"Ah! perhaps a connection by marriage?"
"Well, no--not exactly a connection, either--"
"Well, you see, senor, in Spain etiquette is very strict, and our ladies are under more restraint than with you. I must treat this lady in accordance with my own feelings, and a Spanish gentleman would feel as if he were slighting a lady if he were to act out of accordance with Spanish etiquette."
"Oh," said Harry, earnestly, "she is an English lady."
"But I am a Spanish gentleman."
Harry drew a long breath. He was in despair. Oh, how he longed to be Katie"s third cousin for a few minutes.
"I am very sorry," said Lopez, "but you see I have to be guided by my own sense of propriety. I suppose you are a very old friend, senor; yet I have been quite intimate with the senorita myself, and never heard her mention your name."
"Well," said Harry, "I have not known her _very_ long."
"She used to speak freely of all her English friends," continued Lopez; "for you see she had not many, having lived so long in Spain; and so I was surprised to hear you speak of her as so intimate a friend."
"Well," said Harry, "my acquaintance with her is not of _very_ long standing."
"You were not acquainted with her at Madrid?" said Lopez.
"No," said Harry, dreamily.
"Nor at Cadiz?" continued Lopez.
"No--not Cadiz."
"Then, senor, you could only have made her acquaintance on this journey,"
said Lopez, with a smile, which was not merely put on for a purpose. He felt like smiling, so successful had he been in getting at the truth.
Harry looked confused.
"Well, you see, senor, in captivity, or on a journey, people are very much thrown together, and they make friendships very fast."
"Oh yes," said Lopez, "I understand. In short, it amounts to this, that one day of such intercourse, so free, so unconventional, is equal to a whole year, or even a whole lifetime, of the formal intercourse of ordinary social life."
"Well, senor, I am sorry. I came back thinking that you might be some near relative or connection. My own ideas and habits do not allow me to permit what you ask; but the senorita will be her own mistress in time, and then of course she can see whom she chooses."
And now, for a second time, Lopez walked away, thinking that he understood all. Another victim, he thought. And in two or three days: in that time she has turned his head. And does she return his pa.s.sion? Is she as indifferent to him as she is to me, and to Ashby? I will soon find out.
CHAPTER XLVI.
IN WHICH LOPEZ MAKES A FRESH a.s.sAULT, AND KATIE BREAKS DOWN UTTERLY.
Once more Lopez called upon Katie: it was about two hours after his last call. This was his third call in one day. She looked surprised and also vexed.
"A little matter has occurred to me," said he, "which I thought I would mention to you, as it ought to be of some concern to you."
"Ah!" said Katie, languidly, as Lopez paused. She seemed to be more indifferent, if possible, than ever; more self-absorbed, and more bored with his society.
"It"s about a certain Mr. Rivers," continued Lopez.
It was not without very careful premeditation that Lopez had entered upon this interview, and the result of his thoughts was that he had decided upon introducing this matter in the most abrupt manner possible. But in all his speculations as to the possible effect of this new scheme, he had never imagined anything like the reality as he now witnessed it.
At the mention of that name Katie"s manner changed instantly and utterly.
From languor, from indifference, and from boredom, she started up erect with wild excitement and terrified interest. In her face there was a perfect anguish of fear and apprehension. Her eyes stared upon him in utter horror; she gasped for breath, and it was not until some time that she could articulate a few words.
"Mr.--Mr.--Rivers!" she gasped. "Did you say--Mr. Rivers?"
However amazed Lopez was at Katie"s intensity of excitement, he made no reference to it, and answered in a quiet and matter-of-fact tone.
"He said he was acquainted with you, and wanted to see you."
"To see me? Mr. Rivers?" said Katie, still agitated. "And can--can he--will he--will you let him? Did you consent?"
"Well," said Lopez, "you see, there were reasons--"
"Reasons!" repeated Katie, all tremulously, and in dire suspense--"reasons!" she waited his reply breathlessly. The thought of Harry being in the power of Lopez, of the hate and malignant vengeance which Lopez might pour forth upon his devoted head, had all occurred to her at once at the mention of his name, and still overwhelmed her.
"In Spain, you know," said Lopez, "there is not such freedom of social intercourse between young unmarried ladies and gentlemen as in England, and I did not think that you would feel like violating our Spanish etiquette."
"Spanish etiquette!" cried Katie, with nervous eagerness; "oh, that is nothing--Tell him he may come--he may come; tell him he may come--I shall be most happy to see him--I shall be so glad to see him! I shall--oh, I shall--be--I shall be--oh yes, glad to see him!"
Katie was struggling with intense feeling. Her feelings carried her away completely. Lopez saw this plainly, and felt, as he had felt in Ashby"s case, partly triumphant exultation, partly the bitterest jealousy. But he had a careful guard over every exhibition of his own feelings. And yet, in the midst of his exultation, his jealousy, and his efforts at self-control, he marvelled greatly at the intensity of feeling displayed by this girl whom he had believed to be so immovable. And for whom?--for an acquaintance of three days" standing.
"Oh, but you see," said he, "there is something else to prevent, unfortunately."
"Something else!" repeated Katie, in a low, trembling voice: "and _unfortunately_! did you say _unfortunately_?"
"I said _unfortunately_," said Lopez. "You see--I forgot to mention it before, as I did not know that you were acquainted with him--but this Rivers has been arrested as a spy."
This was, of course, untrue; but Lopez was merely trying an experiment on Katie.
The experiment was fearfully successful.
In an instant all that Lopez had said at their last interview about the fate of spies rushed to her mind. Ashby"s fate she had regarded with mild pity, but the fate of Rivers seemed to crush her down into the dust.
She clutched the arm of Lopez convulsively with both her hands; she raised up her face--white with horror; she gasped for breath.
"Oh, senor! oh, senor!" she cried, "what is it that you mean? A spy!
Harry a spy, and arrested! Oh, you cannot mean it! Say that you do not mean it! Oh, say it--say it!"
She could say no more. Her grasp loosened. She fell back, and, burying her face in her hands, burst into a pa.s.sion of tears. Sobs convulsed that slender frame. Lopez sat with a bitter smile regarding her.