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Nostromo: A Tale of the Seaboard
by Joseph Conrad
Part Second: The Isabels
Chapter Five
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THE Gould carriage was
the first to return from the harbour to the empty town. On the ancient
pavement, laid out in patterns, sunk into ruts and holes, the portly
Ignacio, mindful of the springs of the Parisian-built landau, had pulled up
to a walk, and Decoud in his corner contemplated moodily the inner aspect of
the gate. The squat turreted sides held up between them a mass of masonry
with bunches of grass growing at the top, and a grey, heavily scrolled,
armorial shield of stone above the apex of the arch with the arms of Spain
nearly smoothed out as if in readiness for some new device typical of the
impending progress.
The explosive noise of the railway trucks seemed to augment Decoud's
irritation. He muttered something to himself, then began to talk aloud in
curt, angry phrases thrown at the silence of the two women. They did not
look at him at all; while Don Jose, with his semi-translucent, waxy
complexion, overshadowed by the soft grey hat, swayed a little to the jolts
of the carriage by the side of Mrs. Gould.
"This sound puts a new edge on a very old truth."
Decoud spoke in French, perhaps because of Ignacio on the box above him; the
old coachman, with his broad back filling a short, silver-braided jacket,
had a big pair of ears, whose thick rims stood well away from his cropped
head.
"Yes, the noise outside the city wall is new, but the principle is
old."
He ruminated his discontent for a while, then began afresh with a sidelong
glance at Antonia--
"No, but just imagine our forefathers in morions and corselets drawn up
outside this gate, and a band of adventurers just landed from their ships in
the harbour there. Thieves, of course. Speculators, too. Their expeditions,
each one, were the speculations of grave and reverend persons in England.
That is history, as that absurd sailor Mitchell is always saying."
"Mitchell's arrangements for the embarkation of the troops were
excellent!" exclaimed Don Jose.
"That!--that! oh, that's really the work of that Genoese seaman! But to
return to my noises; there used to be in the old days the sound of trumpets
outside that gate. War trumpets! I'm sure they were trumpets. I have read
somewhere that Drake, who was the greatest of these men, used to dine alone
in his cabin on board ship to the sound of trumpets. In those days this town
was full of wealth. Those men came to take it. Now the whole land is like a
treasure-house, and all these people are breaking into it, whilst we are
cutting each other's throats. The only thing that keeps them out is mutual
jealousy. But they'll come to an agreement some day--and by the time we've
settled our quarrels and become decent and honourable, there'll be nothing
left for us. It has always been the same. We are a wonderful people, but it
has always been our fate to be"--he did not say "robbed," but
added, after a pause--"exploited!"
Mrs. Gould said, "Oh, this is unjust!" And Antonia interjected,
"Don't answer him, Emilia. He is attacking me."
"You surely do not think I was attacking Don Carlos!" Decoud
answered.
And then the carriage stopped before the door of the Casa Gould. The young
man offered his hand to the ladies. They went in first together; Don Jose
walked by the side of Decoud, and the gouty old porter tottered after them
with some light wraps on his arm.
Don Jose slipped his hand under the arm of the journalist of Sulaco.
"The Porvenir must have a long and confident article upon Barrios and
the irresistibleness of his army of Cayta! The moral effect should be kept
up in the country. We must cable encouraging extracts to Europe and the
United States to maintain a favourable impression abroad."
Decoud muttered, "Oh, yes, we must comfort our friends, the
speculators."
The long open gallery was in shadow, with its screen of plants in vases
along the balustrade, holding out motionless blossoms, and all the glass
doors of the reception-rooms thrown open. A jingle of spurs died out at the
further end.
Basilio, standing aside against the wall, said in a soft tone to the passing
ladies, "The Senor Administrador is just back from the mountain."
In the great sala, with its groups of ancient Spanish and modern European
furniture making as if different centres under the high white spread of the
ceiling, the silver and porcelain of the tea-service gleamed among a cluster
of dwarf chairs, like a bit of a lady's boudoir, putting in a note of
feminine and intimate delicacy.
Don Jose in his rocking-chair placed his hat on his lap, and Decoud walked
up and down the whole length of the room, passing between tables loaded with
knick-knacks and almost disappearing behind the high backs of leathern
sofas. He was thinking of the angry face of Antonia; he was confident that
he would make his peace with her. He had not stayed in Sulaco to quarrel
with Antonia.
Martin Decoud was angry with himself. All he saw and heard going on around
him exasperated the preconceived views of his European civilization. To
contemplate revolutions from the distance of the Parisian Boulevards was
quite another matter. Here on the spot it was not possible to dismiss their
tragic comedy with the expression, "Quelle farce!"
The reality of the political action, such as it was, seemed closer, and
acquired poignancy by Antonia's belief in the cause. Its crudeness hurt his
feelings. He was surprised at his own sensitiveness.
"I suppose I am more of a Costaguanero than I would have believed
possible," he thought to himself.
His disdain grew like a reaction of his scepticism against the action into
which he was forced by his infatuation for Antonia. He soothed himself by
saying he was not a patriot, but a lover.
The ladies came in bareheaded, and Mrs. Gould sank low before the little
tea-table. Antonia took up her usual place at the reception hour--the corner
of a leathern couch, with a rigid grace in her pose and a fan in her hand.
Decoud, swerving from the straight line of his march, came to lean over the
high back of her seat.
For a long time he talked into her ear from behind, softly, with a half
smile and an air of apologetic familiarity. Her fan lay half grasped on her
knees. She never looked at him. His rapid utterance grew more and more
insistent and caressing. At last he ventured a slight laugh.
"No, really. You must forgive me. One must be serious sometimes."
He paused. She turned her head a little; her blue eyes glided slowly towards
him, slightly upwards, mollified and questioning.
"You can't think I am serious when I call Montero a gran' bestia every
second day in the Porvenir? That is not a serious occupation. No occupation
is serious, not even when a bullet through the heart is the penalty of
failure!"
Her hand closed firmly on her fan.
"Some reason, you understand, I mean some sense, may creep into
thinking; some glimpse of truth. I mean some effective truth, for which
there is no room in politics or journalism. I happen to have said what I
thought. And you are angry! If you do me the kindness to think a little you
will see that I spoke like a patriot."
She opened her red lips for the first time, not unkindly.
"Yes, but you never see the aim. Men must be used as they are. I
suppose nobody is really disinterested, unless, perhaps, you, Don
Martin."
"God forbid! It's the last thing I should like you to believe of
me." He spoke lightly, and paused.
She began to fan herself with a slow movement without raising her hand.
After a time he whispered passionately--
"Antonia!"
She smiled, and extended her hand after the English manner towards Charles
Gould, who was bowing before her; while Decoud, with his elbows spread on
the back of the sofa, dropped his eyes and murmured, "Bonjour."
The Senor Administrador of the San Tome mine bent over his wife for a
moment. They exchanged a few words, of which only the phrase, "The
greatest enthusiasm," pronounced by Mrs. Gould, could be heard.
"Yes," Decoud began in a murmur. "Even he!"
"This is sheer calumny," said Antonia, not very severely.
"You just ask him to throw his mine into the melting-pot for the great
cause," Decoud whispered.
Don Jose had raised his voice. He rubbed his hands cheerily. The excellent
aspect of the troops and the great quantity of new deadly rifles on the
shoulders of those brave men seemed to fill him with an ecstatic confidence.
Charles Gould, very tall and thin before his chair, listened, but nothing
could be discovered in his face except a kind and deferential attention.
Meantime, Antonia had risen, and, crossing the room, stood looking out of
one of the three long windows giving on the street. Decoud followed her. The
window was thrown open, and he leaned against the thickness of the wall. The
long folds of the damask curtain, falling straight from the broad brass
cornice, hid him partly from the room. He folded his arms on his breast, and
looked steadily at Antonia's profile.
The people returning from the harbour filled the pavements; the shuffle of
sandals and a low murmur of voices ascended to the window. Now and then a
coach rolled slowly along the disjointed roadway of the Calle de la
Constitucion. There were not many private carriages in Sulaco; at the most
crowded hour on the Alameda they could be counted with one glance of the
eye. The great family arks swayed on high leathern springs, full of pretty
powdered faces in which the eyes looked intensely alive and black. And first
Don Juste Lopez, the President of the Provincial Assembly, passed with his
three lovely daughters, solemn in a black frock-coat and stiff white tie, as
when directing a debate from a high tribune. Though they all raised their
eyes, Antonia did not make the usual greeting gesture of a fluttered hand,
and they affected not to see the two young people, Costaguaneros with
European manners, whose eccentricities were discussed behind the barred
windows of the first families in Sulaco. And then the widowed Senora
Gavilaso de Valdes rolled by, handsome and dignified, in a great machine in
which she used to travel to and from her country house, surrounded by an
armed retinue in leather suits and big sombreros, with carbines at the bows
of their saddles. She was a woman of most distinguished family, proud, rich,
and kind-hearted. Her second son, Jaime, had just gone off on the Staff of
Barrios. The eldest, a worthless fellow of a moody disposition, filled
Sulaco with the noise of his dissipations, and gambled heavily at the club.
The two youngest boys, with yellow Ribierist cockades in their caps, sat on
the front seat. She, too, affected not to see the Senor Decoud talking
publicly with Antonia in defiance of every convention. And he not even her
novio as far as the world knew! Though, even in that case, it would have
been scandal enough. But the dignified old lady, respected and admired by
the first families, would have been still more shocked if she could have
heard the words they were exchanging.
"Did you say I lost sight of the aim? I have only one aim in the
world."
She made an almost imperceptible negative movement of her head, still
staring across the street at the Avellanos's house, grey, marked with decay,
and with iron bars like a prison.
"And it would be so easy of attainment," he continued, "this
aim which, whether knowingly or not, I have always had in my heart--ever
since the day when you snubbed me so horribly once in Paris, you
remember."
A slight smile seemed to move the corner of the lip that was on his side.
"You know you were a very terrible person, a sort of Charlotte Corday
in a schoolgirl's dress; a ferocious patriot. I suppose you would have stuck
a knife into Guzman Bento?"
She interrupted him. "You do me too much honour."
"At any rate," he said, changing suddenly to a tone of bitter
levity, "you would have sent me to stab him without compunction."
"Ah, par exemple!" she murmured in a shocked tone.
"Well," he argued, mockingly, "you do keep me here writing
deadly nonsense. Deadly to me! It has already killed my self-respect. And
you may imagine," he continued, his tone passing into light banter,
"that Montero, should he be successful, would get even with me in the
only way such a brute can get even with a man of intelligence who
condescends to call him a gran' bestia three times a week. It's a sort of
intellectual death; but there is the other one in the background for a
journalist of my ability."
"If he is successful!" said Antonia, thoughtfully.
"You seem satisfied to see my life hang on a thread," Decoud
replied, with a broad smile. "And the other Montero, the 'my trusted
brother' of the proclamations, the guerrillero--haven't I written that he
was taking the guests' overcoats and changing plates in Paris at our
Legation in the intervals of spying on our refugees there, in the time of
Rojas? He will wash out that sacred truth in blood. In my blood! Why do you
look annoyed? This is simply a bit of the biography of one of our great men.
What do you think he will do to me? There is a certain convent wall round
the corner of the Plaza, opposite the door of the Bull Ring. You know?
Opposite the door with the inscription, Intrada de la Sombra.' Appropriate,
perhaps! That's where the uncle of our host gave up his Anglo-South-American
soul. And, note, he might have run away. A man who has fought with weapons
may run away. You might have let me go with Barrios if you had cared for me.
I would have carried one of those rifles, in which Don Jose believes, with
the greatest satisfaction, in the ranks of poor peons and Indios, that know
nothing either of reason or politics. The most forlorn hope in the most
forlorn army on earth would have been safer than that for which you made me
stay here. When you make war you may retreat, but not when you spend your
time in inciting poor ignorant fools to kill and to die."
His tone remained light, and as if unaware of his presence she stood
motionless, her hands clasped lightly, the fan hanging down from her
interlaced fingers. He waited for a while, and then--
"I shall go to the wall," he said, with a sort of jocular
desperation.
Even that declaration did not make her look at him. Her head remained still,
her eyes fixed upon the house of the Avellanos, whose chipped pilasters,
broken cornices, the whole degradation of dignity was hidden now by the
gathering dusk of the street. In her whole figure her lips alone moved,
forming the words--
"Martin, you will make me cry."
He remained silent for a minute, startled, as if overwhelmed by a sort of
awed happiness, with the lines of the mocking smile still stiffened about
his mouth, and incredulous surprise in his eyes. The value of a sentence is
in the personality which utters it, for nothing new can be said by man or
woman; and those were the last words, it seemed to him, that could ever have
been spoken by Antonia. He had never made it up with her so completely in
all their intercourse of small encounters; but even before she had time to
turn towards him, which she did slowly with a rigid grace, he had begun to
plead--
"My sister is only waiting to embrace you. My father is transported
with joy. I won't say anything of my mother! Our mothers were like sisters.
There is the mail-boat for the south next week--let us go. That Moraga is a
fool! A man like Montero is bribed. It's the practice of the country. It's
tradition --it's politics. Read 'Fifty Years of Misrule.'"
"Leave poor papa alone, Don Martin. He believes--"
"I have the greatest tenderness for your father," he began,
hurriedly. "But I love you, Antonia! And Moraga has miserably
mismanaged this business. Perhaps your father did, too; I don't know.
Montero was bribeable. Why, I suppose he only wanted his share of this
famous loan for national development. Why didn't the stupid Sta. Marta
people give him a mission to Europe, or something? He would have taken five
years' salary in advance, and gone on loafing in Paris, this stupid,
ferocious Indio!"
"The man," she said, thoughtfully, and very calm before this
outburst, "was intoxicated with vanity. We had all the information, not
from Moraga only; from others, too. There was his brother intriguing,
too."
"Oh, yes!" he said. "Of course you know. You know everything.
You read all the correspondence, you write all the papers--all those State
papers that are inspired here, in this room, in blind deference to a theory
of political purity. Hadn't you Charles Gould before your eyes? Rey de
Sulaco! He and his mine are the practical demonstration of what could have
been done. Do you think he succeeded by his fidelity to a theory of virtue?
And all those railway people, with their honest work! Of course, their work
is honest! But what if you cannot work honestly till the thieves are
satisfied? Could he not, a gentleman, have told this Sir John
what's-his-name that Montero had to be bought off--he and all his Negro
Liberals hanging on to his gold-laced sleeve? He ought to have been bought
off with his own stupid weight of gold--his weight of gold, I tell you,
boots, sabre, spurs, cocked hat, and all."
She shook her head slightly. "It was impossible," she murmured.
"He wanted the whole lot? What?"
She was facing him now in the deep recess of the window, very close and
motionless. Her lips moved rapidly. Decoud, leaning his back against the
wall, listened with crossed arms and lowered eyelids. He drank the tones of
her even voice, and watched the agitated life of her throat, as if waves of
emotion had run from her heart to pass out into the air in her reasonable
words. He also had his aspirations, he aspired to carry her away out of
these deadly futilities of pronunciamientos and reforms. All this was
wrong--utterly wrong; but she fascinated him, and sometimes the sheer
sagacity of a phrase would break the charm, replace the fascination by a
sudden unwilling thrill of interest. Some women hovered, as it were, on the
threshold of genius, he reflected. They did not want to know, or think, or
understand. Passion stood for all that, and he was ready to believe that
some startlingly profound remark, some appreciation of character, or a
judgment upon an event, bordered on the miraculous. In the mature Antonia he
could see with an extraordinary vividness the austere schoolgirl of the
earlier days. She seduced his attention; sometimes he could not restrain a
murmur of assent; now and then he advanced an objection quite seriously.
Gradually they began to argue; the curtain half hid them from the people in
the sala.
Outside it had grown dark. From the deep trench of shadow between the
houses, lit up vaguely by the glimmer of street lamps, ascended the evening
silence of Sulaco; the silence of a town with few carriages, of unshod
horses, and a softly sandalled population. The windows of the Casa Gould
flung their shining parallelograms upon the house of the Avellanos. Now and
then a shuffle of feet passed below with the pulsating red glow of a
cigarette at the foot of the walls; and the night air, as if cooled by the
snows of Higuerota, refreshed their faces.
"We Occidentals," said Martin Decoud, using the usual term the
provincials of Sulaco applied to themselves, "have been always distinct
and separated. As long as we hold Cayta nothing can reach us. In all our
troubles no army has marched over those mountains. A revolution in the
central provinces isolates us at once. Look how complete it is now! The news
of Barrios' movement will be cabled to the United States, and only in that
way will it reach Sta. Marta by the cable from the other seaboard. We have
the greatest riches, the greatest fertility, the purest blood in our great
families, the most laborious population. The Occidental Province should
stand alone. The early Federalism was not bad for us. Then came this union
which Don Henrique Gould resisted. It opened the road to tyranny; and, ever
since, the rest of Costaguana hangs like a millstone round our necks. The
Occidental territory is large enough to make any man's country. Look at the
mountains! Nature itself seems to cry to us, 'Separate!'"
She made an energetic gesture of negation. A silence fell.
"Oh, yes, I know it's contrary to the doctrine laid down in the
'History of Fifty Years' Misrule.' I am only trying to be sensible. But my
sense seems always to give you cause for offence. Have I startled you very
much with this perfectly reasonable aspiration?"
She shook her head. No, she was not startled, but the idea shocked her early
convictions. Her patriotism was larger. She had never considered that
possibility.
"It may yet be the means of saving some of your convictions," he
said, prophetically.
She did not answer. She seemed tired. They leaned side by side on the rail
of the little balcony, very friendly, having exhausted politics, giving
themselves up to the silent feeling of their nearness, in one of those
profound pauses that fall upon the rhythm of passion. Towards the plaza end
of the street the glowing coals in the brazeros of the market women cooking
their evening meal gleamed red along the edge of the pavement. A man
appeared without a sound in the light of a street lamp, showing the coloured
inverted triangle of his bordered poncho, square on his shoulders, hanging
to a point below his knees. From the harbour end of the Calle a horseman
walked his soft-stepping mount, gleaming silver-grey abreast each lamp under
the dark shape of the rider.
"Behold the illustrious Capataz de Cargadores," said Decoud,
gently, "coming in all his splendour after his work is done. The next
great man of Sulaco after Don Carlos Gould. But he is good-natured, and let
me make friends with him."
"Ah, indeed!" said Antonia. "How did you make friends?"
"A journalist ought to have his finger on the popular pulse, and this
man is one of the leaders of the populace. A journalist ought to know
remarkable men--and this man is remarkable in his way."
"Ah, yes!" said Antonia, thoughtfully. "It is known that this
Italian has a great influence."
The horseman had passed below them, with a gleam of dim light on the shining
broad quarters of the grey mare, on a bright heavy stirrup, on a long silver
spur; but the short flick of yellowish flame in the dusk was powerless
against the muffled-up mysteriousness of the dark figure with an invisible
face concealed by a great sombrero.
Decoud and Antonia remained leaning over the balcony, side by side, touching
elbows, with their heads overhanging the darkness of the street, and the
brilliantly lighted sala at their backs. This was a tete-a-tete of extreme
impropriety; something of which in the whole extent of the Republic only the
extraordinary Antonia could be capable--the poor, motherless girl, never
accompanied, with a careless father, who had thought only of making her
learned. Even Decoud himself seemed to feel that this was as much as he
could expect of having her to himself till--till the revolution was over and
he could carry her off to Europe, away from the endlessness of civil strife,
whose folly seemed even harder to bear than its ignominy. After one Montero
there would be another, the lawlessness of a populace of all colours and
races, barbarism, irremediable tyranny. As the great Liberator Bolivar had
said in the bitterness of his spirit, "America is ungovernable. Those
who worked for her independence have ploughed the sea." He did not
care, he declared boldly; he seized every opportunity to tell her that
though she had managed to make a Blanco journalist of him, he was no
patriot. First of all, the word had no sense for cultured minds, to whom the
narrowness of every belief is odious; and secondly, in connection with the
everlasting troubles of this unhappy country it was hopelessly besmirched;
it had been the cry of dark barbarism, the cloak of lawlessness, of crimes,
of rapacity, of simple thieving.
He was surprised at the warmth of his own utterance. He had no need to drop
his voice; it had been low all the time, a mere murmur in the silence of
dark houses with their shutters closed early against the night air, as is
the custom of Sulaco. Only the sala of the Casa Gould flung out defiantly
the blaze of its four windows, the bright appeal of light in the whole dumb
obscurity of the street. And the murmur on the little balcony went on after
a short pause.
"But we are labouring to change all that," Antonia protested.
"It is exactly what we desire. It is our object. It is the great cause.
And the word you despise has stood also for sacrifice, for courage, for
constancy, for suffering. Papa, who--"
"Ploughing the sea," interrupted Decoud, looking down.
There was below the sound of hasty and ponderous footsteps.
"Your uncle, the grand-vicar of the cathedral, has just turned under
the gate," observed Decoud. "He said Mass for the troops in the
Plaza this morning. They had built for him an altar of drums, you know. And
they brought outside all the painted blocks to take the air. All the wooden
saints stood militarily in a row at the top of the great flight of steps.
They looked like a gorgeous escort attending the Vicar-General. I saw the
great function from the windows of the Porvenir. He is amazing, your uncle,
the last of the Corbelans. He glittered exceedingly in his vestments with a
great crimson velvet cross down his back. And all the time our saviour
Barrios sat in the Amarilla Club drinking punch at an open window. Esprit
fort--our Barrios. I expected every moment your uncle to launch an
excommunication there and then at the black eye-patch in the window across
the Plaza. But not at all. Ultimately the troops marched off. Later Barrios
came down with some of the officers, and stood with his uniform all
unbuttoned, discoursing at the edge of the pavement. Suddenly your uncle
appeared, no longer glittering, but all black, at the cathedral door with
that threatening aspect he has--you know, like a sort of avenging spirit. He
gives one look, strides over straight at the group of uniforms, and leads
away the general by the elbow. He walked him for a quarter of an hour in the
shade of a wall. Never let go his elbow for a moment, talking all the time
with exaltation, and gesticulating with a long black arm. It was a curious
scene. The officers seemed struck with astonishment. Remarkable man, your
missionary uncle. He hates an infidel much less than a heretic, and prefers
a heathen many times to an infidel. He condescends graciously to call me a
heathen, sometimes, you know."
Antonia listened with her hands over the balustrade, opening and shutting
the fan gently; and Decoud talked a little nervously, as if afraid that she
would leave him at the first pause. Their comparative isolation, the
precious sense of intimacy, the slight contact of their arms, affected him
softly; for now and then a tender inflection crept into the flow of his
ironic murmurs.
"Any slight sign of favour from a relative of yours is welcome,
Antonia. And perhaps he understands me, after all! But I know him, too, our
Padre Corbelan. The idea of political honour, justice, and honesty for him
consists in the restitution of the confiscated Church property. Nothing else
could have drawn that fierce converter of savage Indians out of the wilds to
work for the Ribierist cause! Nothing else but that wild hope! He would make
a pronunciamiento himself for such an object against any Government if he
could only get followers! What does Don Carlos Gould think of that? But, of
course, with his English impenetrability, nobody can tell what he thinks.
Probably he thinks of nothing apart from his mine; of his 'Imperium in
Imperio.' As to Mrs. Gould, she thinks of her schools, of her hospitals, of
the mothers with the young babies, of every sick old man in the three
villages. If you were to turn your head now you would see her extracting a
report from that sinister doctor in a check shirt--what's his name? Monygham--or
else catechising Don Pepe or perhaps listening to Padre Roman. They are all
down here to-day--all her ministers of state. Well, she is a sensible woman,
and perhaps Don Carlos is a sensible man. It's a part of solid English sense
not to think too much; to see only what may be of practical use at the
moment. These people are not like ourselves. We have no political reason; we
have political passions--sometimes. What is a conviction? A particular view
of our personal advantage either practical or emotional. No one is a patriot
for nothing. The word serves us well. But I am clear-sighted, and I shall
not use that word to you, Antonia! I have no patriotic illusions. I have
only the supreme illusion of a lover."
He paused, then muttered almost inaudibly, "That can lead one very far,
though."
Behind their backs the political tide that once in every twenty-four hours
set with a strong flood through the Gould drawing-room could be heard,
rising higher in a hum of voices. Men had been dropping in singly, or in
twos and threes: the higher officials of the province, engineers of the
railway, sunburnt and in tweeds, with the frosted head of their chief
smiling with slow, humorous indulgence amongst the young eager faces. Scarfe,
the lover of fandangos, had already slipped out in search of some dance, no
matter where, on the outskirts of the town. Don Juste Lopez, after taking
his daughters home, had entered solemnly, in a black creased coat buttoned
up under his spreading brown beard. The few members of the Provincial
Assembly present clustered at once around their President to discuss the
news of the war and the last proclamation of the rebel Montero, the
miserable Montero, calling in the name of "a justly incensed
democracy" upon all the Provincial Assemblies of the Republic to
suspend their sittings till his sword had made peace and the will of the
people could be consulted. It was practically an invitation to dissolve: an
unheard-of audacity of that evil madman.
The indignation ran high in the knot of deputies behind Jose Avellanos. Don
Jose, lifting up his voice, cried out to them over the high back of his
chair, "Sulaco has answered by sending to-day an army upon his flank.
If all the other provinces show only half as much patriotism as we
Occidentals--"
A great outburst of acclamations covered the vibrating treble of the life
and soul of the party. Yes! Yes! This was true! A great truth! Sulaco was in
the forefront, as ever! It was a boastful tumult, the hopefulness inspired
by the event of the day breaking out amongst those caballeros of the Campo
thinking of their herds, of their lands, of the safety of their families.
Everything was at stake. . . . No! It was impossible that Montero should
succeed! This criminal, this shameless Indio! The clamour continued for some
time, everybody else in the room looking towards the group where Don Juste
had put on his air of impartial solemnity as if presiding at a sitting of
the Provincial Assembly. Decoud had turned round at the noise, and, leaning
his back on the balustrade, shouted into the room with all the strength of
his lungs, "Gran' bestia!"
This unexpected cry had the effect of stilling the noise. All the eyes were
directed to the window with an approving expectation; but Decoud had already
turned his back upon the room, and was again leaning out over the quiet
street.
"This is the quintessence of my journalism; that is the supreme
argument," he said to Antonia. "I have invented this definition,
this last word on a great question. But I am no patriot. I am no more of a
patriot than the Capataz of the Sulaco Cargadores, this Genoese who has done
such great things for this harbour--this active usher-in of the material
implements for our progress. You have heard Captain Mitchell confess over
and over again that till he got this man he could never tell how long it
would take to unload a ship. That is bad for progress. You have seen him
pass by after his labours on his famous horse to dazzle the girls in some
ballroom with an earthen floor. He is a fortunate fellow! His work is an
exercise of personal powers; his leisure is spent in receiving the marks of
extraordinary adulation. And he likes it, too. Can anybody be more
fortunate? To be feared and admired is--"
"And are these your highest aspirations, Don Martin?" interrupted
Antonia.
"I was speaking of a man of that sort," said Decoud, curtly.
"The heroes of the world have been feared and admired. What more could
he want?"
Decoud had often felt his familiar habit of ironic thought fall shattered
against Antonia's gravity. She irritated him as if she, too, had suffered
from that inexplicable feminine obtuseness which stands so often between a
man and a woman of the more ordinary sort. But he overcame his vexation at
once. He was very far from thinking Antonia ordinary, whatever verdict his
scepticism might have pronounced upon himself. With a touch of penetrating
tenderness in his voice he assured her that his only aspiration was to a
felicity so high that it seemed almost unrealizable on this earth.
She coloured invisibly, with a warmth against which the breeze from the
sierra seemed to have lost its cooling power in the sudden melting of the
snows. His whisper could not have carried so far, though there was enough
ardour in his tone to melt a heart of ice. Antonia turned away abruptly, as
if to carry his whispered assurance into the room behind, full of light,
noisy with voices.
The tide of political speculation was beating high within the four walls of
the great sala, as if driven beyond the marks by a great gust of hope. Don
Juste's fan-shaped beard was still the centre of loud and animated
discussions. There was a self-confident ring in all the voices. Even the few
Europeans around Charles Gould--a Dane, a couple of Frenchmen, a discreet
fat German, smiling, with down-cast eyes, the representatives of those
material interests that had got a footing in Sulaco under the protecting
might of the San Tome mine--had infused a lot of good humour into their
deference. Charles Gould, to whom they were paying their court, was the
visible sign of the stability that could be achieved on the shifting ground
of revolutions. They felt hopeful about their various undertakings. One of
the two Frenchmen, small, black, with glittering eyes lost in an immense
growth of bushy beard, waved his tiny brown hands and delicate wrists. He
had been travelling in the interior of the province for a syndicate of
European capitalists. His forcible "Monsieur l' Administrateur"
returning every minute shrilled above the steady hum of conversations. He
was relating his discoveries. He was ecstatic. Charles Gould glanced down at
him courteously.
At a given moment of these necessary receptions it was Mrs. Gould's habit to
withdraw quietly into a little drawing-room, especially her own, next to the
great sala. She had risen, and, waiting for Antonia, listened with a
slightly worried graciousness to the engineer-in-chief of the railway, who
stooped over her, relating slowly, without the slightest gesture, something
apparently amusing, for his eyes had a humorous twinkle. Antonia, before she
advanced into the room to join Mrs. Gould, turned her head over her shoulder
towards Decoud, only for a moment.
"Why should any one of us think his aspirations unrealizable?" she
said, rapidly.
"I am going to cling to mine to the end, Antonia," he answered,
through clenched teeth, then bowed very low, a little distantly.
The engineer-in-chief had not finished telling his amusing story. The
humours of railway building in South America appealed to his keen
appreciation of the absurd, and he told his instances of ignorant prejudice
and as ignorant cunning very well. Now, Mrs. Gould gave him all her
attention as he walked by her side escorting the ladies out of the room.
Finally all three passed unnoticed through the glass doors in the gallery.
Only a tall priest stalking silently in the noise of the sala checked
himself to look after them. Father Corbelan, whom Decoud had seen from the
balcony turning into the gateway of the Casa Gould, had addressed no one
since coming in. The long, skimpy soutane accentuated the tallness of his
stature; he carried his powerful torso thrown forward; and the straight,
black bar of his joined eyebrows, the pugnacious outline of the bony face,
the white spot of a scar on the bluish shaven cheeks (a testimonial to his
apostolic zeal from a party of unconverted Indians), suggested something
unlawful behind his priesthood, the idea of a chaplain of bandits.
He separated his bony, knotted hands clasped behind his back, to shake his
finger at Martin.
Decoud had stepped into the room after Antonia. But he did not go far. He
had remained just within, against the curtain, with an expression of not
quite genuine gravity, like a grown-up person taking part in a game of
children. He gazed quietly at the threatening finger.
"I have watched your reverence converting General Barrios by a special
sermon on the Plaza," he said, without making the slightest movement.
"What miserable nonsense!" Father Corbelan's deep voice resounded
all over the room, making all the heads turn on the shoulders. "The man
is a drunkard. Senores, the God of your General is a bottle!"
His contemptuous, arbitrary voice caused an uneasy suspension of every
sound, as if the self-confidence of the gathering had been staggered by a
blow. But nobody took up Father Corbelan's declaration.
It was known that Father Corbelan had come out of the wilds to advocate the
sacred rights of the Church with the same fanatical fearlessness with which
he had gone preaching to bloodthirsty savages, devoid of human compassion or
worship of any kind. Rumours of legendary proportions told of his successes
as a missionary beyond the eye of Christian men. He had baptized whole
nations of Indians, living with them like a savage himself. It was related
that the padre used to ride with his Indians for days, half naked, carrying
a bullock-hide shield, and, no doubt, a long lance, too--who knows? That he
had wandered clothed in skins, seeking for proselytes somewhere near the
snow line of the Cordillera. Of these exploits Padre Corbelan himself was
never known to talk. But he made no secret of his opinion that the
politicians of Sta. Marta had harder hearts and more corrupt minds than the
heathen to whom he had carried the word of God. His injudicious zeal for the
temporal welfare of the Church was damaging the Ribierist cause. It was
common knowledge that he had refused to be made titular bishop of the
Occidental diocese till justice was done to a despoiled Church. The
political Gefe of Sulaco (the same dignitary whom Captain Mitchell saved
from the mob afterwards) hinted with naive cynicism that doubtless their
Excellencies the Ministers sent the padre over the mountains to Sulaco in
the worst season of the year in the hope that he would be frozen to death by
the icy blasts of the high paramos. Every year a few hardy muleteers--men
inured to exposure--were known to perish in that way. But what would you
have? Their Excellencies possibly had not realized what a tough priest he
was. Meantime, the ignorant were beginning to murmur that the Ribierist
reforms meant simply the taking away of the land from the people. Some of it
was to be given to foreigners who made the railway; the greater part was to
go to the padres.
These were the results of the Grand Vicar's zeal. Even from the short
allocution to the troops on the Plaza (which only the first ranks could have
heard) he had not been able to keep out his fixed idea of an outraged Church
waiting for reparation from a penitent country. The political Gefe had been
exasperated. But he could not very well throw the brother-in-law of Don Jose
into the prison of the Cabildo. The chief magistrate, an easy-going and
popular official, visited the Casa Gould, walking over after sunset from the
Intendencia, unattended, acknowledging with dignified courtesy the
salutations of high and low alike. That evening he had walked up straight to
Charles Gould and had hissed out to him that he would have liked to deport
the Grand Vicar out of Sulaco, anywhere, to some desert island, to the
Isabels, for instance. "The one without water preferably--eh, Don
Carlos?" he had added in a tone between jest and earnest. This
uncontrollable priest, who had rejected his offer of the episcopal palace
for a residence and preferred to hang his shabby hammock amongst the rubble
and spiders of the sequestrated Dominican Convent, had taken into his head
to advocate an unconditional pardon for Hernandez the Robber! And this was
not enough; he seemed to have entered into communication with the most
audacious criminal the country had known for years. The Sulaco police knew,
of course, what was going on. Padre Corbelan had got hold of that reckless
Italian, the Capataz de Cargadores, the only man fit for such an errand, and
had sent a message through him. Father Corbelan had studied in Rome, and
could speak Italian. The Capataz was known to visit the old Dominican
Convent at night. An old woman who served the Grand Vicar had heard the name
of Hernandez pronounced; and only last Saturday afternoon the Capataz had
been observed galloping out of town. He did not return for two days. The
police would have laid the Italian by the heels if it had not been for fear
of the Cargadores, a turbulent body of men, quite apt to raise a tumult.
Nowadays it was not so easy to govern Sulaco. Bad characters flocked into
it, attracted by the money in the pockets of the railway workmen. The
populace was made restless by Father Corbelan's discourses. And the first
magistrate explained to Charles Gould that now the province was stripped of
troops any outbreak of lawlessness would find the authorities with their
boots off, as it were.
Then he went away moodily to sit in an armchair, smoking a long, thin cigar,
not very far from Don Jose, with whom, bending over sideways, he exchanged a
few words from time to time. He ignored the entrance of the priest, and
whenever Father Corbelan's voice was raised behind him, he shrugged his
shoulders impatiently.
Father Corbelan had remained quite motionless for a time with that something
vengeful in his immobility which seemed to characterize all his attitudes. A
lurid glow of strong convictions gave its peculiar aspect to the black
figure. But its fierceness became softened as the padre, fixing his eyes
upon Decoud, raised his long, black arm slowly, impressively--
"And you--you are a perfect heathen," he said, in a subdued, deep
voice.
He made a step nearer, pointing a forefinger at the young man's breast.
Decoud, very calm, felt the wall behind the curtain with the back of his
head. Then, with his chin tilted well up, he smiled.
"Very well," he agreed with the slightly weary nonchalance of a
man well used to these passages. "But is it perhaps that you have not
discovered yet what is the God of my worship? It was an easier task with our
Barrios."
The priest suppressed a gesture of discouragement. "You believe neither
in stick nor stone," he said.
"Nor bottle," added Decoud without stirring. "Neither does
the other of your reverence's confidants. I mean the Capataz of the
Cargadores. He does not drink. Your reading of my character does honour to
your perspicacity. But why call me a heathen?"
"True," retorted the priest. "You are ten times worse. A
miracle could not convert you."
"I certainly do not believe in miracles," said Decoud, quietly.
Father Corbelan shrugged his high, broad shoulders doubtfully.
"A sort of Frenchman--godless--a materialist," he pronounced
slowly, as if weighing the terms of a careful analysis. "Neither the
son of his own country nor of any other," he continued, thoughtfully.
"Scarcely human, in fact," Decoud commented under his breath, his
head at rest against the wall, his eyes gazing up at the ceiling.
"The victim of this faithless age," Father Corbelan resumed in a
deep but subdued voice.
"But of some use as a journalist." Decoud changed his pose and
spoke in a more animated tone. "Has your worship neglected to read the
last number of the Porvenir? I assure you it is just like the others. On the
general policy it continues to call Montero a gran' bestia, and stigmatize
his brother, the guerrillero, for a combination of lackey and spy. What
could be more effective? In local affairs it urges the Provincial Government
to enlist bodily into the national army the band of Hernandez the
Robber--who is apparently the protege of the Church--or at least of the
Grand Vicar. Nothing could be more sound."
The priest nodded and turned on the heels of his square-toed shoes with big
steel buckles. Again, with his hands clasped behind his back, he paced to
and fro, planting his feet firmly. When he swung about, the skirt of his
soutane was inflated slightly by the brusqueness of his movements.
The great sala had been emptying itself slowly. When the Gefe Politico rose
to go, most of those still remaining stood up suddenly in sign of respect,
and Don Jose Avellanos stopped the rocking of his chair. But the
good-natured First Official made a deprecatory gesture, waved his hand to
Charles Gould, and went out discreetly.
In the comparative peace of the room the screaming "Monsieur
l'Administrateur" of the frail, hairy Frenchman seemed to acquire a
preternatural shrillness. The explorer of the Capitalist syndicate was still
enthusiastic. "Ten million dollars' worth of copper practically in
sight, Monsieur l'Administrateur. Ten millions in sight! And a railway
coming--a railway! They will never believe my report. C'est trop beau."
He fell a prey to a screaming ecstasy, in the midst of sagely nodding heads,
before Charles Gould's imperturbable calm.
And only the priest continued his pacing, flinging round the skirt of his
soutane at each end of his beat. Decoud murmured to him ironically:
"Those gentlemen talk about their gods."
Father Corbelan stopped short, looked at the journalist of Sulaco fixedly
for a moment, shrugged his shoulders slightly, and resumed his plodding walk
of an obstinate traveller.
And now the Europeans were dropping off from the group around Charles Gould
till the Administrador of the Great Silver Mine could be seen in his whole
lank length, from head to foot, left stranded by the ebbing tide of his
guests on the great square of carpet, as it were a multi-coloured shoal of
flowers and arabesques under his brown boots. Father Corbelan approached the
rocking-chair of Don Jose Avellanos.
"Come, brother," he said, with kindly brusqueness and a touch of
relieved impatience a man may feel at the end of a perfectly useless
ceremony. "A la Casa! A la Casa! This has been all talk. Let us now go
and think and pray for guidance from Heaven."
He rolled his black eyes upwards. By the side of the frail diplomatist--the
life and soul of the party--he seemed gigantic, with a gleam of fanaticism
in the glance. But the voice of the party, or, rather, its mouthpiece, the
"son Decoud" from Paris, turned journalist for the sake of
Antonia's eyes, knew very well that it was not so, that he was only a
strenuous priest with one idea, feared by the women and execrated by the men
of the people. Martin Decoud, the dilettante in life, imagined himself to
derive an artistic pleasure from watching the picturesque extreme of
wrongheadedness into which an honest, almost sacred, conviction may drive a
man. "It is like madness. It must be--because it's
self-destructive," Decoud had said to himself often. It seemed to him
that every conviction, as soon as it became effective, turned into that form
of dementia the gods send upon those they wish to destroy. But he enjoyed
the bitter flavour of that example with the zest of a connoisseur in the art
of his choice. Those two men got on well together, as if each had felt
respectively that a masterful conviction, as well as utter scepticism, may
lead a man very far on the by-paths of political action.
Don Jose obeyed the touch of the big hairy hand. Decoud followed out the
brothers-in-law. And there remained only one visitor in the vast empty sala,
bluishly hazy with tobacco smoke, a heavy-eyed, round-cheeked man, with a
drooping moustache, a hide merchant from Esmeralda, who had come overland to
Sulaco, riding with a few peons across the coast range. He was very full of
his journey, undertaken mostly for the purpose of seeing the Senor
Administrador of San Tome in relation to some assistance he required in his
hide-exporting business. He hoped to enlarge it greatly now that the country
was going to be settled. It was going to be settled, he repeated several
times, degrading by a strange, anxious whine the sonority of the Spanish
language, which he pattered rapidly, like some sort of cringing jargon. A
plain man could carry on his little business now in the country, and even
think of enlarging it--with safety. Was it not so? He seemed to beg Charles
Gould for a confirmatory word, a grunt of assent, a simple nod even.
He could get nothing. His alarm increased, and in the pauses he would dart
his eyes here and there; then, loth to give up, he would branch off into
feeling allusion to the dangers of his journey. The audacious Hernandez,
leaving his usual haunts, had crossed the Campo of Sulaco, and was known to
be lurking in the ravines of the coast range. Yesterday, when distant only a
few hours from Sulaco, the hide merchant and his servants had seen three men
on the road arrested suspiciously, with their horses' heads together. Two of
these rode off at once and disappeared in a shallow quebrada to the left.
"We stopped," continued the man from Esmeralda, "and I tried
to hide behind a small bush. But none of my mozos would go forward to find
out what it meant, and the third horseman seemed to be waiting for us to
come up. It was no use. We had been seen. So we rode slowly on, trembling.
He let us pass--a man on a grey horse with his hat down on his eyes--without
a word of greeting; but by-and-by we heard him galloping after us. We faced
about, but that did not seem to intimidate him. He rode up at speed, and
touching my foot with the toe of his boot, asked me for a cigar, with a
blood-curdling laugh. He did not seem armed, but when he put his hand back
to reach for the matches I saw an enormous revolver strapped to his waist. I
shuddered. He had very fierce whiskers, Don Carlos, and as he did not offer
to go on we dared not move. At last, blowing the smoke of my cigar into the
air through his nostrils, he said, 'Senor, it would be perhaps better for
you if I rode behind your party. You are not very far from Sulaco now. Go
you with God.' What would you? We went on. There was no resisting him. He
might have been Hernandez himself; though my servant, who has been many
times to Sulaco by sea, assured me that he had recognized him very well for
the Capataz of the Steamship Company's Cargadores. Later, that same evening,
I saw that very man at the corner of the Plaza talking to a girl, a Morenita,
who stood by the stirrup with her hand on the grey horse's mane."
"I assure you, Senor Hirsch," murmured Charles Gould, "that
you ran no risk on this occasion."
"That may be, senor, though I tremble yet. A most fierce man--to look
at. And what does it mean? A person employed by the Steamship Company
talking with salteadores--no less, senor; the other horsemen were
salteadores--in a lonely place, and behaving like a robber himself! A cigar
is nothing, but what was there to prevent him asking me for my purse?"
"No, no, Senor Hirsch," Charles Gould murmured, letting his glance
stray away a little vacantly from the round face, with its hooked beak
upturned towards him in an almost childlike appeal. "If it was the
Capataz de Cargadores you met--and there is no doubt, is there? --you were
perfectly safe."
"Thank you. You are very good. A very fierce-looking man, Don Carlos.
He asked me for a cigar in a most familiar manner. What would have happened
if I had not had a cigar? I shudder yet. What business had he to be talking
with robbers in a lonely place?"
But Charles Gould, openly preoccupied now, gave not a sign, made no sound.
The impenetrability of the embodied Gould Concession had its surface shades.
To be dumb is merely a fatal affliction; but the King of Sulaco had words
enough to give him all the mysterious weight of a taciturn force. His
silences, backed by the power of speech, had as many shades of significance
as uttered words in the way of assent, of doubt, of negation--even of simple
comment. Some seemed to say plainly, "Think it over"; others meant
clearly, "Go ahead"; a simple, low "I see," with an
affirmative nod, at the end of a patient listening half-hour was the
equivalent of a verbal contract, which men had learned to trust implicitly,
since behind it all there was the great San Tome mine, the head and front of
the material interests, so strong that it depended on no man's goodwill in
the whole length and breadth of the Occidental Province--that is, on no
goodwill which it could not buy ten times over. But to the little hook-nosed
man from Esmeralda, anxious about the export of hides, the silence of
Charles Gould portended a failure. Evidently this was no time for extending
a modest man's business. He enveloped in a swift mental malediction the
whole country, with all its inhabitants, partisans of Ribiera and Montero
alike; and there were incipient tears in his mute anger at the thought of
the innumerable ox-hides going to waste upon the dreamy expanse of the
Campo, with its single palms rising like ships at sea within the perfect
circle of the horizon, its clumps of heavy timber motionless like solid
islands of leaves above the running waves of grass. There were hides there,
rotting, with no profit to anybody--rotting where they had been dropped by
men called away to attend the urgent necessities of political revolutions.
The practical, mercantile soul of Senor Hirsch rebelled against all that
foolishness, while he was taking a respectful but disconcerted leave of the
might and majesty of the San Tome mine in the person of Charles Gould. He
could not restrain a heart-broken murmur, wrung out of his very aching
heart, as it were.
"It is a great, great foolishness, Don Carlos, all this. The price of
hides in Hamburg is gone up--up. Of course the Ribierist Government will do
away with all that--when it gets established firmly. Meantime--"
He sighed.
"Yes, meantime," repeated Charles Gould, inscrutably.
The other shrugged his shoulders. But he was not ready to go yet. There was
a little matter he would like to mention very much if permitted. It appeared
he had some good friends in Hamburg (he murmured the name of the firm) who
were very anxious to do business, in dynamite, he explained. A contract for
dynamite with the San Tome mine, and then, perhaps, later on, other mines,
which were sure to--The little man from Esmeralda was ready to enlarge, but
Charles interrupted him. It seemed as though the patience of the Senor
Administrador was giving way at last.
"Senor Hirsch," he said, "I have enough dynamite stored up at
the mountain to send it down crashing into the valley"--his voice rose
a little--"to send half Sulaco into the air if I liked."
Charles Gould smiled at the round, startled eyes of the dealer in hides, who
was murmuring hastily, "Just so. Just so." And now he was going.
It was impossible to do business in explosives with an Administrador so well
provided and so discouraging. He had suffered agonies in the saddle and had
exposed himself to the atrocities of the bandit Hernandez for nothing at
all. Neither hides nor dynamite--and the very shoulders of the enterprising
Israelite expressed dejection. At the door he bowed low to the
engineer-in-chief. But at the bottom of the stairs in the patio he stopped
short, with his podgy hand over his lips in an attitude of meditative
astonishment.
"What does he want to keep so much dynamite for?" he muttered.
"And why does he talk like this to me?"
The engineer-in-chief, looking in at the door of the empty sala, whence the
political tide had ebbed out to the last insignificant drop, nodded
familiarly to the master of the house, standing motionless like a tall
beacon amongst the deserted shoals of furniture.
"Good-night, I am going. Got my bike downstairs. The railway will know
where to go for dynamite should we get short at any time. We have done
cutting and chopping for a while now. We shall begin soon to blast our way
through."
"Don't come to me," said Charles Gould, with perfect serenity.
"I shan't have an ounce to spare for anybody. Not an ounce. Not for my
own brother, if I had a brother, and he were the engineer-in-chief of the
most promising railway in the world."
"What's that?" asked the engineer-in-chief, with equanimity.
"Unkindness?"
"No," said Charles Gould, stolidly. "Policy."
"Radical, I should think," the engineer-in-chief observed from the
doorway.
"Is that the right name?" Charles Gould said, from the middle of
the room.
"I mean, going to the roots, you know," the engineer explained,
with an air of enjoyment.
"Why, yes," Charles pronounced, slowly. "The Gould Concession
has struck such deep roots in this country, in this province, in that gorge
of the mountains, that nothing but dynamite shall be allowed to dislodge it
from there. It's my choice. It's my last card to play."
The engineer-in-chief whistled low. "A pretty game," he said, with
a shade of discretion. "And have you told Holroyd of that extraordinary
trump card you hold in your hand?"
"Card only when it's played; when it falls at the end of the game. Till
then you may call it a--a--"
"Weapon," suggested the railway man.
"No. You may call it rather an argument," corrected Charles Gould,
gently. "And that's how I've presented it to Mr. Holroyd."
"And what did he say to it?" asked the engineer, with undisguised
interest.
"He"--Charles Gould spoke after a slight pause--"he said
something about holding on like grim death and putting our trust in God. I
should imagine he must have been rather startled. But then"--pursued
the Administrador of the San Tome mine--"but then, he is very far away,
you know, and, as they say in this country, God is very high above."
The engineer's appreciative laugh died away down the stairs, where the
Madonna with the Child on her arm seemed to look after his shaking broad
back from her shallow niche.
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