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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #66503 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/66503)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of With Sword and Crucifix; Being an Account of
-the Strange Adventures of Count Louis Sancerre, Companion of Sieur LaSalle,
-on the Lower Mississippi, in the Year of Grace 1682, by Edward S. Van Zile
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: With Sword and Crucifix; Being an Account of the Strange
- Adventures of Count Louis Sancerre, Companion of Sieur LaSalle, on
- the Lower Mississippi, in the Year of Grace 1682
-
-Author: Edward S. Van Zile
-
-Release Date: October 10, 2021 [eBook #66503]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: D A Alexander, David E. Brown, and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
- produced from images generously made available by The Internet
- Archive)
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WITH SWORD AND CRUCIFIX; BEING AN
-ACCOUNT OF THE STRANGE ADVENTURES OF COUNT LOUIS SANCERRE, COMPANION OF
-SIEUR LASALLE, ON THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI, IN THE YEAR OF GRACE 1682 ***
-
-[Illustration: [Page 11
-
-“‘THE SWORD AND THE CRUCIFIX,’ WHISPERED DE SANCERRE,
-POINTING TO THE SOLDIER AND THE PRIEST”]
-
-
-
-
- With
- Sword and Crucifix
-
- _Being an Account of the Strange Adventures of
- Count Louis de Sancerre, Companion of Sieur
- de la Salle, on the Lower Mississippi
- in the Year of Grace 1682_
-
- BY
- EDWARD S. VAN ZILE
-
- ILLUSTRATED
-
- [Illustration]
-
- NEW YORK AND LONDON
- HARPER & BROTHERS PUBLISHERS
- 1900
-
-
-
-
- Copyright, 1899, by HARPER & BROTHERS.
-
- _All rights reserved._
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- CHAPTER PAGE
-
- I. IN WHICH A GREAT EXPLORER LISTENS AT MIDNIGHT TO A TALE
- OF LOVE 1
-
- II. IN WHICH DE SANCERRE IS CONFRONTED BY A MYSTERY 9
-
- III. IN WHICH A MAIDEN SHOWS HER HEART 18
-
- IV. IN WHICH DE LA SALLE REACHES A FATEFUL DECISION 26
-
- V. IN WHICH A DAUGHTER GRANTS A FATHER’S WISH 33
-
- VI. IN WHICH JUAN RODRIQUEZ UNDERGOES AN UNPLEASANT HALF-HOUR 40
-
- VII. IN WHICH JUAN RODRIQUEZ TAKES HIS REVENGE 49
-
- VIII. IN WHICH SATAN HAS HIS WAY WITH THE _CONCEPCION_ 58
-
- IX. IN WHICH TWO CHILDREN OF THE SUN ASTONISH A SCOUNDREL 64
-
- X. IN WHICH THE CROSS IS CARRIED TO A CITY OF IDOLATERS 72
-
- XI. IN WHICH THE BROTHER OF THE SUN WELCOMES THE CHILDREN
- OF THE MOON 81
-
- XII. IN WHICH CHATÉMUC FINDS THE INSPIRATION WHICH HE LACKED 92
-
- XIII. IN WHICH DE SANCERRE RUNS A STUBBORN RACE 103
-
- XIV. IN WHICH THE RESULTS OF CHATÉMUC’S ENTHUSIASM ARE SEEN 114
-
- XV. IN WHICH THE GRAY FRIAR DONS THE LIVERY OF SATAN 123
-
- XVI. IN WHICH A SPIRIT SAVES DE SANCERRE FROM DEATH 133
-
- XVII. IN WHICH DE SANCERRE BREAKS HIS FAST AND SMILES 146
-
- XVIII. IN WHICH DE SANCERRE HEARS NEWS OF THE GREAT SUN 156
-
- XIX. IN WHICH COHEYOGO EXHIBITS HIS CRAFTINESS 167
-
- XX. IN WHICH A WHITE ROBE FAILS TO PROTECT A BLACK HEART 181
-
- XXI. IN WHICH DE SANCERRE WIELDS HIS SWORD AGAIN 194
-
- XXII. IN WHICH THE CITY OF THE SUN ENJOYS A FÊTE 206
-
- XXIII. IN WHICH DE SANCERRE UNDERGOES MANY VARIED EMOTIONS 219
-
- XXIV. IN WHICH SPIRITS, GOOD AND BAD, BESET A WILDERNESS 232
-
- XXV. IN WHICH DE SANCERRE WEEPS AND FIGHTS 242
-
- XXVI. IN WHICH DOÑA JULIA IS REMINDED OF THE PAST 253
-
- XXVII. IN WHICH ST. EUSTACE IS KIND TO DE SANCERRE 264
-
- XXVIII. IN WHICH DE SANCERRE’S ISLAND IS BESIEGED 277
-
- XXIX. IN WHICH THE GREAT SPIRIT COMES FROM THE SEA TO
- RECLAIM COYOCOP 290
-
-
-
-
-ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- “‘THE SWORD AND THE CRUCIFIX!’ WHISPERED DE SANCERRE,
- POINTING FROM THE SOLDIER TO THE PRIEST” _Frontispiece_
-
- “THE CAPTAIN HURLED HIM DOWN UPON THE DECK” _Facing p._ 46
-
- “THE FRENCHMAN, WITH A GRAY SMILE UPON HIS PALLID FACE,
- RUSHED PAST THE LINE, A WINNER OF THE RACE BY TWO
- FULL YARDS” “ 112
-
- “COOL, MOTIONLESS, WITH UNFLINCHING EYES, THE FRENCHMAN
- STOOD WATCHING THE CHIEF PRIEST” “ 176
-
- “A WHITE-FACED MAN PRESSING TO HIS BREAST A DARK-HAIRED
- MAIDEN” “ 238
-
- “HE FELT A LIGHT HAND UPON HIS ARM, AND GAZED DOWN INTO
- THE DARK EYES OF THE MAIDEN” “ 296
-
-
-
-
-WITH SWORD AND CRUCIFIX
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-IN WHICH A GREAT EXPLORER LISTENS AT MIDNIGHT TO A TALE OF LOVE
-
-
-“Louis le Grand, King of France and Navarre, has deserted pleasure to
-follow piety--and times are changed, monsieur.”
-
-The speaker, Louis de Sancerre, of Languedoc, descendant of a famous
-constable of France, leaned against a tree near the shore of a majestic
-river, and musingly watched the moonbeams as they chased the ripples
-toward an unknown sea. A soft, cool breeze, heavy with the odor of
-new-born flowers, caressed his pale, clear-cut face, and toyed with the
-ruffles and trappings of a costume more becoming at Versailles than in
-the mysterious wilderness through which its wearer had floated for many
-weeks.
-
-On the bank at the exiled courtier’s feet lay reclining the martial
-figure of a man, whose stern, immobile face, lofty brow, and piercing
-eyes told a tale of high resolve and stubborn will. Sieur de la Salle,
-winning his way to immortality through wastes of swamp and canebrake
-and the windings of a great river, had made his camp at a bend in the
-stream from which the outlook seemed to promise the fulfilment of his
-dearest hopes. On the crest of a low hill, sloping gently to the water,
-his followers had thrown up a rude fort of felled trees, and now at
-midnight the adventurous Frenchmen and their score of Indian allies
-were tasting sleep after a day of wearisome labor.
-
-De la Salle and a hapless waif from the splendid court of Louis
-XIV., more sensitive than their subordinates to the grandeur of the
-undertaking in which they were engaged, had felt no wish to slumber.
-They had strolled away from the silent camp; and, for the first time
-since Count Louis de Sancerre had joined the expedition, its leader
-had been learning something of the flippant, witty, reckless, debonair
-courtier’s career.
-
-“Beware the omnipresent ear of the Great Order, Monsieur le Comte!”
-exclaimed La Salle, rising to his elbow and searching the shadows
-behind him with questioning eyes. “Think not, de Sancerre, that in the
-treacherous quiet of this wilderness you may safely speak your mind.
-I have good reason to distrust the trees, the waters, and the roving
-winds. Where I go are ever savages or silence, but always in my ear
-echoes the stealthy footfall of the Jesuit. And this is well, monsieur.
-I seize this country in the name of France; the Order takes it in the
-name of God!”
-
-“In the name of God!” repeated de Sancerre, mockingly. “You know
-Versailles, monsieur? There is no room for God. Banished once by a
-courtesan, the Almighty now succumbs to a confessor.”
-
-“Hold, monsieur!” cried La Salle, sternly. “This is blasphemy!
-Blasphemy and treason! But enough of priests! You tell me that you
-loved this woman from the court of Spain?”
-
-“How can I say? What is love, monsieur?” exclaimed de Sancerre,
-lightly, throwing himself down beside his leader.
-
-It was as if a butterfly, born of the moonbeams, had come to ask a
-foolish riddle of the grim forest glades. The incarnation of all that
-was most polished, insincere, diabolical, fascinating at Versailles
-had taken the form of a handsome man, not quite forty years of age,
-who reclined at midnight upon the banks of an unexplored river, and
-pestered the living embodiment of high adventure and mighty purposes
-with the light and airy nothings of a courtier’s tongue. How should
-Sieur de la Salle know the mystery of love? He who had wooed hardship
-to win naught but the kiss of disappointment, he who had cherished
-no mistress save the glory of France, no passion but for King and
-Church, was not a source from which a flippant worldling could wring a
-definition of the word of words.
-
-The majestic silence of the night was broken by the raucous muttering
-of some restless dreamer within the confines of the camp. An owl
-hooted, and far away a wolf bayed at the moon. La Salle arose, climbed
-the bank to see that his sentries were attentive at their posts, and
-then returned to Count de Sancerre’s side.
-
-“You do not answer me, Sieur de la Salle!” exclaimed the latter,
-testily. “I have sought the answer from La Fontaine, from Moliêre,
-Racine; aye, from Bossuet and Fénelon. ’Twas all in vain. They were
-men, you say, and did not understand? But I have asked the question of
-de Montespan, la Vallière, la Fayette, Sêvigné. One was witty, another
-silent, and all were wrong. There remained, of course, de Maintenon.
-Her I never asked. She would have said, I doubt not, that love is a
-priest who leads by prayer to power.”
-
-“You wander far afield, Monsieur le Comte,” remarked La Salle, coldly,
-after an interval of silence. “The night grows old, and still you have
-not told me why you left the splendors that you love, to risk your life
-in this fierce struggle in an unknown land.”
-
-“To risk my life?” cried the Count, laughingly. “If that were all!
-To tear my velvets where no draper is, to see the gay-plumed birds
-a-laughing at my plight, to long in vain for powder for my wig, to
-find my buckles growing red with damp--all this is worse than death.
-But still, I bear it bravely, do I not? Ah, well, Turenne--God rest
-his soul!--taught me the lessons of a hard campaign. What is this
-voyage in a bark canoe upon the peaceful breast of yonder stream? A
-pleasure-jaunt, monsieur, to one who fought with France against the
-world--who sheathed his sword at Nimeguen. Once only were we beaten,
-de la Salle. The Dutch let in the sea, and, lo! his Majesty and
-Luxembourg, Turenne and Condé, Vauban and the rest, were powerless
-against the mighty ally of the foe. I say to you, Monsieur le
-Capitaine, beware the sea! You seek it in your quest. ’Tis full of
-treachery.”
-
-The Count had arisen and drawn his sword, which gleamed in the
-moonlight as he turned its point toward the unknown mouth the roving
-river sought.
-
-“This blade,” he said, reseating himself and patting the steel with
-affection, “flashed gayly for the King upon the Rhine. Alas for me, it
-drove me at the last to seek my fortunes in a weary land.”
-
-“You drew it, then, for something other than the cause of France?”
-remarked La Salle, suspiciously.
-
-“For that of which we spoke, which no tongue voices but all hearts have
-felt. I drew it once for love--_et voilà tout_!”
-
-“You killed a Spaniard, then?”
-
-“They speak the truth, monsieur, who say your mind is quick. She--as I
-told you--came to France with Spain’s great embassy. He, a strutting
-grandee, proud and bigoted, came with the suite, holding some post that
-made his person safe. The tool of diplomats, the pet of priests, my
-rival--as he was--defied my hate. ’Tis said they were betrothed, Don
-Josef and-- But hold! her name I need not speak.”
-
-The Count remained silent for a time, watching the moon-kissed
-waters at his feet. La Salle, grim, reticent, but not unsympathetic,
-gazed steadfastly at his companion’s delicately-carved face. A stern
-knight-errant, who sought to win an empire for his king, lay wasting
-the midnight hours to listen to a love-tale from a flippant tongue.
-
-“’Twas with this blade,” went on de Sancerre after a time, waving
-his sword from side to side in the moonlight, “that I pierced his
-heart--and broke my own. For which all praise be to Saint Maturin, who
-watches over fools.”
-
-“He was no coward, then?” questioned La Salle.
-
-“Not when his pride was pricked,” answered de Sancerre. “Great wars
-have been begun with less diplomacy than I employed to make my insult
-drive him to his steel. But, Spanish blood is hot, and, truth to tell,
-my tongue can cut and thrust. Her eyes were on us at a _fête champêtre_
-when, standing by his side, I spoke the words that made him mine at
-midnight--’neath a moon like this. There’s little left to tell. He knew
-a Spanish trick or two, but, monsieur, he was a boy! In the moonlight
-there his eyes were so like hers I lost all pity--and--so--he died.”
-
-“And then?”
-
-“And then I vowed a candle to St. Christopher and sailed across the
-sea. Breathe it not, monsieur--I bore a letter from de Montespan to
-Frontenac.”
-
-“Then cut your tongue out ere you tell the tale,” exclaimed La Salle,
-gruffly. After a moment’s silence he went on, more gently: “But,
-Monsieur le Comte, I cannot understand the ease of your escape. You’ve
-roused the anger of the King, de Maintenon, the Jesuits, and Spain.
-Such foes could crush an empire in a day.”
-
-“But you yourself, monsieur, have stood against them all.”
-
-“I?” exclaimed La Salle, musingly. “You may be right, my friend. I
-sometimes wonder if my life is charmed. Whom can I trust, monsieur?
-Allies false when the hour of danger came, assassins at my bedside, and
-poison in my food--all these I’ve known, monsieur. And still I live.”
-
-The two adventurers had arisen and were facing each other in the
-moonlight. La Salle, tall, commanding--a king by the divine right of
-a dauntless soul--stood, with head uncovered, looking down at the
-slender, graceful patrician confronting him.
-
-“You strive for France, Sieur de la Salle,” exclaimed de Sancerre, the
-mocking note gone from his voice--“for the glory of dear France--and
-France will not destroy you.”
-
-“For France!” repeated La Salle, solemnly. “For France and for the
-Church! _Vive le Roi!_”
-
-Silently they turned and, mounting the hillock, made their way toward
-the sleeping camp, while the Mississippi rolled on beneath the moon to
-tell a strange tale to the listening waters of the gulf.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-IN WHICH DE SANCERRE IS CONFRONTED BY A MYSTERY
-
-
-Like a statue done in bronze stood Chatémuc before a
-hastily-constructed hut at the rear of the log fort in which the rank
-and file of the explorers lay sleeping. La Salle had chosen the sentry
-as his special body-guard, for at many a critical juncture in his
-long years of exploration--menaced at all times, as he had been, by a
-thousand lurking perils--the daring Frenchman had tested the loyalty
-and courage of this stalwart Mohican, who, for love of a white man, had
-wandered many weary miles from his tribal hunting-grounds.
-
-Within the rude but spacious hut over which the phlegmatic Indian stood
-guard lay sleeping, as La Salle and de Sancerre entered the enclosure,
-two men who had found rest upon heaps of leaves and grass, and whose
-strangely-contrasted outlines, emphasized by the errant moonbeams
-that penetrated the chinks between the logs, called attention to
-the curious mixture of unrelated nationalities of which La Salle’s
-expedition was made up. In one corner of the hut reclined the slender
-form of the Franciscan friar, Zenobe Membré. Upon his placid, smiling
-face--a countenance suggestive of religious enthusiasm even while
-he slept--rested a ray of silvery light, as if the prayer that he
-had uttered ere he fell asleep had transformed itself into a halo to
-glorify his pillow through the night. His thin hands were crossed
-upon his breast, and showed white and transparent against the gray
-background of his garb.
-
-Within the shadows at an opposite corner of the apartment lay the
-lithe, muscular figure of a man whose costume made it difficult for the
-observer to determine whether the wearer was a foot-soldier from the
-Low Countries or a Canadian _coureur de bois_. The truth was that Henri
-de Tonti’s experiences as an Italian officer in the Sicilian wars had
-left their impress upon his attire as an explorer under de la Salle.
-As he lay, fully dressed, in the moonlight that night he might well
-have been a sculptor’s dream, representing in his outlines the martial
-genius of the Old World, bringing “not peace but a sword” to the New.
-A bare hand rested lovingly upon the cross-piece of his rapier, which
-he had unfastened from his waist and tossed upon the dry grass of his
-couch. His other hand was covered by a glove.
-
-Before they threw themselves upon their tempting beds of leaves, La
-Salle and de Sancerre stood side by side in the centre of the hut for a
-moment, gazing thoughtfully at the weird tableau that their slumbering
-comrades made.
-
-“The sword and crucifix!” whispered de Sancerre, pointing from the
-soldier to the priest. “Strange allies these, monsieur.”
-
-“But one without the other were in vain! They serve together by the
-will of God. Good-night, Monsieur le Comte.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-How long de Sancerre had slept before he was awakened by a light touch
-upon his shoulder he never knew. It must have been a considerable
-time, for, as he opened his reluctant eyes, he saw that the moonlight
-no longer gleamed in all quarters of the hut, but dimly illumined
-only one corner thereof. Inured though he was to perils of all kinds,
-the Count felt a thrill of dismay as his eyes rested upon a hideous,
-grinning face leering at him from the shadows close at hand. He sat up
-hurriedly, uttering no sound, but fumbling in the leaves and grass for
-his rapier. A glance assured him that his comrades had been undisturbed
-by the intruder at his side.
-
-“Be not afraid, señor,” whispered a voice in broken Spanish. “The
-children of the moon have naught to fear from us.”
-
-De Sancerre, to whom Spanish was like a native tongue, raised himself
-upon his elbow and gazed searchingly at the misshapen hag who had
-disturbed his sleep.
-
-“I crave your pardon,” he murmured, with the air of a courtier
-addressing a coquette in the Salon de Venus, while the mocking smile
-that his face so often wore gleamed in the half-light. “Then I am of
-the children of the moon?”
-
-“At night ye come from out the shadows of the distant lands, ye
-white-faced offspring of your Queen, the Moon. The Sun, our God, has
-told us you would come. Be not afraid. We have rare gifts for you--and
-loving hearts.”
-
-The harsh, guttural voice in which the aged crone spoke these gentle
-words added to the uncanny effect of her wrinkled, time-marked face,
-peering at the smiling Frenchman through the gloom.
-
-“I bring you this,” she went on, still speaking in a mongrel Spanish
-patois, which de Sancerre found it difficult to interpret. “Remember
-what I say. The children of the sun send greeting to their brothers of
-the moon.”
-
-She laid upon the dried grass of his bed a piece of white mulberry
-bark, upon which de Sancerre’s eyes rested indifferently for an
-instant. When he raised them again the hag had left his side, and he
-saw her pushing her way through an opening in the tree-limbs at the
-further end of the hut. For an instant her diminutive body stopped the
-gap in the wooden wall. Then, from where he lay, the Frenchman could
-catch a glimpse of moonbeams on the river through the opening that she
-had made.
-
-For a moment this strange visitation affected de Sancerre unpleasantly.
-Surrounded, as their little party was, by unknown tribes with whom
-the wily Spaniards had had intercourse, the words of the old crone,
-cordial though they had been in their way, filled the Count with alarm.
-Furthermore, the ease with which she had made an undiscovered entrance
-to their hut emphasized the disquiet that he had begun to feel.
-Thorough soldier as he was, this seemingly harmless invasion of his
-leader’s quarters became to his mind a more menacing episode the more
-he weighed it in all its bearings.
-
-Rising noiselessly from his resting-place, de Sancerre made his way
-between his sleeping comrades to the entrance to the hut. Stepping
-forth into the white night, he confronted Chatémuc, who still stood
-motionless in the same spot that he had occupied when La Salle and his
-companion had returned from the river. The Mohican, from long service
-with the explorer, had acquired a practical knowledge of the French
-tongue, but, as a general rule, he made use of it only in monosyllables.
-
-“Chatémuc,” said de Sancerre, sternly, “your eyes are heavy with the
-moonlight or with sleep. You keep indifferent guard. Did you not see
-an aged witch who even now stood within the hut and roused me from my
-sleep?”
-
-The tall Mohican gazed down upon the Frenchman with keen, searching
-eyes, which glowed at that moment with a fire that proved him innocent
-either of treason or stupidity. His stern, immobile face gave no
-indication of the astonishment which the Frenchman’s accusation must
-have caused him.
-
-“There’s nothing stirring but the river and the leaves,” said Chatémuc,
-with grim emphasis, turning his shapely head slowly to sweep the
-landscape in all directions with eyes for which the forest had no
-mysteries.
-
-“_Ma foi_, my Chatémuc! You’re as proud and stubborn as de Groot, the
-Hollander. But follow me. I’ll show you a hole that proves I dreamed no
-dream.”
-
-De Sancerre, behind whom stalked the stately Mohican, made his way
-hurriedly to the further side of the hut. Pointing to an opening
-between the logs, through which a small boy might have crawled, the
-Count said:
-
-“Behold, monsieur, the yawning chasm in your reputation as a sentry!
-’Twould not admit an army, but it might serve for a snake.”
-
-Chatémuc had fallen upon his knees, and was examining the aperture
-and the trampled grass which led to it. Presently he arose and turned
-towards the Count.
-
-“A woman,” he muttered. “Small. Light. Old.”
-
-“Fine woodcraft, Chatémuc! You read the blazonry that crossed the
-drawbridge with great skill--after the castle has been captured. But
-let it pass. No harm’s been done, save that your pride has had a fall.
-And so I leave you to your watch again. If you loved me, Chatémuc,
-you’d keep old women from my midnight couch. I fear my sleep is lost.”
-
-Stealing noiselessly past the motionless forms of La Salle, the
-friar, and the Italian captain, after his successful demonstration of
-Chatémuc’s negligence as a sentinel, de Sancerre approached his tumbled
-bed of leaves with weary step. A feeling of depression, a sudden
-realization of the horrid possibilities that his environment suggested,
-a sensation of impotent rebellion at the fate that had hurled him
-from the very centre of seventeenth-century civilization into the
-rude embrace of a horror-haunted wilderness, came suddenly upon the
-vivacious Frenchman, mocking at his stoical views of life and making
-of the satirical tendency of his mind a knife with which to cut himself.
-
-“_Nom de Dieu!_” he muttered, as he gazed down upon the dry grass and
-leaves of his uninviting couch, “these be fine lodgings for a Count of
-Languedoc! At the worst, with Turenne, there was always Versailles at
-our rear.”
-
-At that instant his heavy eyes lighted upon the slip of white bark
-which his recent caller had left with him as a token of good-will.
-De Sancerre bent down and, grasping the seemingly meaningless gift,
-gazed at it inquiringly. To his amazement, he made out in the
-darkness what seemed to him to be a bit of writing, scratched with a
-pointed instrument upon this fragment from a mulberry bush. Hastily,
-stealthily, making his way to the opening through which the donor of
-the gift had forced her exit, the Count leaned forward, and in the
-moonlight read, with wondering eyes, the name:
-
- _Julia de Aquilar_
-
-It was the name of the woman for love of whom he had killed a Spaniard
-and lost his native land. Instantly his mind harked back to the
-confession that, but an hour or so before, he had poured into the ears
-of Sieur de la Salle. Had an eavesdropper overheard his words, and, in
-a spirit of mischief, sought to tease him by a trick? He rejected the
-supposition at once, for the conviction came upon him, increasing a
-thousandfold the consternation which he felt, that he had deliberately
-refrained from mentioning the name of his inamorata to La Salle.
-
-De Sancerre drew himself erect and stood motionless for a moment, the
-most amazed and startled being in all the strange new world.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-IN WHICH A MAIDEN SHOWS HER HEART
-
-
-Sieur de la Salle’s temporary stockade had been erected upon the
-western bank of the great river, and his followers had received
-with delight the report that their leader had decided to indulge
-in a few days of recuperation before continuing his journey to the
-gulf. After weeks of labor at the paddles, the canoemen were in
-sore need of rest. The party consisted of twenty-three Frenchmen,
-eighteen Indians--Abenakis and Mohicans--ten squaws, and three
-pappooses. Discontent and even open grumbling had already developed
-in this incongruous assemblage, and it was only the stern, imperious
-personality of de la Salle that had saved the expedition from falling
-asunder through the inherent antagonisms of the elements of which it
-was composed.
-
-But upon the morning following the Count de Sancerre’s receipt of an
-inexplicable gift from the children of the sun there reigned an air
-of gayety in the camp. Provisions were plentiful, the terminus of the
-exploration, it was rumored, was near at hand, and, for the next few
-days, at least, no exhausting task, no menacing danger seemed likely
-to annoy the adventurers. The glories of early spring upon the lower
-Mississippi met their wondering and grateful eyes. In his delight the
-Frenchman carolled forth a _chanson_ to greet the rising sun, while his
-phlegmatic comrade, the native American, grunted with satisfaction as
-he reclined upon the long grass and appeared to muse indolently upon
-the strange vivacity of the men from over-sea.
-
-Shortly after dawn de Sancerre, pale, heavy-eyed, restless, weary of
-his vain efforts to gain a dreamless sleep, had wandered away from the
-camp and thrown himself listlessly down upon the gently sloping shore
-of the river, across whose ripples flashed the gleaming arrows of the
-April sun. As he lay there, reclining against a slender tree-trunk, the
-last few hours seemed to him to have been a long nightmare, through
-which the mocking black eyes of a woman of wondrous beauty had taunted
-him for his helplessness.
-
-As de Sancerre, refreshed by the cool breeze that chased the sunbeams
-across the flood, recalled every detail of his recent adventure,
-he found himself confronted not only by a mystery, but by a choice
-between two courses of action which must be made at once. Should he
-tell his comrades of the strange episode that had disturbed his
-rest, or should he keep the secret to himself, trusting to Chatémuc’s
-pride and reticence to repress the story of the night? In a certain
-sense he was under obligations to de la Salle to keep him informed
-of every happening which, even remotely, might affect the welfare of
-the expedition. On the other hand, there was that in his leader’s
-personality which caused de Sancerre to hesitate before telling him a
-tale which, he reflected, would sound like the ravings of a lunatic. He
-could picture the cold, disdainful glance in de la Salle’s searching
-eye ere he turned upon his heel with the curt remark that the Count de
-Sancerre’s dreams should test the friar’s skill.
-
-To the Count, thus vexed by a most disturbing problem, came Katonah,
-sister of Chatémuc, the only Indian maiden in Sieur de la Salle’s
-strangely-assorted suite. With the most punctilious courtesy de
-Sancerre sprang erect, removed from his head his travel-worn but
-still picturesque bonnet, and, making a sweeping bow, pointed to the
-grass-grown seat that he had just vacated.
-
-“Mademoiselle Katonah, I bid you welcome! I was dreaming, _petite_,
-of the land across the sea. Your eyes and smile shall change my mood
-again.”
-
-The Indian girl gazed at the Frenchman with dark, fearless eyes,
-in which there gleamed a light that told the courtier a tale he had
-no wish to learn. Not that the Count was better than his age, more
-scrupulous than the pleasure-loving court in which his youth had been
-passed, but in the freer, nobler atmosphere of this brave New World,
-and in the companionship of men striving in the midst of peril to do
-great deeds, all that was most admirable in de Sancerre’s character
-had been born anew, and, to his own amazement, he had learned that his
-views of life had undergone a change, that there had grown up something
-in his soul which gave the lie to his scoffing tongue, still from habit
-the tongue of a _mondain_ fashioned in an evil school.
-
-Katonah, reclining against the tree and gazing upward at the Frenchman,
-formed a deep-toned picture becoming to that land of hazy sunlight,
-drowzy zephyrs, and opening flowers, bright-hued and redolent of
-spring. Her dark eyes, clear-cut features, and white, even teeth, her
-slender, supple limbs, satisfied even the exacting eye of a man who had
-looked with admiration upon La Vallière, de Montespan, de Maintenon.
-
-“The land across the sea!” exclaimed Katonah, waving a slender,
-well-turned hand toward the opposite shore of the great river. “You
-would go back to it?” She had learned the French tongue from her
-brother, Chatémuc.
-
-Her eloquent eyes rested questioningly upon the pallid, symmetrical
-face of de Sancerre.
-
-The barbaric directness of her question brought a smile to the
-Frenchman’s lips as he threw himself down by her side and took her hand
-in his.
-
-“Mayhap some day I shall go back, _ma petite_. But at this moment I
-have no wish to go.”
-
-De Sancerre was looking at Katonah, but in his mind was the picture of
-a scrap of white bark upon which had been scrawled the name of the only
-woman his heart had ever loved. Perhaps Katonah weighed his words at
-their real worth, for she withdrew her hand from his, while her gentle
-eyes rested mournfully upon the mighty river upon whose bosom she had
-learned the joy and sorrow of a hopeless love.
-
-De Sancerre, whose delicately-moulded face, graceful figure, ready
-wit, and quick perceptions, added to high birth and a reputation for
-physical courage, had made him a favorite at a voluptuous court, felt
-a mixture of self-satisfaction and annoyance at the unsought homage
-that he had won from this handsome savage. No coquette at Versailles
-could have put into artful words the flattery that Katonah gave him by
-a glance. But de Sancerre realized that, under existing circumstances,
-her devotion to him might involve them both in serious peril. Her
-brother, Chatémuc, was a sentry whose eyes and ears would not always
-be blind and deaf to what was stirring besides the river and the leaves.
-
-“Katonah,” said the Count, presently, “let me tell you why I may never
-go back to the land beyond the sea.”
-
-The Indian girl gazed up at him with earnest attention.
-
-“To the great wigwam of the king who rules all kings there came a
-maiden from a distant land. Her eyes were like the night, her hair the
-color of a raven’s wing.”
-
-De Sancerre met Katonah’s eyes and remained silent for a time. There
-was something in her glance that chilled him for the moment with an
-inexplicable foreboding. Annoyed at his weakness, he went on:
-
-“All men loved her, _ma petite_, and so it was not strange that I--
-_Mais n’importe._ Among the braves, Katonah, who followed in her train
-was a youth with evil eye, a black, soft-footed, proud, and boastful
-man, to whom her word was sworn.”
-
-“You killed him, then,” said Katonah, with conviction.
-
-De Sancerre started nervously and gazed around him searchingly. There
-was an uncanny precipitancy in Katonah’s mental methods which affected
-him unpleasantly.
-
-“Yes,” he acknowledged. “I killed him, Katonah.”
-
-“And the maiden with the raven hair? You carried her away?”
-
-“No, Katonah. I came across the sea and left her there.”
-
-The eyes of the Mohican wore a puzzled expression as she tried to read
-his face.
-
-“I do not understand,” she murmured, presently.
-
-De Sancerre remained silent for a while. He realized that, with the
-limited vocabulary at his disposal, he could not make the Indian girl
-comprehend the exigencies which, in a civilized land, might arise
-to drive a lover from his loved one’s side. The mind of the savage
-maiden was unfitted to grasp those finer distinctions which made
-the habits and customs at Versailles so superior to the methods and
-manners prevailing among her Mohican kindred. Presently the expatriated
-courtier said:
-
-“Katonah, let me tell you a strange tale. Your brother kept guard last
-night between the river and our hut. But while we slept an aged woman
-crept up beside my bed and gave me this.”
-
-De Sancerre removed from his breast the piece of mulberry bark upon
-which rested the name of Julia de Aquilar. Katonah gazed at the writing
-awe-struck.
-
-“It is the name,” said the Frenchman, in answer to her glance, “of the
-woman with the raven hair.”
-
-The Indian girl, with marvellous grace and agility, sprang to her feet.
-Motionless she stood for a moment looking down at de Sancerre.
-
-“She followed you across the sea?” she asked, in a dull, passionless
-voice.
-
-De Sancerre smiled as he slipped the bark into his doublet and rose to
-a standing posture.
-
-“That could not be, Katonah,” he said, lightly. “I think some wizard,
-making medicine, has read her name upon my heart.”
-
-More he might have said, but at that instant Chatémuc, with stormy
-brow, stood beside them. Not glancing at the Frenchman, his angry gaze
-rested upon the shrinking figure of Katonah. With an imperious gesture
-he pointed towards the camp, and, as the girl hurried away in obedience
-to her brother’s silent behest, de Sancerre threw himself wearily upon
-the bank, a mocking light gleaming in his eyes as he turned and watched
-the retreating Mohicans until they were lost to sight behind the
-osier-trees.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-IN WHICH DE LA SALLE REACHES A FATEFUL DECISION
-
-
-“I have heard it said that the good Father le Jeune, the Jesuit, not
-speaking Algonquin, was obliged to expound the mysteries of the faith
-to the Montagnais through the aid of a blasphemous backslider, far gone
-in liquor. This tool of Satan put vile words into the mouth of the
-Jesuit, so that the Montagnais laughed mockingly while le Jeune fondly
-thought that he was explaining to them the doctrine of the Trinity.”
-
-Henri de Tonti, Zenobe Membré, and Sieur de la Salle had joined the
-Count de Sancerre, after the departure of Chatémuc and Katonah, and the
-quartet had formed itself for the time being into a council, to answer
-at once an insistent and momentous question. Two white-robed envoys,
-carrying a disk of burnished copper to represent the sun, had entered
-La Salle’s hut an hour before this, bringing to him an invitation to
-visit, with his followers, the city of their chief. Henri de Tonti,
-enthusiastic lay proselyter though he was, had taken the ground that
-an expedition to the haunts of the sun-worshippers would result in
-nothing more valuable than a waste of time and energy, while it might
-involve the party in unforeseen dangers. To check the enthusiasm of the
-Franciscan friar, who longed to convert these friendly idolaters to the
-true faith, de Tonti had just been calling the attention of the council
-to the difficulties besetting a missionary who attempted to explain the
-teachings of Mother Church in a tongue with which he was not thoroughly
-conversant.
-
-The slender, white-faced friar, whose great physical endurance was
-suggested by nothing in his outward seeming but the clear, steady
-gleam in his large gray eyes, turned, rather impatiently, from the
-Italian adventurer and put forth an appealing palm towards Sieur de la
-Salle, who lay at full length upon the bank, his head resting upon his
-upturned hand, as he listened attentively to the debate between the
-soldier and the priest.
-
-“There is much efficacy in signs, monsieur,” exclaimed Membré, with
-fervor. “Could I have led a thousand redmen to a knowledge of the
-truth had I always waited for an alien tongue? When all seemed lost,
-when their ears were deaf, when my prayers and hymns were but the
-feeble strivings of a voice they would not heed, has come a miracle,
-vouchsafed by Jesus Christ, and howling savages have fallen prone in
-penitence before the cross. I ask not much of you, monsieur, but in the
-name of Mother Church I crave an escort to these children of the sun.
-To pass them by, to leave them hopeless in their blind idolatry, to say
-no word to bring them to the faith--Mother of God, but this would be a
-sin!”
-
-The delicate face of the Franciscan glowed with the fervor of his soul.
-He had drawn himself up to his full height, and his rich, penetrating
-voice echoed weirdly across the gleaming waters of the flood.
-
-De la Salle put up his hand with a gesture seemingly intended to calm
-the exuberance of the devoted priest. Turning to de Sancerre, who was
-seated on his right, he said:
-
-“What think you, Monsieur le Comte? Shall we risk a visit to these
-children of the sun?”
-
-“_Mais oui, monsieur._ There is no other course. If they should take
-offence at our neglect--_ma foi_, it might go hard with us.”
-
-A scornful smile played across de Tonti’s scarred and rugged face. He
-was annoyed at his failure to prevent the delay which this apparently
-useless visit to a pagan tribe would engender. De Sancerre observed
-the satirical expression upon the Italian’s countenance, but wisely
-refrained from giving voice to the anger which he felt at the sight.
-Between de Tonti and de Sancerre a national antagonism had been
-intensified by the jealousy existing between them regarding the
-attitude of their leader. The evident fondness shown by de la Salle
-for the companionship of the itinerant French nobleman had displeased
-the Italian veteran, whose long years of devotion to the explorer’s
-service had begotten a claim to special consideration. In more highly
-civilized surroundings the friction between de Tonti and de Sancerre
-would long ago have found relief in bloodshed. One striking difference
-between Versailles and the wilderness lay in the fact that in the
-latter greater provocation was needed to impel men to run each other
-through with steel than in the parks in which gay courtiers insulted
-one another with soft words.
-
-“Furthermore, monsieur,” went on de Sancerre, observing that his
-words had not impelled de la Salle to come to an immediate decision
-regarding the question at issue--“furthermore, there may be a way to
-find an interpreter through whom these lost idolaters shall learn the
-teachings of our faith.” If there sounded a note of insincerity in the
-Frenchman’s voice, none marked it save de Tonti, whose smile was always
-satirical when de Sancerre touched upon the Church.
-
-“Your words, Monsieur le Comte, mean much or nothing. Explain
-yourself,” said de la Salle, coldly.
-
-“Did you notice at the further end of yonder hut a hole through which a
-good-sized dog might crawl?” asked de Sancerre, impressively, arising
-and pointing toward the camp.
-
-“Sieur de la Salle has eyes for everything, Monsieur le Comte,”
-remarked de Tonti, tauntingly.
-
-Paying no attention to his rival, de Sancerre went on:
-
-“Through that hole last night there crept into the hut an aged hag,
-who, coming to my side, gave us a welcome from the children of the sun.
-They call us--as you know--the children of the moon.”
-
-De la Salle, calm, phlegmatic, but ever on the alert, gazed searchingly
-at the speaker.
-
-“Your tale is somewhat late, monsieur,” he remarked, meaningly.
-
-“I feared the gossip of an idle camp,” said de Sancerre, lightly,
-carelessly tossing a pebble into the rippling waters at his feet. “The
-matter’s not of moment but for this: the old crone spoke a Spanish
-_patois_, hard to understand, but not impossible. Her tongue, I think,
-might serve our friar well.”
-
-“A Spanish _patois_?” repeated de la Salle, musingly. “’Tis well you
-spoke of this, Monsieur le Comte. I told the keen-eyed Colbert that
-there was no time to lose. Below, around us lie the lands of gold, and
-stretched across them rests the arm of Spain. The time has come when we
-must lop it off.”
-
-De la Salle had arisen and, with his hand upon the hilt of his sword,
-gazed toward the waters which flowed toward a Spanish sea. He looked,
-for the moment, the very incarnation of the martial spirit of an
-adventurous age, bidding defiance to a mighty foe. Suddenly he turned
-and eyed his followers sternly. In a voice which admitted of no reply,
-he said:
-
-“De Tonti, de Sancerre, and Membré, prepare to set out at once to these
-people of the sun. I’ll give you presents for their chiefs and wives.
-Send Chatémuc to me. He shall go with you, and his sister--Katonah, is
-it not? She’ll find the woman with the Spanish tongue where you, as
-men, might fail.”
-
-“But,” exclaimed de Sancerre, springing to his feet, “there may be
-peril for the girl in this. ’Tis best we go alone.”
-
-“I am amazed, Monsieur le Comte,” remarked La Salle, sternly. “Obey my
-orders! ’Tis not for you to question what I plan. Whatever comes of
-this, the blame shall rest with me.”
-
-De Tonti, Membré, and de Sancerre had turned to make their way
-hurriedly back to the camp.
-
-“De Sancerre,” called La Salle, ere they had gone beyond ear-shot. The
-French nobleman returned hurriedly to his leader’s side.
-
-“There is no danger to Katonah in all this,” said La Salle, meaningly,
-his eyes reading de Sancerre’s face. “No harm can come to her, for
-Chatémuc is ever by her side. No nobleman in Spain or France is
-prouder, de Sancerre, than Chatémuc. You understand me?”
-
-“_Ma foi_, I am not dull, monsieur!” exclaimed the Count, a note of
-anger in his voice. Then he turned on his heel and strode rapidly
-toward the camp.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-IN WHICH A DAUGHTER GRANTS A FATHER’S WISH
-
-
-Late in the afternoon of a day in April, just one year before the date
-of the occurrences recorded in the foregoing chapters of this tale,
-Don Rodrigo de Aquilar, statesman, soldier, scholar, devout Catholic,
-sat at a curiously-carved table in the library of his ancestral house
-in the street of Las Palmas, Seville. His gray hair and pointed beard,
-his keen, dark eyes and lofty brow, the simple elegance of his attire,
-and the artistic luxury of his surroundings combined to form a striking
-picture in the half-lights of the waning day. Upon the table before him
-lay pompous tomes, quaint old manuscripts, and several crude maps and
-charts.
-
-Copies of the letters of Menendez to Philip II. of Spain, made by
-Don Rodrigo in the archives of Seville; a transcript of the bull “by
-the authority whereof Pope Alexander, the sixth of that name, gave
-and granted to the Kings of Castile and their successors the regions
-and islands found in the west ocean sea by the navigations of the
-Spaniards:” a reproduction of a map of the western world, dedicated
-to Sir Philip Sidney by Michael Lok; a volume entitled _Hakluyt’s
-Divers Voyages_, hot with hatred of the Spanish, and other misleading
-data concerning a misunderstood continent confronted the Castilian
-aristocrat, and by their united efforts cast upon him a spell which
-had brought to his thin cheeks a hectic flush, and to his haughty lips
-lines of determination.
-
-It was, however, with a much later manuscript than any one of those
-above mentioned that Don Rodrigo was engaged at the moment of which we
-write. Bending eagerly forward from a quaintly-cut, high-backed chair,
-the aged Spaniard was scanning attentively a parchment upon which a
-recent explorer, with artistic tendencies, had inscribed a pictorial
-outline of his discoveries. Ports, harbors, islands, and rivers
-competed for the attention of the observer with rudely outlined birds,
-beasts, and fishes. Indians feasting and dancing, Indians flogged by
-priests. Indians burning alive for heresy, gave grim testimony to the
-fact that the eccentric cartographer had witnessed sympathetically
-the saving of souls in the New World. It was not upon these, however,
-nor upon the chameleon with two legs confronting a bat-winged griffin
-having the tail of an alligator--a weird product, according to the
-map-maker, of Mexico--that Don Rodrigo de Aquilar was squandering
-the retreating light of day. His eyes and mind rested upon a sketch
-representing a group of Indians working silver mines.
-
-“Methinks, Juan, the venture’s worth the risk. Were it not for Doña
-Julia, I’d slip my anchor of old age and sail across the sea. I have no
-mind to place the King’s gift in an agent’s hands, to let him rob the
-Mexicans and me.”
-
-Don Rodrigo had leaned back in his chair, and was gazing across the
-disordered table at a pale, dark-eyed youth, attired in black velvet,
-whose thin, nervous hand had been making a copy of letters-patent from
-Charles of Spain to his Majesty’s “dear beloved son in Christ, Don
-Rodrigo de Aquilar.” Juan Rodriquez, secretary to Don Rodrigo, was a
-lineal descendant of a _marinero_ of Seville who had returned safely to
-his native city after circumnavigating the globe with Magellan. Of this
-same _marinero_ it had been written that he was “energetic, courageous,
-but marvellous unprincipled.”
-
-“I have heard Doña Julia say, señor,” remarked Juan in a softly
-modulated voice--“I have heard her say, within the last few days, that
-she would be glad to see those strange lands over-sea, where palaces
-are made of gold and pearls grow upon the trees.”
-
-A grim smile played across the haughty countenance of the old statesman.
-
-“An idle whim begot of idle tales, young man! But were I sure that
-sufferings and danger would not beset our ship, I’d take the girl
-and look upon my grant before I die. ’Twill be her heritage at last.
-But, look you, Juan! These blind cartographers have dealt in fancies
-tempting men to death. Somewhere beneath the soil of yonder fatal land
-lie my two sons--and in my death a famous name must die. And I am old.
-They’d say at court, should I set sail from here, that his Majesty’s
-rich gifts had made me mad at last.”
-
-There was silence at the table for a time. Don Rodrigo reclined in his
-chair and watched the changing lights and shadows of the waning day as
-they emphasized the sombre beauty of the room. Presently he said:
-
-“You’ve made the footings, Juan? A hundred thousand ducats will cover
-everything?”
-
-“And leave a handsome margin, señor,” answered the secretary, referring
-to a parchment upon which daintily-executed rows of figures had been
-inscribed. “As times go, señor, the vessel costs you but a song.”
-
-Don Rodrigo eyed Juan Rodriquez searchingly. His secretary’s apparent
-eagerness for the venture mystified him. Diplomatist, educated in a
-crafty school, the old Spaniard had never lost sight of the advantages
-to be gained at times by frank directness.
-
-“You are urging me to take this step, Juan. Let me ask you why?”
-
-The pale face of the youth had turned yellow in the twilight. His dark,
-shifty eyes refused to meet his master’s insistent gaze. His thin hand
-drummed nervously on the dry, rattling parchment in front of him as he
-said, with an attempt at candor which did not ring true:
-
-“I believe, señor, that it would be well for Doña Julia, and for you,
-to leave Seville for a time. She mourns Don Josef--does she not? And
-you, Don Rodrigo, have won a triumph in diplomacy that frees you for a
-while from public life. The voyage now is not so fraught with danger
-as of old, nor is there peril when you reach New Spain. More than
-one fair lady of Seville has been across and back for love of Mother
-Church. And, as I said, the marvels of the sea might serve to turn your
-daughter’s mind from thoughts of her betrothed.”
-
-Don Rodrigo gazed earnestly at the eager face of his secretary.
-
-“You believe, then, Juan, that Doña Julia’s heart was broken when Don
-Josef fell, run through by the Frenchman’s sword? You think she loved
-him?”
-
-“Nay, señor, such thoughts are not for me,” answered Juan, in a voice
-that resembled the purring of a cat. “But this I see--that since you
-returned from France her eyes are heavy and her cheeks are pale. The
-songs she used to sing we hear no more. She’s fading like a flower
-which craves the sun. Give her, señor, new aims, new scenes, the
-splendors of the sea, the marvels of New Spain, and once again her eyes
-and smile will be as sunny as they were of old.”
-
-“You’re wise beyond your years, young man,” remarked the old diplomat,
-playfully. “Mayhap, my Juan, you know a charm to make me young again.
-Or perhaps you can find the island of Bimini and the fountain of
-eternal youth which bold de Leon sought. But, hark, I hear her step!
-We’ll lay the venture, in all its bare simplicity, before her, and do
-as she decides.”
-
-As Don Rodrigo ceased speaking there entered the library a dark-haired,
-large-eyed, graceful girl, who glided from the shadows of the twilight
-toward the centre of the room, and stood motionless at the lower end of
-the long table. A belated sunbeam, stealing through the distant window,
-caressed her face for a moment, upon which a sad smile rested as her
-eyes met her father’s.
-
-“You disobey his Majesty’s behest, Don Rodrigo de Aquilar!” she
-exclaimed, playfully, pointing toward the books and maps before her.
-“Did not the King command you to take a well-earned rest, my father?”
-
-“But his Majesty has never ordered me to sit here and die,” remarked
-Don Rodrigo, emphatically. “Be seated, Julia. You come to us at a most
-opportune moment. For my services in France his Majesty has granted me
-fair lands across the sea. Mines rich in silver belong to me by virtue
-of this seal. The question is, my daughter, will you go with me to view
-my province in New Spain?”
-
-Juan Rodriquez, who had arisen upon Doña Julia’s entrance, stood
-watching the girl with stealthy eyes, in which there gleamed a light
-not there before. There was silence in the room for a moment. Then
-Julia, looking Don Rodrigo fearlessly in the face, said:
-
-“I will go with you gladly, father. Seville has stifled me. But place
-no faith upon my changing whims. If we’re to go, then let us sail at
-once.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-IN WHICH JUAN RODRIQUEZ UNDERGOES AN UNPLEASANT HALF-HOUR
-
-
-In the year 1681 the fickle Guadalquivir still pursued a liberal policy
-toward Seville and vouchsafed sufficient water to that port to enable
-sea-going vessels to begin or end their voyages within sight of the
-Alcazar. Later on, the Spanish sailors were forced, by the treachery of
-the famous river, to abandon Seville and betake themselves to Cadiz for
-an ocean harborage.
-
-At the time, however, at which Don Rodrigo de Aquilar fitted out the
-_Concepcion_--a high-pooped vessel of ninety tons burden--for his
-voyage to the silver mines bestowed upon him by Charles II. of Spain,
-the harbor at Seville enabled the aged diplomat to equip his ship
-without leaving his library. By giving his orders to his secretary,
-Juan Rodriquez, who carried them to Gomez Hernandez, captain of the
-_Concepcion_, Don Rodrigo was relieved of the friction which in those
-days frequently soured an adventurer’s disposition even before he had
-put to sea.
-
-The necessity for haste, lest the veering winds of Doña Julia’s fickle
-fancy should at the last moment balk her father’s enterprise, had been
-impressed upon Juan Rodriquez, who needed no hint from Don Rodrigo to
-make him a gadfly to the captain of the _Concepcion_. Long before he
-weighed anchor, Gomez Hernandez had sworn by his favorite saint that if
-the opportunity ever came to him to put the white-faced, soft-voiced
-secretary into irons, he would show him no pity. That the perilous
-voyage before them might furnish him with the means for punishing
-Juan’s insolence the captain well knew. Let the _Concepcion_ toss the
-Canaries well astern, and for many weeks Gomez Hernandez would be
-autocrat in a little kingdom of his own.
-
-Doña Julia’s cabin was, as it were, the hawser which held the clumsy
-little ship to her moorings. A stuffy room between decks, it seemed
-cruel to ask a maiden used to the luxury of Seville, Madrid and Paris
-to spend weeks within its irritating confines. Don Rodrigo had devoted
-great energy and ingenuity to the task of making his daughter’s
-quarters aboard ship less repulsive than they had at first seemed. Rugs
-from the Orient, a hammock made of padded silk, jars of sweetmeats
-from Turkey, a priceless oil-painting of the Virgin Mary, and other
-quaintly contrasted offshoots of a fond father’s anxious care combined
-to make Doña Julia’s cabin a compartment whose luxury was ludicrous and
-whose discomfort was pathetic.
-
-Had Don Rodrigo de Aquilar better understood the peculiarities of his
-daughter’s disposition, he would have spent less time in making of
-her cabin a mediæval curiosity-shop, and would have weighed anchor
-a week sooner than he did--thus gaining a span of time which would
-have begotten across the sea a radical difference in the outcome of
-his expedition. Something of this found its way into the mind of the
-aged Spaniard after the _Concepcion_ had cleared the mouth of the
-Guadalquivir and was standing out to sea. Beside him upon the poop-deck
-stood Julia, her dark eyes gleaming with excitement as they swept the
-tumbling sea or glanced upward at the bulging sails which drove the
-awkward craft haltingly across the deep. She had paid little or no
-attention to the cabin which had taxed Don Rodrigo’s ingenuity, Juan’s
-patience, and Captain Hernandez’s temper for a month; but the flush
-in her cheeks and the smile upon her lips, as she watched the waters
-sweeping the Old World away from her, gladdened her father’s heart as
-he scanned her changing face.
-
-“The sea is kind to us. See yonder rainbow ’gainst the purple east! An
-omen such as that is worth a candle to St. Christopher.”
-
-The soft, insistent voice of Juan Rodriquez broke in upon the musings
-of the grandee and his daughter.
-
-“’Tis not so strange the saints should wish us well,” remarked Don
-Rodrigo, removing a black velvet cap from his head to let the sea-wind
-play with his white locks. “We go to serve the work of Mother Church.
-To tell the heathen of Mary and her Son, to raise the cross where
-blood-soaked idols stand, to fight the devil with the Book and prayer.”
-
-“And, then--to work the mines,” put in Juan gently.
-
-Doña Julia turned quickly and flashed an angry glance at the
-soft-tongued secretary. She had noticed, with annoyance, a change in
-Juan’s manner since the ship had steered for the open sea. In a way
-that defied explanation in words, the young man had carried himself
-for the past few hours as if, upon the deck of a ship, he had found
-himself upon an equality with his master. There was an elusive sarcasm
-in his words at times, a defiant gleam in his restless eyes, a mocking
-note in his voice, which the girl noted with an inexplicable feeling of
-foreboding.
-
-“Aye--to work the mines,” repeated Don Rodrigo, unsuspiciously. “Why
-not? ’Tis nigh two centuries since treasures from New Spain came
-over-sea. And for their paltry gold we’ve given them the cross. For
-every ducat gained by Spain, a soul’s been won for heaven. Harsh
-measures with the stubborn--these, of course. ’Tis thus the Church must
-win its way on earth. The fight is not yet done. Upon the border of the
-lands I own the good Dominicans have built a mission-house. On you, my
-daughter, will devolve the task to raise a great cathedral where the
-friars dwell. I’ll dig the silver from the ground for you, and mayhap
-from my place in paradise the saints will give me eyes to see the glory
-of your deeds. May Mother Mary will it so!”
-
-The old man’s eyes were upturned in fervor toward the changing glories
-of the evening sky. The excitement of the embarkation, the enlivening
-influence of the stiff, salt breeze, and the mysterious promises held
-out to him by that seductive West toward which his vessel plunged had
-stirred the blood in the aged Spaniard’s veins, and emphasized at the
-same moment both his religious enthusiasm and his earthly ambitions.
-
-Doña Julia was on the point of commenting upon her father’s words when
-there sprang to the deck from below a slender, active man who, ashore,
-would have looked like a sailor, but aboard ship resembled a soldier.
-Gomez Hernandez, captain of the _Concepcion_, was the very incarnation
-of that dauntless spirit which had, within the lapse of two centuries,
-carried the arms of Castile and Aragon to the farthest quarters of an
-astonished globe. Bright, dark eyes, a cruel mouth, a small, agile,
-muscular frame, and a manner proud or cringing as occasion dictated,
-combined to make of Gomez Hernandez a typical Spanish seaman of the
-seventeenth century. Saluting Don Rodrigo de Aquilar respectfully the
-captain said:
-
-“May I trouble you, señor, to join me in my cabin for a while? I have
-matters to lay before you which brook no delay.”
-
-Hernandez’s words were addressed to the diplomat, but his piercing eyes
-rested as he spoke upon the face of Juan Rodriquez. The secretary, even
-paler than his wont was, gazed across the sea toward the horizon from
-which the shades of night had begun to creep.
-
-“Await me here, Julia,” said Don Rodrigo, cheerfully, turning to follow
-the captain to the lower deck. “I will return to you at once. Lead on,
-my captain. You’ll find I am not mutinous, no matter what you ask.”
-
-In another moment Doña Julia and Juan Rodriquez stood alone upon the
-poop. The secretary turned from his contemplation of the sea and his
-restless eyes fell full upon the disturbed face of the girl, a face
-of marvellous beauty in the half-lights of the fading day. There
-was silence between them for a time. The creaking of timbers, the
-complaining of the cordage, the angry splash of the disturbed sea,
-and from the bow the subdued notes of an evening hymn, sung by devout
-sailors, reached their ears.
-
-“Señora,” said Juan, moving toward Doña Julia, “I have much to say to
-you--and there is little time. If my words to you should seem abrupt,
-the blame lies with my tongue, not with my heart. If that could speak,
-you’d find me eloquent indeed. I--”
-
-With an imperious gesture, Doña Julia checked his speech. Her
-symmetrical, somewhat voluptuous, mouth was curved at that moment in a
-smile of disdain.
-
-“Spare me--and spare yourself, Juan Rodriquez,” she said, coldly,
-turning her back to the sea and facing squarely the youth, whose
-eyes met hers with a glance of crafty defiance not unmingled with an
-admiration that filled her with loathing. “You say more only at your
-peril. I’ll forgive you your presumption--once. But take good heed of
-what I say. If you address me in such words again, it shall go hard
-with you.”
-
-A grayish pallor overspread Juan’s face in the twilight. A cruel smile
-played across his thin lips, and his hand grasped a railing at his side
-as if it would crush the stubborn wood.
-
-[Illustration: “THE CAPTAIN HURLED HIM DOWN UPON THE DECK”]
-
-“You threaten me, Doña Julia de Aquilar,” he murmured, showing his
-teeth in an evil smile. “You know not what you do. See how our ship is
-driving toward the murky blackness of the West. Think you I shall be
-powerless beyond? I say to you, señora, that you, your father, and all
-you hold most dear, are in the grasp of Juan Rodriquez--your servant in
-Seville, your master in New Spain.”
-
-He had seized the girl’s wrist and was gazing into her white face with
-vindictive, hungry eyes. She wrenched her arm free from his repellent
-grasp, and, drawing herself up to her full height, gazed haughtily at
-the boastful youth.
-
-“What mad fancies there may be in your mind, Juan Rodriquez, I cannot
-guess. But this I know: if I should breathe a word of what you’ve said
-into my father’s ears, you’d lie a prisoner between the decks. And he
-shall know of this, unless you swear to me to leave me to myself, to
-speak no word to me, to keep your eyes from off my face, my name from
-off your lips.”
-
-The threatening smile upon Juan’s mobile face had changed to a spiteful
-grin while the girl was speaking.
-
-“Your love for Don Rodrigo would be weak, indeed, should you, señora,
-speak a word of this. I tell you, Doña Julia, your father’s in my
-grasp. I’ll show him mercy--but I make my terms with you. ’Tis no mad
-fancy, nor an idle boast,” went on Juan, making a significant gesture
-toward the slashed velvet upon his breast, “which you have heard from
-me. I know my power. If you are wise, you’ll take my word for this.”
-
-There was a calm, convincing note in Juan’s voice that froze the rising
-anger in Doña Julia’s veins. She knew the crafty nature of the man too
-well to believe that he would thus threaten her unless he had gained
-possession of some weapon for the working of great mischief. In mute
-dismay she stood for a moment gazing helplessly at the gray, grim
-waters which seemed to yawn in hunger for the tossing ship. Suddenly
-she felt an arm around her waist, and turning quickly found the flushed
-face of the youth pressed close to hers. An exclamation of mingled
-disgust, anger, and fear escaped her.
-
-At that instant the strong, nervous hand of Gomez Hernandez seized Juan
-Rodriquez by the neck. With an ease which his slight figure rendered
-marvellous, the captain twisted the youth like a plaything in his
-grasp, and then hurled him, full length, prone upon the deck.
-
-“I crave your pardon, señora,” said Hernandez, with cool politeness,
-bowing low to Doña Julia, “but Don Rodrigo requests your presence in
-his cabin.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-IN WHICH JUAN RODRIQUEZ TAKES HIS REVENGE
-
-
-The voyage of the _Concepcion_, thus inauspiciously begun, continued
-with fair weather upon the sea and squalls threatening aboard the ship.
-Doña Julia spent much time in her oddly-equipped cabin; Don Rodrigo,
-impatient of delay, fretted at the tedium of the passage and paced the
-poop restlessly for hours at a time. Between Juan Rodriquez and Captain
-Hernandez a sullen truce was maintained for several weeks succeeding
-the incident recorded at the end of the foregoing chapter. But Juan had
-neither forgotten nor forgiven the insult which he had received at the
-hands of the relentless navigator. He awaited, with the patience of a
-crafty schemer, an opportunity to avenge himself upon the man who had
-turned his melodramatic declaration of love into an undignified farce.
-
-A Carmelite friar, who had begged passage to Hispaniola from Don
-Rodrigo, discovered, after a time, a radical change in the disposition
-manifested by the heterogeneous crew toward his white frock and all
-that it represented. In so far as the discipline of Captain Hernandez
-permitted open grumbling, the sailors grew outspoken in their protests.
-The good priest, who had found the crew devoted to their beads at the
-outset of the voyage, was unable, as the weeks went by, to persuade
-the sailors to put their grievance into words. Nor was he able to keep
-them at their prayers or to lead their voices in quaint old Latin
-hymns. There was in the ship a mysterious, elusive influence which had
-convinced the impressionable, superstitious seamen that the vessel was
-accursed and that somebody aboard ship, being in league with Satan, was
-able to nullify the effects of their religious observances. Thus it was
-that the sweet-faced Carmelite labored in vain to restore before the
-mast the devout atmosphere which had prevailed among the crew while the
-coast of Spain still lay but a few miles astern.
-
-Matters grew worse aboard the _Concepcion_ after the white friar had
-been put ashore at the Indies and the clumsy vessel had begun to
-beat up the Gulf of Mexico against baffling head-winds. The sailors
-whispered to each other that the desertion of the Carmelite had left
-the Prince of Darkness in full control of the ship. To a crew composed
-in large part of Spanish desperadoes, with a sprinkling of Portuguese
-cutthroats, it was not easy to restore an atmosphere of religious
-fervor after it had once been destroyed by evil tongues. Experienced
-as he was in the fickleness of the half-savage sailors who in those
-adventurous days manned the omnipresent ships of Spain, Captain
-Hernandez witnessed with grave concern the gradual abandonment by his
-crew of its religious attitude and the increasing tendency of the
-sailors to imply, either by word or manner, that Mary and the saints
-had abandoned the ship to a cruel fate.
-
-To Julia de Aquilar the voyage had become a seemingly interminable
-imprisonment. The elation which she had felt at the outset of the
-cruise had never returned to her after the depressing episode which had
-aroused in Juan Rodriquez a deadly hatred for the captain of the ship.
-The girl had caught the gleam of murder in the secretary’s eyes as he
-lay out-stretched upon the deck gazing upward at Gomez Hernandez, and
-in her cabin, as she tossed restlessly in her hammock, her mind grew
-sick with a foreboding which waxed more insistent as the weary days
-and nights crept by. Now and then she would climb the clumsy ladder to
-walk the deck for a while, but the dread of finding herself again alone
-with Juan Rodriquez made her shy of this diversion. Don Rodrigo, whose
-spirits rose higher the nearer the ship approached the land in which
-his silver lay concealed, would enter her stuffy cabin--a hole between
-decks hardly worthy of the name--to rally her upon her indifference to
-the splendors of the sea and the polychromatic beauties of the islands
-on their bow. Upon her father’s departure, the tears, held back while
-he was by her side, would dim the lustre of her splendid eyes, and her
-white, slender hands would rise in supplication to the smiling Virgin
-who looked down upon her from the slanting wooden wall above her head.
-
-Why had she, to whom the Old World offered all its sweetest gifts,
-become a voluntary exile, a hopeless maiden weeping in a corner of a
-vagrant ship? Ever with her through those weary weeks this question
-craved an answer. Ever from the past arose the gorgeous pictures of her
-former life, a life of courtly splendor where the world was gay. In the
-dark watches of the night, Doña Julia de Aquilar, half dozing, half
-awake, would tread again the stately mazes of a contre-dance or smile
-demurely upon a powdered and bejewelled cavalier. She would hear again
-the merry, mocking voices of Versailles or the stately tones of Spanish
-gentlemen. Suddenly the lurching of the ship would rouse her from her
-waking dream, and, putting up a hand, as if defying fate, she would
-touch the wooden walls of her voluntary cell, walls that seemed to be
-bearing down upon her with the weight of worlds, crushing out the color
-from her cheeks, the light from her eyes, the joy of youth from her
-rebellious soul.
-
-But, waking or sleeping, one face was always gazing at her from the
-past, a face which seemed to laugh in courteous derision at her plight.
-“I slew Don Josef--your betrothed,” the haunting vision seemed to say,
-while upon the clear-cut countenance which memory photographed the
-girl could see the gay and mocking smile of one who knew the world too
-well. Her betrothed? Though dead, she hated him. Caprice and vanity had
-forged for her the chains that had made her, at Versailles, a captive,
-longing to be free. And when her freedom came, when the sword of him
-whose vibrant voice she could hear above the creaking and groaning of
-the ship had severed forever the bonds which tied her to an unloved
-man, her liberty was nothing worth, taking its revenge upon her for her
-former negligence by coming back too late. She had learned, through the
-gossip of a chattering court, that he who had cut down her betrothed
-had fled across the sea. Never again would she look upon de Sancerre’s
-face, nor hear a voice which, while it mocked at love, had thrilled her
-heart of hearts. The years in passing would leave to her a memory--and
-nothing more.
-
-What mattered it, then, whether she passed her weary span of life in
-the city of Seville or in the strange environment toward which the ship
-plunged on? In either case, the romance of her youth was dead. That the
-strange chances of existence would ever bring Louis de Sancerre again
-to her side, Julia de Aquilar never dreamed. Even in the prayers that
-she offered day and night to the Virgin Mother above her head she had
-never voiced a longing which, put into words, would have sounded to
-her ears like the incipient ravings of insanity. Her betrothed and the
-man whom she had begun to love had both passed from her life at the
-same moment, and through the gloom of night there came to Doña Julia no
-ray of hope save from the gentle radiance of Mother Church. The veil,
-and its promise of perfect peace, grew constantly more alluring to her
-distraught soul, as week crept into week and the very timbers of the
-ship cried ever louder against the cruel persistence of the lonely sea.
-
-From a dreamless sleep--a rare blessing vouchsafed by Mother Mary--Doña
-Julia awoke one night with a start and sat upright in her hammock,
-peering into the darkness with straining eyes. What had disturbed
-her slumber she did not at first know. But above her head echoed the
-shuffling sounds of hurrying feet, and the flapping of canvas as the
-ship came about in a stiff breeze. Leaping down from her hammock and
-throwing a long, black cape over her shoulders, she groped her way to
-the entrance to her cabin and threw open the clumsy door. A swinging
-lantern lighted the hatchway, and, almost before her eyes had grown
-accustomed to the sudden glare, above her head sounded the grewsome cry
-of “Man overboard!”
-
-At that instant down the ladder in front of the trembling girl crept
-the slinking figure of Juan Rodriquez. For a fleeting moment Doña Julia
-caught a glimpse of the youth’s pallid face, upon which there rested
-an evil smile made up of fear, cruelty, and triumph. Believing himself
-unobserved, Juan stood for a moment at the foot of the ladder looking
-upward toward the deck and listening intently to the uproar above his
-head. Then, with a subdued chuckle, which sent a chill through the
-heart of the motionless girl, he stole into the shadows toward his
-berth amidships.
-
-The harsh cries of the panic-stricken sailors filled the night with a
-horrid din. The Spanish maiden, undecided whether to climb to the deck
-or to return to her hammock, crossed herself devoutly and murmured a
-prayer to St. Christopher, who watches over seamen and protects the
-faithful from night alarms. The mischievous lantern, vibrating wildly
-as the ship took the seas broadside on, threw lights and shadows across
-the disturbed face of the girl, and seemed to rejoice at its chance to
-add to the uncanny features of her surroundings.
-
-The turmoil on the deck decreased as the moments passed, but Doña Julia
-still stood waiting, listening, praying; chafing at inaction, but
-distrustful of the night beyond the hatchway. To her, thus agitated,
-came her father down the ladder, his worn figure bent as if it carried
-a great burden. He turned and faced her, and as the playful lantern
-swung toward them she saw that his face was ghastly pale, and that his
-thin hand trembled as he wiped the sea-spray from his furrowed brow.
-
-“What is it, father?” asked the girl, springing toward Don Rodrigo and
-placing both hands upon his shoulders as she peered into his white face.
-
-“Captain Hernandez,” muttered the old man, in a voice that told the
-story of his despair--“he fell into the sea. None saw him in the
-blackness of the night, but far astern the helmsman heard a cry--and
-that was all! God rest his soul!” he groaned, crossing himself. “It
-will go hard with us, I fear.”
-
-“But, father--Mother Mary, pray for him!--the voyage nears its end.
-Captain Hernandez--the saints receive him!--had with him men who know
-these seas?”
-
-“I trust them not,” murmured the old man, wearily. Then, as if he
-regretted the admission he had made, he bent and kissed the anxious
-face of his daughter and said, with an effort at cheerfulness, “But
-fear not, Julia. All will yet be well. I’ve vowed an altar to St. James
-of Compostella, whose blessing rests on pilgrims of the faith. But how
-to calm the crew I hardly know. The sailors seem nigh mad with fear.
-They say that Satan is aboard the ship.”
-
-“Alas, I think he is,” murmured Julia to herself, as she returned to
-her cabin and threw herself despondently upon her swinging bed. That
-she had solved by chance the awful secret of the captain’s death, she
-could not for a moment doubt.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-IN WHICH SATAN HAS HIS WAY WITH THE _CONCEPCION_
-
-
-Dawn crept sullenly across the heaving bosom of the gulf, as if
-disaffected by the night’s dark deed. The sun gazed for a moment
-upon a ship accursed, then hid its light behind black, evil-looking
-clouds. From the east and south came winds that smote the sea and dug
-deep valleys in the briny waste. Then, where the valleys gaped, great
-hills of water rose and wet the air, and chased each other toward the
-wind-made chasms just beyond. Losing their temper in their wild career,
-the boisterous blasts let forth an angry roar and lashed the waters
-viciously. Before the dawn could take the name of day, a mighty battle
-raged between the gale and gulf.
-
-The command of the _Concepcion_ had fallen to Miquel Sanchez, a
-veteran seaman, but unskilled in the nicer points of navigation.
-Knowing the treacherous nature of the waters through which his ship
-was reeling, uncertain of his course, and depending for aid upon a
-sullen, superstitious crew, already persuaded that the vessel had
-been doomed to destruction, the outlook seemed menacing, wellnigh
-hopeless, to the new master of the _Concepcion_, as he paced his narrow
-deck at dawn, and hoarsely shouted orders for the taking in of sail.
-The ship, showing her keel to the yawning chasms in the sea, rushed
-affrighted under bare poles through the welter toward the west. As the
-storm increased in fury, the panic of the crew grew less controllable.
-Even the helmsman strove to tell his beads when the eyes of Sanchez
-turned to scan the sky; and, broken by the howling blasts, the noise of
-prayers and curses echoed from the decks. The desperate sailors knew
-the sea too well to hug the hope that such a ship as theirs could foil
-the fury of the storm. Had not a priest deserted them? Had not their
-captain perished in the waves? Who doubted Satan’s presence on the ship
-would be too dull to die!
-
-Don Rodrigo de Aquilar had made his way with much effort to Doña
-Julia’s cabin, and had found her on her knees before the painting
-of the Virgin, praying for a miracle that should snatch the vessel
-from its certain doom. The girl’s face, above which raven-black locks
-were coiled in picturesque disorder, was white from the imminence of
-their peril, while her soft, dark eyes gleamed with the fervor of her
-supplication. As she arose to greet her father, the hand which she
-slipped into his was cold, but trembled not. If the fear of death
-lurked in her heart, it was only by the pallor of her cheek its
-presence could be known. Her eyes were steady and her lips were firm as
-she stood there reading her father’s haggard face to find, if so the
-saints decreed, a gleam of hope to cheer her soul.
-
-“God’s mercy on us all!” muttered the old Spaniard, pressing his
-daughter’s hand to his breast. “This Sanchez is as stubborn as a Moor!
-He will not change his helm! I am no seaman, but I’ve sat with poor
-Hernandez many an hour and conned the chart of this same sea we sail.
-But yesternoon he made a reckoning. If the sun spake sooth, upon the
-course we hold we’ll dash to pieces ’gainst a curving coast. I told
-this sullen Sanchez what I knew, but, ’though he crossed himself, he
-gave no heed to me.”
-
-Doña Julia’s arm, showing white as marble against the black cloak
-hanging from his shoulders, was thrown around her father’s neck.
-Kissing his pallid cheek, she said:
-
-“I have no love of life; no fear of death! To die with you, my
-father--will it be so hard?”
-
-“To die without confession--that is hard!” exclaimed Don Rodrigo,
-despondently. “I begged the Carmelite to stay with us; but, still,
-he gave me absolution ere he left. And if I perish, ’tis for Mother
-Church! But listen, Julia! I am old and worn. A few years more or less
-are little worth. But you are young. You must not die, my child! If I
-had lured you to an ocean grave, I’m sure my soul would find no peace
-in Paradise.”
-
-Doña Julia had seated herself upon the edge of her uneasy hammock,
-and was looking down at her father, who had attempted to maintain an
-upright posture upon the treacherous surface of a sea-chest fastened by
-clamps to the cabin floor. Suddenly the old Spaniard arose and stumbled
-to the hatchway.
-
-“Juan!” he cried, striving to cast his voice amidships in spite of the
-howling of the gale, the ominous thumping of the loosened ballast, the
-cries of frantic sailors, and the thunder of the seas as they pounded
-vengefully against the frail timbers of the ship. “Juan Rodriquez, come
-aft at once! Juan! Juan!”
-
-A hand, cold as ice, was clapped upon the old man’s white and trembling
-lips.
-
-“Father, I implore you, do not summon him,” prayed Julia, striving to
-drag the aged Spaniard back into her cabin. “He cannot serve you now.
-For Mother Mary’s sake, I beg of you to leave him to his prayers. He
-has sore need of them.”
-
-Her protest came too late. In the dim, gray light of the hatchway the
-girl caught sight of a face which even in that awful hour wore an
-inscrutable, evil smile, as if the diabolical spirit of the storm had
-rejoiced the soul of Juan Rodriquez.
-
-“We’re driving fast, Juan, upon an unknown coast,” said Don Rodrigo,
-coolly, a detaining arm thrown around his daughter’s waist. “You’re
-lithe and muscular, and come of fearless stock. I’ve seen you in the
-water at Seville.” At this moment the increasing uproar aboard ship
-compelled the old man to raise his thin voice to a shout. Drawing from
-his breast a package wrapped in oil-skin, he thrust it toward the
-out-stretched hand of his secretary. “Here is my patent from the King
-of Spain. ’Twill serve as Julia’s title to the mines--to the greater
-glory of our Mother Church! And, for the sake of heathen souls beyond,
-your arm, my Juan, must save my daughter from these hungry seas. I say
-to you--”
-
-“Father, as you love me, as you hope for Paradise, put no trust in
-this man’s loyalty! If you must die, I do not care to live. A thousand
-deaths were better than a life saved by a--”
-
-At that instant a crash, as if the storm had served as usher to the
-crack of doom, drove the word she would have uttered back upon her
-tongue. Don Rodrigo’s white head was turned to crimson by its impact
-with an iron-jointed beam, and, plunging forward, he lay dead beside
-his daughter’s feet. Doña Julia tottered forward a step or two, and
-then fell swooning into Juan’s arms.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-IN WHICH TWO CHILDREN OF THE SUN ASTONISH A SCOUNDREL
-
-
-Before the day was ended the winds and waves had signed a truce, but on
-the beach, far to the westward of the Mississippi’s mouth, lay ghastly
-trophies of their recent war. In a vain effort to propitiate the demon
-of the storm--according to the Portuguese sailors: to lighten the
-vessel, the captain would have said--cables, spars, water-casks, kits
-and chests of varying size, puncheons of wine, bags of sea-biscuit,
-cannon, powder, and stone ballast had been thrown overboard in a futile
-effort to float the shattered ship from a sunken reef. A portion of
-this impotent sacrifice the sullen surf had uplifted upon its crest,
-and, rushing shoreward, had tossed it spitefully upon the sands.
-
-As the hours dragged on, while the storm, in full retreat, hurried
-its black battalions toward the west, the moaning beach became a
-resting-place for grimmer flotsam than sailor’s kit or broken spar.
-Trusting to the stanchness of their ships and the favor of their
-saints, the Spanish seamen in those adventurous days but seldom learned
-to swim. In constant peril from the hungry waves, forever searching
-unknown seas, where shipwreck menaced him at every hour, the Spaniard
-or the Portuguese would drown, amazed to find no saving potency in
-strings of beads, no buoyancy in dangling crucifix.
-
-When the ship _Concepcion_, abandoned by the saints, struck on a rock,
-concealed beneath the waves by Satan’s crafty hand, there was only
-one man aboard the vessel who had learned to breast the surf with
-strength and skill sufficient for a crisis such as this--and he was
-a white-faced landsman, who had spent his life with pen and books,
-learning nothing of the sea save what had come to him when bathing in
-the sunny waters of Seville.
-
-For the first time in all the countless centuries since the floods
-had tossed it there, the curving beach now watched the grewsome
-pastime which a shipwreck grants the surf. A shadow on a billow
-rushing landward, a black spot on a white-plumed, tossing wave, a
-splash and hissing on the trembling sands, and there on the shore,
-as the storm-wind rushes by, lies a thing which was once a man, a
-black-and-white blotch in the dim light vouchsafed by the scudding
-clouds. With uncanny satisfaction at its task, the undercurrent,
-slinking back again beneath the sea, returns to lay upon the sands
-another horrid plaything of the surf. ’Tis novel sport for this
-deserted coast, but how the waves enjoy it! They roar and thunder, sob
-and laugh and hiss; they toss their new-found toys upon the sands, then
-snatch them back again and turn them ’round and ’round as if in envy of
-the grasping beach. But as the hours pass by, the shore keeps gaining
-what the billows lose. When the sun has pierced the western clouds, to
-cast a passing gleam across the panting sea, the glistening sands are
-dotted far and wide with worthless relics of the surf’s grim sport.
-
-The arms of Juan Rodriquez had been moved by mighty passions to a
-most stupendous feat. Strong swimmer though he was, the burden of a
-senseless girl, and the striving of the deep to make no blunder in the
-game it played, had turned his heart to ice, while the minutes seemed
-like hours and each stroke that he made was feebler than the last.
-But the struggling wretch was urged to mad endeavor by a combination
-of the most potent motives which can inspire the efforts of a man.
-Fear of death and love of a woman united in that awful hour to give
-to Juan’s slender but well-knit body a stubborn endurance that foiled
-the undertow and checked, for the nonce, the surf’s ghastly pastime.
-Slowly but persistently, with gasping breath and straining eyes, now
-smothered in the brine, now lifted like a cork upon a wave, a man who
-was not fit to die fought wildly with the sea for life and love. To
-leave the girl to drown and struggle on alone, with certain victory
-within his grasp, his dread of death had tempted him to do. But at that
-instant a kindlier current than he had hoped to find eased for a moment
-the pressure upon his chest, and bore him slantingly athwart the beach
-far westward of the wrecked _Concepcion_.
-
-To the fainting youth and his senseless burden the damp strand offered
-no easy couch, but it was better to lie there on the shore, while the
-enemy, checkmated, scolded and threatened and boasted in complaining
-impotence just outside the danger-line, than to choke and die, and
-go to judgment unshrived and with black crimes upon one’s soul. What
-mattered it to Juan Rodriquez that for a time, as he lay struggling
-for breath upon the beach, the ripples, malicious offspring of the
-giant breakers, washed moist sand into his hair and ears, and licked
-his corpselike face as if they kissed him for his prowess while they
-whispered vengeful threats?
-
-Presently the victorious swimmer regained his senses, and, tottering
-to his feet, dragged the shrunken figure of Doña Julia further up the
-beach. Her black gown clung close around her as she lay, as if asleep,
-upon the sands, the only thing of beauty that the sea had brought to
-land. Juan bent down and placed his hand upon her bosom. The gleam of
-despair in his sunken eyes died out as he felt the feeble beating of
-her heart and upon his cheek the faint impact of her returning breath.
-Then he drew himself up to his full height, cast a glance of triumph
-at the treacherous sea, and, assured of Doña Julia’s safety, hurried
-eastward across the shingle, glistening at that moment from the rays of
-the setting sun.
-
-It was a dismal task that the dripping, trembling youth had essayed.
-From one staring, motionless victim of the storm to another went Juan,
-placing his shaking hand above hearts which would never beat again,
-and starting back in horror from faces which served as mirrors to the
-pain of sudden death. And ever as he crept on from one purple corpse
-to another the conviction became more fixed in his mind that he alone,
-of all the sturdy men upon that fated ship, had kept the spark of life
-within his breast. Suddenly the sightless eyes of Miquel Sanchez stared
-up at him in the sunlight.
-
-“Curse you! Curse you!” cried Juan, kicking the unprotesting corpse in
-senseless rage. “Had I known you were a lubber, Hernandez had not died!
-’Tis well for you the sea took all your life, or I’d choke the dying
-breath from out your throat! Curse you!”
-
-Bending down, the youth, a madman for the instant, seized a handful
-of moist sand and hurled it spitefully into the upturned face of the
-man whose stubborn ignorance had placed in jeopardy his schemes for
-self-aggrandizement. But at that horrid moment Juan Rodriquez knew,
-for self-confession forced itself upon him, that it was his own weak
-yielding to the thirst for vengeance which had wrecked the vessel.
-Coward that he was, the fury of his self-reproach found vicious vent
-upon a lifeless trunk that had no power of protest against so grave a
-wrong.
-
-The fervor of his unjust anger spent, Juan turned, like a snarling cur,
-from the outraged corpse, and, hungry for human intercourse, resolved
-to return at once to Doña Julia’s side, restore her to her senses, and
-fortify his faltering heart by the sound of a living voice. He had
-gazed into dead men’s faces until his soul was sick with the horror of
-the day. He glanced at the sinking sun petulantly, as if he awaited
-with impatience the black shroud that oncoming night would throw over
-the motionless bodies scattered along the beach.
-
-Suddenly the youth, an expression of mingled astonishment, horror, and
-fear upon his changing face, fell upon his knees and crossed himself
-with a fervor begotten of the miracle upon which his straining eyes
-now gazed.
-
-Beside the out-stretched figure of Doña Julia stood two angelic beings,
-taller than the run of men, who faced the sun and raised their arms
-straight upward toward the evening sky. They wore white robes, and
-from the distant dune to which the startled Juan crawled it seemed as
-if golden halos glorified the heads of these marvellous messengers
-from Paradise. They stood for a time with arms upraised, while to the
-straining ears of a youth whose heart felt like a lump of ice came
-the subdued notes of a chant which, he knew full well, was music not
-of earthly origin. Presently the angels bent their heads together,
-as if in heavenly converse, while Juan cast a stealthy glance across
-the sun-red sands to see if Miquel Sanchez had roused himself from
-death to totter toward God’s envoys with an awful accusation upon his
-lips. When his eyes turned toward the west again, relieved to find the
-sailor still lying stark and still, Juan saw that the angels had gently
-uplifted the body of Julia de Aquilar, and, with stately grace, were
-bearing it away toward the twilight of the foot-hills. With his wet
-garments chilling the very marrow in his bones, the thief and murderer
-watched these celestial beings bearing his love away to Paradise. The
-grim mockery of the chattering prayer that he breathed he could not
-comprehend. He paid the homage of furtive worship to angels whose
-searching glance, he feared, might seek him out behind his sandy
-lurking-place.
-
-The red-fringed twilight had lost its glow, and the zenith had pinned
-a star upon its breast before Juan Rodriquez, still trembling at the
-miracle that he had seen, found courage to slink westward along the
-shore. Behind him dead men seemed to stalk, following his footsteps
-with grim persistence, while somewhere from the hills upon his right
-the eyes of angels searched his very soul. On across the beach he
-hurried, while the waters of the gulf turned black, and the dread
-silence of the night was broken only by the gossip of the waves,
-telling the sands a horrid secret that they had learned.
-
-Alone with his thoughts, with the memory of dark crimes upon his soul,
-Juan strove through the long night to cast far behind him the haunted
-shore upon which angels came and went. The interplay of life and death
-had left him only this--the hope of wealth. Had he known that between
-him and the silver mines that he sought lay more than a thousand weary
-miles, he would have made a pillow of the sand in his despair.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-IN WHICH THE CROSS IS CARRIED TO A CITY OF IDOLATERS
-
-
-“I have learned something of these proud pagans, Chatémuc. They are
-worshippers of fire; fruit ripe to pluck, to the greater glory of
-Mother Church.”
-
-The Mohican grunted in acquiescence as he strode forward, a
-copper-colored giant by the side of the gray-garbed, undersized
-Franciscan.
-
-Beneath budding trees and along a flower-haunted trail went de la
-Salle’s envoys to the children of the sun. It was high noon, and the
-god of the idolaters shone down upon those who would dethrone him as a
-deity with a kindly radiance behind which no malice lurked. Mayhap the
-warm-hearted luminary had grown weary of the human sacrifices offered
-up by his deluded worshippers, and was pleased to see the gentle Membré
-carrying a cross, symbol of a faith which demands for its altars no
-gifts but contrite hearts, toward a blood-stained city in which a
-savage cult still lay as a curse upon a race endowed by nature with
-many kindly traits.
-
-Between Membré, the friar, and Chatémuc, the Mohican, had long existed
-a cordial friendship, based, in part, upon hardships and dangers
-shared together, but more especially upon the relationship existing
-between them of a missionary to a convert. Of the many native Americans
-who had become good children of Mother Church under the inspiring
-influence of the magnetic Franciscan none had been more faithful to his
-adopted religion than the stately Mohican, whose proud, reserved, but
-inherently enthusiastic temperament derived warmth and inspiration from
-the friar’s exalted soul. Of late years much of Zenobe Membré’s success
-as a proselyter had been due to long and earnest consultations held in
-the wilderness with Chatémuc, an Indian understanding Indians, and a
-Roman Catholic who spoke French.
-
-Just in front of the Mohican and the Franciscan walked Katonah by the
-side of de Sancerre; a forest belle attended by a courtly swain. Used
-as he was to the startling contrasts which the exodus of Europeans to
-the New World had begotten in such abundance, the friar had been struck
-by the incongruity of this pair, who laughed and chatted just beyond
-him with a gayety born of the sunshine and the spring.
-
-At the head of the little procession strode the soldierly Henri de
-Tonti, attended on either hand by a long-limbed child of the sun. The
-Italian veteran looked like a pygmy beside his tall, white-garbed,
-black-haired guides, who stalked along on his flanks with a stately
-grace which had aroused the enthusiastic admiration of de Sancerre, a
-cosmopolite who had in his time looked upon many well-formed warriors
-both in the Old World and the New.
-
-“They worship fire, Chatémuc,” repeated the Franciscan, earnestly,
-after a moment’s silence. “Their god is the sun, and they have a
-priesthood whose duty it is to keep alive in their temple a blaze of
-logs, first lighted, generations back, by the sun itself.”
-
-The Mohican turned and looked down at the friar with a gleam of mingled
-astonishment and inquiry in his melancholy eyes. The grunt to which he
-gave vent the Franciscan well understood.
-
-“You are amazed at my knowledge of their customs, my Chatémuc,”
-remarked the Franciscan, smilingly. “But have I not heard many wild
-and horrid tales in the years through which I’ve borne the cross to
-outlands such as this? ’Tis strange, indeed, how rumor flies through
-forests, over lakes, and makes the mountains rear their tops in vain.
-’Tis thus the saints work miracles for us, that we may bear the Word
-to savage lands. As feeble men, we could do naught, my son; but with
-the pioneers of Mother Church march all the hosts of heaven, and when
-the day is darkest and the heathen shout for joy, there comes a wonder,
-some marvel on the earth, some sudden splendor of the midnight sky, and
-the cross, triumphant, gains another tribe! Oh, Chatémuc, the glory of
-it all!”
-
-The gray eyes of the Franciscan gazed upward at the set face of the
-seemingly stoical Indian, whose religious enthusiasm was rapidly rising
-to fever-heat under the intoxicating influence of the fanatical friar’s
-carefully-chosen words--words whose effect upon the devout Mohican
-Zenobe Membré was not now testing for the first time.
-
-“But their fire, father? It always burns?” asked Chatémuc, presently,
-in a low voice.
-
-“Day and night, year after year, from generation to generation, they
-keep alive this idolatrous blaze, a flame lighted in hell and carried
-to these pagans by Satan’s self. And while it burns, my Chatémuc,
-’twill be impossible to lure their souls to Christ.”
-
-The searching gaze of the friar scanned closely the phlegmatic face
-of the Mohican. Not a muscle in Chatémuc’s copper-colored countenance
-moved, but a dangerous gleam had begun to flash in his eyes as they
-rested now and again upon the white-robed sun-worshippers striding on
-ahead of him.
-
-“They guard the fire by day and night?”
-
-“’Tis never left alone, my son,” answered the Franciscan, fully
-satisfied with the effect that his words had had upon Chatémuc.
-
-The native American is not a rash and impulsive being. Courageous
-Chatémuc was, beyond many of his race; but he was, nevertheless, an
-Indian, and inclined to attain his ends by craft and subtlety rather
-than by reckless daring. It was not until the French had introduced the
-native American to the civilizing influence of brandy that the latter
-abandoned, at times, in his warfare the methods of a snake, and fought,
-now and then, like a lion.
-
-“How large a guard, my father, do they keep around their fire?” asked
-the Mohican, presently.
-
-“That I do not know, my son. But bear this in mind, good Chatémuc:
-against a soldier fighting for the cross the powers of hell cannot
-prevail. Remember, Chatémuc, that unless that blaze is turned to ashes
-in their sight, my prayers and exhortations will be of no avail. We’ll
-leave them pagans as we found them, unless their sacred fire no longer
-burns.”
-
-The vibrant notes in the friar’s rich voice rekindled the light in the
-Indian’s gloomy eyes.
-
-“Either the fire or a Mohican shall die, my father!” exclaimed the
-warrior, in low, earnest tones. “Chatémuc, your son in Christ, has
-sworn an oath.”
-
-Meanwhile the high spirits of Louis de Sancerre had cast their spell
-upon Katonah, a maiden whose ready smile seldom changed to laughter.
-But on this bright spring day, treading a flower-bedecked path by the
-side of a man whose delicately chiselled face was to her eyes a symbol
-of all the joy of life, it was not hard for the Mohican maiden to
-affect a gayety uncharacteristic of a race lacking in vivacity.
-
-“They are splendid fellows,” remarked de Sancerre, gazing at the
-stalwart messengers from the Brother of the Sun. “With ten thousand
-men like these, Turenne could have marched around the world. But our
-mission to them is one of peace. I must teach them the steps of the
-_menuet_.”
-
-“And what is that?” asked Katonah, glancing over her shoulder to see
-whether Chatémuc’s rebuking eye was fixed upon her. To her great
-satisfaction she discovered that her brother seemed to be absorbed in
-the words of the gray friar.
-
-“The _menuet, ma petite_? ’Twas made for you. ’Tis a _coupée_, a high
-step and a balance. Your untrammelled grace, Katonah, would hurt the
-eyes of _mesdames_ at Versailles.”
-
-Little of this the Indian maiden understood, but she realized
-intuitively that her cavalier had been paying her an honest compliment.
-Her quick ear, more sensitive to the changes in his voice than to all
-other sounds, had learned to detect and dread a sarcastic note in
-his tones that often cut her to the heart. But on this gay noontide
-of a day at the close of what the sun-worshippers called the Moon of
-Strawberries, Louis de Sancerre was a joyous, frank, vivacious man who
-paid the beautiful savage at his side acceptable homage with his eyes
-and in whose words she could find nothing to wound her pride.
-
-“When we reach this sun-baked centre of idolatry, _ma petite_,”
-remarked De Sancerre, presently, “we must make an effort to remain side
-by side. Though I should pass a thousand years in harems of the Turks,
-I could not forget the face of that old hag who came to haunt me by
-my lonely couch. ’Tis her you are to find--for the greater glory of
-our Mother Church. But bear this in mind, _petite_, that I must have
-some speech with her before the friar seizes on her tongue and makes
-her Spanish eloquent for Christ. I’d ask her of a miracle, before good
-Membré goes to work with his.”
-
-For Katonah the glory of the day had passed. The gleam of happiness
-died slowly in her eyes, and the smile which lingered still upon her
-lips had lost its joyousness. Not only had the mocking echo returned
-to de Sancerre’s voice, but he had recalled to the girl’s mind the
-story that he had told her, earlier in the day, of a Spanish maiden
-whose name had come to him so strangely in the dark hours of the
-night. It was, then, the memory of a maiden over-sea which had led
-the Frenchman’s footsteps toward the city of the sun! The misery in
-Katonah’s heart crept into her voice.
-
-“I’ll serve you as I can,” she said, gently, her eyes avoiding his.
-“But,” and she lowered her tones until her words became a warning made
-in whispers--“but I say to you, monsieur, beware of Chatémuc! Stay not
-by my side. I’ll serve you as I can, but leave me when we reach the
-town. Believe me when I say ’tis safer so.”
-
-“_Ma foi, ma petite_,” exclaimed de Sancerre, petulantly, turning his
-head to cast a glance behind him at Chatémuc, “your warning, though
-well meant, was hardly fair to him! Your brother is too good a friend
-of Mother Church to harbor hatred of a Catholic like me, who only
-yesternight vowed three long candles to the Virgin-mother--after that
-ugly crone had left my side at last.”
-
-“You smile, and speak light words,” murmured Katonah, deprecatingly.
-“But I say to you, beware of Chatémuc. He loves the faith, but hateth
-you, monsieur. I know not why. ’Tis strange!”
-
-She gazed at the Frenchman’s face with a frank admiration which brought
-a self-conscious smile to the courtier’s lips. Flicking a multicolored
-insect from the tattered velvet of his sleeve, de Sancerre exclaimed:
-
-“Ah, my Katonah! ’Tis those who know me best who love me best. Your
-brother is a stranger, who cannot read my heart. But, hark! what have
-we here?”
-
-The noise of kettle-drums and the howling of a great throng arose in
-front of them. Their stately guides withdrew from de Tonti’s side and
-stalked sedately to the rear of the little group of strangers, leaving
-the Italian captain to lead his followers to the imminent outskirts of
-the town.
-
-“Listen to the drums, _petite_!” exclaimed de Sancerre, gayly. “We’ll
-dance a _menuet_ in yonder city, or I am not a moonbeam’s favorite
-son!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-IN WHICH THE BROTHER OF THE SUN WELCOMES THE CHILDREN OF THE MOON
-
-
-The Brother of the Sun, overjoyed at the opportunity now before
-him to offer hospitality to guests upon whose white faces he gazed
-with mingled admiration and astonishment, had come in state to the
-confines of the forest to testify to the cordiality of a greeting that
-illuminated his well-cut, strong, and mobile countenance. The Great
-Sun, as he was called--his exact relationship to the orb of day being,
-to a large extent, a matter of conjecture--was an elderly man, fully
-six feet six inches in height, with a light-mahogany complexion, hair
-still jet-black, and brilliant, dark eyes gazing proudly forth upon a
-world which, from the hour of his birth, had paid abject homage to his
-exalted rank.
-
-He was enthroned in a litter resembling a huge sedan-chair, which was
-carried upon the shoulders of eight stalwart men in white attire but
-bare-footed. The four long arms of the litter were painted red, and
-its body was decorated with embroidered deer-skins, leaves of the
-magnolia-tree, and garlands of red and white flowers. His head was
-ornamented by a diadem of white feathers. Inserted in the lobes of his
-shapely ears were rings of decorated bone. He wore a necklace made of
-the teeth of alligators, and against the background of his raven-black
-hair gayly colored beads shone in the sunlight.
-
-Behind his litter marched a mighty army of three thousand stalwart
-men, bare-armed, bare-legged, in a uniform of flowing, white, plaited
-mulberry bark, relieved by dyed skins, striped with yellow, black, and
-red, thrown across their broad shoulders. They carried bows made of the
-acacia-wood, and arrows of reed tipped with bird-feathers. Gigantic,
-muscular, stern-faced warriors, the army of the sun-worshippers broke
-upon the gaze of the astonished Europeans with startling effect.
-
-It has been asserted that the immediate ancestors of these children
-of the sun, angered at Montezuma, had joined Cortez in his victorious
-campaign against that unfortunate monarch. Later on, crushed and
-rebellious under Spanish tyranny, they had migrated toward the north
-and had found peaceful lands to their liking near the banks of the
-lower Mississippi. Whatever may be the truth of this, the fact remains
-that upon the afternoon which found Sieur de la Salle’s envoys the
-honored guests of the Brother of the Sun, the latter’s army defiled
-to the eastward of the city with ranks which begot in the eyes of
-the Count de Sancerre and the veteran de Tonti a gleam of mingled
-amazement and admiration. Not only were the warriors of the sun,
-individually, men suggesting prowess and endurance, but they, as a
-body, gave evidence of having learned, from sources beyond the reach
-of native Americans further to the northward, tactics indicating a
-European origin. If the sun-worshippers had, in fact, suffered from
-Spanish cruelty, they had also derived from their tyrannical allies
-valuable hints pertaining to the art of war. As he gazed at this army
-of athletes, Henri de Tonti, for the first time since he had left
-de la Salle’s camp, felt regret for the protest he had made against
-the expedition which his leader had decreed. Here before him stood a
-splendid band of soldiers who might be made, with some diplomacy, loyal
-friends to the on-pushing French.
-
-To the mind of Zenobe Membré the martial array before him presented a
-magnificent collection of lost souls, well worthy, in outward seeming,
-of the saving grace of the cross. To snatch from the grasp of Satan
-so many glorious exponents of manly vigor would be, indeed, a triumph
-for Mother Church. Something of this he breathed into the ear of the
-motionless and silent Chatémuc, who stood with the friar upon a low
-hillock, overlooking the plain, viewing with amazement this imposing
-regiment, each member of which seemed to be taller by several inches
-than the stately Mohican.
-
-“Look, Katonah!” cried de Sancerre, seizing the Indian maiden by the
-arm. “See, there, at the side of his dark-brown Majesty’s peripatetic
-flower-garden, stands my aged midnight prowler! Her old face is turned
-up to his. Can you see her, _ma petite_?”
-
-Katonah stretched her shapely limbs to their utmost to look above
-the press in front of her, and presently her eyes lighted upon the
-shrivelled crone with whose discovery she had been intrusted by de la
-Salle.
-
-“Go to your brother and keep the friar by his side until I return,
-Katonah,” whispered the Frenchman, excitedly. “I must have speech at
-once with this old hag.”
-
-The sun-worshippers, pouring in throngs from their abandoned city--men,
-women, and children following and preceding the army in the fervor
-of their welcome to the white-faced children of the moon, who had
-come to them so mysteriously from the bosom of a wonder-working
-stream--impeded, by their respectful but exacting curiosity, the
-progress of de Sancerre toward the royal group. Women, scantily clad
-but gay with flowers and feathers, would put forth their brown hands to
-touch the tattered velvets of the Frenchman’s travel-stained but once
-gorgeous costume. Naked boys and girls squirmed toward him unabashed,
-marvelling at the pallor of his face and the splendor of the buckles
-upon his shoes.
-
-“_Peste!_” muttered the annoyed courtier under his breath. “If they but
-knew how hard I have to strive to hold these outworn garments to my
-back, they’d keep their hands away. I’ll reach the royal presence as
-naked as a baby unless they grow more gentle with my garb.” And all the
-time he smiled and bowed, while men and women, boys and girls, cried
-out in wild approval of his courtly grace.
-
-Henri de Tonti, who had lost much of his European polish through the
-long friction of camps and the wilderness, had reached the Great Sun’s
-flowery throne without winning the enthusiastic good-will of these
-impressionable adult children, who seemed to feel instinctively that
-the unbending, sallow, grim-faced Italian was less worthy, somehow, of
-their friendship than the fascinating, smiling Frenchman who followed
-gayly in the footsteps of the unmagnetic captain toward their king.
-In the presence of royalty the advantage in address possessed by de
-Sancerre over de Tonti was emphasized at once. With curt ceremony the
-Italian had saluted the smiling, black-eyed monarch, and had then stood
-silent, gazing helplessly upon the expectant throng pressing toward the
-litter, in the vain hope of finding some way to communicate with the
-royal sun-worshipper.
-
-De Sancerre’s triumphal progress toward the throne had attracted the
-attention of the Brother of the Sun, and the plaudits of his subjects
-had led the latter to believe that the leading personage among his
-pale-faced guests was now before him. Falling gracefully upon one knee,
-the Frenchman kissed the out-stretched hand of the beaming King with a
-flourish and a fervor which aroused the admiring multitude to a fresh
-outburst of delighted shouts.
-
-“_Ma foi_, your Majesty!” exclaimed de Sancerre, in French, as he arose
-to his feet, “the encore warms my blood like wine! I like your people!
-They see at once the difference ’twixt a curmudgeon and a cavalier.”
-
-His eyes rested triumphantly upon the countenance of the disconcerted
-de Tonti for a moment, and then looked forth upon the sea of dusky,
-smiling faces upturned to his. Almost within reach of his hand stood
-the old woman who had borne to his bedside a welcome from the children
-of the sun.
-
-“Well met, señora!” cried de Sancerre, in Spanish, to the grinning
-hag. “Come to me here! Your tongue shall bind the ties of love between
-your king and mine!”
-
-With the quickness of perception which his bright eyes indicated, the
-Brother of the Sun seemed to grasp the significance of de Sancerre’s
-last words, for he beckoned to the aged crone to approach the royal
-presence. With a rapidity of motion strangely out of keeping with her
-time-worn appearance, the old woman reached de Sancerre’s side on the
-instant, and, having made her obeisance to the throne, stood looking up
-at the Frenchman expectantly. To the latter’s astonishment he saw in
-her small, black, beady eyes a gleam of saturnine humor which assured
-him that between his soul and hers stretched at least one sympathetic
-bond.
-
-“Say to his Majesty for my king, my people, and myself,” went on de
-Sancerre, in Spanish, holding the gaze of the interpreter to his, “that
-our hearts beat with joy at the welcome you extend to us. Say to him
-that the king of kings, far beyond the great water of the sea, sends
-greeting to his Brother of the Sun, and craves his friendship for all
-time to come. This much at once; but, later on, assure his Majesty I
-hope to lay before him plans and projects worthy of his warlike fame,
-that he, your monarch, and my king of kings may know no equals ’neath
-the sun and moon.” De Sancerre paused to give the interpreter a chance
-to turn his words into her native tongue. (“In sooth,” he muttered
-to himself, as he turned to smile again upon the now silent throng
-surrounding the low hillock upon which the King’s litter stood, “had I
-but shown myself so great a diplomat in France, I might have changed
-the map of Europe with my tongue and pen.”) “And what, señora, saith
-the Son of Suns?”
-
-“He answers you with words of deepest love,” answered the old woman,
-turning toward the Frenchman from the royal sun-worshipper, whose
-dark-hued face glowed with the delight de Sancerre’s adroitly-framed
-sentences had begotten. “He offers the hand of friendship to your king,
-the Brother of the Moon, and will divide with him the waters and the
-lands in perfect amity. He bids me say to you that in this day the
-children of the sun find glorious fulfilment of ancient prophecies.
-Before the East had parted from the West, and North and South were
-wrapped in close embrace, ’twas told by wise, inspired tongues that
-some day by the waters of a boundless sea a goddess in deep sleep,
-sent to our people by the sun itself, would meet the eyes of roving
-huntsmen, wandering far afield. Our seers have told us that when she
-had come--Coyocop, the very spirit of the sun, our god--our race would
-meet our brothers of the moon, and all the world would bow beneath our
-yoke.”
-
-De Sancerre, impatient by temperament, and finding difficulty in fully
-understanding the disjointed Spanish _patois_ used by the old woman,
-had paid but little real attention to this long speech, in spite of the
-attitude of absorbed interest which he had assumed, knowing that the
-piercing eyes of the sun’s brother were scanning his face attentively.
-
-“Your name is, señora--is--” he asked, as the wrinkled hag paused an
-instant to regain her breath.
-
-“Noco,” she answered, simply.
-
-“Doña Noco, say to his Majesty that others of our suite are approaching
-the throne to lay their homage at his feet, and that I, his servant,
-crave further speech with him anon. Then, señora, if you love me, draw
-aside a pace or two, that I may have a word with you alone.”
-
-Hardly had de Sancerre ceased to speak when through an opening in the
-throng made by the courteous sun-worshippers came toward the throne the
-gray-frocked friar, Zenobe Membré, followed by Katonah and Chatémuc,
-side by side. The Franciscan, chanting in a light but well-rounded
-voice a Latin hymn, bore aloft before him a rudely-carved wooden
-crucifix. With his large gray eyes raised to heaven, and his face
-radiant with the religious ecstasy which filled his soul, he looked,
-at that moment, to the eyes of the overwrought sun-worshippers, like a
-man created of shadows and moonbeams, bearing toward their sovereign a
-mystic symbol potent for good or ill.
-
-The effect of the friar’s dramatic approach upon the impressionable
-Brother of the Sun served de Sancerre’s purpose well. Unobserved by the
-King, whose eyes were fixed upon the chanting priest, the Frenchman
-seized this opportunity to draw Noco aside. Removing from his breast
-the piece of mulberry bark upon which was scrawled the name of Julia de
-Aquilar, he asked, in a whisper which did not disguise his excitement:
-
-“Who wrote this name? Tell me, Doña Noco, for the love of God!”
-
-“Coyocop,” muttered the hag, in a voice indicating the fear that she
-felt of the Frenchman’s impetuosity. Her answer conveyed no meaning to
-the straining ear of de Sancerre.
-
-“Tell me more, good Noco,” he implored, glancing furtively at the
-Brother of the Sun, who had arisen to greet the oncoming Franciscan.
-
-“I dare not--now,” whispered Noco, nervously. “Anon, perhaps, if the
-chance should come.”
-
-With this unsatisfactory promise the interpreter returned to resume
-her duties at her sovereign’s side, and de Sancerre, mystified and
-morose, turned to watch the efforts of Zenobe Membré to dethrone the
-deified sun in favor of the true God.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-IN WHICH CHATÉMUC FINDS THE INSPIRATION WHICH HE LACKED
-
-
-“’Twas as I said it would be, my Chatémuc,” exclaimed Membré,
-mournfully, as the friar and his convert retired from the immediate
-presence of royalty. “As long as yonder temple protects its hellish
-fire, the ears of this great monarch will be deaf to words of mine.
-Mother of God, ’tis sad! He has a noble face! I would that I might live
-to shrive him of the many sins his haughty pride begets!”
-
-Chatémuc gave vent to what might have been a pious groan, though it
-sounded to a listening group of sun-worshippers like the grunt of an
-ill-tempered man. The half-civilized Mohican had good reasons for
-his discontented mood. His unexpected discovery of a race of native
-Americans taller, better proportioned, and seemingly more muscular than
-his kinsmen of the North, had touched his sullen pride. Furthermore,
-Chatémuc felt that he had been made a victim, at the very foot of the
-throne, of a cleverly designed conspiracy. De Sancerre had spoken a
-few words to Noco, and the latter had addressed the King himself. In
-his native tongue the Great Sun had issued an order which had been
-translated by Noco into Spanish, and which de Sancerre had turned into
-French for the benefit--or, rather, for the disturbance--of Chatémuc.
-The royal behest had been uncompromising in its curt simplicity. The
-Brother of the Sun had ordered Noco to act as hostess to Katonah during
-the latter’s sojourn within his domain. Annoyed as the Mohican had
-been at this command, he had reluctantly recognized the futility of an
-open protest against the disposition made, without his consent, of his
-sister. He had retired with the Franciscan from the group surrounding
-the King’s litter, with a burning desire in his heart to make mischief.
-Quick to read the mind of Chatémuc, the gray friar, whose open zeal as
-a proselyter had been changed, by the Great Sun’s stubborn indifference
-to the awful significance of the crucifix, into the craft of a schemer,
-was now pouring into the Mohican’s ears words emphasizing the glories
-of martyrdom, and picturing the bliss which awaited those who perished
-for the cause of Mother Church. The Franciscan and his convert
-had withdrawn to a sunny slope a few yards to the eastward of the
-flower-strewn hillock upon which the Brother of the Sun maintained the
-pomp of royalty.
-
-Had the eyes and ears of Chatémuc and Membré been open at that moment
-to pleasant impressions, they would have found many sources of delight
-in their surroundings. They gazed upon a multicolored scene whose most
-striking features they had never, in their many years of forest-travel,
-looked upon before. Bright-hued flowers, trees gay with the blossoms of
-spring, birds whose brilliant plumage suggested the possibility that a
-rainbow, shattered into small bits, had found wings for the remnants
-of its glory, and, over all, a blue canopy across which floated white,
-fleecy playthings of the breeze, whispered in vain their story of love
-and peace to the zealous friar and his attentive tool.
-
-From the westward came the inspiring shouts of the home-going multitude
-and the noise of kettle-drums helping the army to keep perfect time
-as it marched, a snow-white phalanx, toward the City of the Sun. From
-their coigne of vantage Membré and the Mohican could see that a monarch
-who had snubbed the former and enraged the latter harbored no present
-intention of following his subjects and his army toward his city. In
-fact, it soon became apparent that the Brother of the Sun was about to
-regale his guests with a somewhat pretentious feast. Upon litters,
-undecorated and simple in construction, servants belonging to the
-lowest social caste--slaves in fact, if not by law--bore from the city
-food designed to give a substantial foundation to the Great Sun’s _fête
-champêtre_. Bustling women brought rudely-constructed wooden benches to
-the grass-carpeted banquet-hall whose decorations were the flowers of
-spring and whose roof was the smiling sky.
-
-It was well for the good feeling that de Sancerre had done so much to
-strengthen between the children of the sun and moon that the slaves
-made ready the feast with great despatch, for the inopportune attempt
-of Zenobe Membré to convert the King at one stroke from the religion of
-his ancestors to a faith whose mysteries a sign-language was impotent
-to explain had cast a damper upon the group surrounding royalty.
-While it was true that the Great Sun had not taken offence at the
-inexplicable demonstration made by the zealous friar, he had become
-thoughtful and silent after the retreat of Membré and the Mohican. To
-relieve the situation, Henri de Tonti, a soldier unfitted either by
-disposition or habit for delicate feats of diplomacy, made no effort.
-Upon his scarred and unsymmetrical countenance rested an expression of
-sullen discontent as he stood, with folded arms, pretending to watch
-the preparations for a feast for which he had no heart. His jealousy
-of de Sancerre increased as he saw that, through the aid of Noco’s
-tongue, the courtier was tempting back again the smile of friendly
-interest to the black-eyed monarch’s face. Undecided whether to flee
-to the hillock where her brother stood or to place herself in Noco’s
-charge, according to the King’s command, Katonah lingered irresolutely
-by de Sancerre’s side, while her heart beat fast with the dread of an
-impending peril whose source she could not divine.
-
-Presently the activity of the slaves ceased for a moment, and the
-master of ceremonies--“_le maître d’hôtel_” as de Sancerre dubbed him
-under his breath--approached the throne with arms stretched upward
-above his head, and announced in one word that the preparations for the
-banquet had been completed.
-
-“Cahani!” exclaimed the Great Sun, seating himself upon a bench in
-front of the royal litter, and motioning to de Sancerre to take the
-place at his right hand. “Cahani! Sit down!”
-
-At the monarch’s left stood Noco, duenna and interpreter, a useful
-creature at that moment, but unfitted by birth to eat meat with her
-sovereign. The Brother of the Sun smiled upon Katonah, and graciously
-offered her the second place of honor by his side. What the maiden’s
-rank among the Mohicans might be made no difference at this juncture.
-She had been honored by the Great Sun’s gracious recognition, and
-from that instant was looked up to as a princess by the ceremonious
-sun-worshippers, who held that their monarch’s nod might serve as a
-patent of nobility to a stranger from an alien land. Among themselves,
-the road from the lowest social status to the highest was a hard one.
-To enter the circle of the nobility, a low-caste man and wife among the
-children of the sun must strangle one of their own offspring, having
-proved, by this heroic sacrifice, their superiority to the humble rank
-to which birth had consigned them.
-
-On the royal bench beyond Katonah sat the restless and dissatisfied de
-Tonti, silently protesting against the turn which events had taken,
-but just now impotent to change their course. The Italian veteran had
-walked far since breaking his fast, and had undergone the exhausting
-conflict of many antagonistic emotions. Hunger and thirst combined
-for the moment to postpone the withdrawal of his followers from the
-too-hospitable grasp of the sun-worshippers, but the observant captain
-realized the immediate necessity of a consultation with de la Salle
-before proceeding further with negotiations which the impulsiveness
-of de Sancerre might twist into an awkward shape. De Tonti had
-started out that morning to visit, he had imagined, an insignificant
-tribe of friendly Indians, and, behold, he had come upon a powerful
-nation, equipped with an army of gigantic warriors and endowed with a
-civilization whose outward manifestations were extremely impressive.
-Distrustful of de Sancerre, and knowing well the extremes to which
-Zenobe Membré’s zeal as a proselyter might carry him, the Italian
-soldier scented danger in their present environment. He determined,
-therefore, to withdraw his followers from the feast at an early moment,
-to reject the Great Sun’s proffer of hospitality for the night--which,
-he felt sure, would be extended to them--and to return to de la Salle’s
-camp by the river as quickly as circumstances permitted.
-
-On the small plateau below the hillock upon which the Great Sun and
-his guests sat in state a hundred dusky noblemen had ranged themselves
-along the benches, awaiting, in solemn silence, the signal from their
-monarch which should reawaken the activity of the serving-women and
-inaugurate a banquet bidding fair to last until sundown. The Great Sun
-had raised his sceptre of painted feathers to indicate to his master of
-ceremonies that the time had come for the serving of the first course,
-when the royal eye lighted upon Zenobe Membré and the Mohican, who
-still stood upon a hillock beyond the furthest line of benches, plunged
-in deep converse.
-
-“Go to your friend who sings the praises of his god, the Moon,”
-exclaimed the King, turning to Noco, who stood behind him awaiting his
-pleasure, and pointing his tawdry sceptre toward the Franciscan, “and
-say to him that the Brother of the Sun invites him to meat and drink.
-Have my people make a place for him, and for his captive who leans upon
-his voice. Go quickly, and return to me at once.”
-
-Without further delay, the monarch gave the impatiently-awaited
-signal for the serving of the feast, and the hunger of his guests was
-suddenly confronted by a throng of antagonists, any one of which was
-fashioned to appease, in short order, the appetite of a European. The
-coarser meats, the buffalo steaks and the clumsily cooked venison,
-were relieved by fish prepared for the table with some skill, and by
-old corn made palatable in a variety of ways. To Henri de Tonti’s
-great satisfaction, he found that the _cuisine_ of the sun-worshippers
-was the most admirable which he had encountered in his long years of
-pilgrimages from one native tribe to another.
-
-It was with a great deal of reluctance that the Franciscan friar,
-followed by Chatémuc, had accepted the invitation extended to him from
-the Great Sun through Noco’s overworked tongue. She had delivered her
-message to the friar in her mongrel Spanish, and the Franciscan’s
-knowledge of Latin had enabled him to grasp the general tenor of
-her words. He had been endeavoring to throw upon the embers of the
-Mohican’s religious enthusiasm sufficient fuel to beget a flame that
-should result in immediate action of an heroic nature. But while
-the Franciscan dwelt upon the glories of martyrdom and the splendor
-of the rewards awaiting a servant of the Church who gave his life
-for the faith, fatigue and hunger, having possessed themselves of
-Chatémuc’s earthly tabernacle, formed a powerful alliance against that
-self-abnegation which the priest labored earnestly to arouse in the
-Mohican’s soul.
-
-“To eat meat with these children of Satan, who worship the very fires
-of hell, is, I fear, to commit a grave sin,” remarked the friar,
-gazing upward at Chatémuc dubiously, as they followed Noco toward the
-lower benches. Being a hungry barbarian, not a devout and learned
-controversialist, the Mohican could vouchsafe in answer to this nothing
-more satisfactory than a grunt, a guttural comment upon the delicate
-point raised by the agitated friar which might mean much or nothing.
-
-Seated at the very outskirts of the picturesque throng, Zenobe Membré
-bent his tonsured head and told his beads for a time, watching Chatémuc
-furtively as the Mohican indulged freely in roasted meats, half-cooked
-fish, and various preparations made from last year’s corn.
-
-“How proudly yonder temple rises toward the sky, my Chatémuc,” muttered
-the friar, glancing toward the City of the Sun. “Great will be the
-glory of the hand chosen by the saints to pull it to the ground.”
-
-Chatémuc chewed a morsel of tough venison and said nothing, but his
-eyes rested with a hostile gleam upon the Great Sun a hundred yards
-beyond him, beside whom sat Katonah, seemingly removed from her
-brother by the breadth of a mighty nation. Suddenly by the Mohican’s
-side appeared a serving-woman, who placed upon the bench at his right
-hand a gourd containing a fermented liquor made of the leaves of
-the cassia-tree. The increasing loquacity of the banqueters beyond
-the friar and his companion proved that the beverage, which had now
-reached them, possessed exhilarating properties. If the Franciscan had
-needed further evidence of the enlivening influence of the seductive
-liquor, which had come late to the feast as an ally to good-fellowship,
-the change in Chatémuc’s face would have offered it. After emptying
-his gourd twice--for the Mohican liked the cinnamon flavor of the
-drink--Chatémuc, flashing a glance of hatred at the Great Sun, looked
-down at the attentive friar at his side.
-
-“The fire of hell shall burn no more beyond,” he said, jerking his hand
-toward the distant city, behind which the weary sun had begun to creep.
-“The oath I swore to you shall be no idle boast.”
-
-Having observed that the Mohican liked the wine she offered him,
-the woman delegated to serve the friar and his comrade refilled the
-latter’s gourd for the third time. Chatémuc swallowed the fiery liquor
-eagerly, and turned to speak a final word to the priest.
-
-At that instant Zenobe Membré’s eyes were fixed upon the royal group
-beyond him. The Great Sun had arisen and stood waving his feathered
-sceptre energetically, while he gazed down at Noco, to whom he seemed
-to be talking with some excitement. Gazing up at the King, with a
-satirical smile upon his delicate face, sat de Sancerre, while de Tonti
-had sprung to his feet with an expression of anger upon his countenance.
-
-When the friar turned to address Chatémuc, he discovered that the
-Mohican had left his side and had been lost to sight in the long
-shadows of the stealthy twilight.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-IN WHICH DE SANCERRE RUNS A STUBBORN RACE
-
-
-It is but fair to the memory of a noble, if somewhat too impetuous
-proselyter, to say that if Zenobe Membré--whose achievements and
-sufferings entitle him to all praise--had realized that martyrdom, the
-rewards for which he had painted in such glowing colors, really menaced
-the aroused Mohican, he would have weighed his words with greater care.
-But the gray friar had long been in the habit of using heroic language
-to stir the soul of Chatémuc to religious enthusiasm, and he had not,
-as yet, found cause to regret the use which he had made for years
-of his pliable convert. Furthermore, the Franciscan placed absolute
-confidence in the Mohican’s ability to take good care of his red skin.
-He had seen the craft of Chatémuc overcome appalling odds too many
-times to long indulge the fear that the Indian’s sudden disappearance
-at this juncture presaged disaster. Nevertheless, he regretted that his
-convert had set out upon a mission of some peril with such unwonted
-precipitancy. The friar would have felt better satisfied with himself
-if he had been permitted to breathe a word of caution into Chatémuc’s
-ear before the latter had gone forth upon his lonely crusade against
-the fires of hell.
-
-“At the worst,” muttered the Franciscan to himself, as he made his
-way toward the royal litter between lines of black-eyed, smiling
-sun-worshippers--“at the worst, it would be one life for Paradise and a
-nation for the Church! May the saints be with my Chatémuc! If he won a
-martyr’s crown, his blood would quench a fire which Satan keeps alive.
-But Mother Mary aid him! I love him well! I’d lose my right hand to
-save my Chatémuc from death! May Christ assail me if so my words were
-rash!”
-
-Thus communing with himself, the Franciscan approached the excited
-group surrounding royalty.
-
-“_Ma foi_, good father, you come to us most opportunely!” cried de
-Sancerre, springing to his feet, a smile upon his lips but a gleam
-of repressed anger in his eyes. “Monsieur de Tonti is bent upon
-repaying his Majesty’s hospitality with marked ingratitude. He orders
-us--courageous captain that he is--to return at once to Sieur de la
-Salle. As for me, I have promised the Brother of the Sun to pass the
-night in yonder city--to the greater glory of our sire, the moon!”
-
-Henri de Tonti, a black frown upon his brow, had overheard the
-Frenchman’s sarcastic words. Seizing the friar by the arm, he flashed a
-glance of rage and menace at the exasperating de Sancerre, and drew the
-Franciscan aside, to lay before him weighty arguments in favor of an
-immediate retreat to the river.
-
-Meanwhile the younger men among the sun-worshipping nobility, moved by
-the same cinnamon-flavored inspiration which had driven Chatémuc toward
-a Satan-lighted fire, had abandoned the scene of the recent feast to
-indulge in athletic rivalries on the greensward which undulated gently
-between the outskirts of the forest and the City of the Sun.
-
-“Will you say to his Majesty, señora,” cried de Sancerre, gayly,
-drawing near to the Great Sun and addressing Noco, “that he has reason
-to be proud of the prowess of his young men? I have never watched
-a more exciting wrestling-bout than yonder struggle between those
-writhing giants. It is inspiring! It is classic! Could Girardon carve
-a fountain from that Grecian contest over there, ’twould add another
-marvel to Versailles.”
-
-The Brother of the Sun smiled down upon de Sancerre with warm
-cordiality as the aged interpreter, having caught the general drift
-of the Frenchman’s words, turned his praise into her native tongue.
-The monarch’s momentary annoyance at Henri de Tonti’s lack of tact
-had passed away, and, standing erect, a right royal figure on his
-flower-bedecked dais, he watched, with unconcealed pride, the skilful
-feats with bow-and-arrow performed by the sun-worshipping aristocrats
-and the prodigies of strength which the wrestlers and stone-hurlers
-accomplished.
-
-“Tell me, Doña Noco,” exclaimed de Sancerre presently, at the
-conclusion of a closely-contested foot-race, which even the distraught
-and restless Katonah, searching vainly with her eyes for Chatémuc,
-had watched for a moment with bated breath--“tell me the name of
-yonder greyhound, carved in bronze, who smiles so disdainfully upon
-the victor. I have never before seen a youth whose legs and shoulders
-seemed to be so well fashioned by nature to outstrip the wind itself.
-Why does he not compete?”
-
-The shrivelled crone grinned with delight.
-
-“That is my grandson, Cabanacte,” she answered, proudly. “He’s now a
-nobleman, for, at the risk of life, he bore the spirit of the sun to
-us. The whirlwind cannot catch him. The falling-star seems slow behind
-his feet. He stands, in pride, alone; for none dare challenge him.”
-
-A flush crept into the pale face of the Frenchman as his sparkling
-eyes garnered with delight all the inspiring features of the scene
-before him, features which formed at that moment a picture reminding
-him of the glory of ancient Athens, the splendors of a pagan cult which
-found in strength and beauty idols worthy of adoring tribute. The
-passing day breathed a golden blessing upon the City of the Sun, which
-gleamed in the distance like a dream of Greece in the old, heroic days.
-De Sancerre, well-read and impressionable, mused for a moment upon the
-strange likeness of the scene before him to a painting that he had
-gazed upon, in a land far over-sea, representing Attic athletes engaged
-in classic games beneath a stately temple behind which the sun had hid
-its weary face. Awakening from his day-dreams, he turned toward Noco
-and addressed her in a voice which made his Spanish most impressive.
-
-“Go to Cabanacte, señora, and say to him that Count Louis de Sancerre
-of Languedoc--the fairest province in the silver moon--dares him to a
-test of speed, the course to run from here to yonder lonely tree, near
-to the city’s gate, and back again.”
-
-A grin of mingled admiration and amazement lighted the old hag’s face
-as she turned toward the King and repeated to him his guest’s daring
-defiance of a runner whose superiority no sun-worshipper had cared to
-test for many waning moons. A courteous smile played across the firm,
-well-cut mouth of the Great Sun as he listened to Noco’s words, but the
-scornful gleam in his black eyes as they rested upon the Frenchman’s
-slender, undersized figure was not lost upon the observant challenger.
-De Sancerre realized fully that he had placed in jeopardy his influence
-with the Brother of the Sun by risking a trial of speed with a youth
-whose fleetness he had had, as yet, no means of gauging. If he should
-be outstripped by Cabanacte the good-will of the Great Sun would be
-changed to contempt, and the relationship of host to guests, already
-disturbed by de Tonti’s lack of tact, might be transformed into that
-of a victor to his captives. What, then, would become of de Sancerre’s
-efforts to solve the mystery to which old Noco held the key?
-
-But de Sancerre, always self-confident, placed absolute faith in the
-elasticity of his light, nervous frame, whose muscles had been hardened
-by his campaigns over-sea and by his wanderings with de la Salle.
-No fleeter foot than his had been found in the sport-loving army of
-Turenne, and he had been as much admired in camps for his agility as
-at courts for his grace. If, perchance, he should outrun the stalwart
-Cabanacte, de Sancerre felt sure that his easily-won popularity with
-these impressionable sun-worshippers would be placed upon a much more
-stable foundation than its present underpinning of smiles and courtly
-bows.
-
-“My grandson, Cabanacte, sends greeting to the envoy of the moon,”
-panted Noco, returning speedily to de Sancerre’s side, “and will gladly
-chase the wind with him in friendly rivalry. He bids me say that night
-falls quickly when the sun has set and that he craves your presence at
-this moment on the course.”
-
-Making a courteous obeisance to the Brother of the Sun, de Sancerre was
-about to hasten to the side of his gigantic adversary, who, stripped
-almost to nakedness, stood awaiting his challenger, when he felt a
-detaining hand upon his arm, and, turning petulantly, looked into
-Katonah’s agitated face.
-
-“Chatémuc! My brother! I cannot see him anywhere!”
-
-“Fear not, _ma petite_,” exclaimed de Sancerre, cheerily. “Wait here
-until I’ve made this sun-baked Mercury imagine he’s a snail, and we’ll
-find your kinsman of the joyous face. ’Twould break my heart to lose
-the gay and smiling Chatémuc! Adieu! I go to victory, or, perhaps, to
-death! Pray to Saint Maturin for me, Katonah! He watches over fools!”
-
-A great shout arose from the sun-worshippers as de Sancerre and
-Cabanacte, saluting each other with ceremonious respect, stood side
-by side awaiting the signal for their flight toward the distant tree
-which marked the turning-point in the course which they were about
-to run. The Frenchman, attired in tattered velvets and wearing shoes
-never designed for the use of an athlete, seemed to be at that moment
-handicapped by both nature and art for the race awaiting him. Almost a
-pygmy beside the bronze giant, whose limbs would have driven sleep from
-a sculptor’s couch, de Sancerre had apparently chosen well in asking
-Katonah for an invocation to the saint who protects fools from the
-outcome of their folly. The black-eyed sun-worshippers glanced at each
-other in smiling derision. Surely, these children of the moon must eat
-at night of some plant or fruit which stirred their blood to madness
-when they wandered far afield! No dwarf would dare to measure strides
-with a colossus unless, indeed, he’d lost his wits through midnight
-revelry in moonlit glades! This white-faced, queerly-dressed, and most
-presumptuous rival of the mighty Cabanacte might smile and bow and
-gain the ear of kings, but look upon him now, with head bent forward,
-waiting for the word! Fragile, petite, thin in the shanks, and with
-a chest a boy might scorn, he dares to measure strides with a sturdy
-demigod who towers above him, a giant shadow in the gloaming there!
-
-A howl from the overwrought throng shook the leaves upon the trees.
-The runners had sprung from the line at a cry and, elbow to elbow,
-were speeding toward the distant tree. Falling back to Cabanacte’s
-flank, de Sancerre, seeming to grow taller as he ran, and using his
-feet with a nimbleness and grace which emphasized the clumsiness of
-his fleet rival’s tread, hung with ease upon the giant’s pace, moving
-with a rhythmical smoothness which indicated reserved power. Through
-the twilight toward the city rushed the courtier and the savage, made
-equals at that moment by the levelling spirit of a manly sport, while
-the onlookers stood, eager-eyed and silent, watching with amazement
-the pertinacity of the lithe Frenchman who so stubbornly kept the pace
-behind their yet unconquered champion.
-
-As the racers turned the tree marking the half of their swift career,
-the dusky patriots saw, with growing consternation, that the child of
-moonbeams still sped gayly along behind the stalwart, wavering figure
-of a son of suns. The pace set by Cabanacte had been heartrending
-from the start, for he had cherished the conviction that he would be
-able to shake off his puny rival long before the turn for home was
-made. But ever as he strove to increase his lead the bronze-tinted
-athlete heard, just behind his shoulder, the dainty footfalls of
-a light-waisted, wiry, bold-hearted antagonist, who panted not in
-weariness behind the champion after the manner of his rivals of other
-days. Out of the glowing West came the racers side by side, every step
-a contest as they struggled toward the goal.
-
-“Cabanacte! Cabanacte!” cried the sun-worshippers, mad with the fear
-that the dwarf might outrun the giant at the last. For the Frenchman
-had crept up from behind and was now speeding homeward on even terms
-with his delirious, reeling, wind-blown, but still unconquered
-rival. For a hundred yards the racers fought their fight by inches,
-each marvelling in his aching mind at the stern persistence of his
-antagonist. Then, when the strain grew greater than human muscles could
-endure, the bursting heart of de Sancerre seemed to ease its awful
-pressure upon his chest, his faltering steps regained their light and
-graceful motion, and, passing Cabanacte as the latter glanced up with
-eyes bloodshot with longing, the Frenchman, with a gay smile upon his
-pallid face, rushed past the line, a winner of the race by two full
-yards.
-
-[Illustration: “THE FRENCHMAN, WITH A GAY SMILE UPON HIS PALLID FACE,
-RUSHED PAST THE LINE, A WINNER OF THE RACE BY TWO FULL YARDS”]
-
-The hot, generous blood of the sun-worshippers bounded in their veins
-as they seized the tottering victor and, with shouts of wonder and
-acclaim, raised him to their shoulders and bore him, a wonder-worker
-in their eyes, to the smiling presence of their astonished king. But
-before de Sancerre could receive the congratulations of the Brother of
-the Sun, the voice of Katonah had reached him over the heads of the
-excited patricians.
-
-“Monsieur,” cried the Mohican maiden, in French, her voice vibrating
-with excitement, “Père Membré and Monsieur de Tonti have set out for
-the camp, and Chatémuc has not returned!”
-
-“_Peste, ma petite!_” exclaimed de Sancerre, blowing her a kiss over
-the turmoil of black heads beneath him. “Why trouble me with trifles
-such as these? See you not that a splinter from a moonbeam has put
-the sun to shame--to the greater glory of our Mother Church. _Laude,
-Katonah! Laude et jubilate!_”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-IN WHICH THE RESULTS OF CHATÉMUC’S ENTHUSIASM ARE SEEN
-
-
-“Courage, _ma petite_! We’ll find your Chatémuc; then learn the
-mysteries of yonder sun-kissed town. That the stubborn captain has
-deserted us is hardly strange. Always in fear of de la Salle’s
-displeasure, Monsieur de Tonti has grown erratic, unreliable, jealous.
-As for the friar, his retreat surprises me. He lacks not courage nor
-persistence. He would not leave our brother of the sun without, at the
-least, one more attempt to show him the path which leads to Mother
-Church.”
-
-Released from the enthusiastic arms of the noblemen who had carried
-him in triumph to their king, de Sancerre was now following the royal
-litter toward the City of the Sun, walking the well-beaten path with
-the mincing step of a courtier whose feet, though swifter than the
-winds, pay homage gayly to Grace as a worthier deity than Speed. On
-either side of the victorious runner, whose eyes still glowed with
-the joy of triumph, walked Noco and Katonah. The latter, downcast and
-apprehensive, gazed gloomily toward the city, whose roofs could now
-be plainly seen, while she listened apathetically to the Frenchman’s
-encouraging words. Changing the tongue he used from French to Spanish,
-de Sancerre, turning toward Noco, who looked, in the twilight, like a
-hideous heathen idol carved in mahogany, said:
-
-“I trust, señora, that your courageous grandson, my very worthy
-opponent, will bear me no ill-will because my slender body was less a
-burden than his giant frame.”
-
-Noco, to whom de Sancerre’s overthrow of the erstwhile invincible
-Cabanacte had appeared like a miracle wrought by some mysterious
-moon-magic, gazed reverentially at the Frenchman with beady, black
-eyes, which seemed to be fully half a century younger than the other
-features of her wrinkled face. Her countenance was a palimpsest, with
-youth staring out from beneath the writings made by time.
-
-“My grandson, Cabanacte, O Son of the Full Moon, will ever do your
-bidding with a loyal heart. According to the customs of our land, your
-triumph in the race entitles you to service at his hands until his feet
-wax swift enough to fly away from yours.”
-
-“Caramba!” exclaimed de Sancerre, whose expletives bore testimony to
-the cosmopolitan tendencies of his adventurous career, “your words,
-señora, rejoice my heart! I stand in sore need of a servitor to save
-me from the nakedness which one more heated foot-race would beget. If
-Cabanacte can repair the rents which make my costume such a marvel to
-the eye, I’ll free him from his _villein socage_ and make him proud
-again.”
-
-Enough of this the old hag understood--enlightened, to a great extent,
-by the Frenchman’s eloquent gestures--to emphasize the grin upon her
-ugly but intelligent face.
-
-“Cabanacte is a warrior, not a maker of flowing robes!” she exclaimed,
-with a raucous chuckle. “But to-night old Noco will repair the holes
-in the Son of the Full Moon’s garb. Look at this.” Fumbling at her
-waist, she presently held out to de Sancerre’s gaze a needle made of
-fish-bone. Lowering her voice, she said: “Coyocop, the spirit of the
-sun, has not disdained to let my needle prick her sacred dress. She
-weeps, and cares for nothing but to lie upon her couch and whisper
-secrets to the mother of the sun. ’Tis sad, but so she must fulfil her
-mission to our race. Our nation’s wise men and the priests who tend the
-temple-fire had told us she would come. My grandson, Cabanacte, bore
-her from the sea.”
-
-De Sancerre listened attentively to the old crone’s words. He recalled
-Noco’s assertion that Coyocop had scrawled his inamorata’s name upon
-the mulberry bark, though, at the time, he had not grasped the full
-significance of her mumbled, mongrel Spanish words, rendered less clear
-to him by the use of the meaningless name, Coyocop. But now, as they
-hurried on behind the porters who carried the King’s litter, followed
-by a hundred chattering noblemen, a veil seemed to be lifted from de
-Sancerre’s mind. His heart beat with suffocating rapidity, and his
-voice trembled as he looked down at Noco, trying to catch her eyes in
-the darkening twilight, and exclaimed:
-
-“’Twas Coyocop who scratched that name upon the bark? But why, good
-Doña Noco? Tell me why.”
-
-The old woman glanced over her shoulder, to assure herself that they
-could not be overheard. Then she whispered:
-
-“I told her the white-faced children of the moon had come to us upon
-the bosom of the flood, according to an ancient prophecy. The temple
-priests would strangle me with cords if they should learn how my old
-tongue has wagged. They watch me closely, for they worship her. But
-once she found a moment, when no priest was near, to scratch the mystic
-symbols on the bark. I crept away at night and, lo, your god, the moon,
-was guide to my old feet--and, so, I came to you from Coyocop.”
-
-That Noco had told him all she had to tell, the Frenchman did not for
-a moment doubt. But, even then, she had thrown little light upon the
-mystery which confronted him. A mondain to his finger-tips, at heart
-a sceptic, de Sancerre fostered no belief in miracles. Surrounded,
-as he had been all the days of his life, by men and women steeped
-in superstition, his spirit had revolted at the impostures which
-had served to blind mankind through centuries of human history. Had
-de Sancerre been wrought of the stuff of which his age was made, he
-would have reached the conclusion at once that here in the wilderness
-the avenging spirit of the Spaniard whom he had slain in France was
-haunting him at night to play him tricks to drive him straight to
-madness. ’Twould be so easy to account thus for what his reason could
-not now explain. But de Sancerre was a man who, intellectually, had
-pressed on in advance of his times. By policy a conformist to the
-exterior demands of his avowed religion, he had long lost his faith in
-the active interference in earthly affairs of saints and devils. How
-the name of Julia de Aquilar had found its way to a piece of vagrom
-bark in a wilderness, thousands of miles across the sea from the land
-of her nativity, he could not explain, nor could he harbor, for an
-instant, the wild idea that Coyocop and his inamorata would prove
-to be identical. In spite of the malicious horns of his dilemma,
-nevertheless, he eliminated from his thoughts the possibility that he
-had become the plaything of supernatural agencies. But who was Coyocop?
-He must look upon her face without delay.
-
-“Señora, listen!” exclaimed de Sancerre, seizing Noco by the arm. “I
-must see the spirit of the sun to-night! From the mountains of the
-moon, where reigns our god in silvery state, I bear a message to the
-goddess Coyocop. _Peste_, Doña Noco! Have you gone to sleep?” He shook
-her gently, striving hard to find her eyes.
-
-“It cannot be,” muttered the old crone, trembling under his grasp as if
-the night wind chilled her time-worn frame--“it cannot be. ’Twould mean
-your life--and mine.”
-
-“Hold, señora! Remember Cabanacte--and pin your faith to me! No matter
-what the odds may be, the brother of the moonbeams always wins! Bear
-that in mind, good Noco, or the future may grow black for thee. Be
-faithful to my fortunes--and I’ll make your grandson noble once again.”
-
-How deep an impression his words had made upon the beldame, de Sancerre
-could not tell, for at that moment there arose behind him a weird
-chant, sung by a hundred tuneful voices, rising and falling upon the
-evening air with thrilling effect. Suddenly beyond them from the very
-heart of the City of the Sun arose a mightier chorus than the King’s
-suite could beget, and the night grew vibrant with a wild, menacing
-song which chilled de Sancerre’s heart and caused Katonah to press
-close to his side, in vain striving for the comfort she could not find.
-
-Presently the litter of the King, passing between two outlying houses,
-turned into a broad avenue which led directly to the great square of
-the city, at one side of which stood the temple of the sun. The moon
-had not yet arisen, and what was twilight in the open had turned to
-night within the confines of the town. De Sancerre, who was a close
-observer, both by temperament and by habit, strove in vain to obtain a
-satisfactory view of the dwelling-houses between which the royal litter
-passed. But when the King and his followers had reached the outskirts
-of the great square, the Frenchman forgot at once his curiosity as a
-traveller; forgot, even for a moment, the problem to solve which he
-had dared to enter this pagan city, in defiance of all discipline and
-in direct disobedience to La Salle’s lieutenant. The scene which broke
-upon his staring eyes stilled, for an instant, the beating of his
-heart, which seemed to bound into his throat to choke him.
-
-The square between the King’s litter and the entrance to the temple
-was thronged with men and women, in front of whom stood long lines of
-stalwart warriors, the flower of the army which had recently astonished
-the eyes of the wanderers from over-sea. Waving lights and shadows, the
-quarrelsome offspring of flaring torches, changed constantly the grim
-details of the scene, as if the night wind strove to hide the horrors
-of a dancing, evil dream.
-
-Directly in front of the main entrance to the temple of the
-sun-worshippers stood a post to which Chatémuc had been tied by cords.
-On either side of him white-robed priests, wielding long wooden rods,
-the ends of which had been turned to red coals in the sacred fire,
-prodded his hissing flesh, while they sang a chant of devilish triumph,
-in which the populace, enraged at the sacrilege attempted by the
-Mohican, joined at intervals.
-
-Facing the dying martyr, who gazed down at him with proud stoicism,
-knelt the gray-frocked Franciscan, Zenobe Membré, holding toward
-the victim of excessive zeal the crude crucifix, for love of which
-Chatémuc, the Mohican, was now freeing his soul from torment.
-
-“Nom de Dieu!” cried de Sancerre, placing his hand upon his rapier,
-“this savage sport must end!” In another instant the reckless
-Frenchman, carving his way to death, would have challenged an army,
-single-handed, had not Katonah, reeling from the horror of her
-brother’s death, fallen senseless into his reluctant arms.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-
-IN WHICH THE GRAY FRIAR DONS THE LIVERY OF SATAN
-
-“It was a miracle! A voice from heaven whispered in my ear, and,
-turning back, I left de Tonti, angry, threatening, to take his way
-alone. To give my Chatémuc the words of absolution at the last, the
-Virgin Mother led me by the hand. And now in Paradise he wears a
-martyr’s crown. The saints be praised!”
-
-The earnest eyes of the Franciscan were turned upward in an ecstasy of
-gratitude and devotion. Seated upon a wooden bench by the gray friar’s
-side, de Sancerre listened musingly to Membré’s account of the Italian
-captain’s attempt to entice him back to de la Salle’s camp before he
-had learned the outcome of Chatémuc’s effort to extinguish a flame from
-hell.
-
-Noco, well understanding the present temper of the sun-worshipping
-priesthood, and acting upon a command given to her by the Great Sun
-himself, had managed, with considerable difficulty, to persuade
-de Sancerre and Katonah to secrete themselves for a time in her
-unpretentious but not comfortless hut. Her rescue of Zenobe Membré
-from his threatening environment at the martyred Mohican’s side had
-been, she flattered herself, a triumph of adroitness, and she sat in
-a dark corner of the room at this moment whispering to her gigantic
-grandson. Cabanacte, warm praise of her own cleverness. She had saved
-the Franciscan from the immediate vengeance of the sun-worshipping
-priests by suggesting to the latter that the summary execution of the
-gray-frocked singer of unorthodox chants might arouse the anger of
-Coyocop, whose coming, prophecy had told them, was connected, in some
-occult way, with the predicted advent of the white-faced envoys from
-the moon. Sated with the cruel entertainment vouchsafed to them by the
-death-twitchings of the stoical Chatémuc, the white-robed guardians
-of the sun-temple had permitted the Franciscan to depart with Noco,
-although the latter well knew that thenceforth every movement which she
-and her gray-garbed companion made would be noted by the dark eyes of
-fanatical spies.
-
-The room in which the refugees--for such the antagonism of the dominant
-sun-priests had made them--had found shelter for the night was a
-picturesque apartment, fifteen feet in length and breadth, and lighted
-by flickering gleams from the embers of a fire of walnut-wood. Upon a
-bed of plaited reeds, resting upon a wooden frame two feet high, lay
-Katonah, grief-stricken, motionless, making no sound. Heart-broken
-at her brother’s awful fate, the Indian maiden nursed her sorrow in
-loneliness and silence. In vain had the good friar attempted to console
-her for her irreparable loss by painting, in eloquent words, the
-rewards awaiting a martyr who died for love of Mother Church. Katonah
-was too recent a convert to the Franciscan’s faith to realize and
-rejoice in the unseen glories of her brother’s heroic self-sacrifice.
-She had listened to Membré’s soothing words with a grateful smile
-upon her strong, symmetrical face, but evident relief had come to her
-when the gray-frocked enthusiast had retired from her bedside to seat
-himself beside de Sancerre in the centre of the room.
-
-“Pardieu!” muttered the Frenchman, casting a searching glance at the
-corner in which Noco and Cabanacte were engaged in earnest, low-voiced
-converse, “these people show outward signs of enlightenment, but they
-have a most brutal way of putting a man to death. The savage delight
-which those white-robed devils seemed to take in basting poor Chatémuc
-made my sword-point itch. ’Twas well for me Saint Maturin was kind.
-He checked my folly just in time! But listen, father! The martyrdom
-of Chatémuc must now suffice. Those imps of hell will have your life,
-anon, unless you foil their craft by craft. I think I hear their
-stealthy footsteps menacing these sun-cooked walls and making challenge
-of our god, the moon.”
-
-The Franciscan put up his hand to enforce silence that he might
-listen to the furtive footfalls outside the hut. At that moment Noco
-and her grandson stole toward the centre of the room. The stalwart
-sun-worshipper, who now looked upon de Sancerre as a supernatural being
-worthy of the most reverential treatment, towered aloft in the narrow
-chamber like a keen-eyed, sun-burnt ogre who had lured a number of
-unlucky dwarfs to his den to have his grim way with them. Stretching
-his long body at full length before the sputtering fire, Cabanacte
-turned his admiring gaze toward the troubled face of his fleet-footed
-conqueror and waited for Noco to put into words the thoughts which
-fretted him.
-
-“You--all of you--must leave here to-night, señor,” said the old woman
-in a guttural whisper. “The Brother of the Sun is your friend, but
-the priests of the temple look with suspicion upon you and the gray
-chanter. They would not dare to defy openly the King, but they have
-tracked you to this hiding-place and will work you mischief if they
-may.”
-
-“But, señora, I fear them not!” exclaimed de Sancerre, drawing his
-rapier and allowing the fire-flashes to gleam along the steel. “Saving
-the father’s presence here, one sword against a priesthood is enough.
-My tongue’s as boastful as a Gascon’s, is it not? But list to this,
-señora! I leave here only when I’ve had some speech with Coyocop,
-the spirit of the sun. When that may be I do not know, but Louis de
-Sancerre, a moonbeam’s eldest son, has sworn an oath--and so, señora,
-my welcome I must stretch.”
-
-Cabanacte, who had learned a little distorted Spanish from his
-loquacious grandparent, had caught the drift of the Frenchman’s speech.
-Putting forth a large, brown hand, shapely in its massiveness, he
-touched the buckles upon de Sancerre’s shoes and exclaimed, in what
-sounded like a parody upon Noco’s rendition of an alien tongue:
-
-“Good! Good! The son of moonbeams has a lofty soul! And Cabanacte is
-his body-guard! No harm shall come to you, despite the oath our priests
-have sworn!”
-
-The smile upon de Sancerre’s ever-changing face was the visible sign
-of varied emotions. Pleased at the cordial proffer of Cabanacte’s
-friendship, the Frenchman was astonished to discover that the giant
-had picked up a Spanish vocabulary which, in spite of his peculiar
-pronunciation, was not wholly useless. That the survival of a Spanish
-_patois_ among these sun-worshippers suggested a pathetic page of
-unwritten history de Sancerre realized, but his mind at that moment
-was too disturbed to linger long over an ethnological and linguistic
-problem. Turning to face the Franciscan friar, he said:
-
-“Père Membré, these pagan priests seek vengeance upon you. They have no
-reason yet for hating me, a splinter from a moonbeam who makes no open
-war against their creed. But, for the cause of Mother Church, we must
-lure them from their grim idolatry. Let Cabanacte use his strength and
-wits to find a pathway leading to our camp by which you may return.
-Here I shall stay until our leader, coming North again, shall send me
-word to quit this place, leaving behind me a friendly race, soil ready
-for the seeds of living truth.”
-
-It was not excessive self-laudation which had led de Sancerre to
-believe that he possessed the qualifications essential to success in
-diplomacy. Whenever he had set out to effect a purpose seemingly worthy
-of studied effort, he had found no difficulty in checking the satirical
-tendencies of his flippant tongue. At this moment he was gazing at the
-Franciscan’s disturbed countenance with eyes which seemed to gleam
-with the fervor of his zeal for Mother Church. Wishing to convince
-Père Membré that the ultimate conversion of these pagans from their
-worship of hell-fire to the true faith depended upon their possession
-of a hostage who should study their manners and customs and learn the
-shortest path by which their unregenerated souls might be reached, de
-Sancerre explained his plan of action to the friar with an unctuous
-fervor which convinced the latter that he had underestimated the errant
-courtier’s enthusiasm as a proselyter.
-
-“But the Mohican maiden, monsieur? I owe it to Chatémuc, the martyr,
-now with the saints in Paradise, to place her in the care of de la
-Salle. His sword, my crucifix, must guard Katonah for her brother’s
-sake.”
-
-The walnut embers in the clumsy fireplace had grown black and cold. For
-some time past no sound had reached the ears of the schemers from the
-menacing environment outside the hut. The moon had touched its midnight
-goal, and sought, in passing, to probe the secrets of old Noco’s home.
-
-“_Bonnement!_” exclaimed de Sancerre. “Go to her at once, good father,
-and tell her that ’tis best she should return with you to-night. I’ll
-join you presently. Meanwhile, I must have further speech with Noco and
-her grandson.”
-
-Presently the moonbeams, which had stolen into the hut through chinks
-between the timbers and the hardened mud, threw a dim light upon a
-most impressive tableau. The white face of the Frenchman was bent
-close to the dusky visage of the athletic sun-worshipper, while Noco,
-squatting upon the ground, bent toward them her wrinkled, grinning
-countenance, an effigy of “Gossip,” wrought in bronze. Bending over the
-reed-made couch upon which Katonah, dumb with misery, lay listening,
-stood the gray friar, whispering to the phlegmatic and seemingly
-obedient maiden the Frenchman’s late behest.
-
-Before the moonbeams could take their tale abroad, the scene had
-changed. From a corner of the hut Noco had brought to the Franciscan
-and his charge flowing garments of white mulberry bark, in which
-Katonah and the friar reluctantly enrobed themselves. With a harmless
-dye, old Noco, whose time-tested frame seemed to defy fatigue, deftly
-changed the protesting Membré’s white complexion to light mahogany.
-
-“Mother of Mary! I fear me this is sacrilege,” muttered the friar,
-nervously seeking his breviary beneath the white uniform of a lost
-sun-worshipper. “_Satis, superque!_ You’ll make my face, old woman,
-as black as Satan’s heart! The saints forgive me! Were not my life of
-value to the Church, I’d gladly die before I’d don this ghostly livery
-of sin.”
-
-Meanwhile de Sancerre had been straining his weary eyes in the effort
-to scratch a message to de la Salle with his dagger’s-point upon a slip
-of white bark.
-
-“The Spanish have tampered with a mighty nation,” he wrote. “I remain
-to learn the truth; to find a way to win them to our king. Camp where
-you are when you return. I’ll learn of your approach, rejoin you
-then, and bring you news most worthy your concern. _Au revoir, mon
-capitaine!_ For France, with sword and crucifix!”
-
-As he scrawled his signature beneath these words, Katonah glided
-silently to his side, a maiden whose grace was not destroyed by her
-unwonted garb, a costume enhancing the dark beauty of her proud,
-melancholy face. Her light hand rested gently upon his arm for a moment.
-
-“The good father tells me that you would have me go,” she murmured in
-a voice of mingled resignation and regret. De Sancerre, handing her
-the slip of mulberry bark upon which he had scratched a message to his
-leader, smiled up into the yearning face of the lonely girl.
-
-“Give this to our captain, Sieur de la Salle,” he said, sharply. “Fail
-not, Katonah! My life, I think, depends upon this scrawl.”
-
-A smile flashed across the maiden’s mournful face as she pressed the
-bark to her bosom, heaving with a conflict of emotions to which no
-words of hers could give relief.
-
-“His hand shall hold it ere the sun is up,” she said, simply.
-“Farewell!”
-
-De Sancerre, looking up into the girl’s eyes felt, with amazement, the
-tears creeping into his. He bent his head and imprinted a kiss upon her
-slender, trembling hand, which felt like ice beneath his lips.
-
-“Courage, _ma petite_!” he cried, with forced gayety. “You will return
-anon! And then, the river once again, and home--and friends--and--”
-
-His voice broke, and when he had regained his self-control he saw that
-Katonah had joined Cabanacte and the friar at the entrance to the hut.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-IN WHICH A SPIRIT SAVES DE SANCERRE FROM DEATH
-
-
-There reigned in Noco’s hut intense silence. Stretched upon a bench in
-the centre of the room lay de Sancerre, his head bent forward and his
-eyes agleam, while he listened apprehensively to the murmurs of the
-night outside. On the ground at his feet squatted his aged hostess,
-quick to interpret every sound which echoed from the sleeping town. Her
-eyes still burned with the light of her marvellous vitality, but her
-present posture indicated that her old bones had grown weary of the
-friction begotten by a long and exacting day.
-
-“All is well, señora? You hear no threatening sound?” De Sancerre’s
-voice bore witness to the excitement under which he labored at that
-crucial moment.
-
-“A dog barks, near at hand; an owl hoots, far away. Our friends are
-safe beyond the town--and all is well!”
-
-“_Bien!_ Doña Noco, I trust the keenness of your ears. I feared the
-searching gaze of wakeful spies. ’Tis possible your priests have gone
-to sleep.”
-
-The old hag grinned. “Make no mistake,” she exclaimed, in her broken
-Spanish. “Their eyes have seen your people, but, fearing Cabanacte’s
-wrath, they dared not search beneath the white robes at his side.
-Within the temple chattering priests will ask each other whom my
-grandson guides. They’ll ask in vain! But, hark! The night’s as quiet
-as a sleeping babe.”
-
-“Then, when I’m in the mood, I’ll vow a candle to St. Raphael,” cried
-de Sancerre, lightly. “He travelled safe by wearing a disguise! But
-tell me, Doña Noco, is the coast now clear? I’ve set my heart upon a
-look at Coyocop’s abode. I cannot sleep until I know where this fair
-spirit of the sun is lodged.”
-
-The beldame’s black eyes flashed with excitement. Her overwrought
-frame seemed to renew its vigor as she arose to her feet and hurried
-toward the low-cut entrance to the hut. An instant later, de Sancerre
-found himself the solitary occupant of a dreary and disordered room.
-He peered through the shadows toward the exit through which Noco had
-passed and, for a moment, doubt of her good faith entered his mind. He
-fully comprehended the perils of his environment, and realized that
-upon the loyalty of the old hag who had just left his side depended
-his escape from the dangers which beset him. While it might be that
-he, an envoy from the moon, helped to fulfil an ancient prophecy in
-which these fickle sun-worshippers put faith, the fact remained that
-their chief, the Great Sun, had failed to give him countenance before
-the temple priests. It had become painfully apparent to de Sancerre
-that the real centre of authority in this land of superstitions was
-to be looked for near the sacred fire and not at the King’s throne.
-The fact that the Brother of the Sun had found it inexpedient to lodge
-the Frenchman in the royal residence bore testimony to the strong
-ties which bound the palace to the temple, to the close relationship
-of church and state. To a man who had spent years at Versailles, the
-influence exerted by a priesthood upon a king was not a marvel.
-
-“_Ma foi!_” muttered de Sancerre to himself, as he rested his aching
-head upon his hand and watched expectantly the hole in the wall through
-which Noco had departed. “The old finesse which served me well at
-courts has worn itself to naught. In France or in this wilderness my
-fate’s the same. I jump to favor--then the King grows cold and potent
-priests usurp the place I held. But, even so, the tale is not all told.
-I’m here to solve a puzzle, not to fawn upon a prince nor tempt the
-vengeance of a temple’s brood. So be that Noco’s true, I yet may work
-my will upon a stubborn mystery.”
-
-At that moment a hideous grin, weird offspring of ivory and bronze,
-rewarded de Sancerre’s straining gaze.
-
-“Follow me, señor,” whispered Noco through the hole which served as a
-door to the hut. “There’s no one in the city now awake save nodding
-priests who feed the fire with logs. I’ll show you in the moonlight
-where Coyocop’s at rest.”
-
-In the white light of a cloudless night the City of the Sun lay
-disguised in a beauty which the bright glare of its own deity destroyed
-by day. Grouped around the temple, the houses of the sun-worshippers,
-rising gracefully from artificial mounds, were softened in their
-outlines by the moonbeams until they formed a city upon which de
-Sancerre, accustomed, as he was, to the architectural splendors of the
-old world, gazed with surprise and pleasure. Choosing the shadows cast
-by the sun-baked walls for her pathway, Noco led the stranger past
-the most pretentious building in the town, the sacred temple in which
-a mystic fire was ever kept alive. Like an earthen oven, one hundred
-feet in circumference, the stronghold of a cruel priesthood impressed
-the Frenchman with its grim significance. As he and his withered guide
-crept noiselessly past the silent, shadow-haunted fane, de Sancerre
-succumbed to a shudder which he could not readily control. Upon a
-palisade above his head, surrounding the temple upon all sides, skulls
-gleamed in the moonlight, bearing sombre witness to the horrors of the
-cult by which a noble race was brutalized.
-
-“_Dios!_” he muttered in the old hag’s ear, as he clasped her by the
-arm. “The shambles of your creed offend my sight! If you love me,
-señora, we’ll leave this place behind!”
-
-They had not far to go. Beyond the temple and facing the east stood the
-spacious cabin in which the Brother of the Sun maintained his royal
-state. It was silent and deserted as they stole by it, to take their
-stand in the shadow cast by a house proud of its nearness to the home
-of kings. White and silent, the night recalled to de Sancerre’s mind an
-evening in the outskirts of Versailles when, having eluded the watchful
-eyes of his Spanish rival, he had tempted Doña Julia de Aquilar to a
-stroll beneath the moon. His heart grew sick with the sweetness of his
-revery. He could see again the dark, liquid eyes, the raven hair, the
-pale, perfect face of a woman whose splendid beauty mocked him now as
-he stood there a waif, blown by the cruel winds of misfortune to a land
-where grinning skulls stared down at him at night, as if they’d heard
-the story of his lost love and rejoiced at his cruel plight.
-
-“Come! Come, señora,” he murmured, fretfully, turning to retrace
-his steps, and seemingly forgetful of the object of his perilous
-pilgrimage. “Come! Let us go back!”
-
-“Hush, señor! Listen!” whispered the old crone, hoarsely, pulling him
-closer toward the house in the shadow of which they lingered. “Listen!
-’Tis Coyocop!”
-
-De Sancerre leaned against the wall of the hut, made dizzy for a
-moment by the wild beating of his heart. In perfect harmony with the
-melancholy beauty of the night arose a sad, soft, sweet-toned voice,
-which came to him at that moment like a caress bestowed upon him in a
-dream and made real by a miracle. De Sancerre clutched old Noco’s arm
-with a grasp which made her wince. Gazing at the moon-kissed scene
-before him with eyes which saw only a picture of the past he listened,
-white-lipped, breathless, trembling, to an old Spanish song, into which
-Juan Fernandez Heredia, more than a century before this night, had
-breathed the passion and the melancholy of a romantic race.
-
- “To part, to lose thee, was so hard,
- So sad that all besides is nought;
- The pain of death itself, compared
- To this, is hardly worth a thought.”
-
-A sob set to music, despair turned into song, a voice telling of unshed
-tears echoed through the night and gave way to silence for a time.
-
-“_Nom de Dieu!_ Do I dream, or am I going mad?” muttered de Sancerre to
-himself, peering down at his silent companion as if seeking an answer
-to the questions that beset him. Suddenly the voice, whose tones spoke
-to his heart in the only language known to all the world, again made
-music out of misery:
-
- “There is a wound that never heals--
- ’Tis folly e’en to dream of healing;
- Inquire not what a spirit feels
- That aye has lost the sense of feeling.
-
- “My heart is callous now, and bared
- To every pang with sorrow fraught;
- The pain of death itself, compared
- To this, is hardly worth a thought.”
-
-The song gave way to silence, and, drawing himself erect, like a man
-who awakens from a trance, de Sancerre turned to Noco:
-
-“’Tis the spirit of the sun,” whispered the old crone. “’Tis Coyocop.
-She sings at night the songs we cannot understand.”
-
-“Listen, señora,” muttered the Frenchman, striving to check the
-impetuosity which tempted him to defy the perils surrounding him and to
-enter the hut without more ado. “’Tis the spirit of the sun--of life
-and hope and love! I worship her, señora. By what astounding chance--
-But let that pass! Doña Noco, you must speak to Coyocop at once. Tell
-her--”
-
-De Sancerre’s words died upon his lips, for the wiry old hag had
-dragged him by the arm around a corner of the cabin before he could end
-his sentence.
-
-“Silence,” she murmured. “A priest of the temple has come this way to
-listen to the spirit’s voice. ’Tis well for us that my old eyes are
-quick.”
-
-Not heeding the angry protests of the Frenchman, whose longing to send
-a word of greeting to a singer whose voice seemed to have reached him
-from a land far over-sea was driving him to desperate deeds, Noco led
-de Sancerre rapidly, by a circuitous path they had not trod before,
-toward the quarter of the sleeping town in which her hut awaited them.
-Beneath the ghastly sentinels grinning down at them from the temple’s
-palisades they stole for a space, and then turned to pick their way
-toward Noco’s home behind cabins which cast long shadows toward the
-east.
-
-Stepping from the gloom into the moonlight, Noco, holding the Frenchman
-like a captive by the arm, was about to enter her hut with her
-rebellious guest when there arose around them, as if the earth had
-suddenly given birth to a night-prowling priesthood, the white-robed
-figures of a score of silent men.
-
-“What have we here?” exclaimed de Sancerre, breaking away from Noco’s
-clutch, and drawing his rapier from its sheath. “My sword is fond of
-moonlight! Ask these ghostly cowards, señora, how they dare to dog
-the footsteps of the Brother of the Moon. Just say to them that in
-this blood-stained blade there’s magic, made of silver-dust, to kill a
-thousand men.”
-
-“Be silent, señor,” implored Noco. “I’ll save you, if I can.” Then,
-facing the chief priest, who towered above them a few paces in front of
-his silent and motionless brethren, she exclaimed, in the tongue of the
-sun-worshippers:
-
-“What would you with this scion of the moon? He worships Coyocop.”
-
-“How know we that?” asked the chief priest, sternly, a bronze giant
-questioning a bronze dwarf surrounded by sentinels of bronze. In the
-very centre of the dusky, white-garbed group stood the pale, desperate
-Frenchman, his rapier pointed at an angle toward the ground, while his
-keen eyes, bold and unflinching, travelled defiantly from face to face
-of the scowling priests.
-
-“What says the Inquisition? Will they dare the terrors of my hungry
-blade, señora?” cried de Sancerre, mockingly.
-
-“’Tis dread of the gray chanter that inspires them,” muttered Noco.
-Then she turned to the Frenchman. “I’ve told them that you worship
-Coyocop. They have no proof of it.”
-
-“Pardieu!” exclaimed the Frenchman, elevating his rapier. “The blood of
-a sulky Spaniard on this blade is proof enough. But, I have it! Say to
-his holiness, the chief priest, that I will scratch a message to the
-spirit of the sun upon a piece of bark. Bid him, in person, take it
-straight to Coyocop. If he obeys not what she says to him, the City of
-the Sun is doomed.”
-
-Quickly translating de Sancerre’s defiant words into her native tongue,
-Noco, at a gesture from the chief priest, entered her hut. She was
-absent but a moment and, upon her return, handed a piece of virgin
-mulberry-wood to de Sancerre. Drawing his dagger from its sheath, the
-Frenchman scrawled these words upon the white bark:
-
- “Louis de Sancerre, of Languedoc, sends greeting to Coyocop. Warn
- the bearer that my person must be sacred in the City of the Sun.
- To-morrow I will speak to you the words I cannot write.”
-
-Noco, without more ado, handed the note to the guardian of the sacred
-fire, who received it with evident reluctance. Ignorant of the art of
-writing, he looked upon the gleaming bark as a bit of moon-magic which
-might, at any moment, cast upon him an evil spell. But, for the sake
-of his prestige with his order, he dared not give way to the dread
-which filled his superstitious soul. Stalking away, with Noco hurrying
-on behind him, he strode through the moonlight toward the house in
-which the spirit of the sun was lodged.
-
-The minutes which preceded his return were like weary hours to the
-distraught Frenchman, surrounded, as he was, by pitiless faces from
-which black, piercing eyes seemed to singe his velvets with their
-spiteful gleams. A tattered courtier, with drawn sword, he stood there
-motionless, silent, awaiting with foreboding the return of his most
-influential foe. If fancy, or a fever begotten of a long and exciting
-day, had played him a trick; if the song of Coyocop had been voiced
-by Julia de Aquilar only in his imagination, he knew that he was
-doomed. Presently he drew from his bosom the piece of bark upon which
-was written the Spanish maiden’s name. The sight revived his drooping
-courage. Whatever might be the explanation of the presence of Julia de
-Aquilar in this grim outland, his reason told him that his eyes and
-ears had not deceived him.
-
-At that moment the chief priest, breaking through the circle of his
-subordinates, strode quickly toward de Sancerre. Falling upon his
-knees, he raised his long arms toward the sky and uttered a harsh shout
-which was repeated by the onlooking priests.
-
-“You are saved!” whispered the panting Noco, an instant later, to the
-Frenchman. “Coyocop has rescued you from death!”
-
-Having paid homage to the misunderstood scion of the moon, the guardian
-of the sacred fire handed to de Sancerre the bark, within which the
-former had found no evil spell. Scrawled beneath the Frenchman’s words
-were these:
-
- “The Holy Mother has heard my prayers. All glory be to her for this
- strange miracle. I await your coming with a grateful heart. No harm
- can fall upon you, for I have warned the temple priest. May the
- saints guard you through the night.
-
- “JULIA DE AQUILAR.”
-
-Turning to Noco, who had regained her breath, de Sancerre said:
-
-“Say to this servant of the sun that I grant him pardon for his foolish
-threats. But warn him to take heed of how he walks. Unless he payeth
-abject homage to my power, it may go hard with him.”
-
-Waving his rapier ’til it flashed before the eyes of the overawed
-priest like a magic wand made of silvery moonbeams, de Sancerre strode
-with studied dignity toward Noco’s hut, and disappeared from sight.
-The sun-priests, headed by their subdued chief, filed solemnly toward
-their blood-stained temple, and presently the moon, drooping toward the
-west, gazed down upon a city apparently abandoned by all men.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-IN WHICH DE SANCERRE BREAKS HIS FAST AND SMILES
-
-
-Worn out with the exhausting experiences of long hours, unprecedented,
-even in his varied career, for the many contrasted emotions with
-which they had assailed him, de Sancerre had thrown himself, fully
-dressed, upon a bed of plaited reeds in Noco’s hut, and, despite his
-inclination to muse upon the joy and wonder of the day’s concluding
-episode, had fallen into a dreamless, restful sleep, which still
-wrapped him in its benign embrace long after the sun-god had blinked
-at the matutinal shouts with which the shining orb was greeted by its
-worshippers at dawn. The day was nearly ten hours of age before the
-Frenchman, stretching his arms and legs to their full length, awoke
-suddenly, and, with a smile upon his lips and a gleam of happiness in
-his eyes, recalled instantly the marvel which had made his present
-environment, with all its perils, a delight to his refreshed and ardent
-soul. Suddenly he discovered that while he slept his outer garments had
-been removed. Turning on his side he raised his head, rested it upon
-his hand, and glanced toward the centre of the room, which still bore
-marks of the disorder begotten by the hasty flight of the disguised
-Franciscan and his charge.
-
-Squatting upon the ground beside a bench, upon which rested de
-Sancerre’s nether garments, sat old Noco, busily plying her fish-bone
-needle, while she repaired the many rents in his doublet and crooned
-a monotonous chant in a harsh, guttural voice. At the further end
-of the hut a crackling fire sent forth an odor which increased the
-satisfaction of the Frenchman with his surroundings. With corn-meal
-and fish, de Sancerre’s hostess had prepared a repast which the most
-fastidious palate at Versailles would have found seductive. Upon a
-small bench at Noco’s right hand stood a bowl of reddish crockery, in
-which wild strawberries awaited the pleasure of her guest.
-
-“You will pardon me, señora,” cried de Sancerre, gayly, “if I remark
-that my present plight is somewhat embarrassing. I shall be late at
-table unless my overworked wardrobe is restored to me at once.”
-
-“_Mas vale tarde que nunca!_” retorted the old hag, glancing
-inquiringly at the fire, and then resuming her patchwork. “You slept
-well, señor?”
-
-“Like a log,” answered de Sancerre--“a log saved from the sacred fire.
-And now, there is no time to lose! We have before us, Doña Noco, a busy
-day.”
-
-“Nay,” returned his hostess, approaching his bedside with his
-rejuvenated garments upon her withered arm. “’Tis well to wait a while.
-When Cabanacte has returned, we’ll hold a council and perfect a plan.
-It is not fitting that the Brother of the Moon should show himself at
-once. My people worship best the gods they do not see.”
-
-Again de Sancerre caught in Noco’s eyes a mocking gleam which once
-before had placed him in close sympathy with her. That this old hag,
-whose mind was quick and clear, had, in her heart of hearts, discarded
-many of the ancient superstitions to which she outwardly conformed
-the Frenchman more than half suspected. But he spoke no further
-word to her until he had made a hasty toilet, and, refreshed by an
-application of cool water to his face and hands, had seated himself
-upon a bench to rejoice his inner man with strawberries, corn-cake, and
-skilfully-cooked fish. The variety of Noco’s accomplishments filled
-de Sancerre with mingled admiration and astonishment. Speaking two
-languages, expert with her needle, an admirable cook, quick-witted,
-fertile in resource, the old woman impressed the Frenchman that
-morning as a being well entitled to his respect and gratitude. But
-his mind dwelt no long time upon the praiseworthy versatility of his
-aged hostess. Impatient and impetuous by nature, he chafed sorely at
-inaction.
-
-“Cabanacte!” he exclaimed, after he had satisfied his appetite,
-observing that Noco had disposed of the most exacting of her many
-tasks. “When think you, señora, your grandson will return?”
-
-“When ’tis best for you, señor,” answered the old woman, shortly.
-
-“And ’twas he, Doña Noco, who found Coyocop, the spirit of the sun, by
-the shore of the great sea?”
-
-“’Twas Cabanacte who found Coyocop, whose coming was foretold when the
-mountains were but hillocks, and bore her to the sacred City of the
-Sun.”
-
-“He found her by the sea alone?” asked de Sancerre, wonderingly.
-
-“The Brother of the Moon should know all things,” muttered Noco, with
-satire in her eyes and voice. Then she went on: “The white-faced
-children of the moon who bore her to our land lay sleeping on the
-beach, awaiting the coming of their god to waken them. But Cabanacte
-knew that she was Coyocop. And so, she came to us.”
-
-From outside the hut de Sancerre could hear the noises of a town
-astir, the tread of bare-footed men upon the hardened earth, the cries
-of children at their play, and, now and then, the voices of women
-chattering of many wondrous things. He longed to make his way at once
-to Coyocop’s abode that with his eyes he might assure himself that last
-night’s strange adventures had not taken place in dreams. Even yet,
-he found it hard to believe that Julia de Aquilar was, in reality,
-a captive, like himself, in this weird town. But there lay her own
-handwriting on the bark! He read and reread the message which she had
-sent to him, and, turning toward Noco, asked, pensively:
-
-“Coyocop, señora, seemed glad to learn that I was here?”
-
-“I know not what the chief priest may have thought,” croaked the old
-crone, a gleam of malice in her black eyes as they met de Sancerre’s
-gaze, “but to me she seemed less like a goddess than a girl. She wept
-for joy to read your note.”
-
-De Sancerre sprang to his feet and paced up and down the hut restlessly.
-
-“Cabanacte!” he exclaimed, petulantly. “_Nom de Dieu!_ When will the
-man return?”
-
-“We care not much for women in this land of ours,” muttered Noco, using
-her broken Spanish to tease her impatient guest. “Out of clay the
-Great Spirit moulded the first man, and, pleased with what he’d made,
-blew into him the breath of life. And thus he fell to sneezing, the
-first man, ’til from his nose there dropped a doll-shaped thing which
-set to dancing upon the ground there at his feet. And as she danced,
-she grew in size, until a woman stood before his eyes. It is not
-strange that man should make us work!” A sarcastic grin rested upon the
-hag’s brown face as she gazed up at de Sancerre.
-
-“But Coyocop is more than woman,” cried de Sancerre, earnestly.
-“_Caramba!_ But you love to torture me, señora! I say to you, beware! I
-know not what may lie the deepest in your heart, but this I say to you,
-’twill serve you well to do your best for me. The time is coming when
-I’ll pay you tenfold for your kindness now.”
-
-Noco drew near to the Frenchman and stood before him, listening for a
-time to the familiar noises outside her hut. Then she asked, in a tone
-which had no mischief in it:
-
-“The Spanish, señor. Do you love them well?”
-
-For a moment de Sancerre, startled by so unexpected an interrogatory,
-gazed down at the old hag, speechless. His suspicious mind strove in
-vain to find her motive for a question which seemed to him, at first,
-to have no bearing upon the topics they had just discussed. But his
-intuitions told him that upon the answer he should make to her would
-depend her attitude toward him from this time forth. By one word, he
-well knew, he might destroy in an instant the good-will of the one
-ally who could save him and Julia de Aquilar from the dangers which
-menaced them. Noco spoke Spanish, a tongue which, it seemed probable,
-she had learned from her immediate ancestors. That the Spaniards had
-treated the native Americans with great cruelty, de Sancerre had often
-heard. Was it possible that Noco had inherited a hatred for a race of
-oppressors from whom her forebears had fled in fear? On the chance that
-this might be, the Frenchman, hesitating only a moment, decided finally
-to tell the truth to his dusky inquisitor.
-
-“Doña Noco,” said de Sancerre, impressively, placing a hand upon the
-old crone’s arm, “the Spanish are my dearest foes. Often have I led my
-men against them on the fields of war. I hold for them a hatred only
-less intense than the love I bear for Coyocop.”
-
-The dark, beady eyes of the beldame seemed to search de Sancerre’s very
-soul. Suddenly she fell upon her knees, and, seizing his cold hand,
-pressed it to her shrivelled lips.
-
-“I am your servant, señor--even unto death,” she muttered, hoarsely.
-Then she sprang to her feet with marvellous agility and stood listening
-intently, as if the noise outside bore some new tale to her quick ears.
-
-“’Tis Cabanacte!” she exclaimed. “And with him comes the sister of the
-foolish man they slew.”
-
-Hardly had de Sancerre grasped the significance of her words, when
-Katonah, followed by Noco’s grandson, stole into the hut, panting as if
-their journey had been a hurried one.
-
-“_Bienvenue_, Katonah!” cried de Sancerre, a note of mingled annoyance
-and surprise in his voice. “I did not think to see you here again. You
-bring me word from Sieur de la Salle?”
-
-Katonah’s sensitive ear caught the hollow sound in the Frenchman’s word
-of welcome. The suggestion of a sad smile played across her weary face,
-as she said:
-
-“The great captain urged me not to come. But, monsieur, I was so
-lonely! With you and Chatémuc not there, I could not stay.” A
-suppressed sob checked her words. Handing to de Sancerre a note from
-de la Salle, the Mohican maiden seated herself upon a bench and gazed
-mournfully at the glowing embers of Noco’s dying fire.
-
-“_Ma foi_, Cabanacte, I’m glad to see your giant form again!” cried
-de Sancerre, smiling as he perused de la Salle’s epistle. It ran as
-follows:
-
- “Let this chance, monsieur, to serve your king atone for your
- disobedience to me. Be firm, unbending, and conservative. Well I
- know that you will be courageous. Await me where you are. I return
- shortly, and will send for you. I must teach the mouth of this great
- river to speak the name of France. I go to ring the knell of Spain!
- _Adieu et au revoir!_
-
- “DE LA SALLE.”
-
-“_Bien!_” exclaimed de Sancerre, kissing his hand to old Noco,
-smilingly. “We hold the cards we need. ’Twill be my fault if blunders
-now should lose the game we play.”
-
-The old woman had come to the side of her eccentric guest.
-
-“My captain,” went on de Sancerre, in a lower tone, “a brother of the
-moon-god, like myself, tells me in this note that he goes to seize
-a kingdom from our Spanish foes. You are content, señora? You are
-content?”
-
-“Aye, señor, well content!” answered the old hag with grim emphasis.
-
-“And now,” exclaimed the Frenchman, beckoning to Cabanacte to approach
-them, “we’ll hold a solemn council, for the truth is this: unless I
-soon have speech with Coyocop, my throbbing heart will thump itself
-to death. Tell me, Cabanacte, is there danger for yon maiden, whose
-brother died the death?”
-
-The bronze athlete had stretched himself at de Sancerre’s feet in
-such a position that he could fix his gaze upon the sombre beauty of
-Katonah’s face. He showed his perfect teeth, and his black eyes gleamed
-as he answered:
-
-“Danger for her? No, none! Not while Cabanacte lives.”
-
-De Sancerre smiled gayly. Cabanacte’s answer had delighted him.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-IN WHICH DE SANCERRE HEARS NEWS OF THE GREAT SUN
-
-
-The Count de Sancerre’s desire to come to an immediate decision
-regarding a line of action that should lead him at once into the living
-presence of Coyocop was not to be gratified. Noco’s sensitive ear,
-acting as a thermometer to register the degree of excitement prevailing
-outside her cabin, had heard an ominous murmur that had lost none of
-its threatening significance because it had come from afar. She knew at
-once that a crowd of gossiping sun-worshippers, inspired by some new
-rumor, had gathered in the great square near the temple of the sun.
-Hurrying to her grandson’s side, she said:
-
-“Go forth at once, Cabanacte, and mingle with the throng outside.
-There’s news abroad which makes the city talk. Return to us when you
-have learned the meaning of the uproar in the square.”
-
-The dark-hued colossus reluctantly arose and stood, for a moment,
-listening to the increasing disturbance among his easily-excited
-neighbors. Hurrying feet, making toward the temple of the sun and
-the King’s cabin, echoed from the street just outside the hut. The
-pattering footsteps of chattering women and children mingled with the
-louder tread of stalwart men, aroused from their siesta by an epidemic
-of distrust. Cabanacte, dismayed at the grim possibilities suggested by
-this unwonted demonstration upon the part of a people little given to
-activity at noonday, bent down to Noco before obeying her behest.
-
-“Secrete the maiden where no prying eye can see her,” he murmured,
-hoarsely, still gazing at Katonah. “I’ll join the rabble and return at
-once. I dread the cruel fervor of our priests. But still they cannot
-know that it was her brother whom they killed?”
-
-“Stop not to make conjecture, Cabanacte,” scolded the old crone,
-pushing her grandson toward the hut’s ignoble exit. “I say to you, ’tis
-not Katonah who has made the city talk. ’Tis some calamity--I know not
-what.”
-
-Without more ado, the tall sun-worshipper crawled from the twilight
-of the hut into the burning sunshine of the agitated street, and,
-drawing himself erect, joined the gossiping throng which poured noisily
-toward the great square. To Cabanacte’s great surprise and relief,
-his appearance in the open caused no added excitement among the
-bronze-faced, eager-eyed men and women who hurried by his side toward
-the centre of the town. It became evident to him at once that the news
-which awaited him beyond had nothing to do with the strangers whom he
-had left in the hut behind him.
-
-Meanwhile de Sancerre, vexed at the delay to which a mercurial
-people had forced him to submit, gazed despondently now at Noco and
-now at Katonah. French expletives, colored by a Spanish oath at
-times, escaped from his erstwhile smiling mouth. Noco had stationed
-herself at the entrance to the cabin, endeavoring to catch the echo
-of some enlightening rumor as it flew back from the crowded square.
-Katonah, watching the Frenchman with eyes which seemed to implore his
-forgiveness, had withdrawn to a remote corner of the room and seated
-herself wearily upon a wooden bench. If she had heard a menace to
-herself in the uproar in the town, she gave no outward indication
-of the dread that her heart might feel. With the proud shyness of a
-sensitive girl, and the external stoicism of an Indian, she withdrew,
-as far as was possible, from the presence of her companions and made
-no further sign. Had Zenobe Membré known that at this ominous juncture
-Katonah had murmured no prayer, no invocation to the saints, the
-sanguine Franciscan would have marvelled, perhaps wept, at the mighty
-gulf which stretched between the martyred Chatémuc, secure in Paradise,
-and a melancholy maiden who had known the faith and lost it.
-
-The chagrined Frenchman, fully realizing his own impotence at this
-mysterious crisis, presently arose and began to pace the room with
-impatient steps. He felt like a man to whom some unexpected and glowing
-promise had been given by destiny, to be withdrawn almost at the
-moment of its presentation. During the long, weary hour which followed
-Cabanacte’s departure from the hut, de Sancerre’s mind vibrated between
-hope and despair. Had he made the amazing discovery of Julia de
-Aquilar’s presence in the City of the Sun only that it might mock him
-for his lack of power? Could it be that fate had lured him in malice
-within sound of her sweet voice to hurl him into the lonely silence
-of the wilderness at last? And to himself he swore an oath that he
-would never leave the City of the Sun alive unless the Spanish maiden
-fled with him to the wilds. Death in the effort to save her from years
-of hopeless captivity was preferable, a thousand times, to life and
-freedom and a vain regret. How well he loved this woman de Sancerre had
-never known before. For the first time this _mondain_, who had fondly
-imagined that life had nothing new to give him, realized the might and
-majesty of a great passion, and his soul grew sick with the fear that
-its ecstasy might change to misery at last.
-
-But while de Sancerre’s mind dwelt fondly upon the joy of an
-all-absorbing love, it endeavored, at the same time, to make an
-inventory of the actual and the possible dangers which he would be
-compelled to confront before he could indulge the hope that the love he
-welcomed would ever fulfil the promise which it held within itself.
-
-Weeks must pass before de la Salle could return from his voyage to the
-gulf. Even then the explorer had at his command no force with which to
-overcome these martial and stalwart sun-worshippers. De Sancerre’s only
-hope lay in diplomacy and craft. It was essential to the success of his
-scheme, whose general outlines were already forming in his mind, that
-the superstitious tendencies of the people surrounding him be used as
-a tool for forging his escape. But their fanaticism was a double-edged
-instrument which must be handled with the nicest care or it would turn
-within his hands and destroy him at a blow.
-
-Coyocop? How far could he trust her quickness and discretion? That she
-possessed both of these qualities he was inclined to believe. One of
-her greatest charms in the blithesome days at Versailles had consisted
-in her ready responsiveness to his changing moods, in the keenness of a
-mind which shone to advantage even in that centre of the great world’s
-sharpest wit. As for her discretion, had it not been proved by the
-fact that she had maintained for many months her alien authority over
-these fickle, jealous, sharp-eyed people? Furthermore--and de Sancerre
-lingered over the mystery with much concern--she had, during that same
-period, managed to conceal from the keen-witted and revengeful Noco the
-fact that her origin was Spanish, not divine. How well the girl must
-have played a most exacting part to deceive the eccentric old hag, de
-Sancerre fully realized. That in Julia de Aquilar he would find an ally
-well-fitted to play the rôle which he had in mind for her, her skill in
-blinding Noco gave good proof. But, at the best, de Sancerre’s growing
-project must win the full fruition of success much more by chance than
-by design. Even before he took initial steps, he must learn what new
-excitement had aroused the lazy town at noon.
-
-“_Peste!_” he exclaimed, fretfully. “It was no victory to outrun
-Cabanacte. His heavy limbs are slower than a Prussian’s wits.”
-
-At that very instant the hole beside which Noco lurked was darkened
-by her grandson’s stooping form. Drawing himself erect, after he had
-pulled his long limbs into the hut, Cabanacte glanced searchingly
-around the room until his black eyes lighted upon the self-absorbed
-Katonah. Then, followed by Noco, he strode toward de Sancerre.
-
-“There is no danger to the girl,” muttered the giant, as he seated
-himself upon a bench, which groaned in protest beneath his weight. “But
-I bring to you bad news.”
-
-“_Ma foi_, you look it!” exclaimed de Sancerre to himself, scanning the
-troubled countenance of the dusky youth.
-
-Turning to Noco, Cabanacte poured forth rapidly in his native tongue
-the sombre story which he had heard abroad, and then stood erect,
-gazing at Katonah.
-
-“The Great Sun lies dying!” exclaimed the old woman, excitedly, turning
-from her grandson to her guest. “In perfect health at sunrise, he fell
-near noonday, and none can make him speak.”
-
-De Sancerre had sprung to his feet and was glancing alternately down at
-Noco and up at Cabanacte. The menacing significance of the misfortune
-which had fallen upon the King appeared to him at once. Had evil come
-to the Great Sun in some way not readily explainable, the crafty
-sun-priests would lay his sickness to the blighting influence of the
-stranger’s magic, the fatal witchery brought with him from the moon.
-
-“He’s dying, do you say? There is no hope?” gasped the Frenchman,
-looking into Noco’s eyes for a ray of encouragement.
-
-“He’s dying as his mother died,” muttered the old crone, musingly,
-seemingly forgetful of de Sancerre’s presence. “But, even then, he had
-long years to live. And yesterday he looked no older than my Cabanacte
-there.”
-
-“He’s dying, do you say?” repeated the Frenchman, mechanically.
-
-“Aye, dying, señor,” hissed the beldame, spitefully. “And now the
-temple priests prepare the cords with which they’ll choke his servants
-and his wives to death. No Great Sun goes alone into the land beyond!
-What sights my eyes have seen! King follows king into the spirit-world,
-and with them go the best and noblest of our weeping race. Aye,
-señor, the Great Sun’s dying and the city mourns. When he has passed,
-his household follows him. The sight you saw but yesternight was
-child’s-play for the priests. ’Tis when a Great Sun dies they have
-man’s sport with death.”
-
-The mocking, angry tones in Noco’s guttural voice made the broken
-Spanish in which she spoke impress the Frenchman’s ears as a most
-repellent tongue. De Sancerre was striving feverishly to grasp the full
-significance of her grim words, to weigh in all its bearings the new
-exigency which had increased a hundredfold the peril in which he stood.
-But the thought beset him, with tyrannical persistence, that he had no
-time to lose. Should the Great Sun die at once, de Sancerre would be
-powerless against any revenge which the sun-priests might, in their
-crafty cruelty, seek to take. How far the homage which they paid to
-Coyocop could be trusted to save him in the crisis which would follow
-the King’s death he could not determine, but he had begun to fear that
-not only the priests but the people at large would hold him responsible
-for the sudden and mysterious blow which had fallen upon the throne.
-With little time at his disposal in which to examine the crisis from
-many points of view, de Sancerre came quickly to the conclusion that
-his doom was sealed unless he acted with boldness, decision, and
-rapidity. Satisfied of the loyalty of Noco and Cabanacte, although he
-marvelled somewhat at their good-will, he drew himself up to his full
-height, and, putting up his hand to command silence, said:
-
-“Go forth at once, Cabanacte, and tell the people of this afflicted
-town that it was the insult cast upon me by the temple priests which
-brought down the wrath of Heaven upon the Great Sun’s head. Tell this
-to the rabble. Then go to the chief priest and say to him that he, too,
-shall fall with suddenness before his fire unless he heeds the words
-that I shall speak. Bid him be silent ’til I come to him, and to keep
-his priests at prayer. _Nom de Dieu_, my Cabanacte, have you lost your
-ears? Stop staring at me and go forth at once, or, with the ease with
-which my legs outran you, I’ll strike you dead with this!”
-
-Waving his rapier threateningly at the giant’s panting breast, de
-Sancerre drove the startled athlete through the entrance to the street,
-and then turned back to seize the trembling Noco by the arm.
-
-“I have a message which you must take to Coyocop! If you should fail to
-gain her ear, the City of the Sun is doomed. Say this to her, that when
-I send a priest to summon her she must be quick to join me at the Great
-Sun’s lodge. Repeat my words, señora.”
-
-Shaking the old crone roughly by the arm, de Sancerre bent down to
-catch her gasping voice.
-
-“_Bien!_” he cried, “you’ve conned your lesson well! Go, now, señora,
-and make no mistake! If you would save your dying king, see Coyocop and
-tell her what I say.”
-
-In another instant the panting Noco, grumbling but overawed, had left
-the hut upon a mission for which she had no hungry heart.
-
-De Sancerre drew back from the entrance, and dropped limply upon
-a bench. He had put into operation a hastily-formed plan with an
-impetuosity which, in its rebound, left him faint and dazed. Suddenly
-a warm pressure upon his cold hands aroused him from his momentary
-submission to this enervating reaction. Looking down, he saw that
-Katonah was gazing up at him with sympathetic apprehension.
-
-“I have placed you in great danger by my return!” she exclaimed. “I am
-going now. I will not come back.”
-
-She had arisen and was about to leave the hut. Seizing her hand, de
-Sancerre drew her to his side.
-
-“No, _ma petite_! You are not at fault! Don’t leave me--but do not
-speak! I must think--I must think! But my mind’s in a whirl. _Courage_,
-Katonah! There, do not tremble so! _Ma foi_, little one, ’tis a hard
-nut we have to crack! There, do not move! Let me take your hand.
-_Bien!_ Now, let me think!”
-
-Silence, intense, unbroken, reigned within the hut; while, outside,
-the hot sun beat down upon a city in which rumor itself had become
-voiceless in growing dread of a fatal word.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
-IN WHICH COHEYOGO EXHIBITS HIS CRAFTINESS
-
-
-While the Great Sun, by virtue of his divine origin, was technically
-the high-priest of the nation, it had come about, at the time of Count
-Louis de Sancerre’s sojourn among the sun-worshippers, that the chief
-of the holy men, upon whom devolved the duty of keeping alive the
-sacred fire, had, by the strength of his bigoted personality, usurped
-all religious authority and had made the temple independent of, and
-more potent than, the royal cabin. While the chief priest had never
-openly defied the Great Sun, he had, nevertheless, gradually become the
-most influential personage in the nation.
-
-It was the advent of Coyocop which had given to Coheyogo, the chief
-priest, an opportunity for making himself, with no visible break
-between the church and state, practically omnipotent in the City of the
-Sun.
-
-Just how thoroughly Coheyogo believed that Julia de Aquilar was the
-very incarnation of the sun-spirit which, tradition had assured his
-people, would come to them from the shore of a distant sea, it is
-impossible to say. It is a fact, however, that from the moment of her
-arrival among the sun-worshippers the chief priest had openly accepted
-the maiden as a supernatural guest from whom emanated an authority
-which he and his fellow-priests were in duty bound to obey. For the
-furtherance of his own ends and the increase of his own power, the
-crafty Coheyogo could have taken no better course.
-
-It had come about that Noco as interpreter--the connecting link between
-the spirit of the sun and the chief priest of the temple--had found
-herself in a position of great influence. The old hag, a compound of
-superstition, spitefulness, and saturnine humor done up in a crumpled
-brown package, had derived malicious satisfaction from playing
-Coheyogo’s game with a skill and an audacity which had saved her from
-the many perils which had menaced her in the pursuit of this eccentric
-pastime.
-
-Coheyogo would visit Coyocop with Noco and lay before the sun-spirit
-some problem dealing with the attitude of the temple toward a question
-at that moment interesting the sun-worshippers. The quick-witted
-and fearless interpreter would answer the chief priest with advice
-originating in her own fertile brain, and, in this way, would protect
-Coyocop from cares of state, while she made a willing tool of
-Coheyogo and satisfied her own love of mischief. Within well-defined
-limitations, old Noco, at the moment of which we write, held under
-her control more actual power than either the Great Sun or the chief
-priest. As the tongue of Coyocop, the court of last resort in a
-priest-ridden state, the old crone, with little fear of detection,
-could put into the mouth of the sun-spirit whatever words she chose.
-Fortunately for Coyocop and the sun-worshippers, the aged linguist
-was, at heart, progressive rather than reactionary. She had cherished
-for years a detestation for the bloody sacrifices of the temple, which
-heterodoxy, had Coheyogo suspected it, would have long ago brought
-her life to a sudden end. As it was, the old interpreter had made use
-of Coyocop to mitigate, as far as possible, the horrors which a cruel
-cult, administered by heartless priests, had inflicted upon a brave,
-kindly, but too plastic race.
-
-It was now a full hour past high noon, and Coheyogo stood, surrounded
-by the temple priests, confronting Cabanacte by the sacred fire. The
-interior of the sun-temple was not less repulsive to an unbiased eye
-than the skull-crowned palisades outside. Divided into two rooms
-of unequal size, the interior of the blood-stained fane served the
-double purpose of a gigantic oven to keep the veins of the living at
-fever-heat and of a tomb in which the bones of the noble dead might
-crumble into dust. In the larger of the two rooms, in which the chief
-priest was now holding a council of the elders, stood an altar seven
-feet long by two in width and rising to a height of four feet above
-the floor. Upon this altar rested a long, hand-painted basket in which
-reposed the remains of the reigning Great Sun’s immediate predecessor.
-
-The heat of the room was intense, for no windows broke the monotony of
-the temple’s walls; mud-baked partitions, nine inches in thickness.
-Rows of plaited mats covered the arched ceiling of the interior. At the
-end of the room furthest from the sacred fire, folding doors, closed at
-this moment, opened into the private apartments of the chief priest.
-Running from these doors, along both sides of the smoke-blackened hall,
-wooden shelves supported the grewsome relics of horrid ceremonials.
-Long lines of baskets, daubed with red and yellow paint, contained the
-revered dust of Great Suns gone into the land of spirits accompanied
-by the loyal souls of their strangled wives and retainers. Scattered
-between these tawdry urns, the shelves bore crudely-wrought clay
-figures of men, women, serpents, owls, and eagles; and here and there
-an offering of fruit, meat, or fish stood ready to satisfy the craving
-of any uneasy ghost coming back dissatisfied with the cuisine of the
-spirit-world.
-
-Grouped around the sacred fire, in which logs of oak and walnut
-preserved a flame which the sun-god had vouchsafed to man in a remote
-day of grace, the temple priests, whose dark faces bore evidence of
-their internal agitation, stood listening and watching as Cabanacte
-and Coheyogo faced each other at this crisis and discussed, in subdued
-tones, a question of immediate significance. As the chosen discoverer
-of Coyocop, the instrument employed by the great spirit for the
-fulfilment of an ancient prophecy, Cabanacte occupied an influential
-position in the eyes of the temple brotherhood. The inspiration from
-on high, which had turned the giant’s feet toward a haunted shingle
-upon which the spirit of the sun lay asleep, might at any moment stir
-his tongue with words of divine origin. Since the night upon which
-Cabanacte had brought Coyocop to the City of the Sun, he had always
-been listened to with rapt attention by the jealous guardians of the
-sacred fire.
-
-“He threatens me, you say?” muttered Coheyogo angrily, gazing up at
-Cabanacte with flashing eyes. “And you have told the people that the
-Great Sun dies because I do not worship this white-faced conjurer who
-says the moon is his? Beware, oh Cabanacte, what you do! I’ll dare the
-magic of his silver wand and prove to him the sun-god is omnipotent.”
-
-Drawing himself up to his full height, until he towered a full
-half-foot above the stately sun-priest, Cabanacte exclaimed, in a low,
-insistent voice:
-
-“Have you forgotten Coyocop? Did she not last night--old Noco tells the
-tale--command you to do honor to this white face from the moon? ’Tis
-you, Coheyogo, who should now take heed. ’Tis not moon-magic which you
-would defy. ’Tis Coyocop herself, the spirit of the sun, our god.”
-
-The chief priest remained silent for a time, gazing thoughtfully at
-the sacred fire, which seemed to roar and flash and snap and dance
-before his restless black eyes as if it threatened him with tortures
-for harboring a sacrilegious thought. Had not the spirit of the sun
-itself, through Coyocop’s inspired tongue, commanded him to treat the
-nation’s white-faced guest with all respect? The great power which
-Coheyogo had wielded for a year seemed to be slipping from his grasp.
-Its foundation-stone had been the word of Coyocop. Should he not heed
-her late behest he’d pull the very underpinning from beneath his
-tower of strength. Furthermore, the Great Sun, an easy-going monarch,
-subservient to the chief priest’s stronger will, lay at death’s
-door. His successor to the throne, his sister’s son, Manatte, was a
-headstrong, stubborn youth, upon whom the influence of Coheyogo was but
-slight. Should the chief priest lose at one stroke the countenance of
-Coyocop and the good-will of the Great Sun, the supremacy of the temple
-would be destroyed upon the instant, and Coheyogo would find himself
-hurled from a pinnacle of power to a grovelling attitude among a people
-chafing under the cruel tyranny of a bloodthirsty priesthood. Turning
-fretfully from the threatening blaze to glance up again at the steady
-eyes of Cabanacte, the chief priest said:
-
-“The words of Coyocop come straight from God.” Facing then the
-expectant priests, he cried sternly: “Go forth, my brothers, and bid
-the people to disperse at once. Tell them to go to their homes and
-offer prayers that the Great Sun may be spared to us. Then come to me
-here, for I have other work for you to do.”
-
-Left alone in the stilling room with Cabanacte, the chief priest went
-on:
-
-“Direct the moon-man and old Noco to attend me here. If yonder white
-face has no evil wish, it may be that his magic may save our king from
-death.”
-
-Cabanacte smiled grimly.
-
-“I know not, Coheyogo,” he remarked, as he turned toward the exit to
-the temple, “that the envoy from the moon will heed your curt command.
-But this I do believe, that, if besought, he’d use his greatest power
-to save our Sun alive. I will return to you at once.”
-
-With these words the dusky giant strode past the hideous, grinning
-idols of baked clay, and the plaited coffins of the royal dead, and
-made his way to the great square from which the white-robed priests
-were driving an awe-struck, moaning people to their homes.
-
-Coheyogo, glancing furtively around the deserted hall in which the
-spectres of the dead seemed ready to chase the flickering shadows
-cast by the miraculous fire, bent down and threw a huge log into the
-mocking flame, as if to quiet for a moment its spiteful, chiding voice.
-Suddenly behind him he heard the stealthy footfall of a white-robed
-underling. Turning quickly from the fire, Coheyogo’s piercing eyes
-rested upon a priest whom he had recently despatched to the Great Sun’s
-cabin.
-
-“What news?” cried the chief priest, eagerly. “He still lives?”
-
-“Magani! Listen, master! He lives, and, tossing on his bed, mutters
-strange words beneath his breath. ’Tis a devil that is in him, for he
-talks of things we cannot see.”
-
-“And his physician?” asked Coheyogo, impatiently.
-
-“He has done his best, but his eyes are wild and he shakes his head in
-impotence.”
-
-“He’ll shake it in the noose should the Great Sun die,” muttered the
-chief priest, with cruel emphasis. “What boots his boasted skill if he
-fails us when we need him most? But, hark! Our brothers have returned.”
-
-Filing into the temple like a procession of white ghosts with charred
-faces, the priests of the sun grouped themselves in a circle behind
-their chief, and stood awaiting in silence the outcome of a crisis
-which might, at its worst, satisfy their ever-present craving for
-human sacrifices to offer to their god, the innocent and genial orb
-of day. That the cruel and crafty Coheyogo dreaded the news of the
-Great Sun’s death more keenly than they, in their love for an inhuman
-custom, desired it, they had no means of knowing. But they were to
-learn presently that there was a new force at work in their city with
-which they had never before been called upon to deal. As they stood
-there silent, eager-eyed, remorseless, longing for a continuance of
-the thrilling sport for which the death of Chatémuc had but whetted
-their appetites, the sound of light, dainty footsteps approaching the
-entrance to the temple reached their quick ears. Turning toward the
-doorway at the further end of the hall, Coheyogo and his motionless
-and noiseless brood gazed upon an approaching figure which, in spite
-of its lack of size, was most impressive at that fateful moment. De
-Sancerre had donned a flowing garment of white mulberry bark, which
-hid his gay velvets from view and fell in graceful lines from his neck
-to his feet. His head was bare, and his hair, a picturesque mixture of
-black and gray, emphasized the pleasing contour of his pale, clean-cut
-face.
-
-With drawn rapier, the symbol of his dreaded moon-magic, the French
-aristocrat, his eyes fixed upon the chief priest, strode solemnly
-toward the sacred fire, followed at a distance by Noco and her
-long-limbed grandson. As he came to a halt in front of Coheyogo, de
-Sancerre raised the hilt of his sword to his chin and made a graceful,
-sweeping salute with the weapon. Turning to Noco, who had now reached
-his side, he said to her:
-
-“Say to the chief priest that I come to him in amity or in defiance,
-as he may choose. Tell him that the Brother of the Moon makes no
-idle boasts, but that ’tis safer for the City of the Sun to win his
-friendship than to arouse his wrath.”
-
-[Illustration: “COOL, MOTIONLESS, WITH UNFLINCHING EYES, THE FRENCHMAN
-STOOD WATCHING THE CHIEF PRIEST”]
-
-Coheyogo, with a face which none could read, listened attentively to
-the old crone’s defiant words. His black eyes held the Frenchman’s
-gaze to his. There was something in the latter’s glance that exercised
-upon the sun-worshipper a potent fascination, an influence more
-effective than the impression made upon him by Noco’s speech. The
-lower type of man succumbed, in spite of his physical superiority, to
-the will-power of a higher and more complicated intellect than his
-own. Even had Coheyogo considered it expedient at that moment to wreak
-summary vengeance upon his white-faced, smiling challenger, it is to be
-doubted that his tongue could have uttered the words which would have
-sent de Sancerre to his doom. Cool, motionless, with unflinching eyes
-and a mouth which wore the outlines of a derisive smile, the undersized
-Frenchman stood watching the chief priest, outwardly as self-confident
-as if he had possessed, in reality, the destructive power of which he
-boasted. Presently Coheyogo turned to Noco, whose wrinkled countenance
-was twitching with excitement in the fitful glow of the sacred fire.
-
-“The Chief Priest of the Sun has no quarrel with the Brother of the
-Moon,” said the old hag, addressing de Sancerre a moment later. “But
-he says to him that the Great Sun, in health and strength at sunrise,
-now lies tossing in peril of his life. Is it true, he asks, that you
-have threatened to bring down the same strange sickness upon the temple
-priests?”
-
-“Not if they do the bidding of Coyocop, the spirit of the sun,”
-answered de Sancerre, curtly, closely scanning Coheyogo’s face as Noco
-repeated his words. Then he turned to the interpreter and went on:
-
-“Let the chief priest understand that the spirit of the sun and the
-spirit of the moon go hand in hand, to the greater glory of the God of
-gods. Say to him that together Coyocop and I can make a nation great
-or destroy it at a word. Disobedience to us is impiety to God. If he,
-Coheyogo, would know this truth, he must be docile, patient, and abide
-my time. If in his mind the shadow of a doubt remains that what I say
-is true, let him recall the legends of his race, the promises and
-prophecies which your fathers told their sons.”
-
-There reigned an ominous silence in the stifling, ill-smelling room
-for a time, broken only by the malicious crackling of the sacred
-fire or the impatient grunt of some overwrought priest. Coheyogo,
-fearing to lose his power by accepting the proffered alliance, but too
-superstitious to defy the unseen rulers of the universe by rejecting
-it, stood, grim and self-absorbed, scanning a distressing problem from
-many points of view. He dared not offend Coyocop, but he resented de
-Sancerre’s claim to a share in the supernatural authority which the
-sun-worshippers had attributed to her. After long reflection, the chief
-priest looked down at the grinning Noco and said:
-
-“Say to the Brother of the Moon that if he has sufficient power to
-bring down destruction upon this City of the Sun, or even to cast an
-evil spell upon our king, he is wise enough to cure the latter of the
-sickness which has laid him low. If he will lead the Great Sun back to
-us from the very gates of death, he will find within this temple none
-but servants glad to pay him homage and obey his words. But, if he
-fails to raise our king, ’twill prove to us he either boasts too much
-or bears us no good-will.”
-
-De Sancerre’s lips turned a shade lighter, but the mocking smile
-did not desert them, as Noco translated Coheyogo’s ultimatum into
-her clumsy Spanish. But even in that moment of supreme dismay, when
-his life, so he reflected, had been staked against loaded dice, the
-Frenchman could not refrain from casting a glance of admiration at the
-crafty priest who had played his game so well. If de Sancerre should
-undertake the restoration of the Great Sun’s health and should fail
-to save his life, even Coyocop would be powerless to protect him from
-the fate which had befallen Chatémuc. He had planned to visit the
-sick-bed of the King, and to send for Julia de Aquilar to meet him
-there, should he find that the Great Sun lay afflicted by no contagious
-disease. But de Sancerre had not foreseen that his boastfulness--which
-had served him well at times--would place him in his present plight,
-making his very life dependent upon his skill as a physician. He dared
-not hesitate, however, to accept the gauntlet thrown down by the
-keen-witted schemer, whose black eyes were now fixed upon him with a
-sardonic, defiant gleam.
-
-“It will give me great joy to restore my friend, the ruler of this
-land, to health,” said de Sancerre calmly to Noco, his gaze still
-meeting Coheyogo’s unwaveringly. “Will you request the chief priest to
-accompany me to the royal bedside?”
-
-With these words, the Frenchman turned his back upon the sacred fire
-and its jealous guardian, and strode haughtily toward the temple’s exit.
-
-“_Nom de Dieu_,” he muttered to himself, “I know more about the slaying
-of my fellow-men than how to save them from the jaws of death! I would
-I could recall the odds and ends of medicine I’ve gathered in my time!
-But, even then, I fear my skill would not suffice. The Great Sun, if I
-mistake not, has no more to gain from me than I from him. St. Maturin,
-be kind to us!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
-IN WHICH A WHITE ROBE FAILS TO PROTECT A BLACK HEART
-
-
-Seated upon a low couch of plaited reeds, Julia de Aquilar, her white,
-slender hands folded upon her lap, and her dark, eloquent eyes turned
-upward as if they rested upon the Virgin Mother’s face, listened for
-the footsteps of a worldling and a sceptic, whose irreverent tongue had
-often in her hearing made sport of love itself. Her year in captivity
-as a celestial guide and counsellor to a half-savage race had softened,
-while preserving, the splendid coloring of her flawless complexion.
-Paler than of old, her face had lost none of its marvellous symmetry,
-and the warm hue of her curving lips bore witness to the triumph which
-youth, in its abounding elasticity, had won over the allied forces of
-loneliness and despair. The shadows beneath her expectant eyes had but
-added to their glowing splendor. Long days and nights of revery and
-introspection had changed the dominant expression of her face, somewhat
-too haughty aforetime, and a gentle radiance seemed to emanate
-from a countenance which had gained an added fascination from the
-spiritualizing touches of a sorrow too deep for tears.
-
-The room in which Doña Julia sat at this moment, watching and praying
-for a rescuer whose advent had been made possible only through a
-miracle vouchsafed by Mary and the saints, testified to the homage
-which was paid by the sun-worshippers to the spirit, Coyocop. Bunches
-of early spring flowers, borne to her cabin by devotees who had never
-looked upon her face, were scattered in profusion upon the earthen
-floor and along the wooden shelves fitted into the gray walls.
-Offerings of dried fruits, and more substantial edibles, indicated the
-anxiety of an afflicted people to propitiate the unseen powers in this
-day of peril to their prostrate chief. Fabrics woven with commendable
-skill in various colors, and bits of pottery showing artistic
-possibilities in the makers thereof, added to the polychromatic
-ensemble of Coyocop’s sacred retreat. At that very instant Doña Julia
-could hear the murmurs of a group of devout sun-worshippers, who had
-come from the budding forest to pile before her door great heaps of
-magnolia blossoms to bear witness to their reverence for the beneficent
-spirit of the sun, and to their hope that she would save them from
-their threatening doom. The skull-bedecked temple of the sun stood for
-all that was most savage in a cult demanding human blood. The hut of
-Coyocop, wellnigh hidden from the noonday by sacrificial flowers, gave
-forth a fragrant incense which arose from an altar built of loving
-hearts.
-
-It was the assurance, which had come to her in many ways, that she
-possessed the reverential affection of thousands of men and women upon
-whom she had never gazed that had lightened Doña Julia’s captivity,
-and had vouchsafed to her lonely soul a source of inspiration without
-which her faith in heaven might have lost its strength. Horrified to
-find herself worshipped as a goddess, but fearful of the fate which
-might befall her should she make denial of her divinity, she had
-passed long months in silent misery, theoretically omnipotent, but
-practically a helpless captive; used, for their own selfish purposes,
-by a few schemers, and adored at a distance by priest-ridden thousands
-who cherished, in their heart of hearts, the hope that Coyocop would
-mitigate the cruel cult which stained their temple red.
-
-The Great Sun came in state to visit her at times, and, more often,
-Manatte, his nephew and heir-apparent, presuming upon his royal
-prerogatives, would enter her cabin to feast his black eyes upon the
-beauty of a countenance which he was bound to look upon as sacred from
-the touch of human lips. The tall, dusky youth, whose handsome, wilful
-face Doña Julia had grown to loathe, had never dared to rebel against
-the restraints which Coyocop’s divine origin forced upon him, but his
-restless eyes told the girl what was in his protesting heart, and she
-would watch his reluctant steps, as he stole from her hut, with mingled
-relief and dread. Well she knew that fear of the Brother of the Sun
-and of the chief priest alone prevented Manatte from defying the Great
-Spirit and making her his own.
-
-The afternoon was growing old, and Doña Julia, with a bunch of white
-flowers upon her bosom, relieving the black monotony of her sombre
-garb, still awaited in loneliness the coming of Louis de Sancerre,
-whose presence in that remote corner of the globe only the saints in
-heaven could explain. That Coheyogo and Noco, who came to her daily
-to play a solemn farce in which she had long ago lost all interest,
-had not made their accustomed advent to her cabin filled her with
-increasing alarm. The uproar in the city at noonday, the mournful
-outcries of an agitated people, had aroused in Doña Julia’s soul a
-dread foreboding which the subsequent silence which had fallen upon the
-hysterical town had done nothing to relieve.
-
-Presently the overwrought girl, from whose lips the cup of hope seemed
-to have been snatched just as she was about to drink deep of its
-grateful draught, fell upon her knees beside her bed and breathed a
-fervent prayer to the Mother of Christ for strength in this hour of
-doubt and discouragement. Soothed by her devotions, she arose and,
-standing erect, listened for the sound of a footstep which should
-precede an answer to her supplication; but an ominous silence reigned
-outside her hut. Readjusting the flowers upon her breast, and smoothing
-her rebellious, raven hair with a trembling hand, Doña Julia, cold
-with a sense of loneliness which had fallen upon her heart, moved
-hesitatingly toward the hole which served as a clumsy entrance to
-the room. Bending down, her hungry eyes eagerly scanned the deserted
-square, upon which the sun was shining as if in search of its secreted
-worshippers. To the overpowering sweetness of the spring blossoms,
-lying in heaps outside the doorway, she gave no heed, as she sought in
-vain for signs of life in a city upon which the blight of a great fear
-had recently descended. Suddenly, as Doña Julia gazed in consternation
-at this lonely centre of a populous town, a tall form issued from the
-cabin of the Great Sun. Drawing himself up to his full height, the
-man, glancing in all directions, as if to assure himself that he was
-unobserved, made straight toward the hole in the sun-baked wall through
-which the girl was peering. The white feathers in his hair bore witness
-to his royal rank, and as he came into the full glare of the sunlight
-just beyond her cabin Doña Julia saw that her approaching visitor was
-Manatte. To rush forth into the square and arouse the city by her cries
-was her first impulse, but before she could give way to it the youth
-had cut off her escape.
-
-“Coyocop!” he exclaimed, as he stood erect, after he had crawled
-through the entrance, driving her back in affright toward the centre of
-the flower-bedecked room. “Coyocop!”
-
-There were in his voice passion, triumph, desperation; an appeal to the
-woman and a defiance to the gods. The Great Sun lay dying. Even the
-chief priest would hesitate to offend him--Manatte, who would soon be
-king!
-
-“Coyocop!” he repeated more gently, holding forth to her a hand, like a
-beggar asking alms, while his eyes rested upon the white flowers which
-rose and fell upon her throbbing bosom.
-
-But, though her body trembled, there was no flinching in Doña Julia’s
-glance. Hopeless, as she was, for she realized that sacrilege such as
-this could spring only from an opportunity in which Manatte could find
-no peril, her eyes gazed into his with a proud scorn which left no
-need for words. With head thrown back, she strove to conquer the brute
-nature of the youth by the mere force of her strong will and the purity
-of her virgin soul. But she knew full well that the silent prayers
-which she offered up to God would reach His throne too late.
-
-For a moment they stood thus confronting one another; Purity attired
-in black, and License enrobed in spotless white. Never afterward could
-Julia de Aquilar sense the sweet, haunting odor of magnolia blossoms
-without a sinking of the heart which made her breath protest. No sound
-broke the intense stillness save the twittering of birds which wooed
-the flowers outside the hut and the stifled words which Manatte strove
-to speak. Suddenly he sprang toward her and seized her wrists, while
-his bronze face burned her cold, white cheeks.
-
-“Coyocop,” he muttered, in a tongue which she could not understand,
-“you shall be mine, ’though every star the midnight sky reveals should
-send a god to save you from my love!”
-
-A maiden’s despairing cry startled the silent town.
-
-“Mother of God, have mercy! Help! O Christ, save me!”
-
-A light, nervous footfall echoed from the square, and the entrance
-to the hut was darkened for an instant. Rapier in hand, de Sancerre
-sprang into the centre of the room. As Manatte, with an oath upon his
-swollen lips, turned upon the intruder, the Frenchman drove his sword
-straight through a snow-white robe into a black heart. Without a groan,
-the evil scion of a royal race fell dead upon the ground.
-
-“Thank God, I came in time!” exclaimed de Sancerre, as he withdrew
-his rapier from Manatte’s breast and turned toward Doña Julia, who,
-faint and breathless, leaned against the wall facing him. “Doña Julia
-de Aquilar,” he cried, tossing his dripping sword to the ground and
-crossing the room at a stride, “I kiss your hand.” Falling upon one
-knee the courtier pressed his lips to the cold, trembling fingers in
-his grasp.
-
-“Mother of Mary, I thank thee for thy care,” murmured Doña Julia
-raising her eyes to heaven from the smiling, upturned face of de
-Sancerre.
-
-It was upon a tableau which might have suggested, to other eyes, a
-worldling praying to a saint for pardon for the murder of a giant that
-Coheyogo, followed by Noco and Cabanacte, gazed as he entered the hut
-and attempted to read the story of the grim picture by which he was
-confronted. De Sancerre, who had doffed his white robes in the Great
-Sun’s cabin, still knelt at the feet of the pale and agitated girl.
-Near the centre of the room lay the bleeding, motionless body of the
-sacrilegious sun-worshipper. Thrown from a shelf by the recent tumult
-in the room, a great bunch of magnolia blossoms lay scattered close to
-Manatte’s head, a floral halo of which death itself still left him most
-unworthy.
-
-Springing to his feet and pointing toward the youth he had slain, de
-Sancerre said, calmly, to Noco:
-
-“Tell the chief priest this, that yonder scoundrel insulted the spirit
-of the sun. For this he died. It was this sword,” he went on, picking
-up his rapier and wiping the blood from the blade with a handful of
-flowers, “which saved Coyocop from his polluting kiss. I know not who
-he is, but were he ten thousand times a son of suns he well deserved
-his death.”
-
-Coheyogo stood gazing down at the set face of Manatte as Noco repeated
-to him the Frenchman’s words.
-
-“Stand at the entrance outside the hut,” said the chief priest, curtly,
-to Cabanacte, “and bid no one enter upon pain of death. Of what has
-happened here, breathe not a word. Go!”
-
-Crawling through the entrance, Cabanacte drew himself erect in the
-sunlight, a sentry against whose behests none of the chattering
-sun-worshippers, who had poured into the square to learn the meaning of
-the cry which had echoed from Coyocop’s abode, dared protest.
-
-“Say to the Brother of the Moon that what he did was well done,”
-went on Coheyogo to Noco. “If the draught which he made for the
-Great Sun gives life as surely as his silver wand brings death, then
-shall the shadow pass from our weeping race. Go, then, Noco, to the
-temple quickly, and bid four priests to hasten to me here. Answer no
-questions, but, as you go, inform the people that Coyocop has destroyed
-with flowers, brought to her cabin by the faithful, the evil spirit
-which strove to kill our king and bring destruction upon the City of
-the Sun. Say to them further, if they should whisper the name of yonder
-chief, that Manatte has gone to the foot-hills to offer prayers for the
-Great Sun’s life. Go at once, for the day grows old and we have much to
-do.”
-
-Turning toward de Sancerre, who had been whispering to Doña Julia words
-of hope and cheer, Coheyogo pointed to the feet of the dead sun-prince,
-and then strode to the head of the corpse. The Frenchman and the
-chief priest raised the heavy body and placed it upon Doña Julia’s
-reed-plaited bed. With armfuls of magnolia blossoms Coheyogo covered
-Manatte’s face and shoulders, while de Sancerre, comprehending vaguely
-the scheme which the chief priest had in mind, strewed flowers upon the
-trunk of his sword’s gigantic prey.
-
-“May God defend us!” he muttered. “I fear the keenness of this crafty
-priest! He has an agile mind. He turns a nightmare to a dream of spring
-with most exquisite skill. And, for some reason which I cannot find, he
-takes great pleasure in this gay youth’s death. I trust that Doña Julia
-has learned to read his mind. I dread him either as an ally or a foe!”
-
-Before de Sancerre could find an opportunity for holding further
-converse with the Spanish maiden, whose presence in the City of the Sun
-had wellnigh restored his boyhood’s faith in miracles, Noco, followed
-by four silent elders from the temple of the sacred fire, had entered
-the hut. A few moments later the voiceless, expectant throng in the
-great square gazed with awe and wonder upon a picturesque procession
-which moved with slow and solemn tread from Coyocop’s abode to the
-outskirts of the town, beyond which point a word from the temple
-priests prevented the dusky crowd from following it.
-
-At the head of the cortège walked the chief priest, accompanied by de
-Sancerre, whose drawn rapier gleamed like a sword of fire as the red
-rays of the setting sun made a plaything of the blade. Behind them
-came four white-robed bearers carrying a plaited bier, upon which lay
-the body of a tall man concealed from view by a trembling shroud
-of fragrant flowers. Following this strange funeral, upon which the
-sun-worshippers gazed with awe-stricken eyes, as if they looked upon a
-marvel wrought by spirits, hobbled the aged Noco, mumbling to herself
-as she grinned at a people for whose blind superstition she had no
-respect. Cabanacte had remained as sentry at Coyocop’s abode, to chafe
-under the useless task consigned to him; for to him it seemed more
-fitting that he should guard Katonah than stand as sentinel before a
-cabin upon which high heaven smiled.
-
-When the cortège had reached the twilight shadows outside the city, the
-chief priest gave a few simple directions to the bearers of the corpse
-and, accompanied by de Sancerre and Noco, turned back toward the temple
-of the sun.
-
-“Come with me, señora!” cried the Frenchman, when they had reached
-the square, pointing toward the Great Sun’s cabin. “Say to the chief
-priest, Doña Noco, that you and I must watch by the good King’s side
-to-night.”
-
-“It is well,” answered Coheyogo, as he listened to the old crone’s
-words. “May the great spirit grant you the skill to save his life. ’Tis
-best for you that he should live.”
-
-With this significant hint, the chief priest strode through the dusk
-toward the temple of the sacred fire.
-
-Before de Sancerre and Noco had reached the cabin in which the Brother
-of the Sun lay tossing upon a feverish couch, the Frenchman, whose mind
-was filled with the vision of a pale, dark-eyed woman, garbed in black,
-with spring flowers upon her breast, recalled, for an instant, another
-face which seemed to accuse him in the twilight there of strange
-forgetfulness.
-
-“Wait, señora,” exclaimed de Sancerre, seizing Noco by the arm at the
-very entrance to the royal hut. “Katonah! It is not well to leave her
-all alone. Go to your home and bring her here at once. This town’s a
-seething cesspool of dark-brown, white-robed treachery! _Peste!_ If
-harm should come to her, I dare not look into the saintly Membré’s good
-gray eyes again. Come back at once. The Great Sun needs your care.”
-
-With these words de Sancerre bent down to enter the royal cabin, while
-Noco hurried away to rescue Katonah from a lonely night.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI
-
-IN WHICH DE SANCERRE WIELDS HIS SWORD AGAIN
-
-
-The royal cabin was the largest and most pretentious dwelling-house in
-the City of the Sun. Its walls were made of mud, sand and moss, and,
-hardened by time, had become both serviceable and sightly. The roof
-was formed of grass and reeds, united in a close embrace which defied
-the most penetrating rain or hail. Forty feet square, the main room of
-the palace--to give it a grandiloquent name--was furnished in a style
-befitting the exalted rank of its royal occupant. The Great Sun’s
-throne was simple in construction, being nothing more than a wooden
-stool four feet in height, but its inherent significance was indicated
-by the devices with which it had been decorated by reverential and
-cunning hands. Beneath the throne was stretched the rarest of the
-King’s household furnishings, a carpet made of costly furs, which, so
-tradition asserted, had aroused the cupidity of a Spaniard in a former
-generation, and still bore the stain of the lifeblood which he had
-vainly paid in his effort to rob the feet of royalty of their most
-valued luxury.
-
-Audience-chamber, throne-room and sleeping-apartment, the main hall of
-the Great Sun’s abode, as de Sancerre entered it, after despatching
-old Noco to her cabin in search of Katonah, was a sight which might
-have delighted the eye of an impressionable painter, but would have
-aroused the temper of a conscientious housekeeper. The Great Sun’s
-sudden illness had begotten a confusion in the royal ménage which
-had transformed his abode from a picturesque cabin into a disordered
-hospital.
-
-The stricken chieftain lay tossing from side to side upon a couch
-covered with painted and embroidered deer-skins. As de Sancerre
-approached his patient, a group of noisy women, the wives of the Great
-Sun, fled toward the shadows at the further end of the room. Following
-them, a white-robed, soft-footed sun-worshipper, casting a glance of
-malice at the Frenchman, deserted the sick King’s side and stole away
-into the darkness. The court physician, who, through the chief priest’s
-influence, had been succeeded by de Sancerre, had been availing himself
-of an opportunity to observe the effects of the Frenchman’s treatment
-upon the fever-racked scion of the sun.
-
-Jealous of his prerogatives, but knowing that a cruel death awaited
-him should the Great Sun die, the royal physician had been torn by
-conflicting emotions as he gazed down upon the restless form of a
-chieftain whose bodily welfare had been his care for many years. While
-he longed, for the sake of his own safety, to see the King restored to
-health, he harbored a professional protest against the introduction to
-the royal cabin of this alien moon-magic, which, after all, seemed to
-consist in nothing more than the administration to the patient of a few
-drops of a liquid medicine at more or less regular intervals.
-
-De Sancerre was not, in fact, jeopardizing his life--more than ever of
-value to him since he had solved the mystery of Coyocop--by risking the
-recovery of the Great Sun upon an answer to prayer, nor upon the chance
-that the royal sun-worshipper’s strong constitution might resist the
-attack of a sudden indisposition. The Frenchman, upon his first visit
-to the chieftain’s cabin, had quickly reached the conclusion that the
-Great Sun had fallen a victim to over-excitement and over-eating. De
-Sancerre’s experience in courts and camps had long ago familiarized him
-with the effects which follow a nervous strain accompanied by excessive
-indulgence in food and drink.
-
-The Frenchman’s observant eye, trained in many climes to harvest
-large crops of details, had noted, as he approached the City of the
-Sun through a semi-tropical forest, a tree whose resinous inner bark
-vouchsafes to men a balsam of great curative powers. It was from this
-tree--the copal--that, obeying de Sancerre’s directions, old Noco had
-obtained the ingredients for a fever-quieting draught which had already
-begun to exercise a beneficent influence upon the Frenchman’s royal
-patient.
-
-As he now gazed down questioningly at the Great Sun, whose kingly
-bearing had been replaced by that lack of dignity which an acute fever
-begets even where royalty itself is concerned, de Sancerre was rejoiced
-to discover that his simple febrifuge had already produced the effect
-which he had foreseen.
-
-“Thanks be to St. Maturin!” he muttered, contentedly, glancing toward
-the end of the room to which the King’s wives and the discomfited
-court physician had withdrawn. “My surmise was correct. The Great
-Sun was too hospitable to the wandering moon. I have known more
-enlightened monarchs, in more highly civilized lands, to succumb to
-their excessive zeal for good-fellowship. Quiet, care, and a few drops
-of balsam are all that this old chief requires to make him a king again
-from top to toe. _Nom de Dieu_, another day like this one, and I’ll
-need medicine myself! The rôle of executioner is not so bad, but a
-physician--_peste!_ May the devil fly away with that chief priest! I
-fear me he’s a snake. I should dare to hope that I might rescue Doña
-Julia from this bloodthirsty land if I could but trust that crafty
-Coheyogo, who’s as keen as Richelieu and as slippery as Mazarin! I must
-keep a sharp eye upon his reverence, or he will yet cast his sacred
-cords around my neck!”
-
-To de Sancerre, thus standing in silent revery beside the Great Sun’s
-couch, came Noco, hobbling from the entrance with hurried step. Her
-appearance was greeted by a more insistent chorus from the gossiping
-women at the end of the room, to whom the outcome of their royal
-husband’s illness meant either life or death.
-
-“Katonah!” panted the old crone, as she reached the Frenchman’s side.
-“She has disappeared.”
-
-“Impossible!” exclaimed de Sancerre. “You know her not, señora. She
-would not leave your cabin without a word to me.”
-
-“I am not blind!” cried Noco, angrily. “My house is empty and the girl
-is gone. And Cabanacte--”
-
-“What of him?” asked de Sancerre, impatiently, as Noco paused for
-breath.
-
-“I told him of Katonah’s flight, and he has set out in search of her.”
-
-“The traitor!” muttered the Frenchman, peering down at the old hag who
-had brought to him such unwelcome news. “Your grandson, Doña Noco, has
-abandoned the spirit for the flesh--and left Coyocop without a guard!
-Surely, Katonah is safer in the forest than is the spirit of the sun
-in a city which pretends to worship her. I shall chide your grandson,
-Doña Noco, if I ever look upon his giant form again. But stay you here,
-señora. When this great Son of Suns awakens from his sleep give him
-a drink of balsam--and he’ll sleep again. I go to Coyocop, and will
-return anon.”
-
-The moon had not yet arisen, and darkness and silence combined to
-cast a menacing spell upon the impressionable City of the Sun. De
-Sancerre’s spirits were at a low ebb as he groped his way toward Doña
-Julia’s unguarded cabin. The reaction from a day of excitement had come
-upon him, and the gloom of the deserted square did not tend toward
-the restoration of his former cheerfulness. It was true that he had
-escaped death through a combination of circumstances which apparently
-had won for him the good-will of the chief priest, but the outlook
-for the immediate future was not promising. De la Salle could not
-return from the South for several weeks, even if he and his followers
-escaped the perils which might menace them as they approached the mouth
-of the great river. Cabanacte, to whom de Sancerre had looked for
-the aid which might make his escape with the Spanish girl possible,
-had betrayed friendship at the instigation of a stronger passion.
-His return from the forest might be long delayed. As he approached
-the hut in which his grateful eyes had rested upon the pale, sweet
-face of Julia de Aquilar, de Sancerre felt a sinking of the heart, a
-sensation of utter hopelessness which was an unacceptable novelty to
-the vivacious Frenchman, against whose sanguine temperament the shafts
-of despair had heretofore been powerless.
-
-As he stationed himself, with rapier in hand, before the entrance
-to Coyocop’s sacred cabin, there was nothing in his surroundings to
-relight the flame of hope in de Sancerre’s soul. Clouds had begun to
-darken the eastern sky, revoking its promise of a moonlit night. A
-moaning wind, damp and chill, had stolen from its lair in the forest to
-annoy a fickle city with its cold, moist kiss. The world seemed to be
-made of sighs and shadows. The great square in front of him, dark and
-deserted, strove to deceive the Frenchman with its tale of an abandoned
-town. Now and then the voice of some devout sun-worshipper, raised in
-hoarse prayer, would penetrate the walls of a hut and bear witness to
-the city’s swarming life.
-
-After a time there came upon de Sancerre the impression that piercing
-black eyes watched him as he strode up and down in front of the
-silent, shadow-haunted hut in which the strange chances of life had
-imprisoned the only woman who had ever aroused in his mocking soul the
-precious passion of romantic love. He cut the darkness with his eager
-glance, but suspicion was not replaced by certainty. Nevertheless, the
-feeling grew strong within him that the night wind toyed with white
-robes not far away, and that stealthy footsteps reached his ears on
-either hand.
-
-By a strong effort of will, de Sancerre routed the sensation of mingled
-consternation and impotence which the chill gloom and the presence of
-prying spies had begotten, and, drawing close to the doorway of Doña
-Julia’s cabin, hummed an ancient love-ballad born of the troubadours.
-The song had died in the damp embrace of the roving wind when the
-silence was broken by a voice which reached de Sancerre’s grateful ears
-from the entrance to the hut.
-
-“Speak not in Spanish and in whispers only, Mademoiselle de Aquilar!”
-exclaimed the Frenchman in a low voice, not changing his attitude of a
-swordsman doing duty as a sentinel. “There are listening ears upon all
-sides of me. If we converse in French, they’ll think we use the tongue
-of sun or moon.”
-
-“I heard your voice, monsieur. Is there great danger if we talk a
-while?”
-
-“I hardly know,” answered de Sancerre, striving again to read the
-secrets of the night. “But listen, for when the chance may come to me
-to speak to you again I do not know. Be ready at any moment, at a word
-from me, to leave this hut. I’ll use old Noco for my messenger, when I
-have made my plans. I dare not flee with you to-night, for, as I speak,
-I see the ghostly menace of a skulking temple priest. There’d be no
-safety for us beyond the town. Alas, we must abide our time!”
-
-“But, oh, my heart is light, monsieur,” whispered the girl, from whose
-Spanish tongue the French words made rich music as they fell. “If this
-be not a dream, it cannot be that you have come in vain. One night I
-heard my father’s voice in Paradise. He spoke to me of you, and when
-old Noco told me that by the river there were white-faced men, I heard
-his voice again--and wrote my name upon the bark. It is a miracle,
-monsieur!”
-
-“A miracle, indeed!” exclaimed de Sancerre, chafing under the tyranny
-of his grim surroundings and distrustful of an overpowering inclination
-to bend down and clasp the girl’s hand in his. “But the devil and the
-sun-priests, mademoiselle, are in league against us. Pray to the saints
-that we may foil them both! _Ma foi_, a half-done miracle is worse than
-none! But this I promise you, that whether you and I be playthings of
-a heartless Fate, or the favored wards of Mother Mary and her Son, I’ll
-plot and scheme and fight until I save you from captivity, or pay the
-price of death. And so, good-night! I dare not let you linger longer
-where you are, for already these white-robed spies are growing restless
-at our talk, and I hear them muttering in the darkness there, as if in
-resentment of my converse with their deity.”
-
-A suppressed sob told de Sancerre how much his presence meant to the
-lonely girl.
-
-“Can we not leave this awful place at once?” she moaned. “Forgive me,
-monsieur, but it has been so long since I have seen a ray of hope in
-this black hole that every moment since I knew that you were here has
-seemed a year. May Mother Mary guard you through the night! ’Tis well I
-love my prayers, monsieur! I will not sleep.”
-
-“Nay, mademoiselle, ’tis well to pray, but not to lose your sleep.
-You’ll need the saints, anon--but also strength. Sleep, Doña Julia, for
-the love of--God! And so, good-night! I’ll watch beside your door until
-these slinking scoundrels have gone to feed their sacred fire.”
-
-No sound save the complaining of the restless wind broke the stillness
-of the night, which had grown blacker as its age increased. Suddenly
-de Sancerre, as agile as a cat, sprang forward, barely in time to
-escape the clutch of remorseless arms. Turning, like a thunderbolt he
-drove his sword through a white-robed night-prowler, who died at his
-feet without a groan. So sudden and noiseless had been the attack and
-its fatal defence that it had not recalled Doña Julia to the entrance
-to the hut. On the instant, old Noco grasped de Sancerre by the arm,
-and, turning in anger, the Frenchman found himself confronted by
-Coheyogo.
-
-“I’ve killed another snake, señora!” exclaimed de Sancerre, grimly,
-pointing to a white mass at his feet. “Will you say to the chief
-priest, Doña Noco, that I should more highly prize his friendship if he
-kept his temple priests from off my back?”
-
-Coheyogo muttered a few words to the aged interpreter.
-
-“The man you’ve slain has been rebellious and deserves his fate. He
-disobeyed a strict command,” said Noco, repeating the chief priest’s
-curt comment. “He’ll place a guard of trusty priests before the door of
-Coyocop, that you and I may seek the Great Sun’s side.”
-
-“How kind he is!” muttered do Sancerre, petulantly. “A pretty plight
-this is for a Count of Languedoc! I’m tired of this Coheyogo’s
-domineering ways! But still, I dare not cross him now. Come, señora,”
-he exclaimed in Spanish, turning toward the King’s cabin and groping
-his way through the black night. “I trust my sword will find no more to
-do to-night! It has had a busy day!”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXII
-
-IN WHICH THE CITY OF THE SUN ENJOYS A FÊTE
-
-
-The moon of strawberries had been succeeded by the moon of old corn,
-and there was joy in the land of the sun-worshippers. In other words,
-the month of April had gone by and the month of May had found the Great
-Sun’s grateful subjects making ready to celebrate his restoration to
-health by national games and a thanksgiving feast.
-
-The laggard weeks had told many a flattering tale of hope to Count
-Louis de Sancerre, but at the end of a month’s sojourn in the City
-of the Sun he still found himself, in all essential particulars, a
-helpless stranger in a fickle and jealous land, honored by the Great
-Sun and the chief priest, and admired by the people, but closely
-watched by sharp black eyes, from which flashed gleams of malice
-and suspicion. Impatient and impetuous though he was, the Frenchman
-dared not force the issue to a crisis. Easy of accomplishment as the
-kidnapping of Coyocop seemed to be, de Sancerre realized that he
-would rush to certain death if he took a false step and attempted a
-rescue hampered by his ignorance of the surrounding country and of the
-movements of Sieur de la Salle. Day succeeded day and no word came from
-the river to the pale and haggard Frenchman, whose only joy in life
-during those dreary weeks sprang from the voice of Julia de Aquilar,
-which reached his grateful ears now and then as he prowled around
-her cabin late at night. Even this source of delight he was obliged
-to forego after a time, receiving from the chief priest a broad hint
-regarding the dangers which menaced a stranger in the town after dark,
-and learning from Noco that Coheyogo had discovered in the temple the
-existence of a fanatical faction among the sun-priests which had sworn
-to overcome de Sancerre’s moon-magic by physical force.
-
-But it was Cabanacte’s failure to return from his quest of Katonah
-that had wound the strongest cord around the Frenchman’s hands. Could
-he have had the giant’s assistance at this crisis, de Sancerre felt
-confident that any one of a number of schemes which he had been obliged
-to reject for lack of an ally could have been forced to the goal of
-success. But Cabanacte had disappeared, had made no further sign, and
-old Noco, to whom her grandson was as an open book, had said sadly to
-de Sancerre that the youth would not return.
-
-The restless and wellnigh discouraged Frenchman had, through his
-success as a physician, won the enthusiastic gratitude of the Great
-Sun, who had insisted upon making his Brother of the Moon the honored
-guest of the royal cabin, within which de Sancerre was compelled, much
-against his will, to spend the major portion of the time, talking to
-the convalescent king by the aid of Noco’s nimble tongue.
-
-It was the dawn of a cloudless day near the middle of the moon of old
-corn when de Sancerre, opening his eyes after a night of dreamless,
-restful sleep, enjoyed, for a moment, that sensation of physical
-well-being which suggests the possibility that nature harbors no enmity
-to man. Outside the royal cabin the morning vibrated with the melody of
-birds and the distant rumors of a forest springing gladly into life.
-There was movement and bustle inside the hut, and de Sancerre turned
-lazily upon his gayly-bedecked couch to watch the Great Sun as he paid
-homage to his risen god. With a spotless white robe flowing from his
-royal shoulders, the King, still feeble from his recent illness, stood
-in the centre of the room gravely lighting his calumet from a live
-ember which one of his wives held out to him. Then striding toward the
-dawn-beset exit to the cabin, which led straight to the rising sun,
-the convalescent chief blew three puffs of tobacco-smoke toward the
-deified orb of day.
-
-“_Pardieu_,” muttered de Sancerre, “if they would but sacrifice more
-tobacco and less blood to their shining god, this city would not be so
-repulsive to a man of tender heart.” The Frenchman had thrown his slim
-legs over the side of the plaited bed and sat gazing at the Sun-Chief
-with a quizzical smile upon his clean-cut, thin and colorless face.
-Suddenly upon the air of morning arose the shouts of a joyful multitude
-approaching the Great Sun’s cabin. As if born of the dawn, the noisy
-throng poured into the square, carrying to the palace of their king
-offerings of fruit, flowers, vegetables, meats and fish. Into the
-cabin crowded the smiling, chattering sun-worshippers, their white
-teeth gleaming and their black eyes flashing fire as they piled their
-gifts around the Great Sun’s hand-painted throne, interfering with de
-Sancerre’s toilet but treating him with the respect due to a son of
-the full moon, in whose magic they had reason to rejoice. A noisy,
-picturesque, light-hearted crowd, delighting in the escape of their
-king from death, and in the postponement of the general slaughter of
-men, women, and children which would have followed his demise, they
-impressed the Frenchman as overgrown, frolicsome, unreliable children,
-beneath whose gayety lurked the capacity for bloody mischief.
-
-Half-dressed and somewhat weary of the glad uproar, de Sancerre, having
-withdrawn to a distant corner of the hut, stood watching a ceremony
-which was destined to replenish the royal larder, when he felt a tug at
-his arm, and, looking down, met the keen eyes of Noco.
-
-“’Tis from Coyocop,” she muttered, slipping into his hand a piece of
-mulberry bark. The corner in which he stood was not well-lighted, but
-de Sancerre was able, at length, to decipher the scrawl made by Julia
-de Aquilar. Her words were few:
-
-“Eat no fish at to-day’s banquet,” ran the message. De Sancerre glanced
-down at the old hag questioningly, but there was nothing in her face to
-suggest that she understood the warning which had been scratched upon
-the bark. The moment seemed to be ripe for putting into operation a
-plan upon which de Sancerre’s mind had been at work for several days.
-
-“Tell me, señora,” he said, observing with satisfaction that no prying
-eyes were fixed upon them at that moment, “would it please you to find
-your grandson, Cabanacte, and lure him from the forest to his home?”
-
-There was a gleam in her small, black eyes as they met his which
-assured de Sancerre that he had pressed a finger upon the beldame’s
-dearest wish.
-
-“It cannot be done,” she croaked, turning her back to him as if about
-to mingle with the laughing throng. De Sancerre seized her by the arm.
-
-“Listen, Noco,” he urged, bending down to whisper eager Spanish into
-her old ears. “Coyocop and I, going to the forest side by side, could
-find Cabanacte and the maiden from the north. Tell this to Coyocop,
-that I will come to her when the banquet nears its end at dark. I leave
-the rest to you, for you must lead us from the city to the woods. The
-moon of old corn will give us light to-night to find your grandson in
-the forest glades or where the river floweth toward the sea. Will you
-take my word to her?”
-
-“_Si, señor_,” muttered Noco, gazing up at de Sancerre with eyes which
-strove to read his very soul. “But if we fail--if Coyocop is missed--it
-will be death for you and me.”
-
-“We cannot fail, señora, for the full moon is my god! We’ll find your
-Cabanacte ere the night is old--and none will ever know. And now,
-begone! Between the setting of the sun and the rising of the moon I’ll
-come to you and Coyocop. Be true to me, señora, and by the magic of my
-silver wand you’ll look upon your grandson’s face to-night.”
-
-In another moment Noco, eluding the Great Sun’s glance as she stole
-between the tall sun-worshippers, had crept from the cabin into the
-rosy light of day.
-
-The hours which followed her departure passed like long days to de
-Sancerre. He watched the Great Sun’s wives as they became surfeited
-with the petty tyranny which they exercised at the expense of a throng
-of lesser women, upon whom rested the drudgery necessitated by the
-approaching feast. Cares of state--an inventory of the tribute paid to
-his divine right--occupied the attention of the King until noon had
-long been passed and left de Sancerre to his own devices. Seated at the
-entrance to the cabin, the Frenchman could observe what was passing in
-the sunny square outside, while he still kept an eye upon the Great Sun
-and his busy household. Half-naked boys and girls, gay with garlands of
-flowers, were arranging long lines of wooden benches in front of the
-royal dwelling under the direction of a master of ceremonies who had
-escaped death with his king.
-
-The bench upon which the Great Sun, the chief priest, and de Sancerre,
-the nation’s guest, were to sit stood just in front of the King’s
-cabin, and had been covered with painted skins and surrounded by a
-carpet of magnolia blossoms.
-
-As the hour for the banquet approached the nobly-born sun-worshippers
-gathered in groups at the further end of the square, awaiting a signal
-from royalty to seat themselves upon the benches, hot by this time from
-the glare of a cloudless day. Gayety, suppressed but impatient, reigned
-in the City of the Sun. Black eyes flashed above smiling lips, and now
-and then a chorus of happy voices would raise a chant in praise of a
-deity who had blessed the earth with fecund warmth. Even the stealthy,
-silent, keen-eyed temple priests failed to cast a damper upon the
-joyous children of the sun as they mingled with the throng or lurked in
-the shadow of their skull-crowned palisade.
-
-The banquet had been under way for more than an hour before de
-Sancerre, seated between the Great Sun and Coheyogo, had been able to
-revive the hope which had sprung up in his breast earlier in the day.
-His environment, as it met his eyes at the outset of the feast, seemed
-to preclude all possibility of a successful issue to the plan which
-he had impulsively put into operation. A group of plebeians, watching
-the nobility as it made merry--apparently at the King’s expense, but,
-in reality, at theirs--stood directly in front of Coyocop’s abode and
-were laughingly driving de Sancerre’s heart into his pointed shoes.
-Would the gaping throng disperse as the sun sank low in the sky, and
-leave to the Frenchman one chance in a thousand for the triumph of his
-daring scheme? The hours, as they passed, left de Sancerre less and
-less self-confident, while they increased the joyous hilarity of the
-feasters among whom he sat. The mud-made walls of the houses on either
-side of him had begun to throw long shadows across the square before
-de Sancerre was able to cull from his surroundings a bud of hope. It
-sprang from the tongue of Noco, who, as she passed behind his back,
-muttered in Spanish:
-
-“I will touch your arm at dark. Then follow me.”
-
-At that moment the women serving the royal table placed before the
-Great Sun and his guests of honor bits of bark upon which rested fish
-still hissing from the heat of a wood-fire. De Sancerre, who had turned
-to nod to Noco, caught a gleam of excitement in the black eyes of the
-serving-woman who had stretched her scrawny, brown arms between him and
-the chief priest. As he faced the feast again the fish in front of him
-recalled the written warning which he had received that morning from
-Julia de Aquilar.
-
-“Touch no fish at to-day’s banquet,” repeated de Sancerre to himself.
-“’Twas good advice, I think. I’ll let this schemer, Coheyogo, eat my
-dish.” Acting upon the impulse of the moment, the Frenchman touched the
-chief priest upon the arm, and, as Coheyogo’s black eyes met his, he
-made a gesture toward the retreating form of Noco, as if he invoked
-the aid of the temple to recall the interpreter to his side. The
-spontaneity of de Sancerre’s action had its effect upon the sun-priest,
-for he turned instantly and called aloud to the double-tongued
-and two-faced hag. With a rapidity and deftness worthy of a
-prestidigitateur, do Sancerre transposed the fragments of fish-laden
-bark upon the bench, and, as Coheyogo resumed his former attitude, he
-was confronted, unknowingly, with a dish with which a fanatical but
-disobedient priest, hating moon-magic, had tampered.
-
-There is but short shrift given to the day when the sun deserts it in
-southern climes. Twilight had already begun to cast a gloom upon the
-feast, against which the forced gayety begotten of cinnamon-flavored
-wine could not prevail, when de Sancerre again felt old Noco’s touch
-upon his arm. Before he turned to her the Frenchman, whose heart was
-beating wildly beneath his rusty velvets, cast a glance at the Great
-Sun. To his great satisfaction he discovered that his royal patient
-had wholly disregarded the warning vouchsafed by his recent illness
-and had been indulging in the pleasures of the table to an extent
-that had placed again in jeopardy the lives of those of his subjects
-who were doomed to accompany him in state to the spirit-land. But
-it was the condition of Coheyogo at that moment which gave to de
-Sancerre the greater cause for joy. The chief priest sat blinking
-down at a half-eaten fish, as if he struggled vainly to read the grim
-secret which it held. Now and then his head would drop forward as if
-he had been overcome by sleep. Then, by an effort of will, he would
-straighten his spine and attempt to collect his thoughts. The Frenchman
-watched him searchingly for a moment, and observed with delight that
-the struggle which the chief priest was making against a slothful but
-resistless foe would end in full defeat.
-
-“_Ma foi_,” muttered de Sancerre, as he crawled softly from between the
-intoxicated State and the bedrugged Church into the shadow into which
-Noco had stolen, “had I not learned a trick or two in camps, ’tis I
-who would be nodding, not Coheyogo. I would I could remain to see the
-outcome of this contest between a poison and a snake!”
-
-Noco had grasped him by the arm, and in another instant de Sancerre
-found himself stealing toward Doña Julia’s cabin through the darkest
-corner of the crowded square. Either the saints or the moon-god, or
-senseless chance, granted the Frenchman favors at that crucial hour;
-for, as he approached Coyocop’s sacred abode, wellnigh hidden from
-sight beneath hillocks of cut flowers, a group of enthusiasts at the
-feast, still unconquered by the fermented juice of the cassia-berry,
-had mounted the food-stained benches and raised a maudlin, monotonous
-chant, in which the onlooking plebeians accompanied them. At the same
-moment a crowd of boys and girls at the further end of the square
-had begun a weird, ungraceful, unseemly dance, in which, as time
-passed, men and women joined with shouts of wild laughter. Presently
-the kettle-drum added its barbaric clamor to the din which fretted
-the darkness as it crept across the disordered square. Even the
-sun-priests, heated by the epidemic of gayety which had seized the
-town, had left their sacred fire to the care of a chosen few, and were
-now mingling with the shouting, dancing, delirious multitude upon a
-pretext of good-fellowship, which was not too well received.
-
-“Wait here, señor,” whispered Noco, in a guttural voice which shook
-with excitement, pushing de Sancerre against the wall at the rear of
-Doña Julia’s hut. “Don’t stir until I return. I fear some priest may
-still be watching me.”
-
-The old crone disappeared around the corner of the cabin, and de
-Sancerre stood, trying to swallow his insistent heart, as he listened
-to the uproar in the square and, presently, to the voice of Julia de
-Aquilar whispering to Noco almost at his very side.
-
-“Come,” hissed Noco, at his shoulder, seizing him by the wrist, and
-dragging Doña Julia toward the black shelter of the forest by the other
-hand. “No word! No rest! There will be no safety for us until we reach
-the trees.”
-
-Followed through the gloom by the harsh discord of a mad town’s
-revelry, Doña Julia de Aquilar, of Seville, and Count Louis de
-Sancerre, of Languedoc, linked together by a wrinkled beldame, who
-looked at that moment like a grinning witch escaping to the wilds with
-the helpless victims of her spite, hurried, with hearts growing lighter
-with every step, toward a pathless wilderness, in which a thousand
-lurking perils would menace them at every turn.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIII
-
-IN WHICH DE SANCERRE UNDERGOES MANY VARIED EMOTIONS
-
-
-The full moon of May, the moon of old corn, shone down upon a virgin
-forest bounding with the high pulse of a ripe spring-time. Its white
-splendor tiptoed along the outskirts of impenetrable thickets, or
-danced gayly down majestic glades, patrolled by oak and hickory,
-sassafras, and poplar trees. Presently, shunning a menacing morass, the
-silvery outriders of the moon’s array would file along a narrow bayou
-or charge _en masse_ across the broad surface of a trembling lake. And
-while the triumphant moonlight took possession of a splendid province,
-the thousand voices of the forest murmured at midnight a welcome to the
-conqueror.
-
-Panting for breath, and worn with the friction of their race for
-freedom through swamps and woods, de Sancerre and his companions, after
-long hours of hurried flight, paused to recover their strength, far
-to the southward of the City of the Sun. The marvellous endurance of
-Julia de Aquilar, whose urgency had granted to the enraged Noco no
-chance to protest against the fervor of their mad career, had put even
-the wiry, hardened frame of the lithe Frenchman to a stubborn test.
-Hand in hand de Sancerre and the Spanish girl had sped onward, followed
-by the grumbling crone, now breaking their way through vindictive
-underbrush, anon wetting their feet in marshy vales, again making
-progress beneath stately trees, avoiding the deep gloom of threatening
-recesses and following a moon-track, like hounds upon a scent. Behind
-them sat certain death; beyond them, a joyful promise lured them deeper
-and ever deeper into the primeval wilds.
-
-Tottering and breathless, old Noco reached the crest of the
-tree-crowned hillock upon which Doña Julia and de Sancerre, gasping,
-speechless, but strong with renewed hope, stood awaiting her coming.
-Throwing her old bones upon the damp grass, Noco lay moaning for a time
-in senile misery. Youth, under the spurs of fear and hope, had led old
-age a cruel race. Noco had come into the forest to solve by moon-magic
-the secret of her grandson’s flight, and, lo! the wizard upon whom she
-relied had become a will-o’-the-wisp, in tattered velvets, using his
-diabolical power to kidnap Coyocop, the spirit of the sun.
-
-“Lean against the tree-trunk, señora,” said de Sancerre to Doña Julia,
-his voice tripping over his breath as he spoke. “I fear old Noco has
-found our pace too hot. But, even now, I dare not rest. We must go on!”
-
-Descending the hillock to the treacherous ooze which mirrored the
-moon in a multitude of pools, the Frenchman filled his bedraggled
-bonnet with cold water and returned quickly to Noco’s side. Bending
-down, he forced the panting beldame to drink deep of the refreshing
-draught. Then he poured a cold stream upon her drawn, dusky face and
-through the white hair above her wrinkled brow. The old hag’s beady
-eyes had watched his every movement. Had he not cast a spell upon the
-moon-kissed water with which he laved her head? Surely this revival of
-her strength, which raised her on the instant to her feet, was magical.
-Cruel though he might have been to her, the Brother of the Moon was
-making full reparation with his witchery for the suffering which she
-had undergone. Old Noco was more superstitious at midnight than at
-dawn, more a savage in the forest than in her city hut. The mocking
-gleam which her eyes had known so well the moonlight could not find, as
-she stood facing de Sancerre, gazing up at him with a question in her
-glance.
-
-“Cabanacte?” she exclaimed, still short of breath.
-
-“We will seek him by the river,” answered de Sancerre, pointing to a
-break in the forest which opened toward the east, as he drew the woman
-toward the hollow gum-tree against which the Spanish girl was seated,
-silently pouring out her soul in gratitude to Mother Mary and the
-saints.
-
-“But there is no time,” complained the old woman. “They will miss
-Coyocop, and if they find us in the woods--ugh!” The grunt of horror to
-which Noco gave vent bore witness to how much cruelty her aged eyes had
-gazed upon.
-
-“Listen, Doña Noco,” said de Sancerre sternly, as he extended his hand
-to Julia de Aquilar and, indulging in a courtly flourish wholly out of
-keeping with his environment, drew her to her feet, “we have set out
-to find Katonah and your grandson. Be true to Cabanacte and put your
-trust in Coyocop. Listen, señora,” and here de Sancerre bent down and
-addressed the old crone with impressive emphasis, “as we hurry on,
-ponder the words I speak; the City of the Sun is unworthy of the spirit
-sent from God. It is accursed. Its temple runs with blood, and its vile
-priests have sealed the city’s doom. Come; ’twas your grandson who
-found Coyocop. ’Tis Coyocop who shall now find Cabanacte.”
-
-Onward through the moonlit forest the trio kept their course, tending
-always toward a noble river that might bear them, could they build a
-raft, to the vagrant camp of de la Salle, pitched somewhere further
-south. Wasting no breath in futile words, de Sancerre maintained a
-telling pace which carried them every moment further from a city of
-murder toward a stream where hunger menaced them.
-
-For two long, heavy hours they struggled eastward across the
-treacherous margin of a river grown erratic from its weary longing for
-the sea. Now and then de Sancerre would turn to refresh his straining
-eyes with a vision of beauty, done in black and white against the
-moonlight, and, for all time, upon his heart. A word of encouragement
-would escape from his dry lips at intervals, and a smile of hope and
-gratitude would reward him for his prodigality of breath.
-
-The want and hardship which confronted them, the chances of capture
-from savage tribes, of death from starvation, or swamp-begotten fever,
-although clear to de Sancerre’s mind, could not, in that glad hour,
-cast a shadow upon his buoyant spirits. “A half-done miracle is worse
-than none,” he had said to Doña Julia. It gave him renewed confidence
-in the future to feel that upon his own courage, pertinacity, and
-foresight would depend the happy outcome of a strange adventure
-which chance, at the outset, had made possible. It was pleasant to
-de Sancerre to reflect that he could now relieve the saints of all
-responsibility for the issue of events.
-
-Nevertheless, the Frenchman uttered a word of gratitude to St. Maturin,
-who watches over fools, when, about two hours after midnight, he and
-his companions shook the forest from their weary shoulders and stood
-upon the curving shore of the River Colbert--known to later times as
-the Mississippi. De Sancerre’s quick eye saw at once that at this point
-Sieur de la Salle had, weeks before, made his camp for a night. By a
-short cut through the woods, the Frenchman had reached a point upon
-the river to gain which the canoes of the great explorer had labored
-for a day upon the winding stream. That the litter left upon the bank
-had not been abandoned by a party of roving Indians was proven beyond
-peradventure to do Sancerre by a discovery which electrified his pulse
-and renewed his admiration for the saint whom he had just invoked. As
-he hurried down the slope which fell gently from the forest to the
-stream, anxious to enter the deserted huts, made of reeds and leafy
-branches by expert hands to serve as shelter for a single night,
-de Sancerre’s torn shoes struck against an object which forced an
-exclamation of astonishment and delight from his ready tongue.
-
-Gleaming in the moonlight at his feet, the long barrel of a flintlock
-musket pointed straight at a powder-horn and a bag of bullets, as if
-the weapon, lacking nourishment, prayed to be recharged. Bending down,
-de Sancerre raised the clumsy gun and examined its mechanism with the
-eagerness of a shipwrecked mariner toward whose raft the sea had tossed
-a chest which might, when opened, gladden his eyes with food.
-
-Doña Julia and Noco stood behind the Frenchman watching his movements
-with eyes in which curiosity had conquered the heaviness of dire
-fatigue.
-
-“This, Mademoiselle de Aquilar,” explained de Sancerre, balancing the
-heavy musket in his hand, “is the _fusil ordinaire_, or snaphance gun.
-I have heard young hotspurs in the low countries--who knew little of
-the rapier’s niceties--assert that, at close quarters, its butt-end is
-more deadly than a sword. Of its merits in a _mêlée_ I am not ripe to
-speak, but I learned, while yet I lingered with Count Frontenac, to
-drive a bullet through a distant tree. The weapon has its use! You may
-thank the saints, mademoiselle, for this gun and powder-horn. ’Twill
-serve my turn if my captain’s careless redmen have left no eatables in
-yonder huts.”
-
-“Ah, well I knew, monsieur, you had not come to me in vain!” exclaimed
-Doña Julia, a glad smile gleaming in her eloquent eyes, beneath which
-rested the dark shadows of physical exhaustion. “The saints have led
-your steps to where the musket lay!”
-
-“_Mais, oui!_ But tell not Noco this. Her ears must harken to another
-tale.”
-
-Turning to gaze down at the silent beldame, the fiery brightness of
-whose busy eyes the strain of a forced march at midnight had not
-dimmed, ’though her face twitched with fatigue and her scrawny hands
-shook in the moonlight, de Sancerre said:
-
-“The Brother of the Moon is glad, señora, for my god has put into my
-hands the thunder and the lightning--to call Cabanacte from the wilds
-and to smite the sun-priests if they follow us. To-morrow I will make
-the echoes of the forest lead your grandson to us here. But now we must
-have rest, for Coyocop is weary, and the dawn must find us up.”
-
-St. Maturin, the friend of fools, still played de Sancerre’s game.
-As the Frenchman, followed by the women, to whom each step they took
-was now a hardship, entered the nearest hut, he saw at once that his
-withdrawal from de la Salle’s expedition, and the loss of Chatémuc
-and Katonah, had led the explorer to lighten his equipment by the
-contents of one canoe, intending, doubtless, to retake the stores upon
-his return should circumstances make them again of value to him. A
-boat-load of corn-meal and gunpowder had been stored in the hut in
-the hope that neither the weather nor roving savages would deprive the
-returning explorers of its use.
-
-“_Nom de Dieu!_” cried the Frenchman, gayly, as he pointed to the
-godsend which made his light heart lighter. “There lie food and
-ammunition. ’Tis true, indeed, that Heaven has been kind to us! And so
-I leave you, Mademoiselle de Aquilar, to your prayers and sleep. I must
-make further search.”
-
-Old Noco, who had paid out the last link of her energy, had made a
-shake-down of the meal-bags, and her labored breathing proved that her
-aged bones were finding the rest they craved. De Sancerre held Doña
-Julia’s cold, trembling hand in his and gazed upon her weary face for
-a long moment, whose very silence was eloquent with words he could not
-speak.
-
-“Good-night, monsieur,” faltered the girl, tears born of gratitude and
-physical weariness dimming the dark beauty of her eyes.
-
-“Good-night,” he said, bending to touch her white hand with his lips.
-Then he drew himself erect, trembling as if the damp breeze from the
-river had chilled his overwrought frame. Suddenly he clasped the
-weeping girl to his breast, and his lips met hers in a kiss which
-crowned the miracle the saints had wrought for them.
-
-“My love! My love!” whispered de Sancerre; and when he reached the
-moonlit night outside the hut again it seemed to him that the river and
-the forest had changed their outlines to his eyes and that he stood
-within the confines of a paradise. He seated himself upon the sloping
-margin of the stream, vainly attempting to recall his soaring thoughts
-to the homely exigencies of his grim environment. It was no paradise
-by which he was surrounded. A lonely flood finding its way to a lonely
-sea lay before his eyes, while at his back stood a pathless wilderness
-through which, even at this moment, black-hearted fanatics, skilled in
-woodcraft, might be following his trail. This dark thought, clouding
-the splendor of a dream begotten by a kiss, led de Sancerre, almost
-unconsciously, to take from the ground at his side the awkward musket
-with which chance had armed him. He longed to test its prowess as an
-ally, to prove to his troubled mind that dampness and neglect had not
-robbed the flintlock of its heritage. With no intention of giving way
-to the curiosity which assailed him, the Frenchman carefully loaded the
-gun with powder and ball and raised it affectionately to his shoulder.
-In that hour of peril and loneliness the musket seemed to be a friend
-speaking to him of de la Salle’s loyalty and persistence and of the
-certainty that his return from the gulf could not be long delayed.
-
-Suddenly an uncanny premonition crept over de Sancerre, whose nervous
-energy had been exhausted by a day and night of strangely-contrasted
-emotions and by a physical strain whose reaction was now taking its
-revenge. Turning his back to the river, de Sancerre’s restless eyes
-swept the black, threatening line of the forest, behind which the moon
-was drooping. Presently his heart seemed to clutch his throat and the
-long barrel of the musket trembled as his hand shook for an instant.
-At the edge of the woods, two hundred yards beyond the camp, stood a
-white, naked thing, resembling in outline a man, but as shadowy and
-ghostly as a creature made of moonbeams. It stood erect for a moment
-and then bent down as if it would crawl back into the forest upon all
-fours.
-
-Impulsively, de Sancerre covered the apparition with his gun and
-snapped the steel against the flint. A crash, echoing across the
-startled flood, and hurled back in anger by the bushes and the trees,
-made sudden war upon the silence of the stately night. When the smoke
-from the friendly gun--in good case to serve the Frenchman’s ends--had
-cleared away, de Sancerre saw no ghastly victim of his marksmanship
-lying in white relief against the black outline of the woods. “Mayhap,”
-he reflected, “my bullet passed through a shadow not of earth! Don
-Joseph? Perhaps I drew him back from hell with that dear kiss I won!
-But what mad thoughts are these? ’Twas but a gray wolf in the scrub,
-or a vision raised by my own weariness. At all events, _ma petite_,”
-he exclaimed, patting the smoking musket contentedly, “there’s now no
-doubt that you and I agree.”
-
-A soft touch fell upon de Sancerre’s arm, and, turning, he looked into
-the white, agitated face of Doña Julia.
-
-“Fear not, señora,” he exclaimed, earnestly. “Forgive me that I
-disturbed your rest. But it seemed best to me to try the temper of this
-clumsy gun. ’Tis always well to know how great may be the prowess of an
-ally whom you have gained.”
-
-Her dark eyes were reading his face closely.
-
-“They have not found us?” she asked, eagerly. “You did not shoot at
-men?”
-
-“Only at a target made by dreams,” he answered, reassuringly. “I shot
-at the phantom of my hate, _ma chère_, and, lo! it brought my love to
-me.”
-
-Her dark eyes fell until their long black lashes rested against her
-white face.
-
-“You love me, señor?” she whispered, in a voice which filled his soul
-with an ecstasy it had never known before.
-
-And once again the waters of the listening river bore a love-tale to
-the distant gulf--a strange, sweet sequel to gossip which the waves had
-heard before.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIV
-
-IN WHICH SPIRITS, GOOD AND BAD, BESET A WILDERNESS
-
-
-Cabanacte’s wooing of Katonah, an idyl of the forest, a love-poem lost
-in the wilds, a spring song set to halting words, had filled two simple
-lives with sadness through days of wandering and nights of melancholy
-dreams. When the stalwart sun-worshipper had first overtaken the girl,
-fleeing she knew not whither, and inspired by a motive which she could
-not analyze, Cabanacte had been greeted by a faint, apathetic smile
-which had aroused in his heart the hope that, as time went by, her eyes
-might look into his with the light of a great happiness shining in
-their depths.
-
-As the days and nights came and went and returned again, while a glad
-world chanted the wedding-song of spring, and the forest whispered
-the gossip of the mating-time, Cabanacte’s gentleness brought peace
-without passion, affection without encouragement, into Katonah’s
-gaze as it rested upon the dark, strong, kindly face of the dusky
-youth. Reclining at her feet for hours at a time, the bronze giant
-would attempt to tell the story of his love to the Mohican maiden in
-broken Spanish, only a few words of which Katonah understood. But what
-mattered the tongue in which he spoke? The moon of old corn was at
-the full, and the universe grew eloquent with a language which every
-living creature comprehended. The birds were singing in the trees from
-a libretto which the squirrels and chipmunks knew by heart. The wild
-flowers blushed at a romance buzzed by bees, and from the grass and the
-waters and the forest glades arose a myriad of voices repeating the
-ballad of that gayest of all troubadours, the spring-time of the South.
-
-Cabanacte’s wooing assumed many varying forms. As a huntsman he
-would lay the trophies of his skill at Katonah’s feet. He would lure
-a fish from a stream, and, making a fire by rubbing wood against a
-stone, would serve to her a tempting dish upon a platter made of
-bark. Wild plums, yellow or red, berries luscious with the essence of
-the sunshine, and ripe, sweet figs served as seductive foils to the
-burnt-offerings which he placed upon the altar of his love.
-
-Hand in hand they would wander aimlessly through the flower-scented
-woods by day, silent for hours at a time and soothed into contentment
-by a barbaric indifference to what the future might have in store
-for them. At night Katonah would sleep beneath a sheltering tree,
-while Cabanacte watched by her side until his eyes grew dim and his
-head would wobble from the fillips of fatigue. Presently he would
-shake slumber from his stooping shoulders and sit erect, to gaze down
-lovingly upon the quiet face and the slender, graceful figure of the
-melancholy maiden, whose beauty was more potent to his eyes than the
-heavy hand of sleep. Why should Cabanacte give way to dreams while his
-gaze could rest upon a vision of the night more grateful to his longing
-soul than the fairest picture that his fancy had ever drawn?
-
-Now and again the dusky giant would gently touch the sleeping maiden’s
-brow with trembling fingers, or bend down to press with reverent lips a
-kiss upon her cool, smooth cheek. Half-awakened by his caress, Katonah
-would stir restlessly in the arms of mother-earth, and Cabanacte,
-alarmed and repentant, would draw himself erect again to continue his
-conflict with the promptings of his love and the call to oblivion with
-which sleep assailed him.
-
-Often in the heat of noonday his guard would be relieved, and he would
-slumber beneath the trees while Katonah sat as sentry by his side.
-Then would the flying and the climbing and the crawling creatures of
-the forest come forth to sing and chatter and squeak in the effort to
-lure the silent, sad-eyed maiden to tell to them the secret of her
-heart. Of whom was she thinking as she reclined against a tree-trunk
-and gazed, not at the stalwart, picturesque youth stretched in sleep
-upon the greensward at her side, but up at the white-flecked, May-day
-sky, a patch of dotted blue above the flowering trees? Why did the
-tears creep into her dark, gentle eyes at such a time as this? Was she
-not young and strong and beautiful? Was not all nature joyous with the
-bounding pulse of spring? What craveth this brown-cheeked maiden which
-the kindly earth has not bestowed? Surely, the sleeping stripling at
-her feet is worthy of her maiden heart! Not often does the spring-time
-lure into the forest, to meet the searching, knowing eyes of a thousand
-living creatures, a nobler youth than he who, for days and nights,
-has been her worshipper and slave. The forest is young to-day with
-vernal ecstasy, but, oh, how old it is with the worldly wisdom of long
-centuries! What means this futile wooing of a sun-burnt demigod and the
-cold indifference of a stubborn maiden, who sighs and weeps when all
-the joys of this glad earth are hers?
-
-The forest holds a mystery, a problem strange and new. The breeze
-at sunset tells the story to the blushing waters of the lakes, and
-spreads the gossip through the swamps and glades. The moonbeams steal
-abroad and verify the tale that the twilight breeze had voiced. A youth
-and maiden, young and beautiful, so runs the chatter of the woods and
-streams, wander in sadness along a zigzag trail, and, while he sighs,
-the maiden weeps and moans. There is no precedent, in all the forest
-lore, for this strange, futile quest of misery, this daily search for
-some new cause for tears where all the world is singing hymns of joy
-and praise.
-
-And all the questions which the forest asked had found an echo in
-Cabanacte’s soul. Why should Katonah gaze into his loving eyes with a
-glance which spoke of sorrow at her heart? What was there in all this
-wondrous paradise of earth which he, a youth of mighty prowess, could
-not lay at her dear feet? He would take her to the City of the Sun and
-teach her how to smile in gladness, how to make his home a joy. Did she
-fear the slavish drudgery of the women of her race and his? Oh, Sun
-in Heaven, could he but make her understand the broken Spanish of his
-clumsy tongue, he’d swear an oath to toil for her from year to year, to
-keep her slender hands at rest and hold her higher than the wives whose
-fate she feared!
-
-Often would Cabanacte take Katonah’s hand in his, and, smiling up
-at her as she leaned against a tree, strive to make his scraps of
-Spanish aid the noble purpose of his heart. Now and then the knowledge
-which the girl had gained of French would serve Cabanacte’s turn, and
-she would smile in comprehension of some word which he had voiced.
-After a time she found herself amused and interested by his earnest
-efforts to put her into touch with the ardent, uncomplicated longings
-of his simple soul. One day she had attempted to make answer to his
-question--clarified by the eloquence of primitive gestures--whether she
-would return with him to the City of the Sun. They had laughed aloud at
-the strange linguistic jumble which had ensued, and the spying gossips
-of the forest had sent forth the stirring rumor that the coy maiden had
-dried her tears and was at last worthy of the blessings of the spring.
-But hardly had the forest learned the story of Katonah’s laughter, when
-the tears gleamed in her eyes and her whispered negative drove the
-smile from Cabanacte’s face.
-
-From this beginning, however, the youth and maiden had developed,
-through the long, aimless hours of their sylvan wanderings, a curious,
-amorphous _patois_, made up of a few words culled from the French and
-Spanish tongues and forced by Cabanacte to tell an ancient tale in a
-language new to man. It brought renewed hope to the youth’s sinking
-heart to find words which could drive, if only for a moment, the
-mournful gleam from Katonah’s sad eyes, or, when fate was very kind,
-tempt a fleeting smile to her trembling lips.
-
-But even after they had garnered a few useful words from Latin roots,
-there remained a heavy shadow upon the hearts of Katonah and her
-swain. Between them stood an elusive, intangible, but persistent and
-domineering, something, which restrained Cabanacte with its cruel grip,
-and often turned Katonah deaf to her lover’s passionate words and blind
-to the adoring splendor which shone in his burning eyes. A savage
-maiden’s foolish dream, a cherished memory which haunted her by day and
-crept into her sleep at night decreed that Cabanacte should woo her
-heart in vain and in a forest musical with love should grow sick with
-longing for the word that she would not speak. With gentle wiles and
-all the art his simple nature knew he laid before Katonah the treasures
-of devotion, and, ’though she smiled, and gazed into his eyes with
-tender gratitude, she waved them all aside and sat in silence in the
-moonlit night, recalling a pale, clear-cut face upon which she never
-hoped to look again.
-
-[Illustration: “A WHITE-FACED MAN PRESSING TO HIS BREAST A DARK-HAIRED
-MAIDEN”]
-
-It was long past midnight, and Cabanacte, weary of his vigil, and
-worn with the melancholy thoughts which oppressed him, leaned against
-a tree and dozed for a time while the maiden, reclining at his side,
-listened in her dreams to a mocking voice which had aforetime been
-music to her heart. The murmurs of the night had died away to silence
-as the moon fell toward the west, and the forest had settled itself
-for a nap before the dawn should hail the noisy day, when Katonah and
-Cabanacte were hurled to their feet by a crackling crash, which echoed
-through the protesting woods with a threatening insistence that stopped
-for an instant the beating of their hearts. Seizing the girl’s cold
-hand, Cabanacte, glancing around him upon all sides with affrighted
-eyes, rushed wildly away from the oak-tree beneath which they had found
-rest, and strove, with a giant’s strength, to win his way to the great
-river as a refuge from a wilderness in which evil spirits menaced them
-with ugly cries. Suddenly the stalwart youth paused in his mad career
-and drew the panting maiden close to his side. Far away between the
-trees a ghastly creature, a spectral man or monkey, crept and ran and
-bounded toward the shadow-haunted depths of the forest from which they
-fled. Knowing all the secrets of the woods, Cabanacte turned cold at
-the fleeting vision which had checked his wild flight, for never had
-he seen beneath the moon so weird a sight. Almost before he could
-regain his breath it had come and gone, and the night was once again
-his lonely, silent friend.
-
-Trembling from the cumulative horrors which had so suddenly beset their
-ears and eyes, Cabanacte and Katonah stole through the forest toward
-the river, which glimmered now and then between the trees. The giant’s
-arm was thrown around Katonah’s slender waist, and Cabanacte could feel
-the hurried beating of her aching heart as he pressed her to his side,
-as if to defend her from some new peril lurking in these treacherous
-wilds.
-
-Suddenly, as they crept apprehensively toward the outskirts of the
-trees, the broad expanse of the Mississippi broke upon their sight,
-and, between their coigne of vantage and the river, they saw a tableau
-which emphasized their growing conviction that some strange enchantment
-was working wonders on the earth at night, to bind them together by
-ties woven in the land of ghosts.
-
-Before their startled gaze stood a slender, white-faced man pressing
-to his breast a dark-haired maiden clad in black, and as they crouched
-beneath the underbrush they saw the brother of the moon bend down and
-kiss the spirit of the sun.
-
-“’Tis Coyocop!” muttered Cabanacte, in a voice of wonder and adoration.
-“She has come to the forest to drive away the evil demons of the night!”
-
-“Come!” whispered Katonah, urging her lover by the hand toward the
-woods from which they had just escaped--“come, Cabanacte! I love you!
-Do you understand my words? I love you, Cabanacte! Come!”
-
-As the dusky giant, a willing captive led back to a joyous prison,
-followed Katonah toward the haunted glades, he knew that Coyocop had
-wrought a miracle and had banished from the forest the demons who had
-warred against his love.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXV
-
-IN WHICH DE SANCERRE WEEPS AND FIGHTS
-
-
-“I have searched in all directions,” remarked de Sancerre to Doña
-Julia, standing upon the river-bank and watching the early sunbeams as
-they greeted the rippling flood, “and I fear my captain’s people did
-not abandon the canoe whose contents they left here as a gift from the
-good St. Maturin. But we are in good case! ’Tis a kindly stream, and
-its bosom will bear us gently to my friends. The walls of these frail
-huts will serve us well to form a raft.”
-
-The Spanish maiden watched the golden glory of the dawn, as it made a
-mirror of the stately stream, with eyes which glowed with happiness and
-peace. The dread of many perils which beset de Sancerre’s mind found no
-reflection in the devout soul of Julia de Aquilar. Had not the saints
-wrought miracles to lead her from captivity? Weak, indeed, would be her
-faith if she doubted the kind persistence of their aid.
-
-“’Tis but repaying what I owe, señora, if I should make you safe at
-last,” continued de Sancerre, musingly, taking Doña Julia’s hand in
-his. “You saved my life. You have not told me how you knew they’d
-dressed my fish with poison from the woods.”
-
-“Ah, monsieur,” sighed the girl, regretting that he had recalled the
-sorrows and dangers of the past, which seemed to her at this glad
-hour like the unreal horrors of a nightmare forever ended. “You must
-remember that I’ve spent a long, sad year in that City of the Sun.
-I’m quick to learn an alien tongue, and, without effort, I came to
-understand the language of the priests. The saints be praised, I’ll
-know no more of it! And so I heard them plotting in the night outside
-my door to give you poison in the fish you ate. I prayed to Mother Mary
-to find a way--and, lo! my prayer was answered, for Noco came to me!”
-
-“_Ma foi_, how much we owe to Noco!” exclaimed de Sancerre, scanning
-the river and the forest with searching eyes, as he turned to lead Doña
-Julia to the hut in which, through the aid of their aged companion,
-they were to break their fast. By means of the flintlock on his gun de
-Sancerre had kindled a fire, at which Noco had been cooking cakes of
-corn-meal, the odor from which now mingled with the bracing fragrance
-of the cool May morning.
-
-As they entered the hut the girl uttered a cry of dismay, and de
-Sancerre strode quickly to the prostrate form of their faithful
-counsellor and guide. Stretched before a snapping fire of twigs, with
-her last earthly task undone, lay Noco, dead, the grin and wrinkles
-smoothed from her old, brown face by the kindly hand of eternal sleep.
-The strain of the night’s wild race had been too great for her brave
-heart, and, when called upon by the labor of the day, it had ceased to
-beat.
-
-Doña Julia threw herself upon her knees beside the only friend she had
-known in her long captivity, and, with sobs and prayers, gave vent to
-the sorrow in her heart.
-
-“_Nom de Dieu!_ I think I loved that queer old hag!” murmured de
-Sancerre to himself, brushing a tear from his pale cheek, as he turned
-toward the wood-fire to resume the work from which Noco had been called
-by death. “I thought there was no limit to the vigor in her frame! Alas
-for her, I set the pace too hot!”
-
-But there was no time for sighs and vain regrets. De Sancerre knew the
-woods too well to let his fire long toss the smoke between the fissures
-of the hut. Removing the corn-cakes from the blaze, he extinguished the
-flames at once, and urged Doña Julia to eat freely of a simple meal.
-
-“Remember, señora,” pleaded de Sancerre, earnestly, seeing that the
-sudden taking-off of their aged comrade had robbed the sorrowing girl
-of all desire for food--“remember that the larder of our raft will be a
-crude affair. I know not when the luxury of corn-cakes will tempt our
-teeth again.”
-
-Doña Julia smiled sadly and renewed her efforts to do justice to a
-repast for which she had no heart.
-
-“Think not, señor,” she said, in Spanish, gazing at de Sancerre with
-eyes bright with pride and fortitude, “that I have learned no lessons
-from a year of peril and dismay. You knew me in the luxury of courts.
-Methinks you’ll find me changed in many ways. I mourn old Noco. She
-saved me from despair. She hated Spaniards, but she worshipped me. Ah,
-señor, she had a loyal heart. May the saints be kind to her!”
-
-“Amen!” exclaimed de Sancerre, fervently. “And now, señora, we have no
-time to lose! Untie the meal-bags in the corner there and bring the
-cords to me. I’ll pull a hut to pieces and make a raft of logs upon the
-shore. For every mile the river puts between this spot and us, I’ll vow
-a candle to St. Maturin.”
-
-Fastening a powder-horn and a bullet-pouch to his waist, to the deep
-resentment of his patrician rapier, de Sancerre, with gun in hand,
-hurried to the river-bank and chose a convenient spot from which to
-launch his treacherous craft upon a kindly current flowing toward
-the camp of friends. As the hours passed by and his raft grew in size
-and strength, the depression which the death of Noco had cast upon de
-Sancerre’s spirits stole away, and there were hope and cheer in the
-smiles with which he greeted Doña Julia when she came to him now and
-again from the hut with stout cords with which he spliced together
-the clumsy, stubborn logs of his rude boat. At short intervals he
-would abandon his task as a raft-builder to scan, with straining eyes,
-the broad expanse of river upon his left, or to listen breathlessly
-for sounds of menacing import in the forest at his back. But the sun
-had reached the zenith, his raft was nearly built, and de Sancerre
-could discover, neither upon flood nor land, aught to suggest that
-man-hunting man was stirring at high noon.
-
-“_Courage_, mademoiselle,” he cried, gayly, in his native tongue, as
-Doña Julia, pale and silent, approached him from the hut. “Another hour
-will find us voyageurs at last. We’ll name our gallant little ship _La
-Coyocop_!”
-
-“The saints forefend!” exclaimed the girl, smiling at his fancy.
-“’Twould bring disaster with it! ’Tis a heathen name! We’ll christen
-our good raft in honor of the Virgin or the saints. They have been kind
-to us!”
-
-“_Ma foi_, you speak the truth, _ma chère_! My patron saint, the
-kindly Maturin, has saved me from all blunders for a day. If ever I
-should see a godly land again, I’ll raise an altar to his memory.”
-
-The mocking undertone in de Sancerre’s light, laughing voice recalled
-to Doña Julia the old days at Versailles when this same man, who, by
-a marvel wrought in Paradise, now stood beside her in a wilderness,
-had touched upon many things which she had held in high regard with
-the irreverent wit of a flippant tongue. But, on the instant, she felt
-that she had been unjust to de Sancerre in taking, even for a moment,
-the path along which memory led. The earnest, courageous, resourceful
-man at her side was not the debonair, satirical cavalier whom she had
-known at court. She had said to him that he would find a change in her,
-wrought by a year of danger and despair. She realized, through the
-quick intuitions of a loving heart, that during that same lapse of time
-the wild, stirring life which he had led had touched the nobler chords
-in the soul of de Sancerre, and had brought to view a manly earnestness
-and force which had stamped his mobile face with an imprint grateful
-to her eyes. At Versailles the courtier had fascinated her against her
-will. In the wilderness the man had won the unforced homage of her
-admiration. If, now and then, his tongue, by habit, used flippant
-words to speak of mighty mysteries, the saints in heaven would forgive
-him this, for he had grown to be a man well worthy of their tender care.
-
-The truth of this came to Doña Julia with renewed insistence as she and
-de Sancerre, having made the final preparations for their embarkation,
-knelt beside old Noco’s corpse and, hand clasping hand, voiced a prayer
-for the repose of their faithful ally’s soul.
-
-“I dare not wait to give her burial,” said de Sancerre, regretfully,
-as he and the girl left the hut, carrying to their raft what little
-corn-meal and gunpowder their frail craft allowed to them as cargo.
-“But well I know the saints will treat her well. Her claim upon them is
-the same as mine.”
-
-Doña Julia glanced up at de Sancerre, questioningly. He looked into her
-dark, earnest eyes with his heart in his, and answered her in Spanish:
-
-“Old Noco worshipped you, señora--as I do! _Caramba!_ What is that?”
-
-The Frenchman stood motionless for a moment watching an object which
-broke the monotony of the river’s broad expanse on their left.
-Presently he placed the keg of gunpowder, which he had been carrying,
-upon the shore, and, seizing the long, clumsy musket at his feet,
-examined the pan and hammer.
-
-“What is it, señor?” asked the girl, calmly, glancing up the river at
-a bobbing, white speck far to the northward, and then looking into de
-Sancerre’s pale, set face with eyes in which no terror gleamed.
-
-“I hardly know, señora!” exclaimed the Frenchman. “But I fancy ’tis a
-thing which has no hold upon the saints!”
-
-“You think it is--”
-
-“I fear it is a war-canoe of white-robed devils, whose only claim to
-mercy is that they knew you were from God. But listen, _ma chère_. They
-must not see you here! There is no safety for us within the woods, for
-they would find my raft and track us quickly to the trees. The weird
-moon-magic of this snaphance gun must turn them from their course. Go
-back into the hut, and let their black eyes search for you in vain.
-With good St. Maturin’s most timely gift I’ll show them that a bullet
-is harder than their hearts.”
-
-“Ah, no--I cannot leave you now!” exclaimed the girl, shuddering at the
-prospect of a lonely vigil in the room where Noco lay.
-
-“This is no place for you, señora,” said de Sancerre, grimly,
-glancing again at the river, down which a large canoe, manned by ten
-stalwart sun-worshippers, which rose and fell upon the favoring tide,
-was approaching them with its menace of death for de Sancerre and
-captivity for the girl. “Go to the hut at once! I shall not keep you
-waiting long. If the magic of my musket should not avail, we’ll test
-the friendliness of yonder trees. But, still, I think my merry gun will
-drive the cowards back.”
-
-A moment later de Sancerre, humming snatches of the love-song which he
-had sung before the cabin of the goddess Coyocop, fingered his musket
-with impatience as he waited for the war-canoe to swing within easy
-range of a weapon with which he had had no long experience.
-
-“_Nom de Dieu!_” he muttered, as he raised the gun to his shoulder and
-then lowered it again to await a more favorable opportunity for his
-initial shot. “They make a gallant show! Their sun-baked brawn and
-muscle form a target which would rejoice the heart of a _coureur de
-bois_.”
-
-At that instant a cry of mingled rage and triumph arose from the
-paddlers as they discovered the picturesque figure, standing erect
-upon the bank in tattered velvets and toying with a curiously-shaped
-implement which had no terrors for their unsophisticated eyes.
-
-“_Ma foi_, I think the time is ripe to do my little trick!” exclaimed
-de Sancerre, gayly, a smile of derision playing across his thin lips
-as the echo of his pursuers’ shout of delight and anger came back to
-him from the wall of forest trees. “My hand is steady, and my heart is
-light! You black-haired devil, drop that paddle!”
-
-The mimic lightning made by flint and steel changed powder into noise,
-and as the river and the trees tossed back and forth the echoes of
-the musket’s roar, a dusky athlete, dropping his paddle with a moan,
-toppled over dead into the shimmer of the sun-kissed waves.
-
-“_Bien, ma petite!_” cried de Sancerre, patting his smoking gun with
-grateful hand. “The magic of the moon is working well to-day.”
-
-For a moment the horrified sun-worshippers lost control of their canoe,
-and it drifted jerkily toward the centre of the stream. Presently,
-recovering their wits, they plunged their paddles into the flood and
-held their responsive, graceful boat steadfast on the waves, seemingly
-in doubt as to the course they should pursue.
-
-“Confound them!” muttered the Frenchman, who had leisurely recharged
-his musket. “’Tis strange how slow these bright-eyed devils are to
-learn! Do they want ten miracles, when one should well suffice? They
-seem to crave another message from the moon. If I could hit a moving
-boat-load, I’ll have no trouble now! They’re steadying my target--to
-the greater glory of my magic gun! Adieu--once more!”
-
-Again the peaceful day protested loudly against de Sancerre’s noisy
-tricks, and the waters gained another victim from the worshippers of
-fire. There was no further hesitation aboard the great canoe. With
-paddles wielded by hands cold with fear, and arms bursting with the
-struggle to drive their boat beyond the fatal circle of a demon’s
-witchery, the sun-worshippers frantically urged their primitive
-war-ship upward against the current of this treacherous river of
-death. Laying his faithful gun upon the bank, de Sancerre watched his
-retreating foes for a happy moment. Removing his torn bonnet with a
-flourish from his throbbing head, he made a stately bow, unheeded by
-the terrified canoemen, and cried gayly:
-
-“_Adieu, messieurs!_ They’ll hear of you in France anon! And then
-beware! Adieu!”
-
-With a light heart and feet which seemed to spurn the sloping bank, de
-Sancerre rushed toward the hut in which the woman of his love had been
-listening in terror to the scolding of his gun.
-
-“Behold me, mademoiselle,” he cried, jubilantly, as he drew the
-trembling girl to his breast, “a musketeer who wastes no powder upon
-his foes! I kiss your lips, my life and love! The prayers you sent to
-Heaven, I well know, have saved our lives again! Another kiss--and so
-we will embark.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVI
-
-IN WHICH DOÑA JULIA IS REMINDED OF THE PAST
-
-
-It was night; black, oppressively damp, with thunder in the air and
-fitful lightning zigzagging across the sulky sky. With deep sighs, the
-forest prepared for the chastisement of the threatening storm. A sound
-like the sobbing of great trees followed the distant grumbling of dark,
-menacing clouds. The flying, climbing, crawling creatures of the woods
-and swamps and river-banks had heeded the warnings of the hour and had
-stolen to shelter from the wrath of the fickle spring-time.
-
-The majestic Mississippi, swollen with the pride of power, flowed
-downward in silence through the gloom to throw its mighty arms around
-the islands near the gulf. Now and again its broad expanse would
-reflect for an instant the lightning’s glare and then grow blacker than
-before, as if it repented of its recognition of the storm. Presently
-great drops of water pelted the bosom of the stream, and far to the
-westward the forest cried out against the sudden impact of the
-resounding rain.
-
-For many hours de Sancerre had been guiding his raft with an improvised
-paddle, the blade of which he had made from the wood of a powderkeg,
-and the long afternoon, when it had run its course, had left the
-adventurers nearer to the gulf by many weary miles than they had been
-at embarkation. Worthy of the trust which the dauntless Frenchman had
-placed in it, the hospitable stream had gently carried de Sancerre’s
-raft down the watery pathway along which Sieur de la Salle had found
-the road to disaster and immortality.
-
-An hour before sunset, however, misfortune, in defiance of the saintly
-name which Doña Julia had bestowed upon their primitive vessel,
-had overtaken the fugitives. Several logs, disaffected through the
-treachery of rotten cord, had broken away from the sides. Fearing
-the complete disintegration of his raft, de Sancerre had, with some
-difficulty, succeeded in making a landing and in removing his precious
-gun and stores to the shelter of the underbrush. He had hardly
-completed his task, and drawn his unreliable craft up to a safe mooring
-upon the shore, when the unwelcome storm had begun to fulfil its
-threats.
-
-“I fear,” exclaimed de Sancerre, drawing Doña Julia close to his
-side, as they strove to shelter themselves from the rain beneath the
-overhanging bushes on the river-bank--“I fear our supper will be cold
-and wet to-night. I now begin to understand just why those white-robed
-children of the sun should worship fire. You tremble, _ma chère_. Tell
-me, are you cold?”
-
-“No, no!” exclaimed Doña Julia, her face close to his to defeat the
-uproar of the rain. “The storm will pass. Ah, señor, what cause we have
-for gratitude!”
-
-Somewhere in the forest at their backs the lightning struck a tree and
-their eyes rested for an instant upon a river made of flames, which a
-crash of angry thunder extinguished at their birth.
-
-“Mother Mary, save us!” exclaimed the girl, while the hand which de
-Sancerre held trembled for an instant in his grasp.
-
-“The worst has passed, sweetheart,” he murmured, reassuringly, bending
-down until his lips touched hers. “Listen! The rain falls lighter upon
-the leaves above us now. These sudden storms in southern lands are like
-the--”
-
-“Si, señor?”
-
-“Like the anger of a Spaniard, I had said,” confessed de Sancerre.
-
-“Mayhap,” murmured the girl, her eyes meeting his despite the blackness
-of the gloom. “And think you, sir, they’re like a Spaniard’s love?”
-
-“_Ma foi_, how can I tell?” he cried, laughingly. “You, señora, must
-guide me to the truth. But listen!” he went on, his voice growing
-earnest, as, forgetful for the moment of the storm and perils of the
-night, he gazed down upon the upturned face of a maiden who had shown
-to him the unsuspected depths of his own heart, “if your love for me is
-but a passing fancy, born of solitude and taught to speak by chance, I
-beg of you to pray the saints that I may die to-night. To live to lose
-your love-- I’d choose a thousand deaths instead!”
-
-In the girl’s dark eyes de Sancerre could see a protest growing as he
-spoke.
-
-“Nay, señor,” she murmured, turning her gaze from his to watch the
-distant lightning as it flashed across the waters from the black clouds
-which covered the storm’s retreat. “My life has been so strange I fear
-I may not speak as other maidens would. But why should I not confess
-the truth? My love for you is not a forest growth. The saints forgive
-me, I loved you at Versailles! If in this awful wilderness you’re
-dearer to my heart than when, at court, you hurt my pride and showed my
-heart itself, ’tis not my fickleness which is at fault. I’ve loved none
-other, señor, in my life.”
-
-“You were betrothed!” exclaimed de Sancerre, impulsively, a man rather
-than a courtier at the moment.
-
-“’Tis a story for another hour than this,” said Doña Julia, softly.
-“Don Josef! Mother Mary be good to him! I always hated him,
-señor--although my hand was his. But look how the moon breaks through
-above those clouds! The storm is over, and the night grows clear. Shall
-we launch our raft again? I fear the forest, señor, more than yonder
-stream.”
-
-“Nay, I dare not float at night, _ma chère_” answered de Sancerre,
-smoothing the raven hair from her white forehead as her head rested
-upon his shoulder, and they watched the fickle night change its garb
-of black, fringed with fire, for the silvery costume vouchsafed by the
-full moon. “I fear I might steal past my captain in the dark.”
-
-Suddenly he pressed her face, splendid in its beauty as the moon
-caressed it, to his breast, while he gazed across his shoulder at the
-dripping forest with eyes large with sudden fear.
-
-“God in heaven! There it comes again!”
-
-Against his will, the words forced themselves from de Sancerre’s
-parched lips.
-
-“What is it, señor?” whispered Doña Julia, trembling at the horror in
-his voice.
-
-“A white, misshapen thing,” he muttered, hoarsely. “I’ve seen it once
-before. It lies upon the ground beneath a tree.”
-
-They neither moved nor spoke for a long moment. De Sancerre strove in
-vain to rouse the mocking sceptic in his mind. Son of a superstitious
-age, he could not conquer the idea that he was haunted in the wilds
-by the lover of this girl, whom he had slain. Presently, as he still
-watched the white blotch beneath the weeping tree, his will regained
-its strength and he exclaimed:
-
-“Sit here, señora. I’ll go to it!”
-
-He sprang to his feet, and, on the instant, Doña Julia stood by his
-side, while her gaze followed his toward the spectral outlines of an
-out-stretched man, motionless and ghastly beneath the moon.
-
-“The saints protect us! You shall not go alone!” exclaimed the girl,
-putting an icy hand into de Sancerre’s grasp and taking a firm step
-toward the mystery which tested the courage of her soul.
-
-“You must not come with me, señora,” cried de Sancerre, budging not an
-inch. “From where you stand your eyes can follow me. I shall return at
-once.”
-
-Releasing her hand, the Frenchman sprang forward, and in another moment
-stood gazing down at the almost naked body of a man whose soul at that
-very instant had passed from this world to the next. In death the
-thin, drawn face regained the lines of youth, but on the head the hair
-was white, and on his chin a tuft of beard gleamed like silver in the
-moonlight. There was no flesh upon his bones. The night wind stirred
-the rags still clinging to his frame and tossed an oil-skin bag,
-fastened by a string around his neck, across his chest. A crucifix in
-miniature rested at that instant just above his heart.
-
-“_Nom de Dieu_, it is a Spaniard--but not the ghost of him I slew!”
-exclaimed de Sancerre, breaking away from the horrid spectacle to
-return to Doña Julia. He had no need to go, for the girl was at his
-side, gazing down at the corpse with horror-stricken eyes.
-
-“’Tis Juan Rodriquez!” she exclaimed, in a tone which voiced a conflict
-of emotions. “He goes to God with black, foul crimes upon his soul!”
-
-“Who was this man, señora?” asked de Sancerre in amazement, drawing the
-girl to one side out of the insistent glare from the shrivelled corpse.
-
-“An evil, treacherous creature, señor, who served my father as a
-scribe. I thought that he had perished with the others in the ship. I
-spoke his name to-day, when I told you the story of my father’s awful
-fate. From the moment of my father’s fall, until I found myself within
-the City of the Sun, my memory is dumb. That was a year ago and more.
-The man who’s lying there has suffered torments, señor, before his time
-was ripe.”
-
-“He’d lost his reason and become a beast,” exclaimed de Sancerre,
-shortly. “But still he was from Europe, and has a claim upon us! I’ll
-get my paddle and scratch a hole to hide him from the wolves. And then
-I’ll say a prayer, and let him rest in peace.”
-
-“He was a murderer!” gasped the girl, trembling with cold as the rising
-breeze forced her damp garments against her weary limbs.
-
-“_Ma foi_, if that is so, our prayers are little worth. But come,
-_chérie_, there is less wind beneath this hill. I will return and throw
-some earth above those bones. If that white fragment of a wicked man
-had murdered all my kin, I would not leave him there uncovered for all
-time. He came from lands we know--and so I’ll treat him well! God, how
-I shall welcome the sight of de la Salle!”
-
-With quick sympathy the girl put her hand upon de Sancerre’s arm as
-they turned their faces toward the glimmering flood.
-
-“A woman is so useless, señor!” she exclaimed, “I can do naught but
-pray! But show me how I best may aid you now. I will try so hard!”
-
-“You know not what you say, señora!” cried de Sancerre in Spanish,
-clasping the cold hand resting upon his arm as he led her toward the
-river. “Useless, quotha? Is a woman useless who teaches a wayward,
-rebellious, mocking heart the peace and glory of true love? I say to
-you, my Julia, that as Mother Mary is greater than the saints, so is a
-good woman better than the best of men.”
-
-Then he added, smiling gayly as his happy eyes met her earnest gaze,
-and changing his tongue to French: “Not, _chérie_, that I am the best
-of men!”
-
-“You are to me! Is not that enough?” she murmured, in a tone which made
-sweet music to his ears.
-
-A half an hour had passed and de Sancerre had returned to the girl from
-his grewsome task as a grave-digger. The awful fate of the murderer
-to whom he had given hasty burial depressed his spirits, for the dead
-man had borne upon his emaciated frame the marks of his long year of
-misery, a year during which he had wandered through the wilds in a
-great circle, until hunger and exposure had made him a mad, crawling
-animal, too long despised by death itself.
-
-“There were papers in this oil-skin bag,” remarked de Sancerre,
-throwing himself wearily upon the bank beside Doña Julia. “As he was
-secretary to your father, I thought it best to examine what he had
-kept so safe upon his breast. It was not wrong, _ma chère_?”
-
-The girl’s face was even paler than its wont was, as she met her
-lover’s questioning eyes. Her lips trembled slightly as she said:
-
-“He boasted once, upon our vessel’s deck, that he’d be master when
-we reached New Spain. Our king had granted lands and silver mines in
-Mexico to my dear father, rewarding him for his success in France. ’Tis
-possible--”
-
-An exclamation uttered by de Sancerre interrupted Doña Julia’s surmise.
-The Frenchman had been examining two imposing parchments by the clear
-light of the full moon.
-
-“Your father’s scribe, señora, was a man of fertile mind. King Charles
-of Spain has made two grants covering the same ground, one to his
-‘dear, beloved son in Christ, Don Rodrigo de Aquilar,’ and the other
-to his ‘dear, beloved son in Christ, Don Juan Rodriquez.’ ’Tis clear
-enough that one of these is forged, but, for my life, I could not pick
-the honest parchment from the false. Why yonder villain kept them both,
-I do not understand.”
-
-“I think I know,” mused the girl, in a weary voice. “He thought less
-of robbery than how to make me his. He would have torn this skilful
-counterfeit into a thousand bits had I been kind to him.”
-
-“_Nom de Dieu!_ He dared to--”
-
-Doña Julia glanced chidingly at the impetuous Frenchman.
-
-“You spoke not harshly of him when I told you of his awful crimes,” she
-said, while her hand crept shyly into de Sancerre’s. “Is he less worthy
-of your leniency because he schemed to win the hand you hold?”
-
-“’Tis selfishness, I know,” said de Sancerre, thoughtfully, gazing
-contentedly into the dark eyes which met his. “I cared but little that
-he’d killed some man I never knew, but if he loved you, señora, I’m
-glad he died the death!” Seizing the forged parchment upon his lap,
-the Frenchman tore it to pieces and scattered the fragments upon the
-ground. Then he replaced the genuine grant in the oil-skin bag and
-fastened it to his sword-belt.
-
-“I must repair my raft, _ma chère_,” he said to the girl a moment
-later, bending down to kiss her cheek, cold and smooth and white. “You
-will forgive me, sweetheart, for loving you so well?”
-
-Not far away the moonlight, falling in soft radiance between the trees,
-had thrown upon a rough grave, newly-made, the shadow of a cross.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVII
-
-IN WHICH ST. EUSTACE IS KIND TO DE SANCERRE
-
-
-Overlooking the waters of the great river, as they met and mingled with
-the waves of a lonely sea, stood a wooden column beside a wooden cross.
-Almost hidden by the shadow of the pompous pillar, the cross, unmarked
-by hand of man, made no open claim to power, but awaited patiently the
-outcome of the years. Upon the column had been inscribed the words:
-
- Louis le Grand, Roy de France et de Navarre, règne; le Neuvième
- Avril, 1682.
-
-Now and then the King’s Column would appear to hold converse with the
-Cross of Christ, for it was a weary vigil which they kept, and the
-lofty pillar, haughtily displaying the arms of France, was forced, from
-very loneliness, to recognize the humble emblem at its base.
-
-Through long, sunny days and soft, moonlit nights the salt breeze
-from the sea heard the royal column boasting to the lowly cross. By
-virtue of the legend upon its breast, said the King’s Pillar, a great
-monarch had gained a vast domain. Savannas, forests, prairies, deserts,
-rivers, lakes, and mountains, forming a gigantic province, had become,
-through a word uttered by a great explorer, the property of him whose
-name the wooden column bore. Through all the oncoming ages, the King’s
-Pillar asserted, Louis le Grand, Roy de France et de Navarre, and his
-posterity, would own the fair lands through which a mighty river and
-its tributaries flowed. It was not to be wondered at that the stately
-column grew vain with the grandeur of its mission upon earth, and even
-garrulous at times, as it described to the insignificant cross the
-splendor of the dreams which a glowing future vouchsafed to it.
-
-The Cross of Christ would listen in silence to the mouthing of the
-Royal Claimant, gazing further into the future, with a clearer vision
-than the proud pillar, whose words were those of men blinded by the
-intoxication of transient power. The unpretentious cross could well
-afford to indulge in the luxury of silence. Since it had first become a
-symbol of the power which is begotten by the teachings of humility and
-love, it had heard, a thousand times, the boastful words of monarchs
-swollen with the glory of ephemeral success. It had seen emperors and
-kings seizing lands and peoples to hold them in subjection until time
-should be no more. But the centuries had come and gone, and the banners
-of earthly kings, rising and falling, had pressed onward and been
-driven back. Only the cross, emblem of peace on earth and good will to
-men, had, through those same ages, steadily enlarged the dominion over
-which its gentle rule prevailed. Carried forward often by fanatics and
-made to serve the ends of cruel hearts, it was, in spite of all the
-errors of its followers, slowly but surely receiving the earth for its
-heritage and mankind as the reward of its benignity.
-
-One afternoon, late in the month of May, a man, pale, dejected, moving
-with the heavy step of one who had undergone great bodily fatigue, led
-a maiden, upon whose white face lay the shadow of a weariness against
-which youth could not prevail, toward the King’s Column. Removing his
-bonnet from a head grown gray from recent hardships, the man, releasing
-the girl’s hand, bent a knee before the proud emblem of his sovereign.
-At the same moment the maiden knelt down before the cross, and, weeping
-softly, breathed a prayer to a Mother whose Son had died for men.
-
-Presently the girl arose and, followed by him who had paid his tribute
-to the fleeting power of kings, skirted the royal column, and seated
-herself upon a mound of sand from which she could sweep, with her
-dark, mournful eyes, the expanse of a gulf new to the keel of ships.
-Stretching before her as if it knew no bounds lay a great water, an
-awful waste of sun-kissed, dancing waves, whose glittering splendor
-brought no solace to her heavy heart.
-
-“It is a mystery which I cannot fathom,” said de Sancerre, mournfully,
-throwing himself down by Doña Julia’s side and gazing up at her sad,
-sweet face with eyes heavy from a disappointment which had crushed, for
-the time being, the fond hopes which had inspired him through long days
-of labor and nights of wakeful vigilance. “The good faith of the stern,
-upright de la Salle I cannot doubt. He would jeopardize his life, and
-all his mighty projects, to rescue a comrade to whom his word was
-pledged. We must have passed him somewhere in the twilight of the dawn
-or when I used the sunset’s glow too long.”
-
-“What seemeth best to do, señor?” asked the girl, turning her gaze from
-the cruel sea to look into the face of a man upon whose courage and
-resourcefulness she had good reason to rely.
-
-“_Ma foi_, I hardly know,” muttered the Frenchman, looking about him
-upon the scattered remnants of de la Salle’s encampment. “My captain
-may return--but ’twill be a weary while ere he comes back. A year, at
-least, must pass before he reaches here again. We stand in no great
-danger from starvation, but ’tis a lonely shore. I thought to lead you
-from captivity, and, lo! I’ve merely changed your cabin-prison to a
-sandy jail! I fear St. Maturin has turned his face from me!”
-
-“Be not cast down, señor,” whispered Doña Julia, in her native tongue.
-“It cannot be that Mother Mary, who has been most kind to us, will
-leave us here to die.”
-
-“’Twould be unreasonable,” exclaimed de Sancerre, almost petulantly.
-Then he went on, making an effort at cheerfulness. “But, for the
-present, we have no cause to lose all hope. This desert shore seems
-safe from savage men. My musket there will gain us meat enough, and in
-the forest there are fruits and berries fit for royal boards. In sooth,
-‘le Roy de France et de Navarre’ has won a kingdom rich in all good
-things.”
-
-“We’re safe from savage men, you say, señor,” remarked Doña Julia,
-musingly, casting a meaning glance behind her at the silent woods. “I
-fear you do not understand the nation which we have defied.” She smiled
-sadly as she went on: “You have abducted Coyocop, a goddess sent from
-heaven to make their people great. Although your musket filled them
-with dismay, they’ll follow us.”
-
-The lines of care upon de Sancerre’s drawn face grew deeper as he
-listened thoughtfully to the girl’s words.
-
-“We’ve left no trail,” he mused, gazing longingly at the horizon where
-the sea-line met the sky. “They’re keen as woodsmen, but the river
-tells no tales. But, mayhap, you are right! You’ve known them long and
-heard the sun-priests talk. And if the worst should come, _ma chère_,
-I’d die for you with sword and gun in hand beneath the blazoned arms of
-France. ’Twould be a fitting ending for a count of Languedoc.”
-
-“Speak not so sadly, señor,” exclaimed Doña Julia, placing a gentle
-hand upon his shoulder and looking into his face with courageous,
-hopeful eyes. “I sought not to dishearten you, but ’tis well for you to
-know the truth. To linger where we are is far from safe.”
-
-“That may be so,” admitted de Sancerre, reflectively, as he examined
-the lock of his musket and then stood erect to cast a searching
-glance across sea and land. The restless billows of the gulf, the
-marshy coast, the islands at the river’s mouth, and the grim forest
-overlooking the waters, formed a picture which human gaze had seldom
-swept. At this moment the outlook held no menace to the eyes or ears
-of de Sancerre. “To linger where we are, señora, may not be safe,” he
-remarked, as he reseated himself and took her hand in his, “but where
-’tis best to go I hardly know. Our raft will not float up-stream, and
-we cannot put to sea. We have not much to choose! Between this hillock
-and the next there can be no great difference in the perils which
-surround us. And, somehow, señora, I feel nearer to my captain with the
-arms of France above my head.”
-
-Doña Julia pressed de Sancerre’s hand and her quick sympathy shone in
-her dark eyes.
-
-“Your captain, señor--you loved him?”
-
-“De la Salle? I know not that I loved him. But I would have followed
-him to hell! There is a grandeur in my captain’s soul which draws to
-him the little men and makes them great. Aye, señora, by all succeeding
-ages the name of him who raised this wooden column, against which we
-lean, in honor must be held! The deeds of de la Salle shall live, when
-the feats of countless noisy boasters are forgotten. But, that I loved
-this mighty leader I cannot say. I’ve served in Europe under lesser men
-than de la Salle, who led me by the heart; while he, methinks, appeals
-but to my head. He rules us not with velvet, but with steel, this
-dauntless captain, upon whose martial figure I would that I might gaze.
-And that is best, in such a land as this! Followed by redmen and wild
-border outlaws, he could not hold them should he smile and scrape.
-And, at the best, he cannot trust his men. They grumble at their
-captain, because he has no weakness in their eyes.”
-
-De Sancerre’s long speech, to which Doña Julia had listened with forced
-attention, had changed the melancholy current of his thoughts and
-restored the lines of firmness to his mouth, the light of courage to
-his eyes. The memory of the bold adventurer under whom he had served
-for many months, and the inspiring legend which he had read and reread
-upon the column at his back, had revived the martial spirit in his
-impressionable soul, and his face and voice no longer bore evidence of
-the bitter disappointment which had driven him to the verge of despair
-when he had made the discovery that Sieur de la Salle had abandoned his
-camp at the Mississippi’s mouth. With gun in hand, the Frenchman stood
-erect.
-
-“Listen, _ma chère_, for I crave your counsel and advice,” he said,
-gazing down at Doña Julia. “We may be here for months before we find a
-means of rescue, either by land or sea. We’re worn with sleeplessness
-and toil, but, more than this, our bodies crave strong food. We’ve
-eaten meal and berries until I dream of Vatel when I doze--great
-Condé’s cook, who killed himself because a dish was spoiled. My gun
-could add a fat wild turkey to our larder; but the point is this: the
-musket’s noise might lead our dusky enemies to seek us here. I feared
-not their persistence ’til you spoke of it. This column and the arms it
-bears would make no great impression upon our foes.”
-
-“Our only hope must lie in yonder cross,” murmured Doña Julia,
-devoutly. Then she gazed upward at the thin, white face of a man who
-might well call himself at this moment “a splinter from a moonbeam,”
-so thin and white he looked. The horror of her situation, should her
-brave protector fall sick from lack of nourishing food, forced itself
-impressively upon her mind.
-
-“’Twill do no harm, señor,” she went on, “for you to snap your gun. In
-any case, our enemies, if they are still upon our track, would find us
-here, and if they hear your musket’s loud report, ’twill check them for
-a time. They’ll think the woods are haunted with demons threatening
-them.”
-
-“_Ma foi_, they would be, had I the magic which I claim!” exclaimed de
-Sancerre, examining carefully the priming of his gun. “I think, señora,
-that what you say is true. If those brown devils are now upon our
-trail, our silence cannot save us. St. Eustace be my guide! We’ll break
-our fast at sunset, sweetheart, upon a bit of meat. I’ll not go out of
-sight. I’ve wasted too much time, for we must choose a lodging for the
-night before the dark has come.”
-
-Reinvigorated in mind and body, de Sancerre descended the hillock from
-which the King’s Column and the Cross of Christ looked down upon an
-empire over which the reign of the proud pillar was not destined to
-endure. With eyes raised to heaven, Doña Julia knelt before the humble
-emblem of her faith, and besought the saints to guard her champion from
-the perils which might at this moment beset his steps. Then she arose,
-and, leaning against the wooden monument, watched, with ever-growing
-interest, the versatile Frenchman’s efforts to satisfy his craving for
-a more nourishing diet than his labors as a raftsman had permitted him
-to gain.
-
-“_Peste!_” muttered de Sancerre, as he made his way through the long
-grass toward the forest trees, “this musket is heavier by many pounds
-than when the good St. Maturin turned my footsteps toward it. Unless
-your bullet, _ma petite_, should find its way to yonder sleek, but most
-unsuspicious, banquet, I fear you’ll grow too weighty for my hands.
-_Laude et jubilate!_ The bird is mine!”
-
-De Sancerre turned and waved his ragged bonnet toward Doña Julia,
-who had witnessed the success of his shot, and then, leisurely
-reloading his musket, made his way toward the precious trophy of his
-marksmanship. Suddenly he stood stock-still, his head thrown back,
-and his eyes staring at the forest in amazement. As if in answer to
-his gun’s report, there came from the distant trees the echo of a
-musket-shot, which thrilled the soul of the startled Frenchman with
-mingled hope and fear.
-
-“St. Maturin help me!” he exclaimed, in a voice suggesting a parched
-throat. “Is it friend or foe? I thought, _ma petite_, that you had no
-kinsman within the radius of many miles.”
-
-Striving by gestures to urge Doña Julia to conceal herself behind the
-King’s Column, de Sancerre, with his musket at his shoulder, stretched
-himself at full length upon the grass, and, while his heart beat with
-suffocating rapidity, watched with straining eyes a grove of leafy
-trees from which the ominous reply to his gun had been made. Suddenly
-in front of him, almost within a stone’s-throw, stood a tall, slender
-man, clad in the unseasonable costume of a Canadian _courier de bois_.
-He carried a smoking musket in his hand. At his belt dangled a hatchet,
-a bullet-pouch, and a bag of tobacco. In a leather case at his neck
-hung his only permanent friend, his pipe.
-
-“St. Maturin be praised!” cried de Sancerre, springing to his feet
-and raising his musket to arm’s-length above his head. “’Tis that
-rebellious rascal, Jacques Barbier! _Bienvenue_, Jacques! In the name
-of all the saints at once, how came you here?”
-
-“Gar!” exclaimed the lawless runner-of-the-woods, throwing himself at
-full length upon the grass, and gazing up at de Sancerre with a smile,
-hard to analyze, upon his sun-burned, handsome, self-willed face. “It
-is Monsieur le Comte! My eyes are quick, monsieur. I do not wonder that
-you stayed behind.”
-
-Displaying his white teeth mischievously, the _coureur de bois_, a
-deserter from de la Salle’s band of Indians and outcasts, waved a brown
-hand toward the King’s Column.
-
-Hot with anger at the insolence of the outlaw though he was, de
-Sancerre controlled his temper and said calmly, but in a tone of voice
-which had a restraining effect upon the bushranger:
-
-“’Tis a long story, Jacques! I found a Spanish princess in a city built
-by devils. You’ve come to me in time to take a hand in a merry little
-war between the sun and moon. No, Jacques! You’re wrong. I can read
-your mind at once. You think the wilderness has robbed me of my wits.
-But come! There is much to do, and I must question you about my captain
-and why I find you here alone. Bring that nut-fattened turkey up the
-hill, and we will work and talk and make what plans we may.”
-
-The outlaw, whose life had been one long protest against the authority
-of other men, arose from the ground, with lazy nonchalance, and gazed
-down at the wild-fowl which de Sancerre had shot. The Frenchman had
-turned away and was breaking his path through the long, dry grass
-toward the crest of the hill, from which Doña Julia had been watching a
-rencontre the outcome of which she had no way of predicting.
-
-Jacques Barbier gazed alternately upward at the retreating figure of
-de Sancerre and downward at the wild turkey at his feet. Then, with a
-protesting smile upon his symmetrical, but half-savage, face, he bent
-down and raised the fat fowl to his shoulder and followed Monsieur
-le Comte toward the King’s Column. De Sancerre had gained for a
-time--short or long, as the case might be--an ally whose woodcraft was
-as brilliant as his lawlessness was incorrigible.
-
-“_Jubilate, señora_,” cried the count, as he approached Doña Julia.
-“The saints have been more than kind! They have filled our larder,
-doubled our fighting force, and made me younger by ten years. But,
-señora, ’tis not a pious friend whom I have found! This same Jacques
-Barbier’s a devil, in his way. Wear this, my dagger, at your waist, _ma
-chère_! I know that you dare use it, should the need arise.”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXVIII
-
-IN WHICH DE SANCERRE’S ISLAND IS BESIEGED
-
-
-“_Pardieu, Monsieur le Comte_, I’ll ne’er forget the scene!” remarked
-Jacques Barbier, puffing his pipe and lazily watching the smoke as the
-evening breeze tore it into shreds. Nearly a month had passed since
-the _coureur de bois_, with a wild turkey, had helped to make a single
-shot from de Sancerre’s musket worth its expenditure of powder and
-ball. During that period, Jacques Barbier, obedient, docile, knowing
-every secret of the woods and waters, had been a source of never-ending
-comfort to the French count. With a tactfulness which he would have
-been incompetent to employ a year before this crisis, de Sancerre
-had attached the Canadian youth to his fortunes without arousing the
-restless, reckless spirit of revolt which made a _coureur de bois_, in
-those wild times, an unreliable ally and a mutinous subordinate.
-
-There were, however, other things besides de Sancerre’s diplomacy
-which had tended to keep Jacques Barbier contented with his lot for
-the time being. The necessity for obtaining food without betraying
-their hiding-place to savage men, hot upon their trail, had taxed the
-Canadian’s ingenuity and had aroused his pride as a woodsman. He had
-listened with close attention to de Sancerre’s tale, and had agreed
-with Doña Julia that the sun-worshippers would not abandon the quest of
-their goddess as long as their resources for her pursuit held out. By
-Barbier’s advice and assistance, de Sancerre had erected two small huts
-upon an insignificant island in the western branch of the great river’s
-mouth, and here they had passed several weeks in peace and plenty,
-weeks which had restored brilliancy to Doña Julia’s eyes and color to
-her cheeks and lips, while they had revived her champion’s spirits and
-had brought back mincing lightness to his step and gayety to his ready
-smile.
-
-Their retreat had not been invaded by the degenerate savages along the
-river-banks. Now and then they would catch a glimpse upon the river of
-a distant canoe in which copper-colored sportsmen were attempting to
-lure the ugly catfish from the muddy waters of the turgid stream, and
-once, far to the northward, they observed a war-canoe putting out from
-the eastern shore and urged up-stream by paddles which glistened in the
-sunlight.
-
-Once in awhile, Jacques Barbier would return from the forest, laden
-with game-birds, to tell a highly-colored story of redmen whose keen
-eyes he had avoided through the potency of his marvellous woodcraft.
-But the month of June, known to the sun-worshippers as the moon of
-watermelons, had reached a ripe age, and the island’s refugees found
-themselves well-housed, well-fed, and free, as far as they could
-observe, from the machinations of cruel foes. Sanguine by temperament
-and easily influenced by his environment, de Sancerre had put himself
-into opposition to the belief, held by Doña Julia and Jacques Barbier,
-that the sun-priests and their tools would descend to the gulf, by land
-or water, in search of Coyocop. He had eliminated from his mind the
-thought of peril at his back and had turned his face toward the sea,
-thinking only of succor from a passing ship.
-
-It was with the hope that European sailors would come to them from the
-gulf that de Sancerre had fastened a piece of white canvas, which he
-had found among the _débris_ of de la Salle’s encampment, to the top of
-the King’s Column. From where he sat at twilight in front of the rude
-hut occupied by Jacques Barbier and himself, de Sancerre could look
-across the narrow streak of water between his island and the main-land
-and see his signal of distress flapping lazily in the evening breeze.
-Now and then the bright, restless eyes of the _coureur de bois_ would
-rest protestingly upon the white flag. To his mind, the rag was more
-likely to bring upon them enemies from the woods than friends from the
-lonely sea. Jacques Barbier hated the ocean with an intensity only
-equalled by the fervor of his love for the forest wilds.
-
-On the evening to which reference is now made, the _coureur de bois_
-had grown unwontedly loquacious, as he smoked his evening pipe, and
-glanced alternately at Doña Julia and de Sancerre, as, hand clasped in
-hand, they listened to the usually taciturn Canadian’s account of the
-ceremonies attending the erection of the King’s Column and the Cross of
-Christ.
-
-“_Pardieu_, Monsieur le Comte, I’ll ne’er forget the scene! We, that
-is your countrymen and mine, were mustered under arms, while behind us
-stood the Mohicans and Abenakis, with the squaws and pappooses whom
-they had brought with them to make trouble for us all. Père Membré, in
-full canonicals, looking like a saint just come to earth from Paradise,
-intoned a Latin chant. Then we all raised our voices and sang a hymn:
-
- “‘The banners of Heaven’s King advance,
- The mystery of the Cross shines forth.’
-
-The Mohicans and Abenakis grunted with excitement and the pappooses
-yelled. ‘_Vive le Roi!_’ we shouted, to drown their clatter, and then
-your captain--may the devil fly away with his surly tongue!--raised
-his voice and claimed for the King of France and Navarre possession of
-‘this country of Louisiana’--with the right to put a tax upon every
-peltry which we poor trappers take. Gar, it is no wonder, Monsieur le
-Comte, that we who risk our lives within the woods should feel small
-reverence for a king so far away, whose harsh enactments have made us
-outlaws in the land where we were born. Mayhap, monsieur, you have good
-cause to love the King of France! In that, you differ from Jacques
-Barbier.”
-
-Doña Julia felt de Sancerre’s hand grow cold in hers and heard him
-mutter something beneath his breath, the burden of which she did not
-catch. The truth was that the random shot of the _coureur du bois_
-had touched the French count in a sensitive spot. What better reason
-had he for loyalty to the Tyrant of Versailles than this vagabond
-of the woods, who, even in the most remote corners of a trackless
-wilderness, still felt the sinister influence of a selfish despotism
-exercising a wide-spread cruelty begotten of egotism and bigotry? Had
-not de Sancerre known the fickleness of royal smiles and frowns, the
-ingratitude of a monarch who, at the instigation of a priesthood, could
-sacrifice a brave and loyal subject without granting him a chance to
-speak a word in his own defense?
-
-“In good sooth,” murmured de Sancerre to himself, “his tongue has cut
-me deep! What cause have I to love the King of France? I knelt in
-homage at his column there, but methinks my knee and not my heart paid
-tribute to _le Grand Monarque_! Somehow, this mighty wilderness makes
-rebels of us all! _Ma foi_, Jacques Barbier,” he cried aloud, “what is
-it that you see?”
-
-The _coureur de bois_ had sprung to his feet and was sweeping the shore
-of the main-land with a quick, piercing glance which cut through the
-darkness which the moon, soon to show itself in the east, had not yet
-overcome.
-
-“Request the Princess”--the title by which Jacques Barbier designated
-Doña Julia de Aquilar--“request the Princess, Monsieur le Comte, to
-retire to her hut for the night! There are men stirring upon the
-further bank who are neither Quinipissas nor Tangibaos. I fear,
-monsieur, that you have underrated the persistence of your foes who
-make the sun their god. Unless I never knew the woods, there are
-stalwart strangers in the bushes over there. Go you, monsieur, and
-watch the river, while I keep an eye upon this bank. Gar, ’twill be a
-pretty fight, Monsieur le Comte! Your hand is steady? _Bien!_ The moon
-will soon be up. Keep close to earth when you have reached the river!”
-
-“_Ma foi_, Jacques Barbier, I like the way you talk!” whispered de
-Sancerre. “But, tell me, we’re short of bullets, are we not?”
-
-“Humph!” grunted the Canadian, gruffly. “We’ve none to waste upon the
-waters or the trees, Monsieur le Comte! Bear that in mind.”
-
-“Tell me, señor,” exclaimed Doña Julia, to whom Jacques Barbier’s
-French _patois_ was an unmeaning jumble of more or less unrecognizable
-words when he spoke rapidly: “Tell me, señor, has he seen the
-sun-priests on yonder shore?” Her hand was like a piece of ice in his
-clasp, as de Sancerre led the girl toward the hut.
-
-“I hardly know, _ma chère_,” answered her lover, frankly. “There are
-men stirring upon the bank, but I cannot believe that they are from the
-City of the Sun. But if they are, my sweetheart, there are those among
-them who will never look upon their mud-baked homes again! ’Tis strange
-how a fat larder restores the fighting spirit to a man. A month ago my
-stomach loathed a battle. At that time, all that it wanted was a bird.
-To-night, if you were far away, señora, I’d take rare pleasure in doing
-moon-tricks when the moon is full. And so adieu, my sweetheart,” he
-whispered, pressing his lips to hers ere she bent down to enter her
-rude cabin. “When you hear my musket speak, you’ll know an enemy of
-yours has need of prayer.”
-
-It was not long after this that de Sancerre made good his boast,
-although Jacques Barbier began the battle of the night. The French
-count had dragged his musket and his crouching body through the long
-grass toward the eastern shore of the small island, and had taken one
-sweeping glance at the river, over which at that instant the risen moon
-had thrown a flood of silvery light, when behind him he heard the roar
-of the Canadian’s deadly gun. But de Sancerre had no time to think of
-his faithful ally at that critical moment. Almost upon a line with the
-island, and coming straight toward it, two heavily manned war-canoes
-of the sun-worshipers rose and fell upon the moon-kissed flood. The
-imminence of his peril acted upon de Sancerre like a draught of rich,
-old wine.
-
-“What reckless fools these be!” he exclaimed, taking careful aim at
-the nearest canoe, now within a hundred yards of his grass-grown
-shooting-box. “Be faithful, _ma petite_! The time has come again!”
-
-The thunder of de Sancerre’s gun chased the echoes from the musket of
-the _coureur de bois_ across the glimmering flood.
-
-“_Ma foi!_” muttered de Sancerre. “Saint Maturin is wide awake
-to-night! That bullet did its work.”
-
-Reloading his musket with all possible speed, the Frenchman, with a
-grim smile upon his face, drew a bead upon the second canoe, which
-had now forged ahead of the boat-load upon which de Sancerre’s fatal
-shot had exercised a demoralizing effect. Meanwhile, Jacques Barbier’s
-gun had spoken twice, for he had learned to reload his weapon with a
-celerity only acquired after years of practice.
-
-“Steady, now, _ma petite_,” muttered de Sancerre. “You have a record to
-maintain. _Adieu, monsieur!_”
-
-A paddle and its dusky wielder fell into the black-and-white flood, and
-a moment later the two canoes had retreated to mid-stream.
-
-“Gar, you shoot well, Monsieur le Comte!” exclaimed Jacques Barbier,
-creeping to de Sancerre’s side. “If our bullets could have children, we
-could hold this island for a year! There is no danger from the forest
-for a time; and, I think, those boats will not come near us for an hour
-at least. These be the demons from your City of the Sun?”
-
-“There is no doubt about it!” exclaimed de Sancerre. “It must amaze
-them to meet so much moon-magic, although the moon is full. What think
-you, Jacques, will be their next attempt?”
-
-“They’ll hold aloof, Monsieur le Comte, until their courage rises or
-a cloud obstructs the moon. ’Tis best, I think, that we patrol our
-fort. You pace the island to the right. I’ll meet you half-way round,
-and then return. Unless our bullets fly away too fast there is no
-danger--for this night at least.”
-
-“Think you, Jacques Barbier, they saw the maiden--Coyocop?”
-
-“Gar, ’tis certain, is it not? Their bold attack by boat and shore was
-not the outcome of a clumsy chance. They knew that she was here, and
-thought that you could not defend the island on both sides. But this is
-not the time for talk, monsieur. _Marchons!_”
-
-An hour passed by, and the island’s sentinels could find neither
-upon land nor stream sure proof that the sun-worshipers meditated an
-immediate renewal of their attack.
-
-“Tell me, señora,” cried de Sancerre, abandoning his patrol for a time
-to have speech with Doña Julia--“tell me what it means! They found two
-guns awaiting them instead of one. But they have come in force by wood
-and stream. They have no skill in war, if this is all their fight.”
-
-“Be patient, señor, they will come again,” remarked the Spanish
-maiden, unconsciously suggesting by her words the influence which de
-Sancerre’s mind held over hers. “They have concealed themselves, to
-talk of many things which worry them.”
-
-“_Par exemple?_” exclaimed de Sancerre, thrusting his hand through the
-opening to her hut, to clasp hers.
-
-“They know that I am here.”
-
-“You feel sure of that?”
-
-“Yes. But they will not return to-night--for all night long the moon
-will shine.”
-
-“_Pardieu_, I do not follow you, señora.”
-
-“’Tis clear to me,” said the girl, firmly. “Somehow, I seem to read
-their minds, as if the saints were speaking to my soul. They fear that
-your white witchery, when the moon is full, is more fatal than they had
-dreamed. They will await the rising of their god, the sun, before they
-try to capture me again. Be convinced of this: they will attack you,
-señor, just at dawn. I know their hearts and habits well enough to feel
-assured that what I say is true. They are not cowards, but they dread
-the magic of your deadly guns.”
-
-“But listen, señora. I fought them in the sunlight once before. They
-know that _ma petite_ can kill by day,” argued de Sancerre, hoping
-against hope that, for the sake of their scanty store of bullets, the
-girl was right.
-
-“Believe me, señor, that I read their evil minds. They think their
-god, the sun, more powerful at dawn than later in the day. The Great
-Spirit, so the sun-priests say, is not unlike a man, and takes a long
-_siesta_ at high noon. They have attacked you now at noon and in the
-night. They will not tempt your wizard gun again until their shining
-god is wide awake.”
-
-“_Ma foi, ma chère_, your woman’s wit has wrought a miracle, I think!”
-exclaimed de Sancerre. “I owe an altar somewhere far from hence, if
-what you say is true. And so I’ll leave you, sweetheart, for a time. I
-must have speech with Barbier.”
-
-“Welcome, monsieur,” cried the _coureur de bois_, as the Count
-approached him from behind. “I’ve watched the shore until my eyes are
-hot, and cannot see a sign of living thing. The river and the woods
-suggest that we were scared by ghosts.”
-
-“Nay, Jacques, you’ll find our foes were made of flesh and blood! They
-will return in force at dawn!” exclaimed de Sancerre, throwing himself
-upon the long grass at Barbier’s side.
-
-The _coureur de bois_ glanced at the ragged, white-faced patrician at
-his side with a satirical gleam in his restless eyes.
-
-“You’ve learned your woodcraft with great celerity, Monsieur le Comte,”
-he exclaimed, sarcastically. “Mayhap the saints have told you what
-would come to us.”
-
-De Sancerre smiled coldly. “’Tis neither woodcraft nor the saints to
-whom I owe my thanks, Jacques Barbier,” he remarked, quietly. “I am a
-seer and prophet through the goddess Coyocop. And now, young man, I’ll
-let you watch awhile, and get a wink of sleep. I’ll need a steady hand
-at dawn. Arouse me in an hour, and I will take my turn at watching
-peaceful scenes. Good-night, Jacques Barbier. Bear this in mind. We’ll
-have to fight an army when the sun comes up.”
-
-A moment later de Sancerre lay out-stretched beneath the moon in
-dreamless sleep, while the _coureur de bois_, pacing restlessly the
-little island, nursed his wounded pride, and wondered if the morning
-would teach him something new.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXIX
-
-IN WHICH THE GREAT SPIRIT COMES FROM THE SEA TO RECLAIM COYOCOP
-
-
-Coyocop’s prediction was fulfilled at dawn. The year which Doña Julia
-de Aquilar had passed in the City of the Sun had enabled her to read
-aright the minds of the sun-worshippers after their moonlit attack upon
-de Sancerre’s island had been repulsed. They had awaited the coming of
-their gleaming god, and had been rewarded by a sunrise whose splendor
-should have filled their childish souls with love and peace. But the
-mounting orb of day was greeted by its idolaters not with gentle hymns
-of praise, but with wild, warlike shouts, that echoed from the woods
-and across the flood with a grim, menacing persistence that sent a
-chill through the hearts of a maiden and her lover, and caused a
-dare-devil from the northern woods to look with care to the priming of
-his gun.
-
-For the first time since Jacques Barbier, in a fit of temper caused
-by some fancied slight put upon him by the haughty de la Salle, had
-deserted the great explorer’s party, trusting confidently to his own
-skill as a woodsman to carry him safely back to Canada, the _coureur de
-bois_ had regretted, momentarily, his reckless self-confidence. Had he
-remained with his captain, he might have been, at this time, half-way
-up the river toward the forests which he knew and loved; and here he
-was, at the dawn of a day made to give joy to a runner-of-the-woods,
-surrounded by gigantic, fierce-eyed warriors, already raising hoarse
-shouts of triumph for the easy victory which seemed to lie within their
-reach.
-
-“Gar!” exclaimed Barbier, as he raised his gun to his shoulder.
-“Service with de la Salle was hard, but ’twas easier than death. But,
-then, ’tis time for me to die. When a wandering outcast from the Court
-of France comes here to tell me what will happen in the woods--and,
-_pardieu_, he told me true--there’s nothing left in life for poor
-Jacques Barbier!”
-
-A few moments before the _coureur de bois_ had elevated his musket,
-to begin a battle against overwhelming odds, de Sancerre had said
-farewell to a heavy-eyed, pale-lipped maiden, who had spent the night
-in prayer, fearful of the peril which the dawn would bring to a brave
-knight-errant who had grown dearer to her loving heart with every day
-that had passed. Well Doña Julia knew that captivity, not death, would
-be her lot should the sun-worshippers reach the island, but that they
-would grant mercy to de Sancerre she had no hope. The thought of life
-without the man whose love had come to her as the rarest gift which
-Heaven could bestow was a horror which drove the color from her face
-and robbed her voice of everything save sobs.
-
-“Remember, sweetheart, if the worst should come to me,” said de
-Sancerre, with forced calmness, bending down to press his cold lips
-to her trembling hand, “that your brave, earnest heart has taught me
-how to live and how to die. Pray to the Virgin, who holds you in her
-care, to keep me always worthy of your love, ’though death should come
-between us for a time. Adieu, _ma chère_! God grant ’tis _au revoir_!”
-
-The girl clung to his hand, wet with her tears, and strove in vain to
-speak, to put into halting words the love and despair which filled her
-soul. For an instant her white face looked up at him from the entrance
-to the hut, and de Sancerre bent forward and kissed her hot, dry lips.
-
-A moment later he had crawled through the tall grass toward the eastern
-shore of the island and lay watching, once again, the two war-canoes of
-the black-haired, black-eyed, black-hearted savages who had turned from
-their adoration of the sun to begin anew their devil’s work. Suddenly
-a shower of feathered, reed-made arrows whizzed above the gleaming
-waves, deadly from the speed with which long acacia bows endowed them.
-
-“_Ma foi_, the sun-wasps begin to sting!” exclaimed de Sancerre.
-At that instant he heard Jacques Barbier’s gun, warning the
-sun-worshippers’ land-force not to launch a canoe from the shore
-nearest to the island.
-
-The Count and the Canadian, an hour before sunrise, had divided the
-store of bullets which remained to them, and had found that only a
-dozen shots from each musket stood between them and certain death.
-
-“I know how a miser feels as he counts his gold,” soliloquized de
-Sancerre, as he aimed his gun at the canoe, from which a broadside of
-arrows had been launched at his coigne of vantage. “Here goes number
-one, _ma petite_! There are only eleven more to defend a Count of
-Languedoc from the life to come! _Bon matin, monsieur!_”
-
-To de Sancerre’s chagrin and dismay, the brawny, brown paddler at whom
-he had aimed his musket had defied moon-magic at the dawn of day. The
-Count’s precious bullet had done no harm to the oncoming canoe, nor
-to the war-party which it held. Cold with the horrid possibilities
-opened up by his indifferent marksmanship, de Sancerre, with hands
-which trembled annoyingly, attempted to reload his gun in time to
-prevent the imminent landing of the howling bowmen. That his shot would
-have come too late the speed of the canoe made evident, when a crash,
-almost at his very ear, nearly deafened the astonished Frenchman for
-a time. Jacques Barbier, having checked momentarily by his marvellous
-skill with his musket the attack from the main-land, had come to de
-Sancerre’s defense in the nick of time. But the _coureur de bois_ paid
-dearly for the support that he had given to the unnerved Frenchman.
-An arrow, shot by a dusky warrior more daring than his companions,
-had made answer to Jacques Barbier’s fatal bullet and had entered the
-Canadian’s breast just below his dangling tobacco-pipe.
-
-“Mother Mary, that is enough!” groaned the _coureur de bois_, writhing
-upon the tousled grass by his horrified comrade’s side. “_Courage,
-Monsieur le Comte!_ Let them have your charge! I have just life enough
-left to load my gun again. Wait! Your hand trembles! _Bien!_ Fire!”
-
-De Sancerre’s musket roared once again and his bullet found its way to
-the heart of a foe.
-
-“Take my gun, monsieur,” gasped Barbier. “I made shift to load it--but,
-gar, this is death! Ugh!”
-
-A hero at the end of his short, wild life, the _coureur de bois_ lay
-dead upon the shore.
-
-At that instant the waters of the gulf and the river’s mouth vibrated
-with the thunder of an explosion which, to the ears of the startled
-sun-worshippers upon the main-land and in the crowded war-boats,
-sounded like moon-magic gone mad with victory.
-
-“_Nom de Dieu_, it is the cannon of a ship or my ears are haunted by
-Jacques Barbier’s gun!” exclaimed de Sancerre, eyeing the retreating
-canoes as he stealthily raised his head above the underbrush and then
-cast a searching glance toward the sun-kissed sea. To his amazement
-and joy, his gaze rested upon a clumsy carack, loaded deep, coming to
-anchor not half a mile below the island upon which he stood. A puff of
-smoke arose from the great ship’s bow at that moment, and again the
-astonished woods and waters reverberated with an uproar new to the
-ears of a hundred terrified warriors, who had come forth to recover a
-goddess and had been met with the awful chiding of the Great Spirit,
-who had sent a mighty vessel, larger than their wildest dreams had
-known, to carry Coyocop back again to God.
-
-With his heart throbbing with many varied emotions, de Sancerre had
-reluctantly turned his grateful eyes from the sea, no longer a lonely,
-cruel waste of tossing waves, toward the forest to the westward,
-into which the land-forces of the disorganized sun-worshippers were
-scurrying in mad fear of an avenging deity, when he felt a light hand
-upon his arm, and, turning quickly, gazed down into the dark, glowing
-eyes of a maiden whose trust in the saints had not been betrayed.
-
-“In the hut I knelt in prayer,” whispered Doña Julia, from whose face
-shone the light of a soul that had known deep sorrow and great joy,
-“when I heard my father’s voice, telling me that help was near. Oh,
-señor, the wonder of it all!”
-
-“It looks to me a miracle, indeed!” exclaimed de Sancerre. “There
-seemed to be no hope when Barbier was hit! He died, señora, the death
-of a true man.”
-
-Hand in hand, they stood for a time gazing down at the brave,
-liberty-loving runner of the woods, whose clean-cut, handsome face had
-kept its firm, symmetrical outlines through the agony of sudden death.
-
-“Give me back again my dagger, sweetheart,” said de Sancerre, turning
-sadly away from a grim picture of manly vigor cut down in its youthful
-prime. “I did Jacques Barbier a cruel wrong! He was too brave a man to
-do a coward’s deed!”
-
-[Illustration: “HE FELT A LIGHT HAND UPON HIS ARM, AND GAZED DOWN INTO
-THE DARK EYES OF THE MAIDEN”]
-
-“They’re manning a boat to come to us!” exclaimed the Frenchman a
-moment later, as he and Doña Julia turned again to gaze at the great
-carack, rising and falling upon the early morning tide. “It is a
-Spanish vessel, sweetheart!”
-
-“_Si_, señor. There is no doubt of that! I cannot read the flag she
-flies, but ’tis some Spanish merchant-man bound west for Mexico.”
-
-De Sancerre slipped an arm, covered with velvet rags, around the
-slender waist of the girl, whose sweet face had gained new beauty from
-the mighty miracle which the saints had wrought in her behalf.
-
-“They heard our guns at dawn across the sea, and saw my canvas flapping
-in the breeze,” he said, musingly. “At last, by chance, the King of
-France has done me a good turn! He owed me one, señora. My sword has
-served him well, but when it made a slip, which love itself forgave, he
-turned his face away, and left me, sweetheart, with no land to call my
-own!”
-
-Doña Julia looked up at her lover with a bright smile upon her curving
-lips, and her eloquent eyes told of a joyful heart, as she said:
-
-“If so my countrymen in yonder boat are kind enough to take us, señor,
-to the West, we’ll find a province which belongs to me. If you will
-deign to make my realm the land of your adoption, I pledge my word to
-be a gracious queen.”
-
-Falling to one knee, with the airy grace of a courtier who had never
-known the manners of the woods and wilds, de Sancerre pressed the
-girl’s hand to his smiling lips.
-
-“Here, within sight of a column bearing the arms of France and
-Navarre,” he cried, gayly, “I forswear all allegiance to other kings
-than Love, and hereby pledge my life and heart and sword to the service
-of my queen, whose hand I kiss!”
-
-The salt breeze from the playful sea, smiling beneath the bright June
-sun, brought to their ears at that moment the sound of a small boat
-scraping upon the beach, and the rumble of oars clattering against dry
-wood.
-
- * * * * *
-
-The sun was sinking toward the West, and the King’s Column, after a
-long interval of silence, spake complaining words to the Cross of
-Christ. “’Twill be more lonely for us now than heretofore,” grumbled
-the tall pillar, above which a shred of soiled canvas hung, heavy
-and limp, flapping lazily now and again against the wooden sides of
-the royal herald. “In yonder ship, whose sails resemble golden wings
-against the background of the deep, a man and maiden, seemingly most
-worthy of the blessings of this realm of mine, have taken flight and
-treated me with strange ingratitude. I marvel that they should in such
-wise spurn my royal master and the haughty arms of France.”
-
-The Cross of Christ said nothing to soothe the wounded pride of the
-pompous pillar, towering above the humble emblem of an all-conquering
-faith in the crimson light of the waning day. Mayhap the Cross had no
-time, at that sad moment, to give to happy lovers, sailing through the
-glowing twilight toward a land of peace and joy. At its base lay a
-newly-made grave, within which slept the body of a youth who had loved
-God’s world and hated the tyranny of men.
-
-
-THE END
-
-
-
-
-BY H. G. WELLS
-
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-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of With Sword and Crucifix; Being an Account of the Strange Adventures of Count Louis Sancerre, Companion of Sieur LaSalle, on the Lower Mississippi, in the Year of Grace 1682, by Edward S. Van Zile</div>
-
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-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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 <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
-are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this eBook.
-</div>
-
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: With Sword and Crucifix; Being an Account of the Strange Adventures of Count Louis Sancerre, Companion of Sieur LaSalle, on the Lower Mississippi, in the Year of Grace 1682</p>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Edward S. Van Zile</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: October 10, 2021 [eBook #66503]</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
-
-<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: D A Alexander, David E. Brown, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)</div>
-
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WITH SWORD AND CRUCIFIX; BEING AN ACCOUNT OF THE STRANGE ADVENTURES OF COUNT LOUIS SANCERRE, COMPANION OF SIEUR LASALLE, ON THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI, IN THE YEAR OF GRACE 1682 ***</div>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/cover.jpg" width="40%" alt="" /></div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_0"></span>
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_frontispiece.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="center"><span class="illoright">[Page <a href="#Page_11">11</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="caption">&#8220;&#8216;THE SWORD AND THE CRUCIFIX,&#8217; WHISPERED DE SANCERRE,<br />
-POINTING TO THE SOLDIER AND THE PRIEST&#8221;</p>
-</div>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="titlepage">
-
-<h1><small>With</small><br />
-
-Sword and Crucifix</h1>
-
-
-<p><i>Being an Account of the Strange Adventures of<br />
-Count Louis de Sancerre, Companion of Sieur<br />
-de la Salle, on the Lower Mississippi<br />
-in the Year of Grace 1682</i></p>
-
-<p>BY<br />
-
-<span class="xlarge">EDWARD S. VAN ZILE</span></p>
-
-<p>ILLUSTRATED</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_publogo.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p>NEW YORK AND LONDON<br />
-<span class="large">HARPER &amp; BROTHERS PUBLISHERS</span><br />
-1900</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="center">Copyright, 1899, by <span class="smcap">Harper</span> &amp; <span class="smcap">Brothers</span>.<br />
-<br />
-<i>All rights reserved.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_iii">[iii]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" summary="table">
-
-<tr><td class="tdr"><small>CHAPTER</small></td><td>&nbsp;</td><td class="tdr"><small>PAGE</small></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">I.</td><td> <span class="smcap">In which a Great Explorer Listens at
-Midnight to a Tale of Love</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_1"> 1</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">II.</td><td> <span class="smcap">In which de Sancerre is Confronted by a
-Mystery</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_9"> 9</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">III.</td><td> <span class="smcap">In which a Maiden Shows Her Heart</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_18"> 18</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">IV.</td><td> <span class="smcap">In which de la Salle Reaches a Fateful
-Decision</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_26"> 26</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">V.</td><td> <span class="smcap">In which a Daughter Grants a Father&#8217;s
-Wish</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_33"> 33</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">VI.</td><td> <span class="smcap">In which Juan Rodriquez Undergoes an
-Unpleasant Half-hour</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_40"> 40</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">VII.</td><td> <span class="smcap">In which Juan Rodriquez Takes His Revenge</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_49"> 49</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">VIII.</td><td> <span class="smcap">In which Satan has His Way with the
-<i>Concepcion</i></span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_58"> 58</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">IX.</td><td> <span class="smcap">In which Two Children of the Sun Astonish
-a Scoundrel</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_64"> 64</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">X.</td><td> <span class="smcap">In which the Cross is Carried to a City
-of Idolaters</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_72"> 72</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XI.</td><td> <span class="smcap">In which the Brother of the Sun Welcomes
-the Children of the Moon</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_81"> 81</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XII.</td><td> <span class="smcap">In which Chat&eacute;muc finds the Inspiration
-which He Lacked</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_92"> 92</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XIII.</td><td> <span class="smcap">In which de Sancerre Runs a Stubborn
-Race</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_103"> 103</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XIV.</td><td> <span class="smcap">In which the Results of Chat&eacute;muc&#8217;s
-Enthusiasm are Seen</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_114"> 114</a><span class="pagenum" id="Page_iv">[iv]</span></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XV.</td><td> <span class="smcap">In which the Gray Friar Dons the
-Livery of Satan</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_123"> 123</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XVI.</td><td> <span class="smcap">In which a Spirit Saves de Sancerre
-from Death</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_133"> 133</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XVII.</td><td> <span class="smcap">In which de Sancerre Breaks His Fast
-and Smiles</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_146"> 146</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XVIII.</td><td> <span class="smcap">In which de Sancerre Hears News of
-the Great Sun</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_156"> 156</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XIX.</td><td> <span class="smcap">In which Coheyogo Exhibits His Craftiness</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_167"> 167</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XX.</td><td> <span class="smcap">In which a White Robe Fails to Protect
-a Black Heart</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_181"> 181</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XXI.</td><td> <span class="smcap">In which de Sancerre Wields His
-Sword Again</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_194"> 194</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XXII.</td><td> <span class="smcap">In which the City of the Sun Enjoys
-a F&ecirc;te</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_206"> 206</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XXIII.</td><td> <span class="smcap">In which de Sancerre Undergoes Many
-Varied Emotions</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_219"> 219</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XXIV.</td><td> <span class="smcap">In which Spirits, Good and Bad, Beset
-a Wilderness</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_232"> 232</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XXV.</td><td> <span class="smcap">In which de Sancerre Weeps and
-Fights</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_242"> 242</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XXVI.</td><td> <span class="smcap">In which Do&ntilde;a Julia is Reminded of
-the Past</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_253"> 253</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XXVII.</td><td> <span class="smcap">In which St. Eustace is Kind to de
-Sancerre</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_264"> 264</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XXVIII.</td><td> <span class="smcap">In which de Sancerre&#8217;s Island is Besieged</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_277"> 277</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdr">XXIX.</td><td> <span class="smcap">In which the Great Spirit Comes from
-the Sea to Reclaim Coyocop</span></td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_290"> 290</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_v">[v]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table border="0" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="2" summary="table">
-
-<tr><td>&#8220;&#8216;THE SWORD AND THE CRUCIFIX!&#8217; WHISPERED
-DE SANCERRE, POINTING FROM
-THE SOLDIER TO THE PRIEST&#8221;</td><td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_0"> <i>Frontispiece</i></a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>&#8220;THE CAPTAIN HURLED HIM DOWN UPON
-THE DECK&#8221; </td><td class="tdr"> <i>Facing p.</i> <a href="#Page_46"> 46</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>&#8220;THE FRENCHMAN, WITH A GRAY SMILE UPON
-HIS PALLID FACE, RUSHED PAST THE
-LINE, A WINNER OF THE RACE BY TWO
-FULL YARDS&#8221; &nbsp; &nbsp;</td><td class="tdr"> <span class="gap">&#8220;</span> <a href="#Page_112"> 112</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>&#8220;COOL, MOTIONLESS, WITH UNFLINCHING EYES,
-THE FRENCHMAN STOOD WATCHING THE
-CHIEF PRIEST&#8221;</td><td class="tdr"> <span class="gap"> &#8220;</span> <a href="#Page_176"> 176</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>&#8220;A WHITE-FACED MAN PRESSING TO HIS
-BREAST A DARK-HAIRED MAIDEN&#8221;</td><td class="tdr"> <span class="gap"> &#8220;</span> <a href="#Page_238"> 238</a></td></tr>
-
-<tr><td>&#8220;HE FELT A LIGHT HAND UPON HIS ARM,
-AND GAZED DOWN INTO THE DARK EYES
-OF THE MAIDEN&#8221;</td><td class="tdr"> <span class="gap"> &#8220;</span> <a href="#Page_296"> 296</a></td></tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_1">[1]</span>
-
-<p class="ph1">WITH SWORD AND CRUCIFIX</p>
-
-
-<hr class="tiny" />
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER I<br />
-
-
-<small>IN WHICH A GREAT EXPLORER LISTENS AT MIDNIGHT<br />
-TO A TALE OF LOVE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>&#8220;<span class="smcap">Louis le Grand</span>, King of France and Navarre,
-has deserted pleasure to follow piety&mdash;and
-times are changed, monsieur.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The speaker, Louis de Sancerre, of Languedoc,
-descendant of a famous constable of France,
-leaned against a tree near the shore of a majestic
-river, and musingly watched the moonbeams as
-they chased the ripples toward an unknown sea.
-A soft, cool breeze, heavy with the odor of new-born
-flowers, caressed his pale, clear-cut face, and
-toyed with the ruffles and trappings of a costume
-more becoming at Versailles than in the mysterious
-wilderness through which its wearer had
-floated for many weeks.</p>
-
-<p>On the bank at the exiled courtier&#8217;s feet lay
-reclining the martial figure of a man, whose<span class="pagenum" id="Page_2">[2]</span>
-stern, immobile face, lofty brow, and piercing
-eyes told a tale of high resolve and stubborn
-will. Sieur de la Salle, winning his way to immortality
-through wastes of swamp and canebrake
-and the windings of a great river, had
-made his camp at a bend in the stream from
-which the outlook seemed to promise the fulfilment
-of his dearest hopes. On the crest of a low
-hill, sloping gently to the water, his followers had
-thrown up a rude fort of felled trees, and now at
-midnight the adventurous Frenchmen and their
-score of Indian allies were tasting sleep after a
-day of wearisome labor.</p>
-
-<p>De la Salle and a hapless waif from the splendid
-court of Louis XIV., more sensitive than
-their subordinates to the grandeur of the undertaking
-in which they were engaged, had felt no
-wish to slumber. They had strolled away from
-the silent camp; and, for the first time since
-Count Louis de Sancerre had joined the expedition,
-its leader had been learning something of
-the flippant, witty, reckless, debonair courtier&#8217;s
-career.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Beware the omnipresent ear of the Great
-Order, Monsieur le Comte!&#8221; exclaimed La Salle,
-rising to his elbow and searching the shadows
-behind him with questioning eyes. &#8220;Think not,
-de Sancerre, that in the treacherous quiet of this
-wilderness you may safely speak your mind. I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">[3]</span>
-have good reason to distrust the trees, the waters,
-and the roving winds. Where I go are ever
-savages or silence, but always in my ear echoes
-the stealthy footfall of the Jesuit. And this is
-well, monsieur. I seize this country in the name
-of France; the Order takes it in the name of
-God!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;In the name of God!&#8221; repeated de Sancerre,
-mockingly. &#8220;You know Versailles, monsieur?
-There is no room for God. Banished once by a
-courtesan, the Almighty now succumbs to a confessor.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Hold, monsieur!&#8221; cried La Salle, sternly.
-&#8220;This is blasphemy! Blasphemy and treason!
-But enough of priests! You tell me that you
-loved this woman from the court of Spain?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How can I say? What is love, monsieur?&#8221;
-exclaimed de Sancerre, lightly, throwing himself
-down beside his leader.</p>
-
-<p>It was as if a butterfly, born of the moonbeams,
-had come to ask a foolish riddle of the
-grim forest glades. The incarnation of all that
-was most polished, insincere, diabolical, fascinating
-at Versailles had taken the form of a handsome
-man, not quite forty years of age, who
-reclined at midnight upon the banks of an unexplored
-river, and pestered the living embodiment
-of high adventure and mighty purposes with the
-light and airy nothings of a courtier&#8217;s tongue.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">[4]</span>
-How should Sieur de la Salle know the mystery
-of love? He who had wooed hardship to win
-naught but the kiss of disappointment, he who
-had cherished no mistress save the glory of
-France, no passion but for King and Church,
-was not a source from which a flippant worldling
-could wring a definition of the word of
-words.</p>
-
-<p>The majestic silence of the night was broken
-by the raucous muttering of some restless
-dreamer within the confines of the camp. An
-owl hooted, and far away a wolf bayed at the
-moon. La Salle arose, climbed the bank to see
-that his sentries were attentive at their posts,
-and then returned to Count de Sancerre&#8217;s side.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You do not answer me, Sieur de la Salle!&#8221;
-exclaimed the latter, testily. &#8220;I have sought
-the answer from La Fontaine, from Moli&ecirc;re, Racine;
-aye, from Bossuet and F&eacute;nelon. &#8217;Twas all
-in vain. They were men, you say, and did not
-understand? But I have asked the question of
-de Montespan, la Valli&egrave;re, la Fayette, S&ecirc;vign&eacute;.
-One was witty, another silent, and all were wrong.
-There remained, of course, de Maintenon. Her
-I never asked. She would have said, I doubt
-not, that love is a priest who leads by prayer to
-power.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You wander far afield, Monsieur le Comte,&#8221;
-remarked La Salle, coldly, after an interval of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">[5]</span>
-silence. &#8220;The night grows old, and still you
-have not told me why you left the splendors
-that you love, to risk your life in this fierce
-struggle in an unknown land.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;To risk my life?&#8221; cried the Count, laughingly.
-&#8220;If that were all! To tear my velvets where
-no draper is, to see the gay-plumed birds a-laughing
-at my plight, to long in vain for powder for
-my wig, to find my buckles growing red with
-damp&mdash;all this is worse than death. But still, I
-bear it bravely, do I not? Ah, well, Turenne&mdash;God
-rest his soul!&mdash;taught me the lessons of a
-hard campaign. What is this voyage in a bark
-canoe upon the peaceful breast of yonder stream?
-A pleasure-jaunt, monsieur, to one who fought
-with France against the world&mdash;who sheathed
-his sword at Nimeguen. Once only were we
-beaten, de la Salle. The Dutch let in the sea,
-and, lo! his Majesty and Luxembourg, Turenne
-and Cond&eacute;, Vauban and the rest, were powerless
-against the mighty ally of the foe. I say to you,
-Monsieur le Capitaine, beware the sea! You
-seek it in your quest. &#8217;Tis full of treachery.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The Count had arisen and drawn his sword,
-which gleamed in the moonlight as he turned
-its point toward the unknown mouth the roving
-river sought.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;This blade,&#8221; he said, reseating himself and
-patting the steel with affection, &#8220;flashed gayly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">[6]</span>
-for the King upon the Rhine. Alas for me, it
-drove me at the last to seek my fortunes in a
-weary land.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You drew it, then, for something other than
-the cause of France?&#8221; remarked La Salle, suspiciously.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;For that of which we spoke, which no tongue
-voices but all hearts have felt. I drew it once
-for love&mdash;<i>et voil&agrave; tout</i>!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You killed a Spaniard, then?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They speak the truth, monsieur, who say your
-mind is quick. She&mdash;as I told you&mdash;came to
-France with Spain&#8217;s great embassy. He, a strutting
-grandee, proud and bigoted, came with the
-suite, holding some post that made his person
-safe. The tool of diplomats, the pet of priests,
-my rival&mdash;as he was&mdash;defied my hate. &#8217;Tis said
-they were betrothed, Don Josef and&mdash; But hold!
-her name I need not speak.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The Count remained silent for a time, watching
-the moon-kissed waters at his feet. La Salle,
-grim, reticent, but not unsympathetic, gazed steadfastly
-at his companion&#8217;s delicately-carved face.
-A stern knight-errant, who sought to win an empire
-for his king, lay wasting the midnight hours
-to listen to a love-tale from a flippant tongue.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8217;Twas with this blade,&#8221; went on de Sancerre
-after a time, waving his sword from side to side
-in the moonlight, &#8220;that I pierced his heart&mdash;and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">[7]</span>
-broke my own. For which all praise be to Saint
-Maturin, who watches over fools.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He was no coward, then?&#8221; questioned La
-Salle.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not when his pride was pricked,&#8221; answered
-de Sancerre. &#8220;Great wars have been begun with
-less diplomacy than I employed to make my insult
-drive him to his steel. But, Spanish blood
-is hot, and, truth to tell, my tongue can cut and
-thrust. Her eyes were on us at a <i>f&ecirc;te champ&ecirc;tre</i>
-when, standing by his side, I spoke the words
-that made him mine at midnight&mdash;&#8217;neath a
-moon like this. There&#8217;s little left to tell. He
-knew a Spanish trick or two, but, monsieur, he
-was a boy! In the moonlight there his eyes
-were so like hers I lost all pity&mdash;and&mdash;so&mdash;he
-died.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And then?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And then I vowed a candle to St. Christopher
-and sailed across the sea. Breathe it not, monsieur&mdash;I
-bore a letter from de Montespan to
-Frontenac.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then cut your tongue out ere you tell the
-tale,&#8221; exclaimed La Salle, gruffly. After a moment&#8217;s
-silence he went on, more gently: &#8220;But,
-Monsieur le Comte, I cannot understand the ease
-of your escape. You&#8217;ve roused the anger of the
-King, de Maintenon, the Jesuits, and Spain.
-Such foes could crush an empire in a day.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">[8]</span>&#8220;But you yourself, monsieur, have stood against
-them all.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I?&#8221; exclaimed La Salle, musingly. &#8220;You
-may be right, my friend. I sometimes wonder
-if my life is charmed. Whom can I trust, monsieur?
-Allies false when the hour of danger
-came, assassins at my bedside, and poison in my
-food&mdash;all these I&#8217;ve known, monsieur. And still
-I live.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The two adventurers had arisen and were facing
-each other in the moonlight. La Salle, tall,
-commanding&mdash;a king by the divine right of a
-dauntless soul&mdash;stood, with head uncovered, looking
-down at the slender, graceful patrician confronting
-him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You strive for France, Sieur de la Salle,&#8221; exclaimed
-de Sancerre, the mocking note gone from
-his voice&mdash;&#8220;for the glory of dear France&mdash;and
-France will not destroy you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;For France!&#8221; repeated La Salle, solemnly.
-&#8220;For France and for the Church! <i>Vive le
-Roi!</i>&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Silently they turned and, mounting the hillock,
-made their way toward the sleeping camp,
-while the Mississippi rolled on beneath the moon
-to tell a strange tale to the listening waters of
-the gulf.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">[9]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER II<br />
-
-
-<small>IN WHICH DE SANCERRE IS CONFRONTED BY A<br />
-MYSTERY</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Like</span> a statue done in bronze stood Chat&eacute;muc
-before a hastily-constructed hut at the rear of
-the log fort in which the rank and file of the explorers
-lay sleeping. La Salle had chosen the
-sentry as his special body-guard, for at many a
-critical juncture in his long years of exploration&mdash;menaced
-at all times, as he had been, by a
-thousand lurking perils&mdash;the daring Frenchman
-had tested the loyalty and courage of this stalwart
-Mohican, who, for love of a white man, had
-wandered many weary miles from his tribal hunting-grounds.</p>
-
-<p>Within the rude but spacious hut over which
-the phlegmatic Indian stood guard lay sleeping,
-as La Salle and de Sancerre entered the enclosure,
-two men who had found rest upon heaps
-of leaves and grass, and whose strangely-contrasted
-outlines, emphasized by the errant moonbeams
-that penetrated the chinks between the
-logs, called attention to the curious mixture of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">[10]</span>
-unrelated nationalities of which La Salle&#8217;s expedition
-was made up. In one corner of the hut
-reclined the slender form of the Franciscan friar,
-Zenobe Membr&eacute;. Upon his placid, smiling face&mdash;a
-countenance suggestive of religious enthusiasm
-even while he slept&mdash;rested a ray of silvery
-light, as if the prayer that he had uttered ere
-he fell asleep had transformed itself into a halo to
-glorify his pillow through the night. His thin
-hands were crossed upon his breast, and showed
-white and transparent against the gray background
-of his garb.</p>
-
-<p>Within the shadows at an opposite corner of
-the apartment lay the lithe, muscular figure of
-a man whose costume made it difficult for the
-observer to determine whether the wearer was a
-foot-soldier from the Low Countries or a Canadian
-<i>coureur de bois</i>. The truth was that Henri
-de Tonti&#8217;s experiences as an Italian officer in the
-Sicilian wars had left their impress upon his attire
-as an explorer under de la Salle. As he
-lay, fully dressed, in the moonlight that night
-he might well have been a sculptor&#8217;s dream, representing
-in his outlines the martial genius of
-the Old World, bringing &#8220;not peace but a sword&#8221;
-to the New. A bare hand rested lovingly upon the
-cross-piece of his rapier, which he had unfastened
-from his waist and tossed upon the dry grass of his
-couch. His other hand was covered by a glove.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">[11]</span>
-tempting beds of leaves, La Salle and de Sancerre
-stood side by side in the centre of the
-hut for a moment, gazing thoughtfully at the
-weird tableau that their slumbering comrades
-made.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The sword and crucifix!&#8221; whispered de Sancerre,
-pointing from the soldier to the priest.
-&#8220;Strange allies these, monsieur.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But one without the other were in vain!
-They serve together by the will of God. Good-night,
-Monsieur le Comte.&#8221;</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>How long de Sancerre had slept before he
-was awakened by a light touch upon his shoulder
-he never knew. It must have been a considerable
-time, for, as he opened his reluctant
-eyes, he saw that the moonlight no longer
-gleamed in all quarters of the hut, but dimly illumined
-only one corner thereof. Inured though
-he was to perils of all kinds, the Count felt
-a thrill of dismay as his eyes rested upon a hideous,
-grinning face leering at him from the
-shadows close at hand. He sat up hurriedly,
-uttering no sound, but fumbling in the leaves
-and grass for his rapier. A glance assured him
-that his comrades had been undisturbed by the
-intruder at his side.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Be not afraid, se&ntilde;or,&#8221; whispered a voice in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">[12]</span>
-broken Spanish. &#8220;The children of the moon
-have naught to fear from us.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>De Sancerre, to whom Spanish was like a native
-tongue, raised himself upon his elbow and
-gazed searchingly at the misshapen hag who had
-disturbed his sleep.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I crave your pardon,&#8221; he murmured, with
-the air of a courtier addressing a coquette in the
-Salon de Venus, while the mocking smile that
-his face so often wore gleamed in the half-light.
-&#8220;Then I am of the children of the moon?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;At night ye come from out the shadows of
-the distant lands, ye white-faced offspring of your
-Queen, the Moon. The Sun, our God, has told us
-you would come. Be not afraid. We have rare
-gifts for you&mdash;and loving hearts.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The harsh, guttural voice in which the aged
-crone spoke these gentle words added to the uncanny
-effect of her wrinkled, time-marked face,
-peering at the smiling Frenchman through the
-gloom.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I bring you this,&#8221; she went on, still speaking
-in a mongrel Spanish patois, which de Sancerre
-found it difficult to interpret. &#8220;Remember what
-I say. The children of the sun send greeting to
-their brothers of the moon.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She laid upon the dried grass of his bed a piece
-of white mulberry bark, upon which de Sancerre&#8217;s
-eyes rested indifferently for an instant.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">[13]</span>
-When he raised them again the hag had left his
-side, and he saw her pushing her way through
-an opening in the tree-limbs at the further end
-of the hut. For an instant her diminutive body
-stopped the gap in the wooden wall. Then, from
-where he lay, the Frenchman could catch a
-glimpse of moonbeams on the river through the
-opening that she had made.</p>
-
-<p>For a moment this strange visitation affected
-de Sancerre unpleasantly. Surrounded, as their
-little party was, by unknown tribes with whom
-the wily Spaniards had had intercourse, the
-words of the old crone, cordial though they had
-been in their way, filled the Count with alarm.
-Furthermore, the ease with which she had made
-an undiscovered entrance to their hut emphasized
-the disquiet that he had begun to feel. Thorough
-soldier as he was, this seemingly harmless invasion
-of his leader&#8217;s quarters became to his
-mind a more menacing episode the more he
-weighed it in all its bearings.</p>
-
-<p>Rising noiselessly from his resting-place, de
-Sancerre made his way between his sleeping
-comrades to the entrance to the hut. Stepping
-forth into the white night, he confronted Chat&eacute;muc,
-who still stood motionless in the same spot
-that he had occupied when La Salle and his
-companion had returned from the river. The
-Mohican, from long service with the explorer, had<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">[14]</span>
-acquired a practical knowledge of the French
-tongue, but, as a general rule, he made use of it
-only in monosyllables.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Chat&eacute;muc,&#8221; said de Sancerre, sternly, &#8220;your
-eyes are heavy with the moonlight or with sleep.
-You keep indifferent guard. Did you not see
-an aged witch who even now stood within the
-hut and roused me from my sleep?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The tall Mohican gazed down upon the Frenchman
-with keen, searching eyes, which glowed at
-that moment with a fire that proved him innocent
-either of treason or stupidity. His stern,
-immobile face gave no indication of the astonishment
-which the Frenchman&#8217;s accusation must
-have caused him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There&#8217;s nothing stirring but the river and
-the leaves,&#8221; said Chat&eacute;muc, with grim emphasis,
-turning his shapely head slowly to sweep the
-landscape in all directions with eyes for which
-the forest had no mysteries.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Ma foi</i>, my Chat&eacute;muc! You&#8217;re as proud
-and stubborn as de Groot, the Hollander. But
-follow me. I&#8217;ll show you a hole that proves
-I dreamed no dream.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>De Sancerre, behind whom stalked the stately
-Mohican, made his way hurriedly to the further
-side of the hut. Pointing to an opening between
-the logs, through which a small boy might have
-crawled, the Count said:</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">[15]</span>&#8220;Behold, monsieur, the yawning chasm in your
-reputation as a sentry! &#8217;Twould not admit an
-army, but it might serve for a snake.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Chat&eacute;muc had fallen upon his knees, and was
-examining the aperture and the trampled grass
-which led to it. Presently he arose and turned
-towards the Count.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A woman,&#8221; he muttered. &#8220;Small. Light.
-Old.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Fine woodcraft, Chat&eacute;muc! You read the
-blazonry that crossed the drawbridge with great
-skill&mdash;after the castle has been captured. But
-let it pass. No harm&#8217;s been done, save that your
-pride has had a fall. And so I leave you to
-your watch again. If you loved me, Chat&eacute;muc,
-you&#8217;d keep old women from my midnight couch.
-I fear my sleep is lost.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Stealing noiselessly past the motionless forms
-of La Salle, the friar, and the Italian captain,
-after his successful demonstration of Chat&eacute;muc&#8217;s
-negligence as a sentinel, de Sancerre approached
-his tumbled bed of leaves with weary step. A
-feeling of depression, a sudden realization of the
-horrid possibilities that his environment suggested,
-a sensation of impotent rebellion at the
-fate that had hurled him from the very centre
-of seventeenth-century civilization into the rude
-embrace of a horror-haunted wilderness, came
-suddenly upon the vivacious Frenchman, mocking<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">[16]</span>
-at his stoical views of life and making of the
-satirical tendency of his mind a knife with which
-to cut himself.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Nom de Dieu!</i>&#8221; he muttered, as he gazed
-down upon the dry grass and leaves of his uninviting
-couch, &#8220;these be fine lodgings for a Count
-of Languedoc! At the worst, with Turenne,
-there was always Versailles at our rear.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>At that instant his heavy eyes lighted upon
-the slip of white bark which his recent caller had
-left with him as a token of good-will. De Sancerre
-bent down and, grasping the seemingly
-meaningless gift, gazed at it inquiringly. To
-his amazement, he made out in the darkness
-what seemed to him to be a bit of writing,
-scratched with a pointed instrument upon this
-fragment from a mulberry bush. Hastily, stealthily,
-making his way to the opening through
-which the donor of the gift had forced her exit,
-the Count leaned forward, and in the moonlight
-read, with wondering eyes, the name:</p>
-
-<p class="center"><i>Julia de Aquilar</i></p>
-
-<p>It was the name of the woman for love of
-whom he had killed a Spaniard and lost his native
-land. Instantly his mind harked back to the
-confession that, but an hour or so before, he had
-poured into the ears of Sieur de la Salle. Had
-an eavesdropper overheard his words, and, in a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">[17]</span>
-spirit of mischief, sought to tease him by a trick?
-He rejected the supposition at once, for the conviction
-came upon him, increasing a thousandfold
-the consternation which he felt, that he had deliberately
-refrained from mentioning the name
-of his inamorata to La Salle.</p>
-
-<p>De Sancerre drew himself erect and stood motionless
-for a moment, the most amazed and
-startled being in all the strange new world.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">[18]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER III<br />
-
-
-<small>IN WHICH A MAIDEN SHOWS HER HEART</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Sieur de la Salle&#8217;s</span> temporary stockade had
-been erected upon the western bank of the great
-river, and his followers had received with delight
-the report that their leader had decided to
-indulge in a few days of recuperation before continuing
-his journey to the gulf. After weeks of
-labor at the paddles, the canoemen were in sore
-need of rest. The party consisted of twenty-three
-Frenchmen, eighteen Indians&mdash;Abenakis
-and Mohicans&mdash;ten squaws, and three pappooses.
-Discontent and even open grumbling had already
-developed in this incongruous assemblage, and it
-was only the stern, imperious personality of de
-la Salle that had saved the expedition from falling
-asunder through the inherent antagonisms of
-the elements of which it was composed.</p>
-
-<p>But upon the morning following the Count de
-Sancerre&#8217;s receipt of an inexplicable gift from
-the children of the sun there reigned an air of
-gayety in the camp. Provisions were plentiful,
-the terminus of the exploration, it was rumored,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">[19]</span>
-was near at hand, and, for the next few days, at
-least, no exhausting task, no menacing danger
-seemed likely to annoy the adventurers. The
-glories of early spring upon the lower Mississippi
-met their wondering and grateful eyes. In his
-delight the Frenchman carolled forth a <i>chanson</i>
-to greet the rising sun, while his phlegmatic
-comrade, the native American, grunted with satisfaction
-as he reclined upon the long grass and
-appeared to muse indolently upon the strange
-vivacity of the men from over-sea.</p>
-
-<p>Shortly after dawn de Sancerre, pale, heavy-eyed,
-restless, weary of his vain efforts to gain a
-dreamless sleep, had wandered away from the
-camp and thrown himself listlessly down upon
-the gently sloping shore of the river, across
-whose ripples flashed the gleaming arrows of
-the April sun. As he lay there, reclining against
-a slender tree-trunk, the last few hours seemed
-to him to have been a long nightmare, through
-which the mocking black eyes of a woman of
-wondrous beauty had taunted him for his helplessness.</p>
-
-<p>As de Sancerre, refreshed by the cool breeze
-that chased the sunbeams across the flood, recalled
-every detail of his recent adventure, he
-found himself confronted not only by a mystery,
-but by a choice between two courses of action
-which must be made at once. Should he tell his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">[20]</span>
-comrades of the strange episode that had disturbed
-his rest, or should he keep the secret to
-himself, trusting to Chat&eacute;muc&#8217;s pride and reticence
-to repress the story of the night? In a
-certain sense he was under obligations to de la
-Salle to keep him informed of every happening
-which, even remotely, might affect the welfare
-of the expedition. On the other hand, there was
-that in his leader&#8217;s personality which caused de
-Sancerre to hesitate before telling him a tale
-which, he reflected, would sound like the ravings
-of a lunatic. He could picture the cold, disdainful
-glance in de la Salle&#8217;s searching eye ere he
-turned upon his heel with the curt remark that
-the Count de Sancerre&#8217;s dreams should test the
-friar&#8217;s skill.</p>
-
-<p>To the Count, thus vexed by a most disturbing
-problem, came Katonah, sister of Chat&eacute;muc, the
-only Indian maiden in Sieur de la Salle&#8217;s strangely-assorted
-suite. With the most punctilious
-courtesy de Sancerre sprang erect, removed from
-his head his travel-worn but still picturesque
-bonnet, and, making a sweeping bow, pointed to
-the grass-grown seat that he had just vacated.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mademoiselle Katonah, I bid you welcome!
-I was dreaming, <i>petite</i>, of the land across the
-sea. Your eyes and smile shall change my
-mood again.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The Indian girl gazed at the Frenchman with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">[21]</span>
-dark, fearless eyes, in which there gleamed a
-light that told the courtier a tale he had no
-wish to learn. Not that the Count was better
-than his age, more scrupulous than the pleasure-loving
-court in which his youth had been passed,
-but in the freer, nobler atmosphere of this brave
-New World, and in the companionship of men
-striving in the midst of peril to do great deeds,
-all that was most admirable in de Sancerre&#8217;s
-character had been born anew, and, to his own
-amazement, he had learned that his views of life
-had undergone a change, that there had grown
-up something in his soul which gave the lie to
-his scoffing tongue, still from habit the tongue of
-a <i>mondain</i> fashioned in an evil school.</p>
-
-<p>Katonah, reclining against the tree and gazing
-upward at the Frenchman, formed a deep-toned
-picture becoming to that land of hazy sunlight,
-drowzy zephyrs, and opening flowers, bright-hued
-and redolent of spring. Her dark eyes,
-clear-cut features, and white, even teeth, her
-slender, supple limbs, satisfied even the exacting
-eye of a man who had looked with admiration
-upon La Valli&egrave;re, de Montespan, de Maintenon.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The land across the sea!&#8221; exclaimed Katonah,
-waving a slender, well-turned hand toward the
-opposite shore of the great river. &#8220;You would
-go back to it?&#8221; She had learned the French
-tongue from her brother, Chat&eacute;muc.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">[22]</span>Her eloquent eyes rested questioningly upon
-the pallid, symmetrical face of de Sancerre.</p>
-
-<p>The barbaric directness of her question brought
-a smile to the Frenchman&#8217;s lips as he threw
-himself down by her side and took her hand in
-his.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mayhap some day I shall go back, <i>ma petite</i>.
-But at this moment I have no wish to go.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>De Sancerre was looking at Katonah, but in
-his mind was the picture of a scrap of white
-bark upon which had been scrawled the name of
-the only woman his heart had ever loved. Perhaps
-Katonah weighed his words at their real
-worth, for she withdrew her hand from his,
-while her gentle eyes rested mournfully upon
-the mighty river upon whose bosom she had
-learned the joy and sorrow of a hopeless love.</p>
-
-<p>De Sancerre, whose delicately-moulded face,
-graceful figure, ready wit, and quick perceptions,
-added to high birth and a reputation for physical
-courage, had made him a favorite at a voluptuous
-court, felt a mixture of self-satisfaction and annoyance
-at the unsought homage that he had
-won from this handsome savage. No coquette
-at Versailles could have put into artful words
-the flattery that Katonah gave him by a glance.
-But de Sancerre realized that, under existing
-circumstances, her devotion to him might involve
-them both in serious peril. Her brother, Chat&eacute;muc,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">[23]</span>
-was a sentry whose eyes and ears would
-not always be blind and deaf to what was stirring
-besides the river and the leaves.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Katonah,&#8221; said the Count, presently, &#8220;let me
-tell you why I may never go back to the land
-beyond the sea.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The Indian girl gazed up at him with earnest
-attention.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;To the great wigwam of the king who rules
-all kings there came a maiden from a distant
-land. Her eyes were like the night, her hair the
-color of a raven&#8217;s wing.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>De Sancerre met Katonah&#8217;s eyes and remained
-silent for a time. There was something in her
-glance that chilled him for the moment with an
-inexplicable foreboding. Annoyed at his weakness,
-he went on:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All men loved her, <i>ma petite</i>, and so it was
-not strange that I&mdash; <i>Mais n&#8217;importe.</i> Among
-the braves, Katonah, who followed in her train
-was a youth with evil eye, a black, soft-footed,
-proud, and boastful man, to whom her word was
-sworn.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You killed him, then,&#8221; said Katonah, with
-conviction.</p>
-
-<p>De Sancerre started nervously and gazed
-around him searchingly. There was an uncanny
-precipitancy in Katonah&#8217;s mental methods
-which affected him unpleasantly.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">[24]</span>&#8220;Yes,&#8221; he acknowledged. &#8220;I killed him,
-Katonah.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And the maiden with the raven hair? You
-carried her away?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, Katonah. I came across the sea and
-left her there.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The eyes of the Mohican wore a puzzled expression
-as she tried to read his face.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I do not understand,&#8221; she murmured, presently.</p>
-
-<p>De Sancerre remained silent for a while. He
-realized that, with the limited vocabulary at his
-disposal, he could not make the Indian girl comprehend
-the exigencies which, in a civilized land,
-might arise to drive a lover from his loved one&#8217;s
-side. The mind of the savage maiden was unfitted
-to grasp those finer distinctions which
-made the habits and customs at Versailles so
-superior to the methods and manners prevailing
-among her Mohican kindred. Presently the expatriated
-courtier said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Katonah, let me tell you a strange tale.
-Your brother kept guard last night between the
-river and our hut. But while we slept an aged
-woman crept up beside my bed and gave me this.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>De Sancerre removed from his breast the piece
-of mulberry bark upon which rested the name of
-Julia de Aquilar. Katonah gazed at the writing
-awe-struck.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">[25]</span>&#8220;It is the name,&#8221; said the Frenchman, in answer
-to her glance, &#8220;of the woman with the raven
-hair.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The Indian girl, with marvellous grace and
-agility, sprang to her feet. Motionless she stood
-for a moment looking down at de Sancerre.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;She followed you across the sea?&#8221; she asked,
-in a dull, passionless voice.</p>
-
-<p>De Sancerre smiled as he slipped the bark
-into his doublet and rose to a standing posture.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That could not be, Katonah,&#8221; he said, lightly.
-&#8220;I think some wizard, making medicine,
-has read her name upon my heart.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>More he might have said, but at that instant
-Chat&eacute;muc, with stormy brow, stood beside them.
-Not glancing at the Frenchman, his angry gaze
-rested upon the shrinking figure of Katonah.
-With an imperious gesture he pointed towards
-the camp, and, as the girl hurried away in obedience
-to her brother&#8217;s silent behest, de Sancerre
-threw himself wearily upon the bank, a mocking
-light gleaming in his eyes as he turned and
-watched the retreating Mohicans until they were
-lost to sight behind the osier-trees.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">[26]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IV<br />
-
-
-<small>IN WHICH DE LA SALLE REACHES A FATEFUL<br />
-DECISION</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>&#8220;<span class="smcap">I have</span> heard it said that the good Father le
-Jeune, the Jesuit, not speaking Algonquin, was
-obliged to expound the mysteries of the faith to
-the Montagnais through the aid of a blasphemous
-backslider, far gone in liquor. This tool of Satan
-put vile words into the mouth of the Jesuit,
-so that the Montagnais laughed mockingly while
-le Jeune fondly thought that he was explaining
-to them the doctrine of the Trinity.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Henri de Tonti, Zenobe Membr&eacute;, and Sieur de
-la Salle had joined the Count de Sancerre, after
-the departure of Chat&eacute;muc and Katonah, and
-the quartet had formed itself for the time being
-into a council, to answer at once an insistent and
-momentous question. Two white-robed envoys,
-carrying a disk of burnished copper to represent
-the sun, had entered La Salle&#8217;s hut an hour before
-this, bringing to him an invitation to visit,
-with his followers, the city of their chief. Henri
-de Tonti, enthusiastic lay proselyter though he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">[27]</span>
-was, had taken the ground that an expedition to
-the haunts of the sun-worshippers would result
-in nothing more valuable than a waste of time
-and energy, while it might involve the party in
-unforeseen dangers. To check the enthusiasm
-of the Franciscan friar, who longed to convert
-these friendly idolaters to the true faith, de
-Tonti had just been calling the attention of the
-council to the difficulties besetting a missionary
-who attempted to explain the teachings of
-Mother Church in a tongue with which he was
-not thoroughly conversant.</p>
-
-<p>The slender, white-faced friar, whose great
-physical endurance was suggested by nothing in
-his outward seeming but the clear, steady gleam
-in his large gray eyes, turned, rather impatiently,
-from the Italian adventurer and put forth an
-appealing palm towards Sieur de la Salle, who lay
-at full length upon the bank, his head resting
-upon his upturned hand, as he listened attentively
-to the debate between the soldier and the
-priest.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There is much efficacy in signs, monsieur,&#8221;
-exclaimed Membr&eacute;, with fervor. &#8220;Could I have
-led a thousand redmen to a knowledge of the
-truth had I always waited for an alien tongue?
-When all seemed lost, when their ears were
-deaf, when my prayers and hymns were but the
-feeble strivings of a voice they would not heed,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">[28]</span>
-has come a miracle, vouchsafed by Jesus Christ,
-and howling savages have fallen prone in penitence
-before the cross. I ask not much of you,
-monsieur, but in the name of Mother Church I
-crave an escort to these children of the sun. To
-pass them by, to leave them hopeless in their
-blind idolatry, to say no word to bring them to
-the faith&mdash;Mother of God, but this would be a
-sin!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The delicate face of the Franciscan glowed
-with the fervor of his soul. He had drawn himself
-up to his full height, and his rich, penetrating
-voice echoed weirdly across the gleaming
-waters of the flood.</p>
-
-<p>De la Salle put up his hand with a gesture
-seemingly intended to calm the exuberance of
-the devoted priest. Turning to de Sancerre,
-who was seated on his right, he said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What think you, Monsieur le Comte? Shall
-we risk a visit to these children of the sun?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Mais oui, monsieur.</i> There is no other
-course. If they should take offence at our neglect&mdash;<i>ma
-foi</i>, it might go hard with us.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A scornful smile played across de Tonti&#8217;s
-scarred and rugged face. He was annoyed at
-his failure to prevent the delay which this apparently
-useless visit to a pagan tribe would engender.
-De Sancerre observed the satirical expression
-upon the Italian&#8217;s countenance, but<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">[29]</span>
-wisely refrained from giving voice to the anger
-which he felt at the sight. Between de Tonti
-and de Sancerre a national antagonism had been
-intensified by the jealousy existing between them
-regarding the attitude of their leader. The evident
-fondness shown by de la Salle for the companionship
-of the itinerant French nobleman
-had displeased the Italian veteran, whose long
-years of devotion to the explorer&#8217;s service had
-begotten a claim to special consideration. In
-more highly civilized surroundings the friction
-between de Tonti and de Sancerre would long
-ago have found relief in bloodshed. One striking
-difference between Versailles and the wilderness
-lay in the fact that in the latter greater
-provocation was needed to impel men to run
-each other through with steel than in the parks
-in which gay courtiers insulted one another with
-soft words.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Furthermore, monsieur,&#8221; went on de Sancerre,
-observing that his words had not impelled
-de la Salle to come to an immediate decision regarding
-the question at issue&mdash;&#8220;furthermore,
-there may be a way to find an interpreter through
-whom these lost idolaters shall learn the teachings
-of our faith.&#8221; If there sounded a note of
-insincerity in the Frenchman&#8217;s voice, none marked
-it save de Tonti, whose smile was always satirical
-when de Sancerre touched upon the Church.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">[30]</span>&#8220;Your words, Monsieur le Comte, mean much
-or nothing. Explain yourself,&#8221; said de la Salle,
-coldly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Did you notice at the further end of yonder
-hut a hole through which a good-sized dog might
-crawl?&#8221; asked de Sancerre, impressively, arising
-and pointing toward the camp.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Sieur de la Salle has eyes for everything,
-Monsieur le Comte,&#8221; remarked de Tonti, tauntingly.</p>
-
-<p>Paying no attention to his rival, de Sancerre
-went on:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Through that hole last night there crept into
-the hut an aged hag, who, coming to my side,
-gave us a welcome from the children of the sun.
-They call us&mdash;as you know&mdash;the children of the
-moon.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>De la Salle, calm, phlegmatic, but ever on the
-alert, gazed searchingly at the speaker.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Your tale is somewhat late, monsieur,&#8221; he
-remarked, meaningly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I feared the gossip of an idle camp,&#8221; said
-de Sancerre, lightly, carelessly tossing a pebble
-into the rippling waters at his feet. &#8220;The matter&#8217;s
-not of moment but for this: the old crone
-spoke a Spanish <i>patois</i>, hard to understand, but
-not impossible. Her tongue, I think, might serve
-our friar well.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A Spanish <i>patois</i>?&#8221; repeated de la Salle,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_31">[31]</span>
-musingly. &#8220;&#8217;Tis well you spoke of this, Monsieur
-le Comte. I told the keen-eyed Colbert that
-there was no time to lose. Below, around us lie
-the lands of gold, and stretched across them rests
-the arm of Spain. The time has come when we
-must lop it off.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>De la Salle had arisen and, with his hand upon
-the hilt of his sword, gazed toward the waters
-which flowed toward a Spanish sea. He looked,
-for the moment, the very incarnation of the martial
-spirit of an adventurous age, bidding defiance
-to a mighty foe. Suddenly he turned and eyed
-his followers sternly. In a voice which admitted
-of no reply, he said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;De Tonti, de Sancerre, and Membr&eacute;, prepare
-to set out at once to these people of the sun.
-I&#8217;ll give you presents for their chiefs and wives.
-Send Chat&eacute;muc to me. He shall go with you,
-and his sister&mdash;Katonah, is it not? She&#8217;ll find
-the woman with the Spanish tongue where you,
-as men, might fail.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But,&#8221; exclaimed de Sancerre, springing to
-his feet, &#8220;there may be peril for the girl in this.
-&#8217;Tis best we go alone.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am amazed, Monsieur le Comte,&#8221; remarked
-La Salle, sternly. &#8220;Obey my orders! &#8217;Tis
-not for you to question what I plan. Whatever
-comes of this, the blame shall rest with
-me.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_32">[32]</span>De Tonti, Membr&eacute;, and de Sancerre had turned
-to make their way hurriedly back to the camp.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;De Sancerre,&#8221; called La Salle, ere they had
-gone beyond ear-shot. The French nobleman
-returned hurriedly to his leader&#8217;s side.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There is no danger to Katonah in all this,&#8221;
-said La Salle, meaningly, his eyes reading de
-Sancerre&#8217;s face. &#8220;No harm can come to her, for
-Chat&eacute;muc is ever by her side. No nobleman in
-Spain or France is prouder, de Sancerre, than
-Chat&eacute;muc. You understand me?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Ma foi</i>, I am not dull, monsieur!&#8221; exclaimed
-the Count, a note of anger in his voice. Then
-he turned on his heel and strode rapidly toward
-the camp.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">[33]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V<br />
-
-
-<small>IN WHICH A DAUGHTER GRANTS A FATHER&#8217;S WISH</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Late</span> in the afternoon of a day in April, just
-one year before the date of the occurrences recorded
-in the foregoing chapters of this tale, Don
-Rodrigo de Aquilar, statesman, soldier, scholar,
-devout Catholic, sat at a curiously-carved table in
-the library of his ancestral house in the street of
-Las Palmas, Seville. His gray hair and pointed
-beard, his keen, dark eyes and lofty brow, the
-simple elegance of his attire, and the artistic
-luxury of his surroundings combined to form a
-striking picture in the half-lights of the waning
-day. Upon the table before him lay pompous
-tomes, quaint old manuscripts, and several crude
-maps and charts.</p>
-
-<p>Copies of the letters of Menendez to Philip II.
-of Spain, made by Don Rodrigo in the archives
-of Seville; a transcript of the bull &#8220;by the authority
-whereof Pope Alexander, the sixth of
-that name, gave and granted to the Kings of
-Castile and their successors the regions and
-islands found in the west ocean sea by the navigations<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">[34]</span>
-of the Spaniards:&#8221; a reproduction of a
-map of the western world, dedicated to Sir Philip
-Sidney by Michael Lok; a volume entitled <i>Hakluyt&#8217;s
-Divers Voyages</i>, hot with hatred of the
-Spanish, and other misleading data concerning a
-misunderstood continent confronted the Castilian
-aristocrat, and by their united efforts cast upon
-him a spell which had brought to his thin cheeks
-a hectic flush, and to his haughty lips lines of
-determination.</p>
-
-<p>It was, however, with a much later manuscript
-than any one of those above mentioned that Don
-Rodrigo was engaged at the moment of which
-we write. Bending eagerly forward from a
-quaintly-cut, high-backed chair, the aged Spaniard
-was scanning attentively a parchment upon
-which a recent explorer, with artistic tendencies,
-had inscribed a pictorial outline of his discoveries.
-Ports, harbors, islands, and rivers competed for
-the attention of the observer with rudely outlined
-birds, beasts, and fishes. Indians feasting and
-dancing, Indians flogged by priests. Indians burning
-alive for heresy, gave grim testimony to the
-fact that the eccentric cartographer had witnessed
-sympathetically the saving of souls in the
-New World. It was not upon these, however,
-nor upon the chameleon with two legs confronting
-a bat-winged griffin having the tail of an alligator&mdash;a
-weird product, according to the map-maker,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">[35]</span>
-of Mexico&mdash;that Don Rodrigo de Aquilar
-was squandering the retreating light of day.
-His eyes and mind rested upon a sketch representing
-a group of Indians working silver
-mines.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Methinks, Juan, the venture&#8217;s worth the risk.
-Were it not for Do&ntilde;a Julia, I&#8217;d slip my anchor
-of old age and sail across the sea. I have no mind
-to place the King&#8217;s gift in an agent&#8217;s hands, to
-let him rob the Mexicans and me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Don Rodrigo had leaned back in his chair, and
-was gazing across the disordered table at a pale,
-dark-eyed youth, attired in black velvet, whose
-thin, nervous hand had been making a copy of
-letters-patent from Charles of Spain to his
-Majesty&#8217;s &#8220;dear beloved son in Christ, Don Rodrigo
-de Aquilar.&#8221; Juan Rodriquez, secretary to
-Don Rodrigo, was a lineal descendant of a <i>marinero</i>
-of Seville who had returned safely to his
-native city after circumnavigating the globe with
-Magellan. Of this same <i>marinero</i> it had been
-written that he was &#8220;energetic, courageous, but
-marvellous unprincipled.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have heard Do&ntilde;a Julia say, se&ntilde;or,&#8221; remarked
-Juan in a softly modulated voice&mdash;&#8220;I
-have heard her say, within the last few days,
-that she would be glad to see those strange
-lands over-sea, where palaces are made of gold
-and pearls grow upon the trees.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">[36]</span>A grim smile played across the haughty countenance
-of the old statesman.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;An idle whim begot of idle tales, young man!
-But were I sure that sufferings and danger would
-not beset our ship, I&#8217;d take the girl and look
-upon my grant before I die. &#8217;Twill be her heritage
-at last. But, look you, Juan! These blind
-cartographers have dealt in fancies tempting
-men to death. Somewhere beneath the soil of
-yonder fatal land lie my two sons&mdash;and in my
-death a famous name must die. And I am old.
-They&#8217;d say at court, should I set sail from here,
-that his Majesty&#8217;s rich gifts had made me mad
-at last.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>There was silence at the table for a time. Don
-Rodrigo reclined in his chair and watched the
-changing lights and shadows of the waning day
-as they emphasized the sombre beauty of the
-room. Presently he said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve made the footings, Juan? A hundred
-thousand ducats will cover everything?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And leave a handsome margin, se&ntilde;or,&#8221; answered
-the secretary, referring to a parchment
-upon which daintily-executed rows of figures had
-been inscribed. &#8220;As times go, se&ntilde;or, the vessel
-costs you but a song.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Don Rodrigo eyed Juan Rodriquez searchingly.
-His secretary&#8217;s apparent eagerness for the
-venture mystified him. Diplomatist, educated<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">[37]</span>
-in a crafty school, the old Spaniard had never
-lost sight of the advantages to be gained at times
-by frank directness.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are urging me to take this step, Juan.
-Let me ask you why?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The pale face of the youth had turned yellow
-in the twilight. His dark, shifty eyes refused to
-meet his master&#8217;s insistent gaze. His thin hand
-drummed nervously on the dry, rattling parchment
-in front of him as he said, with an attempt
-at candor which did not ring true:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I believe, se&ntilde;or, that it would be well for
-Do&ntilde;a Julia, and for you, to leave Seville for a
-time. She mourns Don Josef&mdash;does she not?
-And you, Don Rodrigo, have won a triumph
-in diplomacy that frees you for a while from
-public life. The voyage now is not so fraught
-with danger as of old, nor is there peril when
-you reach New Spain. More than one fair lady
-of Seville has been across and back for love of
-Mother Church. And, as I said, the marvels of
-the sea might serve to turn your daughter&#8217;s
-mind from thoughts of her betrothed.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Don Rodrigo gazed earnestly at the eager face
-of his secretary.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You believe, then, Juan, that Do&ntilde;a Julia&#8217;s
-heart was broken when Don Josef fell, run
-through by the Frenchman&#8217;s sword? You think
-she loved him?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">[38]</span>&#8220;Nay, se&ntilde;or, such thoughts are not for me,&#8221;
-answered Juan, in a voice that resembled the
-purring of a cat. &#8220;But this I see&mdash;that since you
-returned from France her eyes are heavy and
-her cheeks are pale. The songs she used to sing
-we hear no more. She&#8217;s fading like a flower
-which craves the sun. Give her, se&ntilde;or, new
-aims, new scenes, the splendors of the sea, the
-marvels of New Spain, and once again her eyes
-and smile will be as sunny as they were of old.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;re wise beyond your years, young man,&#8221;
-remarked the old diplomat, playfully. &#8220;Mayhap,
-my Juan, you know a charm to make me
-young again. Or perhaps you can find the
-island of Bimini and the fountain of eternal
-youth which bold de Leon sought. But, hark,
-I hear her step! We&#8217;ll lay the venture, in all its
-bare simplicity, before her, and do as she decides.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>As Don Rodrigo ceased speaking there entered
-the library a dark-haired, large-eyed, graceful
-girl, who glided from the shadows of the twilight
-toward the centre of the room, and stood
-motionless at the lower end of the long table.
-A belated sunbeam, stealing through the distant
-window, caressed her face for a moment, upon
-which a sad smile rested as her eyes met her
-father&#8217;s.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You disobey his Majesty&#8217;s behest, Don Rodrigo<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">[39]</span>
-de Aquilar!&#8221; she exclaimed, playfully, pointing
-toward the books and maps before her. &#8220;Did
-not the King command you to take a well-earned
-rest, my father?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But his Majesty has never ordered me to sit
-here and die,&#8221; remarked Don Rodrigo, emphatically.
-&#8220;Be seated, Julia. You come to us at a
-most opportune moment. For my services in
-France his Majesty has granted me fair lands
-across the sea. Mines rich in silver belong to
-me by virtue of this seal. The question is, my
-daughter, will you go with me to view my province
-in New Spain?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Juan Rodriquez, who had arisen upon Do&ntilde;a
-Julia&#8217;s entrance, stood watching the girl with
-stealthy eyes, in which there gleamed a light not
-there before. There was silence in the room for a
-moment. Then Julia, looking Don Rodrigo fearlessly
-in the face, said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I will go with you gladly, father. Seville has
-stifled me. But place no faith upon my changing
-whims. If we&#8217;re to go, then let us sail at
-once.&#8221;</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">[40]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VI<br />
-
-
-<small>IN WHICH JUAN RODRIQUEZ UNDERGOES AN UNPLEASANT<br />
-HALF-HOUR</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">In</span> the year 1681 the fickle Guadalquivir still
-pursued a liberal policy toward Seville and
-vouchsafed sufficient water to that port to enable
-sea-going vessels to begin or end their voyages
-within sight of the Alcazar. Later on, the
-Spanish sailors were forced, by the treachery
-of the famous river, to abandon Seville and betake
-themselves to Cadiz for an ocean harborage.</p>
-
-<p>At the time, however, at which Don Rodrigo
-de Aquilar fitted out the <i>Concepcion</i>&mdash;a high-pooped
-vessel of ninety tons burden&mdash;for his
-voyage to the silver mines bestowed upon him
-by Charles II. of Spain, the harbor at Seville
-enabled the aged diplomat to equip his ship
-without leaving his library. By giving his orders
-to his secretary, Juan Rodriquez, who carried
-them to Gomez Hernandez, captain of the
-<i>Concepcion</i>, Don Rodrigo was relieved of the
-friction which in those days frequently soured<span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">[41]</span>
-an adventurer&#8217;s disposition even before he had
-put to sea.</p>
-
-<p>The necessity for haste, lest the veering winds
-of Do&ntilde;a Julia&#8217;s fickle fancy should at the last
-moment balk her father&#8217;s enterprise, had been
-impressed upon Juan Rodriquez, who needed no
-hint from Don Rodrigo to make him a gadfly
-to the captain of the <i>Concepcion</i>. Long before
-he weighed anchor, Gomez Hernandez had sworn
-by his favorite saint that if the opportunity ever
-came to him to put the white-faced, soft-voiced
-secretary into irons, he would show him no pity.
-That the perilous voyage before them might furnish
-him with the means for punishing Juan&#8217;s
-insolence the captain well knew. Let the <i>Concepcion</i>
-toss the Canaries well astern, and for
-many weeks Gomez Hernandez would be autocrat
-in a little kingdom of his own.</p>
-
-<p>Do&ntilde;a Julia&#8217;s cabin was, as it were, the hawser
-which held the clumsy little ship to her moorings.
-A stuffy room between decks, it seemed
-cruel to ask a maiden used to the luxury of
-Seville, Madrid and Paris to spend weeks within
-its irritating confines. Don Rodrigo had devoted
-great energy and ingenuity to the task of
-making his daughter&#8217;s quarters aboard ship less
-repulsive than they had at first seemed. Rugs
-from the Orient, a hammock made of padded
-silk, jars of sweetmeats from Turkey, a priceless<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">[42]</span>
-oil-painting of the Virgin Mary, and other
-quaintly contrasted offshoots of a fond father&#8217;s
-anxious care combined to make Do&ntilde;a Julia&#8217;s
-cabin a compartment whose luxury was ludicrous
-and whose discomfort was pathetic.</p>
-
-<p>Had Don Rodrigo de Aquilar better understood
-the peculiarities of his daughter&#8217;s disposition,
-he would have spent less time in making
-of her cabin a medi&aelig;val curiosity-shop, and
-would have weighed anchor a week sooner than
-he did&mdash;thus gaining a span of time which would
-have begotten across the sea a radical difference
-in the outcome of his expedition. Something of
-this found its way into the mind of the aged
-Spaniard after the <i>Concepcion</i> had cleared the
-mouth of the Guadalquivir and was standing
-out to sea. Beside him upon the poop-deck stood
-Julia, her dark eyes gleaming with excitement
-as they swept the tumbling sea or glanced upward
-at the bulging sails which drove the awkward
-craft haltingly across the deep. She had
-paid little or no attention to the cabin which had
-taxed Don Rodrigo&#8217;s ingenuity, Juan&#8217;s patience,
-and Captain Hernandez&#8217;s temper for a month; but
-the flush in her cheeks and the smile upon
-her lips, as she watched the waters sweeping
-the Old World away from her, gladdened her
-father&#8217;s heart as he scanned her changing face.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The sea is kind to us. See yonder rainbow<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">[43]</span>
-&#8217;gainst the purple east! An omen such as that
-is worth a candle to St. Christopher.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The soft, insistent voice of Juan Rodriquez
-broke in upon the musings of the grandee and
-his daughter.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8217;Tis not so strange the saints should wish us
-well,&#8221; remarked Don Rodrigo, removing a black
-velvet cap from his head to let the sea-wind play
-with his white locks. &#8220;We go to serve the work
-of Mother Church. To tell the heathen of Mary
-and her Son, to raise the cross where blood-soaked
-idols stand, to fight the devil with the
-Book and prayer.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And, then&mdash;to work the mines,&#8221; put in Juan
-gently.</p>
-
-<p>Do&ntilde;a Julia turned quickly and flashed an angry
-glance at the soft-tongued secretary. She
-had noticed, with annoyance, a change in Juan&#8217;s
-manner since the ship had steered for the open
-sea. In a way that defied explanation in words,
-the young man had carried himself for the
-past few hours as if, upon the deck of a ship, he
-had found himself upon an equality with his
-master. There was an elusive sarcasm in his
-words at times, a defiant gleam in his restless
-eyes, a mocking note in his voice, which the girl
-noted with an inexplicable feeling of foreboding.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Aye&mdash;to work the mines,&#8221; repeated Don
-Rodrigo, unsuspiciously. &#8220;Why not? &#8217;Tis nigh<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">[44]</span>
-two centuries since treasures from New Spain
-came over-sea. And for their paltry gold we&#8217;ve
-given them the cross. For every ducat gained
-by Spain, a soul&#8217;s been won for heaven. Harsh
-measures with the stubborn&mdash;these, of course.
-&#8217;Tis thus the Church must win its way on earth.
-The fight is not yet done. Upon the border of
-the lands I own the good Dominicans have built
-a mission-house. On you, my daughter, will devolve
-the task to raise a great cathedral where the
-friars dwell. I&#8217;ll dig the silver from the ground
-for you, and mayhap from my place in paradise
-the saints will give me eyes to see the glory of
-your deeds. May Mother Mary will it so!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The old man&#8217;s eyes were upturned in fervor
-toward the changing glories of the evening sky.
-The excitement of the embarkation, the enlivening
-influence of the stiff, salt breeze, and the
-mysterious promises held out to him by that seductive
-West toward which his vessel plunged
-had stirred the blood in the aged Spaniard&#8217;s veins,
-and emphasized at the same moment both his
-religious enthusiasm and his earthly ambitions.</p>
-
-<p>Do&ntilde;a Julia was on the point of commenting
-upon her father&#8217;s words when there sprang
-to the deck from below a slender, active man
-who, ashore, would have looked like a sailor, but
-aboard ship resembled a soldier. Gomez Hernandez,
-captain of the <i>Concepcion</i>, was the very<span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">[45]</span>
-incarnation of that dauntless spirit which had,
-within the lapse of two centuries, carried the
-arms of Castile and Aragon to the farthest quarters
-of an astonished globe. Bright, dark eyes,
-a cruel mouth, a small, agile, muscular frame,
-and a manner proud or cringing as occasion dictated,
-combined to make of Gomez Hernandez a
-typical Spanish seaman of the seventeenth century.
-Saluting Don Rodrigo de Aquilar respectfully
-the captain said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;May I trouble you, se&ntilde;or, to join me in my
-cabin for a while? I have matters to lay before
-you which brook no delay.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Hernandez&#8217;s words were addressed to the diplomat,
-but his piercing eyes rested as he spoke
-upon the face of Juan Rodriquez. The secretary,
-even paler than his wont was, gazed across
-the sea toward the horizon from which the
-shades of night had begun to creep.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Await me here, Julia,&#8221; said Don Rodrigo,
-cheerfully, turning to follow the captain to the
-lower deck. &#8220;I will return to you at once. Lead
-on, my captain. You&#8217;ll find I am not mutinous,
-no matter what you ask.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>In another moment Do&ntilde;a Julia and Juan Rodriquez
-stood alone upon the poop. The secretary
-turned from his contemplation of the sea and his
-restless eyes fell full upon the disturbed face of
-the girl, a face of marvellous beauty in the half-lights<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">[46]</span>
-of the fading day. There was silence between
-them for a time. The creaking of timbers,
-the complaining of the cordage, the angry splash
-of the disturbed sea, and from the bow the subdued
-notes of an evening hymn, sung by devout
-sailors, reached their ears.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Se&ntilde;ora,&#8221; said Juan, moving toward Do&ntilde;a
-Julia, &#8220;I have much to say to you&mdash;and there
-is little time. If my words to you should seem
-abrupt, the blame lies with my tongue, not with
-my heart. If that could speak, you&#8217;d find me
-eloquent indeed. I&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>With an imperious gesture, Do&ntilde;a Julia checked
-his speech. Her symmetrical, somewhat voluptuous,
-mouth was curved at that moment in a
-smile of disdain.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Spare me&mdash;and spare yourself, Juan Rodriquez,&#8221;
-she said, coldly, turning her back to the
-sea and facing squarely the youth, whose eyes
-met hers with a glance of crafty defiance not
-unmingled with an admiration that filled her
-with loathing. &#8220;You say more only at your peril.
-I&#8217;ll forgive you your presumption&mdash;once. But
-take good heed of what I say. If you address me
-in such words again, it shall go hard with you.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A grayish pallor overspread Juan&#8217;s face in the
-twilight. A cruel smile played across his thin
-lips, and his hand grasped a railing at his side as
-if it would crush the stubborn wood.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_046.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="caption">&#8220;THE CAPTAIN HURLED HIM DOWN UPON THE DECK&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">[47]</span>&#8220;You threaten me, Do&ntilde;a Julia de Aquilar,&#8221;
-he murmured, showing his teeth in an evil smile.
-&#8220;You know not what you do. See how our ship
-is driving toward the murky blackness of the
-West. Think you I shall be powerless beyond?
-I say to you, se&ntilde;ora, that you, your father, and
-all you hold most dear, are in the grasp of Juan
-Rodriquez&mdash;your servant in Seville, your master
-in New Spain.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He had seized the girl&#8217;s wrist and was gazing
-into her white face with vindictive, hungry eyes.
-She wrenched her arm free from his repellent
-grasp, and, drawing herself up to her full height,
-gazed haughtily at the boastful youth.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What mad fancies there may be in your
-mind, Juan Rodriquez, I cannot guess. But this
-I know: if I should breathe a word of what
-you&#8217;ve said into my father&#8217;s ears, you&#8217;d lie a
-prisoner between the decks. And he shall know
-of this, unless you swear to me to leave me to myself,
-to speak no word to me, to keep your eyes
-from off my face, my name from off your lips.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The threatening smile upon Juan&#8217;s mobile face
-had changed to a spiteful grin while the girl was
-speaking.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Your love for Don Rodrigo would be weak,
-indeed, should you, se&ntilde;ora, speak a word of this.
-I tell you, Do&ntilde;a Julia, your father&#8217;s in my grasp.
-I&#8217;ll show him mercy&mdash;but I make my terms with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">[48]</span>
-you. &#8217;Tis no mad fancy, nor an idle boast,&#8221; went
-on Juan, making a significant gesture toward
-the slashed velvet upon his breast, &#8220;which you
-have heard from me. I know my power. If
-you are wise, you&#8217;ll take my word for this.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>There was a calm, convincing note in Juan&#8217;s
-voice that froze the rising anger in Do&ntilde;a Julia&#8217;s
-veins. She knew the crafty nature of the man
-too well to believe that he would thus threaten
-her unless he had gained possession of some
-weapon for the working of great mischief. In
-mute dismay she stood for a moment gazing
-helplessly at the gray, grim waters which seemed
-to yawn in hunger for the tossing ship. Suddenly
-she felt an arm around her waist, and turning
-quickly found the flushed face of the youth
-pressed close to hers. An exclamation of mingled
-disgust, anger, and fear escaped her.</p>
-
-<p>At that instant the strong, nervous hand of
-Gomez Hernandez seized Juan Rodriquez by the
-neck. With an ease which his slight figure rendered
-marvellous, the captain twisted the youth
-like a plaything in his grasp, and then hurled
-him, full length, prone upon the deck.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I crave your pardon, se&ntilde;ora,&#8221; said Hernandez,
-with cool politeness, bowing low to Do&ntilde;a
-Julia, &#8220;but Don Rodrigo requests your presence
-in his cabin.&#8221;</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">[49]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VII<br />
-
-
-<small>IN WHICH JUAN RODRIQUEZ TAKES HIS REVENGE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> voyage of the <i>Concepcion</i>, thus inauspiciously
-begun, continued with fair weather upon
-the sea and squalls threatening aboard the ship.
-Do&ntilde;a Julia spent much time in her oddly-equipped
-cabin; Don Rodrigo, impatient of delay, fretted
-at the tedium of the passage and paced the poop
-restlessly for hours at a time. Between Juan
-Rodriquez and Captain Hernandez a sullen truce
-was maintained for several weeks succeeding the
-incident recorded at the end of the foregoing
-chapter. But Juan had neither forgotten nor
-forgiven the insult which he had received at the
-hands of the relentless navigator. He awaited,
-with the patience of a crafty schemer, an opportunity
-to avenge himself upon the man who had
-turned his melodramatic declaration of love into
-an undignified farce.</p>
-
-<p>A Carmelite friar, who had begged passage to
-Hispaniola from Don Rodrigo, discovered, after
-a time, a radical change in the disposition manifested
-by the heterogeneous crew toward his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">[50]</span>
-white frock and all that it represented. In so
-far as the discipline of Captain Hernandez permitted
-open grumbling, the sailors grew outspoken
-in their protests. The good priest, who
-had found the crew devoted to their beads at the
-outset of the voyage, was unable, as the weeks
-went by, to persuade the sailors to put their
-grievance into words. Nor was he able to keep
-them at their prayers or to lead their voices in
-quaint old Latin hymns. There was in the ship
-a mysterious, elusive influence which had convinced
-the impressionable, superstitious seamen
-that the vessel was accursed and that somebody
-aboard ship, being in league with Satan, was able
-to nullify the effects of their religious observances.
-Thus it was that the sweet-faced Carmelite
-labored in vain to restore before the mast the
-devout atmosphere which had prevailed among
-the crew while the coast of Spain still lay but a
-few miles astern.</p>
-
-<p>Matters grew worse aboard the <i>Concepcion</i>
-after the white friar had been put ashore at the
-Indies and the clumsy vessel had begun to beat
-up the Gulf of Mexico against baffling head-winds.
-The sailors whispered to each other that
-the desertion of the Carmelite had left the Prince
-of Darkness in full control of the ship. To a
-crew composed in large part of Spanish desperadoes,
-with a sprinkling of Portuguese cutthroats,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">[51]</span>
-it was not easy to restore an atmosphere of religious
-fervor after it had once been destroyed by
-evil tongues. Experienced as he was in the
-fickleness of the half-savage sailors who in those
-adventurous days manned the omnipresent ships
-of Spain, Captain Hernandez witnessed with
-grave concern the gradual abandonment by his
-crew of its religious attitude and the increasing
-tendency of the sailors to imply, either by word
-or manner, that Mary and the saints had abandoned
-the ship to a cruel fate.</p>
-
-<p>To Julia de Aquilar the voyage had become a
-seemingly interminable imprisonment. The elation
-which she had felt at the outset of the cruise
-had never returned to her after the depressing
-episode which had aroused in Juan Rodriquez a
-deadly hatred for the captain of the ship. The
-girl had caught the gleam of murder in the secretary&#8217;s
-eyes as he lay out-stretched upon the
-deck gazing upward at Gomez Hernandez, and
-in her cabin, as she tossed restlessly in her hammock,
-her mind grew sick with a foreboding
-which waxed more insistent as the weary days
-and nights crept by. Now and then she would
-climb the clumsy ladder to walk the deck for
-a while, but the dread of finding herself again
-alone with Juan Rodriquez made her shy of this
-diversion. Don Rodrigo, whose spirits rose
-higher the nearer the ship approached the land<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">[52]</span>
-in which his silver lay concealed, would enter
-her stuffy cabin&mdash;a hole between decks hardly
-worthy of the name&mdash;to rally her upon her indifference
-to the splendors of the sea and the
-polychromatic beauties of the islands on their
-bow. Upon her father&#8217;s departure, the tears,
-held back while he was by her side, would dim the
-lustre of her splendid eyes, and her white, slender
-hands would rise in supplication to the smiling
-Virgin who looked down upon her from the
-slanting wooden wall above her head.</p>
-
-<p>Why had she, to whom the Old World offered
-all its sweetest gifts, become a voluntary exile,
-a hopeless maiden weeping in a corner of a vagrant
-ship? Ever with her through those weary
-weeks this question craved an answer. Ever
-from the past arose the gorgeous pictures of her
-former life, a life of courtly splendor where the
-world was gay. In the dark watches of the
-night, Do&ntilde;a Julia de Aquilar, half dozing, half
-awake, would tread again the stately mazes of a
-contre-dance or smile demurely upon a powdered
-and bejewelled cavalier. She would hear again
-the merry, mocking voices of Versailles or the
-stately tones of Spanish gentlemen. Suddenly
-the lurching of the ship would rouse her from
-her waking dream, and, putting up a hand, as if
-defying fate, she would touch the wooden walls
-of her voluntary cell, walls that seemed to be<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">[53]</span>
-bearing down upon her with the weight of
-worlds, crushing out the color from her cheeks,
-the light from her eyes, the joy of youth from
-her rebellious soul.</p>
-
-<p>But, waking or sleeping, one face was always
-gazing at her from the past, a face which seemed
-to laugh in courteous derision at her plight. &#8220;I
-slew Don Josef&mdash;your betrothed,&#8221; the haunting
-vision seemed to say, while upon the clear-cut
-countenance which memory photographed the
-girl could see the gay and mocking smile of one
-who knew the world too well. Her betrothed?
-Though dead, she hated him. Caprice and vanity
-had forged for her the chains that had
-made her, at Versailles, a captive, longing to be
-free. And when her freedom came, when the
-sword of him whose vibrant voice she could hear
-above the creaking and groaning of the ship had
-severed forever the bonds which tied her to an
-unloved man, her liberty was nothing worth,
-taking its revenge upon her for her former negligence
-by coming back too late. She had learned,
-through the gossip of a chattering court, that he
-who had cut down her betrothed had fled across
-the sea. Never again would she look upon de
-Sancerre&#8217;s face, nor hear a voice which, while it
-mocked at love, had thrilled her heart of hearts.
-The years in passing would leave to her a memory&mdash;and
-nothing more.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">[54]</span>What mattered it, then, whether she passed
-her weary span of life in the city of Seville or in
-the strange environment toward which the ship
-plunged on? In either case, the romance of her
-youth was dead. That the strange chances of existence
-would ever bring Louis de Sancerre again
-to her side, Julia de Aquilar never dreamed. Even
-in the prayers that she offered day and night to
-the Virgin Mother above her head she had never
-voiced a longing which, put into words, would
-have sounded to her ears like the incipient ravings
-of insanity. Her betrothed and the man whom
-she had begun to love had both passed from her
-life at the same moment, and through the gloom
-of night there came to Do&ntilde;a Julia no ray of hope
-save from the gentle radiance of Mother Church.
-The veil, and its promise of perfect peace, grew
-constantly more alluring to her distraught soul,
-as week crept into week and the very timbers of
-the ship cried ever louder against the cruel persistence
-of the lonely sea.</p>
-
-<p>From a dreamless sleep&mdash;a rare blessing vouchsafed
-by Mother Mary&mdash;Do&ntilde;a Julia awoke one
-night with a start and sat upright in her hammock,
-peering into the darkness with straining
-eyes. What had disturbed her slumber she did
-not at first know. But above her head echoed
-the shuffling sounds of hurrying feet, and the
-flapping of canvas as the ship came about in a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">[55]</span>
-stiff breeze. Leaping down from her hammock
-and throwing a long, black cape over her shoulders,
-she groped her way to the entrance to
-her cabin and threw open the clumsy door. A
-swinging lantern lighted the hatchway, and, almost
-before her eyes had grown accustomed to
-the sudden glare, above her head sounded the
-grewsome cry of &#8220;Man overboard!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>At that instant down the ladder in front of the
-trembling girl crept the slinking figure of Juan
-Rodriquez. For a fleeting moment Do&ntilde;a Julia
-caught a glimpse of the youth&#8217;s pallid face, upon
-which there rested an evil smile made up of fear,
-cruelty, and triumph. Believing himself unobserved,
-Juan stood for a moment at the foot of
-the ladder looking upward toward the deck and
-listening intently to the uproar above his head.
-Then, with a subdued chuckle, which sent a chill
-through the heart of the motionless girl, he stole
-into the shadows toward his berth amidships.</p>
-
-<p>The harsh cries of the panic-stricken sailors
-filled the night with a horrid din. The Spanish
-maiden, undecided whether to climb to the deck
-or to return to her hammock, crossed herself devoutly
-and murmured a prayer to St. Christopher,
-who watches over seamen and protects the faithful
-from night alarms. The mischievous lantern,
-vibrating wildly as the ship took the seas broadside
-on, threw lights and shadows across the disturbed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">[56]</span>
-face of the girl, and seemed to rejoice at
-its chance to add to the uncanny features of her
-surroundings.</p>
-
-<p>The turmoil on the deck decreased as the moments
-passed, but Do&ntilde;a Julia still stood waiting,
-listening, praying; chafing at inaction, but distrustful
-of the night beyond the hatchway. To
-her, thus agitated, came her father down the ladder,
-his worn figure bent as if it carried a great
-burden. He turned and faced her, and as the
-playful lantern swung toward them she saw that
-his face was ghastly pale, and that his thin hand
-trembled as he wiped the sea-spray from his furrowed
-brow.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What is it, father?&#8221; asked the girl, springing
-toward Don Rodrigo and placing both hands
-upon his shoulders as she peered into his white
-face.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Captain Hernandez,&#8221; muttered the old man,
-in a voice that told the story of his despair&mdash;&#8220;he
-fell into the sea. None saw him in the blackness
-of the night, but far astern the helmsman
-heard a cry&mdash;and that was all! God rest his
-soul!&#8221; he groaned, crossing himself. &#8220;It will go
-hard with us, I fear.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But, father&mdash;Mother Mary, pray for him!&mdash;the
-voyage nears its end. Captain Hernandez&mdash;the
-saints receive him!&mdash;had with him men who
-know these seas?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">[57]</span>&#8220;I trust them not,&#8221; murmured the old man,
-wearily. Then, as if he regretted the admission
-he had made, he bent and kissed the anxious
-face of his daughter and said, with an effort at
-cheerfulness, &#8220;But fear not, Julia. All will yet
-be well. I&#8217;ve vowed an altar to St. James of
-Compostella, whose blessing rests on pilgrims of
-the faith. But how to calm the crew I hardly
-know. The sailors seem nigh mad with fear.
-They say that Satan is aboard the ship.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Alas, I think he is,&#8221; murmured Julia to herself,
-as she returned to her cabin and threw herself
-despondently upon her swinging bed. That
-she had solved by chance the awful secret of the
-captain&#8217;s death, she could not for a moment
-doubt.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">[58]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER VIII<br />
-
-
-<small>IN WHICH SATAN HAS HIS WAY WITH THE<br />
-<i>CONCEPCION</i></small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Dawn</span> crept sullenly across the heaving bosom
-of the gulf, as if disaffected by the night&#8217;s dark
-deed. The sun gazed for a moment upon a ship
-accursed, then hid its light behind black, evil-looking
-clouds. From the east and south came
-winds that smote the sea and dug deep valleys
-in the briny waste. Then, where the valleys
-gaped, great hills of water rose and wet the air,
-and chased each other toward the wind-made
-chasms just beyond. Losing their temper in their
-wild career, the boisterous blasts let forth an
-angry roar and lashed the waters viciously. Before
-the dawn could take the name of day, a
-mighty battle raged between the gale and gulf.</p>
-
-<p>The command of the <i>Concepcion</i> had fallen to
-Miquel Sanchez, a veteran seaman, but unskilled
-in the nicer points of navigation. Knowing the
-treacherous nature of the waters through which
-his ship was reeling, uncertain of his course, and
-depending for aid upon a sullen, superstitious<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">[59]</span>
-crew, already persuaded that the vessel had been
-doomed to destruction, the outlook seemed menacing,
-wellnigh hopeless, to the new master of the
-<i>Concepcion</i>, as he paced his narrow deck at dawn,
-and hoarsely shouted orders for the taking in of
-sail. The ship, showing her keel to the yawning
-chasms in the sea, rushed affrighted under bare
-poles through the welter toward the west. As
-the storm increased in fury, the panic of the crew
-grew less controllable. Even the helmsman strove
-to tell his beads when the eyes of Sanchez turned
-to scan the sky; and, broken by the howling
-blasts, the noise of prayers and curses echoed
-from the decks. The desperate sailors knew the
-sea too well to hug the hope that such a ship as
-theirs could foil the fury of the storm. Had not
-a priest deserted them? Had not their captain
-perished in the waves? Who doubted Satan&#8217;s
-presence on the ship would be too dull to die!</p>
-
-<p>Don Rodrigo de Aquilar had made his way
-with much effort to Do&ntilde;a Julia&#8217;s cabin, and had
-found her on her knees before the painting of
-the Virgin, praying for a miracle that should
-snatch the vessel from its certain doom. The
-girl&#8217;s face, above which raven-black locks were
-coiled in picturesque disorder, was white from
-the imminence of their peril, while her soft, dark
-eyes gleamed with the fervor of her supplication.
-As she arose to greet her father, the hand which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">[60]</span>
-she slipped into his was cold, but trembled not.
-If the fear of death lurked in her heart, it was
-only by the pallor of her cheek its presence could
-be known. Her eyes were steady and her lips
-were firm as she stood there reading her father&#8217;s
-haggard face to find, if so the saints decreed, a
-gleam of hope to cheer her soul.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;God&#8217;s mercy on us all!&#8221; muttered the old
-Spaniard, pressing his daughter&#8217;s hand to his
-breast. &#8220;This Sanchez is as stubborn as a Moor!
-He will not change his helm! I am no seaman,
-but I&#8217;ve sat with poor Hernandez many an hour
-and conned the chart of this same sea we sail.
-But yesternoon he made a reckoning. If the sun
-spake sooth, upon the course we hold we&#8217;ll dash
-to pieces &#8217;gainst a curving coast. I told this sullen
-Sanchez what I knew, but, &#8217;though he crossed
-himself, he gave no heed to me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Do&ntilde;a Julia&#8217;s arm, showing white as marble
-against the black cloak hanging from his shoulders,
-was thrown around her father&#8217;s neck. Kissing
-his pallid cheek, she said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have no love of life; no fear of death! To
-die with you, my father&mdash;will it be so hard?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;To die without confession&mdash;that is hard!&#8221; exclaimed
-Don Rodrigo, despondently. &#8220;I begged
-the Carmelite to stay with us; but, still, he gave
-me absolution ere he left. And if I perish, &#8217;tis
-for Mother Church! But listen, Julia! I am<span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">[61]</span>
-old and worn. A few years more or less are little
-worth. But you are young. You must not die,
-my child! If I had lured you to an ocean grave,
-I&#8217;m sure my soul would find no peace in Paradise.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Do&ntilde;a Julia had seated herself upon the edge
-of her uneasy hammock, and was looking down
-at her father, who had attempted to maintain an
-upright posture upon the treacherous surface of
-a sea-chest fastened by clamps to the cabin floor.
-Suddenly the old Spaniard arose and stumbled
-to the hatchway.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Juan!&#8221; he cried, striving to cast his voice
-amidships in spite of the howling of the gale, the
-ominous thumping of the loosened ballast, the
-cries of frantic sailors, and the thunder of the
-seas as they pounded vengefully against the frail
-timbers of the ship. &#8220;Juan Rodriquez, come
-aft at once! Juan! Juan!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A hand, cold as ice, was clapped upon the old
-man&#8217;s white and trembling lips.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Father, I implore you, do not summon him,&#8221;
-prayed Julia, striving to drag the aged Spaniard
-back into her cabin. &#8220;He cannot serve you
-now. For Mother Mary&#8217;s sake, I beg of you to
-leave him to his prayers. He has sore need of
-them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Her protest came too late. In the dim, gray
-light of the hatchway the girl caught sight of a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">[62]</span>
-face which even in that awful hour wore an inscrutable,
-evil smile, as if the diabolical spirit of
-the storm had rejoiced the soul of Juan Rodriquez.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We&#8217;re driving fast, Juan, upon an unknown
-coast,&#8221; said Don Rodrigo, coolly, a detaining arm
-thrown around his daughter&#8217;s waist. &#8220;You&#8217;re
-lithe and muscular, and come of fearless stock.
-I&#8217;ve seen you in the water at Seville.&#8221; At this
-moment the increasing uproar aboard ship compelled
-the old man to raise his thin voice to
-a shout. Drawing from his breast a package
-wrapped in oil-skin, he thrust it toward the out-stretched
-hand of his secretary. &#8220;Here is my
-patent from the King of Spain. &#8217;Twill serve as
-Julia&#8217;s title to the mines&mdash;to the greater glory of
-our Mother Church! And, for the sake of heathen
-souls beyond, your arm, my Juan, must save
-my daughter from these hungry seas. I say to
-you&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Father, as you love me, as you hope for Paradise,
-put no trust in this man&#8217;s loyalty! If
-you must die, I do not care to live. A thousand
-deaths were better than a life saved
-by a&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>At that instant a crash, as if the storm had
-served as usher to the crack of doom, drove the
-word she would have uttered back upon her
-tongue. Don Rodrigo&#8217;s white head was turned<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">[63]</span>
-to crimson by its impact with an iron-jointed
-beam, and, plunging forward, he lay dead beside
-his daughter&#8217;s feet. Do&ntilde;a Julia tottered forward
-a step or two, and then fell swooning into Juan&#8217;s
-arms.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">[64]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER IX<br />
-
-
-<small>IN WHICH TWO CHILDREN OF THE SUN ASTONISH A<br />
-SCOUNDREL</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Before</span> the day was ended the winds and
-waves had signed a truce, but on the beach, far
-to the westward of the Mississippi&#8217;s mouth, lay
-ghastly trophies of their recent war. In a vain
-effort to propitiate the demon of the storm&mdash;according
-to the Portuguese sailors: to lighten
-the vessel, the captain would have said&mdash;cables,
-spars, water-casks, kits and chests of varying size,
-puncheons of wine, bags of sea-biscuit, cannon,
-powder, and stone ballast had been thrown overboard
-in a futile effort to float the shattered ship
-from a sunken reef. A portion of this impotent
-sacrifice the sullen surf had uplifted upon
-its crest, and, rushing shoreward, had tossed it
-spitefully upon the sands.</p>
-
-<p>As the hours dragged on, while the storm, in
-full retreat, hurried its black battalions toward
-the west, the moaning beach became a resting-place
-for grimmer flotsam than sailor&#8217;s kit or
-broken spar. Trusting to the stanchness of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">[65]</span>
-their ships and the favor of their saints, the
-Spanish seamen in those adventurous days but
-seldom learned to swim. In constant peril from
-the hungry waves, forever searching unknown
-seas, where shipwreck menaced him at every hour,
-the Spaniard or the Portuguese would drown,
-amazed to find no saving potency in strings of
-beads, no buoyancy in dangling crucifix.</p>
-
-<p>When the ship <i>Concepcion</i>, abandoned by the
-saints, struck on a rock, concealed beneath the
-waves by Satan&#8217;s crafty hand, there was only one
-man aboard the vessel who had learned to breast
-the surf with strength and skill sufficient for a
-crisis such as this&mdash;and he was a white-faced
-landsman, who had spent his life with pen and
-books, learning nothing of the sea save what had
-come to him when bathing in the sunny waters
-of Seville.</p>
-
-<p>For the first time in all the countless centuries
-since the floods had tossed it there, the curving
-beach now watched the grewsome pastime which
-a shipwreck grants the surf. A shadow on a
-billow rushing landward, a black spot on a white-plumed,
-tossing wave, a splash and hissing on
-the trembling sands, and there on the shore, as
-the storm-wind rushes by, lies a thing which was
-once a man, a black-and-white blotch in the dim
-light vouchsafed by the scudding clouds. With
-uncanny satisfaction at its task, the undercurrent,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">[66]</span>
-slinking back again beneath the sea, returns
-to lay upon the sands another horrid plaything
-of the surf. &#8217;Tis novel sport for this deserted
-coast, but how the waves enjoy it! They roar
-and thunder, sob and laugh and hiss; they toss
-their new-found toys upon the sands, then snatch
-them back again and turn them &#8217;round and
-&#8217;round as if in envy of the grasping beach. But
-as the hours pass by, the shore keeps gaining
-what the billows lose. When the sun has pierced
-the western clouds, to cast a passing gleam across
-the panting sea, the glistening sands are dotted
-far and wide with worthless relics of the surf&#8217;s
-grim sport.</p>
-
-<p>The arms of Juan Rodriquez had been moved
-by mighty passions to a most stupendous feat.
-Strong swimmer though he was, the burden of a
-senseless girl, and the striving of the deep to
-make no blunder in the game it played, had
-turned his heart to ice, while the minutes seemed
-like hours and each stroke that he made was feebler
-than the last. But the struggling wretch was
-urged to mad endeavor by a combination of the
-most potent motives which can inspire the efforts
-of a man. Fear of death and love of a woman
-united in that awful hour to give to Juan&#8217;s slender
-but well-knit body a stubborn endurance that
-foiled the undertow and checked, for the nonce,
-the surf&#8217;s ghastly pastime. Slowly but persistently,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_67">[67]</span>
-with gasping breath and straining eyes,
-now smothered in the brine, now lifted like a
-cork upon a wave, a man who was not fit to die
-fought wildly with the sea for life and love. To
-leave the girl to drown and struggle on alone,
-with certain victory within his grasp, his dread
-of death had tempted him to do. But at that instant
-a kindlier current than he had hoped to
-find eased for a moment the pressure upon his
-chest, and bore him slantingly athwart the beach
-far westward of the wrecked <i>Concepcion</i>.</p>
-
-<p>To the fainting youth and his senseless burden
-the damp strand offered no easy couch, but it
-was better to lie there on the shore, while the
-enemy, checkmated, scolded and threatened and
-boasted in complaining impotence just outside
-the danger-line, than to choke and die, and go to
-judgment unshrived and with black crimes upon
-one&#8217;s soul. What mattered it to Juan Rodriquez
-that for a time, as he lay struggling for breath
-upon the beach, the ripples, malicious offspring
-of the giant breakers, washed moist sand into his
-hair and ears, and licked his corpselike face as
-if they kissed him for his prowess while they
-whispered vengeful threats?</p>
-
-<p>Presently the victorious swimmer regained his
-senses, and, tottering to his feet, dragged the
-shrunken figure of Do&ntilde;a Julia further up the
-beach. Her black gown clung close around her<span class="pagenum" id="Page_68">[68]</span>
-as she lay, as if asleep, upon the sands, the only
-thing of beauty that the sea had brought to land.
-Juan bent down and placed his hand upon her
-bosom. The gleam of despair in his sunken eyes
-died out as he felt the feeble beating of her heart
-and upon his cheek the faint impact of her returning
-breath. Then he drew himself up to his
-full height, cast a glance of triumph at the
-treacherous sea, and, assured of Do&ntilde;a Julia&#8217;s
-safety, hurried eastward across the shingle, glistening
-at that moment from the rays of the setting
-sun.</p>
-
-<p>It was a dismal task that the dripping, trembling
-youth had essayed. From one staring,
-motionless victim of the storm to another went
-Juan, placing his shaking hand above hearts
-which would never beat again, and starting
-back in horror from faces which served as mirrors
-to the pain of sudden death. And ever as
-he crept on from one purple corpse to another
-the conviction became more fixed in his mind
-that he alone, of all the sturdy men upon that
-fated ship, had kept the spark of life within his
-breast. Suddenly the sightless eyes of Miquel
-Sanchez stared up at him in the sunlight.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Curse you! Curse you!&#8221; cried Juan, kicking
-the unprotesting corpse in senseless rage. &#8220;Had
-I known you were a lubber, Hernandez had not
-died! &#8217;Tis well for you the sea took all your<span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">[69]</span>
-life, or I&#8217;d choke the dying breath from out your
-throat! Curse you!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Bending down, the youth, a madman for the
-instant, seized a handful of moist sand and hurled
-it spitefully into the upturned face of the man
-whose stubborn ignorance had placed in jeopardy
-his schemes for self-aggrandizement. But at
-that horrid moment Juan Rodriquez knew, for
-self-confession forced itself upon him, that it was
-his own weak yielding to the thirst for vengeance
-which had wrecked the vessel. Coward
-that he was, the fury of his self-reproach found
-vicious vent upon a lifeless trunk that had no
-power of protest against so grave a wrong.</p>
-
-<p>The fervor of his unjust anger spent, Juan
-turned, like a snarling cur, from the outraged
-corpse, and, hungry for human intercourse, resolved
-to return at once to Do&ntilde;a Julia&#8217;s side,
-restore her to her senses, and fortify his faltering
-heart by the sound of a living voice.
-He had gazed into dead men&#8217;s faces until his
-soul was sick with the horror of the day. He
-glanced at the sinking sun petulantly, as if he
-awaited with impatience the black shroud that
-oncoming night would throw over the motionless
-bodies scattered along the beach.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly the youth, an expression of mingled
-astonishment, horror, and fear upon his changing
-face, fell upon his knees and crossed himself with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">[70]</span>
-a fervor begotten of the miracle upon which his
-straining eyes now gazed.</p>
-
-<p>Beside the out-stretched figure of Do&ntilde;a Julia
-stood two angelic beings, taller than the run of
-men, who faced the sun and raised their arms
-straight upward toward the evening sky. They
-wore white robes, and from the distant dune to
-which the startled Juan crawled it seemed as if
-golden halos glorified the heads of these marvellous
-messengers from Paradise. They stood for
-a time with arms upraised, while to the straining
-ears of a youth whose heart felt like a lump
-of ice came the subdued notes of a chant which,
-he knew full well, was music not of earthly
-origin. Presently the angels bent their heads
-together, as if in heavenly converse, while Juan
-cast a stealthy glance across the sun-red sands
-to see if Miquel Sanchez had roused himself
-from death to totter toward God&#8217;s envoys with
-an awful accusation upon his lips. When his
-eyes turned toward the west again, relieved to
-find the sailor still lying stark and still, Juan
-saw that the angels had gently uplifted the body
-of Julia de Aquilar, and, with stately grace, were
-bearing it away toward the twilight of the foot-hills.
-With his wet garments chilling the very
-marrow in his bones, the thief and murderer
-watched these celestial beings bearing his love
-away to Paradise. The grim mockery of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">[71]</span>
-chattering prayer that he breathed he could not
-comprehend. He paid the homage of furtive
-worship to angels whose searching glance, he
-feared, might seek him out behind his sandy
-lurking-place.</p>
-
-<p>The red-fringed twilight had lost its glow,
-and the zenith had pinned a star upon its breast
-before Juan Rodriquez, still trembling at the
-miracle that he had seen, found courage to slink
-westward along the shore. Behind him dead
-men seemed to stalk, following his footsteps with
-grim persistence, while somewhere from the
-hills upon his right the eyes of angels searched
-his very soul. On across the beach he hurried,
-while the waters of the gulf turned black, and
-the dread silence of the night was broken only
-by the gossip of the waves, telling the sands a
-horrid secret that they had learned.</p>
-
-<p>Alone with his thoughts, with the memory of
-dark crimes upon his soul, Juan strove through
-the long night to cast far behind him the haunted
-shore upon which angels came and went. The
-interplay of life and death had left him only this&mdash;the
-hope of wealth. Had he known that between
-him and the silver mines that he sought
-lay more than a thousand weary miles, he would
-have made a pillow of the sand in his despair.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">[72]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER X<br />
-
-
-<small>IN WHICH THE CROSS IS CARRIED TO A CITY OF<br />
-IDOLATERS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>&#8220;<span class="smcap">I have</span> learned something of these proud
-pagans, Chat&eacute;muc. They are worshippers of
-fire; fruit ripe to pluck, to the greater glory of
-Mother Church.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The Mohican grunted in acquiescence as he
-strode forward, a copper-colored giant by the
-side of the gray-garbed, undersized Franciscan.</p>
-
-<p>Beneath budding trees and along a flower-haunted
-trail went de la Salle&#8217;s envoys to the
-children of the sun. It was high noon, and the
-god of the idolaters shone down upon those who
-would dethrone him as a deity with a kindly
-radiance behind which no malice lurked. Mayhap
-the warm-hearted luminary had grown
-weary of the human sacrifices offered up by his
-deluded worshippers, and was pleased to see the
-gentle Membr&eacute; carrying a cross, symbol of a
-faith which demands for its altars no gifts but
-contrite hearts, toward a blood-stained city in
-which a savage cult still lay as a curse upon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">[73]</span>
-a race endowed by nature with many kindly
-traits.</p>
-
-<p>Between Membr&eacute;, the friar, and Chat&eacute;muc, the
-Mohican, had long existed a cordial friendship,
-based, in part, upon hardships and dangers shared
-together, but more especially upon the relationship
-existing between them of a missionary to a
-convert. Of the many native Americans who
-had become good children of Mother Church under
-the inspiring influence of the magnetic Franciscan
-none had been more faithful to his adopted
-religion than the stately Mohican, whose proud,
-reserved, but inherently enthusiastic temperament
-derived warmth and inspiration from the friar&#8217;s
-exalted soul. Of late years much of Zenobe
-Membr&eacute;&#8217;s success as a proselyter had been due
-to long and earnest consultations held in the wilderness
-with Chat&eacute;muc, an Indian understanding
-Indians, and a Roman Catholic who spoke
-French.</p>
-
-<p>Just in front of the Mohican and the Franciscan
-walked Katonah by the side of de Sancerre;
-a forest belle attended by a courtly swain. Used
-as he was to the startling contrasts which the
-exodus of Europeans to the New World had begotten
-in such abundance, the friar had been
-struck by the incongruity of this pair, who
-laughed and chatted just beyond him with a
-gayety born of the sunshine and the spring.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">[74]</span>At the head of the little procession strode the
-soldierly Henri de Tonti, attended on either hand
-by a long-limbed child of the sun. The Italian
-veteran looked like a pygmy beside his tall,
-white-garbed, black-haired guides, who stalked
-along on his flanks with a stately grace which
-had aroused the enthusiastic admiration of de
-Sancerre, a cosmopolite who had in his time
-looked upon many well-formed warriors both in
-the Old World and the New.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They worship fire, Chat&eacute;muc,&#8221; repeated the
-Franciscan, earnestly, after a moment&#8217;s silence.
-&#8220;Their god is the sun, and they have a priesthood
-whose duty it is to keep alive in their temple a
-blaze of logs, first lighted, generations back, by
-the sun itself.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The Mohican turned and looked down at the
-friar with a gleam of mingled astonishment and
-inquiry in his melancholy eyes. The grunt to
-which he gave vent the Franciscan well understood.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are amazed at my knowledge of their
-customs, my Chat&eacute;muc,&#8221; remarked the Franciscan,
-smilingly. &#8220;But have I not heard many
-wild and horrid tales in the years through
-which I&#8217;ve borne the cross to outlands such
-as this? &#8217;Tis strange, indeed, how rumor flies
-through forests, over lakes, and makes the
-mountains rear their tops in vain. &#8217;Tis thus<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">[75]</span>
-the saints work miracles for us, that we may
-bear the Word to savage lands. As feeble men,
-we could do naught, my son; but with the
-pioneers of Mother Church march all the hosts
-of heaven, and when the day is darkest and the
-heathen shout for joy, there comes a wonder,
-some marvel on the earth, some sudden splendor
-of the midnight sky, and the cross, triumphant,
-gains another tribe! Oh, Chat&eacute;muc, the glory
-of it all!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The gray eyes of the Franciscan gazed upward
-at the set face of the seemingly stoical Indian,
-whose religious enthusiasm was rapidly rising to
-fever-heat under the intoxicating influence of the
-fanatical friar&#8217;s carefully-chosen words&mdash;words
-whose effect upon the devout Mohican Zenobe
-Membr&eacute; was not now testing for the first time.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But their fire, father? It always burns?&#8221;
-asked Chat&eacute;muc, presently, in a low voice.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Day and night, year after year, from generation
-to generation, they keep alive this idolatrous
-blaze, a flame lighted in hell and carried to
-these pagans by Satan&#8217;s self. And while it
-burns, my Chat&eacute;muc, &#8217;twill be impossible to lure
-their souls to Christ.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The searching gaze of the friar scanned closely
-the phlegmatic face of the Mohican. Not a
-muscle in Chat&eacute;muc&#8217;s copper-colored countenance
-moved, but a dangerous gleam had begun to flash<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">[76]</span>
-in his eyes as they rested now and again upon
-the white-robed sun-worshippers striding on
-ahead of him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They guard the fire by day and night?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8217;Tis never left alone, my son,&#8221; answered the
-Franciscan, fully satisfied with the effect that
-his words had had upon Chat&eacute;muc.</p>
-
-<p>The native American is not a rash and impulsive
-being. Courageous Chat&eacute;muc was, beyond
-many of his race; but he was, nevertheless, an
-Indian, and inclined to attain his ends by craft
-and subtlety rather than by reckless daring. It
-was not until the French had introduced the
-native American to the civilizing influence of
-brandy that the latter abandoned, at times, in
-his warfare the methods of a snake, and fought,
-now and then, like a lion.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How large a guard, my father, do they keep
-around their fire?&#8221; asked the Mohican, presently.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That I do not know, my son. But bear this in
-mind, good Chat&eacute;muc: against a soldier fighting
-for the cross the powers of hell cannot prevail.
-Remember, Chat&eacute;muc, that unless that blaze is
-turned to ashes in their sight, my prayers and
-exhortations will be of no avail. We&#8217;ll leave
-them pagans as we found them, unless their
-sacred fire no longer burns.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The vibrant notes in the friar&#8217;s rich voice rekindled
-the light in the Indian&#8217;s gloomy eyes.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">[77]</span>&#8220;Either the fire or a Mohican shall die, my
-father!&#8221; exclaimed the warrior, in low, earnest
-tones. &#8220;Chat&eacute;muc, your son in Christ, has
-sworn an oath.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the high spirits of Louis de Sancerre
-had cast their spell upon Katonah, a maiden
-whose ready smile seldom changed to laughter.
-But on this bright spring day, treading a flower-bedecked
-path by the side of a man whose delicately
-chiselled face was to her eyes a symbol
-of all the joy of life, it was not hard for the
-Mohican maiden to affect a gayety uncharacteristic
-of a race lacking in vivacity.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They are splendid fellows,&#8221; remarked de
-Sancerre, gazing at the stalwart messengers from
-the Brother of the Sun. &#8220;With ten thousand
-men like these, Turenne could have marched
-around the world. But our mission to them is
-one of peace. I must teach them the steps of
-the <i>menuet</i>.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And what is that?&#8221; asked Katonah, glancing
-over her shoulder to see whether Chat&eacute;muc&#8217;s rebuking
-eye was fixed upon her. To her great satisfaction
-she discovered that her brother seemed
-to be absorbed in the words of the gray friar.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The <i>menuet, ma petite</i>? &#8217;Twas made for
-you. &#8217;Tis a <i>coup&eacute;e</i>, a high step and a balance.
-Your untrammelled grace, Katonah, would hurt
-the eyes of <i>mesdames</i> at Versailles.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_78">[78]</span>Little of this the Indian maiden understood,
-but she realized intuitively that her cavalier had
-been paying her an honest compliment. Her
-quick ear, more sensitive to the changes in his
-voice than to all other sounds, had learned to
-detect and dread a sarcastic note in his tones
-that often cut her to the heart. But on this
-gay noontide of a day at the close of what the
-sun-worshippers called the Moon of Strawberries,
-Louis de Sancerre was a joyous, frank, vivacious
-man who paid the beautiful savage at his side
-acceptable homage with his eyes and in whose
-words she could find nothing to wound her
-pride.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;When we reach this sun-baked centre of
-idolatry, <i>ma petite</i>,&#8221; remarked De Sancerre, presently,
-&#8220;we must make an effort to remain side
-by side. Though I should pass a thousand years
-in harems of the Turks, I could not forget the
-face of that old hag who came to haunt me by
-my lonely couch. &#8217;Tis her you are to find&mdash;for
-the greater glory of our Mother Church. But
-bear this in mind, <i>petite</i>, that I must have some
-speech with her before the friar seizes on her
-tongue and makes her Spanish eloquent for
-Christ. I&#8217;d ask her of a miracle, before good
-Membr&eacute; goes to work with his.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>For Katonah the glory of the day had passed.
-The gleam of happiness died slowly in her eyes,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_79">[79]</span>
-and the smile which lingered still upon her lips
-had lost its joyousness. Not only had the mocking
-echo returned to de Sancerre&#8217;s voice, but he
-had recalled to the girl&#8217;s mind the story that
-he had told her, earlier in the day, of a Spanish
-maiden whose name had come to him so strangely
-in the dark hours of the night. It was, then,
-the memory of a maiden over-sea which had led
-the Frenchman&#8217;s footsteps toward the city of the
-sun! The misery in Katonah&#8217;s heart crept into
-her voice.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ll serve you as I can,&#8221; she said, gently, her
-eyes avoiding his. &#8220;But,&#8221; and she lowered her
-tones until her words became a warning made in
-whispers&mdash;&#8220;but I say to you, monsieur, beware
-of Chat&eacute;muc! Stay not by my side. I&#8217;ll serve
-you as I can, but leave me when we reach the
-town. Believe me when I say &#8217;tis safer so.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Ma foi, ma petite</i>,&#8221; exclaimed de Sancerre,
-petulantly, turning his head to cast a glance behind
-him at Chat&eacute;muc, &#8220;your warning, though
-well meant, was hardly fair to him! Your
-brother is too good a friend of Mother Church
-to harbor hatred of a Catholic like me, who only
-yesternight vowed three long candles to the Virgin-mother&mdash;after
-that ugly crone had left my
-side at last.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You smile, and speak light words,&#8221; murmured
-Katonah, deprecatingly. &#8220;But I say to you,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_80">[80]</span>
-beware of Chat&eacute;muc. He loves the faith, but
-hateth you, monsieur. I know not why. &#8217;Tis
-strange!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She gazed at the Frenchman&#8217;s face with a
-frank admiration which brought a self-conscious
-smile to the courtier&#8217;s lips. Flicking a multicolored
-insect from the tattered velvet of his sleeve,
-de Sancerre exclaimed:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ah, my Katonah! &#8217;Tis those who know me
-best who love me best. Your brother is a stranger,
-who cannot read my heart. But, hark! what
-have we here?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The noise of kettle-drums and the howling of a
-great throng arose in front of them. Their stately
-guides withdrew from de Tonti&#8217;s side and stalked
-sedately to the rear of the little group of strangers,
-leaving the Italian captain to lead his followers
-to the imminent outskirts of the town.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Listen to the drums, <i>petite</i>!&#8221; exclaimed de
-Sancerre, gayly. &#8220;We&#8217;ll dance a <i>menuet</i> in
-yonder city, or I am not a moonbeam&#8217;s favorite
-son!&#8221;</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">[81]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XI<br />
-
-
-<small>IN WHICH THE BROTHER OF THE SUN WELCOMES<br />
-THE CHILDREN OF THE MOON</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> Brother of the Sun, overjoyed at the opportunity
-now before him to offer hospitality to
-guests upon whose white faces he gazed with
-mingled admiration and astonishment, had come
-in state to the confines of the forest to testify
-to the cordiality of a greeting that illuminated
-his well-cut, strong, and mobile countenance.
-The Great Sun, as he was called&mdash;his exact relationship
-to the orb of day being, to a large
-extent, a matter of conjecture&mdash;was an elderly
-man, fully six feet six inches in height, with a
-light-mahogany complexion, hair still jet-black,
-and brilliant, dark eyes gazing proudly forth
-upon a world which, from the hour of his birth,
-had paid abject homage to his exalted rank.</p>
-
-<p>He was enthroned in a litter resembling a huge
-sedan-chair, which was carried upon the shoulders
-of eight stalwart men in white attire but bare-footed.
-The four long arms of the litter were
-painted red, and its body was decorated with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">[82]</span>
-embroidered deer-skins, leaves of the magnolia-tree,
-and garlands of red and white flowers. His
-head was ornamented by a diadem of white feathers.
-Inserted in the lobes of his shapely ears
-were rings of decorated bone. He wore a necklace
-made of the teeth of alligators, and against
-the background of his raven-black hair gayly
-colored beads shone in the sunlight.</p>
-
-<p>Behind his litter marched a mighty army of
-three thousand stalwart men, bare-armed, bare-legged,
-in a uniform of flowing, white, plaited
-mulberry bark, relieved by dyed skins, striped
-with yellow, black, and red, thrown across their
-broad shoulders. They carried bows made of
-the acacia-wood, and arrows of reed tipped with
-bird-feathers. Gigantic, muscular, stern-faced
-warriors, the army of the sun-worshippers broke
-upon the gaze of the astonished Europeans with
-startling effect.</p>
-
-<p>It has been asserted that the immediate ancestors
-of these children of the sun, angered at Montezuma,
-had joined Cortez in his victorious campaign
-against that unfortunate monarch. Later
-on, crushed and rebellious under Spanish tyranny,
-they had migrated toward the north and had
-found peaceful lands to their liking near the
-banks of the lower Mississippi. Whatever may be
-the truth of this, the fact remains that upon the
-afternoon which found Sieur de la Salle&#8217;s envoys<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">[83]</span>
-the honored guests of the Brother of the Sun,
-the latter&#8217;s army defiled to the eastward of the
-city with ranks which begot in the eyes of the
-Count de Sancerre and the veteran de Tonti a
-gleam of mingled amazement and admiration.
-Not only were the warriors of the sun, individually,
-men suggesting prowess and endurance,
-but they, as a body, gave evidence of having
-learned, from sources beyond the reach of native
-Americans further to the northward, tactics indicating
-a European origin. If the sun-worshippers
-had, in fact, suffered from Spanish cruelty,
-they had also derived from their tyrannical allies
-valuable hints pertaining to the art of war. As
-he gazed at this army of athletes, Henri de Tonti,
-for the first time since he had left de la Salle&#8217;s
-camp, felt regret for the protest he had made
-against the expedition which his leader had decreed.
-Here before him stood a splendid band
-of soldiers who might be made, with some diplomacy,
-loyal friends to the on-pushing French.</p>
-
-<p>To the mind of Zenobe Membr&eacute; the martial
-array before him presented a magnificent collection
-of lost souls, well worthy, in outward seeming,
-of the saving grace of the cross. To snatch
-from the grasp of Satan so many glorious exponents
-of manly vigor would be, indeed, a triumph
-for Mother Church. Something of this he
-breathed into the ear of the motionless and silent<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">[84]</span>
-Chat&eacute;muc, who stood with the friar upon a low
-hillock, overlooking the plain, viewing with
-amazement this imposing regiment, each member
-of which seemed to be taller by several
-inches than the stately Mohican.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Look, Katonah!&#8221; cried de Sancerre, seizing
-the Indian maiden by the arm. &#8220;See, there, at
-the side of his dark-brown Majesty&#8217;s peripatetic
-flower-garden, stands my aged midnight prowler!
-Her old face is turned up to his. Can you see
-her, <i>ma petite</i>?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Katonah stretched her shapely limbs to their
-utmost to look above the press in front of her, and
-presently her eyes lighted upon the shrivelled
-crone with whose discovery she had been intrusted
-by de la Salle.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Go to your brother and keep the friar by his
-side until I return, Katonah,&#8221; whispered the
-Frenchman, excitedly. &#8220;I must have speech at
-once with this old hag.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The sun-worshippers, pouring in throngs from
-their abandoned city&mdash;men, women, and children
-following and preceding the army in the
-fervor of their welcome to the white-faced children
-of the moon, who had come to them so
-mysteriously from the bosom of a wonder-working
-stream&mdash;impeded, by their respectful but exacting
-curiosity, the progress of de Sancerre
-toward the royal group. Women, scantily clad<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">[85]</span>
-but gay with flowers and feathers, would put
-forth their brown hands to touch the tattered
-velvets of the Frenchman&#8217;s travel-stained but
-once gorgeous costume. Naked boys and girls
-squirmed toward him unabashed, marvelling at
-the pallor of his face and the splendor of the
-buckles upon his shoes.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Peste!</i>&#8221; muttered the annoyed courtier under
-his breath. &#8220;If they but knew how hard I have
-to strive to hold these outworn garments to my
-back, they&#8217;d keep their hands away. I&#8217;ll reach
-the royal presence as naked as a baby unless they
-grow more gentle with my garb.&#8221; And all the
-time he smiled and bowed, while men and women,
-boys and girls, cried out in wild approval of
-his courtly grace.</p>
-
-<p>Henri de Tonti, who had lost much of his
-European polish through the long friction of
-camps and the wilderness, had reached the Great
-Sun&#8217;s flowery throne without winning the enthusiastic
-good-will of these impressionable adult
-children, who seemed to feel instinctively that
-the unbending, sallow, grim-faced Italian was
-less worthy, somehow, of their friendship than
-the fascinating, smiling Frenchman who followed
-gayly in the footsteps of the unmagnetic captain
-toward their king. In the presence of royalty
-the advantage in address possessed by de Sancerre
-over de Tonti was emphasized at once.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">[86]</span>
-With curt ceremony the Italian had saluted the
-smiling, black-eyed monarch, and had then stood
-silent, gazing helplessly upon the expectant
-throng pressing toward the litter, in the vain
-hope of finding some way to communicate with
-the royal sun-worshipper.</p>
-
-<p>De Sancerre&#8217;s triumphal progress toward the
-throne had attracted the attention of the Brother
-of the Sun, and the plaudits of his subjects had
-led the latter to believe that the leading personage
-among his pale-faced guests was now before
-him. Falling gracefully upon one knee, the
-Frenchman kissed the out-stretched hand of the
-beaming King with a flourish and a fervor which
-aroused the admiring multitude to a fresh outburst
-of delighted shouts.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Ma foi</i>, your Majesty!&#8221; exclaimed de Sancerre,
-in French, as he arose to his feet, &#8220;the encore
-warms my blood like wine! I like your
-people! They see at once the difference &#8217;twixt
-a curmudgeon and a cavalier.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>His eyes rested triumphantly upon the countenance
-of the disconcerted de Tonti for a moment,
-and then looked forth upon the sea of dusky,
-smiling faces upturned to his. Almost within
-reach of his hand stood the old woman who had
-borne to his bedside a welcome from the children
-of the sun.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Well met, se&ntilde;ora!&#8221; cried de Sancerre, in Spanish,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">[87]</span>
-to the grinning hag. &#8220;Come to me here!
-Your tongue shall bind the ties of love between
-your king and mine!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>With the quickness of perception which his
-bright eyes indicated, the Brother of the Sun
-seemed to grasp the significance of de Sancerre&#8217;s
-last words, for he beckoned to the aged crone to
-approach the royal presence. With a rapidity
-of motion strangely out of keeping with her
-time-worn appearance, the old woman reached
-de Sancerre&#8217;s side on the instant, and, having
-made her obeisance to the throne, stood looking
-up at the Frenchman expectantly. To the latter&#8217;s
-astonishment he saw in her small, black,
-beady eyes a gleam of saturnine humor which
-assured him that between his soul and hers
-stretched at least one sympathetic bond.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Say to his Majesty for my king, my people,
-and myself,&#8221; went on de Sancerre, in Spanish,
-holding the gaze of the interpreter to his, &#8220;that
-our hearts beat with joy at the welcome you extend
-to us. Say to him that the king of kings,
-far beyond the great water of the sea, sends
-greeting to his Brother of the Sun, and craves
-his friendship for all time to come. This much
-at once; but, later on, assure his Majesty I
-hope to lay before him plans and projects worthy
-of his warlike fame, that he, your monarch, and
-my king of kings may know no equals &#8217;neath<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">[88]</span>
-the sun and moon.&#8221; De Sancerre paused to give
-the interpreter a chance to turn his words into
-her native tongue. (&#8220;In sooth,&#8221; he muttered to
-himself, as he turned to smile again upon the
-now silent throng surrounding the low hillock
-upon which the King&#8217;s litter stood, &#8220;had I but
-shown myself so great a diplomat in France, I
-might have changed the map of Europe with my
-tongue and pen.&#8221;) &#8220;And what, se&ntilde;ora, saith the
-Son of Suns?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He answers you with words of deepest love,&#8221;
-answered the old woman, turning toward the
-Frenchman from the royal sun-worshipper, whose
-dark-hued face glowed with the delight de Sancerre&#8217;s
-adroitly-framed sentences had begotten.
-&#8220;He offers the hand of friendship to your king,
-the Brother of the Moon, and will divide with
-him the waters and the lands in perfect amity.
-He bids me say to you that in this day the children
-of the sun find glorious fulfilment of ancient
-prophecies. Before the East had parted
-from the West, and North and South were wrapped
-in close embrace, &#8217;twas told by wise, inspired
-tongues that some day by the waters of a boundless
-sea a goddess in deep sleep, sent to our people
-by the sun itself, would meet the eyes of
-roving huntsmen, wandering far afield. Our
-seers have told us that when she had come&mdash;Coyocop,
-the very spirit of the sun, our god&mdash;our<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">[89]</span>
-race would meet our brothers of the moon,
-and all the world would bow beneath our yoke.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>De Sancerre, impatient by temperament, and
-finding difficulty in fully understanding the disjointed
-Spanish <i>patois</i> used by the old woman,
-had paid but little real attention to this long
-speech, in spite of the attitude of absorbed interest
-which he had assumed, knowing that the
-piercing eyes of the sun&#8217;s brother were scanning
-his face attentively.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Your name is, se&ntilde;ora&mdash;is&mdash;&#8221; he asked, as the
-wrinkled hag paused an instant to regain her
-breath.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Noco,&#8221; she answered, simply.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do&ntilde;a Noco, say to his Majesty that others of
-our suite are approaching the throne to lay their
-homage at his feet, and that I, his servant, crave
-further speech with him anon. Then, se&ntilde;ora, if
-you love me, draw aside a pace or two, that I
-may have a word with you alone.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Hardly had de Sancerre ceased to speak when
-through an opening in the throng made by the
-courteous sun-worshippers came toward the
-throne the gray-frocked friar, Zenobe Membr&eacute;,
-followed by Katonah and Chat&eacute;muc, side by
-side. The Franciscan, chanting in a light but
-well-rounded voice a Latin hymn, bore aloft before
-him a rudely-carved wooden crucifix. With
-his large gray eyes raised to heaven, and his face<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">[90]</span>
-radiant with the religious ecstasy which filled
-his soul, he looked, at that moment, to the eyes
-of the overwrought sun-worshippers, like a man
-created of shadows and moonbeams, bearing
-toward their sovereign a mystic symbol potent
-for good or ill.</p>
-
-<p>The effect of the friar&#8217;s dramatic approach
-upon the impressionable Brother of the Sun
-served de Sancerre&#8217;s purpose well. Unobserved
-by the King, whose eyes were fixed upon the
-chanting priest, the Frenchman seized this opportunity
-to draw Noco aside. Removing from
-his breast the piece of mulberry bark upon which
-was scrawled the name of Julia de Aquilar, he
-asked, in a whisper which did not disguise his
-excitement:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Who wrote this name? Tell me, Do&ntilde;a Noco,
-for the love of God!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Coyocop,&#8221; muttered the hag, in a voice indicating
-the fear that she felt of the Frenchman&#8217;s
-impetuosity. Her answer conveyed no meaning
-to the straining ear of de Sancerre.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Tell me more, good Noco,&#8221; he implored,
-glancing furtively at the Brother of the Sun, who
-had arisen to greet the oncoming Franciscan.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I dare not&mdash;now,&#8221; whispered Noco, nervously.
-&#8220;Anon, perhaps, if the chance should
-come.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>With this unsatisfactory promise the interpreter<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">[91]</span>
-returned to resume her duties at her sovereign&#8217;s
-side, and de Sancerre, mystified and
-morose, turned to watch the efforts of Zenobe
-Membr&eacute; to dethrone the deified sun in favor of
-the true God.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">[92]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XII<br />
-
-
-<small>IN WHICH CHAT&Eacute;MUC FINDS THE INSPIRATION WHICH<br />
-HE LACKED</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8217;<span class="smcap">Twas</span> as I said it would be, my Chat&eacute;muc,&#8221;
-exclaimed Membr&eacute;, mournfully, as the friar and
-his convert retired from the immediate presence
-of royalty. &#8220;As long as yonder temple protects
-its hellish fire, the ears of this great monarch
-will be deaf to words of mine. Mother of God,
-&#8217;tis sad! He has a noble face! I would that I
-might live to shrive him of the many sins his
-haughty pride begets!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Chat&eacute;muc gave vent to what might have been
-a pious groan, though it sounded to a listening
-group of sun-worshippers like the grunt of an
-ill-tempered man. The half-civilized Mohican
-had good reasons for his discontented mood.
-His unexpected discovery of a race of native
-Americans taller, better proportioned, and seemingly
-more muscular than his kinsmen of the
-North, had touched his sullen pride. Furthermore,
-Chat&eacute;muc felt that he had been made a
-victim, at the very foot of the throne, of a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">[93]</span>
-cleverly designed conspiracy. De Sancerre had
-spoken a few words to Noco, and the latter had
-addressed the King himself. In his native tongue
-the Great Sun had issued an order which had
-been translated by Noco into Spanish, and which
-de Sancerre had turned into French for the benefit&mdash;or,
-rather, for the disturbance&mdash;of Chat&eacute;muc.
-The royal behest had been uncompromising
-in its curt simplicity. The Brother of the
-Sun had ordered Noco to act as hostess to Katonah
-during the latter&#8217;s sojourn within his domain.
-Annoyed as the Mohican had been at
-this command, he had reluctantly recognized the
-futility of an open protest against the disposition
-made, without his consent, of his sister. He had
-retired with the Franciscan from the group surrounding
-the King&#8217;s litter, with a burning desire
-in his heart to make mischief. Quick to read
-the mind of Chat&eacute;muc, the gray friar, whose
-open zeal as a proselyter had been changed, by
-the Great Sun&#8217;s stubborn indifference to the
-awful significance of the crucifix, into the craft
-of a schemer, was now pouring into the Mohican&#8217;s
-ears words emphasizing the glories of martyrdom,
-and picturing the bliss which awaited
-those who perished for the cause of Mother
-Church. The Franciscan and his convert had
-withdrawn to a sunny slope a few yards to the
-eastward of the flower-strewn hillock upon which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">[94]</span>
-the Brother of the Sun maintained the pomp of
-royalty.</p>
-
-<p>Had the eyes and ears of Chat&eacute;muc and
-Membr&eacute; been open at that moment to pleasant
-impressions, they would have found many sources
-of delight in their surroundings. They gazed
-upon a multicolored scene whose most striking
-features they had never, in their many years of
-forest-travel, looked upon before. Bright-hued
-flowers, trees gay with the blossoms of spring,
-birds whose brilliant plumage suggested the possibility
-that a rainbow, shattered into small bits,
-had found wings for the remnants of its glory,
-and, over all, a blue canopy across which floated
-white, fleecy playthings of the breeze, whispered
-in vain their story of love and peace to the zealous
-friar and his attentive tool.</p>
-
-<p>From the westward came the inspiring shouts
-of the home-going multitude and the noise of
-kettle-drums helping the army to keep perfect
-time as it marched, a snow-white phalanx, toward
-the City of the Sun. From their coigne of
-vantage Membr&eacute; and the Mohican could see that
-a monarch who had snubbed the former and enraged
-the latter harbored no present intention of
-following his subjects and his army toward his
-city. In fact, it soon became apparent that the
-Brother of the Sun was about to regale his
-guests with a somewhat pretentious feast. Upon<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">[95]</span>
-litters, undecorated and simple in construction,
-servants belonging to the lowest social caste&mdash;slaves
-in fact, if not by law&mdash;bore from the city
-food designed to give a substantial foundation to
-the Great Sun&#8217;s <i>f&ecirc;te champ&ecirc;tre</i>. Bustling women
-brought rudely-constructed wooden benches to
-the grass-carpeted banquet-hall whose decorations
-were the flowers of spring and whose roof
-was the smiling sky.</p>
-
-<p>It was well for the good feeling that de Sancerre
-had done so much to strengthen between
-the children of the sun and moon that the slaves
-made ready the feast with great despatch, for
-the inopportune attempt of Zenobe Membr&eacute; to
-convert the King at one stroke from the religion
-of his ancestors to a faith whose mysteries a
-sign-language was impotent to explain had cast
-a damper upon the group surrounding royalty.
-While it was true that the Great Sun had not
-taken offence at the inexplicable demonstration
-made by the zealous friar, he had become thoughtful
-and silent after the retreat of Membr&eacute; and
-the Mohican. To relieve the situation, Henri de
-Tonti, a soldier unfitted either by disposition or
-habit for delicate feats of diplomacy, made no
-effort. Upon his scarred and unsymmetrical
-countenance rested an expression of sullen discontent
-as he stood, with folded arms, pretending
-to watch the preparations for a feast for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">[96]</span>
-which he had no heart. His jealousy of de
-Sancerre increased as he saw that, through the
-aid of Noco&#8217;s tongue, the courtier was tempting
-back again the smile of friendly interest to the
-black-eyed monarch&#8217;s face. Undecided whether
-to flee to the hillock where her brother stood or
-to place herself in Noco&#8217;s charge, according to
-the King&#8217;s command, Katonah lingered irresolutely
-by de Sancerre&#8217;s side, while her heart beat
-fast with the dread of an impending peril whose
-source she could not divine.</p>
-
-<p>Presently the activity of the slaves ceased for
-a moment, and the master of ceremonies&mdash;&#8220;<i>le
-ma&icirc;tre d&#8217;h&ocirc;tel</i>&#8221; as de Sancerre dubbed him under
-his breath&mdash;approached the throne with arms
-stretched upward above his head, and announced
-in one word that the preparations for the banquet
-had been completed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Cahani!&#8221; exclaimed the Great Sun, seating
-himself upon a bench in front of the royal litter,
-and motioning to de Sancerre to take the place
-at his right hand. &#8220;Cahani! Sit down!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>At the monarch&#8217;s left stood Noco, duenna and
-interpreter, a useful creature at that moment,
-but unfitted by birth to eat meat with her sovereign.
-The Brother of the Sun smiled upon Katonah,
-and graciously offered her the second place
-of honor by his side. What the maiden&#8217;s rank
-among the Mohicans might be made no difference<span class="pagenum" id="Page_97">[97]</span>
-at this juncture. She had been honored by
-the Great Sun&#8217;s gracious recognition, and from
-that instant was looked up to as a princess by
-the ceremonious sun-worshippers, who held that
-their monarch&#8217;s nod might serve as a patent of
-nobility to a stranger from an alien land. Among
-themselves, the road from the lowest social status
-to the highest was a hard one. To enter the
-circle of the nobility, a low-caste man and wife
-among the children of the sun must strangle
-one of their own offspring, having proved, by this
-heroic sacrifice, their superiority to the humble
-rank to which birth had consigned them.</p>
-
-<p>On the royal bench beyond Katonah sat the
-restless and dissatisfied de Tonti, silently protesting
-against the turn which events had taken,
-but just now impotent to change their course.
-The Italian veteran had walked far since breaking
-his fast, and had undergone the exhausting
-conflict of many antagonistic emotions. Hunger
-and thirst combined for the moment to postpone
-the withdrawal of his followers from the too-hospitable
-grasp of the sun-worshippers, but the
-observant captain realized the immediate necessity
-of a consultation with de la Salle before
-proceeding further with negotiations which the
-impulsiveness of de Sancerre might twist into
-an awkward shape. De Tonti had started out
-that morning to visit, he had imagined, an insignificant<span class="pagenum" id="Page_98">[98]</span>
-tribe of friendly Indians, and, behold, he
-had come upon a powerful nation, equipped with
-an army of gigantic warriors and endowed with
-a civilization whose outward manifestations were
-extremely impressive. Distrustful of de Sancerre,
-and knowing well the extremes to which Zenobe
-Membr&eacute;&#8217;s zeal as a proselyter might carry him,
-the Italian soldier scented danger in their present
-environment. He determined, therefore, to
-withdraw his followers from the feast at an early
-moment, to reject the Great Sun&#8217;s proffer of
-hospitality for the night&mdash;which, he felt sure,
-would be extended to them&mdash;and to return to
-de la Salle&#8217;s camp by the river as quickly as circumstances
-permitted.</p>
-
-<p>On the small plateau below the hillock upon
-which the Great Sun and his guests sat in state
-a hundred dusky noblemen had ranged themselves
-along the benches, awaiting, in solemn
-silence, the signal from their monarch which
-should reawaken the activity of the serving-women
-and inaugurate a banquet bidding fair to
-last until sundown. The Great Sun had raised his
-sceptre of painted feathers to indicate to his master
-of ceremonies that the time had come for the
-serving of the first course, when the royal eye
-lighted upon Zenobe Membr&eacute; and the Mohican,
-who still stood upon a hillock beyond the furthest
-line of benches, plunged in deep converse.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">[99]</span>&#8220;Go to your friend who sings the praises of
-his god, the Moon,&#8221; exclaimed the King, turning
-to Noco, who stood behind him awaiting his
-pleasure, and pointing his tawdry sceptre toward
-the Franciscan, &#8220;and say to him that the
-Brother of the Sun invites him to meat and
-drink. Have my people make a place for him,
-and for his captive who leans upon his voice. Go
-quickly, and return to me at once.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Without further delay, the monarch gave the
-impatiently-awaited signal for the serving of the
-feast, and the hunger of his guests was suddenly
-confronted by a throng of antagonists, any one
-of which was fashioned to appease, in short order,
-the appetite of a European. The coarser meats,
-the buffalo steaks and the clumsily cooked venison,
-were relieved by fish prepared for the table
-with some skill, and by old corn made palatable
-in a variety of ways. To Henri de Tonti&#8217;s great
-satisfaction, he found that the <i>cuisine</i> of the sun-worshippers
-was the most admirable which he
-had encountered in his long years of pilgrimages
-from one native tribe to another.</p>
-
-<p>It was with a great deal of reluctance that the
-Franciscan friar, followed by Chat&eacute;muc, had accepted
-the invitation extended to him from the
-Great Sun through Noco&#8217;s overworked tongue.
-She had delivered her message to the friar in her
-mongrel Spanish, and the Franciscan&#8217;s knowledge<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">[100]</span>
-of Latin had enabled him to grasp the general
-tenor of her words. He had been endeavoring
-to throw upon the embers of the Mohican&#8217;s religious
-enthusiasm sufficient fuel to beget a flame
-that should result in immediate action of an
-heroic nature. But while the Franciscan dwelt
-upon the glories of martyrdom and the splendor
-of the rewards awaiting a servant of the Church
-who gave his life for the faith, fatigue and hunger,
-having possessed themselves of Chat&eacute;muc&#8217;s
-earthly tabernacle, formed a powerful alliance
-against that self-abnegation which the priest
-labored earnestly to arouse in the Mohican&#8217;s
-soul.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;To eat meat with these children of Satan,
-who worship the very fires of hell, is, I fear, to
-commit a grave sin,&#8221; remarked the friar, gazing
-upward at Chat&eacute;muc dubiously, as they followed
-Noco toward the lower benches. Being a hungry
-barbarian, not a devout and learned controversialist,
-the Mohican could vouchsafe in answer
-to this nothing more satisfactory than a
-grunt, a guttural comment upon the delicate
-point raised by the agitated friar which might
-mean much or nothing.</p>
-
-<p>Seated at the very outskirts of the picturesque
-throng, Zenobe Membr&eacute; bent his tonsured head
-and told his beads for a time, watching Chat&eacute;muc
-furtively as the Mohican indulged freely in roasted<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">[101]</span>
-meats, half-cooked fish, and various preparations
-made from last year&#8217;s corn.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How proudly yonder temple rises toward
-the sky, my Chat&eacute;muc,&#8221; muttered the friar,
-glancing toward the City of the Sun. &#8220;Great
-will be the glory of the hand chosen by the saints
-to pull it to the ground.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Chat&eacute;muc chewed a morsel of tough venison
-and said nothing, but his eyes rested with a hostile
-gleam upon the Great Sun a hundred yards
-beyond him, beside whom sat Katonah, seemingly
-removed from her brother by the breadth of a
-mighty nation. Suddenly by the Mohican&#8217;s side
-appeared a serving-woman, who placed upon the
-bench at his right hand a gourd containing a fermented
-liquor made of the leaves of the cassia-tree.
-The increasing loquacity of the banqueters
-beyond the friar and his companion proved that
-the beverage, which had now reached them, possessed
-exhilarating properties. If the Franciscan
-had needed further evidence of the enlivening
-influence of the seductive liquor, which had come
-late to the feast as an ally to good-fellowship,
-the change in Chat&eacute;muc&#8217;s face would have offered
-it. After emptying his gourd twice&mdash;for the
-Mohican liked the cinnamon flavor of the drink&mdash;Chat&eacute;muc,
-flashing a glance of hatred at the
-Great Sun, looked down at the attentive friar at
-his side.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">[102]</span>&#8220;The fire of hell shall burn no more beyond,&#8221;
-he said, jerking his hand toward the distant city,
-behind which the weary sun had begun to creep.
-&#8220;The oath I swore to you shall be no idle boast.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Having observed that the Mohican liked the
-wine she offered him, the woman delegated to
-serve the friar and his comrade refilled the latter&#8217;s
-gourd for the third time. Chat&eacute;muc swallowed
-the fiery liquor eagerly, and turned to
-speak a final word to the priest.</p>
-
-<p>At that instant Zenobe Membr&eacute;&#8217;s eyes were
-fixed upon the royal group beyond him. The
-Great Sun had arisen and stood waving his
-feathered sceptre energetically, while he gazed
-down at Noco, to whom he seemed to be talking
-with some excitement. Gazing up at the King,
-with a satirical smile upon his delicate face, sat
-de Sancerre, while de Tonti had sprung to his
-feet with an expression of anger upon his countenance.</p>
-
-<p>When the friar turned to address Chat&eacute;muc,
-he discovered that the Mohican had left his side
-and had been lost to sight in the long shadows
-of the stealthy twilight.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">[103]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XIII<br />
-
-
-<small>IN WHICH DE SANCERRE RUNS A STUBBORN RACE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> is but fair to the memory of a noble, if somewhat
-too impetuous proselyter, to say that if Zenobe
-Membr&eacute;&mdash;whose achievements and sufferings
-entitle him to all praise&mdash;had realized that
-martyrdom, the rewards for which he had painted
-in such glowing colors, really menaced the aroused
-Mohican, he would have weighed his words with
-greater care. But the gray friar had long been
-in the habit of using heroic language to stir the
-soul of Chat&eacute;muc to religious enthusiasm, and he
-had not, as yet, found cause to regret the use
-which he had made for years of his pliable convert.
-Furthermore, the Franciscan placed absolute
-confidence in the Mohican&#8217;s ability to take
-good care of his red skin. He had seen the craft
-of Chat&eacute;muc overcome appalling odds too many
-times to long indulge the fear that the Indian&#8217;s
-sudden disappearance at this juncture presaged
-disaster. Nevertheless, he regretted that his convert
-had set out upon a mission of some peril
-with such unwonted precipitancy. The friar<span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">[104]</span>
-would have felt better satisfied with himself if
-he had been permitted to breathe a word of caution
-into Chat&eacute;muc&#8217;s ear before the latter had
-gone forth upon his lonely crusade against the
-fires of hell.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;At the worst,&#8221; muttered the Franciscan to
-himself, as he made his way toward the royal
-litter between lines of black-eyed, smiling sun-worshippers&mdash;&#8220;at
-the worst, it would be one life
-for Paradise and a nation for the Church! May
-the saints be with my Chat&eacute;muc! If he won a
-martyr&#8217;s crown, his blood would quench a fire
-which Satan keeps alive. But Mother Mary
-aid him! I love him well! I&#8217;d lose my
-right hand to save my Chat&eacute;muc from death!
-May Christ assail me if so my words were
-rash!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Thus communing with himself, the Franciscan
-approached the excited group surrounding
-royalty.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Ma foi</i>, good father, you come to us most opportunely!&#8221;
-cried de Sancerre, springing to his
-feet, a smile upon his lips but a gleam of repressed
-anger in his eyes. &#8220;Monsieur de Tonti
-is bent upon repaying his Majesty&#8217;s hospitality
-with marked ingratitude. He orders us&mdash;courageous
-captain that he is&mdash;to return at once to
-Sieur de la Salle. As for me, I have promised
-the Brother of the Sun to pass the night in yonder<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">[105]</span>
-city&mdash;to the greater glory of our sire, the
-moon!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Henri de Tonti, a black frown upon his brow,
-had overheard the Frenchman&#8217;s sarcastic words.
-Seizing the friar by the arm, he flashed a glance
-of rage and menace at the exasperating de Sancerre,
-and drew the Franciscan aside, to lay before
-him weighty arguments in favor of an immediate
-retreat to the river.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile the younger men among the sun-worshipping
-nobility, moved by the same cinnamon-flavored
-inspiration which had driven
-Chat&eacute;muc toward a Satan-lighted fire, had abandoned
-the scene of the recent feast to indulge in
-athletic rivalries on the greensward which undulated
-gently between the outskirts of the forest
-and the City of the Sun.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Will you say to his Majesty, se&ntilde;ora,&#8221; cried
-de Sancerre, gayly, drawing near to the Great
-Sun and addressing Noco, &#8220;that he has reason to
-be proud of the prowess of his young men? I
-have never watched a more exciting wrestling-bout
-than yonder struggle between those writhing
-giants. It is inspiring! It is classic! Could
-Girardon carve a fountain from that Grecian contest
-over there, &#8217;twould add another marvel to
-Versailles.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The Brother of the Sun smiled down upon de
-Sancerre with warm cordiality as the aged interpreter,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">[106]</span>
-having caught the general drift of the
-Frenchman&#8217;s words, turned his praise into her
-native tongue. The monarch&#8217;s momentary annoyance
-at Henri de Tonti&#8217;s lack of tact had
-passed away, and, standing erect, a right royal
-figure on his flower-bedecked dais, he watched,
-with unconcealed pride, the skilful feats with
-bow-and-arrow performed by the sun-worshipping
-aristocrats and the prodigies of strength which
-the wrestlers and stone-hurlers accomplished.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Tell me, Do&ntilde;a Noco,&#8221; exclaimed de Sancerre
-presently, at the conclusion of a closely-contested
-foot-race, which even the distraught and restless
-Katonah, searching vainly with her eyes for
-Chat&eacute;muc, had watched for a moment with bated
-breath&mdash;&#8220;tell me the name of yonder greyhound,
-carved in bronze, who smiles so disdainfully upon
-the victor. I have never before seen a youth
-whose legs and shoulders seemed to be so well
-fashioned by nature to outstrip the wind itself.
-Why does he not compete?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The shrivelled crone grinned with delight.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That is my grandson, Cabanacte,&#8221; she answered,
-proudly. &#8220;He&#8217;s now a nobleman, for, at
-the risk of life, he bore the spirit of the sun to
-us. The whirlwind cannot catch him. The falling-star
-seems slow behind his feet. He stands,
-in pride, alone; for none dare challenge him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A flush crept into the pale face of the Frenchman<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">[107]</span>
-as his sparkling eyes garnered with delight
-all the inspiring features of the scene before him,
-features which formed at that moment a picture
-reminding him of the glory of ancient Athens,
-the splendors of a pagan cult which found in
-strength and beauty idols worthy of adoring tribute.
-The passing day breathed a golden blessing
-upon the City of the Sun, which gleamed in
-the distance like a dream of Greece in the old,
-heroic days. De Sancerre, well-read and impressionable,
-mused for a moment upon the strange
-likeness of the scene before him to a painting
-that he had gazed upon, in a land far over-sea,
-representing Attic athletes engaged in classic
-games beneath a stately temple behind which the
-sun had hid its weary face. Awakening from
-his day-dreams, he turned toward Noco and addressed
-her in a voice which made his Spanish
-most impressive.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Go to Cabanacte, se&ntilde;ora, and say to him
-that Count Louis de Sancerre of Languedoc&mdash;the
-fairest province in the silver moon&mdash;dares
-him to a test of speed, the course to run from
-here to yonder lonely tree, near to the city&#8217;s gate,
-and back again.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A grin of mingled admiration and amazement
-lighted the old hag&#8217;s face as she turned toward
-the King and repeated to him his guest&#8217;s daring
-defiance of a runner whose superiority no sun-worshipper<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">[108]</span>
-had cared to test for many waning
-moons. A courteous smile played across the
-firm, well-cut mouth of the Great Sun as he listened
-to Noco&#8217;s words, but the scornful gleam in
-his black eyes as they rested upon the Frenchman&#8217;s
-slender, undersized figure was not lost
-upon the observant challenger. De Sancerre
-realized fully that he had placed in jeopardy his
-influence with the Brother of the Sun by risking
-a trial of speed with a youth whose fleetness he
-had had, as yet, no means of gauging. If he
-should be outstripped by Cabanacte the good-will
-of the Great Sun would be changed to contempt,
-and the relationship of host to guests,
-already disturbed by de Tonti&#8217;s lack of tact,
-might be transformed into that of a victor to his
-captives. What, then, would become of de Sancerre&#8217;s
-efforts to solve the mystery to which old
-Noco held the key?</p>
-
-<p>But de Sancerre, always self-confident, placed
-absolute faith in the elasticity of his light, nervous
-frame, whose muscles had been hardened
-by his campaigns over-sea and by his wanderings
-with de la Salle. No fleeter foot than his had
-been found in the sport-loving army of Turenne,
-and he had been as much admired in camps for
-his agility as at courts for his grace. If, perchance,
-he should outrun the stalwart Cabanacte,
-de Sancerre felt sure that his easily-won popularity<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">[109]</span>
-with these impressionable sun-worshippers
-would be placed upon a much more stable foundation
-than its present underpinning of smiles
-and courtly bows.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My grandson, Cabanacte, sends greeting to
-the envoy of the moon,&#8221; panted Noco, returning
-speedily to de Sancerre&#8217;s side, &#8220;and will gladly
-chase the wind with him in friendly rivalry. He
-bids me say that night falls quickly when the
-sun has set and that he craves your presence at
-this moment on the course.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Making a courteous obeisance to the Brother
-of the Sun, de Sancerre was about to hasten to
-the side of his gigantic adversary, who, stripped
-almost to nakedness, stood awaiting his challenger,
-when he felt a detaining hand upon his
-arm, and, turning petulantly, looked into Katonah&#8217;s
-agitated face.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Chat&eacute;muc! My brother! I cannot see him
-anywhere!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Fear not, <i>ma petite</i>,&#8221; exclaimed de Sancerre,
-cheerily. &#8220;Wait here until I&#8217;ve made this sun-baked
-Mercury imagine he&#8217;s a snail, and we&#8217;ll
-find your kinsman of the joyous face. &#8217;Twould
-break my heart to lose the gay and smiling
-Chat&eacute;muc! Adieu! I go to victory, or, perhaps,
-to death! Pray to Saint Maturin for me,
-Katonah! He watches over fools!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A great shout arose from the sun-worshippers<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">[110]</span>
-as de Sancerre and Cabanacte, saluting each
-other with ceremonious respect, stood side by
-side awaiting the signal for their flight toward
-the distant tree which marked the turning-point
-in the course which they were about to run.
-The Frenchman, attired in tattered velvets and
-wearing shoes never designed for the use of an
-athlete, seemed to be at that moment handicapped
-by both nature and art for the race awaiting him.
-Almost a pygmy beside the bronze giant, whose
-limbs would have driven sleep from a sculptor&#8217;s
-couch, de Sancerre had apparently chosen well
-in asking Katonah for an invocation to the saint
-who protects fools from the outcome of their
-folly. The black-eyed sun-worshippers glanced
-at each other in smiling derision. Surely, these
-children of the moon must eat at night of some
-plant or fruit which stirred their blood to madness
-when they wandered far afield! No dwarf
-would dare to measure strides with a colossus unless,
-indeed, he&#8217;d lost his wits through midnight
-revelry in moonlit glades! This white-faced,
-queerly-dressed, and most presumptuous rival of
-the mighty Cabanacte might smile and bow and
-gain the ear of kings, but look upon him now,
-with head bent forward, waiting for the word!
-Fragile, petite, thin in the shanks, and with a
-chest a boy might scorn, he dares to measure
-strides with a sturdy demigod who towers<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">[111]</span>
-above him, a giant shadow in the gloaming
-there!</p>
-
-<p>A howl from the overwrought throng shook
-the leaves upon the trees. The runners had
-sprung from the line at a cry and, elbow to elbow,
-were speeding toward the distant tree.
-Falling back to Cabanacte&#8217;s flank, de Sancerre,
-seeming to grow taller as he ran, and using his
-feet with a nimbleness and grace which emphasized
-the clumsiness of his fleet rival&#8217;s tread, hung
-with ease upon the giant&#8217;s pace, moving with a
-rhythmical smoothness which indicated reserved
-power. Through the twilight toward the city
-rushed the courtier and the savage, made equals
-at that moment by the levelling spirit of a manly
-sport, while the onlookers stood, eager-eyed and
-silent, watching with amazement the pertinacity
-of the lithe Frenchman who so stubbornly kept
-the pace behind their yet unconquered champion.</p>
-
-<p>As the racers turned the tree marking the half
-of their swift career, the dusky patriots saw, with
-growing consternation, that the child of moonbeams
-still sped gayly along behind the stalwart,
-wavering figure of a son of suns. The pace set
-by Cabanacte had been heartrending from the
-start, for he had cherished the conviction that
-he would be able to shake off his puny rival long
-before the turn for home was made. But ever
-as he strove to increase his lead the bronze-tinted<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">[112]</span>
-athlete heard, just behind his shoulder, the dainty
-footfalls of a light-waisted, wiry, bold-hearted
-antagonist, who panted not in weariness behind
-the champion after the manner of his rivals of
-other days. Out of the glowing West came the
-racers side by side, every step a contest as they
-struggled toward the goal.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Cabanacte! Cabanacte!&#8221; cried the sun-worshippers,
-mad with the fear that the dwarf might
-outrun the giant at the last. For the Frenchman
-had crept up from behind and was now speeding
-homeward on even terms with his delirious, reeling,
-wind-blown, but still unconquered rival.
-For a hundred yards the racers fought their fight
-by inches, each marvelling in his aching mind at
-the stern persistence of his antagonist. Then,
-when the strain grew greater than human muscles
-could endure, the bursting heart of de Sancerre
-seemed to ease its awful pressure upon his
-chest, his faltering steps regained their light and
-graceful motion, and, passing Cabanacte as the
-latter glanced up with eyes bloodshot with longing,
-the Frenchman, with a gay smile upon his
-pallid face, rushed past the line, a winner of the
-race by two full yards.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_112.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="caption">&#8220;THE FRENCHMAN, WITH A GAY SMILE UPON HIS PALLID FACE, RUSHED<br />
-PAST THE LINE, A WINNER OF THE RACE BY TWO FULL YARDS&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The hot, generous blood of the sun-worshippers
-bounded in their veins as they seized the tottering
-victor and, with shouts of wonder and acclaim,
-raised him to their shoulders and bore<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">[113]</span>
-him, a wonder-worker in their eyes, to the smiling
-presence of their astonished king. But before
-de Sancerre could receive the congratulations
-of the Brother of the Sun, the voice of
-Katonah had reached him over the heads of the
-excited patricians.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Monsieur,&#8221; cried the Mohican maiden, in
-French, her voice vibrating with excitement,
-&#8220;P&egrave;re Membr&eacute; and Monsieur de Tonti have
-set out for the camp, and Chat&eacute;muc has not
-returned!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Peste, ma petite!</i>&#8221; exclaimed de Sancerre,
-blowing her a kiss over the turmoil of black
-heads beneath him. &#8220;Why trouble me with
-trifles such as these? See you not that a splinter
-from a moonbeam has put the sun to shame&mdash;to
-the greater glory of our Mother Church.
-<i>Laude, Katonah! Laude et jubilate!</i>&#8221;</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_114">[114]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XIV<br />
-
-
-<small>IN WHICH THE RESULTS OF CHAT&Eacute;MUC&#8217;S ENTHUSIASM<br />
-ARE SEEN</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>&#8220;<span class="smcap">Courage,</span> <i>ma petite</i>! We&#8217;ll find your Chat&eacute;muc;
-then learn the mysteries of yonder sun-kissed
-town. That the stubborn captain has
-deserted us is hardly strange. Always in fear
-of de la Salle&#8217;s displeasure, Monsieur de Tonti
-has grown erratic, unreliable, jealous. As for
-the friar, his retreat surprises me. He lacks not
-courage nor persistence. He would not leave
-our brother of the sun without, at the least, one
-more attempt to show him the path which leads
-to Mother Church.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Released from the enthusiastic arms of the
-noblemen who had carried him in triumph to
-their king, de Sancerre was now following the
-royal litter toward the City of the Sun, walking
-the well-beaten path with the mincing step of a
-courtier whose feet, though swifter than the
-winds, pay homage gayly to Grace as a worthier
-deity than Speed. On either side of the victorious
-runner, whose eyes still glowed with the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_115">[115]</span>
-joy of triumph, walked Noco and Katonah. The
-latter, downcast and apprehensive, gazed gloomily
-toward the city, whose roofs could now be
-plainly seen, while she listened apathetically to
-the Frenchman&#8217;s encouraging words. Changing
-the tongue he used from French to Spanish, de
-Sancerre, turning toward Noco, who looked, in
-the twilight, like a hideous heathen idol carved
-in mahogany, said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I trust, se&ntilde;ora, that your courageous grandson,
-my very worthy opponent, will bear me no
-ill-will because my slender body was less a burden
-than his giant frame.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Noco, to whom de Sancerre&#8217;s overthrow of
-the erstwhile invincible Cabanacte had appeared
-like a miracle wrought by some mysterious moon-magic,
-gazed reverentially at the Frenchman with
-beady, black eyes, which seemed to be fully half
-a century younger than the other features of her
-wrinkled face. Her countenance was a palimpsest,
-with youth staring out from beneath the
-writings made by time.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My grandson, Cabanacte, O Son of the Full
-Moon, will ever do your bidding with a loyal
-heart. According to the customs of our land,
-your triumph in the race entitles you to service
-at his hands until his feet wax swift enough to
-fly away from yours.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Caramba!&#8221; exclaimed de Sancerre, whose<span class="pagenum" id="Page_116">[116]</span>
-expletives bore testimony to the cosmopolitan
-tendencies of his adventurous career, &#8220;your words,
-se&ntilde;ora, rejoice my heart! I stand in sore need
-of a servitor to save me from the nakedness which
-one more heated foot-race would beget. If Cabanacte
-can repair the rents which make my costume
-such a marvel to the eye, I&#8217;ll free him from
-his <i>villein socage</i> and make him proud again.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Enough of this the old hag understood&mdash;enlightened,
-to a great extent, by the Frenchman&#8217;s
-eloquent gestures&mdash;to emphasize the grin upon
-her ugly but intelligent face.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Cabanacte is a warrior, not a maker of flowing
-robes!&#8221; she exclaimed, with a raucous chuckle.
-&#8220;But to-night old Noco will repair the holes in
-the Son of the Full Moon&#8217;s garb. Look at this.&#8221;
-Fumbling at her waist, she presently held out to
-de Sancerre&#8217;s gaze a needle made of fish-bone.
-Lowering her voice, she said: &#8220;Coyocop, the
-spirit of the sun, has not disdained to let my
-needle prick her sacred dress. She weeps, and
-cares for nothing but to lie upon her couch and
-whisper secrets to the mother of the sun. &#8217;Tis
-sad, but so she must fulfil her mission to our
-race. Our nation&#8217;s wise men and the priests who
-tend the temple-fire had told us she would come.
-My grandson, Cabanacte, bore her from the sea.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>De Sancerre listened attentively to the old
-crone&#8217;s words. He recalled Noco&#8217;s assertion that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">[117]</span>
-Coyocop had scrawled his inamorata&#8217;s name upon
-the mulberry bark, though, at the time, he had
-not grasped the full significance of her mumbled,
-mongrel Spanish words, rendered less clear to
-him by the use of the meaningless name, Coyocop.
-But now, as they hurried on behind the
-porters who carried the King&#8217;s litter, followed
-by a hundred chattering noblemen, a veil seemed
-to be lifted from de Sancerre&#8217;s mind. His heart
-beat with suffocating rapidity, and his voice trembled
-as he looked down at Noco, trying to catch
-her eyes in the darkening twilight, and exclaimed:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8217;Twas Coyocop who scratched that name
-upon the bark? But why, good Do&ntilde;a Noco?
-Tell me why.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The old woman glanced over her shoulder, to
-assure herself that they could not be overheard.
-Then she whispered:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I told her the white-faced children of the
-moon had come to us upon the bosom of the
-flood, according to an ancient prophecy. The
-temple priests would strangle me with cords if
-they should learn how my old tongue has wagged.
-They watch me closely, for they worship her.
-But once she found a moment, when no priest
-was near, to scratch the mystic symbols on the
-bark. I crept away at night and, lo, your god,
-the moon, was guide to my old feet&mdash;and, so, I
-came to you from Coyocop.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">[118]</span>That Noco had told him all she had to tell, the
-Frenchman did not for a moment doubt. But,
-even then, she had thrown little light upon the
-mystery which confronted him. A mondain to
-his finger-tips, at heart a sceptic, de Sancerre
-fostered no belief in miracles. Surrounded, as
-he had been all the days of his life, by men and
-women steeped in superstition, his spirit had revolted
-at the impostures which had served to
-blind mankind through centuries of human history.
-Had de Sancerre been wrought of the stuff
-of which his age was made, he would have reached
-the conclusion at once that here in the wilderness
-the avenging spirit of the Spaniard whom he
-had slain in France was haunting him at night to
-play him tricks to drive him straight to madness.
-&#8217;Twould be so easy to account thus for what his
-reason could not now explain. But de Sancerre
-was a man who, intellectually, had pressed on in
-advance of his times. By policy a conformist to
-the exterior demands of his avowed religion, he
-had long lost his faith in the active interference
-in earthly affairs of saints and devils. How the
-name of Julia de Aquilar had found its way to a
-piece of vagrom bark in a wilderness, thousands
-of miles across the sea from the land of her
-nativity, he could not explain, nor could he harbor,
-for an instant, the wild idea that Coyocop
-and his inamorata would prove to be identical.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">[119]</span>
-In spite of the malicious horns of his dilemma,
-nevertheless, he eliminated from his thoughts
-the possibility that he had become the plaything
-of supernatural agencies. But who was
-Coyocop? He must look upon her face without
-delay.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Se&ntilde;ora, listen!&#8221; exclaimed de Sancerre, seizing
-Noco by the arm. &#8220;I must see the spirit of
-the sun to-night! From the mountains of the
-moon, where reigns our god in silvery state, I
-bear a message to the goddess Coyocop. <i>Peste</i>,
-Do&ntilde;a Noco! Have you gone to sleep?&#8221; He
-shook her gently, striving hard to find her
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It cannot be,&#8221; muttered the old crone, trembling
-under his grasp as if the night wind chilled
-her time-worn frame&mdash;&#8220;it cannot be. &#8217;Twould
-mean your life&mdash;and mine.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Hold, se&ntilde;ora! Remember Cabanacte&mdash;and
-pin your faith to me! No matter what the odds
-may be, the brother of the moonbeams always
-wins! Bear that in mind, good Noco, or the
-future may grow black for thee. Be faithful to
-my fortunes&mdash;and I&#8217;ll make your grandson noble
-once again.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>How deep an impression his words had made
-upon the beldame, de Sancerre could not tell, for
-at that moment there arose behind him a weird
-chant, sung by a hundred tuneful voices, rising<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">[120]</span>
-and falling upon the evening air with thrilling
-effect. Suddenly beyond them from the very
-heart of the City of the Sun arose a mightier
-chorus than the King&#8217;s suite could beget, and the
-night grew vibrant with a wild, menacing song
-which chilled de Sancerre&#8217;s heart and caused
-Katonah to press close to his side, in vain striving
-for the comfort she could not find.</p>
-
-<p>Presently the litter of the King, passing between
-two outlying houses, turned into a broad
-avenue which led directly to the great square of
-the city, at one side of which stood the temple
-of the sun. The moon had not yet arisen, and
-what was twilight in the open had turned to
-night within the confines of the town. De Sancerre,
-who was a close observer, both by temperament
-and by habit, strove in vain to obtain a
-satisfactory view of the dwelling-houses between
-which the royal litter passed. But when the
-King and his followers had reached the outskirts
-of the great square, the Frenchman forgot at once
-his curiosity as a traveller; forgot, even for a
-moment, the problem to solve which he had dared
-to enter this pagan city, in defiance of all discipline
-and in direct disobedience to La Salle&#8217;s lieutenant.
-The scene which broke upon his staring
-eyes stilled, for an instant, the beating of his
-heart, which seemed to bound into his throat to
-choke him.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">[121]</span>The square between the King&#8217;s litter and the
-entrance to the temple was thronged with men
-and women, in front of whom stood long lines of
-stalwart warriors, the flower of the army which
-had recently astonished the eyes of the wanderers
-from over-sea. Waving lights and shadows, the
-quarrelsome offspring of flaring torches, changed
-constantly the grim details of the scene, as if the
-night wind strove to hide the horrors of a dancing,
-evil dream.</p>
-
-<p>Directly in front of the main entrance to the
-temple of the sun-worshippers stood a post to
-which Chat&eacute;muc had been tied by cords. On
-either side of him white-robed priests, wielding
-long wooden rods, the ends of which had been
-turned to red coals in the sacred fire, prodded his
-hissing flesh, while they sang a chant of devilish
-triumph, in which the populace, enraged at the
-sacrilege attempted by the Mohican, joined at
-intervals.</p>
-
-<p>Facing the dying martyr, who gazed down at
-him with proud stoicism, knelt the gray-frocked
-Franciscan, Zenobe Membr&eacute;, holding toward the
-victim of excessive zeal the crude crucifix, for
-love of which Chat&eacute;muc, the Mohican, was now
-freeing his soul from torment.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nom de Dieu!&#8221; cried de Sancerre, placing
-his hand upon his rapier, &#8220;this savage sport must
-end!&#8221; In another instant the reckless Frenchman,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">[122]</span>
-carving his way to death, would have challenged
-an army, single-handed, had not Katonah,
-reeling from the horror of her brother&#8217;s death,
-fallen senseless into his reluctant arms.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">[123]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XV<br />
-
-
-
-<small>IN WHICH THE GRAY FRIAR DONS THE LIVERY OF<br />
-SATAN</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>&#8220;<span class="smcap">It</span> was a miracle! A voice from heaven
-whispered in my ear, and, turning back, I left
-de Tonti, angry, threatening, to take his way
-alone. To give my Chat&eacute;muc the words of absolution
-at the last, the Virgin Mother led me by
-the hand. And now in Paradise he wears a
-martyr&#8217;s crown. The saints be praised!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The earnest eyes of the Franciscan were turned
-upward in an ecstasy of gratitude and devotion.
-Seated upon a wooden bench by the gray friar&#8217;s
-side, de Sancerre listened musingly to Membr&eacute;&#8217;s
-account of the Italian captain&#8217;s attempt to entice
-him back to de la Salle&#8217;s camp before he had
-learned the outcome of Chat&eacute;muc&#8217;s effort to extinguish
-a flame from hell.</p>
-
-<p>Noco, well understanding the present temper
-of the sun-worshipping priesthood, and acting
-upon a command given to her by the Great Sun
-himself, had managed, with considerable difficulty,
-to persuade de Sancerre and Katonah to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">[124]</span>
-secrete themselves for a time in her unpretentious
-but not comfortless hut. Her rescue of Zenobe
-Membr&eacute; from his threatening environment at the
-martyred Mohican&#8217;s side had been, she flattered
-herself, a triumph of adroitness, and she sat in a
-dark corner of the room at this moment whispering
-to her gigantic grandson. Cabanacte, warm
-praise of her own cleverness. She had saved
-the Franciscan from the immediate vengeance
-of the sun-worshipping priests by suggesting to
-the latter that the summary execution of the
-gray-frocked singer of unorthodox chants might
-arouse the anger of Coyocop, whose coming,
-prophecy had told them, was connected, in some
-occult way, with the predicted advent of the
-white-faced envoys from the moon. Sated with
-the cruel entertainment vouchsafed to them by
-the death-twitchings of the stoical Chat&eacute;muc, the
-white-robed guardians of the sun-temple had
-permitted the Franciscan to depart with Noco,
-although the latter well knew that thenceforth
-every movement which she and her gray-garbed
-companion made would be noted by the dark
-eyes of fanatical spies.</p>
-
-<p>The room in which the refugees&mdash;for such the
-antagonism of the dominant sun-priests had made
-them&mdash;had found shelter for the night was a
-picturesque apartment, fifteen feet in length and
-breadth, and lighted by flickering gleams from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">[125]</span>
-the embers of a fire of walnut-wood. Upon a
-bed of plaited reeds, resting upon a wooden
-frame two feet high, lay Katonah, grief-stricken,
-motionless, making no sound. Heart-broken at
-her brother&#8217;s awful fate, the Indian maiden
-nursed her sorrow in loneliness and silence. In
-vain had the good friar attempted to console her
-for her irreparable loss by painting, in eloquent
-words, the rewards awaiting a martyr who died
-for love of Mother Church. Katonah was too
-recent a convert to the Franciscan&#8217;s faith to
-realize and rejoice in the unseen glories of her
-brother&#8217;s heroic self-sacrifice. She had listened to
-Membr&eacute;&#8217;s soothing words with a grateful smile
-upon her strong, symmetrical face, but evident
-relief had come to her when the gray-frocked enthusiast
-had retired from her bedside to seat himself
-beside de Sancerre in the centre of the room.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Pardieu!&#8221; muttered the Frenchman, casting
-a searching glance at the corner in which Noco
-and Cabanacte were engaged in earnest, low-voiced
-converse, &#8220;these people show outward
-signs of enlightenment, but they have a most
-brutal way of putting a man to death. The
-savage delight which those white-robed devils
-seemed to take in basting poor Chat&eacute;muc made
-my sword-point itch. &#8217;Twas well for me Saint
-Maturin was kind. He checked my folly just in
-time! But listen, father! The martyrdom of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">[126]</span>
-Chat&eacute;muc must now suffice. Those imps of hell
-will have your life, anon, unless you foil their
-craft by craft. I think I hear their stealthy footsteps
-menacing these sun-cooked walls and making
-challenge of our god, the moon.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The Franciscan put up his hand to enforce silence
-that he might listen to the furtive footfalls
-outside the hut. At that moment Noco and her
-grandson stole toward the centre of the room.
-The stalwart sun-worshipper, who now looked
-upon de Sancerre as a supernatural being worthy
-of the most reverential treatment, towered aloft
-in the narrow chamber like a keen-eyed, sun-burnt
-ogre who had lured a number of unlucky dwarfs
-to his den to have his grim way with them.
-Stretching his long body at full length before the
-sputtering fire, Cabanacte turned his admiring
-gaze toward the troubled face of his fleet-footed
-conqueror and waited for Noco to put into words
-the thoughts which fretted him.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&mdash;all of you&mdash;must leave here to-night,
-se&ntilde;or,&#8221; said the old woman in a guttural whisper.
-&#8220;The Brother of the Sun is your friend, but the
-priests of the temple look with suspicion upon
-you and the gray chanter. They would not dare
-to defy openly the King, but they have tracked
-you to this hiding-place and will work you mischief
-if they may.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But, se&ntilde;ora, I fear them not!&#8221; exclaimed de<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">[127]</span>
-Sancerre, drawing his rapier and allowing the
-fire-flashes to gleam along the steel. &#8220;Saving
-the father&#8217;s presence here, one sword against a
-priesthood is enough. My tongue&#8217;s as boastful
-as a Gascon&#8217;s, is it not? But list to this, se&ntilde;ora!
-I leave here only when I&#8217;ve had some speech
-with Coyocop, the spirit of the sun. When that
-may be I do not know, but Louis de Sancerre, a
-moonbeam&#8217;s eldest son, has sworn an oath&mdash;and
-so, se&ntilde;ora, my welcome I must stretch.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Cabanacte, who had learned a little distorted
-Spanish from his loquacious grandparent, had
-caught the drift of the Frenchman&#8217;s speech. Putting
-forth a large, brown hand, shapely in its
-massiveness, he touched the buckles upon de Sancerre&#8217;s
-shoes and exclaimed, in what sounded
-like a parody upon Noco&#8217;s rendition of an alien
-tongue:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Good! Good! The son of moonbeams has a
-lofty soul! And Cabanacte is his body-guard!
-No harm shall come to you, despite the oath our
-priests have sworn!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The smile upon de Sancerre&#8217;s ever-changing
-face was the visible sign of varied emotions.
-Pleased at the cordial proffer of Cabanacte&#8217;s
-friendship, the Frenchman was astonished to discover
-that the giant had picked up a Spanish
-vocabulary which, in spite of his peculiar pronunciation,
-was not wholly useless. That the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">[128]</span>
-survival of a Spanish <i>patois</i> among these sun-worshippers
-suggested a pathetic page of unwritten
-history de Sancerre realized, but his
-mind at that moment was too disturbed to linger
-long over an ethnological and linguistic problem.
-Turning to face the Franciscan friar, he
-said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;P&egrave;re Membr&eacute;, these pagan priests seek vengeance
-upon you. They have no reason yet for
-hating me, a splinter from a moonbeam who
-makes no open war against their creed. But,
-for the cause of Mother Church, we must lure
-them from their grim idolatry. Let Cabanacte
-use his strength and wits to find a pathway leading
-to our camp by which you may return. Here
-I shall stay until our leader, coming North again,
-shall send me word to quit this place, leaving
-behind me a friendly race, soil ready for the
-seeds of living truth.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was not excessive self-laudation which had
-led de Sancerre to believe that he possessed the
-qualifications essential to success in diplomacy.
-Whenever he had set out to effect a purpose
-seemingly worthy of studied effort, he had found
-no difficulty in checking the satirical tendencies
-of his flippant tongue. At this moment he was
-gazing at the Franciscan&#8217;s disturbed countenance
-with eyes which seemed to gleam with the fervor
-of his zeal for Mother Church. Wishing to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">[129]</span>
-convince P&egrave;re Membr&eacute; that the ultimate conversion
-of these pagans from their worship of hell-fire
-to the true faith depended upon their possession
-of a hostage who should study their
-manners and customs and learn the shortest path
-by which their unregenerated souls might be
-reached, de Sancerre explained his plan of action
-to the friar with an unctuous fervor which
-convinced the latter that he had underestimated
-the errant courtier&#8217;s enthusiasm as a proselyter.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But the Mohican maiden, monsieur? I owe
-it to Chat&eacute;muc, the martyr, now with the saints
-in Paradise, to place her in the care of de la
-Salle. His sword, my crucifix, must guard Katonah
-for her brother&#8217;s sake.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The walnut embers in the clumsy fireplace had
-grown black and cold. For some time past no
-sound had reached the ears of the schemers from
-the menacing environment outside the hut. The
-moon had touched its midnight goal, and sought,
-in passing, to probe the secrets of old Noco&#8217;s
-home.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Bonnement!</i>&#8221; exclaimed de Sancerre. &#8220;Go
-to her at once, good father, and tell her that &#8217;tis
-best she should return with you to-night. I&#8217;ll
-join you presently. Meanwhile, I must have
-further speech with Noco and her grandson.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Presently the moonbeams, which had stolen
-into the hut through chinks between the timbers<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">[130]</span>
-and the hardened mud, threw a dim light upon
-a most impressive tableau. The white face of
-the Frenchman was bent close to the dusky visage
-of the athletic sun-worshipper, while Noco,
-squatting upon the ground, bent toward them her
-wrinkled, grinning countenance, an effigy of
-&#8220;Gossip,&#8221; wrought in bronze. Bending over the
-reed-made couch upon which Katonah, dumb
-with misery, lay listening, stood the gray friar,
-whispering to the phlegmatic and seemingly
-obedient maiden the Frenchman&#8217;s late behest.</p>
-
-<p>Before the moonbeams could take their tale
-abroad, the scene had changed. From a corner
-of the hut Noco had brought to the Franciscan
-and his charge flowing garments of white mulberry bark,
-in which Katonah and the friar reluctantly
-enrobed themselves. With a harmless
-dye, old Noco, whose time-tested frame seemed
-to defy fatigue, deftly changed the protesting
-Membr&eacute;&#8217;s white complexion to light mahogany.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mother of Mary! I fear me this is sacrilege,&#8221;
-muttered the friar, nervously seeking his breviary
-beneath the white uniform of a lost sun-worshipper.
-&#8220;<i>Satis, superque!</i> You&#8217;ll make my face,
-old woman, as black as Satan&#8217;s heart! The
-saints forgive me! Were not my life of value to
-the Church, I&#8217;d gladly die before I&#8217;d don this
-ghostly livery of sin.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile de Sancerre had been straining his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">[131]</span>
-weary eyes in the effort to scratch a message to
-de la Salle with his dagger&#8217;s-point upon a slip of
-white bark.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The Spanish have tampered with a mighty
-nation,&#8221; he wrote. &#8220;I remain to learn the truth;
-to find a way to win them to our king. Camp
-where you are when you return. I&#8217;ll learn of
-your approach, rejoin you then, and bring you
-news most worthy your concern. <i>Au revoir,
-mon capitaine!</i> For France, with sword and
-crucifix!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>As he scrawled his signature beneath these
-words, Katonah glided silently to his side, a
-maiden whose grace was not destroyed by her
-unwonted garb, a costume enhancing the dark
-beauty of her proud, melancholy face. Her
-light hand rested gently upon his arm for a
-moment.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The good father tells me that you would have
-me go,&#8221; she murmured in a voice of mingled resignation
-and regret. De Sancerre, handing her
-the slip of mulberry bark upon which he had
-scratched a message to his leader, smiled up into
-the yearning face of the lonely girl.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Give this to our captain, Sieur de la Salle,&#8221;
-he said, sharply. &#8220;Fail not, Katonah! My life,
-I think, depends upon this scrawl.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A smile flashed across the maiden&#8217;s mournful
-face as she pressed the bark to her bosom, heaving<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">[132]</span>
-with a conflict of emotions to which no words
-of hers could give relief.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;His hand shall hold it ere the sun is up,&#8221; she
-said, simply. &#8220;Farewell!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>De Sancerre, looking up into the girl&#8217;s eyes
-felt, with amazement, the tears creeping into his.
-He bent his head and imprinted a kiss upon her
-slender, trembling hand, which felt like ice beneath
-his lips.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Courage, <i>ma petite</i>!&#8221; he cried, with forced
-gayety. &#8220;You will return anon! And then,
-the river once again, and home&mdash;and friends&mdash;and&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>His voice broke, and when he had regained
-his self-control he saw that Katonah had joined
-Cabanacte and the friar at the entrance to the
-hut.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">[133]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XVI<br />
-
-
-<small>IN WHICH A SPIRIT SAVES DE SANCERRE FROM DEATH</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">There</span> reigned in Noco&#8217;s hut intense silence.
-Stretched upon a bench in the centre of the room
-lay de Sancerre, his head bent forward and his
-eyes agleam, while he listened apprehensively to
-the murmurs of the night outside. On the
-ground at his feet squatted his aged hostess,
-quick to interpret every sound which echoed
-from the sleeping town. Her eyes still burned
-with the light of her marvellous vitality, but her
-present posture indicated that her old bones had
-grown weary of the friction begotten by a long
-and exacting day.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;All is well, se&ntilde;ora? You hear no threatening
-sound?&#8221; De Sancerre&#8217;s voice bore witness to
-the excitement under which he labored at that
-crucial moment.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A dog barks, near at hand; an owl hoots, far
-away. Our friends are safe beyond the town&mdash;and
-all is well!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Bien!</i> Do&ntilde;a Noco, I trust the keenness of
-your ears. I feared the searching gaze of wakeful<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">[134]</span>
-spies. &#8217;Tis possible your priests have gone to
-sleep.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The old hag grinned. &#8220;Make no mistake,&#8221;
-she exclaimed, in her broken Spanish. &#8220;Their
-eyes have seen your people, but, fearing Cabanacte&#8217;s
-wrath, they dared not search beneath the
-white robes at his side. Within the temple chattering
-priests will ask each other whom my
-grandson guides. They&#8217;ll ask in vain! But,
-hark! The night&#8217;s as quiet as a sleeping babe.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Then, when I&#8217;m in the mood, I&#8217;ll vow a candle
-to St. Raphael,&#8221; cried de Sancerre, lightly.
-&#8220;He travelled safe by wearing a disguise! But
-tell me, Do&ntilde;a Noco, is the coast now clear? I&#8217;ve
-set my heart upon a look at Coyocop&#8217;s abode. I
-cannot sleep until I know where this fair spirit
-of the sun is lodged.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The beldame&#8217;s black eyes flashed with excitement.
-Her overwrought frame seemed to renew
-its vigor as she arose to her feet and hurried toward
-the low-cut entrance to the hut. An instant
-later, de Sancerre found himself the solitary occupant
-of a dreary and disordered room. He
-peered through the shadows toward the exit
-through which Noco had passed and, for a moment,
-doubt of her good faith entered his mind.
-He fully comprehended the perils of his environment,
-and realized that upon the loyalty of the
-old hag who had just left his side depended his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">[135]</span>
-escape from the dangers which beset him. While
-it might be that he, an envoy from the moon,
-helped to fulfil an ancient prophecy in which
-these fickle sun-worshippers put faith, the fact
-remained that their chief, the Great Sun, had
-failed to give him countenance before the temple
-priests. It had become painfully apparent to de
-Sancerre that the real centre of authority in this
-land of superstitions was to be looked for near
-the sacred fire and not at the King&#8217;s throne.
-The fact that the Brother of the Sun had found
-it inexpedient to lodge the Frenchman in the
-royal residence bore testimony to the strong ties
-which bound the palace to the temple, to the
-close relationship of church and state. To a man
-who had spent years at Versailles, the influence
-exerted by a priesthood upon a king was not a
-marvel.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Ma foi!</i>&#8221; muttered de Sancerre to himself,
-as he rested his aching head upon his hand and
-watched expectantly the hole in the wall through
-which Noco had departed. &#8220;The old finesse
-which served me well at courts has worn itself to
-naught. In France or in this wilderness my
-fate&#8217;s the same. I jump to favor&mdash;then the King
-grows cold and potent priests usurp the place I
-held. But, even so, the tale is not all told. I&#8217;m
-here to solve a puzzle, not to fawn upon a prince
-nor tempt the vengeance of a temple&#8217;s brood.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">[136]</span>
-So be that Noco&#8217;s true, I yet may work my will
-upon a stubborn mystery.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>At that moment a hideous grin, weird offspring
-of ivory and bronze, rewarded de Sancerre&#8217;s
-straining gaze.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Follow me, se&ntilde;or,&#8221; whispered Noco through
-the hole which served as a door to the hut.
-&#8220;There&#8217;s no one in the city now awake save nodding
-priests who feed the fire with logs. I&#8217;ll
-show you in the moonlight where Coyocop&#8217;s at
-rest.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>In the white light of a cloudless night the City
-of the Sun lay disguised in a beauty which the
-bright glare of its own deity destroyed by day.
-Grouped around the temple, the houses of the
-sun-worshippers, rising gracefully from artificial
-mounds, were softened in their outlines by the
-moonbeams until they formed a city upon which
-de Sancerre, accustomed, as he was, to the architectural
-splendors of the old world, gazed with
-surprise and pleasure. Choosing the shadows
-cast by the sun-baked walls for her pathway,
-Noco led the stranger past the most pretentious
-building in the town, the sacred temple in which
-a mystic fire was ever kept alive. Like an
-earthen oven, one hundred feet in circumference,
-the stronghold of a cruel priesthood impressed
-the Frenchman with its grim significance. As
-he and his withered guide crept noiselessly past<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">[137]</span>
-the silent, shadow-haunted fane, de Sancerre succumbed
-to a shudder which he could not readily
-control. Upon a palisade above his head,
-surrounding the temple upon all sides, skulls
-gleamed in the moonlight, bearing sombre witness
-to the horrors of the cult by which a noble
-race was brutalized.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Dios!</i>&#8221; he muttered in the old hag&#8217;s ear, as he
-clasped her by the arm. &#8220;The shambles of your
-creed offend my sight! If you love me, se&ntilde;ora,
-we&#8217;ll leave this place behind!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>They had not far to go. Beyond the temple
-and facing the east stood the spacious cabin in
-which the Brother of the Sun maintained his
-royal state. It was silent and deserted as they
-stole by it, to take their stand in the shadow cast
-by a house proud of its nearness to the home of
-kings. White and silent, the night recalled to
-de Sancerre&#8217;s mind an evening in the outskirts of
-Versailles when, having eluded the watchful eyes
-of his Spanish rival, he had tempted Do&ntilde;a Julia
-de Aquilar to a stroll beneath the moon. His
-heart grew sick with the sweetness of his revery.
-He could see again the dark, liquid eyes, the raven
-hair, the pale, perfect face of a woman whose
-splendid beauty mocked him now as he stood
-there a waif, blown by the cruel winds of misfortune
-to a land where grinning skulls stared
-down at him at night, as if they&#8217;d heard the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">[138]</span>
-story of his lost love and rejoiced at his cruel
-plight.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Come! Come, se&ntilde;ora,&#8221; he murmured, fretfully,
-turning to retrace his steps, and seemingly
-forgetful of the object of his perilous pilgrimage.
-&#8220;Come! Let us go back!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Hush, se&ntilde;or! Listen!&#8221; whispered the old
-crone, hoarsely, pulling him closer toward the
-house in the shadow of which they lingered.
-&#8220;Listen! &#8217;Tis Coyocop!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>De Sancerre leaned against the wall of the
-hut, made dizzy for a moment by the wild
-beating of his heart. In perfect harmony with
-the melancholy beauty of the night arose a sad,
-soft, sweet-toned voice, which came to him at
-that moment like a caress bestowed upon him in
-a dream and made real by a miracle. De Sancerre
-clutched old Noco&#8217;s arm with a grasp which
-made her wince. Gazing at the moon-kissed
-scene before him with eyes which saw only a
-picture of the past he listened, white-lipped,
-breathless, trembling, to an old Spanish song,
-into which Juan Fernandez Heredia, more than
-a century before this night, had breathed the
-passion and the melancholy of a romantic race.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="first">&#8220;To part, to lose thee, was so hard,</div>
-<div class="indent">So sad that all besides is nought;</div>
-<div class="verse">The pain of death itself, compared</div>
-<div class="indent">To this, is hardly worth a thought.&#8221;</div>
-</div></div>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_139">[139]</span>A sob set to music, despair turned into song, a
-voice telling of unshed tears echoed through the
-night and gave way to silence for a time.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Nom de Dieu!</i> Do I dream, or am I going
-mad?&#8221; muttered de Sancerre to himself, peering
-down at his silent companion as if seeking an
-answer to the questions that beset him. Suddenly
-the voice, whose tones spoke to his heart
-in the only language known to all the world,
-again made music out of misery:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="first">
-&#8220;There is a wound that never heals&mdash;</div>
-<div class="indent">&#8217;Tis folly e&#8217;en to dream of healing;</div>
-<div class="verse">Inquire not what a spirit feels</div>
-<div class="indent">That aye has lost the sense of feeling.</div>
-</div>
-<div class="stanza">
-<div class="first">&#8220;My heart is callous now, and bared</div>
-<div class="indent">To every pang with sorrow fraught;</div>
-<div class="verse">The pain of death itself, compared</div>
-<div class="indent">To this, is hardly worth a thought.&#8221;</div>
-</div></div></div>
-
-<p>The song gave way to silence, and, drawing himself
-erect, like a man who awakens from a trance,
-de Sancerre turned to Noco:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8217;Tis the spirit of the sun,&#8221; whispered the old
-crone. &#8220;&#8217;Tis Coyocop. She sings at night the
-songs we cannot understand.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Listen, se&ntilde;ora,&#8221; muttered the Frenchman,
-striving to check the impetuosity which tempted
-him to defy the perils surrounding him and to
-enter the hut without more ado. &#8220;&#8217;Tis the spirit<span class="pagenum" id="Page_140">[140]</span>
-of the sun&mdash;of life and hope and love! I worship
-her, se&ntilde;ora. By what astounding chance&mdash; But
-let that pass! Do&ntilde;a Noco, you must speak
-to Coyocop at once. Tell her&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>De Sancerre&#8217;s words died upon his lips, for the
-wiry old hag had dragged him by the arm around
-a corner of the cabin before he could end his
-sentence.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Silence,&#8221; she murmured. &#8220;A priest of the
-temple has come this way to listen to the spirit&#8217;s
-voice. &#8217;Tis well for us that my old eyes are
-quick.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Not heeding the angry protests of the Frenchman,
-whose longing to send a word of greeting
-to a singer whose voice seemed to have reached
-him from a land far over-sea was driving him to
-desperate deeds, Noco led de Sancerre rapidly,
-by a circuitous path they had not trod before,
-toward the quarter of the sleeping town in which
-her hut awaited them. Beneath the ghastly sentinels
-grinning down at them from the temple&#8217;s
-palisades they stole for a space, and then turned
-to pick their way toward Noco&#8217;s home behind
-cabins which cast long shadows toward the east.</p>
-
-<p>Stepping from the gloom into the moonlight,
-Noco, holding the Frenchman like a captive by
-the arm, was about to enter her hut with her rebellious
-guest when there arose around them, as
-if the earth had suddenly given birth to a night-prowling<span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">[141]</span>
-priesthood, the white-robed figures of a
-score of silent men.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What have we here?&#8221; exclaimed de Sancerre,
-breaking away from Noco&#8217;s clutch, and drawing
-his rapier from its sheath. &#8220;My sword is
-fond of moonlight! Ask these ghostly cowards,
-se&ntilde;ora, how they dare to dog the footsteps of
-the Brother of the Moon. Just say to them
-that in this blood-stained blade there&#8217;s magic,
-made of silver-dust, to kill a thousand men.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Be silent, se&ntilde;or,&#8221; implored Noco. &#8220;I&#8217;ll save
-you, if I can.&#8221; Then, facing the chief priest,
-who towered above them a few paces in front of
-his silent and motionless brethren, she exclaimed,
-in the tongue of the sun-worshippers:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What would you with this scion of the moon?
-He worships Coyocop.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How know we that?&#8221; asked the chief priest,
-sternly, a bronze giant questioning a bronze
-dwarf surrounded by sentinels of bronze. In
-the very centre of the dusky, white-garbed
-group stood the pale, desperate Frenchman, his
-rapier pointed at an angle toward the ground,
-while his keen eyes, bold and unflinching, travelled
-defiantly from face to face of the scowling
-priests.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What says the Inquisition? Will they dare
-the terrors of my hungry blade, se&ntilde;ora?&#8221; cried
-de Sancerre, mockingly.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">[142]</span>&#8220;&#8217;Tis dread of the gray chanter that inspires
-them,&#8221; muttered Noco. Then she turned to the
-Frenchman. &#8220;I&#8217;ve told them that you worship
-Coyocop. They have no proof of it.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Pardieu!&#8221; exclaimed the Frenchman, elevating
-his rapier. &#8220;The blood of a sulky Spaniard
-on this blade is proof enough. But, I have it!
-Say to his holiness, the chief priest, that I will
-scratch a message to the spirit of the sun upon a
-piece of bark. Bid him, in person, take it straight
-to Coyocop. If he obeys not what she says to
-him, the City of the Sun is doomed.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Quickly translating de Sancerre&#8217;s defiant words
-into her native tongue, Noco, at a gesture from
-the chief priest, entered her hut. She was absent
-but a moment and, upon her return, handed a
-piece of virgin mulberry-wood to de Sancerre.
-Drawing his dagger from its sheath, the Frenchman
-scrawled these words upon the white bark:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>&#8220;Louis de Sancerre, of Languedoc, sends greeting to Coyocop.
-Warn the bearer that my person must be sacred in the
-City of the Sun. To-morrow I will speak to you the words I
-cannot write.&#8221;</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Noco, without more ado, handed the note to
-the guardian of the sacred fire, who received
-it with evident reluctance. Ignorant of the art
-of writing, he looked upon the gleaming bark as
-a bit of moon-magic which might, at any moment,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">[143]</span>
-cast upon him an evil spell. But, for the sake of
-his prestige with his order, he dared not give way
-to the dread which filled his superstitious soul.
-Stalking away, with Noco hurrying on behind
-him, he strode through the moonlight toward
-the house in which the spirit of the sun was
-lodged.</p>
-
-<p>The minutes which preceded his return were
-like weary hours to the distraught Frenchman,
-surrounded, as he was, by pitiless faces from
-which black, piercing eyes seemed to singe his
-velvets with their spiteful gleams. A tattered
-courtier, with drawn sword, he stood there motionless,
-silent, awaiting with foreboding the
-return of his most influential foe. If fancy, or
-a fever begotten of a long and exciting day, had
-played him a trick; if the song of Coyocop had
-been voiced by Julia de Aquilar only in his
-imagination, he knew that he was doomed.
-Presently he drew from his bosom the piece of
-bark upon which was written the Spanish maiden&#8217;s
-name. The sight revived his drooping
-courage. Whatever might be the explanation
-of the presence of Julia de Aquilar in this grim
-outland, his reason told him that his eyes and
-ears had not deceived him.</p>
-
-<p>At that moment the chief priest, breaking
-through the circle of his subordinates, strode
-quickly toward de Sancerre. Falling upon his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">[144]</span>
-knees, he raised his long arms toward the sky
-and uttered a harsh shout which was repeated
-by the onlooking priests.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are saved!&#8221; whispered the panting Noco,
-an instant later, to the Frenchman. &#8220;Coyocop
-has rescued you from death!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Having paid homage to the misunderstood
-scion of the moon, the guardian of the sacred
-fire handed to de Sancerre the bark, within
-which the former had found no evil spell.
-Scrawled beneath the Frenchman&#8217;s words were
-these:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>&#8220;The Holy Mother has heard my prayers. All glory be
-to her for this strange miracle. I await your coming with a
-grateful heart. No harm can fall upon you, for I have
-warned the temple priest. May the saints guard you through
-the night.</p>
-
-<p class="right">&#8220;<span class="smcap">Julia de Aquilar.</span>&#8221;</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Turning to Noco, who had regained her breath,
-de Sancerre said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Say to this servant of the sun that I grant
-him pardon for his foolish threats. But warn
-him to take heed of how he walks. Unless he
-payeth abject homage to my power, it may go
-hard with him.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Waving his rapier &#8217;til it flashed before the eyes
-of the overawed priest like a magic wand made
-of silvery moonbeams, de Sancerre strode with
-studied dignity toward Noco&#8217;s hut, and disappeared<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">[145]</span>
-from sight. The sun-priests, headed by
-their subdued chief, filed solemnly toward their
-blood-stained temple, and presently the moon,
-drooping toward the west, gazed down upon a
-city apparently abandoned by all men.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">[146]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XVII<br />
-
-
-<small>IN WHICH DE SANCERRE BREAKS HIS FAST AND SMILES</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Worn</span> out with the exhausting experiences of
-long hours, unprecedented, even in his varied career,
-for the many contrasted emotions with
-which they had assailed him, de Sancerre had
-thrown himself, fully dressed, upon a bed of
-plaited reeds in Noco&#8217;s hut, and, despite his inclination
-to muse upon the joy and wonder of
-the day&#8217;s concluding episode, had fallen into a
-dreamless, restful sleep, which still wrapped him
-in its benign embrace long after the sun-god had
-blinked at the matutinal shouts with which the
-shining orb was greeted by its worshippers at
-dawn. The day was nearly ten hours of age
-before the Frenchman, stretching his arms and
-legs to their full length, awoke suddenly, and,
-with a smile upon his lips and a gleam of happiness
-in his eyes, recalled instantly the marvel
-which had made his present environment, with
-all its perils, a delight to his refreshed and ardent
-soul. Suddenly he discovered that while
-he slept his outer garments had been removed.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">[147]</span>
-Turning on his side he raised his head, rested it
-upon his hand, and glanced toward the centre of
-the room, which still bore marks of the disorder
-begotten by the hasty flight of the disguised
-Franciscan and his charge.</p>
-
-<p>Squatting upon the ground beside a bench,
-upon which rested de Sancerre&#8217;s nether garments,
-sat old Noco, busily plying her fish-bone
-needle, while she repaired the many rents in his
-doublet and crooned a monotonous chant in a
-harsh, guttural voice. At the further end of the
-hut a crackling fire sent forth an odor which increased
-the satisfaction of the Frenchman with
-his surroundings. With corn-meal and fish, de
-Sancerre&#8217;s hostess had prepared a repast which
-the most fastidious palate at Versailles would
-have found seductive. Upon a small bench at
-Noco&#8217;s right hand stood a bowl of reddish crockery,
-in which wild strawberries awaited the
-pleasure of her guest.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You will pardon me, se&ntilde;ora,&#8221; cried de Sancerre,
-gayly, &#8220;if I remark that my present plight
-is somewhat embarrassing. I shall be late at
-table unless my overworked wardrobe is restored
-to me at once.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Mas vale tarde que nunca!</i>&#8221; retorted the old
-hag, glancing inquiringly at the fire, and then
-resuming her patchwork. &#8220;You slept well,
-se&ntilde;or?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">[148]</span>&#8220;Like a log,&#8221; answered de Sancerre&mdash;&#8220;a log
-saved from the sacred fire. And now, there is
-no time to lose! We have before us, Do&ntilde;a
-Noco, a busy day.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nay,&#8221; returned his hostess, approaching his
-bedside with his rejuvenated garments upon her
-withered arm. &#8220;&#8217;Tis well to wait a while. When
-Cabanacte has returned, we&#8217;ll hold a council and
-perfect a plan. It is not fitting that the Brother
-of the Moon should show himself at once.
-My people worship best the gods they do not
-see.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Again de Sancerre caught in Noco&#8217;s eyes a
-mocking gleam which once before had placed
-him in close sympathy with her. That this old
-hag, whose mind was quick and clear, had, in
-her heart of hearts, discarded many of the ancient
-superstitions to which she outwardly conformed
-the Frenchman more than half suspected.
-But he spoke no further word to her until he
-had made a hasty toilet, and, refreshed by an
-application of cool water to his face and hands,
-had seated himself upon a bench to rejoice his inner
-man with strawberries, corn-cake, and skilfully-cooked
-fish. The variety of Noco&#8217;s accomplishments
-filled de Sancerre with mingled
-admiration and astonishment. Speaking two
-languages, expert with her needle, an admirable
-cook, quick-witted, fertile in resource, the old<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">[149]</span>
-woman impressed the Frenchman that morning
-as a being well entitled to his respect and gratitude.
-But his mind dwelt no long time upon
-the praiseworthy versatility of his aged hostess.
-Impatient and impetuous by nature, he chafed
-sorely at inaction.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Cabanacte!&#8221; he exclaimed, after he had satisfied
-his appetite, observing that Noco had disposed
-of the most exacting of her many tasks.
-&#8220;When think you, se&ntilde;ora, your grandson will
-return?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;When &#8217;tis best for you, se&ntilde;or,&#8221; answered the
-old woman, shortly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And &#8217;twas he, Do&ntilde;a Noco, who found Coyocop,
-the spirit of the sun, by the shore of the
-great sea?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8217;Twas Cabanacte who found Coyocop, whose
-coming was foretold when the mountains were
-but hillocks, and bore her to the sacred City of
-the Sun.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He found her by the sea alone?&#8221; asked de
-Sancerre, wonderingly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The Brother of the Moon should know all
-things,&#8221; muttered Noco, with satire in her eyes
-and voice. Then she went on: &#8220;The white-faced
-children of the moon who bore her to our land
-lay sleeping on the beach, awaiting the coming of
-their god to waken them. But Cabanacte knew
-that she was Coyocop. And so, she came to us.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">[150]</span>From outside the hut de Sancerre could hear
-the noises of a town astir, the tread of bare-footed
-men upon the hardened earth, the cries of
-children at their play, and, now and then, the
-voices of women chattering of many wondrous
-things. He longed to make his way at once to
-Coyocop&#8217;s abode that with his eyes he might
-assure himself that last night&#8217;s strange adventures
-had not taken place in dreams. Even yet,
-he found it hard to believe that Julia de Aquilar
-was, in reality, a captive, like himself, in this
-weird town. But there lay her own handwriting
-on the bark! He read and reread the message
-which she had sent to him, and, turning toward
-Noco, asked, pensively:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Coyocop, se&ntilde;ora, seemed glad to learn that I
-was here?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I know not what the chief priest may have
-thought,&#8221; croaked the old crone, a gleam of malice
-in her black eyes as they met de Sancerre&#8217;s
-gaze, &#8220;but to me she seemed less like a goddess
-than a girl. She wept for joy to read your
-note.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>De Sancerre sprang to his feet and paced up
-and down the hut restlessly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Cabanacte!&#8221; he exclaimed, petulantly. &#8220;<i>Nom
-de Dieu!</i> When will the man return?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We care not much for women in this land of
-ours,&#8221; muttered Noco, using her broken Spanish<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">[151]</span>
-to tease her impatient guest. &#8220;Out of clay the
-Great Spirit moulded the first man, and, pleased
-with what he&#8217;d made, blew into him the breath
-of life. And thus he fell to sneezing, the first
-man, &#8217;til from his nose there dropped a doll-shaped
-thing which set to dancing upon the
-ground there at his feet. And as she danced,
-she grew in size, until a woman stood before his
-eyes. It is not strange that man should make
-us work!&#8221; A sarcastic grin rested upon the
-hag&#8217;s brown face as she gazed up at de Sancerre.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But Coyocop is more than woman,&#8221; cried de
-Sancerre, earnestly. &#8220;<i>Caramba!</i> But you love
-to torture me, se&ntilde;ora! I say to you, beware! I
-know not what may lie the deepest in your
-heart, but this I say to you, &#8217;twill serve you
-well to do your best for me. The time is coming
-when I&#8217;ll pay you tenfold for your kindness
-now.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Noco drew near to the Frenchman and stood
-before him, listening for a time to the familiar
-noises outside her hut. Then she asked, in a
-tone which had no mischief in it:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The Spanish, se&ntilde;or. Do you love them
-well?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>For a moment de Sancerre, startled by so unexpected
-an interrogatory, gazed down at the
-old hag, speechless. His suspicious mind strove
-in vain to find her motive for a question which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">[152]</span>
-seemed to him, at first, to have no bearing upon
-the topics they had just discussed. But his intuitions
-told him that upon the answer he should
-make to her would depend her attitude toward
-him from this time forth. By one word, he well
-knew, he might destroy in an instant the good-will
-of the one ally who could save him and Julia
-de Aquilar from the dangers which menaced them.
-Noco spoke Spanish, a tongue which, it seemed
-probable, she had learned from her immediate
-ancestors. That the Spaniards had treated the
-native Americans with great cruelty, de Sancerre
-had often heard. Was it possible that Noco had
-inherited a hatred for a race of oppressors from
-whom her forebears had fled in fear? On the
-chance that this might be, the Frenchman, hesitating
-only a moment, decided finally to tell the
-truth to his dusky inquisitor.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Do&ntilde;a Noco,&#8221; said de Sancerre, impressively,
-placing a hand upon the old crone&#8217;s arm, &#8220;the
-Spanish are my dearest foes. Often have I led
-my men against them on the fields of war. I hold
-for them a hatred only less intense than the love
-I bear for Coyocop.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The dark, beady eyes of the beldame seemed
-to search de Sancerre&#8217;s very soul. Suddenly she
-fell upon her knees, and, seizing his cold hand,
-pressed it to her shrivelled lips.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am your servant, se&ntilde;or&mdash;even unto death,&#8221;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">[153]</span>
-she muttered, hoarsely. Then she sprang to her
-feet with marvellous agility and stood listening
-intently, as if the noise outside bore some new
-tale to her quick ears.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8217;Tis Cabanacte!&#8221; she exclaimed. &#8220;And with
-him comes the sister of the foolish man they
-slew.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Hardly had de Sancerre grasped the significance
-of her words, when Katonah, followed by
-Noco&#8217;s grandson, stole into the hut, panting as if
-their journey had been a hurried one.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Bienvenue</i>, Katonah!&#8221; cried de Sancerre, a
-note of mingled annoyance and surprise in his
-voice. &#8220;I did not think to see you here again.
-You bring me word from Sieur de la Salle?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Katonah&#8217;s sensitive ear caught the hollow
-sound in the Frenchman&#8217;s word of welcome.
-The suggestion of a sad smile played across her
-weary face, as she said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The great captain urged me not to come.
-But, monsieur, I was so lonely! With you and
-Chat&eacute;muc not there, I could not stay.&#8221; A suppressed
-sob checked her words. Handing to de
-Sancerre a note from de la Salle, the Mohican
-maiden seated herself upon a bench and gazed
-mournfully at the glowing embers of Noco&#8217;s
-dying fire.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Ma foi</i>, Cabanacte, I&#8217;m glad to see your
-giant form again!&#8221; cried de Sancerre, smiling as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">[154]</span>
-he perused de la Salle&#8217;s epistle. It ran as follows:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>&#8220;Let this chance, monsieur, to serve your king atone for
-your disobedience to me. Be firm, unbending, and conservative.
-Well I know that you will be courageous. Await me
-where you are. I return shortly, and will send for you. I
-must teach the mouth of this great river to speak the name
-of France. I go to ring the knell of Spain! <i>Adieu et au
-revoir!</i></p>
-
-<p class="right">&#8220;<span class="smcap">De la Salle.</span>&#8221;</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Bien!</i>&#8221; exclaimed de Sancerre, kissing his
-hand to old Noco, smilingly. &#8220;We hold the
-cards we need. &#8217;Twill be my fault if blunders
-now should lose the game we play.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The old woman had come to the side of her eccentric
-guest.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My captain,&#8221; went on de Sancerre, in a lower
-tone, &#8220;a brother of the moon-god, like myself,
-tells me in this note that he goes to seize a kingdom
-from our Spanish foes. You are content,
-se&ntilde;ora? You are content?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Aye, se&ntilde;or, well content!&#8221; answered the old
-hag with grim emphasis.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And now,&#8221; exclaimed the Frenchman, beckoning
-to Cabanacte to approach them, &#8220;we&#8217;ll
-hold a solemn council, for the truth is this: unless
-I soon have speech with Coyocop, my throbbing
-heart will thump itself to death. Tell me,
-Cabanacte, is there danger for yon maiden, whose
-brother died the death?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">[155]</span>The bronze athlete had stretched himself at de
-Sancerre&#8217;s feet in such a position that he could
-fix his gaze upon the sombre beauty of Katonah&#8217;s
-face. He showed his perfect teeth, and his black
-eyes gleamed as he answered:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Danger for her? No, none! Not while
-Cabanacte lives.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>De Sancerre smiled gayly. Cabanacte&#8217;s answer
-had delighted him.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">[156]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XVIII<br />
-
-
-<small>IN WHICH DE SANCERRE HEARS NEWS OF THE<br />
-GREAT SUN</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> Count de Sancerre&#8217;s desire to come to
-an immediate decision regarding a line of action
-that should lead him at once into the living
-presence of Coyocop was not to be gratified.
-Noco&#8217;s sensitive ear, acting as a thermometer
-to register the degree of excitement prevailing
-outside her cabin, had heard an ominous
-murmur that had lost none of its threatening
-significance because it had come from afar. She
-knew at once that a crowd of gossiping sun-worshippers,
-inspired by some new rumor, had
-gathered in the great square near the temple of
-the sun. Hurrying to her grandson&#8217;s side, she
-said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Go forth at once, Cabanacte, and mingle
-with the throng outside. There&#8217;s news abroad
-which makes the city talk. Return to us when
-you have learned the meaning of the uproar in
-the square.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The dark-hued colossus reluctantly arose and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">[157]</span>
-stood, for a moment, listening to the increasing
-disturbance among his easily-excited neighbors.
-Hurrying feet, making toward the temple of the
-sun and the King&#8217;s cabin, echoed from the street
-just outside the hut. The pattering footsteps of
-chattering women and children mingled with the
-louder tread of stalwart men, aroused from their
-siesta by an epidemic of distrust. Cabanacte,
-dismayed at the grim possibilities suggested by
-this unwonted demonstration upon the part of a
-people little given to activity at noonday, bent
-down to Noco before obeying her behest.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Secrete the maiden where no prying eye can
-see her,&#8221; he murmured, hoarsely, still gazing at
-Katonah. &#8220;I&#8217;ll join the rabble and return at
-once. I dread the cruel fervor of our priests.
-But still they cannot know that it was her brother
-whom they killed?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Stop not to make conjecture, Cabanacte,&#8221;
-scolded the old crone, pushing her grandson
-toward the hut&#8217;s ignoble exit. &#8220;I say to you,
-&#8217;tis not Katonah who has made the city talk.
-&#8217;Tis some calamity&mdash;I know not what.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Without more ado, the tall sun-worshipper
-crawled from the twilight of the hut into the
-burning sunshine of the agitated street, and,
-drawing himself erect, joined the gossiping
-throng which poured noisily toward the great
-square. To Cabanacte&#8217;s great surprise and relief,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">[158]</span>
-his appearance in the open caused no added
-excitement among the bronze-faced, eager-eyed
-men and women who hurried by his side toward
-the centre of the town. It became evident to
-him at once that the news which awaited him
-beyond had nothing to do with the strangers
-whom he had left in the hut behind him.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile de Sancerre, vexed at the delay to
-which a mercurial people had forced him to submit,
-gazed despondently now at Noco and now
-at Katonah. French expletives, colored by a
-Spanish oath at times, escaped from his erstwhile
-smiling mouth. Noco had stationed herself
-at the entrance to the cabin, endeavoring to
-catch the echo of some enlightening rumor as it
-flew back from the crowded square. Katonah,
-watching the Frenchman with eyes which seemed
-to implore his forgiveness, had withdrawn to a
-remote corner of the room and seated herself
-wearily upon a wooden bench. If she had heard
-a menace to herself in the uproar in the town, she
-gave no outward indication of the dread that her
-heart might feel. With the proud shyness of a
-sensitive girl, and the external stoicism of an Indian,
-she withdrew, as far as was possible, from the
-presence of her companions and made no further
-sign. Had Zenobe Membr&eacute; known that at this
-ominous juncture Katonah had murmured no
-prayer, no invocation to the saints, the sanguine<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">[159]</span>
-Franciscan would have marvelled, perhaps wept,
-at the mighty gulf which stretched between the
-martyred Chat&eacute;muc, secure in Paradise, and a
-melancholy maiden who had known the faith
-and lost it.</p>
-
-<p>The chagrined Frenchman, fully realizing his
-own impotence at this mysterious crisis, presently
-arose and began to pace the room with impatient
-steps. He felt like a man to whom some unexpected
-and glowing promise had been given by
-destiny, to be withdrawn almost at the moment of
-its presentation. During the long, weary hour
-which followed Cabanacte&#8217;s departure from the
-hut, de Sancerre&#8217;s mind vibrated between hope
-and despair. Had he made the amazing discovery
-of Julia de Aquilar&#8217;s presence in the City of
-the Sun only that it might mock him for his lack
-of power? Could it be that fate had lured him
-in malice within sound of her sweet voice to
-hurl him into the lonely silence of the wilderness
-at last? And to himself he swore an oath that
-he would never leave the City of the Sun alive
-unless the Spanish maiden fled with him to the
-wilds. Death in the effort to save her from
-years of hopeless captivity was preferable, a
-thousand times, to life and freedom and a vain
-regret. How well he loved this woman de Sancerre
-had never known before. For the first
-time this <i>mondain</i>, who had fondly imagined<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">[160]</span>
-that life had nothing new to give him, realized
-the might and majesty of a great passion, and
-his soul grew sick with the fear that its ecstasy
-might change to misery at last.</p>
-
-<p>But while de Sancerre&#8217;s mind dwelt fondly
-upon the joy of an all-absorbing love, it endeavored,
-at the same time, to make an inventory
-of the actual and the possible dangers which
-he would be compelled to confront before he
-could indulge the hope that the love he welcomed
-would ever fulfil the promise which it
-held within itself.</p>
-
-<p>Weeks must pass before de la Salle could return
-from his voyage to the gulf. Even then
-the explorer had at his command no force with
-which to overcome these martial and stalwart
-sun-worshippers. De Sancerre&#8217;s only hope lay
-in diplomacy and craft. It was essential to the
-success of his scheme, whose general outlines
-were already forming in his mind, that the superstitious
-tendencies of the people surrounding
-him be used as a tool for forging his escape.
-But their fanaticism was a double-edged instrument
-which must be handled with the nicest
-care or it would turn within his hands and destroy
-him at a blow.</p>
-
-<p>Coyocop? How far could he trust her quickness
-and discretion? That she possessed both of
-these qualities he was inclined to believe. One<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">[161]</span>
-of her greatest charms in the blithesome days at
-Versailles had consisted in her ready responsiveness
-to his changing moods, in the keenness of a
-mind which shone to advantage even in that
-centre of the great world&#8217;s sharpest wit. As
-for her discretion, had it not been proved by
-the fact that she had maintained for many
-months her alien authority over these fickle,
-jealous, sharp-eyed people? Furthermore&mdash;and
-de Sancerre lingered over the mystery with much
-concern&mdash;she had, during that same period, managed
-to conceal from the keen-witted and revengeful
-Noco the fact that her origin was
-Spanish, not divine. How well the girl must
-have played a most exacting part to deceive
-the eccentric old hag, de Sancerre fully realized.
-That in Julia de Aquilar he would find an ally
-well-fitted to play the r&ocirc;le which he had in
-mind for her, her skill in blinding Noco gave
-good proof. But, at the best, de Sancerre&#8217;s
-growing project must win the full fruition of
-success much more by chance than by design.
-Even before he took initial steps, he must learn
-what new excitement had aroused the lazy town
-at noon.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Peste!</i>&#8221; he exclaimed, fretfully. &#8220;It was
-no victory to outrun Cabanacte. His heavy
-limbs are slower than a Prussian&#8217;s wits.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>At that very instant the hole beside which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">[162]</span>
-Noco lurked was darkened by her grandson&#8217;s
-stooping form. Drawing himself erect, after
-he had pulled his long limbs into the hut,
-Cabanacte glanced searchingly around the room
-until his black eyes lighted upon the self-absorbed
-Katonah. Then, followed by Noco, he
-strode toward de Sancerre.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There is no danger to the girl,&#8221; muttered the
-giant, as he seated himself upon a bench, which
-groaned in protest beneath his weight. &#8220;But I
-bring to you bad news.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Ma foi</i>, you look it!&#8221; exclaimed de Sancerre
-to himself, scanning the troubled countenance of
-the dusky youth.</p>
-
-<p>Turning to Noco, Cabanacte poured forth rapidly
-in his native tongue the sombre story which
-he had heard abroad, and then stood erect, gazing
-at Katonah.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The Great Sun lies dying!&#8221; exclaimed the
-old woman, excitedly, turning from her grandson
-to her guest. &#8220;In perfect health at sunrise,
-he fell near noonday, and none can make him
-speak.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>De Sancerre had sprung to his feet and was
-glancing alternately down at Noco and up at
-Cabanacte. The menacing significance of the
-misfortune which had fallen upon the King appeared
-to him at once. Had evil come to the
-Great Sun in some way not readily explainable,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">[163]</span>
-the crafty sun-priests would lay his sickness to
-the blighting influence of the stranger&#8217;s magic,
-the fatal witchery brought with him from the
-moon.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s dying, do you say? There is no hope?&#8221;
-gasped the Frenchman, looking into Noco&#8217;s eyes
-for a ray of encouragement.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s dying as his mother died,&#8221; muttered the
-old crone, musingly, seemingly forgetful of de
-Sancerre&#8217;s presence. &#8220;But, even then, he had
-long years to live. And yesterday he looked no
-older than my Cabanacte there.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He&#8217;s dying, do you say?&#8221; repeated the Frenchman,
-mechanically.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Aye, dying, se&ntilde;or,&#8221; hissed the beldame, spitefully.
-&#8220;And now the temple priests prepare the
-cords with which they&#8217;ll choke his servants and
-his wives to death. No Great Sun goes alone
-into the land beyond! What sights my eyes
-have seen! King follows king into the spirit-world,
-and with them go the best and noblest
-of our weeping race. Aye, se&ntilde;or, the Great
-Sun&#8217;s dying and the city mourns. When he
-has passed, his household follows him. The
-sight you saw but yesternight was child&#8217;s-play
-for the priests. &#8217;Tis when a Great Sun dies they
-have man&#8217;s sport with death.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The mocking, angry tones in Noco&#8217;s guttural
-voice made the broken Spanish in which she<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">[164]</span>
-spoke impress the Frenchman&#8217;s ears as a most
-repellent tongue. De Sancerre was striving feverishly
-to grasp the full significance of her grim
-words, to weigh in all its bearings the new exigency
-which had increased a hundredfold the
-peril in which he stood. But the thought beset
-him, with tyrannical persistence, that he had no
-time to lose. Should the Great Sun die at once,
-de Sancerre would be powerless against any revenge
-which the sun-priests might, in their crafty
-cruelty, seek to take. How far the homage
-which they paid to Coyocop could be trusted to
-save him in the crisis which would follow the
-King&#8217;s death he could not determine, but he had
-begun to fear that not only the priests but the
-people at large would hold him responsible for
-the sudden and mysterious blow which had fallen
-upon the throne. With little time at his disposal
-in which to examine the crisis from many points
-of view, de Sancerre came quickly to the conclusion
-that his doom was sealed unless he acted
-with boldness, decision, and rapidity. Satisfied
-of the loyalty of Noco and Cabanacte, although
-he marvelled somewhat at their good-will, he
-drew himself up to his full height, and, putting
-up his hand to command silence, said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Go forth at once, Cabanacte, and tell the
-people of this afflicted town that it was the insult
-cast upon me by the temple priests which<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">[165]</span>
-brought down the wrath of Heaven upon the
-Great Sun&#8217;s head. Tell this to the rabble. Then
-go to the chief priest and say to him that he,
-too, shall fall with suddenness before his fire unless
-he heeds the words that I shall speak. Bid
-him be silent &#8217;til I come to him, and to keep
-his priests at prayer. <i>Nom de Dieu</i>, my Cabanacte,
-have you lost your ears? Stop staring at
-me and go forth at once, or, with the ease with
-which my legs outran you, I&#8217;ll strike you dead
-with this!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Waving his rapier threateningly at the giant&#8217;s
-panting breast, de Sancerre drove the startled
-athlete through the entrance to the street, and
-then turned back to seize the trembling Noco by
-the arm.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have a message which you must take to
-Coyocop! If you should fail to gain her ear,
-the City of the Sun is doomed. Say this to her,
-that when I send a priest to summon her she
-must be quick to join me at the Great Sun&#8217;s
-lodge. Repeat my words, se&ntilde;ora.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Shaking the old crone roughly by the arm, de
-Sancerre bent down to catch her gasping voice.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Bien!</i>&#8221; he cried, &#8220;you&#8217;ve conned your lesson
-well! Go, now, se&ntilde;ora, and make no mistake!
-If you would save your dying king, see Coyocop
-and tell her what I say.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>In another instant the panting Noco, grumbling<span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">[166]</span>
-but overawed, had left the hut upon a mission
-for which she had no hungry heart.</p>
-
-<p>De Sancerre drew back from the entrance, and
-dropped limply upon a bench. He had put into
-operation a hastily-formed plan with an impetuosity
-which, in its rebound, left him faint and
-dazed. Suddenly a warm pressure upon his cold
-hands aroused him from his momentary submission
-to this enervating reaction. Looking down,
-he saw that Katonah was gazing up at him with
-sympathetic apprehension.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I have placed you in great danger by my return!&#8221;
-she exclaimed. &#8220;I am going now. I
-will not come back.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>She had arisen and was about to leave the hut.
-Seizing her hand, de Sancerre drew her to his
-side.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, <i>ma petite</i>! You are not at fault! Don&#8217;t
-leave me&mdash;but do not speak! I must think&mdash;I
-must think! But my mind&#8217;s in a whirl. <i>Courage</i>,
-Katonah! There, do not tremble so! <i>Ma foi</i>,
-little one, &#8217;tis a hard nut we have to crack!
-There, do not move! Let me take your hand.
-<i>Bien!</i> Now, let me think!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Silence, intense, unbroken, reigned within the
-hut; while, outside, the hot sun beat down upon
-a city in which rumor itself had become voiceless
-in growing dread of a fatal word.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">[167]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XIX<br />
-
-
-<small>IN WHICH COHEYOGO EXHIBITS HIS CRAFTINESS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">While</span> the Great Sun, by virtue of his divine
-origin, was technically the high-priest of the nation,
-it had come about, at the time of Count
-Louis de Sancerre&#8217;s sojourn among the sun-worshippers,
-that the chief of the holy men, upon
-whom devolved the duty of keeping alive the
-sacred fire, had, by the strength of his bigoted
-personality, usurped all religious authority and
-had made the temple independent of, and more
-potent than, the royal cabin. While the chief
-priest had never openly defied the Great Sun, he
-had, nevertheless, gradually become the most influential
-personage in the nation.</p>
-
-<p>It was the advent of Coyocop which had given
-to Coheyogo, the chief priest, an opportunity for
-making himself, with no visible break between
-the church and state, practically omnipotent in
-the City of the Sun.</p>
-
-<p>Just how thoroughly Coheyogo believed that
-Julia de Aquilar was the very incarnation of the
-sun-spirit which, tradition had assured his people,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">[168]</span>
-would come to them from the shore of a distant
-sea, it is impossible to say. It is a fact,
-however, that from the moment of her arrival
-among the sun-worshippers the chief priest had
-openly accepted the maiden as a supernatural
-guest from whom emanated an authority which
-he and his fellow-priests were in duty bound to
-obey. For the furtherance of his own ends and
-the increase of his own power, the crafty Coheyogo
-could have taken no better course.</p>
-
-<p>It had come about that Noco as interpreter&mdash;the
-connecting link between the spirit of the sun
-and the chief priest of the temple&mdash;had found
-herself in a position of great influence. The old
-hag, a compound of superstition, spitefulness,
-and saturnine humor done up in a crumpled
-brown package, had derived malicious satisfaction
-from playing Coheyogo&#8217;s game with a skill
-and an audacity which had saved her from the
-many perils which had menaced her in the pursuit
-of this eccentric pastime.</p>
-
-<p>Coheyogo would visit Coyocop with Noco and
-lay before the sun-spirit some problem dealing
-with the attitude of the temple toward a question
-at that moment interesting the sun-worshippers.
-The quick-witted and fearless interpreter would
-answer the chief priest with advice originating
-in her own fertile brain, and, in this way, would
-protect Coyocop from cares of state, while she<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">[169]</span>
-made a willing tool of Coheyogo and satisfied
-her own love of mischief. Within well-defined
-limitations, old Noco, at the moment of which
-we write, held under her control more actual
-power than either the Great Sun or the chief
-priest. As the tongue of Coyocop, the court of
-last resort in a priest-ridden state, the old crone,
-with little fear of detection, could put into the
-mouth of the sun-spirit whatever words she chose.
-Fortunately for Coyocop and the sun-worshippers,
-the aged linguist was, at heart, progressive rather
-than reactionary. She had cherished for years a
-detestation for the bloody sacrifices of the temple,
-which heterodoxy, had Coheyogo suspected it,
-would have long ago brought her life to a sudden
-end. As it was, the old interpreter had
-made use of Coyocop to mitigate, as far as possible,
-the horrors which a cruel cult, administered by
-heartless priests, had inflicted upon a brave, kindly,
-but too plastic race.</p>
-
-<p>It was now a full hour past high noon, and
-Coheyogo stood, surrounded by the temple
-priests, confronting Cabanacte by the sacred fire.
-The interior of the sun-temple was not less repulsive
-to an unbiased eye than the skull-crowned
-palisades outside. Divided into two rooms of
-unequal size, the interior of the blood-stained
-fane served the double purpose of a gigantic
-oven to keep the veins of the living at fever-heat<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">[170]</span>
-and of a tomb in which the bones of the noble dead
-might crumble into dust. In the larger of the
-two rooms, in which the chief priest was now
-holding a council of the elders, stood an altar
-seven feet long by two in width and rising to a
-height of four feet above the floor. Upon this
-altar rested a long, hand-painted basket in which
-reposed the remains of the reigning Great Sun&#8217;s
-immediate predecessor.</p>
-
-<p>The heat of the room was intense, for no windows
-broke the monotony of the temple&#8217;s walls;
-mud-baked partitions, nine inches in thickness.
-Rows of plaited mats covered the arched ceiling of
-the interior. At the end of the room furthest
-from the sacred fire, folding doors, closed at this
-moment, opened into the private apartments of
-the chief priest. Running from these doors,
-along both sides of the smoke-blackened hall,
-wooden shelves supported the grewsome relics of
-horrid ceremonials. Long lines of baskets, daubed
-with red and yellow paint, contained the revered
-dust of Great Suns gone into the land of spirits
-accompanied by the loyal souls of their strangled
-wives and retainers. Scattered between these
-tawdry urns, the shelves bore crudely-wrought
-clay figures of men, women, serpents, owls,
-and eagles; and here and there an offering
-of fruit, meat, or fish stood ready to satisfy
-the craving of any uneasy ghost coming back<span class="pagenum" id="Page_171">[171]</span>
-dissatisfied with the cuisine of the spirit-world.</p>
-
-<p>Grouped around the sacred fire, in which logs
-of oak and walnut preserved a flame which the
-sun-god had vouchsafed to man in a remote day
-of grace, the temple priests, whose dark faces
-bore evidence of their internal agitation, stood
-listening and watching as Cabanacte and Coheyogo
-faced each other at this crisis and discussed,
-in subdued tones, a question of immediate significance.
-As the chosen discoverer of Coyocop,
-the instrument employed by the great spirit for
-the fulfilment of an ancient prophecy, Cabanacte
-occupied an influential position in the eyes of
-the temple brotherhood. The inspiration from
-on high, which had turned the giant&#8217;s feet toward
-a haunted shingle upon which the spirit of the
-sun lay asleep, might at any moment stir his
-tongue with words of divine origin. Since the
-night upon which Cabanacte had brought Coyocop
-to the City of the Sun, he had always been
-listened to with rapt attention by the jealous
-guardians of the sacred fire.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He threatens me, you say?&#8221; muttered Coheyogo
-angrily, gazing up at Cabanacte with flashing eyes.
-&#8220;And you have told the people that
-the Great Sun dies because I do not worship
-this white-faced conjurer who says the moon is
-his? Beware, oh Cabanacte, what you do! I&#8217;ll<span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">[172]</span>
-dare the magic of his silver wand and prove to
-him the sun-god is omnipotent.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Drawing himself up to his full height, until he
-towered a full half-foot above the stately sun-priest,
-Cabanacte exclaimed, in a low, insistent
-voice:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Have you forgotten Coyocop? Did she not
-last night&mdash;old Noco tells the tale&mdash;command
-you to do honor to this white face from the moon?
-&#8217;Tis you, Coheyogo, who should now take heed.
-&#8217;Tis not moon-magic which you would defy.
-&#8217;Tis Coyocop herself, the spirit of the sun, our
-god.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The chief priest remained silent for a time,
-gazing thoughtfully at the sacred fire, which
-seemed to roar and flash and snap and dance
-before his restless black eyes as if it threatened
-him with tortures for harboring a sacrilegious
-thought. Had not the spirit of the sun itself,
-through Coyocop&#8217;s inspired tongue, commanded
-him to treat the nation&#8217;s white-faced guest with
-all respect? The great power which Coheyogo
-had wielded for a year seemed to be slipping from
-his grasp. Its foundation-stone had been the
-word of Coyocop. Should he not heed her late
-behest he&#8217;d pull the very underpinning from
-beneath his tower of strength. Furthermore, the
-Great Sun, an easy-going monarch, subservient to
-the chief priest&#8217;s stronger will, lay at death&#8217;s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">[173]</span>
-door. His successor to the throne, his sister&#8217;s
-son, Manatte, was a headstrong, stubborn youth,
-upon whom the influence of Coheyogo was but
-slight. Should the chief priest lose at one stroke
-the countenance of Coyocop and the good-will
-of the Great Sun, the supremacy of the temple
-would be destroyed upon the instant, and Coheyogo
-would find himself hurled from a pinnacle
-of power to a grovelling attitude among a people
-chafing under the cruel tyranny of a bloodthirsty
-priesthood. Turning fretfully from the threatening
-blaze to glance up again at the steady eyes
-of Cabanacte, the chief priest said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The words of Coyocop come straight from
-God.&#8221; Facing then the expectant priests, he
-cried sternly: &#8220;Go forth, my brothers, and bid
-the people to disperse at once. Tell them to go
-to their homes and offer prayers that the Great
-Sun may be spared to us. Then come to me
-here, for I have other work for you to do.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Left alone in the stilling room with Cabanacte,
-the chief priest went on:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Direct the moon-man and old Noco to attend
-me here. If yonder white face has no evil wish,
-it may be that his magic may save our king from
-death.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Cabanacte smiled grimly.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I know not, Coheyogo,&#8221; he remarked, as he
-turned toward the exit to the temple, &#8220;that the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">[174]</span>
-envoy from the moon will heed your curt command.
-But this I do believe, that, if besought,
-he&#8217;d use his greatest power to save our Sun alive.
-I will return to you at once.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>With these words the dusky giant strode past
-the hideous, grinning idols of baked clay, and
-the plaited coffins of the royal dead, and made
-his way to the great square from which the
-white-robed priests were driving an awe-struck,
-moaning people to their homes.</p>
-
-<p>Coheyogo, glancing furtively around the deserted
-hall in which the spectres of the dead
-seemed ready to chase the flickering shadows
-cast by the miraculous fire, bent down and threw
-a huge log into the mocking flame, as if to quiet
-for a moment its spiteful, chiding voice. Suddenly
-behind him he heard the stealthy footfall of
-a white-robed underling. Turning quickly from
-the fire, Coheyogo&#8217;s piercing eyes rested upon a
-priest whom he had recently despatched to the
-Great Sun&#8217;s cabin.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What news?&#8221; cried the chief priest, eagerly.
-&#8220;He still lives?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Magani! Listen, master! He lives, and,
-tossing on his bed, mutters strange words beneath
-his breath. &#8217;Tis a devil that is in him, for he
-talks of things we cannot see.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;And his physician?&#8221; asked Coheyogo, impatiently.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">[175]</span>&#8220;He has done his best, but his eyes are wild
-and he shakes his head in impotence.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He&#8217;ll shake it in the noose should the Great
-Sun die,&#8221; muttered the chief priest, with cruel
-emphasis. &#8220;What boots his boasted skill if he
-fails us when we need him most? But, hark!
-Our brothers have returned.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Filing into the temple like a procession of
-white ghosts with charred faces, the priests of
-the sun grouped themselves in a circle behind
-their chief, and stood awaiting in silence the outcome
-of a crisis which might, at its worst, satisfy
-their ever-present craving for human sacrifices to
-offer to their god, the innocent and genial orb
-of day. That the cruel and crafty Coheyogo
-dreaded the news of the Great Sun&#8217;s death more
-keenly than they, in their love for an inhuman
-custom, desired it, they had no means of knowing.
-But they were to learn presently that there
-was a new force at work in their city with which
-they had never before been called upon to deal.
-As they stood there silent, eager-eyed, remorseless,
-longing for a continuance of the thrilling sport
-for which the death of Chat&eacute;muc had but whetted
-their appetites, the sound of light, dainty footsteps
-approaching the entrance to the temple
-reached their quick ears. Turning toward the
-doorway at the further end of the hall, Coheyogo
-and his motionless and noiseless brood gazed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">[176]</span>
-upon an approaching figure which, in spite of its
-lack of size, was most impressive at that fateful
-moment. De Sancerre had donned a flowing
-garment of white mulberry bark, which hid his
-gay velvets from view and fell in graceful lines
-from his neck to his feet. His head was bare,
-and his hair, a picturesque mixture of black and
-gray, emphasized the pleasing contour of his pale,
-clean-cut face.</p>
-
-<p>With drawn rapier, the symbol of his dreaded
-moon-magic, the French aristocrat, his eyes fixed
-upon the chief priest, strode solemnly toward
-the sacred fire, followed at a distance by
-Noco and her long-limbed grandson. As he
-came to a halt in front of Coheyogo, de Sancerre
-raised the hilt of his sword to his chin and made
-a graceful, sweeping salute with the weapon.
-Turning to Noco, who had now reached his side,
-he said to her:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Say to the chief priest that I come to him in
-amity or in defiance, as he may choose. Tell
-him that the Brother of the Moon makes no idle
-boasts, but that &#8217;tis safer for the City of the Sun
-to win his friendship than to arouse his wrath.&#8221;</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_176.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="caption">&#8220;COOL, MOTIONLESS, WITH UNFLINCHING EYES, THE FRENCHMAN STOOD<br />
-WATCHING THE CHIEF PRIEST&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Coheyogo, with a face which none could read,
-listened attentively to the old crone&#8217;s defiant
-words. His black eyes held the Frenchman&#8217;s
-gaze to his. There was something in the latter&#8217;s
-glance that exercised upon the sun-worshipper<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">[177]</span>
-a potent fascination, an influence more effective
-than the impression made upon him by Noco&#8217;s
-speech. The lower type of man succumbed, in
-spite of his physical superiority, to the will-power
-of a higher and more complicated intellect than
-his own. Even had Coheyogo considered it expedient
-at that moment to wreak summary vengeance
-upon his white-faced, smiling challenger,
-it is to be doubted that his tongue could have
-uttered the words which would have sent de
-Sancerre to his doom. Cool, motionless, with unflinching
-eyes and a mouth which wore the outlines
-of a derisive smile, the undersized Frenchman
-stood watching the chief priest, outwardly
-as self-confident as if he had possessed, in reality,
-the destructive power of which he boasted.
-Presently Coheyogo turned to Noco, whose
-wrinkled countenance was twitching with excitement
-in the fitful glow of the sacred fire.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The Chief Priest of the Sun has no quarrel
-with the Brother of the Moon,&#8221; said the old hag,
-addressing de Sancerre a moment later. &#8220;But
-he says to him that the Great Sun, in health and
-strength at sunrise, now lies tossing in peril of
-his life. Is it true, he asks, that you have
-threatened to bring down the same strange
-sickness upon the temple priests?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Not if they do the bidding of Coyocop, the
-spirit of the sun,&#8221; answered de Sancerre, curtly,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">[178]</span>
-closely scanning Coheyogo&#8217;s face as Noco repeated
-his words. Then he turned to the interpreter
-and went on:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Let the chief priest understand that the spirit
-of the sun and the spirit of the moon go hand in
-hand, to the greater glory of the God of gods.
-Say to him that together Coyocop and I can
-make a nation great or destroy it at a word.
-Disobedience to us is impiety to God. If he,
-Coheyogo, would know this truth, he must be
-docile, patient, and abide my time. If in his
-mind the shadow of a doubt remains that what I
-say is true, let him recall the legends of his race,
-the promises and prophecies which your fathers
-told their sons.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>There reigned an ominous silence in the stifling,
-ill-smelling room for a time, broken only
-by the malicious crackling of the sacred fire or
-the impatient grunt of some overwrought priest.
-Coheyogo, fearing to lose his power by accepting
-the proffered alliance, but too superstitious to
-defy the unseen rulers of the universe by rejecting it,
-stood, grim and self-absorbed, scanning a
-distressing problem from many points of view.
-He dared not offend Coyocop, but he resented
-de Sancerre&#8217;s claim to a share in the supernatural
-authority which the sun-worshippers had attributed
-to her. After long reflection, the chief
-priest looked down at the grinning Noco and said:</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">[179]</span>&#8220;Say to the Brother of the Moon that if he
-has sufficient power to bring down destruction
-upon this City of the Sun, or even to cast an evil
-spell upon our king, he is wise enough to cure
-the latter of the sickness which has laid him low.
-If he will lead the Great Sun back to us from
-the very gates of death, he will find within this
-temple none but servants glad to pay him homage
-and obey his words. But, if he fails to raise
-our king, &#8217;twill prove to us he either boasts too
-much or bears us no good-will.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>De Sancerre&#8217;s lips turned a shade lighter, but
-the mocking smile did not desert them, as Noco
-translated Coheyogo&#8217;s ultimatum into her clumsy
-Spanish. But even in that moment of supreme
-dismay, when his life, so he reflected, had been
-staked against loaded dice, the Frenchman could
-not refrain from casting a glance of admiration
-at the crafty priest who had played his game so
-well. If de Sancerre should undertake the restoration
-of the Great Sun&#8217;s health and should
-fail to save his life, even Coyocop would be
-powerless to protect him from the fate which
-had befallen Chat&eacute;muc. He had planned to visit
-the sick-bed of the King, and to send for Julia
-de Aquilar to meet him there, should he find
-that the Great Sun lay afflicted by no contagious
-disease. But de Sancerre had not foreseen that
-his boastfulness&mdash;which had served him well at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">[180]</span>
-times&mdash;would place him in his present plight,
-making his very life dependent upon his skill as
-a physician. He dared not hesitate, however, to
-accept the gauntlet thrown down by the keen-witted
-schemer, whose black eyes were now fixed
-upon him with a sardonic, defiant gleam.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It will give me great joy to restore my
-friend, the ruler of this land, to health,&#8221; said
-de Sancerre calmly to Noco, his gaze still meeting
-Coheyogo&#8217;s unwaveringly. &#8220;Will you request
-the chief priest to accompany me to the
-royal bedside?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>With these words, the Frenchman turned his
-back upon the sacred fire and its jealous guardian,
-and strode haughtily toward the temple&#8217;s exit.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Nom de Dieu</i>,&#8221; he muttered to himself,
-&#8220;I know more about the slaying of my fellow-men
-than how to save them from the jaws of
-death! I would I could recall the odds and ends
-of medicine I&#8217;ve gathered in my time! But,
-even then, I fear my skill would not suffice. The
-Great Sun, if I mistake not, has no more to gain
-from me than I from him. St. Maturin, be kind
-to us!&#8221;</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">[181]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XX<br />
-
-
-<small>IN WHICH A WHITE ROBE FAILS TO PROTECT<br />
-A BLACK HEART</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Seated</span> upon a low couch of plaited reeds,
-Julia de Aquilar, her white, slender hands folded
-upon her lap, and her dark, eloquent eyes turned
-upward as if they rested upon the Virgin Mother&#8217;s
-face, listened for the footsteps of a worldling
-and a sceptic, whose irreverent tongue had
-often in her hearing made sport of love itself.
-Her year in captivity as a celestial guide and
-counsellor to a half-savage race had softened,
-while preserving, the splendid coloring of her
-flawless complexion. Paler than of old, her face
-had lost none of its marvellous symmetry, and
-the warm hue of her curving lips bore witness
-to the triumph which youth, in its abounding
-elasticity, had won over the allied forces of loneliness
-and despair. The shadows beneath her
-expectant eyes had but added to their glowing
-splendor. Long days and nights of revery and
-introspection had changed the dominant expression
-of her face, somewhat too haughty aforetime,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">[182]</span>
-and a gentle radiance seemed to emanate
-from a countenance which had gained an added
-fascination from the spiritualizing touches of a
-sorrow too deep for tears.</p>
-
-<p>The room in which Do&ntilde;a Julia sat at this moment,
-watching and praying for a rescuer whose
-advent had been made possible only through a
-miracle vouchsafed by Mary and the saints, testified
-to the homage which was paid by the sun-worshippers
-to the spirit, Coyocop. Bunches
-of early spring flowers, borne to her cabin by
-devotees who had never looked upon her face,
-were scattered in profusion upon the earthen
-floor and along the wooden shelves fitted into
-the gray walls. Offerings of dried fruits, and
-more substantial edibles, indicated the anxiety
-of an afflicted people to propitiate the unseen
-powers in this day of peril to their prostrate
-chief. Fabrics woven with commendable skill
-in various colors, and bits of pottery showing
-artistic possibilities in the makers thereof, added
-to the polychromatic ensemble of Coyocop&#8217;s sacred
-retreat. At that very instant Do&ntilde;a Julia
-could hear the murmurs of a group of devout
-sun-worshippers, who had come from the budding
-forest to pile before her door great heaps
-of magnolia blossoms to bear witness to their
-reverence for the beneficent spirit of the sun, and
-to their hope that she would save them from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">[183]</span>
-their threatening doom. The skull-bedecked
-temple of the sun stood for all that was most
-savage in a cult demanding human blood. The
-hut of Coyocop, wellnigh hidden from the noonday
-by sacrificial flowers, gave forth a fragrant
-incense which arose from an altar built of loving
-hearts.</p>
-
-<p>It was the assurance, which had come to her
-in many ways, that she possessed the reverential
-affection of thousands of men and women upon
-whom she had never gazed that had lightened
-Do&ntilde;a Julia&#8217;s captivity, and had vouchsafed to
-her lonely soul a source of inspiration without
-which her faith in heaven might have lost its
-strength. Horrified to find herself worshipped
-as a goddess, but fearful of the fate which might
-befall her should she make denial of her divinity,
-she had passed long months in silent misery,
-theoretically omnipotent, but practically a helpless
-captive; used, for their own selfish purposes,
-by a few schemers, and adored at a distance by
-priest-ridden thousands who cherished, in their
-heart of hearts, the hope that Coyocop would
-mitigate the cruel cult which stained their temple
-red.</p>
-
-<p>The Great Sun came in state to visit her at
-times, and, more often, Manatte, his nephew and
-heir-apparent, presuming upon his royal prerogatives,
-would enter her cabin to feast his black<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">[184]</span>
-eyes upon the beauty of a countenance which he
-was bound to look upon as sacred from the touch
-of human lips. The tall, dusky youth, whose
-handsome, wilful face Do&ntilde;a Julia had grown to
-loathe, had never dared to rebel against the restraints
-which Coyocop&#8217;s divine origin forced
-upon him, but his restless eyes told the girl what
-was in his protesting heart, and she would watch
-his reluctant steps, as he stole from her hut, with
-mingled relief and dread. Well she knew that
-fear of the Brother of the Sun and of the chief
-priest alone prevented Manatte from defying the
-Great Spirit and making her his own.</p>
-
-<p>The afternoon was growing old, and Do&ntilde;a Julia,
-with a bunch of white flowers upon her bosom,
-relieving the black monotony of her sombre garb,
-still awaited in loneliness the coming of Louis
-de Sancerre, whose presence in that remote corner
-of the globe only the saints in heaven could
-explain. That Coheyogo and Noco, who came
-to her daily to play a solemn farce in which she
-had long ago lost all interest, had not made their
-accustomed advent to her cabin filled her with
-increasing alarm. The uproar in the city at
-noonday, the mournful outcries of an agitated
-people, had aroused in Do&ntilde;a Julia&#8217;s soul a dread
-foreboding which the subsequent silence which
-had fallen upon the hysterical town had done
-nothing to relieve.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">[185]</span>Presently the overwrought girl, from whose
-lips the cup of hope seemed to have been
-snatched just as she was about to drink deep of
-its grateful draught, fell upon her knees beside
-her bed and breathed a fervent prayer to the
-Mother of Christ for strength in this hour of
-doubt and discouragement. Soothed by her devotions,
-she arose and, standing erect, listened
-for the sound of a footstep which should precede
-an answer to her supplication; but an ominous
-silence reigned outside her hut. Readjusting the
-flowers upon her breast, and smoothing her rebellious,
-raven hair with a trembling hand, Do&ntilde;a
-Julia, cold with a sense of loneliness which had
-fallen upon her heart, moved hesitatingly toward
-the hole which served as a clumsy entrance to
-the room. Bending down, her hungry eyes
-eagerly scanned the deserted square, upon which
-the sun was shining as if in search of its secreted
-worshippers. To the overpowering sweetness of
-the spring blossoms, lying in heaps outside the
-doorway, she gave no heed, as she sought in
-vain for signs of life in a city upon which the
-blight of a great fear had recently descended.
-Suddenly, as Do&ntilde;a Julia gazed in consternation
-at this lonely centre of a populous town, a tall
-form issued from the cabin of the Great Sun.
-Drawing himself up to his full height, the man,
-glancing in all directions, as if to assure himself<span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">[186]</span>
-that he was unobserved, made straight toward
-the hole in the sun-baked wall through which
-the girl was peering. The white feathers in his
-hair bore witness to his royal rank, and as he
-came into the full glare of the sunlight just beyond
-her cabin Do&ntilde;a Julia saw that her approaching
-visitor was Manatte. To rush forth
-into the square and arouse the city by her cries
-was her first impulse, but before she could give
-way to it the youth had cut off her escape.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Coyocop!&#8221; he exclaimed, as he stood erect,
-after he had crawled through the entrance, driving
-her back in affright toward the centre of the
-flower-bedecked room. &#8220;Coyocop!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>There were in his voice passion, triumph, desperation;
-an appeal to the woman and a defiance
-to the gods. The Great Sun lay dying.
-Even the chief priest would hesitate to offend
-him&mdash;Manatte, who would soon be king!</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Coyocop!&#8221; he repeated more gently, holding
-forth to her a hand, like a beggar asking alms,
-while his eyes rested upon the white flowers
-which rose and fell upon her throbbing bosom.</p>
-
-<p>But, though her body trembled, there was no
-flinching in Do&ntilde;a Julia&#8217;s glance. Hopeless, as
-she was, for she realized that sacrilege such as
-this could spring only from an opportunity in
-which Manatte could find no peril, her eyes
-gazed into his with a proud scorn which left no<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">[187]</span>
-need for words. With head thrown back, she
-strove to conquer the brute nature of the youth
-by the mere force of her strong will and the
-purity of her virgin soul. But she knew full
-well that the silent prayers which she offered up
-to God would reach His throne too late.</p>
-
-<p>For a moment they stood thus confronting
-one another; Purity attired in black, and License
-enrobed in spotless white. Never afterward
-could Julia de Aquilar sense the sweet, haunting
-odor of magnolia blossoms without a sinking of
-the heart which made her breath protest. No
-sound broke the intense stillness save the twittering
-of birds which wooed the flowers outside the
-hut and the stifled words which Manatte strove
-to speak. Suddenly he sprang toward her and
-seized her wrists, while his bronze face burned
-her cold, white cheeks.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Coyocop,&#8221; he muttered, in a tongue which
-she could not understand, &#8220;you shall be mine,
-&#8217;though every star the midnight sky reveals
-should send a god to save you from my love!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A maiden&#8217;s despairing cry startled the silent
-town.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mother of God, have mercy! Help! O
-Christ, save me!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A light, nervous footfall echoed from the
-square, and the entrance to the hut was darkened
-for an instant. Rapier in hand, de Sancerre<span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">[188]</span>
-sprang into the centre of the room. As Manatte,
-with an oath upon his swollen lips, turned upon
-the intruder, the Frenchman drove his sword
-straight through a snow-white robe into a black
-heart. Without a groan, the evil scion of a
-royal race fell dead upon the ground.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thank God, I came in time!&#8221; exclaimed de
-Sancerre, as he withdrew his rapier from Manatte&#8217;s
-breast and turned toward Do&ntilde;a Julia,
-who, faint and breathless, leaned against the wall
-facing him. &#8220;Do&ntilde;a Julia de Aquilar,&#8221; he cried,
-tossing his dripping sword to the ground and
-crossing the room at a stride, &#8220;I kiss your hand.&#8221;
-Falling upon one knee the courtier pressed his
-lips to the cold, trembling fingers in his grasp.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mother of Mary, I thank thee for thy care,&#8221;
-murmured Do&ntilde;a Julia raising her eyes to heaven
-from the smiling, upturned face of de Sancerre.</p>
-
-<p>It was upon a tableau which might have suggested,
-to other eyes, a worldling praying to a
-saint for pardon for the murder of a giant that
-Coheyogo, followed by Noco and Cabanacte,
-gazed as he entered the hut and attempted to
-read the story of the grim picture by which he
-was confronted. De Sancerre, who had doffed
-his white robes in the Great Sun&#8217;s cabin, still
-knelt at the feet of the pale and agitated girl.
-Near the centre of the room lay the bleeding,
-motionless body of the sacrilegious sun-worshipper.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">[189]</span>
-Thrown from a shelf by the recent tumult
-in the room, a great bunch of magnolia blossoms
-lay scattered close to Manatte&#8217;s head, a floral
-halo of which death itself still left him most
-unworthy.</p>
-
-<p>Springing to his feet and pointing toward the
-youth he had slain, de Sancerre said, calmly, to
-Noco:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Tell the chief priest this, that yonder scoundrel
-insulted the spirit of the sun. For this he
-died. It was this sword,&#8221; he went on, picking
-up his rapier and wiping the blood from the
-blade with a handful of flowers, &#8220;which saved
-Coyocop from his polluting kiss. I know not
-who he is, but were he ten thousand times a son
-of suns he well deserved his death.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Coheyogo stood gazing down at the set face
-of Manatte as Noco repeated to him the Frenchman&#8217;s
-words.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Stand at the entrance outside the hut,&#8221; said
-the chief priest, curtly, to Cabanacte, &#8220;and bid
-no one enter upon pain of death. Of what has
-happened here, breathe not a word. Go!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Crawling through the entrance, Cabanacte
-drew himself erect in the sunlight, a sentry
-against whose behests none of the chattering
-sun-worshippers, who had poured into the square
-to learn the meaning of the cry which had echoed
-from Coyocop&#8217;s abode, dared protest.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">[190]</span>&#8220;Say to the Brother of the Moon that what he
-did was well done,&#8221; went on Coheyogo to Noco.
-&#8220;If the draught which he made for the Great
-Sun gives life as surely as his silver wand brings
-death, then shall the shadow pass from our weeping
-race. Go, then, Noco, to the temple quickly,
-and bid four priests to hasten to me here.
-Answer no questions, but, as you go, inform the
-people that Coyocop has destroyed with flowers,
-brought to her cabin by the faithful, the evil
-spirit which strove to kill our king and bring
-destruction upon the City of the Sun. Say to
-them further, if they should whisper the name
-of yonder chief, that Manatte has gone to the
-foot-hills to offer prayers for the Great Sun&#8217;s life.
-Go at once, for the day grows old and we have
-much to do.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Turning toward de Sancerre, who had been
-whispering to Do&ntilde;a Julia words of hope and
-cheer, Coheyogo pointed to the feet of the dead
-sun-prince, and then strode to the head of the
-corpse. The Frenchman and the chief priest
-raised the heavy body and placed it upon Do&ntilde;a
-Julia&#8217;s reed-plaited bed. With armfuls of magnolia
-blossoms Coheyogo covered Manatte&#8217;s face
-and shoulders, while de Sancerre, comprehending
-vaguely the scheme which the chief priest
-had in mind, strewed flowers upon the trunk of
-his sword&#8217;s gigantic prey.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_191">[191]</span>&#8220;May God defend us!&#8221; he muttered. &#8220;I fear
-the keenness of this crafty priest! He has an
-agile mind. He turns a nightmare to a dream
-of spring with most exquisite skill. And, for
-some reason which I cannot find, he takes great
-pleasure in this gay youth&#8217;s death. I trust that
-Do&ntilde;a Julia has learned to read his mind. I
-dread him either as an ally or a foe!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Before de Sancerre could find an opportunity
-for holding further converse with the Spanish
-maiden, whose presence in the City of the Sun
-had wellnigh restored his boyhood&#8217;s faith in
-miracles, Noco, followed by four silent elders
-from the temple of the sacred fire, had entered
-the hut. A few moments later the voiceless,
-expectant throng in the great square gazed with
-awe and wonder upon a picturesque procession
-which moved with slow and solemn tread from
-Coyocop&#8217;s abode to the outskirts of the town,
-beyond which point a word from the temple
-priests prevented the dusky crowd from following
-it.</p>
-
-<p>At the head of the cort&egrave;ge walked the chief
-priest, accompanied by de Sancerre, whose drawn
-rapier gleamed like a sword of fire as the red
-rays of the setting sun made a plaything of the
-blade. Behind them came four white-robed bearers
-carrying a plaited bier, upon which lay the body
-of a tall man concealed from view by a trembling<span class="pagenum" id="Page_192">[192]</span>
-shroud of fragrant flowers. Following
-this strange funeral, upon which the sun-worshippers
-gazed with awe-stricken eyes, as if they
-looked upon a marvel wrought by spirits, hobbled
-the aged Noco, mumbling to herself as she
-grinned at a people for whose blind superstition
-she had no respect. Cabanacte had remained
-as sentry at Coyocop&#8217;s abode, to chafe under the
-useless task consigned to him; for to him it
-seemed more fitting that he should guard Katonah
-than stand as sentinel before a cabin upon
-which high heaven smiled.</p>
-
-<p>When the cort&egrave;ge had reached the twilight
-shadows outside the city, the chief priest gave a
-few simple directions to the bearers of the corpse
-and, accompanied by de Sancerre and Noco,
-turned back toward the temple of the sun.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Come with me, se&ntilde;ora!&#8221; cried the Frenchman,
-when they had reached the square, pointing
-toward the Great Sun&#8217;s cabin. &#8220;Say to the
-chief priest, Do&ntilde;a Noco, that you and I must
-watch by the good King&#8217;s side to-night.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is well,&#8221; answered Coheyogo, as he listened
-to the old crone&#8217;s words. &#8220;May the great
-spirit grant you the skill to save his life. &#8217;Tis
-best for you that he should live.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>With this significant hint, the chief priest
-strode through the dusk toward the temple of
-the sacred fire.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">[193]</span>Before de Sancerre and Noco had reached the
-cabin in which the Brother of the Sun lay tossing
-upon a feverish couch, the Frenchman, whose
-mind was filled with the vision of a pale, dark-eyed
-woman, garbed in black, with spring flowers
-upon her breast, recalled, for an instant, another
-face which seemed to accuse him in the twilight
-there of strange forgetfulness.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Wait, se&ntilde;ora,&#8221; exclaimed de Sancerre, seizing
-Noco by the arm at the very entrance to the
-royal hut. &#8220;Katonah! It is not well to leave
-her all alone. Go to your home and bring her
-here at once. This town&#8217;s a seething cesspool of
-dark-brown, white-robed treachery! <i>Peste!</i> If
-harm should come to her, I dare not look into
-the saintly Membr&eacute;&#8217;s good gray eyes again.
-Come back at once. The Great Sun needs your
-care.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>With these words de Sancerre bent down to
-enter the royal cabin, while Noco hurried away
-to rescue Katonah from a lonely night.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">[194]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXI<br />
-
-
-<small>IN WHICH DE SANCERRE WIELDS HIS SWORD AGAIN</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> royal cabin was the largest and most pretentious
-dwelling-house in the City of the Sun.
-Its walls were made of mud, sand and moss, and,
-hardened by time, had become both serviceable
-and sightly. The roof was formed of grass and
-reeds, united in a close embrace which defied the
-most penetrating rain or hail. Forty feet square,
-the main room of the palace&mdash;to give it a grandiloquent
-name&mdash;was furnished in a style befitting
-the exalted rank of its royal occupant. The
-Great Sun&#8217;s throne was simple in construction,
-being nothing more than a wooden stool four
-feet in height, but its inherent significance was
-indicated by the devices with which it had been
-decorated by reverential and cunning hands.
-Beneath the throne was stretched the rarest of
-the King&#8217;s household furnishings, a carpet made
-of costly furs, which, so tradition asserted, had
-aroused the cupidity of a Spaniard in a former
-generation, and still bore the stain of the lifeblood
-which he had vainly paid in his effort to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">[195]</span>
-rob the feet of royalty of their most valued
-luxury.</p>
-
-<p>Audience-chamber, throne-room and sleeping-apartment,
-the main hall of the Great Sun&#8217;s
-abode, as de Sancerre entered it, after despatching
-old Noco to her cabin in search of Katonah,
-was a sight which might have delighted the eye
-of an impressionable painter, but would have
-aroused the temper of a conscientious housekeeper.
-The Great Sun&#8217;s sudden illness had begotten
-a confusion in the royal m&eacute;nage which
-had transformed his abode from a picturesque
-cabin into a disordered hospital.</p>
-
-<p>The stricken chieftain lay tossing from side to
-side upon a couch covered with painted and embroidered
-deer-skins. As de Sancerre approached
-his patient, a group of noisy women, the wives
-of the Great Sun, fled toward the shadows at the
-further end of the room. Following them, a
-white-robed, soft-footed sun-worshipper, casting
-a glance of malice at the Frenchman, deserted
-the sick King&#8217;s side and stole away into the darkness.
-The court physician, who, through the
-chief priest&#8217;s influence, had been succeeded by de
-Sancerre, had been availing himself of an opportunity
-to observe the effects of the Frenchman&#8217;s
-treatment upon the fever-racked scion of the sun.</p>
-
-<p>Jealous of his prerogatives, but knowing that
-a cruel death awaited him should the Great Sun<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">[196]</span>
-die, the royal physician had been torn by conflicting
-emotions as he gazed down upon the restless
-form of a chieftain whose bodily welfare had
-been his care for many years. While he longed,
-for the sake of his own safety, to see the King
-restored to health, he harbored a professional
-protest against the introduction to the royal
-cabin of this alien moon-magic, which, after all,
-seemed to consist in nothing more than the administration
-to the patient of a few drops of a
-liquid medicine at more or less regular intervals.</p>
-
-<p>De Sancerre was not, in fact, jeopardizing his
-life&mdash;more than ever of value to him since he
-had solved the mystery of Coyocop&mdash;by risking
-the recovery of the Great Sun upon an answer
-to prayer, nor upon the chance that the royal
-sun-worshipper&#8217;s strong constitution might resist
-the attack of a sudden indisposition. The Frenchman,
-upon his first visit to the chieftain&#8217;s cabin,
-had quickly reached the conclusion that the Great
-Sun had fallen a victim to over-excitement and
-over-eating. De Sancerre&#8217;s experience in courts
-and camps had long ago familiarized him with
-the effects which follow a nervous strain accompanied
-by excessive indulgence in food and
-drink.</p>
-
-<p>The Frenchman&#8217;s observant eye, trained in
-many climes to harvest large crops of details,
-had noted, as he approached the City of the Sun<span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">[197]</span>
-through a semi-tropical forest, a tree whose
-resinous inner bark vouchsafes to men a balsam
-of great curative powers. It was from this tree&mdash;the
-copal&mdash;that, obeying de Sancerre&#8217;s directions,
-old Noco had obtained the ingredients for
-a fever-quieting draught which had already begun
-to exercise a beneficent influence upon the
-Frenchman&#8217;s royal patient.</p>
-
-<p>As he now gazed down questioningly at the
-Great Sun, whose kingly bearing had been replaced
-by that lack of dignity which an acute
-fever begets even where royalty itself is concerned,
-de Sancerre was rejoiced to discover that
-his simple febrifuge had already produced the
-effect which he had foreseen.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Thanks be to St. Maturin!&#8221; he muttered,
-contentedly, glancing toward the end of the
-room to which the King&#8217;s wives and the discomfited
-court physician had withdrawn. &#8220;My surmise
-was correct. The Great Sun was too hospitable
-to the wandering moon. I have known
-more enlightened monarchs, in more highly
-civilized lands, to succumb to their excessive zeal
-for good-fellowship. Quiet, care, and a few drops
-of balsam are all that this old chief requires to
-make him a king again from top to toe. <i>Nom
-de Dieu</i>, another day like this one, and I&#8217;ll need
-medicine myself! The r&ocirc;le of executioner is not
-so bad, but a physician&mdash;<i>peste!</i> May the devil<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">[198]</span>
-fly away with that chief priest! I fear me he&#8217;s
-a snake. I should dare to hope that I might
-rescue Do&ntilde;a Julia from this bloodthirsty land if
-I could but trust that crafty Coheyogo, who&#8217;s as
-keen as Richelieu and as slippery as Mazarin! I
-must keep a sharp eye upon his reverence, or he
-will yet cast his sacred cords around my neck!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>To de Sancerre, thus standing in silent revery
-beside the Great Sun&#8217;s couch, came Noco, hobbling
-from the entrance with hurried step. Her
-appearance was greeted by a more insistent
-chorus from the gossiping women at the end of
-the room, to whom the outcome of their royal
-husband&#8217;s illness meant either life or death.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Katonah!&#8221; panted the old crone, as she
-reached the Frenchman&#8217;s side. &#8220;She has disappeared.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Impossible!&#8221; exclaimed de Sancerre. &#8220;You
-know her not, se&ntilde;ora. She would not leave your
-cabin without a word to me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I am not blind!&#8221; cried Noco, angrily. &#8220;My
-house is empty and the girl is gone. And Cabanacte&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What of him?&#8221; asked de Sancerre, impatiently,
-as Noco paused for breath.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I told him of Katonah&#8217;s flight, and he has
-set out in search of her.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The traitor!&#8221; muttered the Frenchman, peering
-down at the old hag who had brought to him<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">[199]</span>
-such unwelcome news. &#8220;Your grandson, Do&ntilde;a
-Noco, has abandoned the spirit for the flesh&mdash;and
-left Coyocop without a guard! Surely,
-Katonah is safer in the forest than is the spirit
-of the sun in a city which pretends to worship
-her. I shall chide your grandson, Do&ntilde;a Noco, if
-I ever look upon his giant form again. But
-stay you here, se&ntilde;ora. When this great Son of
-Suns awakens from his sleep give him a drink of
-balsam&mdash;and he&#8217;ll sleep again. I go to Coyocop,
-and will return anon.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The moon had not yet arisen, and darkness
-and silence combined to cast a menacing spell
-upon the impressionable City of the Sun. De
-Sancerre&#8217;s spirits were at a low ebb as he groped
-his way toward Do&ntilde;a Julia&#8217;s unguarded cabin.
-The reaction from a day of excitement had come
-upon him, and the gloom of the deserted square
-did not tend toward the restoration of his former
-cheerfulness. It was true that he had escaped
-death through a combination of circumstances
-which apparently had won for him the good-will
-of the chief priest, but the outlook for the
-immediate future was not promising. De la
-Salle could not return from the South for several
-weeks, even if he and his followers escaped the
-perils which might menace them as they approached
-the mouth of the great river. Cabanacte,
-to whom de Sancerre had looked for the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">[200]</span>
-aid which might make his escape with the Spanish
-girl possible, had betrayed friendship at the
-instigation of a stronger passion. His return
-from the forest might be long delayed. As he
-approached the hut in which his grateful eyes
-had rested upon the pale, sweet face of Julia de
-Aquilar, de Sancerre felt a sinking of the heart,
-a sensation of utter hopelessness which was an
-unacceptable novelty to the vivacious Frenchman,
-against whose sanguine temperament the
-shafts of despair had heretofore been powerless.</p>
-
-<p>As he stationed himself, with rapier in hand,
-before the entrance to Coyocop&#8217;s sacred cabin,
-there was nothing in his surroundings to relight
-the flame of hope in de Sancerre&#8217;s soul.
-Clouds had begun to darken the eastern sky,
-revoking its promise of a moonlit night. A
-moaning wind, damp and chill, had stolen from
-its lair in the forest to annoy a fickle city with
-its cold, moist kiss. The world seemed to be
-made of sighs and shadows. The great square
-in front of him, dark and deserted, strove to deceive
-the Frenchman with its tale of an abandoned
-town. Now and then the voice of some
-devout sun-worshipper, raised in hoarse prayer,
-would penetrate the walls of a hut and bear
-witness to the city&#8217;s swarming life.</p>
-
-<p>After a time there came upon de Sancerre the
-impression that piercing black eyes watched him<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">[201]</span>
-as he strode up and down in front of the silent,
-shadow-haunted hut in which the strange chances
-of life had imprisoned the only woman who had
-ever aroused in his mocking soul the precious
-passion of romantic love. He cut the darkness
-with his eager glance, but suspicion was not replaced
-by certainty. Nevertheless, the feeling
-grew strong within him that the night wind
-toyed with white robes not far away, and that
-stealthy footsteps reached his ears on either hand.</p>
-
-<p>By a strong effort of will, de Sancerre routed
-the sensation of mingled consternation and impotence
-which the chill gloom and the presence
-of prying spies had begotten, and, drawing close
-to the doorway of Do&ntilde;a Julia&#8217;s cabin, hummed
-an ancient love-ballad born of the troubadours.
-The song had died in the damp embrace of the
-roving wind when the silence was broken by a
-voice which reached de Sancerre&#8217;s grateful ears
-from the entrance to the hut.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Speak not in Spanish and in whispers only,
-Mademoiselle de Aquilar!&#8221; exclaimed the Frenchman
-in a low voice, not changing his attitude
-of a swordsman doing duty as a sentinel. &#8220;There
-are listening ears upon all sides of me. If we
-converse in French, they&#8217;ll think we use the
-tongue of sun or moon.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I heard your voice, monsieur. Is there great
-danger if we talk a while?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">[202]</span>&#8220;I hardly know,&#8221; answered de Sancerre, striving
-again to read the secrets of the night. &#8220;But
-listen, for when the chance may come to me to
-speak to you again I do not know. Be ready at
-any moment, at a word from me, to leave this
-hut. I&#8217;ll use old Noco for my messenger, when
-I have made my plans. I dare not flee with you
-to-night, for, as I speak, I see the ghostly menace
-of a skulking temple priest. There&#8217;d be no
-safety for us beyond the town. Alas, we must
-abide our time!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But, oh, my heart is light, monsieur,&#8221; whispered
-the girl, from whose Spanish tongue the
-French words made rich music as they fell. &#8220;If
-this be not a dream, it cannot be that you have
-come in vain. One night I heard my father&#8217;s
-voice in Paradise. He spoke to me of you, and
-when old Noco told me that by the river there
-were white-faced men, I heard his voice again&mdash;and
-wrote my name upon the bark. It is a
-miracle, monsieur!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A miracle, indeed!&#8221; exclaimed de Sancerre,
-chafing under the tyranny of his grim surroundings
-and distrustful of an overpowering inclination
-to bend down and clasp the girl&#8217;s hand in
-his. &#8220;But the devil and the sun-priests, mademoiselle,
-are in league against us. Pray to the
-saints that we may foil them both! <i>Ma foi</i>, a
-half-done miracle is worse than none! But this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">[203]</span>
-I promise you, that whether you and I be playthings
-of a heartless Fate, or the favored wards
-of Mother Mary and her Son, I&#8217;ll plot and scheme
-and fight until I save you from captivity, or pay
-the price of death. And so, good-night! I dare
-not let you linger longer where you are, for already
-these white-robed spies are growing restless
-at our talk, and I hear them muttering in
-the darkness there, as if in resentment of my
-converse with their deity.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A suppressed sob told de Sancerre how much
-his presence meant to the lonely girl.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Can we not leave this awful place at once?&#8221;
-she moaned. &#8220;Forgive me, monsieur, but it has
-been so long since I have seen a ray of hope in
-this black hole that every moment since I knew
-that you were here has seemed a year. May
-Mother Mary guard you through the night!
-&#8217;Tis well I love my prayers, monsieur! I will
-not sleep.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nay, mademoiselle, &#8217;tis well to pray, but not
-to lose your sleep. You&#8217;ll need the saints, anon&mdash;but
-also strength. Sleep, Do&ntilde;a Julia, for the
-love of&mdash;God! And so, good-night! I&#8217;ll watch
-beside your door until these slinking scoundrels
-have gone to feed their sacred fire.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>No sound save the complaining of the restless
-wind broke the stillness of the night, which had
-grown blacker as its age increased. Suddenly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">[204]</span>
-de Sancerre, as agile as a cat, sprang forward,
-barely in time to escape the clutch of remorseless
-arms. Turning, like a thunderbolt he drove
-his sword through a white-robed night-prowler,
-who died at his feet without a groan. So sudden
-and noiseless had been the attack and its
-fatal defence that it had not recalled Do&ntilde;a Julia
-to the entrance to the hut. On the instant, old
-Noco grasped de Sancerre by the arm, and, turning
-in anger, the Frenchman found himself confronted
-by Coheyogo.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I&#8217;ve killed another snake, se&ntilde;ora!&#8221; exclaimed
-de Sancerre, grimly, pointing to a white mass at
-his feet. &#8220;Will you say to the chief priest, Do&ntilde;a
-Noco, that I should more highly prize his friendship
-if he kept his temple priests from off my
-back?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Coheyogo muttered a few words to the aged
-interpreter.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The man you&#8217;ve slain has been rebellious and
-deserves his fate. He disobeyed a strict command,&#8221;
-said Noco, repeating the chief priest&#8217;s
-curt comment. &#8220;He&#8217;ll place a guard of trusty
-priests before the door of Coyocop, that you and
-I may seek the Great Sun&#8217;s side.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;How kind he is!&#8221; muttered do Sancerre,
-petulantly. &#8220;A pretty plight this is for a Count
-of Languedoc! I&#8217;m tired of this Coheyogo&#8217;s
-domineering ways! But still, I dare not cross<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">[205]</span>
-him now. Come, se&ntilde;ora,&#8221; he exclaimed in Spanish,
-turning toward the King&#8217;s cabin and groping
-his way through the black night. &#8220;I trust my
-sword will find no more to do to-night! It has
-had a busy day!&#8221;</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">[206]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXII<br />
-
-
-<small>IN WHICH THE CITY OF THE SUN ENJOYS A F&Ecirc;TE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> moon of strawberries had been succeeded
-by the moon of old corn, and there was joy in
-the land of the sun-worshippers. In other words,
-the month of April had gone by and the month
-of May had found the Great Sun&#8217;s grateful subjects
-making ready to celebrate his restoration
-to health by national games and a thanksgiving
-feast.</p>
-
-<p>The laggard weeks had told many a flattering
-tale of hope to Count Louis de Sancerre, but at
-the end of a month&#8217;s sojourn in the City of the
-Sun he still found himself, in all essential particulars,
-a helpless stranger in a fickle and jealous
-land, honored by the Great Sun and the chief
-priest, and admired by the people, but closely
-watched by sharp black eyes, from which flashed
-gleams of malice and suspicion. Impatient and
-impetuous though he was, the Frenchman dared
-not force the issue to a crisis. Easy of accomplishment
-as the kidnapping of Coyocop seemed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">[207]</span>
-to be, de Sancerre realized that he would rush
-to certain death if he took a false step and attempted
-a rescue hampered by his ignorance of
-the surrounding country and of the movements
-of Sieur de la Salle. Day succeeded day and no
-word came from the river to the pale and haggard
-Frenchman, whose only joy in life during those
-dreary weeks sprang from the voice of Julia de
-Aquilar, which reached his grateful ears now and
-then as he prowled around her cabin late at night.
-Even this source of delight he was obliged to
-forego after a time, receiving from the chief
-priest a broad hint regarding the dangers which
-menaced a stranger in the town after dark, and
-learning from Noco that Coheyogo had discovered
-in the temple the existence of a fanatical faction
-among the sun-priests which had sworn to overcome
-de Sancerre&#8217;s moon-magic by physical
-force.</p>
-
-<p>But it was Cabanacte&#8217;s failure to return from
-his quest of Katonah that had wound the strongest
-cord around the Frenchman&#8217;s hands. Could
-he have had the giant&#8217;s assistance at this crisis,
-de Sancerre felt confident that any one of a number
-of schemes which he had been obliged to reject
-for lack of an ally could have been forced
-to the goal of success. But Cabanacte had disappeared,
-had made no further sign, and old
-Noco, to whom her grandson was as an open<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">[208]</span>
-book, had said sadly to de Sancerre that the
-youth would not return.</p>
-
-<p>The restless and wellnigh discouraged Frenchman
-had, through his success as a physician, won
-the enthusiastic gratitude of the Great Sun, who
-had insisted upon making his Brother of the
-Moon the honored guest of the royal cabin, within
-which de Sancerre was compelled, much against
-his will, to spend the major portion of the time,
-talking to the convalescent king by the aid of
-Noco&#8217;s nimble tongue.</p>
-
-<p>It was the dawn of a cloudless day near the
-middle of the moon of old corn when de Sancerre,
-opening his eyes after a night of dreamless,
-restful sleep, enjoyed, for a moment, that sensation
-of physical well-being which suggests the
-possibility that nature harbors no enmity to man.
-Outside the royal cabin the morning vibrated
-with the melody of birds and the distant rumors
-of a forest springing gladly into life. There was
-movement and bustle inside the hut, and de Sancerre
-turned lazily upon his gayly-bedecked couch
-to watch the Great Sun as he paid homage to his
-risen god. With a spotless white robe flowing
-from his royal shoulders, the King, still feeble
-from his recent illness, stood in the centre of the
-room gravely lighting his calumet from a live
-ember which one of his wives held out to
-him. Then striding toward the dawn-beset exit<span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">[209]</span>
-to the cabin, which led straight to the rising
-sun, the convalescent chief blew three puffs of
-tobacco-smoke toward the deified orb of day.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Pardieu</i>,&#8221; muttered de Sancerre, &#8220;if they
-would but sacrifice more tobacco and less blood
-to their shining god, this city would not be so repulsive
-to a man of tender heart.&#8221; The Frenchman
-had thrown his slim legs over the side of
-the plaited bed and sat gazing at the Sun-Chief
-with a quizzical smile upon his clean-cut, thin and
-colorless face. Suddenly upon the air of morning
-arose the shouts of a joyful multitude approaching
-the Great Sun&#8217;s cabin. As if born of
-the dawn, the noisy throng poured into the
-square, carrying to the palace of their king offerings
-of fruit, flowers, vegetables, meats and fish.
-Into the cabin crowded the smiling, chattering
-sun-worshippers, their white teeth gleaming and
-their black eyes flashing fire as they piled their
-gifts around the Great Sun&#8217;s hand-painted throne,
-interfering with de Sancerre&#8217;s toilet but treating
-him with the respect due to a son of the full
-moon, in whose magic they had reason to rejoice.
-A noisy, picturesque, light-hearted crowd, delighting
-in the escape of their king from death,
-and in the postponement of the general slaughter
-of men, women, and children which would have
-followed his demise, they impressed the Frenchman
-as overgrown, frolicsome, unreliable children,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">[210]</span>
-beneath whose gayety lurked the capacity for
-bloody mischief.</p>
-
-<p>Half-dressed and somewhat weary of the glad
-uproar, de Sancerre, having withdrawn to a distant
-corner of the hut, stood watching a ceremony
-which was destined to replenish the royal
-larder, when he felt a tug at his arm, and, looking
-down, met the keen eyes of Noco.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8217;Tis from Coyocop,&#8221; she muttered, slipping
-into his hand a piece of mulberry bark. The
-corner in which he stood was not well-lighted,
-but de Sancerre was able, at length, to decipher
-the scrawl made by Julia de Aquilar. Her words
-were few:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Eat no fish at to-day&#8217;s banquet,&#8221; ran the message.
-De Sancerre glanced down at the old hag
-questioningly, but there was nothing in her face
-to suggest that she understood the warning which
-had been scratched upon the bark. The moment
-seemed to be ripe for putting into operation a
-plan upon which de Sancerre&#8217;s mind had been at
-work for several days.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Tell me, se&ntilde;ora,&#8221; he said, observing with
-satisfaction that no prying eyes were fixed upon
-them at that moment, &#8220;would it please you to
-find your grandson, Cabanacte, and lure him
-from the forest to his home?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>There was a gleam in her small, black eyes as
-they met his which assured de Sancerre that he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">[211]</span>
-had pressed a finger upon the beldame&#8217;s dearest
-wish.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It cannot be done,&#8221; she croaked, turning her
-back to him as if about to mingle with the laughing
-throng. De Sancerre seized her by the arm.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Listen, Noco,&#8221; he urged, bending down to
-whisper eager Spanish into her old ears. &#8220;Coyocop
-and I, going to the forest side by side, could
-find Cabanacte and the maiden from the north.
-Tell this to Coyocop, that I will come to her
-when the banquet nears its end at dark. I leave
-the rest to you, for you must lead us from the
-city to the woods. The moon of old corn will
-give us light to-night to find your grandson in
-the forest glades or where the river floweth toward
-the sea. Will you take my word to her?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Si, se&ntilde;or</i>,&#8221; muttered Noco, gazing up at de
-Sancerre with eyes which strove to read his very
-soul. &#8220;But if we fail&mdash;if Coyocop is missed&mdash;it
-will be death for you and me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We cannot fail, se&ntilde;ora, for the full moon is
-my god! We&#8217;ll find your Cabanacte ere the
-night is old&mdash;and none will ever know. And
-now, begone! Between the setting of the sun
-and the rising of the moon I&#8217;ll come to you and
-Coyocop. Be true to me, se&ntilde;ora, and by the
-magic of my silver wand you&#8217;ll look upon your
-grandson&#8217;s face to-night.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>In another moment Noco, eluding the Great<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">[212]</span>
-Sun&#8217;s glance as she stole between the tall sun-worshippers,
-had crept from the cabin into the
-rosy light of day.</p>
-
-<p>The hours which followed her departure passed
-like long days to de Sancerre. He watched the
-Great Sun&#8217;s wives as they became surfeited with
-the petty tyranny which they exercised at the
-expense of a throng of lesser women, upon whom
-rested the drudgery necessitated by the approaching
-feast. Cares of state&mdash;an inventory of the
-tribute paid to his divine right&mdash;occupied the
-attention of the King until noon had long been
-passed and left de Sancerre to his own devices.
-Seated at the entrance to the cabin, the Frenchman
-could observe what was passing in the sunny
-square outside, while he still kept an eye upon
-the Great Sun and his busy household. Half-naked
-boys and girls, gay with garlands of
-flowers, were arranging long lines of wooden
-benches in front of the royal dwelling under the
-direction of a master of ceremonies who had
-escaped death with his king.</p>
-
-<p>The bench upon which the Great Sun, the chief
-priest, and de Sancerre, the nation&#8217;s guest, were
-to sit stood just in front of the King&#8217;s cabin, and
-had been covered with painted skins and surrounded
-by a carpet of magnolia blossoms.</p>
-
-<p>As the hour for the banquet approached the
-nobly-born sun-worshippers gathered in groups<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">[213]</span>
-at the further end of the square, awaiting a signal
-from royalty to seat themselves upon the
-benches, hot by this time from the glare of a
-cloudless day. Gayety, suppressed but impatient,
-reigned in the City of the Sun. Black
-eyes flashed above smiling lips, and now and
-then a chorus of happy voices would raise a
-chant in praise of a deity who had blessed the
-earth with fecund warmth. Even the stealthy,
-silent, keen-eyed temple priests failed to cast a
-damper upon the joyous children of the sun as
-they mingled with the throng or lurked in the
-shadow of their skull-crowned palisade.</p>
-
-<p>The banquet had been under way for more
-than an hour before de Sancerre, seated between
-the Great Sun and Coheyogo, had been able to
-revive the hope which had sprung up in his breast
-earlier in the day. His environment, as it met
-his eyes at the outset of the feast, seemed to preclude
-all possibility of a successful issue to the
-plan which he had impulsively put into operation.
-A group of plebeians, watching the nobility as it
-made merry&mdash;apparently at the King&#8217;s expense,
-but, in reality, at theirs&mdash;stood directly in front
-of Coyocop&#8217;s abode and were laughingly driving
-de Sancerre&#8217;s heart into his pointed shoes. Would
-the gaping throng disperse as the sun sank low
-in the sky, and leave to the Frenchman one
-chance in a thousand for the triumph of his daring<span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">[214]</span>
-scheme? The hours, as they passed, left de
-Sancerre less and less self-confident, while they
-increased the joyous hilarity of the feasters
-among whom he sat. The mud-made walls of
-the houses on either side of him had begun to
-throw long shadows across the square before de
-Sancerre was able to cull from his surroundings
-a bud of hope. It sprang from the tongue of
-Noco, who, as she passed behind his back, muttered
-in Spanish:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I will touch your arm at dark. Then follow
-me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>At that moment the women serving the royal
-table placed before the Great Sun and his guests
-of honor bits of bark upon which rested fish still
-hissing from the heat of a wood-fire. De Sancerre,
-who had turned to nod to Noco, caught a
-gleam of excitement in the black eyes of the
-serving-woman who had stretched her scrawny,
-brown arms between him and the chief priest.
-As he faced the feast again the fish in front of
-him recalled the written warning which he had
-received that morning from Julia de Aquilar.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Touch no fish at to-day&#8217;s banquet,&#8221; repeated
-de Sancerre to himself. &#8220;&#8217;Twas good advice, I
-think. I&#8217;ll let this schemer, Coheyogo, eat my
-dish.&#8221; Acting upon the impulse of the moment,
-the Frenchman touched the chief priest upon the
-arm, and, as Coheyogo&#8217;s black eyes met his, he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">[215]</span>
-made a gesture toward the retreating form of
-Noco, as if he invoked the aid of the temple to
-recall the interpreter to his side. The spontaneity
-of de Sancerre&#8217;s action had its effect
-upon the sun-priest, for he turned instantly and
-called aloud to the double-tongued and two-faced
-hag. With a rapidity and deftness worthy of a
-prestidigitateur, do Sancerre transposed the fragments
-of fish-laden bark upon the bench, and,
-as Coheyogo resumed his former attitude, he was
-confronted, unknowingly, with a dish with which
-a fanatical but disobedient priest, hating moon-magic,
-had tampered.</p>
-
-<p>There is but short shrift given to the day when
-the sun deserts it in southern climes. Twilight
-had already begun to cast a gloom upon the
-feast, against which the forced gayety begotten
-of cinnamon-flavored wine could not prevail,
-when de Sancerre again felt old Noco&#8217;s touch
-upon his arm. Before he turned to her the
-Frenchman, whose heart was beating wildly beneath
-his rusty velvets, cast a glance at the Great
-Sun. To his great satisfaction he discovered that
-his royal patient had wholly disregarded the
-warning vouchsafed by his recent illness and
-had been indulging in the pleasures of the table
-to an extent that had placed again in jeopardy
-the lives of those of his subjects who were
-doomed to accompany him in state to the spirit-land.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">[216]</span>
-But it was the condition of Coheyogo at
-that moment which gave to de Sancerre the
-greater cause for joy. The chief priest sat
-blinking down at a half-eaten fish, as if he
-struggled vainly to read the grim secret which
-it held. Now and then his head would drop
-forward as if he had been overcome by sleep.
-Then, by an effort of will, he would straighten
-his spine and attempt to collect his thoughts.
-The Frenchman watched him searchingly for a
-moment, and observed with delight that the
-struggle which the chief priest was making
-against a slothful but resistless foe would end
-in full defeat.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Ma foi</i>,&#8221; muttered de Sancerre, as he crawled
-softly from between the intoxicated State and
-the bedrugged Church into the shadow into which
-Noco had stolen, &#8220;had I not learned a trick or
-two in camps, &#8217;tis I who would be nodding, not
-Coheyogo. I would I could remain to see the
-outcome of this contest between a poison and a
-snake!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Noco had grasped him by the arm, and in
-another instant de Sancerre found himself stealing
-toward Do&ntilde;a Julia&#8217;s cabin through the darkest
-corner of the crowded square. Either the
-saints or the moon-god, or senseless chance,
-granted the Frenchman favors at that crucial
-hour; for, as he approached Coyocop&#8217;s sacred<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">[217]</span>
-abode, wellnigh hidden from sight beneath hillocks
-of cut flowers, a group of enthusiasts at
-the feast, still unconquered by the fermented
-juice of the cassia-berry, had mounted the food-stained
-benches and raised a maudlin, monotonous
-chant, in which the onlooking plebeians accompanied
-them. At the same moment a crowd
-of boys and girls at the further end of the square
-had begun a weird, ungraceful, unseemly dance, in
-which, as time passed, men and women joined with
-shouts of wild laughter. Presently the kettle-drum
-added its barbaric clamor to the din which
-fretted the darkness as it crept across the disordered
-square. Even the sun-priests, heated by
-the epidemic of gayety which had seized the
-town, had left their sacred fire to the care of a
-chosen few, and were now mingling with the
-shouting, dancing, delirious multitude upon a
-pretext of good-fellowship, which was not too
-well received.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Wait here, se&ntilde;or,&#8221; whispered Noco, in a guttural
-voice which shook with excitement, pushing
-de Sancerre against the wall at the rear of
-Do&ntilde;a Julia&#8217;s hut. &#8220;Don&#8217;t stir until I return.
-I fear some priest may still be watching me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The old crone disappeared around the corner
-of the cabin, and de Sancerre stood, trying to
-swallow his insistent heart, as he listened to the
-uproar in the square and, presently, to the voice<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">[218]</span>
-of Julia de Aquilar whispering to Noco almost
-at his very side.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Come,&#8221; hissed Noco, at his shoulder, seizing
-him by the wrist, and dragging Do&ntilde;a Julia
-toward the black shelter of the forest by the
-other hand. &#8220;No word! No rest! There will
-be no safety for us until we reach the trees.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Followed through the gloom by the harsh discord
-of a mad town&#8217;s revelry, Do&ntilde;a Julia de
-Aquilar, of Seville, and Count Louis de Sancerre,
-of Languedoc, linked together by a wrinkled beldame,
-who looked at that moment like a grinning
-witch escaping to the wilds with the helpless
-victims of her spite, hurried, with hearts
-growing lighter with every step, toward a pathless
-wilderness, in which a thousand lurking perils
-would menace them at every turn.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">[219]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXIII<br />
-
-
-<small>IN WHICH DE SANCERRE UNDERGOES MANY VARIED<br />
-EMOTIONS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> full moon of May, the moon of old corn,
-shone down upon a virgin forest bounding with
-the high pulse of a ripe spring-time. Its white
-splendor tiptoed along the outskirts of impenetrable
-thickets, or danced gayly down majestic
-glades, patrolled by oak and hickory, sassafras,
-and poplar trees. Presently, shunning a menacing
-morass, the silvery outriders of the moon&#8217;s
-array would file along a narrow bayou or charge
-<i>en masse</i> across the broad surface of a trembling
-lake. And while the triumphant moonlight took
-possession of a splendid province, the thousand
-voices of the forest murmured at midnight a
-welcome to the conqueror.</p>
-
-<p>Panting for breath, and worn with the friction
-of their race for freedom through swamps
-and woods, de Sancerre and his companions,
-after long hours of hurried flight, paused to
-recover their strength, far to the southward of
-the City of the Sun. The marvellous endurance<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">[220]</span>
-of Julia de Aquilar, whose urgency had granted
-to the enraged Noco no chance to protest against
-the fervor of their mad career, had put even the
-wiry, hardened frame of the lithe Frenchman
-to a stubborn test. Hand in hand de Sancerre
-and the Spanish girl had sped onward, followed
-by the grumbling crone, now breaking their way
-through vindictive underbrush, anon wetting their
-feet in marshy vales, again making progress beneath
-stately trees, avoiding the deep gloom of
-threatening recesses and following a moon-track,
-like hounds upon a scent. Behind them sat certain
-death; beyond them, a joyful promise lured
-them deeper and ever deeper into the primeval
-wilds.</p>
-
-<p>Tottering and breathless, old Noco reached
-the crest of the tree-crowned hillock upon which
-Do&ntilde;a Julia and de Sancerre, gasping, speechless,
-but strong with renewed hope, stood awaiting
-her coming. Throwing her old bones upon the
-damp grass, Noco lay moaning for a time in senile
-misery. Youth, under the spurs of fear and
-hope, had led old age a cruel race. Noco had
-come into the forest to solve by moon-magic
-the secret of her grandson&#8217;s flight, and, lo! the
-wizard upon whom she relied had become a will-o&#8217;-the-wisp,
-in tattered velvets, using his diabolical
-power to kidnap Coyocop, the spirit of the sun.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Lean against the tree-trunk, se&ntilde;ora,&#8221; said de<span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">[221]</span>
-Sancerre to Do&ntilde;a Julia, his voice tripping over
-his breath as he spoke. &#8220;I fear old Noco has
-found our pace too hot. But, even now, I dare
-not rest. We must go on!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Descending the hillock to the treacherous ooze
-which mirrored the moon in a multitude of pools,
-the Frenchman filled his bedraggled bonnet with
-cold water and returned quickly to Noco&#8217;s side.
-Bending down, he forced the panting beldame to
-drink deep of the refreshing draught. Then he
-poured a cold stream upon her drawn, dusky face
-and through the white hair above her wrinkled
-brow. The old hag&#8217;s beady eyes had watched
-his every movement. Had he not cast a spell
-upon the moon-kissed water with which he laved
-her head? Surely this revival of her strength,
-which raised her on the instant to her feet, was
-magical. Cruel though he might have been to
-her, the Brother of the Moon was making full
-reparation with his witchery for the suffering
-which she had undergone. Old Noco was more
-superstitious at midnight than at dawn, more a
-savage in the forest than in her city hut. The
-mocking gleam which her eyes had known so
-well the moonlight could not find, as she stood
-facing de Sancerre, gazing up at him with a
-question in her glance.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Cabanacte?&#8221; she exclaimed, still short of
-breath.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">[222]</span>&#8220;We will seek him by the river,&#8221; answered
-de Sancerre, pointing to a break in the forest
-which opened toward the east, as he drew the
-woman toward the hollow gum-tree against
-which the Spanish girl was seated, silently pouring
-out her soul in gratitude to Mother Mary
-and the saints.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But there is no time,&#8221; complained the old
-woman. &#8220;They will miss Coyocop, and if they
-find us in the woods&mdash;ugh!&#8221; The grunt of
-horror to which Noco gave vent bore witness to
-how much cruelty her aged eyes had gazed upon.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Listen, Do&ntilde;a Noco,&#8221; said de Sancerre sternly,
-as he extended his hand to Julia de Aquilar and,
-indulging in a courtly flourish wholly out of keeping
-with his environment, drew her to her feet,
-&#8220;we have set out to find Katonah and your
-grandson. Be true to Cabanacte and put your
-trust in Coyocop. Listen, se&ntilde;ora,&#8221; and here
-de Sancerre bent down and addressed the old
-crone with impressive emphasis, &#8220;as we hurry
-on, ponder the words I speak; the City of the
-Sun is unworthy of the spirit sent from God.
-It is accursed. Its temple runs with blood, and
-its vile priests have sealed the city&#8217;s doom. Come;
-&#8217;twas your grandson who found Coyocop. &#8217;Tis
-Coyocop who shall now find Cabanacte.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Onward through the moonlit forest the trio
-kept their course, tending always toward a noble<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">[223]</span>
-river that might bear them, could they build a
-raft, to the vagrant camp of de la Salle, pitched
-somewhere further south. Wasting no breath in
-futile words, de Sancerre maintained a telling
-pace which carried them every moment further
-from a city of murder toward a stream where
-hunger menaced them.</p>
-
-<p>For two long, heavy hours they struggled eastward
-across the treacherous margin of a river
-grown erratic from its weary longing for the sea.
-Now and then de Sancerre would turn to refresh
-his straining eyes with a vision of beauty, done
-in black and white against the moonlight, and,
-for all time, upon his heart. A word of encouragement
-would escape from his dry lips at
-intervals, and a smile of hope and gratitude
-would reward him for his prodigality of breath.</p>
-
-<p>The want and hardship which confronted them,
-the chances of capture from savage tribes, of
-death from starvation, or swamp-begotten fever,
-although clear to de Sancerre&#8217;s mind, could not,
-in that glad hour, cast a shadow upon his buoyant
-spirits. &#8220;A half-done miracle is worse than
-none,&#8221; he had said to Do&ntilde;a Julia. It gave him
-renewed confidence in the future to feel that
-upon his own courage, pertinacity, and foresight
-would depend the happy outcome of a strange
-adventure which chance, at the outset, had made
-possible. It was pleasant to de Sancerre to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">[224]</span>
-reflect that he could now relieve the saints of
-all responsibility for the issue of events.</p>
-
-<p>Nevertheless, the Frenchman uttered a word
-of gratitude to St. Maturin, who watches over
-fools, when, about two hours after midnight, he
-and his companions shook the forest from their
-weary shoulders and stood upon the curving
-shore of the River Colbert&mdash;known to later times
-as the Mississippi. De Sancerre&#8217;s quick eye saw
-at once that at this point Sieur de la Salle had,
-weeks before, made his camp for a night. By a
-short cut through the woods, the Frenchman had
-reached a point upon the river to gain which
-the canoes of the great explorer had labored for
-a day upon the winding stream. That the litter
-left upon the bank had not been abandoned by a
-party of roving Indians was proven beyond peradventure
-to do Sancerre by a discovery which
-electrified his pulse and renewed his admiration
-for the saint whom he had just invoked. As he
-hurried down the slope which fell gently from
-the forest to the stream, anxious to enter the deserted
-huts, made of reeds and leafy branches by
-expert hands to serve as shelter for a single night,
-de Sancerre&#8217;s torn shoes struck against an object
-which forced an exclamation of astonishment
-and delight from his ready tongue.</p>
-
-<p>Gleaming in the moonlight at his feet, the
-long barrel of a flintlock musket pointed straight<span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">[225]</span>
-at a powder-horn and a bag of bullets, as if the
-weapon, lacking nourishment, prayed to be recharged.
-Bending down, de Sancerre raised the
-clumsy gun and examined its mechanism with
-the eagerness of a shipwrecked mariner toward
-whose raft the sea had tossed a chest which
-might, when opened, gladden his eyes with food.</p>
-
-<p>Do&ntilde;a Julia and Noco stood behind the Frenchman
-watching his movements with eyes in which
-curiosity had conquered the heaviness of dire
-fatigue.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;This, Mademoiselle de Aquilar,&#8221; explained
-de Sancerre, balancing the heavy musket in his
-hand, &#8220;is the <i>fusil ordinaire</i>, or snaphance gun.
-I have heard young hotspurs in the low countries&mdash;who
-knew little of the rapier&#8217;s niceties&mdash;assert
-that, at close quarters, its butt-end is more deadly
-than a sword. Of its merits in a <i>m&ecirc;l&eacute;e</i> I am not
-ripe to speak, but I learned, while yet I lingered
-with Count Frontenac, to drive a bullet through
-a distant tree. The weapon has its use! You
-may thank the saints, mademoiselle, for this gun
-and powder-horn. &#8217;Twill serve my turn if my
-captain&#8217;s careless redmen have left no eatables
-in yonder huts.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ah, well I knew, monsieur, you had not
-come to me in vain!&#8221; exclaimed Do&ntilde;a Julia, a
-glad smile gleaming in her eloquent eyes, beneath
-which rested the dark shadows of physical exhaustion.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">[226]</span>
-&#8220;The saints have led your steps to
-where the musket lay!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Mais, oui!</i> But tell not Noco this. Her
-ears must harken to another tale.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Turning to gaze down at the silent beldame,
-the fiery brightness of whose busy eyes the
-strain of a forced march at midnight had not
-dimmed, &#8217;though her face twitched with fatigue
-and her scrawny hands shook in the moonlight,
-de Sancerre said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The Brother of the Moon is glad, se&ntilde;ora, for
-my god has put into my hands the thunder and
-the lightning&mdash;to call Cabanacte from the wilds
-and to smite the sun-priests if they follow us.
-To-morrow I will make the echoes of the forest
-lead your grandson to us here. But now we
-must have rest, for Coyocop is weary, and the
-dawn must find us up.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>St. Maturin, the friend of fools, still played
-de Sancerre&#8217;s game. As the Frenchman, followed
-by the women, to whom each step they
-took was now a hardship, entered the nearest
-hut, he saw at once that his withdrawal from de
-la Salle&#8217;s expedition, and the loss of Chat&eacute;muc
-and Katonah, had led the explorer to lighten his
-equipment by the contents of one canoe, intending,
-doubtless, to retake the stores upon his return
-should circumstances make them again of
-value to him. A boat-load of corn-meal and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">[227]</span>
-gunpowder had been stored in the hut in the
-hope that neither the weather nor roving savages
-would deprive the returning explorers of its use.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Nom de Dieu!</i>&#8221; cried the Frenchman, gayly,
-as he pointed to the godsend which made
-his light heart lighter. &#8220;There lie food and
-ammunition. &#8217;Tis true, indeed, that Heaven has
-been kind to us! And so I leave you, Mademoiselle
-de Aquilar, to your prayers and sleep. I
-must make further search.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Old Noco, who had paid out the last link of
-her energy, had made a shake-down of the meal-bags,
-and her labored breathing proved that her
-aged bones were finding the rest they craved.
-De Sancerre held Do&ntilde;a Julia&#8217;s cold, trembling
-hand in his and gazed upon her weary face for a
-long moment, whose very silence was eloquent
-with words he could not speak.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Good-night, monsieur,&#8221; faltered the girl, tears
-born of gratitude and physical weariness dimming
-the dark beauty of her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Good-night,&#8221; he said, bending to touch her
-white hand with his lips. Then he drew himself
-erect, trembling as if the damp breeze from the
-river had chilled his overwrought frame. Suddenly
-he clasped the weeping girl to his breast,
-and his lips met hers in a kiss which crowned the
-miracle the saints had wrought for them.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;My love! My love!&#8221; whispered de Sancerre;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">[228]</span>
-and when he reached the moonlit night outside
-the hut again it seemed to him that the river
-and the forest had changed their outlines to his
-eyes and that he stood within the confines of a
-paradise. He seated himself upon the sloping
-margin of the stream, vainly attempting to recall
-his soaring thoughts to the homely exigencies of
-his grim environment. It was no paradise by
-which he was surrounded. A lonely flood finding
-its way to a lonely sea lay before his eyes,
-while at his back stood a pathless wilderness
-through which, even at this moment, black-hearted
-fanatics, skilled in woodcraft, might be
-following his trail. This dark thought, clouding
-the splendor of a dream begotten by a kiss, led
-de Sancerre, almost unconsciously, to take from
-the ground at his side the awkward musket with
-which chance had armed him. He longed to
-test its prowess as an ally, to prove to his troubled
-mind that dampness and neglect had not robbed
-the flintlock of its heritage. With no intention
-of giving way to the curiosity which assailed him,
-the Frenchman carefully loaded the gun with
-powder and ball and raised it affectionately to
-his shoulder. In that hour of peril and loneliness
-the musket seemed to be a friend speaking to
-him of de la Salle&#8217;s loyalty and persistence and
-of the certainty that his return from the gulf
-could not be long delayed.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">[229]</span>Suddenly an uncanny premonition crept over
-de Sancerre, whose nervous energy had been exhausted
-by a day and night of strangely-contrasted
-emotions and by a physical strain whose
-reaction was now taking its revenge. Turning
-his back to the river, de Sancerre&#8217;s restless eyes
-swept the black, threatening line of the forest,
-behind which the moon was drooping. Presently
-his heart seemed to clutch his throat and the
-long barrel of the musket trembled as his hand
-shook for an instant. At the edge of the woods,
-two hundred yards beyond the camp, stood a
-white, naked thing, resembling in outline a man,
-but as shadowy and ghostly as a creature made
-of moonbeams. It stood erect for a moment and
-then bent down as if it would crawl back into
-the forest upon all fours.</p>
-
-<p>Impulsively, de Sancerre covered the apparition
-with his gun and snapped the steel against the
-flint. A crash, echoing across the startled flood,
-and hurled back in anger by the bushes and the
-trees, made sudden war upon the silence of the
-stately night. When the smoke from the friendly
-gun&mdash;in good case to serve the Frenchman&#8217;s
-ends&mdash;had cleared away, de Sancerre saw no
-ghastly victim of his marksmanship lying in
-white relief against the black outline of the
-woods. &#8220;Mayhap,&#8221; he reflected, &#8220;my bullet
-passed through a shadow not of earth! Don<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">[230]</span>
-Joseph? Perhaps I drew him back from hell
-with that dear kiss I won! But what mad
-thoughts are these? &#8217;Twas but a gray wolf
-in the scrub, or a vision raised by my own
-weariness. At all events, <i>ma petite</i>,&#8221; he exclaimed,
-patting the smoking musket contentedly,
-&#8220;there&#8217;s now no doubt that you and I
-agree.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A soft touch fell upon de Sancerre&#8217;s arm, and,
-turning, he looked into the white, agitated face
-of Do&ntilde;a Julia.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Fear not, se&ntilde;ora,&#8221; he exclaimed, earnestly.
-&#8220;Forgive me that I disturbed your rest. But it
-seemed best to me to try the temper of this
-clumsy gun. &#8217;Tis always well to know how
-great may be the prowess of an ally whom you
-have gained.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Her dark eyes were reading his face closely.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They have not found us?&#8221; she asked, eagerly.
-&#8220;You did not shoot at men?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Only at a target made by dreams,&#8221; he answered,
-reassuringly. &#8220;I shot at the phantom
-of my hate, <i>ma ch&egrave;re</i>, and, lo! it brought my
-love to me.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Her dark eyes fell until their long black lashes
-rested against her white face.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You love me, se&ntilde;or?&#8221; she whispered, in a
-voice which filled his soul with an ecstasy it had
-never known before.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">[231]</span>And once again the waters of the listening
-river bore a love-tale to the distant gulf&mdash;a
-strange, sweet sequel to gossip which the waves
-had heard before.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">[232]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXIV<br />
-
-
-<small>IN WHICH SPIRITS, GOOD AND BAD, BESET A<br />
-WILDERNESS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Cabanacte&#8217;s</span> wooing of Katonah, an idyl of
-the forest, a love-poem lost in the wilds, a spring
-song set to halting words, had filled two simple
-lives with sadness through days of wandering
-and nights of melancholy dreams. When the
-stalwart sun-worshipper had first overtaken the
-girl, fleeing she knew not whither, and inspired
-by a motive which she could not analyze, Cabanacte
-had been greeted by a faint, apathetic smile
-which had aroused in his heart the hope that, as
-time went by, her eyes might look into his with
-the light of a great happiness shining in their
-depths.</p>
-
-<p>As the days and nights came and went and
-returned again, while a glad world chanted the
-wedding-song of spring, and the forest whispered
-the gossip of the mating-time, Cabanacte&#8217;s gentleness
-brought peace without passion, affection
-without encouragement, into Katonah&#8217;s gaze as
-it rested upon the dark, strong, kindly face of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">[233]</span>
-the dusky youth. Reclining at her feet for hours
-at a time, the bronze giant would attempt to tell
-the story of his love to the Mohican maiden in
-broken Spanish, only a few words of which Katonah
-understood. But what mattered the tongue
-in which he spoke? The moon of old corn was
-at the full, and the universe grew eloquent with
-a language which every living creature comprehended.
-The birds were singing in the trees
-from a libretto which the squirrels and chipmunks
-knew by heart. The wild flowers blushed
-at a romance buzzed by bees, and from the grass
-and the waters and the forest glades arose a
-myriad of voices repeating the ballad of that
-gayest of all troubadours, the spring-time of the
-South.</p>
-
-<p>Cabanacte&#8217;s wooing assumed many varying
-forms. As a huntsman he would lay the trophies
-of his skill at Katonah&#8217;s feet. He would
-lure a fish from a stream, and, making a fire by
-rubbing wood against a stone, would serve to her
-a tempting dish upon a platter made of bark.
-Wild plums, yellow or red, berries luscious with
-the essence of the sunshine, and ripe, sweet figs
-served as seductive foils to the burnt-offerings
-which he placed upon the altar of his love.</p>
-
-<p>Hand in hand they would wander aimlessly
-through the flower-scented woods by day, silent
-for hours at a time and soothed into contentment<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">[234]</span>
-by a barbaric indifference to what the future
-might have in store for them. At night Katonah
-would sleep beneath a sheltering tree, while
-Cabanacte watched by her side until his eyes
-grew dim and his head would wobble from the
-fillips of fatigue. Presently he would shake
-slumber from his stooping shoulders and sit erect,
-to gaze down lovingly upon the quiet face and
-the slender, graceful figure of the melancholy
-maiden, whose beauty was more potent to his
-eyes than the heavy hand of sleep. Why should
-Cabanacte give way to dreams while his gaze
-could rest upon a vision of the night more grateful
-to his longing soul than the fairest picture
-that his fancy had ever drawn?</p>
-
-<p>Now and again the dusky giant would gently
-touch the sleeping maiden&#8217;s brow with trembling
-fingers, or bend down to press with reverent lips
-a kiss upon her cool, smooth cheek. Half-awakened
-by his caress, Katonah would stir restlessly
-in the arms of mother-earth, and Cabanacte,
-alarmed and repentant, would draw himself erect
-again to continue his conflict with the promptings
-of his love and the call to oblivion with which
-sleep assailed him.</p>
-
-<p>Often in the heat of noonday his guard would
-be relieved, and he would slumber beneath the
-trees while Katonah sat as sentry by his side.
-Then would the flying and the climbing and the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">[235]</span>
-crawling creatures of the forest come forth to
-sing and chatter and squeak in the effort to lure
-the silent, sad-eyed maiden to tell to them the
-secret of her heart. Of whom was she thinking
-as she reclined against a tree-trunk and gazed, not
-at the stalwart, picturesque youth stretched in
-sleep upon the greensward at her side, but up at
-the white-flecked, May-day sky, a patch of dotted
-blue above the flowering trees? Why did the
-tears creep into her dark, gentle eyes at such a
-time as this? Was she not young and strong and
-beautiful? Was not all nature joyous with the
-bounding pulse of spring? What craveth this
-brown-cheeked maiden which the kindly earth
-has not bestowed? Surely, the sleeping stripling
-at her feet is worthy of her maiden heart!
-Not often does the spring-time lure into the
-forest, to meet the searching, knowing eyes of a
-thousand living creatures, a nobler youth than he
-who, for days and nights, has been her worshipper
-and slave. The forest is young to-day with
-vernal ecstasy, but, oh, how old it is with the
-worldly wisdom of long centuries! What means
-this futile wooing of a sun-burnt demigod and
-the cold indifference of a stubborn maiden, who
-sighs and weeps when all the joys of this glad
-earth are hers?</p>
-
-<p>The forest holds a mystery, a problem strange
-and new. The breeze at sunset tells the story<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">[236]</span>
-to the blushing waters of the lakes, and spreads
-the gossip through the swamps and glades. The
-moonbeams steal abroad and verify the tale that
-the twilight breeze had voiced. A youth and
-maiden, young and beautiful, so runs the chatter
-of the woods and streams, wander in sadness along
-a zigzag trail, and, while he sighs, the maiden
-weeps and moans. There is no precedent, in all
-the forest lore, for this strange, futile quest of
-misery, this daily search for some new cause for
-tears where all the world is singing hymns of joy
-and praise.</p>
-
-<p>And all the questions which the forest asked
-had found an echo in Cabanacte&#8217;s soul. Why
-should Katonah gaze into his loving eyes with
-a glance which spoke of sorrow at her heart?
-What was there in all this wondrous paradise of
-earth which he, a youth of mighty prowess,
-could not lay at her dear feet? He would take
-her to the City of the Sun and teach her how to
-smile in gladness, how to make his home a joy.
-Did she fear the slavish drudgery of the women
-of her race and his? Oh, Sun in Heaven, could
-he but make her understand the broken Spanish
-of his clumsy tongue, he&#8217;d swear an oath to toil
-for her from year to year, to keep her slender
-hands at rest and hold her higher than the wives
-whose fate she feared!</p>
-
-<p>Often would Cabanacte take Katonah&#8217;s hand<span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">[237]</span>
-in his, and, smiling up at her as she leaned against
-a tree, strive to make his scraps of Spanish aid
-the noble purpose of his heart. Now and then
-the knowledge which the girl had gained of
-French would serve Cabanacte&#8217;s turn, and she
-would smile in comprehension of some word
-which he had voiced. After a time she found
-herself amused and interested by his earnest
-efforts to put her into touch with the ardent, uncomplicated
-longings of his simple soul. One
-day she had attempted to make answer to his
-question&mdash;clarified by the eloquence of primitive
-gestures&mdash;whether she would return with him to
-the City of the Sun. They had laughed aloud
-at the strange linguistic jumble which had ensued,
-and the spying gossips of the forest had
-sent forth the stirring rumor that the coy maiden
-had dried her tears and was at last worthy of
-the blessings of the spring. But hardly had the
-forest learned the story of Katonah&#8217;s laughter,
-when the tears gleamed in her eyes and her
-whispered negative drove the smile from Cabanacte&#8217;s
-face.</p>
-
-<p>From this beginning, however, the youth and
-maiden had developed, through the long, aimless
-hours of their sylvan wanderings, a curious, amorphous
-<i>patois</i>, made up of a few words culled
-from the French and Spanish tongues and forced
-by Cabanacte to tell an ancient tale in a language<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">[238]</span>
-new to man. It brought renewed hope to the
-youth&#8217;s sinking heart to find words which could
-drive, if only for a moment, the mournful gleam
-from Katonah&#8217;s sad eyes, or, when fate was very
-kind, tempt a fleeting smile to her trembling
-lips.</p>
-
-<p>But even after they had garnered a few useful
-words from Latin roots, there remained a
-heavy shadow upon the hearts of Katonah and
-her swain. Between them stood an elusive, intangible,
-but persistent and domineering, something,
-which restrained Cabanacte with its cruel
-grip, and often turned Katonah deaf to her
-lover&#8217;s passionate words and blind to the adoring
-splendor which shone in his burning eyes.
-A savage maiden&#8217;s foolish dream, a cherished
-memory which haunted her by day and crept
-into her sleep at night decreed that Cabanacte
-should woo her heart in vain and in a forest
-musical with love should grow sick with longing
-for the word that she would not speak. With
-gentle wiles and all the art his simple nature
-knew he laid before Katonah the treasures of
-devotion, and, &#8217;though she smiled, and gazed into
-his eyes with tender gratitude, she waved them
-all aside and sat in silence in the moonlit night,
-recalling a pale, clear-cut face upon which she
-never hoped to look again.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_238.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="caption">&#8220;A WHITE-FACED MAN PRESSING TO HIS BREAST A<br />
-DARK-HAIRED MAIDEN&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was long past midnight, and Cabanacte,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">[239]</span>
-weary of his vigil, and worn with the melancholy
-thoughts which oppressed him, leaned against a
-tree and dozed for a time while the maiden, reclining
-at his side, listened in her dreams to a
-mocking voice which had aforetime been music
-to her heart. The murmurs of the night had
-died away to silence as the moon fell toward
-the west, and the forest had settled itself for a
-nap before the dawn should hail the noisy day,
-when Katonah and Cabanacte were hurled to
-their feet by a crackling crash, which echoed
-through the protesting woods with a threatening
-insistence that stopped for an instant the beating
-of their hearts. Seizing the girl&#8217;s cold hand,
-Cabanacte, glancing around him upon all sides
-with affrighted eyes, rushed wildly away from
-the oak-tree beneath which they had found rest,
-and strove, with a giant&#8217;s strength, to win his
-way to the great river as a refuge from a wilderness
-in which evil spirits menaced them with
-ugly cries. Suddenly the stalwart youth paused
-in his mad career and drew the panting maiden
-close to his side. Far away between the trees a
-ghastly creature, a spectral man or monkey,
-crept and ran and bounded toward the shadow-haunted
-depths of the forest from which they
-fled. Knowing all the secrets of the woods, Cabanacte
-turned cold at the fleeting vision which
-had checked his wild flight, for never had he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">[240]</span>
-seen beneath the moon so weird a sight. Almost
-before he could regain his breath it had
-come and gone, and the night was once again
-his lonely, silent friend.</p>
-
-<p>Trembling from the cumulative horrors which
-had so suddenly beset their ears and eyes, Cabanacte
-and Katonah stole through the forest
-toward the river, which glimmered now and then
-between the trees. The giant&#8217;s arm was thrown
-around Katonah&#8217;s slender waist, and Cabanacte
-could feel the hurried beating of her aching heart
-as he pressed her to his side, as if to defend her
-from some new peril lurking in these treacherous
-wilds.</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly, as they crept apprehensively toward
-the outskirts of the trees, the broad expanse of
-the Mississippi broke upon their sight, and, between
-their coigne of vantage and the river, they
-saw a tableau which emphasized their growing
-conviction that some strange enchantment was
-working wonders on the earth at night, to bind
-them together by ties woven in the land of
-ghosts.</p>
-
-<p>Before their startled gaze stood a slender,
-white-faced man pressing to his breast a dark-haired
-maiden clad in black, and as they crouched
-beneath the underbrush they saw the brother
-of the moon bend down and kiss the spirit of
-the sun.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">[241]</span>&#8220;&#8217;Tis Coyocop!&#8221; muttered Cabanacte, in a
-voice of wonder and adoration. &#8220;She has come
-to the forest to drive away the evil demons of
-the night!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Come!&#8221; whispered Katonah, urging her lover
-by the hand toward the woods from which they
-had just escaped&mdash;&#8220;come, Cabanacte! I love
-you! Do you understand my words? I love
-you, Cabanacte! Come!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>As the dusky giant, a willing captive led back
-to a joyous prison, followed Katonah toward the
-haunted glades, he knew that Coyocop had
-wrought a miracle and had banished from the
-forest the demons who had warred against his
-love.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">[242]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXV<br />
-
-
-<small>IN WHICH DE SANCERRE WEEPS AND FIGHTS</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>&#8220;<span class="smcap">I have</span> searched in all directions,&#8221; remarked
-de Sancerre to Do&ntilde;a Julia, standing upon the
-river-bank and watching the early sunbeams as
-they greeted the rippling flood, &#8220;and I fear my
-captain&#8217;s people did not abandon the canoe whose
-contents they left here as a gift from the good
-St. Maturin. But we are in good case! &#8217;Tis
-a kindly stream, and its bosom will bear us gently
-to my friends. The walls of these frail huts
-will serve us well to form a raft.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The Spanish maiden watched the golden glory
-of the dawn, as it made a mirror of the stately
-stream, with eyes which glowed with happiness
-and peace. The dread of many perils which
-beset de Sancerre&#8217;s mind found no reflection in
-the devout soul of Julia de Aquilar. Had not
-the saints wrought miracles to lead her from
-captivity? Weak, indeed, would be her faith if
-she doubted the kind persistence of their aid.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8217;Tis but repaying what I owe, se&ntilde;ora, if I
-should make you safe at last,&#8221; continued de Sancerre,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_243">[243]</span>
-musingly, taking Do&ntilde;a Julia&#8217;s hand in his.
-&#8220;You saved my life. You have not told me how
-you knew they&#8217;d dressed my fish with poison
-from the woods.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ah, monsieur,&#8221; sighed the girl, regretting
-that he had recalled the sorrows and dangers of
-the past, which seemed to her at this glad hour
-like the unreal horrors of a nightmare forever
-ended. &#8220;You must remember that I&#8217;ve spent
-a long, sad year in that City of the Sun. I&#8217;m
-quick to learn an alien tongue, and, without effort,
-I came to understand the language of the
-priests. The saints be praised, I&#8217;ll know no more
-of it! And so I heard them plotting in the
-night outside my door to give you poison in the
-fish you ate. I prayed to Mother Mary to find
-a way&mdash;and, lo! my prayer was answered, for
-Noco came to me!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Ma foi</i>, how much we owe to Noco!&#8221; exclaimed
-de Sancerre, scanning the river and the forest with
-searching eyes, as he turned to lead Do&ntilde;a Julia
-to the hut in which, through the aid of their
-aged companion, they were to break their fast.
-By means of the flintlock on his gun de Sancerre
-had kindled a fire, at which Noco had been
-cooking cakes of corn-meal, the odor from which
-now mingled with the bracing fragrance of the
-cool May morning.</p>
-
-<p>As they entered the hut the girl uttered a cry<span class="pagenum" id="Page_244">[244]</span>
-of dismay, and de Sancerre strode quickly to the
-prostrate form of their faithful counsellor and
-guide. Stretched before a snapping fire of twigs,
-with her last earthly task undone, lay Noco, dead,
-the grin and wrinkles smoothed from her old,
-brown face by the kindly hand of eternal sleep.
-The strain of the night&#8217;s wild race had been too
-great for her brave heart, and, when called upon
-by the labor of the day, it had ceased to beat.</p>
-
-<p>Do&ntilde;a Julia threw herself upon her knees beside
-the only friend she had known in her long
-captivity, and, with sobs and prayers, gave vent
-to the sorrow in her heart.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Nom de Dieu!</i> I think I loved that queer
-old hag!&#8221; murmured de Sancerre to himself,
-brushing a tear from his pale cheek, as he turned
-toward the wood-fire to resume the work from
-which Noco had been called by death. &#8220;I thought
-there was no limit to the vigor in her frame!
-Alas for her, I set the pace too hot!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>But there was no time for sighs and vain regrets.
-De Sancerre knew the woods too well to
-let his fire long toss the smoke between the fissures
-of the hut. Removing the corn-cakes from
-the blaze, he extinguished the flames at once, and
-urged Do&ntilde;a Julia to eat freely of a simple meal.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Remember, se&ntilde;ora,&#8221; pleaded de Sancerre,
-earnestly, seeing that the sudden taking-off of
-their aged comrade had robbed the sorrowing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">[245]</span>
-girl of all desire for food&mdash;&#8220;remember that the
-larder of our raft will be a crude affair. I know
-not when the luxury of corn-cakes will tempt our
-teeth again.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Do&ntilde;a Julia smiled sadly and renewed her efforts
-to do justice to a repast for which she had
-no heart.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Think not, se&ntilde;or,&#8221; she said, in Spanish, gazing
-at de Sancerre with eyes bright with pride
-and fortitude, &#8220;that I have learned no lessons
-from a year of peril and dismay. You knew me
-in the luxury of courts. Methinks you&#8217;ll find
-me changed in many ways. I mourn old Noco.
-She saved me from despair. She hated Spaniards,
-but she worshipped me. Ah, se&ntilde;or, she
-had a loyal heart. May the saints be kind to
-her!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Amen!&#8221; exclaimed de Sancerre, fervently.
-&#8220;And now, se&ntilde;ora, we have no time to lose!
-Untie the meal-bags in the corner there and bring
-the cords to me. I&#8217;ll pull a hut to pieces and
-make a raft of logs upon the shore. For every
-mile the river puts between this spot and us, I&#8217;ll
-vow a candle to St. Maturin.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Fastening a powder-horn and a bullet-pouch to
-his waist, to the deep resentment of his patrician
-rapier, de Sancerre, with gun in hand, hurried to
-the river-bank and chose a convenient spot from
-which to launch his treacherous craft upon a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">[246]</span>
-kindly current flowing toward the camp of
-friends. As the hours passed by and his raft
-grew in size and strength, the depression which
-the death of Noco had cast upon de Sancerre&#8217;s
-spirits stole away, and there were hope and cheer
-in the smiles with which he greeted Do&ntilde;a Julia
-when she came to him now and again from the
-hut with stout cords with which he spliced together
-the clumsy, stubborn logs of his rude boat.
-At short intervals he would abandon his task as
-a raft-builder to scan, with straining eyes, the
-broad expanse of river upon his left, or to listen
-breathlessly for sounds of menacing import in
-the forest at his back. But the sun had reached
-the zenith, his raft was nearly built, and de Sancerre
-could discover, neither upon flood nor land,
-aught to suggest that man-hunting man was stirring
-at high noon.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Courage</i>, mademoiselle,&#8221; he cried, gayly, in
-his native tongue, as Do&ntilde;a Julia, pale and silent,
-approached him from the hut. &#8220;Another hour
-will find us voyageurs at last. We&#8217;ll name our
-gallant little ship <i>La Coyocop</i>!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The saints forefend!&#8221; exclaimed the girl,
-smiling at his fancy. &#8220;&#8217;Twould bring disaster
-with it! &#8217;Tis a heathen name! We&#8217;ll christen
-our good raft in honor of the Virgin or the
-saints. They have been kind to us!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Ma foi</i>, you speak the truth, <i>ma ch&egrave;re</i>! My<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">[247]</span>
-patron saint, the kindly Maturin, has saved me
-from all blunders for a day. If ever I should see
-a godly land again, I&#8217;ll raise an altar to his
-memory.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The mocking undertone in de Sancerre&#8217;s light,
-laughing voice recalled to Do&ntilde;a Julia the old
-days at Versailles when this same man, who, by
-a marvel wrought in Paradise, now stood beside
-her in a wilderness, had touched upon many things
-which she had held in high regard with the irreverent
-wit of a flippant tongue. But, on the
-instant, she felt that she had been unjust to de
-Sancerre in taking, even for a moment, the path
-along which memory led. The earnest, courageous,
-resourceful man at her side was not the
-debonair, satirical cavalier whom she had known
-at court. She had said to him that he would find
-a change in her, wrought by a year of danger and
-despair. She realized, through the quick intuitions
-of a loving heart, that during that same
-lapse of time the wild, stirring life which he had
-led had touched the nobler chords in the soul of
-de Sancerre, and had brought to view a manly
-earnestness and force which had stamped his mobile
-face with an imprint grateful to her eyes.
-At Versailles the courtier had fascinated her
-against her will. In the wilderness the man
-had won the unforced homage of her admiration.
-If, now and then, his tongue, by habit,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">[248]</span>
-used flippant words to speak of mighty mysteries,
-the saints in heaven would forgive him this,
-for he had grown to be a man well worthy of
-their tender care.</p>
-
-<p>The truth of this came to Do&ntilde;a Julia with renewed
-insistence as she and de Sancerre, having
-made the final preparations for their embarkation,
-knelt beside old Noco&#8217;s corpse and, hand
-clasping hand, voiced a prayer for the repose of
-their faithful ally&#8217;s soul.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I dare not wait to give her burial,&#8221; said de
-Sancerre, regretfully, as he and the girl left the
-hut, carrying to their raft what little corn-meal
-and gunpowder their frail craft allowed to them
-as cargo. &#8220;But well I know the saints will treat
-her well. Her claim upon them is the same as
-mine.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Do&ntilde;a Julia glanced up at de Sancerre, questioningly.
-He looked into her dark, earnest eyes
-with his heart in his, and answered her in Spanish:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Old Noco worshipped you, se&ntilde;ora&mdash;as I do!
-<i>Caramba!</i> What is that?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The Frenchman stood motionless for a moment
-watching an object which broke the monotony
-of the river&#8217;s broad expanse on their left.
-Presently he placed the keg of gunpowder, which
-he had been carrying, upon the shore, and, seizing
-the long, clumsy musket at his feet, examined the
-pan and hammer.</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">[249]</span>&#8220;What is it, se&ntilde;or?&#8221; asked the girl, calmly,
-glancing up the river at a bobbing, white speck
-far to the northward, and then looking into de
-Sancerre&#8217;s pale, set face with eyes in which no
-terror gleamed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I hardly know, se&ntilde;ora!&#8221; exclaimed the Frenchman.
-&#8220;But I fancy &#8217;tis a thing which has no
-hold upon the saints!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You think it is&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I fear it is a war-canoe of white-robed devils,
-whose only claim to mercy is that they knew you
-were from God. But listen, <i>ma ch&egrave;re</i>. They
-must not see you here! There is no safety for
-us within the woods, for they would find my
-raft and track us quickly to the trees. The
-weird moon-magic of this snaphance gun must
-turn them from their course. Go back into the
-hut, and let their black eyes search for you in
-vain. With good St. Maturin&#8217;s most timely gift
-I&#8217;ll show them that a bullet is harder than their
-hearts.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Ah, no&mdash;I cannot leave you now!&#8221; exclaimed
-the girl, shuddering at the prospect of a lonely
-vigil in the room where Noco lay.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;This is no place for you, se&ntilde;ora,&#8221; said de Sancerre,
-grimly, glancing again at the river, down
-which a large canoe, manned by ten stalwart
-sun-worshippers, which rose and fell upon the
-favoring tide, was approaching them with its<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">[250]</span>
-menace of death for de Sancerre and captivity
-for the girl. &#8220;Go to the hut at once! I shall not
-keep you waiting long. If the magic of my musket
-should not avail, we&#8217;ll test the friendliness of
-yonder trees. But, still, I think my merry gun
-will drive the cowards back.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A moment later de Sancerre, humming snatches
-of the love-song which he had sung before the
-cabin of the goddess Coyocop, fingered his musket
-with impatience as he waited for the war-canoe
-to swing within easy range of a weapon
-with which he had had no long experience.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Nom de Dieu!</i>&#8221; he muttered, as he raised
-the gun to his shoulder and then lowered it
-again to await a more favorable opportunity for
-his initial shot. &#8220;They make a gallant show!
-Their sun-baked brawn and muscle form a target
-which would rejoice the heart of a <i>coureur
-de bois</i>.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>At that instant a cry of mingled rage and triumph
-arose from the paddlers as they discovered
-the picturesque figure, standing erect upon
-the bank in tattered velvets and toying with a
-curiously-shaped implement which had no terrors
-for their unsophisticated eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Ma foi</i>, I think the time is ripe to do my little
-trick!&#8221; exclaimed de Sancerre, gayly, a smile
-of derision playing across his thin lips as the echo
-of his pursuers&#8217; shout of delight and anger came<span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">[251]</span>
-back to him from the wall of forest trees. &#8220;My
-hand is steady, and my heart is light! You
-black-haired devil, drop that paddle!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The mimic lightning made by flint and steel
-changed powder into noise, and as the river and
-the trees tossed back and forth the echoes of the
-musket&#8217;s roar, a dusky athlete, dropping his paddle
-with a moan, toppled over dead into the
-shimmer of the sun-kissed waves.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Bien, ma petite!</i>&#8221; cried de Sancerre, patting
-his smoking gun with grateful hand. &#8220;The
-magic of the moon is working well to-day.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>For a moment the horrified sun-worshippers
-lost control of their canoe, and it drifted jerkily
-toward the centre of the stream. Presently,
-recovering their wits, they plunged their paddles
-into the flood and held their responsive, graceful
-boat steadfast on the waves, seemingly in doubt
-as to the course they should pursue.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Confound them!&#8221; muttered the Frenchman,
-who had leisurely recharged his musket. &#8220;&#8217;Tis
-strange how slow these bright-eyed devils are to
-learn! Do they want ten miracles, when one
-should well suffice? They seem to crave another
-message from the moon. If I could hit a moving
-boat-load, I&#8217;ll have no trouble now! They&#8217;re
-steadying my target&mdash;to the greater glory of my
-magic gun! Adieu&mdash;once more!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Again the peaceful day protested loudly against<span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">[252]</span>
-de Sancerre&#8217;s noisy tricks, and the waters gained
-another victim from the worshippers of fire.
-There was no further hesitation aboard the great
-canoe. With paddles wielded by hands cold with
-fear, and arms bursting with the struggle to drive
-their boat beyond the fatal circle of a demon&#8217;s
-witchery, the sun-worshippers frantically urged
-their primitive war-ship upward against the current
-of this treacherous river of death. Laying
-his faithful gun upon the bank, de Sancerre
-watched his retreating foes for a happy moment.
-Removing his torn bonnet with a flourish from
-his throbbing head, he made a stately bow, unheeded
-by the terrified canoemen, and cried
-gayly:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Adieu, messieurs!</i> They&#8217;ll hear of you in
-France anon! And then beware! Adieu!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>With a light heart and feet which seemed to
-spurn the sloping bank, de Sancerre rushed toward
-the hut in which the woman of his love had
-been listening in terror to the scolding of his
-gun.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Behold me, mademoiselle,&#8221; he cried, jubilantly,
-as he drew the trembling girl to his breast,
-&#8220;a musketeer who wastes no powder upon his
-foes! I kiss your lips, my life and love! The
-prayers you sent to Heaven, I well know, have
-saved our lives again! Another kiss&mdash;and so we
-will embark.&#8221;</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">[253]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXVI<br />
-
-
-<small>IN WHICH DO&Ntilde;A JULIA IS REMINDED OF THE PAST</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">It</span> was night; black, oppressively damp, with
-thunder in the air and fitful lightning zigzagging
-across the sulky sky. With deep sighs, the
-forest prepared for the chastisement of the
-threatening storm. A sound like the sobbing of
-great trees followed the distant grumbling of
-dark, menacing clouds. The flying, climbing,
-crawling creatures of the woods and swamps
-and river-banks had heeded the warnings of the
-hour and had stolen to shelter from the wrath of
-the fickle spring-time.</p>
-
-<p>The majestic Mississippi, swollen with the
-pride of power, flowed downward in silence
-through the gloom to throw its mighty arms
-around the islands near the gulf. Now and
-again its broad expanse would reflect for an
-instant the lightning&#8217;s glare and then grow
-blacker than before, as if it repented of its recognition
-of the storm. Presently great drops
-of water pelted the bosom of the stream,
-and far to the westward the forest cried out<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">[254]</span>
-against the sudden impact of the resounding
-rain.</p>
-
-<p>For many hours de Sancerre had been guiding
-his raft with an improvised paddle, the blade of
-which he had made from the wood of a powderkeg,
-and the long afternoon, when it had run its
-course, had left the adventurers nearer to the
-gulf by many weary miles than they had been
-at embarkation. Worthy of the trust which the
-dauntless Frenchman had placed in it, the hospitable
-stream had gently carried de Sancerre&#8217;s
-raft down the watery pathway along which
-Sieur de la Salle had found the road to disaster
-and immortality.</p>
-
-<p>An hour before sunset, however, misfortune,
-in defiance of the saintly name which Do&ntilde;a
-Julia had bestowed upon their primitive vessel,
-had overtaken the fugitives. Several logs, disaffected
-through the treachery of rotten cord,
-had broken away from the sides. Fearing the
-complete disintegration of his raft, de Sancerre
-had, with some difficulty, succeeded in making a
-landing and in removing his precious gun and
-stores to the shelter of the underbrush. He had
-hardly completed his task, and drawn his unreliable
-craft up to a safe mooring upon the shore,
-when the unwelcome storm had begun to fulfil
-its threats.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I fear,&#8221; exclaimed de Sancerre, drawing Do&ntilde;a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">[255]</span>
-Julia close to his side, as they strove to shelter
-themselves from the rain beneath the overhanging
-bushes on the river-bank&mdash;&#8220;I fear our supper
-will be cold and wet to-night. I now begin to
-understand just why those white-robed children
-of the sun should worship fire. You tremble,
-<i>ma ch&egrave;re</i>. Tell me, are you cold?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;No, no!&#8221; exclaimed Do&ntilde;a Julia, her face
-close to his to defeat the uproar of the rain.
-&#8220;The storm will pass. Ah, se&ntilde;or, what cause
-we have for gratitude!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Somewhere in the forest at their backs the
-lightning struck a tree and their eyes rested for
-an instant upon a river made of flames, which a
-crash of angry thunder extinguished at their
-birth.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mother Mary, save us!&#8221; exclaimed the girl,
-while the hand which de Sancerre held trembled
-for an instant in his grasp.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The worst has passed, sweetheart,&#8221; he murmured,
-reassuringly, bending down until his lips
-touched hers. &#8220;Listen! The rain falls lighter
-upon the leaves above us now. These sudden
-storms in southern lands are like the&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Si, se&ntilde;or?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Like the anger of a Spaniard, I had said,&#8221;
-confessed de Sancerre.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mayhap,&#8221; murmured the girl, her eyes meeting
-his despite the blackness of the gloom.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">[256]</span>
-&#8220;And think you, sir, they&#8217;re like a Spaniard&#8217;s
-love?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Ma foi</i>, how can I tell?&#8221; he cried, laughingly.
-&#8220;You, se&ntilde;ora, must guide me to the truth.
-But listen!&#8221; he went on, his voice growing earnest,
-as, forgetful for the moment of the storm
-and perils of the night, he gazed down upon the
-upturned face of a maiden who had shown to
-him the unsuspected depths of his own heart,
-&#8220;if your love for me is but a passing fancy, born
-of solitude and taught to speak by chance, I
-beg of you to pray the saints that I may die to-night.
-To live to lose your love&mdash; I&#8217;d choose
-a thousand deaths instead!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>In the girl&#8217;s dark eyes de Sancerre could see a
-protest growing as he spoke.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nay, se&ntilde;or,&#8221; she murmured, turning her
-gaze from his to watch the distant lightning as
-it flashed across the waters from the black clouds
-which covered the storm&#8217;s retreat. &#8220;My life
-has been so strange I fear I may not speak as
-other maidens would. But why should I not
-confess the truth? My love for you is not a
-forest growth. The saints forgive me, I loved
-you at Versailles! If in this awful wilderness
-you&#8217;re dearer to my heart than when, at court,
-you hurt my pride and showed my heart itself,
-&#8217;tis not my fickleness which is at fault. I&#8217;ve
-loved none other, se&ntilde;or, in my life.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">[257]</span>&#8220;You were betrothed!&#8221; exclaimed de Sancerre,
-impulsively, a man rather than a courtier at the
-moment.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8217;Tis a story for another hour than this,&#8221; said
-Do&ntilde;a Julia, softly. &#8220;Don Josef! Mother Mary
-be good to him! I always hated him, se&ntilde;or&mdash;although
-my hand was his. But look how the
-moon breaks through above those clouds! The
-storm is over, and the night grows clear. Shall
-we launch our raft again? I fear the forest,
-se&ntilde;or, more than yonder stream.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nay, I dare not float at night, <i>ma ch&egrave;re</i>&#8221; answered
-de Sancerre, smoothing the raven hair
-from her white forehead as her head rested upon
-his shoulder, and they watched the fickle night
-change its garb of black, fringed with fire, for
-the silvery costume vouchsafed by the full moon.
-&#8220;I fear I might steal past my captain in the
-dark.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly he pressed her face, splendid in its
-beauty as the moon caressed it, to his breast,
-while he gazed across his shoulder at the dripping
-forest with eyes large with sudden fear.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;God in heaven! There it comes again!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Against his will, the words forced themselves
-from de Sancerre&#8217;s parched lips.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What is it, se&ntilde;or?&#8221; whispered Do&ntilde;a Julia,
-trembling at the horror in his voice.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A white, misshapen thing,&#8221; he muttered,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">[258]</span>
-hoarsely. &#8220;I&#8217;ve seen it once before. It lies upon
-the ground beneath a tree.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>They neither moved nor spoke for a long
-moment. De Sancerre strove in vain to rouse
-the mocking sceptic in his mind. Son of a
-superstitious age, he could not conquer the idea
-that he was haunted in the wilds by the lover of
-this girl, whom he had slain. Presently, as he
-still watched the white blotch beneath the weeping
-tree, his will regained its strength and he
-exclaimed:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Sit here, se&ntilde;ora. I&#8217;ll go to it!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>He sprang to his feet, and, on the instant, Do&ntilde;a
-Julia stood by his side, while her gaze followed
-his toward the spectral outlines of an out-stretched
-man, motionless and ghastly beneath the moon.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;The saints protect us! You shall not go
-alone!&#8221; exclaimed the girl, putting an icy hand
-into de Sancerre&#8217;s grasp and taking a firm step
-toward the mystery which tested the courage of
-her soul.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You must not come with me, se&ntilde;ora,&#8221; cried
-de Sancerre, budging not an inch. &#8220;From where
-you stand your eyes can follow me. I shall return
-at once.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Releasing her hand, the Frenchman sprang
-forward, and in another moment stood gazing
-down at the almost naked body of a man whose
-soul at that very instant had passed from this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">[259]</span>
-world to the next. In death the thin, drawn face
-regained the lines of youth, but on the head the
-hair was white, and on his chin a tuft of beard
-gleamed like silver in the moonlight. There was
-no flesh upon his bones. The night wind stirred
-the rags still clinging to his frame and tossed an
-oil-skin bag, fastened by a string around his neck,
-across his chest. A crucifix in miniature rested at
-that instant just above his heart.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Nom de Dieu</i>, it is a Spaniard&mdash;but not the
-ghost of him I slew!&#8221; exclaimed de Sancerre,
-breaking away from the horrid spectacle to return
-to Do&ntilde;a Julia. He had no need to go, for the
-girl was at his side, gazing down at the corpse
-with horror-stricken eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8217;Tis Juan Rodriquez!&#8221; she exclaimed, in a
-tone which voiced a conflict of emotions. &#8220;He
-goes to God with black, foul crimes upon his
-soul!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Who was this man, se&ntilde;ora?&#8221; asked de Sancerre
-in amazement, drawing the girl to one side
-out of the insistent glare from the shrivelled
-corpse.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;An evil, treacherous creature, se&ntilde;or, who
-served my father as a scribe. I thought that he
-had perished with the others in the ship. I spoke
-his name to-day, when I told you the story of
-my father&#8217;s awful fate. From the moment of
-my father&#8217;s fall, until I found myself within the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">[260]</span>
-City of the Sun, my memory is dumb. That was
-a year ago and more. The man who&#8217;s lying
-there has suffered torments, se&ntilde;or, before his
-time was ripe.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He&#8217;d lost his reason and become a beast,&#8221;
-exclaimed de Sancerre, shortly. &#8220;But still he
-was from Europe, and has a claim upon us! I&#8217;ll
-get my paddle and scratch a hole to hide him
-from the wolves. And then I&#8217;ll say a prayer,
-and let him rest in peace.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He was a murderer!&#8221; gasped the girl, trembling
-with cold as the rising breeze forced her
-damp garments against her weary limbs.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Ma foi</i>, if that is so, our prayers are little
-worth. But come, <i>ch&eacute;rie</i>, there is less wind beneath
-this hill. I will return and throw some
-earth above those bones. If that white fragment
-of a wicked man had murdered all my kin, I
-would not leave him there uncovered for all time.
-He came from lands we know&mdash;and so I&#8217;ll treat
-him well! God, how I shall welcome the sight
-of de la Salle!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>With quick sympathy the girl put her hand
-upon de Sancerre&#8217;s arm as they turned their
-faces toward the glimmering flood.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;A woman is so useless, se&ntilde;or!&#8221; she exclaimed,
-&#8220;I can do naught but pray! But show me how
-I best may aid you now. I will try so hard!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You know not what you say, se&ntilde;ora!&#8221; cried<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">[261]</span>
-de Sancerre in Spanish, clasping the cold hand
-resting upon his arm as he led her toward the
-river. &#8220;Useless, quotha? Is a woman useless
-who teaches a wayward, rebellious, mocking
-heart the peace and glory of true love? I say
-to you, my Julia, that as Mother Mary is greater
-than the saints, so is a good woman better than
-the best of men.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Then he added, smiling gayly as his happy
-eyes met her earnest gaze, and changing his
-tongue to French: &#8220;Not, <i>ch&eacute;rie</i>, that I am the
-best of men!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You are to me! Is not that enough?&#8221; she
-murmured, in a tone which made sweet music to
-his ears.</p>
-
-<p>A half an hour had passed and de Sancerre
-had returned to the girl from his grewsome task
-as a grave-digger. The awful fate of the murderer
-to whom he had given hasty burial depressed
-his spirits, for the dead man had borne upon
-his emaciated frame the marks of his long year
-of misery, a year during which he had wandered
-through the wilds in a great circle, until hunger
-and exposure had made him a mad, crawling
-animal, too long despised by death itself.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There were papers in this oil-skin bag,&#8221; remarked
-de Sancerre, throwing himself wearily
-upon the bank beside Do&ntilde;a Julia. &#8220;As he was
-secretary to your father, I thought it best to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">[262]</span>
-examine what he had kept so safe upon his breast.
-It was not wrong, <i>ma ch&egrave;re</i>?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The girl&#8217;s face was even paler than its wont
-was, as she met her lover&#8217;s questioning eyes.
-Her lips trembled slightly as she said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;He boasted once, upon our vessel&#8217;s deck, that
-he&#8217;d be master when we reached New Spain.
-Our king had granted lands and silver mines in
-Mexico to my dear father, rewarding him for his
-success in France. &#8217;Tis possible&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>An exclamation uttered by de Sancerre interrupted
-Do&ntilde;a Julia&#8217;s surmise. The Frenchman
-had been examining two imposing parchments
-by the clear light of the full moon.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Your father&#8217;s scribe, se&ntilde;ora, was a man of fertile
-mind. King Charles of Spain has made two
-grants covering the same ground, one to his &#8216;dear,
-beloved son in Christ, Don Rodrigo de Aquilar,&#8217;
-and the other to his &#8216;dear, beloved son in Christ,
-Don Juan Rodriquez.&#8217; &#8217;Tis clear enough that
-one of these is forged, but, for my life, I could
-not pick the honest parchment from the false.
-Why yonder villain kept them both, I do not
-understand.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I think I know,&#8221; mused the girl, in a weary
-voice. &#8220;He thought less of robbery than how
-to make me his. He would have torn this skilful
-counterfeit into a thousand bits had I been
-kind to him.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">[263]</span>&#8220;<i>Nom de Dieu!</i> He dared to&mdash;&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Do&ntilde;a Julia glanced chidingly at the impetuous
-Frenchman.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You spoke not harshly of him when I told
-you of his awful crimes,&#8221; she said, while her
-hand crept shyly into de Sancerre&#8217;s. &#8220;Is he less
-worthy of your leniency because he schemed to
-win the hand you hold?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8217;Tis selfishness, I know,&#8221; said de Sancerre,
-thoughtfully, gazing contentedly into the dark
-eyes which met his. &#8220;I cared but little that
-he&#8217;d killed some man I never knew, but if he
-loved you, se&ntilde;ora, I&#8217;m glad he died the death!&#8221;
-Seizing the forged parchment upon his lap, the
-Frenchman tore it to pieces and scattered the
-fragments upon the ground. Then he replaced
-the genuine grant in the oil-skin bag and fastened
-it to his sword-belt.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I must repair my raft, <i>ma ch&egrave;re</i>,&#8221; he said to
-the girl a moment later, bending down to kiss
-her cheek, cold and smooth and white. &#8220;You
-will forgive me, sweetheart, for loving you so
-well?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Not far away the moonlight, falling in soft
-radiance between the trees, had thrown upon a
-rough grave, newly-made, the shadow of a cross.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">[264]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXVII<br />
-
-
-<small>IN WHICH ST. EUSTACE IS KIND TO DE SANCERRE</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Overlooking</span> the waters of the great river, as
-they met and mingled with the waves of a lonely
-sea, stood a wooden column beside a wooden
-cross. Almost hidden by the shadow of the
-pompous pillar, the cross, unmarked by hand of
-man, made no open claim to power, but awaited
-patiently the outcome of the years. Upon the
-column had been inscribed the words:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Louis le Grand, Roy de France et de Navarre, r&egrave;gne; le
-Neuvi&egrave;me Avril, 1682.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>Now and then the King&#8217;s Column would appear
-to hold converse with the Cross of Christ,
-for it was a weary vigil which they kept, and the
-lofty pillar, haughtily displaying the arms of
-France, was forced, from very loneliness, to
-recognize the humble emblem at its base.</p>
-
-<p>Through long, sunny days and soft, moonlit
-nights the salt breeze from the sea heard the
-royal column boasting to the lowly cross. By
-virtue of the legend upon its breast, said the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">[265]</span>
-King&#8217;s Pillar, a great monarch had gained a
-vast domain. Savannas, forests, prairies, deserts,
-rivers, lakes, and mountains, forming a gigantic
-province, had become, through a word uttered
-by a great explorer, the property of him whose
-name the wooden column bore. Through all the
-oncoming ages, the King&#8217;s Pillar asserted, Louis
-le Grand, Roy de France et de Navarre, and his
-posterity, would own the fair lands through
-which a mighty river and its tributaries flowed.
-It was not to be wondered at that the stately
-column grew vain with the grandeur of its
-mission upon earth, and even garrulous at times,
-as it described to the insignificant cross the
-splendor of the dreams which a glowing future
-vouchsafed to it.</p>
-
-<p>The Cross of Christ would listen in silence to
-the mouthing of the Royal Claimant, gazing
-further into the future, with a clearer vision
-than the proud pillar, whose words were those
-of men blinded by the intoxication of transient
-power. The unpretentious cross could well afford
-to indulge in the luxury of silence. Since it had
-first become a symbol of the power which is begotten
-by the teachings of humility and love, it
-had heard, a thousand times, the boastful words
-of monarchs swollen with the glory of ephemeral
-success. It had seen emperors and kings seizing
-lands and peoples to hold them in subjection<span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">[266]</span>
-until time should be no more. But the centuries
-had come and gone, and the banners of earthly
-kings, rising and falling, had pressed onward
-and been driven back. Only the cross, emblem
-of peace on earth and good will to men, had,
-through those same ages, steadily enlarged the
-dominion over which its gentle rule prevailed.
-Carried forward often by fanatics and made to
-serve the ends of cruel hearts, it was, in spite of
-all the errors of its followers, slowly but surely
-receiving the earth for its heritage and mankind
-as the reward of its benignity.</p>
-
-<p>One afternoon, late in the month of May, a
-man, pale, dejected, moving with the heavy step
-of one who had undergone great bodily fatigue,
-led a maiden, upon whose white face lay the
-shadow of a weariness against which youth could
-not prevail, toward the King&#8217;s Column. Removing
-his bonnet from a head grown gray
-from recent hardships, the man, releasing the
-girl&#8217;s hand, bent a knee before the proud emblem
-of his sovereign. At the same moment
-the maiden knelt down before the cross, and,
-weeping softly, breathed a prayer to a Mother
-whose Son had died for men.</p>
-
-<p>Presently the girl arose and, followed by him
-who had paid his tribute to the fleeting power
-of kings, skirted the royal column, and seated
-herself upon a mound of sand from which she<span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">[267]</span>
-could sweep, with her dark, mournful eyes, the
-expanse of a gulf new to the keel of ships.
-Stretching before her as if it knew no bounds
-lay a great water, an awful waste of sun-kissed,
-dancing waves, whose glittering splendor brought
-no solace to her heavy heart.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It is a mystery which I cannot fathom,&#8221; said
-de Sancerre, mournfully, throwing himself down
-by Do&ntilde;a Julia&#8217;s side and gazing up at her sad,
-sweet face with eyes heavy from a disappointment
-which had crushed, for the time being, the
-fond hopes which had inspired him through long
-days of labor and nights of wakeful vigilance.
-&#8220;The good faith of the stern, upright de la Salle
-I cannot doubt. He would jeopardize his life,
-and all his mighty projects, to rescue a comrade
-to whom his word was pledged. We must have
-passed him somewhere in the twilight of the dawn
-or when I used the sunset&#8217;s glow too long.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What seemeth best to do, se&ntilde;or?&#8221; asked the
-girl, turning her gaze from the cruel sea to look
-into the face of a man upon whose courage and
-resourcefulness she had good reason to rely.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Ma foi</i>, I hardly know,&#8221; muttered the Frenchman,
-looking about him upon the scattered remnants
-of de la Salle&#8217;s encampment. &#8220;My captain
-may return&mdash;but &#8217;twill be a weary while ere
-he comes back. A year, at least, must pass before
-he reaches here again. We stand in no<span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">[268]</span>
-great danger from starvation, but &#8217;tis a lonely
-shore. I thought to lead you from captivity,
-and, lo! I&#8217;ve merely changed your cabin-prison
-to a sandy jail! I fear St. Maturin has turned
-his face from me!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Be not cast down, se&ntilde;or,&#8221; whispered Do&ntilde;a
-Julia, in her native tongue. &#8220;It cannot be that
-Mother Mary, who has been most kind to us,
-will leave us here to die.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8217;Twould be unreasonable,&#8221; exclaimed de Sancerre,
-almost petulantly. Then he went on, making
-an effort at cheerfulness. &#8220;But, for the present,
-we have no cause to lose all hope. This
-desert shore seems safe from savage men. My
-musket there will gain us meat enough, and in
-the forest there are fruits and berries fit for royal
-boards. In sooth, &#8216;le Roy de France et de Navarre&#8217;
-has won a kingdom rich in all good
-things.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We&#8217;re safe from savage men, you say, se&ntilde;or,&#8221;
-remarked Do&ntilde;a Julia, musingly, casting a meaning
-glance behind her at the silent woods. &#8220;I
-fear you do not understand the nation which we
-have defied.&#8221; She smiled sadly as she went on:
-&#8220;You have abducted Coyocop, a goddess sent
-from heaven to make their people great. Although
-your musket filled them with dismay,
-they&#8217;ll follow us.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The lines of care upon de Sancerre&#8217;s drawn<span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">[269]</span>
-face grew deeper as he listened thoughtfully to
-the girl&#8217;s words.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;We&#8217;ve left no trail,&#8221; he mused, gazing longingly
-at the horizon where the sea-line met
-the sky. &#8220;They&#8217;re keen as woodsmen, but the
-river tells no tales. But, mayhap, you are right!
-You&#8217;ve known them long and heard the sun-priests
-talk. And if the worst should come, <i>ma
-ch&egrave;re</i>, I&#8217;d die for you with sword and gun in
-hand beneath the blazoned arms of France.
-&#8217;Twould be a fitting ending for a count of
-Languedoc.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Speak not so sadly, se&ntilde;or,&#8221; exclaimed Do&ntilde;a
-Julia, placing a gentle hand upon his shoulder
-and looking into his face with courageous, hopeful
-eyes. &#8220;I sought not to dishearten you, but
-&#8217;tis well for you to know the truth. To linger
-where we are is far from safe.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;That may be so,&#8221; admitted de Sancerre, reflectively,
-as he examined the lock of his musket
-and then stood erect to cast a searching glance
-across sea and land. The restless billows of the
-gulf, the marshy coast, the islands at the river&#8217;s
-mouth, and the grim forest overlooking the
-waters, formed a picture which human gaze had
-seldom swept. At this moment the outlook held
-no menace to the eyes or ears of de Sancerre.
-&#8220;To linger where we are, se&ntilde;ora, may not be
-safe,&#8221; he remarked, as he reseated himself and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">[270]</span>
-took her hand in his, &#8220;but where &#8217;tis best to go
-I hardly know. Our raft will not float up-stream,
-and we cannot put to sea. We have not much
-to choose! Between this hillock and the next
-there can be no great difference in the perils
-which surround us. And, somehow, se&ntilde;ora, I
-feel nearer to my captain with the arms of
-France above my head.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Do&ntilde;a Julia pressed de Sancerre&#8217;s hand and her
-quick sympathy shone in her dark eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Your captain, se&ntilde;or&mdash;you loved him?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;De la Salle? I know not that I loved him.
-But I would have followed him to hell! There
-is a grandeur in my captain&#8217;s soul which draws
-to him the little men and makes them great.
-Aye, se&ntilde;ora, by all succeeding ages the name of
-him who raised this wooden column, against
-which we lean, in honor must be held! The
-deeds of de la Salle shall live, when the feats of
-countless noisy boasters are forgotten. But, that
-I loved this mighty leader I cannot say. I&#8217;ve
-served in Europe under lesser men than de la
-Salle, who led me by the heart; while he, methinks,
-appeals but to my head. He rules us not
-with velvet, but with steel, this dauntless captain,
-upon whose martial figure I would that I
-might gaze. And that is best, in such a land as
-this! Followed by redmen and wild border outlaws,
-he could not hold them should he smile<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">[271]</span>
-and scrape. And, at the best, he cannot trust
-his men. They grumble at their captain, because
-he has no weakness in their eyes.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>De Sancerre&#8217;s long speech, to which Do&ntilde;a Julia
-had listened with forced attention, had changed
-the melancholy current of his thoughts and restored
-the lines of firmness to his mouth, the
-light of courage to his eyes. The memory of
-the bold adventurer under whom he had served
-for many months, and the inspiring legend which
-he had read and reread upon the column at his
-back, had revived the martial spirit in his impressionable
-soul, and his face and voice no longer
-bore evidence of the bitter disappointment which
-had driven him to the verge of despair when he
-had made the discovery that Sieur de la Salle
-had abandoned his camp at the Mississippi&#8217;s
-mouth. With gun in hand, the Frenchman stood
-erect.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Listen, <i>ma ch&egrave;re</i>, for I crave your counsel
-and advice,&#8221; he said, gazing down at Do&ntilde;a Julia.
-&#8220;We may be here for months before we find a
-means of rescue, either by land or sea. We&#8217;re
-worn with sleeplessness and toil, but, more than
-this, our bodies crave strong food. We&#8217;ve eaten
-meal and berries until I dream of Vatel when I
-doze&mdash;great Cond&eacute;&#8217;s cook, who killed himself
-because a dish was spoiled. My gun could add
-a fat wild turkey to our larder; but the point<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">[272]</span>
-is this: the musket&#8217;s noise might lead our dusky
-enemies to seek us here. I feared not their persistence
-&#8217;til you spoke of it. This column and
-the arms it bears would make no great impression
-upon our foes.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Our only hope must lie in yonder cross,&#8221; murmured
-Do&ntilde;a Julia, devoutly. Then she gazed
-upward at the thin, white face of a man who
-might well call himself at this moment &#8220;a splinter
-from a moonbeam,&#8221; so thin and white he
-looked. The horror of her situation, should her
-brave protector fall sick from lack of nourishing
-food, forced itself impressively upon her
-mind.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8217;Twill do no harm, se&ntilde;or,&#8221; she went on, &#8220;for
-you to snap your gun. In any case, our enemies,
-if they are still upon our track, would find us
-here, and if they hear your musket&#8217;s loud report,
-&#8217;twill check them for a time. They&#8217;ll think the
-woods are haunted with demons threatening
-them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Ma foi</i>, they would be, had I the magic which
-I claim!&#8221; exclaimed de Sancerre, examining carefully
-the priming of his gun. &#8220;I think, se&ntilde;ora,
-that what you say is true. If those brown devils
-are now upon our trail, our silence cannot save
-us. St. Eustace be my guide! We&#8217;ll break our
-fast at sunset, sweetheart, upon a bit of meat.
-I&#8217;ll not go out of sight. I&#8217;ve wasted too much<span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">[273]</span>
-time, for we must choose a lodging for the night
-before the dark has come.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Reinvigorated in mind and body, de Sancerre
-descended the hillock from which the King&#8217;s Column
-and the Cross of Christ looked down upon
-an empire over which the reign of the proud
-pillar was not destined to endure. With eyes
-raised to heaven, Do&ntilde;a Julia knelt before the
-humble emblem of her faith, and besought the
-saints to guard her champion from the perils
-which might at this moment beset his steps.
-Then she arose, and, leaning against the wooden
-monument, watched, with ever-growing interest,
-the versatile Frenchman&#8217;s efforts to satisfy his
-craving for a more nourishing diet than his labors
-as a raftsman had permitted him to gain.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Peste!</i>&#8221; muttered de Sancerre, as he made
-his way through the long grass toward the
-forest trees, &#8220;this musket is heavier by many
-pounds than when the good St. Maturin turned
-my footsteps toward it. Unless your bullet, <i>ma
-petite</i>, should find its way to yonder sleek, but
-most unsuspicious, banquet, I fear you&#8217;ll grow
-too weighty for my hands. <i>Laude et jubilate!</i>
-The bird is mine!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>De Sancerre turned and waved his ragged bonnet
-toward Do&ntilde;a Julia, who had witnessed the
-success of his shot, and then, leisurely reloading
-his musket, made his way toward the precious<span class="pagenum" id="Page_274">[274]</span>
-trophy of his marksmanship. Suddenly he stood
-stock-still, his head thrown back, and his eyes
-staring at the forest in amazement. As if in
-answer to his gun&#8217;s report, there came from the
-distant trees the echo of a musket-shot, which
-thrilled the soul of the startled Frenchman with
-mingled hope and fear.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;St. Maturin help me!&#8221; he exclaimed, in a voice
-suggesting a parched throat. &#8220;Is it friend or
-foe? I thought, <i>ma petite</i>, that you had no kinsman
-within the radius of many miles.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Striving by gestures to urge Do&ntilde;a Julia to
-conceal herself behind the King&#8217;s Column, de
-Sancerre, with his musket at his shoulder, stretched
-himself at full length upon the grass, and,
-while his heart beat with suffocating rapidity,
-watched with straining eyes a grove of leafy
-trees from which the ominous reply to his gun
-had been made. Suddenly in front of him, almost
-within a stone&#8217;s-throw, stood a tall, slender
-man, clad in the unseasonable costume of a
-Canadian <i>courier de bois</i>. He carried a smoking
-musket in his hand. At his belt dangled a
-hatchet, a bullet-pouch, and a bag of tobacco.
-In a leather case at his neck hung his only permanent
-friend, his pipe.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;St. Maturin be praised!&#8221; cried de Sancerre,
-springing to his feet and raising his musket
-to arm&#8217;s-length above his head. &#8220;&#8217;Tis that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_275">[275]</span>
-rebellious rascal, Jacques Barbier! <i>Bienvenue</i>,
-Jacques! In the name of all the saints at once,
-how came you here?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Gar!&#8221; exclaimed the lawless runner-of-the-woods,
-throwing himself at full length upon the
-grass, and gazing up at de Sancerre with a smile,
-hard to analyze, upon his sun-burned, handsome,
-self-willed face. &#8220;It is Monsieur le Comte!
-My eyes are quick, monsieur. I do not wonder
-that you stayed behind.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Displaying his white teeth mischievously, the
-<i>coureur de bois</i>, a deserter from de la Salle&#8217;s
-band of Indians and outcasts, waved a brown
-hand toward the King&#8217;s Column.</p>
-
-<p>Hot with anger at the insolence of the outlaw
-though he was, de Sancerre controlled his temper
-and said calmly, but in a tone of voice which had
-a restraining effect upon the bushranger:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8217;Tis a long story, Jacques! I found a Spanish
-princess in a city built by devils. You&#8217;ve come
-to me in time to take a hand in a merry little war
-between the sun and moon. No, Jacques! You&#8217;re
-wrong. I can read your mind at once. You
-think the wilderness has robbed me of my wits.
-But come! There is much to do, and I must
-question you about my captain and why I find
-you here alone. Bring that nut-fattened turkey
-up the hill, and we will work and talk and make
-what plans we may.&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_276">[276]</span>The outlaw, whose life had been one long protest
-against the authority of other men, arose
-from the ground, with lazy nonchalance, and
-gazed down at the wild-fowl which de Sancerre
-had shot. The Frenchman had turned away
-and was breaking his path through the long, dry
-grass toward the crest of the hill, from which
-Do&ntilde;a Julia had been watching a rencontre the
-outcome of which she had no way of predicting.</p>
-
-<p>Jacques Barbier gazed alternately upward at
-the retreating figure of de Sancerre and downward
-at the wild turkey at his feet. Then, with
-a protesting smile upon his symmetrical, but half-savage,
-face, he bent down and raised the fat
-fowl to his shoulder and followed Monsieur le
-Comte toward the King&#8217;s Column. De Sancerre
-had gained for a time&mdash;short or long, as the case
-might be&mdash;an ally whose woodcraft was as brilliant
-as his lawlessness was incorrigible.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Jubilate, se&ntilde;ora</i>,&#8221; cried the count, as he approached
-Do&ntilde;a Julia. &#8220;The saints have been
-more than kind! They have filled our larder,
-doubled our fighting force, and made me younger
-by ten years. But, se&ntilde;ora, &#8217;tis not a pious friend
-whom I have found! This same Jacques Barbier&#8217;s
-a devil, in his way. Wear this, my dagger, at
-your waist, <i>ma ch&egrave;re</i>! I know that you dare use
-it, should the need arise.&#8221;</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">[277]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXVIII<br />
-
-
-<small>IN WHICH DE SANCERRE&#8217;S ISLAND IS BESIEGED</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Pardieu, Monsieur le Comte</i>, I&#8217;ll ne&#8217;er forget
-the scene!&#8221; remarked Jacques Barbier, puffing
-his pipe and lazily watching the smoke as the
-evening breeze tore it into shreds. Nearly a
-month had passed since the <i>coureur de bois</i>, with
-a wild turkey, had helped to make a single shot
-from de Sancerre&#8217;s musket worth its expenditure
-of powder and ball. During that period, Jacques
-Barbier, obedient, docile, knowing every secret
-of the woods and waters, had been a source of
-never-ending comfort to the French count. With
-a tactfulness which he would have been incompetent
-to employ a year before this crisis, de
-Sancerre had attached the Canadian youth to his
-fortunes without arousing the restless, reckless
-spirit of revolt which made a <i>coureur de bois</i>,
-in those wild times, an unreliable ally and a mutinous
-subordinate.</p>
-
-<p>There were, however, other things besides de
-Sancerre&#8217;s diplomacy which had tended to keep
-Jacques Barbier contented with his lot for the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">[278]</span>
-time being. The necessity for obtaining food
-without betraying their hiding-place to savage
-men, hot upon their trail, had taxed the Canadian&#8217;s
-ingenuity and had aroused his pride as a woodsman.
-He had listened with close attention to
-de Sancerre&#8217;s tale, and had agreed with Do&ntilde;a
-Julia that the sun-worshippers would not abandon
-the quest of their goddess as long as their resources
-for her pursuit held out. By Barbier&#8217;s
-advice and assistance, de Sancerre had erected
-two small huts upon an insignificant island in
-the western branch of the great river&#8217;s mouth,
-and here they had passed several weeks in peace
-and plenty, weeks which had restored brilliancy
-to Do&ntilde;a Julia&#8217;s eyes and color to her cheeks and
-lips, while they had revived her champion&#8217;s spirits
-and had brought back mincing lightness to his
-step and gayety to his ready smile.</p>
-
-<p>Their retreat had not been invaded by the
-degenerate savages along the river-banks. Now
-and then they would catch a glimpse upon the
-river of a distant canoe in which copper-colored
-sportsmen were attempting to lure the ugly catfish
-from the muddy waters of the turgid stream,
-and once, far to the northward, they observed a
-war-canoe putting out from the eastern shore
-and urged up-stream by paddles which glistened
-in the sunlight.</p>
-
-<p>Once in awhile, Jacques Barbier would return<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">[279]</span>
-from the forest, laden with game-birds, to tell a
-highly-colored story of redmen whose keen eyes
-he had avoided through the potency of his marvellous
-woodcraft. But the month of June,
-known to the sun-worshippers as the moon of
-watermelons, had reached a ripe age, and the
-island&#8217;s refugees found themselves well-housed,
-well-fed, and free, as far as they could observe,
-from the machinations of cruel foes. Sanguine
-by temperament and easily influenced by his
-environment, de Sancerre had put himself into
-opposition to the belief, held by Do&ntilde;a Julia and
-Jacques Barbier, that the sun-priests and their
-tools would descend to the gulf, by land or water,
-in search of Coyocop. He had eliminated from
-his mind the thought of peril at his back and
-had turned his face toward the sea, thinking
-only of succor from a passing ship.</p>
-
-<p>It was with the hope that European sailors
-would come to them from the gulf that de Sancerre
-had fastened a piece of white canvas, which
-he had found among the <i>d&eacute;bris</i> of de la Salle&#8217;s
-encampment, to the top of the King&#8217;s Column.
-From where he sat at twilight in front of the
-rude hut occupied by Jacques Barbier and himself,
-de Sancerre could look across the narrow
-streak of water between his island and the main-land
-and see his signal of distress flapping lazily
-in the evening breeze. Now and then the bright,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">[280]</span>
-restless eyes of the <i>coureur de bois</i> would rest
-protestingly upon the white flag. To his mind,
-the rag was more likely to bring upon them
-enemies from the woods than friends from the
-lonely sea. Jacques Barbier hated the ocean with
-an intensity only equalled by the fervor of his
-love for the forest wilds.</p>
-
-<p>On the evening to which reference is now made,
-the <i>coureur de bois</i> had grown unwontedly loquacious,
-as he smoked his evening pipe, and
-glanced alternately at Do&ntilde;a Julia and de Sancerre,
-as, hand clasped in hand, they listened to the
-usually taciturn Canadian&#8217;s account of the ceremonies
-attending the erection of the King&#8217;s Column
-and the Cross of Christ.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Pardieu</i>, Monsieur le Comte, I&#8217;ll ne&#8217;er forget
-the scene! We, that is your countrymen and
-mine, were mustered under arms, while behind
-us stood the Mohicans and Abenakis, with the
-squaws and pappooses whom they had brought
-with them to make trouble for us all. P&egrave;re
-Membr&eacute;, in full canonicals, looking like a saint
-just come to earth from Paradise, intoned a Latin
-chant. Then we all raised our voices and sang a
-hymn:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
-<div class="first2">&#8220;&#8216;The banners of Heaven&#8217;s King advance,</div>
-<div class="verse">The mystery of the Cross shines forth.&#8217;</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<p>The Mohicans and Abenakis grunted with excitement
-and the pappooses yelled. &#8216;<i>Vive le Roi!</i>&#8217;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">[281]</span>
-we shouted, to drown their clatter, and then
-your captain&mdash;may the devil fly away with his
-surly tongue!&mdash;raised his voice and claimed for
-the King of France and Navarre possession of
-&#8216;this country of Louisiana&#8217;&mdash;with the right to
-put a tax upon every peltry which we poor
-trappers take. Gar, it is no wonder, Monsieur
-le Comte, that we who risk our lives within the
-woods should feel small reverence for a king so
-far away, whose harsh enactments have made us
-outlaws in the land where we were born. Mayhap,
-monsieur, you have good cause to love the
-King of France! In that, you differ from Jacques
-Barbier.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Do&ntilde;a Julia felt de Sancerre&#8217;s hand grow cold
-in hers and heard him mutter something beneath
-his breath, the burden of which she did not catch.
-The truth was that the random shot of the
-<i>coureur du bois</i> had touched the French count in
-a sensitive spot. What better reason had he for
-loyalty to the Tyrant of Versailles than this
-vagabond of the woods, who, even in the most
-remote corners of a trackless wilderness, still felt
-the sinister influence of a selfish despotism exercising
-a wide-spread cruelty begotten of egotism
-and bigotry? Had not de Sancerre known the
-fickleness of royal smiles and frowns, the ingratitude
-of a monarch who, at the instigation of a
-priesthood, could sacrifice a brave and loyal<span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">[282]</span>
-subject without granting him a chance to speak
-a word in his own defense?</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;In good sooth,&#8221; murmured de Sancerre to
-himself, &#8220;his tongue has cut me deep! What
-cause have I to love the King of France? I
-knelt in homage at his column there, but
-methinks my knee and not my heart paid tribute
-to <i>le Grand Monarque</i>! Somehow, this
-mighty wilderness makes rebels of us all! <i>Ma
-foi</i>, Jacques Barbier,&#8221; he cried aloud, &#8220;what is
-it that you see?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The <i>coureur de bois</i> had sprung to his feet and
-was sweeping the shore of the main-land with a
-quick, piercing glance which cut through the
-darkness which the moon, soon to show itself in
-the east, had not yet overcome.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Request the Princess&#8221;&mdash;the title by which
-Jacques Barbier designated Do&ntilde;a Julia de
-Aquilar&mdash;&#8220;request the Princess, Monsieur le
-Comte, to retire to her hut for the night! There
-are men stirring upon the further bank who are
-neither Quinipissas nor Tangibaos. I fear, monsieur,
-that you have underrated the persistence
-of your foes who make the sun their god. Unless
-I never knew the woods, there are stalwart
-strangers in the bushes over there. Go you, monsieur,
-and watch the river, while I keep an eye
-upon this bank. Gar, &#8217;twill be a pretty fight,
-Monsieur le Comte! Your hand is steady?<span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">[283]</span>
-<i>Bien!</i> The moon will soon be up. Keep close
-to earth when you have reached the river!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Ma foi</i>, Jacques Barbier, I like the way you
-talk!&#8221; whispered de Sancerre. &#8220;But, tell me,
-we&#8217;re short of bullets, are we not?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Humph!&#8221; grunted the Canadian, gruffly.
-&#8220;We&#8217;ve none to waste upon the waters or the
-trees, Monsieur le Comte! Bear that in mind.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Tell me, se&ntilde;or,&#8221; exclaimed Do&ntilde;a Julia, to
-whom Jacques Barbier&#8217;s French <i>patois</i> was an
-unmeaning jumble of more or less unrecognizable
-words when he spoke rapidly: &#8220;Tell me,
-se&ntilde;or, has he seen the sun-priests on yonder
-shore?&#8221; Her hand was like a piece of ice in
-his clasp, as de Sancerre led the girl toward
-the hut.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I hardly know, <i>ma ch&egrave;re</i>,&#8221; answered her
-lover, frankly. &#8220;There are men stirring upon
-the bank, but I cannot believe that they are from
-the City of the Sun. But if they are, my sweetheart,
-there are those among them who will
-never look upon their mud-baked homes again!
-&#8217;Tis strange how a fat larder restores the fighting
-spirit to a man. A month ago my stomach
-loathed a battle. At that time, all that it wanted
-was a bird. To-night, if you were far away,
-se&ntilde;ora, I&#8217;d take rare pleasure in doing moon-tricks
-when the moon is full. And so adieu, my sweetheart,&#8221;
-he whispered, pressing his lips to hers<span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">[284]</span>
-ere she bent down to enter her rude cabin.
-&#8220;When you hear my musket speak, you&#8217;ll know
-an enemy of yours has need of prayer.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>It was not long after this that de Sancerre
-made good his boast, although Jacques Barbier
-began the battle of the night. The French count
-had dragged his musket and his crouching body
-through the long grass toward the eastern shore
-of the small island, and had taken one sweeping
-glance at the river, over which at that instant
-the risen moon had thrown a flood of silvery
-light, when behind him he heard the roar of the
-Canadian&#8217;s deadly gun. But de Sancerre had no
-time to think of his faithful ally at that critical
-moment. Almost upon a line with the island,
-and coming straight toward it, two heavily
-manned war-canoes of the sun-worshipers rose
-and fell upon the moon-kissed flood. The imminence
-of his peril acted upon de Sancerre like a
-draught of rich, old wine.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;What reckless fools these be!&#8221; he exclaimed,
-taking careful aim at the nearest canoe, now
-within a hundred yards of his grass-grown
-shooting-box. &#8220;Be faithful, <i>ma petite</i>! The
-time has come again!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The thunder of de Sancerre&#8217;s gun chased the
-echoes from the musket of the <i>coureur de bois</i>
-across the glimmering flood.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Ma foi!</i>&#8221; muttered de Sancerre. &#8220;Saint<span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">[285]</span>
-Maturin is wide awake to-night! That bullet
-did its work.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Reloading his musket with all possible speed,
-the Frenchman, with a grim smile upon his face,
-drew a bead upon the second canoe, which had
-now forged ahead of the boat-load upon which de
-Sancerre&#8217;s fatal shot had exercised a demoralizing
-effect. Meanwhile, Jacques Barbier&#8217;s gun
-had spoken twice, for he had learned to reload
-his weapon with a celerity only acquired after
-years of practice.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Steady, now, <i>ma petite</i>,&#8221; muttered de Sancerre.
-&#8220;You have a record to maintain. <i>Adieu,
-monsieur!</i>&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A paddle and its dusky wielder fell into the
-black-and-white flood, and a moment later the
-two canoes had retreated to mid-stream.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Gar, you shoot well, Monsieur le Comte!&#8221;
-exclaimed Jacques Barbier, creeping to de Sancerre&#8217;s
-side. &#8220;If our bullets could have children,
-we could hold this island for a year! There is
-no danger from the forest for a time; and, I
-think, those boats will not come near us for an
-hour at least. These be the demons from your
-City of the Sun?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;There is no doubt about it!&#8221; exclaimed de
-Sancerre. &#8220;It must amaze them to meet so much
-moon-magic, although the moon is full. What
-think you, Jacques, will be their next attempt?&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">[286]</span>&#8220;They&#8217;ll hold aloof, Monsieur le Comte, until
-their courage rises or a cloud obstructs the moon.
-&#8217;Tis best, I think, that we patrol our fort. You
-pace the island to the right. I&#8217;ll meet you half-way
-round, and then return. Unless our bullets
-fly away too fast there is no danger&mdash;for this
-night at least.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Think you, Jacques Barbier, they saw the
-maiden&mdash;Coyocop?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Gar, &#8217;tis certain, is it not? Their bold attack
-by boat and shore was not the outcome of a
-clumsy chance. They knew that she was here,
-and thought that you could not defend the
-island on both sides. But this is not the time for
-talk, monsieur. <i>Marchons!</i>&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>An hour passed by, and the island&#8217;s sentinels
-could find neither upon land nor stream sure
-proof that the sun-worshipers meditated an immediate
-renewal of their attack.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Tell me, se&ntilde;ora,&#8221; cried de Sancerre, abandoning
-his patrol for a time to have speech with
-Do&ntilde;a Julia&mdash;&#8220;tell me what it means! They
-found two guns awaiting them instead of one.
-But they have come in force by wood and stream.
-They have no skill in war, if this is all their
-fight.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Be patient, se&ntilde;or, they will come again,&#8221; remarked
-the Spanish maiden, unconsciously suggesting
-by her words the influence which de<span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">[287]</span>
-Sancerre&#8217;s mind held over hers. &#8220;They have concealed
-themselves, to talk of many things which
-worry them.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Par exemple?</i>&#8221; exclaimed de Sancerre, thrusting
-his hand through the opening to her hut, to
-clasp hers.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They know that I am here.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You feel sure of that?&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Yes. But they will not return to-night&mdash;for
-all night long the moon will shine.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Pardieu</i>, I do not follow you, se&ntilde;ora.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;&#8217;Tis clear to me,&#8221; said the girl, firmly. &#8220;Somehow,
-I seem to read their minds, as if the saints
-were speaking to my soul. They fear that your
-white witchery, when the moon is full, is more
-fatal than they had dreamed. They will await
-the rising of their god, the sun, before they try to
-capture me again. Be convinced of this: they
-will attack you, se&ntilde;or, just at dawn. I know
-their hearts and habits well enough to feel assured
-that what I say is true. They are not
-cowards, but they dread the magic of your deadly
-guns.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;But listen, se&ntilde;ora. I fought them in the sunlight
-once before. They know that <i>ma petite</i>
-can kill by day,&#8221; argued de Sancerre, hoping
-against hope that, for the sake of their scanty
-store of bullets, the girl was right.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Believe me, se&ntilde;or, that I read their evil<span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">[288]</span>
-minds. They think their god, the sun, more powerful
-at dawn than later in the day. The Great
-Spirit, so the sun-priests say, is not unlike a man,
-and takes a long <i>siesta</i> at high noon. They have
-attacked you now at noon and in the night.
-They will not tempt your wizard gun again until
-their shining god is wide awake.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Ma foi, ma ch&egrave;re</i>, your woman&#8217;s wit has
-wrought a miracle, I think!&#8221; exclaimed de Sancerre.
-&#8220;I owe an altar somewhere far from
-hence, if what you say is true. And so I&#8217;ll leave
-you, sweetheart, for a time. I must have speech
-with Barbier.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Welcome, monsieur,&#8221; cried the <i>coureur de
-bois</i>, as the Count approached him from behind.
-&#8220;I&#8217;ve watched the shore until my eyes are hot,
-and cannot see a sign of living thing. The river
-and the woods suggest that we were scared by
-ghosts.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Nay, Jacques, you&#8217;ll find our foes were
-made of flesh and blood! They will return in
-force at dawn!&#8221; exclaimed de Sancerre, throwing
-himself upon the long grass at Barbier&#8217;s
-side.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>coureur de bois</i> glanced at the ragged,
-white-faced patrician at his side with a satirical
-gleam in his restless eyes.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;You&#8217;ve learned your woodcraft with great
-celerity, Monsieur le Comte,&#8221; he exclaimed, sarcastically.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">[289]</span>
-&#8220;Mayhap the saints have told you
-what would come to us.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>De Sancerre smiled coldly. &#8220;&#8217;Tis neither woodcraft
-nor the saints to whom I owe my thanks,
-Jacques Barbier,&#8221; he remarked, quietly. &#8220;I am
-a seer and prophet through the goddess Coyocop.
-And now, young man, I&#8217;ll let you watch
-awhile, and get a wink of sleep. I&#8217;ll need a
-steady hand at dawn. Arouse me in an hour,
-and I will take my turn at watching peaceful
-scenes. Good-night, Jacques Barbier. Bear this
-in mind. We&#8217;ll have to fight an army when
-the sun comes up.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A moment later de Sancerre lay out-stretched
-beneath the moon in dreamless sleep, while the
-<i>coureur de bois</i>, pacing restlessly the little island,
-nursed his wounded pride, and wondered
-if the morning would teach him something new.</p>
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">[290]</span>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak">CHAPTER XXIX<br />
-
-
-<small>IN WHICH THE GREAT SPIRIT COMES FROM THE SEA<br />
-TO RECLAIM COYOCOP</small></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Coyocop&#8217;s</span> prediction was fulfilled at dawn.
-The year which Do&ntilde;a Julia de Aquilar had passed
-in the City of the Sun had enabled her to read
-aright the minds of the sun-worshippers after
-their moonlit attack upon de Sancerre&#8217;s island
-had been repulsed. They had awaited the coming
-of their gleaming god, and had been rewarded
-by a sunrise whose splendor should have
-filled their childish souls with love and peace.
-But the mounting orb of day was greeted by its
-idolaters not with gentle hymns of praise, but
-with wild, warlike shouts, that echoed from
-the woods and across the flood with a grim,
-menacing persistence that sent a chill through
-the hearts of a maiden and her lover, and caused
-a dare-devil from the northern woods to look
-with care to the priming of his gun.</p>
-
-<p>For the first time since Jacques Barbier, in a
-fit of temper caused by some fancied slight put
-upon him by the haughty de la Salle, had deserted<span class="pagenum" id="Page_291">[291]</span>
-the great explorer&#8217;s party, trusting confidently
-to his own skill as a woodsman to carry him
-safely back to Canada, the <i>coureur de bois</i> had
-regretted, momentarily, his reckless self-confidence.
-Had he remained with his captain, he
-might have been, at this time, half-way up the
-river toward the forests which he knew and
-loved; and here he was, at the dawn of a day
-made to give joy to a runner-of-the-woods, surrounded
-by gigantic, fierce-eyed warriors, already
-raising hoarse shouts of triumph for the easy victory
-which seemed to lie within their reach.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Gar!&#8221; exclaimed Barbier, as he raised his gun
-to his shoulder. &#8220;Service with de la Salle was
-hard, but &#8217;twas easier than death. But, then,
-&#8217;tis time for me to die. When a wandering outcast
-from the Court of France comes here to tell
-me what will happen in the woods&mdash;and, <i>pardieu</i>,
-he told me true&mdash;there&#8217;s nothing left in
-life for poor Jacques Barbier!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>A few moments before the <i>coureur de bois</i> had
-elevated his musket, to begin a battle against
-overwhelming odds, de Sancerre had said farewell
-to a heavy-eyed, pale-lipped maiden, who
-had spent the night in prayer, fearful of the
-peril which the dawn would bring to a brave
-knight-errant who had grown dearer to her loving
-heart with every day that had passed. Well
-Do&ntilde;a Julia knew that captivity, not death, would<span class="pagenum" id="Page_292">[292]</span>
-be her lot should the sun-worshippers reach the
-island, but that they would grant mercy to de
-Sancerre she had no hope. The thought of life
-without the man whose love had come to her
-as the rarest gift which Heaven could bestow
-was a horror which drove the color from her
-face and robbed her voice of everything save
-sobs.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Remember, sweetheart, if the worst should
-come to me,&#8221; said de Sancerre, with forced calmness,
-bending down to press his cold lips to her
-trembling hand, &#8220;that your brave, earnest heart
-has taught me how to live and how to die. Pray
-to the Virgin, who holds you in her care, to keep
-me always worthy of your love, &#8217;though death
-should come between us for a time. Adieu,
-<i>ma ch&egrave;re</i>! God grant &#8217;tis <i>au revoir</i>!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The girl clung to his hand, wet with her tears,
-and strove in vain to speak, to put into halting
-words the love and despair which filled her soul.
-For an instant her white face looked up at him
-from the entrance to the hut, and de Sancerre
-bent forward and kissed her hot, dry lips.</p>
-
-<p>A moment later he had crawled through the
-tall grass toward the eastern shore of the island
-and lay watching, once again, the two war-canoes
-of the black-haired, black-eyed, black-hearted
-savages who had turned from their adoration
-of the sun to begin anew their devil&#8217;s work.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">[293]</span>
-Suddenly a shower of feathered, reed-made arrows
-whizzed above the gleaming waves, deadly
-from the speed with which long acacia bows endowed
-them.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Ma foi</i>, the sun-wasps begin to sting!&#8221; exclaimed
-de Sancerre. At that instant he heard
-Jacques Barbier&#8217;s gun, warning the sun-worshippers&#8217;
-land-force not to launch a canoe from the
-shore nearest to the island.</p>
-
-<p>The Count and the Canadian, an hour before
-sunrise, had divided the store of bullets which
-remained to them, and had found that only a
-dozen shots from each musket stood between
-them and certain death.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;I know how a miser feels as he counts his
-gold,&#8221; soliloquized de Sancerre, as he aimed his
-gun at the canoe, from which a broadside of
-arrows had been launched at his coigne of vantage.
-&#8220;Here goes number one, <i>ma petite</i>! There
-are only eleven more to defend a Count of Languedoc
-from the life to come! <i>Bon matin,
-monsieur!</i>&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>To de Sancerre&#8217;s chagrin and dismay, the
-brawny, brown paddler at whom he had aimed
-his musket had defied moon-magic at the dawn
-of day. The Count&#8217;s precious bullet had done
-no harm to the oncoming canoe, nor to the war-party
-which it held. Cold with the horrid possibilities
-opened up by his indifferent marksmanship,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">[294]</span>
-de Sancerre, with hands which trembled
-annoyingly, attempted to reload his gun in time
-to prevent the imminent landing of the howling
-bowmen. That his shot would have come too
-late the speed of the canoe made evident, when
-a crash, almost at his very ear, nearly deafened
-the astonished Frenchman for a time. Jacques
-Barbier, having checked momentarily by his
-marvellous skill with his musket the attack from
-the main-land, had come to de Sancerre&#8217;s defense
-in the nick of time. But the <i>coureur de bois</i>
-paid dearly for the support that he had given
-to the unnerved Frenchman. An arrow, shot
-by a dusky warrior more daring than his companions,
-had made answer to Jacques Barbier&#8217;s
-fatal bullet and had entered the Canadian&#8217;s
-breast just below his dangling tobacco-pipe.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Mother Mary, that is enough!&#8221; groaned the
-<i>coureur de bois</i>, writhing upon the tousled grass
-by his horrified comrade&#8217;s side. &#8220;<i>Courage, Monsieur
-le Comte!</i> Let them have your charge!
-I have just life enough left to load my gun
-again. Wait! Your hand trembles! <i>Bien!</i>
-Fire!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>De Sancerre&#8217;s musket roared once again and
-his bullet found its way to the heart of a foe.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Take my gun, monsieur,&#8221; gasped Barbier.
-&#8220;I made shift to load it&mdash;but, gar, this is death!
-Ugh!&#8221;</p>
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">[295]</span>A hero at the end of his short, wild life, the
-<i>coureur de bois</i> lay dead upon the shore.</p>
-
-<p>At that instant the waters of the gulf and the
-river&#8217;s mouth vibrated with the thunder of an
-explosion which, to the ears of the startled sun-worshippers
-upon the main-land and in the crowded
-war-boats, sounded like moon-magic gone mad
-with victory.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Nom de Dieu</i>, it is the cannon of a ship or
-my ears are haunted by Jacques Barbier&#8217;s gun!&#8221;
-exclaimed de Sancerre, eyeing the retreating canoes
-as he stealthily raised his head above the
-underbrush and then cast a searching glance
-toward the sun-kissed sea. To his amazement
-and joy, his gaze rested upon a clumsy carack,
-loaded deep, coming to anchor not half a mile
-below the island upon which he stood. A puff
-of smoke arose from the great ship&#8217;s bow at that
-moment, and again the astonished woods and
-waters reverberated with an uproar new to the
-ears of a hundred terrified warriors, who had
-come forth to recover a goddess and had been
-met with the awful chiding of the Great Spirit,
-who had sent a mighty vessel, larger than their
-wildest dreams had known, to carry Coyocop
-back again to God.</p>
-
-<p>With his heart throbbing with many varied
-emotions, de Sancerre had reluctantly turned his
-grateful eyes from the sea, no longer a lonely,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">[296]</span>
-cruel waste of tossing waves, toward the forest
-to the westward, into which the land-forces of
-the disorganized sun-worshippers were scurrying
-in mad fear of an avenging deity, when he felt a
-light hand upon his arm, and, turning quickly,
-gazed down into the dark, glowing eyes of a
-maiden whose trust in the saints had not been
-betrayed.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;In the hut I knelt in prayer,&#8221; whispered Do&ntilde;a
-Julia, from whose face shone the light of a soul
-that had known deep sorrow and great joy,
-&#8220;when I heard my father&#8217;s voice, telling me
-that help was near. Oh, se&ntilde;or, the wonder of it
-all!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;It looks to me a miracle, indeed!&#8221; exclaimed
-de Sancerre. &#8220;There seemed to be no hope when
-Barbier was hit! He died, se&ntilde;ora, the death of
-a true man.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Hand in hand, they stood for a time gazing
-down at the brave, liberty-loving runner of the
-woods, whose clean-cut, handsome face had kept
-its firm, symmetrical outlines through the agony
-of sudden death.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Give me back again my dagger, sweetheart,&#8221;
-said de Sancerre, turning sadly away from a grim
-picture of manly vigor cut down in its youthful
-prime. &#8220;I did Jacques Barbier a cruel wrong!
-He was too brave a man to do a coward&#8217;s deed!&#8221;</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter"><img src="images/i_296.jpg" alt="" /></div>
-
-<p class="caption">&#8220;HE FELT A LIGHT HAND UPON HIS ARM, AND GAZED DOWN INTO THE<br />
-DARK EYES OF THE MAIDEN&#8221;</p>
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">[297]</span>&#8220;They&#8217;re manning a boat to come to us!&#8221;
-exclaimed the Frenchman a moment later, as he
-and Do&ntilde;a Julia turned again to gaze at the great
-carack, rising and falling upon the early morning
-tide. &#8220;It is a Spanish vessel, sweetheart!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;<i>Si</i>, se&ntilde;or. There is no doubt of that! I cannot
-read the flag she flies, but &#8217;tis some Spanish
-merchant-man bound west for Mexico.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>De Sancerre slipped an arm, covered with velvet
-rags, around the slender waist of the girl,
-whose sweet face had gained new beauty from
-the mighty miracle which the saints had wrought
-in her behalf.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;They heard our guns at dawn across the sea,
-and saw my canvas flapping in the breeze,&#8221; he
-said, musingly. &#8220;At last, by chance, the King
-of France has done me a good turn! He owed
-me one, se&ntilde;ora. My sword has served him well,
-but when it made a slip, which love itself forgave,
-he turned his face away, and left me, sweetheart,
-with no land to call my own!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Do&ntilde;a Julia looked up at her lover with a
-bright smile upon her curving lips, and her eloquent
-eyes told of a joyful heart, as she said:</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;If so my countrymen in yonder boat are kind
-enough to take us, se&ntilde;or, to the West, we&#8217;ll find
-a province which belongs to me. If you will
-deign to make my realm the land of your adoption,
-I pledge my word to be a gracious queen.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>Falling to one knee, with the airy grace of a<span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">[298]</span>
-courtier who had never known the manners of
-the woods and wilds, de Sancerre pressed the
-girl&#8217;s hand to his smiling lips.</p>
-
-<p>&#8220;Here, within sight of a column bearing the
-arms of France and Navarre,&#8221; he cried, gayly,
-&#8220;I forswear all allegiance to other kings than
-Love, and hereby pledge my life and heart and
-sword to the service of my queen, whose hand I
-kiss!&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The salt breeze from the playful sea, smiling
-beneath the bright June sun, brought to their
-ears at that moment the sound of a small boat
-scraping upon the beach, and the rumble of oars
-clattering against dry wood.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The sun was sinking toward the West, and the
-King&#8217;s Column, after a long interval of silence,
-spake complaining words to the Cross of Christ.
-&#8220;&#8217;Twill be more lonely for us now than heretofore,&#8221;
-grumbled the tall pillar, above which a
-shred of soiled canvas hung, heavy and limp,
-flapping lazily now and again against the wooden
-sides of the royal herald. &#8220;In yonder ship,
-whose sails resemble golden wings against the
-background of the deep, a man and maiden,
-seemingly most worthy of the blessings of this
-realm of mine, have taken flight and treated me
-with strange ingratitude. I marvel that they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">[299]</span>
-should in such wise spurn my royal master and
-the haughty arms of France.&#8221;</p>
-
-<p>The Cross of Christ said nothing to soothe the
-wounded pride of the pompous pillar, towering
-above the humble emblem of an all-conquering
-faith in the crimson light of the waning day.
-Mayhap the Cross had no time, at that sad
-moment, to give to happy lovers, sailing through
-the glowing twilight toward a land of peace and
-joy. At its base lay a newly-made grave, within
-which slept the body of a youth who had loved
-God&#8217;s world and hated the tyranny of men.</p>
-
-
-<p class="center">THE END</p>
-
-
-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph2"><span class="smcap">By H. G. WELLS</span></p>
-</div>
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-8vo, Cloth, Ornamental, $1 50.</p>
-<div class="blockquot">
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-<i>Daily Telegraph</i> says, &#8220;will prove absolutely enthralling.
-The hero goes into a trance in 1900, and when he awakes two
-centuries later he finds that his property has increased so
-greatly that he owns more than half the world.&#8221;</p>
-</div>
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-8vo, Cloth, Ornamental, $1 50.</p>
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-Post 8vo, Cloth, Ornamental, $1 75.</p>
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-$1 75; 8vo, Paper, 45 cents.</p>
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-Blue Carbuncle, The Speckled Band, The Engineer&#8217;s Thumb,
-The Noble Bachelor, The Beryl Coronet, The Copper Beeches.</p>
-</div>
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-Post 8vo, Cloth, Ornamental, $1 50.</p>
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p>Contents: Silver Blaze, The Yellow Face, The Stock-Broker&#8217;s
-Clerk, The &#8220;Gloria Scott,&#8221; The Musgrave Ritual,
-The Reigate Puzzle, The Crooked Man, The Resident Patient,
-The Greek Interpreter, The Navy Treaty, The Final Problem.</p>
-</div>
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-Cloth, Ornamental, $1 00.</p>
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-$1 00.</p>
-</div>
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-<hr class="tiny" />
-
-<p class="center">HARPER &amp; BROTHERS, <span class="smcap">Publishers</span><br />
-
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-
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-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
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-<p class="ph2"><span class="smcap">By JOHN FOX, Jr.</span></p>
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-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>A MOUNTAIN EUROPA. With Portrait. Post 8vo,
-Cloth, Ornamental, $1 25.</p>
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-and its truth to a phase of little-known American life.&mdash;<i>Omaha
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-</div>
-
-<p>THE KENTUCKIANS. A Novel. Illustrated by <span class="smcap">W.
-T. Smedley</span>. Post 8vo, Cloth, Ornamental, $1 25.</p>
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p>This, Mr. Fox&#8217;s first long story, sets him well in view, and
-distinguishes him as at once original and sound. He takes
-the right view of the story-writer&#8217;s function and the wholesale
-view of what the art of fiction can rightfully attempt.&mdash;<i>Independent</i>,
-N. Y.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>&#8220;HELL FER SARTAIN,&#8221; and Other Stories. Post
-8vo, Cloth, Ornamental, $1 00.</p>
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p>Mr. Fox has made a great success of his pictures of the
-rude life and primitive passions of the people of the mountains
-of West Virginia and Kentucky. His sketches are
-short but graphic; he paints his scenes and his hill people
-in terse and simple phrases and makes them genuinely picturesque,
-giving us glimpses of life that are distinctively American.&mdash;<i>Detroit
-Free Press.</i></p>
-</div>
-
-<p>A CUMBERLAND VENDETTA, and Other Stories.
-Illustrated. Post 8vo, Cloth, Ornamental, $1 25.</p>
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p>These stories are tempestuously alive, and sweep the heart-strings
-with a master-hand.&mdash;<i>Watchman</i>, Boston.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<hr class="tiny" />
-
-<p class="center">HARPER &amp; BROTHERS, <span class="smcap">Publishers</span><br />
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-NEW YORK AND LONDON</p>
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-<div class="chapter">
-<p class="ph2"><span class="smcap">By W. CLARK RUSSELL</span></p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p>A SEA QUEEN. 16mo, Half Cloth, $1 00.</p>
-
-
-
-<p>JACK&#8217;S COURTSHIP. A Sailor&#8217;s Yarn of Love and
-Shipwreck. 16mo, Half Cloth, 75 cents.</p>
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p>The present &#8220;Jack&#8221; is a lover who ships for Australia on
-board the same vessel with his sweetheart, whom a stern
-father has sent off to get her out of the way of his attentions.
-Shipwreck and a chapter of Robinson Crusoe life on
-a desert island vary the fortunes of &#8220;Jack&#8217;s Courtship,&#8221; all
-of which are related in Mr. Russell&#8217;s vivid style.&mdash;<i>Literary
-World</i>, Boston.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>A VOYAGE TO THE CAPE. 16mo, Paper, 25
-cents.</p>
-
-
-<p>AN OCEAN TRAGEDY. 8vo, Paper, 50 cents.</p>
-
-<p>MAROONED. 8vo, Paper, 25 cents.</p>
-
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-<p>MRS. DINES&#8217;S JEWELS. Illustrated. 8vo, Paper,
-50 cents.</p>
-
-
-<p>MY DANISH SWEETHEART. Illustrated. 8vo,
-Paper, 60 cents.</p>
-
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-<p>MY SHIPMATE LOUISE. 8vo, Paper, 50 cents.</p>
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p>A novel by Mr. Clark Russell cannot fail to reach the
-strongest interest, and to be characterized by the genius of
-one who, beyond all writers, understands sailors and the sea.&mdash;<i>Graphic</i>,
-London.</p>
-
-<p>As a writer on all subjects connected with the sea and
-those who live on it, he is without a rival.&mdash;<i>Morning Post</i>,
-London.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<hr class="tiny" />
-
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-<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop" />
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-<p class="ph2">TRANSCRIBER&#8217;S NOTES:</p>
-
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-<p>Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.</p>
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-<p>Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.</p>
-
-<p>Archaic or alternate spelling has been retained from the original.</p>
-</div></div>
-
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-<div style='display:block; margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK WITH SWORD AND CRUCIFIX; BEING AN ACCOUNT OF THE STRANGE ADVENTURES OF COUNT LOUIS SANCERRE, COMPANION OF SIEUR LASALLE, ON THE LOWER MISSISSIPPI, IN THE YEAR OF GRACE 1682 ***</div>
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