Montezuma's Daughter

by

H. Rider Haggard



NOTE

The more unpronounceable of the Aztec names are shortened in many
instances out of consideration for the patience of the reader; thus
'Popocatapetl' becomes 'Popo,' 'Huitzelcoatl' becomes 'Huitzel,'
&c.  The prayer in Chapter xxvi. is freely rendered from
Jourdanet's French translation of Fray Bernardino de Sahagun's
History of New Spain, written shortly after the conquest of Mexico
(Book VI, chap. v.), to which monumental work and to Prescott's
admirable history the author of this romance is much indebted.  The
portents described as heralding the fall of the Aztec Empire, and
many of the incidents and events written of in this story, such as
the annual personation of the god Tezcatlipoca by a captive
distinguished for his personal beauty, and destined to sacrifice,
are in the main historical.  The noble speech of the Emperor
Guatemoc to the Prince of Tacuba uttered while they both were
suffering beneath the hands of the Spaniards is also authentic.



DEDICATION

My dear Jebb,

Strange as were the adventures and escapes of Thomas Wingfield,
once of this parish, whereof these pages tell, your own can almost
equal them in these latter days, and, since a fellow feeling makes
us kind, you at least they may move to a sigh of sympathy.  Among
many a distant land you know that in which he loved and fought,
following vengeance and his fate, and by your side I saw its relics
and its peoples, its volcans and its valleys.  You know even where
lies the treasure which, three centuries and more ago, he helped to
bury, the countless treasure that an evil fortune held us back from
seeking.  Now the Indians have taken back their secret, and though
many may search, none will lift the graven stone that seals it, nor
shall the light of day shine again upon the golden head of
Montezuma.  So be it!  The wealth which Cortes wept over, and his
Spaniards sinned and died for, is for ever hidden yonder by the
shores of the bitter lake whose waters gave up to you that ancient
horror, the veritable and sleepless god of Sacrifice, of whom I
would not rob you--and, for my part, I do not regret the loss.

What cannot be lost, what to me seem of more worth than the dead
hero Guatemoc's gems and jars of gold, are the memories of true
friendship shown to us far away beneath the shadow of the
Slumbering Woman,* and it is in gratitude for these that I ask
permission to set your name within a book which were it not for you
would never have been written.

I am, my dear Jebb,

Always sincerely yours,

H. RIDER HAGGARD.


DITCHINGHAM, NORFOLK, October 5, 1892.

To J. Gladwyn Jebb, Esq.



NOTE

Worn out prematurely by a life of hardship and extraordinary
adventure, Mr. Jebb passed away on March 18, 1893, taking with him
the respect and affection of all who had the honour of his
friendship.  The author has learned with pleasure that the reading
of this tale in proof and the fact of its dedication to himself
afforded him some amusement and satisfaction in the intervals of
his sufferings.

H. R. H.

March 22, 1893.


* The volcano Izticcihuatl in Mexico.



CONTENTS


I        WHY THOMAS WINGFIELD TELLS HIS TALE

II.      OF THE PARENTAGE OF THOMAS WINGFIELD

III.     THE COMING OF THE SPANIARD

IV.      THOMAS TELLS HIS LOVE

V.       THOMAS SWEARS AN OATH

VI.      GOOD-BYE, SWEETHEART

VII.     ANDRES DE FONSECA

VIII.    THE SECOND MEETING

IX.      THOMAS BECOMES RICH

X.       THE PASSING OF ISABELLA DE SIGUENZA

XI.      THE LOSS OF THE CARAK

XII.     THOMAS COMES TO SHORE

XIII.    THE STONE OF SACRIFICE

XIV.     THE SAVING OF GUATEMOC

XV.      THE COURT OF MONTEZUMA

XVI.     THOMAS BECOMES A GOD

XVII.    THE ARISING OF PAPANTZIN

XVIII.   THE NAMING OF THE BRIDES

XIX.     THE FOUR GODDESSES

XX.      OTOMIE'S COUNSEL

XXI.     THE KISS OF LOVE

XXII.    THE TRIUMPH OF THE CROSS

XXIII.   THOMAS IS MARRIED

XXIV.    THE NIGHT OF FEAR

XXV.     THE BURYING OF MONTEZUMA'S TREASURE

XXVI.    THE CROWNING OF GUATEMOC

XXVII.   THE FALL OF TENOCTITLAN

XXVIII.  THOMAS IS DOOMED

XXIX.    DE GARCIA SPEAKS HIS MIND

XXX.     THE ESCAPE

XXXI.    OTOMIE PLEADS WITH HER PEOPLE

XXXII.   THE END OF GUATEMOC

XXXIII.  ISABELLA DE SIGUENZA IS AVENGED

XXXIV.   THE SIEGE OF THE CITY OF PINES

XXXV.    THE LAST SACRIFICE OF THE WOMEN OF THE OTOMIE

XXXVI.   THE SURRENDER

XXXVII.  VENGEANCE

XXXVIII. OTOMIE'S FAREWELL

XXXIX.   THOMAS COMES BACK FROM THE DEAD

XL.      AMEN



Montezuma's Daughter


CHAPTER I

WHY THOMAS WINGFIELD TELLS HIS TALE


Now glory be to God who has given us the victory!  It is true, the
strength of Spain is shattered, her ships are sunk or fled, the sea
has swallowed her soldiers and her sailors by hundreds and by
thousands, and England breathes again.  They came to conquer, to
bring us to the torture and the stake--to do to us free Englishmen
as Cortes did by the Indians of Anahuac.  Our manhood to the slave
bench, our daughters to dishonour, our souls to the loving-kindness
of the priest, our wealth to the Emperor and the Pope!  God has
answered them with his winds, Drake has answered them with his
guns.  They are gone, and with them the glory of Spain.

I, Thomas Wingfield, heard the news to-day on this very Thursday in
the Bungay market-place, whither I went to gossip and to sell the
apples which these dreadful gales have left me, as they hang upon
my trees.

Before there had been rumours of this and of that, but here in
Bungay was a man named Young, of the Youngs of Yarmouth, who had
served in one of the Yarmouth ships in the fight at Gravelines, aye
and sailed north after the Spaniards till they were lost in the
Scottish seas.

Little things lead to great, men say, but here great things lead to
little, for because of these tidings it comes about that I, Thomas
Wingfield, of the Lodge and the parish of Ditchingham in the county
of Norfolk, being now of a great age and having only a short time
to live, turn to pen and ink.  Ten years ago, namely, in the year
1578, it pleased her Majesty, our gracious Queen Elizabeth, who at
that date visited this county, that I should be brought before her
at Norwich.  There and then, saying that the fame of it had reached
her, she commanded me to give her some particulars of the story of
my life, or rather of those twenty years, more or less, which I
spent among the Indians at that time when Cortes conquered their
country of Anahuac, which is now known as Mexico.  But almost
before I could begin my tale, it was time for her to start for
Cossey to hunt the deer, and she said it was her wish that I should
write the story down that she might read it, and moreover that if
it were but half as wonderful as it promised to be, I should end my
days as Sir Thomas Wingfield.  To this I answered her Majesty that
pen and ink were tools I had no skill in, yet I would bear her
command in mind.  Then I made bold to give her a great emerald that
once had hung upon the breast of Montezuma's daughter, and of many
a princess before her, and at the sight of it her eyes glistened
brightly as the gem, for this Queen of ours loves such costly
playthings.  Indeed, had I so desired, I think that I might then
and there have struck a bargain, and set the stone against a title;
but I, who for many years had been the prince of a great tribe, had
no wish to be a knight.  So I kissed the royal hand, and so tightly
did it grip the gem within that the knuckle joints shone white, and
I went my ways, coming back home to this my house by the Waveney on
that same day.

Now the Queen's wish that I should set down the story of my life
remained in my mind, and for long I have desired to do it before
life and story end together.  The labour, indeed, is great to one
unused to such tasks; but why should I fear labour who am so near
to the holiday of death?  I have seen things that no other
Englishman has seen, which are worthy to be recorded; my life has
been most strange, many a time it has pleased God to preserve it
when all seemed lost, and this perchance He has done that the
lesson of it might become known to others.  For there is a lesson
in it and in the things that I have seen, and it is that no wrong
can ever bring about a right, that wrong will breed wrong at last,
and be it in man or people, will fall upon the brain that thought
it and the hand that wrought it.

Look now at the fate of Cortes--that great man whom I have known
clothed with power like a god.  Nearly forty years ago, so I have
heard, he died poor and disgraced in Spain; he, the conqueror--yes,
and I have learned also that his son Don Martin has been put to the
torture in that city which the father won with so great cruelties
for Spain.  Malinche, she whom the Spaniards named Marina, the
chief and best beloved of all the women of this same Cortes,
foretold it to him in her anguish when after all that had been,
after she had so many times preserved him and his soldiers to look
upon the sun, at the last he deserted her, giving her in marriage
to Don Juan Xaramillo.  Look again at the fate of Marina herself.
Because she loved this man Cortes, or Malinche, as the Indians
named him after her, she brought evil on her native land; for
without her aid Tenoctitlan, or Mexico, as they call it now, had
never bowed beneath the yoke of Spain--yes, she forgot her honour
in her passion.  And what was her reward, what right came to her of
her wrongdoing?  This was her reward at last: to be given away in
marriage to another and a lesser man when her beauty waned, as a
worn-out beast is sold to a poorer master.

Consider also the fate of those great peoples of the land of
Anahuac.  They did evil that good might come.  They sacrificed the
lives of thousands to their false gods, that their wealth might
increase, and peace and prosperity be theirs throughout the
generations.  And now the true God has answered them.  For wealth
He has given them desolation, for peace the sword of the Spaniard,
for prosperity the rack and the torment and the day of slavery.
For this it was that they did sacrifice, offering their own
children on the altars of Huitzel and of Tezcat.

And the Spaniards themselves, who in the name of mercy have wrought
cruelties greater than any that were done by the benighted Aztecs,
who in the name of Christ daily violate His law to the uttermost
extreme, say shall they prosper, shall their evil-doing bring them
welfare?  I am old and cannot live to see the question answered,
though even now it is in the way of answering.  Yet I know that
their wickedness shall fall upon their own heads, and I seem to see
them, the proudest of the peoples of the earth, bereft of fame and
wealth and honour, a starveling remnant happy in nothing save their
past.  What Drake began at Gravelines God will finish in many
another place and time, till at last Spain is of no more account
and lies as low as the empire of Montezuma lies to-day.

Thus it is in these great instances of which all the world may
know, and thus it is even in the life of so humble a man as I,
Thomas Wingfield.  Heaven indeed has been merciful to me, giving me
time to repent my sins; yet my sins have been visited on my head,
on me who took His prerogative of vengeance from the hand of the
Most High.  It is just, and because it is so I wish to set out the
matter of my life's history that others may learn from it.  For
many years this has been in my mind, as I have said, though to
speak truth it was her Majesty the Queen who first set the seed.
But only on this day, when I have heard for certain of the fate of
the Armada, does it begin to grow, and who can say if ever it will
come to flower?  For this tidings has stirred me strangely,
bringing back my youth and the deeds of love and war and wild
adventure which I have been mingled in, fighting for my own hand
and for Guatemoc and the people of the Otomie against these same
Spaniards, as they have not been brought back for many years.
Indeed, it seems to me, and this is no rare thing with the aged, as
though there in the far past my true life lay, and all the rest
were nothing but a dream.

From the window of the room wherein I write I can see the peaceful
valley of the Waveney.  Beyond its stream are the common lands
golden with gorse, the ruined castle, and the red roofs of Bungay
town gathered about the tower of St. Mary's Church.  Yonder far
away are the king's forests of Stowe and the fields of Flixton
Abbey; to the right the steep bank is green with the Earsham oaks,
to the left the fast marsh lands spotted with cattle stretch on to
Beccles and Lowestoft, while behind me my gardens and orchards rise
in terraces up the turfy hill that in old days was known as the
Earl's Vineyard.  All these are about me, and yet in this hour they
are as though they were not.  For the valley of the Waveney I see
the vale of Tenoctitlan, for the slopes of Stowe the snowy shapes
of the volcanoes Popo and Iztac, for the spire of Earsham and the
towers of Ditchingham, of Bungay, and of Beccles, the soaring
pyramids of sacrifice gleaming with the sacred fires, and for the
cattle in the meadows the horsemen of Cortes sweeping to war.

It comes back to me; that was life, the rest is but a dream.  Once
more I feel young, and, should I be spared so long, I will set down
the story of my youth before I am laid in yonder churchyard and
lost in the world of dreams.  Long ago I had begun it, but it was
only on last Christmas Day that my dear wife died, and while she
lived I knew that this task was better left undone.  Indeed, to be
frank, it was thus with my wife:  She loved me, I believe, as few
men have the fortune to be loved, and there is much in my past that
jarred upon this love of hers, moving her to a jealousy of the dead
that was not the less deep because it was so gentle and so closely
coupled with forgiveness.  For she had a secret sorrow that ate her
heart away, although she never spoke of it.  But one child was born
to us, and this child died in infancy, nor for all her prayers did
it please God to give her another, and indeed remembering the words
of Otomie I did not expect that it would be so.  Now she knew well
that yonder across the seas I had children whom I loved by another
wife, and though they were long dead, must always love unalterably,
and this thought wrung her heart.  That I had been the husband of
another woman she could forgive, but that this woman should have
borne me children whose memory was still so dear, she could not
forget if she forgave it, she who was childless.  Why it was so,
being but a man, I cannot say; for who can know all the mystery of
a loving woman's heart?  But so it was.  Once, indeed, we
quarrelled on the matter; it was our only quarrel.

It chanced that when we had been married but two years, and our
babe was some few days buried in the churchyard of this parish of
Ditchingham, I dreamed a very vivid dream as I slept one night at
my wife's side.  I dreamed that my dead children, the four of them,
for the tallest lad bore in his arms my firstborn, that infant who
died in the great siege, came to me as they had often come when I
ruled the people of the Otomie in the City of Pines, and talked
with me, giving me flowers and kissing my hands.  I looked upon
their strength and beauty, and was proud at heart, and, in my
dream, it seemed as though some great sorrow had been lifted from
my mind; as though these dear ones had been lost and now were found
again.  Ah! what misery is there like to this misery of dreams,
that can thus give us back our dead in mockery, and then departing,
leave us with a keener woe?

Well, I dreamed on, talking with my children in my sleep and naming
them by their beloved names, till at length I woke to look on
emptiness, and knowing all my sorrow I sobbed aloud.  Now it was
early morning, and the light of the August sun streamed through the
window, but I, deeming that my wife slept, still lay in the shadow
of my dream as it were, and groaned, murmuring the names of those
whom I might never see again.  It chanced, however, that she was
awake, and had overheard those words which I spoke with the dead,
while I was yet asleep and after; and though some of this talk was
in the tongue of the Otomie, the most was English, and knowing the
names of my children she guessed the purport of it all.  Suddenly
she sprang from the bed and stood over me, and there was such anger
in her eyes as I had never seen before nor have seen since, nor did
it last long then, for presently indeed it was quenched in tears.

'What is it, wife?' I asked astonished.

'It is hard,' she answered, 'that I must bear to listen to such
talk from your lips, husband.  Was it not enough that, when all men
thought you dead, I wore my youth away faithful to your memory?
though how faithful you were to mine you know best.  Did I ever
reproach you because you had forgotten me, and wedded a savage
woman in a distant land?'

'Never, dear wife, nor had I forgotten you as you know well; but
what I wonder at is that you should grow jealous now when all cause
is done with.'

'Cannot we be jealous of the dead?  With the living we may cope,
but who can fight against the love which death has completed,
sealing it for ever and making it immortal!  Still, THAT I forgive
you, for against this woman I can hold my own, seeing that you were
mine before you became hers, and are mine after it.  But with the
children it is otherwise.  They are hers and yours alone.  I have
no part nor lot in them, and whether they be dead or living I know
well you love them always, and will love them beyond the grave if
you may find them there.  Already I grow old, who waited twenty
years and more before I was your wife, and I shall give you no
other children.  One I gave you, and God took it back lest I should
be too happy; yet its name was not on your lips with those strange
names.  My dead babe is little to you, husband!'

Here she choked, bursting into tears; nor did I think it well to
answer her that there was this difference in the matter, that
whereas, with the exception of one infant, those sons whom I had
lost were almost adolescent, the babe she bore lived but sixty
days.

Now when the Queen first put it in my mind to write down the
history of my life, I remembered this outbreak of my beloved wife;
and seeing that I could write no true tale and leave out of it the
story of her who was also my wife, Montezuma's daughter, Otomie,
Princess of the Otomie, and of the children that she gave me, I let
the matter lie.  For I knew well, that though we spoke very rarely
on the subject during all the many years we passed together, still
it was always in Lily's mind; nor did her jealousy, being of the
finer sort, abate at all with age, but rather gathered with the
gathering days.  That I should execute the task without the
knowledge of my wife would not have been possible, for till the
very last she watched over my every act, and, as I verily believe,
divined the most of my thoughts.


And so we grew old together, peacefully, and side by side, speaking
seldom of that great gap in my life when we were lost to each other
and of all that then befell.  At length the end came.  My wife died
suddenly in her sleep in the eighty-seventh year of her age.  I
buried her on the south side of the church here, with sorrow
indeed, but not with sorrow inconsolable, for I know that I must
soon rejoin her, and those others whom I have loved.

There in that wide heaven are my mother and my sister and my sons;
there are great Guatemoc my friend, last of the emperors, and many
other companions in war who have preceded me to peace; there, too,
though she doubted of it, is Otomie the beautiful and proud.  In
the heaven which I trust to reach, all the sins of my youth and the
errors of my age notwithstanding, it is told us there is no
marrying and giving in marriage; and this is well, for I do not
know how my wives, Montezuma's daughter and the sweet English
gentlewoman, would agree together were it otherwise.

And now to my task.



CHAPTER II

OF THE PARENTAGE OF THOMAS WINGFIELD


I, Thomas Wingfield, was born here at Ditchingham, and in this very
room where I write to-day.  The house of my birth was built or
added to early in the reign of the seventh Henry, but long before
his time some kind of tenement stood here, which was lived in by
the keeper of the vineyards, and known as Gardener's Lodge.
Whether it chanced that the climate was more kindly in old times,
or the skill of those who tended the fields was greater, I do not
know, but this at the least is true, that the hillside beneath
which the house nestles, and which once was the bank of an arm of
the sea or of a great broad, was a vineyard in Earl Bigod's days.
Long since it has ceased to grow grapes, though the name of the
'Earl's Vineyard' still clings to all that slope of land which lies
between this house and a certain health-giving spring that bubbles
from the bank the half of a mile away, in the waters of which sick
folks come to bathe even from Norwich and Lowestoft.  But sheltered
as it is from the east winds, to this hour the place has the
advantage that gardens planted here are earlier by fourteen days
than any others in the country side, and that a man may sit in them
coatless in the bitter month of May, when on the top of the hill,
not two hundred paces hence, he must shiver in a jacket of
otterskins.

The Lodge, for so it has always been named, in its beginnings
having been but a farmhouse, faces to the south-west, and is built
so low that it might well be thought that the damp from the river
Waveney, which runs through the marshes close by, would rise in it.
But this is not so, for though in autumn the roke, as here in
Norfolk we name ground fog, hangs about the house at nightfall, and
in seasons of great flood the water has been known to pour into the
stables at the back of it, yet being built on sand and gravel there
is no healthier habitation in the parish.  For the rest the
building is of stud-work and red brick, quaint and mellow looking,
with many corners and gables that in summer are half hidden in
roses and other creeping plants, and with its outlook on the
marshes and the common where the lights vary continually with the
seasons and even with the hours of the day, on the red roofs of
Bungay town, and on the wooded bank that stretches round the
Earsham lands; though there are many larger, to my mind there is
none pleasanter in these parts.  Here in this house I was born, and
here doubtless I shall die, and having spoken of it at some length,
as we are wont to do of spots which long custom has endeared to us,
I will go on to tell of my parentage.

First, then, I would set out with a certain pride--for who of us
does not love an ancient name when we happen to be born to it?--
that I am sprung from the family of the Wingfields of Wingfield
Castle in Suffolk, that lies some two hours on horseback from this
place.  Long ago the heiress of the Wingfields married a De la
Pole, a family famous in our history, the last of whom, Edmund,
Earl of Suffolk, lost his head for treason when I was young, and
the castle passed to the De la Poles with her.  But some offshoots
of the old Wingfield stock lingered in the neighbourhood, perchance
there was a bar sinister on their coat of arms, I know not and do
not care to know; at the least my fathers and I are of this blood.
My grandfather was a shrewd man, more of a yeoman than a squire,
though his birth was gentle.  He it was who bought this place with
the lands round it, and gathered up some fortune, mostly by careful
marrying and living, for though he had but one son he was twice
married, and also by trading in cattle.

Now my grandfather was godly-minded even to superstition, and
strange as it may seem, having only one son, nothing would satisfy
him but that the boy should be made a priest.  But my father had
little leaning towards the priesthood and life in a monastery,
though at all seasons my grandfather strove to reason it into him,
sometimes with words and examples, at others with his thick cudgel
of holly, that still hangs over the ingle in the smaller sitting-
room.  The end of it was that the lad was sent to the priory here
in Bungay, where his conduct was of such nature that within a year
the prior prayed his parents to take him back and set him in some
way of secular life.  Not only, so said the prior, did my father
cause scandal by his actions, breaking out of the priory at night
and visiting drinking houses and other places; but, such was the
sum of his wickedness, he did not scruple to question and make mock
of the very doctrines of the Church, alleging even that there was
nothing sacred in the image of the Virgin Mary which stood in the
chancel, and shut its eyes in prayer before all the congregation
when the priest elevated the Host.  'Therefore,' said the prior, 'I
pray you take back your son, and let him find some other road to
the stake than that which runs through the gates of Bungay Priory.'

Now at this story my grandfather was so enraged that he almost fell
into a fit; then recovering, he bethought him of his cudgel of
holly, and would have used it.  But my father, who was now nineteen
years of age and very stout and strong, twisted it from his hand
and flung it full fifty yards, saying that no man should touch him
more were he a hundred times his father.  Then he walked away,
leaving the prior and my grandfather staring at each other.

Now to shorten a long tale, the end of the matter was this.  It was
believed both by my grandfather and the prior that the true cause
of my father's contumacy was a passion which he had conceived for a
girl of humble birth, a miller's fair daughter who dwelt at
Waingford Mills.  Perhaps there was truth in this belief, or
perhaps there was none.  What does it matter, seeing that the maid
married a butcher at Beccles and died years since at the good age
of ninety and five?  But true or false, my grandfather believed the
tale, and knowing well that absence is the surest cure for love, he
entered into a plan with the prior that my father should be sent to
a monastery at Seville in Spain, of which the prior's brother was
abbot, and there learn to forget the miller's daughter and all
other worldly things.

When this was told to my father he fell into it readily enough,
being a young man of spirit and having a great desire to see the
world, otherwise, however, than through the gratings of a monastery
window.  So the end of it was that he went to foreign parts in the
care of a party of Spanish monks, who had journeyed here to Norfolk
on a pilgrimage to the shrine of our Lady of Walsingham.

It is said that my grandfather wept when he parted with his son,
feeling that he should see him no more; yet so strong was his
religion, or rather his superstition, that he did not hesitate to
send him away, though for no reason save that he would mortify his
own love and flesh, offering his son for a sacrifice as Abraham
would have offered Isaac.  But though my father appeared to consent
to the sacrifice, as did Isaac, yet his mind was not altogether set
on altars and faggots; in short, as he himself told me in after
years, his plans were already laid.

Thus it chanced that when he had sailed from Yarmouth a year and
six months, there came a letter from the abbot of the monastery in
Seville to his brother, the prior of St. Mary's at Bungay, saying
that my father had fled from the monastery, leaving no trace of
where he had gone.  My grandfather was grieved at this tidings, but
said little about it.

Two more years passed away, and there came other news, namely, that
my father had been captured, that he had been handed over to the
power of the Holy Office, as the accursed Inquisition was then
named, and tortured to death at Seville.  When my grandfather heard
this he wept, and bemoaned himself that his folly in forcing one
into the Church who had no liking for that path, had brought about
the shameful end of his only son.  After that date also he broke
his friendship with the prior of St. Mary's at Bungay, and ceased
his offerings to the priory.  Still he did not believe that my
father was dead in truth, since on the last day of his own life,
that ended two years later, he spoke of him as a living man, and
left messages to him as to the management of the lands which now
were his.

And in the end it became clear that this belief was not ill-
founded, for one day three years after the old man's death, there
landed at the port of Yarmouth none other than my father, who had
been absent some eight years in all.  Nor did he come alone, for
with him he brought a wife, a young and very lovely lady, who
afterwards was my mother.  She was a Spaniard of noble family,
having been born at Seville, and her maiden name was Donna Luisa de
Garcia.


Now of all that befell my father during his eight years of
wandering I cannot speak certainly, for he was very silent on the
matter, though I may have need to touch on some of his adventures.
But I know it is true that he fell under the power of the Holy
Office, for once when as a little lad I bathed with him in the
Elbow Pool, where the river Waveney bends some three hundred yards
above this house, I saw that his breast and arms were scored with
long white scars, and asked him what had caused them.  I remember
well how his face changed as I spoke, from kindliness to the hue of
blackest hate, and how he answered speaking to himself rather than
to me.

'Devils,' he said, 'devils set on their work by the chief of all
devils that live upon the earth and shall reign in hell.  Hark you,
my son Thomas, there is a country called Spain where your mother
was born, and there these devils abide who torture men and women,
aye, and burn them living in the name of Christ.  I was betrayed
into their hands by him whom I name the chief of the devils, though
he is younger than I am by three years, and their pincers and hot
irons left these marks upon me.  Aye, and they would have burnt me
alive also, only I escaped, thanks to your mother--but such tales
are not for a little lad's hearing; and see you never speak of
them, Thomas, for the Holy Office has a long arm.  You are half a
Spaniard, Thomas, your skin and eyes tell their own tale, but
whatever skin and eyes may tell, let your heart give them the lie.
Keep your heart English, Thomas; let no foreign devilments enter
there.  Hate all Spaniards except your mother, and be watchful lest
her blood should master mine within you.'

I was a child then, and scarcely understood his words or what he
meant by them.  Afterwards I learned to understand them but too
well.  As for my father's counsel, that I should conquer my Spanish
blood, would that I could always have followed it, for I know that
from this blood springs the most of such evil as is in me.  Hence
come my fixedness of purpose or rather obstinacy, and my powers of
unchristian hatred that are not small towards those who have
wronged me.  Well, I have done what I might to overcome these and
other faults, but strive as we may, that which is bred in the bone
will out in the flesh, as I have seen in many signal instances.

There were three of us children, Geoffrey my elder brother, myself,
and my sister Mary, who was one year my junior, the sweetest child
and the most beautiful that I have ever known.  We were very happy
children, and our beauty was the pride of our father and mother,
and the envy of other parents.  I was the darkest of the three,
dark indeed to swarthiness, but in Mary the Spanish blood showed
only in her rich eyes of velvet hue, and in the glow upon her cheek
that was like the blush on a ripe fruit.  My mother used to call me
her little Spaniard, because of my swarthiness, that is when my
father was not near, for such names angered him.  She never learned
to speak English very well, but he would suffer her to talk in no
other tongue before him.  Still, when he was not there she spoke in
Spanish, of which language, however, I alone of the family became a
master--and that more because of certain volumes of old Spanish
romances which she had by her, than for any other reason.  From my
earliest childhood I was fond of such tales, and it was by bribing
me with the promise that I should read them that she persuaded me
to learn Spanish.  For my mother's heart still yearned towards her
old sunny home, and often she would talk of it with us children,
more especially in the winter season, which she hated as I do.
Once I asked her if she wished to go back to Spain.  She shivered
and answered no, for there dwelt one who was her enemy and would
kill her; also her heart was with us children and our father.  I
wondered if this man who sought to kill my mother was the same as
he of whom my father had spoken as 'the chief of the devils,' but I
only answered that no man could wish to kill one so good and
beautiful.

Ah! my boy,' she said, 'it is just because I am, or rather have
been, beautiful that he hates me.  Others would have wedded me
besides your dear father, Thomas.'  And her face grew troubled as
though with fear.


Now when I was eighteen and a half years old, on a certain evening
in the month of May it happened that a friend of my father's,
Squire Bozard, late of the Hall in this parish, called at the Lodge
on his road from Yarmouth, and in the course of his talk let it
fall that a Spanish ship was at anchor in the Roads, laden with
merchandise.  My father pricked up his ears at this, and asked who
her captain might be.  Squire Bozard answered that he did not know
his name, but that he had seen him in the market-place, a tall and
stately man, richly dressed, with a handsome face and a scar upon
his temple.

At this news my mother turned pale beneath her olive skin, and
muttered in Spanish:

'Holy Mother! grant that it be not he.'

My father also looked frightened, and questioned the squire closely
as to the man's appearance, but without learning anything more.
Then he bade him adieu with little ceremony, and taking horse rode
away for Yarmouth.

That night my mother never slept, but sat all through it in her
nursing chair, brooding over I know not what.  As I left her when I
went to my bed, so I found her when I came from it at dawn.  I can
remember well pushing the door ajar to see her face glimmering
white in the twilight of the May morning, as she sat, her large
eyes fixed upon the lattice.

'You have risen early, mother,' I said.

'I have never lain down, Thomas,' she answered.

'Why not?  What do you fear?'

'I fear the past and the future, my son.  Would that your father
were back.'

About ten o'clock of that morning, as I was making ready to walk
into Bungay to the house of that physician under whom I was
learning the art of healing, my father rode up.  My mother, who was
watching at the lattice, ran out to meet him.

Springing from his horse he embraced her, saying, 'Be of good
cheer, sweet, it cannot be he.  This man has another name.'

'But did you see him?' she asked.

'No, he was out at his ship for the night, and I hurried home to
tell you, knowing your fears.'

'It were surer if you had seen him, husband.  He may well have
taken another name.'

'I never thought of that, sweet,' my father answered; 'but have no
fear.  Should it be he, and should he dare to set foot in the
parish of Ditchingham, there are those who will know how to deal
with him.  But I am sure that it is not he.'

'Thanks be to Jesu then!' she said, and they began talking in a low
voice.

Now, seeing that I was not wanted, I took my cudgel and started
down the bridle-path towards the common footbridge, when suddenly
my mother called me back.

'Kiss me before you go, Thomas,' she said.  'You must wonder what
all this may mean.  One day your father will tell you.  It has to
do with a shadow which has hung over my life for many years, but
that is, I trust, gone for ever.'

'If it be a man who flings it, he had best keep out of reach of
this,' I said, laughing, and shaking my thick stick.

'It is a man,' she answered, 'but one to be dealt with otherwise
than by blows, Thomas, should you ever chance to meet him.'

'May be, mother, but might is the best argument at the last, for
the most cunning have a life to lose.'

'You are too ready to use your strength, son,' she said, smiling
and kissing me.  'Remember the old Spanish proverb: "He strikes
hardest who strikes last."'

'And remember the other proverb, mother: "Strike before thou art
stricken,"' I answered, and went.

When I had gone some ten paces something prompted me to look back,
I know not what.  My mother was standing by the open door, her
stately shape framed as it were in the flowers of a white creeping
shrub that grew upon the wall of the old house.  As was her custom,
she wore a mantilla of white lace upon her head, the ends of which
were wound beneath her chin, and the arrangement of it was such
that at this distance for one moment it put me in mind of the
wrappings which are placed about the dead.  I started at the
thought and looked at her face.  She was watching me with sad and
earnest eyes that seemed to be filled with the spirit of farewell.


I never saw her again till she was dead.



CHAPTER III

THE COMING OF THE SPANIARD


And now I must go back and speak of my own matters.  As I have
told, it was my father's wish that I should be a physician, and
since I came back from my schooling at Norwich, that was when I had
entered on my sixteenth year, I had studied medicine under the
doctor who practised his art in the neighbourhood of Bungay.  He
was a very learned man and an honest, Grimstone by name, and as I
had some liking for the business I made good progress under him.
Indeed I had learned almost all that he could teach me, and my
father purposed to send me to London, there to push on my studies,
so soon as I should attain my twentieth year, that is within some
five months of the date of the coming of the Spaniard.

But it was not fated that I should go to London.

Medicine was not the only thing that I studied in those days,
however.  Squire Bozard of Ditchingham, the same who told my father
of the coming of the Spanish ship, had two living children, a son
and a daughter, though his wife had borne him many more who died in
infancy.  The daughter was named Lily and of my own age, having
been born three weeks after me in the same year.  Now the Bozards
are gone from these parts, for my great-niece, the granddaughter
and sole heiress of this son, has married and has issue of another
name.  But this is by the way.

From our earliest days we children, Bozards and Wingfields, lived
almost as brothers and sisters, for day by day we met and played
together in the snow or in the flowers.  Thus it would be hard for
me to say when I began to love Lily or when she began to love me;
but I know that when first I went to school at Norwich I grieved
more at losing sight of her than because I must part from my mother
and the rest.  In all our games she was ever my partner, and I
would search the country round for days to find such flowers as she
chanced to love.  When I came back from school it was the same,
though by degrees Lily grew shyer, and I also grew suddenly shy,
perceiving that from a child she had become a woman.  Still we met
often, and though neither said anything of it, it was sweet to us
to meet.

Thus things went on till this day of my mother's death.  But before
I go further I must tell that Squire Bozard looked with no favour
on the friendship between his daughter and myself--and this, not
because he disliked me, but rather because he would have seen Lily
wedded to my elder brother Geoffrey, my father's heir, and not to a
younger son.  So hard did he grow about the matter at last that we
two might scarcely meet except by seeming accident, whereas my
brother was ever welcome at the Hall.  And on this account some
bitterness arose between us two brothers, as is apt to be the case
when a woman comes between friends however close.  For it must be
known that my brother Geoffrey also loved Lily, as all men would
have loved her, and with a better right perhaps than I had--for he
was my elder by three years and born to possessions.  It may seem
indeed that I was somewhat hasty to fall into this state, seeing
that at the time of which I write I was not yet of age; but young
blood is nimble, and moreover mine was half Spanish, and made a man
of me when many a pure-bred Englishman is still nothing but a boy.
For the blood and the sun that ripens it have much to do with such
matters, as I have seen often enough among the Indian peoples of
Anahuac, who at the age of fifteen will take to themselves a bride
of twelve.  At the least it is certain that when I was eighteen
years of age I was old enough to fall in love after such fashion
that I never fell out of it again altogether, although the history
of my life may seem to give me the lie when I say so.  But I take
it that a man may love several women and yet love one of them the
best of all, being true in the spirit to the law which he breaks in
the letter.

Now when I had attained nineteen years I was a man full grown, and
writing as I do in extreme old age, I may say it without false
shame, a very handsome youth to boot.  I was not over tall, indeed,
measuring but five feet nine inches and a half in height, but my
limbs were well made, and I was both deep and broad in the chest.
In colour I was, and my white hair notwithstanding, am still
extraordinarily dark hued, my eyes also were large and dark, and my
hair, which was wavy, was coal black.  In my deportment I was
reserved and grave to sadness, in speech I was slow and temperate,
and more apt at listening than in talking.  I weighed matters well
before I made up my mind upon them, but being made up, nothing
could turn me from that mind short of death itself, whether it were
set on good or evil, on folly or wisdom.  In those days also I had
little religion, since, partly because of my father's secret
teaching and partly through the workings of my own reason, I had
learned to doubt the doctrines of the Church as they used to be set
out.  Youth is prone to reason by large leaps as it were, and to
hold that all things are false because some are proved false; and
thus at times in those days I thought that there was no God,
because the priest said that the image of the Virgin at Bungay wept
and did other things which I knew that it did not do.  Now I know
well that there is a God, for my own story proves it to my heart.
In truth, what man can look back across a long life and say that
there is no God, when he can see the shadow of His hand lying deep
upon his tale of years?

On this sad day of which I write I knew that Lily, whom I loved,
would be walking alone beneath the great pollard oaks in the park
of Ditchingham Hall.  Here, in Grubswell as the spot is called,
grew, and indeed still grow, certain hawthorn trees that are the
earliest to blow of any in these parts, and when we had met at the
church door on the Sunday, Lily said that there would be bloom upon
them by the Wednesday, and on that afternoon she should go to cut
it.  It may well be that she spoke thus with design, for love will
breed cunning in the heart of the most guileless and truthful maid.
Moreover, I noticed that though she said it before her father and
the rest of us, yet she waited to speak till my brother Geoffrey
was out of hearing, for she did not wish to go maying with him, and
also that as she spoke she shot a glance of her grey eyes at me.
Then and there I vowed to myself that I also would be gathering
hawthorn bloom in this same place and on that Wednesday afternoon,
yes, even if I must play truant and leave all the sick of Bungay to
Nature's nursing.  Moreover, I was determined on one thing, that if
I could find Lily alone I would delay no longer, but tell her all
that was in my heart; no great secret indeed, for though no word of
love had ever passed between us as yet, each knew the other's
hidden thoughts.  Not that I was in the way to become affianced to
a maid, who had my path to cut in the world, but I feared that if I
delayed to make sure of her affection my brother would be before me
with her father, and Lily might yield to that to which she would
not yield if once we had plighted troth.

Now it chanced that on this afternoon I was hard put to it to
escape to my tryst, for my master, the physician, was ailing, and
sent me to visit the sick for him, carrying them their medicines.
At the last, however, between four and five o'clock, I fled, asking
no leave.  Taking the Norwich road I ran for a mile and more till I
had passed the Manor House and the church turn, and drew near to
Ditchingham Park.  Then I dropped my pace to a walk, for I did not
wish to come before Lily heated and disordered, but rather looking
my best, to which end I had put on my Sunday garments.  Now as I
went down the little hill in the road that runs past the park, I
saw a man on horseback who looked first at the bridle-path, that at
this spot turns off to the right, then back across the common lands
towards the Vineyard Hills and the Waveney, and then along the road
as though he did not know which way to turn.  I was quick to notice
things--though at this moment my mind was not at its swiftest,
being set on other matters, and chiefly as to how I should tell my
tale to Lily--and I saw at once that this man was not of our
country.

He was very tall and noble-looking, dressed in rich garments of
velvet adorned by a gold chain that hung about his neck, and as I
judged about forty years of age.  But it was his face which chiefly
caught my eye, for at that moment there was something terrible
about it.  It was long, thin, and deeply carved; the eyes were
large, and gleamed like gold in sunlight; the mouth was small and
well shaped, but it wore a devilish and cruel sneer; the forehead
lofty, indicating a man of mind, and marked with a slight scar.
For the rest the cavalier was dark and southern-looking, his
curling hair, like my own, was black, and he wore a peaked
chestnut-coloured beard.


By the time that I had finished these observations my feet had
brought me almost to the stranger's side, and for the first time he
caught sight of me.  Instantly his face changed, the sneer left it,
and it became kindly and pleasant looking.  Lifting his bonnet with
much courtesy he stammered something in broken English, of which
all that I could catch was the word Yarmouth; then perceiving that
I did not understand him, he cursed the English tongue and all
those who spoke it, aloud and in good Castilian.

'If the senor will graciously express his wish in Spanish,' I said,
speaking in that language, 'it may be in my power to help him.'

'What! you speak Spanish, young sir,' he said, starting, 'and yet
you are not a Spaniard, though by your face you well might be.
Caramba! but it is strange!' and he eyed me curiously.

'It may be strange, sir,' I answered, 'but I am in haste.  Be
pleased to ask your question and let me go.'

'Ah!' he said, 'perhaps I can guess the reason of your hurry.  I
saw a white robe down by the streamlet yonder,' and he nodded
towards the park.  'Take the advice of an older man, young sir, and
be careful.  Make what sport you will with such, but never believe
them and never marry them--lest you should live to desire to kill
them!'

Here I made as though I would pass on, but he spoke again.

'Pardon my words, they were well meant, and perhaps you may come to
learn their truth.  I will detain you no more.  Will you graciously
direct me on my road to Yarmouth, for I am not sure of it, having
ridden by another way, and your English country is so full of trees
that a man cannot see a mile?'

I walked a dozen paces down the bridle-path that joined the road at
this place, and pointed out the way that he should go, past
Ditchingham church.  As I did so I noticed that while I spoke the
stranger was watching my face keenly and, as it seemed to me, with
an inward fear which he strove to master and could not.  When I had
finished again he raised his bonnet and thanked me, saying,

'Will you be so gracious as to tell me your name, young Sir?'

'What is my name to you?' I answered roughly, for I disliked this
man.  'You have not told me yours.'

'No, indeed, I am travelling incognito.  Perhaps I also have met a
lady in these parts,' and he smiled strangely.  'I only wished to
know the name of one who had done me a courtesy, but who it seems
is not so courteous as I deemed.'  And he shook his horse's reins.

'I am not ashamed of my name,' I said.  'It has been an honest one
so far, and if you wish to know it, it is Thomas Wingfield.'

'I thought it,' he cried, and as he spoke his face grew like the
face of a fiend.  Then before I could find time even to wonder, he
had sprung from his horse and stood within three paces of me.

'A lucky day!  Now we will see what truth there is in prophecies,'
he said, drawing his silver-mounted sword.  'A name for a name;
Juan de Garcia gives you greeting, Thomas Wingfield.'

Now, strange as it may seem, it was at this moment only that there
flashed across my mind the thought of all that I had heard about
the Spanish stranger, the report of whose coming to Yarmouth had
stirred my father and mother so deeply.  At any other time I should
have remembered it soon enough, but on this day I was so set upon
my tryst with Lily and what I should say to her, that nothing else
could hold a place in my thoughts.

'This must be the man,' I said to myself, and then I said no more,
for he was on me, sword up.  I saw the keen point flash towards me,
and sprang to one side having a desire to fly, as, being unarmed
except for my stick, I might have done without shame.  But spring
as I would I could not avoid the thrust altogether.  It was aimed
at my heart and it pierced the sleeve of my left arm, passing
through the flesh--no more.  Yet at the pain of that cut all
thought of flight left me, and instead of it a cold anger filled
me, causing me to wish to kill this man who had attacked me thus
and unprovoked.  In my hand was my stout oaken staff which I had
cut myself on the banks of Hollow Hill, and if I would fight I must
make such play with this as I might.  It seems a poor weapon indeed
to match against a Toledo blade in the hands of one who could
handle it well, and yet there are virtues in a cudgel, for when a
man sees himself threatened with it, he is likely to forget that he
holds in his hand a more deadly weapon, and to take to the guarding
of his own head in place of running his adversary through the body.

And that was what chanced in this case, though how it came about
exactly I cannot tell.  The Spaniard was a fine swordsman, and had
I been armed as he was would doubtless have overmatched me, who at
that age had no practice in the art, which was almost unknown in
England.  But when he saw the big stick flourished over him he
forgot his own advantage, and raised his arm to ward away the blow.
Down it came upon the back of his hand, and lo! his sword fell from
it to the grass.  But I did not spare him because of that, for my
blood was up.  The next stroke took him on the lips, knocking out a
tooth and sending him backwards.  Then I caught him by the leg and
beat him most unmercifully, not upon the head indeed, for now that
I was victor I did not wish to kill one whom I thought a madman as
I would that I had done, but on every other part of him.

Indeed I thrashed him till my arms were weary and then I fell to
kicking him, and all the while he writhed like a wounded snake and
cursed horribly, though he never cried out or asked for mercy.  At
last I ceased and looked at him, and he was no pretty sight to see--
indeed, what with his cuts and bruises and the mire of the
roadway, it would have been hard to know him for the gallant
cavalier whom I had met not five minutes before.  But uglier than
all his hurts was the look in his wicked eyes as he lay there on
his back in the pathway and glared up at me.

'Now, friend Spaniard,' I said, 'you have learned a lesson; and
what is there to hinder me from treating you as you would have
dealt with me who had never harmed you?' and I took up his sword
and held it to his throat.

'Strike home, you accursed whelp!' he answered in a broken voice;
'it is better to die than to live to remember such shame as this.'

'No,' I said, 'I am no foreign murderer to kill a defenceless man.
You shall away to the justice to answer for yourself.  The hangman
has a rope for such as you.'

'Then you must drag me thither,' he groaned, and shut his eyes as
though with faintness, and doubtless he was somewhat faint.

Now as I pondered on what should be done with the villain, it
chanced that I looked up through a gap in the fence, and there,
among the Grubswell Oaks three hundred yards or more away, I caught
sight of the flutter of a white robe that I knew well, and it
seemed to me that the wearer of that robe was moving towards the
bridge of the 'watering' as though she were weary of waiting for
one who did not come.

Then I thought to myself that if I stayed to drag this man to the
village stocks or some other safe place, there would be an end of
meeting with my love that day, and I did not know when I might find
another chance.  Now I would not have missed that hour's talk with
Lily to bring a score of murderous-minded foreigners to their
deserts, and, moreover, this one had earned good payment for his
behaviour.  Surely thought I, he might wait a while till I had done
my love-making, and if he would not wait I could find a means to
make him do so.  Not twenty paces from us the horse stood cropping
the grass.  I went to him and undid his bridle rein, and with it
fastened the Spaniard to a small wayside tree as best I was able.

'Now, here you stay,' I said, 'till I am ready to fetch you;' and I
turned to go.

But as I went a great doubt took me, and once more I remembered my
mother's fear, and how my father had ridden in haste to Yarmouth on
business about a Spaniard.  Now to-day a Spaniard had wandered to
Ditchingham, and when he learned my name had fallen upon me madly
trying to kill me.  Was not this the man whom my mother feared, and
was it right that I should leave him thus that I might go maying
with my dear?  I knew in my breast that it was not right, but I was
so set upon my desire and so strongly did my heartstrings pull me
towards her whose white robe now fluttered on the slope of the Park
Hill, that I never heeded the warning.

Well had it been for me if I had done so, and well for some who
were yet unborn.  Then they had never known death, nor I the land
of exile, the taste of slavery, and the altar of sacrifice.



CHAPTER IV

THOMAS TELLS HIS LOVE


Having made the Spaniard as fast as I could, his arms being bound
to the tree behind him, and taking his sword with me, I began to
run hard after Lily and caught her not too soon, for in one more
minute she would have turned along the road that runs to the
watering and over the bridge by the Park Hill path to the Hall.

Hearing my footsteps, she faced about to greet me, or rather as
though to see who it was that followed her.  There she stood in the
evening light, a bough of hawthorn bloom in her hand, and my heart
beat yet more wildly at the sight of her.  Never had she seemed
fairer than as she stood thus in her white robe, a look of amaze
upon her face and in her grey eyes, that was half real half
feigned, and with the sunlight shifting on her auburn hair that
showed beneath her little bonnet.  Lily was no round-checked
country maid with few beauties save those of health and youth, but
a tall and shapely lady who had ripened early to her full grace and
sweetness, and so it came about that though we were almost of an
age, yet in her presence I felt always as though I were the
younger.  Thus in my love for her was mingled some touch of
reverence.

'Oh! it is you, Thomas,' she said, blushing as she spoke.  'I
thought you were not--I mean that I am going home as it grows late.
But say, why do you run so fast, and what has happened to you,
Thomas, that your arm is bloody and you carry a sword in your
hand?'

'I have no breath to speak yet,' I answered.  'Come back to the
hawthorns and I will tell you.'

'No, I must be wending homewards.  I have been among the trees for
more than an hour, and there is little bloom upon them.'

'I could not come before, Lily.  I was kept, and in a strange
manner.  Also I saw bloom as I ran.'

'Indeed, I never thought that you would come, Thomas,' she
answered, looking down, 'who have other things to do than to go out
maying like a girl.  But I wish to hear your story, if it is short,
and I will walk a little way with you.'

So we turned and walked side by side towards the great pollard
oaks, and by the time that we reached them, I had told her the tale
of the Spaniard, and how he strove to kill me, and how I had beaten
him with my staff.  Now Lily listened eagerly enough, and sighed
with fear when she learned how close I had been to death.

'But you are wounded, Thomas,' she broke in; 'see, the blood runs
fast from your arm.  Is the thrust deep?'

'I have not looked to see.  I have had no time to look.'

'Take off your coat, Thomas, that I may dress the wound.  Nay, I
will have it so.'

So I drew off the garment, not without pain, and rolled up the
shirt beneath, and there was the hurt, a clean thrust through the
fleshy part of the lower arm.  Lily washed it with water from the
brook, and bound it with her kerchief, murmuring words of pity all
the while.  To say truth, I would have suffered a worse harm
gladly, if only I could find her to tend it.  Indeed, her gentle
care broke down the fence of my doubts and gave me a courage that
otherwise might have failed me in her presence.  At first, indeed,
I could find no words, but as she bound my wound, I bent down and
kissed her ministering hand.  She flushed red as the evening sky,
the flood of crimson losing itself at last beneath her auburn hair,
but it burned deepest upon the white hand which I had kissed.

'Why did you do that, Thomas?' she said, in a low voice.

Then I spoke.  'I did it because I love you, Lily, and do not know
how to begin the telling of my love.  I love you, dear, and have
always loved as I always shall love you.'

'Are you so sure of that, Thomas?' she said, again.

'There is nothing else in the world of which I am so sure, Lily.
What I wish to be as sure of is that you love me as I love you.'

For a moment she stood quiet, her head sunk almost to her breast,
then she lifted it and her eyes shone as I had never seen them
shine before.

'Can you doubt it, Thomas?' she said.

And now I took her in my arms and kissed her on the lips, and the
memory of that kiss has gone with me through my long life, and is
with me yet, when, old and withered, I stand upon the borders of
the grave.  It was the greatest joy that has been given to me in
all my days.  Too soon, alas! it was done, that first pure kiss of
youthful love--and I spoke again somewhat aimlessly.

'It seems then that you do love me who love you so well.'

'If you doubted it before, can you doubt it NOW?' she answered very
softly.  'But listen, Thomas.  It is well that we should love each
other, for we were born to it, and have no help in the matter, even
if we wished to find it.  Still, though love be sweet and holy, it
is not all, for there is duty to be thought of, and what will my
father say to this, Thomas?'

'I do not know, Lily, and yet I can guess.  I am sure, sweet, that
he wishes you to take my brother Geoffrey, and leave me on one
side.'

'Then his wishes are not mine, Thomas.  Also, though duty be
strong, it is not strong enough to force a woman to a marriage for
which she has no liking.  Yet it may prove strong enough to keep a
woman from a marriage for which her heart pleads--perhaps, also, it
should have been strong enough to hold me back from the telling of
my love.'

'No, Lily, the love itself is much, and though it should bring no
fruit, still it is something to have won it for ever and a day.'

'You are very young to talk thus, Thomas.  I am also young, I know,
but we women ripen quicker.  Perhaps all this is but a boy's fancy,
to pass with boyhood.'

'It will never pass, Lily.  They say that our first loves are the
longest, and that which is sown in youth will flourish in our age.
Listen, Lily; I have my place to make in the world, and it may take
a time in the making, and I ask one promise of you, though perhaps
it is a selfish thing to seek.  I ask of you that you will be
faithful to me, and come fair weather or foul, will wed no other
man till you know me dead.'

'It is something to promise, Thomas, for with time come changes.
Still I am so sure of myself that I promise--nay I swear it.  Of
you I cannot be sure, but things are so with us women that we must
risk all upon a throw, and if we lose, good-bye to happiness.'

Then we talked on, and I cannot remember what we said, though these
words that I have written down remain in my mind, partly because of
their own weight, and in part because of all that came about in the
after years.

And at last I knew that I must go, though we were sad enough at
parting.  So I took her in my arms and kissed her so closely that
some blood from my wound ran down her white attire.  But as we
embraced I chanced to look up, and saw a sight that frightened me
enough.  For there, not five paces from us, stood Squire Bozard,
Lily's father, watching all, and his face wore no smile.

He had been riding by a bridle-path to the watering ford, and
seeing a couple trespassing beneath the oaks, dismounted from his
horse to hunt them away.  Not till he was quite near did he know
whom he came to hunt, and then he stood still in astonishment.
Lily and I drew slowly apart and looked at him.  He was a short
stout man, with a red face and stern grey eyes, that seemed to be
starting from his head with anger.  For a while he could not speak,
but when he began at length the words came fast enough.  All that
he said I forget, but the upshot of it was that he desired to know
what my business was with his daughter.  I waited till he was out
of breath, then answered him that Lily and I loved each other well,
and were plighting our troth.

'Is this so, daughter?' he asked.

'It is so, my father,' she answered boldly.

Then he broke out swearing.  'You light minx,' he said, 'you shall
be whipped and kept cool on bread and water in your chamber.  And
for you, my half-bred Spanish cockerel, know once and for all that
this maid is for your betters.  How dare you come wooing my
daughter, you empty pill-box, who have not two silver pennies to
rattle in your pouch!  Go win fortune and a name before you dare to
look up to such as she.'

'That is my desire, and I will do it, sir,' I answered.

'So, you apothecary's drudge, you will win name and place, will
you!  Well, long before that deed is done the maid shall be safely
wedded to one who has them and who is not unknown to you.
Daughter, say now that you have finished with him.'

'I cannot say that, father,' she replied, plucking at her robe.
'If it is not your will that I should marry Thomas here, my duty is
plain and I may not wed him.  But I am my own and no duty can make
me marry where I will not.  While Thomas lives I am sworn to him
and to no other man.'

'At the least you have courage, hussey,' said her father.  'But
listen now, either you will marry where and when I wish, or tramp
it for your bread.  Ungrateful girl, did I breed you to flaunt me
to my face?  Now for you, pill-box.  I will teach you to come
kissing honest men's daughters without their leave,' and with a
curse he rushed at me, stick aloft, to thrash me.

Then for the second time that day my quick blood boiled in me, and
snatching up the Spaniard's sword that lay upon the grass beside
me, I held it at the point, for the game was changed, and I who had
fought with cudgel against sword, must now fight with sword against
cudgel.  And had it not been that Lily with a quick cry of fear
struck my arm from beneath, causing the point of the sword to pass
over his shoulder, I believe truly that I should then and there
have pierced her father through, and ended my days early with a
noose about my neck.

'Are you mad?' she cried.  'And do you think to win me by slaying
my father?  Throw down that sword, Thomas.'

'As for winning you, it seems that there is small chance of it;' I
answered hotly, 'but I tell you this, not for the sake of all the
maids upon the earth will I stand to be beaten with a stick like a
scullion.'

'And there I do not blame you, lad,' said her father, more kindly.
'I see that you also have courage which may serve you in good
stead, and it was unworthy of me to call you "pill-box" in my
anger.  Still, as I have said, the girl is not for you, so be gone
and forget her as best you may, and if you value your life, never
let me find you two kissing again.  And know that to-morrow I will
have a word with your father on this matter.'

'I will go since I must go,' I answered, 'but, sir, I still hope to
live to call your daughter wife.  Lily, farewell till these storms
are overpast.'

'Farewell, Thomas,' she said weeping.  'Forget me not and I will
never forget my oath to you.'

Then taking Lily by the arm her father led her away.

I also went away--sad, but not altogether ill-pleased.  For now I
knew that if I had won the father's anger, I had also won the
daughter's unalterable love, and love lasts longer than wrath, and
here or hereafter will win its way at length.  When I had gone a
little distance I remembered the Spaniard, who had been clean
forgotten by me in all this love and war, and I turned to seek him
and drag him to the stocks, the which I should have done with joy,
and been glad to find some one on whom to wreak my wrongs.  But
when I came to the spot where I had left him, I found that fate had
befriended him by the hand of a fool, for there was no Spaniard but
only the village idiot, Billy Minns by name, who stood staring
first at the tree to which the foreigner had been made fast, and
then at a piece of silver in his hand.

'Where is the man who was tied here, Billy?' I asked.

'I know not, Master Thomas,' he answered in his Norfolk talk which
I will not set down.  'Half-way to wheresoever he was going I
should say, measured by the pace at which he left when once I had
set him upon his horse.'

'You set him on his horse, fool?  How long was that ago?'

'How long!  Well, it might be one hour, and it might be two.  I'm
no reckoner of time, that keeps its own score like an innkeeper,
without my help.  Lawks! how he did gallop off, working those long
spurs he wore right into the ribs of the horse.  And little wonder,
poor man, and he daft, not being able to speak, but only to bleat
sheeplike, and fallen upon by robbers on the king's roads, and in
broad daylight.  But Billy cut him loose and caught his horse and
set him on it, and got this piece for his good charity.  Lawks! but
he was glad to be gone.  How he did gallop!'

'Now you are a bigger fool even than I thought you, Billy Minns,' I
said in anger.  'That man would have murdered me, I overcame him
and made him fast, and you have let him go.'

'He would have murdered you, Master, and you made him fast!  Then
why did you not stop to keep him till I came along, and we would
have haled him to the stocks?  That would have been sport and all.
You call me fool--but if you found a man covered with blood and
hurts tied to a tree, and he daft and not able to speak, had you
not cut him loose?  Well, he's gone, and this alone is left of
him,' and he spun the piece into the air.

Now, seeing that there was reason in Billy's talk, for the fault
was mine, I turned away without more words, not straight homewards,
for I wished to think alone awhile on all that had come about
between me and Lily and her father, but down the way which runs
across the lane to the crest of the Vineyard Hills.  These hills
are clothed with underwood, in which large oaks grow to within some
two hundred yards of this house where I write, and this underwood
is pierced by paths that my mother laid out, for she loved to walk
here.  One of these paths runs along the bottom of the hill by the
edge of the pleasant river Waveney, and the other a hundred feet or
more above and near the crest of the slope, or to speak more
plainly, there is but one path shaped like the letter O, placed
thus [symbol of O laying on its side omitted], the curved ends of
the letter marking how the path turns upon the hill-side.

Now I struck the path at the end that is furthest from this house,
and followed that half of it which runs down by the river bank,
having the water on one side of it and the brushwood upon the
other.  Along this lower path I wandered, my eyes fixed upon the
ground, thinking deeply as I went, now of the joy of Lily's love,
and now of the sorrow of our parting and of her father's wrath.  As
I went, thus wrapped in meditation, I saw something white lying
upon the grass, and pushed it aside with the point of the
Spaniard's sword, not heeding it.  Still, its shape and fashioning
remained in my mind, and when I had left it some three hundred
paces behind me, and was drawing near to the house, the sight of it
came back to me as it lay soft and white upon the grass, and I knew
that it was familiar to my eyes.  From the thing, whatever it might
be, my mind passed to the Spaniard's sword with which I had tossed
it aside, and from the sword to the man himself.  What had been his
business in this parish?--an ill one surely--and why had he looked
as though he feared me and fallen upon me when he learned my name?

I stood still, looking downward, and my eyes fell upon footprints
stamped in the wet sand of the path.  One of them was my mother's.
I could have sworn to it among a thousand, for no other woman in
these parts had so delicate a foot.  Close to it, as though
following after, was another that at first I thought must also have
been made by a woman, it was so narrow.  But presently I saw that
this could scarcely be, because of its length, and moreover, that
the boot which left it was like none that I knew, being cut very
high at the instep and very pointed at the toe.  Then, of a sudden,
it came upon me that the Spanish stranger wore such boots, for I
had noted them while I talked with him, and that his feet were
following those of my mother, for they had trodden on her track,
and in some places, his alone had stamped their impress on the sand
blotting out her footprints.  Then, too, I knew what the white rag
was that I had thrown aside.  It was my mother's mantilla which I
knew, and yet did not know, because I always saw it set daintily
upon her head.  In a moment it had come home to me, and with the
knowledge a keen and sickening dread.  Why had this man followed my
mother, and why did her mantilla lie thus upon the ground?

I turned and sped like a deer back to where I had seen the lace.
All the way the footprints went before me.  Now I was there.  Yes,
the wrapping was hers, and it had been rent as though by a rude
hand; but where was she?

With a beating heart once more I bent to read the writing of the
footsteps.  Here they were mixed one with another, as though the
two had stood close together, moving now this way and now that in
struggle.  I looked up the path, but there were none.  Then I cast
round about like a beagle, first along the river side, then up the
bank.  Here they were again, and made by feet that flew and feet
that followed.  Up the bank they went fifty yards and more, now
lost where the turf was sound, now seen in sand or loam, till they
led to the bole of a big oak, and were once more mixed together,
for here the pursuer had come up with the pursued.

Despairingly as one who dreams, for now I guessed all and grew mad
with fear, I looked this way and that, till at length I found more
footsteps, those of the Spaniard.  These were deep marked, as of a
man who carried some heavy burden.  I followed them; first they
went down the hill towards the river, then turned aside to a spot
where the brushwood was thick.  In the deepest of the clump the
boughs, now bursting into leaf, were bent downwards as though to
hide something beneath.  I wrenched them aside, and there, gleaming
whitely in the gathering twilight was the dead face of my mother.



CHAPTER V

THOMAS SWEARS AN OATH


For a while I stood amazed with horror, staring down at the dead
face of my beloved mother.  Then I stooped to lift her and saw that
she had been stabbed, and through the breast, stabbed with the
sword which I carried in my hand.

Now I understood.  This was the work of that Spanish stranger whom
I had met as he hurried from the place of murder, who, because of
the wickedness of his heart or for some secret reason, had striven
to slay me also when he learned that I was my mother's son.  And I
had held this devil in my power, and that I might meet my May, I
had suffered him to escape my vengeance, who, had I known the
truth, would have dealt with him as the priests of Anahuac deal
with the victims of their gods.  I understood and shed tears of
pity, rage, and shame.  Then I turned and fled homewards like one
mad.

At the doorway I met my father and my brother Geoffrey riding up
from Bungay market, and there was that written on my face which
caused them to ask as with one voice:

'What evil thing has happened?'

Thrice I looked at my father before I could speak, for I feared
lest the blow should kill him.  But speak I must at last, though I
chose that it should be to Geoffrey my brother.  'Our mother lies
murdered yonder on the Vineyard Hill.  A Spanish man has done the
deed, Juan de Garcia by name.'  When my father heard these words
his face became livid as though with pain of the heart, his jaw
fell and a low moan issued from his open mouth.  Presently he
rested his hand upon the pommel of the saddle, and lifting his
ghastly face he said:

'Where is this Spaniard?  Have you killed him?'

'No, father.  He chanced upon me in Grubswell, and when he learned
my name he would have murdered me.  But I played quarter staff with
him and beat him to a pulp, taking his sword.'

'Ay, and then?'

'And then I let him go, knowing nothing of the deed he had already
wrought upon our mother.  Afterwards I will tell you all.'

'You let him go, son!  You let Juan de Garcia go!  Then, Thomas,
may the curse of God rest upon you till you find him and finish
that which you began to-day.'

'Spare to curse me, father, who am accursed by my own conscience.
Turn your horses rather and ride for Yarmouth, for there his ship
lies and thither he has gone with two hours' start.  Perhaps you
may still trap him before he sets sail.'

Without another word my father and brother wheeled their horses
round and departed at full gallop into the gloom of the gathering
night.

They rode so fiercely that, their horses being good, they came to
the gates of Yarmouth in little more than an hour and a half, and
that is fast riding.  But the bird was flown.  They tracked him to
the quay and found that he had shipped a while before in a boat
which was in waiting for him, and passed to his vessel that lay in
the Roads at anchor but with the most of her canvas set.  Instantly
she sailed, and now was lost in the night.  Then my father caused
notice to be given that he would pay reward of two hundred pieces
in gold to any ship that should capture the Spaniard, and two
started on the quest, but they did not find her that before morning
was far on her way across the sea.

So soon as they had galloped away I called together the grooms and
other serving men and told them what had chanced.  Then we went
with lanterns, for by now it was dark, and came to the thick
brushwood where lay the body of my mother.  I drew near the first,
for the men were afraid, and so indeed was I, though why I should
fear her lying dead who living had loved me tenderly, I do not
know.  Yet I know this, that when I came to the spot and saw two
eyes glowering at me and heard the crash of bushes as something
broke them, I could almost have fallen with fear, although I knew
well that it was but a fox or wandering hound haunting the place of
death.

Still I went on, calling the others to follow, and the end of it
was that we laid my mother's body upon a door which had been lifted
from its hinges, and bore her home for the last time.  And to me
that path is still a haunted place.  It is seventy years and more
since my mother died by the hand of Juan de Garcia her cousin, yet
old as I am and hardened to such sad scenes, I do not love to walk
that path alone at night.

Doubtless it was fancy which plays us strange tricks, still but a
year ago, having gone to set a springe for a woodcock, I chanced to
pass by yonder big oak upon a November eve, and I could have sworn
that I saw it all again.  I saw myself a lad, my wounded arm still
bound with Lily's kerchief, climbing slowly down the hill-side,
while behind me, groaning beneath their burden, were the forms of
the four serving men.  I heard the murmur of the river and the wind
that seventy years ago whispered in the reeds.  I saw the clouded
sky flawed here and there with blue, and the broken light that
gleamed on the white burden stretched upon the door, and the red
stain at its breast.  Ay, I heard myself talk as I went forward
with the lantern, bidding the men pass to the right of some steep
and rotten ground, and it was strange to me to listen to my own
voice as it had been in youth.  Well, well, it was but a dream, yet
such slaves are we to the fears of fancy, that because of the dead,
I, who am almost of their number, do not love to pass that path at
night.

At length we came home with our burden, and the women took it
weeping and set about their task with it.  And now I must not only
fight my own sorrows but must strive to soothe those of my sister
Mary, who as I feared would go mad with grief and horror.  At last
she sobbed herself into a torpor, and I went and questioned the men
who sat round the fire in the kitchen, for none sought their beds
that night.  From them I learned that an hour or more before I met
the Spaniard, a richly-dressed stranger had been seen walking along
the church-path, and that he had tied his horse among some gorse
and brambles on the top of the hill, where he stood as though in
doubt, till my mother came out, when he descended and followed her.
Also I learned that one of the men at work in the garden, which is
not more than three hundred paces from where the deed was done,
heard cries, but had taken no note of them, thinking forsooth that
it was but the play of some lover from Bungay and his lass chasing
each other through the woods, as to this hour it is their fashion
to do.  Truly it seemed to me that day as though this parish of
Ditchingham were the very nursery of fools, of whom I was the first
and biggest, and indeed this same thought has struck me since
concerning other matters.

At length the morning came, and with it my father and brother, who
returned from Yarmouth on hired horses, for their own were spent.
In the afternoon also news followed them that the ships which had
put to sea on the track of the Spaniard had been driven back by bad
weather, having seen nothing of him.

Now I told all the story of my dealings with the murderer of my
mother, keeping nothing back, and I must bear my father's bitter
anger because knowing that my mother was in dread of a Spaniard, I
had suffered my reason to be led astray by my desire to win speech
with my love.  Nor did I meet with any comfort from my brother
Geoffrey, who was fierce against me because he learned that I had
not pleaded in vain with the maid whom he desired for himself.  But
he said nothing of this reason.  Also that no drop might be lacking
in my cup, Squire Bozard, who came with many other neighbours to
view the corpse and offer sympathy with my father in his loss, told
him at the same time that he took it ill that I should woo his
daughter against his wish, and that if I continued in this course
it would strain their ancient friendship.  Thus I was hit on every
side; by sorrow for my mother whom I had loved tenderly, by longing
for my dear whom I might not see, by self-reproach because I had
let the Spaniard go when I held him fast, and by the anger of my
father and my brother.  Indeed those days were so dark and bitter,
for I was at the age when shame and sorrow sting their sharpest,
that I wished that I were dead beside my mother.  One comfort
reached me indeed, a message from Lily sent by a servant girl whom
she trusted, giving me her dear love and bidding me to be of good
cheer.

At length came the day of burial, and my mother, wrapped in fair
white robes, was laid to her rest in the chancel of the church at
Ditchingham, where my father has long been set beside her, hard by
the brass effigies that mark the burying place of Lily's
forefather, his wife, and many of their children.  This funeral was
the saddest of sights, for the bitterness of my father's grief
broke from him in sobs and my sister Mary swooned away in my arms.
Indeed there were few dry eyes in all that church, for my mother,
notwithstanding her foreign birth, was much loved because of her
gentle ways and the goodness of her heart.  But it came to an end,
and the noble Spanish lady and English wife was left to her long
sleep in the ancient church, where she shall rest on when her
tragic story and her very name are forgotten among men.  Indeed
this is likely to be soon, for I am the last of the Wingfields
alive in these parts, though my sister Mary has left descendants of
another name to whom my lands and fortune go except for certain
gifts to the poor of Bungay and of Ditchingham.

When it was over I went back home.  My father was sitting in the
front room well nigh beside himself with grief, and by him was my
brother.  Presently he began to assail me with bitter words because
I had let the murderer go when God gave him into my hand.

'You forget, father,' sneered Geoffrey, 'Thomas woos a maid, and it
was more to him to hold her in his arms than to keep his mother's
murderer safely.  But by this it seems he has killed two birds with
one stone, he has suffered the Spanish devil to escape when he knew
that our mother feared the coming of a Spaniard, and he has made
enmity between us and Squire Bozard, our good neighbour, who
strangely enough does not favour his wooing.'

'It is so,' said my father.  'Thomas, your mother's blood is on
your hands.'

I listened and could bear this goading injustice no longer.

'It is false,' I said, 'I say it even to my father.  The man had
killed my mother before I met him riding back to seek his ship at
Yarmouth and having lost his way; how then is her blood upon my
hands?  As for my wooing of Lily Bozard, that is my matter,
brother, and not yours, though perhaps you wish that it was yours
and not mine.  Why, father, did you not tell me what you feared of
this Spaniard?  I heard some loose talk only and gave little
thought to it, my mind being full of other things.  And now I will
say something.  You called down God's curse upon me, father, till
such time as I should find this murderer and finish what I had
begun.  So be it!  Let God's curse rest upon me till I do find him.
I am young, but I am quick and strong, and so soon as may be I
start for Spain to hunt him there till I shall run him down or know
him to be dead.  If you will give me money to help me on my quest,
so be it--if not I go without.  I swear before God and by my
mother's spirit that I will neither rest nor stay till with the
very sword that slew her, I have avenged her blood upon her
murderer or know him dead, and if I suffer myself to be led astray
from the purpose of this oath by aught that is, then may a worse
end than hers overtake me, may my soul be rejected in heaven, and
my name be shameful for ever upon the earth!'

Thus I swore in my rage and anguish, holding up my hand to heaven
that I called upon to witness the oath.

My father looked at me keenly.  'If that is your mind, son Thomas,
you shall not lack for money.  I would go myself, for blood must be
wiped out with blood, but I am too broken in my health; also I am
known in Spain and the Holy Office would claim me there.  Go, and
my blessing go with you.  It is right that you should go, for it is
through your folly that our enemy has escaped us.'

'Yes, it is right that he should go,' said Geoffrey.

'You say that because you wish to be rid of me, Geoffrey,' I
answered hotly, 'and you would be rid of me because you desire to
take my place at the side of a certain maid.  Follow your nature
and do as you will, but if you would outwit an absent man no good
shall come to you of it.'

'The girl is to him who can win her,' he said.

'The girl's heart is won already, Geoffrey.  You may buy her from
her father but you can never win her heart, and without a heart she
will be but a poor prize.'

'Peace! now is no time for such talk of love and maids,' said my
father, 'and listen.  This is the tale of the Spanish murderer and
your mother.  I have said nothing of it heretofore, but now it must
out.  When I was a lad it happened that I also went to Spain
because my father willed it.  I went to a monastery at Seville, but
I had no liking for monks and their ways, and I broke out from the
monastery.  For a year or more I made my living as I best might,
for I feared to return to England as a runaway.  Still I made a
living and not a bad one, now in this way and now in that, but
though I am ashamed to say it, mostly by gaming, at which I had
great luck.  One night I met this man Juan de Garcia--for in his
hate he gave you his true name when he would have stabbed you--at
play.  Even then he had an evil fame, though he was scarcely more
than a lad, but he was handsome in person, set high in birth, and
of a pleasing manner.  It chanced that he won of me at the dice,
and being in a good humour, he took me to visit at the house of his
aunt, his uncle's widow, a lady of Seville.  This aunt had one
child, a daughter, and that daughter was your mother.  Now your
mother, Luisa de Garcia, was affianced to her cousin Juan de
Garcia, not with her own will indeed, for the contract had been
signed when she was only eight years old.  Still it was binding,
more binding indeed than in this country, being a marriage in all
except in fact.  But those women who are thus bound for the most
part bear no wife's love in their hearts, and so it was with your
mother.  Indeed she both hated and feared her cousin Juan, though I
think that he loved her more than anything on earth, and by one
pretext and another she contrived to bring him to an agreement that
no marriage should be celebrated till she was full twenty years of
age.  But the colder she was to him, the more was he inflamed with
desire to win her and also her possessions, which were not small,
for like all Spaniards he was passionate, and like most gamesters
and men of evil life, much in want of money.

'Now to be brief, from the first moment that your mother and I set
eyes on each other we loved one another, and it was our one desire
to meet as often as might be; and in this we had no great
difficulty, for her mother also feared and hated Juan de Garcia,
her nephew by marriage, and would have seen her daughter clear of
him if possible.  The end of it was that I told my love, and a plot
was made between us that we should fly to England.  But all this
had not escaped the ears of Juan, who had spies in the household,
and was jealous and revengeful as only a Spaniard can be.  First he
tried to be rid of me by challenging me to a duel, but we were
parted before we could draw swords.  Then he hired bravos to murder
me as I walked the streets at night, but I wore a chain shirt
beneath my doublet and their daggers broke upon it, and in place of
being slain I slew one of them.   Twice baffled, de Garcia was not
defeated.  Fight and murder had failed, but another and surer means
remained.  I know not how, but he had won some clue to the history
of my life, and of how I had broken out from the monastery.  It was
left to him, therefore, to denounce me to the Holy Office as a
renegade and an infidel, and this he did one night; it was the
night before the day when we should have taken ship.  I was sitting
with your mother and her mother in their house at Seville, when six
cowled men entered and seized me without a word.  When I prayed to
know their purpose they gave no other answer than to hold a
crucifix before my eyes.  Then I knew why I was taken, and the
women ceased clinging to me and fell back sobbing.  Secretly and
silently I was hurried away to the dungeons of the Holy Office, but
of all that befell me there I will not stop to tell.

'Twice I was racked, once I was seared with hot irons, thrice I was
flogged with wire whips, and all this while I was fed on food such
as we should scarcely offer to a dog here in England.  At length my
offence of having escaped from a monastery and sundry blasphemies,
so-called, being proved against me, I was condemned to death by
fire.

'Then at last, when after a long year of torment and of horror, I
had abandoned hope and resigned myself to die, help came.  On the
eve of the day upon which I was to be consumed by flame, the chief
of my tormentors entered the dungeon where I lay on straw, and
embracing me bade me be of good cheer, for the church had taken
pity on my youth and given me my freedom.  At first I laughed
wildly, for I thought that this was but another torment, and not
till I was freed of my fetters, clothed in decent garments, and set
at midnight without the prison gates, would I believe that so good
a thing had befallen me through the hand of God.  I stood weak and
wondering outside the gates, not knowing where to fly, and as I
stood a woman glided up to me wrapped in a dark cloak, who
whispered "Come."  That woman was your mother.  She had learned of
my fate from the boasting of de Garcia and set herself to save me.
Thrice her plans failed, but at length through the help of some
cunning agent, gold won what was denied to justice and to mercy,
and my life and liberty were bought with a very great sum.

'That same night we were married and fled for Cadiz, your mother
and I, but not her mother, who was bedridden with a sickness.  For
my sake your beloved mother abandoned her people, what remained to
her of her fortune after paying the price of my life, and her
country, so strong is the love of woman.  All had been made ready,
for at Cadiz lay an English ship, the "Mary" of Bristol, in which
passage was taken for us.  But the "Mary" was delayed in port by a
contrary wind which blew so strongly that notwithstanding his
desire to save us, her master dared not take the sea.  Two days and
a night we lay in the harbour, fearing all things not without
cause, and yet most happy in each other's love.  Now those who had
charge of me in the dungeon had given out that I had escaped by the
help of my master the Devil, and I was searched for throughout the
country side.  De Garcia also, finding that his cousin and
affianced wife was missing, guessed that we two were not far apart.
It was his cunning, sharpened by jealousy and hate, that dogged us
down step by step till at length he found us.

'On the morning of the third day, the gale having abated, the
anchor of the "Mary" was got home and she swung out into the
tideway.  As she came round and while the seamen were making ready
to hoist the sails, a boat carrying some twenty soldiers, and
followed by two others, shot alongside and summoned the captain to
heave to, that his ship might be boarded and searched under warrant
from the Holy Office.  It chanced that I was on deck at the time,
and suddenly, as I prepared to hide myself below, a man, in whom I
knew de Garcia himself, stood up and called out that I was the
escaped heretic whom they sought.  Fearing lest his ship should be
boarded and he himself thrown into prison with the rest of his
crew, the captain would then have surrendered me.  But I, desperate
with fear, tore my clothes from my body and showed the cruel scars
that marked it.

"'You are Englishmen," I cried to the sailors, "and will you
deliver me to these foreign devils, who am of your blood?  Look at
their handiwork," and I pointed to the half-healed scars left by
the red-hot pincers; "if you give me up, you send me back to more
of this torment and to death by burning.  Pity my wife if you will
not pity me, or if you will pity neither, then lend me a sword that
by death I may save myself from torture."

'Then one of the seamen, a Southwold man who had known my father,
called out: "By God! I for one will stand by you, Thomas Wingfield.
If they want you and your sweet lady they must kill me first," and
seizing a bow from the rack he drew it out of its case and strung
it, and setting an arrow on the string he pointed it at the
Spaniards in the boat.

'Then the others broke into shouts of:

'"If you want any man from among us, come aboard and take him, you
torturing devils," and the like.

'Seeing where the heart of the crew lay, the captain found courage
in his turn.  He made no answer to the Spaniards, but bade half of
the men hoist the sails with all speed, and the rest make ready to
keep off the soldiers should they seek to board us.

'By now the other two boats had come up and fastened on to us with
their hooks.  One man climbed into the chains and thence to the
deck, and I knew him for a priest of the Holy Office, one of those
who had stood by while I was tormented.  Then I grew mad at the
thought of all that I had suffered, while that devil watched,
bidding them lay on for the love of God.  Snatching the bow from
the hand of the Southwold seaman, I drew the arrow to its head and
loosed.  It did not miss its mark, for like you, Thomas, I was
skilled with the bow, and he dived back into the sea with an
English yard shaft in his heart.

'After that they tried to board us no more, though they shot at us
with arrows, wounding one man.  The captain called to us to lay
down our bows and take cover behind the bulwarks, for by now the
sails began to draw.  Then de Garcia stood up in the boat and
cursed me and my wife.

'"I will find you yet," he screamed, with many Spanish oaths and
foul words.  "If I must wait for twenty years I will be avenged
upon you and all you love.  Be assured of this, Luisa de Garcia,
hide where you will, I shall find you, and when we meet, you shall
come with me for so long as I will keep you or that shall be the
hour of your death."

'Then we sailed away for England, and the boats fell astern.


'My sons, this is the story of my youth, and of how I came to wed
your mother whom I have buried to-day.  Juan de Garcia has kept his
word.'

'Yet it seems strange,' said my brother, 'that after all these
years he should have murdered her thus, whom you say he loved.
Surely even the evilest of men had shrunk from such a deed!'

'There is little that is strange about it,' answered my father.
'How can we know what words were spoken between them before he
stabbed her?  Doubtless he told of some of them when he cried to
Thomas that now they would see what truth there was in prophecies.
What did de Garcia swear years since?--that she should come with
him or he would kill her.  Your mother was still beautiful,
Geoffrey, and he may have given her choice between flight and
death.  Seek to know no more, son'--and suddenly my father hid his
face in his hands and broke into sobs that were dreadful to hear.

'Would that you had told us this tale before, father,' I said so
soon as I could speak.  'Then there would have lived a devil the
less in the world to-day, and I should have been spared a long
journey.'


Little did I know how long that journey would be!



CHAPTER VI

GOOD-BYE, SWEETHEART


Within twelve days of the burial of my mother and the telling of
the story of his marriage to her by my father, I was ready to start
upon my search.  As it chanced a vessel was about to sail from
Yarmouth to Cadiz.  She was named the 'Adventuress,' of one hundred
tons burden, and carried wool and other goods outwards, purposing
to return with a cargo of wine and yew staves for bows.  In this
vessel my father bought me a passage.  Moreover, he gave me fifty
pounds in gold, which was as much as I would risk upon my person,
and obtained letters from the Yarmouth firm of merchants to their
agents in Cadiz, in which they were advised to advance me such sums
as I might need up to a total of one hundred and fifty English
pounds, and further to assist me in any way that was possible.

Now the ship 'Adventuress' was to sail on the third day of June.
Already it was the first of that month, and that evening I must
ride to Yarmouth, whither my baggage had gone already.  Except one
my farewells were made, and yet that was the one I most wished to
make.  Since the day when we had sworn our troth I had gained no
sight of Lily except once at my mother's burial, and then we had
not spoken.  Now it seemed that I must go without any parting word,
for her father had sent me notice that if I came near the Hall his
serving men had orders to thrust me from the door, and this was a
shame that I would not risk.  Yet it was hard that I must go upon
so long a journey, whence it well might chance I should not return,
and bid her no goodbye.  In my grief and perplexity I spoke to my
father, telling him how the matter stood and asking his help.

'I go hence,' I said, 'to avenge our common loss, and if need be to
give my life for the honour of our name.  Aid me then in this.'

'My neighbour Bozard means his daughter for your brother Geoffrey,
and not for you, Thomas,' he answered; 'and a man may do what he
wills with his own.  Still I will help you if I can, at the least
he cannot drive me from his door.  Bid them bring horses, and we
will ride to the Hall.'

Within the half of an hour we were there, and my father asked for
speech with its master.  The serving man looked at me askance,
remembering his orders, still he ushered us into the justice room
where the Squire sat drinking ale.

'Good morrow to you, neighbour,' said the Squire; 'you are welcome
here, but you bring one with you who is not welcome, though he be
your son.'

'I bring him for the last time, friend Bozard.  Listen to his
request, then grant it or refuse it as you will; but if you refuse
it, it will not bind us closer.  The lad rides to-night to take
ship for Spain to seek that man who murdered his mother.  He goes
of his own free will because after the doing of the deed it was he
who unwittingly suffered the murderer to escape, and it is well
that he should go.'

'He is a young hound to run such a quarry to earth, and in a
strange country,' said the Squire.  'Still I like his spirit and
wish him well.  What would he of me?'

'Leave to bid farewell to your daughter.  I know that his suit does
not please you and cannot wonder at it, and for my own part I think
it too early for him to set his fancy in the way of marriage.  But
if he would see the maid it can do no harm, for such harm as there
is has been done already.  Now for your answer.'

Squire Bozard thought a while, then said:

'The lad is a brave lad though he shall be no son-in-law of mine.
He is going far, and mayhap will return no more, and I do not wish
that he should think unkindly of me when I am dead.  Go without,
Thomas Wingfield, and stand under yonder beech--Lily shall join you
there and you may speak with her for the half of an hour--no more.
See to it that you keep within sight of the window.  Nay, no
thanks; go before I change my mind.'

So I went and waited under the beech with a beating heart, and
presently Lily glided up to me, a more welcome sight to my eyes
than any angel out of heaven.  And, indeed, I doubt if an angel
could have been more fair than she, or more good and gentle.

'Oh! Thomas,' she whispered, when I had greeted her, 'is this true
that you sail oversea to seek the Spaniard?'

'I sail to seek the Spaniard, and to find him and to kill him when
he is found.  It was to come to you, Lily, that I let him go, now I
must let you go to come to him.  Nay, do not weep, I have sworn to
do it, and were I to break my oath I should be dishonoured.'

'And because of this oath of yours I must be widowed, Thomas,
before I am a wife?  You go and I shall never see you more.'

'Who can say, my sweet?  My father went over seas and came back
safe, having passed through many perils.'

'Yes, he came back and--not alone.  You are young, Thomas, and in
far countries there are ladies great and fair, and how shall I hold
my own in your heart against them, I being so far away?'

'I swear to you, Lily--'

'Nay, Thomas, swear no oaths lest you should add to your sins by
breaking them.  Yet, love, forget me not, who shall forget you
never.  Perhaps--oh! it wrings my heart to say it--this is our last
meeting on the earth.  If so, then we must hope to meet in heaven.
At the least be sure of this, while I live I will be true to you,
and father or no father, I will die before I break my troth.  I am
young to speak so largely, but it shall be as I say.  Oh! this
parting is more cruel than death.  Would that we were asleep and
forgotten among men.  Yet it is best that you should go, for if you
stayed what could we be to each other while my father lives, and
may he live long!'

'Sleep and forgetfulness will come soon enough, Lily; none must
await them for very long.  Meanwhile we have our lives to live.
Let us pray that we may live them to each other.  I go to seek
fortune as well as foes, and I will win it for your sake that we
may marry.'

She shook her head sadly.  'It were too much happiness, Thomas.
Men and women may seldom wed their true loves, or if they do, it is
but to lose them.  At the least we love, and let us be thankful
that we have learned what love can be, for having loved here,
perchance at the worst we may love otherwhere when there are none
to say us nay.'

Then we talked on awhile, babbling broken words of love and hope
and sorrow, as young folks so placed are wont to do, till at length
Lily looked up with a sad sweet smile and said:

'It is time to go, sweetheart.  My father beckons me from the
lattice.  All is finished.'

'Let us go then,' I answered huskily, and drew her behind the trunk
of the old beech.  And there I caught her in my arms and kissed her
again and yet again, nor was she ashamed to kiss me back.

After this I remember little of what happened, except that as we
rode away I saw her beloved face, wan and wistful, watching me
departing out of her life.  For twenty years that sad and beautiful
face haunted me, and it haunts me yet athwart life and death.
Other women have loved me and I have known other partings, some of
them more terrible, but the memory of this woman as she was then,
and of her farewell look, overruns them all.  Whenever I gaze down
the past I see this picture framed in it and I know that it is one
which cannot fade.  Are there any sorrows like these sorrows of our
youth?  Can any bitterness equal the bitterness of such good-byes?
I know but one of which I was fated to taste in after years, and
that shall be told of in its place.  it is a common jest to mock at
early love, but if it be real, if it be something more than the
mere arising of the passions, early love is late love also; it is
love for ever, the best and worst event which can befall a man or
woman.  I say it who am old and who have done with everything, and
it is true.

One thing I have forgotten.  As we kissed and clung in our despair
behind the bole of the great beech, Lily drew a ring from her
finger and pressed it into my hand saying, 'Look on this each
morning when you wake, and think of me.  It had been her mother's,
and to-day it still is set upon my withered hand, gleaming in the
winter sunlight as I trace these words.  Through the long years of
wild adventure, through all the time of after peace, in love and
war, in the shine of the camp fire, in the glare of the sacrificial
flame, in the light of lonely stars illumining the lonely
wilderness, that ring has shone upon my hand, reminding me always
of her who gave it, and on this hand it shall go down into the
grave.  It is a plain circlet of thick gold, somewhat worn now, a
posy-ring, and on its inner surface is cut this quaint couplet:


     Heart to heart,
     Though far apart.


A fitting motto for us indeed, and one that has its meaning to this
hour.


That same day of our farewell I rode with my father to Yarmouth.
My brother Geoffrey did not come with us, but we parted with kindly
words, and of this I am glad, for we never saw each other again.
No more was said between us as to Lily Bozard and our wooing of
her, though I knew well enough that so soon as my back was turned
he would try to take my place at her side, as indeed happened.  I
forgive it to him; in truth I cannot blame him much, for what man
is there that would not have desired to wed Lily who knew her?
Once we were dear friends, Geoffrey and I, but when we ripened
towards manhood, our love of Lily came between us, and we grew more
and more apart.  It is a common case enough.  Well, as it chanced
he failed, so why should I think unkindly of him?  Let me rather
remember the affection of our childhood and forget the rest.  God
rest his soul.

Mary, my sister, who after Lily Bozard was now the fairest maiden
in the country side, wept much at my going.  There was but a year
between us, and we loved each other dearly, for no such shadow of
jealousy had fallen on our affection.  I comforted her as well as I
was able, and telling her all that had passed between me and Lily,
I prayed her to stand my friend and Lily's, should it ever be in
her power to do so.  This Mary promised to do readily enough, and
though she did not give the reason, I could see that she thought it
possible that she might be able to help us.  As I have said, Lily
had a brother, a young man of some promise, who at this time was
away at college, and he and my sister Mary had a strong fancy for
each other, that might or might not ripen into something closer.
So we kissed and bade farewell with tears.

And after that my father and I rode away.  But when we had passed
down Pirnhow Street, and mounted the little hill beyond Waingford
Mills to the left of Bungay town, I halted my horse, and looked
back upon the pleasant valley of the Waveney where I was born, and
my heart grew full to bursting.  Had I known all that must befall
me, before my eyes beheld that scene again, I think indeed that it
would have burst.  But God, who in his wisdom has laid many a
burden upon the backs of men, has saved them from this; for had we
foreknowledge of the future, I think that of our own will but few
of us would live to see it.  So I cast one long last look towards
the distant mass of oaks that marked the spot where Lily lived, and
rode on.

On the following day I embarked on board the 'Adventuress' and we
sailed.  Before I left, my father's heart softened much towards me,
for he remembered that I was my mother's best beloved, and feared
also lest we should meet no more.  So much did it soften indeed,
that at the last hour he changed his mind and wished to hold me
back from going.  But having put my hand to the plough and suffered
all the bitterness of farewell, I would not return to be mocked by
my brother and my neighbours.  'You speak too late, father,' I
said.  'You desired me to go to work this vengeance and stirred me
to it with many bitter words, and now I would go if I knew that I
must die within a week, for such oaths cannot be lightly broken,
and till mine is fulfilled the curse rests on me.'

'So be it, son,' he answered with a sigh.  'Your mother's cruel
death maddened me and I said what I may live to be sorry for,
though at the best I shall not live long, for my heart is broken.
Perhaps I should have remembered that vengeance is in the hand of
the Lord, who wreaks it at His own time and without our help.  Do
not think unkindly of me, my boy, if we should chance to meet no
more, for I love you, and it was but the deeper love that I bore to
your mother which made me deal harshly with you.'

'I know it, father, and bear no grudge.  But if you think that you
owe me anything, pay it by holding back my brother from working
wrong to me and Lily Bozard while I am absent.'

'I will do my best, son, though were it not that you and she have
grown so dear to each other, the match would have pleased me well.
But as I have said, I shall not be long here to watch your welfare
in this or any other matter, and when I am gone things must follow
their own fate.  Do not forget your God or your home wherever you
chance to wander, Thomas: keep yourself from brawling, beware of
women that are the snare of youth, and set a watch upon your tongue
and your temper which is not of the best.  Moreover, wherever you
may be do not speak ill of the religion of the land, or make a mock
of it by your way of life, lest you should learn how cruel men can
be when they think that it is pleasing to their gods, as I have
learnt already.'

I said that I would bear his counsel in mind, and indeed it saved
me from many a sorrow.  Then he embraced me and called on the
Almighty to take me in His care, and we parted.

I never saw him more, for though he was but middle-aged, within a
year of my going my father died suddenly of a distemper of the
heart in the nave of Ditchingham church, as he stood there, near
the rood screen, musing by my mother's grave one Sunday after mass,
and my brother took his lands and place.  God rest him also!  He
was a true-hearted man, but more wrapped up in his love for my
mother than it is well for any man to be who would look at life
largely and do right by all.  For such love, though natural to
women, is apt to turn to something that partakes of selfishness,
and to cause him who bears it to think all else of small account.
His children were nothing to my father when compared to my mother,
and he would have been content to lose them every one if thereby he
might have purchased back her life.  But after all it was a noble
infirmity, for he thought little of himself and had gone through
much to win her.


Of my voyage to Cadiz, to which port I had learned that de Garcia's
ship was bound, there is little to be told.  We met with contrary
winds in the Bay of Biscay and were driven into the harbour of
Lisbon, where we refitted.  But at last we came safely to Cadiz,
having been forty days at sea.



CHAPTER VII

ANDRES DE FONSECA


Now I shall dwell but briefly on all the adventures which befell me
during the year or so that I remained in Spain, for were I to set
out everything at length, this history would have no end, or at
least mine would find me before I came to it.

Many travellers have told of the glories of Seville, to which
ancient Moorish city I journeyed with all speed, sailing there up
the Guadalquiver, and I have to tell of lands from which no other
wanderer has returned to England, and must press on to them.  To be
short then; foreseeing that it might be necessary for me to stop
some time in Seville, and being desirous to escape notice and to be
at the smallest expense possible, I bethought me that it would be
well if I could find means of continuing my studies of medicine,
and to this end I obtained certain introductions from the firm of
merchants to whose care I had been recommended, addressed to
doctors of medicine in Seville.  These letters at my request were
made out not in my own name but in that of 'Diego d'Aila,' for I
did not wish it to be known that I was an Englishman.  Nor, indeed,
was this likely, except my speech should betray me, for, as I have
said, in appearance I was very Spanish, and the hindrance of the
language was one that lessened every day, since having already
learned it from my mother, and taking every opportunity to read and
speak it, within six months I could talk Castilian except for some
slight accent, like a native of the land.  Also I have a gift for
the acquiring of languages.


When I was come to Seville, and had placed my baggage in an inn,
not one of the most frequented, I set out to deliver a letter of
recommendation to a famous physician of the town whose name I have
long forgotten.  This physician had a fine house in the street of
Las Palmas, a great avenue planted with graceful trees, that has
other little streets running into it.  Down one of these I came
from my inn, a quiet narrow place having houses with patios or
courtyards on either side of it.  As I walked down this street I
noticed a man sitting in the shade on a stool in the doorway of his
patio.  He was small and withered, with keen black eyes and a
wonderful air of wisdom, and he watched me as I went by.  Now the
house of the famous physician whom I sought was so placed that the
man sitting at this doorway could command it with his eyes and take
note of all who went in and came out.  When I had found the house I
returned again into the quiet street and walked to and fro there
for a while, thinking of what tale I should tell to the physician,
and all the time the little man watched me with his keen eyes.  At
last I had made up my story and went to the house, only to find
that the physician was from home.  Having inquired when I might
find him I left, and once more took to the narrow street, walking
slowly till I came to where the little man sat.  As I passed him,
his broad hat with which he was fanning himself slipped to the
ground before my feet.  I stooped down, lifted it from the
pavement, and restored it to him.

'A thousand thanks, young sir,' he said in a full and gentle voice.
'You are courteous for a foreigner.'

'How do you know me to be a foreigner, senor?' I asked, surprised
out of my caution.

'If I had not guessed it before, I should know it now,' he
answered, smiling gravely.  'Your Castilian tells its own tale.'

I bowed, and was about to pass on, when he addressed me again.

'What is your hurry, young sir?  Step in and take a cup of wine
with me; it is good.'

I was about to say him nay, when it came into my mind that I had
nothing to do, and that perhaps I might learn something from this
gossip.

'The day is hot, senor, and I accept.'

He spoke no more, but rising, led me into a courtyard paved with
marble in the centre of which was a basin of water, having vines
trained around it.  Here were chairs and a little table placed in
the shade of the vines.  When he had closed the door of the patio
and we were seated, he rang a silver bell that stood upon the
table, and a girl, young and fair, appeared from the house, dressed
in a quaint Spanish dress.

'Bring wine,' said my host.

The wine was brought, white wine of Oporto such as I had never
tasted before.

'Your health, senor?'  And my host stopped, his glass in his hand,
and looked at me inquiringly.

'Diego d'Aila,' I answered.

'Humph,' he said.  'A Spanish name, or perhaps an imitation Spanish
name, for I do not know it, and I have a good head for names.'

'That is my name, to take or to leave, senor?'--And I looked at him
in turn.

'Andres de Fonseca,' he replied bowing, 'a physician of this city,
well known enough, especially among the fair.  Well, Senor Diego, I
take your name, for names are nothing, and at times it is
convenient to change them, which is nobody's business except their
owners'.  I see that you are a stranger in this city--no need to
look surprised, senor, one who is familiar with a town does not
gaze and stare and ask the path of passers-by, nor does a native of
Seville walk on the sunny side of the street in summer.  And now,
if you will not think me impertinent, I will ask you what can be
the business of so healthy a young man with my rival yonder?'  And
he nodded towards the house of the famous physician.

'A man's business, like his name, is his own affair, senor, I
answered, setting my host down in my mind as one of those who
disgrace our art by plying openly for patients that they may
capture their fees.  'Still, I will tell you.  I am also a
physician, though not yet fully qualified, and I seek a place where
I may help some doctor of repute in his daily practice, and thus
gain experience and my living with it.'

'Ah is it so?  Well, senor, then you will look in vain yonder,' and
again he nodded towards the physician's house.  'Such as he will
take no apprentice without the fee be large indeed; it is not the
custom of this city.'

'Then I must seek a livelihood elsewhere, or otherwise.'

'I did not say so.  Now, senor, let us see what you know of
medicine, and what is more important, of human nature, for of the
first none of us can ever know much, but he who knows the latter
will be a leader of men--or of women--who lead the men.'

And without more ado he put me many questions, each of them so
shrewd and going so directly to the heart of the matter in hand,
that I marvelled at his sagacity.  Some of these questions were
medical, dealing chiefly with the ailments of women, others were
general and dealt more with their characters.  At length he
finished.

'You will do, senor,' he said; 'you are a young man of parts and
promise, though, as was to be expected from one of your years, you
lack experience.  There is stuff in you, senor, and you have a
heart, which is a good thing, for the blunders of a man with a
heart often carry him further than the cunning of the cynic; also
you have a will and know how to direct it.'

I bowed, and did my best to hold back my satisfaction at his words
from showing in my face.

'Still,' he went on, 'all this would not cause me to submit to you
the offer that I am about to make, for many a prettier fellow than
yourself is after all unlucky, or a fool at the bottom, or bad
tempered and destined to the dogs, as for aught I know you may be
also.  But I take my chance of that because you suit me in another
way.  Perhaps you may scarcely know it yourself, but you have
beauty, senor, beauty of a very rare and singular type, which half
the ladies of Seville will praise when they come to know you.'

'I am much flattered,' I said, 'but might I ask what all these
compliments may mean?  To be brief, what is your offer?'

'To be brief then, it is this.  I am in need of an assistant who
must possess all the qualities that I see in you, but most of all
one which I can only guess you to possess--discretion.  That
assistant would not be ill-paid; this house would be at his
disposal, and he would have opportunities of learning the world
such as are given to few.  What say you?'

'I say this, senor, that I should wish to know more of the business
in which I am expected to assist.  Your offers sound too liberal,
and I fear that I must earn your bounty by the doing of work that
honest men might shrink from.'

'A fair argument, but, as it happens, not quite a correct one.
Listen: you have been told that yonder physician, to whose house
you went but now, and these'--here he repeated four or five names--
'are the greatest of their tribe in Seville.  It is not so.  I am
the greatest and the richest, and I do more business than any two
of them.  Do you know what my earnings have been this day alone?  I
will tell you; just over twenty-five gold pesos,* more than all the
rest of the profession have taken together, I will wager.  You want
to know how I earn so much; you want to know also, why, if I have
earned so much, I am not content to rest from my labours.  Good, I
will tell you.  I earn it by ministering to the vanities of women
and sheltering them from the results of their own folly.  Has a
lady a sore heart, she comes to me for comfort and advice.  Has she
pimples on her face, she flies to me to cure them.  Has she a
secret love affair, it is I who hide her indiscretion; I consult
the future for her, I help her to atone the past, I doctor her for
imaginary ailments, and often enough I cure her of real ones.  Half
the secrets of Seville are in my hands; did I choose to speak I
could set a score of noble houses to broil and bloodshed.  But I do
not speak, I am paid to keep silent; and when I am not paid, still
I keep silent for my credit's sake.  Hundreds of women think me
their saviour, I know them for my dupes.  But mark you, I do not
push this game too far.  A love philtre--of coloured water--I may
give at a price, but not a poisoned rose.  These they must seek
elsewhere.  For the rest, in my way I am honest.  I take the world
as it comes, that is all, and, as women will be fools, I profit by
their folly and have grown rich upon it.


* About sixty-three pounds sterling.


'Yes, I have grown rich, and yet I cannot stop.  I love the money
that is power; but more than all, I love the way of life.  Talk of
romances and adventure!  What romance or adventure is half so
wonderful as those that come daily to my notice?  And I play a part
in every one of them, and none the less a leading part because I do
not shout and strut upon the boards.'

'If all this is so, why do you seek the help of an unknown lad, a
stranger of whom you know nothing?' I asked bluntly.

'Truly, you lack experience,' the old man answered with a laugh.
'Do you then suppose that I should choose one who was NOT a
stranger--one who might have ties within this city with which I was
unacquainted.  And as for knowing nothing of you, young man, do you
think that I have followed this strange trade of mine for forty
years without learning to judge at sight?  Perhaps I know you
better than you know yourself.  By the way, the fact that you are
deeply enamoured of that maid whom you have left in England is a
recommendation to me, for whatever follies you may commit, you will
scarcely embarrass me and yourself by suffering your affections to
be seriously entangled.  Ah! have I astonished you?'

'How do you know?' I began--then ceased.

'How do I know?  Why, easily enough.  Those boots you wear were
made in England.  I have seen many such when I travelled there;
your accent also though faint is English, and twice you have spoken
English words when your Castilian failed you.  Then for the maid,
is not that a betrothal ring upon your hand?  And when I spoke to
you of the ladies of this country, my talk did not interest you
overmuch as at your age it had done were you heart-whole.  Surely
also the lady is fair and tall?  Ah! I thought so.  I have noticed
that men and women love their opposite in colour, no invariable
rule indeed, but good for a guess.'

'You are very clever, senor.'

'No, not clever, but trained, as you will be when you have been a
year in my hands, though perchance you do not intend to stop so
long in Seville.  Perhaps you came here with an object, and wish to
pass the time profitably till it is fulfilled.  A good guess again,
I think.  Well, so be it, I will risk that; object and attainment
are often far apart.  Do you take my offer?'

'I incline to do so.'

'Then you will take it.  Now I have something more to say before we
come to terms.  I do not want you to play the part of an
apothecary's drudge.  You will figure before the world as my
nephew, come from abroad to learn my trade.  You will help me in it
indeed, but that is not all your duty.  Your part will be to mix in
the life of Seville, and to watch those whom I bid you watch, to
drop a word here and a hint there, and in a hundred ways that I
shall show you to draw grist to my mill--and to your own.  You must
be brilliant and witty, or sad and learned, as I wish; you must
make the most of your person and your talents, for these go far
with my customers.  To the hidalgo you must talk of arms, to the
lady, of love; but you must never commit yourself beyond
redemption.  And above all, young man'--and here his manner changed
and his face grew stern and almost fierce--'you must never violate
my confidence or the confidence of my clients.  On this point I
will be quite open within you, and I pray you for your own sake to
believe what I say, however much you may mistrust the rest.  If you
break faith with me, YOU DIE.  You die, not by my hand, but you
die.  That is my price; take it or leave it.  Should you leave it
and go hence to tell what you have heard this day, even then
misfortune may overtake you suddenly.  Do you understand?'

'I understand.  For my own sake I will respect your confidence.'

'Young sir, I like you better than ever.  Had you said that you
would respect it because it was a confidence, I should have
mistrusted you, for doubtless you feel that secrets communicated so
readily have no claim to be held sacred.  Nor have they, but when
their violation involves the sad and accidental end of the
violator, it is another matter.  Well now, do you accept?'

'I accept.'

'Good.  Your baggage I suppose is at the inn.  I will send porters
to discharge your score and bring it here.  No need for you to go,
nephew, let us stop and drink another glass of wine; the sooner we
grow intimate the better, nephew.'


It was thus that first I became acquainted with Senor Andres de
Fonseca, my benefactor, the strangest man whom I have ever known.
Doubtless any person reading this history would think that I, the
narrator, was sowing a plentiful crop of troubles for myself in
having to deal with him, setting him down as a rogue of the
deepest, such as sometimes, for their own wicked purposes, decoy
young men to crime and ruin.  But it was not so, and this is the
strangest part of the strange story.  All that Andres de Fonseca
told me was true to the very letter.

He was a gentleman of great talent who had been rendered a little
mad by misfortunes in his early life.  As a physician I have never
met his master, if indeed he has one in these times, and as a man
versed in the world and more especially in the world of women, I
have known none to compare with him.  He had travelled far, and
seen much, and he forgot nothing.  In part he was a quack, but his
quackery always had a meaning in it.  He fleeced the foolish,
indeed, and even juggled with astronomy, making money out of their
superstition; but on the other hand he did many a kind act without
reward.  He would make a rich lady pay ten gold pesos for the
dyeing of her hair, but often he would nurse some poor girl through
her trouble and ask no charge; yes, and find her honest employment
after it.  He who knew all the secrets of Seville never made money
out of them by threat of exposure, as he said because it would not
pay to do so, but really because though he affected to be a selfish
knave, at bottom his heart was honest.

For my own part I found life with him both easy and happy, so far
as mine could be quite happy.  Soon I learned my role and played it
well.  It was given out that I was the nephew of the rich old
physician Fonseca, whom he was training to take his place; and
this, together with my own appearance and manners, ensured me a
welcome in the best houses of Seville.  Here I took that share of
our business which my master could not take, for now he never mixed
among the fashion of the city.  Money I was supplied with in
abundance so that I could ruffle it with the best, but soon it
became known that I looked to business as well as to pleasure.
Often and often during some gay ball or carnival, a lady would
glide up to me and ask beneath her breath if Don Andres de Fonseca
would consent to see her privately on a matter of some importance,
and I would fix an hour then and there.  Had it not been for me
such patients would have been lost to us, since, for the most part,
their timidity had kept them away.

In the same fashion when the festival was ended and I prepared to
wend homewards, now and again a gallant would slip his arm in mine
and ask my master's help in some affair of love or honour, or even
of the purse.  Then I would lead him straight to the old Moorish
house where Don Andres sat writing in his velvet robe like some
spider in his web, for the most of our business was done at night;
and straight-way the matter would be attended to, to my master's
profit and the satisfaction of all.  By degrees it became known
that though I was so young yet I had discretion, and that nothing
which went in at my ears came out of my lips; that I neither
brawled nor drank nor gambled to any length, and that though I was
friendly with many fair ladies, there were none who were entitled
to know my secrets.  Also it became known that I had some skill in
my art of healing, and it was said among the ladies of Seville that
there lived no man in that city so deft at clearing the skin of
blemishes or changing the colour of the hair as old Fonseca's
nephew, and as any one may know this reputation alone was worth a
fortune.  Thus it came about that I was more and more consulted on
my own account.  In short, things went so well with us that in the
first six months of my service I added by one third to the receipts
of my master's practice, large as they had been before, besides
lightening his labours not a little.

It was a strange life, and of the things that I saw and learned,
could they be written, I might make a tale indeed, but they have no
part in this history.  For it was as though the smiles and silence
with which men and women hide their thoughts were done away, and
their hearts spoke to us in the accents of truth.  Now some fair
young maid or wife would come to us with confessions of wickedness
that would be thought impossible, did not her story prove itself;
the secret murder perchance of a spouse, or a lover, or a rival;
now some aged dame who would win a husband in his teens, now some
wealthy low-born man or woman, who desired to buy an alliance with
one lacking money, but of noble blood.  Such I did not care to help
indeed, but to the love-sick or the love-deluded I listened with a
ready ear, for I had a fellow-feeling with them.  Indeed so deep
and earnest was my sympathy that more than once I found the unhappy
fair ready to transfer their affections to my unworthy self, and in
fact once things came about so that, had I willed it, I could have
married one of the loveliest and wealthiest noble ladies of
Seville.

But I would none of it, who thought of my English Lily by day and
night.



CHAPTER VIII

THE SECOND MEETING


It may be thought that while I was employed thus I had forgotten
the object of my coming to Spain, namely to avenge my mother's
murder on the person of Juan de Garcia.  But this was not so.  So
soon as I was settled in the house of Andres de Fonseca I set
myself to make inquiries as to de Garcia's whereabouts with all
possible diligence, but without result.

Indeed, when I came to consider the matter coolly it seemed that I
had but a slender chance of finding him in this city.  He had,
indeed, given it out in Yarmouth that he was bound for Seville, but
no ship bearing the same name as his had put in at Cadiz or sailed
up the Guadalquivir, nor was it likely, having committed murder in
England, that he would speak the truth as to his destination.
Still I searched on.  The house where my mother and grandmother had
lived was burned down, and as their mode of life had been retired,
after more than twenty years of change few even remembered their
existence.  Indeed I only discovered one, an old woman whom I found
living in extreme poverty, and who once had been my grandmother's
servant and knew my mother well, although she was not in the house
at the time of her flight to England.  From this woman I gathered
some information, though, needless to say, I did not tell her that
I was the grandson of her old mistress.

It seemed that after my mother fled to England with my father, de
Garcia persecuted my grandmother and his aunt with lawsuits and by
other means, till at last she was reduced to beggary, in which
condition the villain left her to die.  So poor was she indeed,
that she was buried in a public grave.  After that the old woman,
my informant, said she had heard that de Garcia had committed some
crime and been forced to flee the country.  What the crime was she
could not remember, but it had happened about fifteen years ago.

All this I learned when I had been about three months in Seville,
and though it was of interest it did not advance me in my search.

Some four or five nights afterwards, as I entered my employer's
house I met a young woman coming out of the doorway of the patio;
she was thickly veiled and my notice was drawn to her by her tall
and beautiful figure and because she was weeping so violently that
her body shook with her sobs.  I was already well accustomed to
such sights, for many of those who sought my master's counsel had
good cause to weep, and I passed her without remark.  But when I
was come into the room where he received his patients, I mentioned
that I had met such a person and asked if it was any one whom I
knew.

'Ah! nephew,' said Fonseca, who always called me thus by now, and
indeed began to treat me with as much affection as though I were
really of his blood, 'a sad case, but you do not know her and she
is no paying patient.  A poor girl of noble birth who had entered
religion and taken her vows, when a gallant appears, meets her
secretly in the convent garden, promises to marry her if she will
fly with him, indeed does go through some mummery of marriage with
her--so she says--and the rest of it.  Now he has deserted her and
she is in trouble, and what is more, should the priests catch her,
likely to learn what it feels like to die by inches in a convent
wall.  She came to me for counsel and brought some silver ornaments
as the fee.  Here they are.'

'You took them!'

'Yes, I took them--I always take a fee, but I gave her back their
weight in gold.  What is more, I told her where she might hide from
the priests till the hunt is done with.  What I did not like to
tell her is that her lover is the greatest villain who ever trod
the streets of Seville.  What was the good?  She will see little
more of him.  Hist! here comes the duchess--an astrological case
this.  Where are the horoscope and the wand, yes, and the crystal
ball?  There, shade the lamps, give me the book, and vanish.'

I obeyed, and presently met the great lady, a stout woman attended
by a duenna, gliding fearfully through the darkened archways to
learn the answer of the stars and pay many good pesos for it, and
the sight of her made me laugh so much that I forgot quickly about
the other lady and her woes.


And now I must tell how I met my cousin and my enemy de Garcia for
the second time.  Two days after my meeting with the veiled lady it
chanced that I was wandering towards midnight through a lonely part
of the old city little frequented by passers-by.  It was scarcely
safe to be thus alone in such a place and hour, but the business
with which I had been charged by my master was one that must be
carried out unattended.  Also I had no enemies whom I knew of, and
was armed with the very sword that I had taken from de Garcia in
the lane at Ditchingham, the sword that had slain my mother, and
which I bore in the hope that it might serve to avenge her.  In the
use of this weapon I had grown expert enough by now, for every
morning I took lessons in the art of fence.

My business being done I was walking slowly homeward, and as I went
I fell to thinking of the strangeness of my present life and of how
far it differed from my boyhood in the valley of the Waveney, and
of many other things.  And then I thought of Lily and wondered how
her days passed, and if my brother Geoffrey persecuted her to marry
him, and whether or no she would resist his importunities and her
father's.  And so as I walked musing I came to a water-gate that
opened on to the Guadalquivir, and leaning upon the coping of a low
wall I rested there idly to consider the beauty of the night.  In
truth it was a lovely, night, for across all these years I remember
it.  Let those who have seen it say if they know any prospect more
beautiful than the sight of the August moon shining on the broad
waters of the Guadalquivir and the clustering habitations of the
ancient city.

Now as I leaned upon the wall and looked, I saw a man pass up the
steps beside me and go on into the shadow of the street.  I took no
note of him till presently I heard a murmur of distant voices, and
turning my head I discovered that the man was in conversation with
a woman whom he had met at the head of the path that ran down to
the water-gate.  Doubtless it was a lovers' meeting, and since such
sights are of interest to all, and more especially to the young, I
watched the pair.  Soon I learned that there was little of
tenderness in this tryst, at least on the part of the gallant, who
drew continually backwards toward me as though he would seek the
boat by which doubtless he had come, and I marvelled at this, for
the moonlight shone upon the woman's face, and even at that
distance I could see that it was very fair.  The man's face I could
not see however, since his back was towards me for the most part,
moreover he wore a large sombrero that shaded it.  Now they came
nearer to me, the man always drawing backward and the woman always
following, till at length they were within earshot.  The woman was
pleading with the man.

'Surely you will not desert me,' she said, 'after marrying me and
all that you have sworn; you will not have the heart to desert me.
I abandoned everything for you.  I am in great danger.  I--' and
here her voice fell so that I could not catch her words.

Then he spoke.  'Fairest, now as always I adore you.  But we must
part awhile.  You owe me much, Isabella.  I have rescued you from
the grave, I have taught you what it is to live and love.
Doubtless with your advantages and charms, your great charms, you
will profit by the lesson.  Money I cannot give you, for I have
none to spare, but I have endowed you with experience that is more
valuable by far.  This is our farewell for awhile and I am
brokenhearted.  Yet


   "'Neath fairer skies
     Shine other eyes,"


and I--' and again he spoke so low that I could not catch his
words.

As he talked on, all my body began to tremble.  The scene was
moving indeed, but it was not that which stirred me so deeply, it
was the man's voice and bearing that reminded me--no, it could
scarcely be!

'Oh! you will not be so cruel,' said the lady, 'to leave me, your
wife, thus alone and in such sore trouble and danger.  Take me with
you, Juan, I beseech you!' and she caught him by the arm and clung
to him.

He shook her from him somewhat roughly, and as he did so his wide
hat fell to the ground so that the moonlight shone upon his face.
By Heaven! it was he--Juan de Garcia and no other!  I could not be
mistaken.  There was the deeply carved, cruel face, the high
forehead with the scar on it, the thin sneering mouth, the peaked
beard and curling hair.  Chance had given him into my hand, and I
would kill him or he should kill me.

I took three paces and stood before him, drawing my sword as I
came.

'What, my dove, have you a bully at hand?' he said stepping back
astonished.  'Your business, senor?  Are you here to champion
beauty in distress?'

'I am here, Juan de Garcia, to avenge a murdered woman.  Do you
remember a certain river bank away in England, where you chanced to
meet a lady you had known, and to leave her dead?  Or if you have
forgotten, perhaps at least you will remember this, which I carry
that it may kill you,' and I flashed the sword that had been his
before his eyes.

'Mother of God!  It is the English boy who--' and he stopped.

'It is Thomas Wingfield who beat and bound you, and who now
purposes to finish what he began yonder as he has sworn.  Draw, or,
Juan de Garcia, I will stab you where you stand.'

De Garcia heard this speech, that to-day seems to me to smack of
the theatre, though it was spoken in grimmest earnest, and his face
grew like the face of a trapped wolf.  Yet I saw that he had no
mind to fight, not because of cowardice, for to do him justice he
was no coward, but because of superstition.  He feared to fight
with me since, as I learned afterwards, he believed that he would
meet his end at my hand, and it was for this reason chiefly that he
strove to kill me when first we met.

'The duello has its laws, senor,' he said courteously.  'It is not
usual to fight thus unseconded and in the presence of a woman.  If
you believe that you have any grievance against me--though I know
not of what you rave, or the name by which you call me--I will meet
you where and when you will.'  And all the while he looked over his
shoulder seeking some way of escape.

'You will meet me now,' I answered.  'Draw or I strike!'

Then he drew, and we fell to it desperately enough, till the sparks
flew, indeed, and the rattle of steel upon steel rang down the
quiet street.  At first he had somewhat the better of me, for my
hate made me wild in my play, but soon I settled to the work and
grew cooler.  I meant to kill him--more, I knew that I should kill
him if none came between us.  He was still a better swordsman than
I, who, till I fought with him in the lane at Ditchingham, had
never even seen one of these Spanish rapiers, but I had the youth
and the right on my side, as also I had an eye like a hawk's and a
wrist of steel.

Slowly I pressed him back, and ever my play grew closer and better
and his became wilder.  Now I had touched him twice, once in the
face, and I held him with his back against the wall of the way that
led down to the water-gate, and it had come to this, that he
scarcely strove to thrust at me at all, but stood on his defence
waiting till I should tire.  Then, when victory was in my hand
disaster overtook me, for the woman, who had been watching
bewildered, saw that her faithless lover was in danger of death and
straightway seized me from behind, at the same time sending up
shriek after shriek for help.  I shook her from me quickly enough,
but not before de Garcia, seeing his advantage, had dealt me a
coward's thrust that took me in the right shoulder and half
crippled me, so that in my turn I must stand on my defence if I
would keep my life in me.  Meanwhile the shrieks had been heard,
and of a sudden the watch came running round the corner whistling
for help.  De Garcia saw them, and disengaging suddenly, turned and
ran for the water-gate, the lady also vanishing, whither I do not
know.

Now the watch was on me, and their leader came at me to seize me,
holding a lantern in his hand.  I struck it with the handle of the
sword, so that it fell upon the roadway, where it blazed up like a
bonfire.  Then I turned also and fled, for I did not wish to be
dragged before the magistrates of the city as a brawler, and in my
desire to escape I forgot that de Garcia was escaping also.  Away I
went and three of the watch after me, but they were stout and scant
of breath, and by the time that I had run three furlongs I
distanced them.  I halted to get my breath and remembered that I
had lost de Garcia and did not know when I should find him again.
At first I was minded to return and seek him, but reflection told
me that by now it would be useless, also that the end of it might
be that I should fall into the hands of the watch, who would know
me by my wound, which began to pain me.  So I went homeward cursing
my fortune, and the woman who had clasped me from behind just as I
was about to send the death-thrust home, and also my lack of skill
which had delayed that thrust so long.  Twice I might have made it
and twice I had waited, being overcautious and over-anxious to be
sure, and now I had lost my chance, and might bide many a day
before it came again.

How should I find him in this great city?  Doubtless, though I had
not thought of it, de Garcia passed under some feigned name as he
had done at Yarmouth.  It was bitter indeed to have been so near to
vengeance and to have missed it.

By now I was at home and bethought me that I should do well to go
to Fonseca, my master, and ask his help.  Hitherto I had said
nothing of this matter to him, for I have always loved to keep my
own counsel, and as yet I had not spoken of my past even to him.
Going to the room where be was accustomed to receive patients, I
found he had retired to rest, leaving orders that I was not to
awake him this night as he was weary.  So I bound up my hurt after
a fashion and sought my bed also, very ill-satisfied with my
fortune.

On the morrow I went to my master's chamber where he still lay
abed, having been seized by a sudden weakness that was the
beginning of the illness which ended in his death.  As I mixed a
draught for him he noticed that my shoulder was hurt and asked me
what had happened.  This gave me my opportunity, which I was not
slow to take.

'Have you patience to listen to a story?' I said, 'for I would seek
your help.'

'Ah!' he answered, 'it is the old case, the physician cannot heal
himself.  Speak on, nephew.'

Then I sat down by the bed and told him all, keeping nothing back.
I told him the history of my mother and my father's courtship, of
my own childhood, of the murder of my mother by de Garcia, and of
the oath that I had sworn to be avenged upon him.  Lastly I told
him of what had happened upon the previous night and how my enemy
had evaded me.  All the while that I was speaking Fonseca, wrapped
in a rich Moorish robe, sat up in the bed holding his knees beneath
his chin, and watching my face with his keen eyes.  But he spoke no
word and made no sign till I had finished the tale.

'You are strangely foolish, nephew,' he said at length.  'For the
most part youth fails through rashness, but you err by over-
caution.  By over-caution in your fence you lost your chance last
night, and so by over-caution in hiding this tale from me you have
lost a far greater opportunity.  What, have you not seen me give
counsel in many such matters, and have you ever known me to betray
the confidence even of the veriest stranger?  Why then did you fear
for yours?'

'I do not know,' I answered, 'but I thought that first I would
search for myself.'

'Pride goeth before a fall, nephew.  Now listen: had I known this
history a month ago, by now de Garcia had perished miserably, and
not by your hand, but by that of the law.  I have been acquainted
with the man from his childhood, and know enough to hang him twice
over did I choose to speak.  More, I knew your mother, boy, and now
I see that it was the likeness in your face to hers that haunted
me, for from the first it was familiar.  It was I also who bribed
the keepers of the Holy Office to let your father loose, though, as
it chanced, I never saw him, and arranged his flight.  Since then,
I have had de Garcia through my hands some four or five times, now
under this name and now under that.  Once even he came to me as a
client, but the villainy that he would have worked was too black
for me to touch.  This man is the wickedest whom I have known in
Seville, and that is saying much, also he is the cleverest and the
most revengeful.  He lives by vice for vice, and there are many
deaths upon his hands.  But he has never prospered in his evil-
doing, and to-day he is but an adventurer without a name, who lives
by blackmail, and by ruining women that he may rob them at his
leisure.  Give me those books from the strong box yonder, and I
will tell you of this de Garcia.'

I did as he bade me, bringing the heavy parchment volumes, each
bound in vellum and written in cipher.

'These are my records,' he said, 'though none can read them except
myself.  Now for the index.  Ah! here it is.  Give me volume three,
and open it at page two hundred and one.'

I obeyed, laying the book on the bed before him, and he began to
read the crabbed marks as easily as though they were good black-
letter.

'De Garcia--Juan.  Height, appearance, family, false names, and so
on.  This is it--history.  Now listen.'

Then came some two pages of closely written matter, expressed in
secret signs that Fonseca translated as he read.  It was brief
enough, but such a record as it contained I have never heard before
nor since.  Here, set out against this one man's name, was well
nigh every wickedness of which a human being could be capable,
carried through by him to gratify his appetites and revengeful
hate, and to provide himself with gold.

In that black list were two murders: one of a rival by the knife,
and one of a mistress by poison.  And there were other things even
worse, too shameful, indeed, to be written.

'Doubtless there is more that has not come beneath my notice,' said
Fonseca coolly, 'but these things I know for truth, and one of the
murders could be proved against him were he captured.  Stay, give
me ink, I must add to the record.'

And he wrote in his cipher: 'In May, 1517, the said de Garcia
sailed to England on a trading voyage, and there, in the parish of
Ditchingham, in the county of Norfolk, he murdered Luisa Wingfield,
spoken of above as Luisa de Garcia, his cousin, to whom he was once
betrothed.  In September of the same year, or previously, under
cover of a false marriage, he decoyed and deserted one Donna
Isabella of the noble family of Siguenza, a nun in a religious
house in this city.'

'What!' I exclaimed, 'is the girl who came to seek your help two
nights since the same that de Garcia deserted?'

'The very same, nephew.  It was she whom you heard pleading with
him last night.  Had I known two days ago what I know to-day, by
now this villain had been safe in prison.  But perhaps it is not
yet too late.  I am ill, but I will rise and see to it.  Leave it
to me, nephew.  Go, nurse yourself, and leave it to me; if anything
may be done I can do it.  Stay, bid a messenger be ready.  This
evening I shall know whatever there is to be known.'

That night Fonseca sent for me again.

'I have made inquiries,' he said.  'I have even warned the officers
of justice for the first time for many years, and they are hunting
de Garcia as bloodhounds hunt a slave.  But nothing can be heard of
him.  He has vanished and left no trace.  To-night I write to
Cadiz, for he may have fled there down the river.  One thing I have
discovered, however.  The Senora Isabella was caught by the watch,
and being recognised as having escaped from a convent, she was
handed over to the executories of the Holy Office, that her case
may be investigated, or in other words, should her fault be proved,
to death.'

'Can she be rescued?'

'Impossible.  Had she followed my counsel she would never have been
taken.'

'Can she be communicated with?'

'No.  Twenty years ago it might have been managed, now the Office
is stricter and purer.  Gold has no power there.  We shall never
see or hear of her again, unless, indeed, it is at the hour of her
death, when, should she choose to speak with me, the indulgence may
possibly be granted to her, though I doubt it.  But it is not
likely that she will wish to do so.  Should she succeed in hiding
her disgrace, she may escape; but it is not probable.  Do not look
so sad, nephew, religion must have its sacrifices.  Perchance it is
better for her to die thus than to live for many years dead in
life.  She can die but once.  May her blood lie heavy on de
Garcia's head!'

'Amen!' I answered.



CHAPTER IX

THOMAS BECOMES RICH


For many months we heard no more of de Garcia or of Isabella de
Siguenza.  Both had vanished leaving no sign, and we searched for
them in vain.  As for me I fell back into my former way of life of
assistant to Fonseca, posing before the world as his nephew.  But
it came about that from the night of my duel with the murderer, my
master's health declined steadily through the action of a wasting
disease of the liver which baffled all skill, so that within eight
months of that time he lay almost bedridden and at the point of
death.  His mind indeed remained quite clear, and on occasions he
would even receive those who came to consult him, reclining on a
chair and wrapped in his embroidered robe.  But the hand of death
lay on him, and he knew that it was so.  As the weeks went by he
grew more and more attached to me, till at length, had I been his
son, he could not have treated me with a greater affection, while
for my part I did what lay in my power to lessen his sufferings,
for he would let no other physician near him.

At length when he had grown very feeble he expressed a desire to
see a notary.  The man he named was sent for and remained closeted
with him for an hour or more, when he left for a while to return
with several of his clerks, who accompanied him to my master's
room, from which I was excluded.  Presently they all went away,
bearing some parchments with them.

That evening Fonseca sent for me.  I found him very weak, but
cheerful and full of talk.

'Come here, nephew,' he said, 'I have had a busy day.  I have been
busy all my life through, and it would not be well to grow idle at
the last.  Do you know what I have been doing this day?'

I shook my head.

'I will tell you.  I have been making my will--there is something
to leave; not so very much, but still something.'

'Do not talk of wills,' I said; 'I trust that you may live for many
years.'

He laughed.  'You must think badly of my case, nephew, when you
think that I can be deceived thus.  I am about to die as you know
well, and I do not fear death.  My life has been prosperous but not
happy, for it was blighted in its spring--no matter how.  The story
is an old one and not worth telling; moreover, whichever way it had
read, it had all been one now in the hour of death.  We must travel
our journey each of us; what does it matter if the road has been
good or bad when we have reached the goal?  For my part religion
neither comforts nor frightens me now at the last.  I will stand or
fall upon the record of my life.  I have done evil in it and I have
done good; the evil I have done because nature and temptation have
been too strong for me at times, the good also because my heart
prompted me to it.  Well, it is finished, and after all death
cannot be so terrible, seeing that every human being is born to
undergo it, together with all living things.  Whatever else is
false, I hold this to be true, that God exists and is more merciful
than those who preach Him would have us to believe.'  And he ceased
exhausted.

Often since then I have thought of his words, and I still think of
them now that my own hour is so near.  As will be seen Fonseca was
a fatalist, a belief which I do not altogether share, holding as I
do that within certain limits we are allowed to shape our own
characters and destinies.  But his last sayings I believe to be
true.  God is and is merciful, and death is not terrible either in
its act or in its consequence.

Presently Fonseca spoke again.  'Why do you lead me to talk of such
things?  They weary me and I have little time.  I was telling of my
will.  Nephew, listen.  Except certain sums that I have given to be
spent in charities--not in masses, mind you--I have left you all I
possess.'

'You have left it to ME!' I said astonished.

'Yes, nephew, to you.  Why not?  I have no relations living and I
have learned to love you, I who thought that I could never care
again for any man or woman or child.  I am grateful to you, who
have proved to me that my heart is not dead, take what I give you
as a mark of my gratitude.'

Now I began to stammer my thanks, but he stopped me.  'The sum that
you will inherit, nephew, amounts in all to about five thousand
gold pesos, or perhaps twelve thousand of your English pounds,
enough for a young man to begin life on, even with a wife.  Indeed
there in England it may well be held a great fortune, and I think
that your betrothed's father will make no more objection to you as
a son-in-law.  Also there is this house and all that it contains;
the library and the silver are valuable, and you will do well to
keep them.  All is left to you with the fullest formality, so that
no question can arise as to your right to take it; indeed,
foreseeing my end, I have of late called in my moneys, and for the
most part the gold lies in strong boxes in the secret cupboard in
the wall yonder that you know of.  It would have been more had I
known you some years ago, for then, thinking that I grew too rich
who was without an heir, I gave away as much as what remains in
acts of mercy and in providing refuge for the homeless and the
suffering.  Thomas Wingfield, for the most part this money has come
to me as the fruit of human folly and human wretchedness, frailty
and sin.  Use it for the purposes of wisdom and the advancing of
right and liberty.  May it prosper you, and remind you of me, your
old master, the Spanish quack, till at last you pass it on to your
children or the poor.  And now one word more.  If your conscience
will let you, abandon the pursuit of de Garcia.  Take your fortune
and go with it to England; wed that maid whom you desire, and
follow after happiness in whatever way seems best to you.  Who are
you that you should meet out vengeance on this knave de Garcia?
Let him be, and he will avenge himself upon himself.  Otherwise you
may undergo much toil and danger, and in the end lose love, and
life, and fortune at a blow.'

'But I have sworn to kill him,' I answered, 'and how can I break so
solemn an oath?  How could I sit at home in peace beneath the
burden of such shame?'

'I do not know; it is not for me to judge.  You must do as you
wish, but in the doing of it, it may happen that you will fall into
greater shames than this.  You have fought the man and he has
escaped you.  Let him go if you are wise.  Now bend down and kiss
me, and bid me farewell.  I do not desire that you should see me
die, and my death is near.  I cannot tell if we shall meet again
when in your turn you have lain as I lie now, or if we shape our
course for different stars.  If so, farewell for ever.'

Then I leant down and kissed him on the forehead, and as I did so I
wept, for not till this hour did I learn how truly I had come to
love him, so truly that it seemed to me as though my father lay
there dying.

'Weep not,' he said, 'for all our life is but a parting.  Once I
had a son like you, and ours was the bitterest of farewells.  Now I
go to seek for him again who could not come back to me, so weep not
because I die.  Good-bye, Thomas Wingfield.  May God prosper and
protect you!  Now go!'

So I went weeping, and that night, before the dawn, all was over
with Andres de Fonseca.  They told me that he was conscious to the
end and died murmuring the name of that son of whom he spoke in his
last words to me.

What was the history of this son, or of Fonseca himself, I never
learned, for like an Indian he hid his trail as step by step he
wandered down the path of life.  He never spoke of his past, and in
all the books and documents that he left behind him there is no
allusion to it.  Once, some years ago, I read through the cipher
volumes of records that I have spoken of, and of which he gave me
the key before he died.  They stand before me on the shelf as I
write, and in them are many histories of shame, sorrow, and evil,
of faith deluded and innocence betrayed, of the cruelty of priests,
of avarice triumphant over love, and of love triumphant over death--
enough, indeed, to furnish half a hundred of true romances.  But
among these chronicles of a generation now past and forgotten,
there is no mention of Fonseca's own name and no hint of his own
story.  It is lost for ever, and perhaps this is well.  So died my
benefactor and best friend.

When he was made ready for burial I went in to see him and he
looked calm and beautiful in his death sleep.  Then it was that she
who had arrayed him for the grave handed to me two portraits most
delicately painted on ivory and set in gold, which had been found
about his neck.  I have them yet.  One is of the head of a lady
with a sweet and wistful countenance, and the other the face of a
dead youth also beautiful, but very sad.  Doubtless they were
mother and son, but I know no more about them.

On the morrow I buried Andres de Fonseca, but with no pomp, for he
had said that he wished as little money as possible spent upon his
dead body, and returned to the house to meet the notaries.  Then
the seals were broken and the parchments read and I was put in full
possession of the dead man's wealth, and having deducted such sums
as were payable for dues, legacies, and fees, the notaries left me
bowing humbly, for was I not rich?  Yes, I was rich, wealth had
come to me without effort, and I had reason to desire it, yet this
was the saddest night that I had passed since I set foot in Spain,
for my mind was filled with doubts and sorrow, and moreover my
loneliness got a hold of me.  But sad as it might be, it was
destined to seem yet more sorrowful before the morning.  For as I
sat making pretence to eat, a servant came to me saying that a
woman waited in the outer room who had asked to see his late
master.  Guessing that this was some client who had not heard of
Fonseca's death I was about to order that she should be dismissed,
then bethought me that I might be of service to her or at the least
forget some of my own trouble in listening to hers.  So I bade him
bring her in.  Presently she came, a tall woman wrapped in a dark
cloak that hid her face.  I bowed and motioned to her to be seated,
when suddenly she started and spoke.

'I asked to see Don Andres de Fonseca,' she said in a low quick
voice.  'You are not he, senor.'

'Andres de Fonseca was buried to-day,' I answered.  'I was his
assistant in his business and am his heir.  If I can serve you in
any way I am at your disposal.'

'You are young--very young,' she murmured confusedly, 'and the
matter is terrible and urgent.  How can I trust you?'

'It is for you to judge, senora.'

She thought a while, then drew off her cloak, displaying the robes
of a nun.

'Listen,' she said.  'I must do many a penance for this night's
work, and very hardly have I won leave to come hither upon an
errand of mercy.  Now I cannot go back empty-handed, so I must
trust you.  But first swear by thine blessed Mother of God that you
will not betray me.'

'I give you my word,' I answered; 'if that is not enough, let us
end this talk.'

'Do not be angry with me,' she pleaded; 'I have not left my convent
walls for many years and I am distraught with grief.  I seek a
poison of the deadliest.  I will pay well for it.'

'I am not the tool of murderers,' I answered.  'For what purpose do
you wish the poison?'

'Oh! I must tell you--yet how can I?  In our convent there dies to-
night a woman young and fair, almost a girl indeed, who has broken
the vows she took.  She dies to-night with her babe--thus, oh God,
thus! by being built alive into the foundations of the house she
has disgraced.  It is the judgment that has been passed upon her,
judgment without forgiveness or reprieve.  I am the abbess of this
convent--ask not its name or mine--and I love this sinner as though
she were my daughter.  I have obtained this much of mercy for her
because of my faithful services to the church and by secret
influence, that when I give her the cup of water before the work is
done, I may mix poison with it and touch the lips of the babe with
poison, so that their end is swift.  I may do this and yet have no
sin upon my soul.  I have my pardon under seal.  Help me then to be
an innocent murderess, and to save this sinner from her last
agonies on earth.'

I cannot set down the feelings with which I listened to this tale
of horror, for words could not carry them.  I stood aghast seeking
an answer, and a dreadful thought entered my mind.

'Is this woman named Isabella de Siguenza?' I asked.

'That name was hers in the world,' she answered, 'though how you
know it I cannot guess.'

'We know many things in this house, mother.  Say now, can this
Isabella be saved by money or by interest?'

'It is impossible; her sentence has been confirmed by the Tribunal
of Mercy.  She must die and within two hours.  Will you not give
the poison?'

'I cannot give it unless I know its purpose, mother.  This may be a
barren tale, and the medicine might be used in such a fashion that
I should fall beneath the law.  At one price only can I give it,
and it is that I am there to see it used.'

She thought a while and answered: 'It may be done, for as it
chances the wording of my absolution will cover it.  But you must
come cowled as a priest, that those who carry out the sentence may
know nothing.  Still others will know and I warn you that should
you speak of the matter you yourself will meet with misfortune.
The Church avenges itself on those who betray its secrets, senor.'

'As one day its secrets will avenge themselves upon the Church,' I
answered bitterly.  'And now let me seek a fitting drug--one that
is swift, yet not too swift, lest your hounds should see themselves
baffled of the prey before all their devilry is done.  Here is
something that will do the work,' and I held up a phial that I drew
from a case of such medicines.  Come, veil yourself, mother, and
let us be gone upon this "errand of mercy."'

She obeyed, and presently we left the house and walked away swiftly
through the crowded streets till we came to the ancient part of the
city along the river's edge.  Here the woman led me to a wharf
where a boat was in waiting for her.  We entered it, and were rowed
for a mile or more up the stream till the boat halted at a landing-
place beneath a high wall.  Leaving it, we came to a door in the
wall on which my companion knocked thrice.  Presently a shutter in
the woodwork was drawn, and a white face peeped through the grating
and spoke.  My companion answered in a low voice, and after some
delay the door was opened, and I found myself in a large walled
garden planted with orange trees.  Then the abbess spoke to me.

'I have led you to our house,' she said.  'If you know where you
are, and what its name may be, for your own sake I pray you forget
it when you leave these doors.'

I made no answer, but looked round the dim and dewy garden.

Here it was doubtless that de Garcia had met that unfortunate who
must die this night.  A walk of a hundred paces brought us to
another door in the wall of a long low building of Moorish style.
Here the knocking and the questioning were repeated at more length.
Then the door was opened, and I found myself in a passage, ill
lighted, long and narrow, in the depths of which I could see the
figures of nuns flitting to and fro like bats in a tomb.  The
abbess walked down the passage till she came to a door on the right
which she opened.  It led into a cell, and here she left me in the
dark.  For ten minutes or more I stayed there, a prey to thoughts
that I had rather forget.  At length the door opened again, and she
came in, followed by a tall priest whose face I could not see, for
he was dressed in the white robe and hood of the Dominicans that
left nothing visible except his eyes.

'Greeting, my son,' he said, when he had scanned me for a while.
'The abbess mother has told me of your errand.  You are full young
for such a task.'

'Were I old I should not love it better, father.  You know the
case.  I am asked to provide a deadly drug for a certain merciful
purpose.  I have provided that drug, but I must be there to see
that it is put to proper use.'

'You are very cautious, my son.  The Church is no murderess.  This
woman must die because her sin is flagrant, and of late such
wickedness has become common.  Therefore, after much thought and
prayer, and many searchings to find a means of mercy, she is
condemned to death by those whose names are too high to be spoken.
I, alas, am here to see the sentence carried out with a certain
mitigation which has been allowed by the mercy of her chief judge.
It seems that your presence is needful to this act of love,
therefore I suffer it.  The mother abbess has warned you that evil
dogs the feet of those who reveal the secrets of the Church.  For
your own sake I pray you to lay that warning to heart.'

'I am no babbler, father, so the caution is not needed.  One word
more.  This visit should be well feed, the medicine is costly.'

'Fear not, physician,' the monk answered with a note of scorn in
his voice; 'name your sum, it shall be paid to you.'

'I ask no money, father.  Indeed I would pay much to be far away
to-night.  I ask only that I may be allowed to speak with this girl
before she dies.'

'What!' he said, starting, 'surely you are not that wicked man?  If
so, you are bold indeed to risk the sharing of her fate.'

'No, father, I am not that man.  I never saw Isabella de Siguenza
except once, and I have never spoken to her.  I am not the man who
tricked her but I know him; he is named Juan de Garcia.'

'Ah!' he said quickly, 'she would never tell his real name, even
under threat of torture.  Poor erring soul, she could be faithful
in her unfaith.  Of what would you speak to her?'

'I wish to ask her whither this man has gone.  He is my enemy, and
I would follow him as I have already followed him far.  He has done
worse by me and mine than by this poor girl even.  Grant my
request, father, that I may be able to work my vengeance on him,
and with mine the Church's also.'

'"Vengeance is mine," saith the Lord; "I will repay."  Yet it may
be, son, that the Lord will choose you as the instrument of his
wrath.  An opportunity shall be given you to speak with her.  Now
put on this dress'--and he handed me a white Dominican hood and
robe--'and follow me.'

'First,' I said, 'let me give this medicine to the abbess, for I
will have no hand in its administering.  Take it, mother, and when
the time comes, pour the contents of the phial into a cup of water.
Then, having touched the mouth and tongue of the babe with the
fluid, give it to the mother to drink and be sure that she does
drink it.  Before the bricks are built up about them both will
sleep sound, never to wake again.'

'I will do it,' murmured the abbess; 'having absolution I will be
bold, and do it for love and mercy's sake!'

'Your heart is too soft, sister.  Justice is mercy,' said the monk
with a sigh.  'Alas for the frailty of the flesh that wars against
the spirit!'

Then I clothed myself in the ghastly looking dress, and they took
lamps and motioned to me to follow them.



CHAPTER X

THE PASSING OF ISABELLA DE SIGUENZA


Silently we went down the long passage, and as we went I saw the
eyes of the dwellers in this living tomb watch us pass through the
gratings of their cell doors.  Little wonder that the woman about
to die had striven to escape from such a home back to the world of
life and love!  Yet for that crime she must perish.  Surely God
will remember the doings of such men as these priests, and the
nation that fosters them.  And, in deed, He does remember, for
where is the splendour of Spain to-day, and where are the cruel
rites she gloried in?  Here in England their fetters are broken for
ever, and in striving to bind them fast upon us free Englishmen she
is broken also--never to be whole again.

At the far end of the passage we found a stair down which we
passed.  At its foot was an iron-bound door that the monk unlocked
and locked again upon the further side.  Then came another passage
hollowed in the thickness of the wall, and a second door, and we
were in the place of death.

It was a vault low and damp, and the waters of the river washed its
outer wall, for I could hear their murmuring in the silence.
Perhaps the place may have measured ten paces in length by eight
broad.  For the rest its roof was supported by massive columns, and
on one side there was a second door that led to a prison cell.  At
the further end of this gloomy den, that was dimly lighted by
torches and lamps, two men with hooded heads, and draped in coarse
black gowns, were at work, silently mixing lime that sent up a hot
steam upon the stagnant air.  By their sides were squares of
dressed stone ranged neatly against the end of the vault, and
before them was a niche cut in the thickness of the wall itself,
shaped like a large coffin set upon its smaller end.  In front of
this niche was placed a massive chair of chestnut wood.  I noticed
also that two other such coffin-shaped niches had been cut in this
same wall, and filled in with similar blocks of whitish stone.  On
the face of each was a date graved in deep letters.  One had been
sealed up some thirty years before, and one hard upon a hundred.

These two men were the only occupants of the vault when we entered
it, but presently a sound of soft and solemn singing stole down the
second passage.  Then the door was opened, the mason monks ceased
labouring at the heap of lime, and the sound of singing grew louder
so that I could catch the refrain.  It was that of a Latin hymn for
the dying.  Next through the open door came the choir, eight veiled
nuns walking two by two, and ranging themselves on either side of
the vault they ceased their singing.  After them followed the
doomed woman, guarded by two more nuns, and last of all a priest
bearing a crucifix.  This man wore a black robe, and his thin half-
frenzied face was uncovered.  All these and other things I noticed
and remembered, yet at the time it seemed to me that I saw nothing
except the figure of the victim.  I knew her again, although I had
seen her but once in the moonlight.  She was changed indeed, her
lovely face was fuller and the great tormented eyes shone like
stars against its waxen pallor, relieved by the carmine of her lips
alone.  Still it was the same face that some eight months before I
had seen lifted in entreaty to her false lover.  Now her tall shape
was wrapped about with grave clothes over which her black hair
streamed, and in her arms she bore a sleeping babe that from time
to time she pressed convulsively to her breast.

On the threshold of her tomb Isabella de Siguenza paused and looked
round wildly as though for help, scanning each of the silent
watchers to find a friend among them.  Then her eye fell upon the
niche and the heap of smoking lime and the men who guarded it, and
she shuddered and would have fallen had not those who attended her
led her to the chair and placed her in it--a living corpse.

Now the dreadful rites began.  The Dominican father stood before
her and recited her offence, and the sentence that had been passed
upon her, which doomed her, 'to be left alone with God and the
child of your sin, that He may deal with you as He sees fit.'*  To
all of this she seemed to pay no heed, nor to the exhortation that
followed.  At length he ceased with a sigh, and turning to me said:

'Draw near to this sinner, brother, and speak with her before it is
too late.'


* Lest such cruelty should seem impossible and unprecedented, the
writer may mention that in the museum of the city of Mexico, he has
seen the desiccated body of a young woman, which was found immured
in the walls of a religious building.  With it is the body of an
infant.  Although the exact cause of her execution remains a matter
of conjecture, there can be no doubt as to the manner of her death,
for in addition to other evidences, the marks of the rope with
which her limbs were bound in life are still distinctly visible.
Such in those days were the mercies of religion!


Then he bade all present gather themselves at the far end of the
vault that our talk might not be overheard, and they did so without
wonder, thinking doubtless that I was a monk sent to confess the
doomed woman.

So I drew near with a beating heart, and bending over her I spoke
in her ear.

'Listen to me, Isabella de Siguenza!' I said; and as I uttered the
name she started wildly.  'Where is that de Garcia who deceived and
deserted you?'

'How have you learnt his true name?' she answered.  'Not even
torture would have wrung it from me as you know.'

'I am no monk and I know nothing.  I am that man who fought with de
Garcia on the night when you were taken, and who would have killed
him had you not seized me.'

'At the least I saved him, that is my comfort now.'

'Isabella de Siguenza,' I said, 'I am your friend, the best you
ever had and the last, as you shall learn presently.  Tell me where
this man is, for there is that between us which must be settled.'

'If you are my friend, weary me no more.  I do not know where he
is.  Months ago he went whither you will scarcely follow, to the
furthest Indies; but you will never find him there.'

'It may still be that I shall, and if it should so chance, say have
you any message for this man?'

'None--yes, this.  Tell him how we died, his child and his wife--
tell him that I did my best to hide his name from the priests lest
some like fate should befall him.'

'Is that all?'

'Yes.  No, it is not all.  Tell him that I passed away loving and
forgiving.'

'My time is short,' I said; 'awake and listen!' for having spoken
thus she seemed to be sinking into a lethargy.  'I was the
assistant of that Andres de Fonseca whose counsel you put aside to
your ruin, and I have given a certain drug to the abbess yonder.
When she offers you the cup of water, see that you drink and deep,
you and the child.  If so none shall ever die more happily.  Do you
understand?'

'Yes--yes,' she gasped, 'and may blessings rest upon you for the
gift.  Now I am no more afraid--for I have long desired to die--it
was the way I feared.'

'Then farewell, and God be with you, unhappy woman.'

'Farewell,' she answered softly, 'but call me not unhappy who am
about to die thus easily with that I love.'  And she glanced at the
sleeping babe.

Then I drew back and stood with bent head, speaking no word.  Now
the Dominican motioned to all to take the places where they had
stood before and asked her:

'Erring sister, have you aught to say before you are silent for
ever?'

'Yes,' she answered in a clear, sweet voice, that never even
quavered, so bold had she become since she learned that her death
would be swift and easy.  'Yes, I have this to say, that I go to my
end with a clean heart, for if I have sinned it is against custom
and not against God.  I broke the vows indeed, but I was forced to
take those vows, and, therefore, they did not bind.  I was a woman
born for light and love, and yet I was thrust into the darkness of
this cloister, there to wither dead in life.  And so I broke the
vows, and I am glad that I have broken them, though it has brought
me to this.  If I was deceived and my marriage is no marriage
before the law as they tell me now, I knew nothing of it, therefore
to me it is still valid and holy and on my soul there rests no
stain.  At the least I have lived, and for some few hours I have
been wife and mother, and it is as well to die swiftly in this cell
that your mercy has prepared, as more slowly in those above.  And
now for you--I tell you that your wickedness shall find you out,
you who dare to say to God's children--"Ye shall not love," and to
work murder on them because they will not listen.  It shall find
you out I say, and not only you but the Church you serve.  Both
priest and Church shall be broken together and shall be a scorn in
the mouths of men to come.'

'She is distraught,' said the Dominican as a sigh of fear and
wonder went round the vault, 'and blasphemes in her madness.
Forget her words.  Shrive her, brother, swiftly ere she adds to
them.'

Then the black-robed, keen-eyed priest came to her, and holding the
cross before her face, began to mutter I know not what.  But she
rose from the chair and thrust the crucifix aside.

'Peace!' she said, 'I will not be shriven by such as you.  I take
my sins to God and not to you--you who do murder in the name of
Christ.'

The fanatic heard and a fury took him.

'Then go unshriven down to hell, you--' and he named her by ill
names and struck her in the face with the ivory crucifix.

The Dominican bade him cease his revilings angrily enough, but
Isabella de Siguenza wiped her bruised brow and laughed aloud a
dreadful laugh to hear.

'Now I see that you are a coward also,' she said.  'Priest, this is
my last prayer, that you also may perish at the hands of fanatics,
and more terribly than I die to-night.'

Then they hurried her into the place prepared for her and she spoke
again:

'Give me to drink, for we thirst, my babe and I!'

Now I saw the abbess enter that passage whence the victim had been
led.  Presently she came back bearing a cup of water in her hand
and with it a loaf of bread, and I knew by her mien that my draught
was in the water.  But of what befell afterwards I cannot say
certainly, for I prayed the Dominican to open the door by which we
had entered the vault, and passing through it I stood dazed with
horror at some distance.  A while went by, I do not know how long,
till at length I saw the abbess standing before me, a lantern in
her hand, and she was sobbing bitterly.

'All is done,' she said.  'Nay, have no fear, the draught worked
well.  Before ever a stone was laid mother and child slept sound.
Alas for her soul who died unrepentant and unshriven!'

'Alas for the souls of all who have shared in this night's work,' I
answered.  'Now, mother, let me hence, and may we never meet
again!'

Then she led me back to the cell, where I tore off that accursed
monk's robe, and thence to the door in the garden wall and to the
boat which still waited on the river, and I rejoiced to feel the
sweet air upon my face as one rejoices who awakes from some foul
dream.  But I won little sleep that night, nor indeed for some days
to come.  For whenever I closed my eyes there rose before me the
vision of that beauteous woman as I saw her last by the murky
torchlight, wrapped in grave clothes and standing in the coffin-
shaped niche, proud and defiant to the end, her child clasped to
her with one arm while the other was outstretched to take the
draught of death.  Few have seen such a sight, for the Holy Office
and its helpers do not seek witnesses to their dark deeds, and none
would wish to see it twice.  If I have described it ill, it is not
that I have forgotten, but because even now, after the lapse of
some seventy years, I can scarcely bear to write of it or to set
out its horrors fully.  But of all that was wonderful about it
perhaps the most wonderful was that even to the last this
unfortunate lady should still have clung to her love for the
villain who, having deceived her by a false marriage, deserted her,
leaving her to such a doom.  To what end can so holy a gift as this
great love of hers have been bestowed on such a man?  None can say,
but so it was.  Yet now that I think of it, there is one thing even
stranger than her faithfulness.

It will be remembered that when the fanatic priest struck her she
prayed that he also might die at such hands and more terribly than
she must do.  So it came about.  In after years that very man,
Father Pedro by name, was sent to convert the heathen of Anahuac,
among whom, because of his cruelty, he was known as the 'Christian
Devil.'  But it chanced that venturing too far among a clan of the
Otomie before they were finally subdued, he fell into the hands of
some priests of the war god Huitzel, and by them was sacrificed
after their dreadful fashion.  I saw him as he went to his death,
and without telling that I had been present when it was uttered, I
called to his mind the dying curse of Isabella de Siguenza.  Then
for a moment his courage gave way, for seeing in me nothing but an
Indian chief, he believed that the devil had put the words into my
lips to torment him, causing me to speak of what I knew nothing.
But enough of this now; if it is necessary I will tell of it in its
proper place.  At least, whether it was by chance, or because she
had a gift of vision in her last hours, or that Providence was
avenged on him after this fashion, so it came about, and I do not
sorrow for it, though the death of this priest brought much
misfortune on me.

This then was the end of Isabella de Siguenza who was murdered by
priests because she had dared to break their rule.


So soon as I could clear my mind somewhat of all that I had seen
and heard in that dreadful vault, I began to consider the
circumstances in which I found myself.  In the first place I was
now a rich man, and if it pleased me to go back to Norfolk with my
wealth, as Fonseca had pointed out, my prospects were fair indeed.
But the oath that I had taken hung like lead about my neck.  I had
sworn to be avenged upon de Garcia, and I had prayed that the curse
of heaven might rest upon me till I was so avenged, but in England
living in peace and plenty I could scarcely come by vengeance.
Moreover, now I knew where he was, or at least in what portion of
the world I might seek him, and there where white men are few he
could not hide from me as in Spain.  This tidings I had gained from
the doomed lady, and I have told her story at some length because
it was through it and her that I came to journey to Hispaniola, as
it was because of the sacrifice of her tormentor, Father Pedro, by
the priests of the Otomie that I am here in England this day, since
had it not been for that sacrifice the Spaniards would never have
stormed the City of Pines, where, alive or dead, I should doubtless
have been to this hour; for thus do seeming accidents build up the
fates of men.  Had those words never passed Isabella's lips,
doubtless in time I should have wearied of a useless search and
sailed for home and happiness.  But having heard them it seemed to
me, to my undoing, that this would be to play the part of a sorry
coward.  Moreover, strange as it may look, now I felt as though I
had two wrongs to avenge, that of my mother and that of Isabella de
Siguenza.  Indeed none could have seen that young and lovely lady
die thus terribly and not desire to wreak her death on him who had
betrayed and deserted her.

So the end of it was that being of a stubborn temper, I determined
to do violence to my own desires and the dying counsels of my
benefactor, and to follow de Garcia to the ends of the earth and
there to kill him as I had sworn to do.

First, however, I inquired secretly and diligently as to the truth
of the statement that de Garcia had sailed for the Indies, and to
be brief, having the clue, I discovered that two days after the
date of the duel I had fought with him, a man answering to de
Garcia's description, though bearing a different name, had shipped
from Seville in a carak bound for the Canary Islands, which carak
was there to await the arrival of the fleet sailing for Hispaniola.
Indeed from various circumstances I had little doubt that the man
was none other than de Garcia himself, which, although I had not
thought of it before, was not strange, seeing that then as now the
Indies were the refuge of half the desperadoes and villains who
could no longer live in Spain.  Thither then I made up my mind to
follow him, consoling myself a little by the thought that at least
I should see new and wonderful countries, though how new and
wonderful they were I did not guess.


Now it remained for me to dispose of the wealth which had come to
me suddenly.  While I was wondering how I could place it in safety
till my return, I heard by chance that the 'Adventuress' of
Yarmouth, the same ship in which I had come to Spain a year before,
was again in the port of Cadiz, and I bethought me that the best
thing I could do with the gold and other articles of value would be
to ship them to England, there to be held in trust for me.  So
having despatched a message to my friend the captain of the
'Adventuress,' that I had freight of value for him, I made my
preparations to depart from Seville with such speed as I might, and
to this end I sold my benefactor's house, with many of the effects,
at a price much below their worth.  The most of the books and
plate, together with some other articles, I kept, and packing them
in cases, I caused them to be transported down the river to Cadiz,
to the care of those same agents to whom I had received letters
from the Yarmouth merchants.

This being done I followed thither myself, taking the bulk of my
fortune with me in gold, which I hid artfully in numerous packages.
And so it came to pass that after a stay of a year in Seville, I
turned my back on it for ever.  My sojourn there had been
fortunate, for I came to it poor and left it a rich man, to say
nothing of what I had gained in experience, which was much.  Yet I
was glad to be gone, for here Juan de Garcia had escaped me, here I
had lost my best friend and seen Isabella de Siguenza die.


I came to Cadiz in safety and without loss of any of my goods or
gold, and taking boat proceeded on board the 'Adventuress,' where I
found her captain, whose name was Bell, in good health and very
glad to see me.  What pleased me more, however, was that he had
three letters for me, one from my father, one from my sister Mary,
and one from my betrothed, Lily Bozard, the only letter I ever
received from her.  The contents of these writings were not
altogether pleasing however, for I learned from them that my father
was in broken health and almost bedridden, and indeed, though I did
not know it for many years after, he died in Ditchingham Church
upon the very day that I received his letter.  It was short and
sad, and in it he said that he sorrowed much that he had allowed me
to go upon my mission, since he should see me no more and could
only commend me to the care of the Almighty, and pray Him for my
safe return.  As for Lily's letter, which, hearing that the
'Adventuress' was to sail for Cadiz, she had found means to
despatch secretly, though it was not short it was sad also, and
told me that so soon as my back was turned on home, my brother
Geoffrey had asked her in marriage from her father, and that they
pushed the matter strongly, so that her life was made a misery to
her, for my brother waylaid her everywhere, and her father did not
cease to revile her as an obstinate jade who would fling away her
fortune for the sake of a penniless wanderer.

'But,' it went on, 'be assured, sweetheart, that unless they marry
me by force, as they have threatened to do, I will not budge from
my promise.  And, Thomas, should I be wedded thus against my will,
I shall not be a wife for long, for though I am strong I believe
that I shall die of shame and sorrow.  It is hard that I should be
thus tormented, and for one reason only, that you are not rich.
Still I have good hope that things may better themselves, for I see
that my brother Wilfred is much inclined towards your sister Mary,
and though he also urges this marriage on me to-day, she is a
friend to both of us and may be in the way to make terms with him
before she accepts his suit.'  Then the writing ended with many
tender words and prayers for my safe return.

As for the letter from my sister Mary it was to the same purpose.
As yet, she said, she could do nothing for me with Lily Bozard, for
my brother Geoffrey was mad with love for her, my father was too
ill to meddle in the matter, and Squire Bozard was fiercely set
upon the marriage because of the lands that were at stake.  Still,
she hinted, things might not always be so, as a time might come
when she could speak up for me and not in vain.

Now all this news gave me much cause for thought.  More indeed, it
awoke in me a longing for home which was so strong that it grew
almost to a sickness.  Her loving words and the perfume that hung
about the letter of my betrothed brought Lily back to me in such
sort that my heart ached with a desire to be with her.  Moreover I
knew that I should be welcome now, for my fortune was far greater
than my brother's would ever be, and parents do not show the door
to suitors who bring more than twelve thousand golden pieces in
their baggage.  Also I wished to see my father again before he
passed beyond my reach.  But still between me and my desire lay the
shadow of de Garcia and my oath.  I had brooded on vengeance for so
long that I felt even in the midst of this strong temptation that I
should have no pleasure in my life if I forsook my quest.  To be
happy I must first kill de Garcia.  Moreover I had come to believe
that did I so forsake it the curse which I had invoked would surely
fall upon me.

Meanwhile I did this.  Going to a notary I caused him to prepare a
deed which I translated into English.  By this deed I vested all my
fortune except two hundred pesos that I kept for my own use, in
three persons to hold the same on my behalf till I came to claim
it.  Those three persons were my old master, Doctor Grimstone of
Bungay, whom I knew for the honestest of men, my sister Mary
Wingfield, and my betrothed, Lily Bozard.  I directed them by this
deed, which for greater validity I signed upon the ship and caused
to be witnessed by Captain Bell and two other Englishmen, to deal
with the property according to their discretion, investing not less
than half of it in the purchase of lands and putting the rest out
to interest, which interest with the rent of the lands was to be
paid to the said Lily Bozard for her own use for so long as she
remained unmarried.

Also with the deed I executed a will by which I devised the most of
my property to Lily Bozard should she be unmarried at the date of
my death, and the residue to my sister Mary.  In the event of the
marriage or death of Lily, then the whole was to pass to Mary and
her heirs.

These two documents being signed and sealed, I delivered them,
together with all my treasure and other goods, into the keeping of
Captain Bell, charging him solemnly to hand them and my possessions
to Dr. Grimstone of Bungay, by whom he would be liberally rewarded.
This he promised to do, though not until he had urged me almost
with tears to accompany them myself.

With the gold and the deeds I sent several letters; to my father,
my sister, my brother, Dr. Grimstone, Squire Bozard, and lastly to
Lily herself.  In these letters I gave an account of my life and
fortunes since I had come to Spain, for I gathered that others
which I had sent had never reached England, and told them of my
resolution to follow de Garcia to the ends of the earth.

'Others,' I wrote to Lily, 'may think me a madman thus to postpone,
or perchance to lose, a happiness which I desire above anything on
earth, but you who understand my heart will not blame me, however
much you may grieve for my decision.  You will know that when once
I have set my mind upon an object, nothing except death itself can
turn me from it, and that in this matter I am bound by an oath
which my conscience will not suffer me to break.  I could never be
happy even at your side if I abandoned my search now.  First must
come the toil and then the rest, first the sorrow and then the joy.
Do not fear for me, I feel that I shall live to return again, and
if I do not return, at least I am able to provide for you in such
fashion that you need never be married against your will.  While de
Garcia lives I must follow him.'

To my brother Geoffrey I wrote very shortly, telling him what I
thought of his conduct in persecuting an undefended maiden and
striving to do wrong to an absent brother.  I have heard that my
letter pleased him very ill.


And here I may state that those letters and everything else that I
sent came safely to Yarmouth.  There the gold and goods were taken
to Lowestoft and put aboard a wherry, and when he had discharged
his ship, Captain Bell sailed up the Waveney with them till he
brought them to Bungay Staithe and thence to the house of Dr.
Grimstone in Nethergate Street.  Here were gathered my sister and
brother, for my father was then two months buried--and also Squire
Bozard and his son and daughter, for Captain Bell had advised them
of his coming by messenger, and when all the tale was told there
was wonder and to spare.  Still greater did it grow when the chests
were opened and the weight of bullion compared with that set out in
my letters, for there had never been so much gold at once in Bungay
within the memory of man.

And now Lily wept, first for joy because of my good fortune, and
then for sorrow because I had not come with my treasure, and when
he had seen all and heard the deeds read by virtue of which Lily
was a rich woman whether I lived or died, the Squire her father
swore aloud and said that he had always thought well of me, and
kissed his daughter, wishing her joy of her luck.  In short all
were pleased except my brother, who left the house without a word
and straightway took to evil courses.  For now the cup was dashed
from his lips, seeing that having come into my father's lands, he
had brought it about that Lily was to be married to him by might if
no other means would serve.  For even now a man can force his
daughter into marriage while she is under age, and Squire Bozard
was not one to shrink from such a deed, holding as he did that a
woman's fancies were of no account.  But on this day, so great is
the power of gold, there was no more talk of her marrying any man
except myself, indeed her father would have held her back from such
a thing had she shown a mind to it, seeing that then Lily would
have lost the wealth which I had settled on her.  But all talked
loudly of my madness because I would not abandon the chase of my
enemy but chose to follow him to the far Indies, though Squire
Bozard took comfort from the thought that whether I lived or died
the money was still his daughter's.  Only Lily spoke up for me,
saying 'Thomas has sworn an oath and he does well to keep it, for
his honour is at stake.  Now I go to wait until he comes to me in
this world or the next.'


But all this is out of place, for many a year passed away before I
heard of these doings.



CHAPTER XI

THE LOSS OF THE CARAK


On the day after I had given my fortune and letters into the charge
of Captain Bell, I watched the 'Adventuress' drop slowly round the
mole of Cadiz, and so sad was I at heart, that I am not ashamed to
confess I wept.  I would gladly have the wealth she carried if she
had but carried me.  But my purpose was indomitable, and it must be
some other ship that would bear me home to the shores of England.

As it chanced, a large Spanish carak named 'Las Cinque Llagas,' or
'The Five Wounds,' was about to sail for Hispaniola, and having
obtained a licence to trade, I took passage in her under my assumed
name of d'Aila, passing myself off as a merchant.  To further this
deception I purchased goods the value of one hundred and five
pesos, and of such nature as I was informed were most readily
saleable in the Indies, which merchandise I shipped with me.  The
vessel was full of Spanish adventurers, mostly ruffians of varied
career and strange history, but none the less good companions
enough when not in drink.  By this time I could speak Castilian so
perfectly, and was so Spanish in appearance, that it was not
difficult for me to pass myself off as one of their nation and this
I did, inventing a feigned tale of my parentage, and of the reasons
that led me to tempt the seas.  For the rest, now as ever I kept my
own counsel, and notwithstanding my reserve, for I would not mingle
in their orgies, I soon became well liked by my comrades, chiefly
because of my skill in ministering to their sicknesses.

Of our voyage there is little to tell except of its sad end.  At
the Canary Isles we stayed a month, and then sailed away for
Hispaniola, meeting with fine weather but light winds.  When, as
our captain reckoned, we were within a week's sail of the port of
San Domingo for which we were bound, the weather changed, and
presently gathered to a furious tempest from the north that grew
more terrible every hour.  For three days and nights our cumbrous
vessel groaned and laboured beneath the stress of the gale, that
drove us on rapidly we knew not whither, till at length it became
clear that, unless the weather moderated, we must founder.  Our
ship leaked at every seam, one of our masts was carried away, and
another broken in two, at a height of twenty feet from the deck.
But all these misfortunes were small compared to what was to come,
for on the fourth morning a great wave swept off our rudder, and we
drifted helpless before the waves.  An hour later a green sea came
aboard of us, washing away the captain, so that we filled and
settled down to founder.

Then began a most horrid scene.  For several days both the crew and
passengers had been drinking heavily to allay their terror, and now
that they saw their end at hand, they rushed to and fro screaming,
praying, and blaspheming.  Such of them as remained sober began to
get out the two boats, into which I and another man, a worthy
priest, strove to place the women and children, of whom we had
several on board.  But this was no easy task, for the drunken
sailors pushed them aside and tried to spring into the boats, the
first of which overturned, so that all were lost.  Just then the
carak gave a lurch before she sank, and, seeing that everything was
over, I called to the priest to follow me, and springing into the
sea I swam for the second boat, which, laden with some shrieking
women, had drifted loose in the confusion.  As it chanced I reached
it safely, being a strong swimmer, and was able to rescue the
priest before he sank.  Then the vessel reared herself up on her
stern and floated thus for a minute or more, which gave us time to
get out the oars and row some fathoms further away from her.
Scarcely had we done so, when, with one wild and fearful scream
from those on board of her, she rushed down into the depths below,
nearly taking us with her.  For a while we sat silent, for our
horror overwhelmed us, but when the whirlpool which she made had
ceased to boil, we rowed back to where the carak had been.  Now all
the sea was strewn with wreckage, but among it we found only one
child living that had clung to an oar.  The rest, some two hundred
souls, had been sucked down with the ship and perished miserably,
or if there were any still living, we could not find them in that
weltering sea over which the darkness was falling.

Indeed, it was well for our own safety that we failed in so doing,
for the little boat had ten souls on board in all, which was as
many as she could carry--the priest and I being the only men among
them.  I have said that the darkness was falling, and as it chanced
happily for us, so was the sea, or assuredly we must have been
swamped.  All that we could do was to keep the boat's head straight
to the waves, and this we did through the long night.  It was a
strange thing to see, or rather to hear, that good man the priest
my companion, confessing the women one by one as he laboured at his
oar, and when all were shriven sending up prayers to God for the
salvation of our souls, for of the safety of our bodies we
despaired.  What I felt may well be imagined, but I forbear to
describe it, seeing that, bad as was my case, there were worse ones
before me of which I shall have to tell in their season.

At length the night wore away, and the dawn broke upon the desolate
sea.  Presently the sun came up, for which at first we were
thankful, for we were chilled to the bone, but soon its heat grew
intolerable, since we had neither food nor water in the boat, and
already we were parched with thirst.  But now the wind had fallen
to a steady breeze, and with the help of the oars and a blanket, we
contrived to fashion a sail that drew us through the water at a
good speed.  But the ocean was vast, and we did not know whither we
were sailing, and every hour the agony of thirst pressed us more
closely.  Towards mid-day a child died suddenly and was thrown into
the sea, and some three hours later the mother filled a bailing
bowl and drank deep of the bitter water.  For a while it seemed to
assuage her thirst, then suddenly a madness took her, and springing
up she cast herself overboard and sank.  Before the sun, glowing
like a red-hot ball, had sunk beneath the horizon, the priest and I
were the only ones in that company who could sit upright--the rest
lay upon the bottom of the boat heaped one on another like dying
fish groaning in their misery.  Night fell at last and brought us
some relief from our sufferings, for the air grew cooler.  But the
rain we prayed for did not fall, and so great was the heat that,
when the sun rose again in a cloudless sky, we knew, if no help
reached us, that it must be the last which we should see.

An hour after dawn another child died, and as we were in the act of
casting the body into the sea, I looked up and saw a vessel far
away, that seemed to be sailing in such fashion that she would pass
within two miles of where we were.  Returning thanks to God for
this most blessed sight, we took to the oars, for the wind was now
so light that our clumsy sail would no longer draw us through the
water, and rowed feebly so as to cut the path of the ship.  When we
had laboured for more than an hour the wind fell altogether and the
vessel lay becalmed at a distance of about three miles.  So the
priest and I rowed on till I thought that we must die in the boat,
for the heat of the sun was like that of a flame and there came no
wind to temper it; by now, too, our lips were cracked with thirst.
Still we struggled on till the shadow of the ship's masts fell
athwart us and we saw her sailors watching us from the deck.  Now
we were alongside and they let down a ladder of rope, speaking to
us in Spanish.

How we reached the deck I cannot say, but I remember falling
beneath the shade of an awning and drinking cup after cup of the
water that was brought to me.  At last even my thirst was
satisfied, and for a while I grew faint and dizzy, and had no
stomach for the meat which was thrust into my hand.  Indeed, I
think that I must have fainted, for when I came to myself the sun
was straight overhead, and it seemed to me that I had dreamed I
heard a familiar and hateful voice.  At the time I was alone
beneath the awning, for the crew of the ship were gathered on the
foredeck clustering round what appeared to be the body of a man.
By my side was a large plate of victuals and a flask of spirits,
and feeling stronger I ate and drank of them heartily.  I had
scarcely finished my meal when the men on the foredeck lifted the
body of the man, which I saw was black in colour, and cast it
overboard.  Then three of them, whom from their port I took to be
officers, came towards me and I rose to my feet to meet them.

'Senor,' said the tallest of them in a soft and gentle voice,
'suffer me to offer you our felicitations on your wonderful--' and
he stopped suddenly.

Did I still dream, or did I know the voice?  Now for the first time
I could see the man's face--it was that of JUAN DE GARCIA!  But if
I knew him he also knew me.

'Caramba!' he said, 'whom have we here?  Senor Thomas Wingfield I
salute you.  Look, my comrades, you see this young man whom the sea
has brought to us.  He is no Spaniard but an English spy.  The last
time that I saw him was in the streets of Seville, and there he
tried to murder me because I threatened to reveal his trade to the
authorities.  Now he is here, upon what errand he knows best.'

'It is false,' I answered; 'I am no spy, and I am come to these
seas for one purpose only--to find you.'

'Then you have succeeded well, too well for your own comfort,
perhaps.  Say now, do you deny that you are Thomas Wingfield and an
Englishman?'

'I do not deny it.  I--'

'Your pardon.  How comes it then that, as your companion the priest
tells me, you sailed in Las Cinque Llagas under the name of
D'AILA?'

'For my own reasons, Juan de Garcia.'

'You are confused, senor.  My name is Sarceda, as these gentlemen
can bear me witness.  Once I knew a cavalier of the name of de
Garcia, but he is dead.'

'You lie,' I answered; whereon one of De Garcia's companions struck
me across the mouth.

'Gently, friend,' said de Garcia; 'do not defile your hand by
striking such rats as this, or if you must strike, use a stick.
You have heard that he confesses to passing under a false name and
to being an Englishman, and therefore one of our country's foes.
To this I add upon my word of honour that to my knowledge he is a
spy and a would-be murderer.  Now, gentlemen, under the commission
of his majesty's representative, we are judges here, but since you
may think that, having been called a liar openly by this English
dog, I might be minded to deal unjustly with him, I prefer to leave
the matter in your hands.'

Now I tried to speak once more, but the Spaniard who had struck me,
a ferocious-looking villain, drew his sword and swore that he would
run me through if I dared to open my lips.  So I thought it well to
keep silent.

'This Englishman would grace a yardarm very well,' he said.

De Garcia, who had begun to hum a tune indifferently, smiled,
looking first at the yard and then at my neck, and the hate in his
eyes seemed to burn me.

'I have a better thought than that,' said the third officer.  'If
we hung him questions might be asked, and at the least, it would be
a waste of good money.  He is a finely built young man and would
last some years in the mines.  Let him be sold with the rest of the
cargo, or I will take him myself at a valuation.  I am in want of a
few such on my estate.'

At these words I saw de Garcia's face fall a little, for he wished
to be rid of me for ever.  Still he did not think it politic to
interfere beyond saying with a slight yawn:

'So far as I am concerned, take him, comrade, and free of cost.
Only I warn you, watch him well or you will find a stiletto in your
back.'

The officer laughed and said: 'Our friend will scarcely get a
chance at me, for I do not go a hundred paces underground, where he
will find his quarters.  And now, Englishman, there is room for you
below I think;' and he called to a sailor bidding him bring the
irons of the man who had died.

This was done, and after I had been searched and a small sum in
gold that I had upon my person taken from me--it was all that
remained to me of my possessions--fetters were placed upon my
ankles and round my neck, and I was dragged into the hold.  Before
I reached it I knew from various signs what was the cargo of this
ship.  She was laden with slaves captured in Fernandina, as the
Spaniards name the island of Cuba, that were to be sold in
Hispaniola.  Among these slaves I was now numbered.


How to tell the horrors of that hold I know not.  The place was
low, not more than seven feet in height, and the slaves lay ironed
in the bilge water on the bottom of the vessel.  They were crowded
as thick as they could lie, being chained to rings fixed in the
sides of the ship.  Altogether there may have been two hundred of
them, men, women and children, or rather there had been two hundred
when the ship sailed a week before.  Now some twenty were dead,
which was a small number, since the Spaniards reckon to lose from a
third to half of their cargo in this devilish traffic.  When I
entered the place a deadly sickness seized me, weak as I was,
brought on by the horrible sounds and smells, and the sights that I
saw in the flare of the lanterns which my conductors carried, for
the hold was shut off from light and air.  But they dragged me
along and presently I found myself chained in the midst of a line
of black men and women, many feet resting in the bilge water.
There the Spaniards left me with a jeer, saying that this was too
good a bed for an Englishman to lie on.  For a while I endured,
then sleep or insensibility came to my succour, and I sank into
oblivion, and so I must have remained for a day and a night.

When I awoke it was to find the Spaniard to whom I had been sold or
given, standing near me with a lantern and directing the removal of
the fetters from a woman who was chained next to me.  She was dead,
and in the light of the lantern I could see that she had been
carried off by some horrible disease that was new to me, but which
I afterwards learned to know by the name of the Black Vomit.  Nor
was she the only one, for I counted twenty dead who were dragged
out in succession, and I could see that many more were sick.  Also
I saw that the Spaniards were not a little frightened, for they
could make nothing of this sickness, and strove to lessen it by
cleansing the hold and letting air into it by the removal of some
planks in the deck above.  Had they not done this I believe that
every soul of us must have perished, and I set down my own escape
from the sickness to the fact that the largest opening in the deck
was made directly above my head, so that by standing up, which my
chains allowed me to do, I could breathe air that was almost pure.

Having distributed water and meal cakes, the Spaniards went away.
I drank greedily of the water, but the cakes I could not eat, for
they were mouldy.  The sights and sounds around me were so awful
that I will not try to write of them.

And all the while we sweltered in the terrible heat, for the sun
pierced through the deck planking of the vessel, and I could feel
by her lack of motion that we were becalmed and drifting.  I stood
up, and by resting my heels upon a rib of the ship and my back
against her side, I found myself in a position whence I could see
the feet of the passers-by on the deck above.

Presently I saw that one of these wore a priest's robe, and
guessing that he must be my companion with whom I had escaped, I
strove to attract his notice, and at length succeeded.  So soon as
he knew who it was beneath him, the priest lay down on the deck as
though to rest himself, and we spoke together.  He told me, as I
had guessed, that we were becalmed and that a great sickness had
taken hold of the ship, already laying low a third of the crew,
adding that it was a judgment from heaven because of their cruelty
and wickedness.

To this I answered that the judgment was working on the captives as
well as on the captors, and asked him where was Sarceda, as they
named de Garcia.  Then I learned that he had been taken sick that
morning, and I rejoiced at the news, for if I had hated him before,
it may be judged how deeply I hated him now.  Presently the priest
left me and returned with water mixed with the juice of limes, that
tasted to me like nectar from the gods, and some good meat and
fruit.  These he gave me through the hole in the planks, and I made
shift to seize them in my manacled hands and devoured them.  After
this he went away, to my great chagrin; why, I did not discover
till the following morning.

That day passed and the long night passed, and when at length the
Spaniards visited the hold once more, there were forty bodies to be
dragged out of it, and many others were sick.  After they had gone
I stood up, watching for my friend the priest, but he did not come
then, nor ever again.



CHAPTER XII

THOMAS COMES TO SHORE


For an hour or more I stood thus craning my neck upwards to seek
for the priest.  At length when I was about to sink back into the
hold, for I could stand no longer in that cramped posture, I saw a
woman's dress pass by the hole in the deck, and knew it for one
that was worn by a lady who had escaped with me in the boat.

'Senora,' I whispered, 'for the love of God listen to me.  It is I,
d'Aila, who am chained down here among the slaves.'

She started, then as the priest had done, she sat herself down upon
the deck, and I told her of my dreadful plight, not knowing that
she was acquainted with it, and of the horrors below.

'Alas! senor,' she answered, 'they can be little worse than those
above.  A dreadful sickness is raging among the crew, six are
already dead and many more are raving in their last madness.  I
would that the sea had swallowed us with the rest, for we have been
rescued from it only to fall into hell.  Already my mother is dead
and my little brother is dying.'

'Where is the priest?' I asked.

'He died this morning and has just been cast into the sea.  Before
he died he spoke of you, and prayed me to help you if I could.  But
his words were wild and I thought that he might be distraught.  And
indeed how can I help you?'

'Perhaps you can find me food and drink,' I answered 'and for our
friend, God rest his soul.  What of the Captain Sarceda?  Is be
also dead?'

'No, senor, he alone is recovering of all whom the scourge has
smitten.  And now I must go to my brother, but first I will seek
food for you.'

She went and presently returned with meat and a flask of wine which
she had hidden beneath her dress, and I ate and blessed her.

For two days she fed me thus, bringing me food at night.  On the
second night she told me that her brother was dead and of all the
crew only fifteen men and one officer remained untouched by the
sickness, and that she herself grew ill.  Also she said that the
water was almost finished, and there was little food left for the
slaves.  After this she came no more, and I suppose that she died
also.

It was within twenty hours of her last visit that I left this
accursed ship.  For a day none had come to feed or tend the slaves,
and indeed many needed no tending, for they were dead.  Some still
lived however, though so far as I could see the most of them were
smitten with the plague.  I myself had escaped the sickness,
perhaps because of the strength and natural healthiness of my body,
which has always saved me from fevers and diseases, fortified as it
was by the good food that I had obtained.  But now I knew that I
could not live long, indeed chained in this dreadful charnel-house
I prayed for death to release me from the horrors of such
existence.  The day passed as before in sweltering heat, unbroken
by any air or motion, and night came at last, made hideous by the
barbarous ravings of the dying.  But even there and then I slept
and dreamed that I was walking with my love in the vale of Waveney.

Towards the morning I was awakened by a sound of clanking iron, and
opening my eyes, I saw that men were at work, by the light of
lanterns, knocking the fetters from the dead and the living
together.  As the fetters were loosed a rope was put round the body
of the slave, and dead or quick, he was hauled through the
hatchway.  Presently a heavy splash in the water without told the
rest of the tale.  Now I understood that all the slaves were being
thrown overboard because of the want of water, and in the hope that
it might avail to save from the pestilence those of the Spaniards
who still remained alive.

I watched them at their work for a while till there were but two
slaves between me and the workers, of whom one was living and the
other dead.  Then I bethought me that this would be my fate also,
to be cast quick into the sea, and took counsel with myself as to
whether I should declare that I was whole from the plague and pray
them to spare me, or whether I should suffer myself to be drowned.
The desire for life was strong, but perhaps it may serve to show
how great were the torments from which I was suffering, and how
broken was my spirit by misfortunes and the horrors around me, when
I say that I determined to make no further effort to live, but
rather to accept death as a merciful release.  And, indeed, I knew
that there was little likelihood of such attempts being of avail,
for I saw that the Spanish sailors were mad with fear and had but
one desire, to be rid of the slaves who consumed the water, and as
they believed, had bred the pestilence.  So I said such prayers as
came into my head, and although with a great shivering of fear, for
the poor flesh shrinks from its end and the unknown beyond it,
however high may be the spirit, I prepared myself to die.

Now, having dragged away my neighbour in misery, the living savage,
the men turned to me.  They were naked to the middle, and worked
furiously to be done with their hateful task, sweating with the
heat, and keeping themselves from fainting by draughts of spirit.

'This one is alive also and does not seem so sick,' said a man as
he struck the fetters from me.

'Alive or dead, away with the dog!' answered another hoarsely, and
I saw that it was the same officer to whom I had been given as a
slave.  'It is that Englishman, and he it is who brought us ill
luck.  Cast the Jonah overboard and let him try his evil eye upon
the sharks.'

'So be it,' answered the other man, and finished striking off my
fetters.  'Those who have come to a cup of water each a day, do not
press their guests to share it.  They show them the door.  Say your
prayers, Englishman, and may they do you more good than they have
done for most on this accursed ship.  Here, this is the stuff to
make drowning easy, and there is more of it on board than of
water,' and he handed me the flask of spirit.  I took it and drank
deep, and it comforted me a little.  Then they put the rope round
me and at a signal those on the deck above began to haul till I
swung loose beneath the hatchway.  As I passed that Spaniard to
whom I had been given in slavery, and who but now had counselled my
casting away, I saw his face well in the light of the lantern, and
there were signs on it that a physician could read clearly.

'Farewell,' I said to him, 'we may soon meet again.  Fool, why do
you labour?  Take your rest, for the plague is on you.  In six
hours you will be dead!'

His jaw dropped with terror at my words, and for a moment he stood
speechless.  Then he uttered a fearful oath and aimed a blow at me
with the hammer he held, which would swiftly have put an end to my
sufferings had I not at that moment been lifted from his reach by
those who pulled above.

In another second I had fallen on the deck as they slacked the
rope.  Near me stood two black men whose office it was to cast us
poor wretches into the sea, and behind them, seated in a chair, his
face haggard from recent illness, sat de Garcia fanning himself
with his sombrero, for the night was very hot.

He recognised me at once in the moonlight, which was brilliant, and
said, 'What! are you here and still alive, Cousin?  You are tough
indeed; I thought that you must be dead or dying.  Indeed had it
not been for this accursed plague, I would have seen to it myself.
Well, it has come right at last, and here is the only lucky thing
in all this voyage, that I shall have the pleasure of sending you
to the sharks.  It consoles me for much, friend Wingfield.  So you
came across the seas to seek vengeance on me?  Well, I hope that
your stay has been pleasant.  The accommodation was a little poor,
but at least the welcome was hearty.  And now it is time to speed
the parting guest.  Good night, Thomas Wingfield; if you should
chance to meet your mother presently, tell her from me that I was
grieved to have to kill her, for she is the one being whom I have
loved.  I did not come to murder her as you may have thought, but
she forced me to it to save myself, since had I not done so, I
should never have lived to return to Spain.  She had too much of my
own blood to suffer me to escape, and it seems that it runs strong
in your veins also, else you would scarcely hold so fast by
vengeance.  Well, it has not prospered you!'  And he dropped back
into the chair and fell to fanning himself again with the broad
hat.

Even then, as I stood upon the eve of death, I felt my blood run
hot within me at the sting of his coarse taunts.  Truly de Garcia's
triumph was complete.  I had come to hunt him down, and what was
the end of it?  He was about to hurl me to the sharks.  Still I
answered him with such dignity as I could command.

'You have me at some disadvantage,' I said.  'Now if there is any
manhood left in you, give me a sword and let us settle our quarrel
once and for all.  You are weak from sickness I know, but what am I
who have spent certain days and nights in this hell of yours.  We
should be well matched, de Garcia.'

'Perhaps so, Cousin, but where is the need?  To be frank, things
have not gone over well with me when we stood face to face before,
and it is odd, but do you know, I have been troubled with a
foreboding that you would be the end of me.  That is one of the
reasons why I sought a change of air to these warmer regions.  But
see the folly of forebodings, my friend.  I am still alive, though
I have been ill, and I mean to go on living, but you are--forgive
me for mentioning it--you are already dead.  Indeed those
gentlemen,' and he pointed to the two black men who were taking
advantage of our talk to throw into the sea the slave who followed
me up the hatchway, 'are waiting to put a stop to our conversation.
Have you any message that I can deliver for you?  If so, out with
it, for time is short and that hold must be cleared by daybreak.'

'I have no message to give you from myself, though I have a message
for you, de Garcia,' I answered.  'But before I tell it, let me say
a word.  You seem to have won, wicked murderer as you are, but
perhaps the game is not yet played.  Your fears may still come
true.  I am dead, but my vengeance may yet live on, for I leave it
to the Hand in which I should have left it at first.  You may live
some years longer, but do you think that you shall escape?  One day
you will die as surely as I must die to-night, and what then, de
Garcia?'

'A truce, I pray you,' he said with a sneer.  'Surely you have not
been consecrated priest.  You had a message, you said.  Pray
deliver it quickly.  Time presses, Cousin Wingfield.  Who sends
messages to an exile like myself?'

'Isabella de Siguenza, whom you cheated with a false marriage and
abandoned,' I said.

He started from his chair and stood over me.

'What of her?' he whispered fiercely.

'Only this, the monks walled her up alive with her babe.'

'Walled her up alive!  Mother of God! how do you know that?'

'I chanced to see it done, that is all.  She prayed me to tell you
of her end and the child's, and that she died hiding your name,
loving and forgiving.  This was all her message, but I will add to
it.  May she haunt you for ever, she and my mother; may they haunt
you through life and death, through earth and hell.'

He covered his face with his hands for a moment, then dropping them
sank back into the chair and called to the black sailors.

'Away with this slave.  Why are you so slow?'

The men advanced upon me, but I was not minded to be handled by
them if I could help it, and I was minded to cause de Garcia to
share my fate.  Suddenly I bounded at him, and gripping him round
the middle, I dragged him from his chair.  Such was the strength
that rage and despair gave to me that I succeeded in swinging him
up to the level of the bulwarks.  But there the matter ended, for
at that moment the two black sailors sprang upon us both, and tore
him from my grip.  Then seeing that all was lost, for they were
about to cut me down with their swords, I placed my hand upon the
bulwark and leaped into the sea.

My reason told me that I should do well to drown as quickly as
possible, and I thought to myself that I would not try to swim, but
would sink at once.  Yet love of life was too strong for me, and so
soon as I touched the water, I struck out and began to swim along
the side of the ship, keeping myself in her shadow, for I feared
lest de Garcia should cause me to be shot at with arrows and musket
balls.  Presently as I went I heard him say with an oath:

'He has gone, and for good this time, but my foreboding went near
to coming true after all.  Bah! how the sight of that man frightens
me.'

Now I knew in my heart that I was doing a mad thing, for though if
no shark took me, I might float for six or eight hours in this warm
water yet I must sink at last, and what would my struggle have
profited me?  Still I swam on slowly, and after the filth and
stench of the slave hold, the touch of the clean water and the
breath of the pure air were like food and wine to me, and I felt
strength enter into me as I went.  By this time I was a hundred
yards or more from the ship, and though those on board could
scarcely have seen me, I could still hear the splash of the bodies,
as the slaves were flung from her, and the drowning cries of such
among them as still lived.

I lifted my head and looked round the waste of water, and seeing
something floating on it at a distance, I swam towards it,
expecting that every moment would be my last, because of the sharks
which abound in these seas.  Soon I was near it, and to my joy I
perceived that it was a large barrel, which had been thrown from
the ship, and was floating upright in the water.  I reached it, and
pushing at it from below, contrived to tilt it so that I caught its
upper edge with my hand.  Then I saw that it was half full of meal
cakes, and that it had been cast away because the meal was
stinking.  It was the weight of these rotten cakes acting as
ballast, that caused the tub to float upright in the water.  Now I
bethought me, that if I could get into this barrel I should be safe
from the sharks for a while, but how to do it I did not know.

While I wondered, chancing to glance behind me, I saw the fin of a
shark standing above the water not twenty paces away, and advancing
rapidly towards me.  Then terror seized me and gave me strength and
the wit of despair.  Pulling down the edge of the barrel till the
water began to pour into it, I seized it on either side with my
hands, and lifting my weight upon them, I doubled my knees.  To
this hour I cannot tell how I accomplished it, but the next second
I was in the cask, with no other hurt than a scraped shin.  But
though I had found a boat, the boat itself was like to sink, for
what with my weight and that of the rotten meal, and of the water
which had poured over the rim, the edge of the barrel was not now
an inch above the level of the sea, and I knew that did another
bucketful come aboard, it would no longer bear me.  At that moment
also I saw the fin of the shark within four yards, and then felt
the barrel shake as the fish struck it with his nose.

Now I began to bail furiously with my hands, and as I bailed, the
edge of the cask lifted itself above the water.  When it had risen
some two inches, the shark, enraged at my escape, came to the
surface, and turning on its side, bit at the tub so that I heard
its teeth grate on the wood and iron bands, causing it to heel over
and to spin round, shipping more water as it heeled.  Now I must
bail afresh, and had the fish renewed its onset, I should have been
lost.  But not finding wood and iron to its taste, it went away for
a while, although I saw its fin from time to time for the space of
some hours.  I bailed with my hands till I could lift the water no
longer, then making shift to take off my boot, I bailed with that.
Soon the edge of the cask stood twelve inches above the water, and
I did not lighten it further, fearing lest it should overturn.  Now
I had time to rest and to remember that all this was of no avail,
since I must die at last either by the sea or because of thirst,
and I lamented that my cowardice had only sufficed to prolong my
sufferings.

Then I prayed to God to succour me, and never did I pray more
heartily than in that hour, and when I had finished praying some
sort of peace and hope fell upon me.  I thought it marvellous that
I should thus have escaped thrice from great perils within the
space of a few days, first from the sinking carak, then from
pestilence and starvation in the bold of the slave-ship, and now,
if only for a while, from the cruel jaws of the sharks.  It seemed
to me that I had not been preserved from dangers which proved fatal
to so many, only that I might perish miserably at last, and even in
my despair I began to hope when hope was folly; though whether this
relief was sent to me from above, or whether it was simply that
being so much alive at the moment I could not believe that I should
soon be dead, is not for me to say.

At the least my courage rose again, and I could even find heart to
note the beauty of the night.  The sea was smooth as a pond, there
was no breath of wind, and now that the moon began to sink,
thousands of stars of a marvellous brightness, such as we do not
see in England, gemmed the heavens everywhere.  At last these grew
pale, and dawn began to flush the east, and after it came the first
rays of sunlight.  But now I could not see fifty yards around me,
because of a dense mist that gathered on the face of the quiet
water, and hung there for an hour or more.  When the sun was well
up and at length the mist cleared away, I perceived that I had
drifted far from the ship, of which I could only see the masts that
grew ever fainter till they vanished.  Now the surface of the sea
was clear of fog except in one direction, where it hung in a thick
bank of vapour, though why it should rest there and nowhere else, I
could not understand.

Then the sun grew hot, and my sufferings commenced, for except the
draught of spirits that had been given me in the hold of the slave-
ship, I had touched no drink for a day and a night.  I will not
tell them all in particular detail, it is enough to say that those
can scarcely imagine them who have never stood for hour after hour
in a barrel, bare-headed and parched with thirst, while the fierce
heat of a tropical sun beat down on them from above, and was
reflected upward from the glassy surface of the water.  In time,
indeed, I grew faint and dizzy, and could hardly save myself from
falling into the sea, and at last I sank into a sort of sleep or
insensibility, from which I was awakened by a sound of screaming
birds and of falling water.  I looked and saw to my wonder and
delight, that what I had taken to be a bank of mist was really low-
lying land, and that I was drifting rapidly with the tide towards
the bar of a large river.  The sound of birds came from great
flocks of sea-gulls that were preying on the shoals of fish, which
fed at the meeting of the fresh and salt water.  Presently, as I
watched, a gull seized a fish that could not have weighed less than
three pounds, and strove to lift it from the sea.  Failing in this,
it beat the fish on the head with its beak till it died, and had
begun to devour it, when I drifted down upon the spot and made
haste to seize the fish.  In another moment, dreadful as it may
seem, I was devouring the food raw, and never have I eaten with
better appetite, or found more refreshment in a meal.

When I had swallowed all that I was able, without drinking water, I
put the rest of the fish into the pocket of my coat, and turned my
thoughts to the breakers on the bar.  Soon it was evident to me
that I could not pass them standing in my barrel, so I hastened to
upset myself into the water and to climb astride of it.  Presently
we were in the surf, and I had much ado to cling on, but the tide
bore me forward bravely, and in half an hour more the breakers were
past, and I was in the mouth of the great river.  Now fortune
favoured me still further, for I found a piece of wood floating on
the stream which served me for a paddle, and by its help I was
enabled to steer my craft towards the shore, that as I went I
perceived to be clothed with thick reeds, in which tall and lovely
trees grew in groups, bearing clusters of large nuts in their
crowns.  Hither to this shore I came without further accident,
having spent some ten hours in my tub, though it was but a chance
that I did so, because of the horrible reptiles called crocodiles,
or, by some, alligators, with which this river swarmed.  But of
them I knew nothing as yet.

I reached land but just in time, for before I was ashore the tide
turned, and tide and current began to carry me out to sea again,
whence assuredly I had never come back.  Indeed, for the last ten
minutes, it took all the strength that I had to force the barrel
along towards the bank.  At length, however, I perceived that it
floated in not more than four feet of water, and sliding from it, I
waded to the bank and cast myself at length there to rest and thank
God who thus far had preserved me miraculously.  But my thirst,
which now returned upon me more fiercely than ever, would not
suffer me to lie thus for long, so I staggered to my feet and
walked along the bank of the river till I came to a pool of rain
water, which on the tasting, proved to be sweet and good.  Then I
drank, weeping for joy at the taste of the water, drank till I
could drink no more, and let those who have stood in such a plight
remember what water was to them, for no words of mine can tell it.
After I had drunk and washed the brine from my face and body, I
drew out the remainder of my fish and ate it thankfully, and thus
refreshed, cast myself down to sleep in the shade of a bush bearing
white flowers, for I was utterly outworn.

When I opened my eyes again it was night, and doubtless I should
have slept on through many hours more had it not been for a
dreadful itch and pain that took me in every part, till at length I
sprang up and cursed in my agony.  At first I was at a loss to know
what occasioned this torment, till I perceived that the air was
alive with gnat-like insects which made a singing noise, and then
settling on my flesh, sucked blood and spat poison into the wound
at one and the same time.  These dreadful insects the Spaniards
name mosquitoes.  Nor were they the only flies, for hundreds of
other creatures, no bigger than a pin's head, had fastened on to me
like bulldogs to a baited bear, boring their heads into the flesh,
where in the end they cause festers.  They are named garrapatas by
the Spanish, and I take them to be the young of the tic.  Others
there were, also, too numerous to mention, and of every shape and
size, though they had this in common, all bit and all were
venomous.  Before the morning these plagues had driven me almost to
madness, for in no way could I obtain relief from them.  Towards
dawn I went and lay in the water, thinking to lessen my sufferings,
but before I had been there ten minutes I saw a huge crocodile rise
up from the mud beside me.  I sprang away to the bank horribly
afraid, for never before had I beheld so monstrous and evil-looking
a brute, to fall again into the clutches of the creatures, winged
and crawling, that were waiting for me there by myriads.

But enough of these damnable insects!



CHAPTER XIII

THE STONE OF SACRIFICE


At length the morning broke and found me in a sorry plight, for my
face was swollen to the size of a pumpkin by the venom of the
mosquitoes, and the rest of my body was in little better case.
Moreover I could not keep myself still because of the itching, but
must run and jump like a madman.  And where was I to run to through
this huge swamp, in which I could see no shelter or sign of man?  I
could not guess, so since I must keep moving I followed the bank of
the river, as I walked disturbing many crocodiles and loathsome
snakes.  Now I knew that I could not live long in such suffering,
and determined to struggle forward till I fell down insensible and
death put an end to my torments.

For an hour or more I went on thus till I came to a place that was
clear of bush and reeds.  Across this I skipped and danced,
striking with my swollen hands at the gnats which buzzed about my
head.  Now the end was not far off, for I was exhausted and near to
falling, when suddenly I came upon a party of men, brown in colour
and clothed with white garments, who had been fishing in the river.
By them on the water were several canoes in which were loads of
merchandise, and they were now engaged in eating.  So soon as these
men caught sight of me they uttered exclamations in an unknown
tongue and seizing weapons that lay by them, bows and arrows and
wooden clubs set on either side with spikes of flinty glass, they
made towards me as though to kill me.  Now I lifted up my hands
praying for mercy, and seeing that I was unarmed and helpless the
men laid down their arms and addressed me.  I shook my head to show
that I could not understand, and pointed first to the sea and then
to my swollen features.  They nodded, and going to one of the
canoes a man brought from it a paste of a brown colour and aromatic
smell.  Then by signs he directed me to remove such garments as
remained on me, the fashion of which seemed to puzzle them greatly.
This being done, they proceeded to anoint my body with the paste,
the touch of which gave me a most blessed relief from my
intolerable itching and burning, and moreover rendered my flesh
distasteful to the insects, for after that they plagued me little.

When I was anointed they offered me food, fried fish and cakes of
meal, together with a most delicious hot drink covered with a brown
and foaming froth that I learned to know afterwards as chocolate.
When I had finished eating, having talked a while together in low
tones, they motioned me to enter one of the canoes, giving me mats
to lie on.  I obeyed, and three other men came with me, for the
canoe was large.  One of these, a very grave man with a gentle face
and manner whom I took to be the chief of the party, sat down
opposite to me, the other two placing themselves in the bow and
stern of the boat which they drove along by means of paddles.  Then
we started, followed by three other canoes, and before we had gone
a mile utter weariness overpowered me and I fell asleep.

I awoke much refreshed, having slept many hours, for now the sun
was setting, and was astonished to find the grave-looking man my
companion in the canoe, keeping watch over my sleep and warding the
gnats from me with a leafy branch.  His kindness seemed to show
that I was in no danger of ill-treatment, and my fears on that
point being set at rest, I began to wonder as to what strange land
I had come and who its people might be.  Soon, however, I gave
over, having nothing to build on, and observed the scenery instead.
Now we were paddling up a smaller river than the one on the banks
of which I had been cast away, and were no longer in the midst of
marshes.  On either side of us was open land, or rather land that
would have been open had it not been for the great trees, larger
than the largest oak, which grew upon it, some of them of
surpassing beauty.  Up these trees climbed creepers that hung like
ropes even from the topmost boughs, and among them were many
strange and gorgeous flowering plants that seemed to cling to the
bark as moss clings to a wall.  In their branches also sat harsh-
voiced birds of brilliant colours, and apes that barked and
chattered at us as we went.

Just as the sun set over all this strange new scene the canoes came
to a landing place built of timber, and we disembarked.  Now it
grew dark suddenly, and all I could discover was that I was being
led along a good road.  Presently we reached a gate, which, from
the barking of dogs and the numbers of people who thronged about
it, I judged to be the entrance to a town, and passing it, we
advanced down a long street with houses on either side.  At the
doorway of the last house my companion halted, and taking me by the
hand, led me into a long low room lit with lamps of earthenware.
Here some women came forward and kissed him, while others whom I
took to be servants, saluted him by touching the floor with one
hand.  Soon, however, all eyes were turned on me and many eager
questions were asked of the chief, of which I could only guess the
purport.

When all had gazed their fill supper was served, a rich meal of
many strange meats, and of this I was invited to partake, which I
did, seated on a mat and eating of the dishes that were placed upon
the ground by the women.  Among these I noticed one girl who far
surpassed all the others in grace, though none were unpleasing to
the eye.  She was dark, indeed, but her features were regular and
her eyes fine.  Her figure was tall and straight, and the sweetness
of her face added to the charm of her beauty.  I mention this girl
here for two reasons, first because she saved me once from
sacrifice and once from torture, and secondly because she was none
other than that woman who afterwards became known as Marina, the
mistress of Cortes, without whose aid he had never conquered
Mexico.  But at this time she did not guess that it was her destiny
to bring her country of Anahuac beneath the cruel yoke of the
Spaniard.

From the moment of my entry I saw that Marina, as I will call her,
for her Indian name is too long to be written, took pity on my
forlorn state, and did what lay in her power to protect me from
vulgar curiosity and to minister to my wants.  It was she who
brought me water to wash in, and a clean robe of linen to replace
my foul and tattered garments, and a cloak fashioned of bright
feathers for my shoulders.

When supper was done a mat was given me to sleep on in a little
room apart, and here I lay down, thinking that though I might be
lost for ever to my own world, at least I had fallen among a people
who were gentle and kindly, and moreover, as I saw from many
tokens, no savages.  One thing, however, disturbed me; I discovered
that though I was well treated, also I was a prisoner, for a man
armed with a copper spear slept across the doorway of my little
room.  Before I lay down I looked through the wooden bars which
served as a protection to the window place, and saw that the house
stood upon the border of a large open space, in the midst of which
a great pyramid towered a hundred feet or more into the air.  On
the top of this pyramid was a building of stone that I took to be a
temple, and rightly, in front of which a fire burned.  Marvelling
what the purpose of this great work might be, and in honour of what
faith it was erected, I went to sleep.

On the morrow I was to learn.

Here it may be convenient for me to state, what I did not discover
till afterwards, that I was in the city of Tobasco, the capital of
one of the southern provinces of Anahuac, which is situated at a
distance of some hundreds of miles from the central city of
Tenoctitlan, or Mexico.  The river where I had been cast away was
the Rio de Tobasco, where Cortes landed in the following year, and
my host, or rather my captor, was the cacique or chief of Tobasco,
the same man who subsequently presented Marina to Cortes.  Thus it
came about that, with the exception of a certain Aguilar, who with
some companions was wrecked on the coast of Yucatan six years
before, I was the first white man who ever dwelt among the Indians.
This Aguilar was rescued by Cortes, though his companions were all
sacrificed to Huitzel, the horrible war-god of the country.  But
the name of the Spaniards was already known to the Indians, who
looked on them with superstitious fear, for in the year previous to
my being cast away, the hidalgo Hernandez de Cordova had visited
the coast of Yucatan and fought several battles with the natives,
and earlier in the same year of my arrival, Juan de Grigalva had
come to this very river of Tobasco.  Thus it came about that I was
set down as one of this strange new nation of Teules, as the
Indians named the Spaniards, and therefore as an enemy for whose
blood the gods were thirsting.


I awoke at dawn much refreshed with sleep, and having washed and
clothed myself in the linen robes that were provided for me, I came
into the large room, where food was given me.  Scarcely had I
finished my meal when my captor, the cacique, entered, accompanied
by two men whose appearance struck terror to my heart.  In
countenance they were fierce and horrible; they wore black robes
embroidered with mystic characters in red, and their long and
tangled hair was matted together with some strange substance.
These men, whom all present, including the chief or cacique, seemed
to look on with the utmost reverence, glared at me with a fierce
glee that made my blood run cold.  One of them, indeed, tore open
my white robe and placed his filthy hand upon my heart, which beat
quickly enough, counting its throbs aloud while the other nodded at
his words.  Afterwards I learned that he was saying that I was very
strong.

Glancing round to find the interpretation of this act upon the
faces of those about me, my eyes caught those of the girl Marina,
and there was that in them which left me in little doubt.  Horror
and pity were written there, and I knew that some dreadful death
overshadowed me.  Before I could do anything, before I could even
think, I was seized by the priests, or pabas as the Indians name
them, and dragged from the room, all the household following us
except Marina and the cacique.  Now I found myself in a great
square or market place bordered by many fine houses of stone and
lime, and some of mud, which was filling rapidly with a vast number
of people, men women and children, who all stared at me as I went
towards the pyramid on the top of which the fire burned.  At the
foot of this pyramid I was led into a little chamber hollowed in
its thickness, and here my dress was torn from me by more priests,
leaving me naked except for a cloth about my loins and a chaplet of
bright flowers which was set upon my head.  In this chamber were
three other men, Indians, who from the horror on their faces I
judged to be also doomed to death.

Presently a drum began to beat high above us, and we were taken
from the chamber and placed in a procession of many priests, I
being the first among the victims.  Then the priests set up a chant
and we began the ascent of the pyramid, following a road that wound
round and round its bulk till it ended on a platform at its summit,
which may have measured forty paces in the square.  Hence the view
of the surrounding country was very fine, but in that hour I
scarcely noticed it, having no care for prospects, however
pleasing.  On the further side of the platform were two wooden
towers fifty feet or so in height.  These were the temples of the
gods, Huitzel God of War and Quetzal God of the Air, whose hideous
effigies carved in stone grinned at us through the open doorways.
In the chambers of these temples stood small altars, and on the
altars were large dishes of gold, containing the hearts of those
who had been sacrificed on the yesterday.  These chambers,
moreover, were encrusted with every sort of filth.  In front of the
temples stood the altar whereon the fire burned eternally, and
before it were a hog-backed block of black marble of the size of an
inn drinking table, and a great carven stone shaped like a wheel,
measuring some ten feet across with a copper ring in its centre.

All these things I remembered afterwards, though at the time I
scarcely seemed to see them, for hardly were we arrived on the
platform when I was seized and dragged to the wheel-shaped stone.
Here a hide girdle was put round my waist and secured to the ring
by a rope long enough to enable me to run to the edge of the stone
and no further.  Then a flint-pointed spear was given to me and
spears were given also to the two captives who accompanied me, and
it was made clear to me by signs that I must fight with them, it
being their part to leap upon the stone and mine to defend it.  Now
I thought that if I could kill these two poor creatures, perhaps I
myself should be allowed to go free, and so to save my life I
prepared to take theirs if I could.  Presently the head priest gave
a signal commanding the two men to attack me, but they were so lost
in fear that they did not even stir.  Then the priests began to
flog them with leather girdles till at length crying out with pain,
they ran at me.  One reached the stone and leapt upon it a little
before the other, and I struck the spear through his arm.
Instantly he dropped his weapon and fled, and the other man fled
also, for there was no fight in them, nor would any flogging bring
them to face me again.

Seeing that they could not make them brave, the priests determined
to have done with them.  Amidst a great noise of music and
chanting, he whom I had smitten was seized and dragged to the hog-
backed block of marble, which in truth was a stone of sacrifice.
On this he was cast down, breast upwards, and held so by five
priests, two gripping his hands, two his legs, and one his head.
Then, having donned a scarlet cloak, the head priest, that same who
had felt my heart, uttered some kind of prayer, and, raising a
curved knife of the flint-like glass or itztli, struck open the
poor wretch's breast at a single blow, and made the ancient
offering to the sun.

As he did this all the multitude in the place below, in full view
of whom this bloody game was played, prostrated themselves,
remaining on their knees till the offering had been thrown into the
golden censer before the statue of the god Huitzel.  Thereon the
horrible priests, casting themselves on the body, carried it with
shouts to the edge of the pyramid or teocalli, and rolled it down
the steep sides.  At the foot of the slope it was lifted and borne
away by certain men who were waiting, for what purpose I did not
know at that time.

Scarcely was the first victim dead when the second was seized and
treated in a like fashion, the multitude prostrating themselves as
before.  And then last of all came my turn.  I felt myself seized
and my senses swam, nor did I recover them till I found myself
lying on the accursed stone, the priests dragging at my limbs and
head, my breast strained upwards till the skin was stretched tight
as that of a drum, while over me stood the human devil in his red
mantle, the glass knife in his hand.  Never shall I forget his
wicked face maddened with the lust for blood, or the glare in his
eyes as he tossed back his matted locks.  But he did not strike at
once, he gloated over me, pricking me with the point of the knife.
It seemed to me that I lay there for years while the paba aimed and
pointed with the knife, but at last through a mist that gathered
before my eyes, I saw it flash upward.  Then when I thought that my
hour had come, a hand caught his arm in mid-air and held it and I
heard a voice whispering.

What was said did not please the priest, for suddenly he howled
aloud and made a dash towards me to kill me, but again his arm was
caught before the knife fell.  Then he withdrew into the temple of
the god Quetzal, and for a long while I lay upon the stone
suffering the agonies of a hundred deaths, for I believed that it
was determined to torture me before I died, and that my slaughter
had been stayed for this purpose.

There I lay upon the stone, the fierce sunlight beating on my
breast, while from below came the faint murmur of the thousands of
the wondering people.  All my life seemed to pass before me as I
was stretched upon that awful bed, a hundred little things which I
had forgotten came back to me, and with them memories of childhood,
of my oath to my father, of Lily's farewell kiss and words, of de
Garcia's face as I was hurled into the sea, of the death of
Isabella de Siguenza, and lastly a vague wonder as to why all
priests were so cruel!

At length I heard footsteps and shut my eyes, for I could bear the
sight of that dreadful knife no longer.  But behold! no knife fell.
Suddenly my hands were loosed and I was lifted to my feet, on which
I never hoped to stand again.  Then I was borne to the edge of the
teocalli, for I could not walk, and here my would-be murderer, the
priest, having first shouted some words to the spectators below,
that caused them to murmur like a forest when the wind stirs it,
clasped me in his blood-stained arms and kissed me on the forehead.
Now it was for the first time that I noticed my captor, the
cacique, standing at my side, grave, courteous, and smiling.  As he
had smiled when he handed me to the pabas, so he smiled when he
took me back from them.  Then having been cleansed and clothed, I
was led into the sanctuary of the god Quetzal and stood face to
face with the hideous image there, staring at the golden censer
that was to have received my heart while the priests uttered
prayers.  Thence I was supported down the winding road of the
pyramid till I came to its foot, where my captor the cacique took
me by the hand and led me through the people who, it seemed, now
regarded me with some strange veneration.  The first person that I
saw when we reached the house was Marina, who looked at me and
murmured some soft words that I could not understand.  Then I was
suffered to go to my chamber, and there I passed the rest of the
day prostrated by all that I had undergone.  Truly I had come to a
land of devils!

And now I will tell how it was that I came to be saved from the
knife.  Marina having taken some liking to me, pitied my sad fate,
and being very quick-witted, she found a way to rescue me.  For
when I had been led off to sacrifice, she spoke to the cacique, her
lord, bringing it to his mind that, by common report Montezuma, the
Emperor of Anahuac, was disturbed as to the Teules or Spaniards,
and desired much to see one.  Now, she said, I was evidently a
Teule, and Montezuma would be angered, indeed, if I were sacrificed
in a far-off town, instead of being sent to him to sacrifice if he
saw fit.  To this the cacique answered that the words were wise,
but that she should have spoken them before, for now the priests
had got hold of me, and it was hopeless to save me from their grip.

'Nay,' answered Marina, 'there is this to be said.  Quetzal, the
god to whom this Teule is to be offered, was a white man,* and it
may well happen that this man is one of his children.  Will it
please the god that his child should be offered to him?  At the
least, if the god is not angered, Montezuma will certainly be
wroth, and wreak a vengeance on you and on the priests.'


* Quetzal, or more properly Quetzalcoatl, was the divinity who is
fabled to have taught the natives of Anahuac all the useful arts,
including those of government and policy, he was white-skinned and
dark-haired.  Finally he sailed from the shores of Anahuac for the
fabulous country of Tlapallan in a bark of serpents' skins.  But
before he sailed he promised that he would return again with a
numerous progeny.  This promise was remembered by the Aztecs, and
it was largely on account of it that the Spaniards were enabled to
conquer the country, for they were supposed to be his descendants.
Perhaps Quetzalcoatl was a Norseman!   Vide Sagas of Eric the Red
and of Thorfinn Karlsefne.--AUTHOR.


Now when the cacique heard this he saw that Marina spoke truth, and
hurrying up the teocalli, he caught the knife as it was in the act
of falling upon me.  At first the head priest was angered and
called out that this was sacrilege, but when the cacique had told
him his mind, he understood that he would do wisely not to run a
risk of the wrath of Montezuma.  So I was loosed and led into the
sanctuary, and when I came out the paba announced to the people
that the god had declared me to be one of his children, and it was
for this reason that then and thereafter they treated me with
reverence.



CHAPTER XIV

THE SAVING OF GUATEMOC


Now after this dreadful day I was kindly dealt with by the people
of Tobasco, who gave me the name of Teule or Spaniard, and no
longer sought to put me to sacrifice.  Far from it indeed, I was
well clothed and fed, and suffered to wander where I would, though
always under the care of guards who, had I escaped, would have paid
for it with their lives.  I learned that on the morrow of my rescue
from the priests, messengers were despatched to Montezuma, the
great king, acquainting him with the history of my capture, and
seeking to know his pleasure concerning me.  But the way to
Tenoctitlan was far, and many weeks passed before the messengers
returned again.  Meanwhile I filled the days in learning the Maya
language, and also something of that of the Aztecs, which I
practised with Marina and others.  For Marina was not a Tobascan,
having been born at Painalla, on the southeastern borders of the
empire.  But her mother sold her to merchants in order that
Marina's inheritance might come to another child of hers by a
second marriage, and thus in the end the girl fell into the hands
of the cacique of Tobasco.

Also I learned something of the history and customs, and of the
picture writing of the land, and how to read it, and moreover I
obtained great repute among the Tobascans by my skill in medicine,
so that in time they grew to believe that I was indeed a child of
Quetzal, the good god.  And the more I studied this people the less
I could understand of them.  In most ways they were equal to any
nation of our own world of which I had knowledge.  None are more
skilled in the arts, few are better architects or boast purer laws.
Moreover, they were brave and had patience.  But their faith was
the canker at the root of the tree.  In precept it was noble and
had much in common with our own, such as the rite of baptism, but I
have told what it was in practice.  And yet, when all is said, is
it more cruel to offer up victims to the gods than to torture them
in the vaults of the Holy Office or to immure them in the walls of
nunneries?

When I had lived a month in Tobasco I had learned enough of the
language to talk with Marina, with whom I grew friendly, though no
more, and it was from her that I gathered the most of my knowledge,
and also many hints as to the conduct necessary to my safety.  In
return I taught her something of my own faith, and of the customs
of the Europeans, and it was the knowledge that she gained from me
which afterwards made her so useful to the Spaniards, and prepared
her to accept their religion, giving her insight into the ways of
white people.

So I abode for four months and more in the house of the cacique of
Tobasco, who carried his kindness towards me to the length of
offering me his sister in marriage.  To this proposal I said no as
gently as I might, and he marvelled at it, for the girl was fair.
Indeed, so well was I treated, that had it not been that my heart
was far away, and because of the horrible rites of their religion
which I was forced to witness almost daily, I could have learned to
love this gentle, skilled, and industrious people.


At length, when full four months had passed away, the messengers
returned from the court of Montezuma, having been much delayed by
swollen rivers and other accidents of travel.  So great was the
importance that the Emperor attached to the fact of my capture, and
so desirous was he to see me at his capital, that he had sent his
own nephew, the Prince Guatemoc, to fetch me and a great escort of
warriors with him.

Never shall I forget my first meeting with this prince who
afterwards became my dear companion and brother in arms.  When the
escort arrived I was away from the town shooting deer with the bow
and arrow, a weapon in the use of which I had such skill that all
the Indians wondered at me, not knowing that twice I had won the
prize at the butts on Bungay Common.  Our party being summoned by a
messenger, we returned bearing our deer with us.  On reaching the
courtyard of the cacique's house, I found it filled with warriors
most gorgeously attired, and among them one more splendid than the
rest.  He was young, very tall and broad, most handsome in face,
and having eyes like those of an eagle, while his whole aspect
breathed majesty and command.  His body was encased in a cuirass of
gold, over which hung a mantle made of the most gorgeous feathers,
exquisitely set in bands of different colours.  On his head he wore
a helmet of gold surmounted by the royal crest, an eagle, standing
on a snake fashioned in gold and gems.  On his arms, and beneath
his knees, he wore circlets of gold and gems, and in his hand was a
copper-bladed spear.  Round this man were many nobles dressed in a
somewhat similar fashion, except that the most of them wore a vest
of quilted cotton in place of the gold cuirass, and a jewelled
panache of the plumes of birds instead of the royal symbol.

This was Guatemoc, Montezuma's nephew, and afterwards the last
emperor of Anahuac.  So soon as I saw him I saluted him in the
Indian fashion by touching the earth with my right hand, which I
then raised to my head.  But Guatemoc, having scanned me with his
eye as I stood, bow in hand, attired in my simple hunter's dress,
smiled frankly and said:

'Surely, Teule, if I know anything of the looks of men, we are too
equal in our birth, as in our age, for you to salute me as a slave
greets his master.'  And he held his hand to me.

I took it, answering with the help of Marina, who was watching this
great lord with eager eyes.

'It may be so, prince, but though in my own country I am a man of
repute and wealth, here I am nothing but a slave snatched from the
sacrifice.'

'I know it,' he said frowning.  'It is well for all here that you
were so snatched before the breath of life had left you, else
Montezuma's wrath had fallen on this city.'  And he looked at the
cacique who trembled, such in those days was the terror of
Montezuma's name.

Then he asked me if I was a Teule or Spaniard.  I told him that I
was no Spaniard but one of another white race who had Spanish blood
in his veins.  This saying seemed to puzzle him, for he had never
so much as heard of any other white race, so I told him something
of my story, at least so much of it as had to do with my being cast
away.

When I had finished, he said, 'If I have understood aright, Teule,
you say that you are no Spaniard, yet that you have Spanish blood
in you, and came hither in a Spanish ship, and I find this story
strange.  Well, it is for Montezuma to judge of these matters, so
let us talk of them no more.  Come and show me how you handle that
great bow of yours.  Did you bring it with you or did you fashion
it here?  They tell me, Teule, that there is no such archer in the
land.'

So I came up and showed him the bow which was of my own make, and
would shoot an arrow some sixty paces further than any that I saw
in Anahuac, and we fell into talk on matters of sport and war,
Marina helping out my want of language, and before that day was
done we had grown friendly.

For a week the prince Guatemoc and his company rested in the town
of Tobasco, and all this time we three talked much together.  Soon
I saw that Marina looked with eyes of longing on the great lord,
partly because of his beauty rank and might, and partly because she
wearied of her captivity in the house of the cacique, and would
share Guatemoc's power, for Marina was ambitious.  She tried to win
his heart in many ways, but he seemed not to notice her, so that at
last she spoke more plainly and in my hearing.

'You go hence to-morrow, prince,' she said softly, 'and I have a
favour to ask of you, if you will listen to your handmaid.'

'Speak on, maiden,' he answered.

'I would ask this, that if it pleases you, you will buy me of the
cacique my master, or command him to give me up to you, and take me
with you to Tenoctitlan.'

Guatemoc laughed aloud.  'You put things plainly, maiden,' he said,
'but know that in the city of Tenoctitlan, my wife and royal
cousin, Tecuichpo, awaits me, and with her three other ladies, who
as it chances are somewhat jealous.'

Now Marina flushed beneath her brown skin, and for the first and
last time I saw her gentle eyes grow hard with anger as she
answered:

'I asked you to take me with you, prince; I did not ask to be your
wife or love.'

'But perchance you meant it,' he said dryly.

'Whatever I may have meant, prince, it is now forgotten.  I wished
to see the great city and the great king, because I weary of my
life here and would myself grow great.  You have refused me, but
perhaps a time will come when I shall grow great in spite of you,
and then I may remember the shame that has been put upon me against
you, prince, and all your royal house.'

Again Guatemoc laughed, then of a sudden grew stern.

'You are over-bold, girl,' he said; 'for less words than these many
a one might find herself stretched upon the stone of sacrifice.
But I will forget them, for your woman's pride is stung, and you
know not what you say.  Do you forget them also, Teule, if you have
understood.'

Then Marina turned and went, her bosom heaving with anger and
outraged love or pride, and as she passed me I heard her mutter,
'Yes, prince, you may forget, but I shall not.'

Often since that day I have wondered if some vision of the future
entered into the girl's breast in that hour, or if in her wrath she
spoke at random.  I have wondered also whether this scene between
her and Guatemoc had anything to do with the history of her after
life; or did Marina, as she avowed to me in days to come, bring
shame and ruin on her country for the love of Cortes alone?  It is
hard to say, and perhaps these things had nothing to do with what
followed, for when great events have happened, we are apt to search
out causes for them in the past that were no cause.  This may have
been but a passing mood of hers and one soon put out of mind, for
it is certain that few build up the temples of their lives upon
some firm foundation of hope or hate, of desire or despair, though
it has happened to me to do so, but rather take chance for their
architect--and indeed whether they take him or no, he is still the
master builder.  Still that Marina did not forget this talk I know,
for in after times I heard her remind this very prince of the words
that had passed between them, ay, and heard his noble answer to
her.


Now I have but one more thing to tell of my stay in Tobasco, and
then let me on to Mexico, and to the tale of how Montezuma's
daughter became my wife, and of my further dealings with de Garcia.

On the day of our departure a great sacrifice of slaves was held
upon the teocalli to propitiate the gods, so that they might give
us a safe journey, and also in honour of some festival, for to the
festivals of the Indians there was no end.  Thither we went up the
sides of the steep pyramid, since I must look upon these horrors
daily.  When all was prepared, and we stood around the stone of
sacrifice while the multitude watched below, that fierce paba who
once had felt the beatings of my heart, came forth from the
sanctuary of the god Quetzal and signed to his companions to
stretch the first of the victims on the stone.  Then of a sudden
the prince Guatemoc stepped forward, and addressing the priests,
pointed to their chief, and said:

'Seize that man!'

They hesitated, for though he who commanded was a prince of the
blood royal, to lay hands upon a high priest was sacrilege.  Then
with a smile Guatemoc drew forth a ring having a dull blue stone
set in its bezel, on which was engraved a strange device.  With the
ring he drew out also a scroll of picture-writing, and held them
both before the eyes of the pabas.  Now the ring was the ring of
Montezuma, and the scroll was signed by the great high priest of
Tenoctitlan, and those who looked on the ring and the scroll knew
well that to disobey the mandate of him who bore them was death and
dishonour in one.  So without more ado they seized their chief and
held him.  Then Guatemoc spoke again and shortly:

'Lay him on the stone and sacrifice him to the god Quetzal.'

Now he who had taken such fierce joy in the death of others on this
same stone, began to tremble and weep, for he did not desire to
drink of his own medicine.

'Why must I be offered up, O prince?' he cried, 'I who have been a
faithful servant to the gods and to the Emperor.'

'Because you dared to try to offer up this Teule,' answered
Guatemoc, pointing to me, 'without leave from your master
Montezuma, and because of the other evils that you have done, all
of which are written in this scroll.  The Teule is a son of
Quetzal, as you have yourself declared, and Quetzal will be avenged
because of his son.  Away with him, here is your warrant.'

Then the priests, who till this moment had been his servants,
dragged their chief to the stone, and there, notwithstanding his
prayers and bellowings, one who had donned his mantle practised his
own art upon him, and presently his body was cast down the side of
the pyramid.  For my part I am not sufficient of a Christian to
pretend that I was sorry to see him die in that same fashion by
which he had caused the death of so many better men.

When it was done Guatemoc turned to me and said, 'So perish all
your enemies, my friend Teule.'

Within an hour of this event, which revealed to me how great was
the power of Montezuma, seeing that the sight of a ring from his
finger could bring about the instant death of a high priest at the
hands of his disciples, we started on our long journey.  But before
I went I bid a warm farewell to my friend the cacique, and also to
Marina, who wept at my going.  The cacique I never saw again, but
Marina I did see.


For a whole month we travelled, for the way was far and the road
rough, and sometimes we must cut our path through forests and
sometimes we must wait upon the banks of rivers.  Many were the
strange sights that I saw upon that journey, and many the cities in
which we sojourned in much state and honour, but I cannot stop to
tell of all these.

One thing I will relate, however, though briefly, because it
changed the regard that the prince Guatemoc and I felt one to the
other into a friendship which lasted till his death, and indeed
endures in my heart to this hour.

One day we were delayed by the banks of a swollen river, and in
pastime went out to hunt for deer.  When we had hunted a while and
killed three deer, it chanced that Guatemoc perceived a buck
standing on a hillock, and we set out to stalk it, five of us in
all.  But the buck was in the open, and the trees and bush ceased a
full hundred yards away from where he stood, so that there was no
way by which we might draw near to him.  Then Guatemoc began to
mock me, saying, 'Now, Teule, they tell tales of your archery, and
this deer is thrice as far as we Aztecs can make sure of killing.
Let us see your skill.'

'I will try,' I answered, 'though the shot is long.'

So we drew beneath the cover of a ceiba tree, of which the lowest
branches drooped to within fifteen feet of the ground, and having
set an arrow on the string of the great bow that I had fashioned
after the shape of those we use in merry England, I aimed and drew
it.  Straight sped the arrow and struck the buck fair, passing
through its heart, and a low murmur of wonderment went up from
those who saw the feat.

Then, just as we prepared to go to the fallen deer, a male puma,
which is nothing but a cat, though fifty times as big, that had
been watching the buck from above, dropped down from the boughs of
the ceiba tree full on to the shoulders of the prince Guatemoc,
felling him to the ground, where he lay face downwards while the
fierce brute clawed and bit at his back.  Indeed had it not been
for his golden cuirass and helm Guatemoc would never have lived to
be emperor of Anahuac, and perhaps it might have been better so.

Now when they saw the puma snarling and tearing at the person of
their prince, though brave men enough, the three nobles who were
with us were seized by sudden panic and ran, thinking him dead.
But I did not run, though I should have been glad enough to do so.
At my side hung one of the Indian weapons that serve them instead
of swords, a club of wood set on both sides with spikes of
obsidian, like the teeth in the bill of a swordfish.  Snatching it
from its loop I gave the puma battle, striking a blow upon his head
that rolled him over and caused the blood to pour.  In a moment he
was up and at me roaring with rage.  Whirling the wooden sword with
both hands I smote him in mid air, the blow passing between his
open paws and catching him full on the snout and head.  So hard was
this stroke that my weapon was shattered, still it did not stop the
puma.  In a second I was cast to the earth with a great shock, and
the brute was on me tearing and biting at my chest and neck.  It
was well for me at that moment that I wore a garment of quilted
cotton, otherwise I must have been ripped open, and even with this
covering I was sadly torn, and to this day I bear the marks of the
beast's claws upon my body.  But now when I seemed to be lost the
great blow that I had struck took effect on him, for one of the
points of glass had pierced to his brain.  He lifted his head, his
claws contracted themselves in my flesh, then he howled like a dog
in pain and fell dead upon my body.  So I lay upon the ground
unable to stir, for I was much hurt, until my companions, having
taken heart, came back and pulled the puma off me.  By this time
Guatemoc, who saw all, but till now was unable to move from lack of
breath, had found his feet again.

'Teule,' he gasped, 'you are a brave man indeed, and if you live I
swear that I will always stand your friend to the death as you have
stood mine.'

Thus he spoke to me; but to the others he said nothing, casting no
reproaches at them.

Then I fainted away.



CHAPTER XV

THE COURT OF MONTEZUMA


Now for a week I was so ill from my wounds that I was unable to be
moved, and then I must be carried in a litter till we came to
within three days' journey of the city of Tenoctitlan or Mexico.
After that, as the roads were now better made and cared for than
any I have seen in England, I was able to take to my feet again.
Of this I was glad, for I have no love of being borne on the
shoulders of other men after the womanish Indian fashion, and,
moreover, as we had now come to a cold country, the road running
through vast table-lands and across the tops of mountains, it was
no longer necessary as it had been in the hot lands.  Never did I
see anything more dreary than these immense lengths of desolate
plains covered with aloes and other thorny and succulent shrubs of
fantastic aspect, which alone could live on the sandy and waterless
soil.  This is a strange land, that can boast three separate
climates within its borders, and is able to show all the glories of
the tropics side by side with deserts of measureless expanse.

One night we camped in a rest house, of which there were many built
along the roads for the use of travellers, that was placed almost
on the top of the sierra or mountain range which surrounds the
valley of Tenoctitlan.  Next morning we took the road again before
dawn, for the cold was so sharp at this great height that we, who
had travelled from the hot land, could sleep very little, and also
Guatemoc desired if it were possible to reach the city that night.

When we had gone a few hundred paces the path came to the crest of
the mountain range, and I halted suddenly in wonder and admiration.
Below me lay a vast bowl of land and water, of which, however, I
could see nothing, for the shadows of the night still filled it.
But before me, piercing the very clouds, towered the crests of two
snow-clad mountains, and on these the light of the unrisen sun
played, already changing their whiteness to the stain of blood.
Popo, or the Hill that Smokes, is the name of the one, and Ixtac,
or the Sleeping Woman, that of the other, and no grander sight was
ever offered to the eyes of man than they furnished in that hour
before the dawn.  From the lofty summit of Popo went up great
columns of smoke which, what with the fire in their heart and the
crimson of the sunrise, looked like rolling pillars of flame.  And
for the glory of the glittering slopes below, that changed
continually from the mystery of white to dull red, from red to
crimson, and from crimson to every dazzling hue that the rainbow
holds, who can tell it, who can even imagine it?  None, indeed,
except those that have seen the sun rise over the volcans of
Tenoctitlan.

When I had feasted my eyes on Popo I turned to Ixtac.  She is not
so lofty as her 'husband,' for so the Aztecs name the volcan Popo,
and when first I looked I could see nothing but the gigantic shape
of a woman fashioned in snow, and lying like a corpse upon her
lofty bier, whose hair streamed down the mountain side.  But now
the sunbeams caught her also, and she seemed to start out in
majesty from a veil of rosy mist, a wonderful and thrilling sight.
But beautiful as she was then, still I love the Sleeping Woman best
at eve.  Then she lies a shape of glory on the blackness beneath,
and is slowly swallowed up into the solemn night as the dark draws
its veil across her.

Now as I gazed the light began to creep down the sides of the
volcans, revealing the forests on their flanks.  But still the vast
valley was filled with mist that lay in dense billows resembling
those of the sea, through which hills and temple tops started up
like islands.  By slow degrees as we passed upon our downward road
the vapours cleared away, and the lakes of Tezcuco, Chalco, and
Xochicalco shone in the sunlight like giant mirrors.  On their
banks stood many cities, indeed the greatest of these, Mexico,
seemed to float upon the waters; beyond them and about them were
green fields of corn and aloe, and groves of forest trees, while
far away towered the black wall of rock that hedges in the valley.

All day we journeyed swiftly through this fairy land.  We passed
through the cities of Amaquem and Ajotzinco, which I will not stay
to describe, and many a lovely village that nestled upon the
borders of Lake Chalco.  Then we entered on the great causeway of
stone built like a road resting on the waters, and with the
afternoon we came to the town of Cuitlahuac.  Thence we passed on
to Iztapalapan, and here Guatemoc would have rested for the night
in the royal house of his uncle Cuitlahua.  But when we reached the
town we found that Montezuma, who had been advised of our approach
by runners, had sent orders that we were to push on to Tenoctitlan,
and that palanquins had been made ready to bear us.  So we entered
the palanquins, and leaving that lovely city of gardens, were borne
swiftly along the southern causeway.  On we went past towns built
upon piles fixed in the bottom of the lake, past gardens that were
laid out on reeds and floated over the waters like a boat, past
teocallis and glistening temples without number, through fleets of
light canoes and thousands of Indians going to and fro about their
business, till at length towards sunset we reached the battlemented
fort that is called Xoloc which stands upon the dyke.  I say
stands, but alas! it stands no more.  Cortes has destroyed it, and
with it all those glorious cities which my eyes beheld that day.

At Xoloc we began to enter the city of Tenoctitlan or Mexico, the
mightiest city that ever I had seen.  The houses on the outskirts,
indeed, were built of mud or adobe, but those in the richer parts
were constructed of red stone.  Each house surrounded a courtyard
and was in turn surrounded by a garden, while between them ran
canals, having footpaths on either side.  Then there were squares,
and in the squares pyramids, palaces, and temples without end.  I
gazed on them till I was bewildered, but all seemed as nothing when
at length I saw the great temple with its stone gateways opening to
the north and the south, the east and the west, its wall carven
everywhere with serpents, its polished pavements, its teocallis
decked with human skulls, thousands upon thousands of them, and its
vast surrounding tianquez, or market place.  I caught but a glimpse
of it then, for the darkness was falling, and afterwards we were
borne on through the darkness, I did not know whither.

A while went by and I saw that we had left the city, and were
passing up a steep hill beneath the shadow of mighty cedar trees.
Presently we halted in a courtyard and here I was bidden to alight.
Then the prince Guatemoc led me into a wondrous house, of which all
the rooms were roofed with cedar wood, and its walls hung with
richly-coloured cloths, and in that house gold seemed as plentiful
as bricks and oak are with us in England.  Led by domestics who
bore cedar wands in their hands, we went through many passages and
rooms, till at length we came to a chamber where other domestics
were awaiting us, who washed us with scented waters and clothed us
in gorgeous apparel.  Thence they conducted us to a door where we
were bidden to remove our shoes, and a coarse coloured robe was
given to each of us to hide our splendid dress.  The robes having
been put on, we were suffered to pass the door, and found ourselves
in a vast chamber in which were many noble men and some women, all
standing and clad in coarse robes.  At the far end of this chamber
was a gilded screen, and from behind it floated sounds of sweet
music.

Now as we stood in the great chamber that was lighted with sweet-
smelling torches, many men advanced and greeted Guatemoc the
prince, and I noticed that all of them looked upon me curiously.
Presently a woman came and I saw that her beauty was great.  She
was tall and stately, and beneath her rough outer robe splendidly
attired in worked and jewelled garments.  Weary and bewildered as I
was, her loveliness seized me as it were in a vice, never before
had I seen such loveliness.  For her eye was proud and full like
the eye of a buck, her curling hair fell upon her shoulders, and
her features were very noble, yet tender almost to sadness, though
at times she could seem fierce enough.  This lady was yet in her
first youth, perchance she may have seen some eighteen years, but
her shape was that of a full-grown woman and most royal.

'Greeting, Guatemoc my cousin,' she said in a sweet voice; 'so you
are come at last.  My royal father has awaited you for long and
will ask questions as to your delay.  My sister your wife has
wondered also why you tarried.'

Now as she spoke I felt rather than saw that this lady was
searching me with her eyes.

'Greeting, Otomie my cousin,' answered the prince.  'I have been
delayed by the accidents of travel.  Tobasco is far away, also my
charge and companion, Teule,' and he nodded towards me, 'met with
an accident on the road.'

'What was the accident?' she asked.

'Only this, that he saved me from the jaws of a puma at the risk of
his life when all the others fled from me, and was somewhat hurt in
the deed.  He saved me thus--' and in few words he told the story.

She listened and I saw that her eyes sparkled at the tale.  When it
was done she spoke again, and this time to me.

'Welcome, Teule,' she said smiling.  'You are not of our people,
yet my heart goes out to such a man.'  And still smiling she left
us.

'Who is that great lady?' I asked of Guatemoc.

'That is my cousin Otomie, the princess of the Otomie, my uncle
Montezuma's favourite daughter,' he answered.  'She likes you,
Teule, and that is well for you for many reasons.  Hush!'

As he spoke the screen at the far end of the chamber was drawn
aside.  Beyond it a man sat upon a broidered cushion, who was
inhaling the fumes of the tobacco weed from a gilded pipe of wood
after the Indian fashion.  This man, who was no other than the
monarch Montezuma, was of a tall build and melancholy countenance,
having a very pale face for one of his nation, and thin black hair.
He was dressed in a white robe of the purest cotton, and wore a
golden belt and sandals set with pearls, and on his head a plume of
feathers of the royal green.  Behind him were a band of beautiful
girls somewhat slightly clothed, some of whom played on lutes and
other instruments of music, and on either side stood four ancient
counsellors, all of them barefooted and clad in the coarsest
garments.

So soon as the screen was drawn all the company in the chamber
prostrated themselves upon their knees, an example that I hastened
to follow, and thus they remained till the emperor made a sign with
the gilded bowl of his pipe, when they rose to their feet again and
stood with folded hands and eyes fixed abjectly upon the floor.
Presently Montezuma made another signal, and three aged men whom I
understood to be ambassadors, advanced and asked some prayer of
him.  He answered them with a nod of the head and they retreated
from his presence, making obeisance and stepping backward till they
mingled with the crowd.  Then the emperor spoke a word to one of
the counsellors, who bowed and came slowly down the hall looking to
the right and to the left.  Presently his eye fell upon Guatemoc,
and, indeed, he was easy to see, for he stood a head taller than
any there.

'Hail, prince,' he said.  'The royal Montezuma desires to speak
with you, and with the Teule, your companion.'

'Do as I do, Teule,' said Guatemoc, and led the way up the chamber,
till we reached the place where the wooden screen had been, which,
as we passed it, was drawn behind us, shutting us off from the
hall.

Here we stood a while, with folded hands and downcast eyes, till a
signal was made to us to advance.

'Your report, nephew,' said Montezuma in a low voice of command.

'I went to the city of Tobasco, O glorious Montezuma.  I found the
Teule and brought him hither.  Also I caused the high priest to be
sacrificed according to the royal command, and now I hand back the
imperial signet,' and he gave the ring to a counsellor.

'Why did you delay so long upon the road, nephew?'

'Because of the chances of the journey; while saving my life, royal
Montezuma, the Teule my prisoner was bitten by a puma.  Its skin is
brought to you as an offering.'

Now Montezuma looked at me for the first time, then opened a
picture scroll that one of the counsellors handed to him, and read
in it, glancing at me from time to time.

'The description is good,' he said at length, 'in all save one
thing--it does not say that this prisoner is the handsomest man in
Anahuac.  Say, Teule, why have your countrymen landed on my
dominions and slain my people?'

'I know nothing of it, O king,' I answered as well as I might with
the help of Guatemoc, 'and they are not my countrymen.'

'The report says that you confess to having the blood of these
Teules in your veins, and that you came to these shores, or near
them, in one of their great canoes.'

'That is so, O king, yet I am not of their people, and I came to
the shore floating on a barrel.'

'I hold that you lie,' answered Montezuma frowning, 'for the sharks
and crocodiles would devour one who swam thus.'  Then he added
anxiously, 'Say, are you of the descendants of Quetzal?'

'I do not know, O king.  I am of a white race, and our forefather
was named Adam.'

'Perchance that is another name for Quetzal,' he said.  'It has
long been prophesied that his children would return, and now it
seems that the hour of their coming is at hand,' and he sighed
heavily, then added: 'Go now.  To-morrow you shall tell me of these
Teules, and the council of the priests shall decide your fate.'

Now when I heard the name of the priests I trembled in all my bones
and cried, clasping my hands in supplication:

'Slay me if you will, O king, but I beseech you deliver me not
again into the hands of the priests.'

'We are all in the hands of the priests, who are the mouth of God,'
he answered coldly.  'Besides, I hold that you have lied to me.'

Then I went foreboding evil, and Guatemoc also looked downcast.
Bitterly did I curse the hour when I had said that I was of the
Spanish blood and yet no Spaniard.  Had I known even what I knew
that day, torture would not have wrung those words from me.  But
now it was too late.

Now Guatemoc led me to certain apartments of this palace of
Chapoltepec, where his wife, the royal princess Tecuichpo, was
waiting him, a very lovely lady, and with her other ladies, among
them the princess Otomie, Montezuma's daughter, and some nobles.
Here a rich repast was served to us, and I was seated next to the
princess Otomie, who spoke to me most graciously, asking me many
things concerning my land and the people of the Teules.  It was
from her that I learned first that the emperor was much disturbed
at heart because of these Teules or Spaniards, for he was
superstitious, and held them to be the children of the god Quetzal,
who according to ancient prophecy would come to take the land.
Indeed, so gracious was she, and so royally lovely, that for the
first time I felt my heart stirred by any other woman than my
betrothed whom I had left far away in England, and whom, as I
thought, I should never see again.  And as I learned in after days
mine was not the only heart that was stirred that night.

Near to us sat another royal lady, Papantzin, the sister of
Montezuma, but she was neither young nor lovely, and yet most sweet
faced and sad as though with the presage of death.  Indeed she died
not many weeks after but could not rest quiet in her grave, as
shall be told.

When the feast was done and we had drunk of the cocoa or chocolate,
and smoked tobacco in pipes, a strange but most soothing custom
that I learned in Tobasco and of which I have never been able to
break myself, though the weed is still hard to come by here in
England, I was led to my sleeping place, a small chamber panelled
with cedar boards.  For a while I could not sleep, for I was
overcome by the memory of all the strange sights that I had seen in
this wonderful new land which was so civilised and yet so
barbarous.  I thought of that sad-faced king, the absolute lord of
millions, surrounded by all that the heart of man can desire, by
vast wealth, by hundreds of lovely wives, by loving children, by
countless armies, by all the glory of the arts, ruling over the
fairest empire on the earth, with every pleasure to his hand, a god
in all things save his mortality, and worshipped as a god, and yet
a victim to fear and superstition, and more heavy hearted than the
meanest slave about his palaces.  Here was a lesson such as Solomon
would have loved to show, for with Solomon this Montezuma might
cry:

'I gathered me also silver and gold, and the peculiar treasure of
kings and of the provinces: I gat me men singers and women singers,
and the delights of the sons of men, and musical instruments, and
that of all sorts.  And whatsoever my eyes desired I kept not from
them, I withheld not my heart from any joy.  And behold, all was
vanity and vexation of spirit, and there was no profit under the
sun.'

So he might have cried, so, indeed, he did cry in other words, for,
as the painting of the skeletons and the three monarchs that is
upon the north wall of the aisle of Ditchingham Church shows forth
so aptly, kings have their fates and happiness is not to them more
than to any other of the sons of men.  Indeed, it is not at all, as
my benefactor Fonseca once said to me; true happiness is but a
dream from which we awake continually to the sorrows of our short
laborious day.

Then my thoughts flew to the vision of that most lovely maid, the
princess Otomie, who, as I believed, had looked on me so kindly,
and I found that vision sweet, for I was young, and the English
Lily, my own love, was far away and lost to me for ever.  Was it
then wonderful that I should find this Indian poppy fair?  Indeed,
where is the man who would not have been overcome by her sweetness,
her beauty, and that stamp of royal grace which comes with kingly
blood and the daily exercise of power?  Like the rich wonders of
the robe she wore, her very barbarism, of which now I saw but the
better side, drew and dazzled my mind's eye, giving her woman's
tenderness some new quality, sombre and strange, an eastern
richness which is lacking in our well schooled English women, that
at one and the same stroke touched both the imagination and the
senses, and through them enthralled the heart.

For Otomie seemed such woman as men dream of but very rarely win,
seeing that the world has few such natures and fewer nurseries
where they can be reared.  At once pure and passionate, of royal
blood and heart, rich natured and most womanly, yet brave as a man
and beautiful as the night, with a mind athirst for knowledge and a
spirit that no sorrows could avail to quell, ever changing in her
outer moods, and yet most faithful and with the honour of a man,
such was Otomie, Montezuma's daughter, princess of the Otomie.  Was
it wonderful then that I found her fair, or, when fate gave me her
love, that at last I loved her in turn?  And yet there was that in
her nature which should have held me back had I but known of it,
for with all her charm, her beauty and her virtues, at heart she
was still a savage, and strive as she would to hide it, at times
her blood would master her.

But as I lay in the chamber of the palace of Chapoltepec, the tramp
of the guards without my door reminded me that I had little now to
do with love and other delights, I whose life hung from day to day
upon a hair.  To-morrow the priests would decide my fate, and when
the priests were judges, the prisoner might know the sentence
before it was spoken.  I was a stranger and a white man, surely
such a one would prove an offering more acceptable to the gods than
that furnished by a thousand Indian hearts.  I had been snatched
from the altars of Tobasco that I might grace the higher altars of
Tenoctitlan, and that was all.  My fate would be to perish
miserably far from my home, and in this world never to be heard of
more.

Musing thus sadly at last I slept.  When I woke the sun was up.
Rising from my mat I went to the wood-barred window place and
looked through.  The palace whence I gazed was placed on the crest
of a rocky hill.  On one side this hill was bathed by the blue
waters of Tezcuco, on the other, a mile or more away, rose the
temple towers of Mexico.  Along the slopes of the hill, and in some
directions for a mile from its base, grew huge cedar trees from the
boughs of which hung a grey and ghostly-looking moss.  These trees
are so large that the smallest of them is bigger than the best oak
in this parish of Ditchingham, while the greatest measures twenty-
two paces round the base.  Beyond and between these marvellous and
ancient trees were the gardens of Montezuma, that with their
strange and gorgeous flowers, their marble baths, their aviaries
and wild beast dens, were, as I believe, the most wonderful in the
whole world.*

'At the least,' I thought to myself, 'even if I must die, it is
something to have seen this country of Anahuac, its king, its
customs, and its people.'


* The gardens of Montezuma have been long destroyed, but some of
the cedars still flourish at Chapoltepec, though the Spaniards cut
down many.  One of them, which tradition says was a favourite tree
of the great emperor's, measures (according to a rough calculation
the author of this book made upon the spot) about sixty feet round
the bole.  It is strange to think that a few ancient conifers
should alone survive of all the glories of Montezuma's wealth and
state.--AUTHOR.



CHAPTER XVI

THOMAS BECOMES A GOD


Little did I, plain Thomas Wingfield, gentleman, know, when I rose
that morning, that before sunset I should be a god, and after
Montezuma the Emperor, the most honoured man, or rather god, in the
city of Mexico.

It came about thus.  When I had breakfasted with the household of
the prince Guatemoc, I was led to the hall of justice, which was
named the 'tribunal of god.'  Here on a golden throne sat
Montezuma, administering justice in such pomp as I cannot describe.
About him were his counsellors and great lords, and before him was
placed a human skull crowned with emeralds so large that a blaze of
light went up from them.  In his hand also he held an arrow for a
sceptre.  Certain chiefs or caciques were on their trial for
treason, nor were they left long in doubt as to their fate.  For
when some evidence had been heard they were asked what they had to
say in their defence.  Each of them told his tale in few words and
short.  Then Montezuma, who till now had said and done nothing,
took the painted scroll of their indictments and pricked it with
the arrow in his hand where the picture of each prisoner appeared
upon the scroll.  Then they were led away to death, but how they
died I do not know.

When this trial was finished certain priests entered the hall
clothed in sable robes, their matted hair hanging down their backs.
They were fierce, wild-eyed men of great dignity, and I shivered
when I saw them.  I noticed also that they alone made small
reverence to the majesty of Montezuma.  The counsellors and nobles
having fallen back, these priests entered into talk with the
emperor, and presently two of them came forward and taking me from
the custody of the guards, led me forward before the throne.  Then
of a sudden I was commanded to strip myself of my garments, and
this I did with no little shame, till I stood naked before them
all.  Now the priests came forward and examined every part of me
closely.  On my arms were the scars left by de Garcia's sword, and
on my breast the scarcely healed marks of the puma's teeth and
claws.  These wounds they scanned, asking how I had come by them.
I told them, and thereupon they carried on a discussion among
themselves, and out of my hearing, which grew so warm that at
length they appealed to the emperor to decide the point.  He
thought a while, and I heard him say:

'The blemishes do not come from within the body, nor were they upon
it at birth, but have been inflicted by the violence of man and
beast.'

Then the priests consulted together again, and presently their
leader spoke some words into the ear of Montezuma.  He nodded, and
rising from his throne, came towards me who stood naked and
shivering before him, for the air of Mexico is keen.  As he
advanced he loosed a chain of emeralds and gold that hung about his
neck, and unclasped the royal cloak from his shoulders.  Then with
his own hand, he put the chain about my throat, and the cloak upon
my shoulders, and having humbly bent the knee before me as though
in adoration, he cast his arms about me and embraced me.

'Hail! most blessed,' he said, 'divine son of Quetzal, holder of
the spirit of Tezcat, Soul of the World, Creator of the World.
What have we done that you should honour us thus with your presence
for a season?  What can we do to pay the honour back?  You created
us and all this country; behold! while you tarry with us, it is
yours and we are nothing but your servants.  Order and your
commands shall be obeyed, think and your thought shall be executed
before it can pass your lips.  O Tezcat, I, Montezuma your servant,
offer you my adoration, and through me the adoration of all my
people,' and again he bowed the knee.

'We adore you, O Tezcat!' chimed in the priests.

Now I remained silent and bewildered, for of all this foolery I
could understand nothing, and while I stood thus Montezuma clapped
his hands and women entered bearing beautiful clothing with them,
and a wreath of flowers.  The clothing they put upon my body and
the wreath of flowers on my head, worshipping me the while and
saying, 'Tezcat who died yesterday is come again.  Be joyful,
Tezcat has come again in the body of the captive Teule.'

Then I understood that I was now a god and the greatest of gods,
though at that moment within myself I felt more of a fool than I
had ever been before.

And now men appeared, grave and reverend in appearance, bearing
lutes in their hands.  I was told that these were my tutors, and
with them a train of royal pages who were to be my servants.  They
led me forth from the hall making music as they went, and before me
marched a herald, calling out that this was the god Tezcat, Soul of
the World, Creator of the World, who had come again to visit his
people.  They led me through all the courts and endless chambers of
the palace, and wherever I went, man woman and child bowed
themselves to the earth before me, and worshipped me, Thomas
Wingfield of Ditchingham, in the county of Norfolk, till I thought
that I must be mad.

Then they placed me in a litter and carried me down the hill
Chapoltepec, and along causeways and through streets, till we came
to the great square of the temple.  Before me went heralds and
priests, after me followed pages and nobles, and ever as we passed
the multitudes prostrated themselves till I began to understand how
wearisome a thing it is to be a god.  Next they carried me through
the wall of serpents and up the winding paths of the mighty
teocalli till we reached the summit, where the temples and idols
stood, and here a great drum beat, and the priests sacrificed
victim after victim in my honour and I grew sick with the sight of
wickedness and blood.  Presently they invited me to descend from
the litter, laying rich carpets and flowers for my feet to tread
on, and I was much afraid, for I thought that they were about to
sacrifice me to myself or some other divinity.  But this was not
so.  They led me to the edge of the pyramid, or as near as I would
go, for I shrank back lest they should seize me suddenly and cast
me over the edge.  And there the high priest called out my dignity
to the thousands who were assembled beneath, and every one of them
bent the knee in adoration of me, the priests above and the
multitudes below.  And so it went on till I grew dizzy with the
worship, and the shouting, and the sounds of music, and the sights
of death, and very thankful was I, when at last they carried me
back to Chapoltepec.

Here new honours awaited me, for I was conducted to a splendid
range of apartments, next to those of the emperor himself, and I
was told that all Montezuma's household were at my command and that
he who refused to do my bidding should die.

So at last I spoke and said it was my bidding that I should be
suffered to rest a while, till a feast was prepared for me in the
apartments of Guatemoc the prince, for there I hoped to meet
Otomie.

My tutors and the nobles who attended me answered that Montezuma my
servant had trusted that I would feast with him that night.  Still
my command should be done.  Then they left me, saying that they
would come again in an hour to lead me to the banquet.  Now I threw
off the emblems of my godhead and cast myself down on cushions to
rest and think, and a certain exultation took possession of me, for
was I not a god, and had I not power almost absolute?  Still being
of a cautious mind I wondered why I was a god, and how long my
power would last.

Before the hour had gone by, pages and nobles entered, bearing new
robes which were put upon my body and fresh flowers to crown my
head, and I was led away to the apartments of Guatemoc, fair women
going before me who played upon instruments of music.

Here Guatemoc the prince waited to receive me, which he did as
though I, his captive and companion, was the first of kings.  And
yet I thought that I saw merriment in his eye, mingled with sorrow.
Bending forward I spoke to him in a whisper:

'What does all this mean, prince?' I said.  'Am I befooled, or am I
indeed a god?'

'Hush!' he answered, bowing low and speaking beneath his breath.
'It means both good and ill for you, my friend Teule.  Another time
I will tell you.'  Then he added aloud, 'Does it please you, O
Tezcat, god of gods, that we should sit at meat with you, or will
you eat alone?'

'The gods like good company, prince,' I said.

Now during this talk I had discovered that among those gathered in
the hall was the princess Otomie.  So when we passed to the low
table around which we were to sit on cushions, I hung back watching
where she would place herself, and then at once seated myself
beside her.  This caused some little confusion among the company,
for the place of honour had been prepared for me at the head of the
table, the seat of Guatemoc being to my right and that of his wife,
the royal Tecuichpo, to my left.

'Your seat is yonder, O Tezcat,' she said, blushing beneath her
olive skin as she spoke.

'Surely a god may sit where he chooses, royal Otomie,' I answered;
'besides,' I added in a low voice, 'what better place can he find
than by the side of the most lovely goddess on the earth.'

Again she blushed and answered, 'Alas! I no goddess, but only a
mortal maid.  Listen, if you desire that I should be your companion
at our feasts, you must issue it as a command; none will dare to
disobey you, not even Montezuma my father.'

So I rose and said in very halting Aztec to the nobles who waited
on me, 'It is my will that my place shall always be set by the side
of the princess Otomie.'

At these words Otomie blushed even more, and a murmur went round
among the guests, while Guatemoc first looked angry and then
laughed.  But the nobles, my attendants, bowed, and their spokesman
answered:

'The words of Tezcat shall be obeyed.  Let the seat of Otomie, the
royal princess, the favoured of Tezcat, be placed by the side of
the god.'

Afterwards this was always done, except when I ate with Montezuma
himself.  Moreover the princess Otomie became known throughout the
city as 'the blessed princess, the favoured of Tezcat.'  For so
strong a hold had custom and superstition upon this people that
they thought it the greatest of honours to her, who was among the
first ladies in the land, that he who for a little space was
supposed to hold the spirit of the soul of the world, should deign
to desire her companionship when he ate.  Now the feast went on,
and presently I made shift to ask Otomie what all this might mean.

'Alas!' she whispered, 'you do not know, nor dare I tell you now.
But I will say this: though you who are a god may sit where you
will to-day, an hour shall come when you must lie where you would
not.  Listen: when we have finished eating, say that it is your
wish to walk in the gardens of the palace and that I should
accompany you.  Then I may find a chance to speak.'

Accordingly, when the feast was over I said that I desired to walk
in the gardens with the princess Otomie, and we went out and
wandered under the solemn trees, that are draped in a winding-sheet
of grey moss which, hanging from every bough as though the forest
had been decked with the white beards of an army of aged men, waved
and rustled sadly in the keen night air.  But alas! we might not be
alone, for after us at a distance of twenty paces followed all my
crowd of attendant nobles, together with fair dancing girls and
minstrels armed with their accursed flutes, on which they blew in
season and out of it, dancing as they blew.  In vain did I command
them to be silent, telling them that it was written of old that
there is a time to play and dance and a time to cease from dancing,
for in this alone they would not obey me.  Never could I be at
peace because of them then or thereafter, and not till now did I
learn how great a treasure is solitude.

Still we were allowed to walk together under the trees, and though
the clamour of music pursued us wherever we went, we were soon deep
in talk.  Then it was that I learned how dreadful was the fate
which overshadowed me.

'Know, O Teule,' said Otomie, for she would call me by the old name
when there were none to hear; 'this is the custom of our land, that
every year a young captive should be chosen to be the earthly image
of the god Tezcat, who created the world.  Only two things are
necessary to this captive, namely, that his blood should be noble,
and that his person should be beautiful and without flaw or
blemish.  The day that you came hither, Teule, chanced to be the
day of choosing a new captive to personate the god, and you have
been chosen because you are both noble and more beautiful than any
man in Anahuac, and also because being of the people of the Teules,
the children of Quetzal of whom so many rumours have reached us,
and whose coming my father Montezuma dreads more than anything in
the world, it was thought by the priests that you may avert their
anger from us, and the anger of the gods.'

Now Otomie paused as one who has something to say that she can
scarcely find words to fit, but I, remembering only what had been
said, swelled inwardly with the sense of my own greatness, and
because this lovely princess had declared that I was the most
beautiful man in Anahuac, I who though I was well-looking enough,
had never before been called 'beautiful' by man, woman, or child.
But in this case as in many another, pride went before a fall.

'It must be spoken, Teule,' Otomie continued.  'Alas! that it
should be I who am fated to tell you.  For a year you will rule as
a god in this city of Tenoctitlan, and except for certain
ceremonies that you must undergo, and certain arts which you must
learn, none will trouble you.  Your slightest wish will be a law,
and when you smile on any, it shall be an omen of good to them and
they will bless you; even my father Montezuma will treat you with
reverence as an equal or more.  Every delight shall be yours except
that of marriage, and this will be withheld till the twelfth month
of the year.  Then the four most beautiful maidens in the land will
be given to you as brides.'

'And who will choose them?' I asked.

'Nay, I know not, Teule, who do not meddle in such mysteries,' she
answered hurriedly.  'Sometimes the god is judge and sometimes the
priests judge for him.  It is as it may chance.  Listen now to the
end of my tale and you will surely forget the rest.  For one month
you will live with your wives, and this month you will pass in
feasting at all the noblest houses in the city.  On the last day of
the month, however, you will be placed in a royal barge and
together with your wives, paddled across the lake to a place that
is named "Melting of Metals."  Thence you will be led to the
teocalli named "House of Weapons," where your wives will bid
farewell to you for ever, and there, Teule, alas! that I must say
it, you are doomed to be offered as a sacrifice to the god whose
spirit you hold, the great god Tezcat, for your heart will be torn
from your body, and your head will be struck from your shoulders
and set upon the stake that is known as "post of heads."'

Now when I heard this dreadful doom I groaned aloud and my knees
trembled so that I almost fell to the ground.  Then a great fury
seized me and, forgetting my father's counsel, I blasphemed the
gods of that country and the people who worshipped them, first in
the Aztec and Maya languages, then when my knowledge of these
tongues failed me, in Spanish and good English.  But Otomie, who
heard some of my words and guessed more, was seized with fear and
lifted her hands, saying:

'Curse not the awful gods, I beseech you, lest some terrible thing
befall you at once.  If you are overheard it will be thought that
you have an evil spirit and not a good one, and then you must die
now and by torment.  At the least the gods, who are everywhere,
will hear you.'

'Let them hear,' I answered.  'They are false gods and that country
is accursed which worships them.  They are doomed I say, and all
their worshippers are doomed.  Nay, I care not if I am heard--as
well die now by torment as live a year in the torment of
approaching death.  But I shall not die alone, all the sea of blood
that your priests have shed cries out for vengeance to the true
God, and He will avenge.'

Thus I raved on, being mad with fear and impotent anger, while the
princess Otomie stood terrified and amazed at my blasphemies, and
the flutes piped and the dancers danced behind us.  And as I raved
I saw that the mind of Otomie wandered from my words, for she was
staring towards the east like one who sees a vision.  Then I looked
also towards the east and saw that the sky was alight there.  For
from the edge of the horizon to the highest parts of heaven spread
a fan of pale and fearful light powdered over with sparks of fire,
the handle of the fan resting on the earth as it were, while its
wings covered the eastern sky.  Now I ceased my cursing and stood
transfixed, and as I stood, a cry of terror arose from all the
precincts of the palace and people poured from every door to gaze
upon the portent that flared and blazed in the east.  Presently
Montezuma himself came out, attended by his great lords, and in
that ghastly light I saw that his lips worked and his hands writhed
over each other.  Nor was the miracle done with, for anon from the
clear sky that hung over the city, descended a ball of fire, which
seemed to rest upon the points of the lofty temple in the great
square, lighting up the teocalli as with the glare of day.  It
vanished, but where it had been another light now burned, for the
temple of Quetzal was afire.

Now cries of fear and lamentation arose from all who beheld these
wonders on the hill of Chapoltepec and also from the city below.
Even I was frightened, I do not know why, for it may well be that
the blaze of light which we saw on that and after nights was
nothing but the brightness of a comet, and that the fire in the
temple was caused by a thunderbolt.  But to these people, and more
especially to Montezuma, whose mind was filled already with rumours
of the coming of a strange white race, which, as it was truly
prophesied, would bring his empire to nothingness, the omens seemed
very evil.  Indeed, if they had any doubt as to their meaning, it
was soon to be dispelled, in their minds at least.  For as we stood
wonder-struck, a messenger, panting and soiled with travel, arrived
among us and prostrating himself before the majesty of the emperor,
he drew a painted scroll from his robe and handed it to an
attendant noble.  So desirous was Montezuma to know its contents,
that contrary to all custom he snatched the roll from the hands of
the counsellor, and unrolling it, he began to read the picture
writing by the baleful light of the blazing sky and temple.
Presently, as we watched and he read, Montezuma groaned aloud, and
casting down the writing he covered his face with his hands.  As it
chanced it fell near to where I stood, and I saw painted over it
rude pictures of ships of the Spanish rig, and of men in the
Spanish armour.  Then I understood why Montezuma groaned.  The
Spaniards had landed on his shores!

Now some of his counsellors approached him to console him, but he
thrust them aside, saying:

'Let me mourn--the doom that was foretold is fallen upon the
children of Anahuac.  The children of Quetzal muster on our shores
and slay my people.  Let me mourn, I say.'

At that moment another messenger came from the palace, having grief
written on his face.

'Speak,' said Montezuma.

'O king, forgive the tongue that must tell such tidings.  Your
royal sister Papantzin was seized with terror at yonder dreadful
sight,' and he pointed to the heavens; 'she lies dying in the
palace!'

Now when the emperor heard that his sister whom he loved was dying,
he said nothing, but covering his face with his royal mantle, he
passed slowly back to the palace.

And all the while the crimson light gleamed and sparkled in the
east like some monstrous and unnatural dawn, while the temple of
Quetzal burned fiercely in the city beneath.

Now, I turned to the princess Otomie, who had stood by my side
throughout, overcome with wonder and trembling.

'Did I not say that this country was accursed, princess of the
Otomie?'

'You said it, Teule,' she answered, 'and it is accursed.'


Then we went into the palace, and even in this hour of fear, after
me came the minstrels as before.



CHAPTER XVII

THE ARISING OF PAPANTZIN


On the morrow Papantzin died, and was buried with great pomp that
same evening in the burial-ground at Chapoltepec, by the side of
the emperor's royal ancestors.  But, as will be seen, she was not
content with their company.  On that day also, I learned that to be
a god is not all pleasure, since it was expected of me that I must
master various arts, and chiefly the horrid art of music, to which
I never had any desire.  Still my own wishes were not allowed to
weigh in the matter, for there came to me tutors, aged men who
might have found better employment, to instruct me in the use of
the lute, and on this instrument I must learn to strum.  Others
there were also, who taught me letters, poetry, and art, as they
were understood among the Aztecs, and all this knowledge I was glad
of.  Still I remembered the words of the preacher which tell us
that he who increaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow, and moreover I
could see little use in acquiring learning that was to be lost
shortly on the stone of sacrifice.

As to this matter of my sacrifice I was at first desperate.  But
reflection told me that I had already passed many dangers and come
out unscathed, and therefore it was possible that I might escape
this one also.  At least death was still a long way off, and for
the present I was a god.  So I determined that whether I died or
lived, while I lived I would live like a god and take such
pleasures as came to my hand, and I acted on this resolve.  No man
ever had greater or more strange opportunities, and no man can have
used them better.  Indeed, had it not been for the sorrowful
thoughts of my lost love and home which would force themselves upon
me, I should have been almost happy, because of the power that I
wielded and the strangeness of all around me.  But I must to my
tale.

During the days that followed the death of Papantzin the palace and
the city also were plunged in ferment.  The minds of men were
shaken strangely because of the rumours that filled the air.  Every
night the fiery portent blazed in the east, every day a new wonder
or omen was reported, and with it some wild tale of the doings of
the Spaniards, who by most were held to be white gods, the children
of Quetzal, come back to take the land which their forefather
ruled.

But of all that were troubled, none were in such bad case as the
emperor himself, who, during these weeks scarcely ate or drank or
slept, so heavy were his fears upon him.  In this strait he sent
messengers to his ancient rival, that wise and severe man Neza, the
king of the allied state of Tezcuco, begging that he would visit
him.  This king came, an old man with a fierce and gleaming eye,
and I was witness to the interview that followed, for in my quality
of god I had full liberty of the palace, and even to be present at
the councils of the emperor and his nobles.  When the two monarchs
had feasted together, Montezuma spoke to Neza of the matter of the
omens and of the coming of the Teules, asking him to lighten the
darkness by his wisdom.  Then Neza pulled his long grey beard and
answered that heavy as the heart of Montezuma might be, it must
grow still heavier before the end.

'See, Lord,' he said, 'I am so sure that the days of our empire are
numbered, that I will play you at dice for my kingdoms which you
and your forefathers have ever desired to win.'

'For what wager?' asked Montezuma.

'I will play you thus,' answered Neza.  'You shall stake three
fighting cocks, of which, should I win, I ask the spurs only.  I
set against them all the wide empire of Tezcuco.'

'A small stake,' said Montezuma; 'cocks are many and kingdoms few.'

'Still, it shall serve our turn,' answered the aged king, 'for know
that we play against fate.  As the game goes, so shall the issue
be.  If you win my kingdoms all is well; if I win the cocks, then
good-bye to the glory of Anahuac, for its people will cease to be a
people, and strangers shall possess the land.'

'Let us play and see,' said Montezuma, and they went down to the
place that is called tlachco, where the games are set.  Here they
began the match with dice and at first all went well for Montezuma,
so that he called aloud that already he was lord of Tezcuco.

'May it be so!' answered the aged Neza, and from that moment the
chance changed.  For strive as he would, Montezuma could not win
another point, and presently the set was finished, and Neza had won
the cocks.  Now the music played, and courtiers came forward to
give the king homage on his success.  But he rose sighing, and
said:

'I had far sooner lose my kingdoms than have won these fowls, for
if I had lost my kingdoms they would still have passed into the
hands of one of my own race.  Now alas! my possessions and his must
come under the hand of strangers, who shall cast down our gods and
bring our names to nothing.'

And having spoken thus, he rose, and taking farewell of the
emperor, he departed for his own land, where, as it chanced, he
died very shortly, without living to see the fulfilment of his
fears.

On the morrow of his departure came further accounts of the doings
of the Spaniards that plunged Montezuma into still greater alarm.
In his terror he sent for an astronomer, noted throughout the land
for the truth of his divinations.  The astronomer came, and was
received by the emperor privately.  What he told him I do not know,
but at least it was nothing pleasant, for that very night men were
commanded to pull down the house of this sage, who was buried in
its ruins.

Two days after the death of the astronomer, Montezuma bethought him
that, as he believed, I also was a Teule, and could give him
information.  So at the hour of sunset he sent for me, bidding me
walk with him in the gardens.  I went thither, followed by my
musicians and attendants, who would never leave me in peace, but he
commanded that all should stand aside, as he wished to speak with
me alone.  Then he began to walk beneath the mighty cedar trees,
and I with him, but keeping one pace behind.

'Teule,' he said at length, 'tell me of your countrymen, and why
they have come to these shores.  See that you speak truth.'

'They are no countrymen of mine, O Montezuma,' I answered, 'though
my mother was one of them.'

'Did I not bid you speak the truth, Teule?  If your mother was one
of them, must you not also be of them; for are you not of your
mother's bone and blood?'

'As the king pleases,' I answered bowing.  Then I began and told
him of the Spaniards--of their country, their greatness, their
cruelty and their greed of gold, and he listened eagerly, though I
think that he believed little of what I said, for his fear had made
him very suspicious.  When I had done, he spoke and said:

'Why do they come here to Anahuac?'

'I fear, O king, that they come to take the land, or at the least
to rob it of all its treasure, and to destroy its faiths.'

'What then is your counsel, Teule?  How can I defend myself against
these mighty men, who are clothed in metal, and ride upon fierce
wild beasts, who have instruments that make a noise like thunder,
at the sound of which their adversaries fall dead by hundreds, and
who bear weapons of shining silver in their hands?  Alas! there is
no defence possible, for they are the children of Quetzal come back
to take the land.  From my childhood I have known that this evil
overshadowed me, and now it is at my door.'

'If I, who am only a god, may venture to speak to the lord of the
earth,' I answered, 'I say that the reply is easy.  Meet force by
force.  The Teules are few and you can muster a thousand soldiers
for every one of theirs.  Fall on them at once, do not hesitate
till their prowess finds them friends, but crush them.'

'Such is the counsel of one whose mother was a Teule;' the emperor
answered, with sarcasm and bitter meaning.  'Tell me now,
counsellor, how am I to know that in fighting against them I shall
not be fighting against the gods; how even am I to learn the true
wishes and purposes of men or gods who cannot speak my tongue and
whose tongue I cannot speak?'

'It is easy, O Montezuma,' I answered.  'I can speak their tongue;
send me to discover for you.'

Now as I spoke thus my heart bounded with hope, for if once I could
come among the Spaniards, perhaps I might escape the altar of
sacrifice.  Also they seemed a link between me and home.  They had
sailed hither in ships, and ships can retrace their path.  For
though at present my lot was not all sorrow, it will be guessed
that I should have been glad indeed to find myself once more among
Christian men.

Montezuma looked at me a while and answered:

'You must think me very foolish, Teule.  What! shall I send you to
tell my fears and weakness to your countrymen, and to show them the
joints in my harness?  Do you then suppose that I do not know you
for a spy sent to this land by these same Teules to gather
knowledge of the land?  Fool, I knew it from the first, and by
Huitzel! were you not vowed to Tezcat, your heart should smoke to-
morrow on the altar of Huitzel.  Be warned, and give me no more
false counsels lest your end prove swifter than you think.  Learn
that I have asked these questions of you to a purpose, and by the
command of the gods, as it was written on the hearts of those
sacrificed this day.  This was the purpose and this was the
command, that I might discover your secret mind, and that I should
shun whatever advice you chanced to give.  You counsel me to fight
the Teules, therefore I will not fight them, but meet them with
gifts and fair words, for I know well that you would have me to do
that which should bring me to my doom.'

Thus he spoke very fiercely and in a low voice, his head held low
and his arms crossed upon his breast, and I saw that he shook with
passion.  Even then, though I was very much afraid, for god as I
was, a nod from this mighty king would have sent me to death by
torment, I wondered at the folly of one who in everything else was
so wise.  Why should he doubt me thus and allow superstition to
drag him down to ruin?  To-day I see the answer.  Montezuma did not
these things of himself, but because the hand of destiny worked
with his hand, and the voice of destiny spoke in his voice.  The
gods of the Aztecs were false gods indeed, but I for one believe
that they had life and intelligence, for those hideous shapes of
stone were the habitations of devils, and the priests spoke truth
when they said that the sacrifice of men was pleasing to their
gods.

To these devils the king went for counsel through the priests, and
now this doom was on them, that they must give false counsel to
their own destruction, and to the destruction of those who
worshipped them, as was decreed by One more powerful than they.


Now while we were talking the sun had sunk swiftly, so that all the
world was dark.  But the light still lingered on the snowy crests
of the volcanoes Popo and Ixtac, staining them an awful red.  Never
before to my sight had the shape of the dead woman whose
everlasting bier is Ixtac's bulk, seemed so clear and wonderful as
on that night, for either it was so or my fancy gave it the very
shape and colour of a woman's corse steeped in blood and laid out
for burial.  Nor was it my phantasy alone, for when Montezuma had
finished upbraiding me he chanced to look up, and his eyes falling
on the mountain remained fixed there.

'Look now, Teule!' he said, presently, with a solemn laugh; 'yonder
lies the corse of the nations of Anahuac washed in a water of blood
and made ready for burial.  Is she not terrible in death?'

As he spoke the words and turned to go, a sound of doleful wailing
came from the direction of the mountain, a very wild and unearthly
sound that caused the blood in my veins to stand still.  Now
Montezuma caught my arm in his fear, and we gazed together on
Ixtac, and it seemed to us that this wonder happened.  For in that
red and fearful light the red figure of the sleeping woman arose,
or appeared to rise, from its bier of stone.  It arose slowly like
one who awakes from sleep, and presently it stood upright upon the
mountain's brow, towering high into the air.  There it stood a
giant and awakened corpse, its white wrappings stained with blood,
and we trembled to see it.

For a while the wraith remained thus gazing towards the city of
Tenoctitlan, then suddenly it threw its vast arms upward as though
in grief, and at that moment the night rushed in upon it and
covered it, while the sound of wailing died slowly away.

'Say, Teule,' gasped the emperor, 'do I not well to be afraid when
such portents as these meet my eyes day by day?  Hearken to the
lamentations in the city; we have not seen this sight alone.
Listen how the people cry aloud with fear and the priests beat
their drums to avert the omen.  Weep on, ye people, and ye priests
pray and do sacrifice; it is very fitting, for the day of your doom
is upon you.  O Tenoctitlan, queen of cities, I see you ruined and
desolate, your palaces blackened with fire, your temples
desecrated, your pleasant gardens a wilderness.  I see your
highborn women the wantons of stranger lords, and your princes
their servants; the canals run red with the blood of your children,
your gateways are blocked with their bones.  Death is about you
everywhere, dishonour is your daily bread, desolation is your
portion.  Farewell to you, queen of the cities, cradle of my
forefathers in which I was nursed!'

Thus Montezuma lamented in the darkness, and as he cried aloud the
great moon rose over the edge of the world and poured its level
light through the boughs of the cedars clothed in their ghostly
robe of moss.  It struck upon Montezuma's tall shape, on his
distraught countenance and thin hands as he waved them to and fro
in his prophetic agony, on my glittering garments, and the terror-
stricken band of courtiers, and the musicians who had ceased from
their music.  A little wind sprang up also, moaning sadly in the
mighty trees above and against the rocks of Chapoltepec.  Never did
I witness a scene more strange or more pregnant with mystery and
the promise of unborn horror, than that of this great monarch
mourning over the downfall of his race and power.  As yet no
misfortune had befallen the one or the other, and still he knew
that both were doomed, and these words of lamentation burst from a
heart broken by a grief of which the shadow only lay upon it.

But the wonders of that night were not yet done with.

When Montezuma had made an end of crying his prophecies, I asked
him humbly if I should summon to him the lords who were in
attendance on him, but who stood at some distance.

'Nay,' he answered, 'I will not have them see me thus with grief
and terror upon my face.  Whoever fears, at least I must seem
brave.  Walk with me a while, Teule, and if it is in your mind to
murder me I shall not grieve.'

I made no answer, but followed him as he led the way down the
darkest of the winding paths that run between the cedar trees,
where it would have been easy for me to kill him if I wished, but I
could not see how I should be advantaged by the deed; also though I
knew that Montezuma was my enemy, my heart shrank from the thought
of murder.  For a mile or more he walked on without speaking, now
beneath the shadow of the trees, and now through open spaces of
garden planted with lovely flowers, till at last we came to the
gates of the place where the royal dead are laid to rest.  Now in
front of these gates was an open space of turf on which the
moonlight shone brightly, and in the centre of this space lay
something white, shaped like a woman.  Here Montezuma halted and
looked at the gates, then said:

'These gates opened four days since for Papantzin, my sister; how
long, I wonder, will pass before they open for me?'

As he spoke, the white shape upon the grass which I had seen and he
had not seen, stirred like an awakening sleeper.  As the snow shape
upon the mountain had stirred, so this shape stirred; as it had
arisen, so this one arose; as it threw its arms upwards, so this
one threw up her arms.  Now Montezuma saw and stood still
trembling, and I trembled also.

Then the woman--for it was a woman--advanced slowly towards us, and
as she came we saw that she was draped in graveclothes.  Presently
she lifted her head and the moonlight fell full upon her face.  Now
Montezuma groaned aloud and I groaned, for we saw that the face was
the thin pale face of the princess Papantzin--Papantzin who had
lain four days in the grave.  On she came toward us, gliding like
one who walks in her sleep, till she stopped before the bush in the
shadow of which we stood.  Now Papantzin, or the ghost of
Papantzin, looked at us with blind eyes, that is with eyes that
were open and yet did not seem to see.

'Are you there, Montezuma, my brother?' she said in the voice of
Papantzin; 'surely I feel your presence though I cannot see you.'

Now Montezuma stepped from the shadow and stood face to face with
the dead.

'Who are you?' he said, 'who wear the shape of one dead and are
dressed in the garments of the dead?'

'I am Papantzin,' she answered, 'and I am risen out of death to
bring you a message, Montezuma, my brother.'

'What message do you bring me?' he asked hoarsely.

'I bring you a message of doom, my brother.  Your empire shall fall
and soon you shall be accompanied to death by tens of thousands of
your people.  For four days I have lived among the dead, and there
I have seen your false gods which are devils.  There also I have
seen the priests that served them, and many of those who worshipped
them plunged into torment unutterable.  Because of the worship of
these demon gods the people of Anahuac is destined to destruction.'

'Have you no word of comfort for me, Papantzin, my sister?' he
asked.

'None,' she answered.  'Perchance if you abandon the worship of the
false gods you may save your soul; your life you cannot save, nor
the lives of your people.'

Then she turned and passed away into the shadow of the trees; I
heard her graveclothes sweep upon the grass.


Now a fury seized Montezuma and he raved aloud, saying:

'Curses on you, Papantzin, my sister!  Why then do you come back
from the dead to bring me such evil tidings?  Had you brought hope
with you, had you shown a way of escape, then I would have welcomed
you.  May you go back into darkness and may the earth lie heavy on
your heart for ever.  As for my gods, my fathers worshipped them
and I will worship them till the end; ay, if they desert me, at
least I will never desert them.  The gods are angry because the
sacrifices are few upon their altars, henceforth they shall be
doubled; ay, the priests of the gods shall themselves be sacrificed
because they neglect their worship.'

Thus he raved on, after the fashion of a weak man maddened with
terror, while his nobles and attendants who had followed him at a
distance, clustered about him, fearful and wondering.  At length
there came an end, for tearing with his thin hands at his royal
robes and at his hair and beard, Montezuma fell and writhed in a
fit upon the ground.

Then they carried him into the palace and none saw him for three
days and nights.  But he made no idle threat as to the sacrifices,
for from that night forward they were doubled throughout the land.
Already the shadow of the Cross lay deep upon the altars of
Anahuac, but still the smoke of their offerings went up to heaven
and the cry of the captives rang round the teocallis.  The hour of
the demon gods was upon them indeed, but now they reaped their last
red harvest, and it was rich.


Now I, Thomas Wingfield, saw these portents with my own eyes, but I
cannot say whether they were indeed warnings sent from heaven or
illusions springing from the accidents of nature.  The land was
terror-struck, and it may happen that the minds of men thus smitten
can find a dismal meaning in omens which otherwise had passed
unnoticed.  That Papantzin rose from the dead is true, though
perhaps she only swooned and never really died.  At the least she
did not go back there for a while, for though I never saw her
again, it is said that she lived to become a Christian and told
strange tales of what she had seen in the land of Death.*


* For the history of the resurrection of Papantzin, see note to
Jourdanet's translation of Sahagun, page 870.--AUTHOR.



CHAPTER XVIII

THE NAMING OF THE BRIDES


Now some months passed between the date of my naming as the god
Tezcat and the entry of the Spaniards into Mexico, and during all
this space the city was in a state of ferment.  Again and again
Montezuma sent embassies to Cortes, bearing with them vast
treasures of gold and gems as presents, and at the same time
praying him to withdraw, for this foolish prince did not understand
that by displaying so much wealth he flew a lure which must surely
bring the falcon on himself.  To these ambassadors Cortes returned
courteous answers together with presents of small value, and that
was all.

Then the advance began and the emperor learned with dismay of the
conquest of the warlike tribe of the Tlascalans, who, though they
were Montezuma's bitter and hereditary foes, yet made a stand
against the white man.  Next came the tidings that from enemies the
conquered Tlascalans had become the allies and servants of the
Spaniard, and that thousands of their fiercest warriors were
advancing with him upon the sacred city of Cholula.  A while passed
and it was known that Cholula also had been given to massacre, and
that the holy, or rather the unholy gods, had been torn from their
shrines.  Marvellous tales were told of the Spaniards, of their
courage and their might, of the armour that they wore, the thunder
that their weapons made in battle, and the fierce beasts which they
bestrode.  Once two heads of white men taken in a skirmish were
sent to Montezuma, fierce-looking heads, great and hairy, and with
them the head of a horse.  When Montezuma saw these ghastly relics
he almost fainted with fear, still he caused them to be set up on
pinnacles of the great temple and proclamation to be made that this
fate awaited every invader of the land.

Meanwhile all was confusion in his policies.  Day by day councils
were held of the nobles, of high priests, and of neighbouring and
friendly kings.  Some advised one thing, some another, and the end
of it was hesitation and folly.  Ah! had Montezuma but listened to
the voice of that great man Guatemoc, Anahuac would not have been a
Spanish fief to-day.  For Guatemoc prayed him again and yet again
to put away his fears and declare open war upon the Teules before
it was too late; to cease from making gifts and sending embassies,
to gather his countless armies and smite the foe in the mountain
passes.

But Montezuma would answer, 'To what end, nephew?  How can I
struggle against these men when the gods themselves have declared
for them?  Surely the gods can take their own parts if they wish
it, and if they will not, for myself and my own fate I do not care,
but alas! for my people, alas! for the women and the children, the
aged and the weak.'

Then he would cover his face and moan and weep like a child, and
Guatemoc would pass from his presence dumb with fury at the folly
of so great a king, but helpless to remedy it.  For like myself,
Guatemoc believed that Montezuma had been smitten with a madness
sent from heaven to bring the land to ruin.

Now it must be understood that though my place as a god gave me
opportunities of knowing all that passed, yet I Thomas Wingfield,
was but a bubble on that great wave of events which swept over the
world of Anahuac two generations since.  I was a bubble on the
crest of the wave indeed, but at that time I had no more power than
the foam has over the wave.  Montezuma distrusted me as a spy, the
priests looked on me as a god and future victim and no more, only
Guatemoc my friend, and Otomie who loved me secretly, had any faith
in me, and with these two I often talked, showing them the true
meaning of those things that were happening before our eyes.  But
they also were strengthless, for though his reason was no longer
captain, still the unchecked power of Montezuma guided the ship of
state first this way and then that, just as a rudder directs a
vessel to its ruin when the helmsman has left it, and it swings at
the mercy of the wind and tide.

The people were distraught with fear of the future, but not the
less on that account, or perhaps because of it, they plunged with
fervour into pleasures, alternating them with religious ceremonies.
In those days no feast was neglected and no altar lacked its
victim.  Like a river that quickens its flow as it draws near the
precipice over which it must fall, so the people of Mexico,
foreseeing ruin, awoke as it were and lived as they had never lived
before.  All day long the cries of victims came from a hundred
temple tops, and all night the sounds of revelry were heard among
the streets.  'Let us eat and drink,' they said, 'for the gods of
the sea are upon us and to-morrow we die.'  Now women who had been
held virtuous proved themselves wantons, and men whose names were
honest showed themselves knaves, and none cried fie upon them; ay,
even children were seen drunken in the streets, which is an
abomination among the Aztecs.

The emperor had moved his household from Chapoltepec to the palace
in the great square facing the temple, and this palace was a town
in itself, for every night more than a thousand human beings slept
beneath its roof, not to speak of the dwarfs and monsters, and the
hundreds of wild birds and beasts in cages.  Here every day I
feasted with whom I would, and when I was weary of feasting it was
my custom to sally out into the streets playing on the lute, for by
now I had in some degree mastered that hateful instrument, dressed
in shining apparel and attended by a crowd of nobles and royal
pages.  Then the people would rush from their houses shouting and
doing me reverence, the children pelted me with flowers, and the
maidens danced before me, kissing my hands and feet, till at length
I was attended by a mob a thousand strong.  And I also danced and
shouted like any village fool, for I think that a kind of mad
humour, or perhaps it was the drunkenness of worship, entered into
me in those days.  Also I sought to forget my griefs, I desired to
forget that I was doomed to the sacrifice, and that every day
brought me nearer to the red knife of the priest.

I desired to forget, but alas! I could not.  The fumes of the
mescal and the pulque that I had drunk at feasts would pass from my
brain, the perfume of flowers, the sights of beauty and the
adoration of the people would cease to move me, and I could only
brood heavily upon my doom and think with longing of my distant
love and home.  In those days, had it not been for the tender
kindness of Otomie, I think that my heart would have broken or I
should have slain myself.  But this great and beauteous lady was
ever at hand to cheer me in a thousand ways, and now and again she
would let fall some vague words of hope that set my pulses
bounding.  It will be remembered that when first I came to the
court of Montezuma, I had found Otomie fair and my fancy turned
towards her.  Now I still found her fair, but my heart was so full
of terror that there was no room in it for tender thoughts of her
or of any other woman.  Indeed when I was not drunk with wine or
adoration, I turned my mind to the making of my peace with heaven,
of which I had some need.

Still I talked much with Otomie, instructing her in the matters of
my faith and many other things, as I had done by Marina, who we now
heard was the mistress and interpreter of Cortes, the Spanish
leader.  She for her part listened gravely, watching me the while
with her tender eyes, but no more, for of all women Otomie was the
most modest, as she was the proudest and most beautiful.


So matters went on until the Spaniards had left Cholula on their
road to Mexico.  It was then that I chanced one morning to be
sitting in the gardens, my lute in hand, and having my attendant
nobles and tutors gathered at a respectful distance behind me.
From where I sat I could see the entrance to the court in which the
emperor met his council daily, and I noted that when the princes
had gone the priests began to come, and after them a number of very
lovely girls attended by women of middle age.  Presently Guatemoc
the prince, who now smiled but rarely, came up to me smiling, and
asked me if I knew what was doing yonder.  I replied that I knew
nothing and cared less, but I supposed that Montezuma was gathering
a peculiar treasure to send to his masters the Spaniards.

'Beware how you speak, Teule,' answered the prince haughtily.
'Your words may be true, and yet did I not love you, you should rue
them even though you hold the spirit of Tezcat.  Alas!' he added,
stamping on the ground, 'alas! that my uncle's madness should make
it possible that such words can be spoken.  Oh! were I emperor of
Anahuac, in a single week the head of every Teule in Cholula should
deck a pinnacle of yonder temple.'

'Beware how you speak, prince,' I answered mocking him, 'for there
are those who did they hear, might cause YOU to rue YOUR words.
Still one day you may be emperor, and then we shall see how you
will deal with the Teules, at least others will see though I shall
not.  But what is it now?  Does Montezuma choose new wives?'

'He chooses wives, but not for himself.  You know, Teule, that your
time grows short.  Montezuma and the priests name those who must be
given to you to wife.'

'Given me to wife!' I said starting to my feet; 'to me whose bride
is death!  What have I to do with love or marriage?  I who in some
few short weeks must grace an altar?  Ah! Guatemoc, you say you
love me, and once I saved you.  Did you love me, surely you would
save me now as you swore to do.'

'I swore that I would give my life for yours, Teule, if it lay in
my power, and that oath I would keep, for all do not set so high a
store on life as you, my friend.  But I cannot help you; you are
dedicated to the gods, and did I die a hundred times, it would not
save you from your fate.  Nothing can save you except the hand of
heaven if it wills.  Therefore, Teule, make merry while you may,
and die bravely when you must.  Your case is no worse than mine and
that of many others, for death awaits us all.  Farewell.'

When he had gone I rose, and leaving the gardens I passed into the
chamber where it was my custom to give audience to those who wished
to look upon the god Tezcat as they called me.  Here I sat upon my
golden couch, inhaling the fumes of tobacco, and as it chanced I
was alone, for none dared to enter that room unless I gave them
leave.  Presently the chief of my pages announced that one would
speak with me, and I bent my head, signifying that the person
should enter, for I was weary of my thoughts.  The page withdrew,
and presently a veiled woman stood before me.  I looked at her
wondering, and bade her draw her veil and speak.  She obeyed, and I
saw that my visitor was the princess Otomie.  Now I rose amazed,
for it was not usual that she should visit me thus alone.  I
guessed therefore that she had tidings, or was following some
custom of which I was ignorant.

'I pray you be seated,' she said confusedly; 'it is not fitting
that you should stand before me.'

'Why not, princess?' I answered.  'If I had no respect for rank,
surely beauty must claim it.'

'A truce to words,' she replied with a wave of her slim hand.  'I
come here, O Tezcat, according to the ancient custom, because I am
charged with a message to you.  Those whom you shall wed are
chosen.  I am the bearer of their names.'

'Speak on, princess of the Otomie.'

'They are'--and she named three ladies whom I knew to be among the
loveliest in the land.

'I thought that there were four,' I said with a bitter laugh.  'Am
I to be defrauded of the fourth?'

'There is a fourth,' she answered, and was silent.

'Give me her name,' I cried.  'What other slut has been found to
marry a felon doomed to sacrifice?'

'One has been found, O Tezcat, who has borne other titles than this
you give her.'

Now I looked at her questioningly, and she spoke again in a low
voice.

'I, Otomie, princess of the Otomie, Montezuma's daughter, am the
fourth and the first.'

'You!' I said, sinking back upon my cushions.  'YOU!'

'Yes, I.  Listen: I was chosen by the priests as the most lovely in
the land, however unworthily.  My father, the emperor, was angry
and said that whatever befell, I should never be the wife of a
captive who must die upon the altar of sacrifice.  But the priests
answered that this was no time for him to claim exception for his
blood, now when the gods were wroth.  Was the first lady in the
land to be withheld from the god? they asked.  Then my father
sighed and said that it should be as I willed.  And I said with the
priests, that now in our sore distress the proud must humble
themselves to the dust, even to the marrying of a captive slave who
is named a god and doomed to sacrifice.  So I, princess of the
Otomie, have consented to become your wife, O Tezcat, though
perchance had I known all that I read in your eyes this hour, I
should not have consented.  It may happen that in this shame I
hoped to find love if only for one short hour, and that I purposed
to vary the custom of our people, and to complete my marriage by
the side of the victim on the altar, as, if I will, I have the
right to do.  But I see well that I am not welcome, and though it
is too late to go back upon my word, have no fear.  There are
others, and I shall not trouble you.  I have given my message, is
it your pleasure that I should go?  The solemn ceremony of wedlock
will be on the twelfth day from now, O Tezcat.'

Now I rose from my seat and took her hand, saying:

'I thank you, Otomie, for your nobleness of mind.  Had it not been
for the comfort and friendship which you and Guatemoc your cousin
have given me, I think that ere now I should be dead.  So you
desire to comfort me to the last; it seems that you even purposed
to die with me.  How am I to interpret this, Otomie?  In our land a
woman would need to love a man after no common fashion before she
consented to share such a bed as awaits me on yonder pyramid.  And
yet I may scarcely think that you whom kings have sued for can
place your heart so low.  How am I to read the writing of your
words, princess of the Otomie?'

'Read it with your heart,' she whispered low, and I felt her hand
tremble in my own.

I looked at her beauty, it was great; I thought of her devotion, a
devotion that did not shrink from the most horrible of deaths, and
a wind of feeling which was akin to love swept through my soul.
But even as I looked and thought, I remembered the English garden
and the English maid from whom I had parted beneath the beech at
Ditchingham, and the words that we had spoken then.  Doubtless she
still lived and was true to me; while I lived should I not keep
true at heart to her?  If I must wed these Indian girls, I must wed
them, but if once I told Otomie that I loved her, then I broke my
troth, and with nothing less would she be satisfied.  As yet,
though I was deeply moved and the temptation was great, I had not
come to this.

'Be seated, Otomie,' I said, 'and listen to me.  You see this
golden token,' and I drew Lily's posy ring from my hand, 'and you
see the writing within it.'

She bent her head but did not speak, and I saw that there was fear
in her eyes.

'I will read you the words, Otomie,' and I translated into the
Aztec tongue the quaint couplet:


     Heart to heart,
     Though far apart.


Then at last she spoke.  'What does the writing mean?' she said.
'I can only read in pictures, Teule.'

'It means, Otomie, that in the far land whence I come, there is a
woman who loves me, and who is my love.'

'Is she your wife then?'

'She is not my wife, Otomie, but she is vowed to me in marriage.'

'She is vowed to you in marriage,' she answered bitterly: 'why,
then we are equal, for so am I, Teule.  But there is this
difference between us; you love her, and me you do not love.  That
is what you would make clear to me.  Spare me more words, I
understand all.  Still it seems that if I have lost, she is also in
the path of loss.  Great seas roll between you and this love of
yours, Teule, seas of water, and the altar of sacrifice, and the
nothingness of death.  Now let me go.  Your wife I must be, for
there is no escape, but I shall not trouble you over much, and it
will soon be done with.  Then you may seek your desire in the
Houses of the Stars whither you must wander, and it is my prayer
that you shall win it.  All these months I have been planning to
find hope for you, and I thought that I had found it.  But it was
built upon a false belief, and it is ended.  Had you been able to
say from your heart that you loved me, it might have been well for
both of us; should you be able to say it before the end, it may
still be well.  But I do not ask you to say it, and beware how you
tell me a lie.  I leave you, Teule, but before I go I will say that
I honour you more in this hour than I have honoured you before,
because you have dared to speak the truth to me, Montezuma's
daughter, when a lie had been so easy and so safe.  That woman
beyond the seas should be grateful to you, but though I bear her no
ill will, between me and her there is a struggle to the death.  We
are strangers to each other, and strangers we shall remain, but she
has touched your hand as I touch it now; you link us together and
are our bond of enmity.  Farewell my husband that is to be.  We
shall meet no more till that sorry day when a "slut" shall be given
to a "felon" in marriage.  I use your own words, Teule!'

Then rising, Otomie cast her veil about her face and passed slowly
from the chamber, leaving me much disturbed.  It was a bold deed to
have rejected the proffered love of this queen among women, and now
that I had done so I was not altogether glad.  Would Lily, I
wondered, have offered to descend from such state, to cast off the
purple of her royal rank that she might lie at my side on the red
stone of sacrifice?  Perhaps not, for this fierce fidelity is only
to be found in women of another breed.  These daughters of the Sun
love wholly when they love at all, and as they love they hate.
They ask no priest to consecrate their vows, nor if these become
hateful, will they be bound by them for duty's sake.  Their own
desire is their law, but while it rules them they follow it
unflinchingly, and if need be, they seek its consummation in the
gates of death, or failing that, forgetfulness.



CHAPTER XIX

THE FOUR GODDESSES


Some weary time went by, and at last came the day of the entry into
Mexico of Cortes and his conquerors.  Now of all the doings of the
Spaniards after they occupied the city, I do not propose to speak
at length, for these are matters of history, and I have my own
story to tell.  So I shall only write of those of them with which I
was concerned myself.  I did not see the meeting between Montezuma
and Cortes, though I saw the emperor set out to it clad like
Solomon in his glory and surrounded by his nobles.  But I am sure
of this, that no slave being led to sacrifice carried a heavier
heart in his breast than that of Montezuma on this unlucky day.
For now his folly had ruined him, and I think he knew that he was
going to his doom.

Afterwards, towards evening, I saw the emperor come back in his
golden litter, and pass over to the palace built by Axa his father,
that stood opposite to and some five hundred paces from his own,
facing the western gate of the temple.  Presently I heard the sound
of a multitude shouting, and amidst it the tramp of horses and
armed soldiers, and from a seat in my chamber I saw the Spaniards
advance down the great street, and my heart beat at the sight of
Christian men.  In front, clad in rich armour, rode their leader
Cortes, a man of middle size but noble bearing, with thoughtful
eyes that noted everything, and after him, some few on horseback
but the most of them on foot, marched his little army of
conquerors, staring about them with bold wondering eyes and jesting
to each other in Castilian.  They were but a handful, bronzed with
the sun and scarred by battle, some of them ill-armed and almost in
rags, and looking on them I could not but marvel at the indomitable
courage that had enabled them to pierce their way through hostile
thousands, sickness, and war, even to the home of Montezuma's
power.

By the side of Cortes, holding his stirrup in her hand, walked a
beautiful Indian woman dressed in white robes and crowned with
flowers.  As she passed the palace she turned her face.  I knew her
at once; it was my friend Marina, who now had attained to the
greatness which she desired, and who, notwithstanding all the evil
that she had brought upon her country, looked most happy in it and
in her master's love.

As the Spaniards went by I searched their faces one by one, with
the vague hope of hate.  For though it might well chance that death
had put us out of each other's reach, I half thought to see de
Garcia among the number of the conquerors.  Such a quest as theirs,
with its promise of blood, and gold, and rapine, would certainly
commend itself to his evil heart should it be in his power to join
it, and a strange instinct told me that he was NOT dead.  But
neither dead nor living was he among those men who entered Mexico
that day.

That night I saw Guatemoc and asked him how things went.

'Well for the kite that roosts in the dove's nest,' he answered
with a bitter laugh, 'but very ill for the dove.  Montezuma, my
uncle, has been cooing yonder,' and he pointed to the palace of
Axa, 'and the captain of the Teules has cooed in answer, but though
he tried to hide it, I could hear the hawk's shriek in his pigeon's
note.  Ere long there will be merry doings in Tenoctitlan.'

He was right.  Within a week Montezuma was treacherously seized by
the Spaniards and kept a prisoner in their quarters, watched day
and night by their soldiers.  Then came event upon event.  Certain
lords in the coast lands having killed some Spaniards, were
summoned to Mexico by the instigation of Cortes.  They came and
were burned alive in the courtyard of the palace.  Nor was this
all, for Montezuma, their monarch, was forced to witness the
execution with fetters on his ankles.  So low had the emperor of
the Aztecs fallen, that he must bear chains like a common felon.
After this insult he swore allegiance to the King of Spain, and
even contrived to capture Cacama, the lord of Tezcuco, by treachery
and to deliver him into the hands of the Spaniards on whom he would
have made war.  To them also he gave up all the hoarded gold and
treasure of the empire, to the value of hundreds of thousands of
English pounds.  All this the nation bore, for it was stupefied and
still obeyed the commands of its captive king.  But when he
suffered the Spaniards to worship the true God in one of the
sanctuaries of the great temple, a murmur of discontent and sullen
fury rose among the thousands of the Aztecs.  It filled the air, it
could be heard wherever men were gathered, and its sound was like
that of a distant angry sea.  The hour of the breaking of the
tempest was at hand.

Now all this while my life went on as before, save that I was not
allowed to go outside the walls of the palace, for it was feared
lest I should find some means of intercourse with the Spaniards,
who did not know that a man of white blood was confined there and
doomed to sacrifice.  Also in these days I saw little of the
princess Otomie, the chief of my destined brides, who since our
strange love scene had avoided me, and when we met at feasts or in
the gardens spoke to me only on indifferent matters, or of the
affairs of state.  At length came the day of my marriage.  It was,
I remember, the night before the massacre of the six hundred Aztec
nobles on the occasion of the festival of Huitzel.

On this my wedding day I was treated with great circumstance and
worshipped like a god by the highest in the city, who came in to do
me reverence and burned incense before me, till I was weary of the
smell of it, for though such sorrow was on the land, the priests
would abate no jot of their ceremonies or cruelties, and great
hopes were held that I being of the race of Teules, my sacrifice
would avert the anger of the gods.  At sunset I was entertained
with a splendid feast that lasted two hours or more, and at its end
all the company rose and shouted as with one voice:

'Glory to thee, O Tezcat!  Happy art thou here on earth, happy
mayst thou be in the Houses of the Sun.  When thou comest thither,
remember that we dealt well by thee, giving thee of our best, and
intercede for us that our sins may be forgiven.  Glory to thee, O
Tezcat!'

Then two of the chief nobles came forward, and taking torches led
me to a magnificent chamber that I had never seen before.  Here
they changed my apparel, investing me in robes which were still
more splendid than any that I had worn hitherto, being made of the
finest embroidered cotton and of the glittering feathers of the
humming bird.  On my head they set wreaths of flowers, and about my
neck and wrists emeralds of vast size and value, and a sorry
popinjay I looked in this attire, that seemed more suited to a
woman's beauty than to me.

When I was arrayed, suddenly the torches were extinguished and for
a while there was silence.  Then in the distance I heard women's
voices singing a bridal song that was beautiful enough after its
fashion, though I forbear to write it down.  The singing ceased and
there came a sound of rustling robes and of low whispering.  Then a
man's voice spoke, saying:

'Are ye there, ye chosen of heaven?'

And a woman's voice, I thought it was that of Otomie, answered:

'We are here.'

'O maidens of Anahuac,' said the man speaking from the darkness,
'and you, O Tezcat, god among the gods, listen to my words.
Maidens, a great honour has been done to you, for by the very
choice of heaven, you have been endowed with the names, the
lovelinesses, and the virtues of the four great goddesses, and
chosen to abide a while at the side of this god, your maker and
your master, who has been pleased to visit us for a space before he
seeks his home in the habitations of the Sun.  See that you show
yourselves worthy of this honour.  Comfort him and cherish him,
that he may forget his glory in your kindness, and when he returns
to his own place may take with him grateful memories and a good
report of your people.  You have but a little while to live at his
side in this life, for already, like those of a caged bird, the
wings of his spirit beat against the bars of the flesh, and soon he
will shake himself free from us and you.  Yet if you will, it is
allowed to one of you to accompany him to his home, sharing his
flight to the Houses of the Sun.  But to all of you, whether you go
also, or whether you stay to mourn him during your life days, I say
love and cherish him, be tender and gentle towards him, for
otherwise ruin shall overtake you here and hereafter, and you and
all of us will be ill spoken of in heaven.  And you, O Tezcat, we
pray of you to accept these maidens, who bear the names and wear
the charms of your celestial consorts, for there are none more
beautiful or better born in the realms of Anahuac, and among them
is numbered the daughter of our king.  They are not perfect indeed,
for perfection is known to you in the heavenly kingdoms only, since
these ladies are but shadows and symbols of the divine goddesses
your true wives, and here there are no perfect women.  Alas, we
have none better to offer you, and it is our hope that when it
pleases you to pass hence you will think kindly of the women of
this land, and from on high bless them with your blessing, because
your memory of these who were called your wives on earth is
pleasant.'

The voice paused, then spoke again:

'Women, in your own divine names of Xochi, Xilo, Atla, and Clixto,
and in the name of all the gods, I wed you to Tezcat, the creator,
to sojourn with him during his stay on earth.  The god incarnate
takes you in marriage whom he himself created, that the symbol may
be perfect and the mystery fulfilled.  Yet lest your joy should be
too full--look now on that which shall be.'

As the voice spoke these words, many torches sprang into flame at
the far end of the great chamber, revealing a dreadful sight.  For
there, stretched upon a stone of sacrifice, was the body of a man,
but whether the man lived or was modelled in wax I do not know to
this hour, though unless he was painted, I think that he must have
been fashioned in wax, since his skin shone white like mine.  At
the least his limbs and head were held by five priests, and a sixth
stood over him clasping a knife of obsidian in his two hands.  It
flashed on high, and as it gleamed the torches were extinguished.
Then came the dull echo of a blow and a sound of groans, and all
was still, till once more the brides broke out into their marriage
song, a strange chant and a wild and sweet, though after what I had
seen and heard it had little power to move me.

They sang on in the darkness ever more loudly, till presently a
single torch was lit at the end of the chamber, then another and
another, though I could not see who lit them, and the room was a
flare of light.  Now the altar, the victim, and the priests were
all gone, there was no one left in the place except myself and the
four brides.  They were tall and lovely women all of them, clad in
white bridal robes starred over with gems and flowers, and wearing
on their brows the emblems of the four goddesses, but Otomie was
the stateliest and most beautiful of the four, and seemed in truth
a goddess.  One by one they drew near to me, smiling and sighing,
and kneeling before me kissed my hand, saying:

'I have been chosen to be your wife for a space, Tezcat, happy maid
that I am.  May the good gods grant that I become pleasing to your
sight, so that you may love me as I worship you.'

Then she who had spoken would draw back again out of earshot, and
the next would take her place.

Last of all came Otomie.  She knelt and said the words, then added
in a low voice,

'Having spoken to you as the bride and goddess to the husband and
the god Tezcat, now, O Teule, I speak as the woman to the man.  You
do not love me, Teule, therefore, if it is your will, let us be
divorced of our own act who were wed by the command of others, for
so I shall be spared some shame.  These are friends to me and will
not betray us; and she nodded towards her companion brides.

'As you will, Otomie,' I answered briefly.

'I thank you for your kindness, Teule,' she said smiling sadly, and
withdrew making obeisance, looking so stately and so sweet as she
went, that again my heart was shaken as though with love.  Now from
that night till the dreadful hour of sacrifice, no kiss or tender
word passed between me and the princess of the Otomie.  And yet our
friendship and affection grew daily, for we talked much together,
and I sought to turn her heart to the true King of Heaven.  But
this was not easy, for like her father Montezuma, Otomie clung to
the gods of her people, though she hated the priests, and save when
the victims were the foes of her country, shrank from the rites of
human sacrifice, which she said were instituted by the pabas, since
in the early days there were no men offered on the altars of the
gods, but flowers only.  Daily it grew and ripened till, although I
scarcely knew it, at length in my heart, after Lily, I loved her
better than anyone on earth.  As for the other women, though they
were gentle and beautiful, I soon learned to hate them.  Still I
feasted and revelled with them, partly since I must, or bring them
to a miserable death because they failed to please me, and partly
that I might drown my terrors in drink and pleasure, for let it be
remembered that the days left to me on earth were few, and the
awful end drew near.


The day following the celebration of my marriage was that of the
shameless massacre of six hundred of the Aztec nobles by the order
of the hidalgo Alvarado, whom Cortes had left in command of the
Spaniards.  For at this time Cortes was absent in the coast lands,
whither he had gone to make war on Narvaez, who had been sent to
subdue him by his enemy Velasquez, the governor of Cuba.

On this day was celebrated the feast of Huitzel, that was held with
sacrifice, songs, and dances in the great court of the temple, that
court which was surrounded by a wall carved over with the writhing
shapes of snakes.  It chanced that on this morning before he went
to join in the festival, Guatemoc, the prince, came to see me on a
visit of ceremony.

I asked him if he intended to take part in the feast, as the
splendour of his apparel brought me to believe.

'Yes,' he answered, 'but why do you ask?'

'Because, were I you, Guatemoc, I would not go.  Say now, will the
dancers be armed?'

'No, it is not usual.'

'They will be unarmed, Guatemoc, and they are the flower of the
land.  Unarmed they will dance in yonder enclosed space, and the
Teules will watch them armed.  Now, how would it be if these
chanced to pick a quarrel with the nobles?'

'I do not know why you should speak thus, Teule, for surely these
white men are not cowardly murderers, still I take your words as an
omen, and though the feast must be held, for see already the nobles
gather, I will not share in it.'

'You are wise, Guatemoc,' I said.  'I am sure that you are wise'

Afterwards Otomie, Guatemoc, and I went into the garden of the
palace and sat upon the crest of a small pyramid, a teocalli in
miniature that Montezuma had built for a place of outlook on the
market and the courts of the temple.  From this spot we saw the
dancing of the Aztec nobles, and heard the song of the musicians.
It was a gay sight, for in the bright sunlight their feather
dresses flashed like coats of gems, and none would have guessed how
it was to end.  Mingling with the dancers were groups of Spaniards
clad in mail and armed with swords and matchlocks, but I noted
that, as the time went on, these men separated themselves from the
Indians and began to cluster like bees about the gates and at
various points under the shadow of the Wall of Serpents.

'Now what may this mean?' I said to Guatemoc, and as I spoke, I saw
a Spaniard wave a white cloth in the air.  Then, in an instant,
before the cloth had ceased to flutter, a smoke arose from every
side, and with it came the sound of the firing of matchlocks.
Everywhere among the dancers men fell dead or wounded, but the mass
of them, unharmed as yet, huddled themselves together like
frightened sheep, and stood silent and terror-stricken.  Then the
Spaniards, shouting the name of their patron saint, as it is their
custom to do when they have some such wickedness in hand, drew
their swords, and rushing on the unarmed Aztec nobles began to kill
them.  Now some shrieked and fled, and some stood still till they
were cut down, but whether they stayed or ran the end was the same,
for the gates were guarded and the wall was too high to climb.
There they were slaughtered every man of them, and may God, who
sees all, reward their murderers!  It was soon over; within ten
minutes of the waving of the cloth, those six hundred men were
stretched upon the pavement dead or dying, and with shouts of
victory the Spaniards were despoiling their corpses of the rich
ornaments they had worn.

Then I turned to Guatemoc and said, 'It seems that you did well not
to join in yonder revel.'

But Guatemoc made no answer.  He stared at the dead and those who
had murdered them, and said nothing.  Only Otomie spoke: 'You
Christians are a gentle people,' she said with a bitter laugh; 'it
is thus that you repay our hospitality.  Now I trust that
Montezuma, my father, is pleased with his guests.  Ah! were I he,
every man of them should lie on the stone of sacrifice.  If our
gods are devils as you say, what are those who worship yours?'

Then at length Guatemoc said, 'Only one thing remains to us, and
that is vengeance.  Montezuma has become a woman, and I heed him no
more, nay, if it were needful, I would kill him with my own hand.
But two men are still left in the land, Cuitlahua, my uncle, and
myself.  Now I go to summon our armies.'  And he went.

All that night the city murmured like a swarm of wasps, and next
day at dawn, so far as the eye could reach, the streets and market
place were filled with tens of thousands of armed warriors.  They
threw themselves like a wave upon the walls of the palace of Axa,
and like a wave from a rock they were driven back again by the fire
of the guns.  Thrice they attacked, and thrice they were repulsed.
Then Montezuma, the woman king, appeared upon the walls, praying
them to desist because, forsooth, did they succeed, he himself
might perish.  Even then they obeyed him, so great was their
reverence for his sacred royalty, and for a while attacked the
Spaniards no more.  But further than this they would not go.  If
Montezuma forbade them to kill the Spaniards, at least they
determined to starve them out, and from that hour a strait blockade
was kept up against the palace.  Hundreds of the Aztec soldiers had
been slain already, but the loss was not all upon their side, for
some of the Spaniards and many of the Tlascalans had fallen into
their hands.  As for these unlucky prisoners, their end was swift,
for they were taken at once to the temples of the great teocalli,
and sacrificed there to the gods in the sight of their comrades.

Now it was that Cortes returned with many more men, for he had
conquered Narvaez, whose followers joined the standard of Cortes,
and with them others, one of whom I had good reason to know.
Cortes was suffered to rejoin his comrades in the palace of Axa
without attack, I do not know why, and on the following day
Cuitlahua, Montezuma's brother, king of Palapan, was released by
him that he might soothe the people.  But Cuitlahua was no coward.
Once safe outside his prison walls, he called the council together,
of whom the chief was Guatemoc.

There they resolved on war to the end, giving it out that Montezuma
had forfeited his kingdom by his cowardice, and on that resolve
they acted.  Had it been taken but two short months before, by this
date no Spaniard would have been left alive in Tenoctitlan.  For
after Marina, the love of Cortes, whose subtle wit brought about
his triumph, it was Montezuma who was the chief cause of his own
fall, and of that of the kingdom of Anahuac.



CHAPTER XX

OTOMIE'S COUNSEL


On the day after the return of Cortes to Mexico, before the hour of
dawn I was awakened from my uneasy slumbers by the whistling cries
of thousands of warriors and the sound of atabals and drums.

Hurrying to my post of outlook on the little pyramid, where Otomie
joined me, I saw that the whole people were gathered for war.  So
far as the eye could reach, in square, market place, and street,
they were massed in thousands and tens of thousands.  Some were
armed with slings, some with bows and arrows, others with javelins
tipped with copper, and the club set with spikes of obsidian that
is called maqua, and yet others, citizens of the poorer sort, with
stakes hardened in the fire.  The bodies of some were covered with
golden coats of mail and mantles of featherwork, and their skulls
protected by painted wooden helms, crested with hair, and fashioned
like the heads of pumas, snakes, or wolves--others wore escaupils,
or coats of quilted cotton, but the most of them were naked except
for a cloth about the loins.  On the flat azoteas, or roofs of
houses also, and even on the top of the teocalli of sacrifice, were
bands of men whose part it was to rain missiles into the Spanish
quarters.  It was a strange sight to see in that red sunrise, and
one never to be forgotten, as the light flashed from temples and
palace walls, on to the glittering feather garments and gay
banners, the points of countless spears and the armour of the
Spaniards, who hurried to and fro behind their battlements making
ready their defence.

So soon as the sun was up, a priest blew a shrill note upon a
shell, which was answered by a trumpet call from the Spanish
quarters.  Then with a shriek of rage the thousands of the Aztecs
rushed to the attack, and the air grew dark with missiles.
Instantly a wavering line of fire and smoke, followed by a sound as
of thunder, broke from the walls of the palace of Axa, and the
charging warriors fell like autumn leaves beneath the cannon and
arquebuss balls of the Christians.

For a moment they wavered and a great groan went up to heaven, but
I saw Guatemoc spring forward, a banner in his hand, and forming up
again they rushed after him.  Now they were beneath the wall of the
palace, and the assault began.  The Aztecs fought furiously.  Time
upon time they strove to climb the wall, piling up the bodies of
the dead to serve them as ladders, and time upon time they were
repulsed with cruel loss.  Failing in this, they set themselves to
battering it down with heavy beams, but when the breach was made
and they clustered in it like herded sheep, the cannon opened fire
on them, tearing long lanes through their mass and leaving them
dead by scores.  Then they took to the shooting of flaming arrows,
and by this means fired the outworks, but the palace was of stone
and would not burn.  Thus for twelve long hours the struggle raged
unceasingly, till the sudden fall of darkness put an end to it, and
the only sight to be seen was the flare of countless torches
carried by those who sought out the dead, and the only sounds to be
heard were the voice of women lamenting, and the groans of the
dying.

On the morrow the fight broke out again at dawn, when Cortes
sallied forth with the greater part of his soldiers, and some
thousands of his Tlascalan allies.  At first I thought that he
aimed his attack at Montezuma's palace, and a breath of hope went
through me, since then it might become possible for me to escape in
the confusion.  But this was not so, his object being to set fire
to the houses, from the flat roofs of which numberless missiles
were hailed hourly upon his followers.  The charge was desperate
and it succeeded, for the Indians could not withstand the shock of
horsemen any more than their naked skins could turn the Spaniards'
steel.  Presently scores of houses were in flames, and thick
columns of smoke rolled up like those that float from the mouth of
Popo.  But many of those who rode and ran from the gates of Axa did
not come back thither, for the Aztecs clung to the legs of the
horses and dragged their riders away living.  That very day these
captives were sacrificed on the altar of Huitzel, and in the sight
of their comrades, and with them a horse was offered up, which had
been taken alive, and was borne and dragged with infinite labour up
the steep sides of the pyramid.  Indeed never had the sacrifices
been so many as during these days of combat.  All day long the
altars ran red, and all day long the cries of the victims rang in
my ears, as the maddened priests went about their work.  For thus
they thought to please the gods who should give them victory over
the Teules.

Even at night the sacrifices continued by the light of the sacred
fires, that from below gave those who wrought them the appearance
of devils flitting through the flames of hell, and inflicting its
torments on the damned, much as they are depicted in the 'Doom'
painting of the resurrection of the dead that is over the chancel
arch in this church of Ditchingham.  And hour by hour through the
darkness, a voice called out threats and warnings to the Spaniards,
saying, 'Huitzel is hungry for your blood, ye Teules, ye shall
surely follow where ye have seen your fellows go: the cages are
ready, the knives are sharp, and the irons are hot for the torture.
Prepare, ye Teules, for though ye slay many, ye cannot escape.'

Thus the struggle went on day after day, till thousands of the
Aztecs were dead, and the Spaniards were well nigh worn out with
hunger, war, and wounds, for they could not rest a single hour.  At
length one morning, when the assault was at its hottest, Montezuma
himself appeared upon the central tower of the palace, clad in
splendid robes and wearing the diadem.  Before him stood heralds
bearing golden wands, and about him were the nobles who attended
him in his captivity, and a guard of Spaniards.  He stretched out
his hand, and suddenly the fighting was stayed and a silence fell
upon the place, even the wounded ceased from their groaning.  Then
he addressed the multitude.  What he said I was too far off to
hear, though I learned its purport afterwards.  He prayed his
people to cease from war, for the Spaniards were his friends and
guests and would presently leave the city of Tenoctitlan.  When
these cowardly words had passed his lips, a fury took his subjects,
who for long years had worshipped him as a god, and a shriek rent
the air that seemed to say two words only:

'Woman!  Traitor!'

Then I saw an arrow rush upwards and strike the emperor, and after
the arrow a shower of stones, so that he fell down there upon the
tower roof.

Now a voice cried, 'We have slain our king.  Montezuma is dead,'
and instantly with a dreadful wailing the multitude fled this way
and that, so that presently no living man could be seen where there
had been thousands.

I turned to comfort Otomie, who was watching at my side, and had
seen her royal father fall, and led her weeping into the palace.
Here we met Guatemoc, the prince, and his mien was fierce and wild.
He was fully armed and carried a bow in his hand.

'Is Montezuma dead?' I asked.

'I neither know nor care,' he answered with a savage laugh, then
added:

'Now curse me, Otomie my cousin, for it was my arrow that smote him
down, this king who has become a woman and a traitor, false to his
manhood and his country.'

Then Otomie ceased weeping and answered:

'I cannot curse you, Guatemoc, for the gods have smitten my father
with a madness as you smote him with your arrow, and it is best
that he should die, both for his own sake and for that of his
people.  Still, Guatemoc, I am sure of this, that your crime will
not go unpunished, and that in payment for this sacrilege, you
shall yourself come to a shameful death.'

'It may be so,' said Guatemoc, 'but at least I shall not die
betraying my trust;' and he went.


Now I must tell that, as I believed, this was my last day on earth,
for on the morrow my year of godhead expired, and I, Thomas
Wingfield, should be led out to sacrifice.  Notwithstanding all the
tumult in the city, the mourning for the dead and the fear that
hung over it like a cloud, the ceremonies of religion and its
feasts were still celebrated strictly, more strictly indeed than
ever before.  Thus on this night a festival was held in my honour,
and I must sit at the feast crowned with flowers and surrounded by
my wives, while those nobles who remained alive in the city did me
homage, and with them Cuitlahua, who, if Montezuma were dead, would
now be emperor.  It was a dreary meal enough, for I could scarcely
be gay though I strove to drown my woes in drink, and as for the
guests, they had little jollity left in them.  Hundreds of their
relatives were dead and with them thousands of the people; the
Spaniards still held their own in the fortress, and that day they
had seen their emperor, who to them was a god, smitten down by one
of their own number, and above all they felt that doom was upon
themselves.  What wonder that they were not merry?  Indeed no
funeral feast could have been more sad, for flowers and wine and
fair women do not make pleasure, and after all it was a funeral
feast--for me.

At length it came to an end and I fled to my own apartments,
whither my three wives followed me, for Otomie did not come,
calling me most happy and blessed who to-morrow should be with
myself, that is with my own godhead, in heaven.  But I did not call
them blessed, for, rising in wrath, I drove them away, saying that
I had but one comfort left, and it was that wherever I might go I
should leave them behind.

Then I cast myself upon the cushions of my bed and mourned in my
fear and bitterness of heart.  This was the end of the vengeance
which I had sworn to wreak on de Garcia, that I myself must have my
heart torn from my breast and offered to a devil.  Truly Fonseca,
my benefactor, had spoken words of wisdom when he counselled me to
take my fortune and forget my oath.  Had I done so, to-day I might
have been my betrothed's husband and happy in her love at home in
peaceful England, instead of what I was, a lost soul in the power
of fiends and about to be offered to a fiend.  In the bitterness of
the thought and the extremity of my anguish I wept aloud and prayed
to my Maker that I might be delivered from this cruel death, or at
the least that my sins should be forgiven me, so that to-morrow
night I might rest at peace in heaven.

Thus weeping and praying I sank into a half sleep, and dreamed that
I walked on the hillside near the church path that runs through the
garden of the Lodge at Ditchingham.  The whispers of the wind were
in the trees which clothe the bank of the Vineyard Hills, the scent
of the sweet English flowers was in my nostrils and the balmy air
of June blew on my brow.  It was night in this dream of mine, and I
thought that the moon shone sweetly on the meadows and the river,
while from every side came the music of the nightingale.  But I was
not thinking of these delightful sights and sounds, though they
were present in my mind, for my eyes watched the church path which
goes up the hill at the back of the house, and my heart listened
for a footstep that I longed to hear.  Then there came a sound of
singing from beyond the hill, and the words of the song were sad,
for they told of one who had sailed away and returned no more, and
presently between the apple trees I saw a white figure on its
crest.  Slowly it came towards me and I knew that it was she for
whom I waited, Lily my beloved.  Now she ceased to sing, but drew
on gently and her face seemed very sad.  Moreover it was the face
of a woman in middle life, but still most beautiful, more beautiful
indeed than it had been in the bloom of youth.  She had reached the
foot of the hill and was turning towards the little garden gate,
when I came forward from the shadow of the trees, and stood before
her.  Back she started with a cry of fear, then grew silent and
gazed into my face.

'So changed,' she murmured; 'can it be the same?  Thomas, is it you
come back to me from the dead, or is this but a vision?' and slowly
and doubtingly the dream wraith stretched out her arms as though to
clasp me.

Then I awoke.  I awoke and lo! before me stood a fair woman clothed
in white, on whom the moonlight shone as in my dream, and her arms
were stretched towards me lovingly.

'It is I, beloved, and no vision,' I cried, springing from my bed
and clasping her to my breast to kiss her.  But before my lips
touched hers I saw my error, for she whom I embraced was not Lily
Bozard, my betrothed, but Otomie, princess of the Otomie, who was
called my wife.  Then I knew that this was the saddest and the most
bitter of dreams that had been sent to mock me, for all the truth
rushed into my mind.  Losing my hold of Otomie, I fell back upon
the bed and groaned aloud, and as I fell I saw the flush of shame
upon her brow and breast.  For this woman loved me, and thus my act
and words were an insult to her, who could guess well what prompted
them.  Still she spoke gently.

'Pardon me, Teule, I came but to watch and not to waken you.  I
came also that I may see you alone before the daybreak, hoping that
I might be of service, or at the least, of comfort to you, for the
end draws near.  Say then, in your sleep did you mistake me for
some other woman dearer and fairer than I am, that you would have
embraced me?'

'I dreamed that you were my betrothed whom I love, and who is far
away across the sea,' I answered heavily.  'But enough of love and
such matters.  What have I to do with them who go down into
darkness?'

'In truth I cannot tell, Teule, still I have heard wise men say
that if love is to be found anywhere, it is in this same darkness
of death, that is light indeed.  Grieve not, for if there is truth
in the faith of which you have told me or in our own, either on
this earth or beyond it, with the eyes of the spirit you will see
your dear before another sun is set, and I pray that you may find
her faithful to you.  Tell me now, how much does she love you?
Would SHE have lain by your side on the bed of sacrifice as, had
things gone otherwise between us, Teule, it was my hope to do?'

'No,' I answered, 'it is not the custom of our women to kill
themselves because their husbands chance to die.'

'Perhaps they think it better to live and wed again,' answered
Otomie very quietly, but I saw her eyes flash and her breast heave
in the moonlight as she spoke.

'Enough of this foolish talk,' I said.  'Listen, Otomie; if you had
cared for me truly, surely you would have saved me from this
dreadful doom, or prevailed on Guatemoc to save me.  You are
Montezuma's daughter, could you not have brought it about during
all these months that he issued his royal mandate, commanding that
I should be spared?'

'Do you, then, take me for so poor a friend, Teule?' she answered
hotly.  'Know that for all these months, by day and by night, I
have worked and striven to find a means to rescue you.  Before he
became a prisoner I importuned my father the emperor, till he
ordered me from his presence.  I have sought to bribe the priests,
I have plotted ways of escape, ay, and Guatemoc has helped, for he
loves you.  Had it not been for the coming of these accursed
Teules, and the war that they have levied in the city, I had surely
saved you, for a woman's thought leaps far, and can find a path
where none seems possible.  But this war has changed everything,
and moreover the star-readers and diviners of auguries have given a
prophecy which seals your fate.  For they have prophesied that if
your blood flows, and your heart is offered at the hour of noon to-
morrow on the altar of Tezcat, our people shall be victorious over
the Teules, and utterly destroy them.  But if the sacrifice is
celebrated one moment before or after that propitious hour, then
the doom of Tenoctitlan is sealed.  Also they have declared that
you must die, not, according to custom, at the Temple of Arms
across the lake, but on the great pyramid before the chief statue
of the god.  All this is known throughout the land; thousands of
priests are now offering up prayers that the sacrifice may be
fortunate, and a golden ring has been hung over the stone of
slaughter in such a fashion that the light of the sun must strike
upon the centre of your breast at the very moment of mid-day.  For
weeks you have been watched as a jaguar watches its prey, for it
was feared that you would escape to the Teules, and we, your wives,
have been watched also.  At this moment there is a triple ring of
guards about the palace, and priests are set without your doors and
beneath the window places.  Judge, then, what chance there is of
escape, Teule.'

'Little indeed,' I said, 'and yet I know a road.  If I kill myself,
they cannot kill me.'

'Nay,' she answered hastily, 'what shall that avail you?  While you
live you may hope, but once dead, you are dead for ever.  Also if
you must die, it is best that you should die by the hand of the
priest.  Believe me, though the end is horrible,' and she
shuddered, 'it is almost painless, so they say, and very swift.
They will not torture you, that we have saved you, Guatemoc and I,
though at first they wished thus to honour the god more
particularly on this great day.'

'O Teule,' Otomie went on, seating herself by me on the bed, and
taking my hand, 'think no more of these brief terrors, but look
beyond them.  Is it so hard a thing to die, and swiftly?  We all
must die, to-day, or to-night, or the next day, it matters little
when--and your faith, like ours, teaches that beyond the grave is
endless blessedness.  Think then, my friend, to-morrow you will
have passed far from this strife and turmoil; the struggle and the
sorrows and the daily fears for the future that make the soul sick
will be over for you, you will be taken to your peace, where no one
shall disturb you for ever.  There you will find that mother whom
you have told me of, and who loved you, and there perhaps one will
join you who loves you better than your mother, mayhap even I may
meet you there, friend,' and she looked up at me strangely.  'The
road that you are doomed to walk is dark indeed, but surely it must
be well-trodden, and there is light shining beyond it.  So be a
man, my friend, and do not grieve; rejoice rather that at so early
an age you have done with woes and doubts, and come to the gates of
joy, that you have passed the thorny, unwatered wilderness and see
the smiling lakes and gardens, and among them the temples of your
eternal city.

'And now farewell.  We meet no more till the hour of sacrifice, for
we women who masquerade as wives must accompany you to the first
platforms of the temple.  Farewell, dear friend, and think upon my
words; whether they are acceptable to you or no, I am sure of this,
that both for the sake of your own honour and because I ask it of
you, you will die bravely as though the eyes of your own people
were watching all.'  And bending suddenly, Otomie kissed me on the
forehead gently as a sister might, and was gone.

The curtains swung behind her, but the echoes of her noble words
still dwelt in my heart.  Nothing can make man look on death
lovingly, and that awaiting me was one from which the bravest would
shrink, yet I felt that Otomie had spoken truth, and that, terrible
as it seemed, it might prove less terrible than life had shewn
itself to be.  An unnatural calm fell upon my soul like some dense
mist upon the face of the ocean.  Beneath that mist the waters
might foam, above it the sun might shine, yet around was one grey
peace.  In this hour I seemed to stand outside of my earthly self,
and to look on all things with a new sense.  The tide of life was
ebbing away from me, the shore of death loomed very near, and I
understood then, as in extreme old age I understand to-day, how
much more part we mortals have in death than in this short accident
of life.  I could consider all my past, I could wonder on the
future of my spirit, and even marvel at the gentleness and wisdom
of the Indian woman, who was able to think such thoughts and utter
them.

Well, whatever befell, in one thing I would not disappoint her, I
would die bravely as an Englishman should do, leaving the rest to
God.  These barbarians should never say of me that the foreigner
was a coward.  Who was I that I should complain?  Did not hundreds
of men as good as I was perish daily in yonder square, and without
a murmur?  Had not my mother died also at the hand of a murderer?
Was not that unhappy lady, Isabella de Siguenza, walled up alive
because she had been mad enough to love a villain who betrayed her?
The world is full of terrors and sorrows such as mine, who was I
that I should complain?


So I mused on till at length the day dawned, and with the rising
sun rose the clamour of men making ready for battle.  For now the
fight raged from day to day, and this was to be one of the most
terrible.  But I thought little then of the war between the Aztecs
and the Spaniards, who must prepare myself for the struggle of my
own death that was now at hand.



CHAPTER XXI

THE KISS OF LOVE


Presently there was a sound of music, and, accompanied by certain
artists, my pages entered, bearing with them apparel more gorgeous
than any that I had worn hitherto.  First, these pages having
stripped me of my robes, the artists painted all my body in hideous
designs of red, and white, and blue, till I resembled a flag, not
even sparing my face and lips, which they coloured with carmine
hues.  Over my heart also they drew a scarlet ring with much care
and measurement.  Then they did up my hair that now hung upon my
shoulders, after the fashion in which it was worn by generals among
the Indians, tying it on the top of my head with an embroidered
ribbon red in colour, and placed a plume of cock's feathers above
it.  Next, having arrayed my body in gorgeous vestments not unlike
those used by popish priests at the celebration of the mass, they
set golden earrings in my ears, golden bracelets on my wrists and
ankles, and round my neck a collar of priceless emeralds.  On my
breast also they hung a great gem that gleamed like moonlit water,
and beneath my chin a false beard made from pink sea shells.  Then
having twined me round with wreaths of flowers till I thought of
the maypole on Bungay Common, they rested from their labours,
filled with admiration at their handiwork.

Now the music sounded again and they gave me two lutes, one of
which I must hold in either hand, and conducted me to the great
hall of the palace.  Here a number of people of rank were gathered,
all dressed in festal attire, and here also on a dais to which I
was led, stood my four wives clad in the rich dresses of the four
goddesses Xochi, Xilo, Atla, and Clixto, after whom they were named
for the days of their wifehood, Atla being the princess Otomie.
When I had taken my place upon the dais, my wives came forward one
by one, and kissing me on the brow, offered me sweetmeats and meal
cakes in golden platters, and cocoa and mescal in golden cups.  Of
the mescal I drank, for it is a spirit and I needed inward comfort,
but the other dainties I could not touch.  These ceremonies being
finished, there was silence for a while, till presently a band of
filthy priests entered at the far end of the chamber, clad in their
scarlet sacrificial robes.  Blood was on them everywhere, their
long locks were matted with it, their hands were red with it, even
their fierce eyes seemed full of it.  They advanced up the chamber
till they stood before the dais, then suddenly the head priest
lifted up his hands, crying aloud:

'Adore the immortal god, ye people,' and all those gathered there
prostrated themselves shouting:

'We adore the god.'

Thrice the priest cried aloud, and thrice they answered him thus,
prostrating themselves at every answer.  Then they rose again, and
the priest addressed me, saying:

'Forgive us, O Tezcat, that we cannot honour you as it is meet, for
our sovereign should have been here to worship you with us.  But
you know, O Tezcat, how sore is the strait of your servants, who
must wage war in their own city against those who blaspheme you and
your brother gods.  You know that our beloved emperor lies wounded,
a prisoner in their unholy hands.  When we have gratified your
longing to pass beyond the skies, O Tezcat, and when in your
earthly person you have taught us the lesson that human prosperity
is but a shadow which flees away; in memory of our love for you
intercede for us, we beseech you, that we may smite these wicked
ones and honour you and them by the rite of their own sacrifice.  O
Tezcat, you have dwelt with us but a little while, and now you will
not suffer that we hold you longer from your glory, for your eyes
have longed to see this happy day, and it is come at last.  We have
loved you, Tezcat, and ministered to you, grant in return that we
may see you in your splendour, we who are your little children, and
till we come, watch well over our earthly welfare, and that of the
people among whom you have deigned to sojourn.'

Having spoken some such words as these, that at times could
scarcely be heard because of the sobbing of the people, and of my
wives who wept loudly, except Otomie alone, this villainous priest
made a sign and once more the music sounded.  Then he and his band
placed themselves about me, my wives the goddesses going before and
after, and led me down the hall and on to the gateways of the
palace, which were thrown wide for us to pass.  Looking round me
with a stony wonder, for in this my last hour nothing seemed to
escape my notice, I saw that a strange play was being played about
us.  Some hundreds of paces away the attack on the palace of Axa,
where the Spaniards were entrenched, raged with fury.  Bands of
warriors were attempting to scale the walls and being driven back
by the deadly fire of the Spaniards and the pikes and clubs of
their Tlascalan allies, while from the roofs of such of the
neighbouring houses as remained unburned, and more especially from
the platform of the great teocalli, on which I must presently give
up the ghost, arrows, javelins, and stones were poured by thousands
into the courtyards and outer works of the Spanish quarters.

Five hundred yards away or so, raged this struggle to the death,
but about me, around the gates of Montezuma's palace on the hither
side of the square, was a different scene.  Here were gathered a
vast crowd, among them many women and children, waiting to see me
die.  They came with flowers in their hands, with the sound of
music and joyous cries, and when they saw me they set up such a
shout of welcome that it almost drowned the thunder of the guns and
the angry roar of battle.  Now and again an ill-aimed cannon ball
would plough through them, killing some and wounding others, but
the rest took no heed, only crying the more, 'Welcome, Tezcat, and
farewell.  Blessings on you, our deliverer, welcome and farewell!'

We went slowly through the press, treading on a path of flowers,
till we came across the courtyard to the base of the pyramid.  Here
at the outer gate there was a halt because of the multitude of the
people, and while we waited a warrior thrust his way through the
crowd and bowed before me.  Glancing up I saw that it was Guatemoc.

'Teule,' he whispered to me, 'I leave my charge yonder,' and he
nodded towards the force who strove to break a way into the palace
of Axa, 'to bid you farewell.  Doubtless we shall meet again ere
long.  Believe me, Teule, I would have helped you if I could, but
it cannot be.  I wish that I might change places with you.  My
friend, farewell.  Twice you have saved my life, but yours I cannot
save.'

'Farewell, Guatemoc,' I answered 'heaven prosper you, for you are a
true man.'

Then we passed on.

At the foot of the pyramid the procession was formed, and here one
of my wives bade me adieu after weeping on my neck, though I did
not weep on hers.  Now the road to the summit of the teocalli winds
round and round the pyramid, ever mounting higher as it winds, and
along this road we went in solemn state.  At each turn we halted
and another wife bade me a last good-bye, or one of my instruments
of music, which I did not grieve to see the last of, or some
article of my strange attire, was taken from me.  At length after
an hour's march, for our progress was slow, we reached the flat top
of the pyramid that is approached by a great stair, a space larger
than the area of the churchyard here at Ditchingham, and unfenced
at its lofty edge.  Here on this dizzy place stood the temples of
Huitzel and of Tezcat, soaring structures of stone and wood, within
which were placed the horrid effigies of the gods, and dreadful
chambers stained with sacrifice.  Here, too, were the holy fires
that burned eternally, the sacrificial stones, the implements of
torment, and the huge drum of snakes' skin, but for the rest the
spot was bare.  It was bare but not empty, for on that side of it
which looked towards the Spanish quarters were stationed some
hundreds of men who hurled missiles into their camp without
ceasing.  On the other side also were gathered a concourse of
priests awaiting the ceremony of my death.  Below the great square,
fringed round with burnt-out houses, was crowded with thousands of
people, some of them engaged in combat with the Spaniards, but the
larger part collected there to witness my murder.

Now we reached the top of the pyramid, two hours before midday, for
there were still many rites to be carried out ere the moment of
sacrifice.  First I was led into the sanctuary of Tezcat, the god
whose name I bore.  Here was his statue or idol, fashioned in black
marble and covered with golden ornaments.  In the hand of this idol
was a shield of burnished gold on which its jewelled eyes were
fixed, reading there, as his priests fabled, all that passed upon
the earth he had created.  Before him also was a plate of gold,
which with muttered invocations the head priest cleansed as I
watched, rubbing it with his long and matted locks.  This done he
held it to my lips that I might breathe on it, and I turned faint
and sick, for I knew that it was being made ready to receive the
heart which I felt beating in my breast.

Now what further ceremonies were to be carried out in this unholy
place I do not know, for at that moment a great tumult arose in the
square beneath, and I was hurried from the sanctuary by the
priests.  Then I perceived this: galled to madness by the storm of
missiles rained upon them from its crest, the Spaniards were
attacking the teocalli.  Already they were pouring across the
courtyard in large companies, led by Cortes himself, and with them
came many hundreds of their allies the Tlascalans.  On the other
hand some thousands of the Aztecs were rushing to the foot of the
first stairway to give the white men battle there.  Five minutes
passed and the fight grew fierce.  Again and again, covered by the
fire of the arquebusiers, the Spaniards charged the Aztecs, but
their horses slipping upon the stone pavement, at length they
dismounted and continued the fray on foot.  Slowly and with great
slaughter the Indians were pushed back and the Spaniards gained a
footing on the first stairway.  But hundreds of warriors still
crowded the lofty winding road, and hundreds more held the top, and
it was plain that if the Spaniards won through at all, the task
would be a hard one.  Still a fierce hope smote me like a blow when
I saw what was toward.  If the Spaniards took the temple there
would be no sacrifice.  No sacrifice could be offered till midday,
so Otomie had told me, and that was not for hard upon two hours.
It came to this then, if the Spaniards were victorious within two
hours, there was a chance of life for me, if not I must die.

Now when I was led out of the sanctuary of Tezcat, I wondered
because the princess Otomie, or rather the goddess Atla as she was
then called, was standing among the chief priests and disputing
with them, for I had seen her bow her head at the door of the holy
place, and thought that it was in token of farewell, seeing that
she was the last of the four women to leave me.  Of what she
disputed I could not hear because of the din of battle, but the
argument was keen and it seemed to me that the priests were
somewhat dismayed at her words, and yet had a fierce joy in them.
It appeared also that she won her cause, for presently they bowed
in obeisance to her, and turning slowly she swept to my side with a
peculiar majesty of gait that even then I noted.  Glancing up at
her face also, I saw that it was alight as though with a great and
holy purpose, and moreover that she looked like some happy bride
passing to her husband's arms.

'Why are you not gone, Otomie?' I said.  'Now it is too late.  The
Spaniards surround the teocalli and you will be killed or taken
prisoner.'

'I await the end whatever it may be,' she answered briefly, and we
spoke no more for a while, but watched the progress of the fray,
which was fierce indeed.  Grimly the Aztec warriors fought before
the symbols of their gods, and in the sight of the vast concourse
of the people who crowded the square beneath and stared at the
struggle in silence.  They hurled themselves upon the Spanish
swords, they gripped the Spaniards with their hands and screaming
with rage dragged them to the steep sides of the roadway, purposing
to cast them over.  Sometimes they succeeded, and a ball of men
clinging together would roll down the slope and be dashed to pieces
on the stone flooring of the courtyard, a Spaniard being in the
centre of the ball.  But do what they would, like some vast and
writhing snake, still the long array of Teules clad in their
glittering mail ploughed its way upward through the storm of spears
and arrows.  Minute by minute and step by step they crept on,
fighting as men fight who know the fate that awaits the desecrators
of the gods of Anahuac, fighting for life, and honour, and safety
from the stone of sacrifice.  Thus an hour went by, and the
Spaniards were half way up the pyramid.  Louder and louder grew the
fearful sounds of battle, the Spaniards cheered and called on their
patron saints to aid them, the Aztecs yelled like wild beasts, the
priests screamed invocations to their gods and cries of
encouragement to the warriors, while above all rose the rattle of
the arquebusses, the roar of the cannon, and the fearful note of
the great drum of snake's skin on which a half-naked priest beat
madly.  Only the multitudes below never moved, nor shouted.  They
stood silent gazing upward, and I could see the sunlight flash on
the thousands of their staring eyes.

Now all this while I was standing near the stone of sacrifice with
Otomie at my side.  Round me were a ring of priests, and over the
stone was fixed a square of black cloth supported upon four poles,
which were set in sockets in the pavement.  In the centre of this
black cloth was sewn a golden funnel measuring six inches or so
across at its mouth, and the sunbeams passing through this funnel
fell in a bright patch, the size of an apple, upon the space of
pavement that was shaded by the cloth.  As the sun moved in the
heavens, so did this ring of light creep across the shadow till at
length it climbed the stone of sacrifice and lay upon its edge.

Then at a sign from the head priest, his ministers laid hold of me
and plucked what were left of my fine clothes from me as cruel boys
pluck a living bird, till I stood naked except for the paint upon
my body and a cloth about my loins.  Now I knew that my hour had
come, and strange to tell, for the first time this day courage
entered into me, and I rejoiced to think that soon I should have
done with my tormentors.  Turning to Otomie I began to bid her
farewell in a clear voice, when to my amaze I saw that as I had
been served so she was being served, for her splendid robes were
torn off her and she stood before me arrayed in nothing except her
beauty, her flowing hair, and a broidered cotton smock.

'Do not wonder, Teule,' she said in a low voice, answering the
question my tongue refused to frame, 'I am your wife and yonder is
our marriage bed, the first and last.  Though you do not love me,
to-day I die your death and at your side, as I have the right to
do.  I could not save you, Teule, but at least I can die with you.'

At the moment I made no answer, for I was stricken silent by my
wonder, and before I could find my tongue the priests had cast me
down, and for the second time I lay upon the stone of doom.  As
they held me a yell fiercer and longer than any which had gone
before, told that the Spaniards had got foot upon the last stair of
the ascent.  Scarcely had my body been set upon the centre of the
great stone, when that of Otomie was laid beside it, so close that
our sides touched, for I must lie in the middle of the stone and
there was no great place for her.  Then the moment of sacrifice not
being come, the priests made us fast with cords which they knotted
to copper rings in the pavement, and turned to watch the progress
of the fray.

For some minutes we lay thus side by side, and as we lay a great
wonder and gratitude grew in my heart, wonder that a woman could be
so brave, gratitude for the love she gave me, sealing it with her
life-blood.  Because Otomie loved me she had chosen this fearful
death, because she loved me so well that she desired to die thus at
my side rather than to live on in greatness and honour without me.
Of a sudden, in a moment while I thought of this marvel, a new
light shone upon my heart and it was changed towards her.  I felt
that no woman could ever be so dear to me as this glorious woman,
no, not even my betrothed.  I felt--nay, who can say what I did
feel?  But I know this, that the tears rushed to my eyes and ran
down my painted face, and I turned my head to look at her.  She was
lying as much upon her left side as her hands would allow, her long
hair fell from the stone to the paving where it lay in masses, and
her face was towards me.  So close was it indeed that there was not
an inch between our lips.

'Otomie,' I whispered, 'listen to me.  I love you, Otomie.'  Now I
saw her breast heave beneath the bands and the colour come upon her
brow.

'Then I am repaid,' she answered, and our lips clung together in a
kiss, the first, and as we thought the last.  Yes, there we kissed,
on the stone of sacrifice, beneath the knife of the priest and the
shadow of death, and if there has been a stranger love scene in the
world, I have never heard its story.

'Oh! I am repaid,' she said again; 'I would gladly die a score of
deaths to win this moment, indeed I pray that I may die before you
take back your words.  For, Teule, I know well that there is one
who is dearer to you than I am, but now your heart is softened by
the faithfulness of an Indian girl, and you think that you love
her.  Let me die then believing that the dream is true.'

'Talk not so,' I answered heavily, for even at that moment the
memory of Lily came into my mind.  'You give your life for me and I
love you for it.'

'My life is nothing and your love is much,' she answered smiling.
'Ah! Teule, what magic have you that you can bring me, Montezuma's
daughter, to the altar of the gods and of my own free will?  Well,
I desire no softer bed, and for the why and wherefore it will soon
be known by both of us, and with it many other things.'



CHAPTER XXII

THE TRIUMPH OF THE CROSS


'Otomie,' I said presently, 'when will they kill us?'

'When the point of light lies within the ring that is painted over
your heart,' she answered.

Now I turned my head from her, and looked at the sunbeam which
pierced the shadow above us like a golden pencil.  It rested at my
side about six inches from me, and I reckoned that it would lie in
the scarlet ring painted upon my breast within some fifteen
minutes.  Meanwhile the clamour of battle grew louder and nearer.
Shifting myself so far as the cords would allow, I strained my head
upwards and saw that the Spaniards had gained the crest of the
pyramid, since the battle now raged upon its edge, and I have
rarely seen so terrible a fight, for the Aztecs fought with the
fury of despair, thinking little of their own lives if they could
only bring a Spaniard to his death.  But for the most part their
rude weapons would not pierce the coats of mail, so that there
remained only one way to compass their desire, namely, by casting
the white men over the edge of the teocalli to be crushed like
eggshells upon the pavement two hundred feet below.  Thus the fray
broke itself up into groups of foes who rent and tore at each other
upon the brink of the pyramid, now and again to vanish down its
side, ten or twelve of them together.  Some of the priests also
joined in the fight, thinking less of their own deaths than of the
desecration of their temples, for I saw one of them, a man of huge
strength and stature, seize a Spanish soldier round the middle and
leap with him into space.  Still, though very slowly, the Spaniards
and Tlascalans forced their way towards the centre of the platform,
and as they came the danger of this dreadful end grew less, for the
Aztecs must drag them further.

Now the fight drew near to the stone of sacrifice, and all who
remained alive of the Aztecs, perhaps some two hundred and fifty of
them, besides the priests, ringed themselves round us and it in a
circle.  Also the outer rim of the sunbeam that fell through the
golden funnel, creeping on remorselessly, touched my painted side
which it seemed to burn as hot iron might, for alas, I could not
command the sun to stand still while the battle raged, as did
Joshua in the valley of Ajalon.  When it touched me, five priests
seized my limbs and head, and the father of them, he who had
conducted me from the palace, clasped his flint knife in both
hands.  Now a deathly sickness took me and I shut my eyes dreaming
that all was done, but at that moment I heard a wild-eyed man, the
chief of the astronomers whom I had noted standing by, call out to
the minister of death:

'Not yet, O priest of Tezeat!  If you smite before the sunbeam lies
upon the victim's heart, your gods are doomed and doomed are the
people of Anahuac.'

The priest gnashed his teeth with rage, and glared first at the
creeping point of light and then over his shoulder at the advancing
battle.  Slowly the ring of warriors closed in upon us, slowly the
golden ray crept up my breast till its outer rim touched the red
circle painted upon my heart.  Again the priest heaved up his awful
knife, again I shut my eyes, and again I heard the shrill scream of
the astronomer, 'Not yet, not yet, or your gods are doomed!'

Then I heard another sound.  It was the voice of Otomie crying for
help.

'Save us, Teules; they murder us!' she shrieked in so piercing a
note that it reached the ears of the Spaniards, for one shouted in
answer and in the Castilian tongue, 'On, my comrades, on!  The dogs
do murder on their altars!'

Then there was a mighty rush and the defending Aztecs were swept in
upon the altar, lifting the priest of sacrifice from his feet and
throwing him across my body.  Thrice that rush came like a rush of
the sea, and each time the stand of the Aztecs weakened.  Now their
circle was broken and the swords of the Spaniards flashed up on
every side, and now the red ray lay within the ring upon my heart.

'Smite, priest of Tezcat,' screamed the voice of the astronomer;
'smite home for the glory of your gods!'

With a fearful yell the priest lifted the knife; I saw the golden
sunbeam that rested full upon my heart shine on it.  Then as it was
descending I saw the same sunbeam shine upon a yard of steel that
flashed across me and lost itself in the breast of the murderer
priest.  Down came the great flint knife, but its aim was lost.  It
struck indeed, but not upon my bosom, though I did not escape it
altogether.  Full upon the altar of sacrifice it fell and was
shattered there, piercing between my side and that of Otomie, and
gashing the flesh of both so that our blood was mingled upon the
stone, making us one indeed.  Down too came the priest across our
bodies for the second time, but to rise no more, for he writhed
dying on those whom he would have slain.

Then as in a dream I heard the wail of the astronomer singing the
dirge of the gods of Anahuac.

'The priest is dead and his gods are fallen,' he cried.  'Tezcat
has rejected his victim and is fallen; doomed are the gods of
Anahuac!  Victory is to the Cross of the Christians!'

Thus he wailed, then came the sound of sword blows and I knew that
this prophet was dead also.

Now a strong arm pulled the dying priest from off us, and he
staggered back till he fell over the altar where the eternal fire
burned, quenching it with his blood and body after it had flared
for many generations, and a knife cut the rope that bound us.

I sat up staring round me wildly, and a voice spoke above me in
Castilian, not to me indeed but to some comrade.

'These two went near to it, poor devils,' said the voice.  'Had my
cut been one second later, that savage would have drilled a hole in
him as big as my head.  By all the saints! the girl is lovely, or
would be if she were washed.  I shall beg her of Cortes as my
prize.'

The voice spoke and I knew the voice.  None other ever had that
hard clear ring.  I knew it even then and looked up, slipping off
the death-stone as I looked.  Now I saw.  Before me fully clad in
mail was my enemy, de Garcia.  It was HIS sword that by the good
providence of God had pierced the breast of the priest.  He had
saved me who, had he known, would as soon have turned his steel
against his own heart as on that of my destroyer.

I gazed at him, wondering if I dreamed, then my lips spoke, without
my will as it were:

'DE GARCIA!'

He staggered back at the sound of my voice, like a man struck by a
shot, then stared at me, rubbed his eyes with his hand, and stared
again.  Now at length he knew me through my paint.

'Mother of God!' he gasped, 'it is that knave Thomas Wingfield, AND
I HAVE SAVED HIS LIFE!'

By this time my senses had come back to me, and knowing all my
folly, I turned seeking escape.  But de Garcia had no mind to
suffer this.  Lifting his sword, he sprang at me with a beastlike
scream of rage and hate.  Swiftly as thought I slipped round the
stone of sacrifice and after me came the uplifted sword of my
enemy.  It would have overtaken me soon enough, for I was weak with
fear and fasting, and my limbs were cramped with bonds, but at that
moment a cavalier whom by his dress and port I guessed to be none
other than Cortes himself, struck up de Garcia's sword, saying:

'How now, Sarceda?  Are you mad with the lust of blood that you
would take to sacrificing victims like an Indian priest?  Let the
poor devil go.'

'He is no Indian, he is an English spy,' cried de Garcia, and once
more struggled to get at me.

'Decidedly our friend is mad,' said Cortes, scanning me; 'he says
that this wretched creature is an Englishman.  Come, be off both of
you, or somebody else may make the same mistake,' and he waved his
sword in token to us to go, deeming that I could not understand his
words; then added angrily, as de Garcia, speechless with rage, made
a new attempt to get at me:

'No, by heaven!  I will not suffer it.  We are Christians and come
to save victims, not to slay them.  Here, comrades, hold this fool
who would stain his soul with murder.'

Now the Spaniards clutched de Garcia by the arms, and he cursed and
raved at them, for as I have said, his rage was that of a beast
rather than of a man.  But I stood bewildered, not knowing whither
to fly.  Fortunate it was for me indeed that one was by who though
she understood no Spanish, yet had a quicker wit.  For while I
stood thus, Otomie clasped my hand, and whispering, 'Fly, fly
swiftly!' led me away from the stone of sacrifice.

'Whither shall we go?' I said at length.  'Were it not better to
trust to the mercy of the Spaniards?'

'To the mercy of that man-devil with the sword?' she answered.
'Peace, Teule, and follow me.'

Now she led me on, and the Spaniards let us by unharmed, ay, and
even spoke words of pity as we passed, for they knew that we were
victims snatched from sacrifice.  Indeed, when a certain brute, a
Tlascalan Indian, rushed at us, purposing to slay us with a club,
one of the Spaniards ran him through the shoulder so that he fell
wounded to the pavement.

So we went on, and at the edge of the pyramid we glanced back and
saw that de Garcia had broken from those who held him, or perhaps
he found his tongue and had explained the truth to them.  At the
least he was bounding from the altar of sacrifice nearly fifty
yards away, and coming towards us with uplifted sword.  Then fear
gave us strength, and we fled like the wind.  Along the steep path
we rushed side by side, leaping down the steps and over the
hundreds of dead and dying, only pausing now and again to save
ourselves from being smitten into space by the bodies of the
priests whom the Spaniards were hurling from the crest of the
teocalli.  Once looking up, I caught sight of de Garcia pursuing
far above us, but after that we saw him no more; doubtless he
wearied of the chase, or feared to fall into the hands of such of
the Aztec warriors as still clustered round the foot of the
pyramid.

We had lived through many dangers that day, the princess Otomie and
I, but one more awaited us before ever we found shelter for awhile.
After we had reached the foot of the pyramid and turned to mingle
with the terrified rabble that surged and flowed through the
courtyard of the temple, bearing away the dead and wounded as the
sea at flood reclaims its waste and wreckage, a noise like thunder
caught my ear.  I looked up, for the sound came from above, and saw
a huge mass bounding down the steep side of the pyramid.  Even then
I knew it again; it was the idol of the god Tezcat that the
Spaniards had torn from its shrine, and like an avenging demon it
rushed straight on to me.  Already it was upon us, there was no
retreat from instant death, we had but escaped sacrifice to the
spirit of the god to be crushed to powder beneath the bulk of his
marble emblem.  On he came while on high the Spaniards shouted in
triumph.  His base had struck the stone side of the pyramid fifty
feet above us, now he whirled round and round in the air to strike
again within three paces of where we stood.  I felt the solid
mountain shake beneath the blow, and next instant the air was
filled with huge fragments of marble, that whizzed over us and past
us as though a mine of powder had been fired beneath our feet,
tearing the rocks from their base.  The god Tezcat had burst into a
score of pieces, and these fell round us like a flight of arrows,
and yet we were not touched.  My head was grazed by his head, his
feet dug a pit before my feet, but I stood there unhurt, the false
god had no power over the victim who had escaped him!

After that I remember nothing till I found myself once more in my
apartments in Montezuma's palace, which I never hoped to see again.
Otomie was by me, and she brought me water to wash the paint from
my body and the blood from my wound, which, leaving her own
untended, she dressed skilfully, for the cut of the priest's knife
was deep and I had bled much.  Also she clothed herself afresh in a
white robe and brought me raiment to wear, with food and drink, and
I partook of them.  Then I bade her eat something herself, and when
she had done so I gathered my wits together and spoke to her.

'What next?' I said.  'Presently the priests will be on us, and we
shall be dragged back to sacrifice.  There is no hope for me here,
I must fly to the Spaniards and trust to their mercy.'

'To the mercy of that man with the sword?  Say, Teule, who is he?'

'He is that Spaniard of whom I have spoken to you, Otomie; he is my
mortal enemy whom I have followed across the seas.'

'And now you would put yourself into his power.  Truly, you are
foolish, Teule.'

'It is better to fall into the hands of Christian men than into
those of your priests,' I answered.

'Have no fear,' she said; 'the priests are harmless for you.  You
have escaped them and there's an end.  Few have ever come alive
from their clutches before, and he who does so is a wizard indeed.
For the rest I think that your God is stronger than our gods, for
surely He must have cast His mantle over us when we lay yonder on
the stone.  Ah! Teule, to what have you brought me that I should
live to doubt my gods, ay, and to call upon the foes of my country
for succour in your need.  Believe me, I had not done it for my own
sake, since I would have died with your kiss upon my lips and your
word of love echoing in my ears, who now must live knowing that
these joys have passed from me.'

'How so?' I answered.  'What I have said, I have said.  Otomie, you
would have died with me, and you saved my life by your wit in
calling on the Spaniards.  Henceforth it is yours, for there is no
other woman in the world so tender and so brave, and I say it
again, Otomie, my wife, I love you.  Our blood has mingled on the
stone of sacrifice and there we kissed; let these be our marriage
rites.  Perhaps I have not long to live, but till I die I am yours,
Otomie my wife.'

Thus I spoke from the fulness of my heart, for my strength and
courage were shattered, horror and loneliness had taken hold of me.
But two things were left to me in the world, my trust in Providence
and the love of this woman, who had dared so much for me.
Therefore I forgot my troth and clung to her as a child clings to
its mother.  Doubtless it was wrong, but I will be bold to say that
few men so placed would have acted otherwise.  Moreover, I could
not take back the fateful words that I had spoken on the stone of
sacrifice.  When I said them I was expecting death indeed, but to
renounce them now that its shadow was lifted from me, if only for a
little while, would have been the act of a coward.  For good or
evil I had given myself to Montezuma's daughter, and I must abide
by it or be shamed.  Still such was the nobleness of this Indian
lady that even then she would not take me at my word.  For a little
while she stood smiling sadly and drawing a lock of her long hair
through the hollow of her hand.  Then she spoke:

'You are not yourself, Teule, and I should be base indeed if I made
so solemn a compact with one who does not know what he sells.
Yonder on the altar and in a moment of death you said that you
loved me, and doubtless it was true.  But now you have come back to
life, and say, lord, who set that golden ring upon your hand and
what is written in its circle?  Yet even if the words are true that
you have spoken and you love me a little, there is one across the
sea whom you love better.  That I could bear, for my heart is fixed
on you alone among men, and at the least you would be kind to me,
and I should move in the sunlight of your presence.  But having
known the light, I cannot live to wander in the darkness.  You do
not understand.  I will tell you what I fear.  I fear that if--if
we were wed, you would weary of me as men do, and that memory would
grow too strong for you.  Then by and by it might be possible for
you to find your way back across the waters to your own land and
your own love, and so you would desert me, Teule.  This is what I
could not bear, Teule.  I can forego you now, ay, and remain your
friend.  But I cannot be put aside like a dancing girl, the
companion of a month, I, Montezuma's daughter, a lady of my own
land.  Should you wed me, it must be for my life, Teule, and that
is perhaps more than you would wish to promise, though you could
kiss me on yonder stone and there is blood fellowship between us,'
and she glanced at the red stain in the linen robe that covered the
wound upon her side.

'And now, Teule, I leave you a while, that I may find Guatemoc, if
he still lives, and others who, now that the strength of the
priests is shattered, have power to protect you and advance you to
honour.  Think then on all that I have said, and do not be hasty to
decide.  Or would you make an end at once and fly to the white men
if I can find a means of escape?'

'I am too weary to fly anywhere,' I answered, 'even if I could.
Moreover, I forget.  My enemy is among the Spaniards, he whom I
have sworn to kill, therefore his friends are my foes and his foes
my friends.  I will not fly, Otomie.'

'There you are wise,' she said, 'for if you come among the Teules
that man will murder you; by fair means or foul he will murder you
within a day, I saw it in his eyes.  Now rest while I seek your
safety, if there is any safety in this blood-stained land.'



CHAPTER XXIII

THOMAS IS MARRIED


Otomie turned and went.  I watched the golden curtains close behind
her; then I sank back upon the couch and instantly was lost in
sleep, for I was faint and weak, and so dazed with weariness, that
at the time I scarcely knew what had happened, or the purpose of
our talk.  Afterwards, however, it came back to me.  I must have
slept for many hours, for when I awoke it was far on into the
night.  It was night but not dark, for through the barred window
places came the sound of tumult and fighting, and red rays of light
cast by the flames of burning houses.  One of these windows was
above my couch, and standing on the bed I seized the sill with my
hands.  With much pain, because of the flesh wound in my side, I
drew myself up till I could look through the bars.  Then I saw that
the Spaniards, not content with the capture of the teocalli, had
made a night attack and set fire to hundreds of houses in the city.
The glare of the flames was that of a lurid day, and by it I could
see the white men retreating to their quarters, pursued by
thousands of Aztecs, who hung upon their flanks, shooting at them
with stones and arrows.

Now I dropped down from the window place and began to think as to
what I should do, for again my mind was wavering.  Should I desert
Otomie and escape to the Spaniards if that were possible, taking my
chance of death at the hands of de Garcia?  Or should I stay among
the Aztecs if they would give me shelter, and wed Otomie?  There
was a third choice, indeed, to stay with them and leave Otomie
alone, though it would be difficult to do this and keep my honour.
One thing I understood, if I married Otomie it must be at her own
price, for then I must become an Indian and give over all hope of
returning to England and to my betrothed.  Of this, indeed, there
was little chance, still, while my life remained to me, it might
come about if I was free.  But once my hands were tied by this
marriage it could never be during Otomie's lifetime, and so far as
Lily Bozard was concerned I should be dead.  How could I be thus
faithless to her memory and my troth, and on the other hand, how
could I discard the woman who had risked all for me, and who, to
speak truth, had grown so dear to me, though there was one yet
dearer?  A hero or an angel might find a path out of this tangle,
but alas! I was neither the one nor the other, only a man afflicted
as other men are with human weakness, and Otomie was at hand, and
very sweet and fair.  Still, almost I determined that I would avail
myself of her nobleness, that I would go back upon my words, and
beg her to despise me and see me no more, in order that I might not
be forced to break the troth that I had pledged beneath the beech
at Ditchingham.  For I greatly dreaded this oath of life-long
fidelity which I should be forced to swear if I chose any other
path.

Thus I thought on in pitiable confusion of mind, not knowing that
all these matters were beyond my ordering, since a path was already
made ready to my feet, which I must follow or die.  And let this be
a proof of the honesty of my words, since, had I been desirous of
glozing the truth, I need have written nothing of these struggles
of conscience, and of my own weakness.  For soon it was to come to
this, though not by her will, that I must either wed Otomie or die
at once, and few would blame me for doing the first and not the
last.  Indeed, though I did wed her, I might still have declared
myself to my affianced and to all the world as a slave of events
from which there was no escape.  But it is not all the truth, since
my mind was divided, and had it not been settled for me, I cannot
say how the struggle would have ended.

Now, looking back on the distant past, and weighing my actions and
character as a judge might do, I can see, however, that had I found
time to consider, there was another matter which would surely have
turned the scale in favour of Otomie.  De Garcia was among the
Spaniards, and my hatred of de Garcia was the ruling passion of my
life, a stronger passion even than my love for the two dear women
who have been its joy.  Indeed, though he is dead these many years
I still hate him, and evil though the desire be, even in my age I
long that my vengeance was still to wreak.  While I remained among
the Aztecs de Garcia would be their enemy and mine, and I might
meet him in war and kill him there.  But if I succeeded in reaching
the Spanish camp, then it was almost sure that he would bring about
my instant death.  Doubtless he had told such a tale of me already,
that within an hour I should be hung as a spy, or otherwise made
away with.

But I will cease from these unprofitable wonderings which have but
one value, that of setting out my strange necessity of choice
between an absent and a present love, and go on with the story of
an event in which there was no room to balance scruples.


While I sat musing on the couch the curtain was drawn, and a man
entered bearing a torch.  It was Guatemoc as he had come from the
fray, which, except for its harvest of burning houses, was finished
for that night.  The plumes were shorn from his head, his golden
armour was hacked by the Spanish swords, and he bled from a shot
wound in the neck.

'Greeting, Teule,' he said.  'Certainly I never thought to see you
alive to-night, or myself either for that matter.  But it is a
strange world, and now, if never before in Tenoctitlan, those
things happen for which we look the least.  But I have no time for
words.  I came to summon you before the council.'

'What is to be my fate?' I asked.  'To be dragged back to the stone
of sacrifice?'

'Nay, have no fear of that.  But for the rest I cannot say.  In an
hour you may be dead or great among us, if any of us can be called
great in these days of shame.  Otomie has worked well for you among
the princes and the counsellors, so she says, and if you have a
heart, you should be grateful to her, for it seems to me that few
women have loved a man so much.  As for me, I have been employed
elsewhere,' and he glanced at his rent armour, 'but I will lift up
my voice for you.  Now come, friend, for the torch burns low.  By
this time you must be well seasoned in dangers; one more or less
will matter as little to you as to me.'

Then I rose and followed him into the great cedar-panelled hall,
where that very morning I had received adoration as a god.  Now I
was a god no longer, but a prisoner on trial for his life.  Upon
the dais where I had stood in the hour of my godhead were gathered
those of the princes and counsellors who were left alive.  Some of
them, like Guatemoc, were clad in rent and bloody mail, others in
their customary dress, and one in a priest's robe.  They had only
two things in common among them, the sternness of their faces and
the greatness of their rank, and they sat there this night not to
decide my fate, which was but a little thing, but to take counsel
as to how they might expel the Spaniards before the city was
destroyed.

When I entered, a man in mail, who sat in the centre of the half
circle, and in whom I knew Cuitlahua, who would be emperor should
Montezuma die, looked up quickly and said:

'Who is this, Guatemoc, that you bring with you?  Ah! I remember;
the Teule that was the god Tezcat, and who escaped the sacrifice
to-day.  Listen, nobles.  What is to be done with this man?  Say,
is it lawful that he be led back to sacrifice?'

Then the priest answered: 'I grieve to say that it is not lawful
most noble prince.  This man has lain on the altar of the god, he
has even been wounded by the holy knife.  But the god rejected him
in a fateful hour, and he must lie there no more.  Slay him if you
will, but not upon the stone of sacrifice.'

'What then shall be done with him?' said the prince again.

'He is of the blood of the Teules, and therefore an enemy.  One
thing is certain; he must not be suffered to join the white devils
and give them tidings of our distresses.  Is it not best that he be
put away forthwith?'

Now several of the council nodded their heads, but others sat
silent, making no sign.

'Come,' said Cuitlahua, 'we have no time to waste over this man
when the lives of thousands are hourly at stake.  The question is,
Shall the Teule be slain?'

Then Guatemoc rose and spoke, saying: 'Your pardon, noble kinsman,
but I hold that we may put this prisoner to better use than to kill
him.  I know him well; he is brave and loyal, as I have proved,
moreover, he is not all a Teule, but half of another race that
hates them as he hates them.  Also he has knowledge of their
customs and mode of warfare, which we lack, and I think that he may
be able to give us good counsel in our strait.'

'The counsel of the wolf to the deer perhaps,' said Cuitlahua,
coldly; 'counsel that shall lead us to the fangs of the Teules.
Who shall answer for this foreign devil, that he will not betray us
if we trust him?'

'I will answer with my life,' answered Guatemoc.

'Your life is of too great worth to be set on such a stake, nephew.
Men of this white breed are liars, and his own word is of no value
even if he gives it.  I think that it will be best to kill him and
have done with doubts.'

'This man is wed to Otomie, princess of the Otomie, Montezuma's
daughter, your niece,' said Guatemoc again, 'and she loves him so
well that she offered herself upon the stone of sacrifice with him.
Unless I mistake she will answer for him also.  Shall she be
summoned before you?'

'If you wish, nephew; but a woman in love is a blind woman, and
doubtless he has deceived her also.  Moreover, she was his wife
according to the rule of religion only.  Is it your desire that the
princess should be summoned before you, comrades?'

Now some said nay, but the most, those whose interest Otomie had
gained, said yea, and the end of it was that one of their number
was sent to summon her.

Presently she came, looking very weary, but proud in mien and
royally attired, and bowed before the council.

'This is the question, princess,' said Cuitlahua.  'Whether this
Teule shall be slain forthwith, or whether he shall be sworn as one
of us, should he be willing to take the oath?  The prince Guatemoc
here vouches for him, and he says, moreover, that you will vouch
for him also.  A woman can do this in one way only, by taking him
she vouches as her husband.  You are already wed to this foreigner
by the rule of religion.  Are you willing to marry him according to
the custom of our land, and to answer for his faith with your own
life?'

'I am willing,' Otomie answered quietly, 'if he is willing.'

'In truth it is a great honour that you would do this white dog,'
said Cuitlahua.  'Bethink you, you are princess of the Otomie and
one of our master's daughters, it is to you that we look to bring
back the mountain clans of the Otomie, of whom you are
chieftainess, from their unholy alliance with the accursed
Tlascalans, the slaves of the Teules.  Is not your life too
precious to be set on such a stake as this foreigner's faith? for
learn, Otomie, if he proves false your rank shall not help you.'

'I know it all,' she replied quietly.  'Foreigner or not, I love
this man and I will answer for him with my blood.  Moreover, I look
to him to assist me to win back the people of the Otomie to their
allegiance.  But let him speak for himself, my lord.  It may happen
that he has no desire to take me in marriage.'

Cuitlahua smiled grimly and said, 'When the choice lies between the
breast of death and those fair arms of yours, niece, it is easy to
guess his answer.  Still, speak, Teule, and swiftly.'

'I have little to say, lord.  If the princess Otomie is willing to
wed me, I am willing to wed her,' I answered, and thus in the
moment of my danger all my doubts and scruples vanished.  As
Cuitlahua had said, it was easy to guess the choice of one set
between death and Otomie.

She heard and looked at me warningly, saying in a low voice:
'Remember our words, Teule.  In such a marriage you renounce your
past and give me your future.'

'I remember,' I answered, and while I spoke, there came before my
eyes a vision of Lily's face as it had been when I bade her
farewell.  This then was the end of the vows that I had sworn.
Cuitlahua looked at me with a glance which seemed to search my
heart and said:

'I hear your words, Teule.  You, a white wanderer, are graciously
willing to take this princess to wife, and by her to be lifted high
among the great lords of this land.  But say, how can we trust you?
If you fail us your wife dies indeed, but that may be naught to
you.'

'I am ready to swear allegiance,' I answered.  'I hate the
Spaniards, and among them is my bitterest enemy whom I followed
across the sea to kill--the man who strove to murder me this very
day.  I can say no more, if you doubt my words it were best to make
an end of me.  Already I have suffered much at the hands of your
people; it matters little if I die or live.'

'Boldly spoken, Teule.  Now, lords, I ask your judgment.  Shall
this man be given to Otomie as husband and be sworn as one of us,
or shall he be killed instantly?  You know the matter.  If he can
be trusted, as Guatemoc and Otomie believe, he will be worth an
army to us, for he is acquainted with the language, the customs,
the weapons, and the modes of warfare of these white devils whom
the gods have let loose upon us.  If on the other hand he is not to
be trusted, and it is hard for us to put faith in one of his blood,
he may do us much injury, for in the end he will escape to the
Teules, and betray our counsels and our strength, or the lack of
it.  It is for you to judge, lords.'

Now the councillors consulted together, and some said one thing and
some another, for they were not by any means of a mind in the
matter.  At length growing weary, Cuitlahua called on them to put
the question to the vote, and this they did by a lifting of hands.
First those who were in favour of my death held up their hands,
then those who thought that it would be wise to spare me.  There
were twenty-six councillors present, not counting Cuitlahua, and of
these thirteen voted for my execution and thirteen were for saving
me alive.

'Now it seems that I must give a casting vote,' said Cuitlahua when
the tale had been rendered, and my blood turned cold at his words,
for I had seen that his mind was set against me.  Then it was that
Otomie broke in, saying:

'Your pardon, my uncle, but before you speak I have a word to say.
You need my services, do you not? for if the people of the Otomie
will listen to any and suffer themselves to be led from their evil
path, it is to me.  My mother was by birth their chieftainess, the
last of a long line, and I am her only child, moreover my father is
their emperor.  Therefore my life is of no small worth now in this
time of trouble, for though I am nothing in myself, yet it may
chance that I can bring thirty thousand warriors to your standard.
The priests knew this on yonder pyramid, and when I claimed my
right to lie at the side of the Teule, they gainsayed me, nor would
they suffer it, though they hungered for the royal blood, till I
called down the vengeance of the gods upon them.  Now my uncle, and
you, lords, I tell you this: Slay yonder man if you will, but know
that then you must find another than me to lure the Otomie from
their rebellion, for then I complete what I began to-day, and
follow him to the grave.'

She ceased and a murmur of amazement went round the chamber, for
none had looked to find such love and courage in this lady's heart.
Only Cuitlahua grew angry.

'Disloyal girl,' he said; 'do you dare to set your lover before
your country?  Shame upon you, shameless daughter of our king.
Why, it is in the blood--as the father is so is the daughter.  Did
not Montezuma forsake his people and choose to lie among these
Teules, the false children of Quetzal?  And now this Otomie follows
in his path.  Tell us how is it, woman, that you and your lover
alone escaped from the teocalli yonder when all the rest were
killed.  Are you then in league with these Teules?  I say to you,
niece, that if things were otherwise and I had my way, you should
win your desire indeed, for you should be slain at this man's side
and within the hour.'  And he ceased for lack of breath, and looked
upon her fiercely.

But Otomie never quailed; she stood before him pale and quiet, with
folded hands and downcast eyes, and answered:

'Forbear to reproach me because my love is strong, or reproach me
if you will, I have spoken my last word.  Condemn this man to die
and Prince you must seek some other envoy to win back the Otomie to
the cause of Anahuac.'

Now Cuitlahua pondered, staring into the gloom above him and
pulling at his beard, and the silence was great, for none knew what
his judgment would be.  At last he spoke:

'So be it.  We have need of Otomie, my niece, and it is of no avail
to fight against a woman's love.  Teule, we give you life, and with
the life honour and wealth, and the greatest of our women in
marriage, and a place in our councils.  Take these gifts and her,
but I say to you both, beware how you use them.  If you betray us,
nay, if you do but think on treachery, I swear to you that you
shall die a death so slow and horrible that the very name of it
would turn your heart to water; you and your wife, your children
and your servants.  Come, let him be sworn!'

I heard and my head swam, and a mist gathered before my eyes.  Once
again I was saved from instant death.

Presently it cleared, and looking up my eyes met those of the woman
who had saved me, Otomie my wife, who smiled upon me somewhat
sadly.  Then the priest came forward bearing a wooden bowl, carved
about with strange signs, and a flint knife, and bade me bare my
arm.  He cut my flesh with the knife, so that blood ran from it
into the bowl.  Some drops of this blood he emptied on to the
ground, muttering invocations the while.  Then he turned and looked
at Cuitlahua as though in question, and Cuitlahua answered with a
bitter laugh:

'Let him be baptized with the blood of the princess Otomie my
niece, for she is bail for him.'

'Nay, lord,' said Guatemoc, 'these two have mingled bloods already
upon the stone of sacrifice, and they are man and wife.  But I also
have vouched for him, and I offer mine in earnest of my faith.'

'This Teule has good friends,' said Cuitlahua; 'you honour him
overmuch.  But so be it.'

Then Guatemoc came forward, and when the priest would have cut him
with the knife, he laughed and said, pointing to the bullet wound
upon his neck:

'No need for that, priest.  Blood runs here that was shed by the
Teules.  None can be fitter for this purpose.'

So the priest drew away the bandage and suffered the blood of
Guatemoc to drop into a second smaller bowl.  Then he came to me
and dipping his finger into the blood, he drew the sign of a cross
upon my forehead as a Christian priest draws it upon the forehead
of an infant, and said:

'In the presence and the name of god our lord, who is everywhere
and sees all things, I sign you with this blood and make you of
this blood.  In the presence and the name of god our lord, who is
everywhere and sees all things, I pour forth your blood upon the
earth!' (here he poured as he spoke).  'As this blood of yours
sinks into the earth, so may the memory of your past life sink and
be forgotten, for you are born again of the people of Anahuac.  In
the presence and the name of god our lord, who is everywhere and
sees all things, I mingle these bloods' (here he poured from one
bowl into the other), 'and with them I touch your tongue' (here
dipping his finger into the bowl he touched the tip of my tongue
with it) 'and bid you swear thus:

'"May every evil to which the flesh of man is subject enter into my
flesh, may I live in misery and die in torment by the dreadful
death, may my soul be rejected from the Houses of the Sun, may it
wander homeless for ever in the darkness that is behind the Stars,
if I depart from this my oath.  I, Teule, swear to be faithful to
the people of Anahuac and to their lawful governors.  I swear to
wage war upon their foes and to compass their destruction, and more
especially upon the Teules till they are driven into the sea.  I
swear to offer no affront to the gods of Anahuac.  I swear myself
in marriage to Otomie, princess of the Otomie, the daughter of
Montezuma my lord, for so long as her life shall endure.  I swear
to attempt no escape from these shores.  I swear to renounce my
father and my mother, and the land where I was born, and to cling
to this land of my new birth; and this my oath shall endure till
the volcan Popo ceases to vomit smoke and fire, till there is no
king in Tenoctitlan, till no priest serves the altars of the gods,
and the people of Anahuac are no more a people."

'Do you swear these things, one and all?'

'One and all I swear them,' I answered because I must, though there
was much in the oath that I liked little enough.  And yet mark how
strangely things came to pass.  Within fifteen years from that
night the volcan Popo had ceased to vomit smoke and fire, the kings
had ceased to reign in Tenoctitlan, the priests had ceased to serve
the altars of the gods, the people of Anahuac were no more a
people, and my vow was null and void.  Yet the priests who framed
this form chose these things as examples of what was immortal!

When I had sworn Guatemoc came forward and embraced me, saying:
'Welcome, Teule, my brother in blood and heart.  Now you are one of
us, and we look to you for help and counsel.  Come, be seated by
me.'

I looked towards Cuitlahua doubtfully, but he smiled graciously,
and said: 'Teule, your trial is over.  We have accepted you, and
you have sworn the solemn oath of brotherhood, to break which is to
die horribly in this world, and to be tortured through eternity by
demons in the next.  Forget all that may have been said in the hour
of your weighing, for the balance is in your favour, and be sure
that if you give us no cause to doubt you, you shall find none to
doubt us.  Now as the husband of Otomie, you are a lord among the
lords, having honour and great possessions, and as such be seated
by your brother Guatemoc, and join our council.'

I did as he bade me, and Otomie withdrew from our presence.  Then
Cuitlahua spoke again, no longer of me and my matters, but of the
urgent affairs of state.  He spoke in slow words and weighty, and
more than once his voice broke in his sorrow.  He told of the
grievous misfortunes that had overcome the country, of the death of
hundreds of its bravest warriors, of the slaughter of the priests
and soldiers that day on the teocalli, and the desecration of his
nation's gods.  What was to be done in this extremity? he asked.
Montezuma lay dying, a prisoner in the camp of the Teules, and the
fire that he had nursed with his breath devoured the land.  No
efforts of theirs could break the iron strength of these white
devils, armed as they were with strange and terrible weapons.  Day
by day disaster overtook the arms of the Aztecs.  What wisdom had
they now that the protecting gods were shattered in their very
shrines, when the altars ran red with the blood of their
ministering priests, when the oracles were dumb or answered only in
the accents of despair?

Then one by one princes and generals arose and gave counsel
according to their lights.  At length all had spoken, and Cuitlahua
said, looking towards me:

'We have a new counsellor among us, who is skilled in the warfare
and customs of the white men, who till an hour ago was himself a
white man.  Has he no word of comfort for us?'

'Speak, my brother?' said Guatemoc.

Then I spoke.  'Most noble Cuitlahua, and you lords and princes.
You honour me by asking my counsel, and it is this in few words and
brief.  You waste your strength by hurling your armies continually
against stone walls and the weapons of the Teules.  So you shall
not prevail against them.  Your devices must be changed if you
would win victory.  The Spaniards are like other men; they are no
gods as the ignorant imagine, and the creatures on which they ride
are not demons but beasts of burden, such as are used for many
purposes in the land where I was born.  The Spaniards are men I
say, and do not men hunger and thirst?  Cannot men be worn out by
want of sleep, and be killed in many ways?  Are not these Teules
already weary to the death?  This then is my word of comfort to
you.  Cease to attack the Spaniards and invest their camp so
closely that no food can reach them and their allies the
Tlascalans.  If this is done, within ten days from now, either they
will surrender or they will strive to break their way back to the
coast.  But to do this, first they must win out of the city, and if
dykes are cut through the causeways, that will be no easy matter.
Then when they strive to escape cumbered with the gold they covet
and came here to seek, then I say will be the hour to attack them
and to destroy them utterly.'

I ceased, and a murmur of applause went round the council.

'It seems that we came to a wise judgment when we determined to
spare this man's life,' said Cuitlahua, 'for all that he tells us
is true, and I would that we had followed this policy from the
first.  Now, lords, I give my voice for acting as our brother
points the way.  What say you?'

'We say with you that our brother's words are good,' answered
Guatemoc presently, 'and now let us follow them to the end.'

Then, after some further talk, the council broke up and I sought my
chamber well nigh blind with weariness and crushed by the weight of
all that I had suffered on that eventful day.  The dawn was flaring
in the eastern sky, and by its glimmer I found my path down the
empty corridors, till at length I came to the curtains of my
sleeping place.  I drew them and passed through.  There, far up the
room, the faint light gleaming on her snowy dress, her raven hair
and ornaments of gold, stood Otomie my bride.

I went towards her, and as I came she glided to meet me with
outstretched arms.  Presently they were about my neck and her kiss
was on my brow.

'Now all is done, my love and lord,' she whispered, 'and come good
or ill, or both, we are one till death, for such vows as ours
cannot be broken.'

'All is done indeed, Otomie, and our oaths are lifelong, though
other oaths have been broken that they might be sworn,' I answered.


Thus then I, Thomas Wingfield, was wed to Otomie, princess of the
Otomie, Montezuma's daughter.



CHAPTER XXIV

THE NIGHT OF FEAR


Long before I awoke that day the commands of the council had been
carried out, and the bridges in the great causeways were broken
down wherever dykes crossed the raised roads that ran through the
waters of the lake.  That afternoon also I went dressed as an
Indian warrior with Guatemoc and the other generals, to a parley
which was held with Cortes, who took his stand on the same tower of
the palace that Montezuma had stood on when the arrow of Guatemoc
struck him down.  There is little to be said of this parley, and I
remember it chiefly because it was then for the first time since I
had left the Tobascans that I saw Marina close, and heard her sweet
and gentle voice.  For now as ever she was by the side of Cortes,
translating his proposals of peace to the Aztecs.  Among those
proposals was one which showed me that de Garcia had not been idle.
It asked that the false white man who had been rescued from the
altars of the gods upon the teocalli should be given in exchange
for certain Aztec prisoners, in order that he might be hung
according to his merits as a spy and deserter, a traitor to the
emperor of Spain.  I wondered as I heard, if Marina knew when she
spoke the words, that 'the false white man' was none other than the
friend of her Tobascan days.

'You see that you are fortunate in having found place among us
Aztecs, Teule,' said Guatemoc with a laugh, 'for your own people
would greet you with a rope.'

Then he answered Cortes, saying nothing of me, but bidding him and
all the Spaniards prepare for death:

'Many of us have perished,' he said; 'you also must perish, Teules.
You shall perish of hunger and thirst, you shall perish on the
altars of the gods.  There is no escape for you Teules; the bridges
are broken.'

And all the multitude took up the words and thundered out, 'There
is no escape for you Teules; the bridges are broken!'

Then the shooting of arrows began, and I sought the palace to tell
Otomie my wife what I had gathered of the state of her father
Montezuma, who the Spaniards said still lay dying, and of her two
sisters who were hostages in their quarters.  Also I told her how
my surrender had been sought, and she kissed me, and said smiling,
that though my life was now burdened with her, still it was better
so than that I should fall into the hands of the Spaniards.

Two days later came the news that Montezuma was dead, and shortly
after it his body, which the Spaniards handed over to the Aztecs
for burial, attired in the gorgeous robes of royalty.  They laid it
in the hall of the palace, whence it was hurried secretly and at
night to Chapoltepec, and there hidden away with small ceremony,
for it was feared that the people might rend it limb from limb in
their rage.  With Otomie weeping at my side, I looked for the last
time on the face of that most unhappy king, whose reign so glorious
in its beginning had ended thus.  And while I looked I wondered
what suffering could have equalled his, as fallen from his estate
and hated by the subjects whom he had betrayed, he lay dying, a
prisoner in the power of the foreign wolves who were tearing out
his country's heart.  It is little wonder indeed that Montezuma
rent the bandages from his wounds and would not suffer them to tend
his hurts.  For the real hurt was in his soul; there the iron had
entered deeply, and no leech could cure it except one called Death.
And yet the fault was not all his, the devils whom he worshipped as
gods were revenged upon him, for they had filled him with the
superstitions of their wicked faith, and because of these the gods
and their high priest must sink into a common ruin.  Were it not
for these unsubstantial terrors that haunted him, the Spaniards had
never won a foothold in Tenoctitlan, and the Aztecs would have
remained free for many a year to come.  But Providence willed it
otherwise, and this dead and disgraced monarch was but its
instrument.

Such were the thoughts that passed through my mind as I gazed upon
the body of the great Montezuma.  But Otomie, ceasing from her
tears, kissed his clay and cried aloud:

'O my father, it is well that you are dead, for none who loved you
could desire to see you live on in shame and servitude.  May the
gods you worshipped give me strength to avenge you, or if they be
no gods, then may I find it in myself.  I swear this, my father,
that while a man is left to me I will not cease from seeking to
avenge you.'

Then taking my hand, without another word she turned and passed
thence.  As will be seen, she kept her oath.


On that day and on the morrow there was fighting with the
Spaniards, who sallied out to fill up the gaps in the dykes of the
causeway, a task in which they succeeded, though with some loss.
But it availed them nothing, for so soon as their backs were turned
we opened the dykes again.  It was on these days that for the first
time I had experience of war, and armed with my bow made after the
English pattern, I did good service.  As it chanced, the very first
arrow that I drew was on my hated foe de Garcia, but here my common
fortune pursued me, for being out of practice, or over-anxious, I
aimed too high, though the mark was an easy one, and the shaft
pierced the iron of his casque, causing him to reel in his saddle,
but doing him no further hurt.  Still this marksmanship, poor as it
was, gained me great renown among the Aztecs, who were but feeble
archers, for they had never before seen an arrow pierce through the
Spanish mail.  Nor would mine have done so had I not collected the
iron barbs off the crossbow bolts of the Spaniards, and fitted them
to my own shafts.  I seldom found the mail that would withstand
arrows made thus, when the range was short and the aim good.

After the first day's fight I was appointed general over a body of
three thousand archers, and was given a banner to be borne before
me and a gorgeous captain's dress to wear.  But what pleased me
better was a chain shirt which came from the body of a Spanish
cavalier.  For many years I always wore this shirt beneath my
cotton mail, and it saved my life more than once, for even bullets
would not pierce the two of them.

I had taken over the command of my archers but forty-eight hours, a
scant time in which to teach them discipline whereof they had
little, though they were brave enough, when the occasion came to
use them in good earnest, and with it the night of disaster that is
still known among the Spaniards as the noche triste.  On the
afternoon before that night a council was held in the palace at
which I spoke, saying, I was certain that the Teules thought of
retreat from the city, and in the dark, for otherwise they would
not have been so eager to fill up the canals in the causeway.  To
this Cuitlahua, who now that Montezuma was dead would be emperor,
though he was not yet chosen and crowned, answered that it might
well be that the Teules meditated flight, but that they could never
attempt it in the darkness, since in so doing they must become
entangled in the streets and dykes.

I replied that though it was not the Aztec habit to march and fight
at night, such things were common enough among white men as they
had seen already, and that because the Spaniards knew it was not
their habit, they would be the more likely to attempt escape under
cover of the darkness, when they thought their enemies asleep.
Therefore I counselled that sentries should be set at all the
entrances to every causeway.  To this Cuitlahua assented, and
assigned the causeway of Tlacopan to Guatemoc and myself, making us
the guardians of its safety.  That night Guatemoc and I, with some
soldiers, went out towards midnight to visit the guard that we had
placed upon the causeway.  It was very dark and a fine rain fell,
so that a man could see no further before his eyes than he can at
evening through a Norfolk roke in autumn.  We found and relieved
the guard, which reported that all was quiet, and we were returning
towards the great square when of a sudden I heard a dull sound as
of thousands of men tramping.

'Listen,' I said.

'It is the Teules who escape,' whispered Guatemoc.

Quickly we ran to where the street from the great square opens on
to the causeway, and there even through the darkness and rain we
caught the gleam of armour.  Then I cried aloud in a great voice,
'To arms!  To arms!  The Teules escape by the causeway of
Tlacopan.'

Instantly my words were caught up by the sentries and passed from
post to post till the city rang with them.  They were cried in
every street and canal, they echoed from the roofs of houses, and
among the summits of a hundred temples.  The city awoke with a
murmur, from the lake came the sound of water beaten by ten
thousand oars, as though myriads of wild-fowl had sprung suddenly
from their reedy beds.  Here, there, and everywhere torches flashed
out like falling stars, wild notes were blown on horns and shells,
and above all arose the booming of the snakeskin drum which the
priests upon the teocalli beat furiously.

Presently the murmur grew to a roar, and from this direction and
from that, armed men poured towards the causeway of Tlacopan.  Some
came on foot, but the most of them were in canoes which covered the
waters of the lake further than the ear could hear.  Now the
Spaniards to the number of fifteen hundred or so, accompanied by
some six or eight thousand Tlascalans, were emerging on the
causeway in a long thin line.  Guatemoc and I rushed before them,
collecting men as we went, till we came to the first canal, where
canoes were already gathering by scores.  The head of the Spanish
column reached the canal and the fight began, which so far as the
Aztecs were concerned was a fray without plan or order, for in that
darkness and confusion the captains could not see their men or the
men hear their captains.  But they were there in countless numbers
and had only one desire in their breasts, to kill the Teules.  A
cannon roared, sending a storm of bullets through us, and by its
flash we saw that the Spaniards carried a timber bridge with them,
which they were placing across the canal.  Then we fell on them,
every man fighting for himself.  Guatemoc and I were swept over
that bridge by the first rush of the enemy, as leaves are swept in
a gale, and though both of us won through safely we saw each other
no more that night.  With us and after us came the long array of
Spaniards and Tlascalans, and from every side the Aztecs poured
upon them, clinging to their struggling line as ants cling to a
wounded worm.

How can I tell all that came to pass that night?  I cannot, for I
saw but little of it.  All I know is that for two hours I was
fighting like a madman.  The foe crossed the first canal, but when
all were over the bridge was sunk so deep in the mud that it could
not be stirred, and three furlongs on ran a second canal deeper and
wider than the first.  Over this they could not cross till it was
bridged with the dead.  It seemed as though all hell had broken
loose upon that narrow ridge of ground.  The sound of cannons and
of arquebusses, the shrieks of agony and fear, the shouts of the
Spanish soldiers, the war-cries of the Aztecs, the screams of
wounded horses, the wail of women, the hiss of hurtling darts and
arrows, and the dull noise of falling blows went up to heaven in
one hideous hurly-burly.  Like a frightened mob of cattle the long
Spanish array swayed this way and that, bellowing as it swayed.
Many rolled down the sides of the causeway to be slaughtered in the
water of the lake, or borne away to sacrifice in the canoes, many
were drowned in the canals, and yet more were trampled to death in
the mud.  Hundreds of the Aztecs perished also, for the most part
beneath the weapons of their own friends, who struck and shot not
knowing on whom the blow should fall or in whose breast the arrow
would find its home.

For my part I fought on with a little band of men who had gathered
about me, till at last the dawn broke and showed an awful sight.
The most of those who were left alive of the Spaniards and their
allies had crossed the second canal upon a bridge made of the dead
bodies of their fellows mixed up with a wreck of baggage, cannon,
and packages of treasure.  Now the fight was raging beyond it.  A
mob of Spaniards and Tlascalans were still crossing the second
breach, and on these I fell with such men as were with me.  I
plunged right into the heart of them, and suddenly before me I saw
the face of de Garcia.  With a shout I rushed at him.  He heard my
voice and knew me.  With an oath he struck at my head.  The heavy
sword came down upon my helmet of painted wood, shearing away one
side of it and felling me, but ere I fell I smote him on the breast
with the club I carried, tumbling him to the earth.  Now half
stunned and blinded I crept towards him through the press.  All
that I could see was a gleam of armour in the mud.  I threw myself
upon it, gripping at the wearer's throat, and together we rolled
down the side of the causeway into the shallow water at the edge of
the lake.  I was uppermost, and with a fierce joy I dashed the
blood from my eyes that I might see to kill my enemy caught at
last.  His body was in the lake but his head lay upon the sloping
bank, and my plan was to hold him beneath the water till he was
drowned, for I had lost my club.

'At length, de Garcia!' I cried in Spanish as I shifted my grip.

'For the love of God let me go!' gasped a rough voice beneath me.
'Fool, I am no Indian dog.'

Now I peered into the man's face bewildered.  I had seized de
Garcia, but the voice was not his voice, nor was the face his face,
but that of a rough Spanish soldier.

'Who are you?' I asked, slackening my hold.  'Where is de Garcia--
he whom you name Sarceda?'

'Sarceda?  I don't know.  A minute ago he was on his back on the
causeway.  The fellow pulled me down and rolled behind me.  Let me
be I say.  I am not Sarceda, and if I were, is this a time to
settle private quarrels?  I am your comrade, Bernal Diaz.  Holy
Mother! who are you?  An Aztec who speaks Castilian?'

'I am no Aztec,' I answered.  'I am an Englishman and I fight with
the Aztecs that I may slay him whom you name Sarceda.  But with you
I have no quarrel, Bernal Diaz.  Begone and escape if you can.  No,
I will keep the sword with your leave.'

'Englishman, Spaniard, Aztec, or devil,' grunted the man as he drew
himself from his bed of ooze, 'you are a good fellow, and I promise
you that if I live through this, and it should ever come about that
I get YOU by the throat, I will remember the turn you did me.
Farewell;' and without more ado he rushed up the bank and plunged
into a knot of his flying countrymen, leaving his good sword in my
hand.  I strove to follow him that I might find my enemy, who once
more had escaped me by craft, but my strength failed me, for de
Garcia's sword had bitten deep and I bled much.  So I must sit
where I was till a canoe came and bore me back to Otomie to be
nursed, and ten days went by before I could walk again.

This was my share in the victory of the noche triste.  Alas! it was
a barren triumph, though more than five hundred of the Spaniards
were slain and thousands of their allies.  For there was no warlike
skill or discipline among the Aztecs, and instead of following the
Spaniards till not one of them remained alive, they stayed to
plunder the dead and drag away the living to sacrifice.  Also this
day of revenge was a sad one to Otomie, seeing that two of her
brothers, Montezuma's sons whom the Spaniards held in hostage,
perished with them in the fray.

As for de Garcia I could not learn what had become of him, nor
whether he was dead or living.



CHAPTER XXV

THE BURYING OF MONTEZUMA'S TREASURE


Cuitlahua was crowned Emperor of the Aztecs in succession to his
brother Montezuma, while I lay sick with the wound given me by the
sword of de Garcia, and also with that which I had received on the
altar of sacrifice.  This hurt had found no time to heal, and in
the fierce fighting on the Night of Fear it burst open and bled
much.  Indeed it gave me trouble for years, and to this hour I feel
it in the autumn season.  Otomie, who nursed me tenderly, and so
strange is the heart of woman, even seemed to be consoled in her
sorrow at the loss of her father and nearest kin, because I had
escaped the slaughter and won fame, told me of the ceremony of the
crowning, which was splendid enough.  Indeed the Aztecs were almost
mad with rejoicing because the Teules had gone at last.  They
forgot, or seemed to forget, the loss of thousands of their bravest
warriors and of the flower of their rank, and as yet, at any rate,
they did not look forward to the future.  From house to house and
street to street ran troops of young men and maidens garlanded with
flowers, crying, 'The Teules are gone, rejoice with us; the Teules
are fled!' and woe to them who were not merry, ay, even though
their houses were desolate with death.  Also the statues of the
gods were set up again on the great pyramid and their temples
rebuilt, the holy crucifix that the Spaniards had placed there
being served as the idols Huitzel and Tezcat had been served, and
tumbled down the sides of the teocalli, and that after sacrifice of
some Spanish prisoners had been offered in its presence.  It was
Guatemoc himself who told me of this sacrilege, but not with any
exultation, for I had taught him something of our faith, and though
he was too sturdy a heathen to change his creed, in secret he
believed that the God of the Christians was a true and mighty God.
Moreover, though he was obliged to countenance them, because of the
power of the priests, like Otomie, Guatemoc never loved the horrid
rites of human sacrifice.

Now when I heard this tale my anger overcame my reason, and I spoke
fiercely, saying:

'I am sworn to your cause, Guatemoc, my brother, and I am married
to your blood, but I tell you that from this hour it is an accursed
cause; because of your bloodstained idols and your priests, it is
accursed.  That God whom you have desecrated, and those who serve
Him shall come back in power, and He shall sit where your idols sat
and none shall stir Him for ever.'

Thus I spoke, and my words were true, though I do not know what put
them into my heart, since I spoke at random in my wrath.  For to-
day Christ's Church stands upon the site of the place of sacrifice
in Mexico, a sign and a token of His triumph over devils, and there
it shall stand while the world endures.

'You speak rashly, my brother,' Guatemoc answered, proudly enough,
though I saw him quail at the evil omen of my words.  'I say you
speak rashly, and were you overheard there are those,
notwithstanding the rank we have given you, the honour which you
have won in war and council, and that you have passed the stone of
sacrifice, who might force you to look again upon the faces of the
beings you blaspheme.  What worse thing has been done to your
Christian God than has been done again and again to our gods by
your white kindred?  But let us talk no more of this matter, and I
pray you, my brother, do not utter such ill-omened words to me
again, lest it should strain our love.  Do you then believe that
the Teules will return?'

'Ay, Guatemoc, so surely as to-morrow's sun shall rise.  When you
held Cortes in your hand you let him go, and since then he has won
a victory at Otompan.  Is he a man, think you, to sheathe the sword
that he has once drawn, and go down into darkness and dishonour?
Before a year is past the Spaniards will be back at the gates of
Tenoctitlan.'

'You are no comforter to-night, my brother,' said Guatemoc, 'and
yet I fear that your words are true.  Well, if we must fight, let
us strive to win.  Now, at least, there is no Montezuma to take the
viper to his breast and nurse it till it stings him.'  Then he rose
and went in silence, and I saw that his heart was heavy.

On the morrow of this talk I could leave my bed, and within a week
I was almost well.  Now it was that Guatemoc came to me again,
saying that he had been bidden by Cuitlahua the emperor, to command
me to accompany him, Guatemoc, on a service of trust and secrecy.
And indeed the nature of the service showed how great a confidence
the leaders of the Aztecs now placed in me, for it was none other
than the hiding away of the treasure that had been recaptured from
the Spaniards on the Night of Fear, and with it much more from the
secret stores of the empire.

At the fall of darkness we started, some of the great lords,
Guatemoc and I, and coming to the water's edge, we found ten large
canoes, each laden with something that was hidden by cotton cloths.
Into these canoes we entered secretly, thinking that none saw us,
three to a canoe, for there were thirty of us in all, and led by
Guatemoc, we paddled for two hours or more across the Lake Tezcuco,
till we reached the further shore at a spot where this prince had a
fair estate.  Here we landed, and the cloths were withdrawn from
the cargoes of the canoes, which were great jars and sacks of gold
and jewels, besides many other precious objects, among them a
likeness of the head of Montezuma, fashioned in solid gold, which
was so heavy that it was as much as Guatemoc and I could do to lift
it between us.  As for the jars, of which, if my memory serves me,
there were seventeen, six men must carry each of them by the help
of paddles lashed on either side, and then the task was not light.
All this priceless stuff we bore in several journeys to the crest
of a rise some six hundred paces distant from the water, setting it
down by the mouth of a shaft behind the shelter of a mound of
earth.  When everything was brought up from the boats, Guatemoc
touched me and another man, a great Aztec noble, born of a
Tlascalan mother, on the shoulder, asking us if we were willing to
descend with him into the hole, and there to dispose of the
treasure.

'Gladly,' I answered, for I was curious to see the place, but the
noble hesitated awhile, though in the end he came with us, to his
ill-fortune.

Then Guatemoc took torches in his hand, and was lowered into the
shaft by a rope.  Next came my turn, and down I went, hanging to
the cord like a spider to its thread, and the hole was very deep.
At length I found myself standing by the side of Guatemoc at the
foot of the shaft, round which, as I saw by the light of the torch
he carried, an edging of dried bricks was built up to the height of
a man above our heads.  Resting on this edging and against the wall
of the shaft, was a massive block of stone sculptured with the
picture writing of the Aztecs.  I glanced at the writing, which I
could now read well, and saw that it recorded the burying of the
treasure in the first year of Cuitlahua, Emperor of Mexico, and
also a most fearful curse on him who should dare to steal it.
Beyond us and at right angles to the shaft ran another passage, ten
paces in length and high enough for a man to walk in, which led to
a chamber hollowed in the earth, as large as that wherein I write
to-day at Ditchingham.  By the mouth of this chamber were placed
piles of adobe bricks and mortar, much as the blocks of hewn stone
had been placed in that underground vault at Seville where Isabella
de Siguenza was bricked up living.

'Who dug this place?' I asked.

'Those who knew not what they dug,' answered Guatemoc.  'But see,
here is our companion.  Now, my brother, I charge you be surprised
at nothing which comes to pass, and be assured I have good reason
for anything that I may do.'

Before I could speak again the Aztec noble was at our side.  Then
those above began to lower the jars and sacks of treasure, and as
they reached us one by one, Guatemoc loosed the ropes and checked
them, while the Aztec and I rolled them down the passage into the
chamber, as here in England men roll a cask of ale.  For two hours
and more we worked, till at length all were down and the tale was
complete.  The last parcel to be lowered was a sack of jewels that
burst open as it came, and descended upon us in a glittering rain
of gems.  As it chanced, a great necklace of emeralds of surpassing
size and beauty fell over my head and hung upon my shoulders.

'Keep it, brother,' laughed Guatemoc, 'in memory of this night,'
and nothing loth, I hid the bauble in my breast.  That necklace I
have yet, and it was a stone of it--the smallest save one--that I
gave to our gracious Queen Elizabeth.  Otomie wore it for many
years, and for this reason it shall be buried with me, though its
value is priceless, so say those who are skilled in gems.  But
priceless or no, it is doomed to lie in the mould of Ditchingham
churchyard, and may that same curse which is graved upon the stone
that hides the treasure of the Aztecs fall upon him who steals it
from my bones.

Now, leaving the chamber, we three entered the tunnel and began the
work of building the adobe wall.  When it was of a height of
between two and three feet, Guatemoc paused from his labour and
bade me hold a torch aloft.  I obeyed wondering what he wished to
see.  Then he drew back some three paces into the tunnel and spoke
to the Aztec noble, our companion, by name.

'What is the fate of discovered traitors, friend?' he said in a
voice that, quiet though it was, sounded very terrible; and, as he
spoke, he loosed from his side the war club set with spikes of
glass that hung there by a thong.

Now the Aztec turned grey beneath his dusky skin and trembled in
his fear.

'What mean you, lord?' he gasped.

'You know well what I mean,' answered Guatemoc in the same terrible
voice, and lifted the club.

Then the doomed man fell upon his knees crying for mercy, and his
wailing sounded so awful in that deep and lonely place that in my
horror I went near to letting the torch fall.

'To a foe I can give mercy--to a traitor, none,' answered Guatemoc,
and whirling the club aloft, he rushed upon the noble and killed
him with a blow.  Then, seizing the body in his strong embrace, he
cast it into the chamber with the treasure, and there it lay still
and dreadful among the gems and gold, the arms, as it chanced,
being wound about two of the great jars as though the dead man
would clasp them to his heart.

Now I looked at Guatemoc who had slain him, wondering if my hour
was at hand also, for I knew well that when princes bury their
wealth they hold that few should share the secret.

'Fear not, my brother,' said Guatemoc.  'Listen: this man was a
thief, a dastard, and a traitor.  As we know now, he strove twice
to betray us to the Teules.  More, it was his plan to show this
nest of wealth to them, should they return again, and to share the
spoil.  All this we learned from a woman whom he thought his love,
but who was in truth a spy set to worm herself into the secrets of
his wicked heart.  Now let him take his fill of gold; look how he
grips it even in death, a white man could not hug the stuff more
closely to his breast.  Ah! Teule, would that the soil of Anahuac
bore naught but corn for bread and flint and copper for the points
of spears and arrows, then had her sons been free for ever.  Curses
on yonder dross, for it is the bait that sets these sea sharks
tearing at our throats.  Curses on it, I say; may it never glitter
more in the sunshine, may it be lost for ever!'  And he fell
fiercely to the work of building up the wall.

Soon it was almost done; but before we set the last bricks, which
were shaped in squares like the clay lump that we use for the
building of farmeries and hinds' houses in Norfolk, I thrust a
torch through the opening and looked for the last time at the
treasure chamber that was also a dead-house.  There lay the
glittering gems; there, stood upon a jar, gleamed the golden head
of Montezuma, of which the emerald eyes seemed to glare at me, and
there, his back resting against this same jar, and his arms
encircling two others to the right and left, was the dead man.  But
he was no longer dead, or so it seemed to me; at the least his eyes
that were shut had opened, and they stared at me like the emerald
eyes of the golden statue above him, only more fearfully.

Very hastily I withdrew the torch, and we finished in silence.
When it was done we withdrew to the end of the passage and looked
up the shaft, and I for one was glad to see the stars shining in
heaven above me.  Then we made a double loop in the rope, and at a
signal were hauled up till we hung over the ledge where the black
mass of marble rested, the tombstone of Montezuma's treasure, and
of him who sleeps among it.

This stone, that was nicely balanced, we pushed with our hands and
feet till presently it fell forward with a heavy sound, and
catching on the ridge of brick which had been prepared to receive
it, shut the treasure shaft in such a fashion that those who would
enter it again must take powder with them.

Then we were dragged up, and came to the surface of the earth in
safety.

Now one asked of the Aztec noble who had gone down with us and
returned no more.

'He has chosen to stay and watch the treasure, like a good and
loyal man, till such time as his king needs it,' answered Guatemoc
grimly, and the listeners nodded, understanding all.

Then they fell to and filled up the narrow shaft with the earth
that lay ready, working without cease, and the dawn broke before
the task was finished.  When at length the hole was full, one of
our companions took seeds from a bag and scattered them on the
naked earth, also he set two young trees that he had brought with
him in the soil of the shaft, though why he did this I do not know,
unless it was to mark the spot.  All being done we gathered up the
ropes and tools, and embarking in the canoes, came back to Mexico
in the morning, leaving the canoes at a landing-place outside the
city, and finding our way to our homes by ones and twos, as we
thought unnoticed of any.

Thus it was that I helped in the burying of Montezuma's treasure,
for the sake of which I was destined to suffer torture in days to
come.  Whether any will help to unbury it I do not know, but till I
left the land of Anahuac the secret had been kept, and I think that
then, except myself, all those were dead who laboured with me at
this task.  It chanced that I passed the spot as I came down to
Mexico for the last time, and knew it again by the two trees that
were growing tall and strong, and as I went by with Spaniards at my
side, I swore in my heart that they should never finger the gold by
my help.  It is for this reason that even now I do not write of the
exact bearings of the place where it lies buried with the bones of
the traitor, though I know them well enough, seeing that in days to
come what I set down here might fall into the hands of one of their
nation.


And now, before I go on to speak of the siege of Mexico, I must
tell of one more matter, namely of how I and Otomie my wife went up
among the people of the Otomie, and won a great number of them back
to their allegiance to the Aztec crown.  It must be known, if my
tale has not made this clear already, that the Aztec power was not
of one people, but built up of several, and that surrounding it
were many other tribes, some of whom were in alliance with it or
subject to it, and some of whom were its deadly enemies.  Such for
instance were the Tlascalans, a small but warlike people living
between Mexico and the coast, by whose help Cortes overcame
Montezuma and Guatemoc.  Beyond the Tlascalans and to the west, the
great Otomie race lived or lives among its mountains.  They are a
braver nation than the Aztecs, speaking another language, of a
different blood, and made up of many clans.  Sometimes they were
subject to the great Aztec empire, sometimes in alliance, and
sometimes at open war with it and in close friendship with the
Tlascalans.  It was to draw the tie closer between the Aztecs and
the Otomies, who were to the inhabitants of Anahuac much what the
Scottish clans are to the people of England, that Montezuma took to
wife the daughter and sole legitimate issue of their great chief or
king.  This lady died in childbirth, and her child was Otomie my
wife, hereditary princess of the Otomie.  But though her rank was
so great among her mother's people, as yet Otomie had visited them
but twice, and then as a child.  Still, she was well skilled in
their language and customs, having been brought up by nurses and
tutors of the tribes, from which she drew a great revenue every
year and over whom she exercised many rights of royalty that were
rendered to her far more freely than they had been to Montezuma her
father.

Now as has been said, some of these Otomie clans had joined the
Tlascalans, and as their allies had taken part in the war on the
side of the Spaniards, therefore it was decided at a solemn council
that Otomie and I her husband should go on an embassy to the chief
town of the nation, that was known as the City of Pines, and strive
to win it back to the Aztec standard.

Accordingly, heralds having been sent before us, we started upon
our journey, not knowing how we should be received at the end of
it.  For eight days we travelled in great pomp and with an ever-
increasing escort, for when the tribes of the Otomie learned that
their princess was come to visit them in person, bringing with her
her husband, a man of the Teules who had espoused the Aztec cause,
they flocked in vast numbers to swell her retinue, so that it came
to pass that before we reached the City of Pines we were
accompanied by an army of at least ten thousand mountaineers, great
men and wild, who made a savage music as we marched.  But with them
and with their chiefs as yet we held no converse except by way of
formal greeting, though every morning when we started on our
journey, Otomie in a litter and I on a horse that had been captured
from the Spaniards, they set up shouts of salutation and made the
mountains ring.  Ever as we went the land like its people grew
wilder and more beautiful, for now we were passing through forests
clad with oak and pine and with many a lovely plant and fern.
Sometimes we crossed great and sparkling rivers and sometimes we
wended through gorges and passes of the mountains, but every hour
we mounted higher, till at length the climate became like that of
England, only far more bright.  At last on the eighth day we passed
through a gorge riven in the red rock, which was so narrow in
places that three horsemen could scarcely have ridden there
abreast.  This gorge, that is five miles long, is the high road to
the City of Pines, to which there was no other access except by
secret paths across the mountains, and on either side of it are
sheer and towering cliffs that rise to heights of between one and
two thousand feet.

'Here is a place where a hundred men might hold an army at bay,' I
said to Otomie, little knowing that it would be my task to do so in
a day to come.

Presently the gorge took a turn and I reined up amazed, for before
me was the City of Pines in all its beauty.  The city lay in a
wheelshaped plain that may measure twelve miles across, and all
around this plain are mountains clad to their summits with forests
of oak and cedar trees.  At the back of the city and in the centre
of the ring of mountains is one, however, that is not green with
foliage but black with lava, and above the lava white with snow,
over which again hangs a pillar of smoke by day and a pillar of
fire by night.  This was the volcan Xaca, or the Queen, and though
it is not so lofty as its sisters Orizaba, Popo, and Ixtac, to my
mind it is the loveliest of them all, both because of its perfect
shape, and of the colours, purple and blue, of the fires that it
sends forth at night or when its heart is troubled.  The Otomies
worshipped this mountain as a god, offering human sacrifice to it,
which was not wonderful, for once the lava pouring from its bowels
cut a path through the City of Pines.  Also they think it holy and
haunted, so that none dare set foot upon its loftier snows.
Nevertheless I was destined to climb them--I and one other.

Now in the lap of this ring of mountains and watched over by the
mighty Xaca, clad in its robe of snow, its cap of smoke, and its
crown of fire, lies, or rather lay the City of Pines, for now it is
a ruin, or so I left it.  As to the city itself, it was not so
large as some others that I have seen in Anahuac, having only a
population of some five and thirty thousand souls, since the
Otomie, being a race of mountaineers, did not desire to dwell in
cities.  But if it was not great, it was the most beautiful of
Indian towns, being laid out in straight streets that met at the
square in its centre.  All along these streets were houses each
standing in a garden, and for the most part built of blocks of lava
and roofed with a cement of white lime.  In the midst of the square
stood the teocalli or pyramid of worship, crowned with temples that
were garnished with ropes of skulls, while beyond the pyramid and
facing it, was the palace, the home of Otomie's forefathers, a
long, low, and very ancient building having many courts, and
sculptured everywhere with snakes and grinning gods.  Both the
palace and the pyramid were cased with a fine white stone that
shone like silver in the sunlight, and contrasted strangely with
the dark-hued houses that were built of lava.

Such was the City of Pines when I saw it first.  When I saw it last
it was but a smoking ruin, and now doubtless it is the home of bats
and jackals; now it is 'a court for owls,' now 'the line of
confusion is stretched out upon it and the stones of emptiness fill
its streets.'


Passing from the mouth of the gorge we travelled some miles across
the plain, every foot of which was cultivated with corn, maguey or
aloe, and other crops, till we came to one of the four gates of the
city.  Entering it we found the flat roofs on either side of the
wide street crowded with hundreds of women and children who threw
flowers on us as we passed, and cried, 'Welcome, princess!
Welcome, Otomie, princess of the Otomie!'  And when at length we
reached the great square, it seemed as though all the men in
Anahuac were gathered there, and they too took up the cry of
'Welcome, Otomie, princess of the Otomie!' till the earth shook
with the sound.  Me also they saluted as I passed, by touching the
earth with their right hands and then holding the hand above the
head, but I think that the horse I rode caused them more wonder
than I did, for the most of them had never seen a horse and looked
on it as a monster or a demon.  So we went on through the shouting
mass, followed and preceded by thousands of warriors, many of them
decked in glittering feather mail and bearing broidered banners,
till we had passed the pyramid, where I saw the priests at their
cruel work above us, and were come to the palace gates.  And here
in a strange chamber sculptured with grinning demons we found rest
for a while.

On the morrow in the great hall of the palace was held a council of
the chiefs and head men of the Otomie clans, to the number of a
hundred or more.  When all were gathered, dressed as an Aztec noble
of the first rank, I came out with Otomie, who wore royal robes and
looked most beautiful in them, and the council rose to greet us.
Otomie bade them be seated and addressed them thus:

'Hear me, you chiefs and captains of my mother's race, who am your
princess by right of blood, the last of your ancient rulers, and
who am moreover the daughter of Montezuma, Emperor of Anahuac, now
dead to us but living evermore in the Mansions of the Sun.  First I
present to you this my husband, the lord Teule, to whom I was given
in marriage when he held the spirit of the god Tezcat, and whom,
when he had passed the altar of the god, being chosen by heaven to
aid us in our war, I wedded anew after the fashion of the earth,
and by the will of my royal brethren.  Know, chiefs and captains,
that this lord, my husband, is not of our Indian blood, nor is he
altogether of the blood of the Teules with whom we are at war, but
rather of that of the true children of Quetzal, the dwellers in a
far off northern sea who are foes to the Teules.  And as they are
foes, so this my lord is their foe, and as doubtless you have
heard, of all the deeds of arms that were wrought upon the night of
the slaying of the Teules, none were greater than his, and it was
he who first discovered their retreat.

'Chiefs and captains of the great and ancient people of the Otomie,
I your princess have been sent to you by Cuitlahua, my king and
yours, together with my lord, to plead with you on a certain
matter.  Our king has heard, and I also have heard with shame, that
many of the warriors of our blood have joined the Tlascalans, who
were ever foes to the Aztecs, in their unholy alliance with the
Teules.  Now for a while the white men are beaten back, but they
have touched the gold they covet, and they will return again like
bees to a half-drained flower.  They will return, yet of themselves
they can do nothing against the glory of Tenoctitlan.  But how
shall it go if with them come thousands and tens of thousands of
the Indian peoples?  I know well that now in this time of trouble,
when kingdoms crumble, when the air is full of portents, and the
very gods seem impotent, there are many who would seize the moment
and turn it to their profit.  There are many men and tribes who
remember ancient wars and wrongs, and who cry, "Now is the hour of
vengeance, now we will think on the widows that the Aztec spears
have made, on the tribute which they have wrung from our poverty to
swell their wealth, and on the captives who have decked the altars
of their sacrifice!"

'Is it not so?  Ay, it is so, and I cannot wonder at it.  Yet I ask
you to remember this, that the yoke you would help to set upon the
neck of the queen of cities will fit your neck also.  O foolish
men, do you think that you shall be spared when by your aid
Tenoctitlan is a ruin and the Aztecs are no more a people?  I say
to you never.  The sticks that the Teules use to beat out the life
of Tenoctitlan shall by them be broken one by one and cast into the
fire to burn.  If the Aztecs fall, then early or late every tribe
within this wide land shall fall.  They shall be slain, their
cities shall be stamped flat, their wealth shall be wrung from
them, and their children shall eat the bread of slavery and drink
the water of affliction.  Choose, ye people of the Otomie.  Will
you stand by the men of your own customs and country, though they
have been your foes at times, or will you throw in your lot with
the stranger?  Choose, ye people of the Otomie, and know this, that
on your choice and that of the other men of Anahuac, depends the
fate of Anahuac.  I am your princess, and you should obey me, but
to-day I issue no command.  I say choose between the alliance of
the Aztec and the yoke of the Teule, and may the god above the
gods, the almighty, the invisible god, direct your choice.'

Otomie ceased and a murmur of applause went round the hall.  Alas,
I can do no justice to the fire of her words, any more than I can
describe the dignity and loveliness of her person as it seemed in
that hour.  But they went to the hearts of the rude chieftains who
listened.  Many of them despised the Aztecs as a womanish people of
the plains and the lakes, a people of commerce.  Many had blood
feuds against them dating back for generations.  But still they
knew that their princess spoke truth, and that the triumph of the
Teule in Tenoctitlan would mean his triumph over every city
throughout the land.  So then and there they chose, though in after
days, in the stress of defeat and trouble, many went back upon
their choice as is the fashion of men.

'Otomie,' cried their spokesman, after they had taken counsel
together, 'we have chosen.  Princess, your words have conquered us.
We throw in our lot with the Aztecs and will fight to the last for
freedom from the Teule.'

'Now I see that you are indeed my people, and I am indeed your
ruler,' answered Otomie.  'So the great lords who are gone, my
forefathers, your chieftains, would have spoken in a like case.
May you never regret this choice, my brethren, Men of the Otomie.'


And so it came to pass that when we left the City of Pines we took
from it to Cuitlahua the emperor, a promise of an army of twenty
thousand men vowed to serve him to the death in his war against the
Spaniard.



CHAPTER XXVI

THE CROWNING OF GUATEMOC


Our business with the people of the Otomie being ended for a while,
we returned to the city of Tenoctitlan, which we reached safely,
having been absent a month and a day.  It was but a little time,
and yet long enough for fresh sorrows to have fallen on that most
unhappy town.  For now the Almighty had added to the burdens which
were laid upon her.  She had tasted of death by the sword of the
white man, now death was with her in another shape.  For the
Spaniard had brought the foul sicknesses of Europe with him, and
small-pox raged throughout the land.  Day by day thousands perished
of it, for these ignorant people treated the plague by pouring cold
water upon the bodies of those smitten, driving the fever inwards
to the vitals, so that within two days the most of them died.*  It
was pitiful to see them maddened with suffering, as they wandered
to and fro about the streets, spreading the distemper far and wide.
They were dying in the houses, they lay dead by companies in the
market places awaiting burial, for the sickness took its toll of
every family, the very priests were smitten by it at the altar as
they sacrificed children to appease the anger of the gods.  But the
worst is still to tell; Cuitlahua, the emperor, was struck down by
the illness, and when we reached the city he lay dying.  Still, he
desired to see us, and sent commands that we should be brought to
his bedside.  In vain did I pray Otomie not to obey; she, who was
without fear, laughed at me, saying, 'What, my husband, shall I
shrink from that which you must face?  Come, let us go and make
report of our mission.  If the sickness takes me and I die, it will
be because my hour has come.'


* This treatment is followed among the Indians of Mexico to this
day, but if the writer may believe what he heard in that country,
the patient is frequently cured by it.


So we went and were ushered into a chamber where Cuitlahua lay
covered by a sheet, as though he were already dead, and with
incense burning round him in golden censers.  When we entered he
was in a stupor, but presently he awoke, and it was announced to
him that we waited.

'Welcome, niece,' he said, speaking through the sheet and in a
thick voice; 'you find me in an evil case, for my days are
numbered, the pestilence of the Teules slays those whom their
swords spared.  Soon another monarch must take my throne, as I took
your father's, and I do not altogether grieve, for on him will rest
the glory and the burden of the last fight of the Aztecs.  Your
report, niece; let me hear it swiftly.  What say the clans of the
Otomie, your vassals?'

'My lord,' Otomie answered, speaking humbly and with bowed head,
'may this distemper leave you, and may you live to reign over us
for many years!  My lord, my husband Teule and I have won back the
most part of the people of the Otomie to our cause and standard.
An army of twenty thousand mountain men waits upon your word, and
when those are spent there are more to follow.'

'Well done, daughter of Montezuma, and you, white man,' gasped the
dying king.  'The gods were wise when they refused you both upon
the stone of sacrifice, and I was foolish when I would have slain
you, Teule.  To you and all I say be of a steadfast heart, and if
you must die, then die with honour.  The fray draws on, but I shall
not share it, and who knows its end?'

Now he lay silent for a while, then of a sudden, as though an
inspiration had seized him, he cast the sheet from his face and sat
upon his couch, no pleasant sight to see, for the pestilence had
done its worst with him.

'Alas!' he wailed, 'and alas!  I see the streets of Tenoctitlan red
with blood and fire, I see her dead piled up in heaps, and the
horses of the Teules trample them.  I see the Spirit of my people,
and her voice is sighing and her neck is heavy with chains.  The
children are visited because of the evil of the fathers.  Ye are
doomed, people of Anahuac, whom I would have nurtured as an eagle
nurtures her young.  Hell yawns for you and Earth refuses you
because of your sins, and the remnant that remains shall be slaves
from generation to generation, till the vengeance is accomplished!'

Having cried thus with a great voice, Cuitlahua fell back upon the
cushions, and before the frightened leech who tended him could lift
his head, he had passed beyond the troubles of this earth.  But the
words which he had spoken remained fixed in the hearts of those who
heard them, though they were told to none except to Guatemoc.


Thus then in my presence and in that of Otomie died Cuitlahua,
emperor of the Aztecs, when he had reigned but fifteen weeks.  Once
more the nation mourned its king, the chief of many a thousand of
its children whom the pestilence swept with him to the 'Mansions of
the Sun,' or perchance to the 'darkness behind the Stars.'

But the mourning was not for long, for in the urgency of the times
it was necessary that a new emperor should be crowned to take
command of the armies and rule the nation.  Therefore on the morrow
of the burial of Cuitlahua the council of the four electors was
convened, and with them lesser nobles and princes to the number of
three hundred, and I among them in the right of my rank as general,
and as husband of the princess Otomie.  There was no great need of
deliberation, indeed, for though the names of several were
mentioned, the princes knew that there was but one man who by
birth, by courage, and nobility of mind, was fitted to cope with
the troubles of the nation.  That man was Guatemoc, my friend and
blood brother, the nephew of the two last emperors and the husband
of my wife's sister, Montezuma's daughter, Tecuichpo.  All knew it,
I say, except, strangely enough, Guatemoc himself, for as we passed
into the council he named two other princes, saying that without
doubt the choice lay between them.

It was a splendid and a solemn sight, that gathering of the four
great lords, the electors, dressed in their magnificent robes, and
of the lesser council of confirmation of three hundred lords and
princes, who sat without the circle but in hearing of all that
passed.  Very solemn also was the prayer of the high priest, who,
clad in his robes of sable, seemed like a blot of ink dropped on a
glitter of gold.  Thus he prayed:

'O god, thou who art everywhere and seest all, knowest that
Cuitlahua our king is gathered to thee.  Thou hast set him beneath
thy footstool and there he rests in his rest.  He has travelled
that road which we must travel every one, he has reached the royal
inhabitations of our dead, the home of everlasting shadows.  There
where none shall trouble him he is sunk in sleep.  His brief
labours are accomplished, and soiled with sin and sorrow, he has
gone to thee.  Thou gavest him joys to taste but not to drink; the
glory of empire passed before his eyes like the madness of a dream.
With tears and with prayers to thee he took up his load, with
happiness he laid it down.  Where his forefathers went, thither he
has followed, nor can he return to us.  Our fire is an ash and our
lamp is darkness.  Those who wore his purple before him bequeathed
to him the intolerable weight of rule, and he in his turn bequeaths
it to another.  Truly, he should give thee praise, thou king of
kings, master of the stars, that standest alone, who hast lifted
from his shoulders so great a burden, and from his brow this crown
of woes, paying him peace for war and rest for labour.

'O god our hope, choose now a servant to succeed him, a man after
thine own heart, who shall not fear nor falter, who shall toil and
not be weary, who shall lead thy people as a mother leads her
children.  Lord of lords, give grace to Guatemoc thy creature, who
is our choice.  Seal him to thy service, and as thy priest let him
sit upon thy earthly throne for his life days.  Let thy foes become
his footstool, let him exalt thy glory, proclaim thy worship, and
protect thy kingdom.  Thus have I prayed to thee in the name of the
nation.  O god, thy will be done!'

When the high priest had made an end of his prayer, the first of
the four great electors rose, saying:

'Guatemoc, in the name of god and with the voice of the people of
Anahuac, we summon you to the throne of Anahuac.  Long may you live
and justly may you rule, and may the glory be yours of beating back
into the sea those foes who would destroy us.  Hail to you,
Guatemoc, Emperor of the Aztecs and of their vassal tribes.'  And
all the three hundred of the council of confirmation repeated in a
voice of thunder, 'Hail to you, Guatemoc, Emperor!'

Now the prince himself stood forward and spoke:

'You lords of election, and you, princes, generals, nobles and
captains of the council of confirmation, hear me.  May the gods be
my witness that when I entered this place I had no thought or
knowledge that I was destined to so high an honour as that which
you would thrust upon me.  And may the gods be my witness again
that were my life my own, and not a trust in the hands of this
people, I would say to you, "Seek on and find one worthier to fill
the throne."  But my life is not my own.  Anahuac calls her son and
I obey the call.  War to the death threatens her, and shall I hang
back while my arm has strength to smite and my brain has power to
plan?  Not so.  Now and henceforth I vow myself to the service of
my country and to war against the Teules.  I will make no peace
with them, I will take no rest till they are driven back whence
they came, or till I am dead beneath their swords.  None can say
what the gods have in store for us, it may be victory or it may be
destruction, but be it triumph or death, let us swear a great oath
together, my people and my brethren.  Let us swear to fight the
Teules and the traitors who abet them, for our cities, our hearths
and our altars; till the cities are a smoking ruin, till the
hearths are cumbered with their dead, and the altars run red with
the blood of their worshippers.  So, if we are destined to conquer,
our triumph shall be made sure, and if we are doomed to fail, at
least there will be a story to be told of us.  Do you swear, my
people and my brethren?'

'We swear,' they answered with a shout.

'It is well,' said Guatemoc.  'And now may everlasting shame
overtake him who breaks this oath.'


Thus then was Guatemoc, the last and greatest of the Aztec
emperors, elected to the throne of his forefathers.  It was happy
for him that he could not foresee that dreadful day when he, the
noblest of men, must meet a felon's doom at the hand of these very
Teules.  Yet so it came about, for the destiny that lay upon the
land smote all alike, indeed the greater the man the more certain
was his fate.

When all was done I hurried to the palace to tell Otomie what had
come to pass, and found her in our sleeping chamber lying on her
bed.

'What ails you, Otomie?' I asked.

'Alas! my husband,' she answered, 'the pestilence has stricken me.
Come not near, I pray you, come not near.  Let me be nursed by the
women.  You shall not risk your life for me, beloved.'

'Peace,' I said and came to her.  It was too true, I who am a
physician knew the symptoms well.  Indeed had it not been for my
skill, Otomie would have died.  For three long weeks I fought with
death at her bedside, and in the end I conquered.  The fever left
her, and thanks to my treatment, there was no single scar upon her
lovely face.  During eight days her mind wandered without ceasing,
and it was then I learned how deep and perfect was her love for me.
For all this while she did nothing but rave of me, and the secret
terror of her heart was disclosed--that I should cease to care for
her, that her beauty and love might pall upon me so that I should
leave her, that 'the flower maid,' for so she named Lily, who dwelt
across the sea should draw me back to her by magic; this was the
burden of her madness.  At length her senses returned and she
spoke, saying:

'How long have I lain ill, husband?'

I told her and she said, 'And have you nursed me all this while,
and through so foul a sickness?'

'Yes, Otomie, I have tended you.'

'What have I done that you should be so good to me?' she murmured.
Then some dreadful thought seemed to strike her, for she moaned as
though in pain, and said, 'A mirror!  Swift, bring me a mirror!'

I gave her one, and rising on her arm, eagerly she scanned her face
in the dim light of the shadowed room, then let the plate of
burnished gold fall, and sank back with a faint and happy cry:

'I feared,' she said, 'I feared that I had become hideous as those
are whom the pestilence has smitten, and that you would cease to
love me, than which it had been better to die.'

'For shame,' I said.  'Do you then think that love can be
frightened away by some few scars?'

'Yes,' Otomie answered, 'that is the love of a man; not such love
as mine, husband.  Had I been thus--ah! I shudder to think of it--
within a year you would have hated me.  Perhaps it had not been so
with another, the fair maid of far away, but me you would have
hated.  Nay, I know it, though I know this also, that I should not
have lived to feel your hate.  Oh! I am thankful, thankful.'

Then I left her for a while, marvelling at the great love which she
had given me, and wondering also if there was any truth in her
words, and if the heart of man could be so ungrateful and so vile.
Supposing that Otomie was now as many were who walked the streets
of Tenoctitlan that day, a mass of dreadful scars, hairless, and
with blind and whitened eyeballs, should I then have shrunk from
her?  I do not know, and I thank heaven that no such trial was put
upon my constancy.  But I am sure of this; had I become a leper
even, Otomie would not have shrunk from me.

So Otomie recovered from her great sickness, and shortly afterwards
the pestilence passed away from Tenoctitlan.  And now I had many
other things to think of, for the choosing of Guatemoc--my friend
and blood brother--as emperor meant much advancement to me, who was
made a general of the highest class, and a principal adviser in his
councils.  Nor did I spare myself in his service, but laboured by
day and night in the work of preparing the city for siege, and in
the marshalling of the troops, and more especially of that army of
Otomies, who came, as they had promised, to the number of twenty
thousand.  The work was hard indeed, for these Indian tribes lacked
discipline and powers of unity, without which their thousands were
of little avail in a war with white men.  Also there were great
jealousies between their leaders which must be overcome, and I was
myself an object of jealousy.  Moreover, many tribes took this
occasion of the trouble of the Aztecs to throw off their allegiance
or vassalage, and even if they did not join the Spaniards, to
remain neutral watching for the event of the war.  Still we
laboured on, dividing the armies into regiments after the fashion
of Europe, and stationing each in its own quarter drilling them to
the better use of arms, provisioning the city for a siege, and
weeding out as many useless mouths as we might; and there was but
one man in Tenoctitlan who toiled at these tasks more heavily than
I, and that was Guatemoc the emperor, who did not rest day or
night.  I tried even to make powder with sulphur which was brought
from the throat of the volcan Popo, but, having no knowledge of
that art, I failed.  Indeed, it would have availed us little had I
succeeded, for having neither arquebusses nor cannons, and no skill
to cast them, we could only have used it in mining roads and
gateways, and, perhaps, in grenades to be thrown with the hand.

And so the months went on, till at length spies came in with the
tidings that the Spaniards were advancing in numbers, and with them
countless hosts of allies.

Now I would have sent Otomie to seek safety among her own people,
but she laughed me to scorn, and said:

'Where you are, there I will be, husband.  What, shall it be
suffered that you face death, perhaps to find him, when I am not at
your side to die with you?  If that is the fashion of white women,
I leave it to them, beloved, and here with you I stay.'



CHAPTER XXVII

THE FALL OF TENOCTITLAN


Now shortly after Christmas, having marched from the coast with a
great array of Spaniards, for many had joined his banner from over
sea, and tens of thousands of native allies, Cortes took up his
head quarters at Tezcuco in the valley of Mexico.  This town is
situated near the borders of the lake, at a distance of several
leagues from Tenoctitlan, and being on the edge of the territory of
the Tlascalans his allies, it was most suitable to Cortes as a base
of action.  And then began one of the most terrible wars that the
world has seen.  For eight months it raged, and when it ceased at
length, Tenoctitlan, and with it many other beautiful and populous
towns, were blackened ruins, the most of the Aztecs were dead by
sword and famine, and their nation was crushed for ever.  Of all
the details of this war I do not purpose to write, for were I to do
so, there would be no end to this book, and I have my own tale to
tell.  These, therefore, I leave to the maker of histories.  Let it
be enough to say that the plan of Cortes was to destroy all her
vassal and allied cities and peoples before he grappled with
Mexico, queen of the valley, and this he set himself to do with a
skill, a valour, and a straightness of purpose, such as have
scarcely been shown by a general since the days of Caesar.

Iztapalapan was the first to fall, and here ten thousand men,
women, and children were put to the sword or burned alive.  Then
came the turn of the others; one by one Cortes reduced the cities
till the whole girdle of them was in his hand, and Tenoctitlan
alone remained untouched.  Many indeed surrendered, for the nations
of Anahuac being of various blood were but as a bundle of reeds and
not as a tree.  Thus when the power of Spain cut the band of empire
that bound them together, they fell this way and that, having no
unity.  So it came about that as the power of Guatemoc weakened
that of Cortes increased, for he garnered these loosened reeds into
his basket.  And, indeed, now that the people saw that Mexico had
met her match, many an ancient hate and smouldering rivalry broke
into flame, and they fell upon her and tore her, like half-tamed
wolves upon their master when his scourge is broken.  It was this
that brought about the fall of Anahuac.  Had she remained true to
herself, had she forgotten her feuds and jealousies and stood
against the Spaniards as one man, then Tenoctitlan would never have
fallen, and Cortes with every Teule in his company had been
stretched upon the stone of sacrifice.

Did I not say when I took up my pen to write this book that every
wrong revenges itself at last upon the man or the people that
wrought it?  So it was now.  Mexico was destroyed because of the
abomination of the worship of her gods.  These feuds between the
allied peoples had their root in the horrible rites of human
sacrifice.  At some time in the past, from all these cities
captives have been dragged to the altars of the gods of Mexico,
there to be slaughtered and devoured by the cannibal worshippers.
Now these outrages were remembered, now when the arm of the queen
of the valley was withered, the children of those whom she had
slain rose up to slay her and to drag HER children to their altars.

By the month of May, strive as we would, and never was a more
gallant fight made, all our allies were crushed or had deserted us,
and the siege of the city began.  It began by land and by water,
for with incredible resource Cortes caused thirteen brigantines of
war to be constructed in Tlascala, and conveyed in pieces for
twenty leagues across the mountains to his camp, whence they were
floated into the lake through a canal, which was hollowed out by
the labour of ten thousand Indians, who worked at it without cease
for two months.  The bearers of these brigantines were escorted by
an army of twenty thousand Tlascalans, and if I could have had my
way that army should have been attacked in the mountain passes.  So
thought Guatemoc also, but there were few troops to spare, for the
most of our force had been despatched to threaten a city named
Chalco, that, though its people were of the Aztec blood, had not
been ashamed to desert the Aztec cause.  Still I offered to lead
the twenty thousand Otomies whom I commanded against the Tlascalan
convoy, and the matter was debated hotly at a council of war.  But
the most of the council were against the risking of an engagement
with the Spaniards and their allies so far from the city, and thus
the opportunity went by to return no more.  It was an evil fortune
like the rest, for in the end these brigantines brought about the
fall of Tenoctitlan by cutting off the supply of food, which was
carried in canoes across the lake.  Alas! the bravest can do
nothing against the power of famine.  Hunger is a very great man,
as the Indians say.

Now the Aztecs fighting alone were face to face with their foes and
the last struggle began.  First the Spaniards cut the aqueduct
which supplied the city with water from the springs at the royal
house of Chapoltepec, whither I was taken on being brought to
Mexico.  Henceforth till the end of the siege, the only water that
we found to drink was the brackish and muddy fluid furnished by the
lake and wells sunk in the soil.  Although it might be drunk after
boiling to free it of the salt, it was unwholesome and filthy to
the taste, breeding various painful sicknesses and fevers.  It was
on this day of the cutting of the aqueduct that Otomie bore me a
son, our first-born.  Already the hardships of the siege were so
great and nourishing food so scarce, that had she been less strong,
or had I possessed less skill in medicine, I think that she would
have died.  Still she recovered to my great thankfulness and joy,
and though I am no clerk I baptized the boy into the Christian
Church with my own hand, naming him Thomas after me.

Now day by day and week by week the fighting went on with varying
success, sometimes in the suburbs of the city, sometimes on the
lake, and sometimes in the very streets.  Time on time the
Spaniards were driven back with loss, time on time they advanced
again from their different camps.  Once we captured sixty of them
and more than a thousand of their allies.  All these were
sacrificed on the altar of Huitzel, and given over to be devoured
by the Aztecs according to the beastlike custom which in Anahuac
enjoined the eating of the bodies of those who were offered to the
gods, not because the Indians love such meat but for a secret
religions reason.

In vain did I pray Guatemoc to forego this horror.

'Is this a time for gentleness?' he answered fiercely.  'I cannot
save them from the altar, and I would not if I could.  Let the dogs
die according to the custom of the land, and to you, Teule my
brother, I say presume not too far.'

Alas! the heart of Guatemoc grew ever fiercer as the struggle wore
on, and indeed it was little to be wondered at.

This was the dreadful plan of Cortes: to destroy the city piecemeal
as he advanced towards its heart, and it was carried out without
mercy.  So soon as the Spaniards got footing in a quarter,
thousands of the Tlascalans were set to work to fire the houses and
burn all in them alive.  Before the siege was done Tenoctitlan,
queen of the valley, was but a heap of blackened ruins.  Cortes
might have cried over Mexico with Isaiah the prophet: 'Thy pomp is
brought down to the grave, and the noise of thy viols: the worm is
spread under thee and the worms cover thee.  How art thou fallen
from heaven, O Lucifer, son of the morning! how art thou cut down
to the ground which didst weaken the nations!'

In all these fights I took my part, though it does not become me to
boast my prowess.  Still the Spaniards knew me well and they had
good reason.  Whenever they saw me they would greet me with
revilings, calling me 'traitor and renegade,' and 'Guatemoc's white
dog,' and moreover, Cortes set a price upon my head, for he knew
through his spies that some of Guatemoc's most successful attacks
and stratagems had been of my devising.  But I took no heed even
when their insults pierced me like arrows, for though many of the
Aztecs were my friends and I hated the Spaniards, it was a shameful
thing that a Christian man should be warring on the side of
cannibals who made human sacrifice.  I took no heed, since always I
was seeking for my foe de Garcia.  He was there I knew, for I saw
him many times, but I could never come at him.  Indeed, if I
watched for him he also watched for me, but with another purpose,
to avoid me.  For now as of old de Garcia feared me, now as of old
he believed that I should bring his death upon him.

It was the custom of warriors in the opposing armies to send
challenges to single combat, one to another, and many such duels
were fought in the sight of all, safe conduct being given to the
combatants and their seconds.  Upon a day, despairing of meeting
him face to face in battle, I sent a challenge to de Garcia by a
herald, under his false name of Sarceda.  In an hour the herald
returned with this message written on paper in Spanish:

'Christian men do not fight duels with renegade heathen dogs, white
worshippers of devils and eaters of human flesh.  There is but one
weapon which such cannot defile, a rope, and it waits for you,
Thomas Wingfield.'

I tore the writing to pieces and stamped upon it in my rage, for
now, to all his other crimes against me, de Garcia had added the
blackest insult.  But wrath availed me nothing, for I could never
come near him, though once, with ten of my Otomies, I charged into
the heart of the Spanish column after him.

From that rush I alone escaped alive, the ten Otomies were
sacrificed to my hate.

How shall I paint the horrors that day by day were heaped upon the
doomed city?  Soon all the food was gone, and men, ay, and worse
still, tender women and children, must eat such meat as swine would
have turned from, striving to keep life in them for a little
longer.  Grass, the bark of trees, slugs and insects, washed down
with brackish water from the lake, these were their best food,
these and the flesh of captives offered in sacrifice.  Now they
began to die by hundreds and by thousands, they died so fast that
none could bury them.  Where they perished, there they lay, till at
length their bodies bred a plague, a black and horrible fever that
swept off thousands more, who in turn became the root of
pestilence.  For one who was killed by the Spaniards and their
allies, two were swept off by hunger and plague.  Think then what
was the number of dead when not less than seventy thousand perished
beneath the sword and by fire alone.  Indeed, it is said that forty
thousand died in this manner in a single day, the day before the
last of the siege.


One night I came back to the lodging where Otomie dwelt with her
royal sister Tecuichpo, the wife of Guatemoc, for now all the
palaces had been burnt down.  I was starving, for I had scarcely
tasted food for forty hours, but all that my wife could set before
me were three little meal cakes, or tortillas, mixed with bark.
She kissed me and bade me eat them, but I discovered that she
herself had touched no food that day, so I would not till she
shared them.  Then I noted that she could scarcely swallow the
bitter morsels, and also that she strove to hide tears which ran
down her face.

'What is it, wife?' I asked.

Then Otomie broke out into a great and bitter crying and said:

'This, my beloved: for two days the milk has been dry in my breast--
hunger has dried it--and our babe is dead!  Look, he lies dead!'
and she drew aside a cloth and showed me the tiny body.

'Hush,' I said, 'he is spared much.  Can we then desire that a
child should live to see such days as we have seen, and after all,
to die at last?'

'He was our son, our first-born,' she cried again.  'Oh! why must
we suffer thus?'

'We must suffer, Otomie, because we are born to it.  Just so much
happiness is given to us as shall save us from madness and no more.
Ask me not why, for I cannot answer you!  There is no answer in my
faith or in any other.'

And then, looking on that dead babe, I wept also.  Every hour in
those terrible months it was my lot to see a thousand sights more
awful, and yet this sight of a dead infant moved me the most of all
of them.  The child was mine, my firstborn, its mother wept beside
me, and its stiff and tiny fingers seemed to drag at my heart
strings.  Seek not the cause, for the Almighty Who gave the heart
its infinite power of pain alone can answer, and to our ears He is
dumb.

Then I took a mattock and dug a hole outside the house till I came
to water, which in Tenoctitlan is found at a depth of two feet or
so.  And, having muttered a prayer over him, there in the water I
laid the body of our child, burying it out of sight.  At the least
he was not left for the zapilotes, as the Aztecs call the vultures,
like the rest of them.

After that we wept ourselves to sleep in each other's arms, Otomie
murmuring from time to time, 'Oh! my husband, I would that we were
asleep and forgotten, we and the babe together.'

'Rest now,' I answered, 'for death is very near to us.'

The morrow came, and with it a deadlier fray than any that had gone
before, and after it more morrows and more deaths, but still we
lived on, for Guatemoc gave us of his food.  Then Cortes sent has
heralds demanding our surrender, and now three-fourths of the city
was a ruin, and three-fourths of its defenders were dead.  The dead
were heaped in the houses like bees stifled in a hive, and in the
streets they lay so thick that we walked upon them.

The council was summoned--fierce men, haggard with hunger and with
war, and they considered the offer of Cortes.

'What is your word, Guatemoc?' said their spokesman at last.

'Am I Montezuma, that you ask me?  I swore to defend this city to
the last,' he answered hoarsely, 'and, for my part, I will defend
it.  Better that we should all die, than that we should fall living
into the hands of the Teules.'

'So say we,' they replied, and the war went on.


At length there came a day when the Spaniards made a new attack and
gained another portion of the city.  There the people were huddled
together like sheep in a pen.  We strove to defend them, but our
arms were weak with famine.  They fired into us with their pieces,
mowing us down like corn before the sickle.  Then the Tlascalans
were loosed upon us, like fierce hounds upon a defenceless buck,
and on this day it is said that there died forty thousand people,
for none were spared.  On the morrow, it was the last day of the
siege, came a fresh embassy from Cortes, asking that Guatemoc
should meet him.  The answer was the same, for nothing could
conquer that noble spirit.

'Tell him,' said Guatemoc, 'that I will die where I am, but that I
will hold no parley with him.  We are helpless, let Cortes work his
pleasure on us.'

By now all the city was destroyed, and we who remained alive within
its bounds were gathered on the causeways and behind the ruins of
walls; men, women, and children together.

Here they attacked us again.  The great drum on the teocalli beat
for the last time, and for the last time the wild scream of the
Aztec warriors went up to heaven.  We fought our best; I killed
four men that day with my arrows which Otomie, who was at my side,
handed me as I shot.  But the most of us had not the strength of a
child, and what could we do?  They came among us like seamen among
a flock of seals, and slaughtered us by hundreds.  They drove us
into the canals and trod us to death there, till bridges were made
of our bodies.  How we escaped I do not know.

At length a party of us, among whom was Guatemoc with his wife
Tecuichpo, were driven to the shores of the lake where lay canoes,
and into these we entered, scarcely knowing what we did, but
thinking that we might escape, for now all the city was taken.  The
brigantines saw us and sailed after us with a favouring wind--the
wind always favoured the foe in that war--and row as we would, one
of them came up with us and began to fire into us.  Then Guatemoc
stood up and spoke, saying:

'I am Guatemoc.  Bring me to Malinche.  But spare those of my
people who remain alive.'

'Now,' I said to Otomie at my side, 'my hour has come, for the
Spaniards will surely hang me, and it is in my mind, wife, that I
should do well to kill myself, so that I may be saved from a death
of shame.'

'Nay, husband,' she answered sadly, 'as I said in bygone days,
while you live there is hope, but the dead come back no more.
Fortune may favour us yet; still, if you think otherwise, I am
ready to die.'

'That I will not suffer, Otomie.'

'Then you must hold your hand, husband, for now as always, where
you go, I follow.'

'Listen,' I whispered; 'do not let it be known that you are my
wife; pass yourself as one of the ladies of Tecuichpo, the queen,
your sister.  If we are separated, and if by any chance I escape, I
will try to make my way to the City of Pines.  There, among your
own people, we may find refuge.'

'So be it, beloved,' she answered, smiling sadly.  'But I do not
know how the Otomie will receive me, who have led twenty thousand
of their bravest men to a dreadful death.'

Now we were on the deck of the brigantine and must stop talking,
and thence, after the Spaniards had quarrelled over us a while, we
were taken ashore and led to the top of a house which still stood,
where Cortes had made ready hurriedly to receive his royal
prisoner.  Surrounded by his escort, the Spanish general stood, cap
in hand, and by his side was Marina, grown more lovely than before,
whom I now met for the first time since we had parted in Tobasco.

Our eyes met and she started, thereby showing that she knew me
again, though it must have been hard for Marina to recognise her
friend Teule in the blood-stained, starving, and tattered wretch
who could scarcely find strength to climb the azotea.  But at that
time no words passed between us, for all eyes were bent on the
meeting between Cortes and Guatemoc, between the conqueror and the
conquered.

Still proud and defiant, though he seemed but a living skeleton,
Guatemoc walked straight to where the Spaniard stood, and spoke,
Marina translating his words.

'I am Guatemoc, the emperor, Malinche,' he said.  'What a man might
do to defend his people, I have done.  Look on the fruits of my
labour,' and he pointed to the blackened ruins of Tenoctitlan that
stretched on every side far as the eye could reach.  'Now I have
come to this pass, for the gods themselves have been against me.
Deal with me as you will, but it will be best that you kill me
now,' and he touched the dagger of Cortes with his hand, 'and thus
rid me swiftly of the misery of life.'

'Fear not, Guatemoc,' answered Cortes.  'You have fought like a
brave man, and such I honour.  With me you are safe, for we
Spaniards love a gallant foe.  See, here is food,' and he pointed
to a table spread with such viands as we had not seen for many a
week; 'eat, you and your companions together, for you must need it.
Afterwards we will talk.'

So we ate, and heartily, I for my part thinking that it would be
well to die upon a full stomach, having faced death so long upon an
empty one, and while we devoured the meat the Spaniards stood on
one side scanning us, not without pity.  Presently, Tecuichpo was
brought before Cortes, and with her Otomie and some six other
ladies.  He greeted her graciously, and they also were given to
eat.  Now, one of the Spaniards who had been watching me whispered
something into the ear of Cortes, and I saw his face darken.

'Say,' he said to me in Castilian, 'are you that renegade, that
traitor who has aided these Aztecs against us?'

'I am no renegade and no traitor, general,' I answered boldly, for
the food and wine had put new life into me.  'I am an Englishman,
and I have fought with the Aztecs because I have good cause to hate
you Spaniards.'

'You shall soon have better, traitor,' he said furiously.  'Here,
lead this man away and hang him on the mast of yonder ship.'

Now I saw that it was finished, and made ready to go to my death,
when Marina spoke into the ear of Cortes.  All she said I could not
catch, but I heard the words 'hidden gold.'  He listened, then
hesitated, and spoke aloud: 'Do not hang this man to-day.  Let him
be safely guarded.  Tomorrow I will inquire into his case.'



CHAPTER XXVIII

THOMAS IS DOOMED


At the words of Cortes two Spaniards came forward, and seizing me
one by either arm, they led me across the roof of the house towards
the stairway.  Otomie had heard also, and though she did not
understand the words, she read the face of Cortes, and knew well
that I was being taken to imprisonment or death.  As I passed her,
she started forward, a terror shining in her eyes.  Fearing that
she was about to throw herself upon my breast, and thus to reveal
herself as my wife, and bring my fate upon her, I glanced at her
warningly, then making pretence to stumble, as though with fear and
exhaustion, I fell at her feet.  The soldiers who led me laughed
brutally, and one of them kicked me with his heavy boot.  But
Otomie stooped down and held her hand to me to help me rise, and as
I did so, we spoke low and swiftly.

'Farewell, wife,' I said; 'whatever happens, keep silent.'

'Farewell,' she answered; 'if you must die, await me in the gates
of death, for I will join you there.'

'Nay, live on.  Time shall bring comfort.'

'You are my life, beloved.  With you time ends for me.'  Now I was
on my feet again, and I think that none noted our whispered words,
for all were listening to Cortes, who rated the man that had kicked
me.

'I bade you guard this traitor, not to kick him,' he said angrily
in Castilian.  'Will you put us to open shame before these savages?
Do so once more, and you shall pay for it smartly.  Learn a lesson
in gentleness from that woman; she is starving, yet she leaves her
food to help your prisoner to his feet.  Now take him away to the
camp, and see that he comes to no harm, for he can tell me much.'

Then the soldiers led me away, grumbling as they went, and the last
thing that I saw was the despairing face of Otomie my wife, as she
gazed after me, faint with the secret agony of our parting.  But
when I came to the head of the stairway, Guatemoc, who stood near,
took my hand and shook it.

'Farewell, my brother,' he said with a heavy smile; 'the game we
played together is finished, and now it is time for us to rest.  I
thank you for your valour and your aid.'

'Farewell, Guatemoc,' I answered.  'You are fallen, but let this
comfort you, in your fall you have found immortal fame.'

'On, on!' growled the soldiers, and I went, little thinking how
Guatemoc and I should meet again.

They took me to a canoe, and we were paddled across the lake by
Tlascalans, till at length we came to the Spanish camp.  All the
journey through, my guards, though they laid no hand on me, fearing
the anger of Cortes, mocked and taunted me, asking me how I liked
the ways of the heathen, and whether I ate the flesh of the
sacrifices raw or cooked; and many another such brutal jest they
made at my expense.  For a while I bore it, for I had learned to be
patient from the Indians, but at last I answered them in few words
and bitter.

'Peace, cowards,' I said; 'remember that I am helpless, and that
were I before you strong and armed, either I should not live to
listen to such words, or you would not live to repeat them.'

Then they were silent, and I also was silent.

When we reached their camp I was led through it, followed by a
throng of fierce Tlascalans and others, who would have torn me limb
from limb had they not feared to do so.  I saw some Spaniards also,
but the most of these were so drunk with mescal, and with joy at
the tidings that Tenoctitlan had fallen, and their labours were
ended at last, that they took no heed of me.  Never did I see such
madness as possessed them, for these poor fools believed that
henceforth they should eat their very bread off plates of gold.  It
was for gold that they had followed Cortes; for gold they had
braved the altar of sacrifice and fought in a hundred fights, and
now, as they thought, they had won it.

The room of the stone house where they prisoned me had a window
secured by bars of wood, and through these bars I could see and
hear the revellings of the soldiers during the time of my
confinement.  All day long, when they were not on duty, and most of
the night also, they gambled and drank, staking tens of pesos on a
single throw, which the loser must pay out of his share of the
countless treasures of the Aztecs.  Little did they care if they
won or lost, they were so sure of plunder, but played on till drink
overpowered them, and they rolled senseless beneath the tables, or
till they sprang up and danced wildly to and fro, catching at the
sunbeams and screaming 'Gold! gold! gold!'

Listening at this window also I gathered some of the tidings of the
camp.  I learned that Cortes had come back, bringing Guatemoc and
several of the princes with him, together with many of the noble
Aztec ladies.  Indeed I saw and heard the soldiers gambling for
these women when they were weary of their play for money, a
description of each of them being written on a piece of paper.  One
of these ladies answered well to Otomie, my wife, and she was put
up to auction by the brute who won her in the gamble, and sold to a
common soldier for a hundred pesos.  For these men never doubted
but that the women and the gold would be handed over to them.

Thus things went for several days, during which I sat and slept in
my prison untroubled by any, except the native woman who waited on
me and brought me food in plenty.  During those days I ate as I
have never eaten before or since, and I slept much, for my sorrows
could not rid my body of its appetites and commanding need for food
and rest.  Indeed I verily believe that at the end of a week, I had
increased in weight by a full half; also my weariness was conquered
at length, and I was strong again.

But when I was neither sleeping nor eating I watched at my window,
hoping, though in vain, to catch some sight of Otomie or of
Guatemoc.  If I might not see my friends, however, at least I saw
my foe, for one evening de Garcia came and stared at my prison.  He
could not see me, but I saw him, and the devilish smile that
flickered on his face as he went away like a wolf, made me shiver
with a presage of woes to come.  For ten minutes or more he stood
gazing at my window hungrily, as a cat gazes at a caged bird, and I
felt that he was waiting for the door to be opened, and KNEW that
it would soon be opened.

This happened on the eve of the day upon which I was put to
torture.

Meanwhile, as time went on, I noticed that a change came over the
temper of the camp.  The soldiers ceased to gamble for untold
wealth, they even ceased from drinking to excess and from their
riotous joy, but took to hanging together in knots discussing
fiercely I could not learn of what.  On the day when de Garcia came
to look at my prison there was a great gathering in the square
opposite my prison, to which I saw Cortes ride up on a white horse
and richly dressed.  The meeting was too far away for me to
overhear what passed, but I noted that several officers addressed
Cortes angrily, and that their speeches were loudly cheered by the
soldiers.  At length the great captain answered them at some
length, and they broke up in silence.  Next morning after I had
breakfasted, four soldiers came into my prison and ordered me to
accompany them.

'Whither?' I asked.

'To the captain, traitor,' their leader answered.

'It has come at last,' I thought to myself, but I said only:

'It is well.  Any change from this hole is one for the better.'

'Certainly,' he replied; 'and it is your last shift.'

Then I knew that the man believed that I was going to my death.  In
five minutes I was standing before Cortes in his private house.  At
his side was Marina and around him were several of his companions
in arms.  The great man looked at me for a while, then spoke.

'Your name is Wingfield; you are of mixed blood, half English and
half Spanish.  You were cast away in the Tobasco River and taken to
Tenoctitlan.  There you were doomed to personate the Aztec god
Tezcat, and were rescued by us when we captured the great teocalli.
Subsequently you joined the Aztecs and took part in the attack and
slaughter of the noche triste.  You were afterwards the friend and
counsellor of Guatemoc, and assisted him in his defence of
Tenoctitlan.  Is this true, prisoner?'

'It is all true, general,' I answered.

'Good.  You are now our prisoner, and had you a thousand lives, you
have forfeited them all because of your treachery to your race and
blood.  Into the circumstances that led you to commit this horrible
treason I cannot enter; the fact remains.  You have slain many of
the Spaniards and their allies; that is, being in a state of
treason you have murdered them.  Wingfield, your life is forfeit
and I condemn you to die by hanging as a traitor and an apostate.'

'Then there is nothing more to be said,' I answered quietly, though
a cold fear froze my blood.

'There is something,' answered Cortes.  'Though your crimes have
been so many, I am ready to give you your life and freedom upon a
condition.  I am ready to do more, to find you a passage to Europe
on the first occasion, where you may perchance escape the echoes of
your infamy if God is good to you.  The condition is this.  We have
reason to believe that you are acquainted with the hiding place of
the gold of Montezuma, which was unlawfully stolen from us on the
night of the noche triste.  Nay, we know that this is so, for you
were seen to go with the canoes that were laden with it.  Choose
now, apostate, between a shameful death and the revealing to us of
the secret of this treasure.'

For a moment I wavered.  On the one hand was the loss of honour
with life and liberty and the hope of home, on the other a dreadful
end.  Then I remembered my oath and Otomie, and what she would
think of me living or dead, if I did this thing, and I wavered no
more.

'I know nothing of the treasure, general,' I answered coldly.
'Send me to my death.'

'You mean that you will say nothing of it, traitor.  Think again.
If you have sworn any oaths they are broken by God.  The empire of
the Aztecs is at an end, their king is my prisoner, their great
city is a ruin.  The true God has triumphed over these devils by my
hand.  Their wealth is my lawful spoil, and I must have it to pay
my gallant comrades who cannot grow rich on desolation.  Think
again.'

'I know nothing of this treasure, general.'

'Yet memory sometimes wakens, traitor.  I have said that you shall
die if yours should fail you, and so you shall to be sure.  But
death is not always swift.  There are means, doubtless you who have
lived in Spain have heard of them,' and he arched his brows and
glared at me meaningly, 'by which a man may die and yet live for
many weeks.  Now, loth as I am to do it, it seems that if your
memory still sleeps, I must find some such means to rouse it--
before you die.'

'I am in your power, general,' I answered.  'You call me traitor
again and again.  I am no traitor.  I am a subject of the King of
England, not of the King of Spain.  I came hither following a
villain who has wrought me and mine bitter wrong, one of your
company named de Garcia or Sarceda.  To find him and for other
reasons I joined the Aztecs.  They are conquered and I am your
prisoner.  At the least deal with me as a brave man deals with a
fallen enemy.  I know nothing of the treasure; kill me and make an
end.'

'As a man I might wish to do this, Wingfield, but I am more than a
man, I am the hand of the Church here in Anahuac.  You have
partaken with the worshippers of idols, you have seen your fellow
Christians sacrificed and devoured by your brute comrades.  For
this alone you deserve to be tortured eternally, and doubtless that
will be so after we have done with you.  As for the hidalgo Don
Sarceda, I know him only as a brave companion in arms, and
certainly I shall not listen to tales told against him by a
wandering apostate.  It is, however, unlucky for you,' and here a
gleam of light shot across the face of Cortes, 'that there should
be any old feud between you, seeing that it is to his charge that I
am about to confide you.  Now for the last time I say choose.  Will
you reveal the hiding place of the treasure and go free, or will
you be handed over to the care of Don Sarceda till such time as he
shall find means to make you speak?'

Now a great faintness seized me, for I knew that I was condemned to
be tortured, and that de Garcia was to be the torturer.  What mercy
had I to expect from his cruel heart when I, his deadliest foe, lay
in his power to wreak his vengeance on?  But still my will and my
honour prevailed against my terrors, and I answered:

'I have told you, general, that I know nothing of this treasure.
Do your worst, and may God forgive you for your cruelty.'

'Dare not to speak that holy Name, apostate and worshipper of
idols, eater of human flesh.  Let Sarceda be summoned.'

A messenger went out, and for a while there was silence.  I caught
Marina's glance and saw pity in her gentle eyes.  But she could not
help me here, for Cortes was mad because no gold had been found,
and the clamour of the soldiers for reward had worn him out and
brought him to this shameful remedy, he who was not cruel by
nature.  Still she strove to plead for me with him, whispering
earnestly in his ear.  For a while Cortes listened, then he pushed
her from him roughly.

'Peace, Marina,' he said.  'What, shall I spare this English dog
some pangs, when my command, and perchance my very life, hangs upon
the finding of the gold?  Nay, he knows well where it lies hid; you
said it yourself when I would have hung him for a traitor, and
certainly he was one of those whom the spy saw go out with it upon
the lake.  Our friend was with them also, but he came back no more;
doubtless they murdered him.  What is this man to you that you
should plead for him?  Cease to trouble me, Marina, am I not
troubled enough already?' and Cortes put his hands to his face and
remained lost in thought.  As for Marina, she looked at me sadly
and sighed as though to say, 'I have done my best,' and I thanked
her with my eyes.

Presently there was a sound of footsteps and I looked up to see de
Garcia standing before me.  Time and hardship had touched him
lightly, and the lines of silver in his curling hair and peaked
beard did but add dignity to his noble presence.  Indeed, when I
looked at him in his dark Spanish beauty, his rich garments decked
with chains of gold, as he bowed before Cortes hat in hand, I was
fain to confess that I had never seen a more gallant cavalier, or
one whose aspect gave the lie so wholly to the black heart within.
But knowing him for what he was, my very blood quivered with hate
at the sight of him, and when I thought of my own impotence and of
the errand on which he had come, I ground my teeth and cursed the
day that I was born.  As for de Garcia, he greeted me with a little
cruel smile, then spoke to Cortes.

'Your pleasure, general?'

'Greeting to you, comrade,' answered Cortes.  'You know this
renegade?'

'But too well, general.  Three times he has striven to murder me.'

'Well, you have escaped and it is your hour now, Sarceda.  He says
that he has a quarrel with you; what is it?'

De Garcia hesitated, stroking his peaked beard, then answered: 'I
am loth to tell it because it is a tale of error for which I have
often sorrowed and done penance.  Yet I will speak for fear you
should think worse of me than I deserve.  This man has some cause
to mislike me, since to be frank, when I was younger than I am to-
day and given to the follies of youth, it chanced that in England I
met his mother, a beautiful Spanish lady who by ill fortune was
wedded to an Englishman, this man's father and a clown of clowns,
who maltreated her.  I will be short; the lady learned to love me
and I worsted her husband in a duel.  Hence this traitor's hate of
me.'

I heard and thought that my heart must burst with fury.  To all his
wickedness and offences against me, de Garcia now had added slander
of my dead mother's honour.

'You lie, murderer,' I gasped, tearing at the ropes that bound me.

'I must ask you to protect me from such insult, general,' de Garcia
answered coldly.  'Were the prisoner worthy of my sword, I would
ask further that his bonds should be loosed for a little space, but
my honour would be tarnished for ever were I to fight with such as
he.'

'Dare to speak thus once more to a gentleman of Spain,' said Cortes
coldly, 'and, you heathen dog, your tongue shall be dragged from
you with red-hot pincers.  For you, Sarceda, I thank you for your
confidence.  If you have no worse crime than a love affair upon
your soul, I think that our good chaplain Olmedo will frank you
through the purgatorial fires.  But we waste words and time.  This
man has the secret of the treasure of Guatemoc and of Montezuma.
If Guatemoc and his nobles will not tell it, he at least may be
forced to speak, for the torments that an Indian can endure without
a groan will soon bring truth bubbling from the lips of this white
heathen.  Take him, Sarceda, and hearken, let him be your especial
care.  First let him suffer with the others, and afterwards, should
he prove obdurate, alone.  The method I leave to you.  Should he
confess, summon me.'

'Pardon me, general, but this is no task for an hidalgo of Spain.
I have been more wont to pierce my enemies with the sword than to
tear them with pincers,' said de Garcia, but as he spoke I saw a
gleam of triumph shine in his black eyes, and heard the ring of
triumph through the mock anger of his voice.

'I know it, comrade.  But this must be done; though I hate it, it
must be done, there is no other way.  The gold is necessary to me--
by the Mother of God! the knaves say that I have stolen it!--and I
doubt these stubborn Indian dogs will ever speak, however great
their agony.  This man knows and I give him over to you because you
are acquainted with his wickedness, and that knowledge will steel
your heart against all pity.  Spare not, comrade; remember that he
must be forced to speak.'

'It is your command, Cortes, and I will obey it, though I love the
task little; with one proviso, however, that you give me your
warrant in writing.'

'It shall be made out at once,' answered the general.  'And now
away with him.'

'Where to?'

'To the prison that he has left.  All is ready and there he will
find his comrades.'

Then a guard was summoned and I was dragged back to my own place,
de Garcia saying as I went that he would be with me presently.



CHAPTER XXIX

DE GARCIA SPEAKS HIS MIND


At first I was not taken into the chamber that I had left, but
placed in a little room opening out of it where the guard slept.
Here I waited a while, bound hand and foot and watched by two
soldiers with drawn swords.  As I waited, torn by rage and fear, I
heard the noise of hammering through the wall, followed by a sound
of groans.  At length the suspense came to an end; a door was
opened, and two fierce Tlascalan Indians came through it and seized
me by the hair and ears, dragging me thus into my own chamber.

'Poor devil!' I heard one of the Spanish soldiers say as I went.
'Apostate or no, I am sorry for him; this is bloody work.'

Then the door closed and I was in the place of torment.  The room
was darkened, for a cloth had been hung in front of the window
bars, but its gloom was relieved by certain fires that burned in
braziers.  It was by the light of these fires chiefly that I saw
the sight.  On the floor of the chamber were placed three solid
chairs, one of them empty.  The other two were filled by none other
than Guatemoc, Emperor of the Aztecs, and by his friend and mine
the cacique of Tacuba.  They were bound in the chairs, the burning
braziers were placed at their feet, behind them stood a clerk with
paper and an inkhorn, and around them Indians were busy at some
dreadful task, directed to it by two Spanish soldiers.  Near the
third chair stood another Spaniard who as yet took no part in the
play; it was de Garcia.  As I looked, an Indian lifted one of the
braziers and seizing the naked foot of the Tacuban prince, thrust
it down upon the glowing coals.  For a while there was silence,
then the Tacuban broke into groans.  Guatemoc turned his head
towards him and spoke, and as he spoke I saw that his foot also was
resting in the flames of a brazier.  'Why do you complain, friend,'
he said, in a steady voice, 'when I keep silence?  Am I then taking
my pleasure in a bed?  Follow me now as always, friend, and be
silent beneath your sufferings.'

The clerk wrote down his words, for I heard the quill scratching on
the paper, and as he wrote, Guatemoc turned his head and saw me.
His face was grey with pain, still he spoke as a hundred times I
had heard him speak at council, slowly and clearly.  'Alas! are you
also here, my friend Teule?' he said; 'I hoped that they had spared
you.  See how these Spaniards keep faith.  Malinche swore to treat
me with all honour; behold how he honours me, with hot coals for my
feet and pincers for my flesh.  They think that we have buried
treasure, Teule, and would wring its secret from us.  You know that
it is a lie.  If we had treasure would we not give it gladly to our
conquerors, the god-born sons of Quetzal?  You know that there is
nothing left except the ruins of our cities and the bones of our
dead.'

Here he ceased suddenly, for the demon who tormented him struck him
across the mouth saying, 'Silence, dog.'

But I understood, and I swore in my heart that I would die ere I
revealed my brother's secret.  This was the last triumph that
Guatemoc could win, to keep his gold from the grasp of the greedy
Spaniard, and that victory at least he should not lose through me.
So I swore, and very soon my oath must be put to the test, for at a
motion from de Garcia the Tlascalans seized me and bound me to the
third chair.

Then he spoke into my ear in Castilian: 'Strange are the ways of
Providence, Cousin Wingfield.  You have hunted me across the world,
and several times we have met, always to your sorrow.  I thought I
had you in the slave ship, I thought that the sharks had you in the
water, but somehow you escaped me whom you came to hunt.  When I
knew it I grieved, but now I grieve no more, for I see that you
were reserved for this moment.  Cousin Wingfield, it shall go hard
if you escape me this time, and yet I think that we shall spend
some days together before we part.  Now I will be courteous with
you.  You may have a choice of evils.  How shall we begin?  The
resources at my command are not all that we could wish, alas! the
Holy Office is not yet here with its unholy armoury, but still I
have done my best.  These fellows do not understand their art: hot
coals are their only inspiration.  I, you see, have several,' and
he pointed to various instruments of torture.  'Which will you
select?'

I made no answer, for I had determined that I would speak no word
and utter no cry, do what they might with me.

'Let me think, let me think,' went on de Garcia, smoothing his
beard.  'Ah, I have it.  Here, slaves.'

Now I will not renew my own agonies, or awake the horror of any who
may chance to read what I have written by describing what befell me
after this.  Suffice it to say that for two hours and more this
devil, helped in his task by the Tlascalans, worked his wicked will
upon me.  One by one torments were administered to me with a skill
and ingenuity that cannot often have been surpassed, and when at
times I fainted I was recovered by cold water being dashed upon me
and spirits poured down my throat.  And yet, I say it with some
pride, during those two dreadful hours I uttered no groan however
great my sufferings, and spoke no word good or bad.

Nor was it only bodily pain that I must bear, for all this while my
enemy mocked me with bitter words, which tormented my soul as his
instruments and hot coals tormented my body.  At length he paused
exhausted, and cursed me for an obstinate pig of an Englishman, and
at that moment Cortes entered the shambles and with him Marina.

'How goes it?' he said lightly, though his face turned pale at the
sight of horror.

'The cacique of Tacuba has confessed that gold is buried in his
garden, the other two have said nothing, general,' the clerk
answered, glancing down his paper.

'Brave men, indeed!' I heard Cortes mutter to himself; then said
aloud, 'Let the cacique be carried to-morrow to the garden of which
he speaks, that he may point out the gold.  As for the other two,
cease tormenting them for this day.  Perhaps they may find another
mind before to-morrow.  I trust so, for their own sakes I trust
so!'

Then he drew to the corner of the room and consulted with Sarceda
and the other torturers, leaving Marina face to face with Guatemoc
and with me.  For a while she stared at the prince as though in
horror, then a strange light came into her beautiful eyes, and she
spoke to him in a low voice, saying in the Aztec tongue:

'Do you remember how once you rejected me down yonder in Tobasco,
Guatemoc, and what I told you then?--that I should grow great in
spite of you?  You see it has all come true and more than true, and
you are brought to this.  Are you not sorry, Guatemoc?  I am sorry,
though were I as some women are, perchance I might rejoice to see
you thus.'

'Woman,' the prince answered in a thick voice, 'you have betrayed
your country and you have brought me to shame and torment.  Yes,
had it not been for you, these things had never been.  I am sorry,
indeed I am sorry--that I did not kill you.  For the rest, may your
name be shameful for ever in the ears of honest men and your soul
be everlastingly accursed, and may you yourself, even before you
die, know the bitterness of dishonour and betrayal!  Your words
were fulfilled, and so shall mine be also.'

She heard and turned away trembling, and for a while was silent.
Then her glance fell upon me and she began to weep.

'Alas! poor man,' she said; 'alas! my friend.'

'Weep not over me, Marina,' I answered, speaking in Aztec, 'for our
tears are of no worth, but help me if you may.'

'Ah that I could!' she sobbed, and turning fled from the place,
followed presently by Cortes.

Now the Spaniards came in again and removed Guatemoc and the
cacique of Tacuba, carrying them in their arms, for they could not
walk, and indeed the cacique was in a swoon.

'Farewell, Teule,' said Guatemoc as he passed me; 'you are indeed a
true son of Quetzal and a gallant man.  May the gods reward you in
times to come for all that you have suffered for me and mine, since
I cannot.'

Then he was borne out and these were the last words that I ever
heard him utter.

Now I was left alone with the Tlascalans and de Garcia, who mocked
me as before.

'A little tired, eh, friend Wingfield?' he said sneering.  'Well,
the play is rough till you get used to it.  A night's sleep will
refresh you, and to-morrow you will be a new man.  Perhaps you
believe that I have done my worst.  Fool, this is but a beginning.
Also you think doubtless that your obstinacy angers me?  Wrong
again, my friend, I only pray that you may keep your lips sealed to
the last.  Gladly would I give my share of this hidden gold in
payment for two more such days with you.  I have still much to pay
you back, and look you, I have found a way to do it.  There are
more ways of hurting a man than through his own flesh--for
instance, when I wished to be revenged upon your father, I struck
him through her whom he loved.  Now I have touched you and you
wonder what I mean.  Well, I will tell you.  Perhaps you may know
an Aztec lady of royal blood who is named Otomie?'

'Otomie, what of her?' I cried, speaking for the first time, since
fear for her stirred me more than all the torments I had borne.

'A triumph indeed; I have found a way to make you speak at last;
why, then, to-morrow you will be full of words.  Only this, Cousin
Wingfield; Otomie, Montezuma's daughter, a very lovely woman by the
way, is your wife according to the Indian customs.  Well, I know
all the story and--she is in my power.  I will prove it to you, for
she shall be brought here presently and then you can console each
other.  For listen, dog, to-morrow she will sit where you are
sitting, and before your eyes she shall be dealt with as you have
been dealt with.  Ah! then you will talk fast enough, but perhaps
it will be too late.'

And now for the first time I broke down and prayed for mercy even
of my foe.

'Spare her,' I groaned; 'do what you will with me, but spare her!
Surely you must have a heart, even you, for you are human.  You can
never do this thing, and Cortes would not suffer it.'

'As for Cortes,' he answered, 'he will know nothing of it--till it
is done.  I have my warrant that charges me to use every means in
my power to force the truth from you.  Torture has failed; this
alone is left.  And for the rest, you must read me ill.  You know
what it is to hate, for you hate me; multiply your hate by ten and
you may find the sum of mine for you.  I hate you for your blood, I
hate you because you have your mother's eyes, but much more do I
hate you for yourself, for did you not beat me, a gentleman of
Spain, with a stick as though I were a hound?  Shall I then shrink
from such a deed when I can satisfy my hate by it?  Also perhaps,
though you are a brave man, at this moment you know what it is to
fear, and are tasting of its agony.  Now I will be open with you;
Thomas Wingfield, I fear you.  When first I saw you I feared you as
I had reason to do, and that is why I tried to kill you, and as
time has gone by I have feared you more and more, so much indeed,
that at times I cannot rest because of a nameless terror that dogs
me and which has to do with you.  Because of you I fled from Spain,
because of you I have played the coward in more frays than one.
The luck has always been mine in this duel between us, and yet I
tell you that even as you are, I fear you still.  If I dared I
would kill you at once, only then you would haunt me as your mother
haunts me, and also I must answer for it to Cortes.  Fear, Cousin
Wingfield, is the father of cruelty, and mine makes me cruel to
you.  Living or dead, I know that you will triumph over me at the
last, but it is my turn now, and while you breathe, or while one
breathes who is dear to you, I will spend my life to bring you and
them to shame and misery and death, as I brought your mother, my
cousin, though she forced me to it to save myself.  Why not?  There
is no forgiveness for me, I cannot undo the past.  You came to take
vengeance on me, and soon or late by you, or through you, it will
be glutted, but till then I triumph, ay, even when I must sink to
this butcher's work to do it,' and suddenly he turned and left the
place.

Then weakness and suffering overcame me and I swooned away.  When I
awoke it was to find that my bonds had been loosed and that I lay
on some sort of bed, while a woman bent over me, tending me with
murmured words of pity and love.  The night had fallen, but there
was light in the chamber, and by it I saw that the woman was none
other than Otomie, no longer starved and wretched, but almost as
lovely as before the days of siege and hunger.

'Otomie! you here!' I gasped through my wounded lips, for with my
senses came the memory of de Garcia's threats.

'Yes, beloved, it is I,' she murmured; 'they have suffered that I
nurse you, devils though they are.  Oh! that I must see you thus
and yet be helpless to avenge you,' and she burst into weeping.

'Hush,' I said, 'hush.  Have we food?'

'In plenty.  A woman brought it from Marina.'

'Give me to eat, Otomie.'

Now for a while she fed me and the deadly sickness passed from me,
though my poor flesh burned with a hundred agonies.

'Listen, Otomie: have you seen de Garcia?'

'No, husband.  Two days since I was separated from my sister
Tecuichpo and the other ladies, but I have been well treated and
have seen no Spaniard except the soldiers who led me here, telling
me that you were sick.  Alas! I knew not from what cause,' and
again she began to weep.

'Still some have seen you and it is reported that you are my wife.'

'It is likely enough,' she answered, 'for it was known throughout
the Aztec hosts, and such secrets cannot be kept.  But why have
they treated you thus?  Because you fought against them?'

'Are we alone?' I asked.

'The guard is without, but there are none else in the chamber.'

'Then bend down your head and I will tell you,' and I told her all.

When I had done so she sprang up with flashing eyes and her hand
pressed upon her breast, and said:

'Oh! if I loved you before, now I love you more if that is
possible, who could suffer thus horribly and yet be faithful to the
fallen and your oath.  Blessed be the day when first I looked upon
your face, O my husband, most true of men.  But they who could do
this--what of them?  Still it is done with and I will nurse you
back to health.  Surely it is done with, or they had not suffered
me to come to you?'

'Alas! Otomie, I must tell all--it is NOT done with,' and with
faltering voice I went on with the tale, yes, and since I must, I
told her for what purpose she had been brought here.  She listened
without a word, though her lips turned pale.

'Truly,' she said when I had done, 'these Teules far surpass the
pabas of our people, for if the priests torture and sacrifice, it
is to the gods and not for gold and secret hate.  Now, husband,
what is your counsel?  Surely you have some counsel.'

'I have none that I dare offer, wife,' I groaned.

'You are timid as a girl who will not utter the love she burns to
tell,' Otomie answered with a proud and bitter laugh.  'Well, I
will speak it for you.  It is in your mind that we must die to-
night.'

'It is,' I said; 'death now, or shame and agony to-morrow and then
death at last, that is our choice.  Since God will not protect us,
we must protect ourselves if we can find the means.'

'God! there is no God.  At times I have doubted the gods of my
people and turned to yours; now I renounce and reject Him.  If
there were a God of mercy such as you cling to, could He suffer
that such things be?  You are my god, husband, to you and for you I
pray, and you alone.  Let us have done now with pleading to those
who are not, or who, if they live, are deaf to our cries and blind
to our misery, and befriend ourselves.  Yonder lies rope, that
window has bars, very soon we can be beyond the sun and the cruelty
of Teules, or sound asleep.  But there is time yet; let us talk a
while, they will scarcely begin their torments before the dawn, and
ere dawn we shall be far.'

So we talked as well as my sufferings would allow.  We talked of
how we first had met, of how Otomie had been vowed to me as the
wife of Tezcat, Soul of the World, of that day when we had lain
side by side upon the stone of sacrifice, of our true marriage
thereafter, of the siege of Tenoctitlan and the death of our first-
born.  Thus we talked till midnight was two hours gone.  Then there
came a silence.

'Husband,' said Otomie at last in a hushed and solemn voice, 'you
are worn with suffering, and I am weary.  It is time to do that
which must be done.  Sad is our fate, but at least rest is before
us.  I thank you, husband, for your gentleness, I thank you more
for your faithfulness to my house and people.  Shall I make ready
for our last journey?'

'Make ready!' I answered.

Then she rose and soon was busy with the ropes.  At length all was
prepared and the moment of death was at hand.

'You must aid me, Otomie,' I said; 'I cannot walk by myself.'

She came and lifted me with her strong and tender arms, till I
stood upon a stool beneath the window bars.  There she placed the
rope about my throat, then taking her stand by me she fitted the
second rope upon her own.  Now we kissed in solemn silence, for
there was nothing more to say.  Yet Otomie said something, asking:

'Of whom do you think in this moment, husband?  Of me and of my
dead child, or of that lady who lives far across the sea?  Nay, I
will not ask.  I have been happy in my love, it is enough.  Now
love and life must end together, and it is well for me, but for you
I grieve.  Say, shall I thrust away the stool?'

'Yes, Otomie, since there is no hope but death.  I cannot break my
faith with Guatemoc, nor can I live to see you shamed and
tortured.'

'Then kiss me first and for the last time.'

We kissed again and then, as she was in the very act of pushing the
stool from beneath us, the door opened and shut, and a veiled woman
stood before us, bearing a torch in one hand and a bundle in the
other.  She looked, and seeing us and our dreadful purpose, ran to
us.

'What do you?' she cried, and I knew the voice for that of Marina.
'Are you then mad, Teule?'

'Who is this who knows you so well, husband, and will not even
suffer that we die in peace?' asked Otomie.

'I am Marina,' answered the veiled woman, 'and I come to save you
if I can.'



CHAPTER XXX

THE ESCAPE


Now Otomie put the rope off her neck, and descending from the
stool, stood before Marina.

'You are Marina,' she said coldly and proudly, 'and you come to
save us, you who have brought ruin on the land that bore you, and
have given thousands of her children to death, and shame, and
torment.  Now, if I had my way, I would have none of your
salvation, nay, I would rather save myself as I was about to do.'

Thus Otomie spoke, and never had she looked more royal than in this
moment, when she risked her last chance of life that she might pour
out her scorn upon one whom she deemed a traitress, no, one who was
a traitress, for had it not been for Marina's wit and aid, Cortes
would never have conquered Anahuac.  I trembled as I heard her
angry words, for, all I suffered notwithstanding, life still seemed
sweet to me, who, ten seconds ago, had stood upon the verge of
death.  Surely Marina would depart and leave us to our doom.  But
it was not so.  Indeed, she shrank and trembled before Otomie's
contempt.  They were a strange contrast in their different
loveliness as they stood face to face in the torture den, and it
was strange also to see the spirit of the lady of royal blood,
threatened as she was with a shameful death, or still more shameful
life, triumph over the Indian girl whom to-day fortune had set as
far above her as the stars.

'Say, royal lady,' asked Marina in her gentle voice, 'for what
cause did you, if tales are true, lie by the side of yonder white
man upon the stone of sacrifice?'

'Because I love him, Marina.'

'And for this same cause have I, Marina, laid my honour upon a
different altar, for this same cause I have striven against the
children of my people, because I love another such as he.  It is
for love of Cortes that I have aided Cortes, therefore despise me
not, but let your love plead for mine, seeing that, to us women,
love is all.  I have sinned, I know, but doubtless in its season my
sin shall find a fitting punishment.'

'It had need be sharp,' answered Otomie.  'My love has harmed none,
see before you but one grain of the countless harvest of your own.
In yonder chair Guatemoc your king was this day tortured by your
master Cortes, who swore to treat him with all honour.  By his side
sat Teule, my husband and your friend; him Cortes gave over to has
private enemy, de Garcia, whom you name Sarceda.  See how he has
left him.  Nay, do not shudder, gentle lady; look now at his
wounds!  Consider to what a pass we are driven when you find us
about to die thus like dogs, he, my husband, that he may not live
to see me handled as he has been, and I with him, because a
princess of the Otomie and of Montezuma's blood cannot submit to
such a shame while death has one door through which to creep.  It
is but a single grain of your harvest, outcast and traitress, the
harvest of misery and death that is stored yonder in the ruins of
Tenoctitlan.  Had I my will, I tell you that I had sooner die a
score of times than take help from a hand so stained with the blood
of my people and of yours--I--'

'Oh! cease, lady, cease,' groaned Marina, covering her eyes with
her hand, as though the sight of Otomie were dreadful to her.
'What is done is done; do not add to my remorse.  What did you say,
that you, the lady Otomie, were brought here to be tortured?'

'Even so, and before my husband's eyes.  Why should Montezuma's
daughter and the princess of the Otomie escape the fate of the
emperor of the Aztecs?  If her womanhood does not protect her, has
she anything to hope of her lost rank?'

'Cortes knows nothing of this, I swear it,' said Marina.  'To the
rest he has been driven by the clamour of the soldiers, who taunt
him with stealing treasure that he has never found.  But of this
last wickedness he is innocent.'

'Then let him ask his tool Sarceda of it.'

'As for Sarceda, I promise you, princess, that if I can I will
avenge this threat upon him.  But time is short, I am come here
with the knowledge of Cortes, to see if I can win the secret of the
treasure from Teule, your husband, and for my friendship's sake I
am about to betray my trust and help him and you to fly.  Do you
refuse my aid?'

Otomie said nothing, but I spoke for the first time.

'Nay, Marina, I have no love for this thief's fate if I can escape
it, but how is it to be done?'

'The chance is poor enough, Teule, but I bethought me that once out
of this prison you might slip away disguised.  Few will be stirring
at dawn, and of them the most will not be keen to notice men or
things.  See, I have brought you the dress of a Spanish soldier;
your skin is dark, and in the half light you might pass as one; and
for the princess your wife, I have brought another dress, indeed I
am ashamed to offer it, but it is the only one that will not be
noted at this hour; also, Teule, I bring you a sword, that which
was taken from you, though I think that once it had another owner.'

Now while she spoke Marina undid her bundle, and there in it were
the dresses and the sword, the same that I had taken from the
Spaniard Diaz in the massacre of the noche triste.  First she drew
out the woman's robe and handed it to Otomie, and I saw that it was
such a robe as among the Indians is worn by the women who follow
camps, a robe with red and yellow in it.  Otomie saw it also and
drew back.

'Surely, girl, you have brought a garment of your own in error,'
she said quietly, but in such a fashion as showed more of the
savage heart that is native to her race than she often suffered to
be seen; 'at the least I cannot wear such robes.'

'It seems that I must bear too much,' answered Marina, growing
wroth at last, and striving to keep back the tears that started to
her eyes.  'I will away and leave you;' and she began to roll up
her bundle.

'Forgive her, Marina,' I said hastily, for the desire to escape
grew on me every minute; 'sorrow has set an edge upon her tongue.'
Then turning to Otomie I added, 'I pray you be more gentle, wife,
for my sake if not for your own.  Marina is our only hope.'

'Would that she had left us to die in peace, husband.  Well, so be
it, for your sake I will put on these garments of a drab.  But how
shall we escape out of this place and the camp?  Will the door be
opened to us, and the guards removed, and if we pass them, can you
walk, husband?'

'The doors will not be opened, lady,' said Marina, 'for those wait
without, who will see that they are locked when I have passed them.
But there will be nothing to fear from the guard, trust to me for
it.  See, the bars of this window are but of wood, that sword will
soon sever them, and if you are seen you must play the part of a
drunken soldier being guided to his quarters by a woman.  For the
rest I know nothing, save that I run great risk for your sakes,
since if it is discovered that I have aided you, then I shall find
it hard to soften the rage of Cortes, who, the war being won,' and
she sighed, 'does not need me now so much as once he did.'

'I can make shift to hop on my right foot,' I said, 'and for the
rest we must trust to fortune.  It can give us no worse gifts than
those we have already.'

'So be it, Teule, and now farewell, for I dare stay no longer.  I
can do nothing more.  May your good star shine on you and lead you
hence in safety; and Teule, if we never meet again, I pray you
think of me kindly, for there are many in the world who will do
otherwise in the days to come.'

'Farewell, Marina,' I said, and she was gone.

We heard the doors close behind her, and the distant voices of
those who bore her litter, then all was silence.  Otomie listened
at the window for a while, but the guards seemed to be gone, where
or why I do not know to this hour, and the only sound was that of
distant revelry from the camp.

'And now to the work,' I said to Otomie.

'As you wish, husband, but I fear it will be profitless.  I do not
trust that woman.  Faithless in all, without doubt she betrays us.
Still at the worst you have the sword, and can use it.'

'It matters little,' I answered.  'Our plight cannot be worse than
it is now; life has no greater evils than torment and death, and
they are with us already.'

Then I sat upon the stool, and my arms being left sound and strong,
I hacked with the sharp sword at the wooden bars of the window,
severing them one by one till there was a space big enough for us
to creep through.  This being done and no one having appeared to
disturb us, Otomie clad me in the clothes of a Spanish soldier
which Marina had brought, for I could not dress myself.  What I
suffered in the donning of those garments, and more especially in
the pulling of the long boot on to my burnt foot, can never be
told, but more than once I stopped, pondering whether it would not
be better to die rather than to endure such agonies.  At last it
was done, and Otomie must put on the red and yellow robe, a garb of
shame such as many honest Indian women would die sooner than be
seen in, and I think that as she did this, her agony was greater
than mine, though of another sort, for to her proud heart, that
dress was a very shirt of Nessus.  Presently she was clad, and
minced before me with savage mockery, saying:

'Prithee, soldier, do I look my part?'

'A peace to such fooling,' I answered; 'our lives are at stake,
what does it matter how we disguise ourselves?'

'It matters much, husband, but how can you understand, who are a
man and a foreigner?  Now I will clamber through the window, and
you must follow me if you can, if not I will return to you and we
will end this masquerade.'

Then she passed through the hole swiftly, for Otomie was agile and
strong as an ocelot, and mounting the stool I made shift to follow
her as well as my hurts would allow.  In the end I was able to
throw myself upon the sill of the window, and there I was stretched
out like a dead cat till she drew me across it, and I fell with her
to the ground on the further side, and lay groaning.  She lifted me
to my feet, or rather to my foot, for I could use but one of them,
and we stared round us.  No one was to be seen, and the sound of
revelry had died away, for the crest of Popo was already red with
the sunlight and the dawn grew in the valley.

'Where to?' I said.

Now Otomie had been allowed to walk in the camp with her sister,
the wife of Guatemoc, and other Aztec ladies, and she had this gift
in common with most Indians, that where she had once passed there
she could pass again, even in the darkest night.

'To the south gate,' she whispered; 'perhaps it is unguarded now
that the war is done, at the least I know the road thither.'

So we started, I leaning on her shoulder and hopping on my right
foot, and thus very painfully we traversed some three hundred yards
meeting nobody.  But now our good luck failed us, for passing round
the corner of some buildings, we came face to face with three
soldiers returning to their huts from a midnight revel, and with
them some native servants.

'Whom have we here?' said the first of these.  'Your name,
comrade?'

'Good-night, brother, good-night,' I answered in Spanish, speaking
with the thick voice of drunkenness.

'Good morning, you mean,' he said, for the dawn was breaking.
'Your name.  I don't know your face, though it seems that you have
been in the wars,' and he laughed.

'You mustn't ask a comrade his name,' I said solemnly and swinging
to and fro.  'The captain might send for me and he's a temperate
man.  Your arm, girl; it is time to go to sleep, the sun sets.'

They laughed, but one of them addressed Otomie, saying:

'Leave the sot, my pretty, and come and walk with us,' and he
caught her by the arm.  But she turned on him with so fierce a look
that he let her go again astonished, and we staggered on till the
corner of another house hid us from their view.  Here I sank to the
ground overcome with pain, for while the soldiers were in sight, I
was obliged to use my wounded foot lest they should suspect.  But
Otomie pulled me up, saying:

'Alas! beloved, we must pass on or perish.'

I rose groaning, and by what efforts I reached the south gate I
cannot describe, though I thought that I must die before I came
there.  At last it was before us, and as chance would have it, the
Spanish guard were asleep in the guardhouse.  Three Tlascalans only
were crouched over a little fire, their zerapes or blankets about
their heads, for the dawn was chilly.

'Open the gates, dogs!' I said in a proud voice.

Seeing a Spanish soldier one of them rose to obey, then paused and
said:

'Why, and by whose orders?'

I could not see the man's face because of the blanket, but his
voice sounded familiar to me and I grew afraid.  Still I must
speak.

'Why?--because I am drunk and wish to lie without till I grow
sober.  By whose orders?  By mine, I am an officer of the day, and
if you disobey I'll have you flogged till you never ask another
question.'

'Shall I call the Teules within?' said the man sulkily to his
companion.

'No,' he answered; 'the lord Sarceda is weary and gave orders that
he should not be awakened without good cause.  Keep them in or let
them through as you will, but do not wake him.'

I trembled in every limb; de Garcia was in the guardhouse!  What if
he awoke, what if he came out and saw me?  More--now I guessed
whose voice it was that I knew again; it was that of one of those
Tlascalans who had aided in tormenting me.  What if he should see
my face?  He could scarcely fail to know that on which he had left
his mark so recently.  I was dumb with fear and could say nothing,
and had it not been for the wit of Otomie, there my story would
have ended.  But now she played her part and played it well, plying
the man with the coarse raillery of the camp, till at length she
put him in a good humour, and he opened the gate, bidding her
begone and me with her.  Already we had passed the gate when a
sudden faintness seized me, and I stumbled and fell, rolling over
on to my back as I touched the earth.

'Up, friend, up!' said Otomie, with a harsh laugh.  'If you must
sleep, wait till you find some friendly bush,' and she dragged at
me to lift me.  The Tlascalan, still laughing, came forward to help
her, and between them I gained my feet again, but as I rose, my
cap, which fitted me but ill, fell off.  He picked it up and gave
it to me and our eyes met, my face being somewhat in the shadow.
Next instant I was hobbling on, but looking back, I saw the
Tlascalan staring after us with a puzzled air, like that of a man
who is not sure of the witness of his senses.

'He knows me,' I said to Otomie, 'and presently when he has found
his wits, he will follow us.'

'On, on!' answered Otomie; 'round yonder corner are aloe bushes
where we may hide.'

'I am spent, I can no more;' and again I began to fall.

Then Otomie caught me as I fell, and of a sudden she put out her
strength, and lifting me from the ground, as a mother lifts her
child, staggered forward holding me to her breast.  For fifty paces
or more she carried me thus, love and despair giving her strength,
till at last we reached the edge of the aloe plants and there we
sank together to the earth.  I cast my eyes back over the path
which we had travelled.  Round the corner came the Tlascalan, a
spiked club in his hand, seeking us to solve his doubts.

'It is finished,' I gasped; 'the man comes.'

For answer Otomie drew my sword from its scabbard and hid it in the
grass.  'Now feign sleep,' she said; 'it is our last chance.'

I cast my arm over my face and pretended to be asleep.  Presently I
heard the sound of a man passing through the bushes, and the
Tlascalan stood over me.

'What would you?' asked Otomie.  'Can you not see that he sleeps?
Let him sleep.'

'I must look on his face first, woman,' he answered, dragging aside
my arm.  'By the gods, I thought so!  This is that Teule whom we
dealt with yesterday and who escapes.'

'You are mad,' she said laughing.  'He has escaped from nowhere,
save from a brawl and a drinking bout.'

'You lie, woman, or if you do not lie, you know nothing.  This man
has the secret of Montezuma's treasure, and is worth a king's
ransom,' and he lifted his club.

'And yet you wish to slay him!  Well, I know nothing of him.  Take
him back whence he came.  He is but a drunken sot and I shall be
well rid of him.'

'Well said.  It would be foolish to kill him, but by bearing him
alive to the lord Sarceda, I shall win honour and reward.  Come,
help me.'

'Help yourself,' she answered sullenly.  'But first search his
pouch; there may be some trifle there which we can divide.'

'Well said, again,' he answered, and kneeling down he bent over me
and began to fumble at the fastenings of the pouch.

Otomie was behind him.  I saw her face change and a terrible light
came into her eyes, such a light as shines in the eyes of the
priest at sacrifice.  Quick as thought she drew the sword from the
grass and smote with all her strength upon the man's bent neck.
Down he fell, making no sound, and she also fell beside him.  In a
moment she was on her feet again, staring at him wildly--the naked
sword in her hand.

'Up,' she said, 'before others come to seek him.  Nay, you must.'

Now, again we were struggling forward through the bushes, my mind
filled with a great wonder that grew slowly to a whirling
nothingness.  For a while it seemed to me as though I were lost in
an evil dream and walking on red hot irons in my dream.  Then came
a vision of armed men with lifted spears, and of Otomie running
towards them with outstretched arms.

I knew no more.



CHAPTER XXXI

OTOMIE PLEADS WITH HER PEOPLE


When I awoke it was to find myself in a cave, where the light shone
very dimly.  Otomie leant over me, and not far away a man was
cooking a pot over a fire made of dry aloe leaves.

'Where am I and what has happened?' I asked.

'You are safe, beloved,' she answered, 'at least for awhile.  When
you have eaten I will tell you more.'

She brought me broth and food and I ate eagerly, and when I was
satisfied she spoke.

'You remember how the Tlascalan followed us and how--I was rid of
him?'

'I remember, Otomie, though how you found strength to kill him I do
not understand.'

'Love and despair gave it to me, and I pray that I may never have
such another need.  Do not speak of it, husband, for this is more
horrible to me than all that has been before.  One thing comforts
me, however; I did not kill him, the sword twisted in my hand and I
believe that he was but stunned.  Then we fled a little way, and
looking back I saw that two other Tlascalans, companions of the
senseless man, were following us and him.  Presently, they came up
to where he lay and stared at him.  Then they started on our
tracks, running hard, and very soon they must have caught us, for
now you could scarcely stir, your mind was gone, and I had no more
strength to carry you.  Still we stumbled on till presently, when
the pursuers were within fifty paces of us, I saw armed men, eight
of them, rushing at us from the bushes.  They were of my own
people, the Otomies, soldiers that had served under you, who
watched the Spanish camp, and seeing a Spaniard alone they came to
slay him.  They very nearly did so indeed, for at first I was so
breathless that I could scarcely speak, but at last in few words I
made shift to declare my name and rank, and your sad plight.  By
now the two Tlascalans were upon us, and I called to the men of the
Otomie to protect us, and falling on the Tlascalans before they
knew that enemies were there, they killed one of them and took the
other prisoner.  Then they made a litter, and placing you on it,
bore you without rest twenty leagues into the mountains, till they
reached this secret hiding place, and here you have lain three days
and nights.  The Teules have searched for you far and wide, but
they have searched in vain.  Only yesterday two of them with ten
Tlascalans, passed within a hundred paces of this cave and I had
much ado to prevent our people from attacking them.  Now they are
gone whence they came, and I think that we are safe for a time.
Soon you will be better and we can go hence.'

'Where can we go to, Otomie?  We are birds without a nest.'

'We must seek shelter in the City of Pines, or fly across the
water; there is no other choice, husband.'

'We cannot try the sea, Otomie, for all the ships that come here
are Spanish, and I do not know how they will greet us in the City
of Pines now that our cause is lost, and with it so many thousands
of their warriors.'

'We must take the risk, husband.  There are still true hearts in
Anahuac, who will stand by us in our sorrow and their own.  At the
least we have escaped from greater dangers.  Now let me dress your
wounds and rest awhile.'

So for three more days I lay in the cave of the mountains and
Otomie tended me, and at the end of that time my state was such
that I could travel in a litter, though for some weeks I was unable
to set foot to the ground.  On the fourth day we started by night,
and I was carried on men's shoulders till at length we passed up
the gorge that leads to the City of Pines.  Here we were stopped by
sentries to whom Otomie told our tale, bidding some of them go
forward and repeat it to the captains of the city.  We followed the
messengers slowly, for my bearers were weary, and came to the gates
of the beautiful town just as the red rays of sunset struck upon
the snowy pinnacle of Xaca that towers behind it, turning her cap
of smoke to a sullen red, like that of molten iron.

The news of our coming had spread about, and here and there knots
of people were gathered to watch us pass.  For the most part they
stood silent, but now and again some woman whose husband or son had
perished in the siege, would hiss a curse at us.

Alas! how different was our state this day to what it had been when
not a year before we entered the City of Pines for the first time.
Then we were escorted by an army ten thousand strong, then
musicians had sung before us and our path was strewn with flowers.
And now!  Now we came two fugitives from the vengeance of the
Teules, I borne in a litter by four tired soldiers, while Otomie,
the princess of this people, still clad in her wanton's robe, at
which the women mocked, for she had been able to come by no other,
tramped at my side, since there were none to carry her, and the
inhabitants of the place cursed us as the authors of their woes.
Nor did we know if they would stop at words.

At length we crossed the square beneath the shadow of the teocalli,
and reached the ancient and sculptured palace as the light failed,
and the smoke on Xaca, the holy hill, began to glow with the fire
in its heart.  Here small preparation had been made to receive us,
and that night we supped by the light of a torch upon tortillas or
meal cakes and water, like the humblest in the land.  Then we crept
to our rest, and as I lay awake because of the pain of my hurts, I
heard Otomie, who thought that I slept, break into low sobbing at
my side.  Her proud spirit was humbled at last, and she, whom I had
never known to weep except once, when our firstborn died in the
siege, wept bitterly.

'Why do you sorrow thus, Otomie?' I asked at length.

'I did not know that you were awake, husband,' she sobbed in
answer, 'or I would have checked my grief.  Husband, I sorrow over
all that has befallen us and my people--also, though these are but
little things, because you are brought low and treated as a man of
no estate, and of the cold comfort that we find here.'

'You have cause, wife,' I answered.  'Say, what will these Otomies
do with us--kill us, or give us up to the Teules?'

'I do not know; to-morrow we shall learn, but for my part I will
not be surrendered living.'

'Nor I, wife.  Death is better than the tender mercies of Cortes
and his minister, de Garcia.  Is there any hope?'

'Yes, there is hope, beloved.  Now the Otomie are cast down and
they remember that we led the flower of their land to death.  But
they are brave and generous at heart, and if I can touch them
there, all may yet be well.  Weariness, pain and memory make us
weak, who should be full of courage, having escaped so many ills.
Sleep, my husband, and leave me to think.  All shall yet go well,
for even misfortune has an end.'

So I slept, and woke in the morning somewhat refreshed and with a
happier mind, for who is there that is not bolder when the light
shines on him and he is renewed by rest?


When I opened my eyes the sun was already high, but Otomie had
risen with the dawn and she had not been idle during those three
hours.  For one thing she had contrived to obtain food and fresh
raiment more befitting to our rank than the rags in which we were
clothed.  Also she had brought together certain men of condition
who were friendly and loyal to her in misfortune, and these she
sent about the city, letting it be known that she would address the
people at mid-day from the steps of the palace, for as Otomie knew
well, the heartstrings of a crowd are touched more easily than
those of cold and ancient counsellors.

'Will they come to listen?' I asked.

'Have no fear,' she answered.  'The desire to look upon us who have
survived the siege, and to know the truth of what has happened,
will bring them.  Moreover, some will be there seeking vengeance on
us.'

Otomie was right, for as the morning drew on towards mid-day, I saw
the dwellers in the City of Pines gathering in thousands, till the
space between the steps of the palace and the face of the pyramid
was black with them.  Now Otomie combed her curling hair and placed
flowers in it, and set a gleaming feather cloak about her
shoulders, so that it hung down over her white robes, and on her
breast that splendid necklace of emeralds which Guatemoc had given
to me in the treasure chamber, and which she had preserved safely
through all our evil fortune, and a golden girdle about her waist.
In her hand also she took a little sceptre of ebony tipped with
gold, that was in the palace, with other ornaments and emblems of
rank, and thus attired, though she was worn with travel and
suffering, and grief had dimmed her beauty for a while, she seemed
the queenliest woman that my eyes have seen.  Next she caused me to
be laid upon my rude litter, and when the hour of noon was come,
she commanded those soldiers who had borne me across the mountains
to carry me by her side.  Thus we issued from the wide doorway of
the palace and took our stand upon the platform at the head of the
steps.  As we came a great cry rose from the thousands of the
people, a fierce cry like that of wild beasts howling for their
prey.  Higher and higher it rose, a sound to strike terror into the
bravest heart, and by degrees I caught its purport.

'Kill them!' said the cry.  'Give the liars to the Teules.'

Otomie stepped forward to the edge of the platform, and lifting the
ebony sceptre she stood silent, the sunlight beating on her lovely
face and form.  But the multitude screamed a thousand taunts and
threats at us, and still the tumult grew.  Once they rushed towards
her as though to tear her to pieces, but fell back at the last
stair, as a wave falls from a rock, and once a spear was thrown
that passed between her neck and shoulder.

Now the soldiers who had carried me, making certain that our death
was at hand, and having no wish to share it, set my litter down
upon the stones and slipped back into the palace, but all this
while Otomie never so much as moved, no, not even when the spear
hissed past her.  She stood before them stately and scornful, a
very queen among women, and little by little the majesty of her
presence and the greatness of her courage hushed them to silence.
When there was quiet at length, she spoke in a clear voice that
carried far.

'Am I among my own people of the Otomie?' she asked bitterly, 'or
have we lost our path and wandered perchance among some savage
Tlascalan tribe?  Listen, people of the Otomie.  I have but one
voice and none can reason with a multitude.  Choose you a tongue to
speak for you, and let him set out the desire of your hearts.'

Now the tumult began again, for some shouted one name and some
another, but in the end a priest and noble named Maxtla stepped
forward, a man of great power among the Otomie, who, above all had
favoured an alliance with the Spaniards and opposed the sending of
an army to aid Guatemoc in the defence of Tenoctitlan.  Nor did he
come alone, for with him were four chiefs, whom by their dress I
knew to be Tlascalans and envoys from Cortes.  Then my heart sank,
for it was not difficult to guess the object of their coming.

'Speak on, Maxtla,' said Otomie, 'for we must hear what there is
for us to answer, and you, people of the Otomie, I pray you keep
silence, that you may judge between us when there is an end of
talking.'

Now a great silence fell upon the multitude, who pressed together
like sheep in a pen, and strained their ears to catch the words of
Maxtla.

'My speech with you, princess, and the Teule your outlawed husband,
shall be short and sharp,' he began roughly.  'A while hence you
came hither to seek an army to aid Cuitlahua, Emperor of the
Aztecs, in his struggle with the Teules, the sons of Quetzal.  That
army was given you, against the wishes of many of us, for you won
over the council by the honey of your words, and we who urged
caution, or even an alliance with the white men, the children of
god, were overruled.  You went hence, and twenty thousand men, the
flower of our people, followed you to Tenoctitlan.  Where are they
now?  I will tell you.  Some two hundred of them have crept back
home, the rest fly to and fro through the air in the gizzards of
the zaphilotes, or crouch on the earth in the bellies of jackals.
Death has them all, and you led them to their deaths.  Is it then
much that we should seek the lives of you two in payment for those
of twenty thousand of our sons, our husbands, and our fathers?  But
we do not even ask this.  Here beside me stand ambassadors from
Malinche, the captain of the Teules, who reached our city but an
hour ago.  This is the demand that they bring from Malinche, and in
his own words:

'"Deliver back to me Otomie, the daughter of Montezuma, and the
renegade her paramour, who is known as Teule, and who has fled from
the justice due to his crimes, and it shall be well with you,
people of the Otomie.  Hide them or refuse to deliver them, and the
fate of the City of Pines shall be as the fate of Tenoctitlan,
queen of the valley.  Choose then between my love and my wrath,
people of the Otomie.  If you obey, the past shall be forgiven and
my yoke will be light upon you; if you refuse, your city shall be
stamped flat and your very name wiped out of the records of the
world."

'Say, messengers of Malinche, are not these the words of Malinche?'

'They are his very words, Maxtla,' said the spokesman of the
embassy.

Now again there was a tumult among the people, and voices cried,
'Give them up, give them to Malinche as a peace offering.'  Otomie
stood forward to speak and it died away, for all desired to hear
her words.  Then she spoke:

'It seems, people of the Otomie, that I am on my trial before my
own vassals, and my husband with me.  Well, I will plead our cause
as well as a woman may, and having the power, you shall judge
between us and Maxtla and his allies, Malinche and the Tlascalans.
What is our offence?  It is that we came hither by the command of
Cuitlahua to seek your aid in his war with the Teules.  What did I
tell you then?  I told you that if the people of Anahuac would not
stand together against the white men, they must be broken one by
one like the sticks of an unbound faggot, and cast into the flames.
Did I speak lies?  Nay, I spoke truth, for through the treason of
her tribes, and chiefly through the treason of the Tlascalans,
Anahuac is fallen, and Tenoctitlan is a ruin sown with dead like a
field with corn.'

'It is true,' cried a voice.

'Yes, people of the Otomie, it is true, but I say that had all the
warriors of the nations of Anahuac played the part that your sons
played, the tale had run otherwise.  They are dead, and because of
their death you would deliver us to our foes and yours, but I for
one do not mourn them, though among their number are many of my
kin.  Nay, be not wroth, but listen.  It is better that they should
lie dead in honour, having earned for themselves a wreath of fame,
and an immortal dwelling in the Houses of the Sun, than that they
should live to be slaves, which it seems is your desire, people of
the Otomie.  There is no false word in what I said to you.  Now the
sticks that Malinche has used to beat out the brains of Guatemoc
shall be broken and burnt to cook the pot of the Teules.  Already
these false children are his slaves.  Have you not heard his
command, that the tribes his allies shall labour in the quarries
and the streets till the glorious city which he has burned rises
afresh upon the face of the waters?  Will you not hasten to take
your share in the work, people of the Otomie, the work that knows
no rest and no reward except the lash of the overseer and the curse
of the Teule?  Surely you will hasten, people of the mountains!
Your hands are shaped to the spade and the trowel, not to the bow
and the spear, and it will be sweeter to toil to do the will and
swell the wealth of Malinche in the sun of the valley or the shadow
of the mine, than to bide here free upon your hills where as yet no
foe has set his foot!'

Again she paused, and a murmur of doubt and unrest went through the
thousands who listened.  Maxtla stepped forward and would have
spoken, but the people shouted him down, crying: 'Otomie, Otomie!
Let us hear the words of Otomie.'

'I thank you, my people,' she said, 'for I have still much to tell
you.  Our crime is then, that we drew an army after us to fight
against the Teules.  And how did we draw this army?  Did I command
you to muster your array?  Nay, I set out my case and I said "Now
choose."  You chose, and of your own free will you despatched those
glorious companies that now are dead.  My crime is therefore that
you chose wrongly as you say, but as I still hold, most rightly,
and because of this crime I and my husband are to be given as a
peace offering to the Teules.  Listen: let me tell you something of
those wars in which we have fought before you give us to the Teules
and our mouths are silent for ever.  Where shall I begin?  I know
not.  Stay, I bore a child--had he lived he would have been your
prince to-day.  That child I saw starve to death before my eyes,
inch by inch and day by day I saw him starve.  But it is nothing;
who am I that I should complain because I have lost my son, when so
many of your sons are dead and their blood is required at my hands?
Listen again:' and she went on to tell in burning words of the
horrors of the siege, of the cruelties of the Spaniards, and of the
bravery of the men of the Otomie whom I had commanded.  For a full
hour she spoke thus, while all that vast audience hung upon her
words.  Also she told of the part that I played in the struggle,
and of the deeds which I had done, and now and again some soldier
in the crowd who served under me, and who had escaped the famine
and the massacre, cried out:

'It is true; we saw it with our eyes.'

'And so,' she said, 'at last it was finished, at last Tenoctitlan
was a ruin and my cousin and my king, the glorious Guatemoc, lay a
prisoner in the hands of Malinche, and with him my husband Teule,
my sister, I myself, and many another.  Malinche swore that he
would treat Guatemoc and his following with all honour.  Do you
know how he treated him?  Within a few days Guatemoc our king was
seated in the chair of torment, while slaves burned him with hot
irons to cause him to declare the hiding place of the treasure of
Montezuma!  Ay, you may well cry "Shame upon him," you shall cry it
yet more loudly before I have done, for know that Guatemoc did not
suffer alone, one lies there who suffered with him and spoke no
word, and I also, your princess, was doomed to torment.  We escaped
when death was at our door, for I told my husband that the people
of the Otomie had true hearts, and would shelter us in our sorrow,
and for his sake I, Otomie, disguised myself in the robe of a
wanton and fled with him hither.  Could I have known what I should
live to see and hear, could I have dreamed that you would receive
us thus, I had died a hundred deaths before I came to stand and
plead for pity at your hands.

'Oh! my people, my people, I beseech of you, make no terms with the
false Teule, but remain bold and free.  Your necks are not fitted
to the yoke of the slave, your sons and daughters are of too high a
blood to serve the foreigner in his needs and pleasures.  Defy
Malinche.  Some of our race are dead, but many thousands remain.
Here in your mountain nest you can beat back every Teule in
Anahuac, as in bygone years the false Tlascalans beat back the
Aztecs.  Then the Tlascalans were free, now they are a race of
serfs.  Say, will you share their serfdom?  My people, my people,
think not that I plead for myself, or even for the husband who is
more dear to me than aught save honour.  Do you indeed dream that
we will suffer you to hand us living to these dogs of Tlascalans,
whom Malinche insults you by sending as his messengers?  Look,' and
she walked to where the spear that had been hurled at her lay upon
the pavement and lifted it, 'here is a means of death that some
friend has sent us, and if you will not listen to my pleading you
shall see it used before your eyes.  Then, if you will, you may
send our bodies to Malinche as a peace offering.  But for your own
sakes I plead with you.  Defy Malinche, and if you must die at
last, die as free men and not as the slaves of the Teule.  Behold
now his tender mercies, and see the lot that shall be yours if you
take another counsel, the counsel of Maxtla;' and coming to the
litter on which I lay, swiftly Otomie rent my robes from me leaving
me almost naked to the waist, and unwound the bandages from my
wounded limb, then lifted me up so that I rested upon my sound
foot.

'Look!' she cried in a piercing voice, and pointing to the scars
and unhealed wounds upon my face and leg; 'look on the work of the
Teule and the Tlascalan, see how the foe is dealt with who
surrenders to them.  Yield if you will, desert us if you will, but
I say that then your own bodies shall be marked in a like fashion,
till not an ounce of gold is left that can minister to the greed of
the Teule, or a man or a maiden who can labour to satisfy his
indolence.'

Then she ceased, and letting me sink gently to the ground, for I
could not stand alone, she stood over me, the spear in her hand, as
though waiting to plunge it to my heart should the people still
demand our surrender to the messengers of Cortes.


For one instant there was silence, then of a sudden the clamour and
the tumult broke out again ten times more furiously than at first.
But it was no longer aimed at us.  Otomie had conquered.  Her noble
words, her beauty, the tale of our sorrows and the sight of my
torments, had done their work, and the heart of the people was
filled with fury against the Teules who had destroyed their army,
and the Tlascalans that had aided them.  Never did the wit and
eloquence of a woman cause a swifter change.  They screamed and
tore their robes and shook their weapons in the air.  Maxtla strove
to speak, but they pulled him down and presently he was flying for
his life.  Then they turned upon the Tlascalan envoys and beat them
with sticks, crying:

'This is our answer to Malinche.  Run, you dogs, and take it!' till
they were driven from the town.

Now at length the turmoil ceased, and some of the great chiefs came
forward and, kissing the hand of Otomie, said:

'Princess, we your children will guard you to the death, for you
have put another heart into us.  You are right; it is better to die
free than to live as slaves.'

'See, my husband,' said Otomie, 'I was not mistaken when I told you
that my people were loyal and true.  But now we must make ready for
war, for they have gone too far to turn back, and when this tidings
comes to the ears of Malinche he will be like a puma robbed of her
young.  Now, let us rest, I am very weary.'

'Otomie,' I answered, 'there has lived no greater woman than you
upon this earth.'

'I cannot tell, husband,' she said, smiling; 'if I have won your
praise and safety, it is enough for me.'



CHAPTER XXXII


THE END OF GUATEMOC


Now for a while we dwelt in quiet at the City of Pines, and by slow
degrees and with much suffering I recovered from the wounds that
the cruel hand of de Garcia had inflicted upon me.  But we knew
that this peace could not last, and the people of the Otomie knew
it also, for had they not scourged the envoys of Malinche out of
the gates of their city?  Many of them were now sorry that this had
been done, but it was done, and they must reap as they had sown.

So they made ready for war, and Otomie was the president of their
councils, in which I shared.  At length came news that a force of
fifty Spaniards with five thousand Tlascalan allies were advancing
on the city to destroy us.  Then I took command of the tribesmen of
the Otomie--there were ten thousand or more of them, all well-armed
after their own fashion--and advanced out of the city till I was
two-thirds of the way down the gorge which leads to it.  But I did
not bring all my army down this gorge, since there was no room for
them to fight there, and I had another plan.  I sent some seven
thousand men round the mountains, of which the secret paths were
well known to them, bidding them climb to the crest of the
precipices that bordered either side of the gorge, and there, at
certain places where the cliff is sheer and more than one thousand
feet in height, to make a great provision of stones.

The rest of my army, excepting five hundred whom I kept with me, I
armed with bows and throwing spears, and stationed them in ambush
in convenient places where the sides of the cliff were broken, and
in such fashion that rocks from above could not be rolled on them.
Then I sent trusty men as spies to warn me of the approach of the
Spaniards, and others whose mission it was to offer themselves to
them as guides.

Now I thought my plan good, and everything looked well, and yet it
missed failure but by a very little.  For Maxtla, our enemy and the
friend of the Spaniards, was in my camp--indeed, I had brought him
with me that I might watch him--and he had not been idle.

For when the Spaniards were half a day's march from the mouth of
the defile, one of those men whom I had told off to watch their
advance, came to me and made it known that Maxtla had bribed him to
go to the leader of the Spaniards and disclose to him the plan of
the ambuscade.  This man had taken the bribe and started on his
errand of treachery, but his heart failed him and, returning, he
told me all.  Then I caused Maxtla to be seized, and before
nightfall he had paid the price of his wickedness.

On the morning after his death the Spanish array entered the pass.
Half-way down it I met them with my five hundred men and engaged
them, but suffered them to drive us back with some loss.  As they
followed they grew bolder and we fled faster, till at length we
flew down the defile followed by the Spanish horse.  Now, some
three furlongs from its mouth that leads to the City of Pines, this
pass turns and narrows, and here the cliffs are so sheer and high
that a twilight reigns at the foot of them.

Down the narrow way we ran in seeming rout, and after us came the
Spaniards shouting on their saints and flushed with victory.  But
scarcely had we turned the corner when they sang another song, for
those who were watching a thousand feet above us gave the signal,
and down from on high came a rain of stones and boulders that
darkened the air and crashed among them, crushing many of them.  On
they struggled, seeing a wider way in front where the cliffs
sloped, and perhaps half of them won through.  But here the archers
were waiting, and now, in the place of stones, arrows were hailed
upon them, till at length, utterly bewildered and unable to strike
a blow in their own defence, they turned to fly towards the open
country.  This finished the fight, for now we assailed their flank,
and once more the rocks thundered on them from above, and the end
of it was that those who remained of the Spaniards and their Indian
allies were driven in utter rout back to the plain beyond the Pass
of Pines.

After this battle the Spaniards troubled us no more for many years
except by threats, and my name grew great among the people of the
Otomie.

One Spaniard I rescued from death and afterwards I gave him his
liberty.  From him I inquired of the doings of de Garcia or
Sarceda, and learned that he was still in the service of Cortes,
but that Marina had been true to her word, and had brought disgrace
upon him because he had threatened to put Otomie to the torture.
Moreover Cortes was angry with him because of our escape, the
burden of which Marina had laid upon his shoulders, hinting that he
had taken a bribe to suffer us to pass the gate.


Of the fourteen years of my life which followed the defeat of the
Spaniards I can speak briefly, for compared to the time that had
gone before they were years of quiet.  In them children were born
to me and Otomie, three sons, and these children were my great joy,
for I loved them dearly and they loved me.  Indeed, except for the
strain of their mother's blood, they were English boys and not
Indian, for I christened them all, and taught them our English
tongue and faith, and their mien and eyes were more English than
Indian, though their skins were dark.  But I had no luck with these
dear children of mine, any more than I have had with that which
Lily bore me.  Two of them died--one from a fever that all my skill
would not avail to cure, and another by a fall from a lofty cedar
tree, which he climbed searching for a kite's nest.  Thus of the
three of them--since I do not speak now of that infant, my
firstborn, who perished in the siege--there remained to me only the
eldest and best beloved of whom I must tell hereafter.

For the rest, jointly with Otomie I was named cacique of the City
of Pines at a great council that was held after I had destroyed the
Spaniards and their allies, and as such we had wide though not
absolute power.  By the exercise of this power, in the end I
succeeded in abolishing the horrible rites of human sacrifice,
though, because of this, a large number of the outlying tribes fell
away from our rule, and the enmity of the priests was excited
against me.  The last sacrifice, except one only, the most terrible
of them all, of which I will tell afterwards, that was ever
celebrated on the teocalli in front of the palace, took place after
the defeat of the Spaniards in the pass.

When I had dwelt three years in the City of Pines and two sons had
been born to me there, secret messengers arrived that were sent by
the friends of Guatemoc, who had survived the torture and was still
a prisoner in the hands of Cortes.  From these messengers we
learned that Cortes was about to start upon an expedition to the
Gulf of Honduras, across the country that is now known as Yucatan,
taking Guatemoc and other Aztec nobles with him for he feared to
leave them behind.  We heard also that there was much murmuring
among the conquered tribes of Anahuac because of the cruelties and
extortions of the Spaniards, and many thought that the hour had
come when a rising against them might be carried to a successful
issue.

This was the prayer of those who sent the envoys, that I should
raise a force of Otomies and travel with it across the country to
Yucatan, and there with others who would be gathered, wait a
favourable opportunity to throw myself upon the Spaniards when they
were entangled in the forests and swamps, putting them to the sword
and releasing Guatemoc.  Such was the first purpose of the plot,
though it had many others of which it is useless to speak, seeing
that they came to nothing.

When the message had been delivered I shook my head sadly, for I
could see no hope in such a scheme, but the chief of the messengers
rose and led me aside, saying that he had a word for my ear.

'Guatemoc sends these words,' he said; 'I hear that you, my
brother, are free and safe with my cousin Otomie in the mountains
of the Otomie.  I, alas! linger in the prisons of the Teules like a
crippled eagle in a cage.  My brother, if it is in your power to
help me, do so I conjure you by the memory of our ancient
friendship, and of all that we have suffered together.  Then a time
may still come when I shall rule again in Anahuac, and you shall
sit at my side.'

I heard and my heart was stirred, for then, as to this hour, I
loved Guatemoc as a brother.

'Go back,' I said, 'and find means to tell Guatemoc that if I can
save him I will, though I have small hopes that way.  Still, let
him look for me in the forests of Yucatan.'

Now when Otomie heard of this promise of mine she was vexed, for
she said that it was foolish and would only end in my losing my
life.  Still, having given it she held with me that it must be
carried out, and the end of it was that I raised five hundred men,
and with them set out upon my long and toilsome march, which I
timed so as to meet Cortes in the passes of Yucatan.  At the last
moment Otomie wished to accompany me, but I forbade it, pointing
out that she could leave neither her children nor her people, and
we parted with bitter grief for the first time.

Of all the hardships that I underwent I will not write.  For two
and a half months we struggled on across mountains and rivers and
through swamps and forests, till at last we reached a mighty
deserted city, that is called Palenque by the Indians of those
parts, which has been uninhabited for many generations.  This city
is the most marvellous place that I have seen in all my travels,
though much of it is hidden in bush, for wherever the traveller
wanders there he finds vast palaces of marble, carven within and
without, and sculptured teocallis and the huge images of grinning
gods.  Often have I wondered what nation was strong enough to build
such a capital, and who were the kings that dwelt in it.  But these
are secrets belonging to the past, and they cannot be answered till
some learned man has found the key to the stone symbols and
writings with which the walls of the buildings are covered over.

In this city I hid with my men, though it was no easy task to
persuade them to take up their habitation among so many ghosts of
the departed, not to speak of the noisome fevers and the wild
beasts and snakes that haunted it, for I had information that the
Spaniards would pass through the swamp that lies between the ruins
and the river, and there I hoped to ambush them.  But on the eighth
day of my hiding I learned from spies that Cortes had crossed the
great river higher up, and was cutting his way through the forest,
for of swamps he had passed more than enough.  So I hurried also to
the river intending to cross it.  But all that day and all that
night it rained as it can rain nowhere else in the world that I
have seen, till at last we waded on our road knee deep in water,
and when we came to the ford of the river it was to find a wide
roaring flood, that no man could pass in anything less frail than a
Yarmouth herring boat.  So there on the bank we must stay in
misery, suffering many ills from fever, lack of food, and plenitude
of water, till at length the stream ran down.

Three days and nights we waited there, and on the fourth morning I
made shift to cross, losing four men by drowning in the passage.
Once over, I hid my force in the bush and reeds, and crept forward
with six men only, to see if I could discover anything of the
whereabouts of the Spaniards.  Within an hour I struck the trail
that they had cut through the forest, and followed it cautiously.
Presently we came to a spot where the forest was thin, and here
Cortes had camped, for there was heat left in the ashes of his
fires, and among them lay the body of an Indian who had died from
sickness.  Not fifty yards from this camp stood a huge ceiba, a
tree that has a habit of growth not unlike that of our English oak,
though it is soft wooded and white barked, and will increase more
in bulk in twenty years than any oak may in a hundred.  Indeed I
never yet saw an oak tree so large as this ceiba of which I write,
either in girth or in its spread of top, unless it be the Kirby oak
or the tree that is called the 'King of Scoto' which grows at
Broome, that is the next parish to this of Ditchingham in Norfolk.
On this ceiba tree many zaphilotes or vultures were perched, and as
we crept towards it I saw what it was they came to seek, for from
the lowest branches of the ceiba three corpses swung in the breeze.
'Here are the Spaniard's footprints,' I said.  'Let us look at
them,' and we passed beneath the shadow of the tree.

As I came, a zaphilote alighted on the head of the body that hung
nearest to me, and its weight, or the wafting of the fowl's wing,
caused the dead man to turn round so that he came face to face with
me.  I looked, started back, then looked again and sank to the
earth groaning.  For here was he whom I had come to seek and save,
my friend, my brother, Guatemoc the last emperor of Anahuac.  Here
he hung in the dim and desolate forest, dead by the death of a
thief, while the vulture shrieked upon his head.  I sat bewildered
and horror-stricken, and as I sat I remembered the proud sign of
Aztec royalty, a bird of prey clasping an adder in its claw.  There
before me was the last of the stock, and behold! a bird of prey
gripped his hair in its talons, a fitting emblem indeed of the fall
of Anahuac and the kings of Anahuac.

I sprang to my feet with an oath, and lifting the bow I held I sent
an arrow through the vulture and it fell to the earth fluttering
and screaming.  Then I bade those with me to cut down the corpses
of Guatemoc and of the prince of Tacuba and another noble who hung
with him, and hollow a deep grave beneath the tree.  There I laid
them, and there I left them to sleep for ever in its melancholy
shadow, and thus for the last time I saw Guatemoc my brother, whom
I came from far to save and found made ready for burial by the
Spaniard.

Then I turned my face homewards, for now Anahuac had no king to
rescue, but it chanced that before I went I caught a Tlascalan who
could speak Spanish, and who had deserted from the army of Cortes
because of the hardships that he suffered in their toilsome march.
This man was present at the murder of Guatemoc and his companions,
and heard the Emperor's last words.  It seems that some knave had
betrayed to Cortes that an attempt would be made to rescue the
prince, and that thereon Cortes commanded that he should be hung.
It seems also that Guatemoc met his death as he had met the
misfortunes of his life, proudly and without fear.  These were his
last words: 'I did ill, Malinche, when I held my hand from taking
my own life before I surrendered myself to you.  Then my heart told
me that all your promises were false, and it has not lied to me.  I
welcome my death, for I have lived to know shame and defeat and
torture, and to see my people the slaves of the Teule, but still I
say that God will reward you for this deed.'

Then they murdered him in the midst of a great silence.


And so farewell to Guatemoc, the most brave, the best and the
noblest Indian that ever breathed, and may the shadow of his
tormentings and shameful end lie deep upon the fame of Cortes for
so long as the names of both of them are remembered among men!


For two more months I journeyed homeward and at length I reached
the City of Pines, well though wearied, and having lost only forty
men by various misadventures of travel, to find Otomie in good
health, and overjoyed to know me safe whom she thought never to see
again.  But when I told her what was the end of her cousin Guatemoc
she grieved bitterly, both for his sake and because the last hope
of the Aztec was gone, and she would not be comforted for many
days.



CHAPTER XXXIII

ISABELLA DE SIGUENZA IS AVENGED


For many years after the death of Guatemoc I lived with Otomie at
peace in the City of Pines.  Our country was poor and rugged, and
though we defied the Spaniards and paid them no tribute, now that
Cortes had gone back to Spain, they had no heart to attempt our
conquest.  Save some few tribes that lived in difficult places like
ourselves, all Anahuac was in their power, and there was little to
gain except hard blows in the bringing of a remnant of the people
of the Otomie beneath their yoke, so they let us be till a more
convenient season.  I say of a remnant of the Otomie, for as time
went on many clans submitted to the Spaniards, till at length we
ruled over the City of Pines alone and some leagues of territory
about it.  Indeed it was only love for Otomie and respect for the
shadow of her ancient race and name, together with some reverence
for me as one of the unconquerable white men, and for my skill as a
general, that kept our following together.

And now it may be asked was I happy in those years?  I had much to
make me happy--no man could have been blessed with a wife more
beautiful and loving, nor one who had exampled her affection by
more signal deeds of sacrifice.  This woman of her own free will
had lain by my side on the stone of slaughter; overriding the
instincts of her sex she had not shrunk from dipping her hands in
blood to secure my safety, her wit had rescued me in many a
trouble, her love had consoled me in many a sorrow: surely
therefore if gratitude can conquer the heart of man, mine should
have been at her feet for ever and a day, and so indeed it was, and
in a sense is still.  But can gratitude, can love itself, or any
passion that rules our souls, make a man forget the house where he
was born?  Could I, an Indian chief struggling with a fallen people
against an inevitable destiny, forget my youth and all its hopes
and fears, could I forget the valley of the Waveney and that Flower
who dwelt therein, and forsworn though I might be, could I forget
the oath that I once had sworn?  Chance had been against me,
circumstances overpowered me, and I think that there are few who,
could they read this story, would not find in it excuse for all
that I had done.  Certainly there are very few who, standing where
I stood, surrounded as I was by doubts, difficulties, and dangers,
would not have acted as I did.

And yet memory would rise up against me, and time upon time I would
lie awake at night, even by the side of Otomie, and remember and
repent, if a man may repent of that over which he has no control.
For I was a stranger in a strange land, and though my home was
there and my children were about me, the longing for my other home
was yet with me, and I could not put away the memory of that Lily
whom I had lost.  Her ring was still upon my hand, but nothing else
of her remained to me.  I did not know if she were married or
single, living or dead.  The gulf between us widened with the
widening years, but still the thought of her went with me like my
shadow; it shone across the stormy love of Otomie, I remembered it
even in my children's kiss.  And worst of all I despised myself for
these regrets.  Nay, if the worst can have a worse, there was one
here, for though she never spoke of it, I feared that Otomie had
read my mind.


     Heart to heart,
     Though far apart,


so ran the writing upon Lily's betrothal ring, and so it was with
me.  Far apart we were indeed, so far that no bridge that I might
imagine could join that distance, and yet I could not say that we
had ceased from being 'heart to heart.'  Her heart might throb no
more, but mine beat still toward it.  Across the land, across the
sea, across the gulf of death--if she were dead--still in secret
must I desire the love that I had forsworn.

And so the years rolled on, bringing little of change with them,
till I grew sure that here in this far place I should live and die.
But that was not to be my fate.


If any should read this, the story of my early life, he will
remember that the tale of the death of a certain Isabella de
Siguenza is pieced into its motley.  He will remember how this
Isabella, in the last moments of her life, called down a curse upon
that holy father who added outrage and insult to her torment,
praying that he might also die by the hands of fanatics and in a
worse fashion.  If my memory does not play me false, I have said
that this indeed came to pass, and very strangely.  For after the
conquest of Anahuac by Cortes, among others this same fiery priest
came from Spain to turn the Indians to the love of God by torment
and by sword.  Indeed, of all of those who entered on this mission
of peace, he was the most zealous.  The Indian pabas wrought
cruelties enough when, tearing out the victim's heart, they offered
it like incense to Huitzel or to Quetzal, but they at least
dismissed his soul to the Mansions of the Sun.  With the Christian
priests the thumb-screw and the stake took the place of the stone
of sacrifice, but the soul which they delivered from its earthly
bondage they consigned to the House of Hell.

Of these priests a certain Father Pedro was the boldest and the
most cruel.  To and fro he passed, marking his path with the
corpses of idolaters, until he earned the name of the 'Christian
Devil.'  At length he ventured too far in his holy fervour, and was
seized by a clan of the Otomie that had broken from our rule upon
this very question of human sacrifice, but which was not yet
subjugated by the Spaniards.  One day, it was when we had ruled for
some fourteen years in the City of Pines, it came to my knowledge
that the pabas of this clan had captured a Christian priest, and
designed to offer him to the god Tezcat.

Attended by a small guard only, I passed rapidly across the
mountains, purposing to visit the cacique of this clan with whom,
although he had cast off his allegiance to us, I still kept up a
show of friendship, and if I could, to persuade him to release the
priest.  But swiftly as I travelled the vengeance of the pabas had
been more swift, and I arrived at the village only to find the
'Christian Devil' in the act of being led to sacrifice before the
image of a hideous idol that was set upon a stake and surrounded
with piles of skulls.  Naked to the waist, his hands bound behind
him, his grizzled locks hanging about his breast, his keen eyes
fixed upon the faces of his heathen foes in menace rather than in
supplication his thin lips muttering prayers, Father Pedro passed
on to the place of his doom, now and again shaking his head
fiercely to free himself from the torment of the insects which
buzzed about it.

I looked upon him and wondered.  I looked again and knew.  Suddenly
there rose before my mind a vision of that gloomy vault in Seville,
of a woman, young and lovely, draped in cerements, and of a thin-
faced black-robed friar who smote her upon the lips with his ivory
crucifix and cursed her for a blaspheming heretic.  There before me
was the man.  Isabella de Siguenza had prayed that a fate like to
her own fate should befall him, and it was upon him now.  Nor
indeed, remembering all that had been, was I minded to avert it,
even if it had been in my power to do so.  I stood by and let the
victim pass, but as he passed I spoke to him in Spanish, saying:

'Remember that which it may well be you have forgotten, holy
father, remember now the dying prayer of Isabella de Siguenza whom
many years ago you did to death in Seville.'

The man heard me; he turned livid beneath his bronzed skin and
staggered until I thought that he would have fallen.  He stared
upon me, with terror in his eye, to see as he believed a common
sight enough, that of an Indian chief rejoicing at the death of one
of his oppressors.

'What devil are you,' he said hoarsely, 'sent from hell to torment
me at the last?'

'Remember the dying prayer of Isabella de Siguenza, whom you struck
and cursed,' I answered mocking.  'Seek not to know whence I am,
but remember this only, now and for ever.'

For a moment he stood still, heedless of the urgings of his
tormentors.  Then his courage came to him again, and he cried with
a great voice: 'Get thee behind me, Satan, what have I to fear from
thee?  I remember that dead sinner well--may her soul have peace--
and her curse has fallen upon me.  I rejoice that it should be so,
for on the further side of yonder stone the gates of heaven open to
my sight.  Get thee behind me, Satan, what have I to fear from
thee?'

Crying thus he staggered forward saying, 'O God, into Thy hand I
commend my spirit!'  May his soul have peace also, for if he was
cruel, at least he was brave, and did not shrink beneath those
torments which he had inflicted on many others.


Now this was a little matter, but its results were large.  Had I
saved Father Pedro from the hands of the pabas of the Otomie, it is
likely enough that I should not to-day be writing this history here
in the valley of the Waveney.  I do not know if I could have saved
him, I only know that I did not try, and that because of his death
great sorrows came upon me.  Whether I was right or wrong, who can
say?  Those who judge my story may think that in this as in other
matters I was wrong; had they seen Isabella de Siguenza die within
her living tomb, certainly they would hold that I was right.  But
for good or ill, matters came about as I have written.

And it came about also, that the new viceroy sent from Spain was
stirred to anger at the murder of the friar by the rebellious and
heathen people of the Otomie, and set himself to take vengeance on
the tribe that wrought the deed.

Soon tidings reached me that a great force of Tlascalan and other
Indians were being collected to put an end to us, root and branch,
and that with them marched more than a hundred Spaniards, the
expedition being under the command of none other than the Captain
Bernal Diaz, that same soldier whom I had spared in the slaughter
of the noche triste, and whose sword to this day hung at my side.

Now we must needs prepare our defence, for our only hope lay in
boldness.  Once before the Spaniards had attacked us with thousands
of their allies, and of their number but few had lived to look
again on the camp of Cortes.  What had been done could be done a
second time--so said Otomie in the pride of her unconquerable
heart.  But alas! in fourteen years things had changed much with
us.  Fourteen years ago we held sway over a great district of
mountains, whose rude clans would send up their warriors in
hundreds at our call.  Now these clans had broken from our yoke,
which was acknowledged by the people of the City of Pines alone and
those of some adjacent villages.  When the Spaniards came down on
me the first time, I was able to muster an army of ten thousand
soldiers to oppose them, now with much toil I could collect no more
than between two and three thousand men, and of these some slipped
away as the hour of danger drew nigh.

Still I must put a bold face on my necessities, and make what play
I might with such forces as lay at my command, although in my heart
I feared much for the issue.  But of my fears I said nothing to
Otomie, and if she felt any she, on her part, buried them in her
breast.  In truth I do believe her faith in me was so great, that
she thought my single wit enough to over-match all the armies of
the Spaniards.

Now at length the enemy drew near, and I set my battle as I had
done fourteen years before, advancing down the pass by which alone
they could approach us with a small portion of my force, and
stationing the remainder in two equal companies upon either brow of
the beetling cliffs that overhung the road, having command to
overwhelm the Spaniards with rocks, hurled upon them from above, so
soon as I should give the signal by flying before them down the
pass.  Other measures I took also, for seeing that do what I would
it well might happen that we should be driven back upon the city, I
caused its walls and gates to be set in order, and garrisoned them.
As a last resource too, I stored the lofty summit of the teocalli,
which now that sacrifices were no longer offered there was used as
an arsenal for the material of war, with water and provisions, and
fortified its sides by walls studded with volcanic glass and by
other devices, till it seemed well nigh impossible that any should
be able to force them while a score of men still lived to offer a
defence.

It was on one night in the early summer, having bid farewell to
Otomie and taking my son with me, for he was now of an age when,
according to the Indian customs, lads are brought face to face with
the dangers of battle, that I despatched the appointed companies to
their stations on the brow of the precipice, and sallied into the
darksome mouth of the pass with the few hundred men who were left
to me.  I knew by my spies that the Spaniards who were encamped on
the further side would attempt its passage an hour before the
daylight, trusting to finding me asleep.  And sure enough, on the
following morning, so early that the first rays of the sun had not
yet stained the lofty snows of the volcan Xaca that towered behind
us, a distant murmuring which echoed through the silence of the
night told me that the enemy had begun his march.  I moved down the
pass to meet him easily enough; there was no stone in it that was
not known to me and my men.  But with the Spaniards it was
otherwise, for many of them were mounted, and moreover they dragged
with them two carronades.  Time upon time these heavy guns remained
fast in the boulder-strewn roadway, for in the darkness the slaves
who drew them could find no places for the wheels to run on, till
in the end the captains of the army, unwilling to risk a fight at
so great a disadvantage, ordered them to halt until the day broke.

At length the dawn came, and the light fell dimly down the depths
of the vast gulf, revealing the long ranks of the Spaniards clad in
their bright armour, and the yet more brilliant thousands of their
native allies, gorgeous in their painted helms and their glittering
coats of feathers.  They saw us also, and mocking at our poor
array, their column twisted forward like some huge snake in the
crack of a rock, till they came to within a hundred paces of us.
Then the Spaniards raised their battle cry of Saint Peter, and
lance at rest, they charged us with their horse.  We met them with
a rain of arrows that checked them a little, but not for long.
Soon they were among us, driving us back at the point of their
lances, and slaying many, for our Indian weapons could work little
harm to men and horses clad in armour.  Therefore we must fly, and
indeed, flight was my plan, for by it I hoped to lead the foe to
that part of the defile where the road was narrow and the cliffs
sheer, and they might be crushed by the stones which should hail on
them from above.  All went well; we fled, the Spaniards followed
flushed with victory, till they were fairly in the trap.  Now a
single boulder came rushing from on high, and falling on a horse,
killed him, then rebounding, carried dismay and wounds to those
behind.  Another followed, and yet another, and I grew glad at
heart, for it seemed to me that the danger was over, and that for
the second time my strategy had succeeded.

But suddenly from above there came a sound other than that of the
rushing rocks, the sound of men joining in battle, that grew and
grew till the air was full of its tumult, then something whirled
down from on high.  I looked; it was no stone, but a man, one of my
own men.  Indeed he was but as the first rain-drop of a shower.

Alas! I saw the truth; I had been outwitted.  The Spaniards, old in
war, could not be caught twice by such a trick; they advanced down
the pass with the carronades indeed because they must, but first
they sent great bodies of men to climb the mountain under shelter
of the night, by secret paths which had been discovered to them,
and there on its summit to deal with those who would stay their
passage by hurling rocks upon them.  And in truth they dealt with
them but too well, for my men of the Otomie, lying on the verge of
the cliff among the scrub of aloes and other prickly plants that
grew there, watching the advance of the foe beneath, and never for
one moment dreaming that foes might be upon their flank, were
utterly surprised.  Scarcely had they time to seize their weapons,
which were laid at their sides that they might have the greater
freedom in the rolling of heavy masses of rock, when the enemy, who
outnumbered them by far, were upon them with a yell.  Then came a
fight, short but decisive.

Too late I saw it all, and cursed the folly that had not provided
against such chances, for, indeed, I never thought it possible that
the forces of the Spaniards could find the secret trails upon the
further side of the mountain, forgetting that treason makes most
things possible.



CHAPTER XXXIV

THE SIEGE OF THE CITY OF PINES


The battle was already lost.  From a thousand feet above us swelled
the shouts of victory.  The battle was lost, and yet I must fight
on.  As swiftly as I could I withdrew those who were left to me to
a certain angle in the path, where a score of desperate men might,
for a while, hold back the advance of an army.  Here I called for
some to stand at my side, and many answered to my call.  Out of
them I chose fifty men or more, bidding the rest run hard for the
City of Pines, there to warn those who were left in garrison that
the hour of danger was upon them, and, should I fall, to conjure
Otomie my wife to make the best resistance in her power, till, if
it were possible, she could wring from the Spaniards a promise of
safety for herself, her child, and her people.  Meanwhile I would
hold the pass so that time might be given to shut the gates and man
the walls.  With the main body of those who were left to me I sent
back my son, though he prayed hard to be allowed to stay with me.
But, seeing nothing before me except death, I refused him.

Presently all were gone, and fearing a snare the Spaniards came
slowly and cautiously round the angle of the rock, and seeing so
few men mustered to meet them halted, for now they were certain
that we had set a trap for them, since they did not think it
possible that such a little band would venture to oppose their
array.  Here the ground lay so that only a few of them could come
against us at one time, nor could they bring their heavy pieces to
bear on us, and even their arquebusses helped them but little.
Also the roughness of the road forced them to dismount from their
horses, so that if they would attack at all, it must be on foot.
This in the end they chose to do.  Many fell upon either side,
though I myself received no wound, but in the end they drove us
back.  Inch by inch they drove us back, or rather those who were
left of us, at the point of their long lances, till at length they
forced us into the mouth of the pass, that is some five furlongs
distant from what was once the wall of the City of Pines.

To fight further was of no avail, here we must choose between death
and flight, and as may be guessed, for wives' and children's sake
if not for our own, we chose to fly.  Across the plain we fled like
deer, and after us came the Spaniards and their allies like hounds.
Happily the ground was rough with stones so that their horses could
not gallop freely, and thus it happened that some of us, perhaps
twenty, gained the gates in safety.  Of my army not more than five
hundred in all lived to enter them again, and perchance there were
as many left within the city.

The heavy gates swung to, and scarcely were they barred with the
massive beams of oak, when the foremost of the Spaniards rode up to
them.  My bow was still in my hand and there was one arrow left in
my quiver.  I set it on the string, and drawing the bow with my
full strength, I loosed the shaft through the bars of the gate at a
young and gallant looking cavalier who rode the first of all.  It
struck him truly between the joint of his helm and neck piece, and
stretching his arms out wide he fell backward over the crupper of
his horse, to move no more.  Then they withdrew, but presently one
of their number came forward bearing a flag of truce.  He was a
knightly looking man, clad in rich armour, and watching him, it
seemed to me that there was something in his bearing, and in the
careless grace with which he sat his horse, that was familiar to
me.  Reining up in front of the gates he raised his visor and began
to speak.

I knew him at once; before me was de Garcia, my ancient enemy, of
whom I had neither heard nor seen anything for hard upon twelve
years.  Time had touched him indeed, which was scarcely to be
wondered at, for now he was a man of sixty or more.  His peaked
chestnut-coloured beard was streaked with grey, his cheeks were
hollow, and at that distance his lips seemed like two thin red
lines, but the eyes were as they had always been, bright and
piercing, and the same cold smile played about his mouth.  Without
a doubt it was de Garcia, who now, as at every crisis of my life,
appeared to shape my fortunes to some evil end, and I felt as I
looked upon him that the last and greatest struggle between us was
at hand, and that before many days were sped, the ancient and
accumulated hate of one or of both of us would be buried for ever
in the silence of death.  How ill had fate dealt with me, now as
always.  But a few minutes before, when I set that arrow on the
string, I had wavered for a moment, doubting whether to loose it at
the young cavalier who lay dead, or at the knight who rode next to
him; and see! I had slain one with whom I had no quarrel and left
my enemy unharmed.

'Ho there!' cried de Garcia in Spanish.  'I desire to speak with
the leader of the rebel Otomie on behalf of the Captain Bernal
Diaz, who commands this army.'

Now I mounted on the wall by means of a ladder which was at hand,
and answered, 'Speak on, I am the man you seek.'

'You know Spanish well, friend,' said de Garcia, starting and
looking at me keenly beneath his bent brows.  'Say now, where did
you learn it?  And what is your name and lineage?'

'I learned it, Juan de Garcia, from a certain Donna Luisa, whom you
knew in your days of youth.  And my name is Thomas Wingfield.'

Now de Garcia reeled in his saddle and swore a great oath.

'Mother of God!' he said, 'years ago I was told that you had taken
up your abode among some savage tribe, but since then I have been
far, to Spain and back indeed, and I deemed that you were dead,
Thomas Wingfield.  My luck is good in truth, for it has been one of
the great sorrows of my life that you have so often escaped me,
renegade.  Be sure that this time there shall be no escape.

'I know well that there will be no escape for one or other of us,
Juan de Garcia,' I answered.  'Now we play the last round of the
game, but do not boast, for God alone knows to whom the victory
shall be given.  You have prospered long, but a day may be at hand
when your prosperity shall cease with your breath.  To your errand,
Juan de Garcia.'

For a moment he sat silent, pulling at his pointed beard, and
watching him I thought that I could see the shadow of a half-
forgotten fear creep into his eyes.  If so, it was soon gone, for
lifting his head, he spoke boldly and clearly.

'This is my message to you, Thomas Wingfield, and to such of the
Otomie dogs with whom you herd as we have left alive to-day.  The
Captain Bernal Diaz offers you terms on behalf of his Excellency
the viceroy.'

'What are his terms?' I asked.

'Merciful enough to such pestilent rebels and heathens,' he
answered sneering.  'Surrender your city without condition, and the
viceroy, in his clemency, will accept the surrender.  Nevertheless,
lest you should say afterwards that faith has been broken with you,
be it known to you, that you shall not go unpunished for your many
crimes.  This is the punishment that shall be inflicted on you.
All those who had part or parcel in the devilish murder of that
holy saint Father Pedro, shall be burned at the stake, and the eyes
of all those who beheld it shall be put out.  Such of the leaders
of the Otomie as the judges may select shall be hanged publicly,
among them yourself, Cousin Wingfield, and more particularly the
woman Otomie, daughter of Montezuma the late king.  For the rest,
the dwellers in the City of Pines must surrender their wealth into
the treasury of the viceroy, and they themselves, men, women and
children, shall be led from the city and be distributed according
to the viceroy's pleasure upon the estates of such of the Spanish
settlers as he may select, there to learn the useful arts of
husbandry and mining.  These are the conditions of surrender, and I
am commanded to say that an hour is given you in which to decide
whether you accept or reject them.'

'And if we reject them?'

'Then the Captain Bernal Diaz has orders to sack and destroy this
city, and having given it over for twelve hours to the mercy of the
Tlascalans and other faithful Indian allies, to collect those who
may be left living within it, and bring them to the city of Mexico,
there to be sold as slaves.'

'Good,' I said; 'you shall have your answer in an hour.'  Now,
leaving the gate guarded, I hurried to the palace, sending
messengers as I went to summon such of the council of the city as
remained alive.  At the door of the palace I met Otomie, who
greeted me fondly, for after hearing of our disaster she had hardly
looked to see me again.

'Come with me to the Hall of Assembly,' I said; 'there I will speak
to you.'

We went to the hall, where the members of the council were already
gathering.  So soon as the most of them were assembled, there were
but eight in all, I repeated to them the words of de Garcia without
comment.  Then Otomie spoke, as being the first in rank she had a
right to do.  Twice before I had heard her address the people of
the Otomie upon these questions of defence against the Spaniards.
The first time, it may be remembered, was when we came as envoys
from Cuitlahua, Montezuma her father's successor, to pray the aid
of the children of the mountain against Cortes and the Teules.  The
second time was when, some fourteen years ago, we had returned to
the City of Pines as fugitives after the fall of Tenoctitlan, and
the populace, moved to fury by the destruction of nearly twenty
thousand of their soldiers, would have delivered us as a peace
offering into the hands of the Spaniards.

On each of these occasions Otomie had triumphed by her eloquence,
by the greatness of her name and the majesty of her presence.  Now
things were far otherwise, and even had she not scorned to use
them, such arts would have availed us nothing in this extremity.
Now her great name was but a shadow, one of many waning shadows
cast by an empire whose glory had gone for ever; now she used no
passionate appeal to the pride and traditions of a doomed race, now
she was no longer young and the first splendour of her womanhood
had departed from her.  And yet, as with her son and mine at her
side, she rose to address those seven councillors, who, haggard
with fear and hopeless in the grasp of fate, crouched in silence
before her, their faces buried in their hands, I thought that
Otomie had never seemed more beautiful, and that her words, simple
as they were, had never been more eloquent.

'Friends,' she said, 'you know the disaster that has overtaken us.
My husband has given you the message of the Teules.  Our case is
desperate.  We have but a thousand men at most to defend this city,
the home of our forefathers, and we alone of all the peoples of
Anahuac still dare to stand in arms against the white men.  Years
ago I said to you, Choose between death with honour and life with
shame!  To-day again I say to you, Choose!  For me and mine there
is no choice left, since whatever you decide, death must be our
portion.  But with you it is otherwise.  Will you die fighting, or
will you and your children serve your remaining years as slaves?'

For a while the seven consulted together, then their spokesman
answered.

'Otomie, and you, Teule, we have followed your counsels for many
years and they have brought us but little luck.  We do not blame
you, for the gods of Anahuac have deserted us as we have deserted
them, and the gods alone stand between men and their evil destiny.
Whatever misfortunes we may have borne, you have shared in them,
and so it is now at the end.  Nor will we go back upon our words in
this the last hour of the people of the Otomie.  We have chosen; we
have lived free with you, and still free, we will die with you.
For like you we hold that it is better for us and ours to perish as
free men than to drag out our days beneath the yoke of the Teule.'

'It is well,' said Otomie; 'now nothing remains for us except to
seek a death so glorious that it shall be sung of in after days.
Husband, you have heard the answer of the council.  Let the
Spaniards hear it also.'

So I went back to the wall, a white flag in my hand, and presently
an envoy advanced from the Spanish camp to speak with me--not de
Garcia, but another.  I told him in few words that those who
remained alive of the people of the Otomie would die beneath the
ruins of their city like the children of Tenoctitlan before them,
but that while they had a spear to throw and an arm to throw it,
they would never yield to the tender mercies of the Spaniard.


The envoy returned to the camp, and within an hour the attack
began.  Bringing up their pieces of ordnance, the Spaniards set
them within little more than an hundred paces of the gates, and
began to batter us with iron shot at their leisure, for our spears
and arrows could scarcely harm them at such a distance.  Still we
were not idle, for seeing that the wooden gates must soon be down,
we demolished houses on either side of them and filled up the
roadway with stones and rubbish.  At the rear of the heap thus
formed I caused a great trench to be dug, which could not be passed
by horsemen and ordnance till it was filled in again.  All along
the main street leading to the great square of the teocalli I threw
up other barricades, protected in the front and rear by dykes cut
through the roadway, and in case the Spaniards should try to turn
our flank and force a passage through the narrow and tortuous lanes
to the right and left, I also barricaded the four entrances to the
great square or market place.

Till nightfall the Spaniards bombarded the shattered remains of the
gates and the earthworks behind them, doing no great damage beyond
the killing of about a score of people by cannon shot and arquebuss
balls.  But they attempted no assault that day.  At length the
darkness fell and their fire ceased, but not so our labours.  Most
of the men must guard the gates and the weak spots in the walls,
and therefore the building of the barricades was left chiefly to
the women, working under my command and that of my captains.
Otomie herself took a share in the toil, an example that was
followed by every lady and indeed by every woman in the city, and
there were many of them, for the women outnumbered the men among
the Otomie, and moreover not a few of them had been made widows on
that same day.

It was a strange sight to see them in the glare of hundreds of
torches split from the resin pine that gave its name to the city,
as all night long they moved to and fro in lines, each of them
staggering beneath the weight of a basket of earth or a heavy
stone, or dug with wooden spades at the hard soil, or laboured at
the pulling down of houses.  They never complained, but worked on
sullenly and despairingly; no groan or tear broke from them, no,
not even from those whose husbands and sons had been hurled that
morning from the precipices of the pass.  They knew that resistance
would be useless and that their doom was at hand, but no cry arose
among them of surrender to the Spaniards.  Those of them who spoke
of the matter at all said with Otomie, that it was better to die
free than to live as slaves, but the most did not speak; the old
and the young, mother, wife, widow, and maid, they laboured in
silence and the children laboured at their sides.

Looking at them it came into my mind that these silent patient
women were inspired by some common and desperate purpose, that all
knew of, but which none of them chose to tell.

'Will you work so hard for your masters the Teules?' cried a man in
bitter mockery, as a file of them toiled past beneath their loads
of stone.

'Fool!' answered their leader, a young and lovely lady of rank; 'do
the dead labour?'

'Nay,' said this ill jester, 'but such as you are too fair for the
Teules to kill, and your years of slavery will be many.  Say, how
shall you escape them?'

'Fool!' answered the lady again, 'does fire die from lack of fuel
only, and must every man live till age takes him?  We shall escape
them thus,' and casting down the torch she carried, she trod it
into the earth with her sandal, and went on with her load.  Then I
was sure that they had some purpose, though I did not guess how
desperate it was, and Otomie would tell me nothing of this woman's
secret.

'Otomie,' I said to her that night, when we met by chance, 'I have
ill news for you.'

'It must be bad indeed, husband, to be so named in such an hour,'
she answered.

'De Garcia is among our foes.'

'I knew it, husband.'

'How did you know it?'

'By the hate written in your eyes,' she answered.

'It seems that his hour of triumph is at hand,' I said.

'Nay, beloved, not HIS but YOURS.  You shall triumph over de
Garcia, but victory will cost you dear.  I know it in my heart; ask
me not how or why.  See, the Queen puts on her crown,' and she
pointed to the volcan Xaca, whose snows grew rosy with the dawn,
'and you must go to the gate, for the Spaniards will soon be
stirring.'

As Otomie spoke I heard a trumpet blare without the walls.
Hurrying to the gates by the first light of day, I could see that
the Spaniards were mustering their forces for attack.  They did not
come at once, however, but delayed till the sun was well up.  Then
they began to pour a furious fire upon our defences, that reduced
the shattered beams of the gates to powder, and even shook down the
crest of the earthwork beyond them.  Suddenly the firing ceased and
again a trumpet called.  Now they charged us in column, a thousand
or more Tlascalans leading the van, followed by the Spanish force.
In two minutes I, who awaited them beyond it together with some
three hundred warriors of the Otomie, saw their heads appear over
the crest of the earthwork, and the fight began.  Thrice we drove
them back with our spears and arrows, but at the fourth charge the
wave of men swept over our defence, and poured into the dry ditch
beyond.

Now we were forced to fly to the next earthwork, for we could not
hope to fight so many in the open street, whither, so soon as a
passage had been made for their horse and ordnance, the enemy
followed us.  Here the fight was renewed, and this barricade being
very strong, we held it for hard upon two hours with much loss to
ourselves and to the Spanish force.  Again we retreated and again
we were assailed, and so the struggle went on throughout the live-
long day.  Every hour our numbers grew fewer and our arms fainter,
but still we fought on desperately.  At the two last barricades,
hundreds of the women of the Otomie fought by the sides of their
husbands and their brothers.

The last earthwork was captured by the Spaniards just as the sun
sank, and under the shadow of approaching darkness those of us that
remained alive fled to the refuge which we had prepared upon the
teocalli, nor was there any further fighting during that night.



CHAPTER XXXV

THE LAST SACRIFICE OF THE WOMEN OF THE OTOMIE


Here in the courtyard of the teocalli, by the light of burning
houses, for as they advanced the Spaniards fired the town, we
mustered our array to find that there were left to us in all some
four hundred fighting men, together with a crowd of nearly two
thousand women and many children.  Now although this teocalli was
not quite so lofty as that of the great temple of Mexico, its sides
were steeper and everywhere faced with dressed stone, and the open
space upon its summit was almost as great, measuring indeed more
than a hundred paces every way.  This area was paved with blocks of
marble, and in its centre stood the temple of the war-god, where
his statue still sat, although no worship had been offered to him
for many years; the stone of sacrifice, the altar of fire, and the
storehouses of the priests.  Moreover in front of the temple, and
between it and the stone of sacrifice, was a deep cemented hole the
size of a large room, which once had been used as a place for the
safe keeping of grain in times of famine.  This pit I had caused to
be filled with water borne with great toil to the top of the
pyramid, and in the temple itself I stored a great quantity of
food, so that we had no cause to fear present death from thirst or
famine.

But now we were face to face with a new trouble.  Large as was the
summit of the pyramid, it would not give shelter to a half of our
numbers, and if we desired to defend it some of the multitude
herded round its base must seek refuge elsewhere.  Calling the
leaders of the people together, I put the matter before them in few
words, leaving them to decide what must be done.  They in turn
consulted among themselves, and at length gave me this answer: that
it was agreed that all the wounded and aged there, together with
most of the children, and with them any others who wished to go,
should leave the teocalli that night, to find their way out of the
city if they could, or if not, to trust to the mercy of the
Spaniards.

I said that it was well, for death was on every side, and it
mattered little which way men turned to meet it.  So they were
sorted out, fifteen hundred or more of them, and at midnight the
gates of the courtyard were thrown open, and they left.  Oh! it was
dreadful to see the farewells that took place in that hour.  Here a
daughter clung to the neck of her aged father, here husbands and
wives bade each other a last farewell, here mothers kissed their
little children, and on every side rose up the sounds of bitter
agony, the agony of those who parted for ever.  I buried my face in
my hands, wondering as I had often wondered before, how a God whose
name is Mercy can bear to look upon sights that break the hearts of
sinful men to witness.

Presently I raised my eyes and spoke to Otomie, who was at my side,
asking her if she would not send our son away with the others,
passing him off as the child of common people.

'Nay, husband,' she answered, 'it is better for him to die with us,
than to live as a slave of the Spaniards.'

At length it was over and the gates had shut behind the last of
them.  Soon we heard the distant challenge of the Spanish sentries
as they perceived them, and the sounds of some shots followed by
cries.

'Doubtless the Tlascalans are massacring them,' I said.  But it was
not so.  When a few had been killed the leaders of the Spaniards
found that they waged war upon an unarmed mob, made up for the most
part of aged people, women and children, and their commander,
Bernal Diaz, a merciful man if a rough one, ordered that the
onslaught should cease.  Indeed he did more, for when all the able-
bodied men, together with such children as were sufficiently strong
to bear the fatigues of travel, had been sorted out to be sold as
slaves, he suffered the rest of that melancholy company to depart
whither they would.  And so they went, though what became of them I
do not know.

That night we spent in the courtyard of the teocalli, but before it
was light I caused the women and children who remained with us,
perhaps some six hundred in all, for very few of the former who
were unmarried, or who being married were still young and comely,
had chosen to desert our refuge, to ascend the pyramid, guessing
that the Spaniards would attack us at dawn.  I stayed, however,
with the three hundred fighting men that were left to me, a hundred
or more having thrown themselves upon the mercy of the Spaniards,
with the refugees, to await the Spanish onset under shelter of the
walls of the courtyard.  At dawn it began, and by midday, do what
we could to stay it, the wall was stormed, and leaving nearly a
hundred dead and wounded behind me, I was driven to the winding way
that led to the summit of the pyramid.  Here they assaulted us
again, but the road was steep and narrow, and their numbers gave
them no great advantage on it, so that the end of it was that we
beat them back with loss, and there was no more fighting that day.

The night which followed we spent upon the summit of the pyramid,
and for my part I was so weary that after I had eaten I never slept
more soundly.  Next morning the struggle began anew; and this time
with better success to the Spaniards.  Inch by inch under cover of
the heavy fire from their arquebusses and pieces, they forced us
upward and backward.  All day long the fight continued upon the
narrow road that wound from stage to stage of the pyramid.  At
length, as the sun sank, a company of our foes, their advance
guard, with shouts of victory, emerged upon the flat summit, and
rushed towards the temple in its centre.  All this while the women
had been watching, but now one of them sprang up, crying with a
loud voice:

'Seize them; they are but few.'

Then with a fearful scream of rage, the mob of women cast
themselves upon the weary Spaniards and Tlascalans, bearing them
down by the weight of their numbers.  Many of them were slain
indeed, but in the end the women conquered, ay, and made their
victims captive, fastening them with cords to the rings of copper
that were let into the stones of the pavement, to which in former
days those doomed to sacrifice had been secured, when their numbers
were so great that the priests feared lest they should escape.  I
and the soldiers with me watched this sight wondering, then I cried
out:

'What! men of the Otomie, shall it be said that our women outdid us
in courage?' and without further ado, followed by a hundred or more
of my companions, I rushed desperately down the steep and narrow
path.

At the first corner we met the main array of Spaniards and their
allies, coming up slowly, for now they were sure of victory, and so
great was the shock of our encounter that many of them were hurled
over the edge of the path, to roll down the steep sides of the
pyramid.  Seeing the fate of their comrades, those behind them
halted, then began to retreat.  Presently the weight of our rush
struck them also, and they in turn pushed upon those below, till at
length panic seized them, and with a great crying the long line of
men that wound round and round the pyramid from its base almost to
its summit, sought their safety in flight.  But some of them found
none, for the rush of those above pressing with ever increasing
force upon their friends below, drove many to their death, since
here on the pyramid there was nothing to cling to, and if once a
man lost his foothold on the path, his fall was broken only when
his body reached the court beneath.  Thus in fifteen short minutes
all that the Spaniards had won this day was lost again, for except
the prisoners at its summit, none of them remained alive upon the
teocalli; indeed so great a terror took them, that bearing with
them their dead and wounded, they retreated under cover of the
night to their camp without the walls of the courtyard.

Now, weary but triumphant, we wended back towards the crest of the
pyramid, but as I turned the corner of the second angle that was
perhaps nearly one hundred feet above the level of the ground, a
thought struck me and I set those with me at a task.  Loosening the
blocks of stone that formed the edge of the roadway, we rolled them
down the sides of the pyramid, and so laboured on removing layer
upon layer of stones and of the earth beneath, till where the path
had been, was nothing but a yawning gap thirty feet or more in
width.

'Now,' I said, surveying our handiwork by the light of the rising
moon, 'that Spaniard who would win our nest must find wings to fly
with.'

'Ay, Teule,' answered one at my side, 'but say what wings shall WE
find?'

'The wings of Death,' I said grimly, and went on my upward way.


It was near midnight when I reached the temple, for the labour of
levelling the road took many hours and food had been sent to us
from above.  As I drew nigh I was amazed to hear the sound of
solemn chanting, and still more was I amazed when I saw that the
doors of the temple of Huitzel were open, and that the sacred fire
which had not shone there for many years once more flared fiercely
upon his altar.  I stood still listening.  Did my ears trick me, or
did I hear the dreadful song of sacrifice?  Nay, again its wild
refrain rang out upon the silence:


     To Thee we sacrifice!
     Save us, O Huitzel,
     Huitzel, lord god!


I rushed forward, and turning the angle of the temple I found
myself face to face with the past, for there as in bygone years
were the pabas clad in their black robes, their long hair hanging
about their shoulders, the dreadful knife of glass fixed in their
girdles; there to the right of the stone of sacrifice were those
destined to the god, and there being led towards it was the first
victim, a Tlascalan prisoner, his limbs held by men clad in the
dress of priests.  Near him, arrayed in the scarlet robe of
sacrifice, stood one of my own captains, who I remembered had once
served as a priest of Tezcat before idolatry was forbidden in the
City of Pines, and around were a wide circle of women that watched,
and from whose lips swelled the awful chant.

Now I understood it all.  In their last despair, maddened by the
loss of fathers, husbands, and children, by their cruel fate, and
standing face to face with certain death, the fire of the old faith
had burnt up in their savage hearts.  There was the temple, there
were the stone and impliments of sacrifice, and there to their
hands were the victims taken in war.  They would glut a last
revenge, they would sacrifice to their fathers' gods as their
fathers had done before them, and the victims should be taken from
their own victorious foes.  Ay, they must die, but at the least
they would seek the Mansions of the Sun made holy by the blood of
the accursed Teule.

I have said that it was the women who sang this chant and glared so
fiercely upon the victims, but I have not yet told all the horror
of what I saw, for in the fore-front of their circle, clad in white
robes, the necklet of great emeralds, Guatemoc's gift, flashing
upon her breast, the plumes of royal green set in her hair, giving
the time of the death chant with a little wand, stood Montezuma's
daughter, Otomie my wife.  Never had I seen her look so beautiful
or so dreadful.  It was not Otomie whom I saw, for where was the
tender smile and where the gentle eyes?  Here before me was a
living Vengeance wearing the shape of woman.  In an instant I
guessed the truth, though I did not know it all.  Otomie, who
although she was not of it, had ever favoured the Christian faith,
Otomie, who for years had never spoken of these dreadful rites
except with anger, whose every act was love and whose every word
was kindness, was still in her soul an idolater and a savage.  She
had hidden this side of her heart from me well through all these
years, perchance she herself had scarcely known its secret, for but
twice had I seen anything of the buried fierceness of her blood.
The first time was when Marina had brought her a certain robe in
which she might escape from the camp of Cortes, and she had spoken
to Marina of that robe; and the second when on this same day she
had played her part to the Tlascalan, and had struck him down with
her own hand as he bent over me.

All this and much more passed through my mind in that brief moment,
while Otomie marked the time of the death chant, and the pabas
dragged the Tlascalan to his doom.

The next I was at her side.

'What passes here?' I asked sternly.

Otomie looked on me with a cold wonder, and empty eyes as though
she did not know me.

'Go back, white man,' she answered; 'it is not lawful for strangers
to mingle in our rites.'

I stood bewildered, not knowing what to do, while the flame burned
and the chant went up before the effigy of Huitzel, of the demon
Huitzel awakened after many years of sleep.

Again and yet again the solemn chant arose, Otomie beating time
with her little rod of ebony, and again and yet again the cry of
triumph rose to the silent stars.

Now I awoke from my dream, for as an evil dream it seemed to me,
and drawing my sword I rushed towards the priest at the altar to
cut him down.  But though the men stood still the women were too
quick for me.  Before I could lift the sword, before I could even
speak a word, they had sprung upon me like the jaguars of their own
forests, and like jaguars they hissed and growled into my ear:

'Get you gone, Teule,' they said, 'lest we stretch you on the stone
with your brethren.'  And still hissing they pushed me thence.

I drew back and thought for a while in the shadow of the temple.
My eye fell upon the long line of victims awaiting their turn of
sacrifice.  There were thirty and one of them still alive, and of
these five were Spaniards.  I noted that the Spaniards were chained
the last of all the line.  It seemed that the murderers would keep
them till the end of the feast, indeed I discovered that they were
to be offered up at the rising of the sun.  How could I save them,
I wondered.  My power was gone.  The women could not be moved from
their work of vengeance; they were mad with their sufferings.  As
well might a man try to snatch her prey from a puma robbed of her
whelps, as to turn them from their purpose.  With the men it was
otherwise, however.  Some of them mingled in the orgie indeed, but
more stood aloof watching with a fearful joy the spectacle in which
they did not share.  Near me was a man, a noble of the Otomie, of
something more than my own age.  He had always been my friend, and
after me he commanded the warriors of the tribe.  I went to him and
said, 'Friend, for the sake of the honour of your people, help me
to end this.'

'I cannot, Teule,' he answered, 'and beware how you meddle in the
play, for none will stand by you.  Now the women have power, and
you see they use it.  They are about to die, but before they die
they will do as their fathers did, for their strait is sore, and
though they have been put aside, the old customs are not
forgotten.'

'At the least can we not save these Teules?' I answered.

'Why should you wish to save the Teules?  Will they save us some
few days hence, when WE are in their power?'

'Perhaps not,' I said, 'but if we must die, let us die clean from
this shame.'

'What then do you wish me to do, Teule?'

'This: I would have you find some three or four men who are not
fallen into this madness, and with them aid me to loose the Teules,
for we cannot save the others.  If this may be done, surely we can
lower them with ropes from that point where the road is broken
away, down to the path beneath, and thus they may escape to their
own people.'

'I will try,' he answered, shrugging his shoulders, 'not from any
tenderness towards the accursed Teules, whom I could well bear to
see stretched upon the stone, but because it is your wish, and for
the sake of the friendship between us.'

Then he went, and presently I saw several men place themselves, as
though by chance, between the spot where the last of the line of
Indian prisoners, and the first of the Spaniards were made fast, in
such a fashion as to hide them from the sight of the maddened
women, engrossed as they were in their orgies.

Now I crept up to the Spaniards.  They were squatted upon the
ground, bound by their hands and feet to the copper rings in the
pavement.  There they sat silently awaiting the dreadful doom,
their faces grey with terror, and their eyes starting from their
sockets.

'Hist!' I whispered in Spanish into the ear of the first, an old
man whom I knew as one who had taken part in the wars of Cortes.
'Would you be saved?'

He looked up quickly, and said in a hoarse voice:

'Who are you that talk of saving us?  Who can save us from these
she devils?'

'I am Teule, a man of white blood and a Christian, and alas that I
must say it, the captain of this savage people.  With the aid of
some few men who are faithful to me, I purpose to cut your bonds,
and afterwards you shall see.  Know, Spaniard, that I do this at
great risk, for if we are caught, it is a chance but that I myself
shall have to suffer those things from which I hope to rescue you.'

'Be assured, Teule,' answered the Spaniard, 'that if we should get
safe away, we shall not forget this service.  Save our lives now,
and the time may come when we shall pay you back with yours.  But
even if we are loosed, how can we cross the open space in this
moonlight and escape the eyes of those furies?'

'We must trust to chance for that,' I answered, and as I spoke,
fortune helped us strangely, for by now the Spaniards in their camp
below had perceived what was going forward on the crest of the
teocalli.  A yell of horror rose from them and instantly they
opened fire upon us with their pieces and arquebusses, though,
because of the shape of the pyramid and of their position beneath
it, the storm of shot swept over us, doing us little or no hurt.
Also a great company of them poured across the courtyard, hoping to
storm the temple, for they did not know that the road had been
broken away.

Now, though the rites of sacrifice never ceased, what with the roar
of cannon, the shouts of rage and terror from the Spaniards, the
hiss of musket balls, and the crackling of flames from houses which
they had fired to give them more light, and the sound of chanting,
the turmoil and confusion grew so great as to render the carrying
out of my purpose easier than I had hoped.  By this time my friend,
the captain of the Otomie, was at my side, and with him several men
whom he could trust.  Stooping down, with a few swift blows of a
knife I cut the ropes which bound the Spaniards.  Then we gathered
ourselves into a knot, twelve of us or more, and in the centre of
the knot we set the five Spaniards.  This done, I drew my sword and
cried:

'The Teules storm the temple!' which was true, for already their
long line was rushing up the winding path.  'The Teules storm the
temple, I go to stop them,' and straightway we sped across the open
space.

None saw us, or if they saw us, none hindered us, for all the
company were intent upon the consummation of a fresh sacrifice;
moreover, the tumult was such, as I afterwards discovered, that we
were scarcely noticed.  Two minutes passed, and our feet were set
upon the winding way, and now I breathed again, for we were beyond
the sight of the women.  On we rushed swiftly as the cramped limbs
of the Spaniards would carry them, till presently we reached that
angle in the path where the breach began.  The attacking Spaniards
had already come to the further side of the gap, for though we
could not see them, we could hear their cries of rage and despair
as they halted helplessly and understood that their comrades were
beyond their aid.

'Now we are sped,' said the Spaniard with whom I had spoken; 'the
road is gone, and it must be certain death to try the side of the
pyramid.'

'Not so,' I answered; 'some fifty feet below the path still runs,
and one by one we will lower you to it with this rope.'

Then we set to work.  Making the cord fast beneath the arms of a
soldier we let him down gently, till he came to the path, and was
received there by his comrades as a man returned from the dead.
The last to be lowered was that Spaniard with whom I had spoken.

'Farewell,' he said, 'and may the blessing of God be on you for
this act of mercy, renegade though you are.  Say, now, will you not
come with me?  I set my life and honour in pledge for your safety.
You tell me that you are still a Christian man.  Is that a place
for Christians?' and he pointed upwards.

'No, indeed,' I answered, 'but still I cannot come, for my wife and
son are there, and I must return to die with them if need be.  If
you bear me any gratitude, strive in return to save their lives,
since for my own I care but little.'

'That I will,' he said, and then we let him down among his friends,
whom he reached in safety.

Now we returned to the temple, giving it out that the Spaniards
were in retreat, having failed to cross the breach in the roadway.
Here before the temple the orgie still went on.  But two Indians
remained alive; and the priests of sacrifice grew weary.

'Where are the Teules?' cried a voice.  'Swift! strip them for the
altar.'

But the Teules were gone, nor, search where they would, could they
find them.

'Their God has taken them beneath His wing,' I said, speaking from
the shadow and in a feigned voice.  'Huitzel cannot prevail before
the God of the Teules.'

Then I slipped aside, so that none knew that it was I who had
spoken, but the cry was caught up and echoed far and wide.

'The God of the Christians has hidden them beneath His wing.  Let
us make merry with those whom He rejects,' said the cry, and the
last of the captives were dragged away.

Now I thought that all was finished, but this was not so.  I have
spoken of the secret purpose which I read in the sullen eyes of the
Indian women as they laboured at the barricades, and I was about to
see its execution.  Madness still burned in the hearts of these
women; they had accomplished their sacrifice, but their festival
was still to come.  They drew themselves away to the further side
of the pyramid, and, heedless of the shots which now and again
pierced the breast of one of them--for here they were exposed to
the Spanish fire--remained a while in preparation.  With them went
the priests of sacrifice, but now, as before, the rest of the men
stood in sullen groups, watching what befell, but lifting no hand
or voice to hinder its hellishness.

One woman did not go with them, and that woman was Otomie my wife.

She stood by the stone of sacrifice, a piteous sight to see, for
her frenzy or rather her madness had outworn itself, and she was as
she had ever been.  There stood Otomie, gazing with wide and
horror-stricken eyes now at the tokens of this unholy rite and now
at her own hands--as though she thought to see them red, and
shuddered at the thought.  I drew near to her and touched her on
the shoulder.  She turned swiftly, gasping,

'Husband! husband!'

'It is I,' I answered, 'but call me husband no more.'

'Oh! what have I done?' she wailed, and fell senseless in my arms.


And here I will add what at the time I knew nothing of, for it was
told me in after years by the Rector of this parish, a very learned
man, though one of narrow mind.  Had I known it indeed, I should
have spoken more kindly to Otomie my wife even in that hour, and
thought more gently of her wickedness.  It seems, so said my friend
the Rector, that from the most ancient times, those women who have
bent the knee to demon gods, such as were the gods of Anahuac, are
subject at any time to become possessed by them, even after they
have abandoned their worship, and to be driven in their frenzy to
the working of the greatest crimes.  Thus, among other instances,
he told me that a Greek poet named Theocritus sets out in one of
his idyls how a woman called Agave, being engaged in a secret
religious orgie in honour of a demon named Dionysus, perceived her
own son Pentheus watching the celebration of the mysteries, and
thereon becoming possessed by the demon she fell on him and
murdered him, being aided by the other women.  For this the poet,
who was also a worshipper of Dionysus, gave her great honour and
not reproach, seeing that she did the deed at the behest of this
god, 'a deed not to be blamed.'

Now I write of this for a reason, though it has nothing to do with
me, for it seems that as Dionysus possessed Agave, driving her to
unnatural murder, so did Huitzel possess Otomie, and indeed she
said as much to me afterwards.  For I am sure that if the devils
whom the Greeks worshipped had such power, a still greater strength
was given to those of Anahuac, who among all fiends were the first.
If this be so, as I believe, it was not Otomie that I saw at the
rites of sacrifice, but rather the demon Huitzel whom she had once
worshipped, and who had power, therefore, to enter into her body
for awhile in place of her own spirit.



CHAPTER XXXVI

THE SURRENDER


Taking Otomie in my arms, I bore her to one of the storehouses
attached to the temple.  Here many children had been placed for
safety, among them my own son.

'What ails our mother, father?' said the boy.  'And why did she
shut me in here with these children when it seems that there is
fighting without?'

'Your mother has fainted,' I answered, 'and doubtless she placed
you here to keep you safe.  Now do you tend her till I return.'

'I will do so,' answered the boy, 'but surely it would be better
that I, who am almost a man, should be without, fighting the
Spaniards at your side rather than within, nursing sick women.'

'Do as I bid you, son,' I said, 'and I charge you not to leave this
place until I come for you again.'

Now I passed out of the storehouse, shutting the door behind me.  A
minute later I wished that I had stayed where I was, since on the
platform my eyes were greeted by a sight more dreadful than any
that had gone before.  For there, advancing towards us, were the
women divided into four great companies, some of them bearing
infants in their arms.  They came singing and leaping, many of them
naked to the middle.  Nor was this all, for in front of them ran
the pabas and such of the women themselves as were persons in
authority.  These leaders, male and female, ran and leaped and
sang, calling upon the names of their demon-gods, and celebrating
the wickednesses of their forefathers, while after them poured the
howling troops of women.

To and fro they rushed, now making obeisance to the statue of
Huitzel, now prostrating themselves before his hideous sister, the
goddess of Death, who sat beside him adorned with her carven
necklace of men's skulls and hands, now bowing around the stone of
sacrifice, and now thrusting their bare arms into the flames of the
holy fire.  For an hour or more they celebrated this ghastly
carnival, of which even I, versed as I was in the Indian customs,
could not fully understand the meaning, and then, as though some
single impulse had possessed them, they withdrew to the centre of
the open space, and, forming themselves into a double circle,
within which stood the pabas, of a sudden they burst into a chant
so wild and shrill that as I listened my blood curdled in my veins.

Even now the burden of that chant with the vision of those who sang
it sometimes haunts my sleep at night, but I will not write it
here.  Let him who reads imagine all that is most cruel in the
heart of man, and every terror of the evillest dream, adding to
these some horror-ridden tale of murder, ghosts, and inhuman
vengeance; then, if he can, let him shape the whole in words and,
as in a glass darkly, perchance he may mirror the spirit of that
last ancient song of the women of the Otomie, with its sobs, its
cries of triumph, and its death wailings.

Ever as they sang, step by step they drew backwards, and with them
went the leaders of each company, their eyes fixed upon the statues
of their gods.  Now they were but a segment of a circle, for they
did not advance towards the temple; backward and outward they went
with a slow and solemn tramp.  There was but one line of them now,
for those in the second ring filled the gaps in the first as it
widened; still they drew on till at length they stood on the sheer
edge of the platform.  Then the priests and the women leaders took
their place among them and for a moment there was silence, until at
a signal one and all they bent them backwards.  Standing thus,
their long hair waving on the wind, the light of burning houses
flaring upon their breasts and in their maddened eyes, they burst
into the cry of:

'SAVE US, HUITZEL! RECEIVE US, LORD GOD, OUR HOME!'

Thrice they cried it, each time more shrilly than before, then
suddenly they were GONE, the women of the Otomie were no more!

With their own self-slaughter they had consummated the last
celebration of the rites of sacrifice that ever shall be held in
the City of Pines.  The devil gods were dead and their worshippers
with them.


A low murmur ran round the lips of the men who watched, then one
cried, and his voice rang strangely in the sudden silence: 'May our
wives, the women of the Otomie, rest softly in the Houses of the
Sun, for of a surety they teach us how to die.'

'Ay,' I answered, 'but not thus.  Let women do self-murder, our
foes have swords for the hearts of men.'

I turned to go, and before me stood Otomie.

'What has befallen?' she said.  'Where are my sisters?  Oh! surely
I have dreamed an evil dream.  I dreamed that the gods of my
forefathers were strong once more, and that once more they drank
the blood of men.

'Your ill dream has a worse awakening, Otomie,' I answered.  'The
gods of hell are still strong indeed in this accursed land, and
they have taken your sisters into their keeping.'

'Is it so?' she said softly, 'yet in my dream it seemed to me that
this was their last strength ere they sink into death unending.
Look yonder!' and she pointed toward the snowy crest of the volcan
Xaca.

I looked, but whether I saw the sight of which I am about to tell
or whether it was but an imagining born of the horrors of that most
hideous night, in truth I cannot say.  At the least I seemed to see
this, and afterwards there were some among the Spaniards who swore
that they had witnessed it also.

On Xaca's lofty summit, now as always stood a pillar of fiery
smoke, and while I gazed, to my vision the smoke and the fire
separated themselves.  Out of the fire was fashioned a cross of
flame, that shone like lightning and stretched for many a rod
across the heavens, its base resting on the mountain top.  At its
foot rolled the clouds of smoke, and now these too took forms vast
and terrifying, such forms indeed as those that sat in stone within
the temple behind me, but magnified a hundredfold.

'See,' said Otomie again, 'the cross of your God shines above the
shapes of mine, the lost gods whom to-night I worshipped though not
of my own will.'  Then she turned and went.

For some few moments I stood very much afraid, gazing upon the
vision on Xaca's snow, then suddenly the rays of the rising sun
smote it and it was gone.


Now for three days more we held out against the Spaniards, for they
could not come at us and their shot swept over our heads
harmlessly.  During these days I had no talk with Otomie, for we
shrank from one another.  Hour by hour she would sit in the
storehouse of the temple a very picture of desolation.  Twice I
tried to speak with her, my heart being moved to pity by the dumb
torment in her eyes, but she turned her head from me and made no
answer.

Soon it came to the knowledge of the Spaniards that we had enough
food and water upon the teocalli to enable us to live there for a
month or more, and seeing that there was no hope of capturing the
place by force of arms, they called a parley with us.

I went down to the breach in the roadway and spoke with their
envoy, who stood upon the path below.  At first the terms offered
were that we should surrender at discretion.  To this I answered
that sooner than do so we would die where we were.  Their reply was
that if we would give over all who had any part in the human
sacrifice, the rest of us might go free.  To this I said that the
sacrifice had been carried out by women and some few men, and that
all of these were dead by their own hands.  They asked if Otomie
was also dead.  I told them no, but that I would never surrender
unless they swore that neither she nor her son should be harmed,
but rather that together with myself they should be given a safe-
conduct to go whither we willed.  This was refused, but in the end
I won the day, and a parchment was thrown up to me on the point of
a lance.  This parchment, which was signed by the Captain Bernal
Diaz, set out that in consideration of the part that I and some men
of the Otomie had played in rescuing the Spanish captives from
death by sacrifice, a pardon was granted to me, my wife and child,
and all upon the teocalli, with liberty to go whither-soever we
would unharmed, our lands and wealth being however declared forfeit
to the viceroy.

With these terms I was well content, indeed I had never hoped to
win any that would leave us our lives and liberty.

And yet for my part death had been almost as welcome, for now
Otomie had built a wall between us that I could never climb, and I
was bound to her, to a woman who, willingly or no, had stained her
hands with sacrifice.  Well, my son was left to me and with him I
must be satisfied; at the least he knew nothing of his mother's
shame.  Oh! I thought to myself as I climbed the teocalli, oh! that
I could but escape far from this accursed land and bear him with me
to the English shores, ay, and Otomie also, for there she might
forget that once she had been a savage.  Alas! it could scarcely
be!

Coming to the temple, I and those with me told the good tidings to
our companions, who received it silently.  Men of a white race
would have rejoiced thus to escape, for when death is near all
other loss seems as nothing.  But with these Indian people it is
not so, since when fortune frowns upon them they do not cling to
life.  These men of the Otomie had lost their country, their wives,
their wealth, their brethren, and their homes; therefore life, with
freedom to wander whither they would, seemed no great thing to
them.  So they met the boon that I had won from the mercy of our
foes, as had matters gone otherwise they would have met the bane,
in sullen silence.

I came to Otomie, and to her also I told the news.

'I had hoped to die here where I am,' she answered.  'But so be it;
death is always to be found.'

Only my son rejoiced, because he knew that God had saved us all
from death by sword or hunger.

'Father,' he said, 'the Spaniards have given us life, but they take
our country and drive us out of it.  Where then shall we go?'

'I do not know, my son,' I answered.

'Father,' the lad said again, 'let us leave this land of Anahuac
where there is nothing but Spaniards and sorrow.  Let us find a
ship and sail across the seas to England, our own country.'

The boy spoke my very thought and my heart leapt at his words,
though I had no plan to bring the matter about.  I pondered a
moment, looking at Otomie.

'The thought is good, Teule,' she said, answering my unspoken
question; 'for you and for our son there is no better, but for
myself I will answer in the proverb of my people, "The earth that
bears us lies lightest on our bones."'

Then she turned, making ready to quit the storehouse of the temple
where we had been lodged during the siege, and no more was said
about the matter.

Before the sun set a weary throng of men, with some few women and
children, were marching across the courtyard that surrounded the
pyramid, for a bridge of timbers taken from the temple had been
made over the breach in the roadway that wound about its side.

At the gates the Spaniards were waiting to receive us.  Some of
them cursed us, some mocked, but those of the nobler sort said
nothing, for they pitied our plight and respected us for the
courage we had shown in the last struggle.  Their Indian allies
were there also, and these grinned like unfed pumas, snarling and
whimpering for our lives, till their masters kicked them to
silence.  The last act of the fall of Anahuac was as the first had
been, dog still ate dog, leaving the goodly spoil to the lion who
watched.

At the gates we were sorted out; the men of small condition,
together with the children, were taken from the ruined city by an
escort and turned loose upon the mountains, while those of note
were brought to the Spanish camp, to be questioned there before
they were set free.  I, with my wife and son, was led to the
palace, our old home, there to learn the will of the Captain Diaz.

It is but a little way to go, and yet there was something to be
seen in the path.  For as we walked I looked up, and before me,
standing with folded arms and apart from all men, was de Garcia.  I
had scarcely thought of him for some days, so full had my mind been
of other matters, but at the sight of his evil face I remembered
that while this man lived, sorrow and danger must be my bedfellows.

He watched us pass, taking note of all, then he called to me who
walked last:

'Farewell, Cousin Wingfield.  You have lived through this bout also
and won a free pardon, you, your woman and your brat together.  If
the old war-horse who is set over us as a captain had listened to
me you should have been burned at the stake, every one of you, but
so it is.  Farewell for a while, friend.  I am away to Mexico to
report these matters to the viceroy, who may have a word to say.'

I made no answer, but asked of our conductor, that same Spaniard
whom I had saved from the sacrifice, what the senor meant by his
words.

'This, Teule; that there has been a quarrel between our comrade
Sarceda and our captain.  The former would have granted you no
terms, or failing this would have decoyed you from your stronghold
with false promises, and then have put you to the sword as infidels
with whom no oath is binding.  But the captain would not have it
so, for he said that faith must be kept even with the heathen, and
we whom you had saved cried shame on him.  And so words ran high,
and in the end the Senor Sarceda, who is third in command among us,
declared that he would be no party to this peacemaking, but would
be gone to Mexico with his servants, there to report to the
viceroy.  Then the Captain Diaz bade him begone to hell if he
wished and report to the devil, saying that he had always believed
that he had escaped thence by mistake, and they parted in wrath
who, since the day of noche triste, never loved each other much;
the end of it being that Sarceda rides for Mexico within an hour,
to make what mischief he can at the viceroy's court, and I think
that you are well rid of him.'

'Father,' said my son to me, 'who is that Spaniard who looks so
cruelly upon us?'

'That is he of whom I have told you, son, de Garcia, who has been
the curse of our race for two generations, who betrayed your
grandfather to the Holy Office, and murdered your grandmother, who
put me to torture, and whose ill deeds are not done with yet.
Beware of him, son, now and ever, I beseech you.'


Now we were come to the palace, almost the only house that was left
standing in the City of Pines.  Here an apartment was given to us
at the end of the long building, and presently a command was
brought to us that I and my wife should wait upon the Spanish
captain Diaz.

So we went, though Otomie desired to stay behind, leaving our son
alone in the chamber where food had been brought to him.  I
remember that I kissed him before I left, though I do not know what
moved me to do so, unless it was because I thought that he might be
asleep when I returned.  The Captain Diaz had his quarters at the
other end of the palace, some two hundred paces away.  Presently we
stood before him.  He was a rough-looking, thick-set man well on in
years, with bright eyes and an ugly honest face, like the face of a
peasant who has toiled a lifetime in all weathers, only the fields
that Diaz tilled were fields of war, and his harvest had been the
lives of men.  Just then he was joking with some common soldiers in
a strain scarcely suited to nice ears, but so soon as he saw us he
ceased and came forward.  I saluted him after the Indian fashion by
touching the earth with my hand, for what was I but an Indian
captive?

'Your sword,' he said briefly, as he scanned me with his quick
eyes.

I unbuckled it from my side and handed it to him, saying in
Spanish:

'Take it, Captain, for you have conquered, also it does but come
back to its owner.'  For this was the same sword that I had
captured from one Bernal Diaz in the fray of the noche triste.

He looked at it, then swore a great oath and said:

'I thought that it could be no other man.  And so we meet again
thus after so many years.  Well, you gave me my life once, and I am
glad that I have lived to pay the debt.  Had I not been sure that
it was you, you had not won such easy terms, friend.  How are you
named?  Nay, I know what the Indians call you.'

'I am named Wingfield.'

'Friend Wingfield then.  For I tell you that I would have sat
beneath yonder devil's house,' and he nodded towards the teocalli,
'till you starved upon its top.  Nay, friend Wingfield, take back
the sword.  I suited myself with another many years ago, and you
have used this one gallantly; never have I seen Indians make a
better fight.  And so that is Otomie, Montezuma's daughter and your
wife, still handsome and royal, I see.  Lord!  Lord! it is many
years ago, and yet it seems but yesterday that I saw her father
die, a Christian-hearted man, though no Christian, and one whom we
dealt ill with.  May God forgive us all!  Well, Madam, none can say
that YOU have a Christian heart.  If a certain tale that I have
heard of what passed yonder, some three nights since, is true.  But
we will speak no more of it, for the savage blood will show, and
you are pardoned for your husband's sake who saved my comrades from
the sacrifice.'

To all this Otomie listened, standing still like a statue, but she
never answered a word.  Indeed she had spoken very rarely since
that dreadful night of her unspeakable shame.

'And now, friend Wingfield,' went on the Captain Diaz, 'what is
your purpose?  You are free to go where you will, whither then will
you go?'

'I do not know,' I answered.  'Years ago, when the Aztec emperor
gave me my life and this princess my wife in marriage, I swore to
be faithful to him and his cause, and to fight for them till Popo
ceased to vomit smoke, till there was no king in Tenoctitlan, and
the people of Anahuac were no more a people.'

'Then you are quit of your oath, friend, for all these things have
come about, and there has been no smoke on Popo for these two
years.  Now, if you will be advised by me, you will turn Christian
again and enter the service of Spain.  But come, let us to supper,
we can talk of these matters afterwards.'

So we sat down to eat by the light of torches in the banqueting
hall with Bernal Diaz and some other of the Spaniards.  Otomie
would have left us, and though the captain bade her stay she ate
nothing, and presently slipped away from the chamber.



CHAPTER XXXVII

VENGEANCE


During that meal Bernal Diaz spoke of our first meeting on the
causeway, and of how I had gone near to killing him in error,
thinking that he was Sarceda, and then he asked me what was my
quarrel with Sarceda.

In as few words as possible I told him the story of my life, of all
the evil that de Garcia or Sarceda had worked upon me and mine, and
of how it was through him that I was in this land that day.  He
listened amazed.

'Holy Mother!' he said at length, 'I always knew him for a villain,
but that, if you do not lie, friend Wingfield, he could be such a
man as this, I did not know.  Now by my word, had I heard this tale
an hour ago, Sarceda should not have left this camp till he had
answered it or cleared himself by combat with you.  But I fear it
is too late; he was to leave for Mexico at the rising of the moon,
to stir up mischief against me because I granted you terms--not
that I fear him there, where his repute is small.'

'I do not lie indeed,' I answered.  'Much of this tale I can prove
if need be, and I tell you that I would give half the life that is
left to me to stand face to face in open fight with him again.
Ever he has escaped me, and the score between us is long.'

Now as I spoke thus it seemed to me that a cold and dreadful air
played upon my hands and brow and a warning sense of present evil
crept into my soul, overcoming me so that I could not stir or speak
for a while.

'Let us go and see if he has gone,' said Diaz presently, and
summoning a guard, he was about to leave the chamber.  It was at
this moment that I chanced to look up and see a woman standing in
the doorway.  Her hand rested on the doorpost; her head, from which
the long hair streamed, was thrown back, and on her face was a look
of such anguish that at first, so much was she changed, I did not
know her for Otomie.  When I knew her, I knew all; one thing only
could conjure up the terror and agony that shone in her deep eyes.

'What has chanced to our son?' I asked.

'DEAD, DEAD!' she answered in a whisper that seemed to pierce my
marrow.

I said nothing, for my heart told me what had happened, but Diaz
asked, 'Dead--why, what has killed him?'

'De Garcia!  I saw him go,' replied Otomie; then she tossed her
arms high, and without another sound fell backwards to the earth.

In that moment I think that my heart broke--at least I know that
nothing has had the power to move me greatly since, though this
memory moves me day by day and hour by hour, till I die and go to
seek my son.

'Say, Bernal Diaz,' I cried, with a hoarse laugh, 'did I lie to you
concerning this comrade of yours?'

Then, springing over Otomie's body I left the chamber, followed by
Bernal Diaz and the others.

Without the door I turned to the left towards the camp.  I had not
gone a hundred paces when, in the moonlight, I saw a small troop of
horsemen riding towards us.  It was de Garcia and his servants, and
they headed towards the mountain pass on their road to Mexico.  I
was not too late.

'Halt!' cried Bernal Diaz.

'Who commands me to halt?' said the voice of de Garcia.

'I, your captain,' roared Diaz.  'Halt, you devil, you murderer, or
you shall be cut down.'

I saw him start and turn pale.

'These are strange manners, senor,' he said.  'Of your grace I ask--"

At this moment de Garcia caught sight of me for the first time, for
I had broken from the hold of Diaz who clutched my arm, and was
moving towards him.  I said nothing, but there was something in my
face which told him that I knew all, and warned him of his doom.
He looked past me, but the narrow road was blocked with men.  I
drew near, but he did not wait for me.  Once he put his hand on the
hilt of the sword, then suddenly he wheeled his horse round and
fled down the street of Xaca.

De Garcia fled, and I followed after him, running fast and low like
a hound.  At first he gained on me, but soon the road grew rough,
and he could not gallop over it.  We were clear of the town now, or
rather of its ruins, and travelling along a little path which the
Indians used to bring down snow from Xaca in the hot weather.
Perhaps there are some five miles of this path before the snow line
is reached, beyond which no Indian dared to set his foot, for the
ground above was holy.  Along this path he went, and I was content
to see it, for I knew well that the traveller cannot leave it,
since on either side lie water-courses and cliffs.  Mile after mile
de Garcia followed it, looking now to the left, now to the right,
and now ahead at the great dome of snow crowned with fire that
towered above him.  But he never looked behind him; he knew what
was there--death in the shape of a man!

I came on doggedly, saving my strength.  I was sure that I must
catch him at last, it did not matter when.

At length he reached the snow-line where the path ended, and for
the first time he looked back.  There I was some two hundred paces
behind him.  I, his death, was behind him, and in front of him
shone the snow.  For a moment he hesitated, and I heard the heavy
breathing of his horse in the great stillness.  Then he turned and
faced the slope, driving his spurs into the brute's sides.  The
snow was hard, for here the frost bit sharply, and for a while,
though it was so steep, the horse travelled over it better than he
had done along the pathway.  Now, as before, there was only one
road that he could take, for we passed up the crest of a ridge, a
pleat as it were in the garment of the mountain, and on either side
were steeps of snow on which neither horse nor man might keep his
footing.  For two hours or more we followed that ridge, and as we
went through the silence of the haunted volcan, and the loneliness
of its eternal snows, it seemed to me that my spirit entered into
the spirit of my quarry, and that with its eyes I saw all that was
passing in his heart.  To a man so wronged the dream was pleasant
even if it were not true, for I read there such agony, such black
despair, such haunting memories, such terror of advancing death and
of what lay beyond it, that no revenge of man's could surpass their
torment.  And it was true--I knew that it was true; he suffered all
this and more, for if he had no conscience, at least he had fear
and imagination to quicken and multiply the fear.

Now the snow grew steeper, and the horse was almost spent, for he
could scarcely breathe at so great a height.  In vain did de Garcia
drive his spurs into its sides, the gallant beast could do no more.
Suddenly it fell down.  Surely, I thought, he will await me now.
But even I had not fathomed the depth of his terrors, for de Garcia
disengaged himself from the fallen horse, looked towards me, then
fled forward on his feet, casting away his armour as he went that
he might travel more lightly.

By this time we had passed the snow and were come to the edge of
the ice cap that is made by the melting of the snow with the heat
of the inner fires, or perhaps by that of the sun in hot seasons, I
know not, and its freezing in the winter months or in the cold of
the nights.  At least there is such a cap on Xaca, measuring nearly
a mile in depth, which lies between the snow and the black rim of
the crater.  Up this ice climbed de Garcia, and the task is not of
the easiest, even for one of untroubled mind, for a man must step
from crack to crack or needle to needle of rough ice, that stand
upon the smooth surface like the bristles on a hog's back, and woe
to him if one break or if he slip, for then, as he falls, very
shortly the flesh will be filed from his bones by the thousands of
sword-like points over which he must pass in his descent towards
the snow.  Indeed, many times I feared greatly lest this should
chance to de Garcia, for I did not desire to lose my vengeance
thus.  Therefore twice when I saw him in danger I shouted to him,
telling him where to put his feet, for now I was within twenty
paces of him, and, strange to say, he obeyed me without question,
forgetting everything in his terror of instant death.  But for
myself I had no fear, for I knew that I should not fall, though the
place was one which I had surely shrunk from climbing at any other
time.

All this while we had been travelling towards Xaca's fiery crest by
the bright moonlight, but now the dawn broke suddenly on the
mountain top, and the flame died away in the heart of the pillar of
smoke.  It was wonderful to see the red glory that shone upon the
ice-cap, and on us two men who crept like flies across it, while
the mountain's breast and the world below were plunged in the
shadows of night.

'Now we have a better light to climb by, comrade!' I called to de
Garcia, and my voice rang strangely among the ice cliffs, where
never a man's voice had echoed before.

As I spoke the mountain rumbled and bellowed beneath us, shaking
like a wind-tossed tree, as though in wrath at the desecration of
its sacred solitudes.  With the rumbling came a shower of grey
ashes that rained down on us, and for a little while hid de Garcia
from my sight.  I heard him call out in fear, and was afraid lest
he had fallen; but presently the ashes cleared away, and I saw him
standing safely on the lava rim that surrounds the crater.

Now, I thought, he will surely make a stand, for could he have
found courage it had been easy for him to kill me with his sword,
which he still wore, as I climbed from the ice to the hot lava.  It
seemed that he thought of it, for he turned and glared at me like a
devil, then went on again, leaving me wondering where he believed
that he would find refuge.  Some three hundred paces from the edge
of the ice, the smoke and steam of the crater rose into the air,
and between the two was lava so hot that in places it was difficult
to walk upon it.  Across this bed, that trembled as I passed over
it, went de Garcia somewhat slowly, for now he was weary, and I
followed him at my ease, getting my breath again.

Presently I saw that he had come to the edge of the crater, for he
leaned forward and looked over, and I thought that he was about to
destroy himself by plunging into it.  But if such thoughts had been
in his mind, he forgot them when he had seen what sort of nest this
was to sleep in, for turning, he came back towards me, sword up,
and we met within a dozen paces of the edge.  I say met, but in
truth we did not meet, for he stopped again, well out of reach of
my sword.  I sat down upon a block of lava and looked at him; it
seemed to me that I could not feast my eyes enough upon his face.
And what a face it was; that of a more than murderer about to meet
his reward!  Would that I could paint to show it, for no words can
tell the fearfulness of those red and sunken eyes, those grinning
teeth and quivering lips.  I think that when the enemy of mankind
has cast his last die and won his last soul, he too will look thus
as he passes into doom.

'At length, de Garcia!' I said.

'Why do you not kill me and make an end?' he asked hoarsely.

'Where is the hurry, cousin?  For hard on twenty years I have
sought you, shall we then part so soon?  Let us talk a while.
Before we part to meet no more, perhaps of your courtesy you will
answer me a question, for I am curious.  Why have you wrought these
evils on me and mine?  Surely you must have some reason for what
seems to be an empty and foolish wickedness.'

I spoke to him thus calmly and coldly, feeling no passion, feeling
nothing.  For in that strange hour I was no longer Thomas
Wingfield, I was no longer human, I was a force, an instrument; I
could think of my dead son without sorrow, he did not seem dead to
me, for I partook of the nature that he had put on in this change
of death.  I could even think of de Garcia without hate, as though
he also were nothing but a tool in some other hand.  Moreover, I
KNEW that he was mine, body and mind, and that he must answer and
truly, so surely as he must die when I chose to kill him.  He tried
to shut his lips, but they opened of themselves and word by word
the truth was dragged from his black heart as though he stood
already before the judgment seat.

'I loved your mother, my cousin,' he said, speaking slowly and
painfully; 'from a child I loved her only in the world, as I love
her to this hour, but she hated me because I was wicked and feared
me because I was cruel.  Then she saw your father and loved him,
and brought about his escape from the Holy Office, whither I had
delivered him to be tortured and burnt, and fled with him to
England.  I was jealous and would have been revenged if I might,
but there was no way.  I led an evil life, and when nearly twenty
years had gone by, chance took me to England on a trading journey.
By chance I learned that your father and mother lived near
Yarmouth, and I determined to see her, though at that time I had no
thought of killing her.  Fortune favoured me, and we met in the
woodland, and I saw that she was still beautiful and knew that I
loved her more than ever before.  I gave her choice to fly with me
or to die, and after a while she died.  But as she shrank up the
wooded hillside before my sword, of a sudden she stood still and
said:

'"Listen before you smite, Juan.  I have a death vision.  As I have
fled from you, so shall you fly before one of my blood in a place
of fire and rock and snow, and as you drive me to the gates of
heaven, so he shall drive you into the mouth of hell."'

'In such a place as this, cousin,' I said.

'In such a place as this,' he whispered, glancing round.

'Continue.'

Again he strove to be silent, but again my will mastered him and he
spoke.

'It was too late to spare her if I wished to escape myself, so I
killed her and fled.  But terror entered my heart, terror which has
never left it to this hour, for always before my eyes was the
vision of him of your mother's blood, before whom I should fly as
she fled before me, who shall drive me into the mouth of hell.'

'That must be yonder, cousin,' I said, pointing with the sword
toward the pit of the crater.

'It is yonder; I have looked.'

'But only for the body, cousin, not for the spirit.'

'Only for the body, not for the spirit,' he repeated after me.

'Continue,' I said.

'Afterwards on that same day I met you, Thomas Wingfield.  Already
your dead mother's prophecy had taken hold of me, and seeing one of
her blood I strove to kill him lest he should kill me.'

'As he will do presently, cousin.'

'As he will do presently,' he repeated like a talking bird.

'You know what happened and how I escaped.  I fled to Spain and
strove to forget.  But I could not.  One night I saw a face in the
streets of Seville that reminded me of your face.  I did not think
that it could be you, yet so strong was my fear that I determined
to fly to the far Indies.  You met me on the night of my flight
when I was bidding farewell to a lady.'

'One Isabella de Siguenza, cousin.  I bade farewell to her
afterwards and delivered her dying words to you.  Now she waits to
welcome you again, she and her child.'

He shuddered and went on.  'In the ocean we met again.  You rose
out of the sea.  I did not dare to kill you at once, I thought that
you must die in the slave-hold and that none could bear witness
against me and hold me guilty of your blood.  You did not die, even
the sea could not destroy you.  But I thought that you were dead.
I came to Anahuac in the train of Cortes and again we met; that
time you nearly killed me.  Afterwards I had my revenge and I
tortured you well; I meant to murder you on the morrow, though
first I would torture you, for terror can be very cruel, but you
escaped me.  Long years passed, I wandered hither and thither, to
Spain, back to Mexico, and elsewhere, but wherever I went my fear,
the ghosts of the dead, and my dreams went with me, and I was never
fortunate.  Only the other day I joined the company of Diaz as an
adventurer.  Not till we reached the City of Pines did I learn that
you were the captain of the Otomie; it was said that you were long
dead.  You know the rest.'

'Why did you murder my son, cousin?'

'Was he not of your mother's blood, of the blood that should bring
my doom upon me, and did I owe you no reward for all the terrors of
these many years?  Moreover he is foolish who strives to slay the
father and spares the son.  He is dead and I am glad that I killed
him, though he haunts me now with the others.'

'And shall haunt you eternally.  Now let us make an end.  You have
your sword, use it if you can.  It will be easier to die fighting.'

'I cannot,' he groaned; 'my doom is upon me.'

'As you will,' and I came at him, sword up.

He ran from before me, moving backwards and keeping his eyes fixed
upon mine, as I have seen a rat do when a snake is about to swallow
it.  Now we were upon the edge of the crater, and looking over I
saw an awful sight.  For there, some thirty feet beneath us, the
red-hot lava glowing sullenly beneath a shifting pall of smoke,
rolled and spouted like a thing alive.  Jets of steam flew upwards
from it with a screaming sound, lines of noxious vapours, many-
coloured, crept and twisted on its surface, and a hot and horrid
stench poisoned the heated air.  Here indeed was such a gate as I
could wish for de Garcia to pass through to his own abode.

I looked, pointed with my sword, and laughed; he looked and
shrieked aloud, for now all his manhood had left him, so great was
his terror of what lay beyond the end.  Yes, this proud and haughty
Spaniard screamed and wept and prayed for mercy; he who had done so
many villanies beyond forgiveness, prayed for mercy that he might
find time to repent.  I stood and watched him, and so dreadful was
his aspect that horror struck me even through the calm of my frozen
heart.

'Come, it is time to finish,' I said, and again I lifted my sword,
only to let it fall, for suddenly his brain gave way and de Garcia
went mad before my eyes!

Of all that followed I will not write.  With his madness courage
came back to him, and he began to fight, but not with ME.

He seemed to perceive me no more, but nevertheless he fought, and
desperately, thrusting at the empty air.  It was terrible to see
him thus doing battle with his invisible foes, and to hear his
screams and curses, as inch by inch they drove him back to the edge
of the crater.  Here he stood a while, like one who makes a last
stand against overpowering strength, thrusting and striking
furiously.  Twice he nearly fell, as though beneath a mortal wound,
but recovering himself, fought on with Nothingness.  Then, with a
sharp cry, suddenly he threw his arms wide, as a man does who is
pierced through the heart; his sword dropped from his hand, and he
fell backwards into the pit.

I turned away my eyes, for I wished to see no more; but often I
have wondered Who or What it was that dealt de Garcia his death
wound.



CHAPTER XXXVIII

OTOMIE'S FAREWELL


Thus then did I accomplish the vengeance that I had sworn to my
father I would wreak upon de Garcia, or rather, thus did I witness
its accomplishment, for in the end he died, terribly enough, not by
my hand but by those of his own fears.  Since then I have sorrowed
for this, for, when the frozen and unnatural calm passed from my
mind, I hated him as bitterly as ever, and grieved that I let him
die otherwise than by my hand, and to this hour such is my mind
towards him.  Doubtless, many may think it wicked, since we are
taught to forgive our enemies, but here I leave the forgiveness to
God, for how can I pardon one who betrayed my father to the
priests, who murdered my mother and my son, who chained me in the
slave-ship and for many hours tortured me with his own hand?
Rather, year by year, do I hate him more.  I write of this at some
length, since the matter has been a trouble to me.  I never could
say that I was in charity with all men living and dead, and because
of this, some years since, a worthy and learned rector of this
parish took upon himself to refuse me the rites of the church.
Then I went to the bishop and laid the story before him, and it
puzzled him somewhat.

But he was a man of large mind, and in the end he rebuked the
rector and commanded him to minister to me, for he thought with me
that the Almighty could not ask of an erring man, that he should
forgive one who had wrought such evils on him and his, even though
that enemy were dead and gone to judgment in another place.

But enough of this question of conscience.


When de Garcia was gone into the pit, I turned my steps homewards,
or rather towards the ruined city which I could see beneath me, for
I had no home left.  Now I must descend the ice cap, and this I
found less easy than climbing it had been, for, my vengeance being
accomplished, I became as other men are, and a sad and weary one at
that, so sad indeed that I should not have sorrowed greatly if I
had made a false step upon the ice.

But I made none, and at length I came to the snow where the
travelling was easy.  My oath was fulfilled and my vengeance was
accomplished, but as I went I reckoned up the cost.  I had lost my
betrothed, the love of my youth; for twenty years I had lived a
savage chief among savages and made acquaintance with every
hardship, wedded to a woman who, although she loved me dearly, and
did not lack nobility of mind, as she had shown the other day, was
still at heart a savage or, at the least, a thrall of demon gods.
The tribe that I ruled was conquered, the beautiful city where I
dwelt was a ruin, I was homeless and a beggar, and my fortune would
be great if in the issue I escaped death or slavery.  All this I
could have borne, for I had borne the like before, but the cruel
end of my last surviving son, the one true joy of my desolate life,
I could not bear.  The love of those children had become the
passion of my middle age, and as I loved them so they had loved me.
I had trained them from babyhood till their hearts were English and
not Aztec, as were their speech and faith, and thus they were not
only my dear children, but companions of my own race, the only ones
I had.  And now by accident, by sickness, and by the sword, they
were dead the three of them, and I was desolate.

Ah! we think much of the sorrows of our youth, and should a
sweetheart give us the go by we fill the world with moans and swear
that it holds no comfort for us.  But when we bend our heads before
the shrouded shape of some lost child, then it is that for the
first time we learn how terrible grief can be.  Time, they tell us,
will bring consolation, but it is false, for such sorrows time has
no salves--I say it who am old--as they are so they shall be.
There is no hope but faith, there is no comfort save in the truth
that love which might have withered on the earth grows fastest in
the tomb, to flower gloriously in heaven; that no love indeed can
be perfect till God sanctifies and completes it with His seal of
death.

I threw myself down there upon the desolate snows of Xaca, that
none had trod before, and wept such tears as a man may weep but
once in his life days.

'O my son Absalom, my son, my son Absalom! would God I had died for
thee, O Absalom, my son, my son!' I cried with the ancient king--I
whose grief was greater than his, for had I not lost three sons
within as many years?  Then remembering that as this king had gone
to join his son long centuries ago, so I must one day go to join
mine, and taking such comfort from the thought as may be found in
it, I rose and crept back to the ruined City of Pines.

It was near sunset when I came thither, for the road was long and I
grew weak.  By the palace I met the Captain Diaz and some of his
company, and they lifted their bonnets to me as I went by, for they
had respect for my sorrows.  Only Diaz spoke, saying:

'Is the murderer dead?'

I nodded and went on.  I went on to our chamber, for there I
thought that I should find Otomie.

She sat in it alone, cold and beautiful as though she had been
fashioned in marble.

'I have buried him with the bones of his brethren and his
forefathers,' she said, answering the question that my eyes asked.
'It seemed best that you should see him no more, lest your heart
should break.'

'It is well,' I answered; 'but my heart is broken already.'

'Is the murderer dead?' she said presently in the very words of
Diaz.

'He is dead.'

'How?'

I told her in few words.

'You should have slain him yourself; our son's blood is not
avenged.'

'I should have slain him, but in that hour I did not seek
vengeance, I watched it fall from heaven, and was content.
Perchance it is best so.  The seeking of vengeance has brought all
my sorrows upon me; vengeance belongs to God and not to man, as I
have learned too late.'

'I do not think so,' said Otomie, and the look upon her face was
that look which I had seen when she smote the Tlascalan, when she
taunted Marina, and when she danced upon the pyramid, the leader of
the sacrifice.  'Had I been in your place, I would have killed him
by inches.  When I had done with him, then the devils might begin,
not before.  But it is of no account; everything is done with, all
are dead, and my heart with them.  Now eat, for you are weary.'

So I ate, and afterwards I cast myself upon the bed and slept.


In the darkness I heard the voice of Otomie that said, 'Awake, I
would speak with you,' and there was that about her voice which
stirred me from my heavy sleep.

'Speak on,' I said.  'Where are you, Otomie?'

'Seated at your side.  I cannot rest, so I am seated here.  Listen.
Many, many years ago we met, when you were brought by Guatemoc from
Tobasco.  Ah! well do I remember my first sight of you, the Teule,
in the court of my father Montezuma, at Chapoltepec.  I loved you
then as I have loved you ever since.  At least I have never gone
astray after strange gods,' and she laughed bitterly.

'Why do you talk of these things, Otomie?' I asked.

'Because it is my fancy to do so.  Cannot you spare me one hour
from your sleep, who have spared you so many?  You remember how you
scorned me--oh! I thought I should have died of shame when, after I
had caused myself to be given to you as wife, the wife of Tezcat,
you told me of the maid across the seas, that Lily maid whose token
is still set upon your finger.  But I lived through it and I loved
you the better for your honesty, and then you know the rest.  I won
you because I was brave and lay at your side upon the stone of
sacrifice, where you kissed me and told me that you loved me.  But
you never loved me, not truly, all the while you were thinking of
the Lily maid.  I knew it then, as I know it now, though I tried to
deceive myself.  I was beautiful in those days and this is
something with a man.  I was faithful and that is more, and once or
twice you thought that you loved me.  Now I wish that those Teules
had come an hour later, and we had died together there upon the
stone, that is I wish it for my own sake, not for yours.  Then we
escaped and the great struggle came.  I told you then that I
understood it all.  You had kissed me on the stone of sacrifice,
but in that moment you were as one dead; when you came back to
life, it was otherwise.  But fortune took the game out of your
hands and you married me, and swore an oath to me, and this oath
you have kept faithfully.  You married me but you did not know whom
you married; you thought me beautiful, and sweet, and true, and all
these things I was, but you did not understand that I was far apart
from you, that I was still a savage as my forefathers had been.
You thought that I had learned your ways, perchance even you
thought that I reverenced your God, as for your sake I have striven
to do, but all the while I have followed the ways of my own people
and I could not quite forget my own gods, or at the least they
would not suffer me, their servant, to escape them.  For years and
years I put them from me, but at last they were avenged and my
heart mastered me, or rather they mastered me, for I knew nothing
of what I did some few nights since, when I celebrated the
sacrifice to Huitzel and you saw me at the ancient rites.

'All these years you had been true to me and I had borne you
children whom you loved; but you loved them for their own sake, not
for mine, indeed, at heart you hated the Indian blood that was
mixed in their veins with yours.  Me also you loved in a certain
fashion and this half love of yours drove me well nigh mad; such as
it was, it died when you saw me distraught and celebrating the
rites of my forefathers on the teocalli yonder, and you knew me for
what I am, a savage.  And now the children who linked us together
are dead--one by one they died in this way and in that, for the
curse which follows my blood descended upon them--and your love for
me is dead with them.  I alone remain alive, a monument of past
days, and I die also.

'Nay, be silent; listen to me, for my time is short.  When you bade
me call you "husband" no longer, then I knew that it was finished.
I obey you, I put you from me, you are no more my husband, and soon
I shall cease to be your wife; still, Teule, I pray you listen to
me.  Now it seems to you in your sorrow, that your days are done
and that there is no happiness left for you.  This is not so.  You
are still but a man in the beginning of middle age, and you are yet
strong.  You will escape from this ruined land, and when you shake
the dust of it off your feet its curse shall fall from you; you
will return to your own place, and there you will find one who has
awaited your coming for many years.  There the savage woman whom
you mated with, the princess of a fallen house, will become but a
fantastic memory to you, and all these strange eventful years will
be as a midnight dream.  Only your love for the dead children will
always remain, these you must always love by day and by night, and
the desire of them, that desire for the dead than which there is
nothing more terrible, shall follow you to your grave, and I am
glad that it should be so, for I was their mother and some thought
of me must go with them.  This alone the Lily maid has left to me,
and there only I shall prevail against her, for, Teule, no child of
hers shall live to rob your heart of the memory of those I gave
you.

'Oh! I have watched you by day and by night: I have seen the
longing in your eyes for a face which you have lost and for the
land of your youth.  Be happy, you shall gain both, for the
struggle is ended and the Lily maid has been too strong for me.  I
grow weak and I have little more to say.  We part, and perhaps for
ever, for what is there between us save the souls of those dead
sons of ours?  Since you desire me no more, that I may make our
severance perfect, now in the hour of my death I renounce your gods
and I seek my own, though I think that I love yours and hate those
of my people.  Is there any communion between them?  We part, and
perchance for ever, yet I pray of you to think of me kindly, for I
have loved you and I love you; I was the mother of your children,
whom being Christian, you will meet again.  I love you now and for
always.  I am glad to have lived because you kissed me on the stone
of sacrifice, and afterwards I bore you sons.  They are yours and
not mine; it seems to me now that I only cared for them because
they were yours, and they loved you and not me.  Take them--take
their spirits as you have taken everything.  You swore that death
alone should sever us, and you have kept your oath in the letter
and in the thought.  But now I go to the Houses of the Sun to seek
my own people, and to you, Teule, with whom I have lived many years
and seen much sorrow, but whom I will no longer call husband, since
you forbade me so to do, I say, make no mock of me to the Lily
maid.  Speak of me to her as little as you may--be happy and--
farewell!'


Now as she spoke ever more faintly, and I listened bewildered, the
light of dawn grew slowly in the chamber.  It gathered on the white
shape of Otomie seated in a chair hard by the bed, and I saw that
her arms hung down and that her head was resting on the back of the
chair.  Now I sprang up and peered into her face.  It was white and
cold, and I could feel no breath upon her lips.  I seized her hand,
that also was cold.  I spoke into her ear, I kissed her brow, but
she did not move nor answer.  The light grew quickly, and now I saw
all.  Otomie was dead, and by her own act.

This was the manner of her death.  She had drunk of a poison of
which the Indians have the secret, a poison that works slowly and
without pain, leaving the mind unclouded to the end.  It was while
her life was fading from her that she had spoken to me thus sadly
and bitterly.  I sat upon the bed and gazed at her.  I did not
weep, for my tears were done, and as I have said, whatever I might
feel nothing could break my calm any more.  And as I gazed a great
tenderness and sorrow took hold of me, and I loved Otomie better
now that she was dead before me than ever I had done in her life
days, and this is saying much.  I remembered her in the glory of
her youth as she was in the court of her royal father, I remembered
the look which she had given me when she stepped to my side upon
the stone of sacrifice, and that other look when she defied
Cuitlahua the emperor, who would have slain me.  Once more I seemed
to hear her cry of bitter sorrow as she uncovered the body of the
dead babe our firstborn, and to see her sword in hand standing over
the Tlascalan.

Many things came back to me in that sad hour of dawn while I
watched by the corpse of Otomie.  There was truth in her words, I
had never forgotten my first love and often I desired to see her
face.  But it was not true to say that I had no love for Otomie.  I
loved her well and I was faithful in my oath to her, indeed, not
until she was dead did I know how dear she had grown to me.  It is
true that there was a great gulf between us which widened with the
years, the gulf of blood and faith, for I knew well that she could
not altogether put away her old beliefs, and it is true that when I
saw her leading the death chant, a great horror took me and for a
while I loathed her.  But these things I might have lived to
forgive, for they were part of her blood and nature, moreover, the
last and worst of them was not done by her own will, and when they
were set aside there remained much that I could honour and love in
the memory of this most royal and beautiful woman, who for so many
years was my faithful wife.  So I thought in that hour and so I
think to this day.  She said that we parted for ever, but I trust
and I believe that this is not so.  Surely there is forgiveness for
us all, and a place where those who were near and dear to each
other on the earth may once more renew their fellowship.

At last I rose with a sigh to seek help, and as I rose I felt that
there was something set about my neck.  It was the collar of great
emeralds which Guatemoc had given to me, and that I had given to
Otomie.  She had set it there while I slept, and with it a lock of
her long hair.  Both shall be buried with me.


I laid her in the ancient sepulchre amid the bones of her
forefathers and by the bodies of her children, and two days later I
rode to Mexico in the train of Bernal Diaz.  At the mouth of the
pass I turned and looked back upon the ruins of the City of Pines,
where I had lived so many years and where all I loved were buried.
Long and earnestly I gazed, as in his hour of death a man looks
back upon his past life, till at length Diaz laid his hand upon my
shoulder:

'You are a lonely man now, comrade,' he said; 'what plans have you
for the future?'

'None,' I answered, 'except to die.'

'Never talk so,' he said; 'why, you are scarcely forty, and I who
am fifty and more do not speak of dying.  Listen; you have friends
in your own country, England?'

'I had.'

'Folk live long in those quiet lands.  Go seek them, I will find
you a passage to Spain.'

'I will think of it,' I answered.

In time we came to Mexico, a new and a strange city to me, for
Cortes had rebuilt it, and where the teocalli had stood, up which I
was led to sacrifice, a cathedral was building, whereof the
foundations were fitly laid with the hideous idols of the Aztecs.
The place was well enough, but it is not so beautiful as the
Tenoctitlan of Montezuma, nor ever will be.  The people too were
changed; then they were warriors and free, now they are slaves.

In Mexico Diaz found me a lodging.  None molested me there, for the
pardon that I had received was respected.  Also I was a ruined man,
no longer to be feared, the part that I had played in the noche
triste and in the defence of the city was forgotten, and the tale
of my sorrows won me pity even from the Spaniards.  I abode in
Mexico ten days, wandering sadly about the city and up to the hill
of Chapoltepec, where Montezuma's pleasure-house had been, and
where I had met Otomie.  Nothing was left of its glories except
some of the ancient cedar trees.  On the eighth day of my stay an
Indian stopped me in the street, saying that an old friend had
charged him to say that she wished to see me.

I followed the Indian, wondering who the friend might be, for I had
no friends, and he led me to a fine stone house in a new street.
Here I was seated in a darkened chamber and waited there a while,
till suddenly a sad and sweet voice that seemed familiar to me,
addressed me in the Aztec tongue, saying, 'Welcome, Teule.'

I looked and there before me, dressed in the Spanish fashion, stood
a lady, an Indian, still beautiful, but very feeble and much worn,
as though with sickness and sorrow.

'Do you not know Marina, Teule?' she said again, but before the
words had left her lips I knew her.  'Well, I will say this, that I
should scarcely have known YOU, Teule.  Trouble and time have done
their work with both of us.'

I took her hand and kissed it.

'Where then is Cortes?' I asked.

Now a great trembling seized her.

'Cortes is in Spain, pleading his suit.  He has wed a new wife
there, Teule.  Many years ago he put me away, giving me in marriage
to Don Juan Xaramillo, who took me because of my possessions, for
Cortes dealt liberally with me, his discarded mistress.'  And she
began to weep.

Then by degrees I learned the story, but I will not write it here,
for it is known to the world.  When Marina had served his turn and
her wit was of no more service to him, the conqueror discarded her,
leaving her to wither of a broken heart.  She told me all the tale
of her anguish when she learned the truth, and of how she had cried
to him that thenceforth he would never prosper.  Nor indeed did he
do so.

For two hours or more we talked, and when I had heard her story I
told her mine, and she wept for me, since with all her faults
Marina's heart was ever gentle.

Then we parted never to meet again.  Before I went she pressed a
gift of money on me, and I was not ashamed to take it who had none.

This then was the history of Marina, who betrayed her country for
her love's sake, and this the reward of her treason and her love.
But I shall always hold her memory sacred, for she was a good
friend to me, and twice she saved my life, nor would she desert me,
even when Otomie taunted her so cruelly.


CHAPTER XXXIX

THOMAS COMES BACK FROM THE DEAD


Now on the morrow of my visit to Marina, the Captain Diaz came to
see me and told me that a friend of his was in command of a carak
which was due to sail from the port of Vera Cruz for Cadiz within
ten days, and that this friend was willing to give me a passage if
I wished to leave Mexico.  I thought for a while and said that I
would go, and that very night, having bid farewell to the Captain
Diaz, whom may God prosper, for he was a good man among many bad
ones, I set out from the city for the last time in the company of
some merchants.  A week's journey took us safely down the mountains
to Vera Cruz, a hot unhealthy town with an indifferent anchorage,
much exposed to the fierce northerly winds.  Here I presented my
letters of recommendation to the commander of the carak, who gave
me passage without question, I laying in a stock of food for the
journey.

Three nights later we set sail with a fair wind, and on the
following morning at daybreak all that was left in sight of the
land of Anahuac was the snowy crest of the volcan Orizaba.
Presently that vanished into the clouds, and thus did I bid
farewell to the far country where so many things had happened to
me, and which according to my reckoning I had first sighted on this
very day eighteen years before.

Of my journey to Spain I have nothing of note to tell.  It was more
prosperous than such voyages often are, and within ten weeks of the
date of our lifting anchor at Vera Cruz, we let it drop in the
harbour of Cadiz.  Here I sojourned but two days, for as it chanced
there was an English ship in the harbour trading to London, and in
her I took a passage, though I was obliged to sell the smallest of
the emeralds from the necklace to find the means to do so, the
money that Marina gave me being spent.  This emerald sold for a
great sum, however, with part of which I purchased clothing
suitable to a person of rank, taking the rest of the gold with me.
I grieved to part with the stone indeed, though it was but a
pendant to the pendant of the collar, but necessity knows no law.
The pendant stone itself, a fine gem though flawed, I gave in after
years to her gracious majesty Queen Elizabeth.

On board the English ship they thought me a Spanish adventurer who
had made moneys in the Indies, and I did not undeceive them, since
I would be left to my own company for a while that I might prepare
my mind to return to ways of thought and life that it had long
forgotten.  Therefore I sat apart like some proud don, saying
little but listening much, and learning all I could of what had
chanced in England since I left it some twenty years before.


At length our voyage came to an end, and on a certain twelfth of
June I found myself in the mighty city of London that I had never
yet visited, and kneeling down in the chamber of my inn, I thanked
God that after enduring so many dangers and hardships, it had
pleased Him to preserve me to set foot again on English soil.
Indeed to this hour I count it nothing short of marvellous that
this frail body of a man should survive all the sorrows and risks
of death by sickness, hunger, battle, murder, drowning, wild
beasts, and the cruelty of men, to which mine had been exposed for
many years.

In London I bought a good horse, through the kind offices of the
host of my inn, and on the morrow at daybreak I set out upon the
Ipswich road.  That very morning my last adventure befell me, for
as I jogged along musing of the beauty of the English landscape and
drinking in the sweet air of June, a cowardly thief fired a pistol
at me from behind a hedge, purposing to plunder me if I fell.  The
bullet passed through my hat, grazing the skull, but before I could
do anything the rascal fled, seeing that he had missed his mark,
and I went on my journey, thinking to myself that it would indeed
have been strange, if after passing such great dangers in safety, I
had died at last by the hand of a miserable foot-pad within five
miles of London town.

I rode hard all that day and the next, and my horse being stout and
swift, by half-past seven o'clock of the evening I pulled up upon
the little hill whence I had looked my last on Bungay, when I rode
thence for Yarmouth with my father.  Below me lay the red roofs of
the town; there to the right were the oaks of Ditchingham and the
beautiful tower of St. Mary's Church, yonder the stream of Waveney
wandered, and before me stretched the meadow lands, purple and
golden with marsh weeds in bloom.  All was as it had been, I could
see no change at all, the only change was in myself.  I dismounted,
and going to a pool of water near the roadway I looked at the
reflection of my own face.  I was changed indeed, scarcely should I
have known it for that of the lad who had ridden up this hill some
twenty years ago.  Now, alas! the eyes were sunken and very
sorrowful, the features were sharp, and there was more grey than
black in the beard and hair.  I should scarcely have known it
myself, would any others know it, I wondered?  Would there be any
to know it indeed?  In twenty years many die and others pass out of
sight; should I find a friend at all among the living?  Since I
read the letters which Captain Bell of the 'Adventuress' had
brought me before I sailed for Hispaniola, I had heard no tidings
from my home, and what tidings awaited me now?  Above all what of
Lily, was she dead or married or gone?

Mounting my horse I pushed on again at a canter, taking the road
past Waingford Mills through the fords and Pirnhow town, leaving
Bungay upon my left.  In ten minutes I was at the gate of the
bridle path that runs from the Norwich road for half a mile or more
beneath the steep and wooded bank under the shelter of which stands
the Lodge at Ditchingham.  By the gate a man loitered in the last
rays of the sun.  I looked at him and knew him; it was Billy Minns,
that same fool who had loosed de Garcia when I left him bound that
I might run to meet my sweetheart.  He was an old man now and his
white hair hung about his withered face, moreover he was unclean
and dressed in rags, but I could have fallen on his neck and
embraced him, so rejoiced was I to look once more on one whom I had
known in youth.

Seeing me come he hobbled on his stick to the gate to open it for
me, whining a prayer for alms.

'Does Mr. Wingfleld live here?' I said, pointing up the path, and
my breath came quick as I asked.

'Mr. Wingfield, sir, Mr. Wingfield, which of them?' he answered.
'The old gentleman he's been dead nigh upon twenty years.  I helped
to dig his grave in the chancel of yonder church I did, we laid him
by his wife--her that was murdered.  Then there's Mr. Geoffrey.'

'What of him?' I asked.

'He's dead, too, twelve year gone or more; he drank hisself to dead
he did.  And Mr. Thomas, he's dead, drowned over seas they say,
many a winter back; they're all dead, all dead!  Ah! he was a rare
one, Mr. Thomas was; I mind me well how when I let the furriner go--'
and he rambled off into the tale of how he had set de Garcia on
his horse after I had beaten him, nor could I bring him back from
it.

Casting him a piece of money, I set spurs to my weary horse and
cantered up the bridle path, leaving the Mill House on my left, and
as I went, the beat of his hoofs seemed to echo the old man's
words, 'All dead, all dead!'  Doubtless Lily was dead also, or if
she was not dead, when the tidings came that I had been drowned at
sea, she would have married.  Being so fair and sweet she would
surely not have lacked for suitors, nor could it be believed that
she had worn her life away mourning over the lost love of her
youth.

Now the Lodge was before me; it had changed no whit except that the
ivy and creepers on its front had grown higher, to the roof indeed,
and I could see that people lived in the house, for it was well
kept, and smoke hung above the chimneys.  The gate was locked, and
there were no serving men about, for night fell fast, and all had
ceased from their labour.  Leaving the house on the right I passed
round it to the stables that are at the back near the hillside
garden, but here the gate was locked also, and I dismounted not
knowing what to do.  Indeed I was so unmanned with fear and doubt
that for a while I seemed bewildered, and leaving the horse to crop
the grass where he stood, I wandered to the foot of the church path
and gazed up the hill as though I waited for the coming of one whom
I should meet.

'What if they were all dead, what if SHE were dead and gone?'  I
buried my face in my hands and prayed to the Almighty who had
protected me through so many years, to spare me this last
bitterness.  I was crushed with sorrow, and I felt that I could
bear no more.  If Lily were lost to me also, then I thought that it
would be best that I should die, since there was nothing left for
which I cared to live.

Thus I prayed for some while, trembling like a leaf, and when I
looked up again, ere I turned to seek tidings from those that dwelt
in the house, whoever they might be, the twilight had fallen
completely, and lo! nightingales sang both far and near.  I
listened to their song, and as I listened, some troubled memory
came back to me that at first I could not grasp.  Then suddenly
there rose up in my mind a vision of the splendid chamber in
Montezuma's palace in Tenoctitlan, and of myself sleeping on a
golden bed, and dreaming on that bed.  I knew it now, I was the god
Tezcat, and on the morrow I must be sacrificed, and I slept in
misery, and as I slept I dreamed.  I dreamed that I stood where I
stood this night, that the scent of the English flowers was in my
nostrils as it was this night, and that the sweet song of the
nightingales rang in my ears as at this present hour.  I dreamed
that as I mused and listened the moon came up over the green ash
and oaks, and lo! there she shone.  I dreamed that I heard a sound
of singing on the hill--

But now I awoke from this vision of the past and of a long lost
dream, for as I stood the sweet voice of a woman began to sing
yonder on the brow of the slope; I was not mad, I heard it clearly,
and the sound grew ever nearer as the singer drew down the steep
hillside.  It was so near now that I could catch the very words of
that sad song which to this day I remember.

Now I could see the woman's shape in the moonlight; it was tall and
stately and clad in a white robe.  Presently she lifted her head to
watch the flitter of a bat and the moonlight lit upon her face.  It
was the face of Lily Bozard, my lost love, beautiful as of yore,
though grown older and stamped with the seal of some great sorrow.
I saw, and so deeply was I stirred at the sight, that had it not
been for the low paling to which I clung, I must have fallen to the
earth, and a deep groan broke from my lips.

She heard the groan and ceased her song, then catching sight of the
figure of a man, she stopped and turned as though to fly.  I stood
quite still, and wonder overcoming her fear, she drew nearer and
spoke in the sweet low voice that I remembered well, saying, 'Who
wanders here so late?  Is it you, John?'

Now when I heard her speak thus a new fear took me.  Doubtless she
was married and 'John' was her husband.  I had found her but to
lose her more completely.  Of a sudden it came into my mind that I
would not discover myself till I knew the truth.  I advanced a
pace, but not so far as to pass from the shadow of the shrubs which
grow here, and taking my stand in such a fashion that the moonlight
did not strike upon my face, I bowed low in the courtly Spanish
fashion, and disguising my voice spoke as a Spaniard might in
broken English which I will spare to write down.

'Madam,' I said, 'have I the honour to speak to one who in bygone
years was named the Senora Lily Bozard?'

'That was my name,' she answered.  'What is your errand with me,
sir?'

Now I trembled afresh, but spoke on boldly.

'Before I answer, Madam, forgive me if I ask another question.  Is
this still your name?'

'It is still my name, I am no married woman,' she answered, and for
a moment the sky seemed to reel above me and the ground to heave
beneath my feet like the lava crust of Xaca.  But as yet I did not
reveal myself, for I wished to learn if she still loved my memory.

'Senora,' I said, 'I am a Spaniard who served in the Indian wars of
Cortes, of which perhaps you have heard.'

She bowed her head and I went on.  'In those wars I met a man who
was named Teule, but who had another name in former days, so he
told me on his deathbed some two years ago.

'What name?' she asked in a low voice.

'Thomas Wingfield.'

Now Lily moaned aloud, and in her turn caught at the pales to save
herself from falling.

'I deemed him dead these eighteen years,' she gasped; 'drowned in
the Indian seas where his vessel foundered.'

'I have heard say that he was shipwrecked in those seas, senora,
but he escaped death and fell among the Indians, who made a god of
him and gave him the daughter of their king in marriage,' and I
paused.

She shivered, then said in a hard voice, 'Continue, sir; I listen
to you.'

'My friend Teule took the part of the Indians in the wars, as being
the husband of one of their princesses he must do in honour, and
fought bravely for them for many years.  At length the town that he
defended was captured, his one remaining child was murdered, his
wife the princess slew herself for sorrow, and he himself was taken
into captivity, where he languished and died.'

'A sad tale, sir,' she said with a little laugh--a mournful laugh
that was half choked by tears.

'A very sad tale, senora, but one which is not finished.  While he
lay dying, my friend told me that in his early life he had plighted
troth with a certain English maid, named--'

'I know the name--continue.'

'He told me that though he had been wedded, and loved his wife the
princess, who was a very royal woman, that many times had risked
her life for his, ay, even to lying at his side upon the stone of
sacrifice and of her own free will, yet the memory of this maiden
to whom he was once betrothed had companioned him through life and
was strong upon him now at its close.  Therefore he prayed me for
our friendship's sake to seek her out when I returned to Europe,
should she still live, and to give her a message from him, and to
make a prayer to her on his behalf.'

'What message and what prayer?' Lily whispered.

'This: that he loved her at the end of his life as he had loved her
at its beginning; that he humbly prayed her forgiveness because he
had broken the troth which they two swore beneath the beech at
Ditchingham.'

'Sir,' she cried, 'what do you know of that?'

'Only what my friend told me, senora.'

'Your friendship must have been close and your memory must be
good,' she murmured.

'Which he had done,' I went on, 'under strange circumstances, so
strange indeed that he dared to hope that his broken troth might be
renewed in some better world than this.  His last prayer was that
she should say to me, his messenger, that she forgave him and still
loved him, as to his death he loved her.'

'And how can such forgiveness or such an avowal advantage a dead
man?' Lily asked, watching me keenly through the shadows.  'Have
the dead then eyes to see and ears to hear?'

'How can I know, senora?  I do but execute my mission.'

'And how can I know that you are a true messenger.  It chanced that
I had sure tidings of the drowning of Thomas Wingfield many years
ago, and this tale of Indians and princesses is wondrous strange,
more like those that happen in romances than in this plain world.
Have you no token of your good faith, sir?'

'I have such a token, senora, but the light is too faint for you to
see it.'

'Then follow me to the house, there we will get light.  Stay,' and
once more going to the stable gate, she called 'John.'

An old man answered her, and I knew the voice for that of one of my
father's serving men.  To him she spoke in low tones, then led the
way by the garden path to the front door of the house, which she
opened with a key from her girdle, motioning to me to pass in
before her.  I did so, and thinking little of such matters at the
moment, turned by habit into the doorway of the sitting-room which
I knew so well, lifting my feet to avoid stumbling on its step, and
passing into the room found my way through the gloom to the wide
fireplace where I took my stand.  Lily watched me enter, then
following me, she lit a taper at the fire which smouldered on the
hearth, and placed it upon the table in the window in such fashion
that though I was now obliged to take off my hat, my face was still
in shadow.

'Now, sir, your token if it pleases you.'

Then I drew the posy ring from my finger and gave it to her, and
she sat down by the table and examined it in the light of the
candle, and as she sat thus, I saw how beautiful she was still, and
how little time had touched her, except for the sadness of her
face, though now she had seen eight-and-thirty winters.  I saw also
that though she kept control of her features as she looked upon the
ring, her breast heaved quickly and her hand shook.

'The token is a true one,' she said at length.  'I know the ring,
though it is somewhat worn since last I saw it, it was my mother's;
and many years ago I gave it as a love gage to a youth to whom I
promised myself in marriage.  Doubtless all your tale is true also,
sir, and I thank you for your courtesy in bringing it so far.  It
is a sad tale, a very sad tale.  And now, sir, as I may not ask you
to stay in this house where I live alone, and there is no inn near,
I propose to send serving men to conduct you to my brother's
dwelling that is something more than a mile away, if indeed,' she
added slowly, 'you do not already know the path!  There you will
find entertainment, and there the sister of your dead companion,
Mary Bozard, will be glad to learn the story of his strange
adventures from your lips.'

I bowed my head and answered, 'First, senora, I would pray your
answer to my friend's dying prayer and message.'

'It is childish to send answers to the dead.'

'Still I pray for them as I was charged to do.'

'How reads the writing within this ring, sir?'


     'Heart to heart,
      Though far apart,'


I said glibly, and next instant I could have bitten out my tongue.

'Ah! you know that also, but doubtless you have carried the ring
for many months and learned the writing.  Well, sir, though we were
far apart, and though perchance I cherished the memory of him who
wore this ring, and for his sake remained unwed, it seems that his
heart went a straying--to the breast indeed of some savage woman
whom he married, and who bore him children.  That being so, my
answer to the prayer of your dead friend is that I forgive him
indeed, but I must needs take back the vows which I swore to him
for this life and for ever, since he has broken them, and as best I
may, strive to cast out the love I bore him since he rejected and
dishonoured it,' and standing up Lily made as though she tore at
her breast and threw something from her, and at the same time she
let fall the ring upon the floor.

I heard and my heart stood still.  So this was the end of it.
Well, she had the right of me, though now I began to wish that I
had been less honest, for sometimes women can forgive a lie sooner
than such frankness.  I said nothing, my tongue was tied, but a
great misery and weariness entered into me.  Stooping down I found
the ring, and replacing it on my finger, I turned to seek the door
with a last glance at the woman who refused me.  Halfway thither I
paused for one second, wondering if I should do well to declare
myself, then bethought me that if she would not abate her anger
toward me dead, her pity for me living would be small.  Nay, I was
dead to her, and dead I would remain.

Now I was at the door and my foot was on its step, when suddenly a
voice, Lily's voice, sounded in my ears and it was sweet and kind.

'Thomas,' said the voice, 'Thomas, before you go, will you not take
count of the gold and goods and land that you placed in my
keeping?'

Now I turned amazed, and lo! Lily came towards me slowly and with
outstretched arms.

'Oh! foolish man,' she whispered low, 'did you think to deceive a
woman's heart thus clumsily?  You who talked of the beech in the
Hall garden, you who found your way so well to this dark chamber,
and spoke the writing in the ring with the very voice of one who
has been dead so long.  Listen: I forgive that friend of yours his
broken troth, for he was honest in the telling of his fault and it
is hard for man to live alone so many years, and in strange
countries come strange adventures; moreover, I will say it, I still
love him as it seems that he loves me, though in truth I grow
somewhat old for love, who have lingered long waiting to find it
beyond my grave.

Thus Lily spoke, sobbing as she spoke, then my arms closed round
her and she said no more.  And yet as our lips met I thought of
Otomie, remembering her words, and remembering also that she had
died by her own hand on this very day a year ago.

Let us pray that the dead have no vision of the living!



CHAPTER XL

AMEN


And now there is little left for me to tell and my tale draws to
its end, for which I am thankful, for I am very old and writing is
a weariness to me, so great a weariness indeed that many a time
during the past winter I have been near to abandoning the task.

For a while Lily and I sat almost silent in this same room where I
write to-day, for our great joy and many another emotion that was
mixed with it, clogged our tongues.  Then as though moved by one
impulse, we knelt down and offered our humble thanks to heaven that
had preserved us both to this strange meeting.  Scarcely had we
risen from our knees when there was a stir without the house, and
presently a buxom dame entered, followed by a gallant gentleman, a
lad, and a maiden.  These were my sister Mary, her husband Wilfred
Bozard, Lily's brother, and their two surviving children, Roger and
Joan.  When she guessed that it was I come home again and no other,
Lily had sent them tidings by the servant man John, that one was
with her whom she believed they would be glad to see, and they had
hurried hither, not knowing whom they should find.  Nor were they
much the wiser at first, for I was much changed and the light in
the room shone dim, but stood perplexed, wondering who this
stranger might be.

'Mary,' I said at length, 'Mary, do you not remember me, my
sister?'

Then she cried aloud, and throwing herself into my arms, she wept
there a while, as would any of us were our beloved dead suddenly to
appear before our eyes, alive and well, and her husband clasped me
by the hand and swore heartily in his amazement, as is the fashion
of some men when they are moved.  But the children stood staring
blankly till I called the girl to me, who now was much what her
mother had been when we parted, and kissing her, told her that I
was that uncle of whom perhaps she had heard as dead many years
ago.

Then my horse, that all this while had been forgotten, having been
caught and stabled, we went to supper and it was a strange meal to
me, and after meat I asked for tidings.  Now I learned that the
fortune which my old master Fonseca had left to me came home in
safety, and that it had prospered exceedingly under Lily's care,
for she had spent but very little of it for her maintenance,
looking on it always as a trust rather than as her own.  When my
death seemed certain my sister Mary had entered on her share of my
possessions, however, and with it had purchased some outlying lands
in Earsham and Hedenham, and the wood and manor of Tyndale Hall in
Ditchingham and Broome.  These lands I made haste to say she might
keep as a gift from me, since it seemed that I had greater riches
than I could need without them, and this saying of mine pleased her
husband Wilfred Bozard not a little, seeing that it is hard for a
man to give up what he has held for many years.

Then I heard the rest of the story; of my father's sudden death, of
how the coming of the gold had saved Lily from being forced into
marriage with my brother Geoffrey, who afterwards had taken to evil
courses which ended in his decease at the age of thirty-one; of the
end of Squire Bozard, Lily's father and my old enemy, from an
apoplexy which took him in a sudden fit of anger.  After this it
seemed, her brother being married to my sister Mary, Lily had moved
down to the Lodge, having paid off the charges that my brother
Geoffrey had heaped upon his heritage, and bought out my sister's
rights to it.  And here at the Lodge she had lived ever since, a
sad and lonely woman, and yet not altogether an unhappy one, for
she gave much of her time to good works.  Indeed she told me that
had it not been for the wide lands and moneys which she must manage
as my heiress, she would have betaken herself to a sisterhood,
there to wear her life away in peace, since I being lost to her,
and indeed dead, as she was assured,--for the news of the wreck of
the carak found its way to Ditchingham,--she no longer thought of
marriage, though more than one gentleman of condition had sought
her hand.  This, with some minor matters, such as the birth and
death of children, and the story of the great storm and flood that
smote Bungay, and indeed the length of the vale of Waveney in those
days, was all the tale that they had to tell who had grown from
youth to middle age in quiet.  For of the crowning and end of kings
and of matters politic, such as the downfall of the power of the
Pope of Rome and the sacking of the religious houses which was
still in progress, I make no mention here.

But now they called for mine, and I began it at the beginning, and
it was strange to see their faces as they listened.  All night
long, till the thrushes sang down the nightingales, and the dawn
shone in the east, I sat at Lily's side telling them my story, and
then it was not finished.  So we slept in the chambers that had
been made ready for us, and on the morrow I took it up again,
showing them the sword that had belonged to Bernal Diaz, the great
necklace of emeralds which Guatemoc had given to me, and certain
scars and wounds in witness of its truth.  Never did I see folk so
much amazed, and when I came to speak of the last sacrifice of the
women of the Otomie, and of the horrid end of de Garcia who died
fighting with his own shadow, or rather with the shadows of his own
wickedness, they cried aloud with fear, as they wept when I told of
the deaths of Isabella de Siguenza and of Guatemoc, and of the loss
of my sons.

But I did not tell all the story to this company, for some of it
was for Lily's ear alone, and to her I spoke of my dealings with
Otomie as a man might speak with a man, for I felt that if I kept
anything back now there would never be complete faith between us.
Therefore I set out all my doubts and troublings, nor did I hide
that I had learned to love Otomie, and that her beauty and
sweetness had drawn me from the first moment when I saw her in the
court of Montezuma, or that which had passed between us on the
stone of sacrifice.

When I had done Lily thanked me for my honesty and said it seemed
that in such matters men differed from women, seeing that SHE had
never felt the need to be delivered from the temptation of strange
loves.  Still we were as God and Nature had made us, and therefore
had little right to reproach each other, or even to set that down
as virtue which was but lack of leaning.  Moreover, this Otomie,
her sin of heathenism notwithstanding, had been a great-hearted
woman and one who might well dazzle the wandering eyes of man,
daring more for her love's sake than ever she, Lily, could have
dared; and to end with, it was clear that at last I must choose
between wedding her and a speedy death, and having sworn so great
an oath to her I should have been perjured indeed if I had left her
when my dangers were gone by.  Therefore she, Lily, was minded to
let all this matter rest, nor should she be jealous if I still
thought of this dead wife of mine with tenderness.

Thus she spoke most sweetly, looking at me the while with her clear
and earnest eyes, that I ever fancied must be such as adorn the
shining faces of angels.  Ay, and those same eyes of hers were
filled with tears when I told her my bitter grief over the death of
my firstborn and of my other bereavements.  For it was not till
some years afterwards, when she had abandoned further hope of
children, that Lily grew jealous of those dead sons of mine and of
my ever present love for them.


Now the tidings of my return and of my strange adventures among the
nations of the Indies were noised abroad far and wide, and people
came from miles round, ay, even from Norwich and Yarmouth, to see
me and I was pressed to tell my tale till I grew weary of it.  Also
a service of thanksgiving for my safe deliverance from many dangers
by land and sea was held in the church of St. Mary's here in
Ditchingham, which service was no longer celebrated after the rites
of the Romish faith, for while I had sojourned afar, the saints
were fallen like the Aztec gods; the yoke of Rome had been broken
from off the neck of England, and though all do not think with me,
I for one rejoiced at it heartily who had seen enough of
priestcraft and its cruelties.

When that ceremony was over and all people had gone to their homes,
I came back again to the empty church from the Hall, where I abode
a while as the guest of my sister and her husband, till Lily and I
were wed.

And there in the quiet light of the June evening I knelt in the
chancel upon the rushes that strewed the grave of my father and my
mother, and sent my spirit up towards them in the place of their
eternal rest, and to the God who guards them.  A great calm came
upon me as I knelt thus, and I felt how mad had been that oath of
mine that as a lad I had sworn to be avenged upon de Garcia, and I
saw how as a tree from a seed, all my sorrows had grown from it.
But even then I could not do other than hate de Garcia, no, nor can
I to this hour, and after all it was natural that I should desire
vengeance on the murderer of my mother though the wreaking of it
had best been left in another Hand.

Without the little chancel door I met Lily, who was lingering there
knowing me to be within, and we spoke together.

'Lily,' I said, 'I would ask you something.  After all that has
been, will you still take me for your husband, unworthy as I am?'

'I promised so to do many a year ago, Thomas,' she answered,
speaking very low, and blushing like the wild rose that bloomed
upon a grave beside her, 'and I have never changed my mind.  Indeed
for many years I have looked upon you as my husband, though I
thought you dead.'

'Perhaps it is more than I deserve,' I said.  'but if it is to be,
say when it shall be, for youth has left us and we have little time
to lose.'

'When you will, Thomas,' she answered, placing her hand in mine.

Within a week from that evening we were wed.


And now my tale is done.  God who gave me so sad and troublous a
youth and early manhood, has blessed me beyond measure in my middle
age and eld.  All these events of which I have written at such
length were done with many a day ago: the hornbeam sapling that I
set beneath these windows in the year when we were married is now a
goodly tree of shade and still I live to look on it.  Here in the
happy valley of the Waveney, save for my bitter memories and that
longing for the dead which no time can so much as dull, year after
year has rolled over my silvering hairs in perfect health and peace
and rest, and year by year have I rejoiced more deeply in the true
love of a wife such as few have known.  For it would seem as though
the heart-ache and despair of youth had but sweetened that most
noble nature till it grew well nigh divine.  But one sorrow came to
us, the death of our infant child--for it was fated that I should
die childless--and in that sorrow, as I have told, Lily shewed that
she was still a woman.  For the rest no shadow lay between us.
Hand in hand we passed down the hill of life, till at length in the
fulness of her days my wife was taken from me.  One Christmas night
she lay down to sleep at my side, in the morning she was dead.  I
grieved indeed and bitterly, but the sorrow was not as the sorrows
of my youth had been, since age and use dull the edge of mortal
griefs and I knew and know that we are no long space apart.  Very
soon I shall join Lily where she is, and I do not fear that
journey.  For the dread of death has left me at length, as it
departs from all who live long enough and strive to repent them of
their sins, and I am well content to leave my safety at the Gates
and my heavenly comfort in the Almighty Hand that saved me from the
stone of sacrifice and has guided me through so many perils upon
this troubled earth.

And now to God my Father, Who holds me, Thomas Wingfield, and all I
have loved and love in His holy keeping, be thanks and glory and
praise!  Amen.