Esteban became superb. He rose to the height of the argument, and to that of his inches, took off his old hat and held it out the length of his arm. "Let the lady fear nothing, senor caballero of my soul. I engage the honour of a gentleman that she shall have every consideration at my hands which her virtues merit. No more"--he looked at the sullen beauty between him and the Englishman--"No more, for that would be idolatrous; and no less, for that would be injustice. _Vaya, senor caballero, vaya Vdcon Dios_." Manvers nodded and strolled away.
CHAPTER VI
A SPANISH CHAPTER
His removal snapped a chain. These two persons became themselves.
Manuela with eyes ablaze strode over to Esteban. "Well," she said.
"You have found me. What is your pleasure?"
He sat very still on his donkey, watching her. He rolled himself a cigarette, still watching, and as he lighted it, looked at her over the flame.
"Speak, Esteban," she said, quivering; but he took two luxurious inhalations first, discharged in dense columns through his nose. Then he said, breathing smoke, "I have come to kill you, Manuelita--from Pobledo in a day and a half."
She had folded her arms, and now nodded. "I know it. I have expected you."
"Of course," said Esteban, inhaling enormously. He shot the smoke upwards towards the light, where it floated and spread out in radiant bars of blue. Manuela was tapping her foot.
"Well, I am here," she said. "I might have left you, but I have not.
Why don"t you do what you intend?"
"There is plenty of time," said Esteban, and continued to smoke. He began to make another cigarette.
"Do you know why I chose to stay with you?" she asked him softly. "Do you know, Esteban?"
He raised his eyebrows. "Not at all."
"It was because I had a bargain to make with you."
He looked at her inquiringly; but he shrugged. "It will be a hard bargain for you, my girl," he told her.
"I believe you will agree to it," she said quickly, "seeing that of my own will I have remained here. I will let you kill me as you please--on a condition."
"Name your condition," said Esteban. "I will only say now that it is my wish to strangle you with my hands."
She put both hers to her throat. "Good," she said. "That shall be your affair. But let the caballero go free. He has done you no harm."
"On the contrary," said Esteban, "I shall certainly kill him when he returns. Have no doubt of that. Then I shall have his horse."
Immediately, without fear, she went up to him where he sat his donkey.
She saw the knife in his _faja_, but had no fear at all. She came quite close to him, with an ardent face, with eyes alight. She stretched out her arms like a man on a cross.
"Kill, kill, Esteban! But listen first. You shall spare that gentleman"s life, for he has done you no wrong."
He laughed her down. "Wrong! And you come to me to swear that on the Cross of Christ? Daughter of swine, you lie."
Tears were in her eyes, which made her blink and shake her head--but she came closer yet in a pa.s.sion of entreaty. She was so close that her bosom touched him. "Kill, Esteban, kill--but love me first!" Her arms were about him now, as if she must have love of him or die.
"Esteban, Esteban!" she was whispering as if she hungered and thirsted for him. He shivered at a memory. "Love me once, love me once, Esteban!" Closer and closer she clung to him; her eyes implored a kiss.
"Loose me, you jade," he said, less sharply, but she clove the closer to him, and one hand crept downwards from his shoulder, as if she would embrace him by the middle. "Too late, Manuelita, too late," he said again, but he was plainly softening. She drew his face towards hers as if to kiss him, then whipped the long knife out of his girdle and drove it with all her sobbing force into his neck. Esteban uttered a thick groan, threw his head up and rocked twice. Then his head dropped, and he fell sideways off his donkey.
She stood staring at what she had done.
CHAPTER VII
THE SLEEPER AWAKENED
Manvers returned whistling from his bath, at peace with all the world of Spain, in a large mood of benevolence and charitable judgment. His mind dwelt pleasantly on Manuela, but pity mixed with his thought; and he added some prudence on his own account. "That child--she"s no more--I must do something for her. Not a bad "un, I"ll swear, not fundamentally bad. I don"t doubt her as I doubt the male: he"s too glib by half... She"s distractingly pretty--what nectarine colour!
The mouth of a child--that droop at the corners--and as soft as a child"s too." He shook his head. "No more kissing or I shall be in a mess."
When he reached his tree and his luncheon, to find his companions gone, he was a little taken aback. His genial proposals were suddenly chilled. "Queer couple--I had a notion that they knew something of each other. So they"ve made a match of it."
Then he saw a bra.s.s crucifix lying in the middle of his plate.
"Hulloa!" He stooped to pick it up. It was still warm. He smiled and felt a glow come back. "Now that"s charming of her. That"s a pretty touch--from a pretty girl. She"s no baggage, depend upon it." The string had plainly hung the thing round her neck, the warmth was that of her bosom. He held it tenderly while he turned it about. "I"ll warrant now, that was all she had upon her. Not a maravedi beside. I know it"s the last thing to leave "em. I"m repaid, more than repaid.
I"ll wear you for a bit, my friend, if you won"t scorch a heretic."
Here he slipped the string over his head, and dropped the cross within his collar. "I"ll treat you to a chain in Valladolid," was his final thought before he consigned Manuela to his cabinet of memories.
He poured and drank, hacked at his ham-bone and ate. "By the Lord," he went on commenting, "they"ve not had bite or sup. Too busy with their match-making? Too delicate to feast without invitation? Which?" He pondered the puzzle. He had invited Manuela, he was sure: had he included her swain? If not, the thing was clear. She wouldn"t eat without him, and he couldn"t eat without his host. It was the best thing he knew of Esteban.
He finished his meal, filled and lit a pipe, smoked half of it drowsily, then lay and slept. Nothing disturbed his three hours" rest, not even the gathering cloud of flies, whose droning over a neighbouring thicket must have kept awake a lighter sleeper. But Manvers was so fast that he did not hear footsteps in the wood, nor the sound of picking in the peaty ground.
It was four o"clock and more when he awoke, sat up and looked at his watch. Yawning and stretching at ease, he then became aware of a friar, with a brown shaven head and fine black beard, who was digging near by. This man, whose eyes had been upon him, waiting for recognition, immediately stopped his toil, struck his spade into the ground, and came towards him, bowing as he came.
"Good evening, senor caballero," he said. "I am Fray Juan de la Cruz, at your service; from the convent of N. S. de la Pena near by. I have to be my own grave-digger; but will you be so obliging as to commit the body while I read the office?"
To this abrupt invitation Manvers could only reply by staring. Fray Juan apologised.
"I imagined that you had perceived my business," he said, "which truly is none of yours. It will be an act of charity on your part--therefore its own reward."
"May I ask you," said Manvers, now on his feet, "what, or whom, you are burying?"
"Come," the friar replied. "I will show you the body." Manvers followed him into the thicket.
"Good G.o.d, what"s this?" The staring light eyes of Esteban Vincaz had no reply for him. He had to turn away, sick at the sight.
Fray Juan de la Cruz told him what he knew. A young girl, riding an a.s.s, had come to the church of the convent, where he happened to be, cleaning the sanctuary. The Reverend Prior was absent, the brothers were afield. She was in haste, she said, and the matter would not allow of delay. She reported that she had killed a man in the wood of La Huerca, to save the life of a gentleman who had been kind to her, who had, indeed, but recently imperilled his own for hers. "If you doubt me," she had said, "go to the forest, to such and such a part.
There you will find the gentleman asleep. He has a crucifix of mine.
The dead man lies not far away, with his own knife near him, with which I killed him. Now," she had said, "I trust you to report all I have said to that gentleman, for I must be off."
"Good G.o.d!" said Manvers again.
"G.o.d indeed is the only good," said Fray Juan, "and His ways past finding out. But I have no reason to doubt this girl"s story. She told me, moreover, the name of the man--or his names, as you may say."