"Why do you look at me like that?" she exclaimed, turning round suddenly and blushing violently, whereupon Dona Paula and Venturita burst out laughing.
CHAPTER III
SAFE ARRIVAL OF THE "BELLA PAULA"
The crowd of people ran through the streets in the direction of the port. Foremost, accompanied by six or eight sailors, his son Pablo and several friends, came Don Rosendo, silent and preoccupied as he listened to his companions" remarks, uttered in voices panting from exertion.
"Don Domingo is in luck to get in at nearly high tide," said a sailor, alluding to the captain of the "Bella Paula."
"How do you know he is coming in? He may have cast anchor this afternoon," remarked another.
"Where?"
"You ask "where?" you fool! Why, in the Bay, of course," replied the other in a rage.
"If so, we should see her, Uncle Miguel."
"How could we see her, you idiot? Why shouldn"t she have dropped anchor behind the Corvera Rock?"
"The flag of the "Bella Paula" would float higher than the rock, Uncle Miguel."
"Whatever do you know about it?"
"What cargo does she carry?" asked a bystander of the owner.
"Four thousand hundredweight."
"From Scotland?"
"No, all from Norway."
"Is the Senorita de las Cuevas on board?"
Don Rosendo did not reply; but after a few more quick steps he turned round, saying:
"Don Melchor must be told that the "Bella Paula" is coming in."
"I"ll go," said a sailor, detaching himself from the crowd, and turning back to the town.
They arrived at the mole. The night was starless, the wind had sunk, the sea was calm. They pa.s.sed the little old mole, and directed their steps to the end of the new mole, which had been recently built, and stretched some little distance out to sea. Lights from the moored boats shone here and there in the darkness; the thick network of riggings was scarcely discernible, and the hulks looked like formless black ma.s.ses.
The newcomers did not at first perceive another group of people at the end of the mole until they came upon them. They were all silent, with their eyes fixed on the sea, trying to make out the lines of the ship in the mist. The waves breaking monotonously against the rocks near by occasionally shimmered in the darkness.
"Where is she?" asked several of the comers from the theatre, as they cast their eyes around.
"There!"
"Where?"
"Don"t you see a little green light there to the left? Follow my hand."
"Ah! Yes, now I see."
Don Rosendo went on to the second stage of the mole, and there ran against Don Melchor de las Cuevas. He was an old, very tall, wiry man; he wore his beard sailor fashion, that is to say, he let it hang round his neck like a bag. He had a stronger reason for doing this than the majority of the people of Sarrio who do so, for he belonged to the honored profession of the navy, although he was now on the retired list.
But in seaport towns, and particularly when the place is small like that of which we are speaking, the maritime element preponderates, and so permeates the place that the inhabitants, unintentionally, and in spite of themselves, adopt certain sailor customs, words, and fashions.
The Senor de las Cuevas had been a gallant, fine fellow when he was young, and now at seventy-four he was still a vigorous, active man, with bright, penetrating eyes, aquiline nose, a fine, open countenance, and a bearing full of energy and decision.
He was standing on one of the seats fixed against the wall of the mole, with an enormous telescope turned toward the little green light which shone intermittently in the distance. He was by far the tallest figure in the group of spectators.
"Don Melchor, you here already! I have just sent a messenger to your house."
"I have been here for an hour," returned the Senor de las Cuevas, taking his gla.s.s from his eye. "I saw the ship from the observatory a little after sunset."
"Who would have thought it? How is it that nothing at sea escapes your observation?"
"I have better sight than when I was a lad of twenty," said Don Melchor in a loud, decided voice for all to hear.
"I believe it, I believe it, Don Melchor."
"I can see a little launch tack twenty miles off."
"I believe it, I believe it, Don Melchor."
"And if I were put to it," continued the old officer, in a louder tone, "I could count the masts of the frigates that pa.s.s the Ferrol."
"Draw it mild, Don Melchor," said a voice. There was a round of suppressed laughter in the dark, for Senor de las Cuevas inspired all the sea-folk with profound respect.
The old sailor turned his head angrily in the direction of the jeering remark, and, after silently trying to pierce the gloom, he said in a severe tone:
"If I knew who that was who said that I would chuck him into the sea."
n.o.body dared say a word, nor was a sign of a smile seen, for it was well known in Sarrio that the Senor de las Cuevas was quite equal to fulfilling his threat.
He had served more than forty years in the navy, and had won the reputation of being a brave, punctilious officer; but his severity bordered on cruelty. When no commander of a ship exercised the old maritime laws, Don Melchor still strove to keep them in practise. It was told with horror in the town that a sailor was drowned through his making him pa.s.s three times under the keel according to the old punishment for certain transgressions; and more than a hundred men had been crippled by his blows, or had had the skin taken off their backs by his use of the rope.
However, there was no pilot or sailor who could be compared with him in his knowledge of all pertaining to the sea, the weather, ships, and all the secrets of navigation.
The little green light continued its slow approach until the form of the "Bella Paula" was visible to the naked eye, and, moreover, two or three black spots could be seen hovering around her from different sides. They were the pilot"s launch and the auxiliary boats, ready to tow the ship when necessary. Sail was crowded on the ship, as there was scarcely any wind. However, it was too near the breakwater not to be dangerous. At least Don Melchor thought so, for he began to swear under his breath, and to seem uneasy. At last, no longer able to restrain himself, although he knew he was not within earshot, he cried out:
"Furl the maintopsail, Domingo! What are you waiting for?"
He had scarcely uttered these words when the almost imperceptible forms of the sailors were seen on the mastheads.