit of it is due to humanity. Every man who wastes the
-faculties which he holds from God in orgies and debaucheries, commits a
-robbery upon the great human family. Remember that we are all mutually
-responsible for one another, and that we ought to employ our faculties
-for the advantage of the whole."</p>
-
-<p>"For Heaven's sake, brother, a truce to your sermons! Such theories,
-more or less paradoxical, may succeed with certain people, but&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Brother," Valentine interrupted, "do not speak so. In spite of
-yourself, your pride of race dictates words which you will ere long
-regret. Certain people! there you have let slip the great word. Oh,
-Louis, Louis! how many things you have yet to learn! But that we may
-know what we are about, reckoning all your resources, how much have you
-left?"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, I scarcely know! A pitiful sum."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, but how much?"</p>
-
-<p>"Good Heavens! some forty thousand francs, I suppose, at most, which may
-amount to sixty thousand by the sale of these luxurious trifles," the
-Count said carelessly.</p>
-
-<p>Valentine started up in his chair.</p>
-
-<p>"Sixty thousand francs!" he cried; "and you are in despair! and have
-made up your mind to die! Senseless fellow! why, these sixty thousand
-francs, well employed, are a fortune! they will enable you to find the
-woman you love! How many poor devils would fancy themselves rich with
-such a sum!"</p>
-
-<p>"What do you mean to do, then?"</p>
-
-<p>"You shall see. What is the name of the lady you are in love with?"</p>
-
-<p>"Doña Rosario del Valle."</p>
-
-<p>"Very well. She has, you say, gone to America?"</p>
-
-<p>"Ten days ago; but I, in justice, must observe to you, that Doña
-Rosario, whom you do not know, is a noble and amiable girl, who has
-never lent an ear to one of my flatteries, or given favourable heed to
-the ruinous extravagances which I committed to please her."</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, that is very possible! why, then, should I seek to rob you of this
-sweet illusion? Only it makes me the more puzzled to perceive how, under
-these circumstances, you could manage to melt your fortune, which was
-considerable, like a lump of butter in the sun."</p>
-
-<p>"Here! read this note from my broker."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" said Valentine, pushing back the paper; "you have been dabbling
-on the Stock Exchange, have you! Everything is now easily explained, my
-poor pigeon; the kites have plucked you nicely! Well, brother, you must
-take your revenge."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, I ask nothing better!" said the young man, knitting his brows.</p>
-
-<p>"We are of the same age; my mother's milk nourished us both; in the
-eyes of God we are brothers! I will make a man of you! I will help
-you to put on that armour of brass which will render you invincible.
-Whilst you, protected by your name and your fortune, allowed life to
-glide luxuriously away, only plucking its flowers as it passed, I, a
-poor wretch wandering over the rough pavement of Paris, carried on a
-gigantic struggle to obtain a mere existence; a struggle of every hour
-and every minute, where the victory for me was a morsel of bread, and
-experience most dearly bought; for often, when I held horses, sold
-theatre checks, or acted clown to a mountebank&mdash;in fact, when I went
-through the thousand impossible shifts of the Bohemian, depression and
-discouragement nearly choked me; often and often have I felt my burning
-brow and throbbing temples clasped in the pinching vice of want; but I
-resisted, I girded myself up against adversity; never did I allow myself
-to be conquered, although I left upon the thorns of my rugged path many
-of the rags of my most fondly-cherished illusions; while my heart,
-writhing with despair, has bled from twenty wounds at once! Courage,
-Louis! henceforth there will be two of us to fight the battle! You shall
-be the head to conceive, I the arm to execute; you the intelligence, I
-the strength! Now the struggle will be equal, for we will sustain one
-another. Trust in me, my brother; a day will come when success will
-crown our efforts!"</p>
-
-<p>"I can fully appreciate your devotion, and I accept it. Am I not, at
-present, your property? Entertain no fear of my resisting you. But I
-cannot help telling you that I fear all my attempts will be in vain, and
-that we shall be forced, sooner or later, to fall back upon that last
-means which you now prevent me having recourse to."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, thou man of little faith!" Valentine said, cheerfully; "on the road
-which we are about to take, fortune will be our slave!"</p>
-
-<p>Louis could not repress a smile.</p>
-
-<p>"We must, at all events, depend upon the aid of chance in what we are
-about to undertake," he said.</p>
-
-<p>"Chance! chance is the hope of fools; the strong man commands it."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, but what do you mean to do?"</p>
-
-<p>"The lady you love is in America, is she not?"</p>
-
-<p>"I have already told you so several times."</p>
-
-<p>"Very well, then, we must go thither."</p>
-
-<p>"But I do not know even in what part of America she resides."</p>
-
-<p>"Of what consequence is that? The New World is the country of gold&mdash;the
-true region of adventurers! We shall retrieve our fortunes whilst
-searching for her; and is that so disagreeable a thing? Tell me&mdash;this
-lady was born somewhere?"</p>
-
-<p>"She is a Chilian."</p>
-
-<p>"Good! she has gone back to Chili, then; and it is there we shall find
-her."</p>
-
-<p>Louis looked at his foster brother for a moment, with a species of
-respectful admiration.</p>
-
-<p>"What! do you seriously mean that you will do this, brother?" he said,
-in an agitated voice.</p>
-
-<p>"Without hesitation."</p>
-
-<p>"Abandon the military career which offers you so many chances of
-success? I know that in three months you will be an officer."</p>
-
-<p>"I have ceased to be a soldier since the morning; I have found a
-substitute."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, that is not possible!"</p>
-
-<p>"Ay, but it is done."</p>
-
-<p>"But your old mother, my nurse, whose only support you are!"</p>
-
-<p>"Out of what you have left we will give her a few thousand francs,
-which, joined to my pension, will suffice for her to live on till we
-come back."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh," said the young man, "I cannot accept of such a sacrifice&mdash;my
-honour forbids it!"</p>
-
-<p>"Unfortunately, brother," Valentine said, in a tone which silenced the
-Count, "you have it not in your power to prevent it. In acting as I
-propose to do I am only discharging a sacred duty."</p>
-
-<p>"I do not understand you."</p>
-
-<p>"What is the use of explaining it to you?"</p>
-
-<p>"I insist."</p>
-
-<p>"Very good; and, perhaps, it will be better. Listen:&mdash;When, after
-having nursed you, my mother restored you to your family, my father fell
-sick, and died at the end of an illness of eight months, leaving my
-mother and myself in the greatest want; the little we possessed had been
-spent in medicines, and in paying the doctor for his visits. We ought to
-have had recourse to your family, who would, no doubt, have relieved us;
-but my mother would never consent to it. 'The Count de Prébois-Crancé
-has done as much as he ought,' she remarked, 'he shall not be troubled
-any more.'"</p>
-
-<p>"She was wrong," said Louis.</p>
-
-<p>"I know she was," Valentine replied. "In the meantime, hunger soon began
-to be felt. It was then I undertook all those impossible trades of which
-I just now spoke to you. One day, as I was carrying my cap round in the
-Place du Trône, after swallowing sabres and eating fire, to the great
-delight of the crowd, I found myself face to face with an officer of the
-Chasseurs d'Afrique, who looked at me with an air of pity and kindness
-that melted my heart within me. He led me away with him, made me relate
-my history, and insisted upon being conducted to the shed where I and
-my mother lived. At the sight of our misery the old soldier was much
-affected; a tear, which he could not restrain, flowed silently down his
-sunburnt cheek. Louis, that officer was your father."</p>
-
-<p>"My noble and good father!" the Count exclaimed, pressing his foster
-brother's hand.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes! yes, noble and good! he secured my mother a little annuity which
-enables her to live, and took me into his own regiment. Two years ago,
-during the last expedition against the Rey of Constantine, your father
-was struck by a bullet in his chest, and died at the end of two hours,
-calling upon his son."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," the young man said, with tears in his eyes, "I know he did."</p>
-
-<p>"But what you do not know, Louis, is, that at the point of death your
-father turned towards me&mdash;for, from the moment he had received his wound
-I had never left him."</p>
-
-<p>Louis again silently pressed the hand of Valentine, whilst the latter
-continued&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"'Valentine,' he said to me, in a faint voice, broken by the rattle of
-death, for the mortal agony had commenced, 'my son is left alone, and
-without experience; he has nobody but you, his foster brother. Watch
-over him&mdash;never abandon him! May I depend upon your promise? it will
-mitigate the pain of dying.' I knelt down beside him, and respectfully
-seizing the hand he held out to me, exclaimed&mdash;'Die in peace! in the
-hour of adversity I will be always by the side of your Louis. Two tears
-of joy at that awful hour dropped from your father's eyes; he said, in a
-faltering voice&mdash;'God has heard your oath and murmuring your name, and
-clasping my hand, he expired. Louis, I owe to your father the comfort
-my mother enjoys; I owe to your father the feelings that make me a man,
-and this cross which glitters on my breast. Can you not now comprehend,
-then, why I have spoken to you as I have done? While you held your
-course in your strength, I kept aloof; but now that the hour has arrived
-for accomplishing my vow, no human power can prevent me from doing so."</p>
-
-<p>The two young men were silent for a moment, and then Louis, laying his
-face on the soldier's honest chest, said, with a burst of tears&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"When shall we set out, brother?"</p>
-
-<p>The latter looked at him earnestly&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"You are fully resolved to commence a new life?"</p>
-
-<p>"Entirely!" Louis replied, in a firm tone.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you leave no regrets behind you?"</p>
-
-<p>"None."</p>
-
-<p>"You are ready to pass bravely through all the trials to which I may
-expose you?"</p>
-
-<p>"I am."</p>
-
-<p>"That is well, brother! it is thus I wish you to be. We will set out as
-soon as we have settled the balance of your past life. You must enter
-on the new existence I am about to open to you quite free from clogs or
-remembrances."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>On the 2nd of February, 1835, a packet boat belonging to the
-Trans-Atlantic Company left Havre, directing its course towards
-Valparaiso. On board this vessel, as passengers, were the Count de
-Prébois-Crancé, Valentine Guillois his foster brother, and Cæsar their
-Newfoundland dog&mdash;Cæsar, the only friend who had remained faithful to
-them, and whom they could not think of leaving behind. Upon the quay
-a woman of about sixty years of age, her face bathed in tears, stood
-with her eyes intently fixed upon the vessel as long as it remained in
-sight. When it had disappeared below the horizon, she cast a desponding
-glance around her, and with a heavy heart bent her steps towards a house
-situated at a small distance from the beach, where she remained three
-days.</p>
-
-<p>"Do what is right, happen what may!" she said, in a voice stifled by
-grief.</p>
-
-<p>This woman was the mother of Valentine Guillois. She was the most to be
-pitied, for she was left alone!</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>THE EXECUTION.</h3>
-
-
-<p>Towards the end of the year 1450, Chili was invaded by Prince
-Sinchiroca, afterwards Inca, who gained possession of the valley of
-Mapocho, then called Promocaces, that is to say, the place of dancing
-and rejoicing. The Peruvian government, however, was never able to
-establish itself in the country, on account of the armed opposition of
-the Promocians, then encamped between the rivers Rapel and Maulé. Hence,
-though the historian Garcilasso de la Vega may place the limits of the
-territory conquered by the Incas upon the river Maulé, everything proves
-they were upon the Rapel, for, near the confluence of the Cachapeul with
-the Tingerica, which from this point takes the name of Rapel, start the
-ruins of an ancient Peruvian fortress, constructed exactly like those of
-Callao and Asseray, in the province of Quito. These fortresses served to
-mark the frontier.</p>
-
-<p>The Spanish conqueror, Don Pedro de Valdivia, founded, on the 24th of
-February, 1541, the city of Santiago in a delightful position upon the
-left bank of the Rio Mapocho, at the entrance of a plain a hundred miles
-in extent, bounded by the Rio Parahuel, and the mountain of El Pardo,
-which has an elevation of not less than four thousand feet. This plain,
-which is also bathed by the Rio Maypo, forms a natural reservoir, in
-which the light soil brought down from the neighbouring heights has
-found a level, and created one of the richest territories of the New
-World.</p>
-
-<p>Santiago, which at a later period became the capital of Chili, is one of
-the finest cities in Spanish America. Its streets are broad, built in
-straight lines, and refreshed by <i>acequias</i>; or rivulets of clear and
-limpid water; while the houses, built of <i>adobes</i>, only one story high,
-on account of the earthquakes so frequent in this country, are vast,
-airy, and well situated. It possesses a great number of monuments, the
-most remarkable of which are the stone bridge of five arches, thrown
-over the Mapocho, and the Tajamar, or breakwater, formed of two brick
-walls, the interior one of which is filled with earth, and serves to
-protect the inhabitants from inundations. The Cordilleras, with their
-eternally snow-crowned summits, although eighty miles distant from
-the city, appear suspended over it, and present an aspect of the most
-majestic and imposing kind.</p>
-
-<p>On the 5th of May, 1835, towards ten o'clock in the evening, stifling
-heat oppressed the city; there was not a breath in the air, or a cloud
-in the heavens. Santiago, generally so joyous at this hour of the
-night, when beams from black eyes and smiles from rosy lips are seen at
-every balcony, and each window seems to challenge the passer-by with
-the twanging of <i>sambecuejas,</i> and snatches of Creole songs, appeared
-plunged in the deepest sadness. The balconies and the windows were
-filled, it is true, with the heads of men and women, packed together as
-closely as possible, but the expression of every face was serious, every
-look was thoughtful and uneasy: no smile, no joy could be witnessed; but
-on all sides were sorrowful brows, pale cheeks, and eyes filled with
-tears.</p>
-
-<p>Here and there in the streets numerous groups were stationed in the
-middle of the causeway, or upon the steps of the doors, conversing in a
-low voice, but with great vivacity. At every instant, orderly officers
-left the government palace, and galloped off in various directions.
-Detachments of troops quitted their barracks, and marched, with drums
-beating, to the Plaza Mayor, where they formed in line, passing silently
-amidst the terrified inhabitants. The Plaza Mayor on this evening
-afforded an exceptional appearance. Torches, waved about by individuals
-mixed with the crowd, threw their red dull reflections upon the
-assembled people, who seemed to be in expectation of some great event.</p>
-
-<p>But among all these people assembled on one spot, and whose number
-increased every second, not a cry, not a word could be heard. Only, at
-intervals, there arose a nameless murmur&mdash;a noise of the sea before a
-tempest&mdash;the whisper of a whole anxious people&mdash;the hoarse fury of a
-storm lashing all these oppressed breasts. The clock of the cathedral
-heavily and slowly struck ten.</p>
-
-<p>Scarce had the <i>serenos</i>, according to custom, chanted the hour, ere
-military commands were heard, and the crowd violently driven back in all
-directions, with cries and oaths, accompanied by blows from gunstocks,
-divided in two nearly equal parts, leaving between them a wide, free
-space. At this moment arose the sounds of religious chants, murmured in
-a low, monotonous tone, and a long procession of monks debouched upon
-the square. These monks all belonged to the order of the Brothers of
-Mercy. They walked slowly in two lines, with their hoods pulled down
-over their faces, their arms crossed upon their breasts, their heads
-hanging down, and chanting the <i>De Profundis</i>. In the middle of them ten
-penitents each bore an open coffin. Then came a squadron of cavalry,
-preceding a battalion of militiamen, in the centre of which body, ten
-men, bare headed, with their arms bound behind them, were conducted,
-each riding with his face toward the tail of a donkey, whose bridle
-was held by a monk of the order of Mercy; a detachment of lancers came
-immediately after, and closed this lugubrious procession.</p>
-
-<p>At the cry of halt, given by the commander of the troops drawn up
-upon the Plaza, the monks separated to the right and left, without
-interrupting their funeral chant, and the condemned remained alone in
-the middle of the space left free for them. These men were patriots,
-who had attempted to overthrow the established government, in order to
-substitute another, the more broad and democratic basis of which would
-be, as they thought, in better accordance with ideas of progress and the
-welfare of the nation. These patriots belonged to the first families of
-the country.</p>
-
-<p>The population of Santiago viewed with sullen despair the death of
-the men whom they considered as martyrs. It is even probable that a
-rising in their favour would have taken place, if General Don Poncho
-Bustamente, the minister at war, had not drawn out a military force
-capable of imposing upon the most determined, and obliging them to be
-silent spectators of the execution of men whom they could not save, but
-whom they entertained a fierce hope of avenging at a future day.</p>
-
-<p>The condemned alighted; they piously knelt, and confessed themselves to
-the monks of Mercy nearest to them, whilst a platoon of fifty soldiers
-took up a position within twenty paces of them. When their confession
-was completed, they rose up bravely, and taking each other by the hand,
-ranged themselves in a single line in front of the soldiers appointed
-to put them to death. In spite, however, of the great numbers of troops
-assembled on the Plaza, an ominous fermentation prevailed among the
-people. The crowd rocked about in all directions. Murmurs of sinister
-augury and curses, pronounced aloud against the agents of power, seemed
-to remind the latter that they had better finish the affair at once, if
-they did not wish to have their victims torn from their hands.</p>
-
-<p>General Bustamente, who calmly and stoically presided over this
-dismal ceremony, smiled with disdain at this expression of popular
-disapprobation. He waved his sword over his head and commanded "right
-about face," which was executed with the rapidity of lightning. The
-troops faced the insurgents on all sides; the front rank pointing their
-muskets at the citizens crowded together before them, whilst the others
-appeared to take aim at the balconies encumbered with people. This was
-followed by so dead a silence, that not a word was lost of the sentence
-read by the proper officer to the patriots&mdash;a sentence which condemned
-them to be shot as traitors, or accomplices in a conspiracy designed
-to overthrow the constituted government, and plunge their country into
-anarchy.</p>
-
-<p>The conspirators listened to their sentence with silent firmness; but
-when the officer, who trembled in every limb, had finished reading it,
-they all cried, as with one voice,</p>
-
-<p>"Viva la Patria! Viva la Libertad!"</p>
-
-<p>The General gave a signal, and a loud rolling of the drums drowned the
-voices of the condemned. A discharge of musketry resounded like a clap
-of thunder, and the ten martyrs fell, once again shouting their cry of
-liberty, a cry doomed to find an echo in the hearts of their terrified
-compatriots.</p>
-
-<p>The troops filed off, with shouldered arms, ensigns flying, and band at
-their head, past the dead bodies, and regained their barracks. When the
-General had disappeared with his escort, and the troops had left the
-Plaza, the people rushed in a mass towards the spot where the martyrs
-of their cause lay in a confused heap. Every one wished to offer them a
-last farewell, and to swear over their bodies to avenge them, or to fall
-in their turn.</p>
-
-<p>At length, by degrees, the crowd became less compact, the groups
-dispersed, the last torches were extinguished, and the spot where,
-scarce an hour before, an awful drama had been accomplished, was left
-completely deserted. A considerable time elapsed before any noise
-disturbed the solemn silence which brooded over the Plaza Mayor.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly, a heavy sigh escaped from the heap of bodies, and a pale head,
-disfigured by the blood and dirt which stained it, arose slowly from
-this human slaughterhouse, pushing aside with difficulty the carcasses
-which had covered it. The victim, who, by a miracle, survived this
-bloody hecatomb, cast an anxious look around him, and passing his hand
-over his brow, which was bathed in a dark perspiration, said vehemently&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"My God! my God! grant me strength to live, that I may avenge myself and
-my country!"</p>
-
-<p>Then, with incredible courage, this man, too weak from the blood he had
-lost, and was still losing, to stand, or to escape by walking away,
-began to crawl along upon his hands and knees, leaving behind him a long
-wet track, and directing his course towards the cathedral. At every yard
-he stopped to take breath, and to place his hands upon his wounds, which
-motion rendered more painful. Scarce had he left the centre of the Plaza
-and its horrid sacrifice fifty paces behind him, and that with immense
-difficulty, when, from a street which opened just before him, issued two
-men, who advanced with hasty steps towards him.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" the unhappy man cried, in utter despair, "I am lost! I am lost!
-Heaven is not just!"&mdash;And he fainted.</p>
-
-<p>The two men, on coming up to him, stopped with great surprise; they
-leant over him, and examined him with care and in an anxious manner.</p>
-
-<p>"Well?" said one of them, at the end of a minute or two.</p>
-
-<p>"He is alive!" the other replied, in a tone of conviction.</p>
-
-<p>Without uttering another word, they rolled up the wounded man in a
-<i>poncho</i>, lifted him on their shoulders, and disappeared in the gloomy
-depths of the street by which they had come, and which led to the
-Canadilla suburb.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>THE PASSAGE.</h3>
-
-
-<p>It is a long voyage from Havre to Chili. The man accustomed to the
-thousand agitations and the intoxicating whirlwind of the atmosphere of
-Paris, necessarily finds the life on shipboard, the calm and regular
-life, insipid and monotonous. It is certainly tedious to remain months
-together in a vessel, confined to a cabin a few feet square, without
-air and without sun, almost without light, and to have no walk but the
-narrow deck of the ship, no horizon but the rolling or the tranquil
-sea&mdash;at all times and everywhere nothing but sea.</p>
-
-<p>The transition is very trying. The Parisian, accustomed to the noise
-and perpetual motion of a great city, cannot at once enter into or
-comprehend the poetry of the sailor's life, of which he knows nothing,
-or the sublime pleasures and keen enjoyments which those granite-hearted
-men, exposed incessantly to a struggle with the elements, constantly
-experience; men who laugh at the tempest and brave the hurricane; who,
-twenty times a minute, stand face to face with death, and at last feel
-such a contempt for it that they end by not believing in it. The hours
-are of interminable length to the passenger who pines for the land;
-every day appears an age to him. With his eyes constantly turned toward
-a point which he begins to imagine he shall never gain, he sinks, in
-spite of himself, into a species of gloomy nostalgia, which the sight of
-the wished for port is alone powerful enough to dissipate.</p>
-
-<p>The Count de Prébois-Crancé and Valentine Guillois had, then, undergone
-the dispersion of all the illusions and all the ennuis attendant upon a
-first sea voyage. During the first days they were employed in recalling
-the vivid remembrance of that other life from which they had parted
-for ever. They talked over the surprise which the sudden disappearance
-of the Count would cause in the fashionable society from which he
-had fled without warning, and without leaving any means of tracing
-him. Forgetting for awhile the distance which separated them from the
-America to which they were bound, they dwelt at great length upon the
-unknown pleasures which awaited them upon that golden soil, that land
-of promise for all sorts of adventurers, but which, alas! often offers
-those who go thither in the hope of gaining an easy fortune, nothing but
-disappointment and sorrow.</p>
-
-<p>As every subject, however interesting it may be, must in the end grow
-exhausted, the two young men, to escape the fatiguing monotony of the
-voyage, had the good sense so to arrange their existence as to prevent
-tedium from gaining the influence over them which it had upon the
-other passengers. Twice a day, morning and evening, the Count, who was
-perfectly well acquainted with Spanish, gave his foster brother lessons
-in that language, lessons by which he profited so well, that after two
-months' study, he was able to carry on a conversation in Spanish. When
-he had made such progress, the young men employed no other language,
-either between themselves or with the persons on board who understood
-it. This habit produced the desired result; that is to say, Valentine,
-in a very short time, spoke Spanish, which is not difficult to acquire,
-as fluently as French; and then, in return, Valentine occasionally
-became the professor. He made Louis go through gymnastic exercises, in
-order to develop his natural strength, accustom his body to fatigue, and
-render him capable of supporting the rude exigencies of his new position.</p>
-
-<p>We will here, for a moment, return to the character of Valentine
-Guillois, a character of which the reader, from the young man's manner
-of acting and speaking, might form a completely erroneous opinion, and
-this we think it our duty to rectify. Morally, Valentine Guillois was
-a young fellow quite unacquainted with himself; hot-headed, giddy in
-the extreme, the surface had been slightly vitiated by reading chosen
-without discernment; but the foundation was essentially good. He
-united in himself all the characteristics of a class whose knowledge
-of the world is obtained from romances and the dramas of the Faubourg
-du Temple. He had sprung up like a mushroom upon <i>the pavé</i> of Paris,
-performing for bread, as he himself said, the most eccentric and
-impossible things. As a soldier, he had lived from hand to mouth,
-happy in the present, and careless of a future whose existence was so
-uncertain for him. But in the heart of this thoughtless <i>gamin</i> a new
-sentiment had germinated, and, in a very short time, taken deep root,&mdash;a
-hearty devotion to the man who had held out his hand to him, had had
-pity on his mother, and who, by dragging him from the slough in which he
-was plunged, without hope of ever rising, had given him a consciousness
-of his own personal value. The death of this benefactor had struck
-him like a clap of thunder. He felt all the importance of the mission
-with which his dying colonel had charged him, the responsible burden
-he imposed upon him, and he swore, with the firm resolution of keeping
-his oath, cost what it might, to watch, like an attentive and devoted
-brother, over the son of him who had made a man of him equal to other
-men. The two most prominent points of Valentine's character were, an
-energy which obstacles only augmented instead of depressing, and an iron
-will.</p>
-
-<p>With these two qualities, employed to the extent to which Valentine
-carried them, a man is sure to accomplish great things, and, if death
-does not surprise him on the road, to attain, at a given moment, the
-object, whatever it may be, which he has marked out for himself. In the
-present circumstances, these qualities were invaluable to the Count de
-Prébois-Crancé, a man of a dreamy, poetical nature, weak character, and
-timid mind, who, accustomed from his birth to the easy life of people
-of fortune, was entirely ignorant of the incessant difficulties of the
-new life into which he found himself suddenly cast. As always happens,
-when two men gifted with such opposite qualities meet, Valentine was
-not long in gaining over his foster brother a great moral influence, an
-influence which he employed with infinite tact, without ever rendering
-his companion aware of it; he appeared to do everything according to
-his will, whilst imposing his own upon him. In short, these two men,
-who loved each other thoroughly, and had but one head and one heart,
-perfected each other.</p>
-
-<p>The mode of speaking employed by Valentine in the early chapters of
-this history, was not at all habitual to him, and had truly astonished
-himself. Rising to the level of the situation in which the resolution of
-the young man he wished to save placed him, he had comprehended, with
-that sound common sense which he unwittingly possessed, that instead
-of desponding over the misfortune which struck his foster brother so
-unexpectedly, it was his duty, on the contrary, to endeavour to impart
-to him the courage he was deficient in. Thus, as we have seen, he
-found in his heart arguments so peremptorily decisive, that the Count
-consented to live, and gave himself up to his counsels. Valentine did
-not hesitate. The departure of Doña Rosario furnished him with the
-excuse he needed for dragging his foster brother from the Parisian gulf
-which, after having swallowed up his fortune, threatened to swallow up
-himself. Perceiving, before all else, the necessity for expatriating
-him, he persuaded Louis to follow the object of his love to America; and
-both set out gaily for the New World, abandoning the country which, like
-other emigrants, they fancied had been so ungrateful to them.</p>
-
-<p>Often during the passage the young Count had felt his courage flag,
-and his faith in the future abandon him, when thinking of the life of
-struggles and trials that awaited him in America. But Valentine, by
-his inexhaustible gaiety, his incredible store of anecdotes, and his
-incessant sallies, always succeeded in smoothing the wrinkles from the
-brow of his companion, who, with his habitual carelessness and want of
-energy, allowed himself to sink under that occult influence of Valentine
-which remoulded him, without his cognizance, and gradually made a new
-man of him.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the state of mind in which our two personages found themselves
-when the packet boat cast anchor in the roads of Valparaiso. Valentine,
-with his imperturbable assurance, doubted of nothing: he was persuaded
-that the people he was about to have to do with were very much beneath
-him in intelligence, and that he could manage very well to attain the
-double object which he aimed at. The Count entirely depended upon his
-foster brother for finding for him the woman he loved, and whom he had
-come so far to seek. As to retrieving his fortune, he did not even dream
-of that.</p>
-
-<p>Valparaiso&mdash;Valley of Paradise&mdash;so named probably by antiphrasis, for it
-is the filthiest and ugliest city of Spanish America&mdash;is nothing but a
-depot for foreigners, whom commercial interests do not call into Chili.
-Our young men only remained there long enough to equip themselves in
-the costume of the country; that is to say, to assume the Panama hat,
-the <i>poncho</i>, and <i>polenas</i>; then, each armed with two double-barrelled
-pistols, a rifle, and a long knife in his belt, they left the port, and,
-mounted on excellent horses, took their course towards Santiago, on the
-evening preceding the day on which the execution we have described in
-the preceding chapter was to take place. The weather was magnificent;&mdash;
-the rays of a burning sun rendered the very dust golden, and made the
-stones of the road shine like jewels.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah!" said Valentine, as soon as they found themselves upon the superb
-road which leads to the capital of Chili; "it does one good to breathe
-the air of the land&mdash;<i>caramba</i>, as they say here. Well, now, here we
-are in this boasted America, and now we must set about collecting our
-harvest of gold."</p>
-
-<p>"And Doña Rosario?" said his foster brother, in a melancholy tone.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh! we shall have found her within a fortnight," replied Valentine,
-with astounding confidence.</p>
-
-<p>With these consolatory words, he animated his horse with the spur, and
-the distance before them rapidly diminished.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI.</a>
-</h4>
-
-<h3>THE LINDA.<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a>
-<a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor" style="vertical-align: super; font-size: .8em; text-decoration: none;">[1]</a>
-</h3>
-
-
-
-<p>The night was gloomy; no star glittered in the heavens; the moon,
-concealed by clouds, only spread a wan, pale light, which, when it
-disappeared, rendered the darkness the denser. The streets were
-deserted; but at regular intervals the furtive steps of the serenos, who
-alone watched at this hour, were audible.</p>
-
-<p>The two men whom we have seen upon the Plaza Mayor, bearing away the
-wounded man, walked for a long time, loaded with their strange burthen,
-stopping at the least noise, and concealing themselves in the depths of
-a doorway, or in the angle of a street, to allow the serenos to pass, as
-they would be sure to require a reason for their being in the streets
-at that unusual hour. Since the discovery of the conspiracy, orders had
-been given that at eleven o'clock every citizen should be within doors.
-After many turnings and windings, the strangers stopped in the street El
-Mercado, one of the most secluded and narrow in Santiago. They appeared
-to be expected, for a door was opened at the sound of their steps, and
-a woman, dressed in white, and holding a candle, the light of which
-she shaded with her left hand, appeared on the threshold. The two men
-stopped, and one of them, taking a steel from his pocket, struck the
-flint so as to produce as few sparks as possible. At this signal&mdash;for it
-evidently was one&mdash;the woman extinguished the light, saying with a loud
-voice, but as if speaking to herself&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Dios proteja a Chile (May God protect Chili)!"</p>
-
-<p>"Dios lo ha protegido (God has protected it)," the man with the flint
-and steel replied, as he replaced his utensils in his pocket.</p>
-
-<p>The woman uttered a cry of joy, which her prudence suddenly repressed.</p>
-
-<p>"Come in, come in," she said in a low voice; and in an instant the two
-men were beside her.</p>
-
-<p>"Is he alive?" she asked, with intense anxiety.</p>
-
-<p>"He is alive," one of the strangers laconically replied.</p>
-
-<p>"In Heaven's name, come in!" she exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>The bearers, guided by the woman, who had relighted her candle,
-disappeared in the house, the door of which was immediately and softly
-closed after them. All the houses of Santiago are alike, with respect
-to their internal arrangements. To describe one is to describe all.
-A wide doorway, ornamented with pilasters, leads to <i>the patio</i>, or
-great entrance court, at the end of which is the principal apartment,
-generally the dining room. On each side are bed chambers, reception
-rooms, and cabinets for labour or study. Behind these apartments is the
-<i>huerta</i>, or garden, laid out with taste, ornamented with fountains, and
-planted with orange trees, citron trees, pomegranates, limes, cedars,
-and palm trees, which grow with incredible luxuriance. Behind the garden
-is the <i>corral</i>&mdash;a vast enclosure appropriated to horses and carriages.</p>
-
-<p>The house into which we have introduced the reader, only differed from
-the others in the princely luxury of its furniture, which seemed to
-indicate that its inhabitant was a person of importance. The two men,
-still preceded by the woman, who served them as guide, entered a little
-room, whose window opened on the garden. They laid their burthen down
-upon a bed, and retired without speaking a word, but bowing respectfully.</p>
-
-<p>The woman remained for a moment motionless, listening to the sound
-of their retreating footsteps; and when all was silent, she sprang
-with a bound towards the door, the bolts of which she fastened with
-an impetuous gesture; then, returning and placing herself beside the
-wounded man, she fixed upon him a long and melancholy look.</p>
-
-<p>This woman, though really thirty-five years of age, appeared to be
-scarcely more than five-and-twenty. She was of an extraordinary, but a
-strange style of beauty; it attracted attention, commanded admiration,
-but created an instinctive repulsion. In spite of the majestic splendour
-of her graceful form, the elegance of her carriage, the freedom of her
-motions, full of voluptuous ease,&mdash;in spite of the purity of the lines
-of her fair face, slightly tinged by the warm rays of an American sun,
-which the magnificent tresses of her black hair beautifully enframed,
-her large black eyes, ornamented with long velvety lashes, and crowned
-by perfectly-arched brows, her straight nose, with its mobile and rosy
-nostrils, her little mouth, whose blood-red lips contrasted admirably
-with her pearl-white teeth&mdash;in spite of all these rich endowments,
-there was in this splendid creature something fatal, which chilled the
-heart as you contemplated her. Her searching glance, the satirical
-smile, which almost always contracted the corners of her lips, the
-slight wrinkle, which formed a harsh, deep line along her white
-brow&mdash;everything about her, even to the melodious sound of her voice,
-with its strongly-accentuated pitch, destroyed sympathy, and produced a
-feeling of hatred, rather than respect.</p>
-
-<p>Alone in that chamber, dimly lighted by one flickering taper, in that
-calm and silent night, face to face with that pale, bleeding man, whom
-she contemplated with stern, contracted brows, she resembled, with her
-long, black hair falling in disorder from her shoulders on to her white
-robe, a Thessalian witch, preparing herself to accomplish some terrible
-and mysterious work.</p>
-
-<p>The stranger was a man of, at most, forty-five years of age, of lofty
-stature, strongly built, and well proportioned. His features were
-handsome, his brow noble, and the expression of his countenance proud,
-but frank and resolute.</p>
-
-<p>The woman remained for a considerable time in mute contemplation.
-Her bosom heaved, her brows became more and more contracted, and she
-appeared to watch the too slow progress of the return to sensibility
-of the man her emissaries had saved from death. At length words forced
-their way through her compressed lips, and she murmured in a low, broken
-voice,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Here he is, then; this time, at least, he is in my power! Will he
-consent to answer me? Oh! perhaps I had better have left him to die."</p>
-
-<p>She paused to breathe a deep, broken sigh, but almost immediately
-continued:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"My daughter! my daughter! of whom this man has bereaved me! and whom,
-in spite of all my researches, he has hitherto concealed in some
-inviolable asylum! My daughter! he must restore her to me; it is my
-will!" she added with inexpressible energy. "He shall, even if I had
-to deliver him up again to the executioners from whom I have ravished
-their prey! These wounds are nothing; loss of blood and terror are the
-sole causes of this insensibility. But time passes&mdash;my absence may be
-noticed. Why should I hesitate longer? Let me at once know what I have
-to hope from him. Perhaps he will allow himself to be softened by my
-tears and prayers. What, he! he to whom all human feeling is unknown!
-Better for me to implore the most implacable Indian! He will laugh at my
-grief, he will reply by sarcasms to my cries of despair;&mdash;oh! woe, woe
-be to him if he do so!"</p>
-
-<p>She looked earnestly at the wounded man, who was still motionless, for
-another instant, and then, adding resolutely, "I will try," she drew
-from her bosom a small crystal phial, curiously cut, and raising the
-head of the unknown, made him inhale the contents. This was followed by
-a moment of intense expectation; the woman watching with an anxious eye
-the convulsive movements which are the precursors of the return to life,
-as they agitated the body of the wounded man. At length, with a deep
-sigh, he opened his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>"Where am I?" he murmured in a faint voice, then sank back, and closed
-his eyes again.</p>
-
-<p>"In safety," the woman replied.</p>
-
-<p>The sound of the voice produced upon the wounded man the effect of an
-electric shock. He raised himself quickly, and looking around him with a
-mixture of disgust, terror, and anger, asked in a hollow voice,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Who spoke?"</p>
-
-<p>"I!" the woman replied haughtily, placing herself before him.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah!" he said with a gesture of disgust, and sinking back upon the bed;
-"you again! ever you!"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, I! still I, Don Tadeo! I, whose will, in spite of your disdain
-and your hatred, has never faltered! I, in short, whose assistance you
-have always obstinately refused, and who have saved you, in spite of
-yourself."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh! that is an easy matter for you, madam; are you not on the best
-possible terms with my executioners?"</p>
-
-<p>At this reply the woman could not repress a movement of anger; a sudden
-redness flitted across her face.</p>
-
-<p>"No insults, Don Tadeo de Leon!" she said, stamping her foot; "I have
-saved you! I am a woman, and you are under my roof!"</p>
-
-<p>"That is true," he replied, rising and bowing to her with ironical
-respect; "I had forgotten that, madam; I am in your house. Have the
-goodness, then, to direct me the way out, that I may be gone as quickly
-as possible."</p>
-
-<p>"Do not be in such haste, Don Tadeo&mdash;you have not yet sufficiently
-recovered your strength. Within a few steps, you perhaps would fall
-again, to be raised up by the agents of the power which, this time, I
-swear to you, would not let you escape."</p>
-
-<p>"And who told you, madam, that I should not prefer being retaken and
-executed a second time, to the chance of remaining longer in your
-presence?"</p>
-
-<p>There was a moment of silence, during which the two interlocutors
-observed each other attentively. The woman was the first to speak.</p>
-
-<p>"Listen to me, Don Tadeo," she said. "In spite of all your efforts,
-destiny, or, speaking more correctly, woman's genius, which nothing can
-resist, has brought us together once again. If you live, if you have
-received only slight wounds, it is because I lavished my gold upon the
-soldiers charged with your execution; I wished to force you to that
-explanation which I have so long demanded of you, which you so often
-have refused me, but which you can now no longer avoid. Submit, then,
-with a good grace. We will afterwards separate, if not good friends,
-at least indifferent, never to meet again. Though I do not wish to
-establish any claim upon your gratitude, you certainly owe your life to
-me; were it for that service alone, you are bound to hear me."</p>
-
-<p>"What! madam," Don Tadeo replied, proudly, "do you think that I consider
-what you have done was rendering me a service? By what right have you
-saved my life? You know me but ill if you fancied I should allow myself
-to be softened by your tears. No, no, I have been too long your dupe and
-your slave to do so. Heaven be praised! I know you well now; and the
-Linda, the mistress of General Bustamente, the tyrant of my country, the
-executioner of my brothers and myself, has nothing to expect from me!
-All that you can say, all that you can do, will be to no purpose. Spare
-yourself, then, I advise you, the trouble of pretending a gentleness
-which neither accords with your character nor your mode of life. I
-madly loved you, a young, pure, and prudent girl, in the cabin of the
-worthy <i>guaso,</i> your father, whose death was caused by your scandalous
-life; you were then called Maria. At that period, would I not have
-sacrificed my life and my happiness for you?&mdash;you know I would. Many
-times have I given you proofs of that boundless love; but the Linda, the
-shameless courtezan, the Linda, the woman branded on the brow like Cain
-with the seal of infamy, the miserable creature&mdash;I know her not. Away,
-madam!&mdash;away! There can be nothing in common between you and me."</p>
-
-<p>And with a gesture of proud authority he waved her from him.</p>
-
-<p>The woman had listened to him with flashing eyes and heaving bosom,
-trembling with rage and shame. Drops of perspiration stood upon her
-face, which glowed with a feverish redness. When he had finished, she
-seized his arm, pressed it with her utmost strength, and placed her face
-close to his.</p>
-
-<p>"Have you said all?" she muttered from between her teeth. "Have you
-heaped insults enough upon me? Have you cast sufficient mire in my face?
-Have you nothing more to add?"</p>
-
-<p>"Nothing, madam," he replied, in a tone of cool contempt. "You can, when
-you please, summon your assassins&mdash;I am ready to receive them."</p>
-
-<p>And throwing himself upon the bed, he waited with an air of the most
-insolent indifference.</p>
-
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> This word, which has no equivalent in English or French,
-is in the Spanish language the highest expression of physical beauty in
-woman.</p></div>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>HUSBAND AND WIFE.</h3>
-
-
-<p>Doña Maria, notwithstanding the fresh and bitter insult she had just
-received from Don Tadeo, did not yet renounce the hope of softening
-him. When she recalled to her mind the early years, already so distant,
-of her love for Don Tadeo, his devotion to her smallest caprices, when
-she could bring him trembling and prostrate to her feet by a glance or
-a smile, and the entire abnegation he had made of his will, in order
-to live for her and by her; notwithstanding all that had since taken
-place between them, she could not persuade herself that the violent
-and deeply-seated passion he had entertained for her, the species of
-worship he had vowed to her, could have entirely disappeared without
-leaving some slight traces behind. Her pride revolted at the idea of
-having lost all her empire over the lofty nature which she so long had
-moulded at her pleasure like soft wax, under the burning impression of
-wild caprices. She fancied that, like most other men, Don Tadeo, deeply
-wounded in his pride, loved her still without being willing to admit it,
-and that the virulent reproaches he had addressed to her, were flashes
-of that ill-extinguished fire which still smouldered in his heart, and
-whose flame she should succeed in reviving.</p>
-
-<p>Unfortunately Doña Maria had never given herself the trouble to study
-the man she had married, and whom her beauty had so long held in
-subjection. Don Tadeo had been nothing in her eyes but an attentive,
-submissive slave, and, under the apparent weakness of the loving man,
-she had not discovered the powerful energy which formed the foundation
-of his character. And yet the history itself of their love had been a
-proof of that energy, and of a will which nothing could control. Doña
-Maria, then fifteen years of age, dwelt with her father in a <i>hacienda</i>,
-in the neighbourhood of Santiago. Deprived of her mother, who had died
-in giving her birth, she was brought up under the care of an old aunt,
-an incorruptible Argus, who allowed no lover to come near her niece.
-The young girl, ignorant as all girls brought up in the country are,
-but whose warm aspirations led her to desire to know the world, and to
-launch into that whirlwind of pleasures the sound of which died without
-an echo in her ears, waited impatiently the arrival of the man who
-should introduce her to these delights, of which, although unknown, she
-had formed seducing ideas. Don Tadeo had only been the guide charged
-with initiating her into the pleasures for which she thirsted. She
-had never loved him; she had only said to herself, on seeing him and
-learning he was of a noble family, "That is the man I have been looking
-for."</p>
-
-<p>This hideous and selfish calculation is made by more girls than
-we may fancy. Don Tadeo was handsome. Doña Maria's self-love was
-flattered by the conquest; but if he had been ugly and disagreeable,
-it would not have altered her course. In her extraordinary character,
-a strange conjunction of the most abject passions, among which shone
-here and there, like diamonds gleaming in the mire, a few feelings
-which attached her to humanity, there was the spirit of two women
-of ancient Rome; Locusta and Messalina were united in her: ardent,
-passionate and ambitious, covetous and prodigal, this demon, concealed
-under the outward form of an angel, acknowledged no other laws but her
-own caprices; and all means, by which she could satisfy them, to her
-appeared good.</p>
-
-<p>For a long time, Don Tadeo, blinded by passion, had submitted without
-complaining to the iron yoke of this infernal genius; but when the day
-arrived that the scales fell from his eyes, he measured with terror the
-depth of the abyss into which this woman had cast him. The frightful
-disorders to which, under the sanction of his name, she had abandoned
-herself, imprinted on his blushing brow a stigma of infamy: the world
-believed him to be her accomplice.</p>
-
-<p>Don Tadeo had by Maria an only daughter, a fair girl of angelic beauty,
-at the period of our history fifteen years of age, whom he loved in
-proportion to the sufferings her mother had inflicted upon him. He
-trembled to think of the frightful future which lay before this innocent
-creature. For four years he had been separated from his wife; and
-during that time she had set no bounds on her irregularities. One day,
-Don Tadeo presented himself unexpectedly at the house of his wife, and
-without saying a word as to his ulterior intentions, took away his
-daughter. From that time&mdash;nearly ten years&mdash;Doña Maria had never seen
-her child.</p>
-
-<p>A strange revolution was effected by this step in the mother's feelings;
-a new sentiment, so to say, germinated in her soul. A thing, till that
-time unknown to her, happened; she felt the pulses of her heart beat
-for another&mdash;she grieved at the remembrance of the little angel who had
-been ravished from her. What was the sentiment? She, herself, knew not;
-she only ardently wished to see her child again. During six years she
-contended, publicly and privately, with Don Tadeo, to have her daughter
-restored to her. The father was deaf and dumb; she could never learn
-what had become of her. Don Tadeo, who, since he ceased to love her, had
-studied the character of the woman of whom he had made an implacable
-enemy, had taken his precautions so prudently that all Doña Maria's
-researches proved fruitless, and all her attempts to obtain an interview
-remained without a result. She imagined that he was afraid of yielding,
-if face to face with her; and she resolved, cost what it might, to force
-him to grant her the interview to which nothing had been able to make
-him consent.</p>
-
-<p>Such was, at the moment we bring them on the scene, the position of
-the two personages who now doubtless met for the last time. It was an
-extraordinary position for both; an unequal contest between a wounded
-and proscribed man, and an ardent, insulted woman, who, like a lioness
-deprived of her whelps, was resolved to succeed, whatever might happen,
-and compel the man whom she had forced to hear her, to restore her
-daughter to her.</p>
-
-<p>Don Tadeo turned towards her.</p>
-
-<p>"I am waiting," he said.</p>
-
-<p>"You are waiting?" she replied, with a friendly smile. "What do you
-expect, then?"</p>
-
-<p>"The assassins whom you doubtless have at hand, in case I should be
-unwilling to reply to your questions concerning your daughter."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" she said, with an air of repulsion, "how can you, Don Tadeo, have
-so bad an opinion of me? How can you pretend to believe that, after
-having saved you, I should deliver you up to those who have proscribed
-you?"</p>
-
-<p>"Who knows?" he replied, in a strongly ironical tone. "The heart of
-women of your class, Linda, is an abyss which no man can pretend to
-sound. You, who are incessantly seeking eccentric pleasures, perhaps
-would find an unknown enjoyment and a charm in this second execution,
-which, besides, would not at all compromise you, as I am already legally
-dead to the world."</p>
-
-<p>"Don Tadeo, I know how unworthy my conduct towards you has been, and
-how little I deserve your pity; but you are a gentleman, and, as such,
-do you think it does you honour to load with insults, however merited,
-a woman who is your wife, and who, after saving your life, with no
-intention of reinstating herself in your favour, merely makes a claim,
-at least upon your pity, if not on your esteem?"</p>
-
-<p>"Very well, madam; nothing can be more just than your observations, and
-I subscribe to them with all my heart. I beg you to pardon me for having
-allowed myself to utter certain words; but, at the first movement, I
-was not master of myself, and I could not keep down in the depths of my
-heart the feelings which were stifling me. Now, accept my sincere thanks
-for the immense service you have rendered me, and permit me to retire.
-A longer sojourn, on my part, in this house, is a robbery of which I
-render myself guilty towards your numerous adorers."</p>
-
-<p>And, bowing with ironical courtesy to his infuriated wife, he made a
-movement towards one of the doors of the room.</p>
-
-<p>"One word more," she said.</p>
-
-<p>"Speak, madam."</p>
-
-<p>"Are you resolved to leave me ignorant of the fate of my daughter?"</p>
-
-<p>"She is dead."</p>
-
-<p>"Dead!" she cried, in a voice of terror.</p>
-
-<p>"For you&mdash;yes," he replied, with a cold smile.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, you are implacable!" she shrieked, stamping her foot with rage.</p>
-
-<p>He bowed, without making any reply.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, then," she resumed, "it is now no longer a favour I implore&mdash;it
-is a bargain I propose to you."</p>
-
-<p>"A bargain?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, a bargain."</p>
-
-<p>"The idea strikes me as original."</p>
-
-<p>"Perhaps it is; you shall judge for yourself."</p>
-
-<p>"I listen, but time presses, and I&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, I will be brief," she interrupted.</p>
-
-<p>"I am at your service," and he reseated himself, smiling, exactly like a
-friend on a visit. The Linda followed his motions with her eye, without
-appearing to attach any importance to them.</p>
-
-<p>"Don Tadeo," she said, "during the many years we have been separated a
-great number of events has taken place."</p>
-
-<p>"Quite correct," said he, with a gesture of polite assent.</p>
-
-<p>"I will say nothing to you of myself&mdash;my life is known to you."</p>
-
-<p>"Very little of it, madam."</p>
-
-<p>She cast a savage look at him.</p>
-
-<p>"Let that pass," she said, "it is of you I would speak."</p>
-
-<p>"Of me?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, of you, whose moments are not so completely absorbed by patriotism
-and the effervescence of political ideas as not to leave you a few for
-more intimate joys and emotions."</p>
-
-<p>"What do you mean?"</p>
-
-<p>"Why do you feign ignorance?" she said, with a perfidious smile; "I am
-sure you understand me."</p>
-
-<p>"Madam!"</p>
-
-<p>"Do not deny it, Tadeo! Tired of the ephemeral love of women of my
-class, as you have just now so well said, you seek in the pure heart of
-a young girl emotions more in accordance with your tastes; in a word,
-I know you are in love with a charming young creature, worthy in all
-respects of being the wife of your choice, if I, unfortunately, did not
-exist."</p>
-
-<p>Don Tadeo fixed upon his wife a scrutinizing look while she was
-pronouncing these words. As she finished, a sigh escaped him.</p>
-
-<p>"What, are you aware?" he exclaimed, with well-feigned surprise. "You
-know&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"I know that her name is Doña Rosario del Valle," she replied, satisfied
-of the effect she thought she had produced upon her husband; "why, it is
-the freshest news in Santiago! all the world is talking of it. How was
-it likely it should escape me, when I take such an interest in you?"</p>
-
-<p>The Linda interrupted herself, and laid her hand on his arm.</p>
-
-<p>"It is of very little consequence," she added; "restore me my daughter,
-Don Tadeo, and this new love of yours shall be sacred to me&mdash;if not&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"You are mistaken, madam, I tell you."</p>
-
-<p>"Beware, Don Tadeo!" she remarked, with a glance at the clock; "by this
-time the woman we were speaking of is in the hands of my agents."</p>
-
-<p>"What do you mean?" he cried, in great agitation.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," she replied, in a husky tone, "I have had her carried off. In a
-few minutes she will be here. Beware! I repeat, Don Tadeo! if you do not
-tell me where my daughter is, and if you continue to refuse to restore
-her to me&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Well," he said, haughtily, looking her full in the face, and crossing
-his arms, "what then will you do?"</p>
-
-<p>"I will kill this woman!" she replied, in a gloomy but firm tone.</p>
-
-<p>Don Tadeo looked at her for a moment with an undefinable expression, and
-then burst into a dry, nervous laugh, which chilled the woman with fear.</p>
-
-<p>"You will kill her!" he cried, "unhappy woman! Well!&mdash;kill that innocent
-creature!&mdash;Call in your executioners&mdash;I will be mute."</p>
-
-<p>The Linda sprang up like a lioness, and rushed towards the door, which
-she opened violently.</p>
-
-<p>"This is too much!&mdash;Come in!" she called out, loudly.</p>
-
-<p>The two men who had brought in Don Tadeo appeared, poniard in hand.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah!" the gentleman said, with a contemptuous smile, "I know you again
-at last."</p>
-
-<p>At a motion from the Linda the assassins advanced towards him.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>THE DARK-HEARTS.</h3>
-
-
-<p>As we have seen, the people had dispersed almost immediately after the
-execution of the patriots. Everyone carried away in the depths of his
-heart the hope of avenging, at an early day, the victims who had so
-nobly died, with the cry for a time left without an echo, of Viva la
-patria! A cry checked by the bayonets of the soldiers of Bustamente, but
-which must soon give birth to fresh martyrs.</p>
-
-<p>And yet the square, though it seemed a desert, was not so. Several
-men, folded in dark cloaks, and with broad-brimmed hats, pulled down
-over their eyes, were grouped in the recess of the coach entrance of a
-house, and were conversing earnestly together in a low voice, keeping an
-anxious lookout the meanwhile. These men were patriots.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of the terror which hovered over the city, they had, by dint of
-prayers, obtained from the archbishop of Santiago, who was a true priest
-according to the gospel, and at heart devoted to the liberal cause,
-permission to pay the last rites to their unfortunate brethren.</p>
-
-<p>No part of the dismal drama which followed the execution had escaped
-them. They had seen Don Tadeo rise like a phantom from the heap of
-carcasses which covered him; they had heard the words he had pronounced,
-and were preparing to go to his succour, when the two strangers,
-appearing suddenly, raised his body and bore it away. This carrying off
-of a half dead man had surprised them exceedingly. After exchanging a
-few words, two of them went in pursuit of the mysterious strangers,
-probably in order to learn to what house the wounded man was taken,
-whilst the others, twelve in number, advanced to the middle of the
-square.</p>
-
-<p>They anxiously bent down and examined the bodies stretched at their
-feet, hoping, perhaps, that another victim might have escaped the
-slaughter. Unfortunately, Don Tadeo was the only one saved by some
-inexplicable mystery. The nine other victims were all dead. After a long
-examination, the patriots stood up again with a painful sigh of regret,
-and one of them went and knocked at a lower door of the cathedral.</p>
-
-<p>"Who is there?" was immediately asked from the interior.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>One for whom the night hath no darkness</i>," the man who had knocked
-replied.</p>
-
-<p>"What do you want?" the voice asked again.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>Is it not written: Knock and it shall be opened to thee</i>?" the
-stranger added.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>Our country!</i>" said the voice.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>Or vengeance!</i>" the man promptly replied.</p>
-
-<p>The door opened, and a monk appeared. His cowl pulled down over his
-face, prevented his features being seen.</p>
-
-<p>"Well," he said, "what do the <i>Dark-Hearts</i> require?"</p>
-
-<p>"A prayer for their murdered brothers."</p>
-
-<p>"Return to those who sent you; they shall be satisfied."</p>
-
-<p>"Thanks for all!" the unknown replied; and, after bowing respectfully to
-the monk, he rejoined his companions. During his absence they had not
-been idle, but had placed the bodies upon hand barrows concealed under
-the arcades of the place.</p>
-
-<p>At the expiration of a few minutes a brilliant light inundated the
-place; the cathedral doors were opened. The interior was seen to be
-splendidly illuminated, and from the principal door issued a long
-procession of monks, each bearing a wax light in his hand; they chanted,
-as they walked, the service of the dead. At the same moment the gates
-of the government palace were thrown open as if by enchantment, and a
-squadron of the Ceras, with General Bustamente at their head, advanced,
-at a trot, towards the procession.</p>
-
-<p>When the monks and soldiers met, they stopped as of one accord. The
-twelve unknown men, folded in their cloaks, and grouped round the
-fountain which forms the centre of the square, anxiously awaited the
-denouement of the scene about to take place.</p>
-
-<p>"What is the meaning of this procession, at such an unusual hour?" the
-general haughtily demanded.</p>
-
-<p>"It means that we have come," the monk who walked first replied, with a
-firm voice, but in a melancholy tone, "to take up the victims you have
-struck down, and give them honourable burial."</p>
-
-<p>"And who, pray, are you?" the general asked, sharply.</p>
-
-<p>"I?" the monk replied, in the same firm tone, and throwing back his
-cowl upon his shoulders&mdash;"I am the archbishop of Santiago, primate of
-Chili, invested by his holiness the Pope with the power of binding and
-unbinding on earth."</p>
-
-<p>In Spanish America, all persons yield without hesitation to the religion
-of Christ. The only power that is real is that of the priests. No one,
-however high he may be placed, ventures to struggle against it: he knows
-beforehand that, if he did, he would be sure to be crushed. The general
-knitted his brows, struck his forehead forcibly with his hand, but was
-constrained to admit himself conquered.</p>
-
-<p>"My lord!" he said, with a bow; "pardon me! In these times of civil
-discord, we often, in spite of ourselves, confound our friends with our
-enemies. I was ignorant that your lordship had given orders for prayers
-to be offered up for these criminals, and still more so that you would
-deign to perform this task in person&mdash;I beg leave to retire."</p>
-
-<p>During this scene, the patriots had concealed themselves behind the
-pillars of the place, where, thanks to the darkness, they remained
-unseen by the general. As soon as the military had disappeared, at a
-sign from the archbishop the bodies were borne into the cathedral.</p>
-
-<p>"Beware of that man, my lord," whispered one of the unknown in the
-archbishop's ear; "he darted at you the glance of a tiger as he retired."</p>
-
-<p>"Brother!" the priest replied calmly; "I am prepared for martyrdom."</p>
-
-<p>The service commenced. As soon as it was terminated, the patriots
-retired, after warmly thanking the archbishop for his kindness towards
-their dead brethren. Scarce had they proceeded a few steps along a
-narrow street, edged by mean dwellings, when two men rose from behind an
-overturned cart which concealed them, and coming towards them, said in a
-low voice&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Our country!"</p>
-
-<p>"Vengeance!" one of the unknown replied. "Come on!"</p>
-
-<p>The two men approached.</p>
-
-<p>"Well!" said he who appeared to be the chief. "What have you learnt?"</p>
-
-<p>"All that it is possible to know," one of the newcomers replied.</p>
-
-<p>"Whither have they transported Don Tadeo?"</p>
-
-<p>"To the mansion of the Linda."</p>
-
-<p>"To the residence of his wife! Of the woman who is now the mistress
-of the General Bustamente!" the chief replied anxiously. "By the holy
-Virgin! my comrades, he is lost, for she hates him mortally. Shall we
-allow him to be assassinated without an effort to save him?"</p>
-
-<p>"That would be base cowardice," they replied unanimously.</p>
-
-<p>"But how can we introduce ourselves into the house?"</p>
-
-<p>"Nothing more easy; the garden walls are very low."</p>
-
-<p>"Come on, then! there is not a minute to be lost!"</p>
-
-<p>Without another word, they all hastened off in the direction of the
-Linda's house, which, as we have said, was situated in the faubourg
-of the Canadilla, the handsomest quarter in Santiago. The windows,
-hermetically closed, did not allow one ray of light to pass; not a
-sound could be heard, and the house seemed deserted. The patriots stole
-silently round the walls, and when they reached the back, they easily
-climbed the fence by sticking their poniards between the bricks, and
-sprang into the garden. Here they looked carefully about them, and,
-after a short pause, proceeded with stealthy steps towards a pale,
-trembling light, which sent a feeble beam through the chink of a
-shutter. They were within a few paces of this window, when they suddenly
-heard the noise of what appeared a scuffle, and a terrible cry was
-uttered, mingled with the crash of furniture and imprecations of rage
-and pain. Bounding forward like panthers, the strangers, who had covered
-their faces with masks of black velvet, dashed at the window, which flew
-in a thousand fragments around them, and entered the salon.</p>
-
-<p>And it was time for them to arrive. Don Tadeo, with a stool, had split
-the head of one of the bandits, who lay lifeless upon the floor; but
-the other had got him down, and, with his knee upon his breast, was on
-the point of stabbing him. With a pistol shot, one of the unknown blew
-out his brains, and the wretch rolled in his agony close to his dead
-companion. Don Tadeo sprang up quickly, exclaiming&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"By the Virgin! I thought my hour was come!" Then, turning towards the
-masked men, he said&mdash;"Thanks, caballeros! thanks for your very timely
-succour! One minute more, and it would have been all over with me! The
-Linda is expeditious!"</p>
-
-<p>The courtesan, with features contracted by rage, and clenched teeth,
-looked on without appearing to see, overwhelmed, confounded by the scene
-which had so rapidly taken place, and which had, in a few minutes,
-ravished from her the vengeance which she thought had this time been so
-certain.</p>
-
-<p>"Without bearing malice, madam," said Don Tadeo in a jeering tone, "this
-is a match deferred. Your fertile imagination will no doubt soon furnish
-you with the means of taking your revenge!"</p>
-
-<p>"I hope so," she said with a sardonic smile.</p>
-
-<p>"Seize this woman," the leader of the unknown commanded; "gag her, and
-bind her securely to the bed."</p>
-
-<p>"Bind me!" she cried in a paroxysm of anger; "me! do you know who I am?"</p>
-
-<p>"Perfectly well, madam," the stranger replied drily. "You are a woman
-for whom honourable people have no name. Libertines have given you that
-of the Linda, and your present lover is General Bustamente. You see,
-madam, that we are not unacquainted with you."</p>
-
-<p>"Beware, sir," she hissed; "I am not to be insulted with impunity."</p>
-
-<p>"We do not insult you, madam; we only wish, for a time, to put it out
-of your power to do mischief. In a few days," he continued, in a quiet,
-firm tone, "we will determine what shall be done with you."</p>
-
-<p>"Done with me!&mdash;me!&mdash;who then are you, with faces you dare not reveal,
-and who presume to speak to me thus?"</p>
-
-<p>"Who we are,&mdash;learn!&mdash;We are the <i>Dark-Hearts!</i>" At this terrible
-announcement, a convulsive trembling shook the limbs of the woman, who,
-retreating to the wall, a prey to intense terror, exclaimed in a faint
-voice; "My God! my God! I am lost," and sank down fainting.</p>
-
-<p>At a sign from the leader, one of his companions bound her securely, and
-after gagging her, fastened her to the foot of the bed. Then, taking Don
-Tadeo with them, they departed by the same way they had entered, without
-taking any heed of the two assassins lying upon the floor. Before he
-left the room, the chief pinned a piece of parchment to a table with
-a dagger. Upon this parchment were written a few words of terrible
-import:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p class="center">"<i>The traitor Pancho Bustamente is cited at the expiration of
-ninety-three days!"</i></p>
-
-<p style="margin-left: 55%;">
-THE DARK-HEARTS.
-</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>IN THE STREET.</h3>
-
-
-<p>As soon as they were outside of the house, the masked men, at a sign
-from the leader, dispersed in various directions. When they had
-disappeared round the corners of the neighbouring streets, the chief
-turned towards Don Tadeo, who, scarce recovered from the trying emotions
-he had successively gone through, and weakened by the blood he had lost,
-as well as by the prodigious efforts his last struggle had cost him,
-was leaning, half fainting against the wall of the house he had been so
-fortunately enabled to quit. A flood of bitter reflections rushed upon
-his brain; the incidents of that terrible night almost unsettled his
-reason: in vain he tried to recover the train of his ideas which had
-been so often and so violently broken. The stranger looked at him for
-a few minutes with profound attention; then approaching him, he laid
-his hand quietly upon his shoulder. At this sudden touch, the gentleman
-started as if he had received an electric shock.</p>
-
-<p>"What!" the unknown said in a tone of reproach, "scarcely entered on the
-good fight, and you despair already, Don Tadeo?"</p>
-
-<p>The wounded man shook his head.</p>
-
-<p>"You, Don Tadeo, whose lofty brow has never bent before revolutionary
-storms; you, who in the most trying circumstances have always remained
-firm, are now pale and cast down, without faith in the present, or hope
-in the future, and have lost strength and courage through the vain
-threats of a woman!"</p>
-
-<p>"That woman," he replied mournfully, "has always been my evil genius.
-She is a demon!"</p>
-
-<p>"And suppose," the unknown exclaimed energetically, "that this woman
-should succeed in getting up another of the infamous schemes in which
-her brain is so fertile, a man of heart takes courage in a struggle?
-Forget these impotent hatreds that can never reach you; remember what
-you are; look boldly at the glorious mission which is imposed upon you."</p>
-
-<p>"What do you mean?"</p>
-
-<p>"Do you not understand me? Can you believe that God, who has this night
-allowed you so miraculously to escape death, has not great designs
-in store for you? Brother," he added, in a tone of authority, "the
-existence that has been restored to you is not your own, it belongs to
-your country!"</p>
-
-<p>A moment of silence followed this appeal, during which Don Tadeo
-appeared a prey to profound despair. At length, looking at the unknown,
-he said with bitter despondency&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"What is to be done? Heaven is my witness that my only desire, my sole
-happiness, would be to see my country free. But during the twenty years
-we have been struggling we have done nothing, alas! but pass from one
-tyranny to another, each time riveting afresh the chains which bind
-us. No! Heaven itself seems to forbid our contending longer against an
-implacable destiny. You know well from experience that citizens cannot
-be improvised from slaves. Servitude destroys moral virtue, abases the
-soul, and degrades the heart. Many generations must pass away before the
-inhabitants of this unfortunate country will be fit to form a people!"</p>
-
-<p>"By what right do you presume to fathom the designs of Providence?"
-the unknown replied, in an imposing tone of voice. "Do you know what
-is reserved for you? Who tells you that the passing triumph of our
-oppressors is not granted by God, in His boundless wisdom, in order to
-render their future fall more terrible?"</p>
-
-<p>Don Tadeo, restored to himself by the manly words of his disguised
-friend, drew himself up proudly, and looked attentively at the speaker.</p>
-
-<p>"And who are you," he said, "whose sympathetic voice has stirred the
-most secret fibres of my heart? Who authorizes you to speak thus?
-Answer! Who are you?"</p>
-
-<p>"Of what importance is it who I am," the unknown remarked, calmly, "if
-I succeed in persuading you that all is far from being lost&mdash;that the
-liberty which you believe for ever destroyed has never been so near
-triumphing, and that it only perhaps requires one sublime effort to
-recover it!"</p>
-
-<p>"But still?" the wounded man said, persistently.</p>
-
-<p>"I am he who, a few minutes ago, saved your life. That ought to suffice."</p>
-
-<p>"Not so," Don Tadeo said, warmly, "for you conceal your features under a
-mask, and the very circumstance you named gives me a right to see them."</p>
-
-<p>"Perhaps it does," the unknown said, slowly removing his mask, and
-revealing to Don Tadeo, in the pale beams of the moon, a countenance
-with manly, marked features, and wearing a frank and loyal expression.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh! my heart did not deceive me!" Tadeo cried&mdash;"Don Gregorio Peralta!"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, it is I, Don Tadeo!" the young man, he was scarcely thirty,
-replied&mdash;"and cannot comprehend the depression of the man whom the
-avengers have chosen as their chief."</p>
-
-<p>"How do you know? Notwithstanding our friendship, I have always
-concealed from you&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Were you not condemned to death?" Don Gregorio interrupted. "Your
-companions elected me <i>King of Darkness</i> in your place, that is, they
-placed in my hands an immense power, as they had done in yours, of
-which I was left the uncontrolled disposal. Death unbound the oath of
-silence imposed upon the brethren. Your name was unknown to all; I was
-as ignorant that you were the energetic chief who had made our society
-a power, as you were, my dear friend, that I was one of your soldiers.
-But, thanks be to God, you are saved, Don Tadeo! Resume your place.
-You alone, under present circumstances, are able to fill worthily the
-post which our confidence has assigned you. Become again the King of
-Darkness! But," he added, in a deep, concentrated tone, "remember that
-we are the avengers; that we ought to be without pity for ourselves
-as for others; that one feeling, and one alone, ought to live in our
-souls&mdash;the love of our country!"</p>
-
-<p>Then followed a short silence; the two men appeared to be reflecting
-deeply. At length Don Tadeo raised his head proudly.</p>
-
-<p>"Thanks, Don Gregorio!" he said, in a firm voice, and pressing his
-hand&mdash;"thanks for your rough words; they have restored me to myself. I
-will prove myself worthy of you. Don Tadeo de Leon no longer exists;
-the hired assassins of a tyrant have shot him tonight upon the Plaza
-Mayor. No one is left but the King of Darkness! the implacable leader
-of the Dark-Hearts! Woe be to them whom God shall bring across my path!
-for I will crush them without pity. We shall triumph, Don Gregorio;
-for from this day I am no longer a man, I am the avenging sword, the
-exterminating angel, fighting for our country!"</p>
-
-<p>While uttering these words, Don Tadeo had drawn his imposing stature up
-to its full height; his handsome, noble features became animated, and
-his eyes sparkled in accordance with his speech.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh," Don Gregorio exclaimed, cheerfully, "I have found my friend again!
-Thank God! thank God!"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, my brother," the leader continued, "from this moment the real
-struggle between us and the tyrant begins&mdash;a struggle without pity,
-without truce, and without mercy, which can only terminate in the
-complete extinction of our enemies. Woe be to them! Woe!"</p>
-
-<p>"No time is to be lost; let us begone!" Don Gregorio said.</p>
-
-<p>"But whither am I to go?" Don Tadeo asked, with a sardonic smile. "Am I
-not legally dead in the eyes of all? My house is no longer mine."</p>
-
-<p>"That is true," the lieutenant of the Dark-Hearts murmured. "Well, never
-mind that! Tomorrow the news of your miraculous resurrection will be a
-thunderclap to our enemies! Their awaking will be terrible! They will
-learn with stupor that the invincible athlete, whom they thought they
-had for ever crushed beneath their feet, is up again, and ready to renew
-the contest."</p>
-
-<p>"And this time, I solemnly swear," Don Tadeo cried, with energy, "the
-fall of the tyrant alone shall terminate it. But you are right; we
-cannot remain longer here. Come home with me; for a time you will be
-there in safety; unless," he added, with a smile, "you prefer asking an
-asylum of Doña Rosario?"</p>
-
-<p>Don Tadeo, who had taken Don Gregorio's arm, stopped suddenly at this
-question, of which his friend did not suspect the terrible extent.
-A convulsive shudder darted through his frame, a cold perspiration
-inundated his face.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh," he exclaimed, in a tone of agony, "my God! I had forgotten!"</p>
-
-<p>Don Gregorio was terrified at the state he beheld him in.</p>
-
-<p>"In heaven's name, what is the matter?" he asked.</p>
-
-<p>"What is the matter!" the chief replied, in a voice choked with emotion,
-"that woman&mdash;that serpent whom we have weakly failed to crush&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Well, what of her?"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, I have but this moment recollected a horrible threat she made. Good
-heavens! good heavens! What is to be done?"</p>
-
-<p>"Explain yourself, my friend; you quite terrify me."</p>
-
-<p>"By her orders, Doña Rosario this very night, was to be carried off; and
-who knows if, furious at my escape from her assassins, that woman has
-not by this time put her to death?"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, that is frightful!" Don Gregorio cried. "What is to be done?"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, that woman!" the wounded man replied; "and not to be able to act,
-or to know how to thwart her horrible schemes."</p>
-
-<p>"Let us fly to Doña Rosario's residence!" Don Gregorio said.</p>
-
-<p>"Alas! you see I am wounded; I can scarcely support myself."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, when you can no longer walk, I will carry you," his friend said,
-resolutely.</p>
-
-<p>"Thanks, brother! May God help us!"</p>
-
-<p>And the two men, the one leaning upon the other, set off, as fast as the
-state of Don Tadeo would permit, towards the residence of the lady whom
-they were so anxious to save. But, in spite of the earnest will that
-animated him, Don Tadeo felt his strength fail him; and, notwithstanding
-all his efforts, it was with extreme difficulty he sustained himself.
-Whilst labouring on thus, the noise of horses' footsteps reached them
-from a distance. Torches gleamed up the street, and a troop of horsemen
-appeared in sight.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, oh!" Don Gregorio said, stopping, and endeavouring to make out who
-those persons could be, who, in defiance of the police regulations,
-dared to be passing along the streets at this hour of the night.</p>
-
-<p>"Let us stop," Don Tadeo replied; "I see the glitter of uniforms. They
-are the spies of the minister of war."</p>
-
-<p>"By Saint Jago!" cried Don Gregorio, "it is General Bustamente himself!
-The two accomplices are going to have a little chat together."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," the wounded man said, in a faltering voice; "he is going towards
-the residence of the Linda."</p>
-
-<p>As the horsemen were but at a short distance, the two men, fearing to be
-surprised, turned quickly into a side street, and the General and his
-suite passed by without seeing them.</p>
-
-<p>"Let us begone as fast as possible," Don Gregorio said; and his
-companion, aware of the urgency for prompt flight, made a desperate
-effort. They resumed their course, and had walked for about ten minutes,
-when they heard the steps of more horses coming towards them.</p>
-
-<p>"What can this mean?" the wounded man said, endeavouring to smile; "Are
-all the people of Santiago running about the streets tonight?"</p>
-
-<p>"Hum!" said Don Gregorio, "I will find out this time."</p>
-
-<p>All at once a female voice was heard in a lamentable tone imploring help.</p>
-
-<p>"Make her hold her tongue, <i>carajas!</i>" a man said, coarsely.</p>
-
-<p>But the sound of that voice had reached the ears of Don Tadeo and his
-friend. At that voice, which both had recognized, they were roused to
-feelings of deep interest and anger. They pressed each other's hand
-firmly; their resolution was formed&mdash;to die or to save her who called
-upon them for help.</p>
-
-<p>"Holloa! what is this about?" another individual said, pulling up his
-horse.</p>
-
-<p>Two men, standing firmly in the middle of the street, seemed determined
-to bar the passage of the horsemen, of whom there were five. One of them
-held a woman before him on his horse.</p>
-
-<p>"Holloa!" cried the one who had just spoken, "get out of the way, if you
-don't wish to be ridden over."</p>
-
-<p>"You shall not pass," a deep voice replied, "unless you release the
-woman you are bearing off."</p>
-
-<p>"Shan't we?" the horseman remarked with a laugh.</p>
-
-<p>"Try," said Don Gregorio, cocking his pistol; a movement silently
-imitated by Don Tadeo, whom he had supplied with firearms.</p>
-
-<p>"For the last time, stand out of the way!" the horseman shouted.</p>
-
-<p>"We will not!"</p>
-
-<p>"We will ride over you, then!" and turning towards his companions,
-"Forward!" he cried angrily.</p>
-
-<p>The five horsemen advanced with uplifted sabres upon the two men, who,
-firmly fixed in the middle of the street, made no effort to avoid them.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>SWORD-THRUSTS.</h3>
-
-
-<p>In order to make the facts that follow intelligible, we must leave Don
-Tadeo and his friend in their critical position, and return to the two
-principal personages of this history, whom we have so long neglected.
-We saw in a preceding chapter the two foster brothers gaily leaving
-Valparaiso, to repair to the capital of Chili, like Bias, carrying all
-their fortune with them, but possessing over the philosophical Greek the
-immense advantage of being amply furnished with hopes and illusions, two
-words which, in this life, have but too frequently the same meaning.</p>
-
-<p>After a rather long ride, the young men had stopped for the night in
-a miserable <i>rancho</i> constructed of mud and dry branches, the dismal
-skeleton of which stood out on one side of the road. The inhabitant of
-this miserable dwelling, a poor devil of a peon, whose life was passed
-in guarding a few head of lean cattle, gave our travellers a frank and
-hospitable reception. Quite delighted at having something to offer them,
-he had cheerfully shared with them his <i>charqui</i>&mdash;strips of meat, dried
-in the sun&mdash;and his <i>harina tostada</i>&mdash;roasted corn&mdash;the whole washed
-down with cups of detestable <i>chicha</i>.</p>
-
-<p>The Frenchmen, who had been literally dying of hunger, were glad of even
-these humble viands, however little savoury they might be, and after
-ascertaining that their horses were comfortably provided for, they lay
-down, wrapped in their ponchos, upon a heap of dry leaves, a delicious
-bed for fatigued men, and upon which they slept soundly till morning.</p>
-
-<p>At daybreak, our two adventurers, still accompanied by their dog Cæsar,
-who, whatever he might think, expressed no astonishment at this new kind
-of life, but trotted seriously beside them, saddled their horses, bade
-farewell to their host, to whom they gave a few reals in return for
-his hospitality, and set forward again, looking with earnest curiosity
-at every object that presented itself to their view, and surprised to
-find so little difference between the New World and the Old. The life
-they were beginning, so different from that they had hitherto led, was,
-for them, full of unexpected charms, and they felt like schoolboys in
-holiday time. Their lungs seemed to expand to inhale the fresh, sharp
-breeze of the mountains. Everything, in their eyes, wore a smiling
-aspect; in a word, they felt they lived.</p>
-
-<p>It is about thirty-five leagues from Valparaiso to Chili, as the people
-of the country are accustomed to call the capital of the Republic. The
-handsome, broad, and well-kept up road, which was formerly cut through
-the mountain by the Spaniards, is rather monotonous, and completely
-devoid of interest for tourists. Vegetation is rare and poor; a fine
-and almost impalpable dust arises with the least puff of wind. The few
-trees, which stand at long distances from each other, are slender,
-stunted, dried up by both wind and sun, and seem, by their wretched
-appearance, to protest against the efforts at cultivation which have
-been made on this plateau, which is rendered sterile by the strong sea
-breezes and the cold winds of the Cordilleras which sweep over it.</p>
-
-<p>At times may be seen, at an immense height, like a black dot in space,
-the great condor of Chili, the eagle of the Andes, or the savage vulture
-in search of prey. At long intervals pass <i>recuas</i> of mules, headed by
-the <i>yegua madrina</i>, whose sonorous bells are heard to a great distance,
-accompanying, well or ill, the dismal chant of the muleteer, who thus
-endeavours to keep his beasts going. Or else it is a <i>guaso</i> of the
-interior, hastening to his chacra or his hacienda, and who, proudly
-mounted upon a half wild horse, passes like a whirlwind, favouring you
-as he goes by, with the eternal "Santas tardes, caballero!"</p>
-
-<p>With the exception of what we have described, the road is dull, dusty,
-and solitary. There is not, as with us, a single hostelry affording
-accommodation for horse and foot; these would be useless establishments
-in a country where the stranger enters every house as if it were his
-own home. Nothing! Solitude everywhere and always; hunger, thirst, and
-fatigue must be expected and endured.</p>
-
-<p>But our young men perceived nothing of this. Enthusiasm supplied the
-place of all they wanted; the road appeared charming to them; the
-journey they were making, delightful! They were in America; beneath
-their feet was the soil of the New World, that privileged land, of which
-so many surprising accounts are given; of which so many people talk, and
-about which so few know anything. Having landed only a few days before,
-while still under the impressions of an endless passage, the weariness
-of which had weighed down their spirits like a mantle of lead, they
-beheld Chili through the enchanting prism of their hopes; reality did
-not yet exist for them. What we have here said may appear a paradox to
-many people; and yet, we are satisfied that all travellers of good faith
-will acknowledge the exact truth.</p>
-
-<p>At times travelling at a steady foot pace, at others enjoying a laugh
-and a gallop, our young men, to whom the political events of the Chilian
-Republic were very uninteresting, and who, consequently, knew nothing of
-what was going on, arrived quietly within a league of Santiago, at about
-eleven o'clock in the evening, just at the moment when the ten Chilian
-patriots were falling on the Plaza Mayor, beneath the balls of General
-Bustamente's soldiers.</p>
-
-<p>"Let us pull up here," Valentine said cheerfully; "it will give our
-horses time to breathe."</p>
-
-<p>"Pull up! what for?" Louis asked. "It is late; we shall not find a
-single hotel open."</p>
-
-<p>"My dear friend," Valentine replied, with a laugh, "you are still a
-Parisian to the backbone! You forget that we are in America. In that
-city, of which the numerous steeples dimly stand out on the horizon
-before us, everybody is long since asleep, and all the doors are closed."</p>
-
-<p>"What shall we do, then?"</p>
-
-<p>"Pardieu! why, we will bivouac. The night is magnificent. The heavens
-display all their jewelry; the air is warm and balmy; what better could
-we desire?"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, nothing, of course!" Louis replied, laughingly.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, then, we have, as you see, time to chat a little."</p>
-
-<p>"Chat, brother! why, we have done nothing else since morning."</p>
-
-<p>"Pardon me, I don't agree with you. We have talked much, about all sorts
-of things, of the country in which we are, and of the manners of the
-inhabitants, little as we know about them; but we have not talked in the
-manner I mean."</p>
-
-<p>"Explain yourself more clearly."</p>
-
-<p>"Look you, brother; an idea has just struck me. We know not what
-adventures await us in that city, yonder, before us. Well! before we
-enter it, I should like to have a sort of final conversation with you."</p>
-
-<p>The young men took off their horses' bridles, that the animals might
-have the advantage of a few tufts of grass which sprang up here and
-there; and, stretching themselves luxuriously upon the ground, they lit
-their cigars.</p>
-
-<p>"We are in America," Valentine resumed; "in the country of gold, upon
-that soil where, with intelligence and courage, men of our age can in a
-few years amass princely fortunes!"</p>
-
-<p>"Do you know, my friend&mdash;&mdash;" interrupted Louis.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, perfectly!" said Valentine, cutting him short. "You are in love,
-and you are seeking the object of your love; that's understood: but that
-does not at all interfere with our projects&mdash;quite the contrary."</p>
-
-<p>"How is that?"</p>
-
-<p>"Pardieu! that's plain enough. You know, do you not, that Doña
-Rosario&mdash;that's her name, I think&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes."</p>
-
-<p>"Very well, then; you know she is rich, do you not?"</p>
-
-<p>"There's no doubt of that."</p>
-
-<p>"Ay, ay! but be it understood, not rich as with us: that is to say, some
-fifty thousand francs a year&mdash;a paltry pittance!&mdash;but rich as people are
-here&mdash;a dozen times over millionaires!"</p>
-
-<p>"Probably she may be," the young man said impatiently.</p>
-
-<p>"That's capital! You must understand, then, that when we have found her,
-for we <i>shall</i> find her, and that soon, you can only demand her hand by
-producing a fortune equal to her own."</p>
-
-<p>"The devil! I never thought of that," said the young man.</p>
-
-<p>"I know you did not; you are in love; and, like all other men afflicted
-with that disease, you think of nothing but the person you love.
-Fortunately, however, I am with you, to think for both; and whenever you
-have spoken to me of love, I have replied by reminding you of fortune."</p>
-
-<p>"That is true. But how is fortune to be made so promptly?"</p>
-
-<p>"Ah! ah! you have come to that question at last," Valentine said,
-laughing.</p>
-
-<p>"I know no profession," Louis continued, following his own idea.</p>
-
-<p>"Nor I either. But let not that alarm you; people succeed best in things
-they don't understand."</p>
-
-<p>"What's to be done?"</p>
-
-<p>"I will think of it; so set your mind at rest. But you must be well
-convinced of one thing, and that is, that we have set foot in a land
-where the ideas are quite different from those of the country we have
-left; where the manners and customs are diametrically opposite."</p>
-
-<p>"You mean to say&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"I mean to say that we must forget all we have learnt, in order that
-we may remember but one thing&mdash;our desire quickly to make a colossal
-fortune."</p>
-
-<p>"By honourable means?"</p>
-
-<p>"I am acquainted with no other," Valentine replied, seriously. "And
-remember, brother, that in the country in which we at present are, the
-point of honour is not at all the same as in France, and many things
-which with us would appear false coin are here deemed good and passable.
-On this point a word to the wise! You understand me, don't you?"</p>
-
-<p>"Nearly, I think."</p>
-
-<p>"Very well! Imagine we are in an enemy's country, and must act
-accordingly."</p>
-
-<p>"But&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Do you wish to marry the woman you love:"</p>
-
-<p>"Can you ask me such a question?"</p>
-
-<p>"Allow me to act, then, as I see best! But, above all, when chance
-throws a good opportunity in our way, let us be careful not to miss it."</p>
-
-<p>"Act just as you please."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, that is all I had to say to you;" and throwing away the remains
-of his cigar, he rose from his recumbent position.</p>
-
-<p>They were soon again in the saddle, and, at a foot's pace, resumed their
-way towards the city, chatting as they went.</p>
-
-<p>Midnight was striking by the clock of the Cabildo at the moment when
-they entered Santiago by the Canada. The streets were deserted and
-silent.</p>
-
-<p>"Everybody is asleep," said Louis.</p>
-
-<p>"So it seems," Valentine replied. "Let us look out, notwithstanding. If
-we find no door open, we can then but compound for a night's bivouac, as
-I suggested."</p>
-
-<p>At this moment two pistol shots were heard, mingled with the gallop of
-horses.</p>
-
-<p>"What can that be?" said Louis. "Assassination is going on here!"</p>
-
-<p>"Forward! cordieu!" replied Valentine.</p>
-
-<p>They clapped spurs to their horses, and galloped at full speed in the
-direction whence the sound proceeded. They soon reached a narrow street,
-in the middle of which two men on foot were bravely contending with five
-on horseback.</p>
-
-<p>"Have at the horsemen!" Valentine shouted; "help the weaker party!"</p>
-
-<p>"Be of good heart, gentlemen!" said Louis; "help is at hand!"</p>
-
-<p>And timely help it was for Don Gregorio and his friend. A minute later,
-and they must have succumbed. The providential arrival of the Frenchmen
-quickly changed the appearance of the fight. Two horsemen fell dead from
-pistol shots fired by the young men; while a third, knocked down by Don
-Gregorio, was silently strangled by Cæsar. The other two thought it
-high time to decamp, leaving their fair prisoner behind them. She had
-fainted; and Don Tadeo, leaning against the wall of a house, was upon
-the point of following her example. Valentine, with the presence of mind
-acquired in his old profession of a Spahi, secured the horses of the
-bandits killed in the skirmish.</p>
-
-<p>"Quick, gentlemen! to the saddle!" Valentine said to the Chilians.</p>
-
-<p>Louis had already dismounted, and was attending to the young lady.</p>
-
-<p>"Do not leave us," Don Gregorio remarked; "we are surrounded by enemies."</p>
-
-<p>"Fear nothing!" said Valentine, "we are quite at your service."</p>
-
-<p>"Many thanks!&mdash;A little assistance, if you please, to place my friend,
-who is wounded, on horseback."</p>
-
-<p>Once in the saddle, Don Tadeo declared he felt sufficiently strong to
-keep his seat without help. Don Gregorio placed the still inanimate
-young lady before him.</p>
-
-<p>"Now, gentlemen," he said, "nothing remains for me but to thank you most
-cordially, if your business will not allow you to remain longer with us."</p>
-
-<p>"I beg to repeat, caballeros, that we are at your service."</p>
-
-<p>"We have no pressing demand upon our time; we will not leave you till we
-are assured you are in safety," Louis said, with animation.</p>
-
-<p>"Follow me, then," said Don Gregorio, with a bow; "and do not spare the
-horses; it is an affair of life and death."</p>
-
-<p>And the four horsemen set off as fast as their horses could bear them.</p>
-
-<p>"Eh! eh!" said Valentine, in an undertone to his foster brother. "Here
-is an adventure that promises something! We are losing no time at
-Santiago! What think you?"</p>
-
-<p>"We shall see!" Louis replied, in a more thoughtful tone.</p>
-
-<p>No light had gleamed out, no window had been opened, during the combat.
-The streets remained silent and gloomy; the city seemed abandoned.
-Nothing was to be heard but the clatter of the horses' feet upon the
-rough pavement of the streets through which they galloped. The cathedral
-clock struck two as they passed across the Plaza Mayor. Don Tadeo could
-not repress a sigh of relief when glancing at the spot where on, only a
-few hours before, he had so miraculously escaped death.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>GENERAL BUSTAMENTE.</h3>
-
-
-<p>Don Tadeo was right, when, on seeing General Bustamente pass, he said he
-was on his way to visit his mistress. It was, in fact, to the residence
-of the Linda the General was going. On arriving at the gate, one of his
-men dismounted, and knocked. But no one answered; and at a sign from
-the General, the soldier knocked louder. But still all remained silent;
-there was no movement within. He began to feel uneasy. This silence was
-the more extraordinary from the General's visit having been announced,
-and he was, consequently, expected. "Oh! oh!" he said, "What is going on
-here? Knock again, Diego, and knock in a way to make yourself heard!"</p>
-
-<p>The soldier knocked with all his strength, but still uselessly. Don
-Pancho's brow contracted; he began to fancy some misfortune must have
-occurred.</p>
-
-<p>"Break open the door!" he cried.</p>
-
-<p>The order was instantly obeyed; and the General, followed by his escort,
-entered the house. In the Patio all dismounted.</p>
-
-<p>"Be prudent," said the General in a low voice to the corporal who
-commanded the escort; "place sentinels everywhere, and keep a sharp
-look-out whilst I search the house."</p>
-
-<p>After giving these orders, the General took his pistols from his
-holsters, and, followed by some of his lancers, entered the house;
-but everywhere the silence of death prevailed. After passing through
-several apartments, he arrived at a door, which, being a little ajar,
-allowed a stream of light to pass. From the other side of this door
-proceeded something like stifled groans. With a kick of his foot, one
-of the lancers dashed open the door; the General entered, and a strange
-spectacle presented itself to his astonished eyes! Doña Maria, tightly
-bound, and gagged, was fastened to the foot of a damask bed, saturated
-with blood. The furniture was broken and disordered, whilst two dead
-bodies, lying in a pool of blood, made it evident that the room had been
-the scene of a desperate conflict.</p>
-
-<p>The general ordered the dead bodies to be removed, and then desired to
-be left alone with the lady. As soon as the lancers had departed he shut
-the door, and approaching the Linda, he hastened to release her from her
-bonds. She was senseless.</p>
-
-<p>On turning round to place the pistols he had retained in his hands on
-the table, he drew back with astonishment, and almost with terror, as
-he perceived the dagger standing erect in the middle of it. But this
-instinctive feeling lasted only a moment. He went quickly up to the
-table, seized the dagger, which he carefully drew out, and eagerly took
-up the paper it had pinned down.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>The tyrant Don Pancho Bustamente is cited at the expiration of
-ninety-three days!</i></p>
-
-<p>
-<span style="margin-left: 19.5em;"><i>"THE DARK-HEARTS."</i></span><br />
-</p>
-
-<p>he read in a loud, harsh tone, and then crushed the paper violently in
-his hand. "Sangre de Dios! Will these demons always make a mock of me?
-Oh! they know that I show no mercy, and that those who fall into my
-hands&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Escape!" said a hollow voice, which made him start involuntarily.</p>
-
-<p>He turned sharply round, and beheld the Linda, with her vicious eye
-fixed upon him with a demoniacal expression. He sprang towards her.</p>
-
-<p>"Thank God!" he cried warmly, "you are again restored to your senses.
-Are you sufficiently recovered to explain the scene that has taken place
-here?"</p>
-
-<p>"A terrible scene, Don Pancho!" she replied, in a tremulous voice; "a
-scene, the bare remembrance of which still freezes me with terror."</p>
-
-<p>"Are you strong enough to describe it to me?"</p>
-
-<p>"I hope so," she replied. "Listen to me attentively, Don Pancho, for
-what I have to tell concerns you, perhaps, more than me."</p>
-
-<p>"You mean this insolent summons, I suppose?" he remarked, showing it.</p>
-
-<p>She glanced over it, and replied&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"I did not even know that such a paper had been addressed to you. But
-listen to me attentively."</p>
-
-<p>"In the first place, have the goodness to explain to me what you just
-now said."</p>
-
-<p>"Everything in its turn, General; I will not fail to explain everything,
-for the vengeance I thirst for must be complete."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" he said, a flash of hatred gleaming from his eye, "set your heart
-at ease on that head,&mdash;whilst avenging myself, I will avenge you."</p>
-
-<p>The Linda related to the General what had passed between her and Don
-Tadeo in the fullest details&mdash;how the Dark-Hearts had snatched him from
-her hands, and the threats they had addressed to her on leaving her.
-But, with that talent which all women possess, of making themselves
-appear innocent in everything, she represented as a miraculous piece of
-awkwardness on the part of the soldiers charged to shoot him, the fact
-of Don Tadeo being alive after his execution. She said that, attracted
-by the hope of avenging himself upon her, whom he suspected of being no
-stranger to his condemnation, he had introduced himself unseen into her
-house, where by a strange chance she happened to be alone, having that
-evening permitted her servants to be present at a <i>romeria</i> (a fête),
-from which they were not to return before three o'clock.</p>
-
-<p>The General had not for an instant the idea of doubting the veracity of
-his mistress. The situation in which he had found her,&mdash;the incredible
-news of the resurrection of his most implacable enemy, altogether so
-confused his thoughts, that suspicion had no time to enter his mind.
-He strode about the room with hasty steps, revolving in his head the
-most extravagant projects for seizing Don Tadeo, and, above all, for
-annihilating the Dark-Hearts,&mdash;those never-to-be-caught Proteuses, who
-so incessantly crossed his path, thwarted all his plans, and always
-escaped him. He plainly saw what additional strength the escape of Don
-Tadeo would give to the patriots, and how much it would complicate his
-political embarrassments, by placing at their head a resolute man who
-could have no longer any considerations to preserve, but would wage war
-to the knife with him. His perplexity was extreme; he instinctively
-felt that the ground beneath him was mined, that he was walking over
-a volcano, but he had no power to denounce to public opprobrium the
-enemies who conspired his ruin. The recital made by his mistress had
-produced the effect of a thunderclap upon him; he knew not what measures
-to employ in order to counteract the numerous plots in action against
-him on all sides, and simultaneously. The Linda did not take her eyes
-off him for a moment, but watched upon his countenance the various
-feelings aroused by what she told him.</p>
-
-<p>We will, in a few words, introduce to the reader this personage, who
-will play so important a part in the course of the following history.<a name="FNanchor_1_2" id="FNanchor_1_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_2" class="fnanchor">[1]</a>
-General Don Pancho Bustamente, who has left in Chili a reputation for
-cruelty so terrible that he is generally called <i>El Verdugo</i>, or the
-executioner, was a man of from thirty-five to thirty-six years of age,
-although he looked near fifty, a little above the middle height, well
-made, and of good carriage, announcing altogether great corporeal
-strength. His features were tolerably regular, but his prominent
-forehead, his grey eyes deeply set beneath the brows, and close to his
-hook nose, his large mouth and high cheek bones, gave him something of
-a resemblance to a bird of prey. His chin was square, an indication
-of obstinacy; his hair and moustache, beginning to be streaked with
-grey, were trained and cut in military fashion. He wore the magnificent
-uniform, covered at every seam with gold embroidery, of a general
-officer.</p>
-
-<p>Don Bustamente was the son of his own works, which was in his favour.
-At first a simple soldier, he had, by exemplary conduct and more than
-common talents, raised himself, step by step, to the highest rank of the
-army, and had in the last instance been named minister-at-war. Then the
-jealousy which had been silent whilst he was confounded with the crowd,
-was unchained against him. The General, instead of despising calumnies
-which might have died out of themselves, gave them some degree of
-foundation, by inaugurating a system of severity and cruelty. Devoured
-by an ambition which nothing could satisfy, all means were deemed good
-by him for the attainment of an object he secretly aimed at, which was
-the overthrow of the republic and government of Chili, and the formation
-of Bolivia and Araucania into one state, of which he would cause
-himself to be proclaimed Protector&mdash;an object which, besides the almost
-insurmountable difficulties it presented, ever appeared&mdash;owing to the
-universal hatred which the General had aroused against himself&mdash;to slip
-further from his grasp each time he thought he was about grasping it.</p>
-
-<p>At the moment we bring him on the scene, he found himself in one of the
-most critical circumstances of his political career. He had in vain
-shot the patriots <i>en masse</i>&mdash;conspiracies, as always happens in such
-cases, succeeded each other without interruption, and the system of
-terror which he had inaugurated, far from intimidating the population,
-appeared, on the contrary, to urge them on to revolt. Secret societies
-were formed; and one of these, the most powerful and the most terrible,
-that of the Dark-Hearts, enveloped him in invisible nets in which he
-struggled in vain. He foresaw that if he did not hasten on the <i>coup
-d'état</i> he meditated, he should be lost beyond redemption. After a
-rather long silence, the General placed himself by the side of the Linda.</p>
-
-<p>"We will be avenged!" he said, in a deep tone; "be but patient."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" she replied, bitterly, "my vengeance has commenced!"</p>
-
-<p>"What do you mean by that?"</p>
-
-<p>"I have caused Doña Rosario del Valle, the woman Don Tadeo de Leon loves
-so passionately, to be carried off."</p>
-
-<p>"You have <i>done</i> that?" said the General.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, and in ten minutes she will be here."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh! oh!" he exclaimed; "and do you mean to keep her with you?"</p>
-
-<p>"With me!" she cried; "No, I thank you, General. I hear that the
-Pehuenches are very fond of white women; I will make them a present of
-her."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" Don Pancho muttered, "women will be always our masters! they alone
-know how to revenge themselves! But," he added aloud, "have you no fear
-lest the man to whom you have confided this mission should betray you?"</p>
-
-<p>She smiled with terrible irony,</p>
-
-<p>"No," she said; "that man hates Don Tadeo more than I do, if that be
-possible; he is working out his own vengeance."</p>
-
-<p>At the same instant steps were heard in the chamber preceding the room.</p>
-
-<p>"You will see, General&mdash;here is my emissary. Come in!" the Linda cried.</p>
-
-<p>A man appeared; his face was pale and haggard; and his clothes, torn and
-disordered, were stained in various places with blood.</p>
-
-<p>"Well!" she exclaimed, in a tone of intense anxiety.</p>
-
-<p>"All has failed," answered the man, breathless with haste and terror.</p>
-
-<p>"What!" the Linda shouted, with a cry like that of a wild beast.</p>
-
-<p>"There were five of us," the man continued, quite unmoved, "and we
-carried off the <i>señorita</i>. All went on well till within a short
-distance from this house, when we were attacked by four demons, who came
-I know not whence."</p>
-
-<p>"And you did not defend yourselves, miserable cowards!" interrupted the
-General violently.</p>
-
-<p>The bandit gave him a cold look, and continued impassively&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Three of our number are dead, and the leader and myself wounded."</p>
-
-<p>"And the girl?" the Linda asked passionately.</p>
-
-<p>"The girl was recaptured by our opponents. The Englishman has sent me to
-you to learn if you still wish him to carry off Doña Rosario?"</p>
-
-<p>"Would he attempt it again?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes. And this time, he says, he is certain to succeed if the conditions
-are the same."</p>
-
-<p>A smile of contempt played round the lips of the courtezan.</p>
-
-<p>"Repeat to him this," she replied; "not only shall he receive the
-hundred ounces if he succeeds, but, still further, he shall have a
-hundred more; and that he may be in no doubt of my promise," she added,
-rising and taking from a drawer a rather heavy bag which she handed to
-the bandit, "give him this; there is the half of the sum, but bid him
-despatch!"</p>
-
-<p>The man bowed.</p>
-
-<p>"As to you, Juanito," she continued, "as soon as you have acquitted
-yourself of this mission, return, for I shall, perhaps, want you here.
-Begone!"</p>
-
-<p>The bandit disappeared instantly.</p>
-
-<p>"Who is that man?" the General asked.</p>
-
-<p>"A poor devil whom I saved some years ago from certain death. He is
-devoted to me, body and soul."</p>
-
-<p>"Hum!" said the general, "he has rather too cunning an eye not to be a
-rogue."</p>
-
-<p>The Linda shrugged her shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>"You are mistrustful of everybody," she said.</p>
-
-<p>"That is the way not to be deceived."</p>
-
-<p>"Or to be deceived the more easily."</p>
-
-<p>"Perhaps so. Well, you see this abduction, so admirably planned, and the
-success of which was certain, has failed."</p>
-
-<p>"I can only repeat what you yourself said to me just now."</p>
-
-<p>"What is that?"</p>
-
-<p>"Patience! But, pray, what are your present plans?" The General rose.</p>
-
-<p>"Whilst you are carrying on against our enemies," he said, in a low,
-stern tone, "a guerilla warfare of ambuscades and treacheries, I, on my
-part, will wage an open war against them&mdash;a war in the face of the sun,
-but as merciless as yours. Their blood shall flow in streams over all
-the territories of the Republic. The Dark-Hearts have summoned me in
-ninety-three days. Well, I take up the gauntlet they have thrown to me."</p>
-
-<p>"That is well!" the Linda replied. "And now let us so arrange our plans
-that they may not fail like their predecessors. We must come to an end
-with these miserable plotters, and in doing so, take a revenge that will
-make an impression on others."</p>
-
-<p>"It shall be a vengeance! I will stake my head on the game. Oh," he
-added, "I hold them! I have found the means I sought to make them all
-fall into my hands; let them sleep for a while in deceitful security,
-but their awakening shall be terrible!"</p>
-
-<p>And, having saluted the Linda with the greatest courtesy, the General
-retired.</p>
-
-<p>"I leave you a few soldiers to watch over your safety till the return of
-your servants," he said, as he went out.</p>
-
-<p>"Thank you, thank you!" she replied, with a bland smile.</p>
-
-<p>The Linda, when left alone, instead of seeking the repose so necessary
-after the excitement of the night, remained plunged in deep thought.
-At sunrise she was still in the same place, in the same position. She
-was still reflecting, but her features became animated; a sinister
-smile curled her pale lips; and her eyes, though apparently fixed upon
-vacancy, emitted portentous flashes. Suddenly she sprang up, and passing
-her hand rapidly over her brow, as if to efface its wrinkles, she cried,
-in a tone of triumph&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"And I, too, will succeed!"</p>
-
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_2" id="Footnote_1_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_2"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> Reasons of the highest consideration oblige us to change
-the names and the portraits of the personages of this history, as the
-majority still exist. But we vouch for the correctness of the facts we
-relate.</p></div>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>THE SPY.</h3>
-
-
-<p>When the young lady was delivered, the four men set off as fast as they
-could go, with regard to her ease. In ten minutes they were out of the
-city, and with the change of the road their speed was increased. The
-route they took was that which leads to Talca.</p>
-
-<p>"Eh, eh!" Valentine said, laughing, to his foster brother; "we seem to
-be playing at prisoners' bars. We enter the city by one gate, to leave
-it immediately by another. We shall not have an opportunity of seeing
-the capital of Chili this time."</p>
-
-<p>With the exception of these few words, to which Louis only replied by a
-careless shrug of the shoulders, no other conversation took place during
-the hour which their rapid journey lasted. By the pale light of the moon
-the trees on each side of the road seemed to defile like a legion of
-melancholy phantoms. Ere long the white walls of a <i>chacra</i> (large farm)
-stood out upon the horizon.</p>
-
-<p>"Here we are," said Don Gregorio, pointing with his finger.</p>
-
-<p>They reached the house in a few minutes. The gate was open, but a
-man was standing evidently on the watch. The fugitives dashed like a
-hurricane into the <i>patio</i>, and the gates were immediately closed behind
-them.</p>
-
-<p>"What has happened, Tio Pepito?" Don Gregorio asked, before he was quite
-off his horse, of the man who appeared to have expected him.</p>
-
-<p>"Nothing, <i>mi amo</i>" (my master), "nothing of consequence," replied Tio
-Pepito, a little thick-set man, with a round face, lit up by two grey
-eyes, sparkling with cunning.</p>
-
-<p>"Have not the persons I expected arrived?"</p>
-
-<p>"Pardon me, <i>mi amo</i>. They have been at the <i>chacra</i> more than an
-hour. They say they must begone immediately; they are waiting for you
-impatiently."</p>
-
-<p>"That's well. Announce my arrival to them, and tell them I shall be at
-their service in two or three minutes."</p>
-
-<p>The mayoral, for this man was the major-domo of the <i>chacra</i>, entered
-the house without reply. Don Tadeo also, who seemed to know perfectly
-well where he was, disappeared, bearing the young girl in his arms. The
-two Frenchmen were left alone with the chacrero, who advanced towards
-them.</p>
-
-<p>"Now that you are, as we suppose, for the present at least, in safety,
-sir," said Valentine, "we have only to take our leave of you."</p>
-
-<p>"Not so!" Don Gregorio exclaimed; "it must not be so. <i>Diable</i>! as you
-Frenchmen say," he added, smiling; "chance does not so often procure
-us such friends as you, to allow us to part with you thus when we have
-met you. You will remain here, if you please. Our acquaintance must not
-terminate so."</p>
-
-<p>"If our continuing here can be of any service to you," Louis replied,
-courteously, "we are at your command."</p>
-
-<p>"Thank you," he said, in a slightly agitated voice, and pressing their
-hands warmly; "I shall never forget that I owe to you the lives of
-myself and my friend. In what way can I be of service to you?"</p>
-
-<p>"Well," Valentine said, laughing, "in every way, and no way, as it may
-happen, caballero."</p>
-
-<p>"Explain yourself," Don Gregorio replied.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>Dame!</i> it is clear enough; we are strangers in this country."</p>
-
-<p>"When did you arrive?" the Chilian said, examining them attentively.</p>
-
-<p>"Faith! very recently. You are the first persons we have spoken to."</p>
-
-<p>"That is well," Gregorio said, slowly. "I told you that I was at your
-service, did I not?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, and we sincerely thank you; although we hope never to have
-occasion to remind you of this obliging offer."</p>
-
-<p>"I perfectly appreciate your delicacy; but a service like the one you
-have rendered me and my friend is an eternal bond. Take no heed of your
-future fortune, it is made."</p>
-
-<p>"Pardon me, pardon me!" said Valentine, earnestly; "we do not understand
-one another at all; you mistake us. We are not men who expect to be paid
-for having acted as our hearts dictated. You owe us nothing."</p>
-
-<p>"I do not propose or pretend to pay you, gentlemen. I only wish, in
-order to attach you to me, to propose to you to share my good or evil
-fortune; in a word, I offer myself to you as a brother."</p>
-
-<p>"In that case we at once accede," said Louis, "and will endeavour to
-prove ourselves worthy of such an offer."</p>
-
-<p>"I have no doubt you will. Only I beg you not to be misled by my words;
-the life I am leading at present is full of perils."</p>
-
-<p>"I can suppose that," said Valentine, with a laugh. "The scene at which
-we have been present, and the <i>denoûment</i> of which we perhaps hastened,
-makes it pretty evident that your existence is not of the most peaceful
-nature."</p>
-
-<p>"What you have as yet seen is nothing. Do you know nobody in this
-country?"</p>
-
-<p>"Nobody."</p>
-
-<p>"Your political opinions, then, are unformed?"</p>
-
-<p>"As regards Chili, completely."</p>
-
-<p>"Bravo!" Don Gregorio exclaimed, with delight; "if we agree on that
-point our compact will be for life and death."</p>
-
-<p>"We do agree," said Valentine, laughing; "and if you conspire&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Well?" the Chilian asked, fixing an inquiring look upon him.</p>
-
-<p>"Why, we will conspire, too, pardieu! That is agreed."</p>
-
-<p>The three men exchanged a cordial pressure of the hand, and then Don
-Gregorio called the major-domo to conduct them to the chamber which was
-prepared for them.</p>
-
-<p>"Good night! or rather good morning!" he said, on quitting them.</p>
-
-<p>"Come!" said Valentine, rubbing his hands, "matters are going on well.
-We shall not want for amusement here."</p>
-
-<p>"Hum!" Louis replied, with a tone of something like uneasiness;
-"conspire!"</p>
-
-<p>"Well, and what better?" said Valentine. "Does that frighten you?
-Remember, my friend, that the best fishing is in troubled waters."</p>
-
-<p>"In that case," Louis remarked, taking up the gay humour of his
-companion, "if my presentiments are just, ours will be miraculous."</p>
-
-<p>"I expect so, firmly," said Valentine, bidding good night to the
-major-domo, who retired, after bowing respectfully.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>cuarto</i> (chamber) in which the young men found themselves, was
-whitewashed, and entirely destitute of furniture, with the exception of
-two oak frames furnished with dressed hides, which served as beds, a
-massive table with twisted feet, and four seats covered with leather.
-In a corner of the room burned a little green wax light before a
-badly-engraved print supposed to represent the Virgin.</p>
-
-<p>"Eh!" said Louis, casting a glance around him, "our friends, the
-Chilians, do not seem to consult comfort much."</p>
-
-<p>"Bah!" Valentine replied, "we have all that we require. A man can sleep
-soundly anywhere when he is fatigued. This chamber is better than the
-bivouac we were threatened with."</p>
-
-<p>"You are right. Let us take a little rest then, for we don't know what
-tomorrow has in reserve for us."</p>
-
-<p>In a quarter of an hour they were both fast asleep. At the moment the
-Frenchmen went into the house with the major-domo, Don Tadeo came out by
-another door.</p>
-
-<p>"Well?" Don Gregorio asked, anxiously.</p>
-
-<p>"She is asleep. Her terror is abated," Don Tadeo replied. "The joy she
-experienced at seeing me, whom she believed dead, brought about a very
-salutary crisis."</p>
-
-<p>"I am glad to hear it! In that quarter, then, we may be at ease?"</p>
-
-<p>"Completely."</p>
-
-<p>"Do you feel yourself strong enough to be present at an important
-interview?"</p>
-
-<p>"Is it necessary that I should be present?"</p>
-
-<p>"I think it quite right that you should hear the communications that one
-of my emissaries is about to make me."</p>
-
-<p>"It is very imprudent of you," said Don Tadeo, "to receive such a man in
-your own house!"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh! do not alarm yourself! I have known him for a long time. Besides,
-he is not aware whose house he is in; he was brought hither blinded, by
-two of our brethren. In addition to which, we shall be masked."</p>
-
-<p>"Well! since you desire it, I am at your commands."</p>
-
-<p>The two friends, after having covered their faces with black velvet
-masks, entered the apartment in which were the persons who waited for
-them. This apartment, which served as a dining room, was very large, and
-furnished with a long table; it was faintly illumined by two sconces,
-in which burned small candles of yellow tallow, yielding so doubtful a
-light that objects could be seen but indistinctly. Three men, wrapped
-in variegated ponchos, and with broad-brimmed hats pulled down over
-their eyes, were carelessly smoking their slender papelitos, whilst
-warming themselves round a copper <i>brasero,</i> placed in the middle of the
-apartment, and in which some olive-stones were slowly burning. At the
-entrance of the leaders of the Dark-Hearts, these men rose.</p>
-
-<p>"Why," asked Don Tadeo, who at the first glance recognized the emissary,
-"why did you not wait, Don Pedro, for the meeting tomorrow, at the
-<i>Quinta Verde,</i> to communicate to the council the revelations you have
-to make?"</p>
-
-<p>The man thus named as Don Pedro bowed respectfully. He was an individual
-of about thirty-five years of age. He was tall, and his countenance, as
-sharp as the blade of a knife, wore a cunning, roguish expression.</p>
-
-<p>"What I have to state only indirectly concerns the Dark-Hearts," he said.</p>
-
-<p>"Then, of what importance is it to us?" Don Gregorio interrupted him.</p>
-
-<p>"But it greatly concerns the leaders, particularly the King of Darkness."</p>
-
-<p>"Explain yourself then, for he is before you," Don Tadeo remarked,
-taking a step forward.</p>
-
-<p>Pedro darted a look at him which seemed to endeavour to penetrate
-through the tissue of his mask.</p>
-
-<p>"What I have to say will be brief," he replied,&mdash;"I leave to you the
-care of judging of its importance. General Don Bustamente will be
-present at the meeting tomorrow."</p>
-
-<p>"Are you sure of that?" the two conspirators exclaimed with a degree of
-astonishment that denoted incredulity.</p>
-
-<p>"It was I who persuaded him to do so."</p>
-
-<p>"You?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, I."</p>
-
-<p>"Are you ignorant, then," Don Tadeo exclaimed with great warmth, "in
-what manner we punish traitors?"</p>
-
-<p>"I am no traitor; on the contrary, I deliver into your hands your most
-implacable enemy."</p>
-
-<p>Don Tadeo replied only by a suspicious glance.</p>
-
-<p>"The General then is ignorant?"</p>
-
-<p>"Of everything," said Don Pedro.</p>
-
-<p>"With what purpose, then, does he wish to introduce himself among us?"</p>
-
-<p>"Can you not guess? For that of obtaining your secret."</p>
-
-<p>"But he risks his life."</p>
-
-<p>"Do you forget that every adept must be introduced by a sponsor, who
-alone knows him? No one sees his face. Well, <i>I</i> introduce him," he
-added, with a smile of strange significance.</p>
-
-<p>"That is true. But if he should suspect you of treachery?"</p>
-
-<p>"I must undergo the consequences; but he will not suspect me."</p>
-
-<p>"Why not?" Don Gregorio asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Because," the spy replied, with a cynical smile, "for ten years the
-General has employed me, and during those ten years he has had only
-cause to praise me for the services I have rendered him."</p>
-
-<p>A momentary silence followed.</p>
-
-<p>"Here!" said Don Gregorio, after a long pause, "this time it is not ten
-ounces, but twenty, that you have earned. Continue to be faithful to us."</p>
-
-<p>And he placed a heavy purse in his hands. The spy seized it with a
-gesture of avidity, and concealed it quickly under his poncho.</p>
-
-<p>"You shall have no reproach to make me," he replied, with a bow.</p>
-
-<p>"I hope we shall not," said Don Tadeo, with difficulty repressing an
-expression of disgust. "Only remember, we should be merciless."</p>
-
-<p>"I know it."</p>
-
-<p>"In that case, farewell."</p>
-
-<p>"Farewell till tomorrow."</p>
-
-<p>The men who had brought him, and who during the conversation had
-remained motionless, at a sign from Don Gregorio approached the spy,
-bandaged his eyes again, and led him away.</p>
-
-<p>"Is that fellow a traitor?" asked Don Gregorio, as he listened to the
-retreating steps of the horses.</p>
-
-<p>"It is our duty to suppose him one," the King of Darkness replied,
-gravely.</p>
-
-<p>The two friends, instead of seeking the repose which must have been
-so necessary to them, talked together for a long time, in order to
-arrange all the measures of safety which were required by the importance
-of the scene about to take place on the morrow at the meeting of the
-conspirators. In the meantime Don Pedro had been quickly led back
-to Santiago. On arriving at one of the gates, his guides left him,
-disappearing in opposite directions. As soon as he was alone, he removed
-the handkerchief from his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>"Hum!" he said, with a sinister smile, as he tossed up in his right hand
-the purse Don Gregorio had given him. "Twenty ounces make a purse of
-gold. Now let us see if General Bustamente is as liberal as his enemies.
-By the Virgin! the news I carry him are worth something to him! Let us
-try to get the best price for them."</p>
-
-<p>After having cast his eyes around to see if the coast was clear, he set
-off at a sharp trot towards the government palace, muttering to himself&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Bah! times are hard. If a man did not manoeuvre a little, he would find
-no means of bringing up his family honestly."</p>
-
-<p>This reflection, of a rather dubious morality, was accompanied by a
-grimace, the expression of which would have given Don Tadeo cause for
-suspicion if he had seen it.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>LOVE.</h3>
-
-
-<p>On the morrow the two Frenchmen were awakened by the rays of the sun.
-The day promised to be a brilliant one, for there was not a cloud in
-the heavens. A light vapour, full of penetrating odours, arose slowly
-from the earth, drawn up by the beams of the sun, whose warm influence
-increased every minute. The morning breeze refreshed the air, and
-invited them to inhale it. The young men, perfectly recovered from their
-fatigue, sprang cheerfully from their humble beds and dressed themselves
-in haste.</p>
-
-<p>The chacra, of which they had only a glimpse the night before by
-moonlight, was an immense farm, consisting of extensive buildings,
-and surrounded by fields in full cultivation. The greatest animation
-prevailed everywhere. Peons, mounted on half wild horses, were driving
-out the cattle to the artificial meadows, whilst others were running
-about after the horses they were getting together, in order to lead
-them to the drinking place. In the patio the major-domo was overlooking
-the women and girls engaged in milking. In short, this residence, which
-had appeared to them so silent and dismal the night before, assumed
-by daylight an appearance of life and cheerfulness delightful to
-contemplate.</p>
-
-<p>The cries of the peons mingled with the lowing of the cattle, the
-barking of the dogs, and the crowing of the cocks, and formed that
-melodious concert which is only to be heard on a farm, and which always
-rejoices the heart.</p>
-
-<p>It is a justice that we willingly render here to the Chilian republic
-when we say that it alone of the southern states of America appears
-to understand that the wealth of a country consists not in the number
-of its mines, but in the encouragement given to cultivation; and that
-this country, while possessing rich mines of gold, silver, and precious
-stones, only places their produce in the second rank, whilst it reserves
-its principal solicitude for agriculture. Chili is as yet young as a
-nation. There manufactures and the arts are in their infancy; but the
-farms are numerous, the fields well cultivated, and soon this country
-will be called upon, there is no doubt, through its system of labour,
-to become the entrepôt of the other American powers, which it already
-provides in a great measure with corn and wine, from Cape Horn to
-California.</p>
-
-<p>Behind the chacra extended a well-kept up garden, in which oranges,
-pomegranates, and citrons, planted in the open ground, grew amidst
-limes, apples, plums, and all the other fruits of Europe. Louis was
-agreeably surprised at the aspect of this garden, with its numerous
-alleys, in which a thousand birds of brilliant colours warbled gaily
-under the foliage of the tufted thickets of jasmine and honeysuckle.
-Whilst Valentine went, followed by Cæsar, to look at the operations of
-the peons and smoke his cigar in the patio, Louis felt himself led by
-his dreamy spirit to indulge in poetical reveries, and to seek a few
-minutes' solitude in the Eden which lay before him. Urged by an unknown
-power, intoxicated by the sweet odours which embalmed the atmosphere, he
-glided into the garden, casting around him a vaguely questioning look.</p>
-
-<p>The young man went dreaming along the garden walks, mechanically pulling
-to pieces with his fingers a rose which he had gathered. He had walked
-thus for nearly an hour, when he was roused by a slight noise among
-the leaves, at a short distance from him. He instinctively raised his
-head, just in time to catch a glimpse of a light white robe which was
-disappearing among the trees, but too late to completely distinguish the
-person who wore it, and who appeared to trip over the dewy grass like
-a white phantom. At the sight of this mysterious apparition the young
-man felt his heart bound in his breast; he stopped trembling, and the
-emotion he felt was so powerful, that he was forced to lean against a
-tree for support.</p>
-
-<p>"What can be the matter with me?" he murmured to himself, as he wiped
-the cold perspiration from his brow. "I am mad!" he continued, with a
-forced smile. "I think I see her everywhere. Heavens! I love her so
-deeply that, in spite of myself, my imagination brings her before me
-unceasingly. That girl, of whom I just caught a glimpse, is probably the
-same we last night so miraculously saved. Poor child! Fortunately she
-did not see me; I should have frightened her. Better avoid her by going
-out of the garden; in my present state I should alarm her."</p>
-
-<p>And, as always happens in such cases, he set off, on the contrary, in
-the very footsteps of her he had only caught a glimpse of, but whom, by
-one of the instinctive feelings of sympathy which come from God, and
-which science can never explain, he had nevertheless recognized.</p>
-
-<p>The young girl, reclining in the depths of an arbour, like a hummingbird
-in its bed of muss, with a pale face, and her eyes cast down to the
-earth, was listening, pensive and sad, to the joyous melodies which the
-birds chanted in her absent ear. All at once, a slight noise made her
-start and raise her head. The Count was before her! She uttered a faint
-cry, and endeavoured to fly.</p>
-
-<p>"Don Louis!" she exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>She had recognized him. The young man sank on his knees at the entrance
-of the arbour.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" he cried, in a voice trembling with emotion, and with an accent of
-the most earnest entreaty, "for pity's sake, remain, madam!"</p>
-
-<p>"Don Louis!" she repeated, already recovered, and feigning the most
-perfect indifference. Young girls, even the purest, possess in a high
-degree the talent of concealing their feelings, and of deceiving persons
-with regard to the emotions they really experience.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, it is I, madam," he continued, with an accent of the most
-respectful passion; "I, who, to see you again, have abandoned
-everything!"</p>
-
-<p>The young lady displayed some slight surprise.</p>
-
-<p>"For Heaven's sake!" he resumed, "allow me once more, if but for an
-instant, to contemplate your adored features! Oh!" he added, with a look
-of deep affection, "my heart had told me you were here, before my eyes
-had perceived you."</p>
-
-<p>"Caballero," she said, in a tremulous voice, "I do not understand you."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, fear nothing from me, madam!" he interrupted her vehemently; "my
-respect for you is as profound as&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Pray, caballero," she said, earnestly, "rise; if anyone should surprise
-you thus!"</p>
-
-<p>"Madam," he replied, "the avowal I have to make to you, requires me to
-remain in the position of a suppliant!"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, caballero!"</p>
-
-<p>"I love you, madam!" he said, in broken accents; "I know not what gives
-me the boldness to pronounce a word which in France I did not venture
-to breathe in your ear, and which I have never allowed to pass from my
-heart to my lips. But even if you banished me from your presence for
-ever, once again I must tell you that I love you, madam; and if you do
-not return my love, I shall die!"</p>
-
-<p>The maiden looked at him for a moment with a melancholy air; a tear
-trembled on her long eyelashes; she took a step towards him, and holding
-out her hand, upon which he imprinted a burning kiss, said softly,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Rise."</p>
-
-<p>The Count obeyed. Doña Rosario sunk back upon the bench behind her,
-and appeared plunged in profound and painful meditation. Both remained
-silent, Louis watching her with intense anxiety, and a throbbing heart.
-At length she raised her head, and exhibited a countenance bathed in
-tears.</p>
-
-<p>"Caballero," she said in a melancholy tone, "if God has permitted us to
-meet once again, it is because, in His divine goodness, He has judged
-that a decisive explanation should take place between us."</p>
-
-<p>The young man appeared anxious to speak.</p>
-
-<p>"Do not interrupt me," she continued, "or I shall not have the courage
-to finish what I have to say to you. You love me, Louis; your presence
-here is an incontestable proof of it&mdash;you love me; and yet how many
-times, during my short residence in France, have you cursed me in
-secret, accusing me of coquetry, or, at least, of unaccountable levity!"</p>
-
-<p>"Madam!"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" she said, with a faint smile, "since you have avowed your love
-for me, I will be frank with you, Louis; and although it be my duty to
-deprive you of all future hope, I am at least anxious to justify the
-past, and leave you a remembrance of me that nothing can tarnish!"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, madam! why do you repeat such things to me?"</p>
-
-<p>"Why?" she said, with a look full of melancholy, and in a voice
-harmonious as the sigh of an Æolian harp, "because I have faith in that
-love, so warm, so young, so true; which neither daily indignities nor
-vast distances have been able to conquer&mdash;because, in short, I also love
-you! do you not plainly see that, Louis?"</p>
-
-<p>On hearing this confession, so ingenuous, and made in a tone so
-sorrowful that the young girl appeared no longer to belong to earth, the
-Count felt struck by a terrible presentiment; his heart was wrung with
-doubtful agony. Trembling, bewildered, he gazed on her with the fixed
-and desperate eye of one condemned to death, who is listening to the
-reading of his sentence.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes!" she resumed, with feverish eagerness; "yes, I love you, Louis, I
-shall always love you; but never, never, can we be united."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, that is impossible!" he cried, raising his head vehemently.</p>
-
-<p>"Listen to me," she said, in a tone of authority; "I do not order you to
-forget me, Louis; a love like yours is eternal: alas! I feel that mine
-will last as long as my life. You see, my friend, I am frank; I do not
-speak to you as a maiden ought to speak; I unfold my heart before you,
-leaving you to read it as you would your own. Well, this love, which
-would be for us the height of felicity,&mdash;this communion of two spirits,
-which blend with each other to form one blissful whole,&mdash;this boundless
-happiness must be dispersed for ever, without chance of recovery,
-without hesitation!"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, I cannot consent!" he exclaimed, in a voice broken by sobs.</p>
-
-<p>"But it must be so, I tell you!" she continued, wild with anguish.
-"Great Heaven! what more do you require of me? Must I confess everything
-to you? Well, then, since it must be so, know that I am a miserable
-creature, condemned from my birth, pursued by a terrible hatred,
-which follows me step by step, which watches me incessantly; and some
-day&mdash;tomorrow, perhaps today&mdash;will crush me without mercy! Obliged
-to change my name constantly; flying from city to city, from country
-to country; wherever I may go, this implacable enemy, whom I do not
-know, and against whom I cannot defend myself, pursues me without
-intermission."</p>
-
-<p>"But I will defend you!" the young man said, with confident energy.</p>
-
-<p>"And I, on my part, am not willing that you should die!" she replied,
-with an accent of ineffable tenderness. "To attach yourself to me is
-to court destruction. I went to France to seek a place of refuge. I
-was obliged to quit that hospitable land with the greatest suddenness.
-Arrived here only a few weeks since, but for you, last night, I should
-have been lost! No, no, I am condemned; I know I am, and I am resigned;
-but I will not drag you down in my fall! Alas! I am, perhaps, doomed to
-suffer tortures still more horrible than those I have hitherto endured!
-Oh, Louis, in the name of the love which you have for me, and which I
-fully share, leave me the supreme consolation in my wretchedness of
-knowing that you are safe from the torments which overwhelm me!"</p>
-
-<p>At this moment Valentine's voice was heard at a short distance, and
-Cæsar came wagging his tail to his master. Doña Rosario gathered a
-blossom of the <i>suchil</i> which grew close to them, and presented it to
-the young man, after having for a moment inhaled its sweet odour.</p>
-
-<p>"Here," she said, "my friend, accept this flower, the only memorial,
-alas! that will remain with you of me."</p>
-
-<p>The young man concealed the flower in his bosom.</p>
-
-<p>"Someone is coming," she continued, in broken accents. "Swear, Louis!
-swear to quit this country as soon as possible, without endeavouring to
-see me again."</p>
-
-<p>The Count hesitated.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" he cried, "some day, perhaps,&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Never on earth. Have I not told you that I am condemned? Swear, Louis,
-that at least I may hope to meet you again in heaven."</p>
-
-<p>She pronounced these words with such a tone of despair, that the young
-man, overcome, in spite of himself, made a gesture of assent, and let
-the almost inarticulate words escape his lips,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"I swear to do so!"</p>
-
-<p>"Thanks! thanks!" she cried wildly, and hurriedly imprinting a kiss upon
-the brow of her prostrated lover, she disappeared with the lightness of
-a fawn amidst a thicket of standard roses, at the moment when Valentine
-became visible at the turning of the walk.</p>
-
-<p>"Why brother," the soldier said gaily, "what the deuce are you about
-here, at the bottom of the garden? Breakfast is waiting for you. I have
-been looking for you this hour; and if it had not been for Cæsar, I
-should not have found you now."</p>
-
-<p>The Count turned towards him, his face lathed in tears, and threw his
-arms round his neck.</p>
-
-<p>"Brother! brother!" he cried, in an accent of despair; "I am the most
-unhappy of men!"</p>
-
-<p>Valentine looked at him in astonishment. The Count had fainted.</p>
-
-<p>"What on earth is all this about?" said the soldier, casting a
-suspicious look around him, and laying his foster brother, who was
-motionless as a corpse, gently upon a grassy bank.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>THE QUINTA VERDE.</h3>
-
-
-<p>Not far from Rio Claro, a charming little city, built in a delicious
-situation between Santiago and Talca, there was then, and probably is
-still, upon a hill commanding an extensive view, a pretty <i>quinta</i>, with
-white walls and green shutters, coquettishly concealed from indiscreet
-eyes by a thicket of trees of various sorts&mdash;oaks, acajous, maples,
-palms, aloes, cactus, &amp;c., which sprang up and intertwined within each
-other in such a fashion around it as to form an almost impregnable
-rampart. It is difficult to explain how, in such a period of convulsions
-and overthrows, this delicious habitation had hitherto escaped, as if by
-a miracle, from the devastation and pillage which incessantly menaced
-it, and which fell without intermission around it, enveloping it, as
-it were, in a network of ruins, without, however, having ever troubled
-that tranquil dwelling, although the human tempest had frequently howled
-beneath its walls, and, in the shade of night, it had often seen the red
-torches of incendiaries gleam; all at once, though no one knew why, and
-as if by enchantment, the cries of murder ceased, and the torches became
-extinguished and harmless in the hands of the men who, a minute before,
-had waved them about madly. This habitation was named the "Quinta Verde."</p>
-
-<p>By what prodigy had this house, so simple in appearance, and so like
-the rest, avoided the common fate and remained alone, perhaps, of all
-the houses of the Chilian plains, calm and tranquil in the midst of
-general confusion, equally respected by the two parties contending for
-power, and surveying carelessly from the top of its pretty <i>mirador</i> the
-revolution raging at its feet, which carried away, as in an infernal
-whirlwind, cities, villages, houses, fortunes, and families? This is
-what many people, at various periods, had been anxious to know, though
-they had never been able to find out. Nobody ostensibly inhabited this
-quinta, in which, on certain days, noises were heard which filled with a
-superstitious terror the worthy <i>guasos</i> living in the neighbourhood.</p>
-
-<p>The day after that on which the events occurred which open this history,
-the heat had been oppressive, the atmosphere heavy, and the sun had
-gone down amidst a flood of purple vapour, the precursors of a storm
-which burst with fury as soon as night had completely closed in. The
-wind bent down the trees as it whistled through them, the collision of
-the branches producing a melancholy sound; the heavens were black, not
-a star was to be seen; and large grey clouds coursed rapidly across
-the zenith, covering all nature with a leaden pall. In the distance
-resounded the howlings of wild beasts, among which was occasionally
-mingled the hoarse, sharp barking of stray dogs.</p>
-
-<p>Nine o'clock struck slowly from a distant steeple; the sound of the
-metal, repeated by the echoes from the hills, vibrated with a plaintive
-tone over the deserted landscape. The moon, fitfully emerging from
-behind the clouds which veiled her, spread for a few seconds a pale
-and trembling light over the scene, giving it a fantastic aspect. This
-fugitive ray of doubtful light, nevertheless, enabled a small troop of
-horsemen, who were painfully ascending a winding path on the side of a
-mountain, to distinguish, at a few paces before them, the black outline
-of a house, from the top window of which beamed like a pharos a red,
-uncertain light. This house was the "Quinta Verde."</p>
-
-<p>At about four or five paces in advance of the troop rode two horsemen,
-muffled carefully in their cloaks, the flaps of their hats pulled down
-over their eyes, appeared, in the darkness, to be a needless precaution;
-but it, nevertheless, showed that these personages were very anxious not
-to be recognized.</p>
-
-<p>"Heaven be praised!" said one of these horsemen to his companion, as
-he pulled up his horse, to look searchingly around him, as far as the
-darkness would permit; "I hope we shall soon be there."</p>
-
-<p>"In a quarter of an hour, at latest, General, we shall be at the end of
-our journey."</p>
-
-<p>"Do not let us stop, then," the one addressed as General said; "I am
-impatient to penetrate into this abominable den."</p>
-
-<p>"One moment, General!" the first speaker continued. "It is my duty to
-warn your Excellency that there is still time to retreat; and that
-would, perhaps, be the more prudent step."</p>
-
-<p>"Please to observe this, Diego," said the General, fixing upon his
-companion a look which gleamed in the semi-obscurity like that of a
-tiger-cat&mdash;"in the circumstances in which I am placed, prudence, as you
-understand the word, would be cowardice. I am quite aware what I am
-called upon to do by the confidence placed in me by my fellow citizens;
-our position is most critical: the liberal reaction is raising its head
-in all quarters, and we must put an end to this ever-reviving hydra.
-The news of Don Tadeo's escape from death has spread with the rapidity
-of a train of gunpowder; all the malcontents of whom he is the leader,
-are in almost open action; if I were to hesitate to strike a great blow
-and crush the head of the serpent which hisses in my ears, it would
-tomorrow, perhaps, be too late; hesitation has always been the ruin of
-statesmen in affairs of importance."</p>
-
-<p>"And yet, General, if the man who has furnished you with this
-information should&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Be a traitor? Well, that is possible&mdash;ay, even probable; therefore,
-I have neglected nothing that may neutralize the consequences of a
-treachery which I foresee."</p>
-
-<p>"By the Virgin! General, in your place, however&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Thank you, old comrade, thank you for your solicitude; but enough of
-this subject, you ought to know me well enough to be sure that I shall
-never flinch from my duty."</p>
-
-<p>"I have nothing more to do, then, but to wish your Excellency well
-through your undertaking; for you know you must arrive alone at the
-Quinta Verde, and I can escort you no farther."</p>
-
-<p>"Very well, wait here then; make your men dismount for a time, keep a
-sharp watch, and execute punctually the orders I have given you. I am
-going on."</p>
-
-<p>Diego bowed respectfully, but with an air of anxiety, and withdrew his
-hand, which had been placed on the bridle of the General's horse. The
-latter more carefully enveloped himself in his cloak, the folds of which
-had become too loose, and gave the usual jockey signal to excite his
-horse. At this well-known sound the horse pricked up its ears, and being
-thoroughbred, although fatigued, set off at a gallop.</p>
-
-<p>After a few minutes of this rapid travelling, the General stopped; but
-it appeared as if his journey was completed, for, dismounting, he threw
-the bridle on his horse's neck, with as little care what became of it as
-if it had been a hack post-horse, and walked with a firm step towards
-the house, which he had held in view some time, and from which he was
-now not more than ten paces distant. This was soon cleared. When he
-reached the gate, he stood for a second and looked around him, as if
-endeavouring to penetrate the darkness; but all was calm and silent.
-In spite of himself, the General was seized with that vague fear which
-takes possession of the most courageous man when in face of the unknown.
-But General Bustamente, whom the reader has no doubt recognized, was too
-old a soldier to suffer himself to be mastered long by an impression,
-however strong it might be; with him this had lasted but an instant, and
-he almost immediately recovered his usual coolness.</p>
-
-<p>"What the devil! am <i>I</i> afraid?" he murmured, with an ironical smile,
-and going boldly up to the gate, he knocked three times at equal
-intervals with the pummel of his sword. In an instant his arms were
-seized by invisible hands, a bandage was placed over his eyes, and a
-voice, faint as a breath, murmured in his ear&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Make no resistance, twenty poniards are at your breast; at the first
-cry, at the least opposition, you are a dead man. Reply categorically to
-our questions."</p>
-
-<p>"All these threats are needless," the General replied, in a calm
-voice; "as I came here of my own free will, I can have no intention of
-resisting&mdash;ask, and I will answer."</p>
-
-<p>"What do you come to seek here?" the voice said.</p>
-
-<p>"The Dark-Hearts."</p>
-
-<p>"Are you ready to appear in their presence?"</p>
-
-<p>"I am," the General replied, still impassive.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you dread nothing?"</p>
-
-<p>"Nothing."</p>
-
-<p>"Let your sword fall."</p>
-
-<p>The General quitted his hold of his sword, and felt at the same moment
-that his pistols were taken from him.</p>
-
-<p>"Now, step forward without fear," said the voice.</p>
-
-<p>The prisoner found himself instantly at liberty.</p>
-
-<p>"In the name of Christ, who died upon the cross for the salvation of the
-world, Dark-Hearts, receive me among the number of your brethren!" the
-General then said, in a low and firm voice.</p>
-
-<p>The double gates of the Quinta Verde flew open before him, and two
-masked men, each holding a dark lantern in his hand, the focus of which
-he directed on the stranger's face, appeared in the entrance.</p>
-
-<p>"There is still time," said one of the unknown; "if your heart be not
-firm, you may retreat."</p>
-
-<p>"My heart is firm."</p>
-
-<p>"Come on, then, as you think yourself worthy to share our glorious task,
-but tremble if you have the least intention of betraying us," said the
-masked man, in a deep, sonorous voice.</p>
-
-<p>The General felt, notwithstanding the recklessness of his character,
-a cold shudder run through his limbs at these words; but he quickly
-surmounted this involuntary emotion.</p>
-
-<p>"It is for traitors to tremble," he replied; "for my part, I have
-nothing to fear."</p>
-
-<p>And he boldly stepped into the Quinta Verde, the doors of which closed
-after him with a dull, heavy sound. The bandage which covered his eyes,
-and which had prevented those who had interrogated him from recognizing
-him, notwithstanding their efforts to do so, was then removed. After
-proceeding for more than a quarter of an hour along a circular corridor,
-lighted only by the red flickering flame of the torch carried by the
-guide through this labyrinth, the General was suddenly stopped by a door
-in front of him. He turned hesitatingly towards the masked men, who had
-followed him step by step.</p>
-
-<p>"What do you wait for?" said one of them in reply to his mute
-interrogation. "Is it not written, <i>Knock and it shall be opened unto
-you?</i>"</p>
-
-<p>The General bowed in sign of acquiescence, and knocked loudly at the
-door. The folding panels drew back silently into the wall, and the
-General found himself at the entrance of a vast hall, whose walls were
-covered with long red draperies, gloomily enlightened by a bronze lamp
-and several chandeliers suspended from the ceiling, which shone in an
-uncertain manner upon the countenances of about a hundred men, who,
-with naked swords in their hands, fixed their eyes upon him through the
-black masks which concealed their faces. At the bottom of this hall was
-a table covered with a green cloth, at which were seated three men. Not
-only were those three men masked, but, as a further precaution, before
-each of them a lighted torch was planted on the table, the dazzling
-flame of which allowed them to be but vaguely seen. Against the wall was
-a crucifix, between two hourglasses surmounted by a death's-head with a
-poniard run through it.</p>
-
-<p>The General manifested no emotion at this imposing <i>mise en scène</i>. A
-smile of disdain curled his lip, and he stepped boldly forward. At this
-moment he felt a light touch on the shoulder, and, on turning round,
-perceived that one of the guides was holding out a mask to him. In spite
-of the precautions he had taken to disguise his features, he eagerly
-seized it, placed it on his face, folded his cloak round him, and
-entered.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>In nomine Patris, et Filii, et Spiritus Sancti!</i>" he said.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>Amen</i>!" all present replied, in a sepulchral tone.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>Exaudiat te Dominus, in die Tribulationis,</i>" said one of the
-personages behind the table.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>Impleat Dominus omnes petitiones tuas</i>," the General replied, without
-hesitation.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>La Patria!</i>" the first speaker rejoined.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>O la Muerte!</i>" replied the General.</p>
-
-<p>"What is your purpose in coming here?" the man who up to this time alone
-had spoken, asked.</p>
-
-<p>"I wish to be admitted into the bosom of the elect."</p>
-
-<p>There was a momentary silence.</p>
-
-<p>"Is there anyone among us who can or will answer for you?" the masked
-man then asked.</p>
-
-<p>"I cannot say; for I do not know the persons among whom I find myself."</p>
-
-<p>"How know you that?"</p>
-
-<p>"I suppose so, as they, as well as I, are masked."</p>
-
-<p>"The Dark-Hearts," said the interrogator in a deep tone, "consider not
-the countenance; they search souls."</p>
-
-<p>The General bowed at this sentence, which appeared to him to border upon
-the ridiculous. The interrogator continued:&mdash;"Do you know the conditions
-of your affiliation?"</p>
-
-<p>"I know them."</p>
-
-<p>"What are they?"</p>
-
-<p>"To sacrifice mother, father, brothers, relations, friends, and myself,
-without hesitation, to the cause which I swear to defend."</p>
-
-<p>"What next?"</p>
-
-<p>"At the first signal, whether it be by day or night, even at the foot of
-the altar, in whatever circumstance I may be placed, to quit everything,
-in order to accomplish immediately the orders that shall be given me, in
-whatever manner they may be given, and whatever may be the tenor of that
-order."</p>
-
-<p>"Do you subscribe to these conditions?"</p>
-
-<p>"I subscribe to them."</p>
-
-<p>"Are you prepared to swear to submit yourself to them?"</p>
-
-<p>"I am prepared."</p>
-
-<p>"Repeat, then, after me, with your hand upon the Gospels, the words I am
-about to dictate to you."</p>
-
-<p>"Dictate!"</p>
-
-<p>The three men behind the table rose; a Bible was brought, and the
-General resolutely placed his hand upon the book. A faint murmur ran
-through the ranks of the assembly. The president struck the table with
-the hilt of his dagger, and silence was re-established. This man then
-pronounced in a slow and deep toned voice the following words, which the
-General repeated after him without hesitation:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"I swear to sacrifice myself, my family, my property, and all that I
-can hope for in this world, for the safety of the cause defended by
-the Dark-Hearts. I swear to kill every man, be he my father, be he my
-brother, who shall be pointed out to me. If I fail in my faith, if I
-betray those who accept me as their brother, I acknowledge myself to
-be worthy of death; and I, beforehand, pardon the Dark-Hearts who may
-inflict it upon me."</p>
-
-<p>"So far well!" replied the president, when the General had pronounced
-the oath. "You are now our brother."</p>
-
-<p>He then rose, and stepping across the hall, stood full in front of the
-General.</p>
-
-<p>"Now," he said in a solemn threatening voice, "answer me, Don Pancho
-Bustamente. As you, of your own free will, take a false oath before a
-hundred persons, do you think we should commit a crime in condemning
-you, since you have had the audacity to place yourself in our power?"</p>
-
-<p>In spite of his assurance, the General could not repress a start of
-terror.</p>
-
-<p>"Remove the mask which covers this man's face, so that everyone may know
-that it is he! Ah! General; you have entered the lion's den, and you
-will be devoured."</p>
-
-<p>The noise of a distant commotion was heard.</p>
-
-<p>"Your soldiers are coming to your rescue," the president resumed, "but
-they will come too late, General; prepare to die!"</p>
-
-<p>These words fell like the blow of a mace upon the brow of him who found
-himself thus outwitted; he, nevertheless, did not yet lose heart; the
-noise evidently approached; and there could be no doubt but that his
-troops, who surrounded the Quinta Verde on all sides, would soon gain
-possession of it; all he wanted was time.</p>
-
-<p>"By what right," he said haughtily, "do you constitute yourselves judges
-and executioners of your own sentence?"</p>
-
-<p>"You are one of us, and are bound by our sentence," the president
-replied, with an ironical smile.</p>
-
-<p>"Beware of what you are about to do, gentlemen," the General added in a
-haughty tone; "remember I am minister-at-war!"</p>
-
-<p>"And I am King of Darkness," the president cried in a voice that froze
-the very blood of the General; "my dagger is more sure than the muskets
-of your soldiers; it does not let its victims escape. Brethren, what
-chastisement does this man deserve?"</p>
-
-<p>"Death!" the conspirators replied.</p>
-
-<p>The General saw that he was lost.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_XV" id="CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>THE DEPARTURE.</h3>
-
-
-<p>Sergeant Diego, when left by General Bustamente a few paces from the
-Quinta Verde, was very uneasy regarding the fate of his leader, and
-entertained dismal presentiments. He was an old soldier, and well
-acquainted with all the machinations and treacheries practised in this
-country between inveterate enemies. He had been far from approving of
-the General's undertaking, for he knew better than anyone how little
-confidence ought to be placed in spies. Constrained, ostensibly, to
-obey the order he had received, he had resolved, <i>in petto</i>, not to
-leave his leader without help in the wasps' nest into which he had
-cast himself headlong. Diego entertained for General Bustamente, under
-whose orders he had served ten years, a profound regard, which entitled
-him to certain freedoms, and his entire confidence. He immediately
-placed himself in relation with two other officers of the detachment,
-ordered, like himself, to watch the mysterious house whose dark outline
-cut gloomily across the cloudy sky, and around which there was a close
-blockade. He was walking about, biting his moustache, and swearing to
-himself, determined, if the General did not come out within half an
-hour, to obtain an entrance by force, if necessary, when a heavy hand
-was laid upon his shoulder. He turned sharply round, stopping short in
-an oath that was passing his lips, and saw a man standing before him: it
-was Don Pedro.</p>
-
-<p>"Is that you?" he asked, as soon as he recognised him.</p>
-
-<p>"Myself," the spy replied.</p>
-
-<p>"But where the devil do you come from?"</p>
-
-<p>"No matter; do you wish to save the General?"</p>
-
-<p>"Is he in danger?"</p>
-
-<p>"In danger of death."</p>
-
-<p>"<i>Demonios!</i>" the sergeant shouted; "he must be saved!"</p>
-
-<p>"For that purpose I am here; but don't speak so loud."</p>
-
-<p>"I will speak as you like, provided you will tell me."</p>
-
-<p>"Nothing!" Don Pedro replied, "for there is not a minute to be lost."</p>
-
-<p>"What is to be done?"</p>
-
-<p>"Listen! A detachment must feign an attack upon the gate by which the
-General entered; another will watch the environs, for the Dark-Hearts
-have roads known only to themselves; you, with a third detachment, will
-follow me; I will undertake to introduce you into the house&mdash;is that
-agreed upon?"</p>
-
-<p>"Perfectly."</p>
-
-<p>"Make haste, then, to inform your colleagues; time presses."</p>
-
-<p>"Instantly; where shall I find you again?"</p>
-
-<p>"Here."</p>
-
-<p>"Very well; I only ask five minutes," and he strode away in haste.</p>
-
-<p>"Hem!" thought Don Pedro, as soon as he was alone; "we should be
-prudent when we wish affairs to be profitable; from what I heard, they
-will condemn the General, and they must not be allowed to go as far as
-that, for my interests would suffer too seriously; I have manoeuvred
-so as to be safe from all suspicion; if I succeed, I shall be more in
-favour with the General than ever, without losing the confidence of the
-conspirators."</p>
-
-<p>"Well!" he said, as he saw Diego coming towards him.</p>
-
-<p>"Everything is done," replied the sergeant, out of breath. "I am ready."</p>
-
-<p>"Come on, then, and God grant it may not be too late!"</p>
-
-<p>"Amen!" said the soldier.</p>
-
-<p>Everything was done as had been arranged; whilst one detachment
-vigorously attacked the gate of the Quinta Verde, Don Pedro led the
-troops commanded by Diego to the opposite side of the house, where a
-low window was open; this window was grated, but several bars had been
-removed beforehand, which left the entrance easy. Pedro commanded the
-soldiers to be silent, and they entered the house one by one. Guided by
-the spy, they advanced stealthily, without meeting with obstacles of any
-kind. At the end of a few minutes they came to a closed door.</p>
-
-<p>"This is it!" said Pedro, in a low voice.</p>
-
-<p>At a sign from the sergeant, the door was beaten in with the butt end
-of their muskets, and the soldiers rushed into the room. It was nearly
-empty, its only occupant being a man stretched motionless upon the
-floor. The sergeant sprang towards him, but recoiled with a cry of
-horror&mdash;he had recognised his leader&mdash;General Bustamente lay with a
-dagger sticking upright in his breast. To the hilt of the dagger was
-tied a long black strip, upon which were written these words in red ink:</p>
-
-<p>"<i>The Justice of the Dark-Hearts!</i>"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" cried Diego; "Vengeance! Vengeance!"</p>
-
-<p>"Vengeance!" the soldiers repeated, with rage, mingled with terror.</p>
-
-<p>The sergeant turned round towards Pedro, whom he believed to be still by
-his side; but the spy, who alone could guide them in their researches,
-had thought it prudent to steal away. As soon as he saw that what he
-dreaded had happened, he had disappeared without anybody observing his
-departure.</p>
-
-<p>"No matter!" said Diego. "If I demolish this den of assassins, from
-bottom to top, and don't leave stone upon stone, I swear I will find
-these demons, if they are buried in the centre of the earth."</p>
-
-<p>The old soldier began searching in all directions, whilst a surgeon who
-had followed the detachment paid attention to the wounded man, whom he
-endeavoured to restore to his senses.</p>
-
-<p>The Dark-Hearts, as the spy had truly said, had paths known only
-to themselves, by which they had quietly departed, after having
-accomplished their terrible vengeance, or executed their severe justice,
-according to the point of view in which an act of this nature and
-importance is viewed. They were already far off in the country, safe
-from all danger, while the soldiers were still ferociously searching for
-them in and about the house.</p>
-
-<p>Don Tadeo and Don Gregorio returned together to the chacra, and were
-astonished, on their arrival, to find Valentine, whom they supposed to
-be in bed and asleep long before, waiting for them at that late hour,
-to request a few minutes' conversation. In spite of the very natural
-surprise which the demand at such a singular hour excited, the two
-gentlemen, who supposed the Frenchman had serious reasons for acting
-thus, granted his request, without making the least observation. The
-conversation was long&mdash;so long, that we think it useless to repeat it
-here in detail, but will satisfy ourselves with giving our readers the
-end of it, which sums it up perfectly.</p>
-
-<p>"I will not insist," said Don Tadeo, "although you will not tell us
-your motives. I believe you to be too considerate a man, Don Valentine,
-not to be convinced that the reasons which force you to leave us are
-serious."</p>
-
-<p>"Of the greatest seriousness," the young man replied.</p>
-
-<p>"Very well. But on leaving this place, in which direction do you intend
-to bend your steps?"</p>
-
-<p>"Faith! I own frankly&mdash;besides, you know already that I and my friend
-are in search of fortune&mdash;that all directions are the same to us, since
-we must, above everything, depend upon chance."</p>
-
-<p>"I am of your opinion," replied Don Tadeo, smiling. "Listen to me,
-then. I possess large estates in the province of Valdivia, which it
-is my intention to visit shortly. What prevents you going that way in
-preference to any other?"</p>
-
-<p>"Nothing, that I know of."</p>
-
-<p>"I, at this moment, stand in need of a man whom I can depend upon, to
-undertake an important mission into Araucania, to one of the principal
-chiefs of the people of that country. If you are going to the province
-of Valdivia, you will be obliged to traverse Araucania in its whole
-length. Are you willing to undertake this commission? Will that
-inconvenience you?"</p>
-
-<p>"Why should I not?" said Valentine. "I have never come face to face with
-savages; I should like to see what sort of people they are."</p>
-
-<p>"Very well; now is your opportunity. That is agreed upon then. You wish
-to start tomorrow, do you not?"</p>
-
-<p>"Tomorrow! Today, if you please&mdash;in a few hours, for it will not be long
-before the sun will be up."</p>
-
-<p>"That is true. Very well, then; at the moment of your departure, my
-major-domo shall place, on my part, written instructions in your hands."</p>
-
-<p>"Caramba!" said Valentine, laughing; "here am I transformed into an
-ambassador!"</p>
-
-<p>"Do not joke, my friend," said Don Tadeo, seriously. "The mission I
-confide to you is delicate&mdash;dangerous, even; I do not conceal that from
-you. If the papers of which you will be the bearer are found upon you,
-you will be exposed to great dangers. Are you still willing to be my
-emissary?"</p>
-
-<p>"Pardieu! Wherever there is danger there is pleasure. And what is the
-name of the person to whom I am to remit these despatches?"</p>
-
-<p>"They are of two descriptions. The latter only concerns yourself; during
-the course of your journey you can make yourself acquainted with them;
-they will instruct you in certain matters you should know in order to
-secure the success of your mission."</p>
-
-<p>"I understand&mdash;and the others?"</p>
-
-<p>"The others are for Antinahuel, that is, the Tiger Sun, and must be
-delivered into his own hands."</p>
-
-<p>"A queer name that!" Valentine replied, with a laugh. "And where am I to
-find the gentleman rejoicing in such a formidable title?"</p>
-
-<p>"By my faith, my friend," replied Don Tadeo, "I know no more than you
-do."</p>
-
-<p>"The Araucano Indians," interrupted Don Gregorio, "are a rather
-wandering race, and it is sometimes difficult to find the one you are in
-search of."</p>
-
-<p>"Bah! I shall find him, be assured of that."</p>
-
-<p>"We do entirely rely upon you."</p>
-
-<p>"In a few hours, as I have told you, I shall myself set out to place in
-a convent in Valdivia the young lady whom you so fortunately saved; it
-will, therefore, be in Valdivia I shall await your answer."</p>
-
-<p>"I beg your pardon, but I have not the least idea where Valdivia is,"
-observed Valentine.</p>
-
-<p>"Don't be uneasy on that account; any child in this country can direct
-you the way thither," Don Gregorio replied.</p>
-
-<p>"Thanks."</p>
-
-<p>"And now, if you change your mind when we meet again, and consent to
-remain among us, remember we are brothers, and do not hesitate to inform
-me of your new determination."</p>
-
-<p>"I can neither, reply yes or no, sir; if it depended upon me, we should
-continue to see each other frequently."</p>
-
-<p>After exchanging a few more friendly expressions, the three men
-separated. At sunrise, Louis and Valentine, mounted on magnificent
-horses, which Don Tadeo had forced them to accept, rode away from the
-chacra, followed by Cæsar. Valentine had received his despatches from
-the hands of the major-domo. As they were quitting the farm Louis
-turned round instinctively, as if to salute with a last look a spot
-he abandoned for ever, and which contained all that was dear to him.
-A window was gently opened, and the face of the fair girl appeared
-through the small interval, bathed in tears. The two young men bowed
-respectfully towards the necks of their horses, and with a deep sigh
-from Louis, they moved on as the window closed.</p>
-
-<p>"Adieu! oh, adieu for ever!" murmured Louis, choking with emotion.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, perhaps!" said Valentine; and, to rouse his friend from his grief,
-he put his horse into a gallop, and they soon lost sight of the chacra
-in the windings of the road.</p>
-
-<p>Within four hours from their departure Don Tadeo and Don Gregorio
-likewise set out on their journey to Valdivia, for the purpose of
-placing Doña Rosario in the convent. But the enemy of whom they thought
-they had relieved themselves at the Quinta Verde, was not dead; the
-dagger of the King of Darkness had not proved more sure than the bullets
-of the General. The two enemies were destined soon to meet again.
-Notwithstanding the seriousness of the wound he had received, thanks
-to the intelligent cares lavished upon him, but more particularly,
-thanks to his excellent constitution, General Bustamente was soon in a
-convalescent state. Don Pancho and the Linda, from that time united by
-the strongest of ties&mdash;a common personal hatred&mdash;prepared to take their
-revenge upon Don Tadeo, and that of the bitterest nature. The General
-signalized his restoration to health by cruelties of the most flagrant
-kind towards every man suspected of liberalism, and by inaugurating
-throughout the republic a pitiless system of terror. Don Tadeo was
-pronounced outlawed; his friends were cast into dungeons, and their
-property was confiscated; and then, when the General thought that all
-these vexations must bring his enemy to bay, and he had nothing to dread
-from him or his partizans, under the pretence of visiting the provinces
-of the Republic, he set out for Valdivia, accompanied by his mistress.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_XVI" id="CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>THE MEETING.</h3>
-
-
-<p>As the principal incidents of this history are now about to take place
-in Araucania, we think it necessary to give our readers some account of
-this people, who alone of all the nations the Spaniards encountered in
-America, succeeded in resisting them, and had, up to the time we treat
-of, preserved intact their liberty and almost all their territory. The
-Araucanos or Moluchos inhabit the beautiful country situated between the
-rivers Biobio and Valdivia, having on one side the sea, and on the other
-the great Cordilleras of the Andes. They are thus completely enclosed
-within the Chilian republic, and yet, as we have said, have always
-remained independent. It would be a great error to suppose these Indians
-savages. The Araucanos have adopted as much of European civilization as
-suited their character and their mode of living, and have rejected the
-rest. From the most remote times these peoples had formed a national
-body, strong and compact, governed by wise laws rigorously executed. The
-first Spanish conquerors were quite astonished to find in this remote
-corner of America, a powerful aristocratic republic, and a feudalism
-organized almost upon the same plan as that which prevailed in Europe
-in the thirteenth century. We will here enter into a few details of the
-government of the Araucanos, who proudly style themselves <i>Aucas</i>&mdash;free
-men. These details concerning a people too little known, up to this day,
-cannot fail to interest the reader.</p>
-
-<p>The principal chiefs of the Araucanos are the Toquis,<a name="FNanchor_1_3" id="FNanchor_1_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_3" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> the Apo-Ulmens,
-and the Ulmens. There are four Toquis, one for each territorial
-division; they have under their orders the Apo-Ulmens, who, in their
-turn, command the Ulmens. The Toquis are independent of each other, but
-confederated for the public good. Titles are hereditary, and pass from
-males to males. The vassals or Mosotones are free; in time of war alone
-they are subject to military service; but, in this country, and it is
-this which constitutes its strength, every man in a condition to bear
-arms is a soldier. It may easily be understood what the chiefs are when
-we state that the people consider them only as the first among their
-equals, and that their authority is consequently rather precarious;
-and if, now and then, certain Toquis have endeavoured to extend their
-authority, the people, jealous of their privileges, have always found
-means to keep them within the bounds prescribed by their ancient usages.</p>
-
-<p>A society whose manners are so simple, and interests so little
-complicated, which is governed by wise laws, and all the members of
-which have an ardent love of liberty, is invincible, as the Spaniards
-have many times found to their cost. After having, in several attempts,
-endeavoured to subdue this little corner of land, isolated amidst their
-own territory; they have ended by acknowledging the futility of their
-efforts, and have tacitly admitted their defeat by renouncing for ever
-their projects of obtaining dominion over the Araucanos, with whom
-they have contracted alliances, and across whose territory they now
-peacefully pass on their road from Santiago to Valdivia.</p>
-
-<p>The Carampangue&mdash;in the Araucano idiom, refuge of lions&mdash;is a charming
-stream, half torrent, half river, which comes bounding down from the
-inaccessible summits of the Andes, and, after many capricious windings,
-loses itself in the sea two leagues to the north of Arauco. Nothing
-can be more beautiful than the banks of the Carampangue, bordered by
-smiling valleys, covered with woods, with apple trees loaded with fruit,
-rich pastures in which animals of all kinds range and feed at liberty,
-and high mountains, from the verdant sides of which hang, in the most
-picturesque positions, clusters of cabins, whose whitewashed walls shine
-in the sun, and give life to this enchanting landscape.</p>
-
-<p>On the day when we resume our narrative, that is, on a beautiful morning
-in July&mdash;called by the Indians the month of the sun&mdash;two horsemen,
-followed by a magnificent black and white Newfoundland dog, were
-ascending, at a sharp trot, the course of the river, following what is
-called a wild beast's track, scarcely marked in the high grass. These
-men, dressed in the Chilian costume, surging up suddenly amidst this
-wild natural scene, formed, by their manners and their vestments, a
-contrast with everything which surrounded them; a contrast of which
-they probably had no idea, for they rode as carelessly through this
-barbarous country, abounding in perils and ambushes without number, as
-they would have done along the road from Paris to Saint-Cloud. These two
-men, whom the reader has, no doubt, recognized, were the Count Louis
-de Prébois-Crancé and Valentine Guillois, his foster brother. They had
-passed in turn through Maulé, Talca, and Concepción; and on the day we
-meet them again, in the middle of Araucania, they had been full two
-months on the road, travelling philosophically along with their dog
-Cæsar upon the banks of the Carampangue. This was the 14th of July,
-1837, at eleven o'clock in the morning.</p>
-
-<p>The young men had passed the night in an abandoned <i>rancho</i> which
-they had fallen in with on their way, and at sunrise resumed their
-journey; so that they now began to be sensible of the calls of hunger.
-Upon taking a survey of the spot where they found themselves, they
-perceived a clump of apple trees, which intercepted the rays of the
-sun, and offered them a shelter for their repast and a little rest.
-They dismounted and sat down at the foot of a large apple tree, leaving
-their horses to browse upon the young branches so abundant around
-them. Valentine knocked down a few apples with a stick, opened his
-<i>alforjas</i>&mdash;large cloth pockets placed behind the saddle&mdash;drew out some
-sea biscuit, a piece of bacon, and a goat's milk cheese, and the two
-young men began eating gaily, sharing their provisions with Cæsar in a
-brotherly way, whilst he, seated gravely in front of them, followed with
-his eyes every morsel they put into their mouths.</p>
-
-<p>"Caramba!" said Valentine, with a satisfied smile; "it is comfortable to
-have a little rest, after having been on horseback from four o'clock in
-the morning."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, to tell the truth, I must own I am a little fatigued," Louis
-confessed.</p>
-
-<p>"My poor friend, you are not, as I am, accustomed to long journeys. It
-was stupid of me not to remember that."</p>
-
-<p>"Bah! on the contrary, I am getting accustomed to them very well; and
-besides," he added, with a sigh, "physical fatigue makes me forget&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Ah! that's true," Valentine interrupted; "come! I am happy to hear you
-speak thus&mdash;I see you are becoming a man!"</p>
-
-<p>Louis shook his head sorrowfully.</p>
-
-<p>"No," he said, "you are mistaken. As the malady which undermines me is
-without remedy, I endeavour to play a manly part."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, hope is one of the supreme illusions of love; when it can no
-longer exist, love dies."</p>
-
-<p>"Or he who experiences it," said the young man, with a melancholy smile.</p>
-
-<p>This was followed by a silence, which Valentine at length broke.</p>
-
-<p>"What a charming country!" he cried, with feigned enthusiasm, for the
-purpose of giving the conversation another direction, as he swallowed,
-with delectation, an enormous piece of bacon.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, but the roads are very bad."</p>
-
-<p>"Who knows?" said Valentine, with a smile: "they say the roads to
-Paradise are of that kind; this may be the way thither." Then addressing
-the dog, "And you, Cæsar, what do you think of our journey, old boy?"</p>
-
-<p>The dog wagged his tail, fixing his eyes, sparkling with intelligence,
-upon the speaker's face, whilst he eagerly devoured all that was given
-to him. But he stopped suddenly in his masticating operations, pricked
-up his ears, turned his head sharply round, and balked furiously.</p>
-
-<p>"Silence, Cæsar!" said Valentine; "what do you bark in that manner for?
-You know right well we are in a desert, and that in a desert there is
-nobody but the devil!"</p>
-
-<p>But Cæsar continued to bark without heeding his master.</p>
-
-<p>"Hum!" said Louis, "I do not agree with you; I think that the deserts of
-America are thickly peopled."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, perhaps you are right."</p>
-
-<p>"The dog's barking is not usual; we ought to take precautions."</p>
-
-<p>"I will see," said Valentine; and addressing the Newfoundland, "Come!
-come! hold your tongue, Cæsar! You are tiresome! What's the matter with
-you? What teases you? Do you scent a stag? Caramba! That would be a
-glorious godsend for us."</p>
-
-<p>Here he rose, and cast an inquiring glance around, but he immediately
-stopped, and seized his rifle, making a sign to Louis to do the same, in
-order to be prepared for whatever might happen.</p>
-
-<p>"Diable!" he said, "Cæsar was right, and I must confess myself a stupid
-fellow. Look yonder, Louis!"</p>
-
-<p>The other turned his eyes as directed.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh! oh!" he said; "what is this?"</p>
-
-<p>"Hum! I believe we shall soon discover."</p>
-
-<p>"With God's help!" Louis replied, cocking his rifle.</p>
-
-<p>Ten Indians in war costume, and mounted on magnificent horses, were
-drawn up within twenty paces of the travellers, though the latter were
-quite unable to comprehend how they had succeeded in approaching so near
-to them without being discovered. Notwithstanding Valentine's efforts,
-Cæsar continued to bark furiously, and endeavoured to rush upon the
-Indians. The American warriors, motionless and impassible, made neither
-gesture nor movement, but they surveyed the Frenchmen so closely and
-persistently, that Valentine, not very patient in his nature, began to
-find himself excessively annoyed.</p>
-
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_3" id="Footnote_1_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_3"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> This word comes from the verb <i>toquin</i>, which means to
-<i>judge</i>, to <i>command.</i></p></div>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_XVII" id="CHAPTER_XVII">CHAPTER XVII.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>THE PUELCHES.</h3>
-
-
-<p>"Eh! eh!" said Valentine, whistling sharply to his dog, who immediately
-came to him; "these fellows do not seem to have friendly intentions; we
-must be upon our guard: who knows what may happen?"</p>
-
-<p>"They are Araucanos," said Louis.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you think so? Then they are devilish ugly!"</p>
-
-<p>"Well, now, for my part, I think them very handsome."</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, yes; that may be in an artistic point of view. But, ugly or
-handsome, we will await their coming."</p>
-
-<p>The Indians talked among themselves, and continued to look at the young
-men.</p>
-
-<p>"They are consulting to determine with what sauce they shall eat us,"
-said Valentine.</p>
-
-<p>"Not at all&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Bah! I tell you they are."</p>
-
-<p>"Pardieu! they are not cannibals!"</p>
-
-<p>"No? So much the worse; that's a defect. In Paris, all the savages
-exhibited in public are cannibals."</p>
-
-<p>"You madman! you laugh at everything."</p>
-
-<p>"Would you prefer my weeping a little? It appears to me that at this
-moment our position is not so seducing in itself that we should seek to
-make it more dismal."</p>
-
-<p>These Indians were for the most part men of from forty to forty-five
-years of age, clothed in the costume of the Puelches, one of the most
-warlike tribes of Upper Araucania; they wore the poncho floating from
-the shoulders, the calzoneras fastened round the hips and falling to
-the ankle, the head bare, the hair long, straight, and greasy, gathered
-together by a red ribbon, which encircled the brow like a diadem, and
-the face painted of various colours. Their arms consisted of a long
-lance, a knife, a gun hanging from the saddle, and a round buckler,
-covered with leather, ornamented with horsehair and human scalps.</p>
-
-<p>The man who appeared to be their chief was a man of lofty stature,
-expressive features, hard and haughty, but still displayed a certain
-frankness, a very rare quality among Indians. The only thing which
-distinguished him from his companions was a feather of the eagle of the
-Andes, planted upright on the left side of his head, in the bright red
-ribbon that confined his hair.</p>
-
-<p>After having consulted with his companions for a few minutes, the chief
-advanced towards the travellers, making his horse curvet with inimitable
-grace, and lowered the point of his lance in sign of peace. When
-within three paces of Valentine, he stopped, and, after saluting him
-ceremoniously, in the Indian fashion, by placing his right hand on his
-breast, and slowly bowing his head twice, he said to him in Spanish:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"My brothers are Muruches&mdash;foreigners,&mdash;and not Culme-Huinca&mdash;despicable
-Spaniards. Why are they so far from the men of their own nation?"</p>
-
-<p>This question, asked in the guttural accent, and with the emphatic tone
-peculiar to the Indians, was perfectly understood by the young men, who,
-as we have before observed, generally spoke Spanish themselves.</p>
-
-<p>"Hum!" Valentine said to his companion, "here is a savage who appears to
-have a little curiosity about him&mdash;what think you?"</p>
-
-<p>"Bah!" Louis replied, "answer him, at all events that will do no harm."</p>
-
-<p>"Why, no, that is true; we cannot easily be more compromised than we are
-already."</p>
-
-<p>And turning towards the chief, who waited impassibly,</p>
-
-<p>"We are travelling," he said, laconically.</p>
-
-<p>"What! alone, thus?" asked the chief.</p>
-
-<p>"Does that astonish you, my friend?"</p>
-
-<p>"Do my brothers fear nothing?"</p>
-
-<p>"What should we fear?" said the Parisian in a bantering tone. "We have
-nothing to lose."</p>
-
-<p>"What! not even your hair?"</p>
-
-<p>Louis could not refrain from laughing, as he looked at Valentine.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah! ah! what, he is laughing at the disordered state of my hair, is he,
-the ugly wretch?" Valentine grumbled, vexed at the observation of the
-chief, and quite mistaking his intentions. "Stop a bit!" then he added,
-in a loud voice, "Have the goodness to pass on, gentlemen savages. Your
-remarks are not pleasant, I can assure you."</p>
-
-<p>He cocked his rifle, and lifted it to his shoulder, as if taking aim
-at the chief. Louis, who had attentively followed the progress of the
-conversation, without saying a word imitated the action of his friend,
-directing the barrel of his rifle towards the group of Indians. The
-chief had, doubtless, understood but little of the speeches of his
-adversaries, but far from appearing terrified at the menacing attitude
-they assumed, he seemed to contemplate with pleasure the martial and
-firm deportment of the Frenchmen; and putting gently on one side the
-weapon pointed against his breast, said in a conciliatory tone:</p>
-
-<p>"My friend is mistaken. I have no intention of insulting him. I am his
-<i>penni</i>&mdash;brother&mdash;and his companion's likewise. Were not the palefaces
-eating when I and my young men came up?"</p>
-
-<p>"Faith! yes, chief, you say true," interrupted Louis, with a smile;
-"your sudden appearance stopped the progress of our humble repast."</p>
-
-<p>"Part of which is very much at your service," continued Valentine,
-pointing with his finger to the provisions spread upon the grass.</p>
-
-<p>"I accept your offer," said the Indian, cordially.</p>
-
-<p>"Bravo!" cried Valentine, throwing down his rifle, and preparing to
-resume his seat on the grass; "to table, then!"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," replied the chief, "but upon one condition."</p>
-
-<p>"What is that?" the young men asked together.</p>
-
-<p>"That I shall furnish my part."</p>
-
-<p>"Agreed," said Louis.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, that is but fair," Valentine added; "and it will be the more
-acceptable, from our not being rich, and having but meagre fare to offer
-you."</p>
-
-<p>"The bread of a friend is always good," the chief said, sententiously.</p>
-
-<p>"That is admirably answered! But, at this moment, unfortunately, our
-bread is only stale biscuit."</p>
-
-<p>"I will remedy that;" and the chief said a few words in the Molucho
-language to his companions, who began to rummage in their alforjas, and
-quickly produced maize tortillas, some charqui, and several leathern
-bottles filled with chica&mdash;a sort of cider made of apples and Indian
-corn. The whole was placed upon the grass before the two Frenchmen, who
-were wonderstruck at the sudden abundance which had succeeded without
-any transition to their late short commons. The Indians dismounted,
-and sat down in a circle round the travellers. The chief, then turning
-towards his guests, said with a pleasant smile&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Now, then, let my brothers eat."</p>
-
-<p>The young men did not require the cordial invitation to be repeated, but
-vigorously attacked the provisions so frankly offered. For the first few
-minutes silence prevailed among the party, for all were too well engaged
-to talk; but as soon as appetite was a little appeased, conversation was
-resumed.</p>
-
-<p>Of all men, Indians, perhaps, understand the laws of hospitality
-the best. They have an instinct of social conventions, if such an
-expression may be allowed, which makes them divine at once, with
-infallible correctness, what the questions are that may be properly
-addressed to their guests, and the point at which they should stop to
-avoid committing any indiscretion. The two Frenchmen, who for the first
-time found themselves in contact with Araucanos, could not overcome
-the surprise caused by the knowledge of life, and the noble and frank
-manners of these men, whom, on the faith of accounts more or less false,
-they were accustomed, in common with all Europeans, to consider as gross
-savages, almost destitute of intelligence, and quite incapable of any
-delicacy of behaviour.</p>
-
-<p>"My brothers are not Spaniards?" the chief said, half interrogatively.</p>
-
-<p>"That is true," Louis replied; "but how did you discover that?"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" he said, with a disdainful smile, "we are well acquainted with
-those <i>chiaplos</i>&mdash;wicked soldiers. They are too old enemies to allow us
-to commit an error with regard to them. From what island do my brothers
-come?"</p>
-
-<p>"Our country is not an island," Valentine observed.</p>
-
-<p>"My brother is mistaken," the chief said emphatically; "there is but one
-country that is not an island, and that is the great land of the Aucas."</p>
-
-<p>The two young men bowed their heads before an opinion so peremptorily
-put forth&mdash;all discussion became impossible.</p>
-
-<p>"We are Frenchmen," Louis replied.</p>
-
-<p>"Frenchmen! ah! a good brave nation! We had several French warriors in
-the time of the great war."</p>
-
-<p>"What!" said Louis, with excited curiosity, "have French warriors fought
-with you?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," the chief remarked, proudly; "warriors with grey beards, and
-breasts marked with honourable scars, which they received in the wars of
-their island, when they fought under the orders of their great chief,
-Zaléon."</p>
-
-<p>"Napoleon?" said Valentine, quite astonished.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes; I believe it is so the palefaces pronounce his name. Did my
-brother know him?" the chief added, with ill-concealed curiosity.</p>
-
-<p>"No," replied the young man. "Although born in his reign, I was never
-able to get sight of him, and he is now dead."</p>
-
-<p>"My brother is mistaken," said the Puelche, solemnly; "such warriors as
-he do not die. When they have performed their task upon earth they go to
-Paradise&mdash;to hunt with Pillian, the master of the world."</p>
-
-<p>The young men bowed, as if convinced.</p>
-
-<p>"It is very singular," said Louis, "that the reputation of that powerful
-genius should have spread to the most remote and unknown regions of the
-globe, and be preserved pure and brilliant among these rude men; whilst
-in that France, for which he did everything men invariably seek to
-lessen it, and even to destroy it."</p>
-
-<p>"Like all their compatriots, who, from time to time, traverse our
-hunting grounds, our brothers have, doubtless, trading purposes in
-coming among us. Where are your goods?" said the chief.</p>
-
-<p>"We are not traders," replied Valentine; "we came to visit our brothers,
-the Araucanos, of whose wisdom and hospitality we have heard much."</p>
-
-<p>"The Moluchos love the French," the chief said, flattered by the
-compliment; "my brothers will be well received in our villages."</p>
-
-<p>"To what tribe does my brother belong?" asked Valentine, inwardly
-delighted at the good opinion the Indians entertained of his compatriots.</p>
-
-<p>"I am one of the principal Ulmens of the sacred tribe of the Great
-Hare," the chief said, proudly.</p>
-
-<p>"Thank you&mdash;one word more."</p>
-
-<p>"Let my brother speak; my ears are open."</p>
-
-<p>"We are in search of a Molucho chief, to whom we have a message from a
-friend of his, with whom he has had much dealing."</p>
-
-<p>"What is the chief's name?"</p>
-
-<p>"Antinahuel."</p>
-
-<p>"Good!"</p>
-
-<p>"Does my brother know him?"</p>
-
-<p>"I know him. If my brothers will follow me they shall see the toldo of
-a chief in which they shall be received like pennis. When they have
-rested, if they desire it, I will myself conduct them to Antinahuel, the
-most powerful Toqui of the four Uthal-Mapus of the Araucano confederacy."</p>
-
-<p>"What province is governed by Antinahuel?"</p>
-
-<p>"The Piré-Mapus, that is to say, the interior of the Andes."</p>
-
-<p>"Thanks, brother."</p>
-
-<p>"Will my brothers accept the offer I have made them?"</p>
-
-<p>"Why should we not accept it, chief, if, as I believe, it is made in
-earnest?"</p>
-
-<p>"Let my brothers come, then," the chief said, with a smile; "my toldería
-is not far off."</p>
-
-<p>The breakfast was over, and the Indians were mounting.</p>
-
-<p>"We may as well go," said Valentine, in French. "This Indian appears to
-speak cordially and honestly, and it will give us a capital opportunity
-of studying interesting manners and customs. What do you think,
-Louis?&mdash;It may prove very amusing."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, I see no harm that accepting the invitation can do."</p>
-
-<p>"God speed us, then!"</p>
-
-<p>And with a bound he was in his saddle, imitated by Louis.</p>
-
-<p>"Forward!" cried the chief, and the party set off at a gallop.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, it must be allowed," said Valentine, in his cheerful way, "that
-these savages, if savages they are, have some redeeming qualities
-belonging to them. I begin to take a warm interest in them. They are
-true Scotch mountaineers for hospitality. I wonder what my regimental
-comrades, and more particularly my old friends of the Boulevard du
-Temple, would say if they could see me now! Houp! After me, the end of
-the world!"</p>
-
-<p>Louis laughed at this outburst of the incorrigible <i>gamin</i>, and, without
-further inquiries, the young men gaily abandoned themselves to the
-guidance of their new friends, who, after leaving the banks of the
-river, directed their course towards the mountains.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_XVIII" id="CHAPTER_XVIII">CHAPTER XVIII.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>THE BLACK JACKAL.</h3>
-
-
-<p>In order to make the facts which follow intelligible, we are obliged
-here to relate an adventure which happened more than twenty years before
-the period at which our history commences.</p>
-
-<p>Towards the end of the month of December, 1816, on a cold, rainy night,
-a traveller, mounted on an excellent horse, and carefully wrapped in
-the folds of an ample cloak, was following at a round trot the road,
-or rather the blind path, on the mountains which leads from Cruces to
-San-José. This man was a rich landowner, who was making a journey into
-Araucania, for the purpose of treating with the Indians for a large
-number of cattle and sheep. Having left Cruces about two o'clock in the
-afternoon, he had been delayed on his way by settling some business with
-various <i>guasos</i>, and he was hastening to gain a hacienda he possessed
-at some leagues from the spot where he then was, and where he reckoned
-upon passing the night.</p>
-
-<p>The country at the time was not in a state of tranquillity. For several
-days past the Puelches had appeared in arms upon the frontiers of Chili,
-and made incursions into the territories of the republic, burning the
-chacras, and carrying off the families they surprised. These marauders
-were commanded by a chief named The Black Jackal, whose cruelty spread
-terror among the people exposed to his depredations.</p>
-
-<p>It was, therefore, with some anxiety, mixed with secret apprehensions,
-that the man we have spoken of made all speed along the desolate road
-which led to his hacienda. Every minute only added to his fears. The
-storm, which had threatened all day, burst forth at last with a fury
-of which we have no conception in our climates. The wind roared loudly
-through the trees, bending some, and uprooting others. The rain fell in
-torrents, and the lightning became so vivid, that the horse began to
-plunge and rear, and refused to advance. The rider spurred the restive
-animal, and endeavoured, as well as the darkness would permit, to
-discover whereabouts he was. After surmounting immense difficulties, he
-saw at length, in the distance, the shadow of the walls of his hacienda,
-and the lights which shone like guiding stars, when suddenly his horse
-bounded on one side in such a way as almost to unseat him. When, with
-much trouble, he had recovered his command of the animal, he looked
-round to see what could have frightened it so, and perceived, with
-terror equal to the horse's, several men of sinister appearance standing
-motionless before him. The horseman's first movement was to seize his
-pistols, in order to sell his life as dearly as he could, for he had no
-doubt he had fallen into an ambuscade of bandits.</p>
-
-<p>"Keep your hands from your weapons, Don Antonio Quintana," said a rough
-voice; "we desire neither your life nor your money."</p>
-
-<p>"What do you want then?" he replied, in a tone that showed he was a
-little reassured by that frank declaration, though he still kept on the
-defensive.</p>
-
-<p>"Hospitality for this night, in the first place," said the other.</p>
-
-<p>Don Antonio endeavoured to ascertain if he knew the man who was speaking
-to him, but he could not distinguish his features through the darkness.</p>
-
-<p>"The doors of my dwelling always fly open to the stranger," he remarked;
-"why have you not knocked at them?"</p>
-
-<p>"Knowing you must come this way, I preferred waiting for you."</p>
-
-<p>"What else do you desire of me, then?"</p>
-
-<p>"I will tell you under your own roof; the open road is a place ill
-adapted for imparting confidence."</p>
-
-<p>"If you have nothing more to say to me now, and are as willing as I am
-to get under shelter, we will continue our journey."</p>
-
-<p>"Go on, then; we will follow you."</p>
-
-<p>Without exchanging another word, they directed their course towards the
-hacienda. Don Antonio Quintana was a resolute man, as the manner in
-which he had replied to the men who had so rudely barred his passage
-proved him. In spite of the fluency with which the one who had spoken
-employed the Spanish language, he had, at the first word, by his
-guttural accent, perceived he was an Indian; and with him fear had
-immediately given way to curiosity, and he had not hesitated to grant
-the hospitality asked, knowing that the Araucano, Puelches, Hueliches,
-or Moluchos, never violate the roof under which they are welcomed, and
-that the hosts who shelter them are held sacred.</p>
-
-<p>On arriving at the hacienda, Don Antonio found he was not mistaken; the
-men who had accosted him in so strange a manner were really Indians.
-There were four of them, and with them was a young woman with a child
-at the breast. The hacendero welcomed them to his dwelling with all the
-minute forms of Castilian courtesy, and gave orders to his peones or
-Indian domestics, terrified at the savage appearance of the strangers,
-to assist them with everything they might desire.</p>
-
-<p>"Eat and drink," he said, "you are at home, here."</p>
-
-<p>"Thanks!" replied the man, who had till that time been spokesman. "We
-accept your offer with as good a will as you give it, as far as regards
-food, of which we stand most in need."</p>
-
-<p>"Will you not rest till day?" asked Don Antonio; "the night is dark, and
-the weather frightful for travelling."</p>
-
-<p>"A black night is what we desire; besides, we must depart immediately.
-Now, allow me to put my second request to you."</p>
-
-<p>"Explain yourself," said the Spaniard, examining the speaker attentively.</p>
-
-<p>The latter was a tall, well-made man, of about forty; his
-strongly-marked features and his commanding eye proclaimed that he was
-accustomed to exercise authority.</p>
-
-<p>"It was I," he said, without preamble, "who directed the last invasion
-made upon the palefaces of the frontiers. My mosotones were all killed
-yesterday in an ambuscade by your lanceros; the three you see with me
-are all that remain of a troop of two hundred warriors; the others are
-dead. I myself am wounded, hunted, tracked like a wild beast; we are
-without horses to rejoin our tribe, without weapons to defend ourselves
-if we are attacked on the plain. I come to ask of you the means of
-escape from our pursuers. I will neither deceive nor surprise your good
-faith. I am bound to tell you the name of the man whose safety you hold
-in your hands. I am the greatest enemy of the Spaniards; my life has
-been passed in contending with them. In a word, I am The Black Jackal,
-the Apo-Ulmen of the Black Serpents."</p>
-
-<p>On hearing this redoubtable name the Chilian could not suppress a start
-of terror; but immediately recovering his self-possession, he replied in
-a calm voice, and in a kind tone.</p>
-
-<p>"You are my guest, and you are unfortunate, two titles sacred with me. I
-desire to know nothing more; you shall have horses and arms."</p>
-
-<p>A smile of ineffable sweetness lit up the countenance of the Indian.</p>
-
-<p>"One last prayer," he said.</p>
-
-<p>"Speak."</p>
-
-<p>The chief took by the hand the young Indian squaw, who had remained
-cowering and weeping in a corner, rocking her child in her arms, and
-presented her to Don Antonio.</p>
-
-<p>"This woman belongs to me; this child is mine," he said, "and I confide
-them both to you."</p>
-
-<p>"I will take charge of them; the woman shall be my sister, the child my
-son," the hacendero replied kindly, and after the Indian fashion.</p>
-
-<p>"The Apo-Ulmen will remember!" said the Puelche chief, in a voice
-trembling with emotion.</p>
-
-<p>He imprinted a kiss upon the brow of the poor little creature, who
-smiled upon him, cast upon the woman a look beaming with tenderness,
-and rushed out of the house, followed by his companions. Don Antonio
-supplied them with arms and horses, and the four Indians disappeared in
-the darkness.</p>
-
-<p>Many years passed away ere Don Antonio heard anything of the Black
-Jackal; the woman and the child remained at the hacienda, and were
-treated as if they had been members of the Chilian's family. The
-hacendero had been married; but, unfortunately, after a year, which
-promised to be the commencement of a long and happy union, the wife died
-when giving birth to a beautiful little girl, whom her father named
-Maria. The two children grew up together, watched over by the anxious
-solicitude of the Indian woman, loving each other like brother and
-sister.</p>
-
-<p>At length, one day, a numerous troop of Puelches, magnificently equipped
-and mounted, arrived at Rio-Claro, the town in which Don Antonio
-resided. The chief of these Indians was the Black Jackal, who came to
-redemand his wife and son of him to whom he had intrusted them. The
-interview was very affecting. The chief forgot his Indian stoicism; he
-gave himself up to the feelings which agitated him, and enjoyed the
-happiness of finding again, after such a length of time, the two beings
-he held dearest in the world. When it became necessary to depart, and
-the children learnt they were to be separated, they shed abundance of
-tears. They had been accustomed from their infancy to live together, and
-they could not comprehend why they were not to continue to do so.</p>
-
-<p>Don Antonio had extended his traffic over different parts of the
-frontiers; he possessed chacras, in which the breeding of cattle
-was carried on upon a vast scale. The Black Jackal, who had sworn
-a perpetual friendship, became of great use to him in his business
-transactions; he often put him in the way of making excellent bargains
-with his compatriots, and, what was still more serviceable, protected
-his property from the depredations of plunderers. Every year Don Antonio
-visited all his chacras in Araucania, and passed a couple of months
-among the tribe of the Black Serpents, with his friend, the Black
-Jackal. His daughter accompanied him in all these journeys, on account
-of the friendship that existed between the children. Things went on thus
-for many years.</p>
-
-<p>At the period when our history commences, the Black Jackal was dead:
-he had fallen, like a brave warrior, with his weapons in his hand, in
-a combat on the frontier; his son, Antinahuel, now about thirty-five
-years of age, who promised to tread in his footsteps, had been elected
-Apo-Ulmen in his place, and afterwards Toqui of his Uthal-Mapus or
-province, which made him one of the principal men of Araucania. Don
-Antonio had likewise died, shortly after the marriage of his daughter,
-Doña Maria, with Don Tadeo de Leon, brought to an untimely grave by his
-grief at her misconduct, which had produced terrible scandal in the
-upper classes of Santiago.</p>
-
-<p>Doña Maria for some years past had only seen Antinahuel at long
-intervals; but between them their friendship remained as warm as in
-the days of their childhood; and, on the part of the Indian warrior,
-it was carried so far that he obeyed the least caprice of the young
-woman as an imperative duty. Great, then, was the astonishment of the
-warriors of the tribe of the Black Serpents, when, in the evening of
-the day on which we have resumed our story, they saw Doña Maria arrive
-on horseback, accompanied only by two peons, at their toldería, and go
-straight towards the rancho of the Toqui. On perceiving her, the usually
-gloomy face of the chief was suddenly lighted up with an expression of
-gladness.</p>
-
-<p>"Eglantine of the Woods!" he cried, in a joyous tone, "does my sister
-then still remember the poor Indian?"</p>
-
-<p>"I have come to visit the toldo of my brother," she said, turning her
-brow towards him, upon which he impressed a kiss; "my heart is sad,
-grief devours me&mdash;and I have remembered my brother."</p>
-
-<p>The chief cast a look upon her of anxiety, mingled with sorrow.</p>
-
-<p>"Although it be to trouble that I owe the visit of my sister, I am,
-nevertheless, rejoiced to see her."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," she resumed, "when we are in trouble we think of our friends."</p>
-
-<p>"My sister has done well in thinking of me; what can I do for her?"</p>
-
-<p>"My brother can render me a great service."</p>
-
-<p>"My life is my sister's; she knows she can dispose of it at her
-pleasure."</p>
-
-<p>"Thank you! I was certain I could depend upon my brother."</p>
-
-<p>"Everywhere, and at all times."</p>
-
-<p>After bowing respectfully to Doña Maria, he led her into his rancho,
-where his mother had prepared everything worthy of the visit of one whom
-for so many years she had loved as a daughter.</p>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_XIX" id="CHAPTER_XIX">CHAPTER XIX.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>TWO OLD FRIENDS.</h3>
-
-
-<p>Antinahuel&mdash;the Tiger Sun&mdash;was at this time a man of about thirty-five
-years of age. In stature he was tall, and in his carriage majestic;
-everything in his person announced a man accustomed to command, and made
-to rule over his fellows. As a warrior, his reputation was immense,
-and his mosotones held him in superstitious veneration. Such was,
-physically, the man whom Doña Maria de Leon came to visit; what he was,
-morally, we shall soon see.</p>
-
-<p>The cloth was laid in the toldo,&mdash;we make use of the expression, the
-cloth was laid, advisedly, because the Araucano chiefs are perfectly
-well acquainted with European customs, and almost all possess dishes,
-plates, and silver spoons and forks. It is true, they only make use of
-these upon great occasions, and for the purpose of display; for, as
-to themselves, they carry frugality and plainness to an excess, and
-when they are alone with their families, are content to eat with their
-fingers.</p>
-
-<p>Doña Maria seated herself at the table, and made a sign to Antinahuel,
-who stood respectfully beside her, to keep her company, and to take his
-place opposite to her. It was clear to the Indian chief that his sister,
-as he called her, who for some years had completely neglected him, must
-have been induced by some powerful interest to seek him thus in his
-remote village. But what could the interest be which led a delicate
-woman, accustomed to all the luxurious comforts of life, to undertake a
-long and perilous journey in order to come and talk with an Indian in a
-miserable toldería, hidden in the midst of the desert?</p>
-
-<p>On her side, the young woman was a prey to still greater uneasiness,
-for she was anxious to discover whether, in spite of her neglect of the
-chief, she had preserved the boundless power she had formerly exercised
-over that Indian nature, which civilization had softened rather than
-subdued; she feared lest the long forgetfulness in which she had left
-him had made her lose her prestige in his eyes, and that coolness and
-indifference might have succeeded to the warm friendship of early days.</p>
-
-<p>When the repast was ended, a peon brought in the <i>maté</i><a name="FNanchor_1_4" id="FNanchor_1_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_4" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> the infusion
-of the Paraguay herb which, with the Chilians, takes the place of tea,
-and of which they are very fond. Two chased cups, placed upon a filagree
-salver, were presented to Doña Maria and the chief; they lit their maize
-<i>pajillos</i>, and smoked, whilst sipping their <i>maté</i>, reflectively. After
-a few minutes' silence, which was beginning to be embarrassing to both,
-Doña Maria, who perceived that Antinahuel was resolved to act on the
-defensive, determined to open the attack.</p>
-
-<p>"My brother," she said, with a smile, "is surprised at my sudden arrival
-at his toldería."</p>
-
-<p>"It is true; the Eglantine of the Woods has appeared unexpectedly
-amongst us, but she is not the less welcome on that account."</p>
-
-<p>And he bowed.</p>
-
-<p>"I am glad to observe that my brother is as gallant as ever."</p>
-
-<p>"No; I love my sister, and I am happy to see her, after being so long
-deprived of her presence."</p>
-
-<p>"I know your friendship for me, Penni; our childhood was passed
-together, but it is a long time since that time. You are now one of the
-caraskens, whilst I am only, as formerly, a poor woman."</p>
-
-<p>"The Eglantine of the Woods is my sister, her least wishes shall always
-be sacred with me."</p>
-
-<p>"Thanks, Penni! But let us drop this conversation, and talk of our early
-years, which, alas! so quickly glided away."</p>
-
-<p>"Yesterday exists no longer," he said, sententiously.</p>
-
-<p>"That's true," she replied, with a sigh; "why, indeed, should we talk of
-times that can never come back?"</p>
-
-<p>"Does my sister intend to return to Chili?"</p>
-
-<p>"No; I have left Santiago for a time; I intend, for a season, to take up
-my abode in Valdivia; I left my friends to continue their route, whilst
-I came on to pay my respects to my brother."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, I know that the man whom the palefaces call General Bustamente,
-though scarcely cured of a dangerous wound, set off, a month ago, to
-visit the province of Valdivia, I, myself, intend shortly to visit that
-city."</p>
-
-<p>"There are many palefaces from the South there at present."</p>
-
-<p>"Among these strangers are there any that I know?"</p>
-
-<p>"Good heavens! how can I tell? Yes, there is one, Don Tadeo, my husband."</p>
-
-<p>Antinahuel raised his head in astonishment.</p>
-
-<p>"I thought he had been shot!" he said.</p>
-
-<p>"He was."</p>
-
-<p>"Well?"</p>
-
-<p>"He escaped death, though grievously wounded."</p>
-
-<p>The artful woman endeavoured to read what impression the news she had so
-coolly imparted made upon the stoical face of the Indian.</p>
-
-<p>"Listen to me, my sister," he resumed, after a minute's pause; "Don
-Tadeo is still your enemy, is he not?"</p>
-
-<p>"More so than ever."</p>
-
-<p>"Good!"</p>
-
-<p>"Not content with having basely abandoned me, and having torn from me
-my child, the innocent creature who alone consoled me and enabled me to
-support the sorrows with which he has overwhelmed me, he has crowned
-his insults by publicly paying his addresses to another woman, whom he
-takes with him everywhere, and who is at this moment his companion at
-Valdivia."</p>
-
-<p>"Hum!" the chief said, carelessly.</p>
-
-<p>Accustomed to Araucanian manners, which permit every man to take as many
-wives as he can support, he found the action of Don Tadeo perfectly
-natural. This did not escape Doña Maria: an ironical smile curled for
-a second the corners of her lips, and she continued, negligently, but
-looking earnestly in the face of the chief&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, the woman is called, as I hear, Doña Rosario de Mendoz; and is,
-they say, a beautiful creature!"</p>
-
-<p>That name, pronounced with such apparent indifference, produced the
-effect of a clap of thunder upon the chief; he sprang up, his face
-inflamed, and his eyes sparkling.</p>
-
-<p>"Rosario de Mendoz, did you say, my sister?" he shouted.</p>
-
-<p>"Good heavens! I hardly know," she replied. "I have only heard her
-name&mdash;I believe that may be it&mdash;but," she added, "what interest can my
-brother take in it?"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh! none," he said, as he quietly resumed his seat. "Why does not my
-sister avenge herself upon the man who has abandoned her?"</p>
-
-<p>"To what purpose? and, besides, what vengeance can I hope for? I am but
-a weak and timid woman, without friends, without support; in short,
-alone."</p>
-
-<p>"And I?" said the chief; "what am I, then?"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" she replied, warmly; "I would not on any account that my brother
-should constitute himself the avenger of an insult which is personal to
-myself."</p>
-
-<p>"My sister is mistaken; in attacking this man I avenge my own insult."</p>
-
-<p>"My brother must explain himself&mdash;I do not understand him."</p>
-
-<p>"That is what I am going to do."</p>
-
-<p>"I am all attention."</p>
-
-<p>At this moment Antinahuel's mother entered the toldo, and, approaching
-the chief, said in a humble, but sad tone,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"My son is wrong in thus recalling old remembrances, and opening ancient
-wounds again."</p>
-
-<p>"Woman!" the Indian replied, "Retire! I am a warrior! My father left me
-a vengeance. I have sworn, and I will accomplish my oath!"</p>
-
-<p>The poor mother left the toldo with a sigh. The Linda, whose curiosity
-was excited to the highest degree, awaited impatiently the chief's
-explanation. Without, the rain fell pattering upon the leaves of the
-trees; at intervals a blast of night wind, loaded with uncertain sounds,
-came whistling through the ill-joined boards of the toldo, and caused
-the flame of the torch which lighted it to waver unsteadily. The two
-speakers, though absorbed in their own reflections, involuntarily lent
-an ear to these nameless sounds, and felt a depression of spirits they
-could not account for. The chief raised his head, and inhaling, one
-after another, several mouthfuls of smoke from his pajillo, which he
-puffed out brusquely, commenced in a low voice,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Although my sister is almost a child of the nation, as my mother nursed
-her, she has never been made acquainted with the history of my family.
-The history I am about to relate will reveal to her that I have against
-Don Tadeo de Leon an old hatred, ever kept alive; and which, if I have
-to the present moment appeared to allow to slumber, it has been because
-that man was the husband of my sister: the conduct of Don Tadeo towards
-my sister frees me from the promise I had made myself, and leaves me
-liberty of action."</p>
-
-<p>Doña Maria bowed assentingly.</p>
-
-<p>"When the vile Spaniards," he continued, "conquered Chili, and reduced
-its cowardly inhabitants to slavery, they dreamt of subjugating
-Araucania in its turn, and marched against the Aucas, whose frontiers
-they violated. My sister sees that I take up my recital from the
-beginning. The Toqui Cadegual was one of the first to convoke a grand
-council of the nation, on the plain of the Carampangue. Named Toqui, one
-of the four Uthal-Mapus, he gave battle to the palefaces. The conflict
-was terrible! It lasted from the rising to the setting of the sun. Many
-Molucho warriors departed for the happy prairies of the Eskennane, but
-Pillian did not abandon the Aucas; they were conquerors, and the Chiaplo
-fled like timid hares before the terrible lances of our warriors.
-Numbers of palefaces fell into our hands; among them was a powerful
-chief, named Don Estevan de Leon. The Toqui Cadegual might have employed
-his rights, and have killed him, but he did nothing of the kind: so far
-from it, he led him to his toldo, and treated him with kindness, as a
-brother. But when did Spaniards ever show themselves grateful for a
-kindness? Don Estevan, forgetful of the sacred duties of hospitality,
-seduced the daughter of the man to whom he owed his life, and, one
-day, disappeared with her. The grief of the Toqui was immense at this
-unworthy and disloyal treachery. He swore to wage from that time a
-pitiless war against the palefaces, and he kept his oath: all Spaniards
-taken by them, whatever their age or sex, were massacred. These terrible
-reprisals were just, were they not?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," said the Linda laconically.</p>
-
-<p>"One day, Cadegual, surprised by his ferocious enemies, fell, covered
-with wounds, into their hands, after a heroic resistance, during which
-all his brave Mosotones had allowed themselves to be killed by his side.
-In his turn, as it happened, Cadegual was in the power of Don Estevan de
-Leon. The Spanish chief recollected the man who had, years before, saved
-his life. He was merciful. After cutting off the hands, and scooping out
-the eyes of his prisoner, he restored to him his daughter, of whom he
-was tired, and sent him back to his nation. The Toqui was led back by
-his child, whom he pardoned. When he joined his tribe, Cadegual called
-together his relations, related to them what he had suffered, showed
-them his bleeding and mutilated arms, and, after having made his sons
-and all his relations swear to avenge him, he allowed himself to die of
-hunger, that he might not survive his shame."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, that is frightful!" Doña Maria cried, affected, in spite of herself.</p>
-
-<p>"That is nothing yet!" the chief resumed, with a bitter smile; "let
-my sister listen to the sequel. From that time, an implacable destiny
-has always hung over the two families, and continually brought the
-descendants of the Toqui Cadegual in contact with those of Captain
-Don Estevan de Leon. During three centuries, this ardent, inveterate
-struggle has lasted between the two families, and will never terminate
-but by the extinction of one, or perhaps both of them. Up to the present
-time, the advantage has almost always been on the side of the Leons;
-the sons of the Toqui have very often been conquered, but they have
-always remained firm and implacable, ready to re-commence the combat at
-the first signal. At the present day, the family of Don Estevan has but
-one representative, Don Tadeo&mdash;a representative formidable through his
-courage, his fortune, and the immense influence, he exercises over his
-compatriots. He, personally, has never injured the Aucas; he seems even
-to be ignorant of the inveterate hatred which exists between his family
-and that of the Toqui; but the descendants of Cadegual do not forget
-it: they are strong, numerous, and powerful in their turn; the hour
-of vengeance has struck, they will not let it escape! My sister," he
-continued, in a voice almost rising to a shout; "my sister, my ancestor
-was the Toqui Cadegual, and I thank you for having warned me that not
-only my enemy is not dead, but that he is within my reach!"</p>
-
-<p>"Your mother asked you properly, Penni, why should you revive old
-hatreds? Peace now reigns between the Chilians and the Aucas: let
-my brother beware; the whites are numerous; they have many warlike,
-disciplined soldiers."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh," he replied, with a sinister look; "I am sure of succeeding, for I
-have my nymph."</p>
-
-<p>Indians of high rank all entertain a firm belief that they have a
-familiar genius, who is bound to obey them.</p>
-
-<p>Doña Maria feigned to yield to this reason; she had succeeded in putting
-the hunter upon the scent of the game she wished to destroy, and it was
-of very little importance to her what motive made him obey her. She knew
-perfectly well that the hatred alleged by the chief was nothing but a
-pretext, and that the real cause remained hidden in the depths of his
-heart. Although she had a clear idea of what it was, she affected not to
-have the least suspicion of it.</p>
-
-<p>She continued talking with Antinahuel for some time longer about
-indifferent subjects, and then retired to a chamber which had been
-prepared for her. It was late, and she wished to set out for Valdivia at
-daybreak. She was sufficiently well acquainted with the companion of her
-childhood to know that, now the tiger was roused, it would not be long
-before he started in quest of the prey which she had marked down for him.</p>
-
-<p>As for the Toqui, the whole night passed away without his thinking of
-taking a moment's repose; he remained plunged in profound and agitating
-reflections.</p>
-
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a name="Footnote_1_4" id="Footnote_1_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_4"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> The Chilians borrowed the mate from the Araucanos, who
-think it a great delicacy, and have a particular talent for making it.
-This is the manner in which they prepare it:&mdash;They put into a coffee
-cup a spoonful of the Paraguay herb, to which they add a lump of sugar,
-which they leave upon the fire till it is a little burnt; they squeeze a
-few drops of lemon juice into it, with some cinnamon and a clove; they
-then fill the cup up with boiling water. The maté being now ready, they
-introduce a silver tube of the thickness of a quill, pierced with small
-holes at its lower end, by means of which the maté is drawn up,&mdash;at
-the risk, be it remembered, of horribly scalding the mouth, as always
-happens to strangers when they first partake of the luxury, to the great
-amusement of the Chilians. Drinking maté is so common in Chili, as to
-be what coffee is in the East; it is taken after every repast, and
-presented to every visitor. In ceremonial parties, a single tube serves
-for all the persons assembled.</p></div>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_XX" id="CHAPTER_XX">CHAPTER XX.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>THE SORCERER.</h3>
-
-
-<p>On the same day, a toldería, situated at some miles from Orano, on the
-banks of the Carampangue, was a scene of the greatest commotion. The
-women and warriors assembled in front of a toldo, on the threshold of
-which was exposed a corpse, lying as it were in state, upon a bed of
-branches, were uttering cries and groans, which were mingled with the
-deafening sound of drums and flutes in most dismal discord, and the
-continuous howling of dogs, whom all this din rendered furious. In the
-middle of the crowd, by the side of the body, stood a man advanced
-in years, tall in stature, and clothed in the costume of a woman,
-who appeared to direct the ceremony, making extraordinary gestures
-and contortions, accompanied by scarcely human yells. This man, of a
-ferocious aspect, was the machi, or sorcerer of the tribe; the motions
-he affected, the cries he uttered, were intended to protect the body
-against the attacks of the evil genius, supposed to be eager to get
-possession of it. At a sign from him the music and groans ceased; the
-evil genius, conquered by the power of the machi, had given up the
-contest, after a sharp struggle, and abandoned the body which it was
-beyond his power to obtain. The sorcerer then turned towards a man of
-lofty stature and commanding countenance, who stood near him leaning
-upon a long lance.</p>
-
-<p>"Ulmen of the powerful tribe of the Great Hare," he said, in a
-sepulchral tone, "thy father, the valiant Ulmen, who has been ravished
-from us by Pillian, is no longer in dread of the influence of the
-evil genius, whom I have forced to depart; he now hunts in the happy
-prairies of the Eskennane with the just warriors: all the rites are
-accomplished&mdash;the hour for surrendering his body to the earth has
-arrived!"</p>
-
-<p>"Stop!" the chief replied, warmly; "my father is dead, but who has
-killed him? A warrior does not succumb thus, in a few hours, unless some
-secret influence has weighed upon him, and dried up the springs of life
-in his heart. Answer me, O machi, inspired by Pillian! Tell me the name
-of the assassin! My heart is sad, and can only be comforted by avenging
-my father."</p>
-
-<p>At these words, pronounced in a firm voice, a shudder crept through the
-ranks of the people assembled in a group round the body. The machi,
-after having looked searchingly round, cast down his eyes, crossed his
-arms upon his breast, and appeared to reflect.</p>
-
-<p>The Araucanos only think one sort of death possible&mdash;that on the field
-of battle; they do not suppose any one can lose his life by either
-accident or disease; in these two cases they always attribute death to
-the action of an occult power, and are persuaded that some enemy of
-the defunct has cast the charm upon him that has killed him. In this
-persuasion, at the period of the funeral ceremonies, the relations and
-friends of the dead person call upon the machi to denounce the assassin
-to them. The machi is obliged to point him out; it would be in vain
-for him to endeavour to make them comprehend that the death of their
-relation is natural, for their fury would be immediately turned against
-him, and he would become their victim.</p>
-
-<p>In this hard alternative, the machi takes good care not to hesitate; the
-murderer is the more easily pointed out through his non-existence, and
-from the sorcerer being in no danger of being suspected of deception.
-Generally, in order to make his own interests agree with those of the
-relations who claim a victim, he gives up one of his own personal
-enemies to their vengeance; when&mdash;but that is rare&mdash;the machi has no
-enemies, he fixes upon someone at hazard. The pretended murderer, in
-spite of his protestations of innocence, is immolated without mercy.</p>
-
-<p>It may be easily understood how perilous such a custom is, and what
-an influence it gives the sorcerer in the tribe; an influence we are
-obliged to admit which he abuses under all circumstances, without the
-least scruple.</p>
-
-<p>Fresh personages, among whom were Valentine and his friend, had arrived
-at the village, and, attracted by curiosity, mingled with the crowd
-collected round the body. The two Frenchmen could not comprehend
-anything of this scene till their guide had briefly explained it to
-them; then they followed the different phases of it with great interest.</p>
-
-<p>"Speak!" said the Ulmen, after a short pause. "Does not my father know
-the name of the man of whom we must demand an account of this murder?"</p>
-
-<p>"I know him," the sorcerer replied, in a solemn tone.</p>
-
-<p>"Why, then, does the inspired machi preserve silence, when the dead body
-cries for vengeance?"</p>
-
-<p>"Because," the machi said, looking this time the newly-arrived chief
-full in the face, "there are powerful men who laugh at human justice."</p>
-
-<p>The eyes of the crowd turned to the man whom the sorcerer appeared
-indirectly to point out.</p>
-
-<p>"The guilty man," the Ulmen cried, in a loud voice, "whatever be his
-rank in the tribe, shall not escape my just vengeance; speak without
-fear, priest of fate! I swear that the man whose name passes your lips
-shall die!"</p>
-
-<p>The machi drew himself up majestically; he raised his arm slowly, and,
-amidst the general anxious curiosity, he, with his finger, pointed to
-the chief who had offered such cordial hospitality to the strangers,
-saying, in a loud, ringing voice&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Accomplish your oath, then, Ulmen&mdash;that is the assassin of your father,
-Trangoil-Lanec cast the charm upon him which has killed him!"</p>
-
-<p>And the machi veiled his face with the corner of his poncho, as if
-overwhelmed with grief at making the revelation.</p>
-
-<p>The sorcerer's terrible words were succeeded by the silence of
-astonishment. Trangoil-Lanec was the last man in the tribe who would
-have been suspected. He was beloved and venerated by all for his
-courage, frankness, and generosity. The first sensation of surprise
-over, a general movement took place in the crowd; all drew back from
-the supposed murderer, leaving him face to face with the chief of whose
-death he was accused. Trangoil-Lanec remained impassive, a smile of
-disdain passed over his lips, he dismounted from his horse, and waited.</p>
-
-<p>The Ulmen walked slowly towards him, and when within a few paces, asked,
-in a sorrowful voice&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Why didst thou kill my father, Trangoil-Lanec? He loved thee, and I,
-was not I thy Penni?"</p>
-
-<p>"I have not killed thy father, Curumilla," the chief replied, with a
-tone of frankness that would have convinced a man less prejudiced than
-the one he addressed.</p>
-
-<p>"The machi has said so."</p>
-
-<p>"The machi lies."</p>
-
-<p>"No, the machi cannot lie&mdash;he is inspired by Pillian; thou, thy wife,
-and thy children must die; the law decrees that it shall be so."</p>
-
-<p>Without deigning to reply, the chief threw down his arms, and went
-and placed himself beside the stake of blood, planted in front of the
-medicine toldo, which contains the sacred idol. A circle was formed, of
-which the stake formed the centre; the wife and children of the chief
-were brought up, and were prepared immediately for the sacrifice; for
-the funeral ceremony of the chief could not be completed before the
-execution of his murderer. The machi was triumphant. One man alone in
-the tribe had ventured to hold up his hand against his robberies and
-rogueries, and that man was about to die and leave him absolute master.
-Upon a sign from Curumilla, two Indians seized the chief, and, in spite
-of the tears and sobs of his wives and children, they prepared to fasten
-him to the stake.</p>
-
-<p>The two Frenchmen had anxiously watched the spectacle of this infamous
-drama; Louis was disgusted with the rascality of the machi and the
-credulity of the Indians.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" he said, to his friend, "we cannot allow this murder to be
-accomplished."</p>
-
-<p>"Hum!" muttered Valentine, stroking the ends of his light moustache, and
-casting a glance around him, "hum! there is a great number of them."</p>
-
-<p>"What matters it how many?" Louis replied, impetuously; "I will not
-be the witness of such iniquity, if I die for it. I will attempt to
-save the life of that unfortunate man, who so frankly offered us his
-friendship."</p>
-
-<p>"The fact is," Valentine said, pensively, "this Trangoil-Lanec, as they
-call him, is a very worthy fellow, for whom I feel a warm sympathy; but
-what can we do?"</p>
-
-<p>"Pardieu!" Louis said, seizing his pistols, "throw ourselves between him
-and his enemies; we can each of us kill five or six."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, and the others will kill us, without our having succeeded in
-saving the man for whom we devote ourselves. A bad means that! Let us
-try to find some other."</p>
-
-<p>"We must be quick, then; the torture is about to commence."</p>
-
-<p>Valentine struck his forehead, and cried, with a jeering laugh&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Bah! I have it! Trick must serve our turn&mdash;leave it to me; my old trade
-of a mountebank will do! Help me, if I want it; but, for heaven's sake,
-swear to remain calm!"</p>
-
-<p>"I swear I will, if you save him."</p>
-
-<p>"Be satisfied&mdash;against rogue I'll play rogue and a half; these savages
-shall see I can be more cunning than they."</p>
-
-<p>Valentine urged his horse into the middle of the circle, and shouted&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Stop a minute!"</p>
-
-<p>At the unexpected appearance of this man, whom nobody had yet observed,
-all turned round and looked at him with astonishment. Louis, with his
-hands on his pistols, watched his movements with anxiety, ready to fly
-to his succour, if he needed it.</p>
-
-<p>"We will not joke," continued Valentine, "we have not time for that.
-You are a set of fools, and your machi is laughing at you. What! would
-you kill a man without a moment's reflection, because a rogue bids you
-do so? Caramba! I have taken it into my head to prevent your committing
-such a folly&mdash;I will do it, too!"</p>
-
-<p>And placing his hand upon his hip, he looked round with an intrepid
-glance. The Indians, according to their strange custom, listened to
-this speech without evincing surprise, even by a gesture. Curumilla
-approached him.</p>
-
-<p>"My pale brother must retire," he said, calmly; "he is unacquainted with
-the laws of the Puelches; this man is condemned, he must die; the machi
-has pointed him out as a murderer."</p>
-
-<p>"I repeat to you, you are fools!" said Valentine shrugging his
-shoulders; "your machi is no more a conjurer than I am; I again tell
-you, he is cheating you, and I will prove it, if you will let me."</p>
-
-<p>"What says my father?" said Curumilla to the machi, who stood cold and
-motionless by the side of the body.</p>
-
-<p>The machi smiled disdainfully.</p>
-
-<p>"When did the white man ever speak truth?" he replied, with a sneer.
-"Let this one prove what he asserts, if he is able."</p>
-
-<p>"Good!" the Ulmen said; "the Murucho may speak."</p>
-
-<p>"Pardieu!" cried Valentine. "Notwithstanding the bold-faced assurance of
-this individual, I shall find it no difficult matter to prove that he is
-an impostor."</p>
-
-<p>"We are attentive," said Curumilla.</p>
-
-<p>The Indians drew round with intense curiosity. Louis could not at all
-make out what his friend proposed to do. He could only suppose that some
-extravagant idea had crossed his brain, and was as impatient as the rest
-to see how he would come through his dangerous undertaking with honour.</p>
-
-<p>"One moment!" said the machi, with perfect assurance. "What will my
-brothers do if I prove my accusation true?"</p>
-
-<p>"The stranger must die," said Curumilla, coolly.</p>
-
-<p>"I accept the terms," Valentine replied, resolutely. Placed thus in the
-necessity of explaining himself, the Frenchman drew himself up to his
-full height, and, knitting his brows, exclaimed pompously&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"I, too, am a great medicine man!"</p>
-
-<p>The Indians bowed reverentially. The science of Europeans is perfectly
-established among them; they respect without disputing it.</p>
-
-<p>"It was not Trangoil-Lanec," continued the Frenchman, with the greatest
-audacity, "who killed the chief; it was the machi himself."</p>
-
-<p>A start of astonishment pervaded the assembly.</p>
-
-<p>"I!" cried the machi, in a voice of amazement.</p>
-
-<p>"You, yourself, and you know it well," replied Valentine, giving him a
-look that made him tremble.</p>
-
-<p>"Stranger," said Trangoil-Lanec, with the majesty of a martyr, "it is
-no use to interpose in my favour; my brothers believe me guilty, and
-innocent though I am, I must die."</p>
-
-<p>"Your devotion to your laws is noble, but in this case it is absurd,"
-Valentine replied.</p>
-
-<p>"This man is guilty," the machi persisted.</p>
-
-<p>"Let us put an end to this, then," replied Trangoil-Lanec; "kill me!"</p>
-
-<p>"What say my brothers?" Curumilla asked of the crowd, who pressed
-anxiously around him.</p>
-
-<p>"That the Murucho medicine-man be allowed to prove the truth of his
-words," replied the warriors with one voice.</p>
-
-<p>They loved Trangoil-Lanec, and in their hearts desired that he should
-not die. On the other hand, they entertained for the machi a hatred
-which the profound terror he inspired them with scarcely sufficed to
-make them conceal.</p>
-
-<p>"Very well," said Valentine, "this is what I propose."</p>
-
-<p>All were silent as the grave. The Frenchman drew his sword, and waved
-the bright blade before the eyes of the spectators.</p>
-
-<p>"You see this weapon," said he, in a pompous tone; "I will put it into
-my mouth, and swallow it up to the hilt. If Trangoil-Lanec is guilty, I
-shall die; if he is innocent, as I affirm, Pillian will help me, and I
-shall draw forth the sword from my body without suffering a wound."</p>
-
-<p>"My brother speaks like a courageous warrior," said Curumilla; "we are
-ready to behold."</p>
-
-<p>"I will not suffer it!" Trangoil-Lanec shouted. "Does my brother want to
-kill himself?"</p>
-
-<p>"Pillian is judge!" Valentine replied, with a smile of strange
-expression, and with an air of conviction admirably well played.</p>
-
-<p>The two Frenchmen exchanged a glance. The Indians are perfect children
-in their love of spectacle, and the extraordinary proposal of the
-Parisian seemed to them to admit of no reply.</p>
-
-<p>"The trial! the trial!" they shouted.</p>
-
-<p>"Very well," said Valentine; "let my brothers behold, then."</p>
-
-<p>He first placed himself in the proper position adopted by jugglers when
-they exhibit this feat in public places; then introducing the blade of
-the sword into his mouth, in a few seconds the whole of it disappeared.
-During the performance of this trick, which in their eyes was a
-miracle, the Puelches watched the bold Frenchman in breathless terror.
-They could not comprehend how a man could perform such an operation
-without deliberately killing himself. Valentine turned on all sides,
-so that everyone might be convinced of the reality of the fact; then
-he deliberately withdrew the blade from his mouth, as bright as when
-it came from the sheath. A cry of enthusiasm burst from the crowd: the
-miracle was evident.</p>
-
-<p>"One minute more," he said; "I have still something to demand of you."</p>
-
-<p>Silence was in an instant re-established.</p>
-
-<p>"I have proved to you, in an incontrovertible manner, that the chief is
-not guilty&mdash;have I not?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes! yes!" they shouted simultaneously; "the paleface is a great
-medicine man! he is beloved by Pillian!"</p>
-
-<p>"Very well. Now, then," he added, with a sardonic smile directed towards
-the machi, "your machi should prove in his turn that I have calumniated
-him, and that it was not he who killed the Apo-Ulmen of your tribe. The
-dead chief was a great warrior; it ought to be avenged."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," the warriors cried, "he ought to be avenged."</p>
-
-<p>"My brother speaks well," observed Curumilla; "let the machi be put to
-the proof."</p>
-
-<p>The unfortunate machi perceived at once that he was lost. He became
-livid, and a cold perspiration bathed his temples, whilst a convulsive
-tremor shook his limbs.</p>
-
-<p>"This man is an impostor," he muttered, in a voice scarcely audible; "he
-abuses your good faith."</p>
-
-<p>"Perhaps I am," said Valentine; "but, in the meantime, imitate me."</p>
-
-<p>"Here," said Curumilla, holding out the sword to the machi, "if you are
-innocent, Pillian will protect you, as he has protected my brother."</p>
-
-<p>"Caramba! that is certain; Pillian always protects the innocent, and you
-are about to be a proof of it," said the Parisian, in whom the revived
-spirit of the <i>gamin</i> was now triumphant.</p>
-
-<p>The machi cast around a look of despair; all eyes were expressive of
-impatience and curiosity; the unhappy wretch perceived but too plainly
-that he could look for help to nobody, and he formed his resolution
-instantly&mdash;he determined to die as he had lived, deceiving the crowd to
-the last minute.</p>
-
-<p>"I fear nothing," he said, in a firm voice; "this steel will be harmless
-to me. You desire that I should go through the trial&mdash;I will obey. But,
-beware! Pillian is angry with your conduct towards me; the humiliation
-you impose upon me will be avenged by the terrible scourges which he
-will inflict upon you."</p>
-
-<p>At these words of their prophet the Puelches were moved. They hesitated.
-For many long years they had been accustomed to place entire faith in
-his predictions, and they experienced a kind of fear in thus daring to
-accuse him of imposture. Valentine saw at a glance what was passing in
-their hearts.</p>
-
-<p>"Capitally well played," he said, replying by a knowing wink to the
-triumphant smile of the machi; "now it is my turn. Let my brothers take
-heart!" he added, in a loud, firm voice. "No misfortune threatens them;
-this man speaks thus because he is afraid to die; he knows he is guilty,
-and that Pillian will not protect him."</p>
-
-<p>The machi darted a glance at him gleaming with hatred, seized the
-sword, and, imitating as well as he knew how what he had seen, with
-desperate quickness plunged the blade down his throat. A stream of black
-blood sprang from his mouth, his eyes glared hideously, his arms shook
-convulsively, he staggered two steps forward, and fell flat upon his
-face. The people crowded round him&mdash;he was dead.</p>
-
-<p>"Let this lying dog be thrown to the vultures," said Curumilla, kicking
-the lifeless body with contempt.</p>
-
-<p>"We are brothers for life and death," cried Trangoil-Lanec, embracing
-Valentine.</p>
-
-<p>"Well," the young man said with a smile, to his friend, "I think I
-have not got very badly through that affair&mdash;eh? You see, it is well,
-sometimes, to have practised many trades; even that of a mountebank may
-serve at need."</p>
-
-<p>"Do not calumniate your heart and courage," Louis replied, warmly
-pressing his hand; "you have; saved the life of a man."</p>
-
-<p>"Aye; but I have killed another."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, he was a guilty wretch!"</p>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_XXI" id="CHAPTER_XXI">CHAPTER XXI.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>THE OBSEQUIES OF AN APO-ULMEN.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The emotion caused by the death of the machi gradually died away, and
-order was re-established. Curumilla and Trangoil-Lanec, abjuring any
-feeling of enmity, exchanged a fraternal embrace, amidst the frantic
-applause of the warriors, who loved both the chiefs.</p>
-
-<p>"Now my father is avenged, we can restore his body to the earth,"
-Curumilla observed. Then, advancing towards the strangers, he bowed to
-them, saying&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Will the palefaces assist at the obsequies?"</p>
-
-<p>"We will," Louis replied.</p>
-
-<p>"My toldo is large," the chief continued; "my brothers will do me honour
-by consenting to inhabit it during their sojourn with the tribe."</p>
-
-<p>Louis was about to reply, but Trangoil-Lanec hastily prevented him.</p>
-
-<p>"My brothers the palefaces," he said, "have deigned to accept my poor
-hospitality."</p>
-
-<p>The young men bowed in silence.</p>
-
-<p>"Good!" the Ulmen continued. "Of what consequence is that? Whichever be
-the toldo the Muruches may choose, I shall consider them as my guests."</p>
-
-<p>"Many thanks, chief," Valentine replied; "be assured that we are
-grateful for your kindness."</p>
-
-<p>The Ulmen then took leave of the Frenchmen, and resumed his place by the
-side of his father's corpse, and the ceremonies commenced. The Araucanos
-are not, as some travellers have led us to believe, a people destitute
-of any faith; on the contrary, their faith is warm, and their religion
-rests upon bases which are not deficient in grandeur. They have no
-dogma, and yet they recognize two principles&mdash;that of good and that of
-evil.</p>
-
-<p>The first, named Pillian, is the Creating God; the second, named
-Guécubu, is the Destroying God. Guécubu is in a state of continual
-struggle with Pillian, endeavouring to disturb the harmony of the world,
-and destroy what exists; by which we see that the doctrine of Manicheism
-was embraced by the barbarians of both the old and the new world, who,
-being unable to penetrate the causes of good and evil, have imagined two
-contrary principles. In addition to these two principal deities, the
-Araucanos recognize a considerable number of secondary genii, who assist
-Pillian in his contest with Guécubu. These genii are males and females;
-the latter are all virgins, for&mdash;and it is a refined idea which we could
-not expect in a barbarous people&mdash;procreation is not necessary in the
-supernatural world. The male gods are named Géru, or lords; the females,
-Amey-Malghen, or spiritual nymphs.</p>
-
-<p>The Araucanos believe in the immortality of the soul, and, consequently,
-in a future life, in which the warriors who have distinguished
-themselves on earth hunt in game-abounding prairies, surrounded by
-everything they have loved. Like all American aborigines, the Araucanos
-are extremely superstitious. Their worship consists in assembling in
-the medicine toldo, where there is a shapeless idol, said to represent
-Pillian. They weep; they utter loud cries, with numberless contortions;
-and sacrifice to him a sheep, a cow, a horse, or a <i>chilihuegue</i>.</p>
-
-<p>At a signal from Curumilla, the warriors drew back to give place to the
-women, who surrounded the body, and began to walk in a circle, singing
-in a low and plaintive tone the noble feats of the deceased. At the
-expiration of about an hour, the cortege moved off after the corpse,
-which was borne by the four most renowned warriors of the tribe, and
-directed its course towards a hill where the place of sepulture was
-prepared. Behind followed the women, casting handfuls of hot ashes over
-the traces left by the passage of the funeral train; so that if the soul
-of the defunct should have any inclination to return to its body, it
-would not be able to find the way to his toldo, or come and trouble his
-heirs.</p>
-
-<p>When the body was laid in the grave, Curumilla cut the throats of his
-father's dogs and horses, which were placed near him, to enable him
-to hunt in the happy prairies. Within reach of his hand was placed a
-certain quantity of provisions for the nourishment of himself and the
-<i>tempulazzy</i>, or boatman, appointed to convey him to the other country,
-and into the presence of Pillian, where he is to be judged according
-to his good or evil actions. Earth was then thrown in upon the body.
-But, as the defunct had been a renowned warrior, a heap of stones was
-collected, of which a pyramid was formed; then everyone walked slowly
-once more round the tomb, pouring upon it a great quantity of chica. The
-relations and friends returned dancing and singing to the village, where
-awaited them one of those Homeric repasts of Araucanian funerals called
-cahuins, which last till all the partakers lie upon the ground utterly
-intoxicated.</p>
-
-<p>Beyond a little natural curiosity, our travellers did not take much
-interest in the ceremony or feast; they were fatigued, and preferred a
-short repose. Trangoil-Lanec guessed their thoughts; and, as soon as the
-procession returned, he left his companions, and offered to conduct the
-young men to his dwelling. They availed themselves of his kindness with
-alacrity. Like all Araucanian huts, this was a vast wooden building,
-covered with whitewashed mud, in the form of a rectangle, the roof being
-a terrace. This simple, airy residence displayed, in its interior, a
-perfect Dutch cleanliness.</p>
-
-<p>Trangoil-Lanec, as we have said, was one of the richest and most
-respected chiefs of his tribe, and had eight wives. Polygamy is allowed
-among the Moluches. When an Indian is desirous of marrying a woman, he
-declares his purpose to her parent, and fixes the number of animals he
-is willing to give. His conditions being accepted, he comes with a few
-friends, carries off the young woman, throws her on the saddle behind
-him, and gallops off to the woods, in the depths of which the couple
-remain three days. On the fourth they return; he slaughters a young
-mare in front of the hut of the father of his bride, and the marriage
-festivities begin. The abduction of the bride, and the sacrifice of
-the mare, take the place of a civil contract. After this fashion an
-Araucano is at liberty to marry as many wives as he can support. And
-yet, the first wife, who bears the title of unem domo, or legitimate
-wife, is most honoured; she has the direction of the household, and
-is the superior of the others, who are called inam domo, or secondary
-wives. All inhabit the same toldo, but in different apartments, where
-they employ themselves in bringing up their children, in weaving
-ponchos with the wool of guanacos and chilihuegues, and in preparing
-the dish which an Indian woman is bound to place every day on the table
-of her husband. Marriage is held sacred, and adultery is considered
-the greatest of crimes; the man and woman who should commit it would
-inevitably be assassinated by the husband and his relations, unless they
-redeemed their lives by means of a compensation imposed by the injured
-husband. When an Araucano leaves his home, he confides his wives to
-his relations, and, on his return, if he can prove that they have been
-unfaithful to him, he has the right of demanding of the guardians all he
-thinks proper to ask; so that the relations are interested in watching
-them. This strictness of morals only regards married women; others
-enjoy the greatest liberty, and take advantage of it without any person
-presuming to find fault with them.</p>
-
-<p>The two Frenchmen, thrown so suddenly into the midst of these strange
-manners and customs, were some time before they could comprehend Indian
-life. Valentine, in particular, was completely at a loss; he was in
-a state of perpetual astonishment, which, however, he took good care
-should not appear in his words or in his actions; for the adventure of
-the machi had raised him so high in the estimation of the inhabitants
-of the toldero, that he dreaded, with reason, lest the smallest
-indiscretion should cast him down from the pedestal upon which he
-maintained his erect position.</p>
-
-<p>One evening, when Louis was preparing, as he frequently did, to visit
-the various toldos, in order to inquire after the sick, and administer
-to them all the relief his limited knowledge of medicine permitted,
-Curumilla came to the two strangers to invite them to be present at the
-cahuin given by the new machi, who had been elected that day, in place
-of the dead one. Valentine promised that they would come. From what
-we have said before, it may easily be comprehended what an enormous
-influence a sorcerer possesses over the members of the tribe; the choice
-is therefore difficult to make, and is seldom a good one. The sorcerer
-is generally a woman: when it is a man, he assumes the female costume,
-which he wears for the rest of his life. In almost all cases the science
-is inherited.</p>
-
-<p>After smoking a considerable number of pipes, and making endless
-speeches, the Araucanos had chosen, as a successor to the machi, an old
-man, of a mild, kindly character, who, during the course of his long
-existence, had only made friends. The repast was, as may be supposed,
-copious, abundantly furnished with ulpo, the national dish of the
-Araucans, and moistened with an incalculable number of couis of chica.
-Among the other delicacies which figured at the feast was a large basket
-filled with hard eggs, which the Ulmens swallowed in emulation of each
-other.</p>
-
-<p>"Why don't you eat some eggs?" said Curumilla to Valentine. "Do you not
-like them?"</p>
-
-<p>"On the contrary, chief, I am very fond of eggs, but not cooked in that
-fashion; I have no inclination to choke myself, thank you."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh! yes," the Ulmen said; "I understand; you prefer them raw."</p>
-
-<p>Valentine burst into a Homeric fit of laughter.</p>
-
-<p>"Not better than these," he said, when he had recovered his gravity;
-"I like eggs boiled in the shell; I like omelettes, or pancakes, but
-neither hard nor raw, if you please."</p>
-
-<p>"What do you mean by that? Cooked eggs must be hard."</p>
-
-<p>The young man looked at him with astonishment, and then said to him in a
-tone of profound compassion&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Now, really, chief, do you mean to say you are only acquainted with
-hard eggs?"</p>
-
-<p>"Our fathers have always eaten them thus," the Ulmen replied, quietly.</p>
-
-<p>"Poor people! how I pity them! They have been ignorant of one of the
-greatest enjoyments of life. Well, my friend," he exclaimed, raising his
-voice with jocular enthusiasm, "I am determined you shall adore me as
-a benefactor to humanity! In short, I will endow you with soft-boiled
-eggs, and with omelettes; at least, the remembrance of me shall not die
-from among you. When I am gone, and you eat one of those two dishes, you
-will think of me."</p>
-
-<p>In spite of his sadness, Louis could not help laughing at the burlesque
-humour and inexhaustible cheerfulness of his foster brother, in whom,
-at every minute, the gamin prevailed over the serious man. The chiefs
-welcomed with joy the offer of the spahi, and asked, with loud cries, on
-what day he would carry his promise into execution.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, I will not make you wait long," he said; "tomorrow, on the square
-of the toldería, and before all the assembled tribe of the Great Hare,
-I will show you how you must set about boiling an egg, and making an
-omelette."</p>
-
-<p>At this promise, the satisfaction of the chiefs mounted to the highest
-pitch, the couis of the chica circulated with increased vivacity, and
-the Ulmens soon found themselves sufficiently intoxicated to begin to
-sing as loud as they could shout, and all together,&mdash;a sort of music
-that produced such an effect upon the two Frenchmen, that they made
-their escape, stopping their ears. The feast was kept up long after
-their departure.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_XXII" id="CHAPTER_XXII">CHAPTER XXII.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>EXPLANATIONS.</h3>
-
-
-<p>We will now return to the chacra of Don Gregorio Peralta, to which
-Doña Rosario had been conducted after her miraculous deliverance.
-The first days that followed the departure of the two Frenchmen were
-sufficiently devoid of incident: Doña Rosario, shut up in her bedroom,
-remained almost continually alone. The poor girl, like all wounded
-spirits, sought to forget reality, by taking refuge in dreams, in order
-to collect and preserve piously in the depths of her heart the few
-happy remembrances which had so rarely gilded with a ray of sunshine
-the sadness of her existence. Don Tadeo, completely absorbed in his
-imperative political combinations, could only see her now and then, and
-but for a few minutes at a time. Before him, she endeavoured to appear
-cheerful, but she suffered the more from being obliged to conceal in her
-own bosom the sorrow which consumed her. She occasionally crept down
-into the garden; she stopped under the arbour in which her meeting with
-Louis had taken place, and remained hours together thinking of him she
-loved, and whom she had driven from her for ever.</p>
-
-<p>This poor child, so beautiful, so mild, so pure, so worthy of being
-loved, was condemned by an implacable destiny continually to lead a
-life of suffering and isolation; without a relation, without a friend
-to whom she might impart the secret of her grief. She was little more
-than sixteen, and already her bruised heart shrank back upon itself; her
-colour faded, her step became languid, her large blue eyes, swimming in
-tears, were incessantly raised towards heaven, as the only refuge that
-remained for her; she appeared to hold to the earth only by a slight
-thread, which the least fresh shock of adversity would snap.</p>
-
-<p>The maiden's story was a strange one. She had never known her parents;
-she had no remembrance of the kisses of her mother&mdash;those warm caresses
-of childhood, which make even mature age tremble with joy. From her
-earliest days, she could only remember being alone, always alone, in the
-hands of the mercenary and indifferent. The innocent joys of childhood
-remained unknown to her; she had known nothing of them but their
-weariness and sadness, and had ever been deprived of those friendships
-of early youth which, by insensibly preparing the mind for affectionate
-expansion, give birth to smiles in the midst of tears, and console with
-a kiss.</p>
-
-<p>Don Tadeo was the only person who was attached to her; he had never
-abandoned her, but watched with the greatest care over her material
-well-being, smiled upon her, and ever gave her good and pleasant
-counsels: but Don Tadeo was much too serious a man to comprehend the
-thousand little cares which the education of a young girl requires. She
-could only entertain for him that profound, yet respectful friendship
-which forbids those ingenuous confidences which can only be made to a
-mother, or to a companion of the same age. The visits of Don Tadeo were
-surrounded by an incomprehensible mystery; sometimes, without apparent
-cause, he made her suddenly quit people to whom he had confided her,
-and took her away with him, after ordering her to change her name,
-upon long tours. It was thus she had been to France: then, he quite as
-unexpectedly brought her back to Chili, sometimes to one city, sometimes
-to another, without ever condescending to explain to her the reasons for
-her leading such a wandering life.</p>
-
-<p>Constrained by her isolation to depend only upon herself, forced to
-reflect as soon as the first rays of reason enlightened her brain, the
-maiden, though so delicate and fragile in appearance, was endowed with
-an energy and firmness of character of which she was ignorant, but
-which supported her unconsciously; and if the hour of danger arrived,
-would be of infinite use to her. She had often, urged by the instinct
-of curiosity so natural to her age in the exceptional position in which
-she was placed, sought by adroit questions to seize the thread that
-might guide her in this labyrinth; but all had proved useless&mdash;Don Tadeo
-remained mute. One day only, after having for a long time contemplated
-her with an expression of sadness, he had pressed her to his heart, and
-said in a trembling voice,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Poor child! I will protect you against your enemies!"</p>
-
-<p>Who could those formidable enemies be? Why were they so inveterate
-against a girl of sixteen, who knew nothing of the world, and had
-never injured a human being? These questions, which Doña Rosario was
-continually asking herself, always remained unanswered. She only caught
-a glimpse in her life, of one of those terrible mysteries which bring
-death to the imprudent who persist in endeavouring to discover them;
-her days, therefore, were passed in continual fears, engendered by her
-imagination.</p>
-
-<p>One evening, when, sad and thoughtful as usual, and buried in the depths
-of an easy chair, in her bedchamber, she was turning over the leaves of
-a book which she was not reading, Don Tadeo entered the room. He saluted
-her, as he always did, by a kiss on her brow, took a seat, placed
-himself in front of her, and after looking at her for a moment with a
-melancholy smile, said quietly,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"I wish to speak with you, Rosario."</p>
-
-<p>"I am all attention, dear friend," she replied, endeavouring to smile.</p>
-
-<p>But before we report this conversation, we must present our readers
-with a few necessary explanations. Like all the other countries of
-South America, Chili, for a long time depressed beneath the Spanish
-yoke, had conquered its independence, more through the weakness of its
-ancient master than by its own proper strength. The system followed by
-the Spanish authorities from the beginning had checked in the people
-of these countries the development of the philosophical ideas which
-give man a consciousness of his own value, render him one day apt to
-achieve liberty, and ripe to enjoy it within just limits. We have said,
-in a preceding work, that the Americans of the South have none of the
-virtues of their ancestors, but, to make up for it, they possess all
-their vices. Destitute of that early education without which it is
-impossible to do or even to conceive great things, the Chilian nation,
-free by an unexpected chance, found itself immediately the sport of
-a few intriguing men, who concealed beneath high-sounding words of
-patriotism a boundless ambition. The newly-freed country struggled in
-vain; the innate carelessness of its inhabitants, and the levity of
-their character, formed an invincible object to any amelioration.</p>
-
-<p>At the epoch at which we have arrived, Chili was labouring under the
-oppression of General Bustamente. This man, not contented with being
-minister of a republic, dreamt of nothing less than causing himself
-to be proclaimed the chief of it, under the title of protector. The
-realization of this idea was not impossible. From its geographical
-position, Chili is almost independent of those troublesome neighbours
-who, in the states of the old world, keep watch over all the acts of
-a nation, and are, ready to put in their <i>veto</i> as soon as their own
-interest appears to be threatened. On one side separated from Upper
-Peru by the vast and almost impassable desert of Atacama, Bolivia alone
-might hazard some timid observations; but the General cherished secret
-hopes of including that republic itself in the new confederation; on
-the other side, immense solitudes and the Cordilleras separated it from
-Buenos Aires, which had neither the will nor the power to oppose his
-projects. One people alone could make a war with him, which he should
-dread, and they were the Araucanos; that little nation, driven like
-an iron wedge into Chili, disturbed the General's plans seriously. He
-resolved to treat with the Araucano Toqui, while determined, at the same
-time, when his projects should have succeeded, to unite all his forces
-to conquer that country which had so long resisted the Spanish power. In
-a word, General Bustamente dreamt of creating at the southern extremity
-of America, with Chili, Araucania, and Bolivia confederated, a rival
-nationality to the United States. Unfortunately for the General, there
-was not in him the stuff to make a great man; he was simply a <i>parvenu</i>,
-an ignorant and cruel soldier.</p>
-
-<p>When America raised the standard of revolt against the mother country,
-numerous secret societies were formed at all points of the territory,
-the most redoubtable, beyond contradiction, being that of the
-Dark-Hearts. The men who placed themselves at the head of this society
-were all intelligent and well informed, mostly educated in Europe, who,
-having seen in the field of action the great principles of the French
-revolution, wished, by applying them in their own country, to regenerate
-the nation. After the proclamation of Chilian independence, the secret
-societies, having no longer an object, disappeared. One alone persisted
-in remaining permanent&mdash;that of the Dark-Hearts. This society was not
-willing that license should assume the mantle of liberty: it felt that
-it had a great and holy mission to fulfil, and that its task, so far
-from being terminated, was scarcely commenced. It was necessary to
-instruct the people, to render them worthy of taking their place among
-nations, and, above all, to deliver them from the tyrants who wished
-to enslave them. This mission the society of the Dark-Hearts laboured
-incessantly to carry out, struggling constantly against oppressive
-powers, which succeeded each other, and destroying them without mercy.
-Proteus-like and intangible, the members of this society escaped the
-most active researches: if by chance some few of them fell in the arena,
-they died with head erect, confident in the future, and leaving to their
-brethren the care of continuing their task.</p>
-
-<p>The recovery of General Bustamente caused the Dark-Hearts a momentary
-stupor; but Don Tadeo, who had caused the news of the miraculous manner
-in which he had survived his execution to be spread universally,
-revived their spirits by placing himself again at their head. Not that
-either courage or hope had failed them. However great the skill of the
-machinations employed by the General to insure the success of his plans,
-the Loyal-Hearts, who had confederates everywhere, foresaw and defeated
-them. They watched all his movements with the greatest care, for they
-were quite aware that the moment was drawing near when their enemy would
-throw off the mask. They had heard of the departure of the convalescent
-General for Valdivia. For what reason, as his health was still so
-uncertain, and repose so necessary, had he gone to that remote province?
-That must be learnt at any price, and they must prepare against any
-eventuality.</p>
-
-<p>In a meeting of the society, future measures were agreed upon; it was
-moreover resolved that the King of Darkness should at the same time
-repair to Valdivia, in order, if advisable, to take the initiative in
-resistance. But Don Tadeo could not think of leaving Doña Rosario behind
-him, exposed to the unprincipled attacks of the Linda. He alone could
-defend the young girl; was he not her only support? As soon, then, as
-the Dark-Hearts had dispersed, Don Tadeo returned to the chacra, and
-went straight to Doña Rosario's chamber.</p>
-
-<p>"My dear child," he said, "I have sad news to inform you of."</p>
-
-<p>"Speak, my kind friend," she replied.</p>
-
-<p>"Urgent affairs require my presence as soon as possible in Valdivia."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" she cried, with an expression of terror, "you will not leave me
-here, will you?"</p>
-
-<p>"At first I intended to do so, this retreat appearing to me to unite all
-the guarantees for security; but cheer up, my child! I have changed my
-mind; I have fancied you would prefer accompanying me?"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, yes," she said, eagerly; "you are always kind. When do we set out?"</p>
-
-<p>"Tomorrow, dear child, at sunrise."</p>
-
-<p>"I shall be ready," she replied, holding up her pretty face towards him,
-that he might impress his customary kiss upon her brow.</p>
-
-<p>Don Tadeo retired, and Rosario immediately set about the preparations
-for her journey. Of what consequence was it to her whether she were in
-one place or another, since she was doomed to suffer everywhere? And who
-can say whether the poor girl, without daring to avow it to herself, did
-not entertain the hope of again seeing him she loved? Love is a divine
-sunbeam that illumines the darkest nights.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_XXIII" id="CHAPTER_XXIII">CHAPTER XXIII.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>THE CHINGANA.</h3>
-
-
-<p>Valdivia, founded in 1551 by the Spanish conqueror Don Pedro de
-Valdivia, is a charming city, two leagues from the sea, upon the left
-bank of a river, which large vessels can easily ascend into the fertile
-valley of Guadallanguen. The aspect of the city, the advanced post of
-civilization in these remote countries, is most agreeable; the streets
-are large, uniformly built; the white houses, only one story high,
-on account of the frequency of earthquakes, are terrace-roofed. Here
-and there rise in the air the steeples of the numerous churches and
-convents, which occupy more than a third of the city. It is astonishing
-to what an extent convents are multiplied in South America. It might
-be supposed that the New World was the land of promise for monks; they
-appear to rise out of the earth at every step. Thanks to the extensive
-commerce which Valdivia carries on by means of its port, which is
-visited by the numerous whalers fishing in those seas, and ships which
-come there to refit, after doubling Cape Horn, or before passing
-it,&mdash;its streets have more animation than is generally to be met with in
-American cities.</p>
-
-<p>Don Tadeo arrived in Valdivia, accompanied by Don Gregorio and Doña
-Rosario, on the evening of the sixteenth day after his departure from
-his friend's chacra. They had used all diligence, and for that country,
-where there are no other means of travelling but on horseback, it might
-be considered a quick journey. If the two gentlemen had thought proper
-to do so, they might have entered the city about three o'clock in the
-afternoon, but they deemed it advisable that no one in a place where
-so many people knew them should be made aware of their arrival: in the
-first place, because the causes which brought them there required the
-greatest secrecy; and, further, because Don Tadeo was forced to conceal
-himself, in order to avoid the police agents of the president of the
-republic, who had orders to arrest him wherever they might meet with
-him. Fortunately, in these countries the police never arrest anybody
-when not absolutely compelled, unless those whom they pursue come and
-deliver themselves up into their hands&mdash;an event, we may safely say,
-that rarely happens.</p>
-
-<p>As during his sojourn at Valdivia, his manner of living must be
-regulated by the affairs which brought him there, he could not openly
-keep house or appear in public, Don Tadeo went straight to the convent
-of the Ursulines, and committed the young lady he had brought with him
-to the care of the abbess, who was not only his relation, but was a
-worthy person, in whom he had perfect confidence. Doña Rosario accepted
-without hesitation the asylum which was offered to her, and where she
-fancied she should be safe from the attacks of her invisible enemies.
-Don Tadeo took an affectionate leave of her and the venerable abbess,
-and hastened to a house of the calle San-Xavier, where Don Gregorio, who
-had left him on entering the city, to avoid observation, awaited his
-coming.</p>
-
-<p>"Well?" asked Don Gregorio, as soon as he saw him.</p>
-
-<p>"She is in safety; at least I suppose so," Don Tadeo replied, with a
-sigh.</p>
-
-<p>"So much the better, for we must redouble our precautions."</p>
-
-<p>"Why so?"</p>
-
-<p>"After leaving you I made inquiries; I observed, I questioned people as
-I walked about and loitered at the port and the Almeda."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, what have you learnt?"</p>
-
-<p>"As we imagined, General Bustamente is here."</p>
-
-<p>"Already?"</p>
-
-<p>"He arrived three days ago."</p>
-
-<p>"What reason could be so important as to bring him here?" said Don
-Tadeo, with an uneasy expression. "Oh, I will know!"</p>
-
-<p>"Another thing: who do you think accompanies him?"</p>
-
-<p>"The executioner, no doubt!" said Don Tadeo, with an ironical smile.</p>
-
-<p>"Almost as bad," Don Gregorio replied.</p>
-
-<p>"Whom do you mean, then?"</p>
-
-<p>"The Linda!"</p>
-
-<p>The chief of the Dark-Hearts turned deadly pale.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh," he said, "that woman! for ever that woman! you must be mistaken,
-my friend; it is impossible!"</p>
-
-<p>"I have seen her."</p>
-
-<p>Don Tadeo walked about in great agitation for several minutes; then,
-stopping short in front of his friend, said, in a husky voice&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Dear Don Gregorio, are you certain you have not been misled by a
-resemblance? Are you quite sure it was she?"</p>
-
-<p>"You had just left me, and I was coming hither, when the sound of horses
-made me turn my head, and I saw, I repeat I saw, the Linda; she also
-appeared to have just arrived at Valdivia; two lancers escorted her, and
-an arriero led the baggage mules.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" said Don Tadeo, "will the infernal malice of that demon ever
-pursue me?"</p>
-
-<p>"My friend," Don Gregorio remarked, "in the path we have undertaken to
-tread, every obstacle must, unhesitatingly, be destroyed."</p>
-
-<p>"What, kill a woman?" the gentleman said, with horror.</p>
-
-<p>"I do not say that, but place her in such a position that she cannot
-possibly injure anyone. Remember, we are Dark-Hearts, and, as such, we
-ought to be without pity."</p>
-
-<p>"Silence!" Don Tadeo murmured, as two low, quick taps were struck on the
-door.</p>
-
-<p>"Come in!" cried Don Gregorio.</p>
-
-<p>The door opened, and Don Pedro showed his polecat face. He did not
-recognize the two men whom, in the various meetings he had had with
-them, he had always seen masked.</p>
-
-<p>"God preserve you, gentlemen!" he said, with a profound bow.</p>
-
-<p>"What is your pleasure, sir?" Don Gregorio asked, in a coldly-polite
-tone, while returning his salutation.</p>
-
-<p>"Sir," said Don Pedro, looking about for a seat which was not offered
-him, "I have just arrived from Santiago."</p>
-
-<p>Don Gregorio bowed again.</p>
-
-<p>"On my departure from that city, a banker in whose hands I had placed
-funds, gave me several bills; among others this, addressed to Don
-Gregorio Peratla, payable at sight."</p>
-
-<p>"That is my name, sir; be so kind as to hand it to me."</p>
-
-<p>"As you see, sir, the bill is for twenty-three ounces."</p>
-
-<p>"Very well, sir," replied Don Gregorio, as he took it, "allow me to
-examine it."</p>
-
-<p>Don Pedro bowed in his turn, whilst Don Gregorio, approaching a
-flambeau, looked attentively at the bill of exchange, put it into his
-pocket, and took some money from his purse.</p>
-
-<p>"Here are the twenty-three ounces, sir," he said, giving them.</p>
-
-<p>The spy took them, counted the gold pieces, examining them attentively,
-and then put them into his pocket.</p>
-
-<p>"It is very singular, sir," he said, just as the two gentlemen thought
-they were about to be relieved of his presence.</p>
-
-<p>"What is it, sir?" asked Don Gregorio; "do you not find the amount
-right?"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, pardon me, perfectly right; but," he added, with a slight
-hesitation, "I thought you had been a merchant?"</p>
-
-<p>"And what leads you to think otherwise?"</p>
-
-<p>"Because I see no desks."</p>
-
-<p>"They are in another part of the house," Don Gregorio replied; "I am a
-private trader."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, very well, sir."</p>
-
-<p>"And, if I had not thought you had pressing need of the money&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Very pressing!" the other interrupted.</p>
-
-<p>"I should have begged you to call again tomorrow, for, at this late
-hour, my cashbox is closed."</p>
-
-<p>And thereupon he waved his hand, rather haughtily, as dismissing him.
-Don Pedro retired, visibly disappointed.</p>
-
-<p>"That is a double-faced fellow, I am sure," said Don Gregorio; "I should
-not wonder if he were a spy of the General."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, I know him!" Don Tadeo replied; "I have about me proofs of his
-treachery. He has been a necessary instrument; at present he may injure
-us. He must be crushed."</p>
-
-<p>Don Gregorio drew from his pocket the bill which had been presented to
-him, and holding it to Don Tadeo&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Look at this," he said.</p>
-
-<p>This bill, payable at sight, appeared perfectly like others. It was
-drawn in the usual form: <i>At sight, please pay</i>, &amp;c. &amp;c.; but, in two
-or three places, the pen, too hard, no doubt, had spluttered and formed
-a certain number of little black spots, of which some were almost
-imperceptible. It appeared that these black spots had a meaning for the
-two men; for as soon as Don Tadeo had cast his eyes over the bill, he
-seized his cloak, and folded himself in it.</p>
-
-<p>"It is Heaven that protects us!" he said; "we must go thither without
-delay."</p>
-
-<p>"That is my opinion, likewise," Don Gregorio replied, holding the bill
-to the light, and burning it till there was not a particle of it left.
-The two men took each a long dagger and a brace of pistols, which they
-concealed under their clothes&mdash;the conspirators were too well acquainted
-with their country to neglect these precautions&mdash;they pulled the flaps
-of their hats over their faces, and wrapping themselves up to the very
-eyes, like two lovers or seekers of adventures, they descended into the
-street.</p>
-
-<p>It was one of those splendid nights unknown in our foggy climates; the
-sky, of a dark blue, was thickly studded with an infinite number of
-stars, among which conspicuously shone the brilliant Southern Cross;
-the air was embalmed with a thousand odours, and a light sea breeze
-refreshed the atmosphere, which had been heated by the torrid sunbeams
-during the past day. The two men passed silently and rapidly through
-the joyous groups which traversed the streets in all directions. It is
-in the evening that the Americans leave their homes to take the air and
-enjoy the freshness.</p>
-
-<p>The conspirators appeared to hear neither the enticing sounds of the
-vihuela which vibrated in their ears, nor the refrains of sambacuejas
-which flew in gusts from the chinganas, nor the bursts of fresh, silvery
-laughter of the black-eyed, rosy-lipped girls, who elbowed them on
-their way. They walked thus for a long time, turning round at intervals
-to ascertain if they were followed, plunging by degrees into the
-lowest quarters of the city, and at length stopped at a house of mean
-appearance, from which issued the loud but not very melodious strains of
-music eminently national.</p>
-
-<p>This house was a chingana, a name which has no equivalent in French
-or English. A Chilian chingana presents so eccentrically droll an
-appearance, that it would defy the pencil of Callot, and is beyond all
-description. Let the reader figure to himself a low room, with smoky
-walls, the floor of which is but beaten earth, and rendered filthy by
-the detritus left by the feet of incessantly arriving and departing
-visitors. In the centre of this den, lighted only by a smoky lamp called
-a <i>candil</i>, by which it is impossible to distinguish more than the
-shadows of the customers, are seated four men upon stools. Two of them
-are twanging wretched guitars, which have lost most of their strings,
-with the backs of their hands; the third plays the tambourine with his
-thumbs upon a crippled table, striking it with all his might; whilst
-the fourth rolls between his hands a piece of bamboo six feet long,
-split into several strips, which yield the most discordant sound that
-can possibly be imagined. The four musicians, not content with the
-formidable clatter made by their instruments, shout, at the very top of
-their voices, songs which we can neither venture to repeat nor translate.</p>
-
-<p>All this infernal noise is made to excite the dancers, who flutter
-about, assuming the most lascivious postures they can invent, amidst the
-hearty applause of the spectators, who writhe with delight, stamp their
-feet with pleasure, and sometimes, carried away by the harmony, thunder
-out all together, the burthen of the song, with the musicians and
-dancers. Amidst this disturbance, these cries and stampings, wind in and
-out the master of the establishment and his waiters, armed with couis of
-chicha, bottles of aguardiente, and even guarapo, to slake the thirst
-of the customers, who, to do them justice, the more they drink the more
-thirsty they become, and the more they wish to drink.</p>
-
-<p>Twice or thrice in the course of an evening, it may happen that some
-of the guests, more heated than the rest, or seized by the demon of
-jealousy, take it into their heads to quarrel. Then knives are drawn
-from the polena, ponchos are rolled round the left arm to serve as
-bucklers, the music ceases, and a circle is formed round the combatants.
-The sanguinary contest begins, and when one of the combatants has
-fallen, he is carried into the street, the music is resumed, the dance
-recommences, and no more is thought of the poor wounded or dying man.</p>
-
-<p>It was in front of one of these establishments that the chief of the
-Dark-Hearts and his friend had stopped; they did not hesitate. Pulling
-up the folds of their cloaks so as to completely conceal their faces,
-they entered the chingana: in spite of the pestilential atmosphere which
-nearly choked them, they passed unnoticed through the drinkers, and
-gained the further end of the room. The cellar door stood ajar; they
-opened it softly, and disappeared down the steps. After descending ten
-of these, they found themselves in a cellar, where a man, leaning over a
-barrel, which he appeared to be occupied in putting in its place, said
-to them, without interrupting his work&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Would you like some aguardiente de pesco, some mescal, or some chica?"</p>
-
-<p>"Neither the one nor the other," Don Tadeo replied; "we wish for some
-French wine."</p>
-
-<p>The man sprang up as if moved by a spring. The two adventurers had put
-on their masks.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you wish to have it white or red?" the man asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Red&mdash;as red as blood," said Don Tadeo.</p>
-
-<p>"Of what year?" the unknown rejoined.</p>
-
-<p>"Of that vintaged on the 5th of April, 1817," said Don Tadeo.</p>
-
-<p>"Then you must come this way, gentlemen," the man replied, with a
-respectful bow; "the wine you do me the honour to call for is extremely
-valuable; it is kept in a separate cellar."</p>
-
-<p>"To be drunk at Martinmas," Don Tadeo remarked.</p>
-
-<p>The man, who seemed only to wait for this last reply to his question,
-smiled with an air of intelligence, and laid his hand lightly on the
-wall. A stone turned slowly round upon itself, without the least noise,
-and opened a passage to the conspirators, which they immediately
-entered, and the stone instantly returned to its place.</p>
-
-<p>In the chingana, the cries, the songs, and the music had acquired an
-intensity really formidable; the joy of the tipplers was at its height.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_XXIV" id="CHAPTER_XXIV">CHAPTER XXIV.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>THE TWO ULMENS.</h3>
-
-
-<p>If we were writing a romance instead of a true history, there are
-certain scenes of the recital which we would pass over in silence. The
-one which follows would certainly be of this number; and yet, though of
-a rather hazardous puerility, it carries with it its lesson, by showing
-what is the influence of the early habits of a miserable life, even upon
-natures the best endowed, and how difficult it is, at a later period, to
-shake them off. We will add, to the praise of Valentine, the man of whom
-we are speaking, that his gaminism, if we may be allowed to employ such
-a term, was much more feigned than real, and that his aim, in allowing
-himself to be sometimes led away by it, was to bring a smile to the lips
-of his foster brother, and thus cheat the sorrow that was undermining
-his peace.</p>
-
-<p>This necessary preamble being gone through, we will resume the course
-of our narrative, and, abandoning for a time Don Tadeo and his friend,
-we will request the reader to follow us back to the tribe of the Great
-Hare. The looked-for morrow was a great day for the tribe, a day
-expected with impatience by all housekeepers, who were about to learn
-how to discover, to use Valentine's word, a new dish, which promised
-to please the palates of their race. As soon as it was daylight, men,
-women, and children assembled on the great Square of the village, and
-formed numerous groups, in which the merit of the unknown dish about
-to be revealed to them was discussed. Louis, for whom the experiment
-his friend was going to make had very little interest, wished to remain
-in the toldo; but Valentine insisted upon his being present at the
-experiment, and much against his will, he consented.</p>
-
-<p>The Parisian was already at his post, standing in an open spot, in
-the middle of the Square, watching with a laughing eye the anxious
-or incredulous expression by turn displayed upon the faces directed
-towards him. A table, which was to serve for his culinary preparations,
-a lighted brasier, upon which boiled an iron pot filled with water, a
-kitchen knife, an enormous frying-pan, found I know not where, a sort
-of tub, a wooden spoon, some parsley, a bit of bacon, some salt, some
-pepper, and a basket full of fresh eggs, had been prepared at his desire
-by the cares of Trangoil-Lanec.</p>
-
-<p>All eagerly looked for the arrival of the Apo-Ulmen of the tribe, with
-which the exhibition was to commence. A kind of dais had been erected
-for him in front of the operator, and when he had taken his lighted
-calumet from the hands of his pipe-bearer, he bent a little on one
-side and whispered a few words in the ear of Curumilla, who stood
-respectfully beside him. The Ulmen bowed, came down from the dais, went
-straight to the Parisian to tell him he might begin, and then resumed
-his post.</p>
-
-<p>Valentine returned the salutation of this master of the ceremonies,
-took off his poncho, which he folded up and laid carefully at his feet,
-and turning up his sleeves above his elbows with the studied grace of
-a performer, he leant slightly forward, placed his right hand upon the
-table, and assuming the tone of a vendor of quack medicines who boasts
-of the efficacy of his nostrums to gaping clowns, he thus commenced his
-demonstration in a loud voice and with a perfectly clear utterance:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Illustrious Ulmens, and you redoubtable warriors of the noble and
-sacred tribe of the Great Hare, listen attentively to what I have the
-honour of explaining to you. In the beginning of time the world did
-not exist; water and clouds, which continually clashed against each
-other in space, then formed the universe. When Pillian created the
-world, as soon as at his voice man had issued from the bosom of the red
-mountain, he took him by the hand, and pointing to all the productions
-of the earth, the air, and the water, he said to him,&mdash;'Thou art the
-king of creation: consequently, animals, plants, and fishes all belong
-to thee, and are, each in proportion with its strength, instincts, or
-conformation, to minister to thy welfare and thy happiness in the world
-in which I have placed thee; thus the horse shall bear thee with fiery
-speed across the deserts, fleecy lamas and sheep clothe thee with their
-wool, and nourish thee with their succulent flesh.' When Pillian had
-analyzed, one after the other, the diverse qualities of the animals,
-before proceeding to the plants and fishes, he stopped at the hen, which
-was moving carelessly about, and picking up the grains of corn scattered
-on the ground. Pillian took her by the wings, and showing her to man,
-said, 'Here is one of the most useful animals I have created for thy
-service; boiled in a pot, the hen will afford thee an excellent broth
-when thou art sick; roasted, its white flesh will acquire a delicious
-flavour; of her eggs thou canst make omelettes with herbs, omelettes
-with mushrooms, omelettes with ham, and, above all others, with bacon.
-If thou art indisposed, and solid food should be too heavy for thy weak
-stomach, thou canst boil her eggs in the shell, and then thou wilt say
-something, indeed!'</p>
-
-<p>"Thus," continued Valentine, attitudinizing before the Indians, who,
-with open mouths and staring eyes, lost not a single word he uttered,
-whether they understood it or not, whilst, in spite of his secret
-grief, Louis literally writhed with laughter; "thus it was that Pillian
-spoke to the first man at the commencement of ages; you were not there,
-Araucano warriors, it is therefore not astonishing that you know nothing
-about it; neither was I there, it is true; but, thanks to the talent
-we white men possess of transmitting our thoughts from age to age, by
-means of writing, these words of the Great Spirit have been carefully
-collected, and have come down to us in their purity. Without further
-prelude, I am going to have the honour of producing before you a boiled
-egg! Listen to me; it is as simple as saying good-day, and within the
-reach of the most limited capacity. In order to enjoy a boiled egg,
-two things are necessary&mdash;in the first place, an egg, and then, some
-boiling water! You take the egg in your fingers, thus, you uncover your
-saucepan, you place the egg in a spoon and deposit it carefully in the
-saucepan, where you allow it to boil gently three minutes. Mind, three
-minutes, neither more nor less: pay attention to that important detail,
-for a longer time would compromise the success of your operation. There
-it is!"</p>
-
-<p>The action suited the word; the three minutes were past: Valentine
-took out the egg, beheaded it, sprinkled a little salt on it, and
-presented it to the Ulmen with some long strips of maize bread. All
-this was performed with the most imperturbable seriousness, amidst the
-profound silence of the attentive crowd. The Apo-Ulmen proceeded to
-taste this wonderful egg with the most deliberate gravity. An air of
-doubt appeared for a second on his lips, as he raised the first mouthful
-towards them; but, by degrees, the features of his broad face expanded
-under the influence of joy and pleasure, and he at last exclaimed
-enthusiastically,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Wah! It is good! Very good!"</p>
-
-<p>Valentine returned to his brasier with a modest smile, and set about
-boiling eggs, which he distributed among the Ulmens and principal
-warriors, who quickly mingled their felicitations with those of the
-Apo-Ulmen. A delirious joy took possession of the poor Indians, and
-Valentine could hardly keep his ground, so eagerly did they press round
-him, to examine closely his mysterious mode of cooking the eggs. At
-length, calm was re-established, and the curiosity of the majority was
-satisfied. The Apo-Ulmen, who had not been able to make his voice heard
-in the tumult, was able to restore a little order, and obtain silence.
-Valentine looked at his public with an air of satisfaction. From that
-moment the Indians were believers&mdash;the most incredulous were convinced,
-and all awaited with impatience the continuation of his experiments.</p>
-
-<p>"Listen to me!" he continued, striking a sharp blow on the table with
-the knife he held in his hand; "listen to me, but, above all, observe
-closely how I proceed. A boiled egg was child's play to me, but the
-omelette requires to be considered seriously, and executed with care, in
-order to obtain that finish, that smoothness, flavour, and perfection
-so much prized by real judges. I am about to make a bacon-omelette, and
-when I name that, I name the most exquisite dish in the world! Whilst
-explaining to you the manner in which you should set about it, I will
-produce it: follow my reasonings closely, and observe attentively the
-manner in which I mingle the various ingredients which enter into the
-composition of this dish. To make a bacon omelette, I must have bacon,
-eggs, salt, pepper, parsley, and some butter&mdash;there they are, as you
-see, all on that table. Now I will mix them."</p>
-
-<p>Then, with incredible address, and the greatest quickness, he commenced
-a monster bacon-omelette, of at least sixty eggs, while continuing his
-explanation with inexpressible freedom and copiousness. The interest of
-the Indians was warmly excited, their enthusiasm betraying itself by
-shouts, leaps, and laughter; but it was carried to its height, and the
-stamping, crying, and screaming became terrific, when the Puelches saw
-Valentine seize the long handle of the frying-pan with a firm grasp,
-and toss the omelette three different times into the air, without any
-apparent effort, and with the style and ease of a finished cook. When
-the omelette was done to the moment, the Frenchman placed it upon a
-dish, taking care to double it with the talent which <i>cordons bleus</i>
-alone possess, and was then preparing to carry it smoking to the
-Apo-Ulmen, but he, enticed by the flavour of the boiled egg, and with
-appetite excited to the highest pitch, spared him that trouble; for
-he forgot all decorum, and rushed towards the table, followed by the
-principal Ulmens of the tribe. The success of the Parisian was enormous.
-Never, in the history of the divine art, did a cook obtain such a
-glorious triumph! Valentine, with the modesty peculiar to men of real
-talent, stole away from the honours they wished to pay him, and hastened
-to conceal himself with his friend in the toldo of Trangoil-Lanec.</p>
-
-<p>On the morrow of this eventful day, at the moment when the young men
-were about to leave the quarters they inhabited in common, their host
-presented himself, followed by Curumilla. The two chiefs saluted them,
-sat down upon the beaten earth which served instead of flooring, and lit
-their pipes. Louis, already accustomed to the ceremonious habits of the
-Araucanos, and convinced that their friends had something of importance
-to say, reseated himself, as did also his foster brother, and awaited
-patiently the expected communication. When the chiefs had deliberately
-smoked out their pipes, and shaken the last ashes upon their nails,
-they replaced them in their belts, and, after exchanging a glance,
-Trangoil-Lanec began:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Are my pale brothers still resolved to leave us?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," replied Louis.</p>
-
-<p>"Has Indian hospitality been wanting towards them?"</p>
-
-<p>"So far from that, chief," the young man said, warmly pressing his
-hands, "you have treated us like children of your own tribe."</p>
-
-<p>"Then why leave us?" Trangoil-Lanec asked; "we know not what we lose, do
-we ever know what we shall find?"</p>
-
-<p>"You are right, chief; but you know we came into this country for the
-purpose of visiting Antinahuel," Louis observed.</p>
-
-<p>"And does my golden-haired brother," for so he called Valentine,
-"absolutely wish to see him?"</p>
-
-<p>"Absolutely," replied the young man.</p>
-
-<p>The two chiefs exchanged a second glance.</p>
-
-<p>"He shall see him," replied Trangoil-Lanec; "Antinahuel is at his
-village."</p>
-
-<p>"Good!" said Valentine. "In that case we will set out tomorrow."</p>
-
-<p>"My brothers shall not go alone."</p>
-
-<p>"What do you mean by that?" Valentine asked.</p>
-
-<p>"The Indian soil is not safe for palefaces; my brother has saved my
-life, I shall follow him."</p>
-
-<p>"My brother has preserved me a friend," said Curumilla, who had till
-that time preserved silence; "I shall follow him."</p>
-
-<p>"You cannot think of such a thing, chief," Valentine remarked. "We are
-travellers whom chance knocks about at its pleasure; we know not what
-destiny has in reserve for us, nor whither it will conduct us, after
-having seen the man to whom we are sent."</p>
-
-<p>"What does it signify?" Curumilla replied; "where you go, we will go."</p>
-
-<p>The young men were greatly moved by such frank and noble devotion.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" Louis exclaimed, warmly, "it is impossible! your friends, your
-wives, and your children."</p>
-
-<p>"Our wives and children will be taken care of by our relations until our
-return."</p>
-
-<p>"My friends, my good friends," said Valentine, with emotion, "you are
-wrong; we cannot impose such a sacrifice upon you, we will not consent
-to it for your sake; I have already told you, we are ignorant of what
-awaits us, or what we shall do; allow us to go alone."</p>
-
-<p>"We will follow our pale brothers," Trangoil-Lanec said in a tone that
-admitted of no reply; "my brothers are not acquainted with the llanos;
-four men are a force in the desert&mdash;two men are dead."</p>
-
-<p>The Frenchmen contested the matter no longer, they accepted the offer
-of the Ulmens, and did so the more readily, because they plainly
-perceived what an immense advantage these men would be to them. They
-were accustomed to a life in the woods, they knew all its mysteries,
-and had fathomed all its depths. The chiefs took leave of their guests,
-to prepare for their departure, which was irrevocably fixed for the
-next day. At sunrise, a small party, composed of Louis, Valentine,
-Trangoil-Lanec, and Curumilla, all four mounted upon excellent horses of
-that mixed Andalusian and Arabian breed, which the Spaniards imported
-into America, and Cæsar, who trotted at their side in close file, left
-the toldería, escorted by all the members of the tribe shouting: "Come
-back again! come back again!&mdash;A good journey! a good journey!"</p>
-
-<p>After repeated farewells to these worthy people, the four travellers
-directed their course towards the toldería of the Black-Serpents, and
-soon disappeared in the numberless defiles formed by the quebradas.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_XXV" id="CHAPTER_XXV">CHAPTER XXV.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>THE SUN-TIGER.</h3>
-
-
-<p>In the state of anarchy in which Chili was plunged at the period of our
-history, the parties were numerous, and everyone was manoeuvring in the
-shade, as skilfully as possible, in order to gain possession of power.
-General Bustamente, as we have stated, aimed at nothing less than the
-protectorate of a confederation similar to that of the United States,
-which, then but little understood, dazzled his ambition. He could not
-divine that those ancient outlaws, those sectarian fanatics exiled from
-Europe, those thriving merchants, had already begun to dream in America
-of a universal monarchy, a senseless Utopia, the application of which
-will one day cost them the loss of that so-called nationality of which
-they are so proud, and which, in reality, does not exist. Probably
-General Bustamente did not look so far into the future, or, if he did
-divine the tendencies of the Anglo-Americans, perhaps he dreamt of
-himself following also that ambitious aim, as soon as his power should
-repose upon solid bases.</p>
-
-<p>The Dark-Hearts, the only true patriots in this unhappy country, on
-their side, wished that the government should adopt measures of a
-rather democratic nature, but they had no intention to overturn it,
-for they were persuaded that a revolution could only be prejudicial
-to the general welfare of the nation. Beside General Bustamente and
-the society of the Dark-Hearts, a third party, more powerful, perhaps,
-than the two first, was at work silently, but active. This party was
-represented by Antinahuel, the toqui of the most important Uthal-Mapus
-of the Araucanian confederacy. We have said that from its geographical
-position, this little insignificant republic is placed like a wedge
-in the Chilian territory, which it separates sharply in two. This
-position gave Antinahuel immense power. All Araucanos are soldiers; at
-a signal from their chiefs, they take up arms, and are able, in a few
-days, to get together an army of experienced warriors. The republicans
-and the partizans of Bustamente were fully aware how much it was to
-their interest to attach the Araucanos to their party; with the aid
-of these ferocious soldiers victory would be certain. Already had the
-King of Darkness and Bustamente made proposals to Antinahuel,&mdash;of
-course, unknown to each other. These overtures the redoubtable toqui
-had appeared to listen to, and had feigned to reply to both, for the
-following reasons:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Antinahuel, in addition to the hereditary hatred which his ancestors
-had bequeathed to him against the white race, or perhaps on account of
-that hatred, had dreamt, since he had been elected supreme chief of an
-Uthal-Mapus, not only of the complete independence of his country, but
-moreover of re-conquering all the territory which the Spaniards had
-deprived it of; he hoped to drive them back to the other side of the
-Cordilleras of the Andes, and restore to his nation the splendour it had
-enjoyed before the arrival of the whites in Chili. And this patriotic
-project Antinahuel was just the man to carry through. Endowed with
-vast intelligence, at once daring and subtle, he allowed himself to be
-stopped by no obstacle, conquered by no reverse. Almost entirely brought
-up in Chili, he spoke Spanish perfectly, was thoroughly acquainted with
-the manners of his enemies, and by means of numberless spies spread
-everywhere, he was well informed with regard to the Chilian policy,
-and of the precarious situation of those whom he wished to conquer; he
-habitually took advantage of the dissensions which separated them, and
-feigned to lend an ear to the propositions made to him on all parts, in
-order, when the moment should arrive, to crush his enemies one after the
-other, and be left alone standing.</p>
-
-<p>He wanted a plausible pretext for keeping his Uthal-Mapus under arms,
-without inspiring the Chilians with mistrust: and this pretext General
-Bustamente and the Dark-Hearts supplied him with by their preparations.
-No one could be surprised, for this reason, at seeing, in a time
-of peace, the toqui gather together a numerous army on the Chilian
-frontiers, since, <i>in petto</i>, either party flattered itself that this
-army was destined to aid its cause. The conduct of the toqui was,
-therefore, most skilful; for he not only inspired mistrust in no one,
-but, on the contrary, gave hopes to all. The position was becoming
-serious; the hour for action could not long be delayed; and Antinahuel,
-whose measures were all prepared, awaited impatiently the moment for
-beginning the struggle.</p>
-
-<p>Things were at this point on the day when Doña Maria came to the
-toldería of the Black-Serpents, to visit the friend of her childhood. As
-soon as she awoke, the Linda gave orders for her departure.</p>
-
-<p>"Is my sister going to leave me already?" said Antinahuel, in a tone of
-mild reproach.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," Doña Maria replied, "my brother knows that I must reach Valdivia
-as quickly as possible."</p>
-
-<p>The chief did not press her stay; a furtive smile played round his lips.
-After Doña Maria was on horseback, she turned towards the toqui.</p>
-
-<p>"Did not my brother say he should be soon in Valdivia?" she asked, in a
-perfectly well-played tone of indifference.</p>
-
-<p>"I shall be there as soon as my sister," he replied.</p>
-
-<p>"We shall see each other again, then?"</p>
-
-<p>"Perhaps we may."</p>
-
-<p>"We must!"</p>
-
-<p>This was said in a positive tone.</p>
-
-<p>"Very well," the chief replied, after a moment's pause; "my sister may
-depart&mdash;she shall see me again."</p>
-
-<p>"Till then, farewell, then," she said, and rode away at a quick pace.</p>
-
-<p>She soon disappeared in a cloud of dust, and the chief returned
-thoughtfully to his toldo.</p>
-
-<p>"Woman," he said, to his mother, "I am going to the great toldería of
-the palefaces."</p>
-
-<p>"I heard everything last night," the Indian woman replied, sorrowfully;
-"my son is wrong."</p>
-
-<p>"Wrong! how, or why?" he asked, passionately.</p>
-
-<p>"My son is a great chief; my sister deceives him, and makes him
-subservient to her vengeance."</p>
-
-<p>"Or rather my own," he replied, in a singular tone.</p>
-
-<p>"The young white girl has a right to the protection of my son."</p>
-
-<p>"I will protect the Pearl of the Andes."</p>
-
-<p>"My son forgets that she of whom he speaks saved his life."</p>
-
-<p>"Silence, woman!" he shouted, in a passionate tone.</p>
-
-<p>The Indian woman held her peace, but sighed deeply.</p>
-
-<p>The chief summoned his mosotones, and selecting from among them a score
-of warriors upon whom he could place entire reliance, ordered them to
-be ready to follow him within an hour. He then threw himself upon a
-bench, and sank into serious and agitating reflections. Suddenly a great
-noise was heard from without, and the chief sprang from his recumbent
-position, and went to the door of his toldo. He was surprised to see two
-strangers, mounted upon excellent horses, and preceded by an Indian,
-advancing towards him. These strangers were Valentine and Louis, who had
-left their friends a short distance from the toldería.</p>
-
-<p>Valentine, on leaving the village of the Puelches, had opened the letter
-addressed to himself, and placed in his hands by the major-domo, with a
-recommendation not to open it till the last minute. The young man was
-far from expecting the contents of this strange missive. After carefully
-reading it, he communicated it to his friend, saying&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Here, read this, Louis;&mdash;hem! who knows but that this singular letter
-is the first step to our fortune?"</p>
-
-<p>Like all men in love, Louis was sceptical upon every subject that did
-not bear some relation to his passion, and he returned the paper,
-shaking his head.</p>
-
-<p>"Politics burn the fingers," he said.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, of those who don't know how to handle them," Valentine replied,
-with a shrug of the shoulders. "Now, it is my opinion that in this
-country, in which it has pleased fate to drop us, the most promising
-element of fortune we have at command happens to be those very politics
-which you so much disdain."</p>
-
-<p>"I must confess, my friend, that I care very little for these
-Dark-Hearts, of whom I know nothing, and who have done us the honour to
-affiliate us."</p>
-
-<p>"I do not share your opinion at all; I believe them to be resolute,
-intelligent men, and am persuaded they will, some day, gain the upper
-hand."</p>
-
-<p>"Much good may it do them! But of what consequence is that to us
-Frenchmen?"</p>
-
-<p>"More than you may think for; and I am determined, immediately after
-my interview with this said Antinahuel, to go directly to Valdivia, in
-order to be present at the meeting they appoint."</p>
-
-<p>"As you please," said the Count, carelessly. "As such is your advice,
-we will go thither; only I warn you that we shall risk our heads. If we
-lose them, it will be all very well; but I wash my hands of the matter
-beforehand."</p>
-
-<p>"I will be prudent, caramba! My head is the only thing I can call my
-own," Valentine replied, laughing, "and be assured I will not risk it
-for nothing. Besides, do you not partake of my curiosity to see how
-these people understand politics, and in what a fashion they set about
-conspiring?"</p>
-
-<p>"Well, that may become interesting; we travel partly for instruction;
-let us gain it, then, when it offers itself."</p>
-
-<p>"Bravo! that's the way in which I like to hear a man speak. Let us go
-and seek the redoubtable chief to whom we have a letter to deliver."</p>
-
-<p>Trangoil-Lanec and Curumilla were too prudent to venture to let
-Antinahuel know of the friendship which bound them to the two Frenchmen.
-Without suspecting the reasons which induced their friends to present
-themselves to the toqui, they foresaw that a day might come when it
-would be advantageous that their relations should be unknown. When they
-arrived, therefore, at a short distance from the toldería, the Indian
-warriors remained concealed in a secluded corner, keeping Cæsar with
-them, and allowing the two Frenchmen to continue their route to the
-village of the Black-Serpents, with whom, in addition, they had not
-lately been upon the best terms.</p>
-
-<p>The reception given to the Frenchmen was most friendly; for in time
-of peace the Araucanos are exceedingly hospitable. As soon as they
-perceived the strangers, they crowded round them; and as all the Indians
-speak Spanish with astonishing facility, Valentine had no difficulty in
-making himself understood. One warrior, more polite than the rest, took
-upon himself to be their guide through the village, in which, of course,
-they were at a loss. He led them to the toldo of the chief, in front of
-which were drawn up twenty horsemen, armed, and apparently waiting.</p>
-
-<p>"That is Antinahuel, the great toqui of the Inapire-Mapu," said the
-guide, emphatically, pointing with his finger at the chief, who at that
-moment came out of his toldo, attracted by the noise.</p>
-
-<p>"Thank you," said Valentine; and the two Frenchmen advanced rapidly
-towards the toqui, who, on his part, made a few steps to meet them.</p>
-
-<p>"Eh, eh!" Valentine said, in a subdued voice, to his companion; "here
-is a man with a good bearing, and with a rather intelligent air for an
-Indian."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," Louis replied, in the same tone, "but he has a contracted brow,
-a sinister look, and compressed lips&mdash;he inspires me with very little
-confidence."</p>
-
-<p>"Bah!" said Valentine, "you are too difficult by half; did you expect to
-find an Indian an Antinous or an Apollo Belvedere?"</p>
-
-<p>"No; but I should like a little more open frankness in his look."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, well, we shall see."</p>
-
-<p>"I do not know why, but that man produces the effect of a reptile upon
-me; he inspires me with invincible repulsion."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, nonsense! you are too impressionable. I am sure that the man, who,
-I cannot deny, has the air of a thorough rascal, is, at bottom, one of
-the best fellows in the world."</p>
-
-<p>"God grant I may be deceived! But I experience, on seeing him, a feeling
-for which I cannot account; it seems as if a kind of presentiment warned
-me to be on my guard against that man, and that he will be fatal to me."</p>
-
-<p>"All folly! What relations can you ever have with this individual? We
-are charged with a mission to him; who knows whether we may ever see him
-again? and then what interests can connect us with him hereafter?"</p>
-
-<p>"You are right; and I do not know what makes me think as I have
-said; besides, we shall soon know what we have to trust to on his
-account&mdash;here he is."</p>
-
-<p>The adventurers were, in fact, at that moment in front of the chief's
-toldo. Antinahuel stood before them; and, although appearing to be
-giving orders to his men, examined them very attentively. He stepped
-towards them quickly, and, bowing with perfect politeness, said, in a
-pleasant tone, and with a graceful gesture&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Strangers, you are welcome to my toldo. Your presence rejoices my
-heart. Condescend to pass over the threshold of this poor hut, which
-will be yours as long as you deign to remain among us."</p>
-
-<p>"Thanks for the kind words of welcome you address to us, powerful
-chief," Valentine replied. "The persons who sent us to you assured us of
-the kind reception we might expect."</p>
-
-<p>"If the strangers come on the part of my friends, that is a further
-reason why I should endeavour to make their abode here as agreeable as
-my humble means will allow me."</p>
-
-<p>The two Frenchmen bowed ceremoniously, and alighted from their horses.
-At a sign from the toqui, two peons led the horses away to a vast corral
-behind the toldo.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_XXVI" id="CHAPTER_XXVI">CHAPTER XXVI.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>THE MATRICIDE.</h3>
-
-
-<p>We have repeatedly said that in times of peace the Araucanos are
-exceedingly hospitable. This hospitality, which on the part of
-the warriors is cordial and simple, on that of the chiefs becomes
-extravagant. Antinahuel was far from being a rude Indian, attached
-though he was to the customs of his fathers; and although in his heart
-he hated not only the Spaniards, but indiscriminately all belonging to
-the white race, the half-civilized education he had received had given
-him ideas of comfort completely above Indian habits. Many of the richest
-Chilian farmers would have found it impossible to display greater luxury
-than he exhibited when his caprice or his interest led him to do so.
-On the present occasion, he was not sorry to show strangers that the
-Araucanos were not so barbarous as their arrogant neighbours wished it
-to be supposed, and that they could, when necessary, rival even them.
-At the first glance, Antinahuel had discovered that his guests were not
-Spaniards; but, with the circumspection which forms the foundation of
-the Indian character, he confined his observations to his own breast. It
-was with the kindest air and in the most winning tone of voice that he
-pressed them to enter his toldo.</p>
-
-<p>The Frenchmen followed him in, and with a gesture he requested them
-to be seated. Peons placed a profusion of cigars and cigarettes upon
-the table, near a tasty filigree brasero. In a few minutes other
-peons entered with the maté, which they respectfully presented to the
-chief and his guests. Then, without the silence being broken&mdash;for the
-Araucanian laws of hospitality require that no question should be
-addressed to strangers until they think proper to speak themselves&mdash;each
-sipped the herb of Paraguay, while smoking. This preliminary operation
-being gone through, Valentine rose.</p>
-
-<p>"I thank you, chief, in the name of myself and my friend, for your
-cordial hospitality."</p>
-
-<p>"Hospitality is a duty which every Araucano is jealous to fulfil!"</p>
-
-<p>"But," replied Valentine, "as I have been given to understand that the
-chief is about to set out on a journey, I do not wish to detain him."</p>
-
-<p>"I am at the orders of my guests; my journey is not so pressing as not
-to admit of being put off for a few hours."</p>
-
-<p>"I thank the chief for his courtesy, but I hope he will soon be at
-liberty."</p>
-
-<p>Antinahuel bowed.</p>
-
-<p>"A Spaniard has charged me with a letter for the chief."</p>
-
-<p>"Ah!" the toqui exclaimed, with a singular intonation, and fixing a
-piercing look upon the face of the young man.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," the Frenchman continued; "and that letter I am about to have the
-honour of handing to you."</p>
-
-<p>And he put his hand to his breast, to take out the letter.</p>
-
-<p>"Stop!" said the chief, laying his hand upon his arm, as he turned
-towards his servants; adding, "leave the room." The three men were left
-alone.</p>
-
-<p>"Now you may give me the letter," he continued.</p>
-
-<p>The chief took it, looked carefully at the superscription, turned the
-paper in all directions in his hand, and then, with some hesitation,
-presented it to the young man.</p>
-
-<p>"Let my brother read it," he said; "the whites are more learned than we
-poor Indians: they know everything."</p>
-
-<p>Valentine gave his countenance the most silly expression possible.</p>
-
-<p>"I cannot read this," he said, with well-assumed embarrassment.</p>
-
-<p>"Does my brother then refuse to render me this service?" the chief
-pressed him.</p>
-
-<p>"I do not refuse you, chief; only I am prevented doing what you request
-by a very simple reason."</p>
-
-<p>"And what is that reason?"</p>
-
-<p>"It is that my companion and I are both Frenchmen."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, and what then?"</p>
-
-<p>"We speak a little Spanish, but we cannot read it."</p>
-
-<p>"Ah!" said the chief, in a tone of doubt; but, after walking about, and
-reflecting a minute, he added,&mdash;"Hem! that is possible."</p>
-
-<p>He then turned towards the two Frenchmen, who, on their part, were, in
-appearance, impassive and indifferent.</p>
-
-<p>"Let my brothers wait an instant," he said; "I know a man in my tribe
-who understands the marks which the whites make upon paper: I will go
-and order him to translate this letter."</p>
-
-<p>The young men bowed, and the chief left the apartment.</p>
-
-<p>"Why the devil did you refuse to read the letter?" Louis asked.</p>
-
-<p>"In good truth," Valentine replied, "I can scarcely tell you why; but
-what you said of the expression of this man's countenance, produced a
-certain effect upon me. He inspires me with no confidence, and I am not
-anxious to be the depository of secrets which he may some day reclaim in
-a disagreeable manner."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, you are right! We may, some day, congratulate ourselves upon this
-circumspection. Hush! I hear footsteps."</p>
-
-<p>And the chief re-entered the room.</p>
-
-<p>"I know the contents of the letter," he said; "if my brothers see the
-man who charged them with it, they will inform him that I am setting out
-this very day for Valdivia."</p>
-
-<p>"We would, with pleasure, take charge of that message," replied
-Valentine; "but we do not know the person who gave us the letter, and it
-is more than probable we may never see him again."</p>
-
-<p>The chief darted at them a stolen and deeply suspicious glance.</p>
-
-<p>"Good! Will my brothers remain here, then?"</p>
-
-<p>"It would give us infinite pleasure to pass a few hours in the agreeable
-society of the chief, but with us time presses; with his permission, we
-will take our leave."</p>
-
-<p>"My brothers are perfectly free; my toldo is open for those who leave
-it, as well as for those who enter it."</p>
-
-<p>The young men rose to depart.</p>
-
-<p>"In what direction are my brothers going?"</p>
-
-<p>"We are bound for Concepción."</p>
-
-<p>"Let my brothers go in peace, then! If their course lay towards
-Valdivia, I would have offered to journey with them."</p>
-
-<p>"A thousand thanks, chief, for your kind offer; unfortunately we cannot
-profit by it, for our road lies in a completely opposite direction."</p>
-
-<p>The three men exchanged a few more words of courtesy, and left the
-toldo. The Frenchmen's horses had been brought round; they mounted, and
-after having saluted the chief once more, they set off. As soon as they
-were out of the village, Louis, turning to Valentine, said,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"We have not an instant to lose. If we wish to reach Valdivia before
-that man, we must make all speed. Who knows whether Don Tadeo may not be
-awaiting our arrival impatiently?"</p>
-
-<p>They soon rejoined their friends, who looked for them anxiously, and all
-four set off at full speed in the direction of Valdivia, without being
-able to explain to themselves why they used such diligence. Antinahuel
-accompanied his guests a few paces out of his toldo. When he had taken
-leave of them, he followed them with his eyes as far as he could see
-them, and when they disappeared at the extremity of the village, he
-returned thoughtfully and slowly to his toldo, saying to himself,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"It is evident to me that these men are deceiving me; their refusal to
-read the letter was nothing but a pretext. What can be their object? Can
-they be enemies? I will watch them!"</p>
-
-<p>When he arrived in front of his toldo, he found his mosotones mounted,
-and awaiting his orders.</p>
-
-<p>"I must set out at once," he said; "I shall learn all yonder, and,
-perhaps," he added, in a voice so low that he could hardly hear it
-himself, "perhaps I shall find <i>her</i> again. If Doña Maria breaks her
-promise, and does not give her up to me, woe, woe be to her!"</p>
-
-<p>He raised his head, and saw his mother standing before him. "What do you
-want, woman?" he asked, harshly; "this is not your place!"</p>
-
-<p>"My place is near you when you are suffering, my son," she mildly
-replied.</p>
-
-<p>"I suffering! You are mad, mother! age has turned your brain! Go back
-into the toldo, and, during my absence, keep a good watch over all that
-belongs to me."</p>
-
-<p>"Are you, then, really going, my son?"</p>
-
-<p>"This moment," he said, and sprang into his saddle.</p>
-
-<p>"Where are you going?" she asked, and seized his horse's bridle.</p>
-
-<p>"What is that to you?" he replied, with an ugly glance.</p>
-
-<p>"Beware! my son; you are entering on a bad course. Guérubu, the spirit
-of evil, is master of your heart."</p>
-
-<p>"I am the best and sole judge of my actions."</p>
-
-<p>"You shall not go!" she exclaimed, as she placed herself resolutely in
-front of his horse.</p>
-
-<p>The Indians collected round the speakers looked on with mute terror at
-this scene; they were too well acquainted with the violent and imperious
-character of Antinahuel not to dread something fatal, if his mother
-persisted in endeavouring to prevent his departure.</p>
-
-<p>The brows of the chief lowered&mdash;his eyes gleamed like lightning&mdash;and it
-was not without a great effort that he mastered the passion boiling in
-his breast.</p>
-
-<p>"I will go!" he said, in a loud voice, and trembling with rage; "I will
-go, if I trample you beneath my horse's hoofs!"</p>
-
-<p>The woman clung convulsively to the saddle, and looked her son in the
-face.</p>
-
-<p>"Do so," she cried; "for, by the soul of your father, who now hunts in
-the blessed prairies with Pillian, I swear I will not stir, even if you
-pass over my body!"</p>
-
-<p>The face of the Indian became horribly contracted; he cast around a
-glance which made the hearts of the bravest tremble with fear.</p>
-
-<p>"Woman! woman!" he shouted, grinding his teeth with rage; "get out of my
-way, or I shall crush you like a reed!"</p>
-
-<p>"I will not stir, I tell you!" she repeated, with wild energy.</p>
-
-<p>"Take care! take care!" he said again; "I shall forget you are my
-mother!"</p>
-
-<p>"I will not stir!"</p>
-
-<p>A nervous tremor shook the limbs of the chief, who had now attained the
-highest paroxysm of fury.</p>
-
-<p>"If you will have it so," he cried, in a husky, but loud voice, "your
-blood be upon your own head!"</p>
-
-<p>And he dug the spurs into the sides of his horse, which plunged with
-pain, and then sprung forward like an arrow, dragging along the poor
-woman, whose body was soon but one huge wound. A cry of horror burst
-from the quivering lips of the terrified Indians. After a few minutes
-of this senseless course, during which she had left fragments of her
-flesh on every sharp point of the road, the strength of the Indian woman
-abandoned her; she left her hold of the bridle, and sank dying.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" she said, in a faint voice, and following, with a look dimmed by
-agony, her son, as he was borne away like a whirlwind, "my unhappy son!
-my unhappy&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>She raised her eyes towards heaven, clasped her mangled hands, as if to
-offer up a last prayer, and fell back.</p>
-
-<p>She died pitying the matricide, and pardoning him. The women of the
-tribe took up the body respectfully, and carried it, weeping, into the
-toldo. At the sight of the corpse, an old Indian shook his head several
-times, murmuring in a prophetic tone,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Antinahuel has killed his mother! Pillian will avenge her!"</p>
-
-<p>And all bowed down their heads sorrowfully: this atrocious crime made
-them dread horrible misfortunes in the future.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_XXVII" id="CHAPTER_XXVII">CHAPTER XXVII.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>THE JUSTICE OF THE DARK-HEARTS.</h3>
-
-
-<p>Don Tadeo and his friend Don Gregorio were introduced, after exchanging
-several passwords, into a subterraneous apartment, the entrance to which
-was perfectly concealed in the wall. The door closed immediately after
-them; the two men turned round sharply, but all signs of an opening
-had disappeared. Without taking further notice of this circumstance,
-which they no doubt had expected, they cast an inquiring glance around
-them, in order to obtain some knowledge of the locality. The place
-was admirably chosen for a meeting of conspirators. It was an immense
-apartment, which must have served for a long time as a cellar, as was
-made evident by the essentially alcoholic emanations still floating in
-the air; the walls were low and thick, and of a dirty red colour; a
-lamp with three jets, hanging from the roof, far from dispersing the
-darkness, seemed only to render it in a manner visible. In a recess
-stood a table, behind which a man in a mask was seated, near to two
-empty seats. Men enveloped in cloaks, and all wearing black velvet
-masks, were gliding about in the darkness, silent as phantoms.</p>
-
-<p>Don Tadeo and his friend exchanged a glance, and without speaking a
-word, proceeded to take their places in the empty seats. As soon as
-they were seated, a change came over the meeting: the low whispering
-which had been heard till that moment ceased all at once, as if by
-enchantment. All the conspirators gathered in a single group in front of
-the table, and with arms crossed upon their chests, waited earnestly.
-The man who before the arrival of Don Tadeo had appeared to preside over
-the meeting arose, and casting round a confident glance on the attentive
-crowd, said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"On this day the seventy-two <i>ventas</i> of the Dark-Hearts, spread over
-the territories of the republic, are assembled in council. In all of
-them the taking up of arms, of which we, the <i>venta</i> of Valdivia, will
-instantly give the signal, will be decreed. Everywhere men faithful to
-the good cause, true lovers of liberty, are preparing to commence the
-struggle with Bustamente. Will you all, comrades, who are here present,
-when the hour strikes, descend frankly and boldly into the arena? Will
-you sacrifice, without reserve, your family, your fortune, and even your
-life, if necessary, for the public good?"</p>
-
-<p>He ceased, and a funereal silence prevailed in the assembly.</p>
-
-<p>"Answer!" he resumed; "what will you do?"</p>
-
-<p>"We will die!" the band of conspirators murmured, like a sinister and
-terrible echo.</p>
-
-<p>"That is well, my brothers," Don Tadeo said, rising suddenly. "I
-expected no less from you, and I thank you. I have long known you all,
-and felt that I could depend upon you&mdash;I, whom none of you know. These
-masks which conceal you one from another, are but transparent gauze
-for the chief of the Dark-Hearts&mdash;and I am the King of Darkness! I
-have sworn that you shall live as free men, or that I will die! Before
-twenty-four hours have passed away, you will hear the signal you have
-so long waited for, and then will commence that terrible struggle which
-can only end in the death of the tyrant; all the provinces, all the
-cities, all the towns will rise <i>en masse</i> at the same instant; courage,
-then! You have only a few hours longer to suffer. The war of ambushes,
-surprises, of subterranean treacheries is ended; war, frank, loyal,
-open, in the face of the sun, is about to begin; let us show ourselves
-what we always have been, firm in our faith, and ready to die for our
-opinions! Let the chiefs of sections draw near."</p>
-
-<p>Ten men left the ranks, and placed themselves silently ten paces from
-the table.</p>
-
-<p>"Let the corporal of chiefs of sections answer for all," said Don Tadeo.</p>
-
-<p>"I am the corporal," said one of the masked men; "the orders expedited
-from the Quinta Verde have been executed; all the sections are warned;
-they are all ready to rise at the first signal; each will take
-possession of the posts that are assigned it."</p>
-
-<p>"So far well! How many men have you at your disposal?"</p>
-
-<p>"Seven thousand three hundred and seventy-seven."</p>
-
-<p>"Can you depend upon them all?"</p>
-
-<p>"No."</p>
-
-<p>"How many are there lukewarm or irresolute?"</p>
-
-<p>"Four thousand."</p>
-
-<p>"How many firm and convinced?"</p>
-
-<p>"Nearly three thousand; but for these I will be answerable."</p>
-
-<p>"That is well! we have even more than we want; the brave will attract
-others. Return to your places."</p>
-
-<p>The chiefs of sections drew back,</p>
-
-<p>"Now," Don Tadeo continued, "before we separate, I have to call down
-your justice upon one of our brothers, who, having entered deeply into
-our secrets, has been false to the society several times for a little
-gold; I have the proofs in my hands. The circumstances are of the utmost
-importance; one word&mdash;a single word&mdash;may ruin our cause and us! Say,
-what chastisement does this man deserve?"</p>
-
-<p>"Death!" the conspirators responded, coolly, but simultaneously.</p>
-
-<p>"I know this man," Don Tadeo continued; "let him come forth from the
-ranks, and not oblige me to tear off his mask, and hurl his name in his
-face."</p>
-
-<p>No one stirred.</p>
-
-<p>"This man is here&mdash;I can see him; for the last time, let him step forth,
-and not crown his baseness by seeking to avoid the punishment he merits."</p>
-
-<p>The conspirators cast suspicious glances at each other; the assembly
-seemed moved by an extreme anxiety; the man, however, upon whom the
-King of Darkness called, persisted in remaining confounded amongst his
-companions.</p>
-
-<p>Don Tadeo waited for an instant, but finding that the man whom he
-summoned imagined he should remain unknown, and not be discovered
-beneath his mask, he made a signal, and Don Gregorio rose and advanced
-towards the group of conspirators, which opened at his approach, and
-laid his hand roughly on the shoulder of a man who had instinctively
-retreated before him, until the wall forced him to stop.</p>
-
-<p>"Come with me, Don Pedro," he said, and he dragged rather than led him
-to the table, behind which stood Don Tadeo, calm and implacable.</p>
-
-<p>The guilty spy was seized with a convulsive trembling, his teeth
-chattered, and he fell upon his knees, crying with terror:</p>
-
-<p>"Mercy, my lord, mercy!"</p>
-
-<p>Don Gregorio tore off his mask, and revealed the face of the spy, whose
-features, horribly contracted by fear, and of an ashy paleness, were
-really hideous.</p>
-
-<p>"Don Pedro," Don Tadeo said, in a stern voice, "you have several times
-sought to sell your brothers of the society; it was you who caused
-the death of the ten patriots shot upon the Place of Santiago; it was
-you who betrayed the secret of the Quinta Verde to the soldiers of
-Bustamente; this very day, even, scarcely two hours ago, you held a long
-conversation with General Bustamente, in which you agreed to deliver up
-to him tomorrow the principal chiefs of the Dark-Hearts: is that true?"</p>
-
-<p>The miserable wretch had not a word to say in his defence; confounded,
-overwhelmed by the irresistible proofs accumulated against him, he hung
-down his head in utter abandonment.</p>
-
-<p>"Is this true?" Don Tadeo reiterated.</p>
-
-<p>"It is true," he murmured, in a scarcely audible voice.</p>
-
-<p>"You acknowledge yourself guilty?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," he said, with a heart-stifling sob; "but grant me life, noble
-seigneur, and I swear&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Silence!"</p>
-
-<p>The spy was struck with mute despair.</p>
-
-<p>"You have heard, companions and friends, how this man confesses his own
-crimes; for the last time, what punishment does he deserve for having
-sold his brothers?"</p>
-
-<p>"Death!" replied the Dark-Hearts, without hesitation.</p>
-
-<p>"In the name of the Dark-Hearts, of whom I am king, I condemn you,
-Don Pedro Saldillo, to death, for treachery and felony towards your
-brethren. You have five minutes to make your peace with Heaven," Don
-Tadeo said, sternly.</p>
-
-<p>He placed his watch upon the table, and drawing a pistol from his belt,
-cocked it deliberately. The sharp noise of the hammer made the condemned
-man shudder with fear. A profound silence prevailed in the vault; the
-hearts of these implacable men might be heard beating in their breasts.
-The spy cast around wild, despairing glances, but beheld nothing but
-angry eyes gleaming upon him through hideous masks. Over the vault, in
-the chingana, they continued dancing, and faint puffs of <i>sambacuejas</i>
-penetrated, at intervals, mixed with uproarious bursts of laughter, even
-to the awful scene beneath. The contrast of this riotous mirth with
-the terrible act of justice which was being carried out, had something
-appalling in it.</p>
-
-<p>"The five minutes are past," said Don Tadeo, in a firm voice.</p>
-
-<p>"A few minutes more! a few minutes, my lord!" the spy implored, wringing
-his hands in despair. "I am not prepared; you cannot kill me thus! In
-the name of all you hold most dear, let me live!"</p>
-
-<p>Without appearing to hear him, Don Tadeo lifted his pistol, and the
-miserable culprit rolled upon the ground, with his brains scattered
-around him.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" he cried, as the pistol was aimed, "be accursed, ye assassins!"
-His death prevented the utterance of more.</p>
-
-<p>The conspirators stood cold, impassive spectators of the scene. As soon
-as the stern act of justice was completed, at a signal from the chief,
-several men opened a trap in the floor which covered a hole half filled
-with quick lime; the body was thrown into it, and the trap closed again.</p>
-
-<p>"Justice has been done, brothers," said Don Tadeo, solemnly; "go in
-peace, the King of Darkness watches over you."</p>
-
-<p>The conspirators bowed respectfully, and disappeared one after the
-other, without uttering a word. At the end of a quarter of an hour no
-one remained in the vault but Don Tadeo and Don Gregorio.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" said Don Tadeo, "Shall we always have thus to combat treachery?"</p>
-
-<p>"Courage! my friend; you have yourself said, in a few hours war will
-commence in the face of day."</p>
-
-<p>"God grant I may not be deceived! This contest in the dark makes
-frightful demands upon the mind; my heart begins to fail me!"</p>
-
-<p>The two conspirators regained the chingana, in which the dancing,
-laughing, and drinking were going on with undiminished spirit; they
-passed through so as not to be observed, and came out into the street.
-They had hardly walked fifty steps when they were joined by a man, who,
-to their great surprise, proved to be Valentine Guillois.</p>
-
-<p>"God be praised for bringing you here so opportunely!" said Don Tadeo.</p>
-
-<p>"I hope I am punctual," the Parisian remarked, with a gay laugh.</p>
-
-<p>Don Tadeo pressed his hand warmly, and drew him towards his residence,
-where our three personages soon arrived.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_XXVIII" id="CHAPTER_XXVIII">CHAPTER XXVIII.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>THE TREATY OF PEACE.</h3>
-
-
-<p>General Bustamente had come to Valdivia under the pretence of himself
-renewing the treaties which existed between the republic of Chili
-and the Araucanian Confederation. This pretext was excellent in the
-sense that it permitted him to concentrate a considerable force in the
-provinces, and gave him, besides, a plausible reason for receiving the
-most powerful Ulmens of the Indians, who would not fail to come to the
-meeting, accompanied by a great number of mosotones. Every time a new
-president is elected in Chili, the minister at war renews the treaties
-in his name. General Bustamente had, up to this moment, neglected to do
-so: he had good reasons for that.&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>This ceremony, in which a great retinue is purposely displayed,
-generally takes place in a vast plain situated upon the Araucanian
-territories, and not at a great distance from Valdivia. By a curious
-coincidence, the pretext of the General suited equally well the
-interests of the three factions which, at this period, divided this
-unhappy country. The Dark-Hearts had skilfully profited by it to prepare
-the resistance they meditated, and Antinahuel, feigning to wish to
-pay the greatest honours to the war minister of the President of the
-republic, had collected a real army of his best warriors in the environs
-of the place chosen for the solemnity.</p>
-
-<p>Such was the state of things, and of the various parties with regard to
-each other, at the time we resume our narrative. The enemies were about
-to come face to face; it was evident that each, being well prepared,
-would endeavour to take advantage of the opportunity, and that a shock
-was imminent; but how would it be brought about? Who would set fire to
-the mine, and cause all those passions, those grudges, those ambitions,
-so long restrained, to explode? Nobody could say!</p>
-
-<p>The plain on which the ceremony was to take place was vast, covered
-with high grass, and belted by mountains verdant with lofty trees. The
-plain, crossed by woods and lines of apple trees, loaded with fruit,
-was divided in two by a meandering river, which flowed gently along,
-balancing on its silver waters numerous troops of black-headed swans;
-here and there, through the breaks of the thickets, might be seen the
-pointed nose of a vicuna, which, with ear erect, and eye on the watch,
-seemed to sniff the breeze, and all at once bounded away into the
-distance.</p>
-
-<p>The sun was rising majestically in the horizon when a measured noise
-of tinkling bells proceeded from a wood of apple trees, and a troop of
-half a score mules, led by the mother mare, and driven by an arriero,
-debouched into the plain. These mules carried diverse objects for an
-encampment, provisions, and even some bales of clothes and linen. At
-twenty paces behind the mules, came a rather numerous troop of horsemen.
-When they arrived at the banks of the little river we have spoken of,
-the arriero stopped his mules, and the party dismounted. In an instant
-the bales were unpacked and arranged with care, so as to form a perfect
-circle, in the centre of which a fire was lighted. Then a tent was
-erected in this temporary camp, and the horses and mules were hobbled.</p>
-
-<p>This party, whom, no doubt, our readers have already recognized, were
-Don Tadeo, his friends the Frenchmen, the Indian Ulmens, with Doña
-Rosario, and three servants. By a strange coincidence, at the same time
-that they were arranging their camp, another party nearly as numerous
-established theirs on the opposite bank of the river, exactly in face
-of them. The leader of this was Doña Maria. As frequently happens, it
-had pleased chance to bring into propinquity irreconcilable enemies, who
-were only separated from each other by a distance of fifty yards at the
-most. But was this entirely owing to chance?</p>
-
-<p>Don Tadeo had no suspicion of this dangerous proximity, or he would
-probably have done everything in his power to avoid it. He had cast a
-vacant glance at the caravan opposite to him, without taking any further
-heed of it, being absorbed in thoughts of the highest importance. Doña
-Maria, on the contrary, knew perfectly well, what she was about, and
-had placed herself where she was with the skill of an able tactician.
-In the mean time, as the morning advanced, the number of travellers
-kept increasing on the plain; by nine o'clock it was literally covered
-with tents; a free space only being reserved around an old half ruined
-chapel, in which mass was to be celebrated before the commencement of
-the ceremony.</p>
-
-<p>The Puelches, who had descended from their mountains in great numbers,
-had passed the night in making joyous libations around their campfires;
-many of them were sleeping in a state of complete intoxication;
-nevertheless, as soon as the arrival of the minister of the Chilian
-republic was announced, they all sprang up tumultuously, and began to
-dance, and utter cries of joy. On one side arrived General Bustamente
-at a canter, surrounded by a brilliant staff, all glittering with gold
-lace, and followed by a numerous troop of lancers; whilst on the other
-side came, at a gallop, the four Araucano Toquis, followed by the
-principal Ulmens of their nation, and a great number of mosotones.</p>
-
-<p>These two troops, which hastened to meet each other amidst the <i>vivas</i>
-and cries of joy of the crowd, raised immense clouds of dust, in which
-they disappeared. The Araucanos in particular, who are excellent
-jinetes, a term used in this country to designate good horsemen,
-indulged in equestrian eccentricities, of which the so-much vaunted Arab
-fantasias can give but a faint idea; for they are nothing in comparison
-with the incredible feats performed by these men, who seem born to
-manage a horse. The Chilians had a much more serious bearing, from
-which they would gladly have freed themselves, if human respect had not
-restrained them.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as the two troops met, the chiefs dismounted and ranged
-themselves, the Ulmens, armed with their long, silver-headed canes,
-behind Antinahuel, and the three other Toquis and the Chilians behind
-General Bustamente. It was the first time the Tiger-Sun and the General
-had met. Each of these two men, therefore, equally good politicians,
-equally false and equally ambitious, and who, at the first glance,
-understood one another, contemplated his rival with intense earnestness.</p>
-
-<p>After exchanging a few salutes, impressed with a rather suspicious
-cordiality, the two bands retrograded from each other a few paces, to
-afford room for the commissary-general and four Capitanes de Amigos.
-These officers are what they call in the United States Indian agents;
-they serve as interpreters and agents to the Araucanos, for trade, and
-all that concerns their transactions with the Chilians. It must be
-observed that all these Indians speak Spanish perfectly well; but they
-never will use it in appointed meetings. These Capitanes de Amigos, who,
-for the most part, are half-breeds, are much beloved and respected.
-They arrived, leading a score of mules loaded with presents, destined
-by the President of the Republic for the principal Ulmens. For, be it
-noted, when Indians treat with Christians, they consider nothing settled
-till they have received presents: it is for them a proof that the other
-party does not wish to deceive them; they constitute an earnest which
-they require to bind the bargain, and prove that they are treated in
-good faith. The Chilians, who, unfortunately for them, had long been
-accustomed to Araucanian habits, had taken good care not to forget this
-important condition.</p>
-
-<p>Whilst the commissary-general was distributing the presents, General
-Bustamente repaired to the chapel, where a priest, who had come
-purposely from Valdivia, celebrated mass. After mass, the speeches
-commenced, as soon as the minister of the republic and the four Toquis
-of the Uthal-Mapus had embraced. These speeches, which were very long,
-resulted in mutual assurances that they were satisfied with the peace
-which reigned between the two peoples, and that they would do all in
-their power to maintain it as long as possible. We think it our duty to
-beg our readers to observe, in justice to the two speakers, that one was
-not more sincere than the other, and that they did not mean one word
-they said, since in their hearts they determined to break their promises
-as soon as possible. They appeared, however, very well satisfied with
-the comedy they were playing, and they terminated it by a final embrace,
-more close and warm than the first, but equally false.</p>
-
-<p>"Now," said the General, "if my brothers, the great chiefs, will please
-to follow me, we will plant the cross."</p>
-
-<p>"No," Antinahuel replied, with a honied smile, "the cross must not be
-planted in front of the stone toldo."</p>
-
-<p>"Why not?" the General asked, with astonishment.</p>
-
-<p>"Because," the Indian replied, in a tone of decision, "the words we
-have exchanged must remain buried on the spot where they have been
-pronounced."</p>
-
-<p>"That is just!" said the General, bowing his head in sign of assent. "It
-shall be done as my brother desires."</p>
-
-<p>Antinahuel smiled proudly.</p>
-
-<p>"Have I spoken well, powerful men?" he asked, looking at the Ulmens.</p>
-
-<p>"Our father, the Toqui of the Inapire-Mapu, has spoken well," the Ulmens
-replied.</p>
-
-<p>The Indian peons then went to fetch from the chapel, upon the floor of
-which it lay, a cross of at least thirty feet in height, which they
-brought to the spot where the conferences had been held. All the chiefs
-and the Chilian officers ranged themselves around it; the troops forming
-a vast circle at a respectful distance. After the pause of an instant,
-of which the priest took advantage to bless the cross with that off-hand
-carelessness which distinguishes the Spanish clergy in America, it was
-planted in the ground. At the moment it was about to gain its upright
-position, Antinahuel interposed.</p>
-
-<p>"Stop!" he said to the Indians armed with spades; and turning towards
-the General, "Peace is well assured between us, is it not?" he asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, certainly," the General replied.</p>
-
-<p>"All our words are buried under this cross?"</p>
-
-<p>"All of them."</p>
-
-<p>"Cover them with earth then," he said to the peons, "that they may not
-escape, and that war may not be rekindled between us."</p>
-
-<p>"When this ceremony was accomplished, Antinahuel caused a young lamb to
-be brought, which the machi slaughtered near the cross. All the Indian
-chiefs bathed their hands in the still warm blood of the quivering
-animal, and daubed the cross with hieroglyphic signs, destined to keep
-away Guécubu, the genius of evil, and prevent the words from escaping
-from the spot in which they were buried. In conclusion, the Araucans
-and the Chilians discharged their firearms in the air, and the ceremony
-was ended. General Bustamente then coming up to the Toqui of the
-Inapire-Mapu, passed his arm through the chiefs in a friendly manner,
-saying in an ingratiating tone&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Will not my brother, Antinahuel, come for an instant in my tent, to
-taste a glass of aguardiente de Pisco and take maté?&mdash;he would render
-his friend happy."</p>
-
-<p>"Why should I not?" the chief replied, smiling, and in the most
-good-humoured tone.</p>
-
-<p>"My brother will accompany me!"</p>
-
-<p>"Lead on, then."</p>
-
-<p>Both moved off, chatting upon indifferent subjects, directing their
-course towards the General's tent, which had been pitched within gunshot
-of the place where the ceremony had taken place. The General had given
-his orders beforehand, so that everything was prepared to receive the
-guest he brought with him magnificently, as for the success of his
-projects he had so great an interest in pleasing him.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_XXIX" id="CHAPTER_XXIX">CHAPTER XXIX.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>THE ABDUCTION.</h3>
-
-
-<p>Whilst the ceremony we have described was being accomplished, a terrible
-event was passing not far from it, on the banks of the river, in the
-camp of Don Tadeo de Leon. The three parties which divided Chili, and
-aimed at governing it, had, as if of one accord, chosen the day for the
-renewal of the treaty to throw off the mask and give their partisans the
-signal of revolt. Don Tadeo, who feared everything from Doña Maria and
-the General's spies, had consented, but with regret, that Rosario should
-accompany him to the plain, to be present at the ceremony; he had taken
-her from the convent, and brought the young girl with him, inwardly
-pleased that she would thus not be in Valdivia during the serious events
-that were there preparing.</p>
-
-<p>Doña Rosario, to tell the truth, had only consulted her love in the
-request she had made of her guardian; the desire of seeing unobserved,
-for a few hours, the object of her affections, had dictated it. Don
-Tadeo, who could not on any account be present at the ceremony, being
-obliged to conceal himself, took the two young Frenchmen aside as soon
-as his little encampment was arranged. It was then about seven o'clock
-in the morning, and the crowd began to flock to the plain. The King of
-Darkness cast a prudent and searching look around, but, reassured by the
-complete solitude that prevailed, he at length decided upon explaining
-to the young men, who were astonished at this strange proceeding, all
-that appeared so unusual and inconsistent in his conduct.</p>
-
-<p>"Caballeros," he said, "since I have had the honour of knowing you, I
-have concealed nothing from you, and you know all my secrets; this day
-must decide the question of life or death to which, from my boyhood,
-I have devoted all the energies of my mind. I must leave this spot
-instantly, and return to Valdivia. It is in that city that the first
-blow will be struck, within a few hours, against the tyrant, and the
-struggle I expect will be terrible. I am not willing to expose the
-young lady whom you know, and whose life you have already saved, to the
-chances of it. I confide the care of her to one of you, the other will
-accompany me to the city. In the event of any fatal mischance happening
-to me, I will place in his hands a paper, which will inform you both of
-my intentions, and of what I wish you to do with that poor child, who is
-all I hold dear on earth, and whom I leave with the greatest pain. Which
-of you, gentlemen, will take charge of Doña Rosario during my absence?"</p>
-
-<p>"Be at ease, Don Tadeo, go where your duty calls you," Louis answered,
-in a solemn but agitated tone; "I swear that while I live no danger,
-either near or distant, shall assail her; to reach her it must pass over
-my dead body."</p>
-
-<p>"Receive my warmest thanks, Don Louis," the Dark-Heart replied, somewhat
-surprised, and yet affected by the manner of the Frenchman; "I place
-implicit faith in your words; I know you will keep your vow at all
-risks; besides, in a few hours I hope I shall be back, and here she can
-have nothing to dread."</p>
-
-<p>"I will watch over her," the young man said, quietly.</p>
-
-<p>"Once again I thank you."</p>
-
-<p>Don Tadeo left the young men, and returned to the tent where Doña
-Rosario, reclining in a hammock, was gently swinging herself, and
-indulging in perhaps pleasing reveries. On seeing her guardian, she
-sprang up eagerly.</p>
-
-<p>"Do not disturb yourself, my child," said Don Tadeo, putting her back
-with a gentle hand, "I have but two words to say to you."</p>
-
-<p>"I am always attentive to you, my kind friend."</p>
-
-<p>"I have come to bid you farewell."</p>
-
-<p>"Farewell, Don Tadeo!" she exclaimed, in great terror.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh! comfort yourself, timid darling! only for a few hours."</p>
-
-<p>"Ah! that is all!" she said, with a smile of satisfaction.</p>
-
-<p>"Certainly, all! There is in this neighbourhood an exceedingly curious
-grotto. I was foolish enough to let some words slip concerning it this
-morning before Don Valentine, and that demon of a Frenchman," he added,
-with a smile, "insists upon my showing it to him; so that, in order to
-get rid of his importunities, I have been obliged to comply."</p>
-
-<p>"You have done quite right," she said, eagerly; "we are under great
-obligations to those two French caballeros, and what he asked is such a
-trifle!"</p>
-
-<p>"That it would have been uncourteous on my part to refuse him," Don
-Tadeo interrupted, "therefore I have not. We shall set off directly,
-in order to be the sooner back. Be as cheerful as you can during our
-absence, dear child."</p>
-
-<p>"I will endeavour," she said, absently.</p>
-
-<p>"Besides, I shall leave Don Louis to take care of you; you can chat
-together, and the time will quickly pass away."</p>
-
-<p>The young girl blushed as she stammered&mdash;"Come back soon, dear friend."</p>
-
-<p>"Time to go and return, that is all; adieu, then, darling!"</p>
-
-<p>Don Tadeo left the tent, and rejoined the young men.</p>
-
-<p>"Adieu, Don Louis!" he said. "Are you ready, Don Valentine?"</p>
-
-<p>"Ready!" the Frenchman replied, laughing; "Caramba! I should be in
-despair at losing such an opportunity of judging whether you understand
-getting up revolutions as well as we Frenchmen do."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh! We are but young at the work yet," Don Tadeo remarked; "and yet we
-begin to have some idea of the matter, I assure you."</p>
-
-<p>"Good-bye, Louis, for a time," said Valentine, pressing his friend's
-hand; and stooping towards his ear, he added&mdash;"Be thankful to your
-stars, do you not see that Heaven protects your love?" The young man
-only replied by shaking his head despondingly, and sighing deeply. A
-peon had brought the horses for the two Chilians and the Frenchman,
-and they were soon in the saddle. They set off at a quick pace, and
-were quickly lost in the high grass and the windings of the road. Louis
-returned pensively to the camp, where he found Doña Rosario alone in her
-tent; the two Indian chiefs, attracted by curiosity, having gone in the
-direction of the chapel, where, mingled with the crowd, they might be
-present at the ceremony. The arrieros and the peons had not been long in
-following their example.</p>
-
-<p>The young girl was seated on a heap of dyed sheepskins in front of
-the tent, dreamily looking at, but without seeing, the clouds which
-were driven across the heavens by a strong breeze. Doña Rosario was
-a charming girl of sixteen, slender, fragile, and delicate, small in
-person, whose least gestures and least movements possessed inexpressible
-attractions. Of a rare kind of beauty in America, she was fair; her
-long silky hair was of the colour of ripe golden corn; her blue eyes,
-in which were reflected the azure of the heavens, had that melancholy,
-dreamy expression which we attribute only to angels, and young girls who
-are beginning to love; her nose, with its pinky nostrils, was inclined
-to be aquiline; while her mouth, rather serious, with rosy lips set
-off by teeth of dazzling whiteness, and her skin of pearl-like purity,
-altogether made her a charming creature.</p>
-
-<p>The noise of the approaching young man's steps roused her from her
-reverie. She turned her head in the direction, and looked at him with
-inexpressible sadness, although a faint smile played upon her lips.</p>
-
-<p>"It is I," said the Count, in a low, inarticulate voice, bowing
-respectfully.</p>
-
-<p>"I knew of your coming," she replied, in a sweetly-toned voice. "Oh! why
-did you return to me at all?"</p>
-
-<p>"Be not angry with me for drawing near you once more. I endeavoured to
-obey you; I left the spot you resided in, without, alas! even the hope
-of seeing you again; but destiny has decided otherwise."</p>
-
-<p>She gave him a long and eloquent look.</p>
-
-<p>"Unfortunately," he continued, with a melancholy smile, "you are
-condemned for some hours to endure my presence."</p>
-
-<p>"I must resign myself to it," she said, extending her hand to him
-cordially.</p>
-
-<p>The young man imprinted a burning kiss upon the white, soft hand he held.</p>
-
-<p>"And so we are left alone!" she said gaily, but withdrawing her hand.</p>
-
-<p>"Good heavens! yes, nearly so," he replied, falling in with her humour.
-"The Indian chiefs and the peons, overcome by curiosity, have joined the
-crowds, and kindly procured us a <i>tête-à-tête</i>."</p>
-
-<p>"In the midst of ten thousand people!" she said, smiling.</p>
-
-<p>"That is all the better; everyone is engaged with his own affairs,
-without troubling himself about those of others; and we can speak to
-each other without the fear of being interrupted by importunate persons."</p>
-
-<p>"True," she said, thoughtfully; "it is frequently amidst a crowd that we
-find the greatest solitude."</p>
-
-<p>"Does not the heart possess that great faculty of being able to isolate
-itself when it pleases&mdash;to fold itself, as it were, within itself?"</p>
-
-<p>"And is not that faculty often a misfortune?"</p>
-
-<p>"Perhaps it is," he replied, with a sigh.</p>
-
-<p>"But how comes it?" she said, with a half-smiling air, in order to
-change the conversation, which was becoming a little too serious.
-"Pardon my giddy impertinence! How comes it, I say, that you, of whom I
-sometimes caught a glimpse at Paris, during my short sojourn there, and
-who then enjoyed, if I was not mistaken, a brilliant position, should
-meet me here so far from your country?"</p>
-
-<p>"Alas! madam, my history is that of many young men, and may be summed up
-in two words&mdash;weakness and ignorance."</p>
-
-<p>"That is but too true; that is the history of nearly all the world, in
-Europe as well as in America."</p>
-
-<p>At this moment a great noise reached them from the camp. Doña Rosario
-and the Count were placed so as not to be able to see what was passing
-in the plain.</p>
-
-<p>"What is that noise?" she asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Probably the tumult of the festival which reaches us: should you like
-to be present at this ceremony?"</p>
-
-<p>"To what purpose? Those cries and that tumult terrify me."</p>
-
-<p>"And yet, I thought it was you who asked Don Tadeo to see this."</p>
-
-<p>"A silly girl's caprice," she said, "which passed away as soon as
-conceived."</p>
-
-<p>"But was it not Don Tadeo's intention to&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Who can tell Don Tadeo's intention?" she interrupted, with a sigh.</p>
-
-<p>"He appears to love you tenderly?" Louis hazarded, timidly.</p>
-
-<p>"Sometimes I am on the point of believing so; he pays me the most
-delicate attentions, shews me the tenderest care; then at other times he
-appears to endure me with, pain&mdash;he repulses me&mdash;my caresses annoy him."</p>
-
-<p>"Singular conduct!" the Count observed; "this gentleman is your
-relation, there can be no doubt."</p>
-
-<p>"I do not know," she replied ingenuously; "when alone and pensive, my
-thoughts stray back to my early years. I have some vague remembrance of
-a young and handsome woman, whose black eyes smiled upon me constantly,
-and whose rosy lips lavished affectionate kisses upon me; and then, all
-at once, a complete darkness comes over my brain, and memory entirely
-fails me. As far back as I can recollect, I find nobody but Don Tadeo
-watching over me, everywhere and always, as a father would do over his
-daughter."</p>
-
-<p>"Perhaps, then," said the Count, "he is your father."</p>
-
-<p>"Listen. One day, after a long and dangerous illness which I had just
-gone through, and in which Don Tadeo had night and day watched over
-my pillow for more than a month, happy at seeing me restored to life,
-for he had been fearful he should lose me, he smiled upon me tenderly,
-kissed my brow and my hands, and appeared to experience the most
-lively joy. 'Oh!' I said, as a sudden thought rushed across my mind;
-'oh! you are my father! None but a father could devote himself with
-such abnegation for his child!' and throwing my arms round his neck,
-I concealed my tear-laden face on his chest. Don Tadeo arose, his
-countenance was lividly pale, his features were frightfully contracted;
-he repulsed me roughly, and strode hastily about the chamber. I Your
-father! I! Doña Rosario!' he cried, in a husky voice, 'you are a silly,
-poor child! Never repeat those words again; your father is dead, and
-your mother, likewise, long, long ago. I am not your father&mdash;never
-repeat that word&mdash;I am only your friend. Yes, your father, at the point
-of death, confided you to my care, and that is why I am bringing you up,
-that is why I watch over you; as to me, I am not even your relation!'
-His agitation was extreme; he said many other things which I do not now
-remember, and then he left me. Alas! from that day I have never ventured
-to ask him for any account of my family."</p>
-
-<p>A silence ensued; the two young people were pensively thoughtful: the
-simple and touching recital of Doña Rosario had strongly affected the
-Count. At length he said, in a tremulous voice,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Let <i>me</i> love you, Doña Rosario!"</p>
-
-<p>The maiden sighed.</p>
-
-<p>"To what could that love lead, Don Louis?" she said sadly,&mdash;"to death,
-perhaps!"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" he exclaimed madly; "and it would be welcome, if it came in your
-defence!"</p>
-
-<p>At this very instant, several individuals rushed into the tent, uttering
-discordant cries. Quick as thought, the Count threw himself before the
-young girl, a pistol in each hand. But, as if Heaven had decreed that he
-should accomplish the wish he had just uttered, before he had time to
-defend himself, he was struck to the earth, stabbed by several machetes.
-In falling, he saw, as if in a dream, Doña Rosario seized by two
-individuals, who fled away with her in their arms. With an incredible
-effort, the young man succeeded in getting on his knees, and afterwards
-in rising altogether. He beheld the ravishers hastening towards their
-horses, which were being held at a short distance by an Indian. He
-took aim at the flying wretches, crying, with a faint voice, "Murder!
-Murder!" and fired.</p>
-
-<p>One of the ravishers fell, uttering an imprecation of rage. The Count,
-exhausted by the superhuman effort he had made, staggered like a drunken
-man; the blood gushed from his ears, his sight grew dim, and he rolled
-senseless upon the ground.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_XXX" id="CHAPTER_XXX">CHAPTER XXX.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>THE PROTEST.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The three travellers returned with such speed to Valdivia, that it
-scarcely took them an hour and a half to traverse the distance which
-divided the plain from the city. They passed on their way General
-Don Pancho Bustamente, at the head of a detachment of lanceros, and
-attended by a numerous staff; but the Dark-Hearts, employing their usual
-precautions, escaped notice. Don Tadeo cast an ironical glance at his
-enemy.</p>
-
-<p>"Look," he said, with a somewhat malignant smile, to Don Gregorio,
-"at our worthy general; he fancies himself already protector. What a
-majestic bearing he affects!"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," said Don Gregorio, with the same expression; "but between the cup
-and the lip he may find there is room for a mischance."</p>
-
-<p>It was striking ten as they entered Valdivia. The city was almost
-deserted: for all who were not detained at home by urgent business had
-gone to the plain, to be present at the renewal of the treaties between
-the Chilians and the Araucanos. This ceremony strongly interested the
-inhabitants of the province: it was for them a guarantee of tranquillity
-for the future; that is to say, the liberty of carrying on with safety
-their commercial transactions with the Indians. More than all the other
-provinces of Chili, Valdivia had cause to dread hostilities with its
-redoubtable neighbours. Separated entirely from the territory of the
-republic, when left to its own resources, the least movement among
-the Moluchos annihilated its commerce. If the inhabitants appeared to
-have emigrated for a time, it was not the same with the soldiers; the
-numerous garrison, composed&mdash;a thing unheard of in time of peace&mdash;of
-fifteen hundred men, had been still further increased within the last
-two days, principally in the course of the preceding night, by two
-regiments of cavalry, and a battery of artillery.</p>
-
-<p>For what purpose was this calling together of forces, which nothing
-appeared to justify? The few inhabitants who remained in the city
-experienced a vague uneasiness on this head, for which they could not
-account. There is a singular fact that we wish to point out here, but
-which we by no means take upon ourselves to explain, because it has
-always seemed to us inexplicable. When a great event, whatever it may
-be, is about to be accomplished in a country, a vague presentiment
-seems to warn the inhabitants; men and things assume an unusual aspect;
-nature itself, associating with this disposition of men's minds, grows
-sensibly darker; a magnetic fluid rushes through the veins; a painful
-pressure weighs upon every breast; the atmosphere becomes heavy; the
-sun loses its brilliancy; and people only communicate their impressions
-to each other in a suppressed voice; in short, there is in the air
-something incomprehensible, but I know not what, which says to man in
-a dismal tone, "Beware! a catastrophe threatens thee!" And this fatal
-presentiment is so general, that when the event takes place, and the
-crisis is over, every one instinctively cries, "I felt it!" And yet no
-one could say why he foresaw the cataclysm.</p>
-
-<p>It is the sentiment of self-preservation which God has placed in the
-heart of man&mdash;that sentiment which constitutes his safeguard, and is
-so strong, that when danger approaches him, it cries to him, "Beware!"
-Valdivia was at this moment oppressed by the weight of an unknown
-apprehension. The few citizens who remained in the city hastened to
-regain their homes. Numerous patrols of cavalry and infantry traversed
-the streets in all directions; cannon rolled along with portentous
-noise, and were planted at the comers of all the principal places. At
-the cabildo a crowd of officers and soldiers went in and out with a
-busy air; couriers succeeded each other unceasingly, and after having
-delivered the orders with which they were charged, set off again at full
-speed.</p>
-
-<p>At the same time, at the corners of streets, men wrapped in large
-cloaks, and with hats pulled down over their eyes, harangued the workmen
-and the sailors of the port, and formed groups, which every instant
-became more numerous. In these groups, arms, gun barrels, bayonets,
-and pike heads began to glitter in the sun. When these mysterious men
-were satisfied that they had accomplished their task in one place, they
-went to another. Immediately after their departure, as if by magic,
-barricades were raised behind them, and impeded the passage. As soon as
-a barricade was terminated, an energetic-looking sentinel, a workman
-with bare arms, but with a callous hand, brandishing a gun, an axe, or
-a sabre, placed himself at its summit, and bade all who approached go
-another way.</p>
-
-<p>On entering the city, Don Tadeo and his companions found themselves
-completely barricaded. Don Tadeo smiled triumphantly. The three men
-cleared the barricades, which were thrown open at their approach, and
-the sentinels bowed to them as they passed. We have forgotten to say
-that all three were masked. There was something striking in the march
-of these three phantoms, before whom all obstacles gave way. If now and
-then a stray citizen ventured to ask timidly who those three masked
-men were, he received for answer, "It is the King of Darkness and his
-lieutenants;" and the citizen, trembling with fear, crossed himself, and
-went his way hastily.</p>
-
-<p>The three men thus arrived at the entrance of the Plaza Mayor. There
-two pieces of mounted cannon barred their passage, and the artillerymen
-were at their guns waiting, match in hand. At a sign from Don Tadeo, the
-officer who commanded approached him. He leant down upon the neck of his
-horse and said a few words to the officer in a whisper; the latter bowed
-respectfully, and, turning to his soldiers, said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Let these gentlemen pass."</p>
-
-<p>In all the cities of Spanish America there is a monumental fountain in
-the centre of the Plaza Mayor. It was towards this fountain that Don
-Tadeo conducted his companions. A hundred individuals, scattered here
-and there, and who appeared to expect him, drew together at his approach.</p>
-
-<p>"Well," Don Tadeo asked Valentine, "how do you like our ride?"</p>
-
-<p>"Delightful," the other replied, "only I fancy we shall shortly come to
-blows, and hear the hissing of bullets."</p>
-
-<p>"I hope so," said the conspirator, coolly.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah! ah!" the young man remarked, "all is for the best, then?"</p>
-
-<p>"You are about to be present at a very interesting spectacle."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh! I depend upon you for that. For my part, I am glad at not having
-lost such an opportunity."</p>
-
-<p>"Is it not one?"</p>
-
-<p>"Pardieu!&mdash;yes. It is astonishing how travelling instructs one," he
-added, in the form of a parenthesis.</p>
-
-<p>The individuals assembled near the fountain surrounded them with
-every mark of the profoundest respect. These were the faithful&mdash;the
-Dark-Hearts&mdash;upon whom perfect dependence was to be placed.</p>
-
-<p>"Gentlemen," said Don Tadeo, "the struggle is about to commence. I
-desire at length that you should know me, that you should be informed
-who the man is who commands you."</p>
-
-<p>And he threw off his mask. A burst of enthusiasm broke from the ranks
-of the conspirators. "Don Tadeo de Leon!" they cried with astonishment,
-mingled with a species of veneration for the man who had suffered so
-much for the common cause.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, gentlemen," Don Tadeo replied, "the man whom the creatures of the
-tyrant condemned to death, and whom God has miraculously preserved, in
-order to be the instrument of His vengeance today."</p>
-
-<p>All the conspirators pressed tumultuously round him. These men of
-spontaneous impressions, and essentially superstitious, no longer
-doubted of victory, since they had at their head the man whom God, as
-they believed, had so manifestly protected. Don Tadeo had calculated
-upon this manifestation to heighten the ardour of the conspirators,
-and to augment still further the prestige he enjoyed. The result had
-answered his expectations.</p>
-
-<p>"Is everyone at his post?" he asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes."</p>
-
-<p>"Are arms and ammunition distributed?"</p>
-
-<p>"To everybody."</p>
-
-<p>"Are all the barricades completed?&mdash;all the gates of the city guarded?"</p>
-
-<p>"All."</p>
-
-<p>"That is well. Now wait."</p>
-
-<p>And quiet was re-established.</p>
-
-<p>All these men had known Don Tadeo for a long time; they appreciated his
-character at its true value; they had already vowed to him a boundless
-friendship; and now they knew that Don Tadeo and the King of Darkness
-were the same person, they were ready to lay down their lives for him.
-The news of the revelation which had been made near the fountain spread
-through the city with the rapidity of a train of gunpowder, and added
-greatly to the fermentation which already prevailed. Whilst the few
-words were being exchanged between the chief of the conspirators and
-his party, a regiment of infantry had formed in front of the cabildo,
-flanked right and left by two squadrons of horse.</p>
-
-<p>"Attention!" Don Tadeo commanded.</p>
-
-<p>A sensation of impatience pervaded the men grouped around him.</p>
-
-<p>"Eh! eh!" Valentine murmured, with that mocking, short laugh that was
-peculiar to him; "this is going on capitally! Caramba! we shall soon
-have some fun!"</p>
-
-<p>The gates of the cabildo were thrown open violently, and a general,
-followed by a brilliant staff, took his station on the top step of the
-great staircase; next several senators made their appearance in full
-costume, and formed a group round him. At a signal from the general, the
-drums beat for a time, to secure attention and silence. When all was
-quiet, a senator, who held a roll of paper in his hand, came forward a
-few steps, and prepared to read.</p>
-
-<p>"Bah!" said the General, seizing his arm, "Why lose your time in reading
-that rubbish? Leave it to me."</p>
-
-<p>The senator, who asked no better than to be freed from the dangerous
-commission with which, very much against his will, he had been charged,
-rolled up his papers, and retreated to the rear. The general assumed a
-commanding posture, placed his hand upon his hip, with the point of his
-sword on the ground, and said in a voice audible in every corner of the
-place&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"People of the province of Valdivia, the sovereign senate, assembled
-in congress at Santiago de Chili, has unanimously passed the following
-resolutions:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"1st. The various provinces of the Chilian republic shall be composed of
-independent states united under the title of the Confederation of the
-United States of South America.</p>
-
-<p>"2nd. The valiant and most excellent general, Don Pancho Bustamente, has
-been elected Protector of the Chilian Confederation."</p>
-
-<p>"People, cry with me&mdash;'Long live the Protector Don Pancho Bustamente!'"</p>
-
-<p>The officers grouped round the General, and the soldiers drawn up in the
-place, shouted&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Long live the Protector!"</p>
-
-<p>But the people were mute.</p>
-
-<p>"Hum!" the general murmured to himself; "they do not display much
-enthusiasm."</p>
-
-<p>A man came forward from the group collected round the fountain, and
-advanced boldly to within twenty paces of the soldiers. This man was
-Don Tadeo de Leon; his countenance was calm and his bearing firm and
-collected. He made a sign with his hand.</p>
-
-<p>"What is your will?" the general shouted.</p>
-
-<p>"To reply to your proclamation," the King of Darkness said, intrepidly.</p>
-
-<p>"Speak! I hear you," the general replied.</p>
-
-<p>Don Tadeo bowed with a significant smile.</p>
-
-<p>"In the name of the Chilian people," he said, in a loud, clear voice,
-"the senate of Santiago de Chili, composed of creatures sold to the
-tyrant, is declared traitorous to its country."</p>
-
-<p>"Miserable fellow! what do you dare to say?" the General cried, angrily.</p>
-
-<p>"No insults, if you please! Allow me to terminate the answer I have to
-give you," Don Tadeo replied, coolly.</p>
-
-<p>The General, involuntarily brow-beaten by the heroic courage of this
-man, who, alone, unarmed before a triple row of muskets ready to be
-directed towards his breast, had dared to speak in this loud, firm
-tone, and overcome by that ascendancy which a great character always
-exercises, bit the pommel of his sword with rage.</p>
-
-<p>"In the name of the people," Don Tadeo, still calm and stoical,
-continued, "Don Pancho Bustamente is declared a traitor to his country,
-and as such is degraded from his titles and his power. Liberty! Chili!"</p>
-
-<p>"Liberty! Chili!" the populace assembled on the square shouted with the
-greatest enthusiasm.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, this is too audacious!" the General cried, pale with anger.
-"Soldiers, seize that rebel!"</p>
-
-<p>Several soldiers stepped forward; but, quicker than thought, Don
-Gregorio and Valentine had sprung to Don Tadeo's side, and dragged him
-back with them among the people.</p>
-
-<p>"Cordieu!" cried Valentine, pressing his hands enough to crush them,
-"you are a troublesome man! but I love you the better for it."</p>
-
-<p>The General, outrageous at seeing his enemy escape, shouted silence. "In
-the name of the Protector," he said, "I command that rebel to be given
-up!"</p>
-
-<p>Hisses and hootings were the only reply.</p>
-
-<p>"Fire!" the General commanded, who, even before the last insulting
-manifestation, had perceived that no half measures were possible. The
-muskets were lowered, and a formidable discharge pealed like thunder.
-Several men fell, killed or wounded.</p>
-
-<p>"Chili! Liberty! down with the oppressor!" the people shouted, arming
-themselves with everything they could lay their hands on. A second
-discharge resounded, followed closely by a third. The ground was, in an
-instant, strewed with the dead and dying; but the patriots showed no
-disposition to disperse; on the contrary, under the incessant fire of
-the soldiers, they organized a resistance, and soon replied by a few
-shots to the incessant platoon firing which was decimating them. The
-combat became mutual; the revolution had commenced.</p>
-
-<p>"Hum!" the General muttered to himself, "I have undertaken a rather
-awkward mission."</p>
-
-<p>But, essentially a soldier, and endowed to the highest degree with that
-spirit of passive obedience which distinguishes all who have grown old
-in harness, he prepared either to chastise the insurgents severely, or
-die at his post.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_XXXI" id="CHAPTER_XXXI">CHAPTER XXXI.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>SPANIARD AND INDIAN.</h3>
-
-
-<p>It was not, as may well be believed, through fear, that General
-Bustamente had absented himself from Valdivia at the moment when one
-of his lieutenants so boldly proclaimed him from the top of the steps
-of the cabildo, before the populace. No, General Bustamente was one
-of those soldiers of fortune of whom so many are found in America,
-accustomed to set his life upon a cast of the die, and to be turned
-aside by nothing in the world from the accomplishment of his projects.
-He had hoped, by the means of the forces he had concentrated in this
-remote province of the republic, that the inhabitants, taken unawares,
-would only offer an insignificant resistance, and that he should be
-able, by joining his troops with those of Antinahuel, to make a forced
-march through Araucania, gain possession of Concepción, and thence,
-keeping the gathering snowball in motion, and dragging his companions
-after him, arrive at Santiago in time to prevent any movement, and
-oblige the inhabitants to capitulate and accept, as an accomplished
-fact, the change of government inaugurated by him in the distant
-provinces of the republic.</p>
-
-<p>This plan was not deficient in audacity, or even in a certain degree of
-policy; it comprised great chances of success. Unfortunately for General
-Bustamente, the Dark-Hearts, whose spies were everywhere, had got wind
-of this project, and had countermined it by taking advantage of the
-opportunity offered them by their enemy to unmask their own batteries.
-We have seen under what conditions the struggle between the two parties
-had commenced in Valdivia. The General, who was ignorant of what was
-passing, felt in a state of perfect security. As soon as he was in his
-tent with Antinahuel, he let fall the curtain which closed it behind
-them, and, by a gesture, invited the toqui to be seated.</p>
-
-<p>"Sit down, chief," he said, "I have something to say to you."</p>
-
-<p>"I am at the orders of my white brother," the Indian replied, with a bow.</p>
-
-<p>The General attentively examined the man before him; he endeavoured to
-read on his countenance the various feelings that acted upon him; but
-the features of the Indian were marble; no impression was reflected by
-them.</p>
-
-<p>"Let us speak frankly, loyally, and as friends who wish no better than
-to understand each other plainly," he said.</p>
-
-<p>Antinahuel bowed reservedly to this appeal to frankness, and the General
-continued&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"At this moment the people of Valdivia are constituting me, by
-acclamation, protector of a new confederation, formed of all the states."</p>
-
-<p>"Good!" said the chief, with an almost imperceptible shake of the head;
-"is my father sure of that?"</p>
-
-<p>"Certainly I am. The Chilians are tired of the continual agitations
-which disturb the country; they have forced this heavy burden upon me;
-but I owe myself to my country, and I will not disappoint the hopes my
-compatriots place in me."</p>
-
-<p>These words were pronounced in a hypocritical tone of self-denial, of
-which the Indian was not in the least the dupe. A smile flitted across
-the lips of the chief, which the General affected not to perceive.</p>
-
-<p>"To be brief," he continued, quitting the mild, conciliatory tone in
-which he had till that time spoken, to assume a more decided and abrupt
-manner, "are you prepared to keep your engagements?"</p>
-
-<p>"Why should I not keep them?" Antinahuel remarked.</p>
-
-<p>"Will you march with me to assure the success of my projects?"</p>
-
-<p>"Let my father order, I will obey."</p>
-
-<p>This readiness was displeasing to the General.</p>
-
-<p>"Come," he said, angrily, "let us put an end to this; I have not time to
-enter into a contest of wits with you, or follow you through a labyrinth
-of Indian circumlocutions."</p>
-
-<p>"I do not understand my father," Antinahuel replied, impassively.</p>
-
-<p>"We shall never get to the end, chief," the General said, stamping his
-foot, "if you will not answer me categorically."</p>
-
-<p>"I listen to my father; let him ask, I will reply."</p>
-
-<p>"How many men can you have under arms within twenty-four hours?"</p>
-
-<p>"Ten thousand," the chief said, drawing himself up proudly.</p>
-
-<p>"All experienced warriors?"</p>
-
-<p>"All."</p>
-
-<p>"What do you require of me for them?"</p>
-
-<p>"My father knows."</p>
-
-<p>"I accept of all your conditions but one."</p>
-
-<p>"Which is that?"</p>
-
-<p>"The surrender of the province of Valdivia to you."</p>
-
-<p>"Is not my father going to make up for that province on another side?"</p>
-
-<p>"How so?"</p>
-
-<p>"Am I not to assist my father in conquering Bolivia?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, then?"</p>
-
-<p>"You are mistaken, chief, it is not the same thing; I may enlarge the
-Chilian territory, but honour forbids me to diminish it."</p>
-
-<p>"Let my father reflect; the province of Valdivia was anciently an
-Araucanian Uthal-Mapus."</p>
-
-<p>"Very possibly, chief; but, according to that principle, all Chili was
-Araucanian previous to the discovery of America."</p>
-
-<p>"My father is mistaken; the Inca Sinchiroca had, a hundred years before,
-conquered the Chilian land as far as the Rio-Maulé."</p>
-
-<p>"You seem to be well acquainted with the history of your country,
-chief," the General observed.</p>
-
-<p>"Does not my father know the history of his?"</p>
-
-<p>"That is not the question, now; do you accept my proposals or not?"</p>
-
-<p>The chief appeared to reflect for an instant.</p>
-
-<p>"Well!" the General exclaimed, impatiently, "time presses."</p>
-
-<p>"That is true; I will, therefore, go and command a council, composed
-of the Apo-Ulmens and Ulmens of my nation, and submit the words of my
-father to them."</p>
-
-<p>The General with difficulty suppressed an expression of anger.</p>
-
-<p>"You must, doubtless, be joking, chief," he said&mdash;"your words cannot be
-serious."</p>
-
-<p>"Antinahuel is the first toqui of his nation," the Indian replied,
-haughtily; "he never jokes."</p>
-
-<p>"But you must give me your answer now&mdash;at once&mdash;in a few minutes!" cried
-the General; "who knows whether we may not be obliged to march within an
-hour from this time?"</p>
-
-<p>"It is my duty, as much as it is my father's, to enlarge the territory
-of my people."</p>
-
-<p>At this moment the gallop of a horse was heard approaching; the General
-flew to the entrance of the tent, where an orderly officer appeared. The
-face of this officer was bathed with perspiration, and spots of blood
-stained his uniform.</p>
-
-<p>"General!" he said breathlessly.</p>
-
-<p>"Silence!" the latter hissed, pointing to the chief, who, though
-apparently indifferent, followed all his movements attentively. The
-General turned towards Antinahuel.</p>
-
-<p>"Chief," he said, "I have orders to give to this officer&mdash;pressing
-orders; if you will permit me, we will resume our conversation
-presently."</p>
-
-<p>"Good!" replied the chief; "my father need not inconvenience himself; I
-can wait."</p>
-
-<p>And after bowing, he left the tent slowly.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" said the General to himself, "you demon! if, some day, I have you
-in my power!"</p>
-
-<p>But perceiving that anger was making him forget himself, he turned
-towards the officer, who stood motionless:</p>
-
-<p>"Well, Diego," he said, "what news have you?&mdash;are we conquerors?"</p>
-
-<p>"No," the officer replied, shaking his head; "the people, excited by
-those incarnate demons, the Dark-Hearts, have rebelled."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" the General cried, "shall I never be able to crush them? What has
-taken place?"</p>
-
-<p>"The people have raised barricades; and Don Tadeo de Leon is at the head
-of the movement."</p>
-
-<p>"Don Tadeo de Leon!" said the General.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, he who was so clumsily shot."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh! this is war to the death then!"</p>
-
-<p>"A part of the troops, seduced by their officers, who have sold
-themselves to the Dark-Hearts, have passed over to their side; at
-this moment they are fighting in all the streets with the fiercest
-inveteracy. I had to pass through a shower of bullets to come and inform
-you."</p>
-
-<p>"We have not an instant to lose."</p>
-
-<p>"No; for though the soldiers who have remained faithful to you are
-fighting like lions, I can assure you they are closely pressed."</p>
-
-<p>"Maldición!" the General howled; "I will not leave stone upon stone of
-that accursed city!"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, but, in the first place, we must reconquer it, General, and that
-will prove rather a rough job, I promise you," replied the old soldier,
-who had preserved his blunt speech throughout.</p>
-
-<p>"Very well!" said Bustamente; "let 'boot and saddle' be sounded, and
-every horseman take a foot soldier behind him."</p>
-
-<p>Don Pancho Bustamente was a prey to the most violent rage; for several
-instants he stamped about his tent, like a wild beast in its cage. This
-unexpected resistance, in spite of all the measures of precaution he had
-taken, exasperated him. Suddenly the curtain of his tent was raised.
-"Who is there?" he cried. "Ah! chief, is that you? Well, what do you
-say?"</p>
-
-<p>"I saw the chief come out, and I thought that perhaps my father would
-not be sorry to see me," the other replied, courteously.</p>
-
-<p>"And you were right; I am delighted to see you; forget all we have said,
-chief; I accept all your conditions; are you satisfied, this time?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes. Including Valdivia?"</p>
-
-<p>"That above all!" said the General, with concentrated rage.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah!"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, and as that province has revolted, in order to be able to give it
-to you, I must bring it back to its duty, must I not?"</p>
-
-<p>"To be sure you must!"</p>
-
-<p>"Well, as I have it at my heart to fulfil all my engagements to you,
-I am going instantly to march against that city; will you help me to
-subdue it?"</p>
-
-<p>"That will be but just, as I shall labour for myself."</p>
-
-<p>"How many horsemen have you at hand?"</p>
-
-<p>"Twelve hundred."</p>
-
-<p>"Good!" said the General, "they will be more than we shall want."</p>
-
-<p>"The troops are ready," said Diego, entering the tent, "and only await
-your Excellency's orders."</p>
-
-<p>"To saddle, then; let us be gone! let us be gone! And you, chief, will
-you not accompany us?"</p>
-
-<p>"Let my father move onward! my mosotones and I will tread in his steps
-quickly."</p>
-
-<p>Ten minutes later, General Bustamente, with his soldiers, was again
-galloping along the road to Valdivia. Antinahuel followed him with his
-eyes attentively; then he rejoined his Ulmens, saying between his teeth,
-"Let us leave these Moro-Huincas to slaughter each other a little while;
-it will always be time enough to fall into the party."</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_XXXII" id="CHAPTER_XXXII">CHAPTER XXXII.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>IN THE MOUNTAIN.</h3>
-
-
-<p>Doña Rosario was so terrified, and such mortal anguish assailed her
-on beholding the Count fall under the knives of the assassins, that
-she fainted. When she recovered her senses, it was dark night. For
-several minutes her confused thoughts whirled about in her brain; and
-she endeavoured, but for a long time in vain, to recover the violently
-broken thread of her ideas. At length light returned to her mind; she
-breathed a deep sigh, and murmured in a low voice full of terror:</p>
-
-<p>"My God! my God! what has happened to me?"</p>
-
-<p>She then opened her eyes, and cast around a despairing look. We have
-said it was a dark night; but what made the darkness more complete
-for the poor girl, was a heavy covering of some kind which was spread
-over her face, as well as her person. Then, with that patience which
-characterizes all prisoners, and which is merely the instinct of
-liberty, the poor child endeavoured to ascertain what her position was.
-As well as she could judge, she was lying upon the back of a mule,
-between two bales; a cord, which passed round her waist, prevented her
-from rising, but her hands were free. The mule had that rough, irregular
-trot, peculiar to its species, which made the young girl suffer terribly
-at every step. Some horse cloths had been thrown over her, no doubt to
-protect her from the heavy dews of the night, or perhaps to prevent her
-from making out what road she was going. Doña Rosario, gently, and with
-great precaution, slipped the covering down from her face: after a few
-efforts her head was completely free. She then looked around her; but
-all was dark. The moon, closely veiled by the clouds which passed over
-its pale disc, only yielded, at rare intervals, a weak, uncertain light.
-By lifting her head softly, the young girl could distinguish several
-horsemen, riding before and behind the mule which carried her. As well
-as she could make out, from the obscurity which surrounded her, these
-horsemen were Indians.</p>
-
-<p>The rather numerous party&mdash;it apparently consisted of a score of
-individuals&mdash;followed a narrow road deeply inclosed between two abrupt
-mountains, the rocky masses of which, throwing their shadow over the
-road, augmented the darkness. This road rose with a gentle ascent; and
-the horses and mules, probably fatigued with a long journey, travelled
-at a foot pace. The young girl, scarcely recovered from her fainting,
-had not been able to judge of the time that had elapsed since her
-abduction; and yet, by collecting her remembrances, and thinking at what
-hour she had been the victim of this odious attempt, she calculated
-that twelve hours must have passed away since she was made a prisoner.
-Overcome by the effort she had been forced to make in order to look
-around her, the poor girl let her head sink back again, stifling a sigh
-of despondency; and closing her eyes, as if to isolate herself the more,
-she plunged into sad and deep meditations.</p>
-
-<p>She was at least ignorant of whom she was with. Many times, it was true,
-Don Tadeo had spoken to her of an inveterate enemy, inveterate for her
-destruction; of a woman whose hatred watched her incessantly, ready to
-sacrifice her on the first favourable opportunity. But who was this
-woman? What cause had she for her hatred? Was she in the hands of this
-woman at that moment? And if so, why had she not already sacrificed
-her to her vengeance? From what motive had she been spared? For what
-punishment was she reserved?</p>
-
-<p>These thoughts and many others came in crowds to assail the maiden's
-bewildered mind. This uncertainty was for her an atrocious torture; at
-that moment, the truth would, perhaps, have been a consolation. Man is
-so constructed, that what he is most in dread of is the unknown; what he
-is ignorant of, assumes instinctively, in the prepossessed eyes of one
-whom a terrible danger menaces, gigantic proportions, a thousand times
-more terrific than the danger itself. The diseased imagination creates
-for itself phantoms which reality, however horrible it may be, puts
-to flight. In a word, the condemned prisoner who is led to punishment
-suffers more from the apprehensions which the fear of the death awaiting
-him inspires him with, than the physical pain of that death itself will
-cause him. Such was, at this moment, the situation of Doña Rosario; her
-mind, filled with inquietude and dark presentiments, made her dread
-nameless sufferings, the mere thought of which froze the young blood in
-her veins.</p>
-
-<p>The caravan still proceeded; it had left the ravine, and was climbing
-a path traced along the edge of a precipice, at the base of which
-could be heard the dull murmur of invisible water. At times, a stone,
-half-broken beneath the hoof of a mule, became detached, and rolled with
-a sinister noise down the side of the mountain, to engulf itself in the
-waters, into which it plunged with a dull plash, the sound of which
-ascended from the abyss. The wind howled through the pines and larches,
-the clashing branches of which showered a deluge of dry cones upon the
-travellers. At intervals the owl, and the screech owl, concealed in
-the crevices of the rocks, poured out into the night their plaintive
-notes, breaking the silence dismally. Furious barkings were heard in the
-distance; by degrees they grew nearer, and ended by forming a frightful
-concert, broken by the sharp voices of women and children, endeavouring
-to quiet them; lights appeared, and the caravan stopped. They had
-evidently arrived at the halt, at which they were to pass the rest of
-the night.</p>
-
-<p>The maiden cast an anxious but cautious look around her; but the flame
-of the torches agitated by the wind would not permit her to see anything
-but the dark outlines of some buildings and the shadows of several
-individuals who flitted about her, with cries and laughter&mdash;nothing
-more. The people of the escort were busily employed in unsaddling the
-horses and unloading the mules, amidst cries and oaths, and did not
-appear to bestow the least attention upon the young girl.</p>
-
-<p>A considerable time passed away; Doña Rosario did not know to what to
-attribute this unaccountable forgetfulness. At length she felt that
-someone took the mule by the bridle, and she heard him shout in a hoarse
-voice, <i>Arrea!</i>&mdash;the word with which the arrieros are accustomed to
-excite their beasts. Had she, then, been deceived? Was it not here they
-were to stop? What was the meaning of the halt, then? Why did a portion
-of the escort leave her?</p>
-
-<p>Her uncertainty was not of long duration; at the end of ten minutes at
-most, the mule stopped again, and the man who led it approached Doña
-Rosario. This man, clothed in the costume of the Chilian peasantry, wore
-an old straw Panama hat, the large brim of which, pulled down over his
-face, prevented her distinguishing his features. At the sight of this
-individual, the young girl felt an involuntary shudder run through her
-frame. The peasant, or pretended peasant, without addressing a word to
-her, withdrew the covering which enfolded her, untied the cord which
-bound her to the mule, and taking her in his arms, carried her with as
-much ease as if she had been a child, into a detached cabin a few paces
-distant, the door of which, standing open, seemed to invite them to
-enter.</p>
-
-<p>The interior of this cabin was dark. The young girl was laid upon the
-ground with a care and attention she did not expect. At the moment when
-he let her sink softly down from his arms to the ground, the man bent
-his head down towards her, and in a voice as inaudible as a breath, he
-whispered, "Courage! and hope!" and recovering himself quickly, went
-hastily out of the cabin, closing the door after him.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as he was gone, Doña Rosario sprang upon her feet. The two words
-pronounced by the unknown had sufficed to restore her presence of mind,
-and remove all her terrors. Hope, that universal panacea, that supreme
-good, which God, in His infinite mercy, has given to the unfortunate
-to help them to suffer, had suddenly re-entered her heart; she felt
-herself become strong, and ready to engage in the struggle with her
-unknown enemies. She knew now that a friend watched in secret over her,
-and, if required, his assistance would not be wanting; therefore it was
-almost with impatience, though still with fear, that she waited for her
-ravishers to signify their intentions.</p>
-
-<p>The place in which she was confined was completely dark. At the first
-moment she in vain endeavoured to distinguish anything in this chaos;
-but, by degrees, her eyes became accustomed to the darkness, and, in
-front of her, she perceived a faint light, which flitted between the
-badly-joined boards of a door. She then, with great precaution, for
-fear of arousing her invisible guardians, and stretching out her hand
-to keep her from contact with any obstacle she could not see, advanced
-cautiously, and listening attentively, towards the side from which came
-the light&mdash;a light which attracted her as instinctively as a flame
-attracts the imprudent moth whose wings it burns.</p>
-
-<p>The nearer she approached, the more distinct the light became, and the
-sound of a voice reached her ears. At length her extended hands touched
-the door, and leaning forward, she applied her eye to the chink. She
-stifled a cry of surprise, and, as at that moment the conversation,
-which had been for a short time interrupted, recommenced, she listened
-with intensity.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_XXXIII" id="CHAPTER_XXXIII">CHAPTER XXXIII.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>ON THE WATCH.</h3>
-
-
-<p>What she heard, but still more what she saw, necessarily powerfully
-interested Doña Rosario. In a vast room, dimly lighted by one of those
-yellow candles which the Chilians call <i>velas de cebo</i>, fastened to
-the wall by means of a ring, a woman, still young, and very handsome,
-attired in a riding dress of great richness, was seated on an ebony
-chair, covered with Cordova leather. With her right hand she played
-with a gold headed whip, and was speaking in an animated tone to a man
-who stood respectfully before her, hat in hand. This man, as well as
-Doña Rosario could make out, was the same who had carried her into the
-<i>cuarto</i>. The woman, whom Doña Rosario did not recollect ever to have
-seen, was no other than Doña Maria, the shameless courtesan, who, under
-the name of the Linda, enjoyed such a scandalous celebrity.</p>
-
-<p>Doña Maria's position threw the light of the candle full upon her face,
-and gave Doña Rosario an opportunity of distinguishing her features.
-She contemplated them with deep interest, for she felt instinctively
-that this woman was the enemy who, from her birth, had fatally followed
-her steps. She imagined that a decisive conference between her and
-the unknown was about to take place, and that in a few minutes her
-fate would be made known to her. And yet, at the aspect of this woman,
-whose bent brows, clear and haughty look, coldly compressed lips,
-and cruel words, revealed with the hatred which devoured her, it was
-neither a feeling of terror, nor a feeling of hatred, that the young
-girl experienced. Without knowing why, a sadness and an undefined pity
-for the very woman who was giving orders that made her shudder, took
-possession of her. She listened breathlessly, fascinated, scarcely
-knowing whether what she heard was really true, and fancying herself at
-times under the influence of some terrible hallucination.</p>
-
-<p>The two speakers, who knew not that they were either watched or
-overheard, resumed their conversation in an unrestrained voice. Doña
-Rosario, we may well suppose, did not lose a single word.</p>
-
-<p>"How is it," said the Linda, "that Joan has not come? I expected him."</p>
-
-<p>The man thus questioned cast a sharp look around him, and rolling up
-the broad brim of his hat in his fingers, replied with ill-dissembled
-embarrassment&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Joan sent me in his place."</p>
-
-<p>"And by what right," said the Linda, in a haughty tone, "does the fellow
-presume to confide to others the care of accomplishing the orders I give
-him?"</p>
-
-<p>"Joan is my friend," the man replied.</p>
-
-<p>"What are the ties that unite you to me:" she asked, contemptuously.</p>
-
-<p>"The mission you charged him with is accomplished."</p>
-
-<p>"Ay&mdash;but faithfully?"</p>
-
-<p>"The woman is there," he said, pointing to the room in which Doña
-Rosario was; "during the journey she has spoken to nobody, and I can
-guarantee that she does not know to what place she has been brought."</p>
-
-<p>At this assurance the look of Doña Maria softened a little, and it was
-in a less sharp and haughty tone she continued&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"But why did Joan give up his place to you?"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" the man said with a feigned bluntness, belied by his cunning eye,
-"for a very simple reason; Joan is at this moment attracted towards the
-plain by the black eyes of the wife of a paleface, which sparkle like
-fireflies in the night. The woman's toldo is built in the country, near
-the toldería which you call, I think, Concepción. Although such conduct
-be unworthy of a warrior, his heart is flying constantly towards this
-woman, in spite of himself, and until he gain possession of her, he will
-never be in his senses."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, then," the Linda interrupted, stamping her foot with vexation,
-"why does not the fool carry her off?"</p>
-
-<p>"I proposed that to him."</p>
-
-<p>"And what did he say?"</p>
-
-<p>"He refused."</p>
-
-<p>Doña Maria shrugged her shoulders with a smile of disdain. "Still," she
-remarked, "all that does not tell me who you are."</p>
-
-<p>"I! I am an Ulmen in my tribe; a great warrior among the Puelches," he
-replied, proudly.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah!" she said, with an air of satisfaction, "you are an Ulmen of the
-Puelches, are you? Good! then I can depend upon your fidelity."</p>
-
-<p>"I am the friend of Joan," he remarked simply, with a respectful bow.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you know the woman whom you have brought here?" the Linda asked,
-darting at him a mistrustful glance.</p>
-
-<p>"How should I know her?"</p>
-
-<p>"Are you ready to obey me in everything?"</p>
-
-<p>"My obedience will depend on my sister; let her speak, and I will
-answer."</p>
-
-<p>"This woman is my enemy," said the Linda.</p>
-
-<p>"Must she die?" he asked, roughly, without lowering his eyes before the
-searching glances of the Linda.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, no!" she cried eagerly; "these Indians are brutes&mdash;they understand
-nothing of vengeance! What use would her death be to me? It is her life
-I want."</p>
-
-<p>"Let my sister explain; I do not comprehend."</p>
-
-<p>"Death! that is nothing but a few instants of suffering, then all is
-over."</p>
-
-<p>"White death may be so, but an Indian death must be called for many
-hours before it answers."</p>
-
-<p>"I wish her to live, I tell you!"</p>
-
-<p>"She shall live. Ah!" he added, with a sigh, "the toldo of a chief is
-empty, its fires are extinguished."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh! oh!" the Linda interrupted; "have you no wives?"</p>
-
-<p>"They are dead."</p>
-
-<p>"And where is your tribe at this moment?"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" said the Indian, "far from here&mdash;ten suns' march, at least. I was
-returning to rejoin the warriors of my toldería, when Joan charged me
-with this mission."</p>
-
-<p>There was a short silence, during which the Linda appeared to be
-reflecting. Doña Rosario redoubled her attention&mdash;she felt she was about
-to know her fate.</p>
-
-<p>"And pray," Doña Maria resumed, fixing her keen eyes upon the Indian,
-"what great interest detained you on the plains near the seashore?"</p>
-
-<p>"None; I came, as the other Ulmens did, to renew the treaties."</p>
-
-<p>"Had you no other reasons?"</p>
-
-<p>"None at all."</p>
-
-<p>"Listen to me, chief. You have, doubtless, admired the four horses
-fastened at the gate of this house?"</p>
-
-<p>"They are noble beasts," the Indian replied, his eyes glistening with
-the desire of possessing them.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, it only depends upon yourself that I should give them to you."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh! oh!" he cried, joyfully, "what must I do for that?"</p>
-
-<p>"Obey me," said the Linda, with a smile.</p>
-
-<p>"I will obey," he replied.</p>
-
-<p>"Whatever I command you?"</p>
-
-<p>"Whatever my sister commands."</p>
-
-<p>"That is well; but remember what I am going to say to you. If you
-deceive me, my vengeance will be terrible&mdash;it will follow you
-everywhere."</p>
-
-<p>"Why should I deceive my sister?"</p>
-
-<p>"Because your Indian race is so constituted&mdash;astute and roguish, ever
-ready to betray."</p>
-
-<p>A sinister flash gleamed from the downcast eye of the Puelche warrior;
-nevertheless, he replied in a calm tone&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"My sister is mistaken; the Araucanos are loyal."</p>
-
-<p>"We shall see," she coldly remarked. "What is your name?"</p>
-
-<p>"The Musk Rat."</p>
-
-<p>"Very well; listen, Musk Rat, to what I am going to say."</p>
-
-<p>"My ears are open."</p>
-
-<p>"This woman, who, according to my orders, you brought here, must never
-again revisit the shores of the sea."</p>
-
-<p>"She shall never see them again."</p>
-
-<p>"I do not wish her to die&mdash;understand that; she must suffer," the Linda
-added, in a tone which made the unhappy girl tremble with fear.</p>
-
-<p>"She shall suffer."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," said Doña Maria, with sparkling eyes, "I wish that, during a
-long course of years, she may suffer a martyrdom at every instant; she
-is young, she will have time to call upon death to deliver her from her
-misery before it deigns to listen to her. Beyond the mountains, far in
-the deserts, in the virgin forests of the Grou-Chaco, I am told that
-hordes of Indians exist who are ferocious and sanguinary, and bear a
-deadly hatred towards all of the white race."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," said the Puelche, in a melancholy tone, "I have heard of these
-men from the chiefs of my tribe; they live only for murder."</p>
-
-<p>"That is it!" she said, with sinister delight. "Well, chief, do you
-think yourself able to traverse these vast deserts, and reach the
-Grou-Chaco?"</p>
-
-<p>"Why should I not?" the Indian replied, raising his head proudly, "Do
-there exist obstacles strong enough to resist the Araucano warrior in
-his course? The puma is the king of the forests, the vulture that of the
-heavens; but the Aucas is the king of the puma and the eagle; the desert
-is his&mdash;Guatechu has given it to him; his horse and his lance render him
-invincible and master of immensity."</p>
-
-<p>"Then my brother will accomplish this journey, which is impossible?"</p>
-
-<p>A disdainful smile played for an instant round the lips of the savage
-warrior.</p>
-
-<p>"I will accomplish it," he said.</p>
-
-<p>"Good! my brother is a chief&mdash;I perceive he is one now."</p>
-
-<p>The Puelche bowed modestly.</p>
-
-<p>"My brother will go there, then, and when he arrives in the Chaco, he
-will sell the pale girl to the Guayacuras."</p>
-
-<p>The Indian did not allow any mark of astonishment to be perceived upon
-his face.</p>
-
-<p>"I will sell her," he replied.</p>
-
-<p>"That is well!&mdash;my brother will be faithful?"</p>
-
-<p>"I am a chief; I have but one word, my tongue is not forked; but why
-should I take this pale woman so far?"</p>
-
-<p>Doña Maria cast a penetrating glance at him&mdash;a suspicion crossed her
-mind&mdash;the Indian perceived it.</p>
-
-<p>"I only made a simple observation to my sister; it concerns me little,
-and she need not answer me if she does not think proper," he said, with
-indifference.</p>
-
-<p>The brow of the Linda became serene again.</p>
-
-<p>"The remark is just, chief; I will answer it. Why take her so far, you
-asked me; because Antinahuel loves this woman&mdash;his heart is softened by
-her&mdash;and perhaps he will suffer himself to be moved by her prayers, and
-restore her to her family. But it shall not happen; she shall weep tears
-of blood; her heart shall break under the incessant pangs of grief; she
-shall lose everything, even hope!"</p>
-
-<p>After uttering these words, Doña Maria arose, with head erect, sparkling
-eyes, and extended arm; there was in her aspect something fatal and
-terrible, which terrified even the Indian, by nature so difficult to
-move.</p>
-
-<p>"Go," she cried, in a tone of command, "before she departs for ever,
-I will see this woman once&mdash;only once, and speak with her for a few
-minutes; she shall at least know me: bring her hither!"</p>
-
-<p>The Indian went out silently; this woman, so beautiful and so cruel,
-terrified him&mdash;she inspired him with horror.</p>
-
-<p>Doña Rosario, on hearing this atrocious sentence pronounced against her,
-fell senseless to the ground.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_XXXIV" id="CHAPTER_XXXIV">CHAPTER XXXIV.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>FACE TO FACE.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The door of the cuarto in which Doña Rosario was confined was thrown
-open, and the Puelche warrior appeared; he held in his hand a rude
-earthen lamp, the flame of which, although feeble, sufficed to
-distinguish objects. He had replaced his shabby hat upon his head, and
-its wide brim served as a mask to his features.</p>
-
-<p>"Come with me!" he said, in a rough voice, to the maiden.</p>
-
-<p>Conscious of the inutility of a resistance which could only be dangerous
-to her amidst the bandits who surrounded her, and bowing her head with
-resignation, she followed her guide in silence. Doña Maria had resumed
-her place in the ebony chair; with arms crossed, and her head hanging
-upon her bosom, she was buried in dark meditations. At the slight noise
-made by the footsteps of the young lady, she drew herself up, a flash of
-hatred gleamed from her dark eyes, and with, a gesture she commanded the
-Indian to retire. The Puelche obeyed.</p>
-
-<p>The two women examined each other intensely; their looks crossed; the
-hawk and the dove were face to face. A deathlike silence reigned in the
-apartment; at intervals the wind came in gusts and dismal moanings,
-through the ill-joined boards of the doors, shook the old building to
-its foundation, and agitated the flame of the only candle that illumined
-the vast gloomy room in which the two women were. After a sufficiently
-long pause, the Linda, who, with that instinct which women possess in
-such a high degree, had examined in detail, one by one, the numerous
-beauties of the charming girl who stood pale and trembling before her,
-at length spoke&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," she said, in a hollow voice, as if speaking to herself, and
-overcome by the evidence of the fact, "yes, this girl is beautiful; she
-has everything to make her an object of love&mdash;to see her must be to
-love her; well, this beauty, which up to this time has been her joy and
-her pride, grief shall wither rapidly; before one year has passed away
-I am resolved that she shall become an object of pity and contempt for
-all. Oh!" she added, in a piercing, shrill voice, "I have her at length
-within the power of my vengeance!"</p>
-
-<p>"What have I done to you, madam, that you should hate me thus?" the
-maiden asked, in a plaintive voice, the sweet and melodious accent of
-which would have softened anyone but her to whom she spoke.</p>
-
-<p>"What have you done to me, silly creature?" the Linda cried, bounding
-up like a wounded lioness, and placing herself close in front of Doña
-Rosario&mdash;"what have you done to me?" and then added, with a loud
-laugh&mdash;"Ah! ah! that's true, <i>you</i> have done nothing to me!"</p>
-
-<p>"Alas, madam! I do not even know you; this is the first time I have been
-in your presence; I, a poor young girl, whose life to the present time
-has passed away in retirement&mdash;how can I have offended you?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, I allow it," the Linda replied; "you have done nothing to me; and,
-personally, as you have just said, I have nothing to reproach you with;
-but, by making you suffer, learn that it is upon <i>him</i> I avenge myself."</p>
-
-<p>"I do not understand what you mean, madam," the maiden said, simply.</p>
-
-<p>"Senseless fool, do not play with the lioness who is ready to devour
-you, or pretend to feign an ignorance of which I am not the dupe; if you
-have not already divined my name, I will tell it you&mdash;I am Doña Maria,
-whom they call the Linda&mdash;do you understand me now?"</p>
-
-<p>"Not more than I did before, madam," replied Doña Rosario, with an
-accent of frankness that shook the belief of her persecutor, in spite of
-herself; "I have never even heard that name."</p>
-
-<p>"Can that be true?" she cried, doubtingly.</p>
-
-<p>"I swear it is."</p>
-
-<p>Doña Linda strode about the apartment with long, hasty steps. Doña
-Rosario, more and more astonished, looked stealthily at this woman,
-without being able to account to herself for the emotion which her
-presence, and the sound of her voice, caused her to experience; it
-was not fear, still less was it joy, but an incomprehensible mixture
-of sadness, joy, pity, and terror; an undefinable feeling, which,
-far from creating repulsion, drew her towards a woman whose odious
-projects were no secret to her, and from whom she knew she had so much
-to dread. Singular sympathy; what Doña Rosario felt towards the Linda,
-the Linda felt towards Doña Rosario: in vain she called to her aid the
-remembrance of all the wrongs with which she fancied she had to reproach
-the man whom she wished to strike in the person of the young girl; in
-the innermost recesses of her heart, a voice, which constantly gained
-strength, spoke to her in favour of the maiden whom she was about to
-sacrifice to her hatred; the more she endeavoured to overcome this
-sentiment, for which she could not account, the more powerless she found
-her efforts become; at length, she was on the point of being softened.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" she murmured, passionately, "what is going on within me? Am I
-weak enough to allow myself to be subdued by the tears of that paltry
-creature?"</p>
-
-<p>Like Indian warriors, who, when fastened to the stake of blood, sing
-their own exploits to encourage them to endure bravely the tortures
-which their executioners silently prepare, the Linda recalled the
-maddening remembrance of all the outrages Don Tadeo had loaded her with;
-and with flashing eyes and trembling lips, she stopped short in front of
-Doña Rosario.</p>
-
-<p>"Listen to me, girl," she said, in a voice which passion caused to
-tremble, "this is the first and last time we shall be in the presence of
-each other; and you shall know why I bear you such hatred. What you will
-learn will be hereafter, perhaps, a consolation to you, and help you to
-bear with courage the miseries I reserve for you," she added, with the
-laugh of a demon.</p>
-
-<p>"I will listen to you, madam," Rosario replied, meekly, "although I am
-certain that what you are about to say cannot, in any sense, render me
-guilty with respect to you."</p>
-
-<p>"Do you think so?" the Linda said, in a tone of ironical compassion;
-"well, then, listen; we have time to talk, as you will not leave this
-place for an hour."</p>
-
-<p>This allusion to her approaching departure made the poor girl shudder,
-by recalling to her all that the departure threatened.</p>
-
-<p>"A woman," the Linda continued, "a young and beautiful woman, more
-beautiful than you, fragile child of cities, whom the least storm
-bends like a weak reed&mdash;a woman, I say, had for love married a man,
-also young, and handsome as the evil angel before his fall, who with
-perfidiously golden words, by opening before her immense and unknown
-horizons, had so seduced her, the poor, poor girl, that in a few days
-he induced her to abandon stealthily the roof which had sheltered her
-infancy, and to which her aged father in vain recalled her up to the day
-of his death, that he might bless and pardon her."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, that is frightful!" cried Doña Rosario.</p>
-
-<p>"Why so? as he had married her, morality was satisfied, in the eyes
-of the world. This woman was pure, and could thenceforward move with
-head erect before the crowd which had hailed her fall with laughter and
-contempt. But everything passes away in this world, and most quickly of
-all, the love of the most passionate man. Only a year after marriage
-this woman, alone in the most retired room of her dwelling, wept over
-the remembrance of the happiness which had left her for ever. Her
-husband had deserted her! A child born of this union, a little fair
-girl, a rosy-lipped cherub, whose eyes reflected the azure of the
-heavens, was the sole consolation which in her misfortunes was left to
-the poor abandoned mother. One night, when she was plunged in sleep, her
-husband stole like a thief into her house, seized the child, in spite
-of the cries of the desolate mother, who threw herself in tears at his
-feet, and implored him by all he held sacred in the world. After roughly
-repulsing the despairing mother, who sank dying on the cold slabs of the
-floor, this heartless and pitiless man disappeared with the child."</p>
-
-<p>"And the mother?" Doña Rosario anxiously asked, much affected by the
-story which the Linda told, entirely to her own advantage.</p>
-
-<p>"The mother," she continued, in a low, broken voice, "the mother was
-doomed never to see her child again. She never has seen her! Prayers,
-threats, everything in turn, have been employed without success. And
-now, this mother, who adores her child, and would sacrifice her life
-for her,&mdash;this mother has vowed a hatred against this man, whom she so
-fondly loved, and who showed no pity to her, which no vengeance can
-satisfy! Now, then, young girl, do you know the name of this mother?
-Say, do you know it? No, you do not? Well, then, I am this mother! and
-the man who ravished from her all her happiness&mdash;the man whom she hates
-as she does the demon whose heart he bears, is Don Tadeo de Leon!"</p>
-
-<p>"Don Tadeo!" Rosario cried, starting back with surprise.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes!" the Linda said, furiously; "yes, Don Tadeo, your lover!"</p>
-
-<p>The maiden sprang towards Doña Maria, and seizing her arm violently, and
-placing her face, inflamed with anger, close to that of the courtezan,
-who was stupefied at the energy she could not have expected from this
-delicate creature, cried indignantly,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"What have you dared to say, madam? Don Tadeo my lover! It is false,
-madam!"</p>
-
-<p>"Can this be true?" the Linda asked, eagerly. "Can I have been so
-grossly mistaken? But then," she added, mistrustfully, "who are you? and
-by what title does he keep you always with him?"</p>
-
-<p>"I will tell you who I am, madam!" Rosario replied, proudly.</p>
-
-<p>All at once the hasty gallop of several horses was heard from without,
-mingled with cries and oaths.</p>
-
-<p>"What can the matter be?" said Doña Maria, turning pale.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" said Doña Rosario, clasping her hands fervently; "oh, my God! are
-you sending me liberators?"</p>
-
-<p>"You are not free yet," the Linda said, with a bitter smile.</p>
-
-<p>The tumult increased greatly; the door, violently pushed from without,
-flew open, and several men rushed into the room.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_XXXV" id="CHAPTER_XXXV">CHAPTER XXXV.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>THE REVOLT.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The multiplicity of the scenes we have to describe, and the exigencies
-of our story, compel us to abandon Doña Rosario and the Linda,
-and return to Valdivia, where the revolt had assumed the gigantic
-proportions of a revolution. Electrified by the heroic conduct of the
-King of Darkness, the patriots fought with the greatest obstinacy.
-The Dark-Hearts appeared to have the gift of ubiquity; their numbers
-increased, they were everywhere at the head of the insurgents, exciting
-them by gesture and voice; but, above all, by their example. The city
-was completely cut up by barricades, against which the few troops who
-remained faithful to General Bustamente struggled in vain. Beaten back
-by the enemies who on all sides rose up against them to the thousand
-times repeated cries of "Our country!" "Chili Liberty!" the soldiers
-retreated, step by step, abandoning, one after another, the different
-posts of which they had been in possession at the commencement of the
-action, and rallied upon the Plaza Mayor, the outlets of which they had
-barricaded in their turn.</p>
-
-<p>The city was in the power of the insurgents; for as the battle from this
-moment was concentrated at one point, it was not difficult to foresee
-with which party the victory would remain; for the soldiers, discouraged
-by the ill success of their <i>coup de main</i>, and sensible of being the
-champions of a lost cause, only fought to obtain honourable conditions.
-General Bustamente's officers, and the senators whom he had brought
-with him as partizans, trembled when thinking of the fate that awaited
-them if they fell into the hands of their enemies. Success justifies
-everything: from the moment they failed to succeed they became traitors
-to their country, and, as such, had no right to a capitulation. They
-therefore excited their soldiers to fight valiantly, promising them
-speedy assistance, and trying to revive their courage by telling them
-that their adversaries were merely citizens, whom they could easily
-overcome if they made a bold attempt, or even resisted for an hour
-longer.</p>
-
-<p>The general who commanded the garrison, and whom we saw upon the steps
-of the cabildo read with so much arrogance the decree which changed the
-form of government, bit his lips with rage and performed prodigies of
-valour, to give Bustamente time to arrive. As soon as he saw the turn
-things had taken, he sent off an express for the General with the utmost
-promptitude. This express was Diego, the old soldier who was so devoted
-to General Bustamente.</p>
-
-<p>"Lieutenant," he said, in conclusion, "you see in what a position we
-are; you must reach the General at all risks."</p>
-
-<p>"I will reach him, General; be at ease on that head!" Diego replied,
-intrepidly.</p>
-
-<p>"And I will endeavour to hold out till your return."</p>
-
-<p>Don Diego, before he finished speaking, had ridden desperately at
-the ranks of the insurgents, spurring on his horse, and waving
-his sword with menacing rapidity round his head. The Dark-Hearts,
-astonished by such an attack on the part of a single man, at the first
-moment unconsciously opened their ranks before him as to a canister
-shot, incapable of resisting the impetuous shock of this apparently
-invulnerable demon, who mowed down all that came in his way. Diego
-skilfully took advantage of the disorder produced on the enemy by his
-furious assault; he kept pushing on, and, after incredible efforts,
-succeeded in getting out of the city. As soon as he was in safety, the
-overexcitement which till that time had sustained him, suddenly sank,
-and at a few paces from the gates he was forced to stop to take breath,
-and restore his confused ideas to a little order. The old soldier washed
-the sides and nostrils of his horse with a little brandy and water;
-and as soon as this duty was performed, aware that the fate of his
-companions depended upon his speed, he sprang into his saddle and set
-off with the fleetness of an arrow.</p>
-
-<p>The General did not delay his return to Valdivia a minute, for he felt
-that success would be an immense advantage to him; and a check, if he
-were beaten, irreparable. As a conqueror, his march to Santiago would
-be nothing but a triumphant march; the authorities of the cities he
-passed through would rival each other in ranging themselves beneath his
-standard; whereas, if he were forced to abandon Valdivia as a fugitive,
-he would be tracked like a wild beast, and obliged to seek safety in
-a prompt flight, either in Bolivia or Buenos Aires, and the projects
-he had nourished so long, and of which he believed he had beforehand
-assured the success, would be deferred, or perhaps destroyed for ever.
-Thus the General was a prey to one of those cold furies, which are so
-much more terrible, because they cannot be exhibited outwardly.</p>
-
-<p>The horsemen advanced amidst a cloud of dust raised by their precipitate
-course, rushing along the road like a whirlwind, and with a noise like
-thunder. Two lances' length in advance of the soldiers, Don Pancho,
-bending over the neck of his horse, with pale brow and clenched teeth,
-galloped at full speed, keeping his eyes fixed upon the lofty steeples
-of Valdivia, whose dark shadows became more enlarged on the horizon
-every minute. Within half a mile of the city he halted his squadron. The
-sharp pattering of musketry resounded strongly, mingled at intervals
-with the dismal, rolling bass of cannon; the battle, therefore, must
-still be going on. The General hastened to make his last preparations
-before attempting an attack he hoped would prove decisive. The foot
-soldiers dismounted, and formed in platoons, and firearms of all kinds
-were loaded.</p>
-
-<p>The troops brought up by the General were not numerous from the European
-point of view, according to which we are accustomed to see great masses
-in conflict; they, at most, did not exceed eight hundred men. In Europe
-it is customary to say that victory is most likely to attend large
-battalions: in America, where the largest armies are frequently of not
-more than three thousand men, this idea becomes naturally modified,
-and it is generally the most skilful or the most brave man who remains
-master of the field of battle.</p>
-
-<p>Don Pancho was a rough soldier, accustomed to the struggles of civil
-wars, which, for the most part, consist of audacious <i>coups de main</i>.
-Endowed with courage bordering on rashness, and devoured by ambition, he
-prepared, with the greatest coolness, to re-establish his compromised
-affairs by an irresistible attack. The country in the neighbourhood of
-Valdivia is a real English garden, interspersed with thickets, apple
-orchards, copses, and slender streams of water rippling away to the
-river. It was very easy for the General to conceal his arrival. Two
-soldiers were detached as scouts, in order to learn the state of things.
-At the expiration of a few minutes they returned. The outskirts of the
-city were deserted, the insurgents had driven the troops back into the
-centre, and, according to the scouts, with the imprudence of citizens
-metamorphosed suddenly into soldiers, they had left no reserve, or even
-placed sentinels, to secure their rear against a surprise.</p>
-
-<p>This information, instead of restoring confidence to the General, made
-him knit his brows; he thought it must be a manoeuvre, and whilst his
-officers were laughing with all their might at the able tactics of
-the insurgents, he judged it necessary to redouble his precautions.
-The troops were divided into two bodies, which, in case of need, were
-to support each other; and, as they were attacking a city entirely
-barricaded, the lancers were ordered to dismount, and reinforce the
-infantry. Only one squadron of a hundred horsemen remained in the
-saddle, concealed about a quarter of a mile from the place, in order to
-support a retreat, or to put the fugitives to the sword, if the surprise
-succeeded. These arrangements made, the General made an earnest address
-to his soldiers, to whom he promised, in the event of success, the
-pillage of the city. He then placed himself at the head of the first
-detachment, and gave the order, "March! Forward!"</p>
-
-<p>The troops advanced in the Indian fashion, taking advantage of every
-inequality in the ground, and of every tree to conceal themselves, and
-arrived thus, without giving alarm, to within pistol shot of the city.
-The dead silence which continued to prevail around him, contrasted in
-a dismal manner with the musketry and cannon which became more audible
-as they advanced, and greatly increased the General's anxiety. A dark
-presentiment warned him that he was threatened by some great danger,
-which he knew not how to avoid, from being ignorant of what kind it
-might be. The least hesitation at this critical minute might bring on
-irreparable misfortunes. The General grasped the hilt of his sword
-firmly in his clenched hand, and turning towards his soldiers, shouted
-in a loud, clear voice, "Forward!"</p>
-
-<p>The detachment, which only awaited this order, rushed forward shouting,
-and, at double-quick time, cleared the space between them and the city.
-Windows, doors, all were closed; and had it not been for the distant
-report of musketry, the city might have been thought deserted. The first
-detachment, finding no obstacles before them, continued their march;
-and the second detachment also entered. But then, all at once, behind,
-before, and on the flanks of the troops, a loud cry burst forth; and
-at every window appeared men with muskets in their hands. Don Pancho
-Bustamente was surrounded, he had allowed himself to be taken&mdash;pardon us
-the triviality of the comparison&mdash;like a rat in a trap. The soldiers,
-astonished for a second, soon recovered themselves; they faced front and
-rear, and attacked the double barrier that enclosed them: but though
-they desperately rushed against it, they could not force it. They then
-plainly perceived they were lost, that they could expect no quarter, and
-prepared to die like brave men.</p>
-
-<p>The General cast fierce and desperate glances around him, looking,
-but unsuccessfully, for a point of issue from the menacing forest of
-bayonets crossed before him, and which enclosed him as in a steel
-network. Some authors have amused themselves at the expense of the
-wars and battles of the Americans, in which they say the two armies
-always take care to place themselves out of reach of cannon shot, so as
-never to have a single man killed. This pleasantry, which is in very
-bad taste, has assumed the proportions of a calumny it is but just
-to refute, for it attacks the honour of the Americans of the South,
-who, I unhesitatingly assert, are endowed with intrepid courage&mdash;a
-courage that was brilliantly displayed during the wars of independence
-against the Spaniards. Unhappily, at present this courage is employed
-in fratricidal struggles, without any understood object. Thrice the
-soldiers rushed upon the insurgents, and thrice were they repulsed
-with enormous loss. The battle was horrible, without mercy on either
-side; they fought hand to hand, foot to foot, breast to breast, to
-the last breath, only falling to die. The troops, decimated by this
-frightful carnage, gradually gave ground; the space they occupied
-became narrower and narrower, and the moment did not appear distant
-when they would disappear under the popular flood which continued to
-ascend, and threatened to engulf them under its irresistible mass. The
-General collected about fifty men resolved to die or open a passage, and
-he made a desperate attempt. It was a collision of giants. For a few
-minutes, the two masses launched one against the other remained almost
-motionless, from the force of the blow with which they met; Don Pancho,
-flourishing his sword around him, and standing in his stirrups, struck
-down all who opposed his passage.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly a man placed himself before him, like a rock which rises from
-the depths of the sea. At the sight of him the General paused, in spite
-of himself, with a stifled cry of surprise and rage. This man was Don
-Tadeo de Leon, his mortal enemy; whom he had once condemned to death,
-and who had, in a miraculous manner, survived his execution. But, now!
-God seemed to place him fatally before him, to be the instrument of his
-vengeance, and the cause of his ruin and his shame.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_XXXVI" id="CHAPTER_XXXVI">CHAPTER XXXVI.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>THE LION AT BAY.</h3>
-
-
-<p>"My God!" said the General, "am I the dupe of an hallucination?"</p>
-
-<p>"Ah! ah!" the King of Darkness exclaimed, with an ironical smile, "you
-recognize me then, General?"</p>
-
-<p>"Don Tadeo de Leon!" Don Pancho cried, in horror. "Do the dead then
-arise from the tomb? Oh! I hoped that what I heard was false. It is you!"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," Don Tadeo replied, in a stern voice, "you are not mistaken, Don
-Pancho; I am Don Tadeo de Leon, whom you caused to be shot upon the
-Plaza Mayor of Santiago. Your spies have informed you correctly."</p>
-
-<p>"Man or demon," the General shouted, half choking with rage, "I will not
-yield to you! I will fight you as a man, and send you back again to the
-hell from which you have escaped!"</p>
-
-<p>His enemy smiled disdainfully.</p>
-
-<p>"Your hour has arrived, Don Pancho," he said; "you are due to the
-justice of the Dark-Hearts."</p>
-
-<p>"You do not hold me yet, wretched traitor! If I cannot conquer, I can
-die, weapon in hand, like a soldier."</p>
-
-<p>"No, your hour has struck, I tell you; you are ours, you shall die, but
-not the death of a soldier; you shall be executed by our justice!"</p>
-
-<p>"If that be the case," the General yelled, brandishing his sword, "come
-and take me!"</p>
-
-<p>Don Tadeo did not deign a reply; he gave a signal, and a lasso whizzed
-through the air, launched by an invisible hand, and fell round the
-General's shoulders. Astonished by this unexpected attack, before he
-could make the least possible resistance, he received a terrific shock,
-lost his stirrups, was pulled from his horse, and dragged amongst
-the insurgents. The astounded General, half mad with rage and shame,
-exhausted himself in vain efforts; nearly strangled by the lasso which
-flayed his neck, his face assumed a purple tint; his eyes, injected with
-blood, seemed starting from their sockets, and a white foam flowed from
-the corners of his discoloured lips. Don Tadeo contemplated him for a
-moment with a mixture of pity and triumph.</p>
-
-<p>"Free him from that slipknot," he said. "Secure his person, but treat
-him with respect."</p>
-
-<p>The soldiers, terrified at this prompt capture, which they had not at
-all expected, stood downcast and silent; in their stupor forgetting even
-the use of their arms. Don Tadeo turned towards them:</p>
-
-<p>"Surrender," he shouted, "surrender! the man who misled you is in our
-power; your lives shall be spared."</p>
-
-<p>The soldiers consulted each other for an instant with their eyes; and
-then, as if by a spontaneous movement, they threw down their muskets,
-crying aloud:</p>
-
-<p>"Chili! Chili! liberty! liberty!"</p>
-
-<p>"That is well!" said Don Tadeo; "leave the city, encamp at the distance
-of a mile, and await the orders which shall soon be transmitted to you."</p>
-
-<p>The conquered soldiers, with downcast looks, followed the road they had
-traversed an hour before; they passed through the silent ranks of the
-insurgents, which opened to give them passage. Without loss of time,
-Don Tadeo, followed by a crowd of his partisans, directed his course
-towards the Plaza Mayor, where the battle still raged. The soldiers,
-solidly intrenched in the Plaza, and masters of the cabildo, fought
-valiantly, hoping still for the assistance of General Bustamente, of
-whose fate they were ignorant. Although reduced to a small number, these
-troops occupied a formidable position, in which it was almost impossible
-to force them, without resolving to suffer great loss. Persuaded that
-they only required to gain time, the soldiers fought with the energy of
-despair, defending inch by inch the barricade behind which they were
-sheltered.</p>
-
-<p>But the day was passing away, their ammunition was growing exhausted, a
-great number of their comrades were stretched dead at their feet, and
-nothing could support them but the hope that the succour so impatiently
-expected was at hand. In the heat of their own contest they had not
-heard the noise of the battle fought by Don Pancho at the city gates, in
-which but few shots had been fired, as it had been principally decided
-by cold steel. Discouragement, however, began to affect the bravest,
-the general who commanded even felt his energy diminish, and he looked
-around him with great anxiety.</p>
-
-<p>Dejected, and with downcast eyes, the senator, who had been the bearer
-of the fatal proclamation, trembled in all his limbs; he regretted,
-but too late, having thrown himself into this hornet's nest; and he
-offered up the most magnificent vows to the innumerable saints of the
-golden Spanish legend, if they would bring him safe and sound through
-the perils which surrounded him. The worthy man had not any warlike
-instincts; and we can safely affirm, without fear of contradiction, that
-if he had had the slightest suspicion that things would have taken the
-turn they did, he would have remained quiet in his charming quinta of
-Corro-Azul, in the environs of Santiago, where his life glided away so
-softly, so happily, and, above all, so free from care. Unfortunately,
-as it sometimes happens in this nether world, where, whatever Candide
-may say, everything is not for the best, in the best of worlds, Don
-Ramón Sandias&mdash;so the worthy senator was named&mdash;had not been able duly
-to appreciate the charms of that calm life; ambition had gnawed at his
-heart, though he had nothing to wish for; and he had, as we have seen,
-plunged up to the neck in a hornet's nest, from which he did not know
-how to emerge.</p>
-
-<p>At every shot he heard, the poor senator jumped like a Guanaco, with
-startled eyes; and when, now and then, in spite of the precautions he
-had taken, the sinister hissing of a bullet resounded in his ear, he
-threw himself flat on his face, murmuring all the prayers that his
-troubled memory could recall.</p>
-
-<p>At first, the contortions and cries of Don Ramón had very much amused
-the officers and soldiers among whom accident had placed him; they had
-even taken delight in augmenting his terrors; but, at length, as happens
-more frequently in such cases than people fancy, the pleasantries had
-ceased; Don Ramón's terrors had communicated themselves to the laughers,
-who saw, with fright, that their position was becoming every minute more
-desperate.</p>
-
-<p>"The devil take the poltroon!" the General at length cried, angrily;
-"cannot you keep your trembling limbs still? Caspita! console yourself,
-they won't kill you more than once."</p>
-
-<p>"Ah! that is very easy for you to say," the senator replied, in a broken
-voice; "I am no soldier; it is your trade to be killed, it is all one to
-you."</p>
-
-<p>"Hum!" said the General, "not quite so much so as you may think; but
-comfort yourself; if this goes on a little longer, we shall all go
-together."</p>
-
-<p>"What is that you say?" the poor man muttered, with redoubled fear.</p>
-
-<p>"Caramba! it is clear as day, if Don Pancho does not make haste and
-come, all of us here will die."</p>
-
-<p>"But I do not wish to die!" said the senator, bursting into tears; "I
-am no soldier. Oh! I implore you, my good, my inestimable Don Tiburcio
-Cornejo, let me go away!"</p>
-
-<p>The General shrugged his shoulders.</p>
-
-<p>"What consequence can it be to you?" the senator continued, in a
-supplicating tone; "do save my life! show me which way I can get out of
-this cursed confusion."</p>
-
-<p>"Eh! how the devil do I know?"' the General said, impatiently.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, now, look here," said the senator; "you owe me two thousand
-piastres, which I won of you at Monte, do you not?"</p>
-
-<p>"What then?" the General, vexed at this ill-timed remark, said, sharply.</p>
-
-<p>"Get me away from here, and I will cry quits."</p>
-
-<p>"You are a fool, Don Ramón; do you think if I could get safely away from
-here, that I would remain?"</p>
-
-<p>"I see what you are," said the senator, despondingly; "you are but a
-false friend, you desire my death, you thirst for my blood."</p>
-
-<p>In short, the poor man was almost mad; he knew not what he said,
-terror had deprived him of the little sense he ever possessed. But, in
-reality, the position became every instant more critical; the carnage
-was horrible, the soldiers fell one after another beneath the bullets
-of the insurgents, who were sheltered by every corner of the plaza. Two
-or three sorties attempted by the troops had been vigorously repulsed;
-and hence, decimated as they were, all they could possibly do now was to
-prevent their intrenchments from being carried.</p>
-
-<p>All at once the senator bounded forward like a chamois; he made directly
-to the General, and seized his arm.</p>
-
-<p>"We are saved!" he cried; "thanks be to God! we are saved!"</p>
-
-<p>"Hilloh! what's the matter now, Don Ramón? What bee has stung you? are
-you really mad?"</p>
-
-<p>"I have not been stung," the senator replied, as fast as he could speak,
-"nor am I mad; we are saved; I tell you, we are saved!"</p>
-
-<p>"Well, how? what is it? Is Don Pancho coming at last?"</p>
-
-<p>"Don Pancho, indeed! I wish he were at the devil!" "Well, what is it,
-then?"</p>
-
-<p>"Why, do you not see, yonder? look, behind the barricade which blocks
-the entrance of the Calle de la Merced."</p>
-
-<p>"What is there to see?"</p>
-
-<p>"Why, a flag of truce! a white flag!"</p>
-
-<p>"Ah!" said the General, eagerly, "let us look! let us look!"</p>
-
-<p>And he did look.</p>
-
-<p>"True!" he said, at the expiration of a minute. "Success to all cowards,
-say I, for having good eyes; I did not see it."</p>
-
-<p>"Ay, but I did," said Don Ramón, rubbing his hands, quite revived, and
-marching off with great glee. But, at that moment, a nearly spent ball
-came ricocheting and whizzing close to his ear.</p>
-
-<p>"Lord, have mercy upon me!" he cried, falling flat on his face, and
-so remaining, as motionless as if he were dead, although he had not
-received a scratch.</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime, the General had likewise caused a flag of truce to be
-hoisted on his intrenchments, and had given orders for the firing to
-cease. The noise of the combat being hushed, the senator, like a rabbit
-relieved from alarm, raised his head a little; reassured by the silence
-which prevailed, he sat up, looking on all sides with the greatest
-anxiety, and, at length, convinced that the peril was over, he contrived
-to get upon his legs, which, however, trembled so frightfully under him,
-that they could scarcely support him.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_XXXVII" id="CHAPTER_XXXVII">CHAPTER XXXVII.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>THE TRUCE.</h3>
-
-
-<p>As soon as the flag of truce was hoisted, firing at once ceased on both
-sides. The troops at bay, who had ceased to hope for succour, were not
-sorry to find that the insurgents saved their military honour by being
-the first to demand a parley. General Cornejo, in particular, was tired
-of the hopeless combat, which he had bravely maintained all the morning.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, Don Ramón," he said, addressing the senator in a more cordial
-tone than he had before employed, "I think I have found means to enable
-you to escape without striking a blow; so what we agreed to stands good,
-does it not?"</p>
-
-<p>The senator looked at him with a bewildered air; the worthy man had not
-the least recollection of what he had either said or done while the
-balls were whistling round him.</p>
-
-<p>"I do not at all understand you, General," he replied.</p>
-
-<p>"Poor man! pretend to be innocent, do!" said the General, laughing, and
-slapping him on the shoulder; "do you wish to persuade me you are like
-the Guanacos, which lose their memory through trembling with fear?"</p>
-
-<p>"Upon my honour," said the senator, "I swear, Don Tiburcio, that I have
-not the least remembrance of having promised you anything."</p>
-
-<p>"Ah! well, it is possible, for you were devilishly frightened. Come, I
-will refresh your memory: pay attention!"</p>
-
-<p>"You will give me great pleasure."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, I doubt that! but that is of no consequence. You said to me, on
-the spot where we now stand, not more than half an hour ago, that if I
-found the means of securing your escape, safe and sound, you would hold
-me quits for the two thousand piastres I lost to you, and owed you."</p>
-
-<p>"Do you flatter yourself that that is the truth?" said the senator,
-whose avaricious instincts began to revive, as fear departed.</p>
-
-<p>"I am sure it is. Ask these gentlemen," the General asked, turning
-towards some officers who stood by.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, certainly! true to the letter," they said, with a laugh.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah! ah!"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, and as I would not listen to you, you added&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"What!" Don Ramón, who knew of old the man he had to deal with, said,
-with a start&mdash;"do you mean to say that I added something?"</p>
-
-<p>"The devil! yes," said the other. "You added this; and I repeat your
-own words. You said, as plainly as you could speak&mdash;'And I will give a
-thousand piastres in addition.'"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, that is not possible!" the senator ejaculated, quite beside himself.</p>
-
-<p>"Perhaps I did not understand you?"</p>
-
-<p>"That must be it."</p>
-
-<p>"Do you admit you mentioned the two thousand?" asked the General,
-quietly.</p>
-
-<p>"Not at all! not at all!" replied Don Ramón, quite confounded by the
-laughter of the bystanders.</p>
-
-<p>"Perhaps you meant more; well, we will not haggle about that."</p>
-
-<p>"I never said a word of the kind!" the exasperated senator exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>"In that case," said the General, with a stern frown, and surveying him
-coolly, "you mean to say that I have told a falsehood."</p>
-
-<p>Don Ramón became aware that he had made a false move, and drew back.</p>
-
-<p>"Pardon me, my dear General," he said, in the most amiable voice
-possible, "you are perfectly right; I do now remember it was two
-thousand piastres I promised you in addition."</p>
-
-<p>It was now the General's turn to be at a loss, for this generosity on
-the part of the senator, whose avarice was proverbial, confused him; he
-was suspicious of some snare or trick.</p>
-
-<p>"But," Don Ramón added, with an air of triumph, "you have not saved me."</p>
-
-<p>"What do you mean by that?"</p>
-
-<p>"Why, Santiago! as we are going to hold a parley, you are too late, and
-our bargain is void."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh! oh!" said Don Tiburcio, with a jeering smile, "you think so, do
-you?"</p>
-
-<p>"Caspita! I am sure of it."</p>
-
-<p>"And yet you are deceived, my dear friend, as you shall judge: come with
-me, the flag of truce is now crossing the barricades, and in an instant
-you will learn that you have never been so near death as now."</p>
-
-<p>"You are joking."</p>
-
-<p>"I never joke about serious circumstances."</p>
-
-<p>"In Heaven's name explain yourself!" said the poor senator, whose fears
-had all returned.</p>
-
-<p>"Lord! it is the simplest thing in the world," said the General,
-carelessly; "I have but to declare to the leader of the revolt, and be
-assured I will not fail to do so, that I only acted by your orders."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, but that is not true," interrupted Don Ramón, in great alarm.</p>
-
-<p>"I know that," the General replied, bluntly; "but, as you are a senator,
-they will believe me, and you will be fully and fairly shot, and that
-will be a pity."</p>
-
-<p>Don Ramón was thunderstruck by this piece of implacable logic; he found
-that he was in a hobble, from which he could not possibly escape without
-paying handsomely. He looked at his <i>friend</i>, who surveyed him with a
-pitilessly ironical smile, whilst the officers bit their lips to keep
-from laughing; he stifled a sigh, and resolving to make the best of
-it, very much against his will, he said, inwardly cursing the man who
-exposed him in such a cynical fashion&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Well, Don Tiburcio, I admit that I owe you two thousand piastres, but
-<i>I</i> will pay you."</p>
-
-<p>This was the only epigram he ventured to indulge in regarding the
-General's willingness to pay; but the latter was magnanimous, he took
-no notice of the offensive part of the speech, and rendered quite
-cheerful by the bargain he had concluded, he prepared to listen to the
-propositions of the officer with the flag of truce, who was brought to
-him with his eyes bandaged. This officer was Don Tadeo de Leon.</p>
-
-<p>"What do you come here for?" the General asked.</p>
-
-<p>"To offer you good terms, if you will surrender," Don Tadeo replied, in
-a firm voice.</p>
-
-<p>"Surrender!" the General shouted with a laugh; "you must be mad, sir!"
-and, turning towards the soldiers who had brought Don Tadeo, he added,
-"Remove the bandage from the eyes of this caballero."</p>
-
-<p>The bandage fell accordingly.</p>
-
-<p>"Look round you," said the General, haughtily, "do we look like people
-asking for a favour?"</p>
-
-<p>"No, General, you are a stout soldier, and your troops are brave; you
-ask no favour of us, it is we who come to you to offer to lay down our
-arms on both sides, and put an end to this fratricidal contest," Don
-Tadeo replied, with an air of grandeur.</p>
-
-<p>"Who are you, may I ask, sir?" said the General, struck with the noble
-bearing of the man who was speaking to him.</p>
-
-<p>"I am Don Tadeo de Leon, whom your leader ordered to be shot."</p>
-
-<p>"You!" cried the General, "you here!"</p>
-
-<p>"I, myself; and I have another name."</p>
-
-<p>"Tell it to me, sir."</p>
-
-<p>"I am called the King of Darkness."</p>
-
-<p>"The leader of the Dark-Hearts!" the General murmured, starting, in
-spite of himself, and surveying the speaker with uneasy curiosity.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, General, I am the leader of the Dark-Hearts, but I am still
-something more."</p>
-
-<p>"Explain yourself, sir," the General asked, who began to be in doubt how
-to behave toward the strange personage who was speaking to him.</p>
-
-<p>"I am the leader of the men whom you term insurgents, but who have,
-in reality, only taken up arms to defend the institutions you have
-overthrown, and the constitution you have violated."</p>
-
-<p>"Sir!" said the General, "your words&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Are severe, but just," continued Don Tadeo; "ask your own loyal,
-soldier's heart, General, and then tell me which side is right."</p>
-
-<p>"I am not a lawyer, sir," Don Tiburcio replied impatiently; "you have
-yourself said that I am a soldier, and, as such, I confine myself to
-obeying, without discussion, the orders I receive from my leaders."</p>
-
-<p>"Let us not lose time uselessly in idle speeches, sir; will you, or will
-you not, lay down your arms?"</p>
-
-<p>"By what right do you make me such a proposal?" the General asked, whose
-pride revolted at being forced to hold a parley with a citizen.</p>
-
-<p>"I could answer you," replied Don Tadeo, sternly, "that it is by the
-right of the stronger, and that you know as well as I do that you
-are combating for a lost cause, and that you are persisting without
-advantage in a senseless struggle; but I prefer addressing myself to
-your heart, and saying, why should brothers and fellow countrymen
-continue to cut each other's throats?&mdash;why should we any longer shed
-such precious blood? Make your conditions, General, and be assured that
-for the sake of protecting your soldier's honour, that honour which is
-ours also, as among the troops against whom we fight are our relations,
-friends, and countrymen, we will grant them as extensively as you can
-desire."</p>
-
-<p>The General felt himself moved, this noble language had found an echo
-in his heart; he looked down on the ground, and reflected for several
-minutes; at length, raising his head, he replied&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Sir, believe me it costs me much not to answer as I could wish what you
-have done me the honour to say to me; but I have a leader above me."</p>
-
-<p>"In your turn please to explain yourself, sir," said Don Tadeo.</p>
-
-<p>"I have sworn to Don Pancho Bustamente to defend his cause to the death."</p>
-
-<p>"Well?"</p>
-
-<p>"Well, sir, unless Don Pancho Bustamente were killed or a prisoner,&mdash;in
-either of which cases I should consider myself freed from my oath to
-him,&mdash;I will lay down my life for him."</p>
-
-<p>"Is that the only reason that prevents you, General?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, the only one."</p>
-
-<p>"In case General Bustamente should be either killed or a prisoner, you
-would surrender?"</p>
-
-<p>"Instantly, I repeat."</p>
-
-<p>"Well," replied Don Tadeo, stretching out his arm in the direction of
-the barricade by which he had come, "look yonder, General."</p>
-
-<p>Don Tiburcio looked in the direction indicated, and uttered a cry of
-surprise and sorrow. Don Pancho Bustamente appeared at the top of
-the barricade; his head was bare, and two armed men watched all his
-movements.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you see him?" Don Tadeo asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," replied the General, sorrowfully; "we all surrender, sir;" and
-turning the point of his sword to the ground, he bent the blade with the
-intention of breaking it. Don Tadeo stopped him by seizing the sword,
-which he, however, returned to him immediately, saying&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"General, keep that weapon, it will serve you against the enemies of our
-country."</p>
-
-<p>The General made no reply; he silently pressed the hand which the King
-of Darkness held out to him, and turning away to conceal the emotion
-which agitated him, he wiped away a tear that had fallen upon his grey
-moustache.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_XXXVIII" id="CHAPTER_XXXVIII">CHAPTER XXXVIII.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>TWO ROGUISH PROFILES.</h3>
-
-
-<p>The city was quiet, the revolt was over, or, to speak more logically,
-the revolution was complete. The soldiers, after laying down their arms,
-had evacuated Valdivia, which was left completely in the power of the
-Dark-Hearts. As soon as peace was re-established, the Dark-Hearts gave
-orders that the barricades should be destroyed, and that all traces of
-the sanguinary struggle should be removed as quickly as possible. By the
-force of accomplished facts alone, Don Tadeo de Leon found himself quite
-naturally invested with power, and in command of the province, with the
-faculties of a dictator.</p>
-
-<p>"Well," he asked Valentine, "what do you think of what you have seen?"</p>
-
-<p>"Faith," the Parisian replied, with characteristic bluntness, "I think
-people must come to America to see how men can be caught with hook and
-line like simple gudgeons."</p>
-
-<p>Don Tadeo could not refrain from smiling at this whimsical answer.</p>
-
-<p>"Do not leave me," he said; "all is not over yet."</p>
-
-<p>"I ask no better; but, our friends yonder, don't you think they will be
-very uneasy at our long absence?"</p>
-
-<p>"Can you for a moment imagine that I have forgotten them? Within an hour
-you will be at liberty. Come with me; I want to show you two faces to
-which our victory has given an expression very different from that which
-they generally wear."</p>
-
-<p>"That will be curious," said Valentine.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," Don Tadeo replied, "or hideous, whichever you please."</p>
-
-<p>"Hum! man is not perfect," said Valentine, philosophically.</p>
-
-<p>"Fortunately not; if he were, he would be execrable," Don Tadeo remarked.</p>
-
-<p>They entered the cabildo, the doors of which were guarded by a
-detachment of Dark-Hearts. The vast saloons of the palace were invaded
-by an eager crowd, who came to salute the rising sun; that is to say,
-they came to offer the spectacle of their baseness to the fortunate man,
-whom, no doubt, they would have stoned if success had not crowned his
-audacious attempt. Don Tadeo passed, without seeing them, through the
-ranks of these sycophants, the sworn courtiers of every authority, as
-void of honour as of shame, possessing but one single talent&mdash;that of
-making bendings to which it would seem impossible that the vertebral
-column of a man could attain, however flexible it may be. Valentine, who
-followed the footsteps of his friend, feigned to take for himself the
-greater part of the genuflexions meant for Don Tadeo, and bowed to the
-right and left with imperturbable coolness and assurance.</p>
-
-<p>The two gentlemen, after many delays caused by the increasing crowd,
-which closed around them, reached at last a retired apartment, in which
-there were only two persons. These two persons were General Tiburcio
-and Senator Don Ramón Sandias. The physiognomy of these persons offered
-a striking contrast. The General, with a sad face and a pensive step,
-walked about the apartment, whilst the senator, luxuriantly reclining
-on a fauteuil, with a smile upon his lips, his visage expanded, and
-one leg thrown over the other, was fanning himself carelessly with an
-embroidered handkerchief of the finest cambric. At the sight of Don
-Tadeo, the General advanced rapidly towards him; as for the senator, he
-sat upright in his chair, assumed a serious look, and waited.</p>
-
-<p>"Sir," the General said, in a low voice, "two words."</p>
-
-<p>"Speak, General," replied Don Tadeo; "I am entirely at your disposal."</p>
-
-<p>"I have some questions which I wish to put to you."</p>
-
-<p>"You may be assured, General, that if it be in my power to answer you, I
-will not hesitate to satisfy you."</p>
-
-<p>"I am convinced of that, and it is that which emboldens me to speak."</p>
-
-<p>"I am all attention."</p>
-
-<p>The General hesitated for a moment, but seemed at length determined.</p>
-
-<p>"Good heavens, sir!" said he, "I am an old soldier, unacquainted with
-diplomacy; I had a friend, almost a brother, and I am a prey to mortal
-uneasiness on his account."</p>
-
-<p>"And that friend?"</p>
-
-<p>"Is General Bustamente. You must know," he added, warmly, "that we have
-been fellow soldiers thirty years; and I should wish&mdash;" here he stopped,
-as if in doubt, looking earnestly at the person he was addressing.</p>
-
-<p>"You would like?" said Don Tadeo, quietly.</p>
-
-<p>"To know the fate that is reserved for him."</p>
-
-<p>Don Tadeo gave the General a melancholy glance.</p>
-
-<p>"To what purpose?" he murmured.</p>
-
-<p>"I beg of you."</p>
-
-<p>"You insist on knowing?"</p>
-
-<p>"I do."</p>
-
-<p>"General Bustamente is a great criminal. While a leader in power, he
-wished to change the form of government against the will of the people
-from whom he held his position, and in contempt of the laws, which he
-shamelessly trampled underfoot."</p>
-
-<p>"That is but too true," said the General, whose brow turned crimson.</p>
-
-<p>"General Bustamente has been implacable during the course of his too
-long career; you know that he who sows the wind can only hope to reap
-the tempest."</p>
-
-<p>"Hence!"</p>
-
-<p>"The same implacability will be shown to him that he has shown to
-others."</p>
-
-<p>"That is to say?"</p>
-
-<p>"He will, in all probability, be condemned to death."</p>
-
-<p>"Alas! I expected as much; but will this condemnation of which you
-speak, be long delayed?"</p>
-
-<p>"Two days at most; the commission which must try him will be formed
-today."</p>
-
-<p>"Poor friend!" said the General, piteously; "and that's the end! Will
-you grant me a favour, sir?"</p>
-
-<p>"Name it."</p>
-
-<p>"As the General must die, it would be a consolation to him to have a
-friend by his side."</p>
-
-<p>"No doubt it would."</p>
-
-<p>"Allow me to be his guard. I am sure he will be happy to know that it is
-I who have the duty of watching over him and leading him to death. And
-then I shall not, at least, abandon him till the last minute."</p>
-
-<p>"So be it,&mdash;your request is granted. Have you anything else to say? I
-shall be happy to serve you."</p>
-
-<p>"No, I thank you, sir; that is all I desired,&mdash;Ah! one word more!"</p>
-
-<p>"Speak."</p>
-
-<p>"Can I be allowed to take this guard soon?"</p>
-
-<p>"Immediately, if you like."</p>
-
-<p>"I thank you, sir."</p>
-
-<p>And after profoundly bowing to Don Tadeo, the General quitted the room
-with a hasty step.</p>
-
-<p>"Poor man!" said Valentine.</p>
-
-<p>"Eh?" cried Don Tadeo.</p>
-
-<p>"I said, poor man!"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, yes; I heard you plainly enough, but of whom were you speaking?"</p>
-
-<p>"Of the unfortunate man who has just left us."</p>
-
-<p>Don Tadeo shrugged his shoulders, and Valentine looked at him with
-surprise.</p>
-
-<p>"Do you think you know whence the solicitude of this poor man, as you
-call him, for his friend arises?"</p>
-
-<p>"Why, from his friendship for him; that is clear."</p>
-
-<p>"You think so, do you?"</p>
-
-<p>"I can think nothing else."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, then, allow me to tell you you are completely mistaken; the poor
-General is only desirous to be near his companion in arms, that he may
-have the opportunity of suppressing the proofs of his complicity in the
-rash enterprise of yesterday; proofs which Don Pancho most likely has
-about him, and which the other wishes to destroy at all hazards."</p>
-
-<p>"Can that be possible?"</p>
-
-<p>"By Saint Jago, yes! He desires to be constantly with him, that he may
-not communicate with anyone&mdash;why, he would kill him, if necessary."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh! this is infamous!"</p>
-
-<p>"But so it is."</p>
-
-<p>"Bah! it gives me a nausea."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, do not be sick yet."</p>
-
-<p>"Why not?"</p>
-
-<p>"Because," Don Tadeo continued, pointing to the senator, "I think we
-have something here that will bring the agreeable feeling to its height."</p>
-
-<p>As soon as Don Ramón saw the General leave the apartment, he quitted his
-easy chair, and advanced towards Don Tadeo, bowing obsequiously.</p>
-
-<p>"To whom have I the honour of speaking?" said the King of Darkness, with
-studied politeness.</p>
-
-<p>"Sir," the other replied, with a jaunty, gentlemanly air, "my name is
-Don Ramón Sandias, and I am a senator."</p>
-
-<p>"How can I be of service to you, sir?" said Don Tadeo, bowing.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh," Don Ramón replied, affectedly; "as regards myself, personally, I
-ask nothing."</p>
-
-<p>"Indeed!"</p>
-
-<p>"Caspita! no; I am rich, what more can I want? But I am a Chilian, a
-patriot, sir; and, what is more, a senator. Placed in an exceptional
-position, I am bound to give my fellow citizens unequivocal proofs of my
-devotion to the holy cause of liberty. Are you not of my opinion, sir?"</p>
-
-<p>"Entirely."</p>
-
-<p>"I have heard, sir, that the wretched cabecilla, the cause of this silly
-movement, which brought the republic within two inches of ruin, is in
-your hands."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, sir," replied Don Tadeo, with imperturbable coolness, "we have
-been fortunate enough to obtain possession of his person."</p>
-
-<p>"You are, doubtless, going to bring this man to trial?" Don Ramón asked,
-in a somewhat familiar tone.</p>
-
-<p>"Within forty-eight hours, sir."</p>
-
-<p>"That is right, sir. It is thus that justice should be dealt to these
-shameless agitators, who, in contempt of the sacred laws of humanity,
-seek to plunge our beautiful country into the gulf of revolutions."</p>
-
-<p>"Sir!"</p>
-
-<p>"Pardon me for speaking thus," said Don Ramón, with well-feigned
-enthusiasm; "I feel that my freedom goes rather far, but my indignation
-carries me away, sir; it is quite time that these makers of widows and
-orphans should receive the exemplary chastisement they merit. I cannot
-think, without trembling, of the manifold evils that would have fallen
-upon us, if this miserable adventurer had succeeded."</p>
-
-<p>"Sir, this man is not yet condemned."</p>
-
-<p>"And that is exactly what brings me to you, sir. As a senator, and
-a devoted patriot, I claim of you the right which belongs to me, of
-presiding over the commission whose duty it is to sit in judgment upon
-him."</p>
-
-<p>"Your request is granted, sir," Don Tadeo replied, who was unable to
-repress a smile of contempt.</p>
-
-<p>"Thank you, sir!" said the senator, with an expression of joy; "however
-painful the duty may be, I shall know how to perform it."</p>
-
-<p>After bowing deeply to Don Tadeo, the senator left the room in high
-spirits.</p>
-
-<p>"You see," said Don Tadeo, turning to Valentine, "Don Pancho had two
-friends upon whom he thought he could depend: one took upon him to
-proclaim him, the other to defend him. Well, in one he finds a gaoler,
-in the other an executioner."</p>
-
-<p>"It is monstrous!" said Valentine, with disgust.</p>
-
-<p>"No," replied Don Tadeo; "it is logical, that's all;&mdash;he has failed."</p>
-
-<p>"I have had enough of your politic men, with two faces, and neither of
-them a true one," replied Valentine; "allow me to return to our friends."</p>
-
-<p>"Begone, then, since you wish it."</p>
-
-<p>"Thanks!"</p>
-
-<p>"You will come back to Valdivia immediately, will you not?"</p>
-
-<p>"Pardieu, will I!"</p>
-
-<p>"Will you have an escort?"</p>
-
-<p>"For what purpose?"</p>
-
-<p>"Ah! that is true; I am always forgetting that you never apprehend
-danger."</p>
-
-<p>"I am only anxious about our friends; that is why I leave you."</p>
-
-<p>"Have you any cause for apprehension?"</p>
-
-<p>"None; but yet, a vague uneasiness, which I can not account for, compels
-me to remain no longer away from them."</p>
-
-<p>"Begone, then, as quickly as you please, my friend; but pray be watchful
-over the poor child, Rosario."</p>
-
-<p>"Be at ease on that score; within three hours she shall be here."</p>
-
-<p>"That is understood: a pleasant ride to you, and remember that I shall
-look for you with impatience."</p>
-
-<p>"Time to go and return, that is all."</p>
-
-<p>"Till then, adieu!"</p>
-
-<p>Valentine left the room, went straight to the stables, saddled his horse
-himself, and set off at a gallop. He had told Don Tadeo the truth: a
-vague uneasiness disturbed him, he had a presentiment of some misfortune
-or another.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_XXXIX" id="CHAPTER_XXXIX">CHAPTER XXXIX.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>THE WOUNDED MAN.</h3>
-
-
-<p>Let us return to the Count de Prébois Crancé. When the abduction was
-committed, that part of the plain where Don Tadeo had pitched his camp
-was deserted. The crowd, attracted by curiosity, had all gone to the
-side where the renewal of the treaties was taking place. Besides, the
-measures of the ravishers had been so judiciously taken, all had passed
-so quickly, without resistance, without cries or tumult, that no alarm
-had been given, and no one could suspect what was going on. The cries of
-"murder!" uttered by the wounded young man were too faint to be heard,
-and the pistol shots he had fired were confounded with the other noises
-of the festival.</p>
-
-<p>Louis remained for a considerable time lying senseless in front of the
-tent, the blood flowing from two wounds. By a singular chance, the
-peons, the arrieros, and even the two Indian chiefs, who could not think
-there was anything to be dreaded, had all gone, as we have said, to be
-present at the ceremony. When the cross had been planted, and the toqui
-and the General had gone, arm in arm, to the tent of the latter, the
-crowd began to separate into little groups, and soon dispersed, each
-returning to the spot where he had established his temporary camp.</p>
-
-<p>The Indian chiefs were the first to quit the scene; now that their
-curiosity was satisfied, they reproached themselves for having been so
-long absent from their friend. On approaching the little camp, they were
-surprised at not seeing Louis, and a certain appearance of disorder in
-the baggage filled them with uneasiness. They quickened their pace, and
-the nearer they drew the more evident this disorder became in their
-eyes, accustomed to remark those thousands of signs which escape the
-eyes of the white man. In fact, the passage left free in the inclosure
-formed by the bales, seemed to have been the scene of a struggle; the
-footmarks of several horses were strongly imprinted in the moist earth,
-and some bales had even been removed, as if to widen the entrance, and
-lay scattered about. All these indications were more than sufficient for
-the chiefs; they exchanged an anxious glance, and rushed into the camp.</p>
-
-<p>Louis was still lying where the assassins had left him, stretched across
-the entrance of the tent, his discharged pistols in his hands, his head
-thrown back, his mouth half open, and his teeth clenched. The blood had
-ceased to flow. The two men looked at him for a moment with a feeling of
-stupor. His countenance was of a livid paleness.</p>
-
-<p>"He is dead!" said Curumilla, in a voice stifled by emotion.</p>
-
-<p>"He seems so," Trangoil-Lanec replied as he knelt down by the body.</p>
-
-<p>He raised the young man's senseless head, untied his cravat, and opened
-his vest; then they perceived the two gaping wounds.</p>
-
-<p>"This is a revenge!" he murmured.</p>
-
-<p>"What is to be done?" said Curumilla, shaking his head discouragingly.</p>
-
-<p>"Let us try to recover him&mdash;I hope he is not dead."</p>
-
-<p>And then, with infinite address and incredible celerity, the two Indians
-bestowed upon the wounded man the most intelligent and most effective
-cares. For a long time all were useless. At length a sigh, faint as a
-breath, exhaled painfully from the oppressed breast of the young man; a
-slight flush tinted his cheeks, and, after several efforts, he opened
-his eyes. Curumilla, after having washed the wounds with clean cold
-water, applied a cataplasm to them of bruised oregano leaves.</p>
-
-<p>"Loss of blood alone has made him faint," he said; "the wounds are wide,
-but not deep, and not at all dangerous."</p>
-
-<p>"But what has been going on here?" Trangoil-Lanec asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Hush!" said Curumilla, laying his hand upon his comrade's arm; "he
-speaks."</p>
-
-<p>Indeed, the young man's lips did move silently; but, at length, he
-pronounced with a great effort, and in a voice so low that the Indians
-scarcely heard it&mdash;that single word which for him contained everything&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Rosario!"</p>
-
-<p>Then he sank back again.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah!" cried Curumilla, as if a sudden light had broken upon him,
-"where is the young palefaced maiden?" and he sprang into the tent, "I
-understand it all now!" he said, returning quickly to his friend.</p>
-
-<p>The Indians lifted up the wounded man gently in their arms, and carried
-him into the tent, where they placed him in Rosario's empty hammock.
-Louis recovered his senses, but almost immediately was overcome by
-a profound drowsiness. After having made him as comfortable as they
-could, the two Indians left the tent, and began, with the instinct of
-their race, to seek on the ground for indications they could ask of no
-witness, but which would show them traces they could understand. Now
-that the murder and the abduction had taken place, it became necessary
-to get upon the track of the ravishers, and endeavour, if possible, to
-save the young girl. After minute researches, which did not last less
-than two hours, the Indians returned to the front of the tent; they sat
-down, face to face, and smoked for a few minutes in silence.</p>
-
-<p>The peons and arrieros had returned from the ceremony, and expressed
-the greatest terror on learning what had taken place during their
-absence. The poor people did not know what to do; they trembled when
-they reflected upon the responsibility which rested upon them, and upon
-the terrible account Don Tadeo would require of them. After the two
-chiefs had smoked a few minutes, they extinguished their pipes, and
-Trangoil-Lanec began:</p>
-
-<p>"My brother is a wise chief, let him say what he has seen."</p>
-
-<p>"I will speak, since my brother desires it," Curumilla replied, bowing
-his head; "the pale maiden with the blue eyes has been carried off by
-five horsemen."</p>
-
-<p>To this Trangoil-Lanec made a sign of assent.</p>
-
-<p>"These five horsemen came from the other side of the river; their
-footmarks are strongly imprinted on the ground, which was wetted in the
-places where the horses trod with their dripping hoofs; four of these
-horsemen are Huiliches, the fifth is a paleface; when they reached the
-entrance of the camp, they stopped and consulted an instant, then four
-of them dismounted; the trace of their footsteps is visible."</p>
-
-<p>"Good!" said Trangoil-Lanec, "my brother has the eyes of a Quanaco;
-nothing escapes him."</p>
-
-<p>"Of the four horsemen who dismounted, three are Indians, as is easily
-perceived by the impression of their naked feet, the great toe of which,
-accustomed to the stirrup, is very wide apart from the other toes; but
-the fourth is a Muruche, for the rowels of his spurs have left deep
-marks all around. The three first have crept up to the tent, where Don
-Louis was talking with the young blue-eyed maiden, and, consequently,
-with his back towards those who came towards him; he was attacked
-unexpectedly, and fell without having time to defend himself: then the
-fourth horseman sprang forward like a puma, seized the maiden in his
-arms, and after jumping a second time over the body of Don Louis, went
-straight to his horse, followed by the three Indians. But Don Louis
-got up, first on his knees, and then on his feet; he fired his pistols
-at the ravishers, and one of them fell mortally wounded. It was the
-paleface, for a pool of blood marks the place of his fall, and, in
-his agony, he pulled up the grass with his clenched hands; then his
-companions dismounted again, took him up, and fled. Don Louis, after
-discharging his pistols, had a faintness come over him, and fell down
-again: that is what I have learnt."</p>
-
-<p>"Good!" Trangoil-Lanec replied, "my brother knows everything; after
-taking up the body of their comrade, the ravishers crossed the river,
-and went in the direction of the mountains. Now, what will my brother
-do?"</p>
-
-<p>"Trangoil-Lanec is an experienced chief, he will wait for Don Valentine;
-Curumilla is younger, he will go upon the track of the ravishers."</p>
-
-<p>"My brother has spoken well; he is wise and prudent; he will find them."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, Curumilla will find them," the chief replied, laconically.</p>
-
-<p>After saying these words, he arose, saddled his horse, and left the
-camp; Trangoil-Lanec soon lost sight of him. He then returned and took
-his place by the wounded man. The day passed away thus. The Spaniards
-had all left the plain; the Indians, for the most part, had followed
-their example; there only remained a few tardy Araucanos; but these,
-also, were preparing to depart. Towards evening, Louis found himself
-much better; he was able, in a few words, to relate to the Indian what
-had passed; but he told him nothing new, he had divined it all.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" said the young man, as he ended, "Rosario! poor Rosario is lost!"</p>
-
-<p>"My brother must not be depressed with grief," Trangoil-Lanec replied
-softly; "Curumilla is upon the track of the ravishers; the young pale
-maiden will be saved!"</p>
-
-<p>"Do you seriously tell me that, chief? Is Curumilla really in pursuit
-of them?" the young man asked, fixing his anxious eyes upon the Indian;
-"can I indeed hope that?"</p>
-
-<p>"Trangoil-Lanec is an Ulmen," the Araucano replied proudly: "no lie has
-ever soiled his lips, his tongue is not forked; I repeat that Curumilla
-is in pursuit of the ravishers. Let my brother hope; he will see again
-the little bird which sings such sweet songs in his heart."</p>
-
-<p>A sudden flush crossed the young man's face at these words; a sad smile
-curled his pale lips; he gently pressed the hand of the chief, and
-closing his eyes, he sank gently back in the hammock. All at once the
-furious galloping of a horse was heard from without.</p>
-
-<p>"Good!" Trangoil-Lanec murmured, looking at the wounded man, whose
-regular breathing proclaimed that he was sleeping peacefully: "what will
-Don Valentine say to all this?"</p>
-
-<p>And he strode out hastily to meet the Parisian, whose face was the
-picture of anxiety.</p>
-
-<p>"Chief!" he cried, in a tremulous voice, "can what the peons say be
-true?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes!" the chief replied coolly.</p>
-
-<p>The young man sank down, as if thunder-struck. The Indian seated him
-gently upon a bale, and placing himself beside him, pressed his hand,
-saying in a soothing tone:</p>
-
-<p>"My brother has much courage."</p>
-
-<p>"Alas!" the young man exclaimed, in an agonized voice, "Louis, my poor
-Louis, dead, assassinated! Oh!" he added, with a terrible gesture, "I
-will avenge him! I will solely live to accomplish that sacred duty!"</p>
-
-<p>The chief looked at him for an instant attentively.</p>
-
-<p>"What does my brother mean?" he asked; "his friend is not dead."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh! why do you seek to deceive me, chief?"</p>
-
-<p>"I speak the truth; Don Louis is not dead," the Ulmen replied, in such
-an imposing voice that it carried conviction to the wounded heart of the
-young man.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" he cried, impetuously, and springing up, "he lives!&mdash;is that
-possible?"</p>
-
-<p>"He has received two wounds."</p>
-
-<p>"Two wounds!"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, but my brother can be comforted, they are not dangerous; in a
-week, at latest, they will be cured."</p>
-
-<p>Valentine remained for an instant stupefied by this good news, after the
-catastrophe which the peons and arrieros had announced to him.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" he exclaimed, throwing himself into the arms of the chief, whom
-he pressed with a kind of frenzy to his breast, "it is true, is it
-not?&mdash;his life is not in danger?"</p>
-
-<p>"No, no, my brother can reassure himself; loss of blood alone reduced
-him to the state of torpor into which he fell. I will answer for his
-recovery."</p>
-
-<p>"Thanks! thanks, chief! I can see him, may I not?"</p>
-
-<p>"He is asleep."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh! I will not wake him, be assured of that; I only wish to see him."</p>
-
-<p>"See him, then," Trangoil-Lanec replied, smiling.</p>
-
-<p>Valentine went in. He looked at his friend, peacefully sleeping; he
-leant softly over him, and impressing a kiss upon his brow, whispered&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Sleep, dear brother, I will watch."</p>
-
-<p>The lips of the wounded man moved; he murmured&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Valentine, save her!"</p>
-
-<p>The Parisian knitted his brow, and drew himself up again.</p>
-
-<p>"Come here, chief," he said to Trangoil-Lanec, "and tell me the details
-of what has passed, that I may know how to avenge my brother, and save
-her he loves."</p>
-
-<p>The two men quitted the tent.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_XL" id="CHAPTER_XL">CHAPTER XL.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>AHAUCANIAN DIPLOMACY.</h3>
-
-
-<p>Antinahuel had not remained long inactive. Scarce had General
-Bustamente's escort disappeared in the cloud of dust, ere he remounted
-his horse, and, followed by all the Araucano chiefs, crossed the river.
-When he arrived on the other bank, he planted his lance in the ground,
-and turned towards the herald who was beside him, ready to execute his
-orders.</p>
-
-<p>"Let the three toquis, the Ulmens, and the Apo-Ulmens meet here in an
-hour," he said; "the fire of council shall be lighted on this spot for a
-grand council. Begone!"</p>
-
-<p>The herald bowed down to his horse's neck and set off at full speed.
-Antinahuel cast a glance around him. All the chiefs had regained their
-huts; one warrior alone remained. On perceiving him a smile stole over
-the lips of the toqui. This warrior was a man of lofty stature, proud
-carriage, and haughty countenance, whose piercing look conveyed a fierce
-and cruel expression. He appeared to be in the prime of life, that is to
-say, about forty years of age; he wore a poncho of exceedingly fine lama
-wool, striped with striking colours, while the long silver-headed cane
-which he held in his hand proclaimed him an Apo-Ulmen. He replied to the
-toqui's smile by a look of intelligence, and, bending to his ear, said,
-with an accent of gratified hatred&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"When the cougars tear each other to pieces, they prepare a rich quarry
-for the eagles of the Andes."</p>
-
-<p>"The Puelches are eagles," Antinahuel replied; "they are masters of the
-other side of the mountains; they leave to the Huiliche women the care
-of weaving their ponchos."</p>
-
-<p>At this sarcasm, launched against the Huiliches, a fraction of the
-Araucano people, who devote themselves principally to agriculture and
-the breeding of cattle, the Apo-Ulmen frowned.</p>
-
-<p>"My father is severe with his sons," he said, in a husky voice.</p>
-
-<p>"The Black-Stag is a formidable chief in his nation," Antinahuel
-remarked, in a conciliatory tone; "he is the first of the Apo-Ulmens
-of the province of the maritime country. His heart is Puelche; my soul
-rejoices when he is at my side. Why is it that the Ulmens are not of the
-same temper as he?"</p>
-
-<p>"My brother has explained the reason. Obliged to live in continual trade
-relations with the miserable Spaniards, the tribes of the flat country
-have laid down the lance to take up the pickaxe: they have become
-cultivators; but let not my father be deceived,&mdash;the old spirit of their
-race still dwells within them, and on the day when they are called on to
-fight for their independence, all will rise at once to punish those who
-would attempt to enslave them."</p>
-
-<p>"Can that be true?" Antinahuel cried, stopping his horse short, and
-looking in the speaker's face; "may they be depended upon?"</p>
-
-<p>"What is the use of speaking of the subject at this moment?" said the
-Apo-Ulmen, with a bantering smile; "has not my father just come from
-renewing the treaties with the palefaces?"</p>
-
-<p>"That is true," said the toqui, darting a keen look at the Indian
-warrior: "peace is secured for a long time."</p>
-
-<p>"My father is a wise chief, that which he does is well done," the other
-replied, casting down his eyes.</p>
-
-<p>Antinahuel was preparing to reply, when an Indian arrived at full speed,
-and, with a prodigy of skill which these matchless horsemen alone
-can execute, he stopped suddenly before the two chiefs, and stood as
-motionless as a statue of bronze. The panting sides of his horse, which
-ejected clouds from his nostrils, and was spotted with white foam,
-showed that he had ridden far and fast. Antinahuel looked at him for an
-instant.</p>
-
-<p>"My son Theg-teg&mdash;the thunderer&mdash;has made a rapid journey."</p>
-
-<p>"I have executed the orders of my father."</p>
-
-<p>At these words, out of politeness, the Apo-Ulmen pressed the sides of
-his horse to retire, but Antinahuel laid his hand upon his arm.</p>
-
-<p>"Black-Stag may remain," he said; "is he not my friend?"</p>
-
-<p>"I will remain if my father wishes it," the chief answered, quietly.</p>
-
-<p>"Let him remain, then; his brother has no secrets from him;" and turning
-to the still motionless warrior, he added, "my brother can speak."</p>
-
-<p>"The Chiaplos are fighting," the latter replied; "they have dug up the
-hatchet and turned it against their own breasts."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" the toqui exclaimed with feigned astonishment; "my brother must be
-mistaken, the palefaces are not cougars, to devour each other."</p>
-
-<p>And he turned towards Black-Stag, with a smile of undefinable expression.</p>
-
-<p>"Theg-teg is not mistaken," the Indian warrior replied, gravely; "his
-eyes have seen clearly: the stone toldería, which the palefaces call
-Valdivia, is at this moment a more ardent furnace than the volcano of
-Autaco, which serves as a retreat for Guécubu, the genius of evil."</p>
-
-<p>"Good!" the toqui remarked, coldly, "my son has seen well; he is a
-warrior brave in battle, but he is likewise prudent; did he stand apart
-to rejoice, without seeking to learn which side prevailed?"</p>
-
-<p>"Theg-teg is prudent, but when he looks he means to see; he knows all,
-my father may question him."</p>
-
-<p>"Good! the great warrior of the palefaces set out from here to fly to
-the help of his soldiers; the advantage is with him."</p>
-
-<p>The Indian smiled, but made no reply.</p>
-
-<p>"Let my brother speak!" Antinahuel resumed; "the toqui of his nation
-interrogates him."</p>
-
-<p>"He whom my brother names as the great warrior of the palefaces, is the
-prisoner of his enemies; his soldiers are dispersed like grains of wheat
-scattered over the field."</p>
-
-<p>"Wah!" Antinahuel cried with feigned anger, "my brother has a lying
-tongue, what he says cannot be true; does the eagle become the prey of
-the owl? The great warrior has an arm strong as the thunder of Pillian.
-Nothing can resist it."</p>
-
-<p>"That arm, however powerful, has not been able to save him; the eagle
-is captive: the courageous puma was surprised by cunning foxes; he has
-fallen, treacherously overcome, into the snare they had laid before his
-feet."</p>
-
-<p>"But his soldiers? the great toqui of the whites had a numerous army."</p>
-
-<p>"I have told my father; the chief being made captive, the soldiers,
-bewildered and struck with fear by Guécubu, fell beneath the blows of
-their angry enemies."</p>
-
-<p>"The chiefs who were conquerors, no doubt, pursued them."</p>
-
-<p>"What for? The palefaces are women without courage: as soon as their
-enemies weep and pray for pardon they forgive them."</p>
-
-<p>At this news the toqui could not repress a movement of impatience, but
-he soon recovered himself.</p>
-
-<p>"Brothers ought not to be inexorable," he said, "when they lift the
-hatchet against each other: they may wound a friend without wishing it.
-The pale warriors have done well."</p>
-
-<p>The Indian bowed if as assenting.</p>
-
-<p>"What are the palefaces doing now?" the chief continued.</p>
-
-<p>"They are assembled round the council fire."</p>
-
-<p>"Good! They are wise men. I am satisfied with my son," Antinahuel
-added, with a gracious smile; "he is a warrior, as skilful as brave;
-he may retire, and take the repose necessary after so long a journey."
-"Theg-teg is not fatigued; his life is my father's," the warrior said
-with a bow; "he may dispose of it at his pleasure."</p>
-
-<p>"Antinahuel will remember his son," the toqui said with a sign of
-dismissal.</p>
-
-<p>The Indian bowed respectfully to his chief, and pressing his knees
-whilst shortening the bridle, he made his horse perform a curvet,
-brought it to the ground with an extraordinary bound, and went off
-caracoling. The toqui looked after him in apparent abstraction; then
-addressing the Apo-Ulmen&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"What does my brother think of that which this man has said?" he asked.</p>
-
-<p>"My father is the wisest of the toquis of his nation, the chief the most
-venerated by the Araucanian tribes; Pillian will breathe words into his
-mind which will mount to his lips, and which we shall listen to with
-respect," Black-Stag replied, evasively, fearing to compromise himself
-by too frank a reply.</p>
-
-<p>"My brother is right," the toqui said, with a haughty glance; "I have my
-nymph!"</p>
-
-<p>The Apo-Ulmen bowed with an air of conviction. We beg our readers to
-observe, with regard to this expression, which for the first time
-has fallen from our pen, that in the Araucanian mythology, besides
-an infinite number of gods and goddesses, there are what are called
-spiritual nymphs, who perform towards man the office of familiar genii.
-There is not a renowned chief among the Araucanos who does not glorify
-himself with the idea of having one of these in his service. Hence,
-what Antinahuel said, instead of disturbing Black-Stag, gave him, on
-the contrary, a greater veneration for his chief; for he also flattered
-himself with having a familiar spirit at his command, although he did
-not dare to proclaim it aloud. At this moment the Araucanian drums and
-trumpets sounded loudly&mdash;the <i>chasquis</i> were calling the chiefs to
-council.</p>
-
-<p>"What will my father do?" asked the Apo-Ulmen.</p>
-
-<p>"Man is weak," Antinahuel replied; "but Pillian loves his sons, the
-Moluchos, he will inspire the words I shall pronounce; my only desire is
-the happiness of the Araucano nation."</p>
-
-<p>"My father has convoked the great Auca-coyog of the nation; did he then
-suspect the news he has just received?"</p>
-
-<p>"Antinahuel knows everything," he answered, with a smile.</p>
-
-<p>"Good! I know what my father thinks."</p>
-
-<p>"Perhaps."</p>
-
-<p>"Let my father remember the words I have spoken."</p>
-
-<p>"My ears are open, my son may repeat them,"</p>
-
-<p>"When cougars tear each other to pieces, they prepare a rich quarry for
-the eagles of the Andes."</p>
-
-<p>"Good!" said Antinahuel, with a laugh; "my son is a great chief, let him
-follow me to the Auca-coyog, the warriors are waiting for us."</p>
-
-<p>The two warriors exchanged a look of undefinable meaning; these two men,
-so cunning and dissimulating, had compromised themselves to each other
-without avowing anything. They directed their course at a gallop towards
-the spot where the principal chiefs awaited them, drawn up in a circle
-around a fierce fire, the smoke of which ascended in graceful eddies
-towards heaven.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_XLI" id="CHAPTER_XLI">CHAPTER XLI.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>THE COUNCIL</h3>
-
-
-<p>The Araucanos, whom certain travellers, either ill-informed or of
-bad faith, persist in representing as savage men plunged in the most
-frightful barbarism, are, on the contrary, a relatively civilized
-people. Their government, the origin of which is lost in the night of
-time, and which, at the period of the Spanish conquest, was as well
-organized and carried out as easily as at the present day, is, as
-we have said in a preceding chapter, an aristocratic republic, with
-essentially feudal tendencies. This government, which affects all the
-appearances of the feudal system, has all its good qualities and all its
-defects. Hence, except in time of war, the toquis possess but the shadow
-of sovereignty, and the power resides in the entire body of the chiefs,
-who, in questions of importance, decide in a general diet, called the
-<i>Auca-coyog</i>, the great council, or council of free men, for such is
-the name they claim for themselves, and very justly, for no power has
-yet been able to subdue them. These councils are generally held in the
-presence of all, in a vast prairie.</p>
-
-<p>Antinahuel had eagerly seized the pretext of the renewal of the treaties
-to try and obtain from the chiefs authority to carry into execution the
-projects which had been so long ripening in his brain. The Araucanian
-code, which contains all the laws of the nation, created an obligation
-for his doing so, from which even his renown and popularity were
-powerless to release him. But he hoped to overcome the opposition of
-the chiefs, or their repugnance to submit to his will, by means of his
-eloquence and the influence which, under many circumstances, he had
-exercised over the minds of the Ulmens, even those most determined to
-resist him.</p>
-
-<p>The Araucanos cultivate with success the art of speaking, which among
-them leads to public honours. They make it a point to speak their own
-language well, and to preserve its purity by guarding particularly
-against the introduction of foreign words. They carry this so far,
-that when a white establishes himself amongst them, they oblige him
-to abandon his own name and take one of their country. The style of
-their speeches is figurative and allegorical. They call the style of
-parliamentary harangues <i>coyagtucan;</i> and it must be observed that these
-speeches contain all the essential parts of true rhetoric, and are
-almost all divided into three heads.</p>
-
-<p>The few words we have said will suffice to show that the Araucanos are
-not so savage as we have been led to suppose. In short, a small people,
-who, without allies, isolated at the extremity of the continent, have
-since the landing of the Spaniards on their coasts, that is to say,
-during three hundred years, constantly and alone resisted European
-armies composed of experienced soldiers and greedy adventurers, whom no
-difficulty was likely to stop, and who have preserved their independence
-and their nationality intact, are, in our opinion, respectable in
-every point of view, and ought not to be stigmatized as barbarians
-with impunity&mdash;the sad, despicable vengeance of those proud and
-impotent Spaniards, who have never been able to conquer them, and whose
-degenerate sons at this very day pay them a tribute, under the lying
-excuse of an annual offering.</p>
-
-<p>We who, thrown by the chance of our adventurous travels among these
-indomitable tribes, have lived many days with them, have had an
-opportunity of judging soundly of these ill-understood people. We have
-been able to appreciate all that is really simple, great, and generous
-in their character. Terminating here this somewhat long digression, a
-tribute of gratitude paid to ancient and dearly-beloved friends, we will
-resume our narrative.</p>
-
-<p>Antinahuel and Black-Stag arrived at the place where the chiefs were
-assembled. They dismounted and joined the groups of Ulmens. The chiefs,
-who were peacefully chatting together, at their arrival became silent,
-and, for a few minutes, not a word was heard in the assembly. At length
-Cathicara, the toqui of the Piré-Mapus, made a few steps towards the
-centre of the circle, and took the initiative.</p>
-
-<p>Cathicara was an old man of seventy, of majestic bearing, and imposing
-countenance. A renowned warrior in his youth, now that many winters had
-wrinkled his brow and silvered his long hair, he enjoyed, by just title,
-a great reputation for wisdom in his nation. Descended from an old race
-of Ulmens, continually opposed to the whites, he was an inveterate enemy
-of the Chilians, against whom he had long waged war. He was acquainted
-with the secret views of Antinahuel, of whom he was the most devoted
-friend and partisan.</p>
-
-<p>"Toquis, Apo-Ulmens and Ulmens of the valiant nation of the Aucas, whose
-immense hunting grounds cover the surface of the earth," he said, "my
-heart is sad; a cloud covers my mind, and my eyes, filled with tears,
-are constantly cast towards the ground; whence comes it that grief
-devours me? Why does the joyous song of the goldfinch no longer sound
-cheerfully in my ears? why do the rays of the sun seem less warm to me?
-why, in short, does nature appear less beautiful to me? Will you tell
-me, my brothers? You are silent; shame covers your brows; your humbled
-eyes are cast down&mdash;have you nothing to reply? It is because you are a
-degenerate people! your warriors are women, who instead of the lance
-take up the spindle; because you bow basely beneath the yoke of these
-Chiaplos, these Huincas, who laugh at you, for they know that you have
-no longer blood red enough to contend with them! When, Aucas warriors,
-did impure owls and screech owls begin to make their nests in the eyrie
-of eagles? Of what use is this stone hatchet, the symbol of strength;
-this hatchet, which you have given me to defend you, if it is to remain
-inactive in my hands, and if I must descend into the tomb, towards
-which I am already hastening, without having been able to do anything
-for your enfranchisement?&mdash;Take it back again, warriors, if it is to be
-nothing but a vain, honorary ornament; for myself, my life has been too
-long&mdash;let me retire to my toldo, where, to my last days, it will be at
-least permitted me to weep over our independence, which is compromised
-by your weakness, and our glory eclipsed for ever by your cowardice!"</p>
-
-<p>After uttering these words, the old man made a few paces backwards,
-staggering as if overcome by grief. Antinahuel sprang towards him, and
-appeared to lavish consolations upon him in a low voice. The speech had
-strongly moved the assembly, for the toqui was beloved and venerated
-by all. The Ulmens remained apparently silent and stoical; but their
-feelings of hatred had been powerfully stirred, and passion began to
-gleam from their eyes in ominous flashes. Black-Stag stepped forward.</p>
-
-<p>"Father," he said, in a low, insinuating tone, and with a quiet air,
-"your words are rough; they have plunged our hearts in sadness; why have
-you been so severe with your children? Pillian alone is acquainted with
-the intentions of men. What do you reproach us with? with having done
-today what our fathers have always done before us, while they did not
-believe themselves in a position to contend victoriously against their
-enemies! No, owls and impure birds do not make their nests in the eyries
-of eagles. No, the Aucas are not women! They are valiant and invincible
-warriors, as their fathers were before them. Listen! listen to what
-the spirit reveals to me: the council with the Spaniards of today is
-null and void, because it has not taken place as the Admapu requires.
-The toqui has not presented to the chief of the palefaces the branch
-of the Cinnamon tree, the symbol of peace; the canes of the Apo-Ulmens
-have not been bound in a sheaf with the sword of the Huinca chief;
-the oath and the speeches have been pronounced upon the cross of the
-palefaces, and not upon the sheaf, as the law requires. I repeat, then,
-the Huinca-coyog is a nullity, nothing but a vain, laughable ceremony,
-to which we ought to attach no importance. Have I spoken well, powerful
-men?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes! yes!" the chiefs cried, brandishing their arms, "the Huinca-coyog
-is null!"</p>
-
-<p>Antinahuel then took a few steps forward within the circle, with his
-head advanced, his eyes fixed on vacancy, and his arms extended, as if
-he heard and saw things which he alone could see and hear.</p>
-
-<p>"Silence!" Black-Stag cried, pointing to him with his finger; "the great
-toqui is holding conference with his nymph!"</p>
-
-<p>The chiefs experienced a sensation of terror while looking at the toqui.
-A solemn silence prevailed in the assembly. On his part, Antinahuel did
-not stir.</p>
-
-<p>Black-Stag approached him softly, and, stooping towards his ear, asked,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"What does my father see?"</p>
-
-<p>"I see the warriors of the palefaces; they have dug up the war hatchet,
-and are fighting with one another."</p>
-
-<p>"What more does my father see?" Black-Stag resumed.</p>
-
-<p>"I see streams of blood, which redden the soil; the odour of that blood
-rejoices my heart, for it is the blood of palefaces shed by their
-brothers!"</p>
-
-<p>"Does my father see anything more?"</p>
-
-<p>"I see the great chief of the whites! he fights valiantly at the head
-of his soldiers! he is surrounded, he fights still! he is nearly
-falling&mdash;he falls&mdash;he is down&mdash;he is conquered! His enemies seize him!"</p>
-
-<p>The Ulmens present at this scene looked on in stupefied amazement; it
-was incomprehensible to them. A smile of disdain curled the lips of
-Black-Stag, as he continued,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Does my father hear anything?"</p>
-
-<p>"I hear the cries of the dying demanding vengeance upon their brothers!"</p>
-
-<p>"Does my father hear anything else?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes; I hear the cries of Aucas warriors, long since dead, and they
-freeze me with terror!"</p>
-
-<p>"What do they say?" the chiefs exclaimed unanimously, a prey to intense
-anxiety. "What do the Aucas warriors say?"</p>
-
-<p>"They say, 'Brothers, the hour is come! To arms! To arms!'"</p>
-
-<p>"To arms!" the chiefs shouted, as with one voice. "To arms! Death to the
-palefaces!"</p>
-
-<p>The impulse was given, enthusiasm had seized all hearts; from this
-moment Antinahuel was able to raise the passions of the crowd to
-delirium at his pleasure. A smile of supreme satisfaction lighted his
-haughty countenance as he recovered apparently from his vision.</p>
-
-<p>"Chiefs of the Aucas," he said, "what do you order me to do?"</p>
-
-<p>"Antinahuel," Cathicara replied, throwing his stone hatchet into the
-fire, in which he was directly imitated by the other toquis; "there is
-now but one supreme hatchet in the nation, it is in your hands; let
-it be red up to the hilt in the blood of the vile Huincas; lead our
-Uthal-Mapus to battle&mdash;you have the supreme command! We give you the
-power of life and death over our persons. From this hour, you alone in
-the nation have the right to command us; whatever be your orders, we
-will accomplish them."</p>
-
-<p>Antinahuel raised his lofty head, his brow radiant with pride:
-brandishing in his nervous hand his powerful war hatchet, the symbol of
-the dictatorial and boundless power which had just been conferred upon
-him, he said haughtily,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Aucas, I accept the honour you do me; I will prove worthy of the
-confidence you place in me. This hatchet shall never be buried till
-my body has served for food to the vultures of the Andes, or till the
-cowardly palefaces, against whom we are about to combat, shall have come
-upon their knees to implore pardon!"</p>
-
-<p>The chiefs replied to these words by cries of joy and ferocious
-howlings. The Auca-coyog was terminated. Tables were placed, and a
-banquet gathered together all the warriors present at the council.
-At the moment when Antinahuel was seating himself in the high place
-reserved for him, an Indian, covered with perspiration and dust,
-approached him, and whispered a few words in his ear. The chief started;
-a nervous paroxysm shook his whole frame, and he arose a prey to the
-most lively agitation.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" he cried, passionately, "it is to me alone that woman should
-belong!" and, addressing the Indian who had spoken to him, he added,
-"Bid my mosotones mount, and be prepared to follow me instantly."</p>
-
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_XLII" id="CHAPTER_XLII">CHAPTER XLII.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>THE NIGHT JOURNEY.</h3>
-
-
-<p>Antinahuel beckoned Black-Stag to come to him, and the Apo-Ulmen did not
-delay. Notwithstanding the number and copiousness of the libations in
-which he had indulged, the face of the Araucano chief was as impassive,
-and his step as steady, as if he had only drunk water. When he arrived
-in front of the toqui, he bowed respectfully, and waited in silence till
-he was spoken to. The toqui, with his eyes fixed on the ground, and
-buried in serious reflections, was some time before he was aware of his
-presence. At length he raised his eyes; his countenance was dark, his
-eyes seemed to dart lightning, a nervous tremour agitated all his limbs.</p>
-
-<p>"Is my father suffering?" Black-Stag asked, mildly and affectionately.</p>
-
-<p>"I am," the chief replied.</p>
-
-<p>"Guécubu has breathed upon the heart of my father; but let him take
-courage, Pillian will support him."</p>
-
-<p>"No," Antinahuel replied; "the breath which dries my breast is a breath
-of fear."</p>
-
-<p>"Of fear?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes; the Huincas are powerful. I dread the strength of their arms for
-my young men!"</p>
-
-<p>Black-Stag surveyed him with astonishment.</p>
-
-<p>"What signifies the power of the palefaces," he said, "when my father is
-at the head of the four Uthal-Mapus?"</p>
-
-<p>"This war will be terrible; and I would conquer."</p>
-
-<p>"My father will conquer. Do not all the warriors listen to his voice?"</p>
-
-<p>"No," said Antinahuel, sorrowfully; "the Ulmens of the Puelches were not
-present at the council."</p>
-
-<p>"That is true," Black-Stag murmured.</p>
-
-<p>"The Puelches are the first among Aucas warriors."</p>
-
-<p>"That is true, too," said Black-Stag.</p>
-
-<p>"I suffer!" Antinahuel repeated.</p>
-
-<p>Black-Stag laid his hand upon his shoulder.</p>
-
-<p>"My father," he said, in an insinuating tone, "is a great chief; nothing
-is impossible to him!"</p>
-
-<p>"What does my son mean?"</p>
-
-<p>"War is declared. Whilst we attempt incursions into the Chilian
-territory, to keep our enemies in a state of uncertainty as to our
-plans, let my father mount with his mosotones upon his coursers more
-fleet than the wind, and fly upon the wings of the tempest to the
-Puelches. His words will convince them; the warriors will abandon
-everything to follow him and fight under his orders. With their
-assistance we shall conquer the Huincas, and the heart of my father will
-swell with joy and pride!"</p>
-
-<p>"My son is wise! I will follow his counsels," the toqui answered, with a
-smile of mysterious expression; "but he has said war is resolved upon;
-the interests of my nation must not suffer from the short absence I am
-forced to make."</p>
-
-<p>"My father will provide for that."</p>
-
-<p>"I have provided for it," Antinahuel said, with a courteous smile; "let
-my son listen to me."</p>
-
-<p>"My ears are open to receive the words of my father."</p>
-
-<p>"At sunrise, when the fumes of the water fire are dissipated, the chiefs
-will ask for Antinahuel." Black-Stag nodded assent.</p>
-
-<p>"I will place in the hands of my son," the chief continued, "the stone
-hatchet, the sign of my dignity. Black-Stag is a part of my soul, his
-heart is devoted to me; I name him my vice-toqui&mdash;he will take my place."</p>
-
-<p>The Apo-Ulmen bowed respectfully before Antinahuel, and kissed his hand.</p>
-
-<p>"Whatever my father orders shall be instantly executed," he said.</p>
-
-<p>"The chiefs are of a proud character; their courage is fiery: my son
-must not give them time to cool, he must make them so compromise
-themselves, that they cannot afterwards retract."</p>
-
-<p>"What are the names of these chiefs, that I may keep them in my memory?"</p>
-
-<p>"They are the most powerful Ulmens of the nation. Let my son remember
-they are eight in number; each of them must make an incursion on the
-frontier, in order to prove to the Chiaplos that hostilities have
-commenced. The four principal among them will immediately repair to
-Valdivia, to proclaim the declaration of war to the palefaces."</p>
-
-<p>"Good!"</p>
-
-<p>"These are the names of the Ulmens: Tangol, Qud-pal, Auchanguer,
-Colfunguin, Trumau, Cuyumil, and Pailapen. Does my son hear these names
-distinctly?"</p>
-
-<p>"I have heard them."</p>
-
-<p>"Has my son understood the sense of my words? Have they entered into his
-brain?"</p>
-
-<p>"The words of my father are here," said Black-Stag, pointing to his
-forehead; "he may banish all uneasiness, and fly towards her who has
-taken possession of his heart."</p>
-
-<p>"Good!" Antinahuel replied; "my son loves me, he will remember; after
-two suns he will find me at the toldería of the Black Serpents."</p>
-
-<p>"The Black-Stag will be there, accompanied by his most valiant warriors;
-may Pillian guide the steps of my father, and may the god of war grant
-him success."</p>
-
-<p>"Farewell, brother!" Antinahuel murmured, taking leave of his lieutenant.</p>
-
-<p>Black-Stag bowed to the toqui and retired. As soon as he was alone,
-Antinahuel made a sign to the Indian whose news had caused his
-departure. During the conference of the two chiefs this man had stood
-motionless, at a sufficient distance to prevent his hearing what they
-said, but near enough to execute immediately the orders that might be
-given him. He drew near in obedience to the sign.</p>
-
-<p>"Is my son fatigued?" the toqui asked.</p>
-
-<p>"No; my horse alone wants rest."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, my son shall have another horse; he will guide us."</p>
-
-<p>Antinahuel, followed by the scout, advanced, without more words, towards
-a group of horsemen, who, leaning on their long lances, cast their black
-shadows gloomily into the night. These horsemen, about thirty in number,
-were the mosotones of the toqui. Antinahuel, at a bound, sprang upon a
-magnificent horse, held by the bridle by two Indians.</p>
-
-<p>"Forward!" he cried, settling himself in his saddle, and plunging his
-spurs into the sides of the horse, which set off with the speed of an
-arrow.</p>
-
-<p>The mosotones followed as quickly after, and the troop of horsemen
-glided through the darkness like a legion of gloomy phantoms, preceded
-by the scout. Who can express the terrible poetry of a night ride in
-the American deserts? The midnight wind had swept the heavens clear of
-clouds, and its vault, of a dark blue, appeared to be, like a monarch's
-robe, splendidly adorned with an infinite number of stars. The night
-had that velvety transparency peculiar to warm climates. At intervals,
-a puff of wind, loaded with indistinct sounds, scattered the dry leaves
-into the air, and was lost in the distance like a sigh.</p>
-
-<p>The Araucanos, bending over the necks of their horses, whose nostrils
-emitted dense clouds of smoke, rode on, and on, and ever on, without
-casting even a look around them. And yet the desert they were
-traversing, so silently and so rapidly, poured floods of splendid
-harmonies into space. The murmur of water among the lianas and the
-glayeuls, the moaning of the wind among the leaves, or the confused
-noise of a thousand invisible insects, could be heard; at times, lights,
-fluttering through the foliage, danced upon the grass in the manner of
-wild fires; at distances were to be seen old trees, at the angles of
-ravines or the brink of precipices, standing like spectres, shaking
-their winding sheets of parasitical plants; a thousand rumours hovered
-in the air; nameless cries issued from dens hollowed under vast roots;
-stifled sighs descended from the hoary summits of the mountains: an
-unknown and mysterious world could be felt existing around. Everywhere,
-on the earth, in the air, was to be heard the great flood of life, which
-comes from God, passes away, and is incessantly renewed.</p>
-
-<p>The Araucanos still continued their furious course, clearing torrents
-and ravines, and crushing under the hoofs of their flying coursers
-stones, the fragments of which rolled with a splash into the barrancas.
-At two lances, length, in front, by the side of the scout, Antinahuel,
-with his eyes ardently directed forward, kept urging on his horse, whose
-hard and loud breathing proclaimed fatigue. All at once a dark mass
-surged up in the distance, and then a voice was heard.</p>
-
-<p>"We have arrived," the guide exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p>"At last!" Antinahuel said, pulling up his horse, which could no longer
-stand when the impetus had ceased. They found themselves in a miserable
-village, composed of five or six huts falling to ruins, and which,
-at every gust of wind, threatened to tumble to pieces. Antinahuel,
-who expected the fall of his horse, disengaged himself quickly, and
-addressing the guide, who had likewise dismounted, asked&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"In which toldo is she?"</p>
-
-<p>"Come," the Indian replied, laconically.</p>
-
-<p>Antinahuel followed him.</p>
-
-<p>They walked some steps without exchanging a word; the chief pressing
-his hand strongly on his breast, as if to keep down the beatings of his
-heart. After a hasty march of ten minutes, the two men found themselves
-in front of an isolated cabin, from the interior of which glimmered a
-feeble light. The Indian stopped, and turned towards Antinahuel.</p>
-
-<p>"That is it," he said, stretching out his arm in the direction of the
-cabin.</p>
-
-<p>The toqui turned round to ascertain whether his mosotones, whom, in his
-rapid course, he had left far behind, were rejoining him; and then,
-after the hesitation of a second, he approached the door and pushed it,
-saying in a low but determined voice&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"An end must be put to this!"</p>
-
-<p>The door opened, and he entered.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_XLIII" id="CHAPTER_XLIII">CHAPTER XLIII.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>TWO HATREDS.</h3>
-
-
-<p>Antinahuel found himself face to face with Doña Maria; by an instinctive
-movement each drew back a step, stifling a cry; a cry of stupor on the
-part of Antinahuel, of surprise on the part of the Linda.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" sighed Doña Rosario, quite overcome, and bowing her head to avoid
-the ardent glance of the Indian chief&mdash;"Oh, Heaven! now I am really
-lost, indeed!"</p>
-
-<p>Doña Maria had in a few seconds driven back to her heart the feelings
-which raged within her; and with a mild voice and a smiling face she
-addressed Antinahuel&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"My brother is welcome," she said, inviting him by a gesture to enter
-the cuarto; "to what happy chance do I owe his presence?"</p>
-
-<p>"A happy chance for me, particularly," he replied, with a satirical
-smile, and endeavouring to compose his features.</p>
-
-<p>The toqui was too well acquainted with the companion of his childhood
-not to know that he had in her a formidable adversary, with whom he must
-play close, in order to bring her to do his will.</p>
-
-<p>"Well!" the Linda resumed, "will my brother deign to do me the pleasure
-of explaining the cause of his sudden appearance, which, not the less,
-fills me with delight?"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh! the cause is very simple indeed, not worth mentioning; I did not
-hope, in any way, to meet my sister here; I must even confess, with all
-humility that I did not seek her."</p>
-
-<p>"Ah!" said Doña Maria, feigning to be imposed upon, "I am doubly
-fortunate, then."</p>
-
-<p>The chief bowed.</p>
-
-<p>"It is the truth," he said.</p>
-
-<p>"Good!" she thought; "now he is going to lie, let us see what villainy
-the demon will invent;" and then she added aloud, with a seducing smile,
-which displayed thirty-two little teeth of the purest pearl&mdash;"I am all
-ears, my brother can speak."</p>
-
-<p>"As my sister knows, this village is on the route which leads to my
-toldería, I have naturally traversed it in returning to my tribe; the
-night is advanced, my mosotones require a few hours' rest; I resolved
-to encamp here. I entered the first rancho which presented itself to
-my view, this rancho in which you are temporarily sojourning, and I am
-grateful to the chance which, as I have told you, has done all this, and
-is alone guilty."</p>
-
-<p>"Not bad for an Indian," murmured Doña Maria; "well, we will say no more
-about that."</p>
-
-<p>"Eh!" said Antinahuel, feigning for the first time to perceive Doña
-Rosario, and advancing towards her; "who is this charming young woman?"</p>
-
-<p>"A slave, not worthy of your notice," the Linda replied, sternly.</p>
-
-<p>"A slave!" Antinahuel cried.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, a slave." The Linda clapped her hands, and the Indian we have seen
-talking with her entered.</p>
-
-<p>"Take away this woman!" she said.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, madam!" Rosario exclaimed, falling on her knees, "can you be
-inexorable towards a poor girl who has never injured you?"</p>
-
-<p>The Linda gave her a fiery glance, and repulsed her with her foot.</p>
-
-<p>"I ordered this girl to be taken away," she said, perilously.</p>
-
-<p>At this flagrant insult, the blood rushed to the heart of the poor
-girl; her pallid brow flushed with scarlet, and drawing herself up
-majestically and proudly, she said in a piercing voice, the prophetic
-tone of which struck the Linda to the heart&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Beware, madam! God will punish you! As you today are without pity for
-me, so the day will come when there will be no pity for you!"</p>
-
-<p>And she left the room, after darting a look at her implacable enemy that
-made even her blench.</p>
-
-<p>When Antinahuel and the Linda were left alone, a long silence ensued.
-The last words of Rosario had wounded the Linda like the stroke of a
-poniard; it was in vain she endeavoured to steel herself against the
-emotion she experienced. She felt herself conquered by the weak girl.
-She, however, gradually overcame the incomprehensible sensation that
-oppressed her. Passing her hand across her brow, as if to drive away the
-importunate idea that pursued her, she turned towards Antinahuel&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"No diplomacy between us, brother," she said, "we know each other too
-well to lose time in manoeuvring."</p>
-
-<p>"My sister is right; let us speak frankly."</p>
-
-<p>"The story of your return to your tribe is very clever, Antinahuel, but
-I do not believe a word of it."</p>
-
-<p>"Good! then my sister knows the reason that brings me here."</p>
-
-<p>"I do know it," she said, with an arch smile, which played like a
-sunbeam round her rosy lips.</p>
-
-<p>Antinahuel made no reply. He began to walk in great agitation about the
-room, casting looks of anger and vexation towards the door by which
-Rosario had gone out. The Linda followed him with a keen and mocking eye.</p>
-
-<p>"Well," she said, at the end of a minute, "will not my brother speak?"</p>
-
-<p>"Why should I not speak?" he angrily replied. "Antinahuel is the most
-redoubtable chief of his nation, the proudest warriors bend their lofty
-brows without hesitation before him!"</p>
-
-<p>"I am waiting," she said, in a calm voice.</p>
-
-<p>"A chief explains himself clearly, no one imposes upon him. My sister
-knows my hatred for the chief of the palefaces, of whom she has so much
-reason to complain."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, I know that man is the personal enemy of my brother."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, then, my sister has in her hands the blue-eyed maiden, and she
-will give her to me, so that I may, in making her suffer, revenge myself
-on my enemy."</p>
-
-<p>"My brother is a man, he does not know how to avenge himself: why
-should I give my prisoner up to him? Women alone possess the secret of
-torturing those they hate. Let my brother leave it to me," she added,
-with a vindictive smile; "the torments I shall invent will suffice, I
-swear, to satisfy a hatred much deeper than any he can feel."</p>
-
-<p>Antinahuel, although his face remained impassive, shuddered inwardly at
-these odious words.</p>
-
-<p>"My sister is boastful," he replied, "her skin is white, her heart knows
-not how to hate, let her leave it to the Indian chief."</p>
-
-<p>"No," she passionately exclaimed, "I have fixed the fate of this woman;
-I will not give her to my brother."</p>
-
-<p>"Will my sister then forget her promise, and falsify her oaths?"</p>
-
-<p>"Of what promises and of what oaths do you speak, chief?"</p>
-
-<p>"Of those," the Indian replied haughtily, "which my sister pronounced in
-the toldo of Antinahuel, when she came among his tribe to implore his
-assistance."</p>
-
-<p>The Linda smiled.</p>
-
-<p>"Woman is a mockingbird," she said, "the man who pays attention to her
-words is&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Good!" Antinahuel interrupted, "my sister shall keep her prisoner. Let
-my sister do her will; I will continue my route towards the toldería of
-my tribe."</p>
-
-<p>The Linda looked at him with astonishment; the facility with which
-Antinahuel apparently renounced his projects seemed to her the more
-incomprehensible, from her knowing with what pertinacity he pursued
-his enterprises, when once he believed he had a chance of success. She
-resolved to know what she had to trust to. At the moment when the chief
-made a step towards the door, she said.</p>
-
-<p>"Is my brother going?"</p>
-
-<p>"I am going," he replied.</p>
-
-<p>"Has he, then, already terminated the affairs about which General
-Bustamente requested him to come and consult with him?"</p>
-
-<p>"General Bustamente no longer stands in need of Antinahuel or of anyone
-else."</p>
-
-<p>"Has he then succeeded so quickly?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," he answered in an equivocal tone.</p>
-
-<p>"Then," the Linda exclaimed, joyfully, "he is master of the city, and
-triumphs at last!"</p>
-
-<p>Antinahuel appeared to hesitate for a minute&mdash;an ironical smile flitted
-across his lips.</p>
-
-<p>"Will not my brother answer?" the Linda continued, with an impatience
-mingled with uneasiness.</p>
-
-<p>"He whom my sister calls General Bustamente," he replied in a sharp
-tone, "no longer needs the assistance of anyone: he is a prisoner."</p>
-
-<p>The Linda sprang up like a wounded lioness.</p>
-
-<p>"A prisoner!" she cried. "Oh! my brother must be mistaken."</p>
-
-<p>"He is a prisoner, and within three days will be dead."</p>
-
-<p>The Linda was struck with stupor; this frightful news crushed all her
-hopes.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" she murmured at length, "he shall not die!"</p>
-
-<p>"He will die!" Antinahuel replied; "who can save him?"</p>
-
-<p>"You, chief!" she said, emphatically grasping his arm.</p>
-
-<p>"Why should I do it?" he remarked carelessly; "of what consequence is
-the life of the man to me?&mdash;the palefaces are not my brothers."</p>
-
-<p>"No; but his life is precious to me, for the sake of my vengeance! He
-alone can deliver up my enemy to me! He shall live, I tell you!"</p>
-
-<p>"Good! My sister will deliver him, then, as she is so anxious to save
-him."</p>
-
-<p>"You alone could do it, chief, if you would," she observed.</p>
-
-<p>Antinahuel fixed his eyes upon her.</p>
-
-<p>"What makes you suppose I would?" he said.</p>
-
-<p>"Listen to me, chief!" the Linda cried. "You love that woman&mdash;that puny,
-palefaced thing, do you not?"</p>
-
-<p>The Indian started, but made no reply.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh! do not endeavour to deceive me; you cannot blind the eyes of a
-woman. The hatred you bear to Don Tadeo is changed into love in your
-heart at the sight of this creature."</p>
-
-<p>"Well! and suppose it should be so?" he said, evidently moved.</p>
-
-<p>"An even-handed bargain with you then; give me General Bustamente," she
-remarked earnestly, "and I will deliver her up to you."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" said Antinahuel, with a bantering smile, "a woman is but a
-mockingbird; the man who puts faith in her words&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>On hearing the chief throw in her face the words she herself had uttered
-only a few minutes before, she stamped with impatience.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, then," she cried, almost bursting with rage, "take her
-then!&mdash;take the woman! and may my curses cling to her!"</p>
-
-<p>Antinahuel uttered a tiger-like roar, and rushed out of the room.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah!" cried the Linda in a hoarse voice, and with an expression
-impossible to be described, "may not the love of this wretch avenge me
-better than all the tortures I could have invented!"</p>
-
-<p>In a few minutes the chief returned precipitately, his features
-distorted by fury and disappointment.</p>
-
-<p>"She has fled!" he shouted. It was true. Rosario and the Indian to whose
-charge the Linda had given her had both disappeared. No one knew what
-had become of them. Antinahuel immediately dispatched his mosotones in
-all directions in search of them. The Linda was left in the toldo a
-prey to indescribable rage; she was cheated of her vengeance! She felt
-crushed under the weight of the helplessness to which she was reduced.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_XLIV" id="CHAPTER_XLIV">CHAPTER XLIV.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>THE RETURN TO VALDIVIA.</h3>
-
-
-<p>Night was come; bending over the pillow of his friend, who was still
-buried in that lethargic sleep which generally follows great loss of
-blood, Valentine watched with anxious tenderness the changes which at
-times darkened his pale countenance.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" he said, in a suppressed voice, clenching his hands with anger,
-"be thy assassins who they may, brother, they shall pay for their crime
-dearly."</p>
-
-<p>The curtain of the tent was slowly raised, and a hand was laid upon the
-young man's shoulder. He turned quickly round; Trangoil-Lanec was before
-him. The face of the Ulmen was dark as night, and he appeared a prey to
-strong emotion.</p>
-
-<p>"What is the matter, chief?" asked Valentine, terrified at his manner;
-"what has happened, in the name of Heaven? Have you any fresh misfortune
-to announce?"</p>
-
-<p>"Misfortune incessantly watches over man," the chief remarked
-sententiously; "he should be ready to receive it at all hours, like an
-expected guest."</p>
-
-<p>"Speak then!" the young man asked, in a firm voice; "whatever may
-happen, I will not falter."</p>
-
-<p>"Good, my brother is strong, he is a great warrior, he will not suffer
-himself to be cast down. Let my brother hasten; we must be gone!"</p>
-
-<p>"Be gone!" cried Valentine, with a nervous start; "and my friend?"</p>
-
-<p>"Our brother Louis will accompany us."</p>
-
-<p>"Is it possible to move him?"</p>
-
-<p>"It must be," the Indian said peremptorily; "the war hatchet is dug up
-against the palefaces, the Aucas chiefs have drunk firewater, the genius
-of evil is master of their hearts; we must depart before they think of
-us; in an hour it will be too late."</p>
-
-<p>"Let us depart then," the young man replied, sorrowfully, convinced that
-Trangoil-Lanec knew more than he was willing to tell, and that some
-great danger threatened them, since the chief, who was a man of tried
-courage, had let fall that mask of stoicism which scarcely ever abandons
-the Indian.</p>
-
-<p>Preparations for departure were made in all haste, and were soon
-terminated. The hammock in which Louis reposed was solidly fastened to
-two long cross pieces of wood, and then, as it was, harnessed upon two
-mules without awakening him. The little band set out, employing the
-greatest precautions. They proceeded thus for more than an hour, without
-exchanging a word; the campfires of the Indians became every minute more
-faint in the distance, and they were, at least for the present, out of
-danger. Valentine approached Trangoil-Lanec, who rode at the head of the
-convoy.</p>
-
-<p>"Where are we going?" he asked.</p>
-
-<p>"To Valdivia," the chief replied; "it is there alone that Don Louis will
-be able to recover in safety."</p>
-
-<p>"You are right," said Valentine; "but shall we remain inactive?"</p>
-
-<p>"I will do what my brother the paleface wishes; am I not his penni?
-where he goes I will go&mdash;his will shall be mine!"</p>
-
-<p>"Thank you, chief," the Frenchman replied, with emotion; "you have a
-brave and worthy heart."</p>
-
-<p>"My brother saved my life," said the Ulmen earnestly; "that life is no
-longer mine, it belongs to him."</p>
-
-<p>Whether it was that the Araucano chiefs did not perceive the departure
-of the strangers, or that, as is more probable, they did not think it
-worthwhile to pursue them, the little troop was not interrupted in its
-flight&mdash;for what other name could be given to this night march amidst
-the desert? They advanced slowly, on account of the wounded man, who
-could not, in his state of weakness and prostration, have supported the
-shaking of a more rapid pace.</p>
-
-<p>Towards three o'clock in the morning, a few fugitive and uncertain
-lights, which flitted across the horizon, and with difficulty pierced
-through the fog, which at that hour of the night envelopes the earth
-like a winding sheet, announced to the party that they were approaching
-the city, and should soon be there. At the end of three quarters of an
-hour, they reached the gardens which envelope Valdivia like an immense
-bouquet of flowers, from the centre of which it seems to spring up. The
-party made a short halt, in order not to attract observation on entering
-the city, through the state of the horses and mules. From that time they
-had nothing to fear from the Indians.</p>
-
-<p>"Is my brother acquainted with the city?" Trangoil-Lanec asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Why do you ask that question?"</p>
-
-<p>"For a very simple reason. In the desert, by night or by day, I can
-serve as a guide to my brother; but here, in this toldería of the
-whites, my eyes close&mdash;I am blind; my brother must conduct us."</p>
-
-<p>"The devil!" said Valentine, quite disconcerted; "in that sense I am as
-blind as you, chief; it was only yesterday that I entered the city for
-the first time: and," he added, laughingly, "the bullets then whistled
-round in such a merry fashion, I had scarcely time to look about me, or
-to ask my way."</p>
-
-<p>"Don't let that disturb you, señor," said one of the peons, who had
-heard the few words pronounced by the two men; "only tell me where you
-want to go, and I will undertake to conduct you."</p>
-
-<p>"Hum!" Valentine replied; "where I want to go to? Caspeta! I cannot
-exactly say; all places are alike to me, provided my friend be in
-safety."</p>
-
-<p>"Pardon me, señor," the arriero replied, "if I dare&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, dare! dare! there's a good fellow! your idea is probably excellent;
-for myself, I confess at this moment my mind is as empty as a drum."</p>
-
-<p>"Why, señor, should you not go to the residence of Don Tadeo de Leon, my
-master?"</p>
-
-<p>"Pardieu!" cried Valentine, vexed at his own want of thought. "On my
-word, you are something like a guide! I do not go to Don Tadeo, because,
-simply, I don't know how to find the place, that's all."</p>
-
-<p>"I know, señor; Don Tadeo is most likely at the cabildo."</p>
-
-<p>"By Jove! that's true again; my powers of thought seem to have been
-driven out of my head; but which is the way to the cabildo?"</p>
-
-<p>"I will show you, señor."</p>
-
-<p>"That's well! this is an intelligent lad. Let us be moving, my friend."</p>
-
-<p>"Forward, then!" cried the arriero. "<i>Ea! arrea mula!</i>" he shouted to
-his beasts.</p>
-
-<p>In a few minutes they debouched upon the Plaza Mayor, opposite the
-cabildo. The city was still and silent; here and there traces of the
-sanguinary contest of the preceding day, heaps of broken furniture, or
-large trenches cut in the ground, gave evidence of the ravages caused by
-the insurrection. A soldier was marching with slow steps in front of the
-cabildo. At sight of the little party, he stopped, and cocked his musket.</p>
-
-<p>"Who goes there?" he shouted sharply.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>La Patria!</i>" Valentine replied.</p>
-
-<p>"Go on, then!" said the soldier.</p>
-
-<p>"Hum!" the young man murmured; "it appears not to be such an easy matter
-to obtain entrance; never mind," he added, "let us try. My friend," he
-said, in an insinuating voice, to the sentinel, who stood motionless
-before him; "we have business in the palace."</p>
-
-<p>"Have you the password?"</p>
-
-<p>"Santiago! no," Valentine answered, frankly.</p>
-
-<p>"Then you cannot enter."</p>
-
-<p>"And yet I wish very much to enter."</p>
-
-<p>"Very possibly; but as you have not the password, I advise you to go
-on your way; for I swear, if you were the devil in person, I would not
-afford you a passage."</p>
-
-<p>"My friend," said the Parisian, in a jeering tone, "you do not talk
-logically; if I were the devil, I should stand in no need of the
-password&mdash;I should get in in spite of you."</p>
-
-<p>"Take care, señor," whispered the arriero; "that soldier is not unlikely
-to fire at you."</p>
-
-<p>"Pardieu! that's what I reckon upon," said Valentine, laughing.</p>
-
-<p>The peon looked at him in astonishment; he thought he was mad. The
-soldier, annoyed by this long conversation, and believing it of no use
-to stand wrangling with these jokers, presented his musket, crying
-angrily,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"For the last time, go on, or I will fire!"</p>
-
-<p>"I am determined I will go in!" Valentine replied, resolutely.</p>
-
-<p>"To arms!" the soldier cried, and fired. Valentine, who had watched
-attentively all the soldier's movements, had slipped quickly from his
-horse, and the bullet whistled harmlessly over his head. At the cry
-of the soldier and the report of his piece, several armed soldiers,
-followed by an officer with a lighted lantern in his hand, rushed
-tumultuously out of the palace.</p>
-
-<p>"What is going on here?" the officer asked, in a loud voice.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah!" Valentine cried, to whom the voice was not unknown, "is that you,
-Don Gregorio?"</p>
-
-<p>"Who calls me?" said the latter; for, in fact, it was he.</p>
-
-<p>"I, Valentine!"</p>
-
-<p>"What! is it you, my friend, who are making all this disturbance?"
-replied Don Gregorio, advancing; "I thought it was nothing less than an
-attack."</p>
-
-<p>"What the devil was I to do?" said the young man, laughing; "I had not
-the password, and I wanted to get in."</p>
-
-<p>"Hum! none but a Frenchman would have such an idea as that."</p>
-
-<p>"Is it not original?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, but you risked being killed."</p>
-
-<p>"Bah! we are always risking being killed, and yet we are not," said
-Valentine, carelessly; "I recommend my plan to you, under similar
-circumstances."</p>
-
-<p>"Much obliged! but I do not think I shall ever try it."</p>
-
-<p>"Ah! there you are wrong."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, then, come in! come in!"</p>
-
-<p>"That is all I want; particularly as I must see Don Tadeo instantly."</p>
-
-<p>"I believe he is asleep."</p>
-
-<p>"He must be awakened."</p>
-
-<p>"Do you bring interesting news, then?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," Valentine replied, becoming suddenly serious; "terrible news!"</p>
-
-<p>Don Gregorio, struck with the tone in which the Frenchman had pronounced
-these words, had a presentiment of some misfortune, and asked no
-further. The arrieros bore the hammock, with Don Louis still asleep,
-into the cabildo. By the care of Don Gregorio he was carried to a
-bedchamber, and placed in a bed hastily provided.</p>
-
-<p>"What does all this mean?" Don Gregorio said, in astonishment; "is Don
-Louis wounded?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," Valentine replied, in a husky voice; "he has received two dagger
-wounds."</p>
-
-<p>"But how did it all happen?"</p>
-
-<p>"You will soon learn; but pray conduct me instantly to Don Tadeo."</p>
-
-<p>"In heaven's name, come, then! your reserve alarms me."</p>
-
-<p>And, followed by Valentine and Trangoil-Lanec, Don Gregorio plunged into
-the labyrinth formed by the numerous corridors of the palace, with which
-he seemed well acquainted.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_XLV" id="CHAPTER_XLV">CHAPTER XLV.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>THE FATHER REVEALS HIMSELF.</h3>
-
-
-<p>Don Tadeo had passed the greater part of the night in giving orders
-for the clearing away of the hideous traces left by the combat. He
-had named the magistrates charged with the police of the city. After
-having assured, as far as possible, the tranquillity and safety of the
-citizens, and sent several couriers to Santiago, and other centres
-of population, to inform them of what had taken place, worn out with
-fatigue, sinking with sleep, he had thrown himself, clothed as he was,
-upon a camp bed, to take a little repose. He had slept scarcely an hour
-that agitated sleep which is the lot of men upon whom the destinies of
-empires rest, when the door of the chamber was pushed violently open, a
-strong light gleamed in his eyes, and several men surrounded him. Don
-Tadeo awoke suddenly.</p>
-
-<p>"Who is there?" he cried, endeavouring to recognise, in spite of the
-light which dazzled his eyes, the persons who so inopportunely disturbed
-his repose.</p>
-
-<p>"It is I," replied Don Gregorio.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, but you do not seem to be alone?"</p>
-
-<p>"No, Don Valentine accompanies me."</p>
-
-<p>"Don Valentine!" cried Don Tadeo, starting up, and passing his hand over
-his brow, to drive away the clouds which still obscured his ideas; "why,
-I did not expect Don Valentine before morning, at soonest; what serious
-reason can have induced him to travel by night?"</p>
-
-<p>"A powerful reason, Don Tadeo," the young man remarked, in a melancholy
-voice.</p>
-
-<p>"In Heaven's name! speak, then!" cried Don Tadeo.</p>
-
-<p>"Be a man! be firm! collect all your courage to bear worthily the blow
-you are about to receive."</p>
-
-<p>Don Tadeo walked two or three times round the room, with his head
-cast down, and his brow contracted; then stopped suddenly in front of
-Valentine with a pale brow, but with a stoical countenance. This man
-of iron had subdued nature within him; as if aware of the rudeness of
-the shock he was about to receive, he had ordered his heart not to
-break&mdash;his muscles not to quiver.</p>
-
-<p>"Speak!" he said, "I am ready to hear you."</p>
-
-<p>While uttering these words his voice was firm, his features calm.
-Valentine, though well acquainted with his courage, was struck with
-admiration.</p>
-
-<p>"Is the misfortune you are about to announce to me personal?" said Don
-Tadeo.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," the young man replied, in a tremulous voice.</p>
-
-<p>"God be praised! Go on, then; I listen to you."</p>
-
-<p>Valentine perceived that he must not put the soul of this man to too
-hard a trial; he determined to speak.</p>
-
-<p>"Doña Rosario has disappeared," he said; "she has been carried off
-during our absence; Louis, my foster brother, in endeavouring to defend
-her, has fallen, pierced by two sword thrusts."</p>
-
-<p>The King of Darkness appeared a statue of marble; no emotion was
-perceptible upon his austere countenance.</p>
-
-<p>"Is Don Louis dead?" he asked, earnestly.</p>
-
-<p>"No," Valentine answered, more and more astonished; "I even hope that in
-a few days he will be cured."</p>
-
-<p>"So much the better," said Don Tadeo, feelingly; "I am indeed glad to
-hear that."</p>
-
-<p>And, crossing his arms upon his broad chest, he resumed his hasty walk
-about the room. The three men looked at each other, surprised at this
-stoicism, which to them was unintelligible.</p>
-
-<p>"Will you then abandon Doña Rosario to her ravishers?" Don Gregorio
-asked, in a reproachful tone.</p>
-
-
-<p>Don Tadeo darted at him a look charged with such bitter irony, that Don
-Gregorio quailed beneath it.</p>
-
-<p>"Were the ravishers concealed in the entrails of the earth, I would
-discover them, be they who they may!" Don Tadeo replied.</p>
-
-<p>"A man is on their track," said Trangoil-Lanec, advancing; "that man is
-Curumilla. He will discover them."</p>
-
-<p>A flash of joy for a moment shot from the eye of the King of Darkness.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" he murmured, with clenched teeth, "beware, Doña Maria, beware!"</p>
-
-<p>He at once had divined the author of the abduction of Rosario.</p>
-
-<p>"What do you intend to do?" said Don Gregorio.</p>
-
-<p>"Nothing, till the return of our scout," he replied, coldly; and then
-turning towards Valentine, added&mdash;"Well, my friend, have you nothing
-else to announce to me?"</p>
-
-<p>"What leads you to suppose I have not told you all?" said the young man.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah!" Don Tadeo replied, with a melancholy smile, "you know, my friend,
-that we Spanish Americans, however civilized we may appear, are still
-semi-barbarians, and, as such, horribly superstitious."</p>
-
-<p>"Well?"</p>
-
-<p>"Well, then, among other follies of the same kind, we place faith in
-proverbs; and is there not one which somewhere says, that a misfortune
-never comes singly?"</p>
-
-<p>"Good Heavens! do you take me for a bird of ill omen, Don Tadeo?"</p>
-
-<p>"God forbid, my friend! only search in your memory, I am sure I am not
-mistaken, and that you have still something else to inform me of."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, you are right, I have other news to announce to you; whether good
-or bad, I leave you to judge."</p>
-
-<p>"I knew there was something more behind," said Don Tadeo, with a sad
-smile; "go on, my friend, let us hear this news, I am listening to you."</p>
-
-<p>"Yesterday, as you know, General Bustamente renewed the treaties of
-peace with the Araucano chiefs."</p>
-
-<p>"He did."</p>
-
-<p>"I cannot tell what fugitive or what scout gave them information of what
-had taken place here; but by evening they had learnt the defeat and
-capture of the General."</p>
-
-<p>"I can understand that; go on."</p>
-
-<p>"A kind of furious madness immediately seemed to possess them, and they
-held a great war council."</p>
-
-<p>"In which, I suppose, they decided upon breaking the treaties; is not
-that it?"</p>
-
-<p>"Exactly."</p>
-
-<p>"And most likely determined upon war with us?"</p>
-
-<p>"I suppose so; the four toquis cast the hatchet into the fire, and a
-supreme toqui was elected in their place."</p>
-
-<p>"Ah! ah!" said Don Tadeo, "and do you know the name of this supreme
-toqui?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes; Antinahuel."</p>
-
-<p>"I suspected as much," Don Tadeo cried, angrily; "that man has deceived
-us. He is a scoundrel only living by cunning, and whose devouring
-ambition leads him to sacrifice, when occasion offers, the dearest
-interests, and falsify the most sacred oaths. He has been playing a
-double game; he feigned to be the partisan of General Bustamente, as he
-appeared to be ours, building upon our mutual ruin his own fortunes and
-his future elevation. But he has thrown off the mask too hastily. By
-heaven! I will inflict a chastisement upon him, of which his compatriots
-shall preserve the remembrance, and which a century hence shall make
-them tremble with fear."</p>
-
-<p>"Beware of the ears that, listen to you," said Don Gregorio, directing
-his attention by a look to the Ulmen, who stood quietly before him.</p>
-
-<p>"Eh! what care I?" Don Tadeo replied, warmly; "if I speak thus, it is
-because I wish to be heard. I am a Spanish noble, and what my heart
-thinks my lips give utterance to; the Ulmen is welcome, if it seems good
-to him, to repeat my words to his chief."</p>
-
-<p>"The Great Eagle of the Whites is unjust towards his son," replied
-Trangoil-Lanec, in a serious tone; "all Araucanos have not the same
-heart; Antinahuel is only responsible for his own acts. Trangoil-Lanec
-is an Ulmen in his tribe; he knows how to be present at a council of
-chiefs: what his eyes see, what his ears hear, his heart forgets, his
-mouth repeats it not: why should my father address such unkind words to
-me, who am ready to devote myself to restore to him her he has lost?"</p>
-
-<p>"That is true; I am unjust, chief, I was wrong in speaking so; your
-heart is true, your tongue is unacquainted with falsehood. Pardon me,
-and let me clasp your loyal hand in mine."</p>
-
-<p>Trangoil-Lanec pressed warmly the hand Don Tadeo held out to him.</p>
-
-<p>"My father is good," he said; "his heart is at this moment darkened by
-the great misfortune that has fallen upon him; but let my father be
-comforted, Trangoil-Lanec will restore the blue-eyed maiden to him."</p>
-
-<p>"Thanks, chief! I accept your offer, you may depend upon my gratitude."</p>
-
-<p>"Trangoil-Lanec does not sell his services, he is repaid when his
-friends are happy."</p>
-
-<p>"Caramba!" cried Valentine, shaking the hand of the chief with all his
-might, "you are a worthy man, Trangoil-Lanec&mdash;I am proud of being your
-friend."</p>
-
-<p>Then, turning towards Don Tadeo, he said&mdash;"I must bid you farewell, for
-a time. I confide my brother Louis to your care."</p>
-
-<p>"Why do you leave me?" Don Tadeo asked, warmly.</p>
-
-<p>"I must. I see your heart is breaking, in spite of the incredible
-efforts you make to appear impassive. I know not the nature of the tie
-which binds you to the unfortunate girl who has been the victim of an
-odious crime; but I can see the loss of her is killing you&mdash;now, with
-the assistance of Heaven, I will restore her to you, Don Tadeo; I will,
-or I will die in the endeavour."</p>
-
-<p>"Don Valentine!" the gentleman exclaimed, strongly moved, "what do you
-propose to do? your project is wild; I cannot accept such devotion."</p>
-
-<p>"Leave it to me. Caramba! I am a Parisian&mdash;that is to say, as obstinate
-as a mule; and when once an idea, good or bad, has entered into my
-brain, it has no chance of getting out, I swear to you. I shall only
-take the time to embrace my poor brother, and set off immediately. Come,
-chief, let us set ourselves upon the track of the ravishers."</p>
-
-<p>"Let us be gone," said the Ulmen.</p>
-
-<p>Don Tadeo remained for a moment motionless, his eyes fixed upon the
-young man with a strange expression; a violent conflict appeared to be
-going on within him; at length nature prevailed, he burst into tears;
-and, throwing himself into the arms of the Frenchman, he murmured, in a
-voice choked by grief&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Valentine! Valentine! restore me my daughter!"</p>
-
-<p>The father had at length revealed himself; the stoicism of the statesman
-had sunk before paternal love!&mdash;But human nature has its limits, beyond
-which it cannot go; the moral shock which Don Tadeo had received, the
-immense efforts he had made to conceal it, had completely exhausted
-his strength, and he sank upon the slabs of the floor like a proud oak
-struck by thunder. He had fainted. Valentine contemplated him for a
-moment with pity and grief.</p>
-
-<p>"Poor father!" he said, "take courage, thy child shall be restored to
-thee!"</p>
-
-<p>And he left the room with hasty steps, followed by Trangoil-Lanec,
-whilst Don Gregorio, kneeling by his friend, gave him the most earnest
-and kind attentions for the recovery of his senses.</p>
-
-
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<h4><a name="CHAPTER_XLVI" id="CHAPTER_XLVI">CHAPTER XLVI.</a></h4>
-
-<h3>CURUMILLA.</h3>
-
-
-<p>In order to explain to the reader the miraculous disappearance of
-Rosario, we are obliged to make a few retrograde steps, and return to
-Curumilla, at the moment when the Ulmen, after his conversation with
-Trangoil-Lanec, had thrown himself, like a staunch bloodhound, upon the
-track of the young girl. Curumilla was a warrior as renowned for his
-prudence and wisdom in council, as for his bravery in fight. Having
-crossed the river, he left his horse in the care of a peon who had
-accompanied him, as it would not only be useless to him, but, still
-further, because it might even be injurious by betraying his presence by
-the clatter of its hoofs upon the ground. Indians are expert horsemen,
-but they are indefatigable walkers. Nature has endowed them with
-incredible strength of muscles of the legs and hams; and they possess in
-the highest degree the knowledge of that rising and sinking gymnastic
-step, which, for some years past, has been introduced into Europe,
-particularly into France, in the marching of troops. They accomplish
-with incredible swiftness journeys which horses could hardly perform,
-always directing their course in a straight line, or as the bird flies,
-without regard to the difficulties that may arise in their way, no
-obstacle being sufficient to turn them from their course. This quality
-renders them particularly formidable to the Spanish Americans, who
-cannot obtain this facility of locomotion, and who, in time of war, find
-the redskins always before them at the moment they least expect them,
-and that almost always at considerable distances from the spots where,
-logically, they ought to be.</p>
-
-<p>Curumilla, after having carefully studied the prints made by the
-ravishers, at once divined the route they had taken, and the place they
-were bound to. He did not amuse himself with following them, for that
-would have been losing precious time; on the contrary, he resolved to
-cut across country, and wait for them at an elbow of the road he was
-acquainted with, where, at all events, he could ascertain their numbers,
-and, perhaps, save the young girl. This being determined, the Ulmen
-set off. He walked for several hours without rest, eye and ear on the
-watch, trying to penetrate the darkness, and listening patiently to the
-various noises of the desert. These noises, which are to us white men
-a dead letter, have for the Indians, who are accustomed to interrogate
-them, a special signification, in which they are never deceived; they
-analyse them, they decompose them, and often learn by this means things
-which their enemies have the greatest interest in concealing from them.
-However inexplicable this fact may at first appear, it is very simple.
-There exists no noise in the desert without a cause. The flight of
-birds, the passage of wild beasts, the rustling of leaves, the rolling
-of a stone down a ravine, the undulation of high grass, the friction of
-branches in the woods, are for the Indian valuable indications.</p>
-
-<p>At a certain point with which he was acquainted, Curumilla laid himself
-down flat on his face, behind a block of rock, and remained motionless
-among the grass and bushes that bordered the route. He remained thus for
-more than an hour, without making the least movement. Whoever might have
-perceived him would have taken him for a dead body. The practised ear of
-the Indian, ever on the watch, at length caught in the distance the dull
-sound of the feet of horses and mules upon the dry and sonorous road.
-This noise grew rapidly nearer, and soon, from his hiding place, he
-perceived about twenty horsemen passing slowly along in the dark, within
-two lance lengths of him. The ravishers, emboldened by their numbers,
-and believing themselves secure from all danger, rode along in perfect
-security. The Indian raised his head softly, and leaning on his hands,
-followed them with his anxious eyes, and waited. They passed without
-seeing him. At some paces behind the troop, a horseman came along,
-leaving himself carelessly to the measured pace of his horse. His head
-occasionally sank upon his breast, and his hands had but a feeble hold
-of the reins. It was evident that this man was asleep in his saddle.</p>
-
-<p>A sudden idea rushed like lightning through Curumilla's brain; gathering
-himself up, he stiffened the iron muscles of his legs, and, bounding
-like a tiger, leaped up behind the horseman. Before the latter,
-surprised by this unexpected attack, had time to utter a cry, he pressed
-his throat in such a manner as, for the time, to render him incapable
-of calling for help. In the twinkling of an eye the horseman was gagged
-and thrown to the ground: then, securing the horse, Curumilla fastened
-it to a bush, and returned to his prisoner. The latter, with the stoical
-and disdainful courage peculiar to the aborigines of America, finding
-himself conquered, attempted no useless resistance; he looked at his
-conqueror with a smile of contempt, and waited for him to speak to him.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh!" said Curumilla, who, upon leaning over him, recognised him, "is it
-you, Joan?"</p>
-
-<p>"Curumilla!" the other replied.</p>
-
-<p>"Hum!" the Ulmen murmured to himself, "I would rather it had been
-somebody else. What is my brother doing on this path?" he asked.</p>
-
-<p>"Of what consequence is that to my brother?" said the Indian, replying
-to one question by another.</p>
-
-<p>"We have no time to waste," the chief replied, unsheathing his knife;
-"let my brother speak."</p>
-
-<p>Joan started; a shudder ran through his limbs at the blue light
-reflected by the long, sharp blade of the knife.</p>
-
-<p>"The chief can question me," he said, in a husky voice.</p>
-
-<p>"Where is my brother going?"</p>
-
-<p>"To the toldería of San Miguel."</p>
-
-<p>"Good! and for what purpose is my brother going there?"</p>
-
-<p>"To place in the hands of the sister of the grand toqui a woman whom we
-have carried off this morning."</p>
-
-<p>"Who ordered you to do so?"</p>
-
-<p>"She whom we are going to meet."</p>
-
-<p>"Who had the direction of this affair?"</p>
-
-<p>"I had."</p>
-
-<p>"Good! where does this woman expect the prisoner?"</p>
-
-<p>"I have told the chief; at the toldería of San Miguel."</p>
-
-<p>"In which casa?"</p>
-
-<p>"In the last; the one which stands a little apart from the others."</p>
-
-<p>"That is well! Let my brother exchange poncho and hat with me."</p>
-
-<p>The Indian obeyed without a word, and when the exchange was made,
-Curumilla said&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"I could kill my brother; prudence would even require me to do so, but
-pity has entered my heart&mdash;Joan has wives and children, he is one of the
-brave warriors of his tribe; if I let him live, will he be grateful?"</p>
-
-<p>The Indian had expected that he was going to die, but these words
-restored him to hope. He was not a bad man at bottom; the Ulmen knew him
-well, and was satisfied he would keep his promises.</p>
-
-<p>"My father holds my life in his hands," Joan replied; "if he does not
-take it today, I shall remain his debtor&mdash;I will lay down my life at a
-sign from him."</p>
-
-<p>"Very well!" said Curumilla, returning his knife to its sheath, "my
-brother may rise, a chief keeps his word."</p>
-
-<p>The Indian sprang upon his feet, and fervently kissed the hand of the
-man who had spared him.</p>
-
-<p>"What does my father command?" he asked.</p>
-
-<p>"My brother must repair as fast as possible to the toldería which the
-Huincas name Valdivia. He will seek Don Tadeo, the Great Eagle of the
-Whites, and relate to him what has passed between us, adding, that I
-will save the prisoner, or die."</p>
-
-<p>"Is that all?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes. If the Great Eagle requires the services of my brother, he will
-place himself without hesitation at his orders. Farewell! May Pillian
-guide my brother! and let him never forget that I was not willing to
-take the life that was in my power!"</p>
-
-<p>"Joan will not forget," the Indian replied.</p>
-
-<p>At a sign from Curumilla, he bent down in the high grass, crept along
-like a serpent, and disappeared in the direction of Valdivia. The chief,
-without losing an instant, jumped into the saddle and soon joined the
-little troop, who had continued jogging quietly along, without dreaming
-of the substitution that had just taken place. It was Curumilla who,
-while carrying the young girl into the house, had whispered hope and
-courage. These three words, in announcing to her that she had a friend
-watching over her, had restored her the strength necessary for the
-struggle that awaited her.</p>
-
-<p>After the unexpected arrival of Antinahuel, when, at the order of Doña
-Maria, Curumilla led away the prisoner, instead of reconducting her
-to the apartment in which she had been, he threw a poncho over her to
-disguise her.</p>
-
-<p>"Follow me," he said in a low voice; "step out boldly, I will endeavour
-to save you."</p>
-
-<p>The maiden hesitated; she was fearful of a snare. The Ulmen comprehended
-her feeling, and said quickly, in a low voice&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"I am Curumilla, one of the Ulmens devoted to the two Frenchmen, the
-friends of Don Tadeo."</p>
-
-<p>Rosario startled imperceptibly.</p>
-
-<p>"Go on," she replied in a firm tone; "happen what may, I will follow
-you."</p>
-
-<p>And they left the hut together. The Indians, dispersed here and there,
-were busily talking over the events of the day, and did not observe
-them. The two fugitives proceeded for ten minutes without exchanging a
-word. The village was soon lost in the darkness; at length Curumilla
-stopped at a thick clump of cactus, behind which two horses stood,
-saddled and bridled.</p>
-
-<p>"Does my sister find herself strong enough to mount on horseback, and
-ride a long distance?" he asked.</p>
-
-<p>"To escape from my persecutors," she replied, in a broken voice, "I feel
-I have strength to do anything."</p>
-
-<p>"Good!" said Curumilla, "my sister is courageous. Her God will help her!"</p>
-
-<p>"It is in Him alone I place my hope," she said, with a sigh.</p>
-
-<p>"To horse, then, and let us begone! minutes are ages!"</p>
-
-<p>He unfastened the horses, they mounted, and set of at full speed,
-without any sound being produced upon the road by their hoofs, which
-Curumilla had covered with pieces of sheepskin. The maiden breathed
-a sigh of relief on feeling herself once more free, and under the
-protection of a devoted friend. The fugitives continued to ride at a
-rapid pace, in a direction diametrically opposite to the one they should
-have taken to return to Valdivia. Prudence required that they should not
-yet take any route on which, according to all possibilities, they would
-be looked for.</p>
-
-<p>We must leave our friends in this critical position for the present;
-but those readers who feel an interest in the loves of Don Louis and
-Doña Rosario, will find their curiosity fully satisfied in the following
-volume of this series, called "The Pearl of the Andes."</p>
-
-
-
-<h4>THE END.</h4>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Adventurers, by Gustave Aimard
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: The Adventurers
-
-Author: Gustave Aimard
-
-Release Date: September 14, 2013 [EBook #43716]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE ADVENTURERS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Marc D'Hooghe at http://www.freeliterature.org
-
-
-
-
-THE ADVENTURERS
-
-A Story of a Love-Chase
-
-BY
-
-GUSTAVE AIMARD
-
-AUTHOR OF
-
-"LAST OF THE INCAS," "QUEEN OF THE SAVANNAH,"
-
-ETC.
-
-LONDON
-
-WARD AND LOCK, 158, FLEET STREET.
-
-1863.
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE.
-
-
-With the publication of the present and the ensuing volume, "The Pearl
-of the Andes," I am enabled to perfect the most important series of
-Aimard's Tales of Indian Life and Adventure. To preserve uniformity, the
-volumes of this series should be arranged in the following order on the
-book-shelf;--
-
- 1. THE ADVENTURERS.
- 2. THE PEARL OF THE ANDES.
- 3. THE TRAIL-HUNTER.
- 4. PIRATES OF THE PRAIRIES.
- 5. THE TRAPPER'S BRIDE.
- 6. THE TIGER SLAYER.
- 7. THE GOLD SEEKERS.
- 8. THE INDIAN CHIEF.
- 9. THE RED TRACK.
-
-Gustave Aimard has a precedent in Fenimore Cooper for introducing the
-same hero in a long range of volumes, and, like his great predecessor,
-he has so arranged, that each work should be complete in itself, and
-not necessitate the purchase of another. But Aimard has one marked
-advantage over Cooper; for while "Leather-Stocking" is but a creation
-of the fancy, or, at the most, the type of the Backwoodsman, the Count
-Louis who figures as the hero of Aimard's series, is a real man. Count
-de Raousset Boulbon, had he succeeded in his daring attempt of founding
-an independent kingdom in Mexico, would in all probability have become
-the Napoleon of the West. A gallant adventurer and thorough gentleman,
-he staked his life upon the issue, and ended his career the victim
-of unparalleled treachery, as Aimard has faithfully recorded. Hence
-Aimard's romances have the great merit of being founded on an historic
-basis, and but little fiction was required to heighten the startling
-interest of the narrative.
-
-Valentine Guillois, there is very little doubt, is intended for the
-Author himself, with all his qualities and defects. When he first
-reached the New World, he was the true, reckless Parisian; but constant
-intercourse with nature rendered him a generous and thoughtful friend
-of humanity. So soon as he returned to civilization, he began recording
-the history of his past life; not so much as a livelihood, as for
-the pleasure he felt in living once again the life of excitement and
-adventure which he had known among the Indians. Hence his books are
-written without an effort; they flow spontaneously from his pen; and the
-absence of artistic effect is the best guarantee of their truthfulness.
-
-It is not surprising, consequently, that M. Aimard's books have met
-with such extensive popularity. They have been translated into nearly
-every modern language, and the Author is now generally recognised as the
-French Cooper. The reception given to his stories in this country has
-been most flattering, and each day heightens their popularity. Hence
-it is not too much to assume that they will become standard works,
-especially with young readers, for whom they are especially adapted;
-because M. Aimard has never yet written a line which could prove
-offensive to the most delicate mind.
-
- L.W.
-
-
-CONTENTS.
-
-
- I. THE CHAPARRAL
- II. THE FOSTER BROTHERS
- III. THE RESOLUTION
- IV. THE EXECUTION
- V. THE PASSAGE
- VI. THE LINDA
- VII. HUSBAND AND WIFE
- VIII. THE DARK-HEARTS
- IX. IN THE STREET
- X. SWORD-THRUSTS
- XI. GENERAL BUSTAMENTE
- XII. THE SPY
- XIII. LOVE
- XIV. THE QUINTA VERDE
- XV. THE DEPARTURE
- XVI. THE MEETING
- XVII. THE PUELCHES
- XVIII. THE BLACK JACKAL
- XIX. TWO OLD FRIENDS
- XX. THE SORCERER
- XXI. THE OBSEQUIES OF AN APO-ULMEN
- XXII. EXPLANATIONS
- XXIII. THE CHINGANA.
- XXIV. THE TWO ULMENS
- XXV. THE SUN-TIGER
- XXVI. THE MATRICIDE
- XXVII. THE JUSTICE OF THE DARK-HEARTS
- XXVIII. THE TREATY OF PEACE
- XXIX. THE ABDUCTION
- XXX. THE PROTEST
- XXXI. SPANIARD AND INDIAN
- XXXII. IN THE MOUNTAIN
- XXXIII. ON THE WATCH
- XXXIV. FACE TO FACE
- XXXV. THE REVOLT
- XXXVI. THE LION AT BAY
- XXXVII. THE TRUCE
- XXXVIII. TWO ROGUISH PROFILES
- XXXIX. THE WOUNDED MAN
- XL. ARAUCANIAN DIPLOMACY
- XLI. THE COUNCIL
- XLII. THE NIGHT JOURNEY
- XLIII. TWO HATREDS
- XLIV. THE RETURN TO VALDIVIA
- XLV. THE FATHER REVEALS HIMSELF
- XLVI. CURUMILLA
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
-THE CHAPARRAL.
-
-
-
-During my last sojourn in America, chance, or rather my good star, led
-me to form an acquaintance with one of those hunters, or wood rangers,
-the type of whom has been immortalized by Cooper, in his poetical
-personage, _Leather-Stockings_.
-
-The strange circumstance by which we were brought together was as
-follows. Towards the end of July, 1855, I had left Galveston, terrified
-at the fevers prevalent there, which are so fatal to Europeans, with the
-intention of visiting the north-west portion of Texas, a country I was
-then unacquainted with.
-
-A Spanish proverb somewhere says, "It is better to go alone than in
-bad company;" and, like all other proverbs, this possesses a certain
-foundation of truth, particularly in America, where the traveller is
-exposed at each instant to the chance of meeting rogues of every hue,
-who, thanks to their seducing exterior, charm him, win his confidence,
-and take advantage of the first occasion to remorselessly plunder and
-assassinate him.
-
-I had profited by the proverb, and, like a shrewd old traveller of the
-prairies, as I knew no one who inspired me with sufficient sympathy
-to lead me to make him my travelling companion, I had bravely set out
-alone, clothed in the picturesque dress of the inhabitants of the
-country, armed to the teeth, and mounted upon an excellent half wild
-horse, which had cost me twenty-five piastres--an enormous sum in those
-countries, where horses are considered as worth little or nothing.
-
-I carelessly wandered here and there, living that nomadic life which
-is so full of attractions; at times stopping at a _tolderia_, at
-others encamping in the desert, hunting wild animals, and plunging
-deeper and deeper into unknown regions. I had, in this fashion, passed
-through, without any untoward accident, Fredericksburgh, the Llana
-Braunfels, and had just left Castroville, on my way to Quichi. Like
-all Spanish-American villages, Castroville is nothing but a miserable
-agglomeration of ruined cabins, cut at right angles by streets choked
-with weeds, growing undisturbed, and concealing multitudes of ants,
-reptiles, and even rabbits of a very small breed, which spring up
-beneath the feet of the few passengers. The _pueblo_ is bounded on the
-west by the Medina, a slender thread of water, almost dry in the great
-heat seasons; and on the east by thickly-wooded hills, the dark green of
-which forms a pleasing contrast with the pale blue of the sky.
-
-At Galveston I had undertaken to deliver a letter to an inhabitant of
-Castroville. The worthy man lived in this village like La Fontaine's rat
-in the depths of its Dutch cheese. Charmed by the arrival of a stranger,
-who, no doubt, brought him news for which he had been long anxious, he
-received me in the most cordial manner, and thought of every expedient
-to detain me. Unfortunately, the little I had seen of Castroville had
-sufficed to completely disgust me with it, and my only wish was to get
-out of it as quickly as possible. My host, in despair at seeing all
-his advances repulsed, at length consented to allow me to continue my
-journey.
-
-"Adieu, then," he said, warmly pressing my hand, with a sigh of regret;
-"since you are determined to go, may God protect you! You are wrong
-in setting out so late; the road you have to travel is dangerous; the
-_Indios bravos_ are up; they assassinate without mercy all the whites
-who fall into their hands--beware!"
-
-I smiled at this warning, which I took for a last effort of the worthy
-man to detain me.
-
-"Bah!" I replied gaily; "the Indians and I are too old acquaintances for
-me to fear anything on their account."
-
-My host shook his head sorrowfully, and retreated into his hut, making
-me a last farewell greeting. I again set forward. I soon began to
-reflect that it was full late, and pressed my horse, in order to pass,
-before nightfall, a _chaparral_, or large thicket of underwood, of at
-least two miles in length, against which my host had particularly warned
-me. This ill-famed spot had a very sinister aspect. The mezquite, the
-acacia, and the cactus constituted its sole vegetation, while here and
-there, whitened bones and planted crosses plainly designated places
-where murders had been committed. Beyond that extended a vast plain,
-called the Leona, peopled by animals of every description. This plain,
-covered by grass at least two feet in height, was dotted at intervals
-with thickets of trees, upon which warbled thousands of golden-throated
-starlings, cardinals, and bluebirds. I was anxious to reach the
-Leona, which I saw in the distance; but ere I did so, I had to cross
-the chaparral. After examining my weapons, and looking carefully in
-all directions, as I could perceive nothing positively suspicious, I
-resolutely spurred my horse forward, determined, if attacked, to sell my
-life as dearly as possible.
-
-The sun, in the meantime, was sinking rapidly towards the horizon, the
-ruddy hues of closing day tinged with their changing reflections the
-summits of the wooded hills, and a fresh breeze agitated the branches
-of the trees with mysterious murmurs. In this country, where there is
-no twilight, night was not long in enveloping me in thick darkness, and
-that before I had passed through two-thirds of the chaparral.
-
-I was beginning to hope I should reach the Leona safe and sound, when,
-all at once, my horse made a violent bound on one side, pricking up its
-ears, and snorting loudly. The sudden shock almost threw me out of the
-saddle, and it was not without trouble that I recovered the mastery
-over my horse, which displayed signs of the greatest terror. As always
-happens in such cases, I instinctively looked round me for the cause of
-this panic; and soon the truth was revealed to me. A cold perspiration
-bedewed my brow, and a shudder of terror ran through my whole frame, at
-the horrible spectacle which met my eyes. Five dead human bodies lay
-stretched beneath the trees, within ten paces of me. Among them was
-one of a woman, and one of a girl about fourteen years of age. They
-all belonged to the white race. They appeared to have fought long and
-obstinately before they fell; they were literally covered with wounds;
-and long arrows, with jagged barbs, and painted red, stood out from the
-bodies, which they had pierced through and through. The victims had all
-been scalped. It was evidently the work of Indians, marked with their
-sanguinary rage, and their inveterate hatred for the white race. The
-form and colour of the arrows told me that the perpetrators of this
-atrocity were the Apaches, the most cruel plunderers of the desert.
-Around the bodies I observed fragments of both wagons and furniture. The
-unfortunate beings, assassinated with refined cruelty, had, no doubt,
-been poor emigrants on their way to Castroville.
-
-At the aspect of this heartbreaking spectacle, I cannot express the pity
-and grief which weighed upon my spirits; high in the air, urubus and
-vultures hovered with lazy wings over the bodies, uttering lugubrious
-cries of joy, whilst in the depths of the chaparral the wolves and
-jaguars began to growl portentously.
-
-I cast a melancholy glance around: all immediately near to me was quiet.
-The Apaches had, according to all appearances, surprised the emigrants
-during a halt. Gutted bales were still ranged in a symmetrical circle,
-and a fire, near which was a heap of dry wood, was not yet extinguished.
-
-"No!" said I to myself, "whatever may happen, I will not leave
-Christians without burial, to become, in this desert, the prey of wild
-beasts."
-
-My resolution, once formed, was soon carried into execution. Springing
-to the ground, I hobbled my horse, gave it some provender, and cast some
-branches of wood upon the fire, which soon sparkled and sent into the
-air a column of bright flame. Among the necessaries of the emigrants
-were spades, pickaxes, and other agricultural instruments, which, being
-of no use to the Indians, they had disdainfully left behind them. I
-seized a spade, and, after having carefully explored the environs
-of my encampment, to assure myself that no immediate danger need be
-apprehended, I set to work to dig a grave.
-
-The night had now set in; one of those American nights, clear,
-silent, full of intoxicating odours, and mysterious melodies chanted
-by the desert in praise of God. Extraordinary to say, all my fears
-had vanished, as if by enchantment! Though alone in this sinister
-place, close to these frightfully-mutilated carcasses, watched in the
-darkness, no doubt, by the unseen eyes of wild beasts, and, perhaps,
-of the murderous Indians, some incomprehensible influence sustained
-me, and gave me strength to accomplish the rude but sacred task I had
-undertaken. Instead of thinking of the dangers which surrounded me, I
-found myself yielding to a pensive melancholy. I thought of these poor
-people, who had come from distant lands, full of hope for the future,
-to seek in the New World a little of the comfort and well-being which
-were denied to them at home, and who, scarcely landed, had fallen, in an
-obscure corner of the desert, by the hands of ferocious savages. They
-had left in their own country friends, perhaps relations, to whom their
-fate would for ever remain a mystery, and who would for years reckon
-the hours with anxiety, looking for their much-wished return, or for
-intelligence of their success in their bold undertaking.
-
-Except two or three alarms caused by the rustling of the leaves in the
-bushes, nothing occurred to interrupt my melancholy duty. In less than
-three-quarters of an hour I had dug a grave large enough to contain the
-five bodies. After extracting the arrows by which they were transfixed,
-I raised them one after the other in my arms, and laid them gently
-side by side at the bottom of the grave. I then hastened to throw in
-the mould again, till it was level with the sod; and that being done,
-I dragged upon the surface all the large stones I could find, to keep
-wild beasts from profaning the dead. This religious duty accomplished,
-I breathed a deep sigh of satisfaction, and bowing my head towards the
-ground, I mentally addressed a short prayer to the Almighty, for the
-unfortunate beings I had buried.
-
-Upon raising my head, I uttered a cry of surprise and terror, while at
-the same time mechanically feeling for my revolver; for, without the
-least noise having given me warning of his approach, a man was standing
-within four paces of me, watching me earnestly, and leaning on his long
-rifle. Two magnificent Newfoundland dogs were lying carelessly but
-quietly at his feet. On observing my gesture, the unknown smiled with a
-kindly expression, and holding out his hand to me over the grave, said--
-
-"Fear nothing! I am a friend. You have buried these poor people; _I_
-have avenged them--their assassins are dead!"
-
-I silently pressed the hand that was so frankly extended to me.
-Acquaintance was formed--we were friends--we are so still! A few minutes
-later we were seated near the fire, supping together with a good
-appetite, while the dogs kept watch against intruders.
-
-The companion I had fallen in with in so curious a manner was a man of
-about forty-five years of age, although he did not appear to be more
-than thirty-two. He was tall and well made; his broad shoulders and
-muscular limbs denoting extraordinary strength and agility. He wore the
-picturesque hunter's costume in all its purity, that is to say, the
-_capote_, or surtout (which is nothing but a kind of blanket worn as a
-robe, fastened to the shoulders, and falling in long folds behind), a
-shirt of striped cotton, large _mitasses_ (drawers of doeskin, stitched
-with hair, fastened at distances, and ornamented with little bells),
-leather gaiters, moccasins of elk skin, braided with beads and porcupine
-quills, and a checked woollen belt, from which hung his knife, tobacco
-pouch, powder horn, pistols, and medicine bag. His headdress consisted
-of a cap made of the skin of a beaver, the tail of which fell between
-his shoulders. This man was a type of a hardy race of adventurers who
-traverse America in all directions. A primitive race, longing for
-open air, space, and liberty, opposed to our ideas of civilization,
-and consequently destined to disappear before the immigration of the
-laborious races, whose powerful agents of conquest are steam and the
-application of mechanical inventions of all kinds.
-
-This hunter was a Frenchman, and his frank, manly countenance, his
-picturesque language, his open and engaging manners, notwithstanding
-his long abode in America, had preserved a reflex of the mother country
-which awakened sympathy and created interest.
-
-All the countries of the New World were familiar to him; he had lived
-more than twenty years in the depths of the woods, and had been engaged
-in dangerous and distant excursions among the Indian tribes. Hence,
-although myself well initiated in the customs of the redskins, and
-though a great part of my existence had been passed in the desert, I
-have felt myself often shudder involuntarily at the recital of his
-adventures. When seated beside him on the banks of the Rio Gila, during
-an excursion we had undertaken into the prairies, he would at times
-allow himself to be carried away by his remembrances, and relate to me,
-as he smoked his Indian pipe, the strange history of the early days
-of his abode in the New World. It is one of these recitals I am about
-to lay before my readers--the first in order of date, since it is the
-history of the events which led him to become a wood ranger. I do not
-venture to hope that my readers will take the interest in it which it
-excited in me; but I beg them to have the kindness to recollect that
-this narrative was told me in the desert, amidst that grand, vast, and
-powerful nature, unknown to the inhabitants of old Europe, and that I
-had it from the lips of the man who had been the hero.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
-THE FOSTER BROTHERS.
-
-
-On the 31st of December, 1834, at eleven o'clock in the evening, a man
-of about twenty-five years of age, of handsome person and countenance,
-and aristocratic appearance, was sitting, or rather reclining, in a
-luxurious easy chair, near the mantelpiece, within which sparkled a
-fire that the advanced season rendered indispensable. This personage
-was the Count Maxime Edouard Louis de Prebois-Crance. His countenance,
-of a cadaverous paleness, formed a striking contrast with his black
-curly hair, which fell in disorder upon his shoulders, covered by
-a large-patterned damask dressing gown. His brows were contracted,
-and his eyes were fixed with feverish impatience upon the dial of a
-charming Louis Quinze clock, whilst his left hand, hanging carelessly
-by his side, played with the silky ears of a magnificent Newfoundland
-dog which lay by his side. The room in which the Count was sitting was
-furnished with all the refinement of comfort invented by modern luxury.
-A four-branched chandelier, with rose-coloured wax candles, placed upon
-a table, was scarcely sufficient to enliven the room, and only spread
-around a dim, uncertain light. Without, the rain was dashing against
-the windows violently; and the wind sighed in mysterious murmurs, which
-disposed the mind to melancholy. When the clock struck the hour the
-Count started up, as if aroused from a dream. He passed his thin white
-hand across his moist brow, and said, in a dissatisfied tone--
-
-"He will not come!"
-
-But at that moment the dog, which had been so motionless, sprang up and
-bounded towards the door, wagging its tail with joy. The door opened,
-the _portiere_ was lifted by a firm hand, and a man appeared.
-
-"Here you are at last!" the Count exclaimed, advancing towards the
-newcomer, who had great trouble to get rid of the caresses of the dog.
-"I had begun to be afraid that you, like the rest, had forgotten me."
-
-"I do not understand you, brother, but trust you will explain yourself,"
-the other replied. "Come, that will do, Caesar; lie down! you are a very
-good dog, but lie down!"
-
-And drawing an easy chair towards the fire, he sat down at the other
-side of the fire, in front of the Count, who had resumed his place. The
-dog lay down between them.
-
-The personage so anxiously expected by the Count formed a strange
-contrast with him; for, just as M. de Prebois-Crance united in himself
-all the qualities which physically distinguish nobility of race, the
-other displayed all the lively, energetic strength of a true child of
-the people. He was a man of twenty-six years of age; tall, thin, and
-perfectly well proportioned; while his face, bronzed by the sun, and
-his marked features, lit up by blue eyes sparkling with intelligence,
-wore an expression of bravery, mildness, and loyalty of character that
-created sympathy at first sight. He was dressed in the elegant uniform
-of a quartermaster sergeant of the Spahis, and the cross of the legion
-of honour glittered on his breast. With his head leaning on his right
-hand, a pensive brow and a thoughtful eye, he examined his friend
-attentively, whilst twisting his long, silky light-coloured moustache
-with the other hand.
-
-The Count, shrinking before his earnest look, which appeared trying to
-read his most secret thoughts, broke the silence abruptly.
-
-"You have been a long time in responding to my message," he said.
-
-"This is the second time you have addressed that reproach to me, Louis,"
-the soldier replied, taking a paper from his breast; "you forget the
-terms of the note which your groom brought yesterday to my quarters."
-
-And he was preparing to read.
-
-"It is useless to read it," said the Count, with a melancholy smile. "I
-acknowledge I am in the wrong."
-
-"Well, then, let us see," said the Spahi gaily, "what this serious
-affair is which makes you stand in need of me. Explain: is there a woman
-to be carried off?--Have you a duel on hand?--Tell me."
-
-"Nothing that you can possibly imagine," the Count interrupted him
-bitterly; "therefore do not waste time in useless surmises."
-
-"What the devil is it, then?"
-
-"I am going to blow out my brains."
-
-The young man uttered these words with so firm and resolute an accent,
-that the soldier started in spite of himself, and bent an anxious glance
-upon the speaker.
-
-"You believe me mad, do you not?" the Count continued, who guessed his
-friend's thoughts. "No, I am not mad, Valentine; I am only at the bottom
-of an abyss from which I can only escape by death or infamy, and I
-prefer death."
-
-The soldier made no reply. With an energetic gesture he pushed back his
-chair, and began to walk about the room with hurried steps. The Count
-had allowed his head to sink upon his breast in a state of perfect
-prostration of mind. After a long silence, during which the fury of the
-storm without increased, Valentine resumed his seat.
-
-"A very strong reason must have obliged you to take such a
-determination," he said coolly; "I will not endeavour to combat it; but
-I command you, by our friendship, to tell me fully what has led you to
-form it. I am your foster brother, Louis; we have grown up together; our
-ideas have been too long in common, our friendship is too strong and too
-fervent for you to refuse to satisfy me."
-
-"To what purpose?" cried the Count, impatiently; "my sorrows are of a
-nature which none but he who experiences them can comprehend."
-
-"A bad pretext, brother," replied the soldier, in a rough tone; "the
-sorrows we dare not avow are of a kind that make us blush."
-
-"Valentine," said the Count, with a flashing eye, "it is ill judged to
-speak so."
-
-"On the contrary, it is quite right," replied the young man, warmly. "I
-love you, I owe you the truth; why should I deceive you? No, you know my
-frankness; therefore do not hope that I shall listen to you with my eyes
-shut. If you want to be flattered in your last moments, why send for me?
-Is it to applaud your death? If so, brother, farewell! I will retire,
-for I have nothing to do here. You great gentlemen, who have only known
-the trouble of coming into the world, know nothing of life but its joys;
-at the first roseleaf which chance happens to ruffle in your bed of
-happiness, you think yourselves lost, and appeal to that greatest of all
-cowardices, suicide."
-
-"Valentine!" the Count cried angrily.
-
-"Yes," continued the young man, with increased energy, "I repeat, that
-supreme cowardice! Man is no more at liberty to quit life when he
-fancies he is tired of it, than the soldier is to quit his post when he
-comes face to face with his country's enemy. Your sorrows, indeed! I
-know well what they are."
-
-"You know?" demanded the Count with astonishment.
-
-"All--listen to me; and when I have told you my thoughts, why, kill
-yourself if you like. Pardieu! do you think when I came here I did not
-know why you summoned me? A gladiator, far too weak to fight the good
-fight, you have cast yourself defencelessly among the wild beasts of
-this terrible arena called Paris--and you have fallen, as was sure to
-be the case. But remember, the death you contemplate will complete your
-dishonour in the eyes of all, instead of reinstating you or surrounding
-you with the halo of false glory you are ambitious of."
-
-"Valentine! Valentine!" cried the Count, striking the table forcibly
-with his clenched hand, "what gives you a right to speak to me thus?"
-
-"My friendship," the soldier replied, energetically, "and the position
-you have yourself placed me in by sending for me. Two causes reduce you
-to despair. These two causes are, in the first place, your love for
-a coquettish woman, a Creole, who has played with your heart as the
-panther of her own savannahs plays with the inoffensive animals she is
-preparing to devour.--Is that true?"
-
-The young man made no reply. With his elbows on the table, his face
-buried in his hands, he remained motionless, apparently insensible to
-the reproaches of his foster brother. Valentine continued--
-
-"Secondly, when, in order to win favour in her eyes, you have
-compromised your fortune, and squandered all that your father had left
-you, this woman flits away as she came, rejoicing over the mischief
-she has done, over the victims she has left on the path she has trod,
-leaving to you and to so many others the despair and the shame of having
-been the sport of a coquette. What urges you to seek refuge in death is
-not the loss of fortune, but the impossibility of following this woman,
-the sole cause of all your misfortunes. I defy you to contradict me."
-
-"Well, I admit all that is true. It is that alone which kills me. What
-care I for the loss of fortune? She alone is the object of my ambition!
-I love her--I love her--I tell you, so that I could struggle against
-the whole world to obtain her!" the young man exclaimed with great
-excitement. "Oh, if I could but hope! Hope--a word void of meaning,
-invented by the ambitious, always implying something unattainable! Do
-you not plainly see the truth of what I say? There is nothing left me
-but to die!"
-
-Valentine contemplated him for some minutes with a sad countenance.
-Suddenly his brow cleared, his eye sparkled; he laid his hand upon the
-Count's shoulder.
-
-"Is this, then, more than a caprice? Do you really love this woman?" he
-said.
-
-"Have I not told you that I am ready to die for her?"
-
-"Ay; and you told me at the same time that you would struggle with the
-whole world to obtain her."
-
-"I did--and would."
-
-"Well, then," continued Valentine, fixing his eyes earnestly upon him,
-"I can help you to find this woman again--I can."
-
-"You can?"
-
-"Yes, I can."
-
-"Oh! you are mad! She has left Paris, and no one knows into what region
-of America she has retreated."
-
-"Of what consequence is that?"
-
-"And then, besides, I am ruined!"
-
-"So much the better."
-
-"Valentine, be careful of what you say," the young man remarked with a
-sigh; "in spite of my reason, I allow myself to believe you."
-
-"Hope, man! hope, I tell you."
-
-"Oh, no; no, that is impossible!"
-
-"Nothing is impossible; that is a word invented by the impotent and the
-cowardly. I repeat that I not only will find this woman for you again,
-but that she--she herself, mind--shall be afraid lest you should despise
-her love."
-
-"Oh!"
-
-"Who knows? You yourself may then, perhaps, reject it."
-
-"Valentine! Valentine!"
-
-"Well, to obtain this glorious result, I only ask two years."
-
-"So long?"
-
-"Oh, such is man!" cried the soldier, with a faint, pitying laugh. "But
-an instant ago, and you were anxious to die, because the word had never
-stood in its true light before you; and now you have not the courage to
-look forward, or wait two years, which constitute only a few minutes of
-human life!"
-
-"Yes, but----"
-
-"Be satisfied, brother--be satisfied! If in two years I have not
-fulfilled my promise, I myself will load your pistols--and then----"
-
-"Well, and then?"
-
-"And then you shall not die alone," he said coolly.
-
-The Count looked at him. Valentine seemed transfigured: his countenance
-wore an expression of indomitable energy, which his foster brother had
-never observed in it before; his eyes sparkled with unwonted brilliancy.
-The young man avowed himself conquered; he took his friend's hand, and
-pressing it warmly, said--
-
-"I agree!"
-
-"You now, then, belong to me?"
-
-"I give myself entirely up to you."
-
-"That's well!"
-
-"But what will you do?"
-
-"Listen to me attentively," the soldier said, sinking back into his
-chair, and motioning to his friend to resume his seat. At this moment
-the clock struck the hour of midnight, and, from a feeling for which
-they could not account, the young men listened silently and reflectively
-to the twelve strokes which resounded at equal intervals upon the bell.
-
-When the echo of the last stroke had ceased to vibrate, Valentine lit a
-cigar, and turning towards Louis, whose eyes were intensely fixed upon
-him, "Now, then," he said slowly, emitting a puff of thin blue smoke,
-which went curling gracefully up towards the ceiling.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
-THE RESOLUTION.
-
-
-"I am listening," said Louis, leaning forward as if to hear the better.
-
-Valentine resumed with a melancholy smile.
-
-"We have now reached the 1st of January, 1835," said he; "with the last
-vibration of midnight your existence as a gentleman has come to an end.
-From this time you are about to commence a life of trials and struggles;
-in a word, you are about to become a man!"
-
-The Count gave him an inquiring glance.
-
-"I will explain myself," Valentine continued; "but in order to do that,
-you must, in the first place, allow me, in a few words, to recall your
-history to you."
-
-"Surely, I am well enough acquainted with that," interrupted the Count,
-in a tone that displayed impatience.
-
-"Well, perhaps you are; but, at all events, listen to my version of it;
-if I err, put me right."
-
-"Follow your own humour," the Count replied, sinking back into his chair
-with the air of a man whom politeness obliges to listen to a tiresome
-discourse.
-
-Though he saw it, Valentine appeared to take no notice of this movement
-on the part of his foster brother. He relit his cigar, which he had
-allowed to go out, patted the dog, whose great head was lying upon his
-knees, and began, as if convinced that Louis gave him the most profound
-attention.
-
-"Your history is that of almost every man of your rank," said he. "Your
-ancestors, whose name can be traced to the Crusades, left you at your
-birth a noble title, and a hundred thousand francs a year. Rich, without
-having had occasion to employ your faculties to gain your fortune,
-and consequently ignorant of the real value of money, you spent it
-heedlessly, believing it to be inexhaustible. This is just what has
-happened; only, one day, when you least expected it, the hideous spectre
-of ruin rose up suddenly before you, and you had a glimpse of want,
-that is, of the necessity for labour; and then you drew back terrified,
-declaring there was no refuge but in death."
-
-"All that is perfectly true," the Count interrupted; "but you forget to
-mention, that before forming this last resolution, I took care to put
-my affairs in order, and to pay all my creditors. I then became my own
-master, and had a right to dispose of my life as I thought fit."
-
-"Not at all. And it is this which your education as a gentleman has
-prevented you from understanding. Your life is not your own; it is
-a loan which God has made you. It is, consequently, nothing but an
-expectation, a _waiting_, a passage: for this reason it is short,
-but the profit of it is due to humanity. Every man who wastes the
-faculties which he holds from God in orgies and debaucheries, commits a
-robbery upon the great human family. Remember that we are all mutually
-responsible for one another, and that we ought to employ our faculties
-for the advantage of the whole."
-
-"For Heaven's sake, brother, a truce to your sermons! Such theories,
-more or less paradoxical, may succeed with certain people, but----"
-
-"Brother," Valentine interrupted, "do not speak so. In spite of
-yourself, your pride of race dictates words which you will ere long
-regret. Certain people! there you have let slip the great word. Oh,
-Louis, Louis! how many things you have yet to learn! But that we may
-know what we are about, reckoning all your resources, how much have you
-left?"
-
-"Oh, I scarcely know! A pitiful sum."
-
-"Well, but how much?"
-
-"Good Heavens! some forty thousand francs, I suppose, at most, which may
-amount to sixty thousand by the sale of these luxurious trifles," the
-Count said carelessly.
-
-Valentine started up in his chair.
-
-"Sixty thousand francs!" he cried; "and you are in despair! and have
-made up your mind to die! Senseless fellow! why, these sixty thousand
-francs, well employed, are a fortune! they will enable you to find the
-woman you love! How many poor devils would fancy themselves rich with
-such a sum!"
-
-"What do you mean to do, then?"
-
-"You shall see. What is the name of the lady you are in love with?"
-
-"Dona Rosario del Valle."
-
-"Very well. She has, you say, gone to America?"
-
-"Ten days ago; but I, in justice, must observe to you, that Dona
-Rosario, whom you do not know, is a noble and amiable girl, who has
-never lent an ear to one of my flatteries, or given favourable heed to
-the ruinous extravagances which I committed to please her."
-
-"Ah, that is very possible! why, then, should I seek to rob you of this
-sweet illusion? Only it makes me the more puzzled to perceive how, under
-these circumstances, you could manage to melt your fortune, which was
-considerable, like a lump of butter in the sun."
-
-"Here! read this note from my broker."
-
-"Oh!" said Valentine, pushing back the paper; "you have been dabbling
-on the Stock Exchange, have you! Everything is now easily explained, my
-poor pigeon; the kites have plucked you nicely! Well, brother, you must
-take your revenge."
-
-"Oh, I ask nothing better!" said the young man, knitting his brows.
-
-"We are of the same age; my mother's milk nourished us both; in the
-eyes of God we are brothers! I will make a man of you! I will help
-you to put on that armour of brass which will render you invincible.
-Whilst you, protected by your name and your fortune, allowed life to
-glide luxuriously away, only plucking its flowers as it passed, I, a
-poor wretch wandering over the rough pavement of Paris, carried on a
-gigantic struggle to obtain a mere existence; a struggle of every hour
-and every minute, where the victory for me was a morsel of bread, and
-experience most dearly bought; for often, when I held horses, sold
-theatre checks, or acted clown to a mountebank--in fact, when I went
-through the thousand impossible shifts of the Bohemian, depression and
-discouragement nearly choked me; often and often have I felt my burning
-brow and throbbing temples clasped in the pinching vice of want; but I
-resisted, I girded myself up against adversity; never did I allow myself
-to be conquered, although I left upon the thorns of my rugged path many
-of the rags of my most fondly-cherished illusions; while my heart,
-writhing with despair, has bled from twenty wounds at once! Courage,
-Louis! henceforth there will be two of us to fight the battle! You shall
-be the head to conceive, I the arm to execute; you the intelligence, I
-the strength! Now the struggle will be equal, for we will sustain one
-another. Trust in me, my brother; a day will come when success will
-crown our efforts!"
-
-"I can fully appreciate your devotion, and I accept it. Am I not, at
-present, your property? Entertain no fear of my resisting you. But I
-cannot help telling you that I fear all my attempts will be in vain, and
-that we shall be forced, sooner or later, to fall back upon that last
-means which you now prevent me having recourse to."
-
-"Oh, thou man of little faith!" Valentine said, cheerfully; "on the road
-which we are about to take, fortune will be our slave!"
-
-Louis could not repress a smile.
-
-"We must, at all events, depend upon the aid of chance in what we are
-about to undertake," he said.
-
-"Chance! chance is the hope of fools; the strong man commands it."
-
-"Well, but what do you mean to do?"
-
-"The lady you love is in America, is she not?"
-
-"I have already told you so several times."
-
-"Very well, then, we must go thither."
-
-"But I do not know even in what part of America she resides."
-
-"Of what consequence is that? The New World is the country of gold--the
-true region of adventurers! We shall retrieve our fortunes whilst
-searching for her; and is that so disagreeable a thing? Tell me--this
-lady was born somewhere?"
-
-"She is a Chilian."
-
-"Good! she has gone back to Chili, then; and it is there we shall find
-her."
-
-Louis looked at his foster brother for a moment, with a species of
-respectful admiration.
-
-"What! do you seriously mean that you will do this, brother?" he said,
-in an agitated voice.
-
-"Without hesitation."
-
-"Abandon the military career which offers you so many chances of
-success? I know that in three months you will be an officer."
-
-"I have ceased to be a soldier since the morning; I have found a
-substitute."
-
-"Oh, that is not possible!"
-
-"Ay, but it is done."
-
-"But your old mother, my nurse, whose only support you are!"
-
-"Out of what you have left we will give her a few thousand francs,
-which, joined to my pension, will suffice for her to live on till we
-come back."
-
-"Oh," said the young man, "I cannot accept of such a sacrifice--my
-honour forbids it!"
-
-"Unfortunately, brother," Valentine said, in a tone which silenced the
-Count, "you have it not in your power to prevent it. In acting as I
-propose to do I am only discharging a sacred duty."
-
-"I do not understand you."
-
-"What is the use of explaining it to you?"
-
-"I insist."
-
-"Very good; and, perhaps, it will be better. Listen:--When, after
-having nursed you, my mother restored you to your family, my father fell
-sick, and died at the end of an illness of eight months, leaving my
-mother and myself in the greatest want; the little we possessed had been
-spent in medicines, and in paying the doctor for his visits. We ought to
-have had recourse to your family, who would, no doubt, have relieved us;
-but my mother would never consent to it. 'The Count de Prebois-Crance
-has done as much as he ought,' she remarked, 'he shall not be troubled
-any more.'"
-
-"She was wrong," said Louis.
-
-"I know she was," Valentine replied. "In the meantime, hunger soon began
-to be felt. It was then I undertook all those impossible trades of which
-I just now spoke to you. One day, as I was carrying my cap round in the
-Place du Trone, after swallowing sabres and eating fire, to the great
-delight of the crowd, I found myself face to face with an officer of the
-Chasseurs d'Afrique, who looked at me with an air of pity and kindness
-that melted my heart within me. He led me away with him, made me relate
-my history, and insisted upon being conducted to the shed where I and
-my mother lived. At the sight of our misery the old soldier was much
-affected; a tear, which he could not restrain, flowed silently down his
-sunburnt cheek. Louis, that officer was your father."
-
-"My noble and good father!" the Count exclaimed, pressing his foster
-brother's hand.
-
-"Yes! yes, noble and good! he secured my mother a little annuity which
-enables her to live, and took me into his own regiment. Two years ago,
-during the last expedition against the Rey of Constantine, your father
-was struck by a bullet in his chest, and died at the end of two hours,
-calling upon his son."
-
-"Yes," the young man said, with tears in his eyes, "I know he did."
-
-"But what you do not know, Louis, is, that at the point of death your
-father turned towards me--for, from the moment he had received his wound
-I had never left him."
-
-Louis again silently pressed the hand of Valentine, whilst the latter
-continued--
-
-"'Valentine,' he said to me, in a faint voice, broken by the rattle of
-death, for the mortal agony had commenced, 'my son is left alone, and
-without experience; he has nobody but you, his foster brother. Watch
-over him--never abandon him! May I depend upon your promise? it will
-mitigate the pain of dying.' I knelt down beside him, and respectfully
-seizing the hand he held out to me, exclaimed--'Die in peace! in the
-hour of adversity I will be always by the side of your Louis. Two tears
-of joy at that awful hour dropped from your father's eyes; he said, in a
-faltering voice--'God has heard your oath and murmuring your name, and
-clasping my hand, he expired. Louis, I owe to your father the comfort
-my mother enjoys; I owe to your father the feelings that make me a man,
-and this cross which glitters on my breast. Can you not now comprehend,
-then, why I have spoken to you as I have done? While you held your
-course in your strength, I kept aloof; but now that the hour has arrived
-for accomplishing my vow, no human power can prevent me from doing so."
-
-The two young men were silent for a moment, and then Louis, laying his
-face on the soldier's honest chest, said, with a burst of tears--
-
-"When shall we set out, brother?"
-
-The latter looked at him earnestly--
-
-"You are fully resolved to commence a new life?"
-
-"Entirely!" Louis replied, in a firm tone.
-
-"Do you leave no regrets behind you?"
-
-"None."
-
-"You are ready to pass bravely through all the trials to which I may
-expose you?"
-
-"I am."
-
-"That is well, brother! it is thus I wish you to be. We will set out as
-soon as we have settled the balance of your past life. You must enter
-on the new existence I am about to open to you quite free from clogs or
-remembrances."
-
- * * * * *
-
-On the 2nd of February, 1835, a packet boat belonging to the
-Trans-Atlantic Company left Havre, directing its course towards
-Valparaiso. On board this vessel, as passengers, were the Count de
-Prebois-Crance, Valentine Guillois his foster brother, and Caesar their
-Newfoundland dog--Caesar, the only friend who had remained faithful to
-them, and whom they could not think of leaving behind. Upon the quay
-a woman of about sixty years of age, her face bathed in tears, stood
-with her eyes intently fixed upon the vessel as long as it remained in
-sight. When it had disappeared below the horizon, she cast a desponding
-glance around her, and with a heavy heart bent her steps towards a house
-situated at a small distance from the beach, where she remained three
-days.
-
-"Do what is right, happen what may!" she said, in a voice stifled by
-grief.
-
-This woman was the mother of Valentine Guillois. She was the most to be
-pitied, for she was left alone!
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
-THE EXECUTION.
-
-
-Towards the end of the year 1450, Chili was invaded by Prince
-Sinchiroca, afterwards Inca, who gained possession of the valley of
-Mapocho, then called Promocaces, that is to say, the place of dancing
-and rejoicing. The Peruvian government, however, was never able to
-establish itself in the country, on account of the armed opposition of
-the Promocians, then encamped between the rivers Rapel and Maule. Hence,
-though the historian Garcilasso de la Vega may place the limits of the
-territory conquered by the Incas upon the river Maule, everything proves
-they were upon the Rapel, for, near the confluence of the Cachapeul with
-the Tingerica, which from this point takes the name of Rapel, start the
-ruins of an ancient Peruvian fortress, constructed exactly like those of
-Callao and Asseray, in the province of Quito. These fortresses served to
-mark the frontier.
-
-The Spanish conqueror, Don Pedro de Valdivia, founded, on the 24th of
-February, 1541, the city of Santiago in a delightful position upon the
-left bank of the Rio Mapocho, at the entrance of a plain a hundred miles
-in extent, bounded by the Rio Parahuel, and the mountain of El Pardo,
-which has an elevation of not less than four thousand feet. This plain,
-which is also bathed by the Rio Maypo, forms a natural reservoir, in
-which the light soil brought down from the neighbouring heights has
-found a level, and created one of the richest territories of the New
-World.
-
-Santiago, which at a later period became the capital of Chili, is one of
-the finest cities in Spanish America. Its streets are broad, built in
-straight lines, and refreshed by _acequias_; or rivulets of clear and
-limpid water; while the houses, built of _adobes_, only one story high,
-on account of the earthquakes so frequent in this country, are vast,
-airy, and well situated. It possesses a great number of monuments, the
-most remarkable of which are the stone bridge of five arches, thrown
-over the Mapocho, and the Tajamar, or breakwater, formed of two brick
-walls, the interior one of which is filled with earth, and serves to
-protect the inhabitants from inundations. The Cordilleras, with their
-eternally snow-crowned summits, although eighty miles distant from
-the city, appear suspended over it, and present an aspect of the most
-majestic and imposing kind.
-
-On the 5th of May, 1835, towards ten o'clock in the evening, stifling
-heat oppressed the city; there was not a breath in the air, or a cloud
-in the heavens. Santiago, generally so joyous at this hour of the
-night, when beams from black eyes and smiles from rosy lips are seen at
-every balcony, and each window seems to challenge the passer-by with
-the twanging of _sambecuejas,_ and snatches of Creole songs, appeared
-plunged in the deepest sadness. The balconies and the windows were
-filled, it is true, with the heads of men and women, packed together as
-closely as possible, but the expression of every face was serious, every
-look was thoughtful and uneasy: no smile, no joy could be witnessed; but
-on all sides were sorrowful brows, pale cheeks, and eyes filled with
-tears.
-
-Here and there in the streets numerous groups were stationed in the
-middle of the causeway, or upon the steps of the doors, conversing in a
-low voice, but with great vivacity. At every instant, orderly officers
-left the government palace, and galloped off in various directions.
-Detachments of troops quitted their barracks, and marched, with drums
-beating, to the Plaza Mayor, where they formed in line, passing silently
-amidst the terrified inhabitants. The Plaza Mayor on this evening
-afforded an exceptional appearance. Torches, waved about by individuals
-mixed with the crowd, threw their red dull reflections upon the
-assembled people, who seemed to be in expectation of some great event.
-
-But among all these people assembled on one spot, and whose number
-increased every second, not a cry, not a word could be heard. Only, at
-intervals, there arose a nameless murmur--a noise of the sea before a
-tempest--the whisper of a whole anxious people--the hoarse fury of a
-storm lashing all these oppressed breasts. The clock of the cathedral
-heavily and slowly struck ten.
-
-Scarce had the _serenos_, according to custom, chanted the hour, ere
-military commands were heard, and the crowd violently driven back in all
-directions, with cries and oaths, accompanied by blows from gunstocks,
-divided in two nearly equal parts, leaving between them a wide, free
-space. At this moment arose the sounds of religious chants, murmured in
-a low, monotonous tone, and a long procession of monks debouched upon
-the square. These monks all belonged to the order of the Brothers of
-Mercy. They walked slowly in two lines, with their hoods pulled down
-over their faces, their arms crossed upon their breasts, their heads
-hanging down, and chanting the _De Profundis_. In the middle of them ten
-penitents each bore an open coffin. Then came a squadron of cavalry,
-preceding a battalion of militiamen, in the centre of which body, ten
-men, bare headed, with their arms bound behind them, were conducted,
-each riding with his face toward the tail of a donkey, whose bridle
-was held by a monk of the order of Mercy; a detachment of lancers came
-immediately after, and closed this lugubrious procession.
-
-At the cry of halt, given by the commander of the troops drawn up
-upon the Plaza, the monks separated to the right and left, without
-interrupting their funeral chant, and the condemned remained alone in
-the middle of the space left free for them. These men were patriots,
-who had attempted to overthrow the established government, in order to
-substitute another, the more broad and democratic basis of which would
-be, as they thought, in better accordance with ideas of progress and the
-welfare of the nation. These patriots belonged to the first families of
-the country.
-
-The population of Santiago viewed with sullen despair the death of
-the men whom they considered as martyrs. It is even probable that a
-rising in their favour would have taken place, if General Don Poncho
-Bustamente, the minister at war, had not drawn out a military force
-capable of imposing upon the most determined, and obliging them to be
-silent spectators of the execution of men whom they could not save, but
-whom they entertained a fierce hope of avenging at a future day.
-
-The condemned alighted; they piously knelt, and confessed themselves to
-the monks of Mercy nearest to them, whilst a platoon of fifty soldiers
-took up a position within twenty paces of them. When their confession
-was completed, they rose up bravely, and taking each other by the hand,
-ranged themselves in a single line in front of the soldiers appointed
-to put them to death. In spite, however, of the great numbers of troops
-assembled on the Plaza, an ominous fermentation prevailed among the
-people. The crowd rocked about in all directions. Murmurs of sinister
-augury and curses, pronounced aloud against the agents of power, seemed
-to remind the latter that they had better finish the affair at once, if
-they did not wish to have their victims torn from their hands.
-
-General Bustamente, who calmly and stoically presided over this
-dismal ceremony, smiled with disdain at this expression of popular
-disapprobation. He waved his sword over his head and commanded "right
-about face," which was executed with the rapidity of lightning. The
-troops faced the insurgents on all sides; the front rank pointing their
-muskets at the citizens crowded together before them, whilst the others
-appeared to take aim at the balconies encumbered with people. This was
-followed by so dead a silence, that not a word was lost of the sentence
-read by the proper officer to the patriots--a sentence which condemned
-them to be shot as traitors, or accomplices in a conspiracy designed
-to overthrow the constituted government, and plunge their country into
-anarchy.
-
-The conspirators listened to their sentence with silent firmness; but
-when the officer, who trembled in every limb, had finished reading it,
-they all cried, as with one voice,
-
-"Viva la Patria! Viva la Libertad!"
-
-The General gave a signal, and a loud rolling of the drums drowned the
-voices of the condemned. A discharge of musketry resounded like a clap
-of thunder, and the ten martyrs fell, once again shouting their cry of
-liberty, a cry doomed to find an echo in the hearts of their terrified
-compatriots.
-
-The troops filed off, with shouldered arms, ensigns flying, and band at
-their head, past the dead bodies, and regained their barracks. When the
-General had disappeared with his escort, and the troops had left the
-Plaza, the people rushed in a mass towards the spot where the martyrs
-of their cause lay in a confused heap. Every one wished to offer them a
-last farewell, and to swear over their bodies to avenge them, or to fall
-in their turn.
-
-At length, by degrees, the crowd became less compact, the groups
-dispersed, the last torches were extinguished, and the spot where,
-scarce an hour before, an awful drama had been accomplished, was left
-completely deserted. A considerable time elapsed before any noise
-disturbed the solemn silence which brooded over the Plaza Mayor.
-
-Suddenly, a heavy sigh escaped from the heap of bodies, and a pale head,
-disfigured by the blood and dirt which stained it, arose slowly from
-this human slaughterhouse, pushing aside with difficulty the carcasses
-which had covered it. The victim, who, by a miracle, survived this
-bloody hecatomb, cast an anxious look around him, and passing his hand
-over his brow, which was bathed in a dark perspiration, said vehemently--
-
-"My God! my God! grant me strength to live, that I may avenge myself and
-my country!"
-
-Then, with incredible courage, this man, too weak from the blood he had
-lost, and was still losing, to stand, or to escape by walking away,
-began to crawl along upon his hands and knees, leaving behind him a long
-wet track, and directing his course towards the cathedral. At every yard
-he stopped to take breath, and to place his hands upon his wounds, which
-motion rendered more painful. Scarce had he left the centre of the Plaza
-and its horrid sacrifice fifty paces behind him, and that with immense
-difficulty, when, from a street which opened just before him, issued two
-men, who advanced with hasty steps towards him.
-
-"Oh!" the unhappy man cried, in utter despair, "I am lost! I am lost!
-Heaven is not just!"--And he fainted.
-
-The two men, on coming up to him, stopped with great surprise; they
-leant over him, and examined him with care and in an anxious manner.
-
-"Well?" said one of them, at the end of a minute or two.
-
-"He is alive!" the other replied, in a tone of conviction.
-
-Without uttering another word, they rolled up the wounded man in a
-_poncho_, lifted him on their shoulders, and disappeared in the gloomy
-depths of the street by which they had come, and which led to the
-Canadilla suburb.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
-THE PASSAGE.
-
-
-It is a long voyage from Havre to Chili. The man accustomed to the
-thousand agitations and the intoxicating whirlwind of the atmosphere of
-Paris, necessarily finds the life on shipboard, the calm and regular
-life, insipid and monotonous. It is certainly tedious to remain months
-together in a vessel, confined to a cabin a few feet square, without
-air and without sun, almost without light, and to have no walk but the
-narrow deck of the ship, no horizon but the rolling or the tranquil
-sea--at all times and everywhere nothing but sea.
-
-The transition is very trying. The Parisian, accustomed to the noise
-and perpetual motion of a great city, cannot at once enter into or
-comprehend the poetry of the sailor's life, of which he knows nothing,
-or the sublime pleasures and keen enjoyments which those granite-hearted
-men, exposed incessantly to a struggle with the elements, constantly
-experience; men who laugh at the tempest and brave the hurricane; who,
-twenty times a minute, stand face to face with death, and at last feel
-such a contempt for it that they end by not believing in it. The hours
-are of interminable length to the passenger who pines for the land;
-every day appears an age to him. With his eyes constantly turned toward
-a point which he begins to imagine he shall never gain, he sinks, in
-spite of himself, into a species of gloomy nostalgia, which the sight of
-the wished for port is alone powerful enough to dissipate.
-
-The Count de Prebois-Crance and Valentine Guillois had, then, undergone
-the dispersion of all the illusions and all the ennuis attendant upon a
-first sea voyage. During the first days they were employed in recalling
-the vivid remembrance of that other life from which they had parted
-for ever. They talked over the surprise which the sudden disappearance
-of the Count would cause in the fashionable society from which he
-had fled without warning, and without leaving any means of tracing
-him. Forgetting for awhile the distance which separated them from the
-America to which they were bound, they dwelt at great length upon the
-unknown pleasures which awaited them upon that golden soil, that land
-of promise for all sorts of adventurers, but which, alas! often offers
-those who go thither in the hope of gaining an easy fortune, nothing but
-disappointment and sorrow.
-
-As every subject, however interesting it may be, must in the end grow
-exhausted, the two young men, to escape the fatiguing monotony of the
-voyage, had the good sense so to arrange their existence as to prevent
-tedium from gaining the influence over them which it had upon the
-other passengers. Twice a day, morning and evening, the Count, who was
-perfectly well acquainted with Spanish, gave his foster brother lessons
-in that language, lessons by which he profited so well, that after two
-months' study, he was able to carry on a conversation in Spanish. When
-he had made such progress, the young men employed no other language,
-either between themselves or with the persons on board who understood
-it. This habit produced the desired result; that is to say, Valentine,
-in a very short time, spoke Spanish, which is not difficult to acquire,
-as fluently as French; and then, in return, Valentine occasionally
-became the professor. He made Louis go through gymnastic exercises, in
-order to develop his natural strength, accustom his body to fatigue, and
-render him capable of supporting the rude exigencies of his new position.
-
-We will here, for a moment, return to the character of Valentine
-Guillois, a character of which the reader, from the young man's manner
-of acting and speaking, might form a completely erroneous opinion, and
-this we think it our duty to rectify. Morally, Valentine Guillois was
-a young fellow quite unacquainted with himself; hot-headed, giddy in
-the extreme, the surface had been slightly vitiated by reading chosen
-without discernment; but the foundation was essentially good. He
-united in himself all the characteristics of a class whose knowledge
-of the world is obtained from romances and the dramas of the Faubourg
-du Temple. He had sprung up like a mushroom upon _the pave_ of Paris,
-performing for bread, as he himself said, the most eccentric and
-impossible things. As a soldier, he had lived from hand to mouth,
-happy in the present, and careless of a future whose existence was so
-uncertain for him. But in the heart of this thoughtless _gamin_ a new
-sentiment had germinated, and, in a very short time, taken deep root,--a
-hearty devotion to the man who had held out his hand to him, had had
-pity on his mother, and who, by dragging him from the slough in which he
-was plunged, without hope of ever rising, had given him a consciousness
-of his own personal value. The death of this benefactor had struck
-him like a clap of thunder. He felt all the importance of the mission
-with which his dying colonel had charged him, the responsible burden
-he imposed upon him, and he swore, with the firm resolution of keeping
-his oath, cost what it might, to watch, like an attentive and devoted
-brother, over the son of him who had made a man of him equal to other
-men. The two most prominent points of Valentine's character were, an
-energy which obstacles only augmented instead of depressing, and an iron
-will.
-
-With these two qualities, employed to the extent to which Valentine
-carried them, a man is sure to accomplish great things, and, if death
-does not surprise him on the road, to attain, at a given moment, the
-object, whatever it may be, which he has marked out for himself. In the
-present circumstances, these qualities were invaluable to the Count de
-Prebois-Crance, a man of a dreamy, poetical nature, weak character, and
-timid mind, who, accustomed from his birth to the easy life of people
-of fortune, was entirely ignorant of the incessant difficulties of the
-new life into which he found himself suddenly cast. As always happens,
-when two men gifted with such opposite qualities meet, Valentine was
-not long in gaining over his foster brother a great moral influence, an
-influence which he employed with infinite tact, without ever rendering
-his companion aware of it; he appeared to do everything according to
-his will, whilst imposing his own upon him. In short, these two men,
-who loved each other thoroughly, and had but one head and one heart,
-perfected each other.
-
-The mode of speaking employed by Valentine in the early chapters of
-this history, was not at all habitual to him, and had truly astonished
-himself. Rising to the level of the situation in which the resolution of
-the young man he wished to save placed him, he had comprehended, with
-that sound common sense which he unwittingly possessed, that instead
-of desponding over the misfortune which struck his foster brother so
-unexpectedly, it was his duty, on the contrary, to endeavour to impart
-to him the courage he was deficient in. Thus, as we have seen, he
-found in his heart arguments so peremptorily decisive, that the Count
-consented to live, and gave himself up to his counsels. Valentine did
-not hesitate. The departure of Dona Rosario furnished him with the
-excuse he needed for dragging his foster brother from the Parisian gulf
-which, after having swallowed up his fortune, threatened to swallow up
-himself. Perceiving, before all else, the necessity for expatriating
-him, he persuaded Louis to follow the object of his love to America; and
-both set out gaily for the New World, abandoning the country which, like
-other emigrants, they fancied had been so ungrateful to them.
-
-Often during the passage the young Count had felt his courage flag,
-and his faith in the future abandon him, when thinking of the life of
-struggles and trials that awaited him in America. But Valentine, by
-his inexhaustible gaiety, his incredible store of anecdotes, and his
-incessant sallies, always succeeded in smoothing the wrinkles from the
-brow of his companion, who, with his habitual carelessness and want of
-energy, allowed himself to sink under that occult influence of Valentine
-which remoulded him, without his cognizance, and gradually made a new
-man of him.
-
-Such was the state of mind in which our two personages found themselves
-when the packet boat cast anchor in the roads of Valparaiso. Valentine,
-with his imperturbable assurance, doubted of nothing: he was persuaded
-that the people he was about to have to do with were very much beneath
-him in intelligence, and that he could manage very well to attain the
-double object which he aimed at. The Count entirely depended upon his
-foster brother for finding for him the woman he loved, and whom he had
-come so far to seek. As to retrieving his fortune, he did not even dream
-of that.
-
-Valparaiso--Valley of Paradise--so named probably by antiphrasis, for it
-is the filthiest and ugliest city of Spanish America--is nothing but a
-depot for foreigners, whom commercial interests do not call into Chili.
-Our young men only remained there long enough to equip themselves in
-the costume of the country; that is to say, to assume the Panama hat,
-the _poncho_, and _polenas_; then, each armed with two double-barrelled
-pistols, a rifle, and a long knife in his belt, they left the port, and,
-mounted on excellent horses, took their course towards Santiago, on the
-evening preceding the day on which the execution we have described in
-the preceding chapter was to take place. The weather was magnificent;--
-the rays of a burning sun rendered the very dust golden, and made the
-stones of the road shine like jewels.
-
-"Ah!" said Valentine, as soon as they found themselves upon the superb
-road which leads to the capital of Chili; "it does one good to breathe
-the air of the land--_caramba_, as they say here. Well, now, here we
-are in this boasted America, and now we must set about collecting our
-harvest of gold."
-
-"And Dona Rosario?" said his foster brother, in a melancholy tone.
-
-"Oh! we shall have found her within a fortnight," replied Valentine,
-with astounding confidence.
-
-With these consolatory words, he animated his horse with the spur, and
-the distance before them rapidly diminished.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
-THE LINDA.[1]
-
-
-The night was gloomy; no star glittered in the heavens; the moon,
-concealed by clouds, only spread a wan, pale light, which, when it
-disappeared, rendered the darkness the denser. The streets were
-deserted; but at regular intervals the furtive steps of the serenos, who
-alone watched at this hour, were audible.
-
-The two men whom we have seen upon the Plaza Mayor, bearing away the
-wounded man, walked for a long time, loaded with their strange burthen,
-stopping at the least noise, and concealing themselves in the depths of
-a doorway, or in the angle of a street, to allow the serenos to pass, as
-they would be sure to require a reason for their being in the streets
-at that unusual hour. Since the discovery of the conspiracy, orders had
-been given that at eleven o'clock every citizen should be within doors.
-After many turnings and windings, the strangers stopped in the street El
-Mercado, one of the most secluded and narrow in Santiago. They appeared
-to be expected, for a door was opened at the sound of their steps, and
-a woman, dressed in white, and holding a candle, the light of which
-she shaded with her left hand, appeared on the threshold. The two men
-stopped, and one of them, taking a steel from his pocket, struck the
-flint so as to produce as few sparks as possible. At this signal--for it
-evidently was one--the woman extinguished the light, saying with a loud
-voice, but as if speaking to herself--
-
-"Dios proteja a Chile (May God protect Chili)!"
-
-"Dios lo ha protegido (God has protected it)," the man with the flint
-and steel replied, as he replaced his utensils in his pocket.
-
-The woman uttered a cry of joy, which her prudence suddenly repressed.
-
-"Come in, come in," she said in a low voice; and in an instant the two
-men were beside her.
-
-"Is he alive?" she asked, with intense anxiety.
-
-"He is alive," one of the strangers laconically replied.
-
-"In Heaven's name, come in!" she exclaimed.
-
-The bearers, guided by the woman, who had relighted her candle,
-disappeared in the house, the door of which was immediately and softly
-closed after them. All the houses of Santiago are alike, with respect
-to their internal arrangements. To describe one is to describe all.
-A wide doorway, ornamented with pilasters, leads to _the patio_, or
-great entrance court, at the end of which is the principal apartment,
-generally the dining room. On each side are bed chambers, reception
-rooms, and cabinets for labour or study. Behind these apartments is the
-_huerta_, or garden, laid out with taste, ornamented with fountains, and
-planted with orange trees, citron trees, pomegranates, limes, cedars,
-and palm trees, which grow with incredible luxuriance. Behind the garden
-is the _corral_--a vast enclosure appropriated to horses and carriages.
-
-The house into which we have introduced the reader, only differed from
-the others in the princely luxury of its furniture, which seemed to
-indicate that its inhabitant was a person of importance. The two men,
-still preceded by the woman, who served them as guide, entered a little
-room, whose window opened on the garden. They laid their burthen down
-upon a bed, and retired without speaking a word, but bowing respectfully.
-
-The woman remained for a moment motionless, listening to the sound
-of their retreating footsteps; and when all was silent, she sprang
-with a bound towards the door, the bolts of which she fastened with
-an impetuous gesture; then, returning and placing herself beside the
-wounded man, she fixed upon him a long and melancholy look.
-
-This woman, though really thirty-five years of age, appeared to be
-scarcely more than five-and-twenty. She was of an extraordinary, but a
-strange style of beauty; it attracted attention, commanded admiration,
-but created an instinctive repulsion. In spite of the majestic splendour
-of her graceful form, the elegance of her carriage, the freedom of her
-motions, full of voluptuous ease,--in spite of the purity of the lines
-of her fair face, slightly tinged by the warm rays of an American sun,
-which the magnificent tresses of her black hair beautifully enframed,
-her large black eyes, ornamented with long velvety lashes, and crowned
-by perfectly-arched brows, her straight nose, with its mobile and rosy
-nostrils, her little mouth, whose blood-red lips contrasted admirably
-with her pearl-white teeth--in spite of all these rich endowments,
-there was in this splendid creature something fatal, which chilled the
-heart as you contemplated her. Her searching glance, the satirical
-smile, which almost always contracted the corners of her lips, the
-slight wrinkle, which formed a harsh, deep line along her white
-brow--everything about her, even to the melodious sound of her voice,
-with its strongly-accentuated pitch, destroyed sympathy, and produced a
-feeling of hatred, rather than respect.
-
-Alone in that chamber, dimly lighted by one flickering taper, in that
-calm and silent night, face to face with that pale, bleeding man, whom
-she contemplated with stern, contracted brows, she resembled, with her
-long, black hair falling in disorder from her shoulders on to her white
-robe, a Thessalian witch, preparing herself to accomplish some terrible
-and mysterious work.
-
-The stranger was a man of, at most, forty-five years of age, of lofty
-stature, strongly built, and well proportioned. His features were
-handsome, his brow noble, and the expression of his countenance proud,
-but frank and resolute.
-
-The woman remained for a considerable time in mute contemplation.
-Her bosom heaved, her brows became more and more contracted, and she
-appeared to watch the too slow progress of the return to sensibility
-of the man her emissaries had saved from death. At length words forced
-their way through her compressed lips, and she murmured in a low, broken
-voice,--
-
-"Here he is, then; this time, at least, he is in my power! Will he
-consent to answer me? Oh! perhaps I had better have left him to die."
-
-She paused to breathe a deep, broken sigh, but almost immediately
-continued:--
-
-"My daughter! my daughter! of whom this man has bereaved me! and whom,
-in spite of all my researches, he has hitherto concealed in some
-inviolable asylum! My daughter! he must restore her to me; it is my
-will!" she added with inexpressible energy. "He shall, even if I had
-to deliver him up again to the executioners from whom I have ravished
-their prey! These wounds are nothing; loss of blood and terror are the
-sole causes of this insensibility. But time passes--my absence may be
-noticed. Why should I hesitate longer? Let me at once know what I have
-to hope from him. Perhaps he will allow himself to be softened by my
-tears and prayers. What, he! he to whom all human feeling is unknown!
-Better for me to implore the most implacable Indian! He will laugh at my
-grief, he will reply by sarcasms to my cries of despair;--oh! woe, woe
-be to him if he do so!"
-
-She looked earnestly at the wounded man, who was still motionless, for
-another instant, and then, adding resolutely, "I will try," she drew
-from her bosom a small crystal phial, curiously cut, and raising the
-head of the unknown, made him inhale the contents. This was followed by
-a moment of intense expectation; the woman watching with an anxious eye
-the convulsive movements which are the precursors of the return to life,
-as they agitated the body of the wounded man. At length, with a deep
-sigh, he opened his eyes.
-
-"Where am I?" he murmured in a faint voice, then sank back, and closed
-his eyes again.
-
-"In safety," the woman replied.
-
-The sound of the voice produced upon the wounded man the effect of an
-electric shock. He raised himself quickly, and looking around him with a
-mixture of disgust, terror, and anger, asked in a hollow voice,--
-
-"Who spoke?"
-
-"I!" the woman replied haughtily, placing herself before him.
-
-"Ah!" he said with a gesture of disgust, and sinking back upon the bed;
-"you again! ever you!"
-
-"Yes, I! still I, Don Tadeo! I, whose will, in spite of your disdain
-and your hatred, has never faltered! I, in short, whose assistance you
-have always obstinately refused, and who have saved you, in spite of
-yourself."
-
-"Oh! that is an easy matter for you, madam; are you not on the best
-possible terms with my executioners?"
-
-At this reply the woman could not repress a movement of anger; a sudden
-redness flitted across her face.
-
-"No insults, Don Tadeo de Leon!" she said, stamping her foot; "I have
-saved you! I am a woman, and you are under my roof!"
-
-"That is true," he replied, rising and bowing to her with ironical
-respect; "I had forgotten that, madam; I am in your house. Have the
-goodness, then, to direct me the way out, that I may be gone as quickly
-as possible."
-
-"Do not be in such haste, Don Tadeo--you have not yet sufficiently
-recovered your strength. Within a few steps, you perhaps would fall
-again, to be raised up by the agents of the power which, this time, I
-swear to you, would not let you escape."
-
-"And who told you, madam, that I should not prefer being retaken and
-executed a second time, to the chance of remaining longer in your
-presence?"
-
-There was a moment of silence, during which the two interlocutors
-observed each other attentively. The woman was the first to speak.
-
-"Listen to me, Don Tadeo," she said. "In spite of all your efforts,
-destiny, or, speaking more correctly, woman's genius, which nothing can
-resist, has brought us together once again. If you live, if you have
-received only slight wounds, it is because I lavished my gold upon the
-soldiers charged with your execution; I wished to force you to that
-explanation which I have so long demanded of you, which you so often
-have refused me, but which you can now no longer avoid. Submit, then,
-with a good grace. We will afterwards separate, if not good friends,
-at least indifferent, never to meet again. Though I do not wish to
-establish any claim upon your gratitude, you certainly owe your life to
-me; were it for that service alone, you are bound to hear me."
-
-"What! madam," Don Tadeo replied, proudly, "do you think that I consider
-what you have done was rendering me a service? By what right have you
-saved my life? You know me but ill if you fancied I should allow myself
-to be softened by your tears. No, no, I have been too long your dupe and
-your slave to do so. Heaven be praised! I know you well now; and the
-Linda, the mistress of General Bustamente, the tyrant of my country, the
-executioner of my brothers and myself, has nothing to expect from me!
-All that you can say, all that you can do, will be to no purpose. Spare
-yourself, then, I advise you, the trouble of pretending a gentleness
-which neither accords with your character nor your mode of life. I
-madly loved you, a young, pure, and prudent girl, in the cabin of the
-worthy _guaso,_ your father, whose death was caused by your scandalous
-life; you were then called Maria. At that period, would I not have
-sacrificed my life and my happiness for you?--you know I would. Many
-times have I given you proofs of that boundless love; but the Linda, the
-shameless courtezan, the Linda, the woman branded on the brow like Cain
-with the seal of infamy, the miserable creature--I know her not. Away,
-madam!--away! There can be nothing in common between you and me."
-
-And with a gesture of proud authority he waved her from him.
-
-The woman had listened to him with flashing eyes and heaving bosom,
-trembling with rage and shame. Drops of perspiration stood upon her
-face, which glowed with a feverish redness. When he had finished, she
-seized his arm, pressed it with her utmost strength, and placed her face
-close to his.
-
-"Have you said all?" she muttered from between her teeth. "Have you
-heaped insults enough upon me? Have you cast sufficient mire in my face?
-Have you nothing more to add?"
-
-"Nothing, madam," he replied, in a tone of cool contempt. "You can, when
-you please, summon your assassins--I am ready to receive them."
-
-And throwing himself upon the bed, he waited with an air of the most
-insolent indifference.
-
-
-[1] This word, which has no equivalent in English or French, is in the
-Spanish language the highest expression of physical beauty in woman.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
-HUSBAND AND WIFE.
-
-
-Dona Maria, notwithstanding the fresh and bitter insult she had just
-received from Don Tadeo, did not yet renounce the hope of softening
-him. When she recalled to her mind the early years, already so distant,
-of her love for Don Tadeo, his devotion to her smallest caprices, when
-she could bring him trembling and prostrate to her feet by a glance or
-a smile, and the entire abnegation he had made of his will, in order
-to live for her and by her; notwithstanding all that had since taken
-place between them, she could not persuade herself that the violent
-and deeply-seated passion he had entertained for her, the species of
-worship he had vowed to her, could have entirely disappeared without
-leaving some slight traces behind. Her pride revolted at the idea of
-having lost all her empire over the lofty nature which she so long had
-moulded at her pleasure like soft wax, under the burning impression of
-wild caprices. She fancied that, like most other men, Don Tadeo, deeply
-wounded in his pride, loved her still without being willing to admit it,
-and that the virulent reproaches he had addressed to her, were flashes
-of that ill-extinguished fire which still smouldered in his heart, and
-whose flame she should succeed in reviving.
-
-Unfortunately Dona Maria had never given herself the trouble to study
-the man she had married, and whom her beauty had so long held in
-subjection. Don Tadeo had been nothing in her eyes but an attentive,
-submissive slave, and, under the apparent weakness of the loving man,
-she had not discovered the powerful energy which formed the foundation
-of his character. And yet the history itself of their love had been a
-proof of that energy, and of a will which nothing could control. Dona
-Maria, then fifteen years of age, dwelt with her father in a _hacienda_,
-in the neighbourhood of Santiago. Deprived of her mother, who had died
-in giving her birth, she was brought up under the care of an old aunt,
-an incorruptible Argus, who allowed no lover to come near her niece.
-The young girl, ignorant as all girls brought up in the country are,
-but whose warm aspirations led her to desire to know the world, and to
-launch into that whirlwind of pleasures the sound of which died without
-an echo in her ears, waited impatiently the arrival of the man who
-should introduce her to these delights, of which, although unknown, she
-had formed seducing ideas. Don Tadeo had only been the guide charged
-with initiating her into the pleasures for which she thirsted. She
-had never loved him; she had only said to herself, on seeing him and
-learning he was of a noble family, "That is the man I have been looking
-for."
-
-This hideous and selfish calculation is made by more girls than
-we may fancy. Don Tadeo was handsome. Dona Maria's self-love was
-flattered by the conquest; but if he had been ugly and disagreeable,
-it would not have altered her course. In her extraordinary character,
-a strange conjunction of the most abject passions, among which shone
-here and there, like diamonds gleaming in the mire, a few feelings
-which attached her to humanity, there was the spirit of two women
-of ancient Rome; Locusta and Messalina were united in her: ardent,
-passionate and ambitious, covetous and prodigal, this demon, concealed
-under the outward form of an angel, acknowledged no other laws but her
-own caprices; and all means, by which she could satisfy them, to her
-appeared good.
-
-For a long time, Don Tadeo, blinded by passion, had submitted without
-complaining to the iron yoke of this infernal genius; but when the day
-arrived that the scales fell from his eyes, he measured with terror the
-depth of the abyss into which this woman had cast him. The frightful
-disorders to which, under the sanction of his name, she had abandoned
-herself, imprinted on his blushing brow a stigma of infamy: the world
-believed him to be her accomplice.
-
-Don Tadeo had by Maria an only daughter, a fair girl of angelic beauty,
-at the period of our history fifteen years of age, whom he loved in
-proportion to the sufferings her mother had inflicted upon him. He
-trembled to think of the frightful future which lay before this innocent
-creature. For four years he had been separated from his wife; and
-during that time she had set no bounds on her irregularities. One day,
-Don Tadeo presented himself unexpectedly at the house of his wife, and
-without saying a word as to his ulterior intentions, took away his
-daughter. From that time--nearly ten years--Dona Maria had never seen
-her child.
-
-A strange revolution was effected by this step in the mother's feelings;
-a new sentiment, so to say, germinated in her soul. A thing, till that
-time unknown to her, happened; she felt the pulses of her heart beat
-for another--she grieved at the remembrance of the little angel who had
-been ravished from her. What was the sentiment? She, herself, knew not;
-she only ardently wished to see her child again. During six years she
-contended, publicly and privately, with Don Tadeo, to have her daughter
-restored to her. The father was deaf and dumb; she could never learn
-what had become of her. Don Tadeo, who, since he ceased to love her, had
-studied the character of the woman of whom he had made an implacable
-enemy, had taken his precautions so prudently that all Dona Maria's
-researches proved fruitless, and all her attempts to obtain an interview
-remained without a result. She imagined that he was afraid of yielding,
-if face to face with her; and she resolved, cost what it might, to force
-him to grant her the interview to which nothing had been able to make
-him consent.
-
-Such was, at the moment we bring them on the scene, the position of
-the two personages who now doubtless met for the last time. It was an
-extraordinary position for both; an unequal contest between a wounded
-and proscribed man, and an ardent, insulted woman, who, like a lioness
-deprived of her whelps, was resolved to succeed, whatever might happen,
-and compel the man whom she had forced to hear her, to restore her
-daughter to her.
-
-Don Tadeo turned towards her.
-
-"I am waiting," he said.
-
-"You are waiting?" she replied, with a friendly smile. "What do you
-expect, then?"
-
-"The assassins whom you doubtless have at hand, in case I should be
-unwilling to reply to your questions concerning your daughter."
-
-"Oh!" she said, with an air of repulsion, "how can you, Don Tadeo, have
-so bad an opinion of me? How can you pretend to believe that, after
-having saved you, I should deliver you up to those who have proscribed
-you?"
-
-"Who knows?" he replied, in a strongly ironical tone. "The heart of
-women of your class, Linda, is an abyss which no man can pretend to
-sound. You, who are incessantly seeking eccentric pleasures, perhaps
-would find an unknown enjoyment and a charm in this second execution,
-which, besides, would not at all compromise you, as I am already legally
-dead to the world."
-
-"Don Tadeo, I know how unworthy my conduct towards you has been, and
-how little I deserve your pity; but you are a gentleman, and, as such,
-do you think it does you honour to load with insults, however merited,
-a woman who is your wife, and who, after saving your life, with no
-intention of reinstating herself in your favour, merely makes a claim,
-at least upon your pity, if not on your esteem?"
-
-"Very well, madam; nothing can be more just than your observations, and
-I subscribe to them with all my heart. I beg you to pardon me for having
-allowed myself to utter certain words; but, at the first movement, I
-was not master of myself, and I could not keep down in the depths of my
-heart the feelings which were stifling me. Now, accept my sincere thanks
-for the immense service you have rendered me, and permit me to retire.
-A longer sojourn, on my part, in this house, is a robbery of which I
-render myself guilty towards your numerous adorers."
-
-And, bowing with ironical courtesy to his infuriated wife, he made a
-movement towards one of the doors of the room.
-
-"One word more," she said.
-
-"Speak, madam."
-
-"Are you resolved to leave me ignorant of the fate of my daughter?"
-
-"She is dead."
-
-"Dead!" she cried, in a voice of terror.
-
-"For you--yes," he replied, with a cold smile.
-
-"Oh, you are implacable!" she shrieked, stamping her foot with rage.
-
-He bowed, without making any reply.
-
-"Well, then," she resumed, "it is now no longer a favour I implore--it
-is a bargain I propose to you."
-
-"A bargain?"
-
-"Yes, a bargain."
-
-"The idea strikes me as original."
-
-"Perhaps it is; you shall judge for yourself."
-
-"I listen, but time presses, and I--"
-
-"Oh, I will be brief," she interrupted.
-
-"I am at your service," and he reseated himself, smiling, exactly like a
-friend on a visit. The Linda followed his motions with her eye, without
-appearing to attach any importance to them.
-
-"Don Tadeo," she said, "during the many years we have been separated a
-great number of events has taken place."
-
-"Quite correct," said he, with a gesture of polite assent.
-
-"I will say nothing to you of myself--my life is known to you."
-
-"Very little of it, madam."
-
-She cast a savage look at him.
-
-"Let that pass," she said, "it is of you I would speak."
-
-"Of me?"
-
-"Yes, of you, whose moments are not so completely absorbed by patriotism
-and the effervescence of political ideas as not to leave you a few for
-more intimate joys and emotions."
-
-"What do you mean?"
-
-"Why do you feign ignorance?" she said, with a perfidious smile; "I am
-sure you understand me."
-
-"Madam!"
-
-"Do not deny it, Tadeo! Tired of the ephemeral love of women of my
-class, as you have just now so well said, you seek in the pure heart of
-a young girl emotions more in accordance with your tastes; in a word,
-I know you are in love with a charming young creature, worthy in all
-respects of being the wife of your choice, if I, unfortunately, did not
-exist."
-
-Don Tadeo fixed upon his wife a scrutinizing look while she was
-pronouncing these words. As she finished, a sigh escaped him.
-
-"What, are you aware?" he exclaimed, with well-feigned surprise. "You
-know--"
-
-"I know that her name is Dona Rosario del Valle," she replied, satisfied
-of the effect she thought she had produced upon her husband; "why, it is
-the freshest news in Santiago! all the world is talking of it. How was
-it likely it should escape me, when I take such an interest in you?"
-
-The Linda interrupted herself, and laid her hand on his arm.
-
-"It is of very little consequence," she added; "restore me my daughter,
-Don Tadeo, and this new love of yours shall be sacred to me--if not--"
-
-"You are mistaken, madam, I tell you."
-
-"Beware, Don Tadeo!" she remarked, with a glance at the clock; "by this
-time the woman we were speaking of is in the hands of my agents."
-
-"What do you mean?" he cried, in great agitation.
-
-"Yes," she replied, in a husky tone, "I have had her carried off. In a
-few minutes she will be here. Beware! I repeat, Don Tadeo! if you do not
-tell me where my daughter is, and if you continue to refuse to restore
-her to me--"
-
-"Well," he said, haughtily, looking her full in the face, and crossing
-his arms, "what then will you do?"
-
-"I will kill this woman!" she replied, in a gloomy but firm tone.
-
-Don Tadeo looked at her for a moment with an undefinable expression, and
-then burst into a dry, nervous laugh, which chilled the woman with fear.
-
-"You will kill her!" he cried, "unhappy woman! Well!--kill that innocent
-creature!--Call in your executioners--I will be mute."
-
-The Linda sprang up like a lioness, and rushed towards the door, which
-she opened violently.
-
-"This is too much!--Come in!" she called out, loudly.
-
-The two men who had brought in Don Tadeo appeared, poniard in hand.
-
-"Ah!" the gentleman said, with a contemptuous smile, "I know you again
-at last."
-
-At a motion from the Linda the assassins advanced towards him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
-THE DARK-HEARTS.
-
-
-As we have seen, the people had dispersed almost immediately after the
-execution of the patriots. Everyone carried away in the depths of his
-heart the hope of avenging, at an early day, the victims who had so
-nobly died, with the cry for a time left without an echo, of Viva la
-patria! A cry checked by the bayonets of the soldiers of Bustamente, but
-which must soon give birth to fresh martyrs.
-
-And yet the square, though it seemed a desert, was not so. Several
-men, folded in dark cloaks, and with broad-brimmed hats, pulled down
-over their eyes, were grouped in the recess of the coach entrance of a
-house, and were conversing earnestly together in a low voice, keeping an
-anxious look-out the meanwhile. These men were patriots.
-
-In spite of the terror which hovered over the city, they had, by dint of
-prayers, obtained from the archbishop of Santiago, who was a true priest
-according to the gospel, and at heart devoted to the liberal cause,
-permission to pay the last rites to their unfortunate brethren.
-
-No part of the dismal drama which followed the execution had escaped
-them. They had seen Don Tadeo rise like a phantom from the heap of
-carcasses which covered him; they had heard the words he had pronounced,
-and were preparing to go to his succour, when the two strangers,
-appearing suddenly, raised his body and bore it away. This carrying off
-of a half dead man had surprised them exceedingly. After exchanging a
-few words, two of them went in pursuit of the mysterious strangers,
-probably in order to learn to what house the wounded man was taken,
-whilst the others, twelve in number, advanced to the middle of the
-square.
-
-They anxiously bent down and examined the bodies stretched at their
-feet, hoping, perhaps, that another victim might have escaped the
-slaughter. Unfortunately, Don Tadeo was the only one saved by some
-inexplicable mystery. The nine other victims were all dead. After a long
-examination, the patriots stood up again with a painful sigh of regret,
-and one of them went and knocked at a lower door of the cathedral.
-
-"Who is there?" was immediately asked from the interior.
-
-"_One for whom the night hath no darkness_," the man who had knocked
-replied.
-
-"What do you want?" the voice asked again.
-
-"_Is it not written: Knock and it shall be opened to thee_?" the
-stranger added.
-
-"_Our country!_" said the voice.
-
-"_Or vengeance!_" the man promptly replied.
-
-The door opened, and a monk appeared. His cowl pulled down over his
-face, prevented his features being seen.
-
-"Well," he said, "what do the _Dark-Hearts_ require?"
-
-"A prayer for their murdered brothers."
-
-"Return to those who sent you; they shall be satisfied."
-
-"Thanks for all!" the unknown replied; and, after bowing respectfully to
-the monk, he rejoined his companions. During his absence they had not
-been idle, but had placed the bodies upon hand barrows concealed under
-the arcades of the place.
-
-At the expiration of a few minutes a brilliant light inundated the
-place; the cathedral doors were opened. The interior was seen to be
-splendidly illuminated, and from the principal door issued a long
-procession of monks, each bearing a wax light in his hand; they chanted,
-as they walked, the service of the dead. At the same moment the gates
-of the government palace were thrown open as if by enchantment, and a
-squadron of the Ceras, with General Bustamente at their head, advanced,
-at a trot, towards the procession.
-
-When the monks and soldiers met, they stopped as of one accord. The
-twelve unknown men, folded in their cloaks, and grouped round the
-fountain which forms the centre of the square, anxiously awaited the
-denouement of the scene about to take place.
-
-"What is the meaning of this procession, at such an unusual hour?" the
-general haughtily demanded.
-
-"It means that we have come," the monk who walked first replied, with a
-firm voice, but in a melancholy tone, "to take up the victims you have
-struck down, and give them honourable burial."
-
-"And who, pray, are you?" the general asked, sharply.
-
-"I?" the monk replied, in the same firm tone, and throwing back his
-cowl upon his shoulders--"I am the archbishop of Santiago, primate of
-Chili, invested by his holiness the Pope with the power of binding and
-unbinding on earth."
-
-In Spanish America, all persons yield without hesitation to the religion
-of Christ. The only power that is real is that of the priests. No one,
-however high he may be placed, ventures to struggle against it: he knows
-beforehand that, if he did, he would be sure to be crushed. The general
-knitted his brows, struck his forehead forcibly with his hand, but was
-constrained to admit himself conquered.
-
-"My lord!" he said, with a bow; "pardon me! In these times of civil
-discord, we often, in spite of ourselves, confound our friends with our
-enemies. I was ignorant that your lordship had given orders for prayers
-to be offered up for these criminals, and still more so that you would
-deign to perform this task in person--I beg leave to retire."
-
-During this scene, the patriots had concealed themselves behind the
-pillars of the place, where, thanks to the darkness, they remained
-unseen by the general. As soon as the military had disappeared, at a
-sign from the archbishop the bodies were borne into the cathedral.
-
-"Beware of that man, my lord," whispered one of the unknown in the
-archbishop's ear; "he darted at you the glance of a tiger as he retired."
-
-"Brother!" the priest replied calmly; "I am prepared for martyrdom."
-
-The service commenced. As soon as it was terminated, the patriots
-retired, after warmly thanking the archbishop for his kindness towards
-their dead brethren. Scarce had they proceeded a few steps along a
-narrow street, edged by mean dwellings, when two men rose from behind an
-overturned cart which concealed them, and coming towards them, said in a
-low voice--
-
-"Our country!"
-
-"Vengeance!" one of the unknown replied. "Come on!"
-
-The two men approached.
-
-"Well!" said he who appeared to be the chief. "What have you learnt?"
-
-"All that it is possible to know," one of the newcomers replied.
-
-"Whither have they transported Don Tadeo?"
-
-"To the mansion of the Linda."
-
-"To the residence of his wife! Of the woman who is now the mistress
-of the General Bustamente!" the chief replied anxiously. "By the holy
-Virgin! my comrades, he is lost, for she hates him mortally. Shall we
-allow him to be assassinated without an effort to save him?"
-
-"That would be base cowardice," they replied unanimously.
-
-"But how can we introduce ourselves into the house?"
-
-"Nothing more easy; the garden walls are very low."
-
-"Come on, then! there is not a minute to be lost!"
-
-Without another word, they all hastened off in the direction of the
-Linda's house, which, as we have said, was situated in the faubourg
-of the Canadilla, the handsomest quarter in Santiago. The windows,
-hermetically closed, did not allow one ray of light to pass; not a
-sound could be heard, and the house seemed deserted. The patriots stole
-silently round the walls, and when they reached the back, they easily
-climbed the fence by sticking their poniards between the bricks, and
-sprang into the garden. Here they looked carefully about them, and,
-after a short pause, proceeded with stealthy steps towards a pale,
-trembling light, which sent a feeble beam through the chink of a
-shutter. They were within a few paces of this window, when they suddenly
-heard the noise of what appeared a scuffle, and a terrible cry was
-uttered, mingled with the crash of furniture and imprecations of rage
-and pain. Bounding forward like panthers, the strangers, who had covered
-their faces with masks of black velvet, dashed at the window, which flew
-in a thousand fragments around them, and entered the salon.
-
-And it was time for them to arrive. Don Tadeo, with a stool, had split
-the head of one of the bandits, who lay lifeless upon the floor; but
-the other had got him down, and, with his knee upon his breast, was on
-the point of stabbing him. With a pistol shot, one of the unknown blew
-out his brains, and the wretch rolled in his agony close to his dead
-companion. Don Tadeo sprang up quickly, exclaiming--
-
-"By the Virgin! I thought my hour was come!" Then, turning towards the
-masked men, he said--"Thanks, caballeros! thanks for your very timely
-succour! One minute more, and it would have been all over with me! The
-Linda is expeditious!"
-
-The courtesan, with features contracted by rage, and clenched teeth,
-looked on without appearing to see, overwhelmed, confounded by the scene
-which had so rapidly taken place, and which had, in a few minutes,
-ravished from her the vengeance which she thought had this time been so
-certain.
-
-"Without bearing malice, madam," said Don Tadeo in a jeering tone, "this
-is a match deferred. Your fertile imagination will no doubt soon furnish
-you with the means of taking your revenge!"
-
-"I hope so," she said with a sardonic smile.
-
-"Seize this woman," the leader of the unknown commanded; "gag her, and
-bind her securely to the bed."
-
-"Bind me!" she cried in a paroxysm of anger; "me! do you know who I am?"
-
-"Perfectly well, madam," the stranger replied drily. "You are a woman
-for whom honourable people have no name. Libertines have given you that
-of the Linda, and your present lover is General Bustamente. You see,
-madam, that we are not unacquainted with you."
-
-"Beware, sir," she hissed; "I am not to be insulted with impunity."
-
-"We do not insult you, madam; we only wish, for a time, to put it out
-of your power to do mischief. In a few days," he continued, in a quiet,
-firm tone, "we will determine what shall be done with you."
-
-"Done with me!--me!--who then are you, with faces you dare not reveal,
-and who presume to speak to me thus?"
-
-"Who we are,--learn!--We are the _Dark-Hearts!_" At this terrible
-announcement, a convulsive trembling shook the limbs of the woman, who,
-retreating to the wall, a prey to intense terror, exclaimed in a faint
-voice; "My God! my God! I am lost," and sank down fainting.
-
-At a sign from the leader, one of his companions bound her securely, and
-after gagging her, fastened her to the foot of the bed. Then, taking Don
-Tadeo with them, they departed by the same way they had entered, without
-taking any heed of the two assassins lying upon the floor. Before he
-left the room, the chief pinned a piece of parchment to a table with
-a dagger. Upon this parchment were written a few words of terrible
-import:--
-
-"_The traitor Pancho Bustamente is cited at the expiration of
-ninety-three days!"_
-
- THE DARK-HEARTS.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
-IN THE STREET.
-
-
-As soon as they were outside of the house, the masked men, at a sign
-from the leader, dispersed in various directions. When they had
-disappeared round the corners of the neighbouring streets, the chief
-turned towards Don Tadeo, who, scarce recovered from the trying emotions
-he had successively gone through, and weakened by the blood he had lost,
-as well as by the prodigious efforts his last struggle had cost him,
-was leaning, half fainting against the wall of the house he had been so
-fortunately enabled to quit. A flood of bitter reflections rushed upon
-his brain; the incidents of that terrible night almost unsettled his
-reason: in vain he tried to recover the train of his ideas which had
-been so often and so violently broken. The stranger looked at him for
-a few minutes with profound attention; then approaching him, he laid
-his hand quietly upon his shoulder. At this sudden touch, the gentleman
-started as if he had received an electric shock.
-
-"What!" the unknown said in a tone of reproach, "scarcely entered on the
-good fight, and you despair already, Don Tadeo?"
-
-The wounded man shook his head.
-
-"You, Don Tadeo, whose lofty brow has never bent before revolutionary
-storms; you, who in the most trying circumstances have always remained
-firm, are now pale and cast down, without faith in the present, or hope
-in the future, and have lost strength and courage through the vain
-threats of a woman!"
-
-"That woman," he replied mournfully, "has always been my evil genius.
-She is a demon!"
-
-"And suppose," the unknown exclaimed energetically, "that this woman
-should succeed in getting up another of the infamous schemes in which
-her brain is so fertile, a man of heart takes courage in a struggle?
-Forget these impotent hatreds that can never reach you; remember what
-you are; look boldly at the glorious mission which is imposed upon you."
-
-"What do you mean?"
-
-"Do you not understand me? Can you believe that God, who has this night
-allowed you so miraculously to escape death, has not great designs
-in store for you? Brother," he added, in a tone of authority, "the
-existence that has been restored to you is not your own, it belongs to
-your country!"
-
-A moment of silence followed this appeal, during which Don Tadeo
-appeared a prey to profound despair. At length, looking at the unknown,
-he said with bitter despondency--
-
-"What is to be done? Heaven is my witness that my only desire, my sole
-happiness, would be to see my country free. But during the twenty years
-we have been struggling we have done nothing, alas! but pass from one
-tyranny to another, each time riveting afresh the chains which bind
-us. No! Heaven itself seems to forbid our contending longer against an
-implacable destiny. You know well from experience that citizens cannot
-be improvised from slaves. Servitude destroys moral virtue, abases the
-soul, and degrades the heart. Many generations must pass away before the
-inhabitants of this unfortunate country will be fit to form a people!"
-
-"By what right do you presume to fathom the designs of Providence?"
-the unknown replied, in an imposing tone of voice. "Do you know what
-is reserved for you? Who tells you that the passing triumph of our
-oppressors is not granted by God, in His boundless wisdom, in order to
-render their future fall more terrible?"
-
-Don Tadeo, restored to himself by the manly words of his disguised
-friend, drew himself up proudly, and looked attentively at the speaker.
-
-"And who are you," he said, "whose sympathetic voice has stirred the
-most secret fibres of my heart? Who authorizes you to speak thus?
-Answer! Who are you?"
-
-"Of what importance is it who I am," the unknown remarked, calmly, "if
-I succeed in persuading you that all is far from being lost--that the
-liberty which you believe for ever destroyed has never been so near
-triumphing, and that it only perhaps requires one sublime effort to
-recover it!"
-
-"But still?" the wounded man said, persistently.
-
-"I am he who, a few minutes ago, saved your life. That ought to suffice."
-
-"Not so," Don Tadeo said, warmly, "for you conceal your features under a
-mask, and the very circumstance you named gives me a right to see them."
-
-"Perhaps it does," the unknown said, slowly removing his mask, and
-revealing to Don Tadeo, in the pale beams of the moon, a countenance
-with manly, marked features, and wearing a frank and loyal expression.
-
-"Oh! my heart did not deceive me!" Tadeo cried--"Don Gregorio Peralta!"
-
-"Yes, it is I, Don Tadeo!" the young man, he was scarcely thirty,
-replied--"and cannot comprehend the depression of the man whom the
-avengers have chosen as their chief."
-
-"How do you know? Notwithstanding our friendship, I have always
-concealed from you--"
-
-"Were you not condemned to death?" Don Gregorio interrupted. "Your
-companions elected me _King of Darkness_ in your place, that is, they
-placed in my hands an immense power, as they had done in yours, of
-which I was left the uncontrolled disposal. Death unbound the oath of
-silence imposed upon the brethren. Your name was unknown to all; I was
-as ignorant that you were the energetic chief who had made our society
-a power, as you were, my dear friend, that I was one of your soldiers.
-But, thanks be to God, you are saved, Don Tadeo! Resume your place.
-You alone, under present circumstances, are able to fill worthily the
-post which our confidence has assigned you. Become again the King of
-Darkness! But," he added, in a deep, concentrated tone, "remember that
-we are the avengers; that we ought to be without pity for ourselves
-as for others; that one feeling, and one alone, ought to live in our
-souls--the love of our country!"
-
-Then followed a short silence; the two men appeared to be reflecting
-deeply. At length Don Tadeo raised his head proudly.
-
-"Thanks, Don Gregorio!" he said, in a firm voice, and pressing his
-hand--"thanks for your rough words; they have restored me to myself. I
-will prove myself worthy of you. Don Tadeo de Leon no longer exists;
-the hired assassins of a tyrant have shot him tonight upon the Plaza
-Mayor. No one is left but the King of Darkness! the implacable leader
-of the Dark-Hearts! Woe be to them whom God shall bring across my path!
-for I will crush them without pity. We shall triumph, Don Gregorio;
-for from this day I am no longer a man, I am the avenging sword, the
-exterminating angel, fighting for our country!"
-
-While uttering these words, Don Tadeo had drawn his imposing stature up
-to its full height; his handsome, noble features became animated, and
-his eyes sparkled in accordance with his speech.
-
-"Oh," Don Gregorio exclaimed, cheerfully, "I have found my friend again!
-Thank God! thank God!"
-
-"Yes, my brother," the leader continued, "from this moment the real
-struggle between us and the tyrant begins--a struggle without pity,
-without truce, and without mercy, which can only terminate in the
-complete extinction of our enemies. Woe be to them! Woe!"
-
-"No time is to be lost; let us begone!" Don Gregorio said.
-
-"But whither am I to go?" Don Tadeo asked, with a sardonic smile. "Am I
-not legally dead in the eyes of all? My house is no longer mine."
-
-"That is true," the lieutenant of the Dark-Hearts murmured. "Well, never
-mind that! Tomorrow the news of your miraculous resurrection will be a
-thunderclap to our enemies! Their awaking will be terrible! They will
-learn with stupor that the invincible athlete, whom they thought they
-had for ever crushed beneath their feet, is up again, and ready to renew
-the contest."
-
-"And this time, I solemnly swear," Don Tadeo cried, with energy, "the
-fall of the tyrant alone shall terminate it. But you are right; we
-cannot remain longer here. Come home with me; for a time you will be
-there in safety; unless," he added, with a smile, "you prefer asking an
-asylum of Dona Rosario?"
-
-Don Tadeo, who had taken Don Gregorio's arm, stopped suddenly at this
-question, of which his friend did not suspect the terrible extent.
-A convulsive shudder darted through his frame, a cold perspiration
-inundated his face.
-
-"Oh," he exclaimed, in a tone of agony, "my God! I had forgotten!"
-
-Don Gregorio was terrified at the state he beheld him in.
-
-"In heaven's name, what is the matter?" he asked.
-
-"What is the matter!" the chief replied, in a voice choked with emotion,
-"that woman--that serpent whom we have weakly failed to crush--"
-
-"Well, what of her?"
-
-"Oh, I have but this moment recollected a horrible threat she made. Good
-heavens! good heavens! What is to be done?"
-
-"Explain yourself, my friend; you quite terrify me."
-
-"By her orders, Dona Rosario this very night, was to be carried off; and
-who knows if, furious at my escape from her assassins, that woman has
-not by this time put her to death?"
-
-"Oh, that is frightful!" Don Gregorio cried. "What is to be done?"
-
-"Oh, that woman!" the wounded man replied; "and not to be able to act,
-or to know how to thwart her horrible schemes."
-
-"Let us fly to Dona Rosario's residence!" Don Gregorio said.
-
-"Alas! you see I am wounded; I can scarcely support myself."
-
-"Well, when you can no longer walk, I will carry you," his friend said,
-resolutely.
-
-"Thanks, brother! May God help us!"
-
-And the two men, the one leaning upon the other, set off, as fast as the
-state of Don Tadeo would permit, towards the residence of the lady whom
-they were so anxious to save. But, in spite of the earnest will that
-animated him, Don Tadeo felt his strength fail him; and, notwithstanding
-all his efforts, it was with extreme difficulty he sustained himself.
-Whilst labouring on thus, the noise of horses' footsteps reached them
-from a distance. Torches gleamed up the street, and a troop of horsemen
-appeared in sight.
-
-"Oh, oh!" Don Gregorio said, stopping, and endeavouring to make out who
-those persons could be, who, in defiance of the police regulations,
-dared to be passing along the streets at this hour of the night.
-
-"Let us stop," Don Tadeo replied; "I see the glitter of uniforms. They
-are the spies of the minister of war."
-
-"By Saint Jago!" cried Don Gregorio, "it is General Bustamente himself!
-The two accomplices are going to have a little chat together."
-
-"Yes," the wounded man said, in a faltering voice; "he is going towards
-the residence of the Linda."
-
-As the horsemen were but at a short distance, the two men, fearing to be
-surprised, turned quickly into a side street, and the General and his
-suite passed by without seeing them.
-
-"Let us begone as fast as possible," Don Gregorio said; and his
-companion, aware of the urgency for prompt flight, made a desperate
-effort. They resumed their course, and had walked for about ten minutes,
-when they heard the steps of more horses coming towards them.
-
-"What can this mean?" the wounded man said, endeavouring to smile; "Are
-all the people of Santiago running about the streets tonight?"
-
-"Hum!" said Don Gregorio, "I will find out this time."
-
-All at once a female voice was heard in a lamentable tone imploring help.
-
-"Make her hold her tongue, _carajas!_" a man said, coarsely.
-
-But the sound of that voice had reached the ears of Don Tadeo and his
-friend. At that voice, which both had recognized, they were roused to
-feelings of deep interest and anger. They pressed each other's hand
-firmly; their resolution was formed--to die or to save her who called
-upon them for help.
-
-"Holloa! what is this about?" another individual said, pulling up his
-horse.
-
-Two men, standing firmly in the middle of the street, seemed determined
-to bar the passage of the horsemen, of whom there were five. One of them
-held a woman before him on his horse.
-
-"Holloa!" cried the one who had just spoken, "get out of the way, if you
-don't wish to be ridden over."
-
-"You shall not pass," a deep voice replied, "unless you release the
-woman you are bearing off."
-
-"Shan't we?" the horseman remarked with a laugh.
-
-"Try," said Don Gregorio, cocking his pistol; a movement silently
-imitated by Don Tadeo, whom he had supplied with firearms.
-
-"For the last time, stand out of the way!" the horseman shouted.
-
-"We will not!"
-
-"We will ride over you, then!" and turning towards his companions,
-"Forward!" he cried angrily.
-
-The five horsemen advanced with uplifted sabres upon the two men, who,
-firmly fixed in the middle of the street, made no effort to avoid them.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
-SWORD-THRUSTS.
-
-
-In order to make the facts that follow intelligible, we must leave Don
-Tadeo and his friend in their critical position, and return to the two
-principal personages of this history, whom we have so long neglected.
-We saw in a preceding chapter the two foster brothers gaily leaving
-Valparaiso, to repair to the capital of Chili, like Bias, carrying all
-their fortune with them, but possessing over the philosophical Greek the
-immense advantage of being amply furnished with hopes and illusions, two
-words which, in this life, have but too frequently the same meaning.
-
-After a rather long ride, the young men had stopped for the night in
-a miserable _rancho_ constructed of mud and dry branches, the dismal
-skeleton of which stood out on one side of the road. The inhabitant of
-this miserable dwelling, a poor devil of a peon, whose life was passed
-in guarding a few head of lean cattle, gave our travellers a frank and
-hospitable reception. Quite delighted at having something to offer them,
-he had cheerfully shared with them his _charqui_--strips of meat, dried
-in the sun--and his _harina tostada_--roasted corn--the whole washed
-down with cups of detestable _chicha_.
-
-The Frenchmen, who had been literally dying of hunger, were glad of even
-these humble viands, however little savoury they might be, and after
-ascertaining that their horses were comfortably provided for, they lay
-down, wrapped in their ponchos, upon a heap of dry leaves, a delicious
-bed for fatigued men, and upon which they slept soundly till morning.
-
-At daybreak, our two adventurers, still accompanied by their dog Caesar,
-who, whatever he might think, expressed no astonishment at this new kind
-of life, but trotted seriously beside them, saddled their horses, bade
-farewell to their host, to whom they gave a few reals in return for
-his hospitality, and set forward again, looking with earnest curiosity
-at every object that presented itself to their view, and surprised to
-find so little difference between the New World and the Old. The life
-they were beginning, so different from that they had hitherto led, was,
-for them, full of unexpected charms, and they felt like schoolboys in
-holiday time. Their lungs seemed to expand to inhale the fresh, sharp
-breeze of the mountains. Everything, in their eyes, wore a smiling
-aspect; in a word, they felt they lived.
-
-It is about thirty-five leagues from Valparaiso to Chili, as the people
-of the country are accustomed to call the capital of the Republic. The
-handsome, broad, and well-kept up road, which was formerly cut through
-the mountain by the Spaniards, is rather monotonous, and completely
-devoid of interest for tourists. Vegetation is rare and poor; a fine
-and almost impalpable dust arises with the least puff of wind. The few
-trees, which stand at long distances from each other, are slender,
-stunted, dried up by both wind and sun, and seem, by their wretched
-appearance, to protest against the efforts at cultivation which have
-been made on this plateau, which is rendered sterile by the strong sea
-breezes and the cold winds of the Cordilleras which sweep over it.
-
-At times may be seen, at an immense height, like a black dot in space,
-the great condor of Chili, the eagle of the Andes, or the savage vulture
-in search of prey. At long intervals pass _recuas_ of mules, headed by
-the _yegua madrina_, whose sonorous bells are heard to a great distance,
-accompanying, well or ill, the dismal chant of the muleteer, who thus
-endeavours to keep his beasts going. Or else it is a _guaso_ of the
-interior, hastening to his chacra or his hacienda, and who, proudly
-mounted upon a half wild horse, passes like a whirlwind, favouring you
-as he goes by, with the eternal "Santas tardes, caballero!"
-
-With the exception of what we have described, the road is dull, dusty,
-and solitary. There is not, as with us, a single hostelry affording
-accommodation for horse and foot; these would be useless establishments
-in a country where the stranger enters every house as if it were his
-own home. Nothing! Solitude everywhere and always; hunger, thirst, and
-fatigue must be expected and endured.
-
-But our young men perceived nothing of this. Enthusiasm supplied the
-place of all they wanted; the road appeared charming to them; the
-journey they were making, delightful! They were in America; beneath
-their feet was the soil of the New World, that privileged land, of which
-so many surprising accounts are given; of which so many people talk, and
-about which so few know anything. Having landed only a few days before,
-while still under the impressions of an endless passage, the weariness
-of which had weighed down their spirits like a mantle of lead, they
-beheld Chili through the enchanting prism of their hopes; reality did
-not yet exist for them. What we have here said may appear a paradox to
-many people; and yet, we are satisfied that all travellers of good faith
-will acknowledge the exact truth.
-
-At times travelling at a steady foot pace, at others enjoying a laugh
-and a gallop, our young men, to whom the political events of the Chilian
-Republic were very uninteresting, and who, consequently, knew nothing of
-what was going on, arrived quietly within a league of Santiago, at about
-eleven o'clock in the evening, just at the moment when the ten Chilian
-patriots were falling on the Plaza Mayor, beneath the balls of General
-Bustamente's soldiers.
-
-"Let us pull up here," Valentine said cheerfully; "it will give our
-horses time to breathe."
-
-"Pull up! what for?" Louis asked. "It is late; we shall not find a
-single hotel open."
-
-"My dear friend," Valentine replied, with a laugh, "you are still a
-Parisian to the backbone! You forget that we are in America. In that
-city, of which the numerous steeples dimly stand out on the horizon
-before us, everybody is long since asleep, and all the doors are closed."
-
-"What shall we do, then?"
-
-"Pardieu! why, we will bivouac. The night is magnificent. The heavens
-display all their jewelry; the air is warm and balmy; what better could
-we desire?"
-
-"Oh, nothing, of course!" Louis replied, laughingly.
-
-"Well, then, we have, as you see, time to chat a little."
-
-"Chat, brother! why, we have done nothing else since morning."
-
-"Pardon me, I don't agree with you. We have talked much, about all sorts
-of things, of the country in which we are, and of the manners of the
-inhabitants, little as we know about them; but we have not talked in the
-manner I mean."
-
-"Explain yourself more clearly."
-
-"Look you, brother; an idea has just struck me. We know not what
-adventures await us in that city, yonder, before us. Well! before we
-enter it, I should like to have a sort of final conversation with you."
-
-The young men took off their horses' bridles, that the animals might
-have the advantage of a few tufts of grass which sprang up here and
-there; and, stretching themselves luxuriously upon the ground, they lit
-their cigars.
-
-"We are in America," Valentine resumed; "in the country of gold, upon
-that soil where, with intelligence and courage, men of our age can in a
-few years amass princely fortunes!"
-
-"Do you know, my friend----" interrupted Louis.
-
-"Oh, perfectly!" said Valentine, cutting him short. "You are in love,
-and you are seeking the object of your love; that's understood: but that
-does not at all interfere with our projects--quite the contrary."
-
-"How is that?"
-
-"Pardieu! that's plain enough. You know, do you not, that Dona
-Rosario--that's her name, I think--"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Very well, then; you know she is rich, do you not?"
-
-"There's no doubt of that."
-
-"Ay, ay! but be it understood, not rich as with us: that is to say, some
-fifty thousand francs a year--a paltry pittance!--but rich as people are
-here--a dozen times over millionaires!"
-
-"Probably she may be," the young man said impatiently.
-
-"That's capital! You must understand, then, that when we have found her,
-for we _shall_ find her, and that soon, you can only demand her hand by
-producing a fortune equal to her own."
-
-"The devil! I never thought of that," said the young man.
-
-"I know you did not; you are in love; and, like all other men afflicted
-with that disease, you think of nothing but the person you love.
-Fortunately, however, I am with you, to think for both; and whenever you
-have spoken to me of love, I have replied by reminding you of fortune."
-
-"That is true. But how is fortune to be made so promptly?"
-
-"Ah! ah! you have come to that question at last," Valentine said,
-laughing.
-
-"I know no profession," Louis continued, following his own idea.
-
-"Nor I either. But let not that alarm you; people succeed best in things
-they don't understand."
-
-"What's to be done?"
-
-"I will think of it; so set your mind at rest. But you must be well
-convinced of one thing, and that is, that we have set foot in a land
-where the ideas are quite different from those of the country we have
-left; where the manners and customs are diametrically opposite."
-
-"You mean to say--"
-
-"I mean to say that we must forget all we have learnt, in order that
-we may remember but one thing--our desire quickly to make a colossal
-fortune."
-
-"By honourable means?"
-
-"I am acquainted with no other," Valentine replied, seriously. "And
-remember, brother, that in the country in which we at present are, the
-point of honour is not at all the same as in France, and many things
-which with us would appear false coin are here deemed good and passable.
-On this point a word to the wise! You understand me, don't you?"
-
-"Nearly, I think."
-
-"Very well! Imagine we are in an enemy's country, and must act
-accordingly."
-
-"But----"
-
-"Do you wish to marry the woman you love:"
-
-"Can you ask me such a question?"
-
-"Allow me to act, then, as I see best! But, above all, when chance
-throws a good opportunity in our way, let us be careful not to miss it."
-
-"Act just as you please."
-
-"Well, that is all I had to say to you;" and throwing away the remains
-of his cigar, he rose from his recumbent position.
-
-They were soon again in the saddle, and, at a foot's pace, resumed their
-way towards the city, chatting as they went.
-
-Midnight was striking by the clock of the Cabildo at the moment when
-they entered Santiago by the Canada. The streets were deserted and
-silent.
-
-"Everybody is asleep," said Louis.
-
-"So it seems," Valentine replied. "Let us look out, notwithstanding. If
-we find no door open, we can then but compound for a night's bivouac, as
-I suggested."
-
-At this moment two pistol shots were heard, mingled with the gallop of
-horses.
-
-"What can that be?" said Louis. "Assassination is going on here!"
-
-"Forward! cordieu!" replied Valentine.
-
-They clapped spurs to their horses, and galloped at full speed in the
-direction whence the sound proceeded. They soon reached a narrow street,
-in the middle of which two men on foot were bravely contending with five
-on horseback.
-
-"Have at the horsemen!" Valentine shouted; "help the weaker party!"
-
-"Be of good heart, gentlemen!" said Louis; "help is at hand!"
-
-And timely help it was for Don Gregorio and his friend. A minute later,
-and they must have succumbed. The providential arrival of the Frenchmen
-quickly changed the appearance of the fight. Two horsemen fell dead from
-pistol shots fired by the young men; while a third, knocked down by Don
-Gregorio, was silently strangled by Caesar. The other two thought it
-high time to decamp, leaving their fair prisoner behind them. She had
-fainted; and Don Tadeo, leaning against the wall of a house, was upon
-the point of following her example. Valentine, with the presence of mind
-acquired in his old profession of a Spahi, secured the horses of the
-bandits killed in the skirmish.
-
-"Quick, gentlemen! to the saddle!" Valentine said to the Chilians.
-
-Louis had already dismounted, and was attending to the young lady.
-
-"Do not leave us," Don Gregorio remarked; "we are surrounded by enemies."
-
-"Fear nothing!" said Valentine, "we are quite at your service."
-
-"Many thanks!--A little assistance, if you please, to place my friend,
-who is wounded, on horseback."
-
-Once in the saddle, Don Tadeo declared he felt sufficiently strong to
-keep his seat without help. Don Gregorio placed the still inanimate
-young lady before him.
-
-"Now, gentlemen," he said, "nothing remains for me but to thank you most
-cordially, if your business will not allow you to remain longer with us."
-
-"I beg to repeat, caballeros, that we are at your service."
-
-"We have no pressing demand upon our time; we will not leave you till we
-are assured you are in safety," Louis said, with animation.
-
-"Follow me, then," said Don Gregorio, with a bow; "and do not spare the
-horses; it is an affair of life and death."
-
-And the four horsemen set off as fast as their horses could bear them.
-
-"Eh! eh!" said Valentine, in an undertone to his foster brother. "Here
-is an adventure that promises something! We are losing no time at
-Santiago! What think you?"
-
-"We shall see!" Louis replied, in a more thoughtful tone.
-
-No light had gleamed out, no window had been opened, during the combat.
-The streets remained silent and gloomy; the city seemed abandoned.
-Nothing was to be heard but the clatter of the horses' feet upon the
-rough pavement of the streets through which they galloped. The cathedral
-clock struck two as they passed across the Plaza Mayor. Don Tadeo could
-not repress a sigh of relief when glancing at the spot where on, only a
-few hours before, he had so miraculously escaped death.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
-GENERAL BUSTAMENTE.
-
-
-Don Tadeo was right, when, on seeing General Bustamente pass, he said he
-was on his way to visit his mistress. It was, in fact, to the residence
-of the Linda the General was going. On arriving at the gate, one of his
-men dismounted, and knocked. But no one answered; and at a sign from
-the General, the soldier knocked louder. But still all remained silent;
-there was no movement within. He began to feel uneasy. This silence was
-the more extraordinary from the General's visit having been announced,
-and he was, consequently, expected. "Oh! oh!" he said, "What is going on
-here? Knock again, Diego, and knock in a way to make yourself heard!"
-
-The soldier knocked with all his strength, but still uselessly. Don
-Pancho's brow contracted; he began to fancy some misfortune must have
-occurred.
-
-"Break open the door!" he cried.
-
-The order was instantly obeyed; and the General, followed by his escort,
-entered the house. In the Patio all dismounted.
-
-"Be prudent," said the General in a low voice to the corporal who
-commanded the escort; "place sentinels everywhere, and keep a sharp
-look-out whilst I search the house."
-
-After giving these orders, the General took his pistols from his
-holsters, and, followed by some of his lancers, entered the house;
-but everywhere the silence of death prevailed. After passing through
-several apartments, he arrived at a door, which, being a little ajar,
-allowed a stream of light to pass. From the other side of this door
-proceeded something like stifled groans. With a kick of his foot, one
-of the lancers dashed open the door; the General entered, and a strange
-spectacle presented itself to his astonished eyes! Dona Maria, tightly
-bound, and gagged, was fastened to the foot of a damask bed, saturated
-with blood. The furniture was broken and disordered, whilst two dead
-bodies, lying in a pool of blood, made it evident that the room had been
-the scene of a desperate conflict.
-
-The general ordered the dead bodies to be removed, and then desired to
-be left alone with the lady. As soon as the lancers had departed he shut
-the door, and approaching the Linda, he hastened to release her from her
-bonds. She was senseless.
-
-On turning round to place the pistols he had retained in his hands on
-the table, he drew back with astonishment, and almost with terror, as
-he perceived the dagger standing erect in the middle of it. But this
-instinctive feeling lasted only a moment. He went quickly up to the
-table, seized the dagger, which he carefully drew out, and eagerly took
-up the paper it had pinned down.
-
-"_The tyrant Don Pancho Bustamente is cited at the expiration of
-ninety-three days!
-
- _"THE DARK-HEARTS."_
-
-he read in a loud, harsh tone, and then crushed the paper violently in
-his hand. "Sangre de Dios! Will these demons always make a mock of me?
-Oh! they know that I show no mercy, and that those who fall into my
-hands----"
-
-"Escape!" said a hollow voice, which made him start involuntarily.
-
-He turned sharply round, and beheld the Linda, with her vicious eye
-fixed upon him with a demoniacal expression. He sprang towards her.
-
-"Thank God!" he cried warmly, "you are again restored to your senses.
-Are you sufficiently recovered to explain the scene that has taken place
-here?"
-
-"A terrible scene, Don Pancho!" she replied, in a tremulous voice; "a
-scene, the bare remembrance of which still freezes me with terror."
-
-"Are you strong enough to describe it to me?"
-
-"I hope so," she replied. "Listen to me attentively, Don Pancho, for
-what I have to tell concerns you, perhaps, more than me."
-
-"You mean this insolent summons, I suppose?" he remarked, showing it.
-
-She glanced over it, and replied--
-
-"I did not even know that such a paper had been addressed to you. But
-listen to me attentively."
-
-"In the first place, have the goodness to explain to me what you just
-now said."
-
-"Everything in its turn, General; I will not fail to explain everything,
-for the vengeance I thirst for must be complete."
-
-"Oh!" he said, a flash of hatred gleaming from his eye, "set your heart
-at ease on that head,--whilst avenging myself, I will avenge you."
-
-The Linda related to the General what had passed between her and Don
-Tadeo in the fullest details--how the Dark-Hearts had snatched him from
-her hands, and the threats they had addressed to her on leaving her.
-But, with that talent which all women possess, of making themselves
-appear innocent in everything, she represented as a miraculous piece of
-awkwardness on the part of the soldiers charged to shoot him, the fact
-of Don Tadeo being alive after his execution. She said that, attracted
-by the hope of avenging himself upon her, whom he suspected of being no
-stranger to his condemnation, he had introduced himself unseen into her
-house, where by a strange chance she happened to be alone, having that
-evening permitted her servants to be present at a _romeria_ (a fete),
-from which they were not to return before three o'clock.
-
-The General had not for an instant the idea of doubting the veracity of
-his mistress. The situation in which he had found her,--the incredible
-news of the resurrection of his most implacable enemy, altogether so
-confused his thoughts, that suspicion had no time to enter his mind.
-He strode about the room with hasty steps, revolving in his head the
-most extravagant projects for seizing Don Tadeo, and, above all, for
-annihilating the Dark-Hearts,--those never-to-be-caught Proteuses, who
-so incessantly crossed his path, thwarted all his plans, and always
-escaped him. He plainly saw what additional strength the escape of Don
-Tadeo would give to the patriots, and how much it would complicate his
-political embarrassments, by placing at their head a resolute man who
-could have no longer any considerations to preserve, but would wage war
-to the knife with him. His perplexity was extreme; he instinctively
-felt that the ground beneath him was mined, that he was walking over
-a volcano, but he had no power to denounce to public opprobrium the
-enemies who conspired his ruin. The recital made by his mistress had
-produced the effect of a thunderclap upon him; he knew not what measures
-to employ in order to counteract the numerous plots in action against
-him on all sides, and simultaneously. The Linda did not take her eyes
-off him for a moment, but watched upon his countenance the various
-feelings aroused by what she told him.
-
-We will, in a few words, introduce to the reader this personage, who
-will play so important a part in the course of the following history.[1]
-General Don Pancho Bustamente, who has left in Chili a reputation for
-cruelty so terrible that he is generally called _El Verdugo_, or the
-executioner, was a man of from thirty-five to thirty-six years of age,
-although he looked near fifty, a little above the middle height, well
-made, and of good carriage, announcing altogether great corporeal
-strength. His features were tolerably regular, but his prominent
-forehead, his grey eyes deeply set beneath the brows, and close to his
-hook nose, his large mouth and high cheek bones, gave him something of
-a resemblance to a bird of prey. His chin was square, an indication
-of obstinacy; his hair and moustache, beginning to be streaked with
-grey, were trained and cut in military fashion. He wore the magnificent
-uniform, covered at every seam with gold embroidery, of a general
-officer.
-
-Don Bustamente was the son of his own works, which was in his favour.
-At first a simple soldier, he had, by exemplary conduct and more than
-common talents, raised himself, step by step, to the highest rank of the
-army, and had in the last instance been named minister-at-war. Then the
-jealousy which had been silent whilst he was confounded with the crowd,
-was unchained against him. The General, instead of despising calumnies
-which might have died out of themselves, gave them some degree of
-foundation, by inaugurating a system of severity and cruelty. Devoured
-by an ambition which nothing could satisfy, all means were deemed good
-by him for the attainment of an object he secretly aimed at, which was
-the overthrow of the republic and government of Chili, and the formation
-of Bolivia and Araucania into one state, of which he would cause
-himself to be proclaimed Protector--an object which, besides the almost
-insurmountable difficulties it presented, ever appeared--owing to the
-universal hatred which the General had aroused against himself--to slip
-further from his grasp each time he thought he was about grasping it.
-
-At the moment we bring him on the scene, he found himself in one of the
-most critical circumstances of his political career. He had in vain
-shot the patriots _en masse_--conspiracies, as always happens in such
-cases, succeeded each other without interruption, and the system of
-terror which he had inaugurated, far from intimidating the population,
-appeared, on the contrary, to urge them on to revolt. Secret societies
-were formed; and one of these, the most powerful and the most terrible,
-that of the Dark-Hearts, enveloped him in invisible nets in which he
-struggled in vain. He foresaw that if he did not hasten on the _coup
-d'etat_ he meditated, he should be lost beyond redemption. After a
-rather long silence, the General placed himself by the side of the Linda.
-
-"We will be avenged!" he said, in a deep tone; "be but patient."
-
-"Oh!" she replied, bitterly, "my vengeance has commenced!"
-
-"What do you mean by that?"
-
-"I have caused Dona Rosario del Valle, the woman Don Tadeo de Leon loves
-so passionately, to be carried off."
-
-"You have _done_ that?" said the General.
-
-"Yes, and in ten minutes she will be here."
-
-"Oh! oh!" he exclaimed; "and do you mean to keep her with you?"
-
-"With me!" she cried; "No, I thank you, General. I hear that the
-Pehuenches are very fond of white women; I will make them a present of
-her."
-
-"Oh!" Don Pancho muttered, "women will be always our masters! they alone
-know how to revenge themselves! But," he added aloud, "have you no fear
-lest the man to whom you have confided this mission should betray you?"
-
-She smiled with terrible irony,
-
-"No," she said; "that man hates Don Tadeo more than I do, if that be
-possible; he is working out his own vengeance."
-
-At the same instant steps were heard in the chamber preceding the room.
-
-"You will see, General--here is my emissary. Come in!" the Linda cried.
-
-A man appeared; his face was pale and haggard; and his clothes, torn and
-disordered, were stained in various places with blood.
-
-"Well!" she exclaimed, in a tone of intense anxiety.
-
-"All has failed," answered the man, breathless with haste and terror.
-
-"What!" the Linda shouted, with a cry like that of a wild beast.
-
-"There were five of us," the man continued, quite unmoved, "and we
-carried off the _senorita_. All went on well till within a short
-distance from this house, when we were attacked by four demons, who came
-I know not whence."
-
-"And you did not defend yourselves, miserable cowards!" interrupted the
-General violently.
-
-The bandit gave him a cold look, and continued impassively--
-
-"Three of our number are dead, and the leader and myself wounded."
-
-"And the girl?" the Linda asked passionately.
-
-"The girl was recaptured by our opponents. The Englishman has sent me to
-you to learn if you still wish him to carry off Dona Rosario?"
-
-"Would he attempt it again?"
-
-"Yes. And this time, he says, he is certain to succeed if the conditions
-are the same."
-
-A smile of contempt played round the lips of the courtezan.
-
-"Repeat to him this," she replied; "not only shall he receive the
-hundred ounces if he succeeds, but, still further, he shall have a
-hundred more; and that he may be in no doubt of my promise," she added,
-rising and taking from a drawer a rather heavy bag which she handed to
-the bandit, "give him this; there is the half of the sum, but bid him
-despatch!"
-
-The man bowed.
-
-"As to you, Juanito," she continued, "as soon as you have acquitted
-yourself of this mission, return, for I shall, perhaps, want you here.
-Begone!"
-
-The bandit disappeared instantly.
-
-"Who is that man?" the General asked.
-
-"A poor devil whom I saved some years ago from certain death. He is
-devoted to me, body and soul."
-
-"Hum!" said the general, "he has rather too cunning an eye not to be a
-rogue."
-
-The Linda shrugged her shoulders.
-
-"You are mistrustful of everybody," she said.
-
-"That is the way not to be deceived."
-
-"Or to be deceived the more easily."
-
-"Perhaps so. Well, you see this abduction, so admirably planned, and the
-success of which was certain, has failed."
-
-"I can only repeat what you yourself said to me just now."
-
-"What is that?"
-
-"Patience! But, pray, what are your present plans?" The General rose.
-
-"Whilst you are carrying on against our enemies," he said, in a low,
-stern tone, "a guerilla warfare of ambuscades and treacheries, I, on my
-part, will wage an open war against them--a war in the face of the sun,
-but as merciless as yours. Their blood shall flow in streams over all
-the territories of the Republic. The Dark-Hearts have summoned me in
-ninety-three days. Well, I take up the gauntlet they have thrown to me."
-
-"That is well!" the Linda replied. "And now let us so arrange our plans
-that they may not fail like their predecessors. We must come to an end
-with these miserable plotters, and in doing so, take a revenge that will
-make an impression on others."
-
-"It shall be a vengeance! I will stake my head on the game. Oh," he
-added, "I hold them! I have found the means I sought to make them all
-fall into my hands; let them sleep for a while in deceitful security,
-but their awakening shall be terrible!"
-
-And, having saluted the Linda with the greatest courtesy, the General
-retired.
-
-"I leave you a few soldiers to watch over your safety till the return of
-your servants," he said, as he went out.
-
-"Thank you, thank you!" she replied, with a bland smile.
-
-The Linda, when left alone, instead of seeking the repose so necessary
-after the excitement of the night, remained plunged in deep thought.
-At sunrise she was still in the same place, in the same position. She
-was still reflecting, but her features became animated; a sinister
-smile curled her pale lips; and her eyes, though apparently fixed upon
-vacancy, emitted portentous flashes. Suddenly she sprang up, and passing
-her hand rapidly over her brow, as if to efface its wrinkles, she cried,
-in a tone of triumph--
-
-"And I, too, will succeed!"
-
-
-[1] Reasons of the highest consideration oblige us to change the names
-and the portraits of the personages of this history, as the majority
-still exist. But we vouch for the correctness of the facts we relate.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
-THE SPY.
-
-
-When the young lady was delivered, the four men set off as fast as they
-could go, with regard to her ease. In ten minutes they were out of the
-city, and with the change of the road their speed was increased. The
-route they took was that which leads to Talca.
-
-"Eh, eh!" Valentine said, laughing, to his foster brother; "we seem to
-be playing at prisoners' bars. We enter the city by one gate, to leave
-it immediately by another. We shall not have an opportunity of seeing
-the capital of Chili this time."
-
-With the exception of these few words, to which Louis only replied by a
-careless shrug of the shoulders, no other conversation took place during
-the hour which their rapid journey lasted. By the pale light of the moon
-the trees on each side of the road seemed to defile like a legion of
-melancholy phantoms. Ere long the white walls of a _chacra_ (large farm)
-stood out upon the horizon.
-
-"Here we are," said Don Gregorio, pointing with his finger.
-
-They reached the house in a few minutes. The gate was open, but a
-man was standing evidently on the watch. The fugitives dashed like a
-hurricane into the _patio_, and the gates were immediately closed behind
-them.
-
-"What has happened, Tio Pepito?" Don Gregorio asked, before he was quite
-off his horse, of the man who appeared to have expected him.
-
-"Nothing, _mi amo_" (my master), "nothing of consequence," replied Tio
-Pepito, a little thick-set man, with a round face, lit up by two grey
-eyes, sparkling with cunning.
-
-"Have not the persons I expected arrived?"
-
-"Pardon me, _mi amo_. They have been at the _chacra_ more than an
-hour. They say they must begone immediately; they are waiting for you
-impatiently."
-
-"That's well. Announce my arrival to them, and tell them I shall be at
-their service in two or three minutes."
-
-The mayoral, for this man was the major-domo of the _chacra_, entered
-the house without reply. Don Tadeo also, who seemed to know perfectly
-well where he was, disappeared, bearing the young girl in his arms. The
-two Frenchmen were left alone with the chacrero, who advanced towards
-them.
-
-"Now that you are, as we suppose, for the present at least, in safety,
-sir," said Valentine, "we have only to take our leave of you."
-
-"Not so!" Don Gregorio exclaimed; "it must not be so. _Diable_! as you
-Frenchmen say," he added, smiling; "chance does not so often procure
-us such friends as you, to allow us to part with you thus when we have
-met you. You will remain here, if you please. Our acquaintance must not
-terminate so."
-
-"If our continuing here can be of any service to you," Louis replied,
-courteously, "we are at your command."
-
-"Thank you," he said, in a slightly agitated voice, and pressing their
-hands warmly; "I shall never forget that I owe to you the lives of
-myself and my friend. In what way can I be of service to you?"
-
-"Well," Valentine said, laughing, "in every way, and no way, as it may
-happen, caballero."
-
-"Explain yourself," Don Gregorio replied.
-
-"_Dame!_ it is clear enough; we are strangers in this country."
-
-"When did you arrive?" the Chilian said, examining them attentively.
-
-"Faith! very recently. You are the first persons we have spoken to."
-
-"That is well," Gregorio said, slowly. "I told you that I was at your
-service, did I not?"
-
-"Yes, and we sincerely thank you; although we hope never to have
-occasion to remind you of this obliging offer."
-
-"I perfectly appreciate your delicacy; but a service like the one you
-have rendered me and my friend is an eternal bond. Take no heed of your
-future fortune, it is made."
-
-"Pardon me, pardon me!" said Valentine, earnestly; "we do not understand
-one another at all; you mistake us. We are not men who expect to be paid
-for having acted as our hearts dictated. You owe us nothing."
-
-"I do not propose or pretend to pay you, gentlemen. I only wish, in
-order to attach you to me, to propose to you to share my good or evil
-fortune; in a word, I offer myself to you as a brother."
-
-"In that case we at once accede," said Louis, "and will endeavour to
-prove ourselves worthy of such an offer."
-
-"I have no doubt you will. Only I beg you not to be misled by my words;
-the life I am leading at present is full of perils."
-
-"I can suppose that," said Valentine, with a laugh. "The scene at which
-we have been present, and the _denoument_ of which we perhaps hastened,
-makes it pretty evident that your existence is not of the most peaceful
-nature."
-
-"What you have as yet seen is nothing. Do you know nobody in this
-country?"
-
-"Nobody."
-
-"Your political opinions, then, are unformed?"
-
-"As regards Chili, completely."
-
-"Bravo!" Don Gregorio exclaimed, with delight; "if we agree on that
-point our compact will be for life and death."
-
-"We do agree," said Valentine, laughing; "and if you conspire--"
-
-"Well?" the Chilian asked, fixing an inquiring look upon him.
-
-"Why, we will conspire, too, pardieu! That is agreed."
-
-The three men exchanged a cordial pressure of the hand, and then Don
-Gregorio called the major-domo to conduct them to the chamber which was
-prepared for them.
-
-"Good night! or rather good morning!" he said, on quitting them.
-
-"Come!" said Valentine, rubbing his hands, "matters are going on well.
-We shall not want for amusement here."
-
-"Hum!" Louis replied, with a tone of something like uneasiness;
-"conspire!"
-
-"Well, and what better?" said Valentine. "Does that frighten you?
-Remember, my friend, that the best fishing is in troubled waters."
-
-"In that case," Louis remarked, taking up the gay humour of his
-companion, "if my presentiments are just, ours will be miraculous."
-
-"I expect so, firmly," said Valentine, bidding good night to the
-major-domo, who retired, after bowing respectfully.
-
-The _cuarto_ (chamber) in which the young men found themselves, was
-whitewashed, and entirely destitute of furniture, with the exception of
-two oak frames furnished with dressed hides, which served as beds, a
-massive table with twisted feet, and four seats covered with leather.
-In a corner of the room burned a little green wax light before a
-badly-engraved print supposed to represent the Virgin.
-
-"Eh!" said Louis, casting a glance around him, "our friends, the
-Chilians, do not seem to consult comfort much."
-
-"Bah!" Valentine replied, "we have all that we require. A man can sleep
-soundly anywhere when he is fatigued. This chamber is better than the
-bivouac we were threatened with."
-
-"You are right. Let us take a little rest then, for we don't know what
-tomorrow has in reserve for us."
-
-In a quarter of an hour they were both fast asleep. At the moment the
-Frenchmen went into the house with the major-domo, Don Tadeo came out by
-another door.
-
-"Well?" Don Gregorio asked, anxiously.
-
-"She is asleep. Her terror is abated," Don Tadeo replied. "The joy she
-experienced at seeing me, whom she believed dead, brought about a very
-salutary crisis."
-
-"I am glad to hear it! In that quarter, then, we may be at ease?"
-
-"Completely."
-
-"Do you feel yourself strong enough to be present at an important
-interview?"
-
-"Is it necessary that I should be present?"
-
-"I think it quite right that you should hear the communications that one
-of my emissaries is about to make me."
-
-"It is very imprudent of you," said Don Tadeo, "to receive such a man in
-your own house!"
-
-"Oh! do not alarm yourself! I have known him for a long time. Besides,
-he is not aware whose house he is in; he was brought hither blinded, by
-two of our brethren. In addition to which, we shall be masked."
-
-"Well! since you desire it, I am at your commands."
-
-The two friends, after having covered their faces with black velvet
-masks, entered the apartment in which were the persons who waited for
-them. This apartment, which served as a dining room, was very large, and
-furnished with a long table; it was faintly illumined by two sconces,
-in which burned small candles of yellow tallow, yielding so doubtful a
-light that objects could be seen but indistinctly. Three men, wrapped
-in variegated ponchos, and with broad-brimmed hats pulled down over
-their eyes, were carelessly smoking their slender papelitos, whilst
-warming themselves round a copper _brasero,_ placed in the middle of the
-apartment, and in which some olive-stones were slowly burning. At the
-entrance of the leaders of the Dark-Hearts, these men rose.
-
-"Why," asked Don Tadeo, who at the first glance recognized the emissary,
-"why did you not wait, Don Pedro, for the meeting tomorrow, at the
-_Quinta Verde,_ to communicate to the council the revelations you have
-to make?"
-
-The man thus named as Don Pedro bowed respectfully. He was an individual
-of about thirty-five years of age. He was tall, and his countenance, as
-sharp as the blade of a knife, wore a cunning, roguish expression.
-
-"What I have to state only indirectly concerns the Dark-Hearts," he said.
-
-"Then, of what importance is it to us?" Don Gregorio interrupted him.
-
-"But it greatly concerns the leaders, particularly the King of Darkness."
-
-"Explain yourself then, for he is before you," Don Tadeo remarked,
-taking a step forward.
-
-Pedro darted a look at him which seemed to endeavour to penetrate
-through the tissue of his mask.
-
-"What I have to say will be brief," he replied,--"I leave to you the
-care of judging of its importance. General Don Bustamente will be
-present at the meeting tomorrow."
-
-"Are you sure of that?" the two conspirators exclaimed with a degree of
-astonishment that denoted incredulity.
-
-"It was I who persuaded him to do so."
-
-"You?"
-
-"Yes, I."
-
-"Are you ignorant, then," Don Tadeo exclaimed with great warmth, "in
-what manner we punish traitors?"
-
-"I am no traitor; on the contrary, I deliver into your hands your most
-implacable enemy."
-
-Don Tadeo replied only by a suspicious glance.
-
-"The General then is ignorant?"
-
-"Of everything," said Don Pedro.
-
-"With what purpose, then, does he wish to introduce himself among us?"
-
-"Can you not guess? For that of obtaining your secret."
-
-"But he risks his life."
-
-"Do you forget that every adept must be introduced by a sponsor, who
-alone knows him? No one sees his face. Well, _I_ introduce him," he
-added, with a smile of strange significance.
-
-"That is true. But if he should suspect you of treachery?"
-
-"I must undergo the consequences; but he will not suspect me."
-
-"Why not?" Don Gregorio asked.
-
-"Because," the spy replied, with a cynical smile, "for ten years the
-General has employed me, and during those ten years he has had only
-cause to praise me for the services I have rendered him."
-
-A momentary silence followed.
-
-"Here!" said Don Gregorio, after a long pause, "this time it is not ten
-ounces, but twenty, that you have earned. Continue to be faithful to us."
-
-And he placed a heavy purse in his hands. The spy seized it with a
-gesture of avidity, and concealed it quickly under his poncho.
-
-"You shall have no reproach to make me," he replied, with a bow.
-
-"I hope we shall not," said Don Tadeo, with difficulty repressing an
-expression of disgust. "Only remember, we should be merciless."
-
-"I know it."
-
-"In that case, farewell."
-
-"Farewell till tomorrow."
-
-The men who had brought him, and who during the conversation had
-remained motionless, at a sign from Don Gregorio approached the spy,
-bandaged his eyes again, and led him away.
-
-"Is that fellow a traitor?" asked Don Gregorio, as he listened to the
-retreating steps of the horses.
-
-"It is our duty to suppose him one," the King of Darkness replied,
-gravely.
-
-The two friends, instead of seeking the repose which must have been
-so necessary to them, talked together for a long time, in order to
-arrange all the measures of safety which were required by the importance
-of the scene about to take place on the morrow at the meeting of the
-conspirators. In the meantime Don Pedro had been quickly led back
-to Santiago. On arriving at one of the gates, his guides left him,
-disappearing in opposite directions. As soon as he was alone, he removed
-the handkerchief from his eyes.
-
-"Hum!" he said, with a sinister smile, as he tossed up in his right hand
-the purse Don Gregorio had given him. "Twenty ounces make a purse of
-gold. Now let us see if General Bustamente is as liberal as his enemies.
-By the Virgin! the news I carry him are worth something to him! Let us
-try to get the best price for them."
-
-After having cast his eyes around to see if the coast was clear, he set
-off at a sharp trot towards the government palace, muttering to himself--
-
-"Bah! times are hard. If a man did not manoeuvre a little, he would find
-no means of bringing up his family honestly."
-
-This reflection, of a rather dubious morality, was accompanied by a
-grimace, the expression of which would have given Don Tadeo cause for
-suspicion if he had seen it.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
-LOVE.
-
-
-On the morrow the two Frenchmen were awakened by the rays of the sun.
-The day promised to be a brilliant one, for there was not a cloud in
-the heavens. A light vapour, full of penetrating odours, arose slowly
-from the earth, drawn up by the beams of the sun, whose warm influence
-increased every minute. The morning breeze refreshed the air, and
-invited them to inhale it. The young men, perfectly recovered from their
-fatigue, sprang cheerfully from their humble beds and dressed themselves
-in haste.
-
-The chacra, of which they had only a glimpse the night before by
-moonlight, was an immense farm, consisting of extensive buildings,
-and surrounded by fields in full cultivation. The greatest animation
-prevailed everywhere. Peons, mounted on half wild horses, were driving
-out the cattle to the artificial meadows, whilst others were running
-about after the horses they were getting together, in order to lead
-them to the drinking place. In the patio the major-domo was overlooking
-the women and girls engaged in milking. In short, this residence, which
-had appeared to them so silent and dismal the night before, assumed
-by daylight an appearance of life and cheerfulness delightful to
-contemplate.
-
-The cries of the peons mingled with the lowing of the cattle, the
-barking of the dogs, and the crowing of the cocks, and formed that
-melodious concert which is only to be heard on a farm, and which always
-rejoices the heart.
-
-It is a justice that we willingly render here to the Chilian republic
-when we say that it alone of the southern states of America appears
-to understand that the wealth of a country consists not in the number
-of its mines, but in the encouragement given to cultivation; and that
-this country, while possessing rich mines of gold, silver, and precious
-stones, only places their produce in the second rank, whilst it reserves
-its principal solicitude for agriculture. Chili is as yet young as a
-nation. There manufactures and the arts are in their infancy; but the
-farms are numerous, the fields well cultivated, and soon this country
-will be called upon, there is no doubt, through its system of labour,
-to become the entrepot of the other American powers, which it already
-provides in a great measure with corn and wine, from Cape Horn to
-California.
-
-Behind the chacra extended a well-kept up garden, in which oranges,
-pomegranates, and citrons, planted in the open ground, grew amidst
-limes, apples, plums, and all the other fruits of Europe. Louis was
-agreeably surprised at the aspect of this garden, with its numerous
-alleys, in which a thousand birds of brilliant colours warbled gaily
-under the foliage of the tufted thickets of jasmine and honeysuckle.
-Whilst Valentine went, followed by Caesar, to look at the operations of
-the peons and smoke his cigar in the patio, Louis felt himself led by
-his dreamy spirit to indulge in poetical reveries, and to seek a few
-minutes' solitude in the Eden which lay before him. Urged by an unknown
-power, intoxicated by the sweet odours which embalmed the atmosphere, he
-glided into the garden, casting around him a vaguely questioning look.
-
-The young man went dreaming along the garden walks, mechanically pulling
-to pieces with his fingers a rose which he had gathered. He had walked
-thus for nearly an hour, when he was roused by a slight noise among
-the leaves, at a short distance from him. He instinctively raised his
-head, just in time to catch a glimpse of a light white robe which was
-disappearing among the trees, but too late to completely distinguish the
-person who wore it, and who appeared to trip over the dewy grass like
-a white phantom. At the sight of this mysterious apparition the young
-man felt his heart bound in his breast; he stopped trembling, and the
-emotion he felt was so powerful, that he was forced to lean against a
-tree for support.
-
-"What can be the matter with me?" he murmured to himself, as he wiped
-the cold perspiration from his brow. "I am mad!" he continued, with a
-forced smile. "I think I see her everywhere. Heavens! I love her so
-deeply that, in spite of myself, my imagination brings her before me
-unceasingly. That girl, of whom I just caught a glimpse, is probably the
-same we last night so miraculously saved. Poor child! Fortunately she
-did not see me; I should have frightened her. Better avoid her by going
-out of the garden; in my present state I should alarm her."
-
-And, as always happens in such cases, he set off, on the contrary, in
-the very footsteps of her he had only caught a glimpse of, but whom, by
-one of the instinctive feelings of sympathy which come from God, and
-which science can never explain, he had nevertheless recognized.
-
-The young girl, reclining in the depths of an arbour, like a hummingbird
-in its bed of muss, with a pale face, and her eyes cast down to the
-earth, was listening, pensive and sad, to the joyous melodies which the
-birds chanted in her absent ear. All at once, a slight noise made her
-start and raise her head. The Count was before her! She uttered a faint
-cry, and endeavoured to fly.
-
-"Don Louis!" she exclaimed.
-
-She had recognized him. The young man sank on his knees at the entrance
-of the arbour.
-
-"Oh!" he cried, in a voice trembling with emotion, and with an accent of
-the most earnest entreaty, "for pity's sake, remain, madam!"
-
-"Don Louis!" she repeated, already recovered, and feigning the most
-perfect indifference. Young girls, even the purest, possess in a high
-degree the talent of concealing their feelings, and of deceiving persons
-with regard to the emotions they really experience.
-
-"Yes, it is I, madam," he continued, with an accent of the most
-respectful passion; "I, who, to see you again, have abandoned
-everything!"
-
-The young lady displayed some slight surprise.
-
-"For Heaven's sake!" he resumed, "allow me once more, if but for an
-instant, to contemplate your adored features! Oh!" he added, with a look
-of deep affection, "my heart had told me you were here, before my eyes
-had perceived you."
-
-"Caballero," she said, in a tremulous voice, "I do not understand you."
-
-"Oh, fear nothing from me, madam!" he interrupted her vehemently; "my
-respect for you is as profound as----
-
-"Pray, caballero," she said, earnestly, "rise; if anyone should surprise
-you thus!"
-
-"Madam," he replied, "the avowal I have to make to you, requires me to
-remain in the position of a suppliant!"
-
-"Oh, caballero!"
-
-"I love you, madam!" he said, in broken accents; "I know not what gives
-me the boldness to pronounce a word which in France I did not venture
-to breathe in your ear, and which I have never allowed to pass from my
-heart to my lips. But even if you banished me from your presence for
-ever, once again I must tell you that I love you, madam; and if you do
-not return my love, I shall die!"
-
-The maiden looked at him for a moment with a melancholy air; a tear
-trembled on her long eyelashes; she took a step towards him, and holding
-out her hand, upon which he imprinted a burning kiss, said softly,--
-
-"Rise."
-
-The Count obeyed. Dona Rosario sunk back upon the bench behind her,
-and appeared plunged in profound and painful meditation. Both remained
-silent, Louis watching her with intense anxiety, and a throbbing heart.
-At length she raised her head, and exhibited a countenance bathed in
-tears.
-
-"Caballero," she said in a melancholy tone, "if God has permitted us to
-meet once again, it is because, in His divine goodness, He has judged
-that a decisive explanation should take place between us."
-
-The young man appeared anxious to speak.
-
-"Do not interrupt me," she continued, "or I shall not have the courage
-to finish what I have to say to you. You love me, Louis; your presence
-here is an incontestable proof of it--you love me; and yet how many
-times, during my short residence in France, have you cursed me in
-secret, accusing me of coquetry, or, at least, of unaccountable levity!"
-
-"Madam!"
-
-"Oh!" she said, with a faint smile, "since you have avowed your love
-for me, I will be frank with you, Louis; and although it be my duty to
-deprive you of all future hope, I am at least anxious to justify the
-past, and leave you a remembrance of me that nothing can tarnish!"
-
-"Oh, madam! why do you repeat such things to me?"
-
-"Why?" she said, with a look full of melancholy, and in a voice
-harmonious as the sigh of an AEolian harp, "because I have faith in that
-love, so warm, so young, so true; which neither daily indignities nor
-vast distances have been able to conquer--because, in short, I also love
-you! do you not plainly see that, Louis?"
-
-On hearing this confession, so ingenuous, and made in a tone so
-sorrowful that the young girl appeared no longer to belong to earth, the
-Count felt struck by a terrible presentiment; his heart was wrung with
-doubtful agony. Trembling, bewildered, he gazed on her with the fixed
-and desperate eye of one condemned to death, who is listening to the
-reading of his sentence.
-
-"Yes!" she resumed, with feverish eagerness; "yes, I love you, Louis, I
-shall always love you; but never, never, can we be united."
-
-"Oh, that is impossible!" he cried, raising his head vehemently.
-
-"Listen to me," she said, in a tone of authority; "I do not order you to
-forget me, Louis; a love like yours is eternal: alas! I feel that mine
-will last as long as my life. You see, my friend, I am frank; I do not
-speak to you as a maiden ought to speak; I unfold my heart before you,
-leaving you to read it as you would your own. Well, this love, which
-would be for us the height of felicity,--this communion of two spirits,
-which blend with each other to form one blissful whole,--this boundless
-happiness must be dispersed for ever, without chance of recovery,
-without hesitation!"
-
-"Oh, I cannot consent!" he exclaimed, in a voice broken by sobs.
-
-"But it must be so, I tell you!" she continued, wild with anguish.
-"Great Heaven! what more do you require of me? Must I confess everything
-to you? Well, then, since it must be so, know that I am a miserable
-creature, condemned from my birth, pursued by a terrible hatred,
-which follows me step by step, which watches me incessantly; and some
-day--tomorrow, perhaps today--will crush me without mercy! Obliged
-to change my name constantly; flying from city to city, from country
-to country; wherever I may go, this implacable enemy, whom I do not
-know, and against whom I cannot defend myself, pursues me without
-intermission."
-
-"But I will defend you!" the young man said, with confident energy.
-
-"And I, on my part, am not willing that you should die!" she replied,
-with an accent of ineffable tenderness. "To attach yourself to me is
-to court destruction. I went to France to seek a place of refuge. I
-was obliged to quit that hospitable land with the greatest suddenness.
-Arrived here only a few weeks since, but for you, last night, I should
-have been lost! No, no, I am condemned; I know I am, and I am resigned;
-but I will not drag you down in my fall! Alas! I am, perhaps, doomed to
-suffer tortures still more horrible than those I have hitherto endured!
-Oh, Louis, in the name of the love which you have for me, and which I
-fully share, leave me the supreme consolation in my wretchedness of
-knowing that you are safe from the torments which overwhelm me!"
-
-At this moment Valentine's voice was heard at a short distance, and
-Caesar came wagging his tail to his master. Dona Rosario gathered a
-blossom of the _suchil_ which grew close to them, and presented it to
-the young man, after having for a moment inhaled its sweet odour.
-
-"Here," she said, "my friend, accept this flower, the only memorial,
-alas! that will remain with you of me."
-
-The young man concealed the flower in his bosom.
-
-"Someone is coming," she continued, in broken accents. "Swear, Louis!
-swear to quit this country as soon as possible, without endeavouring to
-see me again."
-
-The Count hesitated.
-
-"Oh!" he cried, "some day, perhaps,----"
-
-"Never on earth. Have I not told you that I am condemned? Swear, Louis,
-that at least I may hope to meet you again in heaven."
-
-She pronounced these words with such a tone of despair, that the young
-man, overcome, in spite of himself, made a gesture of assent, and let
-the almost inarticulate words escape his lips,--
-
-"I swear to do so!"
-
-"Thanks! thanks!" she cried wildly, and hurriedly imprinting a kiss upon
-the brow of her prostrated lover, she disappeared with the lightness of
-a fawn amidst a thicket of standard roses, at the moment when Valentine
-became visible at the turning of the walk.
-
-"Why brother," the soldier said gaily, "what the deuce are you about
-here, at the bottom of the garden? Breakfast is waiting for you. I have
-been looking for you this hour; and if it had not been for Caesar, I
-should not have found you now."
-
-The Count turned towards him, his face lathed in tears, and threw his
-arms round his neck.
-
-"Brother! brother!" he cried, in an accent of despair; "I am the most
-unhappy of men!"
-
-Valentine looked at him in astonishment. The Count had fainted.
-
-"What on earth is all this about?" said the soldier, casting a
-suspicious look around him, and laying his foster brother, who was
-motionless as a corpse, gently upon a grassy bank.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
-THE QUINTA VERDE.
-
-
-Not far from Rio Claro, a charming little city, built in a delicious
-situation between Santiago and Talca, there was then, and probably is
-still, upon a hill commanding an extensive view, a pretty _quinta_, with
-white walls and green shutters, coquettishly concealed from indiscreet
-eyes by a thicket of trees of various sorts--oaks, acajous, maples,
-palms, aloes, cactus, &c, which sprang up and intertwined within each
-other in such a fashion around it as to form an almost impregnable
-rampart. It is difficult to explain how, in such a period of convulsions
-and overthrows, this delicious habitation had hitherto escaped, as if by
-a miracle, from the devastation and pillage which incessantly menaced
-it, and which fell without intermission around it, enveloping it, as
-it were, in a network of ruins, without, however, having ever troubled
-that tranquil dwelling, although the human tempest had frequently howled
-beneath its walls, and, in the shade of night, it had often seen the red
-torches of incendiaries gleam; all at once, though no one knew why, and
-as if by enchantment, the cries of murder ceased, and the torches became
-extinguished and harmless in the hands of the men who, a minute before,
-had waved them about madly. This habitation was named the "Quinta Verde."
-
-By what prodigy had this house, so simple in appearance, and so like
-the rest, avoided the common fate and remained alone, perhaps, of all
-the houses of the Chilian plains, calm and tranquil in the midst of
-general confusion, equally respected by the two parties contending for
-power, and surveying carelessly from the top of its pretty _mirador_ the
-revolution raging at its feet, which carried away, as in an infernal
-whirlwind, cities, villages, houses, fortunes, and families? This is
-what many people, at various periods, had been anxious to know, though
-they had never been able to find out. Nobody ostensibly inhabited this
-quinta, in which, on certain days, noises were heard which filled with a
-superstitious terror the worthy _guasos_ living in the neighbourhood.
-
-The day after that on which the events occurred which open this history,
-the heat had been oppressive, the atmosphere heavy, and the sun had
-gone down amidst a flood of purple vapour, the precursors of a storm
-which burst with fury as soon as night had completely closed in. The
-wind bent down the trees as it whistled through them, the collision of
-the branches producing a melancholy sound; the heavens were black, not
-a star was to be seen; and large grey clouds coursed rapidly across
-the zenith, covering all nature with a leaden pall. In the distance
-resounded the howlings of wild beasts, among which was occasionally
-mingled the hoarse, sharp barking of stray dogs.
-
-Nine o'clock struck slowly from a distant steeple; the sound of the
-metal, repeated by the echoes from the hills, vibrated with a plaintive
-tone over the deserted landscape. The moon, fitfully emerging from
-behind the clouds which veiled her, spread for a few seconds a pale
-and trembling light over the scene, giving it a fantastic aspect. This
-fugitive ray of doubtful light, nevertheless, enabled a small troop of
-horsemen, who were painfully ascending a winding path on the side of a
-mountain, to distinguish, at a few paces before them, the black outline
-of a house, from the top window of which beamed like a pharos a red,
-uncertain light. This house was the "Quinta Verde."
-
-At about four or five paces in advance of the troop rode two horsemen,
-muffled carefully in their cloaks, the flaps of their hats pulled down
-over their eyes, appeared, in the darkness, to be a needless precaution;
-but it, nevertheless, showed that these personages were very anxious not
-to be recognized.
-
-"Heaven be praised!" said one of these horsemen to his companion, as
-he pulled up his horse, to look searchingly around him, as far as the
-darkness would permit; "I hope we shall soon be there."
-
-"In a quarter of an hour, at latest, General, we shall be at the end of
-our journey."
-
-"Do not let us stop, then," the one addressed as General said; "I am
-impatient to penetrate into this abominable den."
-
-"One moment, General!" the first speaker continued. "It is my duty to
-warn your Excellency that there is still time to retreat; and that
-would, perhaps, be the more prudent step."
-
-"Please to observe this, Diego," said the General, fixing upon his
-companion a look which gleamed in the semi-obscurity like that of a
-tiger-cat--"in the circumstances in which I am placed, prudence, as you
-understand the word, would be cowardice. I am quite aware what I am
-called upon to do by the confidence placed in me by my fellow citizens;
-our position is most critical: the liberal reaction is raising its head
-in all quarters, and we must put an end to this ever-reviving hydra.
-The news of Don Tadeo's escape from death has spread with the rapidity
-of a train of gunpowder; all the malcontents of whom he is the leader,
-are in almost open action; if I were to hesitate to strike a great blow
-and crush the head of the serpent which hisses in my ears, it would
-tomorrow, perhaps, be too late; hesitation has always been the ruin of
-statesmen in affairs of importance."
-
-"And yet, General, if the man who has furnished you with this
-information should--"
-
-"Be a traitor? Well, that is possible--ay, even probable; therefore,
-I have neglected nothing that may neutralize the consequences of a
-treachery which I foresee."
-
-"By the Virgin! General, in your place, however--"
-
-"Thank you, old comrade, thank you for your solicitude; but enough of
-this subject, you ought to know me well enough to be sure that I shall
-never flinch from my duty."
-
-"I have nothing more to do, then, but to wish your Excellency well
-through your undertaking; for you know you must arrive alone at the
-Quinta Verde, and I can escort you no farther."
-
-"Very well, wait here then; make your men dismount for a time, keep a
-sharp watch, and execute punctually the orders I have given you. I am
-going on."
-
-Diego bowed respectfully, but with an air of anxiety, and withdrew his
-hand, which had been placed on the bridle of the General's horse. The
-latter more carefully enveloped himself in his cloak, the folds of which
-had become too loose, and gave the usual jockey signal to excite his
-horse. At this well-known sound the horse pricked up its ears, and being
-thoroughbred, although fatigued, set off at a gallop.
-
-After a few minutes of this rapid travelling, the General stopped; but
-it appeared as if his journey was completed, for, dismounting, he threw
-the bridle on his horse's neck, with as little care what became of it as
-if it had been a hack post-horse, and walked with a firm step towards
-the house, which he had held in view some time, and from which he was
-now not more than ten paces distant. This was soon cleared. When he
-reached the gate, he stood for a second and looked around him, as if
-endeavouring to penetrate the darkness; but all was calm and silent.
-In spite of himself, the General was seized with that vague fear which
-takes possession of the most courageous man when in face of the unknown.
-But General Bustamente, whom the reader has no doubt recognized, was too
-old a soldier to suffer himself to be mastered long by an impression,
-however strong it might be; with him this had lasted but an instant, and
-he almost immediately recovered his usual coolness.
-
-"What the devil! am _I_ afraid?" he murmured, with an ironical smile,
-and going boldly up to the gate, he knocked three times at equal
-intervals with the pummel of his sword. In an instant his arms were
-seized by invisible hands, a bandage was placed over his eyes, and a
-voice, faint as a breath, murmured in his ear--
-
-"Make no resistance, twenty poniards are at your breast; at the first
-cry, at the least opposition, you are a dead man. Reply categorically to
-our questions."
-
-"All these threats are needless," the General replied, in a calm
-voice; "as I came here of my own free will, I can have no intention of
-resisting--ask, and I will answer."
-
-"What do you come to seek here?" the voice said.
-
-"The Dark-Hearts."
-
-"Are you ready to appear in their presence?"
-
-"I am," the General replied, still impassive.
-
-"Do you dread nothing?"
-
-"Nothing."
-
-"Let your sword fall."
-
-The General quitted his hold of his sword, and felt at the same moment
-that his pistols were taken from him.
-
-"Now, step forward without fear," said the voice.
-
-The prisoner found himself instantly at liberty.
-
-"In the name of Christ, who died upon the cross for the salvation of the
-world, Dark-Hearts, receive me among the number of your brethren!" the
-General then said, in a low and firm voice.
-
-The double gates of the Quinta Verde flew open before him, and two
-masked men, each holding a dark lantern in his hand, the focus of which
-he directed on the stranger's face, appeared in the entrance.
-
-"There is still time," said one of the unknown; "if your heart be not
-firm, you may retreat."
-
-"My heart is firm."
-
-"Come on, then, as you think yourself worthy to share our glorious task,
-but tremble if you have the least intention of betraying us," said the
-masked man, in a deep, sonorous voice.
-
-The General felt, notwithstanding the recklessness of his character,
-a cold shudder run through his limbs at these words; but he quickly
-surmounted this involuntary emotion.
-
-"It is for traitors to tremble," he replied; "for my part, I have
-nothing to fear."
-
-And he boldly stepped into the Quinta Verde, the doors of which closed
-after him with a dull, heavy sound. The bandage which covered his eyes,
-and which had prevented those who had interrogated him from recognizing
-him, notwithstanding their efforts to do so, was then removed. After
-proceeding for more than a quarter of an hour along a circular corridor,
-lighted only by the red flickering flame of the torch carried by the
-guide through this labyrinth, the General was suddenly stopped by a door
-in front of him. He turned hesitatingly towards the masked men, who had
-followed him step by step.
-
-"What do you wait for?" said one of them in reply to his mute
-interrogation. "Is it not written, _Knock and it shall be opened unto
-you?_"
-
-The General bowed in sign of acquiescence, and knocked loudly at the
-door. The folding panels drew back silently into the wall, and the
-General found himself at the entrance of a vast hall, whose walls were
-covered with long red draperies, gloomily enlightened by a bronze lamp
-and several chandeliers suspended from the ceiling, which shone in an
-uncertain manner upon the countenances of about a hundred men, who,
-with naked swords in their hands, fixed their eyes upon him through the
-black masks which concealed their faces. At the bottom of this hall was
-a table covered with a green cloth, at which were seated three men. Not
-only were those three men masked, but, as a further precaution, before
-each of them a lighted torch was planted on the table, the dazzling
-flame of which allowed them to be but vaguely seen. Against the wall was
-a crucifix, between two hourglasses surmounted by a death's-head with a
-poniard run through it.
-
-The General manifested no emotion at this imposing _mise en scene_. A
-smile of disdain curled his lip, and he stepped boldly forward. At this
-moment he felt a light touch on the shoulder, and, on turning round,
-perceived that one of the guides was holding out a mask to him. In spite
-of the precautions he had taken to disguise his features, he eagerly
-seized it, placed it on his face, folded his cloak round him, and
-entered.
-
-"_In nomine Patris, et Filii, et Spiritus Sancti!_" he said.
-
-"_Amen_!" all present replied, in a sepulchral tone.
-
-"_Exaudiat te Dominus, in die Tribulationis,_" said one of the
-personages behind the table.
-
-"_Impleat Dominus omnes petitiones tuas_," the General replied, without
-hesitation.
-
-"_La Patria!_" the first speaker rejoined.
-
-"_O la Muerte!_" replied the General.
-
-"What is your purpose in coming here?" the man who up to this time alone
-had spoken, asked.
-
-"I wish to be admitted into the bosom of the elect."
-
-There was a momentary silence.
-
-"Is there anyone among us who can or will answer for you?" the masked
-man then asked.
-
-"I cannot say; for I do not know the persons among whom I find myself."
-
-"How know you that?"
-
-"I suppose so, as they, as well as I, are masked."
-
-"The Dark-Hearts," said the interrogator in a deep tone, "consider not
-the countenance; they search souls."
-
-The General bowed at this sentence, which appeared to him to border upon
-the ridiculous. The interrogator continued:--"Do you know the conditions
-of your affiliation?"
-
-"I know them."
-
-"What are they?"
-
-"To sacrifice mother, father, brothers, relations, friends, and myself,
-without hesitation, to the cause which I swear to defend."
-
-"What next?"
-
-"At the first signal, whether it be by day or night, even at the foot of
-the altar, in whatever circumstance I may be placed, to quit everything,
-in order to accomplish immediately the orders that shall be given me, in
-whatever manner they may be given, and whatever may be the tenor of that
-order."
-
-"Do you subscribe to these conditions?"
-
-"I subscribe to them."
-
-"Are you prepared to swear to submit yourself to them?"
-
-"I am prepared."
-
-"Repeat, then, after me, with your hand upon the Gospels, the words I am
-about to dictate to you."
-
-"Dictate!"
-
-The three men behind the table rose; a Bible was brought, and the
-General resolutely placed his hand upon the book. A faint murmur ran
-through the ranks of the assembly. The president struck the table with
-the hilt of his dagger, and silence was re-established. This man then
-pronounced in a slow and deep toned voice the following words, which the
-General repeated after him without hesitation:--
-
-"I swear to sacrifice myself, my family, my property, and all that I
-can hope for in this world, for the safety of the cause defended by
-the Dark-Hearts. I swear to kill every man, be he my father, be he my
-brother, who shall be pointed out to me. If I fail in my faith, if I
-betray those who accept me as their brother, I acknowledge myself to
-be worthy of death; and I, beforehand, pardon the Dark-Hearts who may
-inflict it upon me."
-
-"So far well!" replied the president, when the General had pronounced
-the oath. "You are now our brother."
-
-He then rose, and stepping across the hall, stood full in front of the
-General.
-
-"Now," he said in a solemn threatening voice, "answer me, Don Pancho
-Bustamente. As you, of your own free will, take a false oath before a
-hundred persons, do you think we should commit a crime in condemning
-you, since you have had the audacity to place yourself in our power?"
-
-In spite of his assurance, the General could not repress a start of
-terror.
-
-"Remove the mask which covers this man's face, so that everyone may know
-that it is he! Ah! General; you have entered the lion's den, and you
-will be devoured."
-
-The noise of a distant commotion was heard.
-
-"Your soldiers are coming to your rescue," the president resumed, "but
-they will come too late, General; prepare to die!"
-
-These words fell like the blow of a mace upon the brow of him who found
-himself thus outwitted; he, nevertheless, did not yet lose heart; the
-noise evidently approached; and there could be no doubt but that his
-troops, who surrounded the Quinta Verde on all sides, would soon gain
-possession of it; all he wanted was time.
-
-"By what right," he said haughtily, "do you constitute yourselves judges
-and executioners of your own sentence?"
-
-"You are one of us, and are bound by our sentence," the president
-replied, with an ironical smile.
-
-"Beware of what you are about to do, gentlemen," the General added in a
-haughty tone; "remember I am minister-at-war!"
-
-"And I am King of Darkness," the president cried in a voice that froze
-the very blood of the General; "my dagger is more sure than the muskets
-of your soldiers; it does not let its victims escape. Brethren, what
-chastisement does this man deserve?"
-
-"Death!" the conspirators replied.
-
-The General saw that he was lost.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
-THE DEPARTURE.
-
-
-Sergeant Diego, when left by General Bustamente a few paces from the
-Quinta Verde, was very uneasy regarding the fate of his leader, and
-entertained dismal presentiments. He was an old soldier, and well
-acquainted with all the machinations and treacheries practised in this
-country between inveterate enemies. He had been far from approving of
-the General's undertaking, for he knew better than anyone how little
-confidence ought to be placed in spies. Constrained, ostensibly, to
-obey the order he had received, he had resolved, _in petto_, not to
-leave his leader without help in the wasps' nest into which he had
-cast himself headlong. Diego entertained for General Bustamente, under
-whose orders he had served ten years, a profound regard, which entitled
-him to certain freedoms, and his entire confidence. He immediately
-placed himself in relation with two other officers of the detachment,
-ordered, like himself, to watch the mysterious house whose dark outline
-cut gloomily across the cloudy sky, and around which there was a close
-blockade. He was walking about, biting his moustache, and swearing to
-himself, determined, if the General did not come out within half an
-hour, to obtain an entrance by force, if necessary, when a heavy hand
-was laid upon his shoulder. He turned sharply round, stopping short in
-an oath that was passing his lips, and saw a man standing before him: it
-was Don Pedro.
-
-"Is that you?" he asked, as soon as he recognised him.
-
-"Myself," the spy replied.
-
-"But where the devil do you come from?"
-
-"No matter; do you wish to save the General?"
-
-"Is he in danger?"
-
-"In danger of death."
-
-"_Demonios!_" the sergeant shouted; "he must be saved!"
-
-"For that purpose I am here; but don't speak so loud."
-
-"I will speak as you like, provided you will tell me."
-
-"Nothing!" Don Pedro replied, "for there is not a minute to be lost."
-
-"What is to be done?"
-
-"Listen! A detachment must feign an attack upon the gate by which the
-General entered; another will watch the environs, for the Dark-Hearts
-have roads known only to themselves; you, with a third detachment, will
-follow me; I will undertake to introduce you into the house--is that
-agreed upon?"
-
-"Perfectly."
-
-"Make haste, then, to inform your colleagues; time presses."
-
-"Instantly; where shall I find you again?"
-
-"Here."
-
-"Very well; I only ask five minutes," and he strode away in haste.
-
-"Hem!" thought Don Pedro, as soon as he was alone; "we should be
-prudent when we wish affairs to be profitable; from what I heard, they
-will condemn the General, and they must not be allowed to go as far as
-that, for my interests would suffer too seriously; I have manoeuvred
-so as to be safe from all suspicion; if I succeed, I shall be more in
-favour with the General than ever, without losing the confidence of the
-conspirators."
-
-"Well!" he said, as he saw Diego coming towards him.
-
-"Everything is done," replied the sergeant, out of breath. "I am ready."
-
-"Come on, then, and God grant it may not be too late!"
-
-"Amen!" said the soldier.
-
-Everything was done as had been arranged; whilst one detachment
-vigorously attacked the gate of the Quinta Verde, Don Pedro led the
-troops commanded by Diego to the opposite side of the house, where a
-low window was open; this window was grated, but several bars had been
-removed beforehand, which left the entrance easy. Pedro commanded the
-soldiers to be silent, and they entered the house one by one. Guided by
-the spy, they advanced stealthily, without meeting with obstacles of any
-kind. At the end of a few minutes they came to a closed door.
-
-"This is it!" said Pedro, in a low voice.
-
-At a sign from the sergeant, the door was beaten in with the butt end
-of their muskets, and the soldiers rushed into the room. It was nearly
-empty, its only occupant being a man stretched motionless upon the
-floor. The sergeant sprang towards him, but recoiled with a cry of
-horror--he had recognised his leader--General Bustamente lay with a
-dagger sticking upright in his breast. To the hilt of the dagger was
-tied a long black strip, upon which were written these words in red ink:
-
-"_The Justice of the Dark-Hearts!_"
-
-"Oh!" cried Diego; "Vengeance! Vengeance!"
-
-"Vengeance!" the soldiers repeated, with rage, mingled with terror.
-
-The sergeant turned round towards Pedro, whom he believed to be still by
-his side; but the spy, who alone could guide them in their researches,
-had thought it prudent to steal away. As soon as he saw that what he
-dreaded had happened, he had disappeared without anybody observing his
-departure.
-
-"No matter!" said Diego. "If I demolish this den of assassins, from
-bottom to top, and don't leave stone upon stone, I swear I will find
-these demons, if they are buried in the centre of the earth."
-
-The old soldier began searching in all directions, whilst a surgeon who
-had followed the detachment paid attention to the wounded man, whom he
-endeavoured to restore to his senses.
-
-The Dark-Hearts, as the spy had truly said, had paths known only
-to themselves, by which they had quietly departed, after having
-accomplished their terrible vengeance, or executed their severe justice,
-according to the point of view in which an act of this nature and
-importance is viewed. They were already far off in the country, safe
-from all danger, while the soldiers were still ferociously searching for
-them in and about the house.
-
-Don Tadeo and Don Gregorio returned together to the chacra, and were
-astonished, on their arrival, to find Valentine, whom they supposed to
-be in bed and asleep long before, waiting for them at that late hour,
-to request a few minutes' conversation. In spite of the very natural
-surprise which the demand at such a singular hour excited, the two
-gentlemen, who supposed the Frenchman had serious reasons for acting
-thus, granted his request, without making the least observation. The
-conversation was long--so long, that we think it useless to repeat it
-here in detail, but will satisfy ourselves with giving our readers the
-end of it, which sums it up perfectly.
-
-"I will not insist," said Don Tadeo, "although you will not tell us
-your motives. I believe you to be too considerate a man, Don Valentine,
-not to be convinced that the reasons which force you to leave us are
-serious."
-
-"Of the greatest seriousness," the young man replied.
-
-"Very well. But on leaving this place, in which direction do you intend
-to bend your steps?"
-
-"Faith! I own frankly--besides, you know already that I and my friend
-are in search of fortune--that all directions are the same to us, since
-we must, above everything, depend upon chance."
-
-"I am of your opinion," replied Don Tadeo, smiling. "Listen to me,
-then. I possess large estates in the province of Valdivia, which it
-is my intention to visit shortly. What prevents you going that way in
-preference to any other?"
-
-"Nothing, that I know of."
-
-"I, at this moment, stand in need of a man whom I can depend upon, to
-undertake an important mission into Araucania, to one of the principal
-chiefs of the people of that country. If you are going to the province
-of Valdivia, you will be obliged to traverse Araucania in its whole
-length. Are you willing to undertake this commission? Will that
-inconvenience you?"
-
-"Why should I not?" said Valentine. "I have never come face to face with
-savages; I should like to see what sort of people they are."
-
-"Very well; now is your opportunity. That is agreed upon then. You wish
-to start tomorrow, do you not?"
-
-"Tomorrow! Today, if you please--in a few hours, for it will not be long
-before the sun will be up."
-
-"That is true. Very well, then; at the moment of your departure, my
-major-domo shall place, on my part, written instructions in your hands."
-
-"Caramba!" said Valentine, laughing; "here am I transformed into an
-ambassador!"
-
-"Do not joke, my friend," said Don Tadeo, seriously. "The mission I
-confide to you is delicate--dangerous, even; I do not conceal that from
-you. If the papers of which you will be the bearer are found upon you,
-you will be exposed to great dangers. Are you still willing to be my
-emissary?"
-
-"Pardieu! Wherever there is danger there is pleasure. And what is the
-name of the person to whom I am to remit these despatches?"
-
-"They are of two descriptions. The latter only concerns yourself; during
-the course of your journey you can make yourself acquainted with them;
-they will instruct you in certain matters you should know in order to
-secure the success of your mission."
-
-"I understand--and the others?"
-
-"The others are for Antinahuel, that is, the Tiger Sun, and must be
-delivered into his own hands."
-
-"A queer name that!" Valentine replied, with a laugh. "And where am I to
-find the gentleman rejoicing in such a formidable title?"
-
-"By my faith, my friend," replied Don Tadeo, "I know no more than you
-do."
-
-"The Araucano Indians," interrupted Don Gregorio, "are a rather
-wandering race, and it is sometimes difficult to find the one you are in
-search of."
-
-"Bah! I shall find him, be assured of that."
-
-"We do entirely rely upon you."
-
-"In a few hours, as I have told you, I shall myself set out to place in
-a convent in Valdivia the young lady whom you so fortunately saved; it
-will, therefore, be in Valdivia I shall await your answer."
-
-"I beg your pardon, but I have not the least idea where Valdivia is,"
-observed Valentine.
-
-"Don't be uneasy on that account; any child in this country can direct
-you the way thither," Don Gregorio replied.
-
-"Thanks."
-
-"And now, if you change your mind when we meet again, and consent to
-remain among us, remember we are brothers, and do not hesitate to inform
-me of your new determination."
-
-"I can neither, reply yes or no, sir; if it depended upon me, we should
-continue to see each other frequently."
-
-After exchanging a few more friendly expressions, the three men
-separated. At sunrise, Louis and Valentine, mounted on magnificent
-horses, which Don Tadeo had forced them to accept, rode away from the
-chacra, followed by Caesar. Valentine had received his despatches from
-the hands of the major-domo. As they were quitting the farm Louis
-turned round instinctively, as if to salute with a last look a spot
-he abandoned for ever, and which contained all that was dear to him.
-A window was gently opened, and the face of the fair girl appeared
-through the small interval, bathed in tears. The two young men bowed
-respectfully towards the necks of their horses, and with a deep sigh
-from Louis, they moved on as the window closed.
-
-"Adieu! oh, adieu for ever!" murmured Louis, choking with emotion.
-
-"Ah, perhaps!" said Valentine; and, to rouse his friend from his grief,
-he put his horse into a gallop, and they soon lost sight of the chacra
-in the windings of the road.
-
-Within four hours from their departure Don Tadeo and Don Gregorio
-likewise set out on their journey to Valdivia, for the purpose of
-placing Dona Rosario in the convent. But the enemy of whom they thought
-they had relieved themselves at the Quinta Verde, was not dead; the
-dagger of the King of Darkness had not proved more sure than the bullets
-of the General. The two enemies were destined soon to meet again.
-Notwithstanding the seriousness of the wound he had received, thanks
-to the intelligent cares lavished upon him, but more particularly,
-thanks to his excellent constitution, General Bustamente was soon in a
-convalescent state. Don Pancho and the Linda, from that time united by
-the strongest of ties--a common personal hatred--prepared to take their
-revenge upon Don Tadeo, and that of the bitterest nature. The General
-signalized his restoration to health by cruelties of the most flagrant
-kind towards every man suspected of liberalism, and by inaugurating
-throughout the republic a pitiless system of terror. Don Tadeo was
-pronounced outlawed; his friends were cast into dungeons, and their
-property was confiscated; and then, when the General thought that all
-these vexations must bring his enemy to bay, and he had nothing to dread
-from him or his partizans, under the pretence of visiting the provinces
-of the Republic, he set out for Valdivia, accompanied by his mistress.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
-THE MEETING.
-
-
-As the principal incidents of this history are now about to take place
-in Araucania, we think it necessary to give our readers some account of
-this people, who alone of all the nations the Spaniards encountered in
-America, succeeded in resisting them, and had, up to the time we treat
-of, preserved intact their liberty and almost all their territory. The
-Araucanos or Moluchos inhabit the beautiful country situated between the
-rivers Biobio and Valdivia, having on one side the sea, and on the other
-the great Cordilleras of the Andes. They are thus completely enclosed
-within the Chilian republic, and yet, as we have said, have always
-remained independent. It would be a great error to suppose these Indians
-savages. The Araucanos have adopted as much of European civilization as
-suited their character and their mode of living, and have rejected the
-rest. From the most remote times these peoples had formed a national
-body, strong and compact, governed by wise laws rigorously executed. The
-first Spanish conquerors were quite astonished to find in this remote
-corner of America, a powerful aristocratic republic, and a feudalism
-organized almost upon the same plan as that which prevailed in Europe
-in the thirteenth century. We will here enter into a few details of the
-government of the Araucanos, who proudly style themselves _Aucas_--free
-men. These details concerning a people too little known, up to this day,
-cannot fail to interest the reader.
-
-The principal chiefs of the Araucanos are the Toquis,[1] the Apo-Ulmens,
-and the Ulmens. There are four Toquis, one for each territorial
-division; they have under their orders the Apo-Ulmens, who, in their
-turn, command the Ulmens. The Toquis are independent of each other, but
-confederated for the public good. Titles are hereditary, and pass from
-males to males. The vassals or Mosotones are free; in time of war alone
-they are subject to military service; but, in this country, and it is
-this which constitutes its strength, every man in a condition to bear
-arms is a soldier. It may easily be understood what the chiefs are when
-we state that the people consider them only as the first among their
-equals, and that their authority is consequently rather precarious;
-and if, now and then, certain Toquis have endeavoured to extend their
-authority, the people, jealous of their privileges, have always found
-means to keep them within the bounds prescribed by their ancient usages.
-
-A society whose manners are so simple, and interests so little
-complicated, which is governed by wise laws, and all the members of
-which have an ardent love of liberty, is invincible, as the Spaniards
-have many times found to their cost. After having, in several attempts,
-endeavoured to subdue this little corner of land, isolated amidst their
-own territory; they have ended by acknowledging the futility of their
-efforts, and have tacitly admitted their defeat by renouncing for ever
-their projects of obtaining dominion over the Araucanos, with whom
-they have contracted alliances, and across whose territory they now
-peacefully pass on their road from Santiago to Valdivia.
-
-The Carampangue--in the Araucano idiom, refuge of lions--is a charming
-stream, half torrent, half river, which comes bounding down from the
-inaccessible summits of the Andes, and, after many capricious windings,
-loses itself in the sea two leagues to the north of Arauco. Nothing
-can be more beautiful than the banks of the Carampangue, bordered by
-smiling valleys, covered with woods, with apple trees loaded with fruit,
-rich pastures in which animals of all kinds range and feed at liberty,
-and high mountains, from the verdant sides of which hang, in the most
-picturesque positions, clusters of cabins, whose whitewashed walls shine
-in the sun, and give life to this enchanting landscape.
-
-On the day when we resume our narrative, that is, on a beautiful morning
-in July--called by the Indians the month of the sun--two horsemen,
-followed by a magnificent black and white Newfoundland dog, were
-ascending, at a sharp trot, the course of the river, following what is
-called a wild beast's track, scarcely marked in the high grass. These
-men, dressed in the Chilian costume, surging up suddenly amidst this
-wild natural scene, formed, by their manners and their vestments, a
-contrast with everything which surrounded them; a contrast of which
-they probably had no idea, for they rode as carelessly through this
-barbarous country, abounding in perils and ambushes without number, as
-they would have done along the road from Paris to Saint-Cloud. These two
-men, whom the reader has, no doubt, recognized, were the Count Louis
-de Prebois-Crance and Valentine Guillois, his foster brother. They had
-passed in turn through Maule, Talca, and Concepcion; and on the day we
-meet them again, in the middle of Araucania, they had been full two
-months on the road, travelling philosophically along with their dog
-Caesar upon the banks of the Carampangue. This was the 14th of July,
-1837, at eleven o'clock in the morning.
-
-The young men had passed the night in an abandoned _rancho_ which
-they had fallen in with on their way, and at sunrise resumed their
-journey; so that they now began to be sensible of the calls of hunger.
-Upon taking a survey of the spot where they found themselves, they
-perceived a clump of apple trees, which intercepted the rays of the
-sun, and offered them a shelter for their repast and a little rest.
-They dismounted and sat down at the foot of a large apple tree, leaving
-their horses to browse upon the young branches so abundant around
-them. Valentine knocked down a few apples with a stick, opened his
-_alforjas_--large cloth pockets placed behind the saddle--drew out some
-sea biscuit, a piece of bacon, and a goat's milk cheese, and the two
-young men began eating gaily, sharing their provisions with Caesar in a
-brotherly way, whilst he, seated gravely in front of them, followed with
-his eyes every morsel they put into their mouths.
-
-"Caramba!" said Valentine, with a satisfied smile; "it is comfortable to
-have a little rest, after having been on horseback from four o'clock in
-the morning."
-
-"Well, to tell the truth, I must own I am a little fatigued," Louis
-confessed.
-
-"My poor friend, you are not, as I am, accustomed to long journeys. It
-was stupid of me not to remember that."
-
-"Bah! on the contrary, I am getting accustomed to them very well; and
-besides," he added, with a sigh, "physical fatigue makes me forget----"
-
-"Ah! that's true," Valentine interrupted; "come! I am happy to hear you
-speak thus--I see you are becoming a man!"
-
-Louis shook his head sorrowfully.
-
-"No," he said, "you are mistaken. As the malady which undermines me is
-without remedy, I endeavour to play a manly part."
-
-"Yes, hope is one of the supreme illusions of love; when it can no
-longer exist, love dies."
-
-"Or he who experiences it," said the young man, with a melancholy smile.
-
-This was followed by a silence, which Valentine at length broke.
-
-"What a charming country!" he cried, with feigned enthusiasm, for the
-purpose of giving the conversation another direction, as he swallowed,
-with delectation, an enormous piece of bacon.
-
-"Yes, but the roads are very bad."
-
-"Who knows?" said Valentine, with a smile: "they say the roads to
-Paradise are of that kind; this may be the way thither." Then addressing
-the dog, "And you, Caesar, what do you think of our journey, old boy?"
-
-The dog wagged his tail, fixing his eyes, sparkling with intelligence,
-upon the speaker's face, whilst he eagerly devoured all that was given
-to him. But he stopped suddenly in his masticating operations, pricked
-up his ears, turned his head sharply round, and balked furiously.
-
-"Silence, Caesar!" said Valentine; "what do you bark in that manner for?
-You know right well we are in a desert, and that in a desert there is
-nobody but the devil!"
-
-But Caesar continued to bark without heeding his master.
-
-"Hum!" said Louis, "I do not agree with you; I think that the deserts of
-America are thickly peopled."
-
-"Well, perhaps you are right."
-
-"The dog's barking is not usual; we ought to take precautions."
-
-"I will see," said Valentine; and addressing the Newfoundland, "Come!
-come! hold your tongue, Caesar! You are tiresome! What's the matter with
-you? What teases you? Do you scent a stag? Caramba! That would be a
-glorious godsend for us."
-
-Here he rose, and cast an inquiring glance around, but he immediately
-stopped, and seized his rifle, making a sign to Louis to do the same, in
-order to be prepared for whatever might happen.
-
-"Diable!" he said, "Caesar was right, and I must confess myself a stupid
-fellow. Look yonder, Louis!"
-
-The other turned his eyes as directed.
-
-"Oh! oh!" he said; "what is this?"
-
-"Hum! I believe we shall soon discover."
-
-"With God's help!" Louis replied, cocking his rifle.
-
-Ten Indians in war costume, and mounted on magnificent horses, were
-drawn up within twenty paces of the travellers, though the latter were
-quite unable to comprehend how they had succeeded in approaching so near
-to them without being discovered. Notwithstanding Valentine's efforts,
-Caesar continued to bark furiously, and endeavoured to rush upon the
-Indians. The American warriors, motionless and impassible, made neither
-gesture nor movement, but they surveyed the Frenchmen so closely and
-persistently, that Valentine, not very patient in his nature, began to
-find himself excessively annoyed.
-
-
-[1] This word comes from the verb _toquin_, which means to _judge_, to
-_command._
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII.
-
-THE PUELCHES.
-
-
-"Eh! eh!" said Valentine, whistling sharply to his dog, who immediately
-came to him; "these fellows do not seem to have friendly intentions; we
-must be upon our guard: who knows what may happen?"
-
-"They are Araucanos," said Louis.
-
-"Do you think so? Then they are devilish ugly!"
-
-"Well, now, for my part, I think them very handsome."
-
-"Ah, yes; that may be in an artistic point of view. But, ugly or
-handsome, we will await their coming."
-
-The Indians talked among themselves, and continued to look at the young
-men.
-
-"They are consulting to determine with what sauce they shall eat us,"
-said Valentine.
-
-"Not at all----"
-
-"Bah! I tell you they are."
-
-"Pardieu! they are not cannibals!"
-
-"No? So much the worse; that's a defect. In Paris, all the savages
-exhibited in public are cannibals."
-
-"You madman! you laugh at everything."
-
-"Would you prefer my weeping a little? It appears to me that at this
-moment our position is not so seducing in itself that we should seek to
-make it more dismal."
-
-These Indians were for the most part men of from forty to forty-five
-years of age, clothed in the costume of the Puelches, one of the most
-warlike tribes of Upper Araucania; they wore the poncho floating from
-the shoulders, the calzoneras fastened round the hips and falling to
-the ankle, the head bare, the hair long, straight, and greasy, gathered
-together by a red ribbon, which encircled the brow like a diadem, and
-the face painted of various colours. Their arms consisted of a long
-lance, a knife, a gun hanging from the saddle, and a round buckler,
-covered with leather, ornamented with horsehair and human scalps.
-
-The man who appeared to be their chief was a man of lofty stature,
-expressive features, hard and haughty, but still displayed a certain
-frankness, a very rare quality among Indians. The only thing which
-distinguished him from his companions was a feather of the eagle of the
-Andes, planted upright on the left side of his head, in the bright red
-ribbon that confined his hair.
-
-After having consulted with his companions for a few minutes, the chief
-advanced towards the travellers, making his horse curvet with inimitable
-grace, and lowered the point of his lance in sign of peace. When
-within three paces of Valentine, he stopped, and, after saluting him
-ceremoniously, in the Indian fashion, by placing his right hand on his
-breast, and slowly bowing his head twice, he said to him in Spanish:--
-
-"My brothers are Muruches--foreigners,--and not Culme-Huinca--despicable
-Spaniards. Why are they so far from the men of their own nation?"
-
-This question, asked in the guttural accent, and with the emphatic tone
-peculiar to the Indians, was perfectly understood by the young men, who,
-as we have before observed, generally spoke Spanish themselves.
-
-"Hum!" Valentine said to his companion, "here is a savage who appears to
-have a little curiosity about him--what think you?"
-
-"Bah!" Louis replied, "answer him, at all events that will do no harm."
-
-"Why, no, that is true; we cannot easily be more compromised than we are
-already."
-
-And turning towards the chief, who waited impassibly,
-
-"We are travelling," he said, laconically.
-
-"What! alone, thus?" asked the chief.
-
-"Does that astonish you, my friend?"
-
-"Do my brothers fear nothing?"
-
-"What should we fear?" said the Parisian in a bantering tone. "We have
-nothing to lose."
-
-"What! not even your hair?"
-
-Louis could not refrain from laughing, as he looked at Valentine.
-
-"Ah! ah! what, he is laughing at the disordered state of my hair, is he,
-the ugly wretch?" Valentine grumbled, vexed at the observation of the
-chief, and quite mistaking his intentions. "Stop a bit!" then he added,
-in a loud voice, "Have the goodness to pass on, gentlemen savages. Your
-remarks are not pleasant, I can assure you."
-
-He cocked his rifle, and lifted it to his shoulder, as if taking aim
-at the chief. Louis, who had attentively followed the progress of the
-conversation, without saying a word imitated the action of his friend,
-directing the barrel of his rifle towards the group of Indians. The
-chief had, doubtless, understood but little of the speeches of his
-adversaries, but far from appearing terrified at the menacing attitude
-they assumed, he seemed to contemplate with pleasure the martial and
-firm deportment of the Frenchmen; and putting gently on one side the
-weapon pointed against his breast, said in a conciliatory tone:
-
-"My friend is mistaken. I have no intention of insulting him. I am his
-_penni_--brother--and his companion's likewise. Were not the palefaces
-eating when I and my young men came up?"
-
-"Faith! yes, chief, you say true," interrupted Louis, with a smile;
-"your sudden appearance stopped the progress of our humble repast."
-
-"Part of which is very much at your service," continued Valentine,
-pointing with his finger to the provisions spread upon the grass.
-
-"I accept your offer," said the Indian, cordially.
-
-"Bravo!" cried Valentine, throwing down his rifle, and preparing to
-resume his seat on the grass; "to table, then!"
-
-"Yes," replied the chief, "but upon one condition."
-
-"What is that?" the young men asked together.
-
-"That I shall furnish my part."
-
-"Agreed," said Louis.
-
-"Well, that is but fair," Valentine added; "and it will be the more
-acceptable, from our not being rich, and having but meagre fare to offer
-you."
-
-"The bread of a friend is always good," the chief said, sententiously.
-
-"That is admirably answered! But, at this moment, unfortunately, our
-bread is only stale biscuit."
-
-"I will remedy that;" and the chief said a few words in the Molucho
-language to his companions, who began to rummage in their alforjas, and
-quickly produced maize tortillas, some charqui, and several leathern
-bottles filled with chica--a sort of cider made of apples and Indian
-corn. The whole was placed upon the grass before the two Frenchmen, who
-were wonderstruck at the sudden abundance which had succeeded without
-any transition to their late short commons. The Indians dismounted,
-and sat down in a circle round the travellers. The chief, then turning
-towards his guests, said with a pleasant smile--
-
-"Now, then, let my brothers eat."
-
-The young men did not require the cordial invitation to be repeated, but
-vigorously attacked the provisions so frankly offered. For the first few
-minutes silence prevailed among the party, for all were too well engaged
-to talk; but as soon as appetite was a little appeased, conversation was
-resumed.
-
-Of all men, Indians, perhaps, understand the laws of hospitality
-the best. They have an instinct of social conventions, if such an
-expression may be allowed, which makes them divine at once, with
-infallible correctness, what the questions are that may be properly
-addressed to their guests, and the point at which they should stop to
-avoid committing any indiscretion. The two Frenchmen, who for the first
-time found themselves in contact with Araucanos, could not overcome
-the surprise caused by the knowledge of life, and the noble and frank
-manners of these men, whom, on the faith of accounts more or less false,
-they were accustomed, in common with all Europeans, to consider as gross
-savages, almost destitute of intelligence, and quite incapable of any
-delicacy of behaviour.
-
-"My brothers are not Spaniards?" the chief said, half interrogatively.
-
-"That is true," Louis replied; "but how did you discover that?"
-
-"Oh!" he said, with a disdainful smile, "we are well acquainted with
-those _chiaplos_--wicked soldiers. They are too old enemies to allow us
-to commit an error with regard to them. From what island do my brothers
-come?"
-
-"Our country is not an island," Valentine observed.
-
-"My brother is mistaken," the chief said emphatically; "there is but one
-country that is not an island, and that is the great land of the Aucas."
-
-The two young men bowed their heads before an opinion so peremptorily
-put forth--all discussion became impossible.
-
-"We are Frenchmen," Louis replied.
-
-"Frenchmen! ah! a good brave nation! We had several French warriors in
-the time of the great war."
-
-"What!" said Louis, with excited curiosity, "have French warriors fought
-with you?"
-
-"Yes," the chief remarked, proudly; "warriors with grey beards, and
-breasts marked with honourable scars, which they received in the wars of
-their island, when they fought under the orders of their great chief,
-Zaleon."
-
-"Napoleon?" said Valentine, quite astonished.
-
-"Yes; I believe it is so the palefaces pronounce his name. Did my
-brother know him?" the chief added, with ill-concealed curiosity.
-
-"No," replied the young man. "Although born in his reign, I was never
-able to get sight of him, and he is now dead."
-
-"My brother is mistaken," said the Puelche, solemnly; "such warriors as
-he do not die. When they have performed their task upon earth they go to
-Paradise--to hunt with Pillian, the master of the world."
-
-The young men bowed, as if convinced.
-
-"It is very singular," said Louis, "that the reputation of that powerful
-genius should have spread to the most remote and unknown regions of the
-globe, and be preserved pure and brilliant among these rude men; whilst
-in that France, for which he did everything men invariably seek to
-lessen it, and even to destroy it."
-
-"Like all their compatriots, who, from time to time, traverse our
-hunting grounds, our brothers have, doubtless, trading purposes in
-coming among us. Where are your goods?" said the chief.
-
-"We are not traders," replied Valentine; "we came to visit our brothers,
-the Araucanos, of whose wisdom and hospitality we have heard much."
-
-"The Moluchos love the French," the chief said, flattered by the
-compliment; "my brothers will be well received in our villages."
-
-"To what tribe does my brother belong?" asked Valentine, inwardly
-delighted at the good opinion the Indians entertained of his compatriots.
-
-"I am one of the principal Ulmens of the sacred tribe of the Great
-Hare," the chief said, proudly.
-
-"Thank you--one word more."
-
-"Let my brother speak; my ears are open."
-
-"We are in search of a Molucho chief, to whom we have a message from a
-friend of his, with whom he has had much dealing."
-
-"What is the chief's name?"
-
-"Antinahuel."
-
-"Good!"
-
-"Does my brother know him?"
-
-"I know him. If my brothers will follow me they shall see the toldo of
-a chief in which they shall be received like pennis. When they have
-rested, if they desire it, I will myself conduct them to Antinahuel, the
-most powerful Toqui of the four Uthal-Mapus of the Araucano confederacy."
-
-"What province is governed by Antinahuel?"
-
-"The Pire-Mapus, that is to say, the interior of the Andes."
-
-"Thanks, brother."
-
-"Will my brothers accept the offer I have made them?"
-
-"Why should we not accept it, chief, if, as I believe, it is made in
-earnest?"
-
-"Let my brothers come, then," the chief said, with a smile; "my tolderia
-is not far off."
-
-The breakfast was over, and the Indians were mounting.
-
-"We may as well go," said Valentine, in French. "This Indian appears to
-speak cordially and honestly, and it will give us a capital opportunity
-of studying interesting manners and customs. What do you think,
-Louis?--It may prove very amusing."
-
-"Well, I see no harm that accepting the invitation can do."
-
-"God speed us, then!"
-
-And with a bound he was in his saddle, imitated by Louis.
-
-"Forward!" cried the chief, and the party set off at a gallop.
-
-"Well, it must be allowed," said Valentine, in his cheerful way, "that
-these savages, if savages they are, have some redeeming qualities
-belonging to them. I begin to take a warm interest in them. They are
-true Scotch mountaineers for hospitality. I wonder what my regimental
-comrades, and more particularly my old friends of the Boulevard du
-Temple, would say if they could see me now! Houp! After me, the end of
-the world!"
-
-Louis laughed at this outburst of the incorrigible _gamin_, and, without
-further inquiries, the young men gaily abandoned themselves to the
-guidance of their new friends, who, after leaving the banks of the
-river, directed their course towards the mountains.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII.
-
-THE BLACK JACKAL.
-
-
-In order to make the facts which follow intelligible, we are obliged
-here to relate an adventure which happened more than twenty years before
-the period at which our history commences.
-
-Towards the end of the month of December, 1816, on a cold, rainy night,
-a traveller, mounted on an excellent horse, and carefully wrapped in
-the folds of an ample cloak, was following at a round trot the road,
-or rather the blind path, on the mountains which leads from Cruces to
-San-Jose. This man was a rich landowner, who was making a journey into
-Araucania, for the purpose of treating with the Indians for a large
-number of cattle and sheep. Having left Cruces about two o'clock in the
-afternoon, he had been delayed on his way by settling some business with
-various _guasos_, and he was hastening to gain a hacienda he possessed
-at some leagues from the spot where he then was, and where he reckoned
-upon passing the night.
-
-The country at the time was not in a state of tranquillity. For several
-days past the Puelches had appeared in arms upon the frontiers of Chili,
-and made incursions into the territories of the republic, burning the
-chacras, and carrying off the families they surprised. These marauders
-were commanded by a chief named The Black Jackal, whose cruelty spread
-terror among the people exposed to his depredations.
-
-It was, therefore, with some anxiety, mixed with secret apprehensions,
-that the man we have spoken of made all speed along the desolate road
-which led to his hacienda. Every minute only added to his fears. The
-storm, which had threatened all day, burst forth at last with a fury
-of which we have no conception in our climates. The wind roared loudly
-through the trees, bending some, and uprooting others. The rain fell in
-torrents, and the lightning became so vivid, that the horse began to
-plunge and rear, and refused to advance. The rider spurred the restive
-animal, and endeavoured, as well as the darkness would permit, to
-discover whereabouts he was. After surmounting immense difficulties, he
-saw at length, in the distance, the shadow of the walls of his hacienda,
-and the lights which shone like guiding stars, when suddenly his horse
-bounded on one side in such a way as almost to unseat him. When, with
-much trouble, he had recovered his command of the animal, he looked
-round to see what could have frightened it so, and perceived, with
-terror equal to the horse's, several men of sinister appearance standing
-motionless before him. The horseman's first movement was to seize his
-pistols, in order to sell his life as dearly as he could, for he had no
-doubt he had fallen into an ambuscade of bandits.
-
-"Keep your hands from your weapons, Don Antonio Quintana," said a rough
-voice; "we desire neither your life nor your money."
-
-"What do you want then?" he replied, in a tone that showed he was a
-little reassured by that frank declaration, though he still kept on the
-defensive.
-
-"Hospitality for this night, in the first place," said the other.
-
-Don Antonio endeavoured to ascertain if he knew the man who was speaking
-to him, but he could not distinguish his features through the darkness.
-
-"The doors of my dwelling always fly open to the stranger," he remarked;
-"why have you not knocked at them?"
-
-"Knowing you must come this way, I preferred waiting for you."
-
-"What else do you desire of me, then?"
-
-"I will tell you under your own roof; the open road is a place ill
-adapted for imparting confidence."
-
-"If you have nothing more to say to me now, and are as willing as I am
-to get under shelter, we will continue our journey."
-
-"Go on, then; we will follow you."
-
-Without exchanging another word, they directed their course towards the
-hacienda. Don Antonio Quintana was a resolute man, as the manner in
-which he had replied to the men who had so rudely barred his passage
-proved him. In spite of the fluency with which the one who had spoken
-employed the Spanish language, he had, at the first word, by his
-guttural accent, perceived he was an Indian; and with him fear had
-immediately given way to curiosity, and he had not hesitated to grant
-the hospitality asked, knowing that the Araucano, Puelches, Hueliches,
-or Moluchos, never violate the roof under which they are welcomed, and
-that the hosts who shelter them are held sacred.
-
-On arriving at the hacienda, Don Antonio found he was not mistaken; the
-men who had accosted him in so strange a manner were really Indians.
-There were four of them, and with them was a young woman with a child
-at the breast. The hacendero welcomed them to his dwelling with all the
-minute forms of Castilian courtesy, and gave orders to his peones or
-Indian domestics, terrified at the savage appearance of the strangers,
-to assist them with everything they might desire.
-
-"Eat and drink," he said, "you are at home, here."
-
-"Thanks!" replied the man, who had till that time been spokesman. "We
-accept your offer with as good a will as you give it, as far as regards
-food, of which we stand most in need."
-
-"Will you not rest till day?" asked Don Antonio; "the night is dark, and
-the weather frightful for travelling."
-
-"A black night is what we desire; besides, we must depart immediately.
-Now, allow me to put my second request to you."
-
-"Explain yourself," said the Spaniard, examining the speaker attentively.
-
-The latter was a tall, well-made man, of about forty; his
-strongly-marked features and his commanding eye proclaimed that he was
-accustomed to exercise authority.
-
-"It was I," he said, without preamble, "who directed the last invasion
-made upon the palefaces of the frontiers. My mosotones were all killed
-yesterday in an ambuscade by your lanceros; the three you see with me
-are all that remain of a troop of two hundred warriors; the others are
-dead. I myself am wounded, hunted, tracked like a wild beast; we are
-without horses to rejoin our tribe, without weapons to defend ourselves
-if we are attacked on the plain. I come to ask of you the means of
-escape from our pursuers. I will neither deceive nor surprise your good
-faith. I am bound to tell you the name of the man whose safety you hold
-in your hands. I am the greatest enemy of the Spaniards; my life has
-been passed in contending with them. In a word, I am The Black Jackal,
-the Apo-Ulmen of the Black Serpents."
-
-On hearing this redoubtable name the Chilian could not suppress a start
-of terror; but immediately recovering his self-possession, he replied in
-a calm voice, and in a kind tone.
-
-"You are my guest, and you are unfortunate, two titles sacred with me. I
-desire to know nothing more; you shall have horses and arms."
-
-A smile of ineffable sweetness lit up the countenance of the Indian.
-
-"One last prayer," he said.
-
-"Speak."
-
-The chief took by the hand the young Indian squaw, who had remained
-cowering and weeping in a corner, rocking her child in her arms, and
-presented her to Don Antonio.
-
-"This woman belongs to me; this child is mine," he said, "and I confide
-them both to you."
-
-"I will take charge of them; the woman shall be my sister, the child my
-son," the hacendero replied kindly, and after the Indian fashion.
-
-"The Apo-Ulmen will remember!" said the Puelche chief, in a voice
-trembling with emotion.
-
-He imprinted a kiss upon the brow of the poor little creature, who
-smiled upon him, cast upon the woman a look beaming with tenderness,
-and rushed out of the house, followed by his companions. Don Antonio
-supplied them with arms and horses, and the four Indians disappeared in
-the darkness.
-
-Many years passed away ere Don Antonio heard anything of the Black
-Jackal; the woman and the child remained at the hacienda, and were
-treated as if they had been members of the Chilian's family. The
-hacendero had been married; but, unfortunately, after a year, which
-promised to be the commencement of a long and happy union, the wife died
-when giving birth to a beautiful little girl, whom her father named
-Maria. The two children grew up together, watched over by the anxious
-solicitude of the Indian woman, loving each other like brother and
-sister.
-
-At length, one day, a numerous troop of Puelches, magnificently equipped
-and mounted, arrived at Rio-Claro, the town in which Don Antonio
-resided. The chief of these Indians was the Black Jackal, who came to
-redemand his wife and son of him to whom he had intrusted them. The
-interview was very affecting. The chief forgot his Indian stoicism; he
-gave himself up to the feelings which agitated him, and enjoyed the
-happiness of finding again, after such a length of time, the two beings
-he held dearest in the world. When it became necessary to depart, and
-the children learnt they were to be separated, they shed abundance of
-tears. They had been accustomed from their infancy to live together, and
-they could not comprehend why they were not to continue to do so.
-
-Don Antonio had extended his traffic over different parts of the
-frontiers; he possessed chacras, in which the breeding of cattle
-was carried on upon a vast scale. The Black Jackal, who had sworn
-a perpetual friendship, became of great use to him in his business
-transactions; he often put him in the way of making excellent bargains
-with his compatriots, and, what was still more serviceable, protected
-his property from the depredations of plunderers. Every year Don Antonio
-visited all his chacras in Araucania, and passed a couple of months
-among the tribe of the Black Serpents, with his friend, the Black
-Jackal. His daughter accompanied him in all these journeys, on account
-of the friendship that existed between the children. Things went on thus
-for many years.
-
-At the period when our history commences, the Black Jackal was dead:
-he had fallen, like a brave warrior, with his weapons in his hand, in
-a combat on the frontier; his son, Antinahuel, now about thirty-five
-years of age, who promised to tread in his footsteps, had been elected
-Apo-Ulmen in his place, and afterwards Toqui of his Uthal-Mapus or
-province, which made him one of the principal men of Araucania. Don
-Antonio had likewise died, shortly after the marriage of his daughter,
-Dona Maria, with Don Tadeo de Leon, brought to an untimely grave by his
-grief at her misconduct, which had produced terrible scandal in the
-upper classes of Santiago.
-
-Dona Maria for some years past had only seen Antinahuel at long
-intervals; but between them their friendship remained as warm as in
-the days of their childhood; and, on the part of the Indian warrior,
-it was carried so far that he obeyed the least caprice of the young
-woman as an imperative duty. Great, then, was the astonishment of the
-warriors of the tribe of the Black Serpents, when, in the evening of
-the day on which we have resumed our story, they saw Dona Maria arrive
-on horseback, accompanied only by two peons, at their tolderia, and go
-straight towards the rancho of the Toqui. On perceiving her, the usually
-gloomy face of the chief was suddenly lighted up with an expression of
-gladness.
-
-"Eglantine of the Woods!" he cried, in a joyous tone, "does my sister
-then still remember the poor Indian?"
-
-"I have come to visit the toldo of my brother," she said, turning her
-brow towards him, upon which he impressed a kiss; "my heart is sad,
-grief devours me--and I have remembered my brother."
-
-The chief cast a look upon her of anxiety, mingled with sorrow.
-
-"Although it be to trouble that I owe the visit of my sister, I am,
-nevertheless, rejoiced to see her."
-
-"Yes," she resumed, "when we are in trouble we think of our friends."
-
-"My sister has done well in thinking of me; what can I do for her?"
-
-"My brother can render me a great service."
-
-"My life is my sister's; she knows she can dispose of it at her
-pleasure."
-
-"Thank you! I was certain I could depend upon my brother."
-
-"Everywhere, and at all times."
-
-After bowing respectfully to Dona Maria, he led her into his rancho,
-where his mother had prepared everything worthy of the visit of one whom
-for so many years she had loved as a daughter.
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX.
-
-TWO OLD FRIENDS.
-
-
-Antinahuel--the Tiger Sun--was at this time a man of about thirty-five
-years of age. In stature he was tall, and in his carriage majestic;
-everything in his person announced a man accustomed to command, and made
-to rule over his fellows. As a warrior, his reputation was immense,
-and his mosotones held him in superstitious veneration. Such was,
-physically, the man whom Dona Maria de Leon came to visit; what he was,
-morally, we shall soon see.
-
-The cloth was laid in the toldo,--we make use of the expression, the
-cloth was laid, advisedly, because the Araucano chiefs are perfectly
-well acquainted with European customs, and almost all possess dishes,
-plates, and silver spoons and forks. It is true, they only make use of
-these upon great occasions, and for the purpose of display; for, as
-to themselves, they carry frugality and plainness to an excess, and
-when they are alone with their families, are content to eat with their
-fingers.
-
-Dona Maria seated herself at the table, and made a sign to Antinahuel,
-who stood respectfully beside her, to keep her company, and to take his
-place opposite to her. It was clear to the Indian chief that his sister,
-as he called her, who for some years had completely neglected him, must
-have been induced by some powerful interest to seek him thus in his
-remote village. But what could the interest be which led a delicate
-woman, accustomed to all the luxurious comforts of life, to undertake a
-long and perilous journey in order to come and talk with an Indian in a
-miserable tolderia, hidden in the midst of the desert?
-
-On her side, the young woman was a prey to still greater uneasiness,
-for she was anxious to discover whether, in spite of her neglect of the
-chief, she had preserved the boundless power she had formerly exercised
-over that Indian nature, which civilization had softened rather than
-subdued; she feared lest the long forgetfulness in which she had left
-him had made her lose her prestige in his eyes, and that coolness and
-indifference might have succeeded to the warm friendship of early days.
-
-When the repast was ended, a peon brought in the _mate_[1] the infusion
-of the Paraguay herb which, with the Chilians, takes the place of tea,
-and of which they are very fond. Two chased cups, placed upon a filagree
-salver, were presented to Dona Maria and the chief; they lit their maize
-_pajillos_, and smoked, whilst sipping their _mate_, reflectively. After
-a few minutes' silence, which was beginning to be embarrassing to both,
-Dona Maria, who perceived that Antinahuel was resolved to act on the
-defensive, determined to open the attack.
-
-"My brother," she said, with a smile, "is surprised at my sudden arrival
-at his tolderia."
-
-"It is true; the Eglantine of the Woods has appeared unexpectedly
-amongst us, but she is not the less welcome on that account."
-
-And he bowed.
-
-"I am glad to observe that my brother is as gallant as ever."
-
-"No; I love my sister, and I am happy to see her, after being so long
-deprived of her presence."
-
-"I know your friendship for me, Penni; our childhood was passed
-together, but it is a long time since that time. You are now one of the
-caraskens, whilst I am only, as formerly, a poor woman."
-
-"The Eglantine of the Woods is my sister, her least wishes shall always
-be sacred with me."
-
-"Thanks, Penni! But let us drop this conversation, and talk of our early
-years, which, alas! so quickly glided away."
-
-"Yesterday exists no longer," he said, sententiously.
-
-"That's true," she replied, with a sigh; "why, indeed, should we talk of
-times that can never come back?"
-
-"Does my sister intend to return to Chili?"
-
-"No; I have left Santiago for a time; I intend, for a season, to take up
-my abode in Valdivia; I left my friends to continue their route, whilst
-I came on to pay my respects to my brother."
-
-"Yes, I know that the man whom the palefaces call General Bustamente,
-though scarcely cured of a dangerous wound, set off, a month ago, to
-visit the province of Valdivia, I, myself, intend shortly to visit that
-city."
-
-"There are many palefaces from the South there at present."
-
-"Among these strangers are there any that I know?"
-
-"Good heavens! how can I tell? Yes, there is one, Don Tadeo, my husband."
-
-Antinahuel raised his head in astonishment.
-
-"I thought he had been shot!" he said.
-
-"He was."
-
-"Well?"
-
-"He escaped death, though grievously wounded."
-
-The artful woman endeavoured to read what impression the news she had so
-coolly imparted made upon the stoical face of the Indian.
-
-"Listen to me, my sister," he resumed, after a minute's pause; "Don
-Tadeo is still your enemy, is he not?"
-
-"More so than ever."
-
-"Good!"
-
-"Not content with having basely abandoned me, and having torn from me
-my child, the innocent creature who alone consoled me and enabled me to
-support the sorrows with which he has overwhelmed me, he has crowned
-his insults by publicly paying his addresses to another woman, whom he
-takes with him everywhere, and who is at this moment his companion at
-Valdivia."
-
-"Hum!" the chief said, carelessly.
-
-Accustomed to Araucanian manners, which permit every man to take as many
-wives as he can support, he found the action of Don Tadeo perfectly
-natural. This did not escape Dona Maria: an ironical smile curled for
-a second the corners of her lips, and she continued, negligently, but
-looking earnestly in the face of the chief--
-
-"Yes, the woman is called, as I hear, Dona Rosario de Mendoz; and is,
-they say, a beautiful creature!"
-
-That name, pronounced with such apparent indifference, produced the
-effect of a clap of thunder upon the chief; he sprang up, his face
-inflamed, and his eyes sparkling.
-
-"Rosario de Mendoz, did you say, my sister?" he shouted.
-
-"Good heavens! I hardly know," she replied. "I have only heard her
-name--I believe that may be it--but," she added, "what interest can my
-brother take in it?"
-
-"Oh! none," he said, as he quietly resumed his seat. "Why does not my
-sister avenge herself upon the man who has abandoned her?"
-
-"To what purpose? and, besides, what vengeance can I hope for? I am but
-a weak and timid woman, without friends, without support; in short,
-alone."
-
-"And I?" said the chief; "what am I, then?"
-
-"Oh!" she replied, warmly; "I would not on any account that my brother
-should constitute himself the avenger of an insult which is personal to
-myself."
-
-"My sister is mistaken; in attacking this man I avenge my own insult."
-
-"My brother must explain himself--I do not understand him."
-
-"That is what I am going to do."
-
-"I am all attention."
-
-At this moment Antinahuel's mother entered the toldo, and, approaching
-the chief, said in a humble, but sad tone,--
-
-"My son is wrong in thus recalling old remembrances, and opening ancient
-wounds again."
-
-"Woman!" the Indian replied, "Retire! I am a warrior! My father left me
-a vengeance. I have sworn, and I will accomplish my oath!"
-
-The poor mother left the toldo with a sigh. The Linda, whose curiosity
-was excited to the highest degree, awaited impatiently the chief's
-explanation. Without, the rain fell pattering upon the leaves of the
-trees; at intervals a blast of night wind, loaded with uncertain sounds,
-came whistling through the ill-joined boards of the toldo, and caused
-the flame of the torch which lighted it to waver unsteadily. The two
-speakers, though absorbed in their own reflections, involuntarily lent
-an ear to these nameless sounds, and felt a depression of spirits they
-could not account for. The chief raised his head, and inhaling, one
-after another, several mouthfuls of smoke from his pajillo, which he
-puffed out brusquely, commenced in a low voice,--
-
-"Although my sister is almost a child of the nation, as my mother nursed
-her, she has never been made acquainted with the history of my family.
-The history I am about to relate will reveal to her that I have against
-Don Tadeo de Leon an old hatred, ever kept alive; and which, if I have
-to the present moment appeared to allow to slumber, it has been because
-that man was the husband of my sister: the conduct of Don Tadeo towards
-my sister frees me from the promise I had made myself, and leaves me
-liberty of action."
-
-Dona Maria bowed assentingly.
-
-"When the vile Spaniards," he continued, "conquered Chili, and reduced
-its cowardly inhabitants to slavery, they dreamt of subjugating
-Araucania in its turn, and marched against the Aucas, whose frontiers
-they violated. My sister sees that I take up my recital from the
-beginning. The Toqui Cadegual was one of the first to convoke a grand
-council of the nation, on the plain of the Carampangue. Named Toqui, one
-of the four Uthal-Mapus, he gave battle to the palefaces. The conflict
-was terrible! It lasted from the rising to the setting of the sun. Many
-Molucho warriors departed for the happy prairies of the Eskennane, but
-Pillian did not abandon the Aucas; they were conquerors, and the Chiaplo
-fled like timid hares before the terrible lances of our warriors.
-Numbers of palefaces fell into our hands; among them was a powerful
-chief, named Don Estevan de Leon. The Toqui Cadegual might have employed
-his rights, and have killed him, but he did nothing of the kind: so far
-from it, he led him to his toldo, and treated him with kindness, as a
-brother. But when did Spaniards ever show themselves grateful for a
-kindness? Don Estevan, forgetful of the sacred duties of hospitality,
-seduced the daughter of the man to whom he owed his life, and, one
-day, disappeared with her. The grief of the Toqui was immense at this
-unworthy and disloyal treachery. He swore to wage from that time a
-pitiless war against the palefaces, and he kept his oath: all Spaniards
-taken by them, whatever their age or sex, were massacred. These terrible
-reprisals were just, were they not?"
-
-"Yes," said the Linda laconically.
-
-"One day, Cadegual, surprised by his ferocious enemies, fell, covered
-with wounds, into their hands, after a heroic resistance, during which
-all his brave Mosotones had allowed themselves to be killed by his side.
-In his turn, as it happened, Cadegual was in the power of Don Estevan de
-Leon. The Spanish chief recollected the man who had, years before, saved
-his life. He was merciful. After cutting off the hands, and scooping out
-the eyes of his prisoner, he restored to him his daughter, of whom he
-was tired, and sent him back to his nation. The Toqui was led back by
-his child, whom he pardoned. When he joined his tribe, Cadegual called
-together his relations, related to them what he had suffered, showed
-them his bleeding and mutilated arms, and, after having made his sons
-and all his relations swear to avenge him, he allowed himself to die of
-hunger, that he might not survive his shame."
-
-"Oh, that is frightful!" Dona Maria cried, affected, in spite of herself.
-
-"That is nothing yet!" the chief resumed, with a bitter smile; "let
-my sister listen to the sequel. From that time, an implacable destiny
-has always hung over the two families, and continually brought the
-descendants of the Toqui Cadegual in contact with those of Captain
-Don Estevan de Leon. During three centuries, this ardent, inveterate
-struggle has lasted between the two families, and will never terminate
-but by the extinction of one, or perhaps both of them. Up to the present
-time, the advantage has almost always been on the side of the Leons;
-the sons of the Toqui have very often been conquered, but they have
-always remained firm and implacable, ready to re-commence the combat at
-the first signal. At the present day, the family of Don Estevan has but
-one representative, Don Tadeo--a representative formidable through his
-courage, his fortune, and the immense influence, he exercises over his
-compatriots. He, personally, has never injured the Aucas; he seems even
-to be ignorant of the inveterate hatred which exists between his family
-and that of the Toqui; but the descendants of Cadegual do not forget
-it: they are strong, numerous, and powerful in their turn; the hour
-of vengeance has struck, they will not let it escape! My sister," he
-continued, in a voice almost rising to a shout; "my sister, my ancestor
-was the Toqui Cadegual, and I thank you for having warned me that not
-only my enemy is not dead, but that he is within my reach!"
-
-"Your mother asked you properly, Penni, why should you revive old
-hatreds? Peace now reigns between the Chilians and the Aucas: let
-my brother beware; the whites are numerous; they have many warlike,
-disciplined soldiers."
-
-"Oh," he replied, with a sinister look; "I am sure of succeeding, for I
-have my nymph."
-
-Indians of high rank all entertain a firm belief that they have a
-familiar genius, who is bound to obey them.
-
-Dona Maria feigned to yield to this reason; she had succeeded in putting
-the hunter upon the scent of the game she wished to destroy, and it was
-of very little importance to her what motive made him obey her. She knew
-perfectly well that the hatred alleged by the chief was nothing but a
-pretext, and that the real cause remained hidden in the depths of his
-heart. Although she had a clear idea of what it was, she affected not to
-have the least suspicion of it.
-
-She continued talking with Antinahuel for some time longer about
-indifferent subjects, and then retired to a chamber which had been
-prepared for her. It was late, and she wished to set out for Valdivia at
-daybreak. She was sufficiently well acquainted with the companion of her
-childhood to know that, now the tiger was roused, it would not be long
-before he started in quest of the prey which she had marked down for him.
-
-As for the Toqui, the whole night passed away without his thinking of
-taking a moment's repose; he remained plunged in profound and agitating
-reflections.
-
-
-[1] The Chilians borrowed the mate from the Araucanos, who think it a
-great delicacy, and have a particular talent for making it. This is the
-manner in which they prepare it:--They put into a coffee cup a spoonful
-of the Paraguay herb, to which they add a lump of sugar, which they
-leave upon the fire till it is a little burnt; they squeeze a few drops
-of lemon juice into it, with some cinnamon and a clove; they then fill
-the cup up with boiling water. The mate being now ready, they introduce
-a silver tube of the thickness of a quill, pierced with small holes at
-its lower end, by means of which the mate is drawn up,--at the risk,
-be it remembered, of horribly scalding the mouth, as always happens to
-strangers when they first partake of the luxury, to the great amusement
-of the Chilians. Drinking mate is so common in Chili, as to be what
-coffee is in the East; it is taken after every repast, and presented to
-every visitor. In ceremonial parties, a single tube serves for all the
-persons assembled.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX.
-
-THE SORCERER.
-
-
-On the same day, a tolderia, situated at some miles from Orano, on the
-banks of the Carampangue, was a scene of the greatest commotion. The
-women and warriors assembled in front of a toldo, on the threshold of
-which was exposed a corpse, lying as it were in state, upon a bed of
-branches, were uttering cries and groans, which were mingled with the
-deafening sound of drums and flutes in most dismal discord, and the
-continuous howling of dogs, whom all this din rendered furious. In the
-middle of the crowd, by the side of the body, stood a man advanced
-in years, tall in stature, and clothed in the costume of a woman,
-who appeared to direct the ceremony, making extraordinary gestures
-and contortions, accompanied by scarcely human yells. This man, of a
-ferocious aspect, was the machi, or sorcerer of the tribe; the motions
-he affected, the cries he uttered, were intended to protect the body
-against the attacks of the evil genius, supposed to be eager to get
-possession of it. At a sign from him the music and groans ceased; the
-evil genius, conquered by the power of the machi, had given up the
-contest, after a sharp struggle, and abandoned the body which it was
-beyond his power to obtain. The sorcerer then turned towards a man of
-lofty stature and commanding countenance, who stood near him leaning
-upon a long lance.
-
-"Ulmen of the powerful tribe of the Great Hare," he said, in a
-sepulchral tone, "thy father, the valiant Ulmen, who has been ravished
-from us by Pillian, is no longer in dread of the influence of the
-evil genius, whom I have forced to depart; he now hunts in the happy
-prairies of the Eskennane with the just warriors: all the rites are
-accomplished--the hour for surrendering his body to the earth has
-arrived!"
-
-"Stop!" the chief replied, warmly; "my father is dead, but who has
-killed him? A warrior does not succumb thus, in a few hours, unless some
-secret influence has weighed upon him, and dried up the springs of life
-in his heart. Answer me, O machi, inspired by Pillian! Tell me the name
-of the assassin! My heart is sad, and can only be comforted by avenging
-my father."
-
-At these words, pronounced in a firm voice, a shudder crept through the
-ranks of the people assembled in a group round the body. The machi,
-after having looked searchingly round, cast down his eyes, crossed his
-arms upon his breast, and appeared to reflect.
-
-The Araucanos only think one sort of death possible--that on the field
-of battle; they do not suppose any one can lose his life by either
-accident or disease; in these two cases they always attribute death to
-the action of an occult power, and are persuaded that some enemy of
-the defunct has cast the charm upon him that has killed him. In this
-persuasion, at the period of the funeral ceremonies, the relations and
-friends of the dead person call upon the machi to denounce the assassin
-to them. The machi is obliged to point him out; it would be in vain
-for him to endeavour to make them comprehend that the death of their
-relation is natural, for their fury would be immediately turned against
-him, and he would become their victim.
-
-In this hard alternative, the machi takes good care not to hesitate; the
-murderer is the more easily pointed out through his non-existence, and
-from the sorcerer being in no danger of being suspected of deception.
-Generally, in order to make his own interests agree with those of the
-relations who claim a victim, he gives up one of his own personal
-enemies to their vengeance; when--but that is rare--the machi has no
-enemies, he fixes upon someone at hazard. The pretended murderer, in
-spite of his protestations of innocence, is immolated without mercy.
-
-It may be easily understood how perilous such a custom is, and what
-an influence it gives the sorcerer in the tribe; an influence we are
-obliged to admit which he abuses under all circumstances, without the
-least scruple.
-
-Fresh personages, among whom were Valentine and his friend, had arrived
-at the village, and, attracted by curiosity, mingled with the crowd
-collected round the body. The two Frenchmen could not comprehend
-anything of this scene till their guide had briefly explained it to
-them; then they followed the different phases of it with great interest.
-
-"Speak!" said the Ulmen, after a short pause. "Does not my father know
-the name of the man of whom we must demand an account of this murder?"
-
-"I know him," the sorcerer replied, in a solemn tone.
-
-"Why, then, does the inspired machi preserve silence, when the dead body
-cries for vengeance?"
-
-"Because," the machi said, looking this time the newly-arrived chief
-full in the face, "there are powerful men who laugh at human justice."
-
-The eyes of the crowd turned to the man whom the sorcerer appeared
-indirectly to point out.
-
-"The guilty man," the Ulmen cried, in a loud voice, "whatever be his
-rank in the tribe, shall not escape my just vengeance; speak without
-fear, priest of fate! I swear that the man whose name passes your lips
-shall die!"
-
-The machi drew himself up majestically; he raised his arm slowly, and,
-amidst the general anxious curiosity, he, with his finger, pointed to
-the chief who had offered such cordial hospitality to the strangers,
-saying, in a loud, ringing voice--
-
-"Accomplish your oath, then, Ulmen--that is the assassin of your father,
-Trangoil-Lanec cast the charm upon him which has killed him!"
-
-And the machi veiled his face with the corner of his poncho, as if
-overwhelmed with grief at making the revelation.
-
-The sorcerer's terrible words were succeeded by the silence of
-astonishment. Trangoil-Lanec was the last man in the tribe who would
-have been suspected. He was beloved and venerated by all for his
-courage, frankness, and generosity. The first sensation of surprise
-over, a general movement took place in the crowd; all drew back from
-the supposed murderer, leaving him face to face with the chief of whose
-death he was accused. Trangoil-Lanec remained impassive, a smile of
-disdain passed over his lips, he dismounted from his horse, and waited.
-
-The Ulmen walked slowly towards him, and when within a few paces, asked,
-in a sorrowful voice--
-
-"Why didst thou kill my father, Trangoil-Lanec? He loved thee, and I,
-was not I thy Penni?"
-
-"I have not killed thy father, Curumilla," the chief replied, with a
-tone of frankness that would have convinced a man less prejudiced than
-the one he addressed.
-
-"The machi has said so."
-
-"The machi lies."
-
-"No, the machi cannot lie--he is inspired by Pillian; thou, thy wife,
-and thy children must die; the law decrees that it shall be so."
-
-Without deigning to reply, the chief threw down his arms, and went
-and placed himself beside the stake of blood, planted in front of the
-medicine toldo, which contains the sacred idol. A circle was formed, of
-which the stake formed the centre; the wife and children of the chief
-were brought up, and were prepared immediately for the sacrifice; for
-the funeral ceremony of the chief could not be completed before the
-execution of his murderer. The machi was triumphant. One man alone in
-the tribe had ventured to hold up his hand against his robberies and
-rogueries, and that man was about to die and leave him absolute master.
-Upon a sign from Curumilla, two Indians seized the chief, and, in spite
-of the tears and sobs of his wives and children, they prepared to fasten
-him to the stake.
-
-The two Frenchmen had anxiously watched the spectacle of this infamous
-drama; Louis was disgusted with the rascality of the machi and the
-credulity of the Indians.
-
-"Oh!" he said, to his friend, "we cannot allow this murder to be
-accomplished."
-
-"Hum!" muttered Valentine, stroking the ends of his light moustache, and
-casting a glance around him, "hum! there is a great number of them."
-
-"What matters it how many?" Louis replied, impetuously; "I will not
-be the witness of such iniquity, if I die for it. I will attempt to
-save the life of that unfortunate man, who so frankly offered us his
-friendship."
-
-"The fact is," Valentine said, pensively, "this Trangoil-Lanec, as they
-call him, is a very worthy fellow, for whom I feel a warm sympathy; but
-what can we do?"
-
-"Pardieu!" Louis said, seizing his pistols, "throw ourselves between him
-and his enemies; we can each of us kill five or six."
-
-"Yes, and the others will kill us, without our having succeeded in
-saving the man for whom we devote ourselves. A bad means that! Let us
-try to find some other."
-
-"We must be quick, then; the torture is about to commence."
-
-Valentine struck his forehead, and cried, with a jeering laugh--
-
-"Bah! I have it! Trick must serve our turn--leave it to me; my old trade
-of a mountebank will do! Help me, if I want it; but, for heaven's sake,
-swear to remain calm!"
-
-"I swear I will, if you save him."
-
-"Be satisfied--against rogue I'll play rogue and a half; these savages
-shall see I can be more cunning than they."
-
-Valentine urged his horse into the middle of the circle, and shouted--
-
-"Stop a minute!"
-
-At the unexpected appearance of this man, whom nobody had yet observed,
-all turned round and looked at him with astonishment. Louis, with his
-hands on his pistols, watched his movements with anxiety, ready to fly
-to his succour, if he needed it.
-
-"We will not joke," continued Valentine, "we have not time for that.
-You are a set of fools, and your machi is laughing at you. What! would
-you kill a man without a moment's reflection, because a rogue bids you
-do so? Caramba! I have taken it into my head to prevent your committing
-such a folly--I will do it, too!"
-
-And placing his hand upon his hip, he looked round with an intrepid
-glance. The Indians, according to their strange custom, listened to
-this speech without evincing surprise, even by a gesture. Curumilla
-approached him.
-
-"My pale brother must retire," he said, calmly; "he is unacquainted with
-the laws of the Puelches; this man is condemned, he must die; the machi
-has pointed him out as a murderer."
-
-"I repeat to you, you are fools!" said Valentine shrugging his
-shoulders; "your machi is no more a conjurer than I am; I again tell
-you, he is cheating you, and I will prove it, if you will let me."
-
-"What says my father?" said Curumilla to the machi, who stood cold and
-motionless by the side of the body.
-
-The machi smiled disdainfully.
-
-"When did the white man ever speak truth?" he replied, with a sneer.
-"Let this one prove what he asserts, if he is able."
-
-"Good!" the Ulmen said; "the Murucho may speak."
-
-"Pardieu!" cried Valentine. "Notwithstanding the bold-faced assurance of
-this individual, I shall find it no difficult matter to prove that he is
-an impostor."
-
-"We are attentive," said Curumilla.
-
-The Indians drew round with intense curiosity. Louis could not at all
-make out what his friend proposed to do. He could only suppose that some
-extravagant idea had crossed his brain, and was as impatient as the rest
-to see how he would come through his dangerous undertaking with honour.
-
-"One moment!" said the machi, with perfect assurance. "What will my
-brothers do if I prove my accusation true?"
-
-"The stranger must die," said Curumilla, coolly.
-
-"I accept the terms," Valentine replied, resolutely. Placed thus in the
-necessity of explaining himself, the Frenchman drew himself up to his
-full height, and, knitting his brows, exclaimed pompously--
-
-"I, too, am a great medicine man!"
-
-The Indians bowed reverentially. The science of Europeans is perfectly
-established among them; they respect without disputing it.
-
-"It was not Trangoil-Lanec," continued the Frenchman, with the greatest
-audacity, "who killed the chief; it was the machi himself."
-
-A start of astonishment pervaded the assembly.
-
-"I!" cried the machi, in a voice of amazement.
-
-"You, yourself, and you know it well," replied Valentine, giving him a
-look that made him tremble.
-
-"Stranger," said Trangoil-Lanec, with the majesty of a martyr, "it is
-no use to interpose in my favour; my brothers believe me guilty, and
-innocent though I am, I must die."
-
-"Your devotion to your laws is noble, but in this case it is absurd,"
-Valentine replied.
-
-"This man is guilty," the machi persisted.
-
-"Let us put an end to this, then," replied Trangoil-Lanec; "kill me!"
-
-"What say my brothers?" Curumilla asked of the crowd, who pressed
-anxiously around him.
-
-"That the Murucho medicine-man be allowed to prove the truth of his
-words," replied the warriors with one voice.
-
-They loved Trangoil-Lanec, and in their hearts desired that he should
-not die. On the other hand, they entertained for the machi a hatred
-which the profound terror he inspired them with scarcely sufficed to
-make them conceal.
-
-"Very well," said Valentine, "this is what I propose."
-
-All were silent as the grave. The Frenchman drew his sword, and waved
-the bright blade before the eyes of the spectators.
-
-"You see this weapon," said he, in a pompous tone; "I will put it into
-my mouth, and swallow it up to the hilt. If Trangoil-Lanec is guilty, I
-shall die; if he is innocent, as I affirm, Pillian will help me, and I
-shall draw forth the sword from my body without suffering a wound."
-
-"My brother speaks like a courageous warrior," said Curumilla; "we are
-ready to behold."
-
-"I will not suffer it!" Trangoil-Lanec shouted. "Does my brother want to
-kill himself?"
-
-"Pillian is judge!" Valentine replied, with a smile of strange
-expression, and with an air of conviction admirably well played.
-
-The two Frenchmen exchanged a glance. The Indians are perfect children
-in their love of spectacle, and the extraordinary proposal of the
-Parisian seemed to them to admit of no reply.
-
-"The trial! the trial!" they shouted.
-
-"Very well," said Valentine; "let my brothers behold, then."
-
-He first placed himself in the proper position adopted by jugglers when
-they exhibit this feat in public places; then introducing the blade of
-the sword into his mouth, in a few seconds the whole of it disappeared.
-During the performance of this trick, which in their eyes was a
-miracle, the Puelches watched the bold Frenchman in breathless terror.
-They could not comprehend how a man could perform such an operation
-without deliberately killing himself. Valentine turned on all sides,
-so that everyone might be convinced of the reality of the fact; then
-he deliberately withdrew the blade from his mouth, as bright as when
-it came from the sheath. A cry of enthusiasm burst from the crowd: the
-miracle was evident.
-
-"One minute more," he said; "I have still something to demand of you."
-
-Silence was in an instant re-established.
-
-"I have proved to you, in an incontrovertible manner, that the chief is
-not guilty--have I not?"
-
-"Yes! yes!" they shouted simultaneously; "the paleface is a great
-medicine man! he is beloved by Pillian!"
-
-"Very well. Now, then," he added, with a sardonic smile directed towards
-the machi, "your machi should prove in his turn that I have calumniated
-him, and that it was not he who killed the Apo-Ulmen of your tribe. The
-dead chief was a great warrior; it ought to be avenged."
-
-"Yes," the warriors cried, "he ought to be avenged."
-
-"My brother speaks well," observed Curumilla; "let the machi be put to
-the proof."
-
-The unfortunate machi perceived at once that he was lost. He became
-livid, and a cold perspiration bathed his temples, whilst a convulsive
-tremor shook his limbs.
-
-"This man is an impostor," he muttered, in a voice scarcely audible; "he
-abuses your good faith."
-
-"Perhaps I am," said Valentine; "but, in the meantime, imitate me."
-
-"Here," said Curumilla, holding out the sword to the machi, "if you are
-innocent, Pillian will protect you, as he has protected my brother."
-
-"Caramba! that is certain; Pillian always protects the innocent, and you
-are about to be a proof of it," said the Parisian, in whom the revived
-spirit of the _gamin_ was now triumphant.
-
-The machi cast around a look of despair; all eyes were expressive of
-impatience and curiosity; the unhappy wretch perceived but too plainly
-that he could look for help to nobody, and he formed his resolution
-instantly--he determined to die as he had lived, deceiving the crowd to
-the last minute.
-
-"I fear nothing," he said, in a firm voice; "this steel will be harmless
-to me. You desire that I should go through the trial--I will obey. But,
-beware! Pillian is angry with your conduct towards me; the humiliation
-you impose upon me will be avenged by the terrible scourges which he
-will inflict upon you."
-
-At these words of their prophet the Puelches were moved. They hesitated.
-For many long years they had been accustomed to place entire faith in
-his predictions, and they experienced a kind of fear in thus daring to
-accuse him of imposture. Valentine saw at a glance what was passing in
-their hearts.
-
-"Capitally well played," he said, replying by a knowing wink to the
-triumphant smile of the machi; "now it is my turn. Let my brothers take
-heart!" he added, in a loud, firm voice. "No misfortune threatens them;
-this man speaks thus because he is afraid to die; he knows he is guilty,
-and that Pillian will not protect him."
-
-The machi darted a glance at him gleaming with hatred, seized the
-sword, and, imitating as well as he knew how what he had seen, with
-desperate quickness plunged the blade down his throat. A stream of black
-blood sprang from his mouth, his eyes glared hideously, his arms shook
-convulsively, he staggered two steps forward, and fell flat upon his
-face. The people crowded round him--he was dead.
-
-"Let this lying dog be thrown to the vultures," said Curumilla, kicking
-the lifeless body with contempt.
-
-"We are brothers for life and death," cried Trangoil-Lanec, embracing
-Valentine.
-
-"Well," the young man said with a smile, to his friend, "I think I
-have not got very badly through that affair--eh? You see, it is well,
-sometimes, to have practised many trades; even that of a mountebank may
-serve at need."
-
-"Do not calumniate your heart and courage," Louis replied, warmly
-pressing his hand; "you have; saved the life of a man."
-
-"Aye; but I have killed another."
-
-"Oh, he was a guilty wretch!"
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI.
-
-THE OBSEQUIES OF AN APO-ULMEN.
-
-
-The emotion caused by the death of the machi gradually died away, and
-order was re-established. Curumilla and Trangoil-Lanec, abjuring any
-feeling of enmity, exchanged a fraternal embrace, amidst the frantic
-applause of the warriors, who loved both the chiefs.
-
-"Now my father is avenged, we can restore his body to the earth,"
-Curumilla observed. Then, advancing towards the strangers, he bowed to
-them, saying--
-
-"Will the palefaces assist at the obsequies?"
-
-"We will," Louis replied.
-
-"My toldo is large," the chief continued; "my brothers will do me honour
-by consenting to inhabit it during their sojourn with the tribe."
-
-Louis was about to reply, but Trangoil-Lanec hastily prevented him.
-
-"My brothers the palefaces," he said, "have deigned to accept my poor
-hospitality."
-
-The young men bowed in silence.
-
-"Good!" the Ulmen continued. "Of what consequence is that? Whichever be
-the toldo the Muruches may choose, I shall consider them as my guests."
-
-"Many thanks, chief," Valentine replied; "be assured that we are
-grateful for your kindness."
-
-The Ulmen then took leave of the Frenchmen, and resumed his place by the
-side of his father's corpse, and the ceremonies commenced. The Araucanos
-are not, as some travellers have led us to believe, a people destitute
-of any faith; on the contrary, their faith is warm, and their religion
-rests upon bases which are not deficient in grandeur. They have no
-dogma, and yet they recognize two principles--that of good and that of
-evil.
-
-The first, named Pillian, is the Creating God; the second, named
-Guecubu, is the Destroying God. Guecubu is in a state of continual
-struggle with Pillian, endeavouring to disturb the harmony of the world,
-and destroy what exists; by which we see that the doctrine of Manicheism
-was embraced by the barbarians of both the old and the new world, who,
-being unable to penetrate the causes of good and evil, have imagined two
-contrary principles. In addition to these two principal deities, the
-Araucanos recognize a considerable number of secondary genii, who assist
-Pillian in his contest with Guecubu. These genii are males and females;
-the latter are all virgins, for--and it is a refined idea which we could
-not expect in a barbarous people--procreation is not necessary in the
-supernatural world. The male gods are named Geru, or lords; the females,
-Amey-Malghen, or spiritual nymphs.
-
-The Araucanos believe in the immortality of the soul, and, consequently,
-in a future life, in which the warriors who have distinguished
-themselves on earth hunt in game-abounding prairies, surrounded by
-everything they have loved. Like all American aborigines, the Araucanos
-are extremely superstitious. Their worship consists in assembling in
-the medicine toldo, where there is a shapeless idol, said to represent
-Pillian. They weep; they utter loud cries, with numberless contortions;
-and sacrifice to him a sheep, a cow, a horse, or a _chilihuegue_.
-
-At a signal from Curumilla, the warriors drew back to give place to the
-women, who surrounded the body, and began to walk in a circle, singing
-in a low and plaintive tone the noble feats of the deceased. At the
-expiration of about an hour, the cortege moved off after the corpse,
-which was borne by the four most renowned warriors of the tribe, and
-directed its course towards a hill where the place of sepulture was
-prepared. Behind followed the women, casting handfuls of hot ashes over
-the traces left by the passage of the funeral train; so that if the soul
-of the defunct should have any inclination to return to its body, it
-would not be able to find the way to his toldo, or come and trouble his
-heirs.
-
-When the body was laid in the grave, Curumilla cut the throats of his
-father's dogs and horses, which were placed near him, to enable him
-to hunt in the happy prairies. Within reach of his hand was placed a
-certain quantity of provisions for the nourishment of himself and the
-_tempulazzy_, or boatman, appointed to convey him to the other country,
-and into the presence of Pillian, where he is to be judged according
-to his good or evil actions. Earth was then thrown in upon the body.
-But, as the defunct had been a renowned warrior, a heap of stones was
-collected, of which a pyramid was formed; then everyone walked slowly
-once more round the tomb, pouring upon it a great quantity of chica. The
-relations and friends returned dancing and singing to the village, where
-awaited them one of those Homeric repasts of Araucanian funerals called
-cahuins, which last till all the partakers lie upon the ground utterly
-intoxicated.
-
-Beyond a little natural curiosity, our travellers did not take much
-interest in the ceremony or feast; they were fatigued, and preferred a
-short repose. Trangoil-Lanec guessed their thoughts; and, as soon as the
-procession returned, he left his companions, and offered to conduct the
-young men to his dwelling. They availed themselves of his kindness with
-alacrity. Like all Araucanian huts, this was a vast wooden building,
-covered with whitewashed mud, in the form of a rectangle, the roof being
-a terrace. This simple, airy residence displayed, in its interior, a
-perfect Dutch cleanliness.
-
-Trangoil-Lanec, as we have said, was one of the richest and most
-respected chiefs of his tribe, and had eight wives. Polygamy is allowed
-among the Moluches. When an Indian is desirous of marrying a woman, he
-declares his purpose to her parent, and fixes the number of animals he
-is willing to give. His conditions being accepted, he comes with a few
-friends, carries off the young woman, throws her on the saddle behind
-him, and gallops off to the woods, in the depths of which the couple
-remain three days. On the fourth they return; he slaughters a young
-mare in front of the hut of the father of his bride, and the marriage
-festivities begin. The abduction of the bride, and the sacrifice of
-the mare, take the place of a civil contract. After this fashion an
-Araucano is at liberty to marry as many wives as he can support. And
-yet, the first wife, who bears the title of unem domo, or legitimate
-wife, is most honoured; she has the direction of the household, and
-is the superior of the others, who are called inam domo, or secondary
-wives. All inhabit the same toldo, but in different apartments, where
-they employ themselves in bringing up their children, in weaving
-ponchos with the wool of guanacos and chilihuegues, and in preparing
-the dish which an Indian woman is bound to place every day on the table
-of her husband. Marriage is held sacred, and adultery is considered
-the greatest of crimes; the man and woman who should commit it would
-inevitably be assassinated by the husband and his relations, unless they
-redeemed their lives by means of a compensation imposed by the injured
-husband. When an Araucano leaves his home, he confides his wives to
-his relations, and, on his return, if he can prove that they have been
-unfaithful to him, he has the right of demanding of the guardians all he
-thinks proper to ask; so that the relations are interested in watching
-them. This strictness of morals only regards married women; others
-enjoy the greatest liberty, and take advantage of it without any person
-presuming to find fault with them.
-
-The two Frenchmen, thrown so suddenly into the midst of these strange
-manners and customs, were some time before they could comprehend Indian
-life. Valentine, in particular, was completely at a loss; he was in
-a state of perpetual astonishment, which, however, he took good care
-should not appear in his words or in his actions; for the adventure of
-the machi had raised him so high in the estimation of the inhabitants
-of the toldero, that he dreaded, with reason, lest the smallest
-indiscretion should cast him down from the pedestal upon which he
-maintained his erect position.
-
-One evening, when Louis was preparing, as he frequently did, to visit
-the various toldos, in order to inquire after the sick, and administer
-to them all the relief his limited knowledge of medicine permitted,
-Curumilla came to the two strangers to invite them to be present at the
-cahuin given by the new machi, who had been elected that day, in place
-of the dead one. Valentine promised that they would come. From what
-we have said before, it may easily be comprehended what an enormous
-influence a sorcerer possesses over the members of the tribe; the choice
-is therefore difficult to make, and is seldom a good one. The sorcerer
-is generally a woman: when it is a man, he assumes the female costume,
-which he wears for the rest of his life. In almost all cases the science
-is inherited.
-
-After smoking a considerable number of pipes, and making endless
-speeches, the Araucanos had chosen, as a successor to the machi, an old
-man, of a mild, kindly character, who, during the course of his long
-existence, had only made friends. The repast was, as may be supposed,
-copious, abundantly furnished with ulpo, the national dish of the
-Araucans, and moistened with an incalculable number of couis of chica.
-Among the other delicacies which figured at the feast was a large basket
-filled with hard eggs, which the Ulmens swallowed in emulation of each
-other.
-
-"Why don't you eat some eggs?" said Curumilla to Valentine. "Do you not
-like them?"
-
-"On the contrary, chief, I am very fond of eggs, but not cooked in that
-fashion; I have no inclination to choke myself, thank you."
-
-"Oh! yes," the Ulmen said; "I understand; you prefer them raw."
-
-Valentine burst into a Homeric fit of laughter.
-
-"Not better than these," he said, when he had recovered his gravity;
-"I like eggs boiled in the shell; I like omelettes, or pancakes, but
-neither hard nor raw, if you please."
-
-"What do you mean by that? Cooked eggs must be hard."
-
-The young man looked at him with astonishment, and then said to him in a
-tone of profound compassion--
-
-"Now, really, chief, do you mean to say you are only acquainted with
-hard eggs?"
-
-"Our fathers have always eaten them thus," the Ulmen replied, quietly.
-
-"Poor people! how I pity them! They have been ignorant of one of the
-greatest enjoyments of life. Well, my friend," he exclaimed, raising his
-voice with jocular enthusiasm, "I am determined you shall adore me as
-a benefactor to humanity! In short, I will endow you with soft-boiled
-eggs, and with omelettes; at least, the remembrance of me shall not die
-from among you. When I am gone, and you eat one of those two dishes, you
-will think of me."
-
-In spite of his sadness, Louis could not help laughing at the burlesque
-humour and inexhaustible cheerfulness of his foster brother, in whom,
-at every minute, the gamin prevailed over the serious man. The chiefs
-welcomed with joy the offer of the spahi, and asked, with loud cries, on
-what day he would carry his promise into execution.
-
-"Oh, I will not make you wait long," he said; "tomorrow, on the square
-of the tolderia, and before all the assembled tribe of the Great Hare,
-I will show you how you must set about boiling an egg, and making an
-omelette."
-
-At this promise, the satisfaction of the chiefs mounted to the highest
-pitch, the couis of the chica circulated with increased vivacity, and
-the Ulmens soon found themselves sufficiently intoxicated to begin to
-sing as loud as they could shout, and all together,--a sort of music
-that produced such an effect upon the two Frenchmen, that they made
-their escape, stopping their ears. The feast was kept up long after
-their departure.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII.
-
-EXPLANATIONS.
-
-
-We will now return to the chacra of Don Gregorio Peralta, to which
-Dona Rosario had been conducted after her miraculous deliverance.
-The first days that followed the departure of the two Frenchmen were
-sufficiently devoid of incident: Dona Rosario, shut up in her bedroom,
-remained almost continually alone. The poor girl, like all wounded
-spirits, sought to forget reality, by taking refuge in dreams, in order
-to collect and preserve piously in the depths of her heart the few
-happy remembrances which had so rarely gilded with a ray of sunshine
-the sadness of her existence. Don Tadeo, completely absorbed in his
-imperative political combinations, could only see her now and then, and
-but for a few minutes at a time. Before him, she endeavoured to appear
-cheerful, but she suffered the more from being obliged to conceal in her
-own bosom the sorrow which consumed her. She occasionally crept down
-into the garden; she stopped under the arbour in which her meeting with
-Louis had taken place, and remained hours together thinking of him she
-loved, and whom she had driven from her for ever.
-
-This poor child, so beautiful, so mild, so pure, so worthy of being
-loved, was condemned by an implacable destiny continually to lead a
-life of suffering and isolation; without a relation, without a friend
-to whom she might impart the secret of her grief. She was little more
-than sixteen, and already her bruised heart shrank back upon itself; her
-colour faded, her step became languid, her large blue eyes, swimming in
-tears, were incessantly raised towards heaven, as the only refuge that
-remained for her; she appeared to hold to the earth only by a slight
-thread, which the least fresh shock of adversity would snap.
-
-The maiden's story was a strange one. She had never known her parents;
-she had no remembrance of the kisses of her mother--those warm caresses
-of childhood, which make even mature age tremble with joy. From her
-earliest days, she could only remember being alone, always alone, in the
-hands of the mercenary and indifferent. The innocent joys of childhood
-remained unknown to her; she had known nothing of them but their
-weariness and sadness, and had ever been deprived of those friendships
-of early youth which, by insensibly preparing the mind for affectionate
-expansion, give birth to smiles in the midst of tears, and console with
-a kiss.
-
-Don Tadeo was the only person who was attached to her; he had never
-abandoned her, but watched with the greatest care over her material
-well-being, smiled upon her, and ever gave her good and pleasant
-counsels: but Don Tadeo was much too serious a man to comprehend the
-thousand little cares which the education of a young girl requires. She
-could only entertain for him that profound, yet respectful friendship
-which forbids those ingenuous confidences which can only be made to a
-mother, or to a companion of the same age. The visits of Don Tadeo were
-surrounded by an incomprehensible mystery; sometimes, without apparent
-cause, he made her suddenly quit people to whom he had confided her,
-and took her away with him, after ordering her to change her name,
-upon long tours. It was thus she had been to France: then, he quite as
-unexpectedly brought her back to Chili, sometimes to one city, sometimes
-to another, without ever condescending to explain to her the reasons for
-her leading such a wandering life.
-
-Constrained by her isolation to depend only upon herself, forced to
-reflect as soon as the first rays of reason enlightened her brain, the
-maiden, though so delicate and fragile in appearance, was endowed with
-an energy and firmness of character of which she was ignorant, but
-which supported her unconsciously; and if the hour of danger arrived,
-would be of infinite use to her. She had often, urged by the instinct
-of curiosity so natural to her age in the exceptional position in which
-she was placed, sought by adroit questions to seize the thread that
-might guide her in this labyrinth; but all had proved useless--Don Tadeo
-remained mute. One day only, after having for a long time contemplated
-her with an expression of sadness, he had pressed her to his heart, and
-said in a trembling voice,--
-
-"Poor child! I will protect you against your enemies!"
-
-Who could those formidable enemies be? Why were they so inveterate
-against a girl of sixteen, who knew nothing of the world, and had
-never injured a human being? These questions, which Dona Rosario was
-continually asking herself, always remained unanswered. She only caught
-a glimpse in her life, of one of those terrible mysteries which bring
-death to the imprudent who persist in endeavouring to discover them;
-her days, therefore, were passed in continual fears, engendered by her
-imagination.
-
-One evening, when, sad and thoughtful as usual, and buried in the depths
-of an easy chair, in her bedchamber, she was turning over the leaves of
-a book which she was not reading, Don Tadeo entered the room. He saluted
-her, as he always did, by a kiss on her brow, took a seat, placed
-himself in front of her, and after looking at her for a moment with a
-melancholy smile, said quietly,--
-
-"I wish to speak with you, Rosario."
-
-"I am all attention, dear friend," she replied, endeavouring to smile.
-
-But before we report this conversation, we must present our readers
-with a few necessary explanations. Like all the other countries of
-South America, Chili, for a long time depressed beneath the Spanish
-yoke, had conquered its independence, more through the weakness of its
-ancient master than by its own proper strength. The system followed by
-the Spanish authorities from the beginning had checked in the people
-of these countries the development of the philosophical ideas which
-give man a consciousness of his own value, render him one day apt to
-achieve liberty, and ripe to enjoy it within just limits. We have said,
-in a preceding work, that the Americans of the South have none of the
-virtues of their ancestors, but, to make up for it, they possess all
-their vices. Destitute of that early education without which it is
-impossible to do or even to conceive great things, the Chilian nation,
-free by an unexpected chance, found itself immediately the sport of
-a few intriguing men, who concealed beneath high-sounding words of
-patriotism a boundless ambition. The newly-freed country struggled in
-vain; the innate carelessness of its inhabitants, and the levity of
-their character, formed an invincible object to any amelioration.
-
-At the epoch at which we have arrived, Chili was labouring under the
-oppression of General Bustamente. This man, not contented with being
-minister of a republic, dreamt of nothing less than causing himself
-to be proclaimed the chief of it, under the title of protector. The
-realization of this idea was not impossible. From its geographical
-position, Chili is almost independent of those troublesome neighbours
-who, in the states of the old world, keep watch over all the acts of
-a nation, and are, ready to put in their _veto_ as soon as their own
-interest appears to be threatened. On one side separated from Upper
-Peru by the vast and almost impassable desert of Atacama, Bolivia alone
-might hazard some timid observations; but the General cherished secret
-hopes of including that republic itself in the new confederation; on
-the other side, immense solitudes and the Cordilleras separated it from
-Buenos Aires, which had neither the will nor the power to oppose his
-projects. One people alone could make a war with him, which he should
-dread, and they were the Araucanos; that little nation, driven like
-an iron wedge into Chili, disturbed the General's plans seriously. He
-resolved to treat with the Araucano Toqui, while determined, at the same
-time, when his projects should have succeeded, to unite all his forces
-to conquer that country which had so long resisted the Spanish power. In
-a word, General Bustamente dreamt of creating at the southern extremity
-of America, with Chili, Araucania, and Bolivia confederated, a rival
-nationality to the United States. Unfortunately for the General, there
-was not in him the stuff to make a great man; he was simply a _parvenu_,
-an ignorant and cruel soldier.
-
-When America raised the standard of revolt against the mother country,
-numerous secret societies were formed at all points of the territory,
-the most redoubtable, beyond contradiction, being that of the
-Dark-Hearts. The men who placed themselves at the head of this society
-were all intelligent and well informed, mostly educated in Europe, who,
-having seen in the field of action the great principles of the French
-revolution, wished, by applying them in their own country, to regenerate
-the nation. After the proclamation of Chilian independence, the secret
-societies, having no longer an object, disappeared. One alone persisted
-in remaining permanent--that of the Dark-Hearts. This society was not
-willing that license should assume the mantle of liberty: it felt that
-it had a great and holy mission to fulfil, and that its task, so far
-from being terminated, was scarcely commenced. It was necessary to
-instruct the people, to render them worthy of taking their place among
-nations, and, above all, to deliver them from the tyrants who wished
-to enslave them. This mission the society of the Dark-Hearts laboured
-incessantly to carry out, struggling constantly against oppressive
-powers, which succeeded each other, and destroying them without mercy.
-Proteus-like and intangible, the members of this society escaped the
-most active researches: if by chance some few of them fell in the arena,
-they died with head erect, confident in the future, and leaving to their
-brethren the care of continuing their task.
-
-The recovery of General Bustamente caused the Dark-Hearts a momentary
-stupor; but Don Tadeo, who had caused the news of the miraculous manner
-in which he had survived his execution to be spread universally,
-revived their spirits by placing himself again at their head. Not that
-either courage or hope had failed them. However great the skill of the
-machinations employed by the General to insure the success of his plans,
-the Loyal-Hearts, who had confederates everywhere, foresaw and defeated
-them. They watched all his movements with the greatest care, for they
-were quite aware that the moment was drawing near when their enemy would
-throw off the mask. They had heard of the departure of the convalescent
-General for Valdivia. For what reason, as his health was still so
-uncertain, and repose so necessary, had he gone to that remote province?
-That must be learnt at any price, and they must prepare against any
-eventuality.
-
-In a meeting of the society, future measures were agreed upon; it was
-moreover resolved that the King of Darkness should at the same time
-repair to Valdivia, in order, if advisable, to take the initiative in
-resistance. But Don Tadeo could not think of leaving Dona Rosario behind
-him, exposed to the unprincipled attacks of the Linda. He alone could
-defend the young girl; was he not her only support? As soon, then, as
-the Dark-Hearts had dispersed, Don Tadeo returned to the chacra, and
-went straight to Dona Rosario's chamber.
-
-"My dear child," he said, "I have sad news to inform you of."
-
-"Speak, my kind friend," she replied.
-
-"Urgent affairs require my presence as soon as possible in Valdivia."
-
-"Oh!" she cried, with an expression of terror, "you will not leave me
-here, will you?"
-
-"At first I intended to do so, this retreat appearing to me to unite all
-the guarantees for security; but cheer up, my child! I have changed my
-mind; I have fancied you would prefer accompanying me?"
-
-"Oh, yes," she said, eagerly; "you are always kind. When do we set out?"
-
-"Tomorrow, dear child, at sunrise."
-
-"I shall be ready," she replied, holding up her pretty face towards him,
-that he might impress his customary kiss upon her brow.
-
-Don Tadeo retired, and Rosario immediately set about the preparations
-for her journey. Of what consequence was it to her whether she were in
-one place or another, since she was doomed to suffer everywhere? And who
-can say whether the poor girl, without daring to avow it to herself, did
-not entertain the hope of again seeing him she loved? Love is a divine
-sunbeam that illumines the darkest nights.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII.
-
-THE CHINGANA.
-
-
-Valdivia, founded in 1551 by the Spanish conqueror Don Pedro de
-Valdivia, is a charming city, two leagues from the sea, upon the left
-bank of a river, which large vessels can easily ascend into the fertile
-valley of Guadallanguen. The aspect of the city, the advanced post of
-civilization in these remote countries, is most agreeable; the streets
-are large, uniformly built; the white houses, only one story high,
-on account of the frequency of earthquakes, are terrace-roofed. Here
-and there rise in the air the steeples of the numerous churches and
-convents, which occupy more than a third of the city. It is astonishing
-to what an extent convents are multiplied in South America. It might
-be supposed that the New World was the land of promise for monks; they
-appear to rise out of the earth at every step. Thanks to the extensive
-commerce which Valdivia carries on by means of its port, which is
-visited by the numerous whalers fishing in those seas, and ships which
-come there to refit, after doubling Cape Horn, or before passing
-it,--its streets have more animation than is generally to be met with in
-American cities.
-
-Don Tadeo arrived in Valdivia, accompanied by Don Gregorio and Dona
-Rosario, on the evening of the sixteenth day after his departure from
-his friend's chacra. They had used all diligence, and for that country,
-where there are no other means of travelling but on horseback, it might
-be considered a quick journey. If the two gentlemen had thought proper
-to do so, they might have entered the city about three o'clock in the
-afternoon, but they deemed it advisable that no one in a place where
-so many people knew them should be made aware of their arrival: in the
-first place, because the causes which brought them there required the
-greatest secrecy; and, further, because Don Tadeo was forced to conceal
-himself, in order to avoid the police agents of the president of the
-republic, who had orders to arrest him wherever they might meet with
-him. Fortunately, in these countries the police never arrest anybody
-when not absolutely compelled, unless those whom they pursue come and
-deliver themselves up into their hands--an event, we may safely say,
-that rarely happens.
-
-As during his sojourn at Valdivia, his manner of living must be
-regulated by the affairs which brought him there, he could not openly
-keep house or appear in public, Don Tadeo went straight to the convent
-of the Ursulines, and committed the young lady he had brought with him
-to the care of the abbess, who was not only his relation, but was a
-worthy person, in whom he had perfect confidence. Dona Rosario accepted
-without hesitation the asylum which was offered to her, and where she
-fancied she should be safe from the attacks of her invisible enemies.
-Don Tadeo took an affectionate leave of her and the venerable abbess,
-and hastened to a house of the calle San-Xavier, where Don Gregorio, who
-had left him on entering the city, to avoid observation, awaited his
-coming.
-
-"Well?" asked Don Gregorio, as soon as he saw him.
-
-"She is in safety; at least I suppose so," Don Tadeo replied, with a
-sigh.
-
-"So much the better, for we must redouble our precautions."
-
-"Why so?"
-
-"After leaving you I made inquiries; I observed, I questioned people as
-I walked about and loitered at the port and the Almeda."
-
-"Well, what have you learnt?"
-
-"As we imagined, General Bustamente is here."
-
-"Already?"
-
-"He arrived three days ago."
-
-"What reason could be so important as to bring him here?" said Don
-Tadeo, with an uneasy expression. "Oh, I will know!"
-
-"Another thing: who do you think accompanies him?"
-
-"The executioner, no doubt!" said Don Tadeo, with an ironical smile.
-
-"Almost as bad," Don Gregorio replied.
-
-"Whom do you mean, then?"
-
-"The Linda!"
-
-The chief of the Dark-Hearts turned deadly pale.
-
-"Oh," he said, "that woman! for ever that woman! you must be mistaken,
-my friend; it is impossible!"
-
-"I have seen her."
-
-Don Tadeo walked about in great agitation for several minutes; then,
-stopping short in front of his friend, said, in a husky voice--
-
-"Dear Don Gregorio, are you certain you have not been misled by a
-resemblance? Are you quite sure it was she?"
-
-"You had just left me, and I was coming hither, when the sound of horses
-made me turn my head, and I saw, I repeat I saw, the Linda; she also
-appeared to have just arrived at Valdivia; two lancers escorted her, and
-an arriero led the baggage mules.
-
-"Oh!" said Don Tadeo, "will the infernal malice of that demon ever
-pursue me?"
-
-"My friend," Don Gregorio remarked, "in the path we have undertaken to
-tread, every obstacle must, unhesitatingly, be destroyed."
-
-"What, kill a woman?" the gentleman said, with horror.
-
-"I do not say that, but place her in such a position that she cannot
-possibly injure anyone. Remember, we are Dark-Hearts, and, as such, we
-ought to be without pity."
-
-"Silence!" Don Tadeo murmured, as two low, quick taps were struck on the
-door.
-
-"Come in!" cried Don Gregorio.
-
-The door opened, and Don Pedro showed his polecat face. He did not
-recognize the two men whom, in the various meetings he had had with
-them, he had always seen masked.
-
-"God preserve you, gentlemen!" he said, with a profound bow.
-
-"What is your pleasure, sir?" Don Gregorio asked, in a coldly-polite
-tone, while returning his salutation.
-
-"Sir," said Don Pedro, looking about for a seat which was not offered
-him, "I have just arrived from Santiago."
-
-Don Gregorio bowed again.
-
-"On my departure from that city, a banker in whose hands I had placed
-funds, gave me several bills; among others this, addressed to Don
-Gregorio Peratla, payable at sight."
-
-"That is my name, sir; be so kind as to hand it to me."
-
-"As you see, sir, the bill is for twenty-three ounces."
-
-"Very well, sir," replied Don Gregorio, as he took it, "allow me to
-examine it."
-
-Don Pedro bowed in his turn, whilst Don Gregorio, approaching a
-flambeau, looked attentively at the bill of exchange, put it into his
-pocket, and took some money from his purse.
-
-"Here are the twenty-three ounces, sir," he said, giving them.
-
-The spy took them, counted the gold pieces, examining them attentively,
-and then put them into his pocket.
-
-"It is very singular, sir," he said, just as the two gentlemen thought
-they were about to be relieved of his presence.
-
-"What is it, sir?" asked Don Gregorio; "do you not find the amount
-right?"
-
-"Oh, pardon me, perfectly right; but," he added, with a slight
-hesitation, "I thought you had been a merchant?"
-
-"And what leads you to think otherwise?"
-
-"Because I see no desks."
-
-"They are in another part of the house," Don Gregorio replied; "I am a
-private trader."
-
-"Oh, very well, sir."
-
-"And, if I had not thought you had pressing need of the money--"
-
-"Very pressing!" the other interrupted.
-
-"I should have begged you to call again tomorrow, for, at this late
-hour, my cashbox is closed."
-
-And thereupon he waved his hand, rather haughtily, as dismissing him.
-Don Pedro retired, visibly disappointed.
-
-"That is a double-faced fellow, I am sure," said Don Gregorio; "I should
-not wonder if he were a spy of the General."
-
-"Oh, I know him!" Don Tadeo replied; "I have about me proofs of his
-treachery. He has been a necessary instrument; at present he may injure
-us. He must be crushed."
-
-Don Gregorio drew from his pocket the bill which had been presented to
-him, and holding it to Don Tadeo--
-
-"Look at this," he said.
-
-This bill, payable at sight, appeared perfectly like others. It was
-drawn in the usual form: _At sight, please pay_, &c. &c.; but, in two
-or three places, the pen, too hard, no doubt, had spluttered and formed
-a certain number of little black spots, of which some were almost
-imperceptible. It appeared that these black spots had a meaning for the
-two men; for as soon as Don Tadeo had cast his eyes over the bill, he
-seized his cloak, and folded himself in it.
-
-"It is Heaven that protects us!" he said; "we must go thither without
-delay."
-
-"That is my opinion, likewise," Don Gregorio replied, holding the bill
-to the light, and burning it till there was not a particle of it left.
-The two men took each a long dagger and a brace of pistols, which they
-concealed under their clothes--the conspirators were too well acquainted
-with their country to neglect these precautions--they pulled the flaps
-of their hats over their faces, and wrapping themselves up to the very
-eyes, like two lovers or seekers of adventures, they descended into the
-street.
-
-It was one of those splendid nights unknown in our foggy climates; the
-sky, of a dark blue, was thickly studded with an infinite number of
-stars, among which conspicuously shone the brilliant Southern Cross;
-the air was embalmed with a thousand odours, and a light sea breeze
-refreshed the atmosphere, which had been heated by the torrid sunbeams
-during the past day. The two men passed silently and rapidly through
-the joyous groups which traversed the streets in all directions. It is
-in the evening that the Americans leave their homes to take the air and
-enjoy the freshness.
-
-The conspirators appeared to hear neither the enticing sounds of the
-vihuela which vibrated in their ears, nor the refrains of sambacuejas
-which flew in gusts from the chinganas, nor the bursts of fresh, silvery
-laughter of the black-eyed, rosy-lipped girls, who elbowed them on
-their way. They walked thus for a long time, turning round at intervals
-to ascertain if they were followed, plunging by degrees into the
-lowest quarters of the city, and at length stopped at a house of mean
-appearance, from which issued the loud but not very melodious strains of
-music eminently national.
-
-This house was a chingana, a name which has no equivalent in French
-or English. A Chilian chingana presents so eccentrically droll an
-appearance, that it would defy the pencil of Callot, and is beyond all
-description. Let the reader figure to himself a low room, with smoky
-walls, the floor of which is but beaten earth, and rendered filthy by
-the detritus left by the feet of incessantly arriving and departing
-visitors. In the centre of this den, lighted only by a smoky lamp called
-a _candil_, by which it is impossible to distinguish more than the
-shadows of the customers, are seated four men upon stools. Two of them
-are twanging wretched guitars, which have lost most of their strings,
-with the backs of their hands; the third plays the tambourine with his
-thumbs upon a crippled table, striking it with all his might; whilst
-the fourth rolls between his hands a piece of bamboo six feet long,
-split into several strips, which yield the most discordant sound that
-can possibly be imagined. The four musicians, not content with the
-formidable clatter made by their instruments, shout, at the very top of
-their voices, songs which we can neither venture to repeat nor translate.
-
-All this infernal noise is made to excite the dancers, who flutter
-about, assuming the most lascivious postures they can invent, amidst the
-hearty applause of the spectators, who writhe with delight, stamp their
-feet with pleasure, and sometimes, carried away by the harmony, thunder
-out all together, the burthen of the song, with the musicians and
-dancers. Amidst this disturbance, these cries and stampings, wind in and
-out the master of the establishment and his waiters, armed with couis of
-chicha, bottles of aguardiente, and even guarapo, to slake the thirst
-of the customers, who, to do them justice, the more they drink the more
-thirsty they become, and the more they wish to drink.
-
-Twice or thrice in the course of an evening, it may happen that some
-of the guests, more heated than the rest, or seized by the demon of
-jealousy, take it into their heads to quarrel. Then knives are drawn
-from the polena, ponchos are rolled round the left arm to serve as
-bucklers, the music ceases, and a circle is formed round the combatants.
-The sanguinary contest begins, and when one of the combatants has
-fallen, he is carried into the street, the music is resumed, the dance
-recommences, and no more is thought of the poor wounded or dying man.
-
-It was in front of one of these establishments that the chief of the
-Dark-Hearts and his friend had stopped; they did not hesitate. Pulling
-up the folds of their cloaks so as to completely conceal their faces,
-they entered the chingana: in spite of the pestilential atmosphere which
-nearly choked them, they passed unnoticed through the drinkers, and
-gained the further end of the room. The cellar door stood ajar; they
-opened it softly, and disappeared down the steps. After descending ten
-of these, they found themselves in a cellar, where a man, leaning over a
-barrel, which he appeared to be occupied in putting in its place, said
-to them, without interrupting his work--
-
-"Would you like some aguardiente de pesco, some mescal, or some chica?"
-
-"Neither the one nor the other," Don Tadeo replied; "we wish for some
-French wine."
-
-The man sprang up as if moved by a spring. The two adventurers had put
-on their masks.
-
-"Do you wish to have it white or red?" the man asked.
-
-"Red--as red as blood," said Don Tadeo.
-
-"Of what year?" the unknown rejoined.
-
-"Of that vintaged on the 5th of April, 1817," said Don Tadeo.
-
-"Then you must come this way, gentlemen," the man replied, with a
-respectful bow; "the wine you do me the honour to call for is extremely
-valuable; it is kept in a separate cellar."
-
-"To be drunk at Martinmas," Don Tadeo remarked.
-
-The man, who seemed only to wait for this last reply to his question,
-smiled with an air of intelligence, and laid his hand lightly on the
-wall. A stone turned slowly round upon itself, without the least noise,
-and opened a passage to the conspirators, which they immediately
-entered, and the stone instantly returned to its place.
-
-In the chingana, the cries, the songs, and the music had acquired an
-intensity really formidable; the joy of the tipplers was at its height.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV.
-
-THE TWO ULMENS.
-
-
-If we were writing a romance instead of a true history, there are
-certain scenes of the recital which we would pass over in silence. The
-one which follows would certainly be of this number; and yet, though of
-a rather hazardous puerility, it carries with it its lesson, by showing
-what is the influence of the early habits of a miserable life, even upon
-natures the best endowed, and how difficult it is, at a later period, to
-shake them off. We will add, to the praise of Valentine, the man of whom
-we are speaking, that his gaminism, if we may be allowed to employ such
-a term, was much more feigned than real, and that his aim, in allowing
-himself to be sometimes led away by it, was to bring a smile to the lips
-of his foster brother, and thus cheat the sorrow that was undermining
-his peace.
-
-This necessary preamble being gone through, we will resume the course
-of our narrative, and, abandoning for a time Don Tadeo and his friend,
-we will request the reader to follow us back to the tribe of the Great
-Hare. The looked-for morrow was a great day for the tribe, a day
-expected with impatience by all housekeepers, who were about to learn
-how to discover, to use Valentine's word, a new dish, which promised
-to please the palates of their race. As soon as it was daylight, men,
-women, and children assembled on the great Square of the village, and
-formed numerous groups, in which the merit of the unknown dish about
-to be revealed to them was discussed. Louis, for whom the experiment
-his friend was going to make had very little interest, wished to remain
-in the toldo; but Valentine insisted upon his being present at the
-experiment, and much against his will, he consented.
-
-The Parisian was already at his post, standing in an open spot, in
-the middle of the Square, watching with a laughing eye the anxious
-or incredulous expression by turn displayed upon the faces directed
-towards him. A table, which was to serve for his culinary preparations,
-a lighted brasier, upon which boiled an iron pot filled with water, a
-kitchen knife, an enormous frying-pan, found I know not where, a sort
-of tub, a wooden spoon, some parsley, a bit of bacon, some salt, some
-pepper, and a basket full of fresh eggs, had been prepared at his desire
-by the cares of Trangoil-Lanec.
-
-All eagerly looked for the arrival of the Apo-Ulmen of the tribe, with
-which the exhibition was to commence. A kind of dais had been erected
-for him in front of the operator, and when he had taken his lighted
-calumet from the hands of his pipe-bearer, he bent a little on one
-side and whispered a few words in the ear of Curumilla, who stood
-respectfully beside him. The Ulmen bowed, came down from the dais, went
-straight to the Parisian to tell him he might begin, and then resumed
-his post.
-
-Valentine returned the salutation of this master of the ceremonies,
-took off his poncho, which he folded up and laid carefully at his feet,
-and turning up his sleeves above his elbows with the studied grace of
-a performer, he leant slightly forward, placed his right hand upon the
-table, and assuming the tone of a vendor of quack medicines who boasts
-of the efficacy of his nostrums to gaping clowns, he thus commenced his
-demonstration in a loud voice and with a perfectly clear utterance:--
-
-"Illustrious Ulmens, and you redoubtable warriors of the noble and
-sacred tribe of the Great Hare, listen attentively to what I have the
-honour of explaining to you. In the beginning of time the world did
-not exist; water and clouds, which continually clashed against each
-other in space, then formed the universe. When Pillian created the
-world, as soon as at his voice man had issued from the bosom of the red
-mountain, he took him by the hand, and pointing to all the productions
-of the earth, the air, and the water, he said to him,--'Thou art the
-king of creation: consequently, animals, plants, and fishes all belong
-to thee, and are, each in proportion with its strength, instincts, or
-conformation, to minister to thy welfare and thy happiness in the world
-in which I have placed thee; thus the horse shall bear thee with fiery
-speed across the deserts, fleecy lamas and sheep clothe thee with their
-wool, and nourish thee with their succulent flesh.' When Pillian had
-analyzed, one after the other, the diverse qualities of the animals,
-before proceeding to the plants and fishes, he stopped at the hen, which
-was moving carelessly about, and picking up the grains of corn scattered
-on the ground. Pillian took her by the wings, and showing her to man,
-said, 'Here is one of the most useful animals I have created for thy
-service; boiled in a pot, the hen will afford thee an excellent broth
-when thou art sick; roasted, its white flesh will acquire a delicious
-flavour; of her eggs thou canst make omelettes with herbs, omelettes
-with mushrooms, omelettes with ham, and, above all others, with bacon.
-If thou art indisposed, and solid food should be too heavy for thy weak
-stomach, thou canst boil her eggs in the shell, and then thou wilt say
-something, indeed!'
-
-"Thus," continued Valentine, attitudinizing before the Indians, who,
-with open mouths and staring eyes, lost not a single word he uttered,
-whether they understood it or not, whilst, in spite of his secret
-grief, Louis literally writhed with laughter; "thus it was that Pillian
-spoke to the first man at the commencement of ages; you were not there,
-Araucano warriors, it is therefore not astonishing that you know nothing
-about it; neither was I there, it is true; but, thanks to the talent
-we white men possess of transmitting our thoughts from age to age, by
-means of writing, these words of the Great Spirit have been carefully
-collected, and have come down to us in their purity. Without further
-prelude, I am going to have the honour of producing before you a boiled
-egg! Listen to me; it is as simple as saying good-day, and within the
-reach of the most limited capacity. In order to enjoy a boiled egg,
-two things are necessary--in the first place, an egg, and then, some
-boiling water! You take the egg in your fingers, thus, you uncover your
-saucepan, you place the egg in a spoon and deposit it carefully in the
-saucepan, where you allow it to boil gently three minutes. Mind, three
-minutes, neither more nor less: pay attention to that important detail,
-for a longer time would compromise the success of your operation. There
-it is!"
-
-The action suited the word; the three minutes were past: Valentine
-took out the egg, beheaded it, sprinkled a little salt on it, and
-presented it to the Ulmen with some long strips of maize bread. All
-this was performed with the most imperturbable seriousness, amidst the
-profound silence of the attentive crowd. The Apo-Ulmen proceeded to
-taste this wonderful egg with the most deliberate gravity. An air of
-doubt appeared for a second on his lips, as he raised the first mouthful
-towards them; but, by degrees, the features of his broad face expanded
-under the influence of joy and pleasure, and he at last exclaimed
-enthusiastically,--
-
-"Wah! It is good! Very good!"
-
-Valentine returned to his brasier with a modest smile, and set about
-boiling eggs, which he distributed among the Ulmens and principal
-warriors, who quickly mingled their felicitations with those of the
-Apo-Ulmen. A delirious joy took possession of the poor Indians, and
-Valentine could hardly keep his ground, so eagerly did they press round
-him, to examine closely his mysterious mode of cooking the eggs. At
-length, calm was re-established, and the curiosity of the majority was
-satisfied. The Apo-Ulmen, who had not been able to make his voice heard
-in the tumult, was able to restore a little order, and obtain silence.
-Valentine looked at his public with an air of satisfaction. From that
-moment the Indians were believers--the most incredulous were convinced,
-and all awaited with impatience the continuation of his experiments.
-
-"Listen to me!" he continued, striking a sharp blow on the table with
-the knife he held in his hand; "listen to me, but, above all, observe
-closely how I proceed. A boiled egg was child's play to me, but the
-omelette requires to be considered seriously, and executed with care, in
-order to obtain that finish, that smoothness, flavour, and perfection
-so much prized by real judges. I am about to make a bacon-omelette, and
-when I name that, I name the most exquisite dish in the world! Whilst
-explaining to you the manner in which you should set about it, I will
-produce it: follow my reasonings closely, and observe attentively the
-manner in which I mingle the various ingredients which enter into the
-composition of this dish. To make a bacon omelette, I must have bacon,
-eggs, salt, pepper, parsley, and some butter--there they are, as you
-see, all on that table. Now I will mix them."
-
-Then, with incredible address, and the greatest quickness, he commenced
-a monster bacon-omelette, of at least sixty eggs, while continuing his
-explanation with inexpressible freedom and copiousness. The interest of
-the Indians was warmly excited, their enthusiasm betraying itself by
-shouts, leaps, and laughter; but it was carried to its height, and the
-stamping, crying, and screaming became terrific, when the Puelches saw
-Valentine seize the long handle of the frying-pan with a firm grasp,
-and toss the omelette three different times into the air, without any
-apparent effort, and with the style and ease of a finished cook. When
-the omelette was done to the moment, the Frenchman placed it upon a
-dish, taking care to double it with the talent which _cordons bleus_
-alone possess, and was then preparing to carry it smoking to the
-Apo-Ulmen, but he, enticed by the flavour of the boiled egg, and with
-appetite excited to the highest pitch, spared him that trouble; for
-he forgot all decorum, and rushed towards the table, followed by the
-principal Ulmens of the tribe. The success of the Parisian was enormous.
-Never, in the history of the divine art, did a cook obtain such a
-glorious triumph! Valentine, with the modesty peculiar to men of real
-talent, stole away from the honours they wished to pay him, and hastened
-to conceal himself with his friend in the toldo of Trangoil-Lanec.
-
-On the morrow of this eventful day, at the moment when the young men
-were about to leave the quarters they inhabited in common, their host
-presented himself, followed by Curumilla. The two chiefs saluted them,
-sat down upon the beaten earth which served instead of flooring, and lit
-their pipes. Louis, already accustomed to the ceremonious habits of the
-Araucanos, and convinced that their friends had something of importance
-to say, reseated himself, as did also his foster brother, and awaited
-patiently the expected communication. When the chiefs had deliberately
-smoked out their pipes, and shaken the last ashes upon their nails,
-they replaced them in their belts, and, after exchanging a glance,
-Trangoil-Lanec began:--
-
-"Are my pale brothers still resolved to leave us?"
-
-"Yes," replied Louis.
-
-"Has Indian hospitality been wanting towards them?"
-
-"So far from that, chief," the young man said, warmly pressing his
-hands, "you have treated us like children of your own tribe."
-
-"Then why leave us?" Trangoil-Lanec asked; "we know not what we lose, do
-we ever know what we shall find?"
-
-"You are right, chief; but you know we came into this country for the
-purpose of visiting Antinahuel," Louis observed.
-
-"And does my golden-haired brother," for so he called Valentine,
-"absolutely wish to see him?"
-
-"Absolutely," replied the young man.
-
-The two chiefs exchanged a second glance.
-
-"He shall see him," replied Trangoil-Lanec; "Antinahuel is at his
-village."
-
-"Good!" said Valentine. "In that case we will set out tomorrow."
-
-"My brothers shall not go alone."
-
-"What do you mean by that?" Valentine asked.
-
-"The Indian soil is not safe for palefaces; my brother has saved my
-life, I shall follow him."
-
-"My brother has preserved me a friend," said Curumilla, who had till
-that time preserved silence; "I shall follow him."
-
-"You cannot think of such a thing, chief," Valentine remarked. "We are
-travellers whom chance knocks about at its pleasure; we know not what
-destiny has in reserve for us, nor whither it will conduct us, after
-having seen the man to whom we are sent."
-
-"What does it signify?" Curumilla replied; "where you go, we will go."
-
-The young men were greatly moved by such frank and noble devotion.
-
-"Oh!" Louis exclaimed, warmly, "it is impossible! your friends, your
-wives, and your children."
-
-"Our wives and children will be taken care of by our relations until our
-return."
-
-"My friends, my good friends," said Valentine, with emotion, "you are
-wrong; we cannot impose such a sacrifice upon you, we will not consent
-to it for your sake; I have already told you, we are ignorant of what
-awaits us, or what we shall do; allow us to go alone."
-
-"We will follow our pale brothers," Trangoil-Lanec said in a tone that
-admitted of no reply; "my brothers are not acquainted with the llanos;
-four men are a force in the desert--two men are dead."
-
-The Frenchmen contested the matter no longer, they accepted the offer
-of the Ulmens, and did so the more readily, because they plainly
-perceived what an immense advantage these men would be to them. They
-were accustomed to a life in the woods, they knew all its mysteries,
-and had fathomed all its depths. The chiefs took leave of their guests,
-to prepare for their departure, which was irrevocably fixed for the
-next day. At sunrise, a small party, composed of Louis, Valentine,
-Trangoil-Lanec, and Curumilla, all four mounted upon excellent horses of
-that mixed Andalusian and Arabian breed, which the Spaniards imported
-into America, and Caesar, who trotted at their side in close file, left
-the tolderia, escorted by all the members of the tribe shouting: "Come
-back again! come back again!--A good journey! a good journey!"
-
-After repeated farewells to these worthy people, the four travellers
-directed their course towards the tolderia of the Black-Serpents, and
-soon disappeared in the numberless defiles formed by the quebradas.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV.
-
-THE SUN-TIGER.
-
-
-In the state of anarchy in which Chili was plunged at the period of our
-history, the parties were numerous, and everyone was manoeuvring in the
-shade, as skilfully as possible, in order to gain possession of power.
-General Bustamente, as we have stated, aimed at nothing less than the
-protectorate of a confederation similar to that of the United States,
-which, then but little understood, dazzled his ambition. He could not
-divine that those ancient outlaws, those sectarian fanatics exiled from
-Europe, those thriving merchants, had already begun to dream in America
-of a universal monarchy, a senseless Utopia, the application of which
-will one day cost them the loss of that so-called nationality of which
-they are so proud, and which, in reality, does not exist. Probably
-General Bustamente did not look so far into the future, or, if he did
-divine the tendencies of the Anglo-Americans, perhaps he dreamt of
-himself following also that ambitious aim, as soon as his power should
-repose upon solid bases.
-
-The Dark-Hearts, the only true patriots in this unhappy country, on
-their side, wished that the government should adopt measures of a
-rather democratic nature, but they had no intention to overturn it,
-for they were persuaded that a revolution could only be prejudicial
-to the general welfare of the nation. Beside General Bustamente and
-the society of the Dark-Hearts, a third party, more powerful, perhaps,
-than the two first, was at work silently, but active. This party was
-represented by Antinahuel, the toqui of the most important Uthal-Mapus
-of the Araucanian confederacy. We have said that from its geographical
-position, this little insignificant republic is placed like a wedge
-in the Chilian territory, which it separates sharply in two. This
-position gave Antinahuel immense power. All Araucanos are soldiers; at
-a signal from their chiefs, they take up arms, and are able, in a few
-days, to get together an army of experienced warriors. The republicans
-and the partizans of Bustamente were fully aware how much it was to
-their interest to attach the Araucanos to their party; with the aid
-of these ferocious soldiers victory would be certain. Already had the
-King of Darkness and Bustamente made proposals to Antinahuel,--of
-course, unknown to each other. These overtures the redoubtable toqui
-had appeared to listen to, and had feigned to reply to both, for the
-following reasons:--
-
-Antinahuel, in addition to the hereditary hatred which his ancestors
-had bequeathed to him against the white race, or perhaps on account of
-that hatred, had dreamt, since he had been elected supreme chief of an
-Uthal-Mapus, not only of the complete independence of his country, but
-moreover of re-conquering all the territory which the Spaniards had
-deprived it of; he hoped to drive them back to the other side of the
-Cordilleras of the Andes, and restore to his nation the splendour it had
-enjoyed before the arrival of the whites in Chili. And this patriotic
-project Antinahuel was just the man to carry through. Endowed with
-vast intelligence, at once daring and subtle, he allowed himself to be
-stopped by no obstacle, conquered by no reverse. Almost entirely brought
-up in Chili, he spoke Spanish perfectly, was thoroughly acquainted with
-the manners of his enemies, and by means of numberless spies spread
-everywhere, he was well informed with regard to the Chilian policy,
-and of the precarious situation of those whom he wished to conquer; he
-habitually took advantage of the dissensions which separated them, and
-feigned to lend an ear to the propositions made to him on all parts, in
-order, when the moment should arrive, to crush his enemies one after the
-other, and be left alone standing.
-
-He wanted a plausible pretext for keeping his Uthal-Mapus under arms,
-without inspiring the Chilians with mistrust: and this pretext General
-Bustamente and the Dark-Hearts supplied him with by their preparations.
-No one could be surprised, for this reason, at seeing, in a time
-of peace, the toqui gather together a numerous army on the Chilian
-frontiers, since, _in petto_, either party flattered itself that this
-army was destined to aid its cause. The conduct of the toqui was,
-therefore, most skilful; for he not only inspired mistrust in no one,
-but, on the contrary, gave hopes to all. The position was becoming
-serious; the hour for action could not long be delayed; and Antinahuel,
-whose measures were all prepared, awaited impatiently the moment for
-beginning the struggle.
-
-Things were at this point on the day when Dona Maria came to the
-tolderia of the Black-Serpents, to visit the friend of her childhood. As
-soon as she awoke, the Linda gave orders for her departure.
-
-"Is my sister going to leave me already?" said Antinahuel, in a tone of
-mild reproach.
-
-"Yes," Dona Maria replied, "my brother knows that I must reach Valdivia
-as quickly as possible."
-
-The chief did not press her stay; a furtive smile played round his lips.
-After Dona Maria was on horseback, she turned towards the toqui.
-
-"Did not my brother say he should be soon in Valdivia?" she asked, in a
-perfectly well-played tone of indifference.
-
-"I shall be there as soon as my sister," he replied.
-
-"We shall see each other again, then?"
-
-"Perhaps we may."
-
-"We must!"
-
-This was said in a positive tone.
-
-"Very well," the chief replied, after a moment's pause; "my sister may
-depart--she shall see me again."
-
-"Till then, farewell, then," she said, and rode away at a quick pace.
-
-She soon disappeared in a cloud of dust, and the chief returned
-thoughtfully to his toldo.
-
-"Woman," he said, to his mother, "I am going to the great tolderia of
-the palefaces."
-
-"I heard everything last night," the Indian woman replied, sorrowfully;
-"my son is wrong."
-
-"Wrong! how, or why?" he asked, passionately.
-
-"My son is a great chief; my sister deceives him, and makes him
-subservient to her vengeance."
-
-"Or rather my own," he replied, in a singular tone.
-
-"The young white girl has a right to the protection of my son."
-
-"I will protect the Pearl of the Andes."
-
-"My son forgets that she of whom he speaks saved his life."
-
-"Silence, woman!" he shouted, in a passionate tone.
-
-The Indian woman held her peace, but sighed deeply.
-
-The chief summoned his mosotones, and selecting from among them a score
-of warriors upon whom he could place entire reliance, ordered them to
-be ready to follow him within an hour. He then threw himself upon a
-bench, and sank into serious and agitating reflections. Suddenly a great
-noise was heard from without, and the chief sprang from his recumbent
-position, and went to the door of his toldo. He was surprised to see two
-strangers, mounted upon excellent horses, and preceded by an Indian,
-advancing towards him. These strangers were Valentine and Louis, who had
-left their friends a short distance from the tolderia.
-
-Valentine, on leaving the village of the Puelches, had opened the letter
-addressed to himself, and placed in his hands by the major-domo, with a
-recommendation not to open it till the last minute. The young man was
-far from expecting the contents of this strange missive. After carefully
-reading it, he communicated it to his friend, saying--
-
-"Here, read this, Louis;--hem! who knows but that this singular letter
-is the first step to our fortune?"
-
-Like all men in love, Louis was sceptical upon every subject that did
-not bear some relation to his passion, and he returned the paper,
-shaking his head.
-
-"Politics burn the fingers," he said.
-
-"Yes, of those who don't know how to handle them," Valentine replied,
-with a shrug of the shoulders. "Now, it is my opinion that in this
-country, in which it has pleased fate to drop us, the most promising
-element of fortune we have at command happens to be those very politics
-which you so much disdain."
-
-"I must confess, my friend, that I care very little for these
-Dark-Hearts, of whom I know nothing, and who have done us the honour to
-affiliate us."
-
-"I do not share your opinion at all; I believe them to be resolute,
-intelligent men, and am persuaded they will, some day, gain the upper
-hand."
-
-"Much good may it do them! But of what consequence is that to us
-Frenchmen?"
-
-"More than you may think for; and I am determined, immediately after
-my interview with this said Antinahuel, to go directly to Valdivia, in
-order to be present at the meeting they appoint."
-
-"As you please," said the Count, carelessly. "As such is your advice,
-we will go thither; only I warn you that we shall risk our heads. If we
-lose them, it will be all very well; but I wash my hands of the matter
-beforehand."
-
-"I will be prudent, caramba! My head is the only thing I can call my
-own," Valentine replied, laughing, "and be assured I will not risk it
-for nothing. Besides, do you not partake of my curiosity to see how
-these people understand politics, and in what a fashion they set about
-conspiring?"
-
-"Well, that may become interesting; we travel partly for instruction;
-let us gain it, then, when it offers itself."
-
-"Bravo! that's the way in which I like to hear a man speak. Let us go
-and seek the redoubtable chief to whom we have a letter to deliver."
-
-Trangoil-Lanec and Curumilla were too prudent to venture to let
-Antinahuel know of the friendship which bound them to the two Frenchmen.
-Without suspecting the reasons which induced their friends to present
-themselves to the toqui, they foresaw that a day might come when it
-would be advantageous that their relations should be unknown. When they
-arrived, therefore, at a short distance from the tolderia, the Indian
-warriors remained concealed in a secluded corner, keeping Caesar with
-them, and allowing the two Frenchmen to continue their route to the
-village of the Black-Serpents, with whom, in addition, they had not
-lately been upon the best terms.
-
-The reception given to the Frenchmen was most friendly; for in time
-of peace the Araucanos are exceedingly hospitable. As soon as they
-perceived the strangers, they crowded round them; and as all the Indians
-speak Spanish with astonishing facility, Valentine had no difficulty in
-making himself understood. One warrior, more polite than the rest, took
-upon himself to be their guide through the village, in which, of course,
-they were at a loss. He led them to the toldo of the chief, in front of
-which were drawn up twenty horsemen, armed, and apparently waiting.
-
-"That is Antinahuel, the great toqui of the Inapire-Mapu," said the
-guide, emphatically, pointing with his finger at the chief, who at that
-moment came out of his toldo, attracted by the noise.
-
-"Thank you," said Valentine; and the two Frenchmen advanced rapidly
-towards the toqui, who, on his part, made a few steps to meet them.
-
-"Eh, eh!" Valentine said, in a subdued voice, to his companion; "here
-is a man with a good bearing, and with a rather intelligent air for an
-Indian."
-
-"Yes," Louis replied, in the same tone, "but he has a contracted brow,
-a sinister look, and compressed lips--he inspires me with very little
-confidence."
-
-"Bah!" said Valentine, "you are too difficult by half; did you expect to
-find an Indian an Antinous or an Apollo Belvedere?"
-
-"No; but I should like a little more open frankness in his look."
-
-"Well, well, we shall see."
-
-"I do not know why, but that man produces the effect of a reptile upon
-me; he inspires me with invincible repulsion."
-
-"Oh, nonsense! you are too impressionable. I am sure that the man, who,
-I cannot deny, has the air of a thorough rascal, is, at bottom, one of
-the best fellows in the world."
-
-"God grant I may be deceived! But I experience, on seeing him, a feeling
-for which I cannot account; it seems as if a kind of presentiment warned
-me to be on my guard against that man, and that he will be fatal to me."
-
-"All folly! What relations can you ever have with this individual? We
-are charged with a mission to him; who knows whether we may ever see him
-again? and then what interests can connect us with him hereafter?"
-
-"You are right; and I do not know what makes me think as I have
-said; besides, we shall soon know what we have to trust to on his
-account--here he is."
-
-The adventurers were, in fact, at that moment in front of the chief's
-toldo. Antinahuel stood before them; and, although appearing to be
-giving orders to his men, examined them very attentively. He stepped
-towards them quickly, and, bowing with perfect politeness, said, in a
-pleasant tone, and with a graceful gesture--
-
-"Strangers, you are welcome to my toldo. Your presence rejoices my
-heart. Condescend to pass over the threshold of this poor hut, which
-will be yours as long as you deign to remain among us."
-
-"Thanks for the kind words of welcome you address to us, powerful
-chief," Valentine replied. "The persons who sent us to you assured us of
-the kind reception we might expect."
-
-"If the strangers come on the part of my friends, that is a further
-reason why I should endeavour to make their abode here as agreeable as
-my humble means will allow me."
-
-The two Frenchmen bowed ceremoniously, and alighted from their horses.
-At a sign from the toqui, two peons led the horses away to a vast corral
-behind the toldo.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI.
-
-THE MATRICIDE.
-
-
-We have repeatedly said that in times of peace the Araucanos are
-exceedingly hospitable. This hospitality, which on the part of
-the warriors is cordial and simple, on that of the chiefs becomes
-extravagant. Antinahuel was far from being a rude Indian, attached
-though he was to the customs of his fathers; and although in his heart
-he hated not only the Spaniards, but indiscriminately all belonging to
-the white race, the half-civilized education he had received had given
-him ideas of comfort completely above Indian habits. Many of the richest
-Chilian farmers would have found it impossible to display greater luxury
-than he exhibited when his caprice or his interest led him to do so.
-On the present occasion, he was not sorry to show strangers that the
-Araucanos were not so barbarous as their arrogant neighbours wished it
-to be supposed, and that they could, when necessary, rival even them.
-At the first glance, Antinahuel had discovered that his guests were not
-Spaniards; but, with the circumspection which forms the foundation of
-the Indian character, he confined his observations to his own breast. It
-was with the kindest air and in the most winning tone of voice that he
-pressed them to enter his toldo.
-
-The Frenchmen followed him in, and with a gesture he requested them
-to be seated. Peons placed a profusion of cigars and cigarettes upon
-the table, near a tasty filigree brasero. In a few minutes other
-peons entered with the mate, which they respectfully presented to the
-chief and his guests. Then, without the silence being broken--for the
-Araucanian laws of hospitality require that no question should be
-addressed to strangers until they think proper to speak themselves--each
-sipped the herb of Paraguay, while smoking. This preliminary operation
-being gone through, Valentine rose.
-
-"I thank you, chief, in the name of myself and my friend, for your
-cordial hospitality."
-
-"Hospitality is a duty which every Araucano is jealous to fulfil!"
-
-"But," replied Valentine, "as I have been given to understand that the
-chief is about to set out on a journey, I do not wish to detain him."
-
-"I am at the orders of my guests; my journey is not so pressing as not
-to admit of being put off for a few hours."
-
-"I thank the chief for his courtesy, but I hope he will soon be at
-liberty."
-
-Antinahuel bowed.
-
-"A Spaniard has charged me with a letter for the chief."
-
-"Ah!" the toqui exclaimed, with a singular intonation, and fixing a
-piercing look upon the face of the young man.
-
-"Yes," the Frenchman continued; "and that letter I am about to have the
-honour of handing to you."
-
-And he put his hand to his breast, to take out the letter.
-
-"Stop!" said the chief, laying his hand upon his arm, as he turned
-towards his servants; adding, "leave the room." The three men were left
-alone.
-
-"Now you may give me the letter," he continued.
-
-The chief took it, looked carefully at the superscription, turned the
-paper in all directions in his hand, and then, with some hesitation,
-presented it to the young man.
-
-"Let my brother read it," he said; "the whites are more learned than we
-poor Indians: they know everything."
-
-Valentine gave his countenance the most silly expression possible.
-
-"I cannot read this," he said, with well-assumed embarrassment.
-
-"Does my brother then refuse to render me this service?" the chief
-pressed him.
-
-"I do not refuse you, chief; only I am prevented doing what you request
-by a very simple reason."
-
-"And what is that reason?"
-
-"It is that my companion and I are both Frenchmen."
-
-"Well, and what then?"
-
-"We speak a little Spanish, but we cannot read it."
-
-"Ah!" said the chief, in a tone of doubt; but, after walking about, and
-reflecting a minute, he added,--"Hem! that is possible."
-
-He then turned towards the two Frenchmen, who, on their part, were, in
-appearance, impassive and indifferent.
-
-"Let my brothers wait an instant," he said; "I know a man in my tribe
-who understands the marks which the whites make upon paper: I will go
-and order him to translate this letter."
-
-The young men bowed, and the chief left the apartment.
-
-"Why the devil did you refuse to read the letter?" Louis asked.
-
-"In good truth," Valentine replied, "I can scarcely tell you why; but
-what you said of the expression of this man's countenance, produced a
-certain effect upon me. He inspires me with no confidence, and I am not
-anxious to be the depository of secrets which he may some day reclaim in
-a disagreeable manner."
-
-"Yes, you are right! We may, some day, congratulate ourselves upon this
-circumspection. Hush! I hear footsteps."
-
-And the chief re-entered the room.
-
-"I know the contents of the letter," he said; "if my brothers see the
-man who charged them with it, they will inform him that I am setting out
-this very day for Valdivia."
-
-"We would, with pleasure, take charge of that message," replied
-Valentine; "but we do not know the person who gave us the letter, and it
-is more than probable we may never see him again."
-
-The chief darted at them a stolen and deeply suspicious glance.
-
-"Good! Will my brothers remain here, then?"
-
-"It would give us infinite pleasure to pass a few hours in the agreeable
-society of the chief, but with us time presses; with his permission, we
-will take our leave."
-
-"My brothers are perfectly free; my toldo is open for those who leave
-it, as well as for those who enter it."
-
-The young men rose to depart.
-
-"In what direction are my brothers going?"
-
-"We are bound for Concepcion."
-
-"Let my brothers go in peace, then! If their course lay towards
-Valdivia, I would have offered to journey with them."
-
-"A thousand thanks, chief, for your kind offer; unfortunately we cannot
-profit by it, for our road lies in a completely opposite direction."
-
-The three men exchanged a few more words of courtesy, and left the
-toldo. The Frenchmen's horses had been brought round; they mounted, and
-after having saluted the chief once more, they set off. As soon as they
-were out of the village, Louis, turning to Valentine, said,--
-
-"We have not an instant to lose. If we wish to reach Valdivia before
-that man, we must make all speed. Who knows whether Don Tadeo may not be
-awaiting our arrival impatiently?"
-
-They soon rejoined their friends, who looked for them anxiously, and all
-four set off at full speed in the direction of Valdivia, without being
-able to explain to themselves why they used such diligence. Antinahuel
-accompanied his guests a few paces out of his toldo. When he had taken
-leave of them, he followed them with his eyes as far as he could see
-them, and when they disappeared at the extremity of the village, he
-returned thoughtfully and slowly to his toldo, saying to himself,--
-
-"It is evident to me that these men are deceiving me; their refusal to
-read the letter was nothing but a pretext. What can be their object? Can
-they be enemies? I will watch them!"
-
-When he arrived in front of his toldo, he found his mosotones mounted,
-and awaiting his orders.
-
-"I must set out at once," he said; "I shall learn all yonder, and,
-perhaps," he added, in a voice so low that he could hardly hear it
-himself, "perhaps I shall find _her_ again. If Dona Maria breaks her
-promise, and does not give her up to me, woe, woe be to her!"
-
-He raised his head, and saw his mother standing before him. "What do you
-want, woman?" he asked, harshly; "this is not your place!"
-
-"My place is near you when you are suffering, my son," she mildly
-replied.
-
-"I suffering! You are mad, mother! age has turned your brain! Go back
-into the toldo, and, during my absence, keep a good watch over all that
-belongs to me."
-
-"Are you, then, really going, my son?"
-
-"This moment," he said, and sprang into his saddle.
-
-"Where are you going?" she asked, and seized his horse's bridle.
-
-"What is that to you?" he replied, with an ugly glance.
-
-"Beware! my son; you are entering on a bad course. Guerubu, the spirit
-of evil, is master of your heart."
-
-"I am the best and sole judge of my actions."
-
-"You shall not go!" she exclaimed, as she placed herself resolutely in
-front of his horse.
-
-The Indians collected round the speakers looked on with mute terror at
-this scene; they were too well acquainted with the violent and imperious
-character of Antinahuel not to dread something fatal, if his mother
-persisted in endeavouring to prevent his departure.
-
-The brows of the chief lowered--his eyes gleamed like lightning--and it
-was not without a great effort that he mastered the passion boiling in
-his breast.
-
-"I will go!" he said, in a loud voice, and trembling with rage; "I will
-go, if I trample you beneath my horse's hoofs!"
-
-The woman clung convulsively to the saddle, and looked her son in the
-face.
-
-"Do so," she cried; "for, by the soul of your father, who now hunts in
-the blessed prairies with Pillian, I swear I will not stir, even if you
-pass over my body!"
-
-The face of the Indian became horribly contracted; he cast around a
-glance which made the hearts of the bravest tremble with fear.
-
-"Woman! woman!" he shouted, grinding his teeth with rage; "get out of my
-way, or I shall crush you like a reed!"
-
-"I will not stir, I tell you!" she repeated, with wild energy.
-
-"Take care! take care!" he said again; "I shall forget you are my
-mother!"
-
-"I will not stir!"
-
-A nervous tremor shook the limbs of the chief, who had now attained the
-highest paroxysm of fury.
-
-"If you will have it so," he cried, in a husky, but loud voice, "your
-blood be upon your own head!"
-
-And he dug the spurs into the sides of his horse, which plunged with
-pain, and then sprung forward like an arrow, dragging along the poor
-woman, whose body was soon but one huge wound. A cry of horror burst
-from the quivering lips of the terrified Indians. After a few minutes
-of this senseless course, during which she had left fragments of her
-flesh on every sharp point of the road, the strength of the Indian woman
-abandoned her; she left her hold of the bridle, and sank dying.
-
-"Oh!" she said, in a faint voice, and following, with a look dimmed by
-agony, her son, as he was borne away like a whirlwind, "my unhappy son!
-my unhappy----"
-
-She raised her eyes towards heaven, clasped her mangled hands, as if to
-offer up a last prayer, and fell back.
-
-She died pitying the matricide, and pardoning him. The women of the
-tribe took up the body respectfully, and carried it, weeping, into the
-toldo. At the sight of the corpse, an old Indian shook his head several
-times, murmuring in a prophetic tone,--
-
-"Antinahuel has killed his mother! Pillian will avenge her!"
-
-And all bowed down their heads sorrowfully: this atrocious crime made
-them dread horrible misfortunes in the future.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII.
-
-THE JUSTICE OF THE DARK-HEARTS.
-
-
-Don Tadeo and his friend Don Gregorio were introduced, after exchanging
-several passwords, into a subterraneous apartment, the entrance to which
-was perfectly concealed in the wall. The door closed immediately after
-them; the two men turned round sharply, but all signs of an opening
-had disappeared. Without taking further notice of this circumstance,
-which they no doubt had expected, they cast an inquiring glance around
-them, in order to obtain some knowledge of the locality. The place
-was admirably chosen for a meeting of conspirators. It was an immense
-apartment, which must have served for a long time as a cellar, as was
-made evident by the essentially alcoholic emanations still floating in
-the air; the walls were low and thick, and of a dirty red colour; a
-lamp with three jets, hanging from the roof, far from dispersing the
-darkness, seemed only to render it in a manner visible. In a recess
-stood a table, behind which a man in a mask was seated, near to two
-empty seats. Men enveloped in cloaks, and all wearing black velvet
-masks, were gliding about in the darkness, silent as phantoms.
-
-Don Tadeo and his friend exchanged a glance, and without speaking a
-word, proceeded to take their places in the empty seats. As soon as
-they were seated, a change came over the meeting: the low whispering
-which had been heard till that moment ceased all at once, as if by
-enchantment. All the conspirators gathered in a single group in front of
-the table, and with arms crossed upon their chests, waited earnestly.
-The man who before the arrival of Don Tadeo had appeared to preside over
-the meeting arose, and casting round a confident glance on the attentive
-crowd, said--
-
-"On this day the seventy-two _ventas_ of the Dark-Hearts, spread over
-the territories of the republic, are assembled in council. In all of
-them the taking up of arms, of which we, the _venta_ of Valdivia, will
-instantly give the signal, will be decreed. Everywhere men faithful to
-the good cause, true lovers of liberty, are preparing to commence the
-struggle with Bustamente. Will you all, comrades, who are here present,
-when the hour strikes, descend frankly and boldly into the arena? Will
-you sacrifice, without reserve, your family, your fortune, and even your
-life, if necessary, for the public good?"
-
-He ceased, and a funereal silence prevailed in the assembly.
-
-"Answer!" he resumed; "what will you do?"
-
-"We will die!" the band of conspirators murmured, like a sinister and
-terrible echo.
-
-"That is well, my brothers," Don Tadeo said, rising suddenly. "I
-expected no less from you, and I thank you. I have long known you all,
-and felt that I could depend upon you--I, whom none of you know. These
-masks which conceal you one from another, are but transparent gauze
-for the chief of the Dark-Hearts--and I am the King of Darkness! I
-have sworn that you shall live as free men, or that I will die! Before
-twenty-four hours have passed away, you will hear the signal you have
-so long waited for, and then will commence that terrible struggle which
-can only end in the death of the tyrant; all the provinces, all the
-cities, all the towns will rise _en masse_ at the same instant; courage,
-then! You have only a few hours longer to suffer. The war of ambushes,
-surprises, of subterranean treacheries is ended; war, frank, loyal,
-open, in the face of the sun, is about to begin; let us show ourselves
-what we always have been, firm in our faith, and ready to die for our
-opinions! Let the chiefs of sections draw near."
-
-Ten men left the ranks, and placed themselves silently ten paces from
-the table.
-
-"Let the corporal of chiefs of sections answer for all," said Don Tadeo.
-
-"I am the corporal," said one of the masked men; "the orders expedited
-from the Quinta Verde have been executed; all the sections are warned;
-they are all ready to rise at the first signal; each will take
-possession of the posts that are assigned it."
-
-"So far well! How many men have you at your disposal?"
-
-"Seven thousand three hundred and seventy-seven."
-
-"Can you depend upon them all?"
-
-"No."
-
-"How many are there lukewarm or irresolute?"
-
-"Four thousand."
-
-"How many firm and convinced?"
-
-"Nearly three thousand; but for these I will be answerable."
-
-"That is well! we have even more than we want; the brave will attract
-others. Return to your places."
-
-The chiefs of sections drew back,
-
-"Now," Don Tadeo continued, "before we separate, I have to call down
-your justice upon one of our brothers, who, having entered deeply into
-our secrets, has been false to the society several times for a little
-gold; I have the proofs in my hands. The circumstances are of the utmost
-importance; one word--a single word--may ruin our cause and us! Say,
-what chastisement does this man deserve?"
-
-"Death!" the conspirators responded, coolly, but simultaneously.
-
-"I know this man," Don Tadeo continued; "let him come forth from the
-ranks, and not oblige me to tear off his mask, and hurl his name in his
-face."
-
-No one stirred.
-
-"This man is here--I can see him; for the last time, let him step forth,
-and not crown his baseness by seeking to avoid the punishment he merits."
-
-The conspirators cast suspicious glances at each other; the assembly
-seemed moved by an extreme anxiety; the man, however, upon whom the
-King of Darkness called, persisted in remaining confounded amongst his
-companions.
-
-Don Tadeo waited for an instant, but finding that the man whom he
-summoned imagined he should remain unknown, and not be discovered
-beneath his mask, he made a signal, and Don Gregorio rose and advanced
-towards the group of conspirators, which opened at his approach, and
-laid his hand roughly on the shoulder of a man who had instinctively
-retreated before him, until the wall forced him to stop.
-
-"Come with me, Don Pedro," he said, and he dragged rather than led him
-to the table, behind which stood Don Tadeo, calm and implacable.
-
-The guilty spy was seized with a convulsive trembling, his teeth
-chattered, and he fell upon his knees, crying with terror:
-
-"Mercy, my lord, mercy!"
-
-Don Gregorio tore off his mask, and revealed the face of the spy, whose
-features, horribly contracted by fear, and of an ashy paleness, were
-really hideous.
-
-"Don Pedro," Don Tadeo said, in a stern voice, "you have several times
-sought to sell your brothers of the society; it was you who caused
-the death of the ten patriots shot upon the Place of Santiago; it was
-you who betrayed the secret of the Quinta Verde to the soldiers of
-Bustamente; this very day, even, scarcely two hours ago, you held a long
-conversation with General Bustamente, in which you agreed to deliver up
-to him tomorrow the principal chiefs of the Dark-Hearts: is that true?"
-
-The miserable wretch had not a word to say in his defence; confounded,
-overwhelmed by the irresistible proofs accumulated against him, he hung
-down his head in utter abandonment.
-
-"Is this true?" Don Tadeo reiterated.
-
-"It is true," he murmured, in a scarcely audible voice.
-
-"You acknowledge yourself guilty?"
-
-"Yes," he said, with a heart-stifling sob; "but grant me life, noble
-seigneur, and I swear----"
-
-"Silence!"
-
-The spy was struck with mute despair.
-
-"You have heard, companions and friends, how this man confesses his own
-crimes; for the last time, what punishment does he deserve for having
-sold his brothers?"
-
-"Death!" replied the Dark-Hearts, without hesitation.
-
-"In the name of the Dark-Hearts, of whom I am king, I condemn you,
-Don Pedro Saldillo, to death, for treachery and felony towards your
-brethren. You have five minutes to make your peace with Heaven," Don
-Tadeo said, sternly.
-
-He placed his watch upon the table, and drawing a pistol from his belt,
-cocked it deliberately. The sharp noise of the hammer made the condemned
-man shudder with fear. A profound silence prevailed in the vault; the
-hearts of these implacable men might be heard beating in their breasts.
-The spy cast around wild, despairing glances, but beheld nothing but
-angry eyes gleaming upon him through hideous masks. Over the vault, in
-the chingana, they continued dancing, and faint puffs of _sambacuejas_
-penetrated, at intervals, mixed with uproarious bursts of laughter, even
-to the awful scene beneath. The contrast of this riotous mirth with
-the terrible act of justice which was being carried out, had something
-appalling in it.
-
-"The five minutes are past," said Don Tadeo, in a firm voice.
-
-"A few minutes more! a few minutes, my lord!" the spy implored, wringing
-his hands in despair. "I am not prepared; you cannot kill me thus! In
-the name of all you hold most dear, let me live!"
-
-Without appearing to hear him, Don Tadeo lifted his pistol, and the
-miserable culprit rolled upon the ground, with his brains scattered
-around him.
-
-"Oh!" he cried, as the pistol was aimed, "be accursed, ye assassins!"
-His death prevented the utterance of more.
-
-The conspirators stood cold, impassive spectators of the scene. As soon
-as the stern act of justice was completed, at a signal from the chief,
-several men opened a trap in the floor which covered a hole half filled
-with quick lime; the body was thrown into it, and the trap closed again.
-
-"Justice has been done, brothers," said Don Tadeo, solemnly; "go in
-peace, the King of Darkness watches over you."
-
-The conspirators bowed respectfully, and disappeared one after the
-other, without uttering a word. At the end of a quarter of an hour no
-one remained in the vault but Don Tadeo and Don Gregorio.
-
-"Oh!" said Don Tadeo, "Shall we always have thus to combat treachery?"
-
-"Courage! my friend; you have yourself said, in a few hours war will
-commence in the face of day."
-
-"God grant I may not be deceived! This contest in the dark makes
-frightful demands upon the mind; my heart begins to fail me!"
-
-The two conspirators regained the chingana, in which the dancing,
-laughing, and drinking were going on with undiminished spirit; they
-passed through so as not to be observed, and came out into the street.
-They had hardly walked fifty steps when they were joined by a man, who,
-to their great surprise, proved to be Valentine Guillois.
-
-"God be praised for bringing you here so opportunely!" said Don Tadeo.
-
-"I hope I am punctual," the Parisian remarked, with a gay laugh.
-
-Don Tadeo pressed his hand warmly, and drew him towards his residence,
-where our three personages soon arrived.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII.
-
-THE TREATY OF PEACE.
-
-
-General Bustamente had come to Valdivia under the pretence of himself
-renewing the treaties which existed between the republic of Chili
-and the Araucanian Confederation. This pretext was excellent in the
-sense that it permitted him to concentrate a considerable force in the
-provinces, and gave him, besides, a plausible reason for receiving the
-most powerful Ulmens of the Indians, who would not fail to come to the
-meeting, accompanied by a great number of mosotones. Every time a new
-president is elected in Chili, the minister at war renews the treaties
-in his name. General Bustamente had, up to this moment, neglected to do
-so: he had good reasons for that.--
-
-This ceremony, in which a great retinue is purposely displayed,
-generally takes place in a vast plain situated upon the Araucanian
-territories, and not at a great distance from Valdivia. By a curious
-coincidence, the pretext of the General suited equally well the
-interests of the three factions which, at this period, divided this
-unhappy country. The Dark-Hearts had skilfully profited by it to prepare
-the resistance they meditated, and Antinahuel, feigning to wish to
-pay the greatest honours to the war minister of the President of the
-republic, had collected a real army of his best warriors in the environs
-of the place chosen for the solemnity.
-
-Such was the state of things, and of the various parties with regard to
-each other, at the time we resume our narrative. The enemies were about
-to come face to face; it was evident that each, being well prepared,
-would endeavour to take advantage of the opportunity, and that a shock
-was imminent; but how would it be brought about? Who would set fire to
-the mine, and cause all those passions, those grudges, those ambitions,
-so long restrained, to explode? Nobody could say!
-
-The plain on which the ceremony was to take place was vast, covered
-with high grass, and belted by mountains verdant with lofty trees. The
-plain, crossed by woods and lines of apple trees, loaded with fruit,
-was divided in two by a meandering river, which flowed gently along,
-balancing on its silver waters numerous troops of black-headed swans;
-here and there, through the breaks of the thickets, might be seen the
-pointed nose of a vicuna, which, with ear erect, and eye on the watch,
-seemed to sniff the breeze, and all at once bounded away into the
-distance.
-
-The sun was rising majestically in the horizon when a measured noise
-of tinkling bells proceeded from a wood of apple trees, and a troop of
-half a score mules, led by the mother mare, and driven by an arriero,
-debouched into the plain. These mules carried diverse objects for an
-encampment, provisions, and even some bales of clothes and linen. At
-twenty paces behind the mules, came a rather numerous troop of horsemen.
-When they arrived at the banks of the little river we have spoken of,
-the arriero stopped his mules, and the party dismounted. In an instant
-the bales were unpacked and arranged with care, so as to form a perfect
-circle, in the centre of which a fire was lighted. Then a tent was
-erected in this temporary camp, and the horses and mules were hobbled.
-
-This party, whom, no doubt, our readers have already recognized, were
-Don Tadeo, his friends the Frenchmen, the Indian Ulmens, with Dona
-Rosario, and three servants. By a strange coincidence, at the same time
-that they were arranging their camp, another party nearly as numerous
-established theirs on the opposite bank of the river, exactly in face
-of them. The leader of this was Dona Maria. As frequently happens, it
-had pleased chance to bring into propinquity irreconcilable enemies, who
-were only separated from each other by a distance of fifty yards at the
-most. But was this entirely owing to chance?
-
-Don Tadeo had no suspicion of this dangerous proximity, or he would
-probably have done everything in his power to avoid it. He had cast a
-vacant glance at the caravan opposite to him, without taking any further
-heed of it, being absorbed in thoughts of the highest importance. Dona
-Maria, on the contrary, knew perfectly well, what she was about, and
-had placed herself where she was with the skill of an able tactician.
-In the mean time, as the morning advanced, the number of travellers
-kept increasing on the plain; by nine o'clock it was literally covered
-with tents; a free space only being reserved around an old half ruined
-chapel, in which mass was to be celebrated before the commencement of
-the ceremony.
-
-The Puelches, who had descended from their mountains in great numbers,
-had passed the night in making joyous libations around their campfires;
-many of them were sleeping in a state of complete intoxication;
-nevertheless, as soon as the arrival of the minister of the Chilian
-republic was announced, they all sprang up tumultuously, and began to
-dance, and utter cries of joy. On one side arrived General Bustamente
-at a canter, surrounded by a brilliant staff, all glittering with gold
-lace, and followed by a numerous troop of lancers; whilst on the other
-side came, at a gallop, the four Araucano Toquis, followed by the
-principal Ulmens of their nation, and a great number of mosotones.
-
-These two troops, which hastened to meet each other amidst the _vivas_
-and cries of joy of the crowd, raised immense clouds of dust, in which
-they disappeared. The Araucanos in particular, who are excellent
-jinetes, a term used in this country to designate good horsemen,
-indulged in equestrian eccentricities, of which the so-much vaunted Arab
-fantasias can give but a faint idea; for they are nothing in comparison
-with the incredible feats performed by these men, who seem born to
-manage a horse. The Chilians had a much more serious bearing, from
-which they would gladly have freed themselves, if human respect had not
-restrained them.
-
-As soon as the two troops met, the chiefs dismounted and ranged
-themselves, the Ulmens, armed with their long, silver-headed canes,
-behind Antinahuel, and the three other Toquis and the Chilians behind
-General Bustamente. It was the first time the Tiger-Sun and the General
-had met. Each of these two men, therefore, equally good politicians,
-equally false and equally ambitious, and who, at the first glance,
-understood one another, contemplated his rival with intense earnestness.
-
-After exchanging a few salutes, impressed with a rather suspicious
-cordiality, the two bands retrograded from each other a few paces, to
-afford room for the commissary-general and four Capitanes de Amigos.
-These officers are what they call in the United States Indian agents;
-they serve as interpreters and agents to the Araucanos, for trade, and
-all that concerns their transactions with the Chilians. It must be
-observed that all these Indians speak Spanish perfectly well; but they
-never will use it in appointed meetings. These Capitanes de Amigos, who,
-for the most part, are half-breeds, are much beloved and respected.
-They arrived, leading a score of mules loaded with presents, destined
-by the President of the Republic for the principal Ulmens. For, be it
-noted, when Indians treat with Christians, they consider nothing settled
-till they have received presents: it is for them a proof that the other
-party does not wish to deceive them; they constitute an earnest which
-they require to bind the bargain, and prove that they are treated in
-good faith. The Chilians, who, unfortunately for them, had long been
-accustomed to Araucanian habits, had taken good care not to forget this
-important condition.
-
-Whilst the commissary-general was distributing the presents, General
-Bustamente repaired to the chapel, where a priest, who had come
-purposely from Valdivia, celebrated mass. After mass, the speeches
-commenced, as soon as the minister of the republic and the four Toquis
-of the Uthal-Mapus had embraced. These speeches, which were very long,
-resulted in mutual assurances that they were satisfied with the peace
-which reigned between the two peoples, and that they would do all in
-their power to maintain it as long as possible. We think it our duty to
-beg our readers to observe, in justice to the two speakers, that one was
-not more sincere than the other, and that they did not mean one word
-they said, since in their hearts they determined to break their promises
-as soon as possible. They appeared, however, very well satisfied with
-the comedy they were playing, and they terminated it by a final embrace,
-more close and warm than the first, but equally false.
-
-"Now," said the General, "if my brothers, the great chiefs, will please
-to follow me, we will plant the cross."
-
-"No," Antinahuel replied, with a honied smile, "the cross must not be
-planted in front of the stone toldo."
-
-"Why not?" the General asked, with astonishment.
-
-"Because," the Indian replied, in a tone of decision, "the words we
-have exchanged must remain buried on the spot where they have been
-pronounced."
-
-"That is just!" said the General, bowing his head in sign of assent. "It
-shall be done as my brother desires."
-
-Antinahuel smiled proudly.
-
-"Have I spoken well, powerful men?" he asked, looking at the Ulmens.
-
-"Our father, the Toqui of the Inapire-Mapu, has spoken well," the Ulmens
-replied.
-
-The Indian peons then went to fetch from the chapel, upon the floor of
-which it lay, a cross of at least thirty feet in height, which they
-brought to the spot where the conferences had been held. All the chiefs
-and the Chilian officers ranged themselves around it; the troops forming
-a vast circle at a respectful distance. After the pause of an instant,
-of which the priest took advantage to bless the cross with that off-hand
-carelessness which distinguishes the Spanish clergy in America, it was
-planted in the ground. At the moment it was about to gain its upright
-position, Antinahuel interposed.
-
-"Stop!" he said to the Indians armed with spades; and turning towards
-the General, "Peace is well assured between us, is it not?" he asked.
-
-"Yes, certainly," the General replied.
-
-"All our words are buried under this cross?"
-
-"All of them."
-
-"Cover them with earth then," he said to the peons, "that they may not
-escape, and that war may not be rekindled between us."
-
-"When this ceremony was accomplished, Antinahuel caused a young lamb to
-be brought, which the machi slaughtered near the cross. All the Indian
-chiefs bathed their hands in the still warm blood of the quivering
-animal, and daubed the cross with hieroglyphic signs, destined to keep
-away Guecubu, the genius of evil, and prevent the words from escaping
-from the spot in which they were buried. In conclusion, the Araucans
-and the Chilians discharged their firearms in the air, and the ceremony
-was ended. General Bustamente then coming up to the Toqui of the
-Inapire-Mapu, passed his arm through the chiefs in a friendly manner,
-saying in an ingratiating tone--
-
-"Will not my brother, Antinahuel, come for an instant in my tent, to
-taste a glass of aguardiente de Pisco and take mate?--he would render
-his friend happy."
-
-"Why should I not?" the chief replied, smiling, and in the most
-good-humoured tone.
-
-"My brother will accompany me!"
-
-"Lead on, then."
-
-Both moved off, chatting upon indifferent subjects, directing their
-course towards the General's tent, which had been pitched within gunshot
-of the place where the ceremony had taken place. The General had given
-his orders beforehand, so that everything was prepared to receive the
-guest he brought with him magnificently, as for the success of his
-projects he had so great an interest in pleasing him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIX.
-
-THE ABDUCTION.
-
-
-Whilst the ceremony we have described was being accomplished, a terrible
-event was passing not far from it, on the banks of the river, in the
-camp of Don Tadeo de Leon. The three parties which divided Chili, and
-aimed at governing it, had, as if of one accord, chosen the day for the
-renewal of the treaty to throw off the mask and give their partisans the
-signal of revolt. Don Tadeo, who feared everything from Dona Maria and
-the General's spies, had consented, but with regret, that Rosario should
-accompany him to the plain, to be present at the ceremony; he had taken
-her from the convent, and brought the young girl with him, inwardly
-pleased that she would thus not be in Valdivia during the serious events
-that were there preparing.
-
-Dona Rosario, to tell the truth, had only consulted her love in the
-request she had made of her guardian; the desire of seeing unobserved,
-for a few hours, the object of her affections, had dictated it. Don
-Tadeo, who could not on any account be present at the ceremony, being
-obliged to conceal himself, took the two young Frenchmen aside as soon
-as his little encampment was arranged. It was then about seven o'clock
-in the morning, and the crowd began to flock to the plain. The King of
-Darkness cast a prudent and searching look around, but, reassured by the
-complete solitude that prevailed, he at length decided upon explaining
-to the young men, who were astonished at this strange proceeding, all
-that appeared so unusual and inconsistent in his conduct.
-
-"Caballeros," he said, "since I have had the honour of knowing you, I
-have concealed nothing from you, and you know all my secrets; this day
-must decide the question of life or death to which, from my boyhood,
-I have devoted all the energies of my mind. I must leave this spot
-instantly, and return to Valdivia. It is in that city that the first
-blow will be struck, within a few hours, against the tyrant, and the
-struggle I expect will be terrible. I am not willing to expose the
-young lady whom you know, and whose life you have already saved, to the
-chances of it. I confide the care of her to one of you, the other will
-accompany me to the city. In the event of any fatal mischance happening
-to me, I will place in his hands a paper, which will inform you both of
-my intentions, and of what I wish you to do with that poor child, who is
-all I hold dear on earth, and whom I leave with the greatest pain. Which
-of you, gentlemen, will take charge of Dona Rosario during my absence?"
-
-"Be at ease, Don Tadeo, go where your duty calls you," Louis answered,
-in a solemn but agitated tone; "I swear that while I live no danger,
-either near or distant, shall assail her; to reach her it must pass over
-my dead body."
-
-"Receive my warmest thanks, Don Louis," the Dark-Heart replied, somewhat
-surprised, and yet affected by the manner of the Frenchman; "I place
-implicit faith in your words; I know you will keep your vow at all
-risks; besides, in a few hours I hope I shall be back, and here she can
-have nothing to dread."
-
-"I will watch over her," the young man said, quietly.
-
-"Once again I thank you."
-
-Don Tadeo left the young men, and returned to the tent where Dona
-Rosario, reclining in a hammock, was gently swinging herself, and
-indulging in perhaps pleasing reveries. On seeing her guardian, she
-sprang up eagerly.
-
-"Do not disturb yourself, my child," said Don Tadeo, putting her back
-with a gentle hand, "I have but two words to say to you."
-
-"I am always attentive to you, my kind friend."
-
-"I have come to bid you farewell."
-
-"Farewell, Don Tadeo!" she exclaimed, in great terror.
-
-"Oh! comfort yourself, timid darling! only for a few hours."
-
-"Ah! that is all!" she said, with a smile of satisfaction.
-
-"Certainly, all! There is in this neighbourhood an exceedingly curious
-grotto. I was foolish enough to let some words slip concerning it this
-morning before Don Valentine, and that demon of a Frenchman," he added,
-with a smile, "insists upon my showing it to him; so that, in order to
-get rid of his importunities, I have been obliged to comply."
-
-"You have done quite right," she said, eagerly; "we are under great
-obligations to those two French caballeros, and what he asked is such a
-trifle!"
-
-"That it would have been uncourteous on my part to refuse him," Don
-Tadeo interrupted, "therefore I have not. We shall set off directly,
-in order to be the sooner back. Be as cheerful as you can during our
-absence, dear child."
-
-"I will endeavour," she said, absently.
-
-"Besides, I shall leave Don Louis to take care of you; you can chat
-together, and the time will quickly pass away."
-
-The young girl blushed as she stammered--"Come back soon, dear friend."
-
-"Time to go and return, that is all; adieu, then, darling!"
-
-Don Tadeo left the tent, and rejoined the young men.
-
-"Adieu, Don Louis!" he said. "Are you ready, Don Valentine?"
-
-"Ready!" the Frenchman replied, laughing; "Caramba! I should be in
-despair at losing such an opportunity of judging whether you understand
-getting up revolutions as well as we Frenchmen do."
-
-"Oh! We are but young at the work yet," Don Tadeo remarked; "and yet we
-begin to have some idea of the matter, I assure you."
-
-"Good-bye, Louis, for a time," said Valentine, pressing his friend's
-hand; and stooping towards his ear, he added--"Be thankful to your
-stars, do you not see that Heaven protects your love?" The young man
-only replied by shaking his head despondingly, and sighing deeply. A
-peon had brought the horses for the two Chilians and the Frenchman,
-and they were soon in the saddle. They set off at a quick pace, and
-were quickly lost in the high grass and the windings of the road. Louis
-returned pensively to the camp, where he found Dona Rosario alone in her
-tent; the two Indian chiefs, attracted by curiosity, having gone in the
-direction of the chapel, where, mingled with the crowd, they might be
-present at the ceremony. The arrieros and the peons had not been long in
-following their example.
-
-The young girl was seated on a heap of dyed sheepskins in front of
-the tent, dreamily looking at, but without seeing, the clouds which
-were driven across the heavens by a strong breeze. Dona Rosario was
-a charming girl of sixteen, slender, fragile, and delicate, small in
-person, whose least gestures and least movements possessed inexpressible
-attractions. Of a rare kind of beauty in America, she was fair; her
-long silky hair was of the colour of ripe golden corn; her blue eyes,
-in which were reflected the azure of the heavens, had that melancholy,
-dreamy expression which we attribute only to angels, and young girls who
-are beginning to love; her nose, with its pinky nostrils, was inclined
-to be aquiline; while her mouth, rather serious, with rosy lips set
-off by teeth of dazzling whiteness, and her skin of pearl-like purity,
-altogether made her a charming creature.
-
-The noise of the approaching young man's steps roused her from her
-reverie. She turned her head in the direction, and looked at him with
-inexpressible sadness, although a faint smile played upon her lips.
-
-"It is I," said the Count, in a low, inarticulate voice, bowing
-respectfully.
-
-"I knew of your coming," she replied, in a sweetly-toned voice. "Oh! why
-did you return to me at all?"
-
-"Be not angry with me for drawing near you once more. I endeavoured to
-obey you; I left the spot you resided in, without, alas! even the hope
-of seeing you again; but destiny has decided otherwise."
-
-She gave him a long and eloquent look.
-
-"Unfortunately," he continued, with a melancholy smile, "you are
-condemned for some hours to endure my presence."
-
-"I must resign myself to it," she said, extending her hand to him
-cordially.
-
-The young man imprinted a burning kiss upon the white, soft hand he held.
-
-"And so we are left alone!" she said gaily, but withdrawing her hand.
-
-"Good heavens! yes, nearly so," he replied, falling in with her humour.
-"The Indian chiefs and the peons, overcome by curiosity, have joined the
-crowds, and kindly procured us a _tete-a-tete_."
-
-"In the midst of ten thousand people!" she said, smiling.
-
-"That is all the better; everyone is engaged with his own affairs,
-without troubling himself about those of others; and we can speak to
-each other without the fear of being interrupted by importunate persons."
-
-"True," she said, thoughtfully; "it is frequently amidst a crowd that we
-find the greatest solitude."
-
-"Does not the heart possess that great faculty of being able to isolate
-itself when it pleases--to fold itself, as it were, within itself?"
-
-"And is not that faculty often a misfortune?"
-
-"Perhaps it is," he replied, with a sigh.
-
-"But how comes it?" she said, with a half-smiling air, in order to
-change the conversation, which was becoming a little too serious.
-"Pardon my giddy impertinence! How comes it, I say, that you, of whom I
-sometimes caught a glimpse at Paris, during my short sojourn there, and
-who then enjoyed, if I was not mistaken, a brilliant position, should
-meet me here so far from your country?"
-
-"Alas! madam, my history is that of many young men, and may be summed up
-in two words--weakness and ignorance."
-
-"That is but too true; that is the history of nearly all the world, in
-Europe as well as in America."
-
-At this moment a great noise reached them from the camp. Dona Rosario
-and the Count were placed so as not to be able to see what was passing
-in the plain.
-
-"What is that noise?" she asked.
-
-"Probably the tumult of the festival which reaches us: should you like
-to be present at this ceremony?"
-
-"To what purpose? Those cries and that tumult terrify me."
-
-"And yet, I thought it was you who asked Don Tadeo to see this."
-
-"A silly girl's caprice," she said, "which passed away as soon as
-conceived."
-
-"But was it not Don Tadeo's intention to----"
-
-"Who can tell Don Tadeo's intention?" she interrupted, with a sigh.
-
-"He appears to love you tenderly?" Louis hazarded, timidly.
-
-"Sometimes I am on the point of believing so; he pays me the most
-delicate attentions, shews me the tenderest care; then at other times he
-appears to endure me with, pain--he repulses me--my caresses annoy him."
-
-"Singular conduct!" the Count observed; "this gentleman is your
-relation, there can be no doubt."
-
-"I do not know," she replied ingenuously; "when alone and pensive, my
-thoughts stray back to my early years. I have some vague remembrance of
-a young and handsome woman, whose black eyes smiled upon me constantly,
-and whose rosy lips lavished affectionate kisses upon me; and then, all
-at once, a complete darkness comes over my brain, and memory entirely
-fails me. As far back as I can recollect, I find nobody but Don Tadeo
-watching over me, everywhere and always, as a father would do over his
-daughter."
-
-"Perhaps, then," said the Count, "he is your father."
-
-"Listen. One day, after a long and dangerous illness which I had just
-gone through, and in which Don Tadeo had night and day watched over
-my pillow for more than a month, happy at seeing me restored to life,
-for he had been fearful he should lose me, he smiled upon me tenderly,
-kissed my brow and my hands, and appeared to experience the most
-lively joy. 'Oh!' I said, as a sudden thought rushed across my mind;
-'oh! you are my father! None but a father could devote himself with
-such abnegation for his child!' and throwing my arms round his neck,
-I concealed my tear-laden face on his chest. Don Tadeo arose, his
-countenance was lividly pale, his features were frightfully contracted;
-he repulsed me roughly, and strode hastily about the chamber. I Your
-father! I! Dona Rosario!' he cried, in a husky voice, 'you are a silly,
-poor child! Never repeat those words again; your father is dead, and
-your mother, likewise, long, long ago. I am not your father--never
-repeat that word--I am only your friend. Yes, your father, at the point
-of death, confided you to my care, and that is why I am bringing you up,
-that is why I watch over you; as to me, I am not even your relation!'
-His agitation was extreme; he said many other things which I do not now
-remember, and then he left me. Alas! from that day I have never ventured
-to ask him for any account of my family."
-
-A silence ensued; the two young people were pensively thoughtful: the
-simple and touching recital of Dona Rosario had strongly affected the
-Count. At length he said, in a tremulous voice,--
-
-"Let _me_ love you, Dona Rosario!"
-
-The maiden sighed.
-
-"To what could that love lead, Don Louis?" she said sadly,--"to death,
-perhaps!"
-
-"Oh!" he exclaimed madly; "and it would be welcome, if it came in your
-defence!"
-
-At this very instant, several individuals rushed into the tent, uttering
-discordant cries. Quick as thought, the Count threw himself before the
-young girl, a pistol in each hand. But, as if Heaven had decreed that he
-should accomplish the wish he had just uttered, before he had time to
-defend himself, he was struck to the earth, stabbed by several machetes.
-In falling, he saw, as if in a dream, Dona Rosario seized by two
-individuals, who fled away with her in their arms. With an incredible
-effort, the young man succeeded in getting on his knees, and afterwards
-in rising altogether. He beheld the ravishers hastening towards their
-horses, which were being held at a short distance by an Indian. He
-took aim at the flying wretches, crying, with a faint voice, "Murder!
-Murder!" and fired.
-
-One of the ravishers fell, uttering an imprecation of rage. The Count,
-exhausted by the superhuman effort he had made, staggered like a drunken
-man; the blood gushed from his ears, his sight grew dim, and he rolled
-senseless upon the ground.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXX.
-
-THE PROTEST.
-
-
-The three travellers returned with such speed to Valdivia, that it
-scarcely took them an hour and a half to traverse the distance which
-divided the plain from the city. They passed on their way General
-Don Pancho Bustamente, at the head of a detachment of lanceros, and
-attended by a numerous staff; but the Dark-Hearts, employing their usual
-precautions, escaped notice. Don Tadeo cast an ironical glance at his
-enemy.
-
-"Look," he said, with a somewhat malignant smile, to Don Gregorio,
-"at our worthy general; he fancies himself already protector. What a
-majestic bearing he affects!"
-
-"Yes," said Don Gregorio, with the same expression; "but between the cup
-and the lip he may find there is room for a mischance."
-
-It was striking ten as they entered Valdivia. The city was almost
-deserted: for all who were not detained at home by urgent business had
-gone to the plain, to be present at the renewal of the treaties between
-the Chilians and the Araucanos. This ceremony strongly interested the
-inhabitants of the province: it was for them a guarantee of tranquillity
-for the future; that is to say, the liberty of carrying on with safety
-their commercial transactions with the Indians. More than all the other
-provinces of Chili, Valdivia had cause to dread hostilities with its
-redoubtable neighbours. Separated entirely from the territory of the
-republic, when left to its own resources, the least movement among
-the Moluchos annihilated its commerce. If the inhabitants appeared to
-have emigrated for a time, it was not the same with the soldiers; the
-numerous garrison, composed--a thing unheard of in time of peace--of
-fifteen hundred men, had been still further increased within the last
-two days, principally in the course of the preceding night, by two
-regiments of cavalry, and a battery of artillery.
-
-For what purpose was this calling together of forces, which nothing
-appeared to justify? The few inhabitants who remained in the city
-experienced a vague uneasiness on this head, for which they could not
-account. There is a singular fact that we wish to point out here, but
-which we by no means take upon ourselves to explain, because it has
-always seemed to us inexplicable. When a great event, whatever it may
-be, is about to be accomplished in a country, a vague presentiment
-seems to warn the inhabitants; men and things assume an unusual aspect;
-nature itself, associating with this disposition of men's minds, grows
-sensibly darker; a magnetic fluid rushes through the veins; a painful
-pressure weighs upon every breast; the atmosphere becomes heavy; the
-sun loses its brilliancy; and people only communicate their impressions
-to each other in a suppressed voice; in short, there is in the air
-something incomprehensible, but I know not what, which says to man in
-a dismal tone, "Beware! a catastrophe threatens thee!" And this fatal
-presentiment is so general, that when the event takes place, and the
-crisis is over, every one instinctively cries, "I felt it!" And yet no
-one could say why he foresaw the cataclysm.
-
-It is the sentiment of self-preservation which God has placed in the
-heart of man--that sentiment which constitutes his safeguard, and is
-so strong, that when danger approaches him, it cries to him, "Beware!"
-Valdivia was at this moment oppressed by the weight of an unknown
-apprehension. The few citizens who remained in the city hastened to
-regain their homes. Numerous patrols of cavalry and infantry traversed
-the streets in all directions; cannon rolled along with portentous
-noise, and were planted at the comers of all the principal places. At
-the cabildo a crowd of officers and soldiers went in and out with a
-busy air; couriers succeeded each other unceasingly, and after having
-delivered the orders with which they were charged, set off again at full
-speed.
-
-At the same time, at the corners of streets, men wrapped in large
-cloaks, and with hats pulled down over their eyes, harangued the workmen
-and the sailors of the port, and formed groups, which every instant
-became more numerous. In these groups, arms, gun barrels, bayonets,
-and pike heads began to glitter in the sun. When these mysterious men
-were satisfied that they had accomplished their task in one place, they
-went to another. Immediately after their departure, as if by magic,
-barricades were raised behind them, and impeded the passage. As soon as
-a barricade was terminated, an energetic-looking sentinel, a workman
-with bare arms, but with a callous hand, brandishing a gun, an axe, or
-a sabre, placed himself at its summit, and bade all who approached go
-another way.
-
-On entering the city, Don Tadeo and his companions found themselves
-completely barricaded. Don Tadeo smiled triumphantly. The three men
-cleared the barricades, which were thrown open at their approach, and
-the sentinels bowed to them as they passed. We have forgotten to say
-that all three were masked. There was something striking in the march
-of these three phantoms, before whom all obstacles gave way. If now and
-then a stray citizen ventured to ask timidly who those three masked
-men were, he received for answer, "It is the King of Darkness and his
-lieutenants;" and the citizen, trembling with fear, crossed himself, and
-went his way hastily.
-
-The three men thus arrived at the entrance of the Plaza Mayor. There
-two pieces of mounted cannon barred their passage, and the artillerymen
-were at their guns waiting, match in hand. At a sign from Don Tadeo, the
-officer who commanded approached him. He leant down upon the neck of his
-horse and said a few words to the officer in a whisper; the latter bowed
-respectfully, and, turning to his soldiers, said--
-
-"Let these gentlemen pass."
-
-In all the cities of Spanish America there is a monumental fountain in
-the centre of the Plaza Mayor. It was towards this fountain that Don
-Tadeo conducted his companions. A hundred individuals, scattered here
-and there, and who appeared to expect him, drew together at his approach.
-
-"Well," Don Tadeo asked Valentine, "how do you like our ride?"
-
-"Delightful," the other replied, "only I fancy we shall shortly come to
-blows, and hear the hissing of bullets."
-
-"I hope so," said the conspirator, coolly.
-
-"Ah! ah!" the young man remarked, "all is for the best, then?"
-
-"You are about to be present at a very interesting spectacle."
-
-"Oh! I depend upon you for that. For my part, I am glad at not having
-lost such an opportunity."
-
-"Is it not one?"
-
-"Pardieu!--yes. It is astonishing how travelling instructs one," he
-added, in the form of a parenthesis.
-
-The individuals assembled near the fountain surrounded them with
-every mark of the profoundest respect. These were the faithful--the
-Dark-Hearts--upon whom perfect dependence was to be placed.
-
-"Gentlemen," said Don Tadeo, "the struggle is about to commence. I
-desire at length that you should know me, that you should be informed
-who the man is who commands you."
-
-And he threw off his mask. A burst of enthusiasm broke from the ranks
-of the conspirators. "Don Tadeo de Leon!" they cried with astonishment,
-mingled with a species of veneration for the man who had suffered so
-much for the common cause.
-
-"Yes, gentlemen," Don Tadeo replied, "the man whom the creatures of the
-tyrant condemned to death, and whom God has miraculously preserved, in
-order to be the instrument of His vengeance today."
-
-All the conspirators pressed tumultuously round him. These men of
-spontaneous impressions, and essentially superstitious, no longer
-doubted of victory, since they had at their head the man whom God, as
-they believed, had so manifestly protected. Don Tadeo had calculated
-upon this manifestation to heighten the ardour of the conspirators,
-and to augment still further the prestige he enjoyed. The result had
-answered his expectations.
-
-"Is everyone at his post?" he asked.
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Are arms and ammunition distributed?"
-
-"To everybody."
-
-"Are all the barricades completed?--all the gates of the city guarded?"
-
-"All."
-
-"That is well. Now wait."
-
-And quiet was re-established.
-
-All these men had known Don Tadeo for a long time; they appreciated his
-character at its true value; they had already vowed to him a boundless
-friendship; and now they knew that Don Tadeo and the King of Darkness
-were the same person, they were ready to lay down their lives for him.
-The news of the revelation which had been made near the fountain spread
-through the city with the rapidity of a train of gunpowder, and added
-greatly to the fermentation which already prevailed. Whilst the few
-words were being exchanged between the chief of the conspirators and
-his party, a regiment of infantry had formed in front of the cabildo,
-flanked right and left by two squadrons of horse.
-
-"Attention!" Don Tadeo commanded.
-
-A sensation of impatience pervaded the men grouped around him.
-
-"Eh! eh!" Valentine murmured, with that mocking, short laugh that was
-peculiar to him; "this is going on capitally! Caramba! we shall soon
-have some fun!"
-
-The gates of the cabildo were thrown open violently, and a general,
-followed by a brilliant staff, took his station on the top step of the
-great staircase; next several senators made their appearance in full
-costume, and formed a group round him. At a signal from the general, the
-drums beat for a time, to secure attention and silence. When all was
-quiet, a senator, who held a roll of paper in his hand, came forward a
-few steps, and prepared to read.
-
-"Bah!" said the General, seizing his arm, "Why lose your time in reading
-that rubbish? Leave it to me."
-
-The senator, who asked no better than to be freed from the dangerous
-commission with which, very much against his will, he had been charged,
-rolled up his papers, and retreated to the rear. The general assumed a
-commanding posture, placed his hand upon his hip, with the point of his
-sword on the ground, and said in a voice audible in every corner of the
-place--
-
-"People of the province of Valdivia, the sovereign senate, assembled
-in congress at Santiago de Chili, has unanimously passed the following
-resolutions:--
-
-"1st. The various provinces of the Chilian republic shall be composed of
-independent states united under the title of the Confederation of the
-United States of South America.
-
-"2nd. The valiant and most excellent general, Don Pancho Bustamente, has
-been elected Protector of the Chilian Confederation."
-
-"People, cry with me--'Long live the Protector Don Pancho Bustamente!'"
-
-The officers grouped round the General, and the soldiers drawn up in the
-place, shouted--
-
-"Long live the Protector!"
-
-But the people were mute.
-
-"Hum!" the general murmured to himself; "they do not display much
-enthusiasm."
-
-A man came forward from the group collected round the fountain, and
-advanced boldly to within twenty paces of the soldiers. This man was
-Don Tadeo de Leon; his countenance was calm and his bearing firm and
-collected. He made a sign with his hand.
-
-"What is your will?" the general shouted.
-
-"To reply to your proclamation," the King of Darkness said, intrepidly.
-
-"Speak! I hear you," the general replied.
-
-Don Tadeo bowed with a significant smile.
-
-"In the name of the Chilian people," he said, in a loud, clear voice,
-"the senate of Santiago de Chili, composed of creatures sold to the
-tyrant, is declared traitorous to its country."
-
-"Miserable fellow! what do you dare to say?" the General cried, angrily.
-
-"No insults, if you please! Allow me to terminate the answer I have to
-give you," Don Tadeo replied, coolly.
-
-The General, involuntarily brow-beaten by the heroic courage of this
-man, who, alone, unarmed before a triple row of muskets ready to be
-directed towards his breast, had dared to speak in this loud, firm
-tone, and overcome by that ascendancy which a great character always
-exercises, bit the pommel of his sword with rage.
-
-"In the name of the people," Don Tadeo, still calm and stoical,
-continued, "Don Pancho Bustamente is declared a traitor to his country,
-and as such is degraded from his titles and his power. Liberty! Chili!"
-
-"Liberty! Chili!" the populace assembled on the square shouted with the
-greatest enthusiasm.
-
-"Oh, this is too audacious!" the General cried, pale with anger.
-"Soldiers, seize that rebel!"
-
-Several soldiers stepped forward; but, quicker than thought, Don
-Gregorio and Valentine had sprung to Don Tadeo's side, and dragged him
-back with them among the people.
-
-"Cordieu!" cried Valentine, pressing his hands enough to crush them,
-"you are a troublesome man! but I love you the better for it."
-
-The General, outrageous at seeing his enemy escape, shouted silence. "In
-the name of the Protector," he said, "I command that rebel to be given
-up!"
-
-Hisses and hootings were the only reply.
-
-"Fire!" the General commanded, who, even before the last insulting
-manifestation, had perceived that no half measures were possible. The
-muskets were lowered, and a formidable discharge pealed like thunder.
-Several men fell, killed or wounded.
-
-"Chili! Liberty! down with the oppressor!" the people shouted, arming
-themselves with everything they could lay their hands on. A second
-discharge resounded, followed closely by a third. The ground was, in an
-instant, strewed with the dead and dying; but the patriots showed no
-disposition to disperse; on the contrary, under the incessant fire of
-the soldiers, they organized a resistance, and soon replied by a few
-shots to the incessant platoon firing which was decimating them. The
-combat became mutual; the revolution had commenced.
-
-"Hum!" the General muttered to himself, "I have undertaken a rather
-awkward mission."
-
-But, essentially a soldier, and endowed to the highest degree with that
-spirit of passive obedience which distinguishes all who have grown old
-in harness, he prepared either to chastise the insurgents severely, or
-die at his post.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXI.
-
-SPANIARD AND INDIAN.
-
-
-It was not, as may well be believed, through fear, that General
-Bustamente had absented himself from Valdivia at the moment when one
-of his lieutenants so boldly proclaimed him from the top of the steps
-of the cabildo, before the populace. No, General Bustamente was one
-of those soldiers of fortune of whom so many are found in America,
-accustomed to set his life upon a cast of the die, and to be turned
-aside by nothing in the world from the accomplishment of his projects.
-He had hoped, by the means of the forces he had concentrated in this
-remote province of the republic, that the inhabitants, taken unawares,
-would only offer an insignificant resistance, and that he should be
-able, by joining his troops with those of Antinahuel, to make a forced
-march through Araucania, gain possession of Concepcion, and thence,
-keeping the gathering snowball in motion, and dragging his companions
-after him, arrive at Santiago in time to prevent any movement, and
-oblige the inhabitants to capitulate and accept, as an accomplished
-fact, the change of government inaugurated by him in the distant
-provinces of the republic.
-
-This plan was not deficient in audacity, or even in a certain degree of
-policy; it comprised great chances of success. Unfortunately for General
-Bustamente, the Dark-Hearts, whose spies were everywhere, had got wind
-of this project, and had countermined it by taking advantage of the
-opportunity offered them by their enemy to unmask their own batteries.
-We have seen under what conditions the struggle between the two parties
-had commenced in Valdivia. The General, who was ignorant of what was
-passing, felt in a state of perfect security. As soon as he was in his
-tent with Antinahuel, he let fall the curtain which closed it behind
-them, and, by a gesture, invited the toqui to be seated.
-
-"Sit down, chief," he said, "I have something to say to you."
-
-"I am at the orders of my white brother," the Indian replied, with a bow.
-
-The General attentively examined the man before him; he endeavoured to
-read on his countenance the various feelings that acted upon him; but
-the features of the Indian were marble; no impression was reflected by
-them.
-
-"Let us speak frankly, loyally, and as friends who wish no better than
-to understand each other plainly," he said.
-
-Antinahuel bowed reservedly to this appeal to frankness, and the General
-continued--
-
-"At this moment the people of Valdivia are constituting me, by
-acclamation, protector of a new confederation, formed of all the states."
-
-"Good!" said the chief, with an almost imperceptible shake of the head;
-"is my father sure of that?"
-
-"Certainly I am. The Chilians are tired of the continual agitations
-which disturb the country; they have forced this heavy burden upon me;
-but I owe myself to my country, and I will not disappoint the hopes my
-compatriots place in me."
-
-These words were pronounced in a hypocritical tone of self-denial, of
-which the Indian was not in the least the dupe. A smile flitted across
-the lips of the chief, which the General affected not to perceive.
-
-"To be brief," he continued, quitting the mild, conciliatory tone in
-which he had till that time spoken, to assume a more decided and abrupt
-manner, "are you prepared to keep your engagements?"
-
-"Why should I not keep them?" Antinahuel remarked.
-
-"Will you march with me to assure the success of my projects?"
-
-"Let my father order, I will obey."
-
-This readiness was displeasing to the General.
-
-"Come," he said, angrily, "let us put an end to this; I have not time to
-enter into a contest of wits with you, or follow you through a labyrinth
-of Indian circumlocutions."
-
-"I do not understand my father," Antinahuel replied, impassively.
-
-"We shall never get to the end, chief," the General said, stamping his
-foot, "if you will not answer me categorically."
-
-"I listen to my father; let him ask, I will reply."
-
-"How many men can you have under arms within twenty-four hours?"
-
-"Ten thousand," the chief said, drawing himself up proudly.
-
-"All experienced warriors?"
-
-"All."
-
-"What do you require of me for them?"
-
-"My father knows."
-
-"I accept of all your conditions but one."
-
-"Which is that?"
-
-"The surrender of the province of Valdivia to you."
-
-"Is not my father going to make up for that province on another side?"
-
-"How so?"
-
-"Am I not to assist my father in conquering Bolivia?"
-
-"Yes."
-
-"Well, then?"
-
-"You are mistaken, chief, it is not the same thing; I may enlarge the
-Chilian territory, but honour forbids me to diminish it."
-
-"Let my father reflect; the province of Valdivia was anciently an
-Araucanian Uthal-Mapus."
-
-"Very possibly, chief; but, according to that principle, all Chili was
-Araucanian previous to the discovery of America."
-
-"My father is mistaken; the Inca Sinchiroca had, a hundred years before,
-conquered the Chilian land as far as the Rio-Maule."
-
-"You seem to be well acquainted with the history of your country,
-chief," the General observed.
-
-"Does not my father know the history of his?"
-
-"That is not the question, now; do you accept my proposals or not?"
-
-The chief appeared to reflect for an instant.
-
-"Well!" the General exclaimed, impatiently, "time presses."
-
-"That is true; I will, therefore, go and command a council, composed
-of the Apo-Ulmens and Ulmens of my nation, and submit the words of my
-father to them."
-
-The General with difficulty suppressed an expression of anger.
-
-"You must, doubtless, be joking, chief," he said--"your words cannot be
-serious."
-
-"Antinahuel is the first toqui of his nation," the Indian replied,
-haughtily; "he never jokes."
-
-"But you must give me your answer now--at once--in a few minutes!" cried
-the General; "who knows whether we may not be obliged to march within an
-hour from this time?"
-
-"It is my duty, as much as it is my father's, to enlarge the territory
-of my people."
-
-At this moment the gallop of a horse was heard approaching; the General
-flew to the entrance of the tent, where an orderly officer appeared. The
-face of this officer was bathed with perspiration, and spots of blood
-stained his uniform.
-
-"General!" he said breathlessly.
-
-"Silence!" the latter hissed, pointing to the chief, who, though
-apparently indifferent, followed all his movements attentively. The
-General turned towards Antinahuel.
-
-"Chief," he said, "I have orders to give to this officer--pressing
-orders; if you will permit me, we will resume our conversation
-presently."
-
-"Good!" replied the chief; "my father need not inconvenience himself; I
-can wait."
-
-And after bowing, he left the tent slowly.
-
-"Oh!" said the General to himself, "you demon! if, some day, I have you
-in my power!"
-
-But perceiving that anger was making him forget himself, he turned
-towards the officer, who stood motionless:
-
-"Well, Diego," he said, "what news have you?--are we conquerors?"
-
-"No," the officer replied, shaking his head; "the people, excited by
-those incarnate demons, the Dark-Hearts, have rebelled."
-
-"Oh!" the General cried, "shall I never be able to crush them? What has
-taken place?"
-
-"The people have raised barricades; and Don Tadeo de Leon is at the head
-of the movement."
-
-"Don Tadeo de Leon!" said the General.
-
-"Yes, he who was so clumsily shot."
-
-"Oh! this is war to the death then!"
-
-"A part of the troops, seduced by their officers, who have sold
-themselves to the Dark-Hearts, have passed over to their side; at
-this moment they are fighting in all the streets with the fiercest
-inveteracy. I had to pass through a shower of bullets to come and inform
-you."
-
-"We have not an instant to lose."
-
-"No; for though the soldiers who have remained faithful to you are
-fighting like lions, I can assure you they are closely pressed."
-
-"Maldicion!" the General howled; "I will not leave stone upon stone of
-that accursed city!"
-
-"Yes, but, in the first place, we must reconquer it, General, and that
-will prove rather a rough job, I promise you," replied the old soldier,
-who had preserved his blunt speech throughout.
-
-"Very well!" said Bustamente; "let 'boot and saddle' be sounded, and
-every horseman take a foot soldier behind him."
-
-Don Pancho Bustamente was a prey to the most violent rage; for several
-instants he stamped about his tent, like a wild beast in its cage. This
-unexpected resistance, in spite of all the measures of precaution he had
-taken, exasperated him. Suddenly the curtain of his tent was raised.
-"Who is there?" he cried. "Ah! chief, is that you? Well, what do you
-say?"
-
-"I saw the chief come out, and I thought that perhaps my father would
-not be sorry to see me," the other replied, courteously.
-
-"And you were right; I am delighted to see you; forget all we have said,
-chief; I accept all your conditions; are you satisfied, this time?"
-
-"Yes. Including Valdivia?"
-
-"That above all!" said the General, with concentrated rage.
-
-"Ah!"
-
-"Yes, and as that province has revolted, in order to be able to give it
-to you, I must bring it back to its duty, must I not?"
-
-"To be sure you must!"
-
-"Well, as I have it at my heart to fulfil all my engagements to you,
-I am going instantly to march against that city; will you help me to
-subdue it?"
-
-"That will be but just, as I shall labour for myself."
-
-"How many horsemen have you at hand?"
-
-"Twelve hundred."
-
-"Good!" said the General, "they will be more than we shall want."
-
-"The troops are ready," said Diego, entering the tent, "and only await
-your Excellency's orders."
-
-"To saddle, then; let us be gone! let us be gone! And you, chief, will
-you not accompany us?"
-
-"Let my father move onward! my mosotones and I will tread in his steps
-quickly."
-
-Ten minutes later, General Bustamente, with his soldiers, was again
-galloping along the road to Valdivia. Antinahuel followed him with his
-eyes attentively; then he rejoined his Ulmens, saying between his teeth,
-"Let us leave these Moro-Huincas to slaughter each other a little while;
-it will always be time enough to fall into the party."
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXII.
-
-IN THE MOUNTAIN.
-
-
-Dona Rosario was so terrified, and such mortal anguish assailed her
-on beholding the Count fall under the knives of the assassins, that
-she fainted. When she recovered her senses, it was dark night. For
-several minutes her confused thoughts whirled about in her brain; and
-she endeavoured, but for a long time in vain, to recover the violently
-broken thread of her ideas. At length light returned to her mind; she
-breathed a deep sigh, and murmured in a low voice full of terror:
-
-"My God! my God! what has happened to me?"
-
-She then opened her eyes, and cast around a despairing look. We have
-said it was a dark night; but what made the darkness more complete
-for the poor girl, was a heavy covering of some kind which was spread
-over her face, as well as her person. Then, with that patience which
-characterizes all prisoners, and which is merely the instinct of
-liberty, the poor child endeavoured to ascertain what her position was.
-As well as she could judge, she was lying upon the back of a mule,
-between two bales; a cord, which passed round her waist, prevented her
-from rising, but her hands were free. The mule had that rough, irregular
-trot, peculiar to its species, which made the young girl suffer terribly
-at every step. Some horse cloths had been thrown over her, no doubt to
-protect her from the heavy dews of the night, or perhaps to prevent her
-from making out what road she was going. Dona Rosario, gently, and with
-great precaution, slipped the covering down from her face: after a few
-efforts her head was completely free. She then looked around her; but
-all was dark. The moon, closely veiled by the clouds which passed over
-its pale disc, only yielded, at rare intervals, a weak, uncertain light.
-By lifting her head softly, the young girl could distinguish several
-horsemen, riding before and behind the mule which carried her. As well
-as she could make out, from the obscurity which surrounded her, these
-horsemen were Indians.
-
-The rather numerous party--it apparently consisted of a score of
-individuals--followed a narrow road deeply inclosed between two abrupt
-mountains, the rocky masses of which, throwing their shadow over the
-road, augmented the darkness. This road rose with a gentle ascent; and
-the horses and mules, probably fatigued with a long journey, travelled
-at a foot pace. The young girl, scarcely recovered from her fainting,
-had not been able to judge of the time that had elapsed since her
-abduction; and yet, by collecting her remembrances, and thinking at what
-hour she had been the victim of this odious attempt, she calculated
-that twelve hours must have passed away since she was made a prisoner.
-Overcome by the effort she had been forced to make in order to look
-around her, the poor girl let her head sink back again, stifling a sigh
-of despondency; and closing her eyes, as if to isolate herself the more,
-she plunged into sad and deep meditations.
-
-She was at least ignorant of whom she was with. Many times, it was true,
-Don Tadeo had spoken to her of an inveterate enemy, inveterate for her
-destruction; of a woman whose hatred watched her incessantly, ready to
-sacrifice her on the first favourable opportunity. But who was this
-woman? What cause had she for her hatred? Was she in the hands of this
-woman at that moment? And if so, why had she not already sacrificed
-her to her vengeance? From what motive had she been spared? For what
-punishment was she reserved?
-
-These thoughts and many others came in crowds to assail the maiden's
-bewildered mind. This uncertainty was for her an atrocious torture; at
-that moment, the truth would, perhaps, have been a consolation. Man is
-so constructed, that what he is most in dread of is the unknown; what he
-is ignorant of, assumes instinctively, in the prepossessed eyes of one
-whom a terrible danger menaces, gigantic proportions, a thousand times
-more terrific than the danger itself. The diseased imagination creates
-for itself phantoms which reality, however horrible it may be, puts
-to flight. In a word, the condemned prisoner who is led to punishment
-suffers more from the apprehensions which the fear of the death awaiting
-him inspires him with, than the physical pain of that death itself will
-cause him. Such was, at this moment, the situation of Dona Rosario; her
-mind, filled with inquietude and dark presentiments, made her dread
-nameless sufferings, the mere thought of which froze the young blood in
-her veins.
-
-The caravan still proceeded; it had left the ravine, and was climbing
-a path traced along the edge of a precipice, at the base of which
-could be heard the dull murmur of invisible water. At times, a stone,
-half-broken beneath the hoof of a mule, became detached, and rolled with
-a sinister noise down the side of the mountain, to engulf itself in the
-waters, into which it plunged with a dull plash, the sound of which
-ascended from the abyss. The wind howled through the pines and larches,
-the clashing branches of which showered a deluge of dry cones upon the
-travellers. At intervals the owl, and the screech owl, concealed in
-the crevices of the rocks, poured out into the night their plaintive
-notes, breaking the silence dismally. Furious barkings were heard in the
-distance; by degrees they grew nearer, and ended by forming a frightful
-concert, broken by the sharp voices of women and children, endeavouring
-to quiet them; lights appeared, and the caravan stopped. They had
-evidently arrived at the halt, at which they were to pass the rest of
-the night.
-
-The maiden cast an anxious but cautious look around her; but the flame
-of the torches agitated by the wind would not permit her to see anything
-but the dark outlines of some buildings and the shadows of several
-individuals who flitted about her, with cries and laughter--nothing
-more. The people of the escort were busily employed in unsaddling the
-horses and unloading the mules, amidst cries and oaths, and did not
-appear to bestow the least attention upon the young girl.
-
-A considerable time passed away; Dona Rosario did not know to what to
-attribute this unaccountable forgetfulness. At length she felt that
-someone took the mule by the bridle, and she heard him shout in a hoarse
-voice, _Arrea!_--the word with which the arrieros are accustomed to
-excite their beasts. Had she, then, been deceived? Was it not here they
-were to stop? What was the meaning of the halt, then? Why did a portion
-of the escort leave her?
-
-Her uncertainty was not of long duration; at the end of ten minutes at
-most, the mule stopped again, and the man who led it approached Dona
-Rosario. This man, clothed in the costume of the Chilian peasantry, wore
-an old straw Panama hat, the large brim of which, pulled down over his
-face, prevented her distinguishing his features. At the sight of this
-individual, the young girl felt an involuntary shudder run through her
-frame. The peasant, or pretended peasant, without addressing a word to
-her, withdrew the covering which enfolded her, untied the cord which
-bound her to the mule, and taking her in his arms, carried her with as
-much ease as if she had been a child, into a detached cabin a few paces
-distant, the door of which, standing open, seemed to invite them to
-enter.
-
-The interior of this cabin was dark. The young girl was laid upon the
-ground with a care and attention she did not expect. At the moment when
-he let her sink softly down from his arms to the ground, the man bent
-his head down towards her, and in a voice as inaudible as a breath, he
-whispered, "Courage! and hope!" and recovering himself quickly, went
-hastily out of the cabin, closing the door after him.
-
-As soon as he was gone, Dona Rosario sprang upon her feet. The two words
-pronounced by the unknown had sufficed to restore her presence of mind,
-and remove all her terrors. Hope, that universal panacea, that supreme
-good, which God, in His infinite mercy, has given to the unfortunate
-to help them to suffer, had suddenly re-entered her heart; she felt
-herself become strong, and ready to engage in the struggle with her
-unknown enemies. She knew now that a friend watched in secret over her,
-and, if required, his assistance would not be wanting; therefore it was
-almost with impatience, though still with fear, that she waited for her
-ravishers to signify their intentions.
-
-The place in which she was confined was completely dark. At the first
-moment she in vain endeavoured to distinguish anything in this chaos;
-but, by degrees, her eyes became accustomed to the darkness, and, in
-front of her, she perceived a faint light, which flitted between the
-badly-joined boards of a door. She then, with great precaution, for
-fear of arousing her invisible guardians, and stretching out her hand
-to keep her from contact with any obstacle she could not see, advanced
-cautiously, and listening attentively, towards the side from which came
-the light--a light which attracted her as instinctively as a flame
-attracts the imprudent moth whose wings it burns.
-
-The nearer she approached, the more distinct the light became, and the
-sound of a voice reached her ears. At length her extended hands touched
-the door, and leaning forward, she applied her eye to the chink. She
-stifled a cry of surprise, and, as at that moment the conversation,
-which had been for a short time interrupted, recommenced, she listened
-with intensity.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIII.
-
-ON THE WATCH.
-
-
-What she heard, but still more what she saw, necessarily powerfully
-interested Dona Rosario. In a vast room, dimly lighted by one of those
-yellow candles which the Chilians call _velas de cebo_, fastened to
-the wall by means of a ring, a woman, still young, and very handsome,
-attired in a riding dress of great richness, was seated on an ebony
-chair, covered with Cordova leather. With her right hand she played
-with a gold headed whip, and was speaking in an animated tone to a man
-who stood respectfully before her, hat in hand. This man, as well as
-Dona Rosario could make out, was the same who had carried her into the
-_cuarto_. The woman, whom Dona Rosario did not recollect ever to have
-seen, was no other than Dona Maria, the shameless courtesan, who, under
-the name of the Linda, enjoyed such a scandalous celebrity.
-
-Dona Maria's position threw the light of the candle full upon her face,
-and gave Dona Rosario an opportunity of distinguishing her features.
-She contemplated them with deep interest, for she felt instinctively
-that this woman was the enemy who, from her birth, had fatally followed
-her steps. She imagined that a decisive conference between her and
-the unknown was about to take place, and that in a few minutes her
-fate would be made known to her. And yet, at the aspect of this woman,
-whose bent brows, clear and haughty look, coldly compressed lips,
-and cruel words, revealed with the hatred which devoured her, it was
-neither a feeling of terror, nor a feeling of hatred, that the young
-girl experienced. Without knowing why, a sadness and an undefined pity
-for the very woman who was giving orders that made her shudder, took
-possession of her. She listened breathlessly, fascinated, scarcely
-knowing whether what she heard was really true, and fancying herself at
-times under the influence of some terrible hallucination.
-
-The two speakers, who knew not that they were either watched or
-overheard, resumed their conversation in an unrestrained voice. Dona
-Rosario, we may well suppose, did not lose a single word.
-
-"How is it," said the Linda, "that Joan has not come? I expected him."
-
-The man thus questioned cast a sharp look around him, and rolling up
-the broad brim of his hat in his fingers, replied with ill-dissembled
-embarrassment--
-
-"Joan sent me in his place."
-
-"And by what right," said the Linda, in a haughty tone, "does the fellow
-presume to confide to others the care of accomplishing the orders I give
-him?"
-
-"Joan is my friend," the man replied.
-
-"What are the ties that unite you to me:" she asked, contemptuously.
-
-"The mission you charged him with is accomplished."
-
-"Ay--but faithfully?"
-
-"The woman is there," he said, pointing to the room in which Dona
-Rosario was; "during the journey she has spoken to nobody, and I can
-guarantee that she does not know to what place she has been brought."
-
-At this assurance the look of Dona Maria softened a little, and it was
-in a less sharp and haughty tone she continued--
-
-"But why did Joan give up his place to you?"
-
-"Oh!" the man said with a feigned bluntness, belied by his cunning eye,
-"for a very simple reason; Joan is at this moment attracted towards the
-plain by the black eyes of the wife of a paleface, which sparkle like
-fireflies in the night. The woman's toldo is built in the country, near
-the tolderia which you call, I think, Concepcion. Although such conduct
-be unworthy of a warrior, his heart is flying constantly towards this
-woman, in spite of himself, and until he gain possession of her, he will
-never be in his senses."
-
-"Well, then," the Linda interrupted, stamping her foot with vexation,
-"why does not the fool carry her off?"
-
-"I proposed that to him."
-
-"And what did he say?"
-
-"He refused."
-
-Dona Maria shrugged her shoulders with a smile of disdain. "Still," she
-remarked, "all that does not tell me who you are."
-
-"I! I am an Ulmen in my tribe; a great warrior among the Puelches," he
-replied, proudly.
-
-"Ah!" she said, with an air of satisfaction, "you are an Ulmen of the
-Puelches, are you? Good! then I can depend upon your fidelity."
-
-"I am the friend of Joan," he remarked simply, with a respectful bow.
-
-"Do you know the woman whom you have brought here?" the Linda asked,
-darting at him a mistrustful glance.
-
-"How should I know her?"
-
-"Are you ready to obey me in everything?"
-
-"My obedience will depend on my sister; let her speak, and I will
-answer."
-
-"This woman is my enemy," said the Linda.
-
-"Must she die?" he asked, roughly, without lowering his eyes before the
-searching glances of the Linda.
-
-"Oh, no!" she cried eagerly; "these Indians are brutes--they understand
-nothing of vengeance! What use would her death be to me? It is her life
-I want."
-
-"Let my sister explain; I do not comprehend."
-
-"Death! that is nothing but a few instants of suffering, then all is
-over."
-
-"White death may be so, but an Indian death must be called for many
-hours before it answers."
-
-"I wish her to live, I tell you!"
-
-"She shall live. Ah!" he added, with a sigh, "the toldo of a chief is
-empty, its fires are extinguished."
-
-"Oh! oh!" the Linda interrupted; "have you no wives?"
-
-"They are dead."
-
-"And where is your tribe at this moment?"
-
-"Oh!" said the Indian, "far from here--ten suns' march, at least. I was
-returning to rejoin the warriors of my tolderia, when Joan charged me
-with this mission."
-
-There was a short silence, during which the Linda appeared to be
-reflecting. Dona Rosario redoubled her attention--she felt she was about
-to know her fate.
-
-"And pray," Dona Maria resumed, fixing her keen eyes upon the Indian,
-"what great interest detained you on the plains near the seashore?"
-
-"None; I came, as the other Ulmens did, to renew the treaties."
-
-"Had you no other reasons?"
-
-"None at all."
-
-"Listen to me, chief. You have, doubtless, admired the four horses
-fastened at the gate of this house?"
-
-"They are noble beasts," the Indian replied, his eyes glistening with
-the desire of possessing them.
-
-"Well, it only depends upon yourself that I should give them to you."
-
-"Oh! oh!" he cried, joyfully, "what must I do for that?"
-
-"Obey me," said the Linda, with a smile.
-
-"I will obey," he replied.
-
-"Whatever I command you?"
-
-"Whatever my sister commands."
-
-"That is well; but remember what I am going to say to you. If you
-deceive me, my vengeance will be terrible--it will follow you
-everywhere."
-
-"Why should I deceive my sister?"
-
-"Because your Indian race is so constituted--astute and roguish, ever
-ready to betray."
-
-A sinister flash gleamed from the downcast eye of the Puelche warrior;
-nevertheless, he replied in a calm tone--
-
-"My sister is mistaken; the Araucanos are loyal."
-
-"We shall see," she coldly remarked. "What is your name?"
-
-"The Musk Rat."
-
-"Very well; listen, Musk Rat, to what I am going to say."
-
-"My ears are open."
-
-"This woman, who, according to my orders, you brought here, must never
-again revisit the shores of the sea."
-
-"She shall never see them again."
-
-"I do not wish her to die--understand that; she must suffer," the Linda
-added, in a tone which made the unhappy girl tremble with fear.
-
-"She shall suffer."
-
-"Yes," said Dona Maria, with sparkling eyes, "I wish that, during a
-long course of years, she may suffer a martyrdom at every instant; she
-is young, she will have time to call upon death to deliver her from her
-misery before it deigns to listen to her. Beyond the mountains, far in
-the deserts, in the virgin forests of the Grou-Chaco, I am told that
-hordes of Indians exist who are ferocious and sanguinary, and bear a
-deadly hatred towards all of the white race."
-
-"Yes," said the Puelche, in a melancholy tone, "I have heard of these
-men from the chiefs of my tribe; they live only for murder."
-
-"That is it!" she said, with sinister delight. "Well, chief, do you
-think yourself able to traverse these vast deserts, and reach the
-Grou-Chaco?"
-
-"Why should I not?" the Indian replied, raising his head proudly, "Do
-there exist obstacles strong enough to resist the Araucano warrior in
-his course? The puma is the king of the forests, the vulture that of the
-heavens; but the Aucas is the king of the puma and the eagle; the desert
-is his--Guatechu has given it to him; his horse and his lance render him
-invincible and master of immensity."
-
-"Then my brother will accomplish this journey, which is impossible?"
-
-A disdainful smile played for an instant round the lips of the savage
-warrior.
-
-"I will accomplish it," he said.
-
-"Good! my brother is a chief--I perceive he is one now."
-
-The Puelche bowed modestly.
-
-"My brother will go there, then, and when he arrives in the Chaco, he
-will sell the pale girl to the Guayacuras."
-
-The Indian did not allow any mark of astonishment to be perceived upon
-his face.
-
-"I will sell her," he replied.
-
-"That is well!--my brother will be faithful?"
-
-"I am a chief; I have but one word, my tongue is not forked; but why
-should I take this pale woman so far?"
-
-Dona Maria cast a penetrating glance at him--a suspicion crossed her
-mind--the Indian perceived it.
-
-"I only made a simple observation to my sister; it concerns me little,
-and she need not answer me if she does not think proper," he said, with
-indifference.
-
-The brow of the Linda became serene again.
-
-"The remark is just, chief; I will answer it. Why take her so far, you
-asked me; because Antinahuel loves this woman--his heart is softened by
-her--and perhaps he will suffer himself to be moved by her prayers, and
-restore her to her family. But it shall not happen; she shall weep tears
-of blood; her heart shall break under the incessant pangs of grief; she
-shall lose everything, even hope!"
-
-After uttering these words, Dona Maria arose, with head erect, sparkling
-eyes, and extended arm; there was in her aspect something fatal and
-terrible, which terrified even the Indian, by nature so difficult to
-move.
-
-"Go," she cried, in a tone of command, "before she departs for ever,
-I will see this woman once--only once, and speak with her for a few
-minutes; she shall at least know me: bring her hither!"
-
-The Indian went out silently; this woman, so beautiful and so cruel,
-terrified him--she inspired him with horror.
-
-Dona Rosario, on hearing this atrocious sentence pronounced against her,
-fell senseless to the ground.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIV.
-
-FACE TO FACE.
-
-
-The door of the cuarto in which Dona Rosario was confined was thrown
-open, and the Puelche warrior appeared; he held in his hand a rude
-earthen lamp, the flame of which, although feeble, sufficed to
-distinguish objects. He had replaced his shabby hat upon his head, and
-its wide brim served as a mask to his features.
-
-"Come with me!" he said, in a rough voice, to the maiden.
-
-Conscious of the inutility of a resistance which could only be dangerous
-to her amidst the bandits who surrounded her, and bowing her head with
-resignation, she followed her guide in silence. Dona Maria had resumed
-her place in the ebony chair; with arms crossed, and her head hanging
-upon her bosom, she was buried in dark meditations. At the slight noise
-made by the footsteps of the young lady, she drew herself up, a flash of
-hatred gleamed from her dark eyes, and with, a gesture she commanded the
-Indian to retire. The Puelche obeyed.
-
-The two women examined each other intensely; their looks crossed; the
-hawk and the dove were face to face. A deathlike silence reigned in the
-apartment; at intervals the wind came in gusts and dismal moanings,
-through the ill-joined boards of the doors, shook the old building to
-its foundation, and agitated the flame of the only candle that illumined
-the vast gloomy room in which the two women were. After a sufficiently
-long pause, the Linda, who, with that instinct which women possess in
-such a high degree, had examined in detail, one by one, the numerous
-beauties of the charming girl who stood pale and trembling before her,
-at length spoke--
-
-"Yes," she said, in a hollow voice, as if speaking to herself, and
-overcome by the evidence of the fact, "yes, this girl is beautiful; she
-has everything to make her an object of love--to see her must be to
-love her; well, this beauty, which up to this time has been her joy and
-her pride, grief shall wither rapidly; before one year has passed away
-I am resolved that she shall become an object of pity and contempt for
-all. Oh!" she added, in a piercing, shrill voice, "I have her at length
-within the power of my vengeance!"
-
-"What have I done to you, madam, that you should hate me thus?" the
-maiden asked, in a plaintive voice, the sweet and melodious accent of
-which would have softened anyone but her to whom she spoke.
-
-"What have you done to me, silly creature?" the Linda cried, bounding
-up like a wounded lioness, and placing herself close in front of Dona
-Rosario--"what have you done to me?" and then added, with a loud
-laugh--"Ah! ah! that's true, _you_ have done nothing to me!"
-
-"Alas, madam! I do not even know you; this is the first time I have been
-in your presence; I, a poor young girl, whose life to the present time
-has passed away in retirement--how can I have offended you?"
-
-"Yes, I allow it," the Linda replied; "you have done nothing to me; and,
-personally, as you have just said, I have nothing to reproach you with;
-but, by making you suffer, learn that it is upon _him_ I avenge myself."
-
-"I do not understand what you mean, madam," the maiden said, simply.
-
-"Senseless fool, do not play with the lioness who is ready to devour
-you, or pretend to feign an ignorance of which I am not the dupe; if you
-have not already divined my name, I will tell it you--I am Dona Maria,
-whom they call the Linda--do you understand me now?"
-
-"Not more than I did before, madam," replied Dona Rosario, with an
-accent of frankness that shook the belief of her persecutor, in spite of
-herself; "I have never even heard that name."
-
-"Can that be true?" she cried, doubtingly.
-
-"I swear it is."
-
-Dona Linda strode about the apartment with long, hasty steps. Dona
-Rosario, more and more astonished, looked stealthily at this woman,
-without being able to account to herself for the emotion which her
-presence, and the sound of her voice, caused her to experience; it
-was not fear, still less was it joy, but an incomprehensible mixture
-of sadness, joy, pity, and terror; an undefinable feeling, which,
-far from creating repulsion, drew her towards a woman whose odious
-projects were no secret to her, and from whom she knew she had so much
-to dread. Singular sympathy; what Dona Rosario felt towards the Linda,
-the Linda felt towards Dona Rosario: in vain she called to her aid the
-remembrance of all the wrongs with which she fancied she had to reproach
-the man whom she wished to strike in the person of the young girl; in
-the innermost recesses of her heart, a voice, which constantly gained
-strength, spoke to her in favour of the maiden whom she was about to
-sacrifice to her hatred; the more she endeavoured to overcome this
-sentiment, for which she could not account, the more powerless she found
-her efforts become; at length, she was on the point of being softened.
-
-"Oh!" she murmured, passionately, "what is going on within me? Am I
-weak enough to allow myself to be subdued by the tears of that paltry
-creature?"
-
-Like Indian warriors, who, when fastened to the stake of blood, sing
-their own exploits to encourage them to endure bravely the tortures
-which their executioners silently prepare, the Linda recalled the
-maddening remembrance of all the outrages Don Tadeo had loaded her with;
-and with flashing eyes and trembling lips, she stopped short in front of
-Dona Rosario.
-
-"Listen to me, girl," she said, in a voice which passion caused to
-tremble, "this is the first and last time we shall be in the presence of
-each other; and you shall know why I bear you such hatred. What you will
-learn will be hereafter, perhaps, a consolation to you, and help you to
-bear with courage the miseries I reserve for you," she added, with the
-laugh of a demon.
-
-"I will listen to you, madam," Rosario replied, meekly, "although I am
-certain that what you are about to say cannot, in any sense, render me
-guilty with respect to you."
-
-"Do you think so?" the Linda said, in a tone of ironical compassion;
-"well, then, listen; we have time to talk, as you will not leave this
-place for an hour."
-
-This allusion to her approaching departure made the poor girl shudder,
-by recalling to her all that the departure threatened.
-
-"A woman," the Linda continued, "a young and beautiful woman, more
-beautiful than you, fragile child of cities, whom the least storm
-bends like a weak reed--a woman, I say, had for love married a man,
-also young, and handsome as the evil angel before his fall, who with
-perfidiously golden words, by opening before her immense and unknown
-horizons, had so seduced her, the poor, poor girl, that in a few days
-he induced her to abandon stealthily the roof which had sheltered her
-infancy, and to which her aged father in vain recalled her up to the day
-of his death, that he might bless and pardon her."
-
-"Oh, that is frightful!" cried Dona Rosario.
-
-"Why so? as he had married her, morality was satisfied, in the eyes
-of the world. This woman was pure, and could thenceforward move with
-head erect before the crowd which had hailed her fall with laughter and
-contempt. But everything passes away in this world, and most quickly of
-all, the love of the most passionate man. Only a year after marriage
-this woman, alone in the most retired room of her dwelling, wept over
-the remembrance of the happiness which had left her for ever. Her
-husband had deserted her! A child born of this union, a little fair
-girl, a rosy-lipped cherub, whose eyes reflected the azure of the
-heavens, was the sole consolation which in her misfortunes was left to
-the poor abandoned mother. One night, when she was plunged in sleep, her
-husband stole like a thief into her house, seized the child, in spite
-of the cries of the desolate mother, who threw herself in tears at his
-feet, and implored him by all he held sacred in the world. After roughly
-repulsing the despairing mother, who sank dying on the cold slabs of the
-floor, this heartless and pitiless man disappeared with the child."
-
-"And the mother?" Dona Rosario anxiously asked, much affected by the
-story which the Linda told, entirely to her own advantage.
-
-"The mother," she continued, in a low, broken voice, "the mother was
-doomed never to see her child again. She never has seen her! Prayers,
-threats, everything in turn, have been employed without success. And
-now, this mother, who adores her child, and would sacrifice her life
-for her,--this mother has vowed a hatred against this man, whom she so
-fondly loved, and who showed no pity to her, which no vengeance can
-satisfy! Now, then, young girl, do you know the name of this mother?
-Say, do you know it? No, you do not? Well, then, I am this mother! and
-the man who ravished from her all her happiness--the man whom she hates
-as she does the demon whose heart he bears, is Don Tadeo de Leon!"
-
-"Don Tadeo!" Rosario cried, starting back with surprise.
-
-"Yes!" the Linda said, furiously; "yes, Don Tadeo, your lover!"
-
-The maiden sprang towards Dona Maria, and seizing her arm violently, and
-placing her face, inflamed with anger, close to that of the courtezan,
-who was stupefied at the energy she could not have expected from this
-delicate creature, cried indignantly,--
-
-"What have you dared to say, madam? Don Tadeo my lover! It is false,
-madam!"
-
-"Can this be true?" the Linda asked, eagerly. "Can I have been so
-grossly mistaken? But then," she added, mistrustfully, "who are you? and
-by what title does he keep you always with him?"
-
-"I will tell you who I am, madam!" Rosario replied, proudly.
-
-All at once the hasty gallop of several horses was heard from without,
-mingled with cries and oaths.
-
-"What can the matter be?" said Dona Maria, turning pale.
-
-"Oh!" said Dona Rosario, clasping her hands fervently; "oh, my God! are
-you sending me liberators?"
-
-"You are not free yet," the Linda said, with a bitter smile.
-
-The tumult increased greatly; the door, violently pushed from without,
-flew open, and several men rushed into the room.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXV.
-
-THE REVOLT.
-
-
-The multiplicity of the scenes we have to describe, and the exigencies
-of our story, compel us to abandon Dona Rosario and the Linda,
-and return to Valdivia, where the revolt had assumed the gigantic
-proportions of a revolution. Electrified by the heroic conduct of the
-King of Darkness, the patriots fought with the greatest obstinacy.
-The Dark-Hearts appeared to have the gift of ubiquity; their numbers
-increased, they were everywhere at the head of the insurgents, exciting
-them by gesture and voice; but, above all, by their example. The city
-was completely cut up by barricades, against which the few troops who
-remained faithful to General Bustamente struggled in vain. Beaten back
-by the enemies who on all sides rose up against them to the thousand
-times repeated cries of "Our country!" "Chili Liberty!" the soldiers
-retreated, step by step, abandoning, one after another, the different
-posts of which they had been in possession at the commencement of the
-action, and rallied upon the Plaza Mayor, the outlets of which they had
-barricaded in their turn.
-
-The city was in the power of the insurgents; for as the battle from this
-moment was concentrated at one point, it was not difficult to foresee
-with which party the victory would remain; for the soldiers, discouraged
-by the ill success of their _coup de main_, and sensible of being the
-champions of a lost cause, only fought to obtain honourable conditions.
-General Bustamente's officers, and the senators whom he had brought
-with him as partizans, trembled when thinking of the fate that awaited
-them if they fell into the hands of their enemies. Success justifies
-everything: from the moment they failed to succeed they became traitors
-to their country, and, as such, had no right to a capitulation. They
-therefore excited their soldiers to fight valiantly, promising them
-speedy assistance, and trying to revive their courage by telling them
-that their adversaries were merely citizens, whom they could easily
-overcome if they made a bold attempt, or even resisted for an hour
-longer.
-
-The general who commanded the garrison, and whom we saw upon the steps
-of the cabildo read with so much arrogance the decree which changed the
-form of government, bit his lips with rage and performed prodigies of
-valour, to give Bustamente time to arrive. As soon as he saw the turn
-things had taken, he sent off an express for the General with the utmost
-promptitude. This express was Diego, the old soldier who was so devoted
-to General Bustamente.
-
-"Lieutenant," he said, in conclusion, "you see in what a position we
-are; you must reach the General at all risks."
-
-"I will reach him, General; be at ease on that head!" Diego replied,
-intrepidly.
-
-"And I will endeavour to hold out till your return."
-
-Don Diego, before he finished speaking, had ridden desperately at
-the ranks of the insurgents, spurring on his horse, and waving
-his sword with menacing rapidity round his head. The Dark-Hearts,
-astonished by such an attack on the part of a single man, at the first
-moment unconsciously opened their ranks before him as to a canister
-shot, incapable of resisting the impetuous shock of this apparently
-invulnerable demon, who mowed down all that came in his way. Diego
-skilfully took advantage of the disorder produced on the enemy by his
-furious assault; he kept pushing on, and, after incredible efforts,
-succeeded in getting out of the city. As soon as he was in safety, the
-overexcitement which till that time had sustained him, suddenly sank,
-and at a few paces from the gates he was forced to stop to take breath,
-and restore his confused ideas to a little order. The old soldier washed
-the sides and nostrils of his horse with a little brandy and water;
-and as soon as this duty was performed, aware that the fate of his
-companions depended upon his speed, he sprang into his saddle and set
-off with the fleetness of an arrow.
-
-The General did not delay his return to Valdivia a minute, for he felt
-that success would be an immense advantage to him; and a check, if he
-were beaten, irreparable. As a conqueror, his march to Santiago would
-be nothing but a triumphant march; the authorities of the cities he
-passed through would rival each other in ranging themselves beneath his
-standard; whereas, if he were forced to abandon Valdivia as a fugitive,
-he would be tracked like a wild beast, and obliged to seek safety in
-a prompt flight, either in Bolivia or Buenos Aires, and the projects
-he had nourished so long, and of which he believed he had beforehand
-assured the success, would be deferred, or perhaps destroyed for ever.
-Thus the General was a prey to one of those cold furies, which are so
-much more terrible, because they cannot be exhibited outwardly.
-
-The horsemen advanced amidst a cloud of dust raised by their precipitate
-course, rushing along the road like a whirlwind, and with a noise like
-thunder. Two lances' length in advance of the soldiers, Don Pancho,
-bending over the neck of his horse, with pale brow and clenched teeth,
-galloped at full speed, keeping his eyes fixed upon the lofty steeples
-of Valdivia, whose dark shadows became more enlarged on the horizon
-every minute. Within half a mile of the city he halted his squadron. The
-sharp pattering of musketry resounded strongly, mingled at intervals
-with the dismal, rolling bass of cannon; the battle, therefore, must
-still be going on. The General hastened to make his last preparations
-before attempting an attack he hoped would prove decisive. The foot
-soldiers dismounted, and formed in platoons, and firearms of all kinds
-were loaded.
-
-The troops brought up by the General were not numerous from the European
-point of view, according to which we are accustomed to see great masses
-in conflict; they, at most, did not exceed eight hundred men. In Europe
-it is customary to say that victory is most likely to attend large
-battalions: in America, where the largest armies are frequently of not
-more than three thousand men, this idea becomes naturally modified,
-and it is generally the most skilful or the most brave man who remains
-master of the field of battle.
-
-Don Pancho was a rough soldier, accustomed to the struggles of civil
-wars, which, for the most part, consist of audacious _coups de main_.
-Endowed with courage bordering on rashness, and devoured by ambition, he
-prepared, with the greatest coolness, to re-establish his compromised
-affairs by an irresistible attack. The country in the neighbourhood of
-Valdivia is a real English garden, interspersed with thickets, apple
-orchards, copses, and slender streams of water rippling away to the
-river. It was very easy for the General to conceal his arrival. Two
-soldiers were detached as scouts, in order to learn the state of things.
-At the expiration of a few minutes they returned. The outskirts of the
-city were deserted, the insurgents had driven the troops back into the
-centre, and, according to the scouts, with the imprudence of citizens
-metamorphosed suddenly into soldiers, they had left no reserve, or even
-placed sentinels, to secure their rear against a surprise.
-
-This information, instead of restoring confidence to the General, made
-him knit his brows; he thought it must be a manoeuvre, and whilst his
-officers were laughing with all their might at the able tactics of
-the insurgents, he judged it necessary to redouble his precautions.
-The troops were divided into two bodies, which, in case of need, were
-to support each other; and, as they were attacking a city entirely
-barricaded, the lancers were ordered to dismount, and reinforce the
-infantry. Only one squadron of a hundred horsemen remained in the
-saddle, concealed about a quarter of a mile from the place, in order to
-support a retreat, or to put the fugitives to the sword, if the surprise
-succeeded. These arrangements made, the General made an earnest address
-to his soldiers, to whom he promised, in the event of success, the
-pillage of the city. He then placed himself at the head of the first
-detachment, and gave the order, "March! Forward!"
-
-The troops advanced in the Indian fashion, taking advantage of every
-inequality in the ground, and of every tree to conceal themselves, and
-arrived thus, without giving alarm, to within pistol shot of the city.
-The dead silence which continued to prevail around him, contrasted in
-a dismal manner with the musketry and cannon which became more audible
-as they advanced, and greatly increased the General's anxiety. A dark
-presentiment warned him that he was threatened by some great danger,
-which he knew not how to avoid, from being ignorant of what kind it
-might be. The least hesitation at this critical minute might bring on
-irreparable misfortunes. The General grasped the hilt of his sword
-firmly in his clenched hand, and turning towards his soldiers, shouted
-in a loud, clear voice, "Forward!"
-
-The detachment, which only awaited this order, rushed forward shouting,
-and, at double-quick time, cleared the space between them and the city.
-Windows, doors, all were closed; and had it not been for the distant
-report of musketry, the city might have been thought deserted. The first
-detachment, finding no obstacles before them, continued their march;
-and the second detachment also entered. But then, all at once, behind,
-before, and on the flanks of the troops, a loud cry burst forth; and
-at every window appeared men with muskets in their hands. Don Pancho
-Bustamente was surrounded, he had allowed himself to be taken--pardon us
-the triviality of the comparison--like a rat in a trap. The soldiers,
-astonished for a second, soon recovered themselves; they faced front and
-rear, and attacked the double barrier that enclosed them: but though
-they desperately rushed against it, they could not force it. They then
-plainly perceived they were lost, that they could expect no quarter, and
-prepared to die like brave men.
-
-The General cast fierce and desperate glances around him, looking,
-but unsuccessfully, for a point of issue from the menacing forest of
-bayonets crossed before him, and which enclosed him as in a steel
-network. Some authors have amused themselves at the expense of the
-wars and battles of the Americans, in which they say the two armies
-always take care to place themselves out of reach of cannon shot, so as
-never to have a single man killed. This pleasantry, which is in very
-bad taste, has assumed the proportions of a calumny it is but just
-to refute, for it attacks the honour of the Americans of the South,
-who, I unhesitatingly assert, are endowed with intrepid courage--a
-courage that was brilliantly displayed during the wars of independence
-against the Spaniards. Unhappily, at present this courage is employed
-in fratricidal struggles, without any understood object. Thrice the
-soldiers rushed upon the insurgents, and thrice were they repulsed
-with enormous loss. The battle was horrible, without mercy on either
-side; they fought hand to hand, foot to foot, breast to breast, to
-the last breath, only falling to die. The troops, decimated by this
-frightful carnage, gradually gave ground; the space they occupied
-became narrower and narrower, and the moment did not appear distant
-when they would disappear under the popular flood which continued to
-ascend, and threatened to engulf them under its irresistible mass. The
-General collected about fifty men resolved to die or open a passage, and
-he made a desperate attempt. It was a collision of giants. For a few
-minutes, the two masses launched one against the other remained almost
-motionless, from the force of the blow with which they met; Don Pancho,
-flourishing his sword around him, and standing in his stirrups, struck
-down all who opposed his passage.
-
-Suddenly a man placed himself before him, like a rock which rises from
-the depths of the sea. At the sight of him the General paused, in spite
-of himself, with a stifled cry of surprise and rage. This man was Don
-Tadeo de Leon, his mortal enemy; whom he had once condemned to death,
-and who had, in a miraculous manner, survived his execution. But, now!
-God seemed to place him fatally before him, to be the instrument of his
-vengeance, and the cause of his ruin and his shame.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVI.
-
-THE LION AT BAY.
-
-
-"My God!" said the General, "am I the dupe of an hallucination?"
-
-"Ah! ah!" the King of Darkness exclaimed, with an ironical smile, "you
-recognize me then, General?"
-
-"Don Tadeo de Leon!" Don Pancho cried, in horror. "Do the dead then
-arise from the tomb? Oh! I hoped that what I heard was false. It is you!"
-
-"Yes," Don Tadeo replied, in a stern voice, "you are not mistaken, Don
-Pancho; I am Don Tadeo de Leon, whom you caused to be shot upon the
-Plaza Mayor of Santiago. Your spies have informed you correctly."
-
-"Man or demon," the General shouted, half choking with rage, "I will not
-yield to you! I will fight you as a man, and send you back again to the
-hell from which you have escaped!"
-
-His enemy smiled disdainfully.
-
-"Your hour has arrived, Don Pancho," he said; "you are due to the
-justice of the Dark-Hearts."
-
-"You do not hold me yet, wretched traitor! If I cannot conquer, I can
-die, weapon in hand, like a soldier."
-
-"No, your hour has struck, I tell you; you are ours, you shall die, but
-not the death of a soldier; you shall be executed by our justice!"
-
-"If that be the case," the General yelled, brandishing his sword, "come
-and take me!"
-
-Don Tadeo did not deign a reply; he gave a signal, and a lasso whizzed
-through the air, launched by an invisible hand, and fell round the
-General's shoulders. Astonished by this unexpected attack, before he
-could make the least possible resistance, he received a terrific shock,
-lost his stirrups, was pulled from his horse, and dragged amongst
-the insurgents. The astounded General, half mad with rage and shame,
-exhausted himself in vain efforts; nearly strangled by the lasso which
-flayed his neck, his face assumed a purple tint; his eyes, injected with
-blood, seemed starting from their sockets, and a white foam flowed from
-the corners of his discoloured lips. Don Tadeo contemplated him for a
-moment with a mixture of pity and triumph.
-
-"Free him from that slipknot," he said. "Secure his person, but treat
-him with respect."
-
-The soldiers, terrified at this prompt capture, which they had not at
-all expected, stood downcast and silent; in their stupor forgetting even
-the use of their arms. Don Tadeo turned towards them:
-
-"Surrender," he shouted, "surrender! the man who misled you is in our
-power; your lives shall be spared."
-
-The soldiers consulted each other for an instant with their eyes; and
-then, as if by a spontaneous movement, they threw down their muskets,
-crying aloud:
-
-"Chili! Chili! liberty! liberty!"
-
-"That is well!" said Don Tadeo; "leave the city, encamp at the distance
-of a mile, and await the orders which shall soon be transmitted to you."
-
-The conquered soldiers, with downcast looks, followed the road they had
-traversed an hour before; they passed through the silent ranks of the
-insurgents, which opened to give them passage. Without loss of time,
-Don Tadeo, followed by a crowd of his partisans, directed his course
-towards the Plaza Mayor, where the battle still raged. The soldiers,
-solidly intrenched in the Plaza, and masters of the cabildo, fought
-valiantly, hoping still for the assistance of General Bustamente, of
-whose fate they were ignorant. Although reduced to a small number, these
-troops occupied a formidable position, in which it was almost impossible
-to force them, without resolving to suffer great loss. Persuaded that
-they only required to gain time, the soldiers fought with the energy of
-despair, defending inch by inch the barricade behind which they were
-sheltered.
-
-But the day was passing away, their ammunition was growing exhausted, a
-great number of their comrades were stretched dead at their feet, and
-nothing could support them but the hope that the succour so impatiently
-expected was at hand. In the heat of their own contest they had not
-heard the noise of the battle fought by Don Pancho at the city gates, in
-which but few shots had been fired, as it had been principally decided
-by cold steel. Discouragement, however, began to affect the bravest,
-the general who commanded even felt his energy diminish, and he looked
-around him with great anxiety.
-
-Dejected, and with downcast eyes, the senator, who had been the bearer
-of the fatal proclamation, trembled in all his limbs; he regretted,
-but too late, having thrown himself into this hornet's nest; and he
-offered up the most magnificent vows to the innumerable saints of the
-golden Spanish legend, if they would bring him safe and sound through
-the perils which surrounded him. The worthy man had not any warlike
-instincts; and we can safely affirm, without fear of contradiction, that
-if he had had the slightest suspicion that things would have taken the
-turn they did, he would have remained quiet in his charming quinta of
-Corro-Azul, in the environs of Santiago, where his life glided away so
-softly, so happily, and, above all, so free from care. Unfortunately,
-as it sometimes happens in this nether world, where, whatever Candide
-may say, everything is not for the best, in the best of worlds, Don
-Ramon Sandias--so the worthy senator was named--had not been able duly
-to appreciate the charms of that calm life; ambition had gnawed at his
-heart, though he had nothing to wish for; and he had, as we have seen,
-plunged up to the neck in a hornet's nest, from which he did not know
-how to emerge.
-
-At every shot he heard, the poor senator jumped like a Guanaco, with
-startled eyes; and when, now and then, in spite of the precautions he
-had taken, the sinister hissing of a bullet resounded in his ear, he
-threw himself flat on his face, murmuring all the prayers that his
-troubled memory could recall.
-
-At first, the contortions and cries of Don Ramon had very much amused
-the officers and soldiers among whom accident had placed him; they had
-even taken delight in augmenting his terrors; but, at length, as happens
-more frequently in such cases than people fancy, the pleasantries had
-ceased; Don Ramon's terrors had communicated themselves to the laughers,
-who saw, with fright, that their position was becoming every minute more
-desperate.
-
-"The devil take the poltroon!" the General at length cried, angrily;
-"cannot you keep your trembling limbs still? Caspita! console yourself,
-they won't kill you more than once."
-
-"Ah! that is very easy for you to say," the senator replied, in a broken
-voice; "I am no soldier; it is your trade to be killed, it is all one to
-you."
-
-"Hum!" said the General, "not quite so much so as you may think; but
-comfort yourself; if this goes on a little longer, we shall all go
-together."
-
-"What is that you say?" the poor man muttered, with redoubled fear.
-
-"Caramba! it is clear as day, if Don Pancho does not make haste and
-come, all of us here will die."
-
-"But I do not wish to die!" said the senator, bursting into tears; "I
-am no soldier. Oh! I implore you, my good, my inestimable Don Tiburcio
-Cornejo, let me go away!"
-
-The General shrugged his shoulders.
-
-"What consequence can it be to you?" the senator continued, in a
-supplicating tone; "do save my life! show me which way I can get out of
-this cursed confusion."
-
-"Eh! how the devil do I know?"' the General said, impatiently.
-
-"Well, now, look here," said the senator; "you owe me two thousand
-piastres, which I won of you at Monte, do you not?"
-
-"What then?" the General, vexed at this ill-timed remark, said, sharply.
-
-"Get me away from here, and I will cry quits."
-
-"You are a fool, Don Ramon; do you think if I could get safely away from
-here, that I would remain?"
-
-"I see what you are," said the senator, despondingly; "you are but a
-false friend, you desire my death, you thirst for my blood."
-
-In short, the poor man was almost mad; he knew not what he said,
-terror had deprived him of the little sense he ever possessed. But, in
-reality, the position became every instant more critical; the carnage
-was horrible, the soldiers fell one after another beneath the bullets
-of the insurgents, who were sheltered by every corner of the plaza. Two
-or three sorties attempted by the troops had been vigorously repulsed;
-and hence, decimated as they were, all they could possibly do now was to
-prevent their intrenchments from being carried.
-
-All at once the senator bounded forward like a chamois; he made directly
-to the General, and seized his arm.
-
-"We are saved!" he cried; "thanks be to God! we are saved!"
-
-"Hilloh! what's the matter now, Don Ramon? What bee has stung you? are
-you really mad?"
-
-"I have not been stung," the senator replied, as fast as he could speak,
-"nor am I mad; we are saved; I tell you, we are saved!"
-
-"Well, how? what is it? Is Don Pancho coming at last?"
-
-"Don Pancho, indeed! I wish he were at the devil!" "Well, what is it,
-then?"
-
-"Why, do you not see, yonder? look, behind the barricade which blocks
-the entrance of the Calle de la Merced."
-
-"What is there to see?"
-
-"Why, a flag of truce! a white flag!"
-
-"Ah!" said the General, eagerly, "let us look! let us look!"
-
-And he did look.
-
-"True!" he said, at the expiration of a minute. "Success to all cowards,
-say I, for having good eyes; I did not see it."
-
-"Ay, but I did," said Don Ramon, rubbing his hands, quite revived, and
-marching off with great glee. But, at that moment, a nearly spent ball
-came ricocheting and whizzing close to his ear.
-
-"Lord, have mercy upon me!" he cried, falling flat on his face, and
-so remaining, as motionless as if he were dead, although he had not
-received a scratch.
-
-In the meantime, the General had likewise caused a flag of truce to be
-hoisted on his intrenchments, and had given orders for the firing to
-cease. The noise of the combat being hushed, the senator, like a rabbit
-relieved from alarm, raised his head a little; reassured by the silence
-which prevailed, he sat up, looking on all sides with the greatest
-anxiety, and, at length, convinced that the peril was over, he contrived
-to get upon his legs, which, however, trembled so frightfully under him,
-that they could scarcely support him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVII.
-
-THE TRUCE.
-
-
-As soon as the flag of truce was hoisted, firing at once ceased on both
-sides. The troops at bay, who had ceased to hope for succour, were not
-sorry to find that the insurgents saved their military honour by being
-the first to demand a parley. General Cornejo, in particular, was tired
-of the hopeless combat, which he had bravely maintained all the morning.
-
-"Well, Don Ramon," he said, addressing the senator in a more cordial
-tone than he had before employed, "I think I have found means to enable
-you to escape without striking a blow; so what we agreed to stands good,
-does it not?"
-
-The senator looked at him with a bewildered air; the worthy man had not
-the least recollection of what he had either said or done while the
-balls were whistling round him.
-
-"I do not at all understand you, General," he replied.
-
-"Poor man! pretend to be innocent, do!" said the General, laughing, and
-slapping him on the shoulder; "do you wish to persuade me you are like
-the Guanacos, which lose their memory through trembling with fear?"
-
-"Upon my honour," said the senator, "I swear, Don Tiburcio, that I have
-not the least remembrance of having promised you anything."
-
-"Ah! well, it is possible, for you were devilishly frightened. Come, I
-will refresh your memory: pay attention!"
-
-"You will give me great pleasure."
-
-"Well, I doubt that! but that is of no consequence. You said to me, on
-the spot where we now stand, not more than half an hour ago, that if I
-found the means of securing your escape, safe and sound, you would hold
-me quits for the two thousand piastres I lost to you, and owed you."
-
-"Do you flatter yourself that that is the truth?" said the senator,
-whose avaricious instincts began to revive, as fear departed.
-
-"I am sure it is. Ask these gentlemen," the General asked, turning
-towards some officers who stood by.
-
-"Oh, certainly! true to the letter," they said, with a laugh.
-
-"Ah! ah!"
-
-"Yes, and as I would not listen to you, you added--"
-
-"What!" Don Ramon, who knew of old the man he had to deal with, said,
-with a start--"do you mean to say that I added something?"
-
-"The devil! yes," said the other. "You added this; and I repeat your
-own words. You said, as plainly as you could speak--'And I will give a
-thousand piastres in addition.'"
-
-"Oh, that is not possible!" the senator ejaculated, quite beside himself.
-
-"Perhaps I did not understand you?"
-
-"That must be it."
-
-"Do you admit you mentioned the two thousand?" asked the General,
-quietly.
-
-"Not at all! not at all!" replied Don Ramon, quite confounded by the
-laughter of the bystanders.
-
-"Perhaps you meant more; well, we will not haggle about that."
-
-"I never said a word of the kind!" the exasperated senator exclaimed.
-
-"In that case," said the General, with a stern frown, and surveying him
-coolly, "you mean to say that I have told a falsehood."
-
-Don Ramon became aware that he had made a false move, and drew back.
-
-"Pardon me, my dear General," he said, in the most amiable voice
-possible, "you are perfectly right; I do now remember it was two
-thousand piastres I promised you in addition."
-
-It was now the General's turn to be at a loss, for this generosity on
-the part of the senator, whose avarice was proverbial, confused him; he
-was suspicious of some snare or trick.
-
-"But," Don Ramon added, with an air of triumph, "you have not saved me."
-
-"What do you mean by that?"
-
-"Why, Santiago! as we are going to hold a parley, you are too late, and
-our bargain is void."
-
-"Oh! oh!" said Don Tiburcio, with a jeering smile, "you think so, do
-you?"
-
-"Caspita! I am sure of it."
-
-"And yet you are deceived, my dear friend, as you shall judge: come with
-me, the flag of truce is now crossing the barricades, and in an instant
-you will learn that you have never been so near death as now."
-
-"You are joking."
-
-"I never joke about serious circumstances."
-
-"In Heaven's name explain yourself!" said the poor senator, whose fears
-had all returned.
-
-"Lord! it is the simplest thing in the world," said the General,
-carelessly; "I have but to declare to the leader of the revolt, and be
-assured I will not fail to do so, that I only acted by your orders."
-
-"Well, but that is not true," interrupted Don Ramon, in great alarm.
-
-"I know that," the General replied, bluntly; "but, as you are a senator,
-they will believe me, and you will be fully and fairly shot, and that
-will be a pity."
-
-Don Ramon was thunder-struck by this piece of implacable logic; he found
-that he was in a hobble, from which he could not possibly escape without
-paying handsomely. He looked at his _friend_, who surveyed him with a
-pitilessly ironical smile, whilst the officers bit their lips to keep
-from laughing; he stifled a sigh, and resolving to make the best of
-it, very much against his will, he said, inwardly cursing the man who
-exposed him in such a cynical fashion--
-
-"Well, Don Tiburcio, I admit that I owe you two thousand piastres, but
-_I_ will pay you."
-
-This was the only epigram he ventured to indulge in regarding the
-General's willingness to pay; but the latter was magnanimous, he took
-no notice of the offensive part of the speech, and rendered quite
-cheerful by the bargain he had concluded, he prepared to listen to the
-propositions of the officer with the flag of truce, who was brought to
-him with his eyes bandaged. This officer was Don Tadeo de Leon.
-
-"What do you come here for?" the General asked.
-
-"To offer you good terms, if you will surrender," Don Tadeo replied, in
-a firm voice.
-
-"Surrender!" the General shouted with a laugh; "you must be mad, sir!"
-and, turning towards the soldiers who had brought Don Tadeo, he added,
-"Remove the bandage from the eyes of this caballero."
-
-The bandage fell accordingly.
-
-"Look round you," said the General, haughtily, "do we look like people
-asking for a favour?"
-
-"No, General, you are a stout soldier, and your troops are brave; you
-ask no favour of us, it is we who come to you to offer to lay down our
-arms on both sides, and put an end to this fratricidal contest," Don
-Tadeo replied, with an air of grandeur.
-
-"Who are you, may I ask, sir?" said the General, struck with the noble
-bearing of the man who was speaking to him.
-
-"I am Don Tadeo de Leon, whom your leader ordered to be shot."
-
-"You!" cried the General, "you here!"
-
-"I, myself; and I have another name."
-
-"Tell it to me, sir."
-
-"I am called the King of Darkness."
-
-"The leader of the Dark-Hearts!" the General murmured, starting, in
-spite of himself, and surveying the speaker with uneasy curiosity.
-
-"Yes, General, I am the leader of the Dark-Hearts, but I am still
-something more."
-
-"Explain yourself, sir," the General asked, who began to be in doubt how
-to behave toward the strange personage who was speaking to him.
-
-"I am the leader of the men whom you term insurgents, but who have,
-in reality, only taken up arms to defend the institutions you have
-overthrown, and the constitution you have violated."
-
-"Sir!" said the General, "your words----"
-
-"Are severe, but just," continued Don Tadeo; "ask your own loyal,
-soldier's heart, General, and then tell me which side is right."
-
-"I am not a lawyer, sir," Don Tiburcio replied impatiently; "you have
-yourself said that I am a soldier, and, as such, I confine myself to
-obeying, without discussion, the orders I receive from my leaders."
-
-"Let us not lose time uselessly in idle speeches, sir; will you, or will
-you not, lay down your arms?"
-
-"By what right do you make me such a proposal?" the General asked, whose
-pride revolted at being forced to hold a parley with a citizen.
-
-"I could answer you," replied Don Tadeo, sternly, "that it is by the
-right of the stronger, and that you know as well as I do that you
-are combating for a lost cause, and that you are persisting without
-advantage in a senseless struggle; but I prefer addressing myself to
-your heart, and saying, why should brothers and fellow countrymen
-continue to cut each other's throats?--why should we any longer shed
-such precious blood? Make your conditions, General, and be assured that
-for the sake of protecting your soldier's honour, that honour which is
-ours also, as among the troops against whom we fight are our relations,
-friends, and countrymen, we will grant them as extensively as you can
-desire."
-
-The General felt himself moved, this noble language had found an echo
-in his heart; he looked down on the ground, and reflected for several
-minutes; at length, raising his head, he replied--
-
-"Sir, believe me it costs me much not to answer as I could wish what you
-have done me the honour to say to me; but I have a leader above me."
-
-"In your turn please to explain yourself, sir," said Don Tadeo.
-
-"I have sworn to Don Pancho Bustamente to defend his cause to the death."
-
-"Well?"
-
-"Well, sir, unless Don Pancho Bustamente were killed or a prisoner,--in
-either of which cases I should consider myself freed from my oath to
-him,--I will lay down my life for him."
-
-"Is that the only reason that prevents you, General?"
-
-"Yes, the only one."
-
-"In case General Bustamente should be either killed or a prisoner, you
-would surrender?"
-
-"Instantly, I repeat."
-
-"Well," replied Don Tadeo, stretching out his arm in the direction of
-the barricade by which he had come, "look yonder, General."
-
-Don Tiburcio looked in the direction indicated, and uttered a cry of
-surprise and sorrow. Don Pancho Bustamente appeared at the top of
-the barricade; his head was bare, and two armed men watched all his
-movements.
-
-"Do you see him?" Don Tadeo asked.
-
-"Yes," replied the General, sorrowfully; "we all surrender, sir;" and
-turning the point of his sword to the ground, he bent the blade with the
-intention of breaking it. Don Tadeo stopped him by seizing the sword,
-which he, however, returned to him immediately, saying--
-
-"General, keep that weapon, it will serve you against the enemies of our
-country."
-
-The General made no reply; he silently pressed the hand which the King
-of Darkness held out to him, and turning away to conceal the emotion
-which agitated him, he wiped away a tear that had fallen upon his grey
-moustache.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXVIII.
-
-TWO ROGUISH PROFILES.
-
-
-The city was quiet, the revolt was over, or, to speak more logically,
-the revolution was complete. The soldiers, after laying down their arms,
-had evacuated Valdivia, which was left completely in the power of the
-Dark-Hearts. As soon as peace was re-established, the Dark-Hearts gave
-orders that the barricades should be destroyed, and that all traces of
-the sanguinary struggle should be removed as quickly as possible. By the
-force of accomplished facts alone, Don Tadeo de Leon found himself quite
-naturally invested with power, and in command of the province, with the
-faculties of a dictator.
-
-"Well," he asked Valentine, "what do you think of what you have seen?"
-
-"Faith," the Parisian replied, with characteristic bluntness, "I think
-people must come to America to see how men can be caught with hook and
-line like simple gudgeons."
-
-Don Tadeo could not refrain from smiling at this whimsical answer.
-
-"Do not leave me," he said; "all is not over yet."
-
-"I ask no better; but, our friends yonder, don't you think they will be
-very uneasy at our long absence?"
-
-"Can you for a moment imagine that I have forgotten them? Within an hour
-you will be at liberty. Come with me; I want to show you two faces to
-which our victory has given an expression very different from that which
-they generally wear."
-
-"That will be curious," said Valentine.
-
-"Yes," Don Tadeo replied, "or hideous, whichever you please."
-
-"Hum! man is not perfect," said Valentine, philosophically.
-
-"Fortunately not; if he were, he would be execrable," Don Tadeo remarked.
-
-They entered the cabildo, the doors of which were guarded by a
-detachment of Dark-Hearts. The vast saloons of the palace were invaded
-by an eager crowd, who came to salute the rising sun; that is to say,
-they came to offer the spectacle of their baseness to the fortunate man,
-whom, no doubt, they would have stoned if success had not crowned his
-audacious attempt. Don Tadeo passed, without seeing them, through the
-ranks of these sycophants, the sworn courtiers of every authority, as
-void of honour as of shame, possessing but one single talent--that of
-making bendings to which it would seem impossible that the vertebral
-column of a man could attain, however flexible it may be. Valentine, who
-followed the footsteps of his friend, feigned to take for himself the
-greater part of the genuflexions meant for Don Tadeo, and bowed to the
-right and left with imperturbable coolness and assurance.
-
-The two gentlemen, after many delays caused by the increasing crowd,
-which closed around them, reached at last a retired apartment, in which
-there were only two persons. These two persons were General Tiburcio
-and Senator Don Ramon Sandias. The physiognomy of these persons offered
-a striking contrast. The General, with a sad face and a pensive step,
-walked about the apartment, whilst the senator, luxuriantly reclining
-on a fauteuil, with a smile upon his lips, his visage expanded, and
-one leg thrown over the other, was fanning himself carelessly with an
-embroidered handkerchief of the finest cambric. At the sight of Don
-Tadeo, the General advanced rapidly towards him; as for the senator, he
-sat upright in his chair, assumed a serious look, and waited.
-
-"Sir," the General said, in a low voice, "two words."
-
-"Speak, General," replied Don Tadeo; "I am entirely at your disposal."
-
-"I have some questions which I wish to put to you."
-
-"You may be assured, General, that if it be in my power to answer you, I
-will not hesitate to satisfy you."
-
-"I am convinced of that, and it is that which emboldens me to speak."
-
-"I am all attention."
-
-The General hesitated for a moment, but seemed at length determined.
-
-"Good heavens, sir!" said he, "I am an old soldier, unacquainted with
-diplomacy; I had a friend, almost a brother, and I am a prey to mortal
-uneasiness on his account."
-
-"And that friend?"
-
-"Is General Bustamente. You must know," he added, warmly, "that we have
-been fellow soldiers thirty years; and I should wish--" here he stopped,
-as if in doubt, looking earnestly at the person he was addressing.
-
-"You would like?" said Don Tadeo, quietly.
-
-"To know the fate that is reserved for him."
-
-Don Tadeo gave the General a melancholy glance.
-
-"To what purpose?" he murmured.
-
-"I beg of you."
-
-"You insist on knowing?"
-
-"I do."
-
-"General Bustamente is a great criminal. While a leader in power, he
-wished to change the form of government against the will of the people
-from whom he held his position, and in contempt of the laws, which he
-shamelessly trampled underfoot."
-
-"That is but too true," said the General, whose brow turned crimson.
-
-"General Bustamente has been implacable during the course of his too
-long career; you know that he who sows the wind can only hope to reap
-the tempest."
-
-"Hence!"
-
-"The same implacability will be shown to him that he has shown to
-others."
-
-"That is to say?"
-
-"He will, in all probability, be condemned to death."
-
-"Alas! I expected as much; but will this condemnation of which you
-speak, be long delayed?"
-
-"Two days at most; the commission which must try him will be formed
-today."
-
-"Poor friend!" said the General, piteously; "and that's the end! Will
-you grant me a favour, sir?"
-
-"Name it."
-
-"As the General must die, it would be a consolation to him to have a
-friend by his side."
-
-"No doubt it would."
-
-"Allow me to be his guard. I am sure he will be happy to know that it is
-I who have the duty of watching over him and leading him to death. And
-then I shall not, at least, abandon him till the last minute."
-
-"So be it,--your request is granted. Have you anything else to say? I
-shall be happy to serve you."
-
-"No, I thank you, sir; that is all I desired,--Ah! one word more!"
-
-"Speak."
-
-"Can I be allowed to take this guard soon?"
-
-"Immediately, if you like."
-
-"I thank you, sir."
-
-And after profoundly bowing to Don Tadeo, the General quitted the room
-with a hasty step.
-
-"Poor man!" said Valentine.
-
-"Eh?" cried Don Tadeo.
-
-"I said, poor man!"
-
-"Oh, yes; I heard you plainly enough, but of whom were you speaking?"
-
-"Of the unfortunate man who has just left us."
-
-Don Tadeo shrugged his shoulders, and Valentine looked at him with
-surprise.
-
-"Do you think you know whence the solicitude of this poor man, as you
-call him, for his friend arises?"
-
-"Why, from his friendship for him; that is clear."
-
-"You think so, do you?"
-
-"I can think nothing else."
-
-"Well, then, allow me to tell you you are completely mistaken; the poor
-General is only desirous to be near his companion in arms, that he may
-have the opportunity of suppressing the proofs of his complicity in the
-rash enterprise of yesterday; proofs which Don Pancho most likely has
-about him, and which the other wishes to destroy at all hazards."
-
-"Can that be possible?"
-
-"By Saint Jago, yes! He desires to be constantly with him, that he may
-not communicate with anyone--why, he would kill him, if necessary."
-
-"Oh! this is infamous!"
-
-"But so it is."
-
-"Bah! it gives me a nausea."
-
-"Well, do not be sick yet."
-
-"Why not?"
-
-"Because," Don Tadeo continued, pointing to the senator, "I think we
-have something here that will bring the agreeable feeling to its height."
-
-As soon as Don Ramon saw the General leave the apartment, he quitted his
-easy chair, and advanced towards Don Tadeo, bowing obsequiously.
-
-"To whom have I the honour of speaking?" said the King of Darkness, with
-studied politeness.
-
-"Sir," the other replied, with a jaunty, gentlemanly air, "my name is
-Don Ramon Sandias, and I am a senator."
-
-"How can I be of service to you, sir?" said Don Tadeo, bowing.
-
-"Oh," Don Ramon replied, affectedly; "as regards myself, personally, I
-ask nothing."
-
-"Indeed!"
-
-"Caspita! no; I am rich, what more can I want? But I am a Chilian, a
-patriot, sir; and, what is more, a senator. Placed in an exceptional
-position, I am bound to give my fellow citizens unequivocal proofs of my
-devotion to the holy cause of liberty. Are you not of my opinion, sir?"
-
-"Entirely."
-
-"I have heard, sir, that the wretched cabecilla, the cause of this silly
-movement, which brought the republic within two inches of ruin, is in
-your hands."
-
-"Yes, sir," replied Don Tadeo, with imperturbable coolness, "we have
-been fortunate enough to obtain possession of his person."
-
-"You are, doubtless, going to bring this man to trial?" Don Ramon asked,
-in a somewhat familiar tone.
-
-"Within forty-eight hours, sir."
-
-"That is right, sir. It is thus that justice should be dealt to these
-shameless agitators, who, in contempt of the sacred laws of humanity,
-seek to plunge our beautiful country into the gulf of revolutions."
-
-"Sir!"
-
-"Pardon me for speaking thus," said Don Ramon, with well-feigned
-enthusiasm; "I feel that my freedom goes rather far, but my indignation
-carries me away, sir; it is quite time that these makers of widows and
-orphans should receive the exemplary chastisement they merit. I cannot
-think, without trembling, of the manifold evils that would have fallen
-upon us, if this miserable adventurer had succeeded."
-
-"Sir, this man is not yet condemned."
-
-"And that is exactly what brings me to you, sir. As a senator, and
-a devoted patriot, I claim of you the right which belongs to me, of
-presiding over the commission whose duty it is to sit in judgment upon
-him."
-
-"Your request is granted, sir," Don Tadeo replied, who was unable to
-repress a smile of contempt.
-
-"Thank you, sir!" said the senator, with an expression of joy; "however
-painful the duty may be, I shall know how to perform it."
-
-After bowing deeply to Don Tadeo, the senator left the room in high
-spirits.
-
-"You see," said Don Tadeo, turning to Valentine, "Don Pancho had two
-friends upon whom he thought he could depend: one took upon him to
-proclaim him, the other to defend him. Well, in one he finds a gaoler,
-in the other an executioner."
-
-"It is monstrous!" said Valentine, with disgust.
-
-"No," replied Don Tadeo; "it is logical, that's all;--he has failed."
-
-"I have had enough of your politic men, with two faces, and neither of
-them a true one," replied Valentine; "allow me to return to our friends."
-
-"Begone, then, since you wish it."
-
-"Thanks!"
-
-"You will come back to Valdivia immediately, will you not?"
-
-"Pardieu, will I!"
-
-"Will you have an escort?"
-
-"For what purpose?"
-
-"Ah! that is true; I am always forgetting that you never apprehend
-danger."
-
-"I am only anxious about our friends; that is why I leave you."
-
-"Have you any cause for apprehension?"
-
-"None; but yet, a vague uneasiness, which I can not account for, compels
-me to remain no longer away from them."
-
-"Begone, then, as quickly as you please, my friend; but pray be watchful
-over the poor child, Rosario."
-
-"Be at ease on that score; within three hours she shall be here."
-
-"That is understood: a pleasant ride to you, and remember that I shall
-look for you with impatience."
-
-"Time to go and return, that is all."
-
-"Till then, adieu!"
-
-Valentine left the room, went straight to the stables, saddled his horse
-himself, and set off at a gallop. He had told Don Tadeo the truth: a
-vague uneasiness disturbed him, he had a presentiment of some misfortune
-or another.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXXIX.
-
-THE WOUNDED MAN.
-
-
-Let us return to the Count de Prebois Crance. When the abduction was
-committed, that part of the plain where Don Tadeo had pitched his camp
-was deserted. The crowd, attracted by curiosity, had all gone to the
-side where the renewal of the treaties was taking place. Besides, the
-measures of the ravishers had been so judiciously taken, all had passed
-so quickly, without resistance, without cries or tumult, that no alarm
-had been given, and no one could suspect what was going on. The cries of
-"murder!" uttered by the wounded young man were too faint to be heard,
-and the pistol shots he had fired were confounded with the other noises
-of the festival.
-
-Louis remained for a considerable time lying senseless in front of the
-tent, the blood flowing from two wounds. By a singular chance, the
-peons, the arrieros, and even the two Indian chiefs, who could not think
-there was anything to be dreaded, had all gone, as we have said, to be
-present at the ceremony. When the cross had been planted, and the toqui
-and the General had gone, arm in arm, to the tent of the latter, the
-crowd began to separate into little groups, and soon dispersed, each
-returning to the spot where he had established his temporary camp.
-
-The Indian chiefs were the first to quit the scene; now that their
-curiosity was satisfied, they reproached themselves for having been so
-long absent from their friend. On approaching the little camp, they were
-surprised at not seeing Louis, and a certain appearance of disorder in
-the baggage filled them with uneasiness. They quickened their pace, and
-the nearer they drew the more evident this disorder became in their
-eyes, accustomed to remark those thousands of signs which escape the
-eyes of the white man. In fact, the passage left free in the inclosure
-formed by the bales, seemed to have been the scene of a struggle; the
-footmarks of several horses were strongly imprinted in the moist earth,
-and some bales had even been removed, as if to widen the entrance, and
-lay scattered about. All these indications were more than sufficient for
-the chiefs; they exchanged an anxious glance, and rushed into the camp.
-
-Louis was still lying where the assassins had left him, stretched across
-the entrance of the tent, his discharged pistols in his hands, his head
-thrown back, his mouth half open, and his teeth clenched. The blood had
-ceased to flow. The two men looked at him for a moment with a feeling of
-stupor. His countenance was of a livid paleness.
-
-"He is dead!" said Curumilla, in a voice stifled by emotion.
-
-"He seems so," Trangoil-Lanec replied as he knelt down by the body.
-
-He raised the young man's senseless head, untied his cravat, and opened
-his vest; then they perceived the two gaping wounds.
-
-"This is a revenge!" he murmured.
-
-"What is to be done?" said Curumilla, shaking his head discouragingly.
-
-"Let us try to recover him--I hope he is not dead."
-
-And then, with infinite address and incredible celerity, the two Indians
-bestowed upon the wounded man the most intelligent and most effective
-cares. For a long time all were useless. At length a sigh, faint as a
-breath, exhaled painfully from the oppressed breast of the young man; a
-slight flush tinted his cheeks, and, after several efforts, he opened
-his eyes. Curumilla, after having washed the wounds with clean cold
-water, applied a cataplasm to them of bruised oregano leaves.
-
-"Loss of blood alone has made him faint," he said; "the wounds are wide,
-but not deep, and not at all dangerous."
-
-"But what has been going on here?" Trangoil-Lanec asked.
-
-"Hush!" said Curumilla, laying his hand upon his comrade's arm; "he
-speaks."
-
-Indeed, the young man's lips did move silently; but, at length, he
-pronounced with a great effort, and in a voice so low that the Indians
-scarcely heard it--that single word which for him contained everything--
-
-"Rosario!"
-
-Then he sank back again.
-
-"Ah!" cried Curumilla, as if a sudden light had broken upon him,
-"where is the young palefaced maiden?" and he sprang into the tent, "I
-understand it all now!" he said, returning quickly to his friend.
-
-The Indians lifted up the wounded man gently in their arms, and carried
-him into the tent, where they placed him in Rosario's empty hammock.
-Louis recovered his senses, but almost immediately was overcome by
-a profound drowsiness. After having made him as comfortable as they
-could, the two Indians left the tent, and began, with the instinct of
-their race, to seek on the ground for indications they could ask of no
-witness, but which would show them traces they could understand. Now
-that the murder and the abduction had taken place, it became necessary
-to get upon the track of the ravishers, and endeavour, if possible, to
-save the young girl. After minute researches, which did not last less
-than two hours, the Indians returned to the front of the tent; they sat
-down, face to face, and smoked for a few minutes in silence.
-
-The peons and arrieros had returned from the ceremony, and expressed
-the greatest terror on learning what had taken place during their
-absence. The poor people did not know what to do; they trembled when
-they reflected upon the responsibility which rested upon them, and upon
-the terrible account Don Tadeo would require of them. After the two
-chiefs had smoked a few minutes, they extinguished their pipes, and
-Trangoil-Lanec began:
-
-"My brother is a wise chief, let him say what he has seen."
-
-"I will speak, since my brother desires it," Curumilla replied, bowing
-his head; "the pale maiden with the blue eyes has been carried off by
-five horsemen."
-
-To this Trangoil-Lanec made a sign of assent.
-
-"These five horsemen came from the other side of the river; their
-footmarks are strongly imprinted on the ground, which was wetted in the
-places where the horses trod with their dripping hoofs; four of these
-horsemen are Huiliches, the fifth is a paleface; when they reached the
-entrance of the camp, they stopped and consulted an instant, then four
-of them dismounted; the trace of their footsteps is visible."
-
-"Good!" said Trangoil-Lanec, "my brother has the eyes of a Quanaco;
-nothing escapes him."
-
-"Of the four horsemen who dismounted, three are Indians, as is easily
-perceived by the impression of their naked feet, the great toe of which,
-accustomed to the stirrup, is very wide apart from the other toes; but
-the fourth is a Muruche, for the rowels of his spurs have left deep
-marks all around. The three first have crept up to the tent, where Don
-Louis was talking with the young blue-eyed maiden, and, consequently,
-with his back towards those who came towards him; he was attacked
-unexpectedly, and fell without having time to defend himself: then the
-fourth horseman sprang forward like a puma, seized the maiden in his
-arms, and after jumping a second time over the body of Don Louis, went
-straight to his horse, followed by the three Indians. But Don Louis
-got up, first on his knees, and then on his feet; he fired his pistols
-at the ravishers, and one of them fell mortally wounded. It was the
-paleface, for a pool of blood marks the place of his fall, and, in
-his agony, he pulled up the grass with his clenched hands; then his
-companions dismounted again, took him up, and fled. Don Louis, after
-discharging his pistols, had a faintness come over him, and fell down
-again: that is what I have learnt."
-
-"Good!" Trangoil-Lanec replied, "my brother knows everything; after
-taking up the body of their comrade, the ravishers crossed the river,
-and went in the direction of the mountains. Now, what will my brother
-do?"
-
-"Trangoil-Lanec is an experienced chief, he will wait for Don Valentine;
-Curumilla is younger, he will go upon the track of the ravishers."
-
-"My brother has spoken well; he is wise and prudent; he will find them."
-
-"Yes, Curumilla will find them," the chief replied, laconically.
-
-After saying these words, he arose, saddled his horse, and left the
-camp; Trangoil-Lanec soon lost sight of him. He then returned and took
-his place by the wounded man. The day passed away thus. The Spaniards
-had all left the plain; the Indians, for the most part, had followed
-their example; there only remained a few tardy Araucanos; but these,
-also, were preparing to depart. Towards evening, Louis found himself
-much better; he was able, in a few words, to relate to the Indian what
-had passed; but he told him nothing new, he had divined it all.
-
-"Oh!" said the young man, as he ended, "Rosario! poor Rosario is lost!"
-
-"My brother must not be depressed with grief," Trangoil-Lanec replied
-softly; "Curumilla is upon the track of the ravishers; the young pale
-maiden will be saved!"
-
-"Do you seriously tell me that, chief? Is Curumilla really in pursuit
-of them?" the young man asked, fixing his anxious eyes upon the Indian;
-"can I indeed hope that?"
-
-"Trangoil-Lanec is an Ulmen," the Araucano replied proudly: "no lie has
-ever soiled his lips, his tongue is not forked; I repeat that Curumilla
-is in pursuit of the ravishers. Let my brother hope; he will see again
-the little bird which sings such sweet songs in his heart."
-
-A sudden flush crossed the young man's face at these words; a sad smile
-curled his pale lips; he gently pressed the hand of the chief, and
-closing his eyes, he sank gently back in the hammock. All at once the
-furious galloping of a horse was heard from without.
-
-"Good!" Trangoil-Lanec murmured, looking at the wounded man, whose
-regular breathing proclaimed that he was sleeping peacefully: "what will
-Don Valentine say to all this?"
-
-And he strode out hastily to meet the Parisian, whose face was the
-picture of anxiety.
-
-"Chief!" he cried, in a tremulous voice, "can what the peons say be
-true?"
-
-"Yes!" the chief replied coolly.
-
-The young man sank down, as if thunder-struck. The Indian seated him
-gently upon a bale, and placing himself beside him, pressed his hand,
-saying in a soothing tone:
-
-"My brother has much courage."
-
-"Alas!" the young man exclaimed, in an agonized voice, "Louis, my poor
-Louis, dead, assassinated! Oh!" he added, with a terrible gesture, "I
-will avenge him! I will solely live to accomplish that sacred duty!"
-
-The chief looked at him for an instant attentively.
-
-"What does my brother mean?" he asked; "his friend is not dead."
-
-"Oh! why do you seek to deceive me, chief?"
-
-"I speak the truth; Don Louis is not dead," the Ulmen replied, in such
-an imposing voice that it carried conviction to the wounded heart of the
-young man.
-
-"Oh!" he cried, impetuously, and springing up, "he lives!--is that
-possible?"
-
-"He has received two wounds."
-
-"Two wounds!"
-
-"Yes, but my brother can be comforted, they are not dangerous; in a
-week, at latest, they will be cured."
-
-Valentine remained for an instant stupefied by this good news, after the
-catastrophe which the peons and arrieros had announced to him.
-
-"Oh!" he exclaimed, throwing himself into the arms of the chief, whom
-he pressed with a kind of frenzy to his breast, "it is true, is it
-not?--his life is not in danger?"
-
-"No, no, my brother can reassure himself; loss of blood alone reduced
-him to the state of torpor into which he fell. I will answer for his
-recovery."
-
-"Thanks! thanks, chief! I can see him, may I not?"
-
-"He is asleep."
-
-"Oh! I will not wake him, be assured of that; I only wish to see him."
-
-"See him, then," Trangoil-Lanec replied, smiling.
-
-Valentine went in. He looked at his friend, peacefully sleeping; he
-leant softly over him, and impressing a kiss upon his brow, whispered--
-
-"Sleep, dear brother, I will watch."
-
-The lips of the wounded man moved; he murmured--
-
-"Valentine, save her!"
-
-The Parisian knitted his brow, and drew himself up again.
-
-"Come here, chief," he said to Trangoil-Lanec, "and tell me the details
-of what has passed, that I may know how to avenge my brother, and save
-her he loves."
-
-The two men quitted the tent.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XL.
-
-AHAUCANIAN DIPLOMACY.
-
-
-Antinahuel had not remained long inactive. Scarce had General
-Bustamente's escort disappeared in the cloud of dust, ere he remounted
-his horse, and, followed by all the Araucano chiefs, crossed the river.
-When he arrived on the other bank, he planted his lance in the ground,
-and turned towards the herald who was beside him, ready to execute his
-orders.
-
-"Let the three toquis, the Ulmens, and the Apo-Ulmens meet here in an
-hour," he said; "the fire of council shall be lighted on this spot for a
-grand council. Begone!"
-
-The herald bowed down to his horse's neck and set off at full speed.
-Antinahuel cast a glance around him. All the chiefs had regained their
-huts; one warrior alone remained. On perceiving him a smile stole over
-the lips of the toqui. This warrior was a man of lofty stature, proud
-carriage, and haughty countenance, whose piercing look conveyed a fierce
-and cruel expression. He appeared to be in the prime of life, that is to
-say, about forty years of age; he wore a poncho of exceedingly fine lama
-wool, striped with striking colours, while the long silver-headed cane
-which he held in his hand proclaimed him an Apo-Ulmen. He replied to the
-toqui's smile by a look of intelligence, and, bending to his ear, said,
-with an accent of gratified hatred--
-
-"When the cougars tear each other to pieces, they prepare a rich quarry
-for the eagles of the Andes."
-
-"The Puelches are eagles," Antinahuel replied; "they are masters of the
-other side of the mountains; they leave to the Huiliche women the care
-of weaving their ponchos."
-
-At this sarcasm, launched against the Huiliches, a fraction of the
-Araucano people, who devote themselves principally to agriculture and
-the breeding of cattle, the Apo-Ulmen frowned.
-
-"My father is severe with his sons," he said, in a husky voice.
-
-"The Black-Stag is a formidable chief in his nation," Antinahuel
-remarked, in a conciliatory tone; "he is the first of the Apo-Ulmens
-of the province of the maritime country. His heart is Puelche; my soul
-rejoices when he is at my side. Why is it that the Ulmens are not of the
-same temper as he?"
-
-"My brother has explained the reason. Obliged to live in continual trade
-relations with the miserable Spaniards, the tribes of the flat country
-have laid down the lance to take up the pickaxe: they have become
-cultivators; but let not my father be deceived,--the old spirit of their
-race still dwells within them, and on the day when they are called on to
-fight for their independence, all will rise at once to punish those who
-would attempt to enslave them."
-
-"Can that be true?" Antinahuel cried, stopping his horse short, and
-looking in the speaker's face; "may they be depended upon?"
-
-"What is the use of speaking of the subject at this moment?" said the
-Apo-Ulmen, with a bantering smile; "has not my father just come from
-renewing the treaties with the palefaces?"
-
-"That is true," said the toqui, darting a keen look at the Indian
-warrior: "peace is secured for a long time."
-
-"My father is a wise chief, that which he does is well done," the other
-replied, casting down his eyes.
-
-Antinahuel was preparing to reply, when an Indian arrived at full speed,
-and, with a prodigy of skill which these matchless horsemen alone
-can execute, he stopped suddenly before the two chiefs, and stood as
-motionless as a statue of bronze. The panting sides of his horse, which
-ejected clouds from his nostrils, and was spotted with white foam,
-showed that he had ridden far and fast. Antinahuel looked at him for an
-instant.
-
-"My son Theg-teg--the thunderer--has made a rapid journey."
-
-"I have executed the orders of my father."
-
-At these words, out of politeness, the Apo-Ulmen pressed the sides of
-his horse to retire, but Antinahuel laid his hand upon his arm.
-
-"Black-Stag may remain," he said; "is he not my friend?"
-
-"I will remain if my father wishes it," the chief answered, quietly.
-
-"Let him remain, then; his brother has no secrets from him;" and turning
-to the still motionless warrior, he added, "my brother can speak."
-
-"The Chiaplos are fighting," the latter replied; "they have dug up the
-hatchet and turned it against their own breasts."
-
-"Oh!" the toqui exclaimed with feigned astonishment; "my brother must be
-mistaken, the palefaces are not cougars, to devour each other."
-
-And he turned towards Black-Stag, with a smile of undefinable expression.
-
-"Theg-teg is not mistaken," the Indian warrior replied, gravely; "his
-eyes have seen clearly: the stone tolderia, which the palefaces call
-Valdivia, is at this moment a more ardent furnace than the volcano of
-Autaco, which serves as a retreat for Guecubu, the genius of evil."
-
-"Good!" the toqui remarked, coldly, "my son has seen well; he is a
-warrior brave in battle, but he is likewise prudent; did he stand apart
-to rejoice, without seeking to learn which side prevailed?"
-
-"Theg-teg is prudent, but when he looks he means to see; he knows all,
-my father may question him."
-
-"Good! the great warrior of the palefaces set out from here to fly to
-the help of his soldiers; the advantage is with him."
-
-The Indian smiled, but made no reply.
-
-"Let my brother speak!" Antinahuel resumed; "the toqui of his nation
-interrogates him."
-
-"He whom my brother names as the great warrior of the palefaces, is the
-prisoner of his enemies; his soldiers are dispersed like grains of wheat
-scattered over the field."
-
-"Wah!" Antinahuel cried with feigned anger, "my brother has a lying
-tongue, what he says cannot be true; does the eagle become the prey of
-the owl? The great warrior has an arm strong as the thunder of Pillian.
-Nothing can resist it."
-
-"That arm, however powerful, has not been able to save him; the eagle
-is captive: the courageous puma was surprised by cunning foxes; he has
-fallen, treacherously overcome, into the snare they had laid before his
-feet."
-
-"But his soldiers? the great toqui of the whites had a numerous army."
-
-"I have told my father; the chief being made captive, the soldiers,
-bewildered and struck with fear by Guecubu, fell beneath the blows of
-their angry enemies."
-
-"The chiefs who were conquerors, no doubt, pursued them."
-
-"What for? The palefaces are women without courage: as soon as their
-enemies weep and pray for pardon they forgive them."
-
-At this news the toqui could not repress a movement of impatience, but
-he soon recovered himself.
-
-"Brothers ought not to be inexorable," he said, "when they lift the
-hatchet against each other: they may wound a friend without wishing it.
-The pale warriors have done well."
-
-The Indian bowed if as assenting.
-
-"What are the palefaces doing now?" the chief continued.
-
-"They are assembled round the council fire."
-
-"Good! They are wise men. I am satisfied with my son," Antinahuel
-added, with a gracious smile; "he is a warrior, as skilful as brave;
-he may retire, and take the repose necessary after so long a journey."
-"Theg-teg is not fatigued; his life is my father's," the warrior said
-with a bow; "he may dispose of it at his pleasure."
-
-"Antinahuel will remember his son," the toqui said with a sign of
-dismissal.
-
-The Indian bowed respectfully to his chief, and pressing his knees
-whilst shortening the bridle, he made his horse perform a curvet,
-brought it to the ground with an extraordinary bound, and went off
-caracoling. The toqui looked after him in apparent abstraction; then
-addressing the Apo-Ulmen--
-
-"What does my brother think of that which this man has said?" he asked.
-
-"My father is the wisest of the toquis of his nation, the chief the most
-venerated by the Araucanian tribes; Pillian will breathe words into his
-mind which will mount to his lips, and which we shall listen to with
-respect," Black-Stag replied, evasively, fearing to compromise himself
-by too frank a reply.
-
-"My brother is right," the toqui said, with a haughty glance; "I have my
-nymph!"
-
-The Apo-Ulmen bowed with an air of conviction. We beg our readers to
-observe, with regard to this expression, which for the first time
-has fallen from our pen, that in the Araucanian mythology, besides
-an infinite number of gods and goddesses, there are what are called
-spiritual nymphs, who perform towards man the office of familiar genii.
-There is not a renowned chief among the Araucanos who does not glorify
-himself with the idea of having one of these in his service. Hence,
-what Antinahuel said, instead of disturbing Black-Stag, gave him, on
-the contrary, a greater veneration for his chief; for he also flattered
-himself with having a familiar spirit at his command, although he did
-not dare to proclaim it aloud. At this moment the Araucanian drums and
-trumpets sounded loudly--the _chasquis_ were calling the chiefs to
-council.
-
-"What will my father do?" asked the Apo-Ulmen.
-
-"Man is weak," Antinahuel replied; "but Pillian loves his sons, the
-Moluchos, he will inspire the words I shall pronounce; my only desire is
-the happiness of the Araucano nation."
-
-"My father has convoked the great Auca-coyog of the nation; did he then
-suspect the news he has just received?"
-
-"Antinahuel knows everything," he answered, with a smile.
-
-"Good! I know what my father thinks."
-
-"Perhaps."
-
-"Let my father remember the words I have spoken."
-
-"My ears are open, my son may repeat them,"
-
-"When cougars tear each other to pieces, they prepare a rich quarry for
-the eagles of the Andes."
-
-"Good!" said Antinahuel, with a laugh; "my son is a great chief, let him
-follow me to the Auca-coyog, the warriors are waiting for us."
-
-The two warriors exchanged a look of undefinable meaning; these two men,
-so cunning and dissimulating, had compromised themselves to each other
-without avowing anything. They directed their course at a gallop towards
-the spot where the principal chiefs awaited them, drawn up in a circle
-around a fierce fire, the smoke of which ascended in graceful eddies
-towards heaven.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLI.
-
-THE COUNCIL
-
-
-The Araucanos, whom certain travellers, either ill-informed or of
-bad faith, persist in representing as savage men plunged in the most
-frightful barbarism, are, on the contrary, a relatively civilized
-people. Their government, the origin of which is lost in the night of
-time, and which, at the period of the Spanish conquest, was as well
-organized and carried out as easily as at the present day, is, as
-we have said in a preceding chapter, an aristocratic republic, with
-essentially feudal tendencies. This government, which affects all the
-appearances of the feudal system, has all its good qualities and all its
-defects. Hence, except in time of war, the toquis possess but the shadow
-of sovereignty, and the power resides in the entire body of the chiefs,
-who, in questions of importance, decide in a general diet, called the
-_Auca-coyog_, the great council, or council of free men, for such is
-the name they claim for themselves, and very justly, for no power has
-yet been able to subdue them. These councils are generally held in the
-presence of all, in a vast prairie.
-
-Antinahuel had eagerly seized the pretext of the renewal of the treaties
-to try and obtain from the chiefs authority to carry into execution the
-projects which had been so long ripening in his brain. The Araucanian
-code, which contains all the laws of the nation, created an obligation
-for his doing so, from which even his renown and popularity were
-powerless to release him. But he hoped to overcome the opposition of
-the chiefs, or their repugnance to submit to his will, by means of his
-eloquence and the influence which, under many circumstances, he had
-exercised over the minds of the Ulmens, even those most determined to
-resist him.
-
-The Araucanos cultivate with success the art of speaking, which among
-them leads to public honours. They make it a point to speak their own
-language well, and to preserve its purity by guarding particularly
-against the introduction of foreign words. They carry this so far,
-that when a white establishes himself amongst them, they oblige him
-to abandon his own name and take one of their country. The style of
-their speeches is figurative and allegorical. They call the style of
-parliamentary harangues _coyagtucan;_ and it must be observed that these
-speeches contain all the essential parts of true rhetoric, and are
-almost all divided into three heads.
-
-The few words we have said will suffice to show that the Araucanos are
-not so savage as we have been led to suppose. In short, a small people,
-who, without allies, isolated at the extremity of the continent, have
-since the landing of the Spaniards on their coasts, that is to say,
-during three hundred years, constantly and alone resisted European
-armies composed of experienced soldiers and greedy adventurers, whom no
-difficulty was likely to stop, and who have preserved their independence
-and their nationality intact, are, in our opinion, respectable in
-every point of view, and ought not to be stigmatized as barbarians
-with impunity--the sad, despicable vengeance of those proud and
-impotent Spaniards, who have never been able to conquer them, and whose
-degenerate sons at this very day pay them a tribute, under the lying
-excuse of an annual offering.
-
-We who, thrown by the chance of our adventurous travels among these
-indomitable tribes, have lived many days with them, have had an
-opportunity of judging soundly of these ill-understood people. We have
-been able to appreciate all that is really simple, great, and generous
-in their character. Terminating here this somewhat long digression, a
-tribute of gratitude paid to ancient and dearly-beloved friends, we will
-resume our narrative.
-
-Antinahuel and Black-Stag arrived at the place where the chiefs were
-assembled. They dismounted and joined the groups of Ulmens. The chiefs,
-who were peacefully chatting together, at their arrival became silent,
-and, for a few minutes, not a word was heard in the assembly. At length
-Cathicara, the toqui of the Pire-Mapus, made a few steps towards the
-centre of the circle, and took the initiative.
-
-Cathicara was an old man of seventy, of majestic bearing, and imposing
-countenance. A renowned warrior in his youth, now that many winters had
-wrinkled his brow and silvered his long hair, he enjoyed, by just title,
-a great reputation for wisdom in his nation. Descended from an old race
-of Ulmens, continually opposed to the whites, he was an inveterate enemy
-of the Chilians, against whom he had long waged war. He was acquainted
-with the secret views of Antinahuel, of whom he was the most devoted
-friend and partisan.
-
-"Toquis, Apo-Ulmens and Ulmens of the valiant nation of the Aucas, whose
-immense hunting grounds cover the surface of the earth," he said, "my
-heart is sad; a cloud covers my mind, and my eyes, filled with tears,
-are constantly cast towards the ground; whence comes it that grief
-devours me? Why does the joyous song of the goldfinch no longer sound
-cheerfully in my ears? why do the rays of the sun seem less warm to me?
-why, in short, does nature appear less beautiful to me? Will you tell
-me, my brothers? You are silent; shame covers your brows; your humbled
-eyes are cast down--have you nothing to reply? It is because you are a
-degenerate people! your warriors are women, who instead of the lance
-take up the spindle; because you bow basely beneath the yoke of these
-Chiaplos, these Huincas, who laugh at you, for they know that you have
-no longer blood red enough to contend with them! When, Aucas warriors,
-did impure owls and screech owls begin to make their nests in the eyrie
-of eagles? Of what use is this stone hatchet, the symbol of strength;
-this hatchet, which you have given me to defend you, if it is to remain
-inactive in my hands, and if I must descend into the tomb, towards
-which I am already hastening, without having been able to do anything
-for your enfranchisement?--Take it back again, warriors, if it is to be
-nothing but a vain, honorary ornament; for myself, my life has been too
-long--let me retire to my toldo, where, to my last days, it will be at
-least permitted me to weep over our independence, which is compromised
-by your weakness, and our glory eclipsed for ever by your cowardice!"
-
-After uttering these words, the old man made a few paces backwards,
-staggering as if overcome by grief. Antinahuel sprang towards him, and
-appeared to lavish consolations upon him in a low voice. The speech had
-strongly moved the assembly, for the toqui was beloved and venerated
-by all. The Ulmens remained apparently silent and stoical; but their
-feelings of hatred had been powerfully stirred, and passion began to
-gleam from their eyes in ominous flashes. Black-Stag stepped forward.
-
-"Father," he said, in a low, insinuating tone, and with a quiet air,
-"your words are rough; they have plunged our hearts in sadness; why have
-you been so severe with your children? Pillian alone is acquainted with
-the intentions of men. What do you reproach us with? with having done
-today what our fathers have always done before us, while they did not
-believe themselves in a position to contend victoriously against their
-enemies! No, owls and impure birds do not make their nests in the eyries
-of eagles. No, the Aucas are not women! They are valiant and invincible
-warriors, as their fathers were before them. Listen! listen to what
-the spirit reveals to me: the council with the Spaniards of today is
-null and void, because it has not taken place as the Admapu requires.
-The toqui has not presented to the chief of the palefaces the branch
-of the Cinnamon tree, the symbol of peace; the canes of the Apo-Ulmens
-have not been bound in a sheaf with the sword of the Huinca chief;
-the oath and the speeches have been pronounced upon the cross of the
-palefaces, and not upon the sheaf, as the law requires. I repeat, then,
-the Huinca-coyog is a nullity, nothing but a vain, laughable ceremony,
-to which we ought to attach no importance. Have I spoken well, powerful
-men?"
-
-"Yes! yes!" the chiefs cried, brandishing their arms, "the Huinca-coyog
-is null!"
-
-Antinahuel then took a few steps forward within the circle, with his
-head advanced, his eyes fixed on vacancy, and his arms extended, as if
-he heard and saw things which he alone could see and hear.
-
-"Silence!" Black-Stag cried, pointing to him with his finger; "the great
-toqui is holding conference with his nymph!"
-
-The chiefs experienced a sensation of terror while looking at the toqui.
-A solemn silence prevailed in the assembly. On his part, Antinahuel did
-not stir.
-
-Black-Stag approached him softly, and, stooping towards his ear, asked,--
-
-"What does my father see?"
-
-"I see the warriors of the palefaces; they have dug up the war hatchet,
-and are fighting with one another."
-
-"What more does my father see?" Black-Stag resumed.
-
-"I see streams of blood, which redden the soil; the odour of that blood
-rejoices my heart, for it is the blood of palefaces shed by their
-brothers!"
-
-"Does my father see anything more?"
-
-"I see the great chief of the whites! he fights valiantly at the head
-of his soldiers! he is surrounded, he fights still! he is nearly
-falling--he falls--he is down--he is conquered! His enemies seize him!"
-
-The Ulmens present at this scene looked on in stupefied amazement; it
-was incomprehensible to them. A smile of disdain curled the lips of
-Black-Stag, as he continued,--
-
-"Does my father hear anything?"
-
-"I hear the cries of the dying demanding vengeance upon their brothers!"
-
-"Does my father hear anything else?"
-
-"Yes; I hear the cries of Aucas warriors, long since dead, and they
-freeze me with terror!"
-
-"What do they say?" the chiefs exclaimed unanimously, a prey to intense
-anxiety. "What do the Aucas warriors say?"
-
-"They say, 'Brothers, the hour is come! To arms! To arms!'"
-
-"To arms!" the chiefs shouted, as with one voice. "To arms! Death to the
-palefaces!"
-
-The impulse was given, enthusiasm had seized all hearts; from this
-moment Antinahuel was able to raise the passions of the crowd to
-delirium at his pleasure. A smile of supreme satisfaction lighted his
-haughty countenance as he recovered apparently from his vision.
-
-"Chiefs of the Aucas," he said, "what do you order me to do?"
-
-"Antinahuel," Cathicara replied, throwing his stone hatchet into the
-fire, in which he was directly imitated by the other toquis; "there is
-now but one supreme hatchet in the nation, it is in your hands; let
-it be red up to the hilt in the blood of the vile Huincas; lead our
-Uthal-Mapus to battle--you have the supreme command! We give you the
-power of life and death over our persons. From this hour, you alone in
-the nation have the right to command us; whatever be your orders, we
-will accomplish them."
-
-Antinahuel raised his lofty head, his brow radiant with pride:
-brandishing in his nervous hand his powerful war hatchet, the symbol of
-the dictatorial and boundless power which had just been conferred upon
-him, he said haughtily,--
-
-"Aucas, I accept the honour you do me; I will prove worthy of the
-confidence you place in me. This hatchet shall never be buried till
-my body has served for food to the vultures of the Andes, or till the
-cowardly palefaces, against whom we are about to combat, shall have come
-upon their knees to implore pardon!"
-
-The chiefs replied to these words by cries of joy and ferocious
-howlings. The Auca-coyog was terminated. Tables were placed, and a
-banquet gathered together all the warriors present at the council.
-At the moment when Antinahuel was seating himself in the high place
-reserved for him, an Indian, covered with perspiration and dust,
-approached him, and whispered a few words in his ear. The chief started;
-a nervous paroxysm shook his whole frame, and he arose a prey to the
-most lively agitation.
-
-"Oh!" he cried, passionately, "it is to me alone that woman should
-belong!" and, addressing the Indian who had spoken to him, he added,
-"Bid my mosotones mount, and be prepared to follow me instantly."
-
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLII.
-
-THE NIGHT JOURNEY.
-
-
-Antinahuel beckoned Black-Stag to come to him, and the Apo-Ulmen did not
-delay. Notwithstanding the number and copiousness of the libations in
-which he had indulged, the face of the Araucano chief was as impassive,
-and his step as steady, as if he had only drunk water. When he arrived
-in front of the toqui, he bowed respectfully, and waited in silence till
-he was spoken to. The toqui, with his eyes fixed on the ground, and
-buried in serious reflections, was some time before he was aware of his
-presence. At length he raised his eyes; his countenance was dark, his
-eyes seemed to dart lightning, a nervous tremour agitated all his limbs.
-
-"Is my father suffering?" Black-Stag asked, mildly and affectionately.
-
-"I am," the chief replied.
-
-"Guecubu has breathed upon the heart of my father; but let him take
-courage, Pillian will support him."
-
-"No," Antinahuel replied; "the breath which dries my breast is a breath
-of fear."
-
-"Of fear?"
-
-"Yes; the Huincas are powerful. I dread the strength of their arms for
-my young men!"
-
-Black-Stag surveyed him with astonishment.
-
-"What signifies the power of the palefaces," he said, "when my father is
-at the head of the four Uthal-Mapus?"
-
-"This war will be terrible; and I would conquer."
-
-"My father will conquer. Do not all the warriors listen to his voice?"
-
-"No," said Antinahuel, sorrowfully; "the Ulmens of the Puelches were not
-present at the council."
-
-"That is true," Black-Stag murmured.
-
-"The Puelches are the first among Aucas warriors."
-
-"That is true, too," said Black-Stag.
-
-"I suffer!" Antinahuel repeated.
-
-Black-Stag laid his hand upon his shoulder.
-
-"My father," he said, in an insinuating tone, "is a great chief; nothing
-is impossible to him!"
-
-"What does my son mean?"
-
-"War is declared. Whilst we attempt incursions into the Chilian
-territory, to keep our enemies in a state of uncertainty as to our
-plans, let my father mount with his mosotones upon his coursers more
-fleet than the wind, and fly upon the wings of the tempest to the
-Puelches. His words will convince them; the warriors will abandon
-everything to follow him and fight under his orders. With their
-assistance we shall conquer the Huincas, and the heart of my father will
-swell with joy and pride!"
-
-"My son is wise! I will follow his counsels," the toqui answered, with a
-smile of mysterious expression; "but he has said war is resolved upon;
-the interests of my nation must not suffer from the short absence I am
-forced to make."
-
-"My father will provide for that."
-
-"I have provided for it," Antinahuel said, with a courteous smile; "let
-my son listen to me."
-
-"My ears are open to receive the words of my father."
-
-"At sunrise, when the fumes of the water fire are dissipated, the chiefs
-will ask for Antinahuel." Black-Stag nodded assent.
-
-"I will place in the hands of my son," the chief continued, "the stone
-hatchet, the sign of my dignity. Black-Stag is a part of my soul, his
-heart is devoted to me; I name him my vice-toqui--he will take my place."
-
-The Apo-Ulmen bowed respectfully before Antinahuel, and kissed his hand.
-
-"Whatever my father orders shall be instantly executed," he said.
-
-"The chiefs are of a proud character; their courage is fiery: my son
-must not give them time to cool, he must make them so compromise
-themselves, that they cannot afterwards retract."
-
-"What are the names of these chiefs, that I may keep them in my memory?"
-
-"They are the most powerful Ulmens of the nation. Let my son remember
-they are eight in number; each of them must make an incursion on the
-frontier, in order to prove to the Chiaplos that hostilities have
-commenced. The four principal among them will immediately repair to
-Valdivia, to proclaim the declaration of war to the palefaces."
-
-"Good!"
-
-"These are the names of the Ulmens: Tangol, Qud-pal, Auchanguer,
-Colfunguin, Trumau, Cuyumil, and Pailapen. Does my son hear these names
-distinctly?"
-
-"I have heard them."
-
-"Has my son understood the sense of my words? Have they entered into his
-brain?"
-
-"The words of my father are here," said Black-Stag, pointing to his
-forehead; "he may banish all uneasiness, and fly towards her who has
-taken possession of his heart."
-
-"Good!" Antinahuel replied; "my son loves me, he will remember; after
-two suns he will find me at the tolderia of the Black Serpents."
-
-"The Black-Stag will be there, accompanied by his most valiant warriors;
-may Pillian guide the steps of my father, and may the god of war grant
-him success."
-
-"Farewell, brother!" Antinahuel murmured, taking leave of his lieutenant.
-
-Black-Stag bowed to the toqui and retired. As soon as he was alone,
-Antinahuel made a sign to the Indian whose news had caused his
-departure. During the conference of the two chiefs this man had stood
-motionless, at a sufficient distance to prevent his hearing what they
-said, but near enough to execute immediately the orders that might be
-given him. He drew near in obedience to the sign.
-
-"Is my son fatigued?" the toqui asked.
-
-"No; my horse alone wants rest."
-
-"Well, my son shall have another horse; he will guide us."
-
-Antinahuel, followed by the scout, advanced, without more words, towards
-a group of horsemen, who, leaning on their long lances, cast their black
-shadows gloomily into the night. These horsemen, about thirty in number,
-were the mosotones of the toqui. Antinahuel, at a bound, sprang upon a
-magnificent horse, held by the bridle by two Indians.
-
-"Forward!" he cried, settling himself in his saddle, and plunging his
-spurs into the sides of the horse, which set off with the speed of an
-arrow.
-
-The mosotones followed as quickly after, and the troop of horsemen
-glided through the darkness like a legion of gloomy phantoms, preceded
-by the scout. Who can express the terrible poetry of a night ride in
-the American deserts? The midnight wind had swept the heavens clear of
-clouds, and its vault, of a dark blue, appeared to be, like a monarch's
-robe, splendidly adorned with an infinite number of stars. The night
-had that velvety transparency peculiar to warm climates. At intervals,
-a puff of wind, loaded with indistinct sounds, scattered the dry leaves
-into the air, and was lost in the distance like a sigh.
-
-The Araucanos, bending over the necks of their horses, whose nostrils
-emitted dense clouds of smoke, rode on, and on, and ever on, without
-casting even a look around them. And yet the desert they were
-traversing, so silently and so rapidly, poured floods of splendid
-harmonies into space. The murmur of water among the lianas and the
-glayeuls, the moaning of the wind among the leaves, or the confused
-noise of a thousand invisible insects, could be heard; at times, lights,
-fluttering through the foliage, danced upon the grass in the manner of
-wild fires; at distances were to be seen old trees, at the angles of
-ravines or the brink of precipices, standing like spectres, shaking
-their winding sheets of parasitical plants; a thousand rumours hovered
-in the air; nameless cries issued from dens hollowed under vast roots;
-stifled sighs descended from the hoary summits of the mountains: an
-unknown and mysterious world could be felt existing around. Everywhere,
-on the earth, in the air, was to be heard the great flood of life, which
-comes from God, passes away, and is incessantly renewed.
-
-The Araucanos still continued their furious course, clearing torrents
-and ravines, and crushing under the hoofs of their flying coursers
-stones, the fragments of which rolled with a splash into the barrancas.
-At two lances, length, in front, by the side of the scout, Antinahuel,
-with his eyes ardently directed forward, kept urging on his horse, whose
-hard and loud breathing proclaimed fatigue. All at once a dark mass
-surged up in the distance, and then a voice was heard.
-
-"We have arrived," the guide exclaimed.
-
-"At last!" Antinahuel said, pulling up his horse, which could no longer
-stand when the impetus had ceased. They found themselves in a miserable
-village, composed of five or six huts falling to ruins, and which,
-at every gust of wind, threatened to tumble to pieces. Antinahuel,
-who expected the fall of his horse, disengaged himself quickly, and
-addressing the guide, who had likewise dismounted, asked--
-
-"In which toldo is she?"
-
-"Come," the Indian replied, laconically.
-
-Antinahuel followed him.
-
-They walked some steps without exchanging a word; the chief pressing
-his hand strongly on his breast, as if to keep down the beatings of his
-heart. After a hasty march of ten minutes, the two men found themselves
-in front of an isolated cabin, from the interior of which glimmered a
-feeble light. The Indian stopped, and turned towards Antinahuel.
-
-"That is it," he said, stretching out his arm in the direction of the
-cabin.
-
-The toqui turned round to ascertain whether his mosotones, whom, in his
-rapid course, he had left far behind, were rejoining him; and then,
-after the hesitation of a second, he approached the door and pushed it,
-saying in a low but determined voice--
-
-"An end must be put to this!"
-
-The door opened, and he entered.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLIII.
-
-TWO HATREDS.
-
-
-Antinahuel found himself face to face with Dona Maria; by an instinctive
-movement each drew back a step, stifling a cry; a cry of stupor on the
-part of Antinahuel, of surprise on the part of the Linda.
-
-"Oh!" sighed Dona Rosario, quite overcome, and bowing her head to avoid
-the ardent glance of the Indian chief--"Oh, Heaven! now I am really
-lost, indeed!"
-
-Dona Maria had in a few seconds driven back to her heart the feelings
-which raged within her; and with a mild voice and a smiling face she
-addressed Antinahuel--
-
-"My brother is welcome," she said, inviting him by a gesture to enter
-the cuarto; "to what happy chance do I owe his presence?"
-
-"A happy chance for me, particularly," he replied, with a satirical
-smile, and endeavouring to compose his features.
-
-The toqui was too well acquainted with the companion of his childhood
-not to know that he had in her a formidable adversary, with whom he must
-play close, in order to bring her to do his will.
-
-"Well!" the Linda resumed, "will my brother deign to do me the pleasure
-of explaining the cause of his sudden appearance, which, not the less,
-fills me with delight?"
-
-"Oh! the cause is very simple indeed, not worth mentioning; I did not
-hope, in any way, to meet my sister here; I must even confess, with all
-humility that I did not seek her."
-
-"Ah!" said Dona Maria, feigning to be imposed upon, "I am doubly
-fortunate, then."
-
-The chief bowed.
-
-"It is the truth," he said.
-
-"Good!" she thought; "now he is going to lie, let us see what villainy
-the demon will invent;" and then she added aloud, with a seducing smile,
-which displayed thirty-two little teeth of the purest pearl--"I am all
-ears, my brother can speak."
-
-"As my sister knows, this village is on the route which leads to my
-tolderia, I have naturally traversed it in returning to my tribe; the
-night is advanced, my mosotones require a few hours' rest; I resolved
-to encamp here. I entered the first rancho which presented itself to
-my view, this rancho in which you are temporarily sojourning, and I am
-grateful to the chance which, as I have told you, has done all this, and
-is alone guilty."
-
-"Not bad for an Indian," murmured Dona Maria; "well, we will say no more
-about that."
-
-"Eh!" said Antinahuel, feigning for the first time to perceive Dona
-Rosario, and advancing towards her; "who is this charming young woman?"
-
-"A slave, not worthy of your notice," the Linda replied, sternly.
-
-"A slave!" Antinahuel cried.
-
-"Yes, a slave." The Linda clapped her hands, and the Indian we have seen
-talking with her entered.
-
-"Take away this woman!" she said.
-
-"Oh, madam!" Rosario exclaimed, falling on her knees, "can you be
-inexorable towards a poor girl who has never injured you?"
-
-The Linda gave her a fiery glance, and repulsed her with her foot.
-
-"I ordered this girl to be taken away," she said, perilously.
-
-At this flagrant insult, the blood rushed to the heart of the poor
-girl; her pallid brow flushed with scarlet, and drawing herself up
-majestically and proudly, she said in a piercing voice, the prophetic
-tone of which struck the Linda to the heart--
-
-"Beware, madam! God will punish you! As you today are without pity for
-me, so the day will come when there will be no pity for you!"
-
-And she left the room, after darting a look at her implacable enemy that
-made even her blench.
-
-When Antinahuel and the Linda were left alone, a long silence ensued.
-The last words of Rosario had wounded the Linda like the stroke of a
-poniard; it was in vain she endeavoured to steel herself against the
-emotion she experienced. She felt herself conquered by the weak girl.
-She, however, gradually overcame the incomprehensible sensation that
-oppressed her. Passing her hand across her brow, as if to drive away the
-importunate idea that pursued her, she turned towards Antinahuel--
-
-"No diplomacy between us, brother," she said, "we know each other too
-well to lose time in manoeuvring."
-
-"My sister is right; let us speak frankly."
-
-"The story of your return to your tribe is very clever, Antinahuel, but
-I do not believe a word of it."
-
-"Good! then my sister knows the reason that brings me here."
-
-"I do know it," she said, with an arch smile, which played like a
-sunbeam round her rosy lips.
-
-Antinahuel made no reply. He began to walk in great agitation about the
-room, casting looks of anger and vexation towards the door by which
-Rosario had gone out. The Linda followed him with a keen and mocking eye.
-
-"Well," she said, at the end of a minute, "will not my brother speak?"
-
-"Why should I not speak?" he angrily replied. "Antinahuel is the most
-redoubtable chief of his nation, the proudest warriors bend their lofty
-brows without hesitation before him!"
-
-"I am waiting," she said, in a calm voice.
-
-"A chief explains himself clearly, no one imposes upon him. My sister
-knows my hatred for the chief of the palefaces, of whom she has so much
-reason to complain."
-
-"Yes, I know that man is the personal enemy of my brother."
-
-"Well, then, my sister has in her hands the blue-eyed maiden, and she
-will give her to me, so that I may, in making her suffer, revenge myself
-on my enemy."
-
-"My brother is a man, he does not know how to avenge himself: why
-should I give my prisoner up to him? Women alone possess the secret of
-torturing those they hate. Let my brother leave it to me," she added,
-with a vindictive smile; "the torments I shall invent will suffice, I
-swear, to satisfy a hatred much deeper than any he can feel."
-
-Antinahuel, although his face remained impassive, shuddered inwardly at
-these odious words.
-
-"My sister is boastful," he replied, "her skin is white, her heart knows
-not how to hate, let her leave it to the Indian chief."
-
-"No," she passionately exclaimed, "I have fixed the fate of this woman;
-I will not give her to my brother."
-
-"Will my sister then forget her promise, and falsify her oaths?"
-
-"Of what promises and of what oaths do you speak, chief?"
-
-"Of those," the Indian replied haughtily, "which my sister pronounced in
-the toldo of Antinahuel, when she came among his tribe to implore his
-assistance."
-
-The Linda smiled.
-
-"Woman is a mockingbird," she said, "the man who pays attention to her
-words is----"
-
-"Good!" Antinahuel interrupted, "my sister shall keep her prisoner. Let
-my sister do her will; I will continue my route towards the tolderia of
-my tribe."
-
-The Linda looked at him with astonishment; the facility with which
-Antinahuel apparently renounced his projects seemed to her the more
-incomprehensible, from her knowing with what pertinacity he pursued
-his enterprises, when once he believed he had a chance of success. She
-resolved to know what she had to trust to. At the moment when the chief
-made a step towards the door, she said.
-
-"Is my brother going?"
-
-"I am going," he replied.
-
-"Has he, then, already terminated the affairs about which General
-Bustamente requested him to come and consult with him?"
-
-"General Bustamente no longer stands in need of Antinahuel or of anyone
-else."
-
-"Has he then succeeded so quickly?"
-
-"Yes," he answered in an equivocal tone.
-
-"Then," the Linda exclaimed, joyfully, "he is master of the city, and
-triumphs at last!"
-
-Antinahuel appeared to hesitate for a minute--an ironical smile flitted
-across his lips.
-
-"Will not my brother answer?" the Linda continued, with an impatience
-mingled with uneasiness.
-
-"He whom my sister calls General Bustamente," he replied in a sharp
-tone, "no longer needs the assistance of anyone: he is a prisoner."
-
-The Linda sprang up like a wounded lioness.
-
-"A prisoner!" she cried. "Oh! my brother must be mistaken."
-
-"He is a prisoner, and within three days will be dead."
-
-The Linda was struck with stupor; this frightful news crushed all her
-hopes.
-
-"Oh!" she murmured at length, "he shall not die!"
-
-"He will die!" Antinahuel replied; "who can save him?"
-
-"You, chief!" she said, emphatically grasping his arm.
-
-"Why should I do it?" he remarked carelessly; "of what consequence is
-the life of the man to me?--the palefaces are not my brothers."
-
-"No; but his life is precious to me, for the sake of my vengeance! He
-alone can deliver up my enemy to me! He shall live, I tell you!"
-
-"Good! My sister will deliver him, then, as she is so anxious to save
-him."
-
-"You alone could do it, chief, if you would," she observed.
-
-Antinahuel fixed his eyes upon her.
-
-"What makes you suppose I would?" he said.
-
-"Listen to me, chief!" the Linda cried. "You love that woman--that puny,
-palefaced thing, do you not?"
-
-The Indian started, but made no reply.
-
-"Oh! do not endeavour to deceive me; you cannot blind the eyes of a
-woman. The hatred you bear to Don Tadeo is changed into love in your
-heart at the sight of this creature."
-
-"Well! and suppose it should be so?" he said, evidently moved.
-
-"An even-handed bargain with you then; give me General Bustamente," she
-remarked earnestly, "and I will deliver her up to you."
-
-"Oh!" said Antinahuel, with a bantering smile, "a woman is but a
-mockingbird; the man who puts faith in her words----"
-
-On hearing the chief throw in her face the words she herself had uttered
-only a few minutes before, she stamped with impatience.
-
-"Well, then," she cried, almost bursting with rage, "take her
-then!--take the woman! and may my curses cling to her!"
-
-Antinahuel uttered a tiger-like roar, and rushed out of the room.
-
-"Ah!" cried the Linda in a hoarse voice, and with an expression
-impossible to be described, "may not the love of this wretch avenge me
-better than all the tortures I could have invented!"
-
-In a few minutes the chief returned precipitately, his features
-distorted by fury and disappointment.
-
-"She has fled!" he shouted. It was true. Rosario and the Indian to whose
-charge the Linda had given her had both disappeared. No one knew what
-had become of them. Antinahuel immediately dispatched his mosotones in
-all directions in search of them. The Linda was left in the toldo a
-prey to indescribable rage; she was cheated of her vengeance! She felt
-crushed under the weight of the helplessness to which she was reduced.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLIV.
-
-THE RETURN TO VALDIVIA.
-
-
-Night was come; bending over the pillow of his friend, who was still
-buried in that lethargic sleep which generally follows great loss of
-blood, Valentine watched with anxious tenderness the changes which at
-times darkened his pale countenance.
-
-"Oh!" he said, in a suppressed voice, clenching his hands with anger,
-"be thy assassins who they may, brother, they shall pay for their crime
-dearly."
-
-The curtain of the tent was slowly raised, and a hand was laid upon the
-young man's shoulder. He turned quickly round; Trangoil-Lanec was before
-him. The face of the Ulmen was dark as night, and he appeared a prey to
-strong emotion.
-
-"What is the matter, chief?" asked Valentine, terrified at his manner;
-"what has happened, in the name of Heaven? Have you any fresh misfortune
-to announce?"
-
-"Misfortune incessantly watches over man," the chief remarked
-sententiously; "he should be ready to receive it at all hours, like an
-expected guest."
-
-"Speak then!" the young man asked, in a firm voice; "whatever may
-happen, I will not falter."
-
-"Good, my brother is strong, he is a great warrior, he will not suffer
-himself to be cast down. Let my brother hasten; we must be gone!"
-
-"Be gone!" cried Valentine, with a nervous start; "and my friend?"
-
-"Our brother Louis will accompany us."
-
-"Is it possible to move him?"
-
-"It must be," the Indian said peremptorily; "the war hatchet is dug up
-against the palefaces, the Aucas chiefs have drunk firewater, the genius
-of evil is master of their hearts; we must depart before they think of
-us; in an hour it will be too late."
-
-"Let us depart then," the young man replied, sorrowfully, convinced that
-Trangoil-Lanec knew more than he was willing to tell, and that some
-great danger threatened them, since the chief, who was a man of tried
-courage, had let fall that mask of stoicism which scarcely ever abandons
-the Indian.
-
-Preparations for departure were made in all haste, and were soon
-terminated. The hammock in which Louis reposed was solidly fastened to
-two long cross pieces of wood, and then, as it was, harnessed upon two
-mules without awakening him. The little band set out, employing the
-greatest precautions. They proceeded thus for more than an hour, without
-exchanging a word; the campfires of the Indians became every minute more
-faint in the distance, and they were, at least for the present, out of
-danger. Valentine approached Trangoil-Lanec, who rode at the head of the
-convoy.
-
-"Where are we going?" he asked.
-
-"To Valdivia," the chief replied; "it is there alone that Don Louis will
-be able to recover in safety."
-
-"You are right," said Valentine; "but shall we remain inactive?"
-
-"I will do what my brother the paleface wishes; am I not his penni?
-where he goes I will go--his will shall be mine!"
-
-"Thank you, chief," the Frenchman replied, with emotion; "you have a
-brave and worthy heart."
-
-"My brother saved my life," said the Ulmen earnestly; "that life is no
-longer mine, it belongs to him."
-
-Whether it was that the Araucano chiefs did not perceive the departure
-of the strangers, or that, as is more probable, they did not think it
-worthwhile to pursue them, the little troop was not interrupted in its
-flight--for what other name could be given to this night march amidst
-the desert? They advanced slowly, on account of the wounded man, who
-could not, in his state of weakness and prostration, have supported the
-shaking of a more rapid pace.
-
-Towards three o'clock in the morning, a few fugitive and uncertain
-lights, which flitted across the horizon, and with difficulty pierced
-through the fog, which at that hour of the night envelopes the earth
-like a winding sheet, announced to the party that they were approaching
-the city, and should soon be there. At the end of three quarters of an
-hour, they reached the gardens which envelope Valdivia like an immense
-bouquet of flowers, from the centre of which it seems to spring up. The
-party made a short halt, in order not to attract observation on entering
-the city, through the state of the horses and mules. From that time they
-had nothing to fear from the Indians.
-
-"Is my brother acquainted with the city?" Trangoil-Lanec asked.
-
-"Why do you ask that question?"
-
-"For a very simple reason. In the desert, by night or by day, I can
-serve as a guide to my brother; but here, in this tolderia of the
-whites, my eyes close--I am blind; my brother must conduct us."
-
-"The devil!" said Valentine, quite disconcerted; "in that sense I am as
-blind as you, chief; it was only yesterday that I entered the city for
-the first time: and," he added, laughingly, "the bullets then whistled
-round in such a merry fashion, I had scarcely time to look about me, or
-to ask my way."
-
-"Don't let that disturb you, senor," said one of the peons, who had
-heard the few words pronounced by the two men; "only tell me where you
-want to go, and I will undertake to conduct you."
-
-"Hum!" Valentine replied; "where I want to go to? Caspeta! I cannot
-exactly say; all places are alike to me, provided my friend be in
-safety."
-
-"Pardon me, senor," the arriero replied, "if I dare----"
-
-"Oh, dare! dare! there's a good fellow! your idea is probably excellent;
-for myself, I confess at this moment my mind is as empty as a drum."
-
-"Why, senor, should you not go to the residence of Don Tadeo de Leon, my
-master?"
-
-"Pardieu!" cried Valentine, vexed at his own want of thought. "On my
-word, you are something like a guide! I do not go to Don Tadeo, because,
-simply, I don't know how to find the place, that's all."
-
-"I know, senor; Don Tadeo is most likely at the cabildo."
-
-"By Jove! that's true again; my powers of thought seem to have been
-driven out of my head; but which is the way to the cabildo?"
-
-"I will show you, senor."
-
-"That's well! this is an intelligent lad. Let us be moving, my friend."
-
-"Forward, then!" cried the arriero. "_Ea! arrea mula!_" he shouted to
-his beasts.
-
-In a few minutes they debouched upon the Plaza Mayor, opposite the
-cabildo. The city was still and silent; here and there traces of the
-sanguinary contest of the preceding day, heaps of broken furniture, or
-large trenches cut in the ground, gave evidence of the ravages caused by
-the insurrection. A soldier was marching with slow steps in front of the
-cabildo. At sight of the little party, he stopped, and cocked his musket.
-
-"Who goes there?" he shouted sharply.
-
-"_La Patria!_" Valentine replied.
-
-"Go on, then!" said the soldier.
-
-"Hum!" the young man murmured; "it appears not to be such an easy matter
-to obtain entrance; never mind," he added, "let us try. My friend," he
-said, in an insinuating voice, to the sentinel, who stood motionless
-before him; "we have business in the palace."
-
-"Have you the password?"
-
-"Santiago! no," Valentine answered, frankly.
-
-"Then you cannot enter."
-
-"And yet I wish very much to enter."
-
-"Very possibly; but as you have not the password, I advise you to go
-on your way; for I swear, if you were the devil in person, I would not
-afford you a passage."
-
-"My friend," said the Parisian, in a jeering tone, "you do not talk
-logically; if I were the devil, I should stand in no need of the
-password--I should get in in spite of you."
-
-"Take care, senor," whispered the arriero; "that soldier is not unlikely
-to fire at you."
-
-"Pardieu! that's what I reckon upon," said Valentine, laughing.
-
-The peon looked at him in astonishment; he thought he was mad. The
-soldier, annoyed by this long conversation, and believing it of no use
-to stand wrangling with these jokers, presented his musket, crying
-angrily,--
-
-"For the last time, go on, or I will fire!"
-
-"I am determined I will go in!" Valentine replied, resolutely.
-
-"To arms!" the soldier cried, and fired. Valentine, who had watched
-attentively all the soldier's movements, had slipped quickly from his
-horse, and the bullet whistled harmlessly over his head. At the cry
-of the soldier and the report of his piece, several armed soldiers,
-followed by an officer with a lighted lantern in his hand, rushed
-tumultuously out of the palace.
-
-"What is going on here?" the officer asked, in a loud voice.
-
-"Ah!" Valentine cried, to whom the voice was not unknown, "is that you,
-Don Gregorio?"
-
-"Who calls me?" said the latter; for, in fact, it was he.
-
-"I, Valentine!"
-
-"What! is it you, my friend, who are making all this disturbance?"
-replied Don Gregorio, advancing; "I thought it was nothing less than an
-attack."
-
-"What the devil was I to do?" said the young man, laughing; "I had not
-the password, and I wanted to get in."
-
-"Hum! none but a Frenchman would have such an idea as that."
-
-"Is it not original?"
-
-"Yes, but you risked being killed."
-
-"Bah! we are always risking being killed, and yet we are not," said
-Valentine, carelessly; "I recommend my plan to you, under similar
-circumstances."
-
-"Much obliged! but I do not think I shall ever try it."
-
-"Ah! there you are wrong."
-
-"Well, then, come in! come in!"
-
-"That is all I want; particularly as I must see Don Tadeo instantly."
-
-"I believe he is asleep."
-
-"He must be awakened."
-
-"Do you bring interesting news, then?"
-
-"Yes," Valentine replied, becoming suddenly serious; "terrible news!"
-
-Don Gregorio, struck with the tone in which the Frenchman had pronounced
-these words, had a presentiment of some misfortune, and asked no
-further. The arrieros bore the hammock, with Don Louis still asleep,
-into the cabildo. By the care of Don Gregorio he was carried to a
-bedchamber, and placed in a bed hastily provided.
-
-"What does all this mean?" Don Gregorio said, in astonishment; "is Don
-Louis wounded?"
-
-"Yes," Valentine replied, in a husky voice; "he has received two dagger
-wounds."
-
-"But how did it all happen?"
-
-"You will soon learn; but pray conduct me instantly to Don Tadeo."
-
-"In heaven's name, come, then! your reserve alarms me."
-
-And, followed by Valentine and Trangoil-Lanec, Don Gregorio plunged into
-the labyrinth formed by the numerous corridors of the palace, with which
-he seemed well acquainted.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLV.
-
-THE FATHER REVEALS HIMSELF.
-
-
-Don Tadeo had passed the greater part of the night in giving orders
-for the clearing away of the hideous traces left by the combat. He
-had named the magistrates charged with the police of the city. After
-having assured, as far as possible, the tranquillity and safety of the
-citizens, and sent several couriers to Santiago, and other centres
-of population, to inform them of what had taken place, worn out with
-fatigue, sinking with sleep, he had thrown himself, clothed as he was,
-upon a camp bed, to take a little repose. He had slept scarcely an hour
-that agitated sleep which is the lot of men upon whom the destinies of
-empires rest, when the door of the chamber was pushed violently open, a
-strong light gleamed in his eyes, and several men surrounded him. Don
-Tadeo awoke suddenly.
-
-"Who is there?" he cried, endeavouring to recognise, in spite of the
-light which dazzled his eyes, the persons who so inopportunely disturbed
-his repose.
-
-"It is I," replied Don Gregorio.
-
-"Well, but you do not seem to be alone?"
-
-"No, Don Valentine accompanies me."
-
-"Don Valentine!" cried Don Tadeo, starting up, and passing his hand over
-his brow, to drive away the clouds which still obscured his ideas; "why,
-I did not expect Don Valentine before morning, at soonest; what serious
-reason can have induced him to travel by night?"
-
-"A powerful reason, Don Tadeo," the young man remarked, in a melancholy
-voice.
-
-"In Heaven's name! speak, then!" cried Don Tadeo.
-
-"Be a man! be firm! collect all your courage to bear worthily the blow
-you are about to receive."
-
-Don Tadeo walked two or three times round the room, with his head
-cast down, and his brow contracted; then stopped suddenly in front of
-Valentine with a pale brow, but with a stoical countenance. This man
-of iron had subdued nature within him; as if aware of the rudeness of
-the shock he was about to receive, he had ordered his heart not to
-break--his muscles not to quiver.
-
-"Speak!" he said, "I am ready to hear you."
-
-While uttering these words his voice was firm, his features calm.
-Valentine, though well acquainted with his courage, was struck with
-admiration.
-
-"Is the misfortune you are about to announce to me personal?" said Don
-Tadeo.
-
-"Yes," the young man replied, in a tremulous voice.
-
-"God be praised! Go on, then; I listen to you."
-
-Valentine perceived that he must not put the soul of this man to too
-hard a trial; he determined to speak.
-
-"Dona Rosario has disappeared," he said; "she has been carried off
-during our absence; Louis, my foster brother, in endeavouring to defend
-her, has fallen, pierced by two sword thrusts."
-
-The King of Darkness appeared a statue of marble; no emotion was
-perceptible upon his austere countenance.
-
-"Is Don Louis dead?" he asked, earnestly.
-
-"No," Valentine answered, more and more astonished; "I even hope that in
-a few days he will be cured."
-
-"So much the better," said Don Tadeo, feelingly; "I am indeed glad to
-hear that."
-
-And, crossing his arms upon his broad chest, he resumed his hasty walk
-about the room. The three men looked at each other, surprised at this
-stoicism, which to them was unintelligible.
-
-"Will you then abandon Dona Rosario to her ravishers?" Don Gregorio
-asked, in a reproachful tone.
-
-
-Don Tadeo darted at him a look charged with such bitter irony, that Don
-Gregorio quailed beneath it.
-
-"Were the ravishers concealed in the entrails of the earth, I would
-discover them, be they who they may!" Don Tadeo replied.
-
-"A man is on their track," said Trangoil-Lanec, advancing; "that man is
-Curumilla. He will discover them."
-
-A flash of joy for a moment shot from the eye of the King of Darkness.
-
-"Oh!" he murmured, with clenched teeth, "beware, Dona Maria, beware!"
-
-He at once had divined the author of the abduction of Rosario.
-
-"What do you intend to do?" said Don Gregorio.
-
-"Nothing, till the return of our scout," he replied, coldly; and then
-turning towards Valentine, added--"Well, my friend, have you nothing
-else to announce to me?"
-
-"What leads you to suppose I have not told you all?" said the young man.
-
-"Ah!" Don Tadeo replied, with a melancholy smile, "you know, my friend,
-that we Spanish Americans, however civilized we may appear, are still
-semi-barbarians, and, as such, horribly superstitious."
-
-"Well?"
-
-"Well, then, among other follies of the same kind, we place faith in
-proverbs; and is there not one which somewhere says, that a misfortune
-never comes singly?"
-
-"Good Heavens! do you take me for a bird of ill omen, Don Tadeo?"
-
-"God forbid, my friend! only search in your memory, I am sure I am not
-mistaken, and that you have still something else to inform me of."
-
-"Well, you are right, I have other news to announce to you; whether good
-or bad, I leave you to judge."
-
-"I knew there was something more behind," said Don Tadeo, with a sad
-smile; "go on, my friend, let us hear this news, I am listening to you."
-
-"Yesterday, as you know, General Bustamente renewed the treaties of
-peace with the Araucano chiefs."
-
-"He did."
-
-"I cannot tell what fugitive or what scout gave them information of what
-had taken place here; but by evening they had learnt the defeat and
-capture of the General."
-
-"I can understand that; go on."
-
-"A kind of furious madness immediately seemed to possess them, and they
-held a great war council."
-
-"In which, I suppose, they decided upon breaking the treaties; is not
-that it?"
-
-"Exactly."
-
-"And most likely determined upon war with us?"
-
-"I suppose so; the four toquis cast the hatchet into the fire, and a
-supreme toqui was elected in their place."
-
-"Ah! ah!" said Don Tadeo, "and do you know the name of this supreme
-toqui?"
-
-"Yes; Antinahuel."
-
-"I suspected as much," Don Tadeo cried, angrily; "that man has deceived
-us. He is a scoundrel only living by cunning, and whose devouring
-ambition leads him to sacrifice, when occasion offers, the dearest
-interests, and falsify the most sacred oaths. He has been playing a
-double game; he feigned to be the partisan of General Bustamente, as he
-appeared to be ours, building upon our mutual ruin his own fortunes and
-his future elevation. But he has thrown off the mask too hastily. By
-heaven! I will inflict a chastisement upon him, of which his compatriots
-shall preserve the remembrance, and which a century hence shall make
-them tremble with fear."
-
-"Beware of the ears that, listen to you," said Don Gregorio, directing
-his attention by a look to the Ulmen, who stood quietly before him.
-
-"Eh! what care I?" Don Tadeo replied, warmly; "if I speak thus, it is
-because I wish to be heard. I am a Spanish noble, and what my heart
-thinks my lips give utterance to; the Ulmen is welcome, if it seems good
-to him, to repeat my words to his chief."
-
-"The Great Eagle of the Whites is unjust towards his son," replied
-Trangoil-Lanec, in a serious tone; "all Araucanos have not the same
-heart; Antinahuel is only responsible for his own acts. Trangoil-Lanec
-is an Ulmen in his tribe; he knows how to be present at a council of
-chiefs: what his eyes see, what his ears hear, his heart forgets, his
-mouth repeats it not: why should my father address such unkind words to
-me, who am ready to devote myself to restore to him her he has lost?"
-
-"That is true; I am unjust, chief, I was wrong in speaking so; your
-heart is true, your tongue is unacquainted with falsehood. Pardon me,
-and let me clasp your loyal hand in mine."
-
-Trangoil-Lanec pressed warmly the hand Don Tadeo held out to him.
-
-"My father is good," he said; "his heart is at this moment darkened by
-the great misfortune that has fallen upon him; but let my father be
-comforted, Trangoil-Lanec will restore the blue-eyed maiden to him."
-
-"Thanks, chief! I accept your offer, you may depend upon my gratitude."
-
-"Trangoil-Lanec does not sell his services, he is repaid when his
-friends are happy."
-
-"Caramba!" cried Valentine, shaking the hand of the chief with all his
-might, "you are a worthy man, Trangoil-Lanec--I am proud of being your
-friend."
-
-Then, turning towards Don Tadeo, he said--"I must bid you farewell, for
-a time. I confide my brother Louis to your care."
-
-"Why do you leave me?" Don Tadeo asked, warmly.
-
-"I must. I see your heart is breaking, in spite of the incredible
-efforts you make to appear impassive. I know not the nature of the tie
-which binds you to the unfortunate girl who has been the victim of an
-odious crime; but I can see the loss of her is killing you--now, with
-the assistance of Heaven, I will restore her to you, Don Tadeo; I will,
-or I will die in the endeavour."
-
-"Don Valentine!" the gentleman exclaimed, strongly moved, "what do you
-propose to do? your project is wild; I cannot accept such devotion."
-
-"Leave it to me. Caramba! I am a Parisian--that is to say, as obstinate
-as a mule; and when once an idea, good or bad, has entered into my
-brain, it has no chance of getting out, I swear to you. I shall only
-take the time to embrace my poor brother, and set off immediately. Come,
-chief, let us set ourselves upon the track of the ravishers."
-
-"Let us be gone," said the Ulmen.
-
-Don Tadeo remained for a moment motionless, his eyes fixed upon the
-young man with a strange expression; a violent conflict appeared to be
-going on within him; at length nature prevailed, he burst into tears;
-and, throwing himself into the arms of the Frenchman, he murmured, in a
-voice choked by grief--
-
-"Valentine! Valentine! restore me my daughter!"
-
-The father had at length revealed himself; the stoicism of the statesman
-had sunk before paternal love!--But human nature has its limits, beyond
-which it cannot go; the moral shock which Don Tadeo had received, the
-immense efforts he had made to conceal it, had completely exhausted
-his strength, and he sank upon the slabs of the floor like a proud oak
-struck by thunder. He had fainted. Valentine contemplated him for a
-moment with pity and grief.
-
-"Poor father!" he said, "take courage, thy child shall be restored to
-thee!"
-
-And he left the room with hasty steps, followed by Trangoil-Lanec,
-whilst Don Gregorio, kneeling by his friend, gave him the most earnest
-and kind attentions for the recovery of his senses.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XLVI.
-
-CURUMILLA.
-
-
-In order to explain to the reader the miraculous disappearance of
-Rosario, we are obliged to make a few retrograde steps, and return to
-Curumilla, at the moment when the Ulmen, after his conversation with
-Trangoil-Lanec, had thrown himself, like a staunch bloodhound, upon the
-track of the young girl. Curumilla was a warrior as renowned for his
-prudence and wisdom in council, as for his bravery in fight. Having
-crossed the river, he left his horse in the care of a peon who had
-accompanied him, as it would not only be useless to him, but, still
-further, because it might even be injurious by betraying his presence by
-the clatter of its hoofs upon the ground. Indians are expert horsemen,
-but they are indefatigable walkers. Nature has endowed them with
-incredible strength of muscles of the legs and hams; and they possess in
-the highest degree the knowledge of that rising and sinking gymnastic
-step, which, for some years past, has been introduced into Europe,
-particularly into France, in the marching of troops. They accomplish
-with incredible swiftness journeys which horses could hardly perform,
-always directing their course in a straight line, or as the bird flies,
-without regard to the difficulties that may arise in their way, no
-obstacle being sufficient to turn them from their course. This quality
-renders them particularly formidable to the Spanish Americans, who
-cannot obtain this facility of locomotion, and who, in time of war, find
-the redskins always before them at the moment they least expect them,
-and that almost always at considerable distances from the spots where,
-logically, they ought to be.
-
-Curumilla, after having carefully studied the prints made by the
-ravishers, at once divined the route they had taken, and the place they
-were bound to. He did not amuse himself with following them, for that
-would have been losing precious time; on the contrary, he resolved to
-cut across country, and wait for them at an elbow of the road he was
-acquainted with, where, at all events, he could ascertain their numbers,
-and, perhaps, save the young girl. This being determined, the Ulmen
-set off. He walked for several hours without rest, eye and ear on the
-watch, trying to penetrate the darkness, and listening patiently to the
-various noises of the desert. These noises, which are to us white men
-a dead letter, have for the Indians, who are accustomed to interrogate
-them, a special signification, in which they are never deceived; they
-analyse them, they decompose them, and often learn by this means things
-which their enemies have the greatest interest in concealing from them.
-However inexplicable this fact may at first appear, it is very simple.
-There exists no noise in the desert without a cause. The flight of
-birds, the passage of wild beasts, the rustling of leaves, the rolling
-of a stone down a ravine, the undulation of high grass, the friction of
-branches in the woods, are for the Indian valuable indications.
-
-At a certain point with which he was acquainted, Curumilla laid himself
-down flat on his face, behind a block of rock, and remained motionless
-among the grass and bushes that bordered the route. He remained thus for
-more than an hour, without making the least movement. Whoever might have
-perceived him would have taken him for a dead body. The practised ear of
-the Indian, ever on the watch, at length caught in the distance the dull
-sound of the feet of horses and mules upon the dry and sonorous road.
-This noise grew rapidly nearer, and soon, from his hiding place, he
-perceived about twenty horsemen passing slowly along in the dark, within
-two lance lengths of him. The ravishers, emboldened by their numbers,
-and believing themselves secure from all danger, rode along in perfect
-security. The Indian raised his head softly, and leaning on his hands,
-followed them with his anxious eyes, and waited. They passed without
-seeing him. At some paces behind the troop, a horseman came along,
-leaving himself carelessly to the measured pace of his horse. His head
-occasionally sank upon his breast, and his hands had but a feeble hold
-of the reins. It was evident that this man was asleep in his saddle.
-
-A sudden idea rushed like lightning through Curumilla's brain; gathering
-himself up, he stiffened the iron muscles of his legs, and, bounding
-like a tiger, leaped up behind the horseman. Before the latter,
-surprised by this unexpected attack, had time to utter a cry, he pressed
-his throat in such a manner as, for the time, to render him incapable
-of calling for help. In the twinkling of an eye the horseman was gagged
-and thrown to the ground: then, securing the horse, Curumilla fastened
-it to a bush, and returned to his prisoner. The latter, with the stoical
-and disdainful courage peculiar to the aborigines of America, finding
-himself conquered, attempted no useless resistance; he looked at his
-conqueror with a smile of contempt, and waited for him to speak to him.
-
-"Oh!" said Curumilla, who, upon leaning over him, recognised him, "is it
-you, Joan?"
-
-"Curumilla!" the other replied.
-
-"Hum!" the Ulmen murmured to himself, "I would rather it had been
-somebody else. What is my brother doing on this path?" he asked.
-
-"Of what consequence is that to my brother?" said the Indian, replying
-to one question by another.
-
-"We have no time to waste," the chief replied, unsheathing his knife;
-"let my brother speak."
-
-Joan started; a shudder ran through his limbs at the blue light
-reflected by the long, sharp blade of the knife.
-
-"The chief can question me," he said, in a husky voice.
-
-"Where is my brother going?"
-
-"To the tolderia of San Miguel."
-
-"Good! and for what purpose is my brother going there?"
-
-"To place in the hands of the sister of the grand toqui a woman whom we
-have carried off this morning."
-
-"Who ordered you to do so?"
-
-"She whom we are going to meet."
-
-"Who had the direction of this affair?"
-
-"I had."
-
-"Good! where does this woman expect the prisoner?"
-
-"I have told the chief; at the tolderia of San Miguel."
-
-"In which casa?"
-
-"In the last; the one which stands a little apart from the others."
-
-"That is well! Let my brother exchange poncho and hat with me."
-
-The Indian obeyed without a word, and when the exchange was made,
-Curumilla said--
-
-"I could kill my brother; prudence would even require me to do so, but
-pity has entered my heart--Joan has wives and children, he is one of the
-brave warriors of his tribe; if I let him live, will he be grateful?"
-
-The Indian had expected that he was going to die, but these words
-restored him to hope. He was not a bad man at bottom; the Ulmen knew him
-well, and was satisfied he would keep his promises.
-
-"My father holds my life in his hands," Joan replied; "if he does not
-take it today, I shall remain his debtor--I will lay down my life at a
-sign from him."
-
-"Very well!" said Curumilla, returning his knife to its sheath, "my
-brother may rise, a chief keeps his word."
-
-The Indian sprang upon his feet, and fervently kissed the hand of the
-man who had spared him.
-
-"What does my father command?" he asked.
-
-"My brother must repair as fast as possible to the tolderia which the
-Huincas name Valdivia. He will seek Don Tadeo, the Great Eagle of the
-Whites, and relate to him what has passed between us, adding, that I
-will save the prisoner, or die."
-
-"Is that all?"
-
-"Yes. If the Great Eagle requires the services of my brother, he will
-place himself without hesitation at his orders. Farewell! May Pillian
-guide my brother! and let him never forget that I was not willing to
-take the life that was in my power!"
-
-"Joan will not forget," the Indian replied.
-
-At a sign from Curumilla, he bent down in the high grass, crept along
-like a serpent, and disappeared in the direction of Valdivia. The chief,
-without losing an instant, jumped into the saddle and soon joined the
-little troop, who had continued jogging quietly along, without dreaming
-of the substitution that had just taken place. It was Curumilla who,
-while carrying the young girl into the house, had whispered hope and
-courage. These three words, in announcing to her that she had a friend
-watching over her, had restored her the strength necessary for the
-struggle that awaited her.
-
-After the unexpected arrival of Antinahuel, when, at the order of Dona
-Maria, Curumilla led away the prisoner, instead of reconducting her
-to the apartment in which she had been, he threw a poncho over her to
-disguise her.
-
-"Follow me," he said in a low voice; "step out boldly, I will endeavour
-to save you."
-
-The maiden hesitated; she was fearful of a snare. The Ulmen comprehended
-her feeling, and said quickly, in a low voice--
-
-"I am Curumilla, one of the Ulmens devoted to the two Frenchmen, the
-friends of Don Tadeo."
-
-Rosario startled imperceptibly.
-
-"Go on," she replied in a firm tone; "happen what may, I will follow
-you."
-
-And they left the hut together. The Indians, dispersed here and there,
-were busily talking over the events of the day, and did not observe
-them. The two fugitives proceeded for ten minutes without exchanging a
-word. The village was soon lost in the darkness; at length Curumilla
-stopped at a thick clump of cactus, behind which two horses stood,
-saddled and bridled.
-
-"Does my sister find herself strong enough to mount on horseback, and
-ride a long distance?" he asked.
-
-"To escape from my persecutors," she replied, in a broken voice, "I feel
-I have strength to do anything."
-
-"Good!" said Curumilla, "my sister is courageous. Her God will help her!"
-
-"It is in Him alone I place my hope," she said, with a sigh.
-
-"To horse, then, and let us begone! minutes are ages!"
-
-He unfastened the horses, they mounted, and set of at full speed,
-without any sound being produced upon the road by their hoofs, which
-Curumilla had covered with pieces of sheepskin. The maiden breathed
-a sigh of relief on feeling herself once more free, and under the
-protection of a devoted friend. The fugitives continued to ride at a
-rapid pace, in a direction diametrically opposite to the one they should
-have taken to return to Valdivia. Prudence required that they should not
-yet take any route on which, according to all possibilities, they would
-be looked for.
-
-We must leave our friends in this critical position for the present;
-but those readers who feel an interest in the loves of Don Louis and
-Dona Rosario, will find their curiosity fully satisfied in the following
-volume of this series, called "The Pearl of the Andes."
-
-
-
-THE END.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Adventurers, by Gustave Aimard
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