登陆注册
19626300000051

第51章 CHAPTER XII. DANGER AND HELP.(2)

Vengeance without mercy is to be dealt out. You are the wife of an American rebel; I cannot promise you your life, or your honor, if you remain here. When soldiers are drunk with blood, and women fall in their way, God have mercy upon them!

I would shield even your rebellious daughter Antonia from such a fate. I open the doors of the convent to you all. There you will find safety and peace."

Isabel sat with white, parted lips and clasped hands, listening. Antonia had not moved or spoken. But with the last words the priest half-turned to her, and she came swiftly to her mother's side, and kissing her, whispered:

"Remember your promise to my father! Oh, mi madre, do not leave Isabel and me alone!"

"You, too, dear ones! We will all go together, till these dreadful days are past."

"No, no, no! Isabel and I will not go. We will die rather."

"The Senorita talks like a foolish one. Listen again! When Santa Anna comes for judgment, it will be swift and terrible.

This house and estate will be forfeited. The faithful Church may hope righteously to obtain it. The sisters have long needed a good home. The convent will then come to you. You will have no shelter but the Church. Come to her arms ere her entreaties are turned to commands."

"My husband told me--"

"Saints of God! you have no husband. He has forfeited every right to advise you. Consider that, daughter; and if you trust not my advice, there is yet living your honorable uncle, the Marquis de Gonzaga."

Antonia caught eagerly at this suggestion. It at least offered some delay, in which the Senora might be strengthened to resist the coercion of Fray Ignatius.

"Mother, it is a good thought. My great-uncle will tell you what to do; and my father will not blame you for following his advice. Perhaps even he may offer his home. You are the child of his sister."

Fray Ignatius walked towards the fire-place and stood rubbing slowly his long, thin hands before the blaze, while the Senora and her daughters discussed this proposal. The half-frantic mother was little inclined to make any further effort to resist the determined will of her old confessor; but the tears of Isabel won from her a promise to see her uncle.

"Then, my daughter, lose no time. I cannot promise you many days in which choice will be left you. Go this afternoon, and to-morrow I will call for your decision."

It was not a visit that the Senora liked to make. She had deeply offended her uncle by her marriage, and their intercourse had since been of the most ceremonious and infrequent kind. But surely, at this hour, when she was left without any one to advise her steps, he would remember the tie of blood between them.

He received her with more kindness than she had anticipated.

His eyes glittered in their deep sockets when she related her extremity and the priest's proposal, and his small shrunken body quivered with excitement as he answered:

"Saints and angels! Fray Ignatius is right about Santa Anna.

We shall see that he will make caps for his soldiers out of the skins of these infidel ingrates. But as for going into the convent, I know not. A miserable marriage you made for yourself, Maria. Pardon, if I say so much! I let the word slip always. I was never one to bite my tongue. I am all old man--very well, come here, you and your daughters, till the days of blood are over. There is room in the house, and a few comforts in it also. I have some power with Santa Anna.

He is a great man--a great man! In all his wars, good fortune flies before him."

He kissed her hands as he opened the door, and then went back to the fire, and bent, muttering, over it: "Giver of good! a true Yturbide; a gentle woman; she is like my sister Mercedes--very like her. These poor women who trust me, as I am a sinner before God, I am unhappy to deceive them."

Fray Ignatius might have divined his thoughts, for he entered at the moment, and said as he approached him:

"You have done right. The soul must be saved, if all is lost.

This is not a time for the friends of the Church and of Mexico to waver. The Church is insulted every day by these foreign heretics--"

"But you are mistaken, father; the Church holds up her head, whatever happens. Even the vice-regal crown is not lost--the Church has cleft it into mitres."

Fray Ignatius smiled, but there was a curious and crafty look of inquiry on his face. "The city is turbulent, Marquis, and there is undoubtedly a great number of Mexicans opposed to Santa Anna."

"Do you not know Mexicans yet? They would be opposed to God Almighty, rather than confess they were well governed. Bah! the genius of Mexico is mutiny. They scarcely want a leader to move their madness. They rebel on any weak pretence. They bluster when they are courted; they crouch when they are oppressed. They are fools to all the world but themselves.

I beg the Almighty to consider in my favor, that some over-hasty angel misplaced my lot. I should have been born in--New York."

The priest knew that he was talking for irritation, but he was too politic to favor the mood. He stood on the hearth with his hands folded behind him, and with a delightful suavity turned the conversation upon the country rather than the people. It was a glorious day in the dawn of spring. The tenderest greens, the softest blues, the freshest scents, the clearest air, the most delightful sunshine were everywhere.

The white old town, with its picturesque crowds, its murmur of voices and laughter, its echoes of fife and drum, its loves and its hatreds, was at his feet; and, far off, the hazy glory of the mountains, the greenness and freshness of Paradise, the peace and freedom of the vast, unplanted places.

The old marquis was insensibly led to contemplate the whole; and, in so doing, to put uppermost that pride of country which was the base of every feeling susceptible to the priest's influence.

"Such a pleasant city, Marquis! Spanish monks founded it.

Spanish and Mexican soldiers have defended it. Look at its fine churches and missions; its lovely homes, and blooming gardens."

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 战神之妖魔统治

    战神之妖魔统治

    ー场神与魔的战斗…!ー场新的革命诗篇…!
  • 无底洞的底

    无底洞的底

    本书的8篇中篇小说,既囊括了“混沌的前青春期和情爱的酸涩与美好”,也讲述了“哀乐中年”的日常与世俗。上个世纪八十年代以来,一个苏北小城的世态人情风貌在社会转型、经济改革的大背景中所发生的多元变化,在一个个故事里丰满立体起来。作者用其传神的笔触,展示了在图像时代的今天,文字仍有其独特的、不可取代的表现力。
  • 灰羽微光曲录

    灰羽微光曲录

    那一天,世界……崩溃了。积木般的城市绝望的倒塌,地平线上升起了末日。现在,世界的终末,已经落入了死神的手心中。不知从何而来的少女,终将沾染鲜血的宿命中。“即使世界抛弃了我,我依旧相信,这个世界是有善意,就算被抛弃,我也会去追逐那颗最温暖的星星。”在世界的角落,死神拉开了他漆黑的斗篷。“我能够带给你的只有这些了,喂,跟我一起逃走好吗?”
  • 华丽丽的蜕变

    华丽丽的蜕变

    一个普通的平凡少女,遭到明星男友的抛弃,一狠心,决定报复,看她怎样爆笑玩转娱乐圈吧!
  • 天下第一美人

    天下第一美人

    他是傲视天下的骄子,是众人心中的“战神”,睿智,霸气,帅气。她是封建等级社会中罕见的奇女,是“天下第一美人”,聪明,美丽,娇弱。当命运将两人系在一起,会发生怎样的奇迹?是遵守世俗的礼教,还是相知相惜,共视天下?
  • 我的第一本性格心理书

    我的第一本性格心理书

    本书将带你走进平常不易涉足的性格心理世界,去了解一个你过去从未了解过的自己,找回本来的自己。那时,潜藏在你体内的激情将会爆发,你会成为你想成为的自己:一个富足、充盈、具备无限的创造力和无尽的生命活力的新人!这本书带你探索人类性格的奥秘,不仅能引领你绘制属于你的“性格地图”,挖掘出其中的“宝藏”,还将教会你识别他人的“性格疆域”,从而使你在个人成长、人际关系、婚姻家庭以及工作求学等方面得到迅速提升,越走越辉煌。
  • 与美同邻

    与美同邻

    与美女邻居从相遇到相知最后最后到相爱的故事。。
  • 虚空幻灭

    虚空幻灭

    或为力量,或为长生,神州大陆上的人纷纷走上了修炼的道路。是逆天而行。炼化山川,吞噬天地,做掠夺万物灵力的魔修,还是顺应天意,吸收天地气运,身化自然,做天人合一的道修?遭到暗算,灵脉尽废的风巡,却走上了全新的修炼之路——修炼空无之力。无相化有相,有相化万相。顺天?逆天?天与我何干?我只要顺应自己的本心!
  • 魔妃逆天:绝世异灵师

    魔妃逆天:绝世异灵师

    【暹罗猫。club】“璃儿,你不觉得你需要负责吗?”“是你自己脱的”…………“你确定你不脱吗?凤染尘……”“呵呵~璃儿,你太过心急了吧?”她不懂情,却凭着直觉在这浮华乱世走走停停。却独对他露出独有的脆弱。他所有温柔仅是她而已,外人,欺她,伤她,死?太便宜了一点吧!灵魂因执念而变成怨灵?物品因情而形成物灵?大地孕育修炼自然之灵?其中七情六欲,纠葛剪不断,理不清,终是你负了我,可是我却不恨的,我用一世成魔堕落,让你守你永世所求
  • 乾坤斗破诀

    乾坤斗破诀

    天为苍,地为穹。斗乾坤,破阴阳。我命有我不由天!