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Nostromo: A Tale of the Seaboard
by Joseph Conrad
Part First: The Silver of
the Mine
Chapter Eight
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THOSE of us whom
business or curiosity took to Sulaco in these years before the first advent
of the railway can remember the steadying effect of the San Tome mine upon
the life of that remote province. The outward appearances had not changed
then as they have changed since, as I am told, with cable cars running along
the streets of the Constitution, and carriage roads far into the country, to
Rincon and other villages, where the foreign merchants and the Ricos
generally have their modern villas, and a vast railway goods yard by the
harbour, which has a quay-side, a long range of warehouses, and quite
serious, organized labour troubles of its own.
Nobody had ever heard of labour troubles then. The Cargadores of the port
formed, indeed, an unruly brotherhood of all sorts of scum, with a patron
saint of their own. They went on strike regularly (every bull-fight day), a
form of trouble that even Nostromo at the height of his prestige could never
cope with efficiently; but the morning after each fiesta, before the Indian
market-women had opened their mat parasols on the plaza, when the snows of
Higuerota gleamed pale over the town on a yet black sky, the appearance of a
phantom-like horseman mounted on a silver-grey mare solved the problem of
labour without fail. His steed paced the lanes of the slums and the
weed-grown enclosures within the old ramparts, between the black, lightless
cluster of huts, like cow-byres, like dog-kennels. The horseman hammered
with the butt of a heavy revolver at the doors of low pulperias, of obscene
lean-to sheds sloping against the tumble-down piece of a noble wall, at the
wooden sides of dwellings so flimsy that the sound of snores and sleepy
mutters within could be heard in the pauses of the thundering clatter of his
blows. He called out men's names menacingly from the saddle, once, twice.
The drowsy answers--grumpy, conciliating, savage, jocular, or
deprecating--came out into the silent darkness in which the horseman sat
still, and presently a dark figure would flit out coughing in the still air.
Sometimes a low-toned woman cried through the window-hole softly, "He's
coming directly, senor," and the horseman waited silent on a motionless
horse. But if perchance he had to dismount, then, after a while, from the
door of that hovel or of that pulperia, with a ferocious scuffle and stifled
imprecations, a cargador would fly out head first and hands abroad, to
sprawl under the forelegs of the silver-grey mare, who only pricked forward
her sharp little ears. She was used to that work; and the man, picking
himself up, would walk away hastily from Nostromo's revolver, reeling a
little along the street and snarling low curses. At sunrise Captain
Mitchell, coming out anxiously in his night attire on to the wooden balcony
running the whole length of the O.S.N. Company's lonely building by the
shore, would see the lighters already under way, figures moving busily about
the cargo cranes, perhaps hear the invaluable Nostromo, now dismounted and
in the checked shirt and red sash of a Mediterranean sailor, bawling orders
from the end of the jetty in a stentorian voice. A fellow in a thousand!
The material apparatus of perfected civilization which obliterates the
individuality of old towns under the stereotyped conveniences of modern life
had not intruded as yet; but over the worn-out antiquity of Sulaco, so
characteristic with its stuccoed houses and barred windows, with the great
yellowy-white walls of abandoned convents behind the rows of sombre green
cypresses, that fact--very modern in its spirit--the San Tome mine had
already thrown its subtle influence. It had altered, too, the outward
character of the crowds on feast days on the plaza before the open portal of
the cathedral, by the number of white ponchos with a green stripe affected
as holiday wear by the San Tome miners. They had also adopted white hats
with green cord and braid--articles of good quality, which could be obtained
in the storehouse of the administration for very little money. A peaceable
Cholo wearing these colours (unusual in Costaguana) was somehow very seldom
beaten to within an inch of his life on a charge of disrespect to the town
police; neither ran he much risk of being suddenly lassoed on the road by a
recruiting party of lanceros--a method of voluntary enlistment looked upon
as almost legal in the Republic. Whole villages were known to have
volunteered for the army in that way; but, as Don Pepe would say with a
hopeless shrug to Mrs. Gould, "What would you! Poor people! Pobrecitos!
Pobrecitos! But the State must have its soldiers."
Thus professionally spoke Don Pepe, the fighter, with pendent moustaches, a
nut-brown, lean face, and a clean run of a cast-iron jaw, suggesting the
type of a cattle-herd horseman from the great Llanos of the South. "If
you will listen to an old officer of Paez, senores," was the exordium
of all his speeches in the Aristocratic Club of Sulaco, where he was
admitted on account of his past services to the extinct cause of Federation.
The club, dating from the days of the proclamation of Costaguana's
independence, boasted many names of liberators amongst its first founders.
Suppressed arbitrarily innumerable times by various Governments, with
memories of proscriptions and of at least one wholesale massacre of its
members, sadly assembled for a banquet by the order of a zealous military
commandante (their bodies were afterwards stripped naked and flung into the
plaza out of the windows by the lowest scum of the populace), it was again
flourishing, at that period, peacefully. It extended to strangers the large
hospitality of the cool, big rooms of its historic quarters in the front
part of a house, once the residence of a high official of the Holy Office.
The two wings, shut up, crumbled behind the nailed doors, and what may be
described as a grove of young orange trees grown in the unpaved patio
concealed the utter ruin of the back part facing the gate. You turned in
from the street, as if entering a secluded orchard, where you came upon the
foot of a disjointed staircase, guarded by a moss-stained effigy of some
saintly bishop, mitred and staffed, and bearing the indignity of a broken
nose meekly, with his fine stone hands crossed on his breast. The chocolate-coloured
faces of servants with mops of black hair peeped at you from above; the
click of billiard balls came to your ears, and ascending the steps, you
would perhaps see in the first sala, very stiff upon a straight-backed
chair, in a good light, Don Pepe moving his long moustaches as he spelt his
way, at arm's length, through an old Sta. Marta newspaper. His horse--a
stony-hearted but persevering black brute with a hammer head--you would have
seen in the street dozing motionless under an immense saddle, with its nose
almost touching the curbstone of the sidewalk.
Don Pepe, when "down from the mountain," as the phrase, often
heard in Sulaco, went, could also be seen in the drawing-room of the Casa
Gould. He sat with modest assurance at some distance from the tea-table.
With his knees close together, and a kindly twinkle of drollery in his
deep-set eyes, he would throw his small and ironic pleasantries into the
current of conversation. There was in that man a sort of sane, humorous
shrewdness, and a vein of genuine humanity so often found in simple old
soldiers of proved courage who have seen much desperate service. Of course
he knew nothing whatever of mining, but his employment was of a special
kind. He was in charge of the whole population in the territory of the mine,
which extended from the head of the gorge to where the cart track from the
foot of the mountain enters the plain, crossing a stream over a little
wooden bridge painted green--green, the colour of hope, being also the
colour of the mine.
It was reported in Sulaco that up there "at the mountain" Don Pepe
walked about precipitous paths, girt with a great sword and in a shabby
uniform with tarnished bullion epaulettes of a senior major. Most miners
being Indians, with big wild eyes, addressed him as Taita (father), as these
barefooted people of Costaguana will address anybody who wears shoes; but it
was Basilio, Mr. Gould's own mozo and the head servant of the Casa, who, in
all good faith and from a sense of propriety, announced him once in the
solemn words, "El Senor Gobernador has arrived."
Don Jose Avellanos, then in the drawing-room, was delighted beyond measure
at the aptness of the title, with which he greeted the old major banteringly
as soon as the latter's soldierly figure appeared in the doorway. Don Pepe
only smiled in his long moustaches, as much as to say, "You might have
found a worse name for an old soldier."
And El Senor Gobernador he had remained, with his small jokes upon his
function and upon his domain, where he affirmed with humorous exaggeration
to Mrs. Gould--
"No two stones could come together anywhere without the Gobernador
hearing the click, senora."
And he would tap his ear with the tip of his forefinger knowingly. Even when
the number of the miners alone rose to over six hundred he seemed to know
each of them individually, all the innumerable Joses, Manuels, Ignacios,
from the villages primero--segundo--or tercero (there were three mining
villages) under his government. He could distinguish them not only by their
flat, joyless faces, which to Mrs. Gould looked all alike, as if run into
the same ancestral mould of suffering and patience, but apparently also by
the infinitely graduated shades of reddish-brown, of blackish-brown, of
coppery-brown backs, as the two shifts, stripped to linen drawers and
leather skull-caps, mingled together with a confusion of naked limbs, of
shouldered picks, swinging lamps, in a great shuffle of sandalled feet on
the open plateau before the entrance of the main tunnel. It was a time of
pause. The Indian boys leaned idly against the long line of little cradle
wagons standing empty; the screeners and ore-breakers squatted on their
heels smoking long cigars; the great wooden shoots slanting over the edge of
the tunnel plateau were silent; and only the ceaseless, violent rush of
water in the open flumes could be heard, murmuring fiercely, with the splash
and rumble of revolving turbine-wheels, and the thudding march of the stamps
pounding to powder the treasure rock on the plateau below. The heads of
gangs, distinguished by brass medals hanging on their bare breasts,
marshalled their squads; and at last the mountain would swallow one-half of
the silent crowd, while the other half would move off in long files down the
zigzag paths leading to the bottom of the gorge. It was deep; and, far
below, a thread of vegetation winding between the blazing rock faces
resembled a slender green cord, in which three lumpy knots of banana
patches, palm-leaf roots, and shady trees marked the Village One, Village
Two, Village Three, housing the miners of the Gould Concession.
Whole families had been moving from the first towards the spot in the
Higuerota range, whence the rumour of work and safety had spread over the
pastoral Campo, forcing its way also, even as the waters of a high flood,
into the nooks and crannies of the distant blue walls of the Sierras. Father
first, in a pointed straw hat, then the mother with the bigger children,
generally also a diminutive donkey, all under burdens, except the leader
himself, or perhaps some grown girl, the pride of the family, stepping
barefooted and straight as an arrow, with braids of raven hair, a thick,
haughty profile, and no load to carry but the small guitar of the country
and a pair of soft leather sandals tied together on her back. At the sight
of such parties strung out on the cross trails between the pastures, or
camped by the side of the royal road, travellers on horseback would remark
to each other--
"More people going to the San Tome mine. We shall see others
to-morrow."
And spurring on in the dusk they would discuss the great news of the
province, the news of the San Tome mine. A rich Englishman was going to work
it--and perhaps not an Englishman, Quien sabe! A foreigner with much money.
Oh, yes, it had begun. A party of men who had been to Sulaco with a herd of
black bulls for the next corrida had reported that from the porch of the
posada in Rincon, only a short league from the town, the lights on the
mountain were visible, twinkling above the trees. And there was a woman seen
riding a horse sideways, not in the chair seat, but upon a sort of saddle,
and a man's hat on her head. She walked about, too, on foot up the mountain
paths. A woman engineer, it seemed she was.
"What an absurdity! Impossible, senor!"
"Si! Si! Una Americana del Norte."
"Ah, well! if your worship is informed. Una Americana; it need be
something of that sort."
And they would laugh a little with astonishment and scorn, keeping a wary
eye on the shadows of the road, for one is liable to meet bad men when
travelling late on the Campo.
And it was not only the men that Don Pepe knew so well, but he seemed able,
with one attentive, thoughtful glance, to classify each woman, girl, or
growing youth of his domain. It was only the small fry that puzzled him
sometimes. He and the padre could be seen frequently side by side,
meditative and gazing across the street of a village at a lot of sedate
brown children, trying to sort them out, as it were, in low, consulting
tones, or else they would together put searching questions as to the
parentage of some small, staid urchin met wandering, naked and grave, along
the road with a cigar in his baby mouth, and perhaps his mother's rosary,
purloined for purposes of ornamentation, hanging in a loop of beads low down
on his rotund little stomach. The spiritual and temporal pastors of the mine
flock were very good friends. With Dr. Monygham, the medical pastor, who had
accepted the charge from Mrs. Gould, and lived in the hospital building,
they were on not so intimate terms. But no one could be on intimate terms
with El Senor Doctor, who, with his twisted shoulders, drooping head,
sardonic mouth, and side-long bitter glance, was mysterious and uncanny. The
other two authorities worked in harmony. Father Roman, dried-up, small,
alert, wrinkled, with big round eyes, a sharp chin, and a great snuff-taker,
was an old campaigner, too; he had shriven many simple souls on the
battlefields of the Republic, kneeling by the dying on hillsides, in the
long grass, in the gloom of the forests, to hear the last confession with
the smell of gunpowder smoke in his nostrils, the rattle of muskets, the hum
and spatter of bullets in his ears. And where was the harm if, at the
presbytery, they had a game with a pack of greasy cards in the early
evening, before Don Pepe went his last rounds to see that all the watchmen
of the mine--a body organized by himself--were at their posts? For that last
duty before he slept Don Pepe did actually gird his old sword on the
verandah of an unmistakable American white frame house, which Father Roman
called the presbytery. Near by, a long, low, dark building, steeple-roofed,
like a vast barn with a wooden cross over the gable, was the miners' chapel.
There Father Roman said Mass every day before a sombre altar-piece
representing the Resurrection, the grey slab of the tombstone balanced on
one corner, a figure soaring upwards, long-limbed and livid, in an oval of
pallid light, and a helmeted brown legionary smitten down, right across the
bituminous foreground. "This picture, my children, muy linda e
maravillosa," Father Roman would say to some of his flock, "which
you behold here through the munificence of the wife of our Senor
Administrador, has been painted in Europe, a country of saints and miracles,
and much greater than our Costaguana." And he would take a pinch of
snuff with unction. But when once an inquisitive spirit desired to know in
what direction this Europe was situated, whether up or down the coast,
Father Roman, to conceal his perplexity, became very reserved and severe.
"No doubt it is extremely far away. But ignorant sinners like you of
the San Tome mine should think earnestly of everlasting punishment instead
of inquiring into the magnitude of the earth, with its countries and
populations altogether beyond your understanding."
With a "Good-night, Padre," "Good-night, Don Pepe," the
Gobernador would go off, holding up his sabre against his side, his body
bent forward, with a long, plodding stride in the dark. The jocularity
proper to an innocent card game for a few cigars or a bundle of yerba was
replaced at once by the stern duty mood of an officer setting out to visit
the outposts of an encamped army. One loud blast of the whistle that hung
from his neck provoked instantly a great shrilling of responding whistles,
mingled with the barking of dogs, that would calm down slowly at last, away
up at the head of the gorge; and in the stillness two serenos, on guard by
the bridge, would appear walking noiselessly towards him. On one side of the
road a long frame building--the store--would be closed and barricaded from
end to end; facing it another white frame house, still longer, and with a
verandah--the hospital--would have lights in the two windows of Dr.
Monygham's quarters. Even the delicate foliage of a clump of pepper trees
did not stir, so breathless would be the darkness warmed by the radiation of
the over-heated rocks. Don Pepe would stand still for a moment with the two
motionless serenos before him, and, abruptly, high up on the sheer face of
the mountain, dotted with single torches, like drops of fire fallen from the
two great blazing clusters of lights above, the ore shoots would begin to
rattle. The great clattering, shuffling noise, gathering speed and weight,
would be caught up by the walls of the gorge, and sent upon the plain in a
growl of thunder. The pasadero in Rincon swore that on calm nights, by
listening intently, he could catch the sound in his doorway as of a storm in
the mountains.
To Charles Gould's fancy it seemed that the sound must reach the uttermost
limits of the province. Riding at night towards the mine, it would meet him
at the edge of a little wood just beyond Rincon. There was no mistaking the
growling mutter of the mountain pouring its stream of treasure under the
stamps; and it came to his heart with the peculiar force of a proclamation
thundered forth over the land and the marvellousness of an accomplished fact
fulfilling an audacious desire. He had heard this very sound in his
imagination on that far-off evening when his wife and himself, after a
tortuous ride through a strip of forest, had reined in their horses near the
stream, and had gazed for the first time upon the jungle-grown solitude of
the gorge. The head of a palm rose here and there. In a high ravine round
the corner of the San Tome mountain (which is square like a blockhouse) the
thread of a slender waterfall flashed bright and glassy through the dark
green of the heavy fronds of tree-ferns. Don Pepe, in attendance, rode up,
and, stretching his arm up the gorge, had declared with mock solemnity,
"Behold the very paradise of snakes, senora."
And then they had wheeled their horses and ridden back to sleep that night
at Rincon. The alcalde--an old, skinny Moreno, a sergeant of Guzman Bento's
time--had cleared respectfully out of his house with his three pretty
daughters, to make room for the foreign senora and their worships the
Caballeros. All he asked Charles Gould (whom he took for a mysterious and
official person) to do for him was to remind the supreme Government--El
Gobierno supreme--of a pension (amounting to about a dollar a month) to
which he believed himself entitled. It had been promised to him, he
affirmed, straightening his bent back martially, "many years ago, for
my valour in the wars with the wild Indios when a young man, senor."
The waterfall existed no longer. The tree-ferns that had luxuriated in its
spray had died around the dried-up pool, and the high ravine was only a big
trench half filled up with the refuse of excavations and tailings. The
torrent, dammed up above, sent its water rushing along the open flumes of
scooped tree trunks striding on trestle-legs to the turbines working the
stamps on the lower plateau--the mesa grande of the San Tome mountain. Only
the memory of the waterfall, with its amazing fernery, like a hanging garden
above the rocks of the gorge, was preserved in Mrs. Gould's water-colour
sketch; she had made it hastily one day from a cleared patch in the bushes,
sitting in the shade of a roof of straw erected for her on three rough poles
under Don Pepe's direction.
Mrs. Gould had seen it all from the beginning: the clearing of the
wilderness, the making of the road, the cutting of new paths up the cliff
face of San Tome. For weeks together she had lived on the spot with her
husband; and she was so little in Sulaco during that year that the
appearance of the Gould carriage on the Alameda would cause a social
excitement. From the heavy family coaches full of stately senoras and
black-eyed senoritas rolling solemnly in the shaded alley white hands were
waved towards her with animation in a flutter of greetings. Dona Emilia was
"down from the mountain."
But not for long. Dona Emilia would be gone "up to the mountain"
in a day or two, and her sleek carriage mules would have an easy time of it
for another long spell. She had watched the erection of the first
frame-house put up on the lower mesa for an office and Don Pepe's quarters;
she heard with a thrill of thankful emotion the first wagon load of ore
rattle down the then only shoot; she had stood by her husband's side
perfectly silent, and gone cold all over with excitement at the instant when
the first battery of only fifteen stamps was put in motion for the first
time. On the occasion when the fires under the first set of retorts in their
shed had glowed far into the night she did not retire to rest on the rough
cadre set up for her in the as yet bare frame-house till she had seen the
first spongy lump of silver yielded to the hazards of the world by the dark
depths of the Gould Concession; she had laid her unmercenary hands, with an
eagerness that made them tremble, upon the first silver ingot turned out
still warm from the mould; and by her imaginative estimate of its power she
endowed that lump of metal with a justificative conception, as though it
were not a mere fact, but something far-reaching and impalpable, like the
true expression of an emotion or the emergence of a principle.
Don Pepe, extremely interested, too, looked over her shoulder with a smile
that, making longitudinal folds on his face, caused it to resemble a
leathern mask with a benignantly diabolic expression.
"Would not the muchachos of Hernandez like to get hold of this
insignificant object, that looks, por Dios, very much like a piece of
tin?" he remarked, jocularly.
Hernandez, the robber, had been an inoffensive, small ranchero, kidnapped
with circumstances of peculiar atrocity from his home during one of the
civil wars, and forced to serve in the army. There his conduct as soldier
was exemplary, till, watching his chance, he killed his colonel, and managed
to get clear away. With a band of deserters, who chose him for their chief,
he had taken refuge beyond the wild and waterless Bolson de Tonoro. The
haciendas paid him blackmail in cattle and horses; extraordinary stories
were told of his powers and of his wonderful escapes from capture. He used
to ride, single-handed, into the villages and the little towns on the Campo,
driving a pack mule before him, with two revolvers in his belt, go straight
to the shop or store, select what he wanted, and ride away unopposed because
of the terror his exploits and his audacity inspired. Poor country people he
usually left alone; the upper class were often stopped on the roads and
robbed; but any unlucky official that fell into his hands was sure to get a
severe flogging. The army officers did not like his name to be mentioned in
their presence. His followers, mounted on stolen horses, laughed at the
pursuit of the regular cavalry sent to hunt them down, and whom they took
pleasure to ambush most scientifically in the broken ground of their own
fastness. Expeditions had been fitted out; a price had been put upon his
head; even attempts had been made, treacherously of course, to open
negotiations with him, without in the slightest way affecting the even tenor
of his career. At last, in true Costaguana fashion, the Fiscal of Tonoro,
who was ambitious of the glory of having reduced the famous Hernandez,
offered him a sum of money and a safe conduct out of the country for the
betrayal of his band. But Hernandez evidently was not of the stuff of which
the distinguished military politicians and conspirators of Costaguana are
made. This clever but common device (which frequently works like a charm in
putting down revolutions) failed with the chief of vulgar Salteadores. It
promised well for the Fiscal at first, but ended very badly for the squadron
of lanceros posted (by the Fiscal's directions) in a fold of the ground into
which Hernandez had promised to lead his unsuspecting followers They came,
indeed, at the appointed time, but creeping on their hands and knees through
the bush, and only let their presence be known by a general discharge of
firearms, which emptied many saddles. The troopers who escaped came riding
very hard into Tonoro. It is said that their commanding officer (who, being
better mounted, rode far ahead of the rest) afterwards got into a state of
despairing intoxication and beat the ambitious Fiscal severely with the flat
of his sabre in the presence of his wife and daughters, for bringing this
disgrace upon the National Army. The highest civil official of Tonoro,
falling to the ground in a swoon, was further kicked all over the body and
rowelled with sharp spurs about the neck and face because of the great
sensitiveness of his military colleague. This gossip of the inland Campo, so
characteristic of the rulers of the country with its story of oppression,
inefficiency, fatuous methods, treachery, and savage brutality, was
perfectly known to Mrs. Gould. That it should be accepted with no indignant
comment by people of intelligence, refinement, and character as something
inherent in the nature of things was one of the symptoms of degradation that
had the power to exasperate her almost to the verge of despair. Still
looking at the ingot of silver, she shook her head at Don Pepe's remark--
"If it had not been for the lawless tyranny of your Government, Don
Pepe, many an outlaw now with Hernandez would be living peaceably and happy
by the honest work of his hands."
"Senora," cried Don Pepe, with enthusiasm, "it is true! It is
as if God had given you the power to look into the very breasts of people.
You have seen them working round you, Dona Emilia--meek as lambs, patient
like their own burros, brave like lions. I have led them to the very muzzles
of guns--I, who stand here before you, senora--in the time of Paez, who was
full of generosity, and in courage only approached by the uncle of Don
Carlos here, as far as I know. No wonder there are bandits in the Campo when
there are none but thieves, swindlers, and sanguinary macaques to rule us in
Sta. Marta. However, all the same, a bandit is a bandit, and we shall have a
dozen good straight Winchesters to ride with the silver down to Sulaco."
Mrs. Gould's ride with the first silver escort to Sulaco was the closing
episode of what she called "my camp life" before she had settled
in her town-house permanently, as was proper and even necessary for the wife
of the administrator of such an important institution as the San Tome mine.
For the San Tome mine was to become an institution, a rallying point for
everything in the province that needed order and stability to live. Security
seemed to flow upon this land from the mountain-gorge. The authorities of
Sulaco had learned that the San Tome mine could make it worth their while to
leave things and people alone. This was the nearest approach to the rule of
common-sense and justice Charles Gould felt it possible to secure at first.
In fact, the mine, with its organization, its population growing fiercely
attached to their position of privileged safety, with its armoury, with its
Don Pepe, with its armed body of serenos (where, it was said, many an outlaw
and deserter--and even some members of Hernandez's band--had found a place),
the mine was a power in the land. As a certain prominent man in Sta. Marta
had exclaimed with a hollow laugh, once, when discussing the line of action
taken by the Sulaco authorities at a time of political crisis--
"You call these men Government officials? They? Never! They are
officials of the mine--officials of the Concession--I tell you."
The prominent man (who was then a person in power, with a lemon-coloured
face and a very short and curly, not to say woolly, head of hair) went so
far in his temporary discontent as to shake his yellow fist under the nose
of his interlocutor, and shriek--
"Yes! All! Silence! All! I tell you! The political Gefe, the chief of
the police, the chief of the customs, the general, all, all, are the
officials of that Gould."
Thereupon an intrepid but low and argumentative murmur would flow on for a
space in the ministerial cabinet, and the prominent man's passion would end
in a cynical shrug of the shoulders. After all, he seemed to say, what did
it matter as long as the minister himself was not forgotten during his brief
day of authority? But all the same, the unofficial agent of the San Tome
mine, working for a good cause, had his moments of anxiety, which were
reflected in his letters to Don Jose Avellanos, his maternal uncle.
"No sanguinary macaque from Sta. Marta shall set foot on that part of
Costaguana which lies beyond the San Tome bridge," Don Pepe used to
assure Mrs. Gould. "Except, of course, as an honoured guest--for our
Senor Administrador is a deep politico." But to Charles Gould, in his
own room, the old Major would remark with a grim and soldierly cheeriness,
"We are all playing our heads at this game."
Don Jose Avellanos would mutter "Imperium in imperio, Emilia, my
soul," with an air of profound self-satisfaction which, somehow, in a
curious way, seemed to contain a queer admixture of bodily discomfort. But
that, perhaps, could only be visible to the initiated. And for the initiated
it was a wonderful place, this drawing-room of the Casa Gould, with its
momentary glimpses of the master--El Senor Administrador--older, harder,
mysteriously silent, with the lines deepened on his English, ruddy,
out-of-doors complexion; flitting on his thin cavalryman's legs across the
doorways, either just "back from the mountain" or with jingling
spurs and riding-whip under his arm, on the point of starting "for the
mountain." Then Don Pepe, modestly martial in his chair, the llanero
who seemed somehow to have found his martial jocularity, his knowledge of
the world, and his manner perfect for his station, in the midst of savage
armed contests with his kind; Avellanos, polished and familiar, the
diplomatist with his loquacity covering much caution and wisdom in delicate
advice, with his manuscript of a historical work on Costaguana, entitled
"Fifty Years of Misrule," which, at present, he thought it was not
prudent (even if it were possible) "to give to the world"; these
three, and also Dona Emilia amongst them, gracious, small, and fairy-like,
before the glittering tea-set, with one common master-thought in their
heads, with one common feeling of a tense situation, with one ever-present
aim to preserve the inviolable character of the mine at every cost. And
there was also to be seen Captain Mitchell, a little apart, near one of the
long windows, with an air of old-fashioned neat old bachelorhood about him,
slightly pompous, in a white waistcoat, a little disregarded and unconscious
of it; utterly in the dark, and imagining himself to be in the thick of
things. The good man, having spent a clear thirty years of his life on the
high seas before getting what he called a "shore billet," was
astonished at the importance of transactions (other than relating to
shipping) which take place on dry land. Almost every event out of the usual
daily course "marked an epoch" for him or else was
"history"; unless with his pomposity struggling with a discomfited
droop of his rubicund, rather handsome face, set off by snow-white close
hair and short whiskers, he would mutter--
"Ah, that! That, sir, was a mistake."
The reception of the first consignment of San Tome silver for shipment to
San Francisco in one of the O.S.N. Co.'s mail-boats had, of course,
"marked an epoch" for Captain Mitchell. The ingots packed in boxes
of stiff ox-hide with plaited handles, small enough to be carried easily by
two men, were brought down by the serenos of the mine walking in careful
couples along the half-mile or so of steep, zigzag paths to the foot of the
mountain. There they would be loaded into a string of two-wheeled carts,
resembling roomy coffers with a door at the back, and harnessed tandem with
two mules each, waiting under the guard of armed and mounted serenos. Don
Pepe padlocked each door in succession, and at the signal of his whistle the
string of carts would move off, closely surrounded by the clank of spur and
carbine, with jolts and cracking of whips, with a sudden deep rumble over
the boundary bridge ("into the land of thieves and sanguinary
macaques," Don Pepe defined that crossing); hats bobbing in the first
light of the dawn, on the heads of cloaked figures; Winchesters on hip;
bridle hands protruding lean and brown from under the falling folds of the
ponchos. The convoy skirting a little wood, along the mine trail, between
the mud huts and low walls of Rincon, increased its pace on the camino real,
mules urged to speed, escort galloping, Don Carlos riding alone ahead of a
dust storm affording a vague vision of long ears of mules, of fluttering
little green and white flags stuck upon each cart; of raised arms in a mob
of sombreros with the white gleam of ranging eyes; and Don Pepe, hardly
visible in the rear of that rattling dust trail, with a stiff seat and
impassive face, rising and falling rhythmically on an ewe-necked
silver-bitted black brute with a hammer head.
The sleepy people in the little clusters of huts, in the small ranches near
the road, recognized by the headlong sound the charge of the San Tome silver
escort towards the crumbling wall of the city on the Campo side. They came
to the doors to see it dash by over ruts and stones, with a clatter and
clank and cracking of whips, with the reckless rush and precise driving of a
field battery hurrying into action, and the solitary English figure of the
Senor Administrador riding far ahead in the lead.
In the fenced roadside paddocks loose horses galloped wildly for a while;
the heavy cattle stood up breast deep in the grass, lowing mutteringly at
the flying noise; a meek Indian villager would glance back once and hasten
to shove his loaded little donkey bodily against a wall, out of the way of
the San Tome silver escort going to the sea; a small knot of chilly leperos
under the Stone Horse of the Alameda would mutter: "Caramba!" on
seeing it take a wide curve at a gallop and dart into the empty Street of
the Constitution; for it was considered the correct thing, the only proper
style by the mule-drivers of the San Tome mine to go through the waking town
from end to end without a check in the speed as if chased by a devil.
The early sunshine glowed on the delicate primrose, pale pink, pale blue
fronts of the big houses with all their gates shut yet, and no face behind
the iron bars of the windows. In the whole sunlit range of empty balconies
along the street only one white figure would be visible high up above the
clear pavement--the wife of the Senor Administrador--leaning over to see the
escort go by to the harbour, a mass of heavy, fair hair twisted up
negligently on her little head, and a lot of lace about the neck of her
muslin wrapper. With a smile to her husband's single, quick, upward glance,
she would watch the whole thing stream past below her feet with an orderly
uproar, till she answered by a friendly sign the salute of the galloping Don
Pepe, the stiff, deferential inclination with a sweep of the hat below the
knee.
The string of padlocked carts lengthened, the size of the escort grew bigger
as the years went on. Every three months an increasing stream of treasure
swept through the streets of Sulaco on its way to the strong room in the
O.S.N. Co.'s building by the harbour, there to await shipment for the North.
Increasing in volume, and of immense value also; for, as Charles Gould told
his wife once with some exultation, there had never been seen anything in
the world to approach the vein of the Gould Concession. For them both, each
passing of the escort under the balconies of the Casa Gould was like another
victory gained in the conquest of peace for Sulaco.
No doubt the initial action of Charles Gould had been helped at the
beginning by a period of comparative peace which occurred just about that
time; and also by the general softening of manners as compared with the
epoch of civil wars whence had emerged the iron tyranny of Guzman Bento of
fearful memory. In the contests that broke out at the end of his rule (which
had kept peace in the country for a whole fifteen years) there was more
fatuous imbecility, plenty of cruelty and suffering still, but much less of
the old-time fierce and blindly ferocious political fanaticism. It was all
more vile, more base, more contemptible, and infinitely more manageable in
the very outspoken cynicism of motives. It was more clearly a brazen-faced
scramble for a constantly diminishing quantity of booty; since all
enterprise had been stupidly killed in the land. Thus it came to pass that
the province of Sulaco, once the field of cruel party vengeances, had become
in a way one of the considerable prizes of political career. The great of
the earth (in Sta. Marta) reserved the posts in the old Occidental State to
those nearest and dearest to them: nephews, brothers, husbands of favourite
sisters, bosom friends, trusty supporters--or prominent supporters of whom
perhaps they were afraid. It was the blessed province of great opportunities
and of largest salaries; for the San Tome mine had its own unofficial pay
list, whose items and amounts, fixed in consultation by Charles Gould and
Senor Avellanos, were known to a prominent business man in the United
States, who for twenty minutes or so in every month gave his undivided
attention to Sulaco affairs. At the same time the material interests of all
sorts, backed up by the influence of the San Tome mine, were quietly
gathering substance in that part of the Republic. If, for instance, the
Sulaco Collectorship was generally understood, in the political world of the
capital, to open the way to the Ministry of Finance, and so on for every
official post, then, on the other hand, the despondent business circles of
the Republic had come to consider the Occidental Province as the promised
land of safety, especially if a man managed to get on good terms with the
administration of the mine. "Charles Gould; excellent fellow!
Absolutely necessary to make sure of him before taking a single step. Get an
introduction to him from Moraga if you can--the agent of the King of Sulaco,
don't you know."
No wonder, then, that Sir John, coming from Europe to smooth the path for
his railway, had been meeting the name (and even the nickname) of Charles
Gould at every turn in Costaguana. The agent of the San Tome Administration
in Sta. Marta (a polished, well-informed gentleman, Sir John thought him)
had certainly helped so greatly in bringing about the presidential tour that
he began to think that there was something in the faint whispers hinting at
the immense occult influence of the Gould Concession. What was currently
whispered was this--that the San Tome Administration had, in part, at least,
financed the last revolution, which had brought into a five-year
dictatorship Don Vincente Ribiera, a man of culture and of unblemished
character, invested with a mandate of reform by the best elements of the
State. Serious, well-informed men seemed to believe the fact, to hope for
better things, for the establishment of legality, of good faith and order in
public life. So much the better, then, thought Sir John. He worked always on
a great scale; there was a loan to the State, and a project for systematic
colonization of the Occidental Province, involved in one vast scheme with
the construction of the National Central Railway. Good faith, order,
honesty, peace, were badly wanted for this great development of material
interests. Anybody on the side of these things, and especially if able to
help, had an importance in Sir John's eyes. He had not been disappointed in
the "King of Sulaco." The local difficulties had fallen away, as
the engineer-in-chief had foretold they would, before Charles Gould's
mediation. Sir John had been extremely feted in Sulaco, next to the
President-Dictator, a fact which might have accounted for the evident ill-humour
General Montero displayed at lunch given on board the Juno just before she
was to sail, taking away from Sulaco the President-Dictator and the
distinguished foreign guests in his train.
The Excellentissimo ("the hope of honest men," as Don Jose had
addressed him in a public speech delivered in the name of the Provincial
Assembly of Sulaco) sat at the head of the long table; Captain Mitchell,
positively stony-eyed and purple in the face with the solemnity of this
"historical event," occupied the foot as the representative of the
O.S.N. Company in Sulaco, the hosts of that informal function, with the
captain of the ship and some minor officials from the shore around him.
Those cheery, swarthy little gentlemen cast jovial side-glances at the
bottles of champagne beginning to pop behind the guests' backs in the hands
of the ship's stewards. The amber wine creamed up to the rims of the
glasses.
Charles Gould had his place next to a foreign envoy, who, in a listless
undertone, had been talking to him fitfully of hunting and shooting. The
well-nourished, pale face, with an eyeglass and drooping yellow moustache,
made the Senor Administrador appear by contrast twice as sunbaked, more
flaming red, a hundred times more intensely and silently alive. Don Jose
Avellanos touched elbows with the other foreign diplomat, a dark man with a
quiet, watchful, self-confident demeanour, and a touch of reserve. All
etiquette being laid aside on the occasion, General Montero was the only one
there in full uniform, so stiff with embroideries in front that his broad
chest seemed protected by a cuirass of gold. Sir John at the beginning had
got away from high places for the sake of sitting near Mrs. Gould.
The great financier was trying to express to her his grateful sense of her
hospitality and of his obligation to her husband's "enormous influence
in this part of the country," when she interrupted him by a low
"Hush!" The President was going to make an informal pronouncement.
The Excellentissimo was on his legs. He said only a few words, evidently
deeply felt, and meant perhaps mostly for Avellanos--his old friend--as to
the necessity of unremitting effort to secure the lasting welfare of the
country emerging after this last struggle, he hoped, into a period of peace
and material prosperity.
Mrs. Gould, listening to the mellow, slightly mournful voice, looking at
this rotund, dark, spectacled face, at the short body, obese to the point of
infirmity, thought that this man of delicate and melancholy mind, physically
almost a cripple, coming out of his retirement into a dangerous strife at
the call of his fellows, had the right to speak with the authority of his
self-sacrifice. And yet she was made uneasy. He was more pathetic than
promising, this first civilian Chief of the State Costaguana had ever known,
pronouncing, glass in hand, his simple watchwords of honesty, peace, respect
for law, political good faith abroad and at home--the safeguards of national
honour.
He sat down. During the respectful, appreciative buzz of voices that
followed the speech, General Montero raised a pair of heavy, drooping
eyelids and rolled his eyes with a sort of uneasy dullness from face to
face. The military backwoods hero of the party, though secretly impressed by
the sudden novelties and splendours of his position (he had never been on
board a ship before, and had hardly ever seen the sea except from a
distance), understood by a sort of instinct the advantage his surly,
unpolished attitude of a savage fighter gave him amongst all these refined
Blanco aristocrats. But why was it that nobody was looking at him? he
wondered to himself angrily. He was able to spell out the print of
newspapers, and knew that he had performed the "greatest military
exploit of modern times."
"My husband wanted the railway," Mrs. Gould said to Sir John in
the general murmur of resumed conversations. "All this brings nearer
the sort of future we desire for the country, which has waited for it in
sorrow long enough, God knows. But I will confess that the other day, during
my afternoon drive when I suddenly saw an Indian boy ride out of a wood with
the red flag of a surveying party in his hand, I felt something of a shock.
The future means change--an utter change. And yet even here there are simple
and picturesque things that one would like to preserve."
Sir John listened, smiling. But it was his turn now to hush Mrs. Gould.
"General Montero is going to speak," he whispered, and almost
immediately added, in comic alarm, "Heavens! he's going to propose my
own health, I believe."
General Montero had risen with a jingle of steel scabbard and a ripple of
glitter on his gold-embroidered breast; a heavy sword-hilt appeared at his
side above the edge of the table. In this gorgeous uniform, with his bull
neck, his hooked nose flattened on the tip upon a blue-black, dyed
moustache, he looked like a disguised and sinister vaquero. The drone of his
voice had a strangely rasping, soulless ring. He floundered, lowering,
through a few vague sentences; then suddenly raising his big head and his
voice together, burst out harshly--
"The honour of the country is in the hands of the army. I assure you I
shall be faithful to it." He hesitated till his roaming eyes met Sir
John's face upon which he fixed a lurid, sleepy glance; and the figure of
the lately negotiated loan came into his mind. He lifted his glass. "I
drink to the health of the man who brings us a million and a half of
pounds."
He tossed off his champagne, and sat down heavily with a half-surprised,
half-bullying look all round the faces in the profound, as if appalled,
silence which succeeded the felicitous toast. Sir John did not move.
"I don't think I am called upon to rise," he murmured to Mrs.
Gould. "That sort of thing speaks for itself." But Don Jose
Avellanos came to the rescue with a short oration, in which he alluded
pointedly to England's goodwill towards Costaguana--"a goodwill,"
he continued, significantly, "of which I, having been in my time
accredited to the Court of St. James, am able to speak with some
knowledge."
Only then Sir John thought fit to respond, which he did gracefully in bad
French, punctuated by bursts of applause and the "Hear! Hears!" of
Captain Mitchell, who was able to understand a word now and then. Directly
he had done, the financier of railways turned to Mrs. Gould--
"You were good enough to say that you intended to ask me for
something," he reminded her, gallantly. "What is it? Be assured
that any request from you would be considered in the light of a favour to
myself."
She thanked him by a gracious smile. Everybody was rising from the table.
"Let us go on deck," she proposed, "where I'll be able to
point out to you the very object of my request."
An enormous national flag of Costaguana, diagonal red and yellow, with two
green palm trees in the middle, floated lazily at the mainmast head of the
Juno. A multitude of fireworks being let off in their thousands at the
water's edge in honour of the President kept up a mysterious crepitating
noise half round the harbour. Now and then a lot of rockets, swishing
upwards invisibly, detonated overhead with only a puff of smoke in the
bright sky. Crowds of people could be seen between the town gate and the
harbour, under the bunches of multicoloured flags fluttering on tall poles.
Faint bursts of military music would be heard suddenly, and the remote sound
of shouting. A knot of ragged negroes at the end of the wharf kept on
loading and firing a small iron cannon time after time. A greyish haze of
dust hung thin and motionless against the sun.
Don Vincente Ribiera made a few steps under the deck-awning, leaning on the
arm of Senor Avellanos; a wide circle was formed round him, where the
mirthless smile of his dark lips and the sightless glitter of his spectacles
could be seen turning amiably from side to side. The informal function
arranged on purpose on board the Juno to give the President-Dictator an
opportunity to meet intimately some of his most notable adherents in Sulaco
was drawing to an end. On one side, General Montero, his bald head covered
now by a plumed cocked hat, remained motionless on a skylight seat, a pair
of big gauntleted hands folded on the hilt of the sabre standing upright
between his legs. The white plume, the coppery tint of his broad face, the
blue-black of the moustaches under the curved beak, the mass of gold on
sleeves and breast, the high shining boots with enormous spurs, the working
nostrils, the imbecile and domineering stare of the glorious victor of Rio
Seco had in them something ominous and incredible; the exaggeration of a
cruel caricature, the fatuity of solemn masquerading, the atrocious
grotesqueness of some military idol of Aztec conception and European
bedecking, awaiting the homage of worshippers. Don Jose approached
diplomatically this weird and inscrutable portent, and Mrs. Gould turned her
fascinated eyes away at last.
Charles, coming up to take leave of Sir John, heard him say, as he bent over
his wife's hand, "Certainly. Of course, my dear Mrs. Gould, for a
protege of yours! Not the slightest difficulty. Consider it done."
Going ashore in the same boat with the Goulds, Don Jose Avellanos was very
silent. Even in the Gould carriage he did not open his lips for a long time.
The mules trotted slowly away from the wharf between the extended hands of
the beggars, who for that day seemed to have abandoned in a body the portals
of churches. Charles Gould sat on the back seat and looked away upon the
plain. A multitude of booths made of green boughs, of rushes, of odd pieces
of plank eked out with bits of canvas had been erected all over it for the
sale of cana, of dulces, of fruit, of cigars. Over little heaps of glowing
charcoal Indian women, squatting on mats, cooked food in black earthen pots,
and boiled the water for the mate gourds, which they offered in soft,
caressing voices to the country people. A racecourse had been staked out for
the vaqueros; and away to the left, from where the crowd was massed thickly
about a huge temporary erection, like a circus tent of wood with a conical
grass roof, came the resonant twanging of harp strings, the sharp ping of
guitars, with the grave drumming throb of an Indian gombo pulsating steadily
through the shrill choruses of the dancers.
Charles Gould said presently--
"All this piece of land belongs now to the Railway Company. There will
be no more popular feasts held here."
Mrs. Gould was rather sorry to think so. She took this opportunity to
mention how she had just obtained from Sir John the promise that the house
occupied by Giorgio Viola should not be interfered with. She declared she
could never understand why the survey engineers ever talked of demolishing
that old building. It was not in the way of the projected harbour branch of
the line in the least.
She stopped the carriage before the door to reassure at once the old
Genoese, who came out bare-headed and stood by the carriage step. She talked
to him in Italian, of course, and he thanked her with calm dignity. An old
Garibaldino was grateful to her from the bottom of his heart for keeping the
roof over the heads of his wife and children. He was too old to wander any
more.
"And is it for ever, signora?" he asked.
"For as long as you like."
"Bene. Then the place must be named, It was not worth while
before."
He smiled ruggedly, with a running together of wrinkles at the corners of
his eyes. "I shall set about the painting of the name to-morrow."
"And what is it going to be, Giorgio?"
"Albergo d'Italia Una," said the old Garibaldino, looking away for
a moment. "More in memory of those who have died," he added,
"than for the country stolen from us soldiers of liberty by the craft
of that accursed Piedmontese race of kings and ministers."
Mrs. Gould smiled slightly, and, bending over a little, began to inquire
about his wife and children. He had sent them into town on that day. The
padrona was better in health; many thanks to the signora for inquiring.
People were passing in twos and threes, in whole parties of men and women
attended by trotting children. A horseman mounted on a silver-grey mare drew
rein quietly in the shade of the house after taking off his hat to the party
in the carriage, who returned smiles and familiar nods. Old Viola, evidently
very pleased with the news he had just heard, interrupted himself for a
moment to tell him rapidly that the house was secured, by the kindness of
the English signora, for as long as he liked to keep it. The other listened
attentively, but made no response.
When the carriage moved on he took off his hat again, a grey sombrero with a
silver cord and tassels. The bright colours of a Mexican serape twisted on
the cantle, the enormous silver buttons on the embroidered leather jacket,
the row of tiny silver buttons down the seam of the trousers, the snowy
linen, a silk sash with embroidered ends, the silver plates on headstall and
saddle, proclaimed the unapproachable style of the famous Capataz de
Cargadores--a Mediterranean sailor--got up with more finished splendour than
any well-to-do young ranchero of the Campo had ever displayed on a high
holiday.
"It is a great thing for me," murmured old Giorgio, still thinking
of the house, for now he had grown weary of change. "The signora just
said a word to the Englishman."
"The old Englishman who has enough money to pay for a railway? He is
going off in an hour," remarked Nostromo, carelessly. "Buon
viaggio, then. I've guarded his bones all the way from the Entrada pass down
to the plain and into Sulaco, as though he had been my own father."
Old Giorgio only moved his head sideways absently. Nostromo pointed after
the Goulds' carriage, nearing the grass-grown gate in the old town wall that
was like a wall of matted jungle.
"And I have sat alone at night with my revolver in the Company's
warehouse time and again by the side of that other Englishman's heap of
silver, guarding it as though it had been my own."
Viola seemed lost in thought. "It is a great thing for me," he
repeated again, as if to himself.
"It is," agreed the magnificent Capataz de Cargadores, calmly.
"Listen, Vecchio--go in and bring me, out a cigar, but don't look for
it in my room. There's nothing there."
Viola stepped into the cafe and came out directly, still absorbed in his
idea, and tendered him a cigar, mumbling thoughtfully in his moustache,
"Children growing up--and girls, too! Girls!" He sighed and fell
silent.
"What, only one?" remarked Nostromo, looking down with a sort of
comic inquisitiveness at the unconscious old man. "No matter," he
added, with lofty negligence; "one is enough till another is
wanted."
He lit it and let the match drop from his passive fingers. Giorgio Viola
looked up, and said abruptly--
"My son would have been just such a fine young man as you, Gian'
Battista, if he had lived."
"What? Your son? But you are right, padrone. If he had been like me he
would have been a man."
He turned his horse slowly, and paced on between the booths, checking the
mare almost to a standstill now and then for children, for the groups of
people from the distant Campo, who stared after him with admiration. The
Company's lightermen saluted him from afar; and the greatly envied Capataz
de Cargadores advanced, amongst murmurs of recognition and obsequious
greetings, towards the huge circus-like erection. The throng thickened; the
guitars tinkled louder; other horsemen sat motionless, smoking calmly above
the heads of the crowd; it eddied and pushed before the doors of the
high-roofed building, whence issued a shuffle and thumping of feet in time
to the dance music vibrating and shrieking with a racking rhythm, overhung
by the tremendous, sustained, hollow roar of the gombo. The barbarous and
imposing noise of the big drum, that can madden a crowd, and that even
Europeans cannot hear without a strange emotion, seemed to draw Nostromo on
to its source, while a man, wrapped up in a faded, torn poncho, walked by
his stirrup, and, buffeted right and left, begged "his worship"
insistently for employment on the wharf. He whined, offering the Senor
Capataz half his daily pay for the privilege of being admitted to the
swaggering fraternity of Cargadores; the other half would be enough for him,
he protested. But Captain Mitchell's right-hand man--"invaluable for
our work--a perfectly incorruptible fellow"--after looking down
critically at the ragged mozo, shook his head without a word in the uproar
going on around.
The man fell back; and a little further on Nostromo had to pull up. From the
doors of the dance hall men and women emerged tottering, streaming with
sweat, trembling in every limb, to lean, panting, with staring eyes and
parted lips, against the wall of the structure, where the harps and guitars
played on with mad speed in an incessant roll of thunder. Hundreds of hands
clapped in there; voices shrieked, and then all at once would sink low,
chanting in unison the refrain of a love song, with a dying fall. A red
flower, flung with a good aim from somewhere in the crowd, struck the
resplendent Capataz on the cheek.
He caught it as it fell, neatly, but for some time did not turn his head.
When at last he condescended to look round, the throng near him had parted
to make way for a pretty Morenita, her hair held up by a small golden comb,
who was walking towards him in the open space.
Her arms and neck emerged plump and bare from a snowy chemisette; the blue
woollen skirt, with all the fullness gathered in front, scanty on the hips
and tight across the back, disclosed the provoking action of her walk. She
came straight on and laid her hand on the mare's neck with a timid,
coquettish look upwards out of the corner of her eyes.
"Querido," she murmured, caressingly, "why do you pretend not
to see me when I pass?"
"Because I don't love thee any more," said Nostromo, deliberately,
after a moment of reflective silence.
The hand on the mare's neck trembled suddenly. She dropped her head before
all the eyes in the wide circle formed round the generous, the terrible, the
inconstant Capataz de Cargadores, and his Morenita.
Nostromo, looking down, saw tears beginning to fall down her face.
"Has it come, then, ever beloved of my heart?" she whispered.
"Is it true?"
"No," said Nostromo, looking away carelessly. "It was a lie.
I love thee as much as ever."
"Is that true?" she cooed, joyously, her cheeks still wet with
tears.
"It is true."
"True on the life?"
"As true as that; but thou must not ask me to swear it on the Madonna
that stands in thy room." And the Capataz laughed a little in response
to the grins of the crowd.
She pouted--very pretty--a little uneasy.
"No, I will not ask for that. I can see love in your eyes." She
laid her hand on his knee. "Why are you trembling like this? From
love?" she continued, while the cavernous thundering of the gombo went
on without a pause. "But if you love her as much as that, you must give
your Paquita a gold-mounted rosary of beads for the neck of her
Madonna."
"No," said Nostromo, looking into her uplifted, begging eyes,
which suddenly turned stony with surprise.
"No? Then what else will your worship give me on the day of the
fiesta?" she asked, angrily; "so as not to shame me before all
these people."
"There is no shame for thee in getting nothing from thy lover for
once."
"True! The shame is your worship's--my poor lover's," she flared
up, sarcastically.
Laughs were heard at her anger, at her retort. What an audacious spitfire
she was! The people aware of this scene were calling out urgently to others
in the crowd. The circle round the silver-grey mare narrowed slowly.
The girl went off a pace or two, confronting the mocking curiosity of the
eyes, then flung back to the stirrup, tiptoeing, her enraged face turned up
to Nostromo with a pair of blazing eyes. He bent low to her in the saddle.
"Juan," she hissed, "I could stab thee to the heart!"
The dreaded Capataz de Cargadores, magnificent and carelessly public in his
amours, flung his arm round her neck and kissed her spluttering lips. A
murmur went round.
"A knife!" he demanded at large, holding her firmly by the
shoulder.
Twenty blades flashed out together in the circle. A young man in holiday
attire, bounding in, thrust one in Nostromo's hand and bounded back into the
ranks, very proud of himself. Nostromo had not even looked at him.
"Stand on my foot," he commanded the girl, who, suddenly subdued,
rose lightly, and when he had her up, encircling her waist, her face near to
his, he pressed the knife into her little hand.
"No, Morenita! You shall not put me to shame," he said. "You
shall have your present; and so that everyone should know who is your lover
to-day, you may cut all the silver buttons off my coat."
There were shouts of laughter and applause at this witty freak, while the
girl passed the keen blade, and the impassive rider jingled in his palm the
increasing hoard of silver buttons. He eased her to the ground with both her
hands full. After whispering for a while with a very strenuous face, she
walked away, staring haughtily, and vanished into the crowd.
The circle had broken up, and the lordly Capataz de Cargadores, the
indispensable man, the tried and trusty Nostromo, the Mediterranean sailor
come ashore casually to try his luck in Costaguana, rode slowly towards the
harbour. The Juno was just then swinging round; and even as Nostromo reined
up again to look on, a flag ran up on the improvised flagstaff erected in an
ancient and dismantled little fort at the harbour entrance. Half a battery
of field guns had been hurried over there from the Sulaco barracks for the
purpose of firing the regulation salutes for the President-Dictator and the
War Minister. As the mail-boat headed through the pass, the badly timed
reports announced the end of Don Vincente Ribiera's first official visit to
Sulaco, and for Captain Mitchell the end of another "historic
occasion." Next time when the "Hope of honest men" was to
come that way, a year and a half later, it was unofficially, over the
mountain tracks, fleeing after a defeat on a lame mule, to be only just
saved by Nostromo from an ignominious death at the hands of a mob. It was a
very different event, of which Captain Mitchell used to say--
"It was history--history, sir! And that fellow of mine, Nostromo, you
know, was right in it. Absolutely making history, sir."
But this event, creditable to Nostromo, was to lead immediately to another,
which could not be classed either as "history" or as "a
mistake" in Captain Mitchell's phraseology. He had another word for it.
"Sir" he used to say afterwards, "that was no mistake. It was
a fatality. A misfortune, pure and simple, sir. And that poor fellow of mine
was right in it--right in the middle of it! A fatality, if ever there was
one--and to my mind he has never been the same man since."
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