IMAGE EVALUATION TEST TARGET (MT-3) 1.0 I.I |50 ™== " IM " m IM M 1.8 1.25 1.4 1.6 < 6" — ► P^ <^ /} /a o^ O / ySJ Photographic Sciences Corporation 1 u ^v^ %' ^ 23 WEST MAIN STREET WEBSTER, NY. 14580 (716) 872-4503 m CIHM/ICMH Microfiche Series. CIHM/ICMH Collection de microfiches. Canadian Institute for Historical Microreproductions / Institut canadien de rnicroreproductions historiques Technical and Bibliographic Notes/Notes techniques et bibliographiques The Institute has attempted to obtain the best original copy available for filming. Features of this copy which may be bibliographically unique, which may alter any of the images in the reproduction, or which may significantly change the usual method of filming, are checked below. L'Institut a microfilm^ le meilleur exemplaire qu'il lui a 6t6 possible de se procurer. Les details de cet exemplaire qui sont peut-dtre uniques du point de vue bibliographique, qui peuvent modifier une image reproduite, ou qui peuvent exiger une modification dans la methods normals de filmage sont indiqu^s ci-dessous. D D D D D D Colou.ed covers/ Couverture de couleur I I Covers damaged/ Couverture endommagde Covers restored and/or laminated/ Couverture restaur6e et/ou pelliculde I I Cover title missing/ Le titre de couverture manque I I Coloured maps/ Cartes gdographiques en couleur Coloured ink (i.e. other than blue or black)/ Encre de couleur (i.e. a itre que bleue ou noire) I I Coloured plates and/or illustrations/ Planches et/ou illustrations en couleur Bound with other material/ Reli6 avec d'autres documents r~7l Tight binding may cause shadows or distortion along interior margin/ La reliure serr6e peut causer de I'ombre ou de la distortion le long de la marge intirieure Blank leaves added during restoration may appear within the text. Whenever possible, these have been omitted from filming/ II se peut que certaines pages blanches ajoutdes lors d'une restauration apparaissent dans le texte, mais, lorsque cela dtait possible, ces pages n'ont pas 6t6 fiimdes. Additional comments:/ Commentaires suppldmentaires: I I Coloured pages/ □ D D D D Pages de couleur Pages damaged/ Pages endommagdes Pages restored and/or laminated/ Pages restaur^es et/ou pellicul6es Pages discoloured, stained or foxed/ Pages d6color6es, tachet6es ou piqudes Pages detached/ Pages ddtachdes Showthrough/ Transparence I I Quality of print varies/ Quality indgale de I'impression Includes supplementary material/ Comprend du materiel supplementaire Only edition available/ Seule Edition disponible Pages wholly or partially obscured by errata slips, tissues, etc., have been refilmed to ensure the best possible image/ Les pages totalement ou partiellement obscurcies par un feuillet d'errata, une pelure, etc., ont 6tit film6es d nouveau de fapon d obtenir la meilleure image possible. This item is filmed at the reduction ratio checked below/ Ce document est filmd au taux de reduction indiqud ci-dessous. 10X 14X 18Xy 22X 26X 30X "7 12X 16X 20X 24X 28X 32X The copy filmed here has been reproduced thanks to the generosity of: National Library of Canada L'exemplaire film6 fut reproduit grflce it la g6n6rosit6 de: Bibliothdque nationale du Canada The images appearing here are the best quality possible considering the condition and legibility of the original copy and in keeping with the filming contract specifications. Les images suivantes ont 6t6 reproduites avec le plus grand soin, compte tenu de la condition et de la nettetd de l'exemplaire film6, et en conformity avec les conditions du contrat de filmage. Original copies in printed paper covers are filmed beginning with the front cover and ending on the last page with a printed or illustrated impres- sion, or the back cover when appropriate. All other original copies are filmed beginning on the first page with a printed or illustrated impres- sion, and ending on the last page with a printed or illustrated impression. Les exemplaires originaux dont la couverture en papier est imprim6e sont filmds en commenpant par le premier plat et en terminant soit par la dernidre page qui comporta una empreinte d'impression ou d'illustration, soit par le second plat, salon le I'^as. Tous les autres exemplaires originaux sont film6s en commenpant par la premidre page qui comporte une empreinte d'impression ou d'illustration et en terminant par la dernidre page qui comporte une telle empreinte. The last recorded frame on each microfiche shall contain the symbol —^-(meaning "CON- TINUED "), or the symbol V (meaning "END "), whichever applies. Un des symboles suivants apparaitra sur la dernidre image de cheque microfiche, selon le cas: le symbole — ^ signifie "A SUIVRC: ", le symbole V signifie "FIN". Maps, plates, charts, etc., may be filmed at different reduction ratios. Those too large to be entirely included in one exposure are filmed beginning in the upper left hand corner, left to right and top to bottom, as many frames as required. The following diagrams illustrate the method: Les cartes, planches, tableaux, etc., peuvent dtre film^s d des taux de rdduc^tion diffdrents. Lorsque le document est troi^ grand pour dtre reproduit en un seul clich6, il est filmd d partir de Tangle sup4rieur gauche, de gauche d droite, et de haut en bas, en prenant le nombre d'images n^cessaire. Les diagrammes suivants illustrent la mdthode. 1 2 3 I I 2 3 4 5 6 ^?R * IN KEDARS TENTS I ^ IN KEDAR'S TENTS •r HENRY SETON MERRIMAN Author of '' The Sowers " -(. (1/ i» %s.^- TORONTO THE COPP, CLARK COMPANY, LIMITED »897 M Entered according to Act of the Parliament «' Canada in the year one thousand eijrht hundred and ninety-seven, by the Copp. Clark Co., L,mZ irronto. Ontario, in the Office of the Minister of Agriculture. 1 I ■ j Contents CHAPTER I. One Sows PAOR I II. Another Reaps II III. Like Ships upon the Sea *3 IV. Le Premier Pas 34 V. Contraband 47 VI. At Ronda 58 VII. In a Moorish Garden . 68 VIII. The Love-letter . 80 IX. A War of Wit . 92 X. The City of Discontent I02 XI. A Tangled Web 113 XII. On the Toledo Road 124 XIII. A Wise Ignoramus ns XIV. A Weight of Evidence 146 XV. An Ultimatum 157 XVI. In Honour . 168 XVII. In Madrid . 179 XVIII. In Toledo 191 XIX. CONCEPCION takes THE ROAD 202 XX. On the Talavera Road 213 XXI. A Cross-examination . 224 CONTENTS CHAPTER XXII. Reparation XXIII. Larralde's Price XXIV. Priestcraft XXV. Swordcraft XXVI. Womancraft XXVII. A Night Journey XXVIII. The City of Strife . XXIX. Midnight and Dawn XXX. The Dawn o'^ Peace pac:r 234 »4S 256 267 278 289 300 311 322 *" * In Kedar's Tents CHAPTER I ONE SOWS <« If it be a duty to respect other men's claims, so also is it duty to maintain our own." It is in the staging of her comedies that Fate shows herself superior to more human invention. While we with careful regard to scenery place our conventional puppets on the stage, and bid them play their old, old parts in a manner as ancient, she rings up the curtain and starts a tragedy on a scene that has obviously been set by the carpenters for a farce. She deals out the parts with a fine inconsistency, and the jolly-faced little man is cast to play Romeo, while the poetic youth with lan- tern jaw and an impaired digestion finds no Juliet to match his love. Fate, with that playfulness which some take seriously or amiss, set her queer stage so long ago as 1838 for the comedy of certain lives, and rang up the curtain one dark evening on no fitter scene than the high road from Gateshead to Durham. It was raining hard, and a fresh breeze from the IN KEDAR'S TENTS southeast swept a salt rime from the North Sea across a tract of land as bare and bleak as the waters of that grim ocean. A hard, cold land this, where the iron that has filled men's purses has also entered their souls. There had been a great meeting at Chester-le- Street of those who were at this time beginning to be known as Chartists, and, the law having been lately passed that torch-light meetings were illegal, this assembly had gathered by the light of a waning moon long since hidden by the clouds. Amid the storm of wind and rain, orators had expounded views as wild as the night itself, to which the hard-visaged sons of Northumbria had listened with grunts of approval or muttered words of discontent. A dangerous game to play, this stirring up of the people's heart, and one that may at any moment turn to the deepest earnest. Few thought at this time that the movement awakening in the working centres of the North and Midlands was destined to spread with the strange rapidity of popular passion — to spread and live for a decade. Few of the Chartists ex- pected to see the fulfilment of half of their de- sires ; yet to-day half of the People's Charter has been granted. These voices crying in the night demanded an extended suffrage, vote by ballot, and freedom for rich and poor alike to sit in Parlia- ment. Within the scope of one reign these de- mands have been granted. ONE SOWS « The meeting at Chcster-Ic-Strect was no difFer- cnt from a hundred others held in England at the same time. It was illegal, and yet the authorities dared not to pronounce it so. It might prove dan- gerous to those taking part in it. Lawyers said that the leaders laid themselves open to the charge of high treason. In this assembly, as in others, there were wire-pullers, men playing their own game, and from the safety of the rear pushing on those in front. With one of these we have to do. With his mistake Fate raised the curtain, and on the horizon of several lives arose a cloud no bigger than a man's hand. Geoffrey Horner lived before his time, inso- much as he was a gentleman-radical. He was clever, and the world heeded not. He was bril- liant, well educated, capable of great achievements, and the world refused to be astonished. Here were the makings of a malcontent. A well-born radical is one whom the world has refused to accept at his own valuation. A wise man is ready to strike a bargain with Fate. The wisest are those who ask much and then take half. It is the coward who asks too little, and the fool who im- agines that he will receive without demanding. Horner had thrown in his lot with the Chartists in the spirit of pique, which makes some men marry the wrong woman because the right one will have none of them. At the Chester-le-Street meeting he had declared himself as upholder of ! , i I ! 4 IN KEDAR'S TENTS moral persuasion, while in his heart he pandered to those who knew only of physical force and placed their reliance thereon. He had come from Dur- ham with a contingent of malcontents, and was now returning thither on foot in company with the local leaders. These were intelligent mechanics, seeking clumsily and blindly enough what they knew to be the good of their fellows. At their heels tramped the rank and file of the great move- ment. The assembly was a subtle foreshadowing of things to come — of Newport and the march of twenty thousand men, of violence and blood- shed, of strife between brethren, and of Justice nonplussed and hesitating. The toil-worn miners were mostly silent, their dimly enlightened intellects uneasily stirred by the words they had lately heard, their stubborn hearts full of a great hope with a minute misgiving at the back of it. With this dangerous material Geoffrey Horner proposed to play his game. Suddenly a voice was raised. " Mates," it cried at the cross-roads, " let 's go and smash Pleydell's windows ! " And a muttered acquiescence to the proposal swept through the moving mass like a sullen breeze through reeds. The desire for action rus- tled among these men of few words and mighty arms. Horner hurriedly consulted his colleagues. Was it wise to attempt to exert an authority which was ONE SOWS merely nominal ? The principles of Chartism were at this time to keep within the limits of the law, and yet to hint, when such a course was safe, that stronger measures lay behind mere words. Their fatal habit was to strike softly. In peace and war, at home and abroad, there is but one humane and safe rule : Hesitate to strike ; strike hard. Sir John Pleydell was a member of that Parlia- ment which had treated the Charter with con- tempt. He was one of those who had voted with the majority against the measures it embodied. In addition to these damning facts he was a large colliery owner and a local Tory of some renown. An ambitious man, as the neighbours said, who wished to leave his son a peerage. Sir John Pley- dell was known to be a cold and calculating spec- ulator, originally a solicitor in Newcastle, pausing to help no man in his steady career of self-ad- vancement. To the minds of the rabble this magnate represented the tyranny against which their protest was raised. Geoffrey Horner looked on him as a political opponent and a dangerous memberof the winning partv. The blow was easy to strike. Horner hesitated — at the cross-roads of other lives than his own — and held his tongue. The suggestion of the unknown humourist in the crowd commended itself to the more energetic of the partv, who immediatelv turned toward the bye-road leading to Dene Hall. The others, the is 6 IN KEDAR'S TENTS minority, followed as minorities do, because they distrusted themselves. Some one struck up a song with words lately published in the Northern Lib- erator, and set to a well known local air. The shooting party assembled at Dene Hall was still at the dinner-table as the malcontents en- tered the park, and the talk of coverts and guns ceased suddenly at the sound of their rough voices. Sir John Pleydell, a young-looking man still despite his gray hair and drawn, careworn face, looked up sharply. He had been sitting silently fingering the stem of his wine-glass — a habit of his when the ladies quitted the room — and although he had shot as well as, perhaps better than any present, had taken but little part in the conversation. He had, in fact, only half listened, and when a rare smile passed across his gray face, it invariably owed its existence to some sally made by his son, Alfred Pleydell — gay, light-hearted, dcbonnaire — at the far end of the table. When Sir John's thought- ful eyes rested on his motherless son a dull and suppressed light gleamed momentarily beneath his heavy lids. Superficial observers said that John Pleydell was an ambitious man ; " not for him- self," added the few who saw deeper. When his quick mind now took in the import of the sound that broke the outer silence of the night Sir John's glance sought his son's face. In moments of alarm the glance flies to where the heart is. ONE SOWS f " What is that ? " said Alfred Pleydell, stand- ing up. " The Chartists," said Sir John. Alfied looiced round. He was a soldier, though the ink had hardly dried upon the parchment that made him one — the only soldier in the room. " We are eleven here," he said, " and two men downstairs. Some of you fellows have your valets, too — say fifteen in all. We cannot stand this, you know." As he spoke the first volley of stones crashed through the windows, and the broken glass rattled to the floor behind the shutters. The cries of the ladies in the drawing-room could be heard, and all the men sprang to their feet. With bla/ing eyes Alfred Plevdell ran to the door, but his father was there before him. " Not you," said the elder man, quiet, but a lit- tle paler than usual ; " I will go and speak to them. They will not dare to touch me. They are prob- ably running away by this time." " Then we '11 run after 'em ! " answered Alfred, with a fine spirit, and something in his attitude, in the ring of his voice awoke that demon of combat- iveness which lies dormant in men of the Anglo- Saxon race. " Come on, you fellows ! " cried the boy, with a queer, glad laugh, and without knowing that he did it, Sir John stood aside, his heart warm with a sud- den pride, his blood stirred by something that had 8 IN KEDAR'S TENTS not moved it these thirty years. The guests crowded out of the room, old men who should have known better, laughing as thev threw aside theii- dinner napkins. What a strange thing is man, peaceful through long years, and at a mo- ment's notice a mere fighting devil ! " Come on ; we '11 teach them to break win- dows ! " repeated Alfred Pleydell, running to the stick-rack. The rain rattled on the skylight of the square hall, and the wind roared down the chimney. Among the men hastily arming themselves with heavy sticks and cramming caps upon their heads were some who had tasted of rheumatism, but they never thought of an overcoat. " We '11 know each other by our shirt-fronts," said a quiet man, who was standing on a chair in order to reach an Indian club suspended on the wall. Alfred was at the door leading through to the servants' quarters, and his summons brought sev- eral men from the pantry and kitchens. " Come on ! " he cried. " Take anything you can find, stick or poker — yes, and those old guns, use 'em like a club. Hit very hard and very often. We '11 charge the devils. There 's nothing like a charge. Come on ! '* And he was already out.of the door with a dozen at his heels. / The change from the lighted rooms to the outer darkness made them pause a moment, during which ONE SOWS time the defenders had leisure to group themselves around Alfred Pleydell. A hoarse shout, which indeed drowned Geoffrey. Horner's voice, showed where the assailants stood. Horner had found his tongue after the first volley of stones. It was the policy of the Chartist leaders and wire-pullers to suggest rather than demonstrate physical force. Enough had been done to call attention to the Chester-le-Street meeting, and give it the desired prominence in the eyes of the nation. " Gev back ! Go to your homes ! " he was shouting, with upraised arms, when the hoarse shouts of his adherents and the flood of light from the opened door made him turn hastily. In a moment he saw the meaning of this development, but it was too late. With a cheer Alfred Pleydell, little more than a boy, led the charge, and, seeing Horner in front, ran at him with upraised stick. Horner half warded the blow, which came whistling down his own stick and paralysed his thumb. He returned the stroke with a sudden fury, striking Pleydell full on the head. Then, because he had a young wife and child at home, he pushed his way through the struggling crowd and ran away in the darkness. As he ran he could hear his late adherents dispers- ing in all directions, like sheep before a dog. He heard a voice calling : "Alfred! Alfred!" And Horner, who an hour — nay, ten minutes 10 IN KEDAR'S TENTS — earlier had had no thought of violence, ran his fastest along the road by which he had lately come. His heart was as water within his breast, and his staring eyes played their part mechanically. He did not fall, but he saw nothing, and had no notion whither he was running. Alfred Pleydell lay quite still on the lawn in front of his father's house. i CHAPTER TI ANOTHER REAPS *' Attempt the end and never stand In doubt." D the >f a harui ith URiNG tne course or a narum-scarum the city of Dublin certain persons had been known to predict that Mr. Frederick Convngham had a future before him. Mostly pleasant-spoken Irish persons, these, who had the racial habit of saying that which is likely to be welcome. Many of them added, " The young divil," under their breath, in a pious hope of thereby cleansing their souls from guilt. " I suppose I 'm idle, and what is worse, I know I 'm a fool ! " said Fred himself to his tutor, when that gentleman, v/ith a toleration which was unde- served, took him severely to task before sending him up for the Bar examination. The tutor said nothing, but he suspected that this, his wildest pupil, was no fool. Truth to tell, Frederick Conyngham had devoted little thought to the mat- ter of which he spoke — namely, himself, and was perhaps none the worse for that. A young man who thinks too often usuallv falls into the error of also thinking too much of himself. -r- ! t% IN KEDAR'S TENTS The examination was, however, safely passed, and in due course Frederick was callpd to the Irish Bar, where a Queen's Council, with an accent like rich wine, told him that he was now a gintelman, and entitled so to call himself. All these events were left behind, and Conyng- ham, sitting alone in his rooms in Norfolk Street, Strand, three days after the breaking of Sir John Pleydell's windows, was engaged in realising that the predicted future was still in every sense before him, and in no wise nearer than it had been in his mother's lifetime. This realisation of an unpleasant fact appeared in no 'vay to disturb his equanimity, for as he knocked his pipe against the bars of the fire he murmured a popular air in a careless voice. The firelight showed his face to be pleasant enough, in a way that left the land of his birth undoubted. Blue eyes, quick and kind, a square chin, closely curling hair, and square shoulders bespoke an Irish- man. Something, however, in the cut of his lips — something close and firm — suggested an ad- mixture of Anglo-Saxon blood. The man looked as if he might have had an English mother. It was, perhaps, this formation of the mouth that had led those pleasant-spoken persons to name to his relatives their conviction that Conyngham had a future before him. The best liars are those who base their fancy upon fact. They knew that the thoroughbred Irishman has usually a cheerful I i ANOTHER REAPS 13 enough life before him, but not that which is vaguely called a future. Fred Conyngham looked like a man who could hold to his purpose, but at this moment he also had the unfortunate appear- ance of not possessing one to hold to. He knocked the ashes from his pipe, and held the hot brier bowl against the ear of a sleeping fox-terrier, which animal growled, without moving, in a manner that suggested its possession of a sense of humour, and a full comprehension of the harm- less practical joke. A moment later the dog sat up and listened with an interest that gradually increased, until the door opened and Geoffrey Horner came into the room. " Faith, it 's Horner," said Conyngham. " Where are you from ? " " The North." " Ah ! sit down. What have you been doing up there ? tub-thumping ? " Horner came forward and sat down in the chair indicated. He looked five years older than when he had last been there. Conyngham glanced at his friend, who was staring into the fire. " Edith all right ? " he asked carelessly. "Yes." " And — the little chap ? " " Yes." Conyngham glanced at his companion again. Horner's eyes had the hard look that comes from «4 IN KEDAR'S TENTS !|!! hopelessness ; his lips were dry and white. He wore the air of one whose stake in the game of life was heavy, who played that game nervously. For this was an ambitious man, with wife and child whom he loved. Conyngham's attitude toward Fate was in strong contrast. He held his head up and faced the world without encumbrance, with- out a settled ambition, without any sense of re- sponsibility at all. The sharp-eyed dog on the hearth-rug looked from one to the other. A mo- ment before the atmosphere of the room had been one of ease and comfortable assurance — an atmos- phere that some men, without any warrant or the justification of any personal success or distinction, seem to carry with them through life. Since Hor- ner had crossed the threshold the ceaseless hum of life in the streets seemed to be nearer, the sound of it louder in the room ; the restlessness of that great strife stirred the air. The fox-terrier laid himself on the hearth-rug again, but instead of sleeping watched his two human companions. Conyngham filled his pipe. He turned to the table where the match-box stood at his elbow, took it up, rattled it, and laid it down. He pressed the tobacco hard with his thumb, and, turning to Horner, said sharply : " What is it ? " "I don't know yet — ruin, I think." " Nonsense, man," said Conyngham, cheerily ; " there is no such thing in this world — at least, I I I •I ANOTHER REAPS »5 I 1 m the jollicst fellows I know arc bankrupts or no better. Look at me — never a brief i literary con- tributions returned with thanks ; Tjalance at the bank, seventeen pounds ten shillings ; balance in hand, none ; debts, the Lord only knows ! Look at me. I 'm happy enough." "Yes; you're a lonely devil." Conyngham looked at his friend with inquiry in his gay eyes. " M-m ! perhaps so. I live alone, if that is what you mean. But as for being lonely — no, hang it ! I have plenty of friends, especially at dividend times." " You have nobody depending on you," said Horner, with the irritability of sorrow. " Because nobody is such a fool. On the other hand, 1 have nobody to care a twopenny curse what becomes of me. Same thing, you see, in the end. Come, man, cheer up. Tell me what is wrong. Seventeen pounds ten shillings is not exactly wealth, but if you want it, you know it is there. Eh ? " " I do not want it, thanks," replied the other. " Seventeen hundred would be no good to me." He paused, biting his under lip and staring with hard eyes into the fire. " Read that," he said at length, and handed Conyngham a cutting from a daily newspaper. The younger man read without apparent inter- est an account of the Chester-le-Street meeting, i6 IN KEDAR'S TENTS and the subsequent attack on Sir John Pleydell's house. " Yes," he commented ; " the usual thing. Brave words followed by a cowardly deed. What in the name of fortune you were doing in that gaiere, you yourself know best. If these are poli- tics, Horner, I say drop them. Politics are a stick, clean enough at the top, but you 've got hold of the wrong end. Young Pleydell was hurt, I see — 'seriously, it is feared.'" " Yes ! " said Horner, significantly, and his com- panion, after a quick look of surprise, read the slip of paper carefully a second time. Then he looked up and met Horner's eyes. " Gad ! " he exclaimed, in a whisper. Horner said nothing. The dog moved rest- lessly, and for a moment the whole world — that sleepless world of the streets — seemed to hold its breath. " And if he dies ? " said Conyngham, at length. " Exactly so," answered the other, with a laugh of scaffold mirth. Conyngham turned in his chair, and sat with his elbows on his knees, his face resting on his closed fists, staring at the worn old hearth-rug. Thus they remained for some minutes. " What are you thinking about ? " asked Horner, at length. " Nothing ; got nothing to think with, you know that, GeoiTrey. Wish I had ; never wanted ->il I X i ■i i ANOTHER RKAPS ir it as I do at this moment. I 'm no good, you know that. You must go to some one with brains, some clever devil." As he spoke he turned and took up the paper again, reading the paragraph slowly and carefully. Horner looked at him with a breathless hunger in his eyes. At some moments it is a crime to think, for we never know but that thought may be trans- mitted without so much as a whisper. "The miners were accompanied by a gentle- man from London," Conyngham read aloud, " a barrister, it is supposed, whose speech was a fea- ture at the Chester-le-Street meeting. This gentleman's name is quite unknown, nor has his whereabouts yet been discovered. His sudden dis- appearance lends likelihood to the report that this unknown agitator actually struck the blow which injured Mr. Alfred Pleydell. B^very exertion is being put forth by the authorities to trace the man, who is possibly a felon and certainly a coward." Conyngham laid aside the paper and again looked at Hornei, who did not meet his glance nor ask of what he was thinking. Horner, indeed, had his own thoughts, perhaps of the fireside — modest enough, but happy as love and health could make it, upon which his own ambition had brought down the ruins of a hundred castles in the air — thoughts he scarce could face, and yet had no power to drive away, of the young wife whose world was that same fireside ; of the child, perhaps, m IN KEDAR'S TENTS whose coming had opened for a time the door of Paradise. Conyngham broke in upon these meditations with a laugh. " I have it ! " he cried. " It 's as simple as the alphabet. This paper says it was a barrister, a man from Lv ndon, a malcontent, a felon — a coward. Dammy, Geoff, that 's me." He leapt to his feet. " Get out of the way, Jim ! " he cried to the dog, pushing the animal aside and standing on the hearth-rug. " Listen to this," he went on. " This thing, like the others, will blow over. It will be forgot- ten in a week. Another meeting will be held, say, in South Wales, more windows will be broken, another young man's head cracked, and Chester-le- Street (God-forsaken place ; never heard of it) will be forgotten." Horner sat looking at the young Irishman with hollow eyes, his lips twitching, his fingers inter- locked. There is nothing makes so complete a coward of a man as a woman's love. Conyngham laughed as the notion unfolded itself in his mind. He might, as he himself had said, be of no great brain power, but he was, at all events, a man, and a brave one. He stood a full six foot, and looked down at his companion, who sat white-faced and shrinking. " It is quite easv," he said, " for me to disap- pear in such a manner as to arouse suspicion. I ANOTHER REAPS 19 have nothing to keep me here. My briefs . . . well, the Solicitor-General can have 'em ! I have no ties — nothing to keep me in any part of the world. When young Pleydell is on his feet again, and a few more windows have been broken, and nine days have elapsed, the wonder will give place to another, and I can return to my . . . practice." " I could n't let you do it." " Oh, yes, you could," said Conyngham, with the quickness of his race to spv out his neigh- bour's vulnerable point. " For the sake of Edith and the little devil." Horner sat silent, and after a moment Conyng- ham went on. " All we want to do is to divert suspicion from you now, to put them on a false scent, for they must have one of some sort. When they find that they cannot catch me, they will forget all about it." Horner shuffled in his seat. This was nothing but detection of the thoughts that had passed through his own mind. " It is easy enough done," went on the Irish- man. "A paragraph here and there in some of the newspapers; a few incriminating papers left in these rooms, which are certain to be searched. I have a bad name — an Irish dog goes about the world with a rope round his neck. If I am caught, it will not be for some time, and then I ^% 20 IN KEDAR'S TENTS m\ M can get out of it somehow — an alibi or some- thing. I '11 get a brief, at all events. By that time the scent will be lost, and it will be all right. Come, GeofF, cheer up ! A man of your sort ought not to be thrown by a mischance like this." He stood with his legs apart, his hands thrust deep into his pockets, a gay laugh on his lips, and much discernment in his eyes. " Oh, d — n Edith ! " he added, after a pause, seeing that his efforts met with no response. " D — n that child ! You used to have some pluck, Horner." Horner shook his head and made no answer, but his very silence was a point gained. He no longer protested nor raised any objection to his companion's harebrained scheme. The thing was feasible, and he knew it. Conyngham went on to set forth his plans, which, with characteristic rapidity of thought, he evolved as he spoke. " Above all," he said, " we must be prompt. I must disappear to-night ; the paragraphs must be in to-morrow's papers. I think I '11 go to Spain. The Carlists seem to be making things lively there. You know, Horner, I was never meant for a wig and gown -, there 's no doubt about it. I shall have a splendid time of it out there." He stopped, meeting a queer look in Horner's eyes, who sat leaning forward and searching his face with jealous glance. ANOTHER REAPS 21 " I was wondering," said the other, with a pale smile, " if you were ever in love with Edith." " No, my good soul, I was not," answered Conyngham, with perfect carelessness j " though I knew her long before you did." He paused, and a quick thought flashed through his mind that some men are seen at their worst in adversity. He was ready enough to find excuses for Horner, for men are strange in the gift of their friendship, often giving it where they know it is but ill-deserved. He rattled on with unbroken gaiety, unfolding plans which in their perfection of detail suggested a previous experience in outrunning the constable. While they were still talking a mutual friend came in, a quick-spoken man, already beginning to be known as a journalist of ability. They talked of indifferent topics for some time. Then the newcomer said jerkily : " Heard the news ? " "No," answered Conyngham. " Alfred Pleydell, young fellow who resisted the Chartist rioters in Durham, died yesterday morn- ing." Frederick Conyngham had placed himself in front of Horner, who was still seated in the low chair by the fire. He found Horner's toe with his heel. " Is that so ? " he said gravely. " Then I 'm off." .::(!' '4 '1. if 'h llli' 22 IN KEDAR'S TENTS '' What do you mean ? " asked the journaHst, with a quick look ; the man had the manner of a ferret. " Nothing, only I 'm off; that 's all, old man. e And I cannot ask you to stay this evening, you understand, because I have to pack." He turned slowly on Horner, who had recovered himself, but still had his hand over his face. " Got any money, Geoff? " he asked. " Yes -, I have twenty pounds, if you want it," answered the other, in a strangely hoarse v^ice. "I do want it — badly." The journalist had taken up his hat and stick. He moved slowly toward the door, and there paus- ing saw Horner pass the bank-notes to Conyngham. " You had better go, too," said the Irishman. " You two are going in the same direction, I know." Horner rose, and, half laughing, Conyngham pushed him toward the door. " See him home, Blake," he said. " Old Horner has the blues to-night." I i CHAPTER III LIKE SHII S UPON THE SEA ** No one can te more wise than destiny." "What are we waiting for? why, two more passengers, grand ladies, as they tell me, and the captain has gone ashore to fetch them," the first mate of the " Granville " barque of London made answer to Frederick Conyngham, and he breathed on his fingers as he spoke, for the northwest wind was blowing across the plains of the Medoc, and the sun had just set behind the smoke of Bordeaux. The " Granville " was lying at anchor in the middle of the Garonne River, having safely dis- charged her deck cargo of empty claret casks and landed a certain number of passengers. There are few colder spots on the Continent than the sunny town of Bordeaux when the west wind blows from Atlantic wastes in winter time. A fine powder of snow scudded across the flat land, which presented a bleak, brown face patched here and there with white. There were two more passengers on board the " Granville " crouching in the cabin, two French gentlemen who had taken passage from V t r I, 1 MWllll' IN KEDAR'S TENTS London to Algcciras, in Spain, on their way to Algiers. Conyngham, with characteristic good-nature, had made himself so entirely at home on board the Mediterranean trader, that his presence was equally welcome in the forecastle and the captain's cabin. Even the first mate, his present interlocutor, a grim man given to muttered abuse of his calling, and a pious pessimism in respect to human nature, gradu- ally thawed under the influence of so cheerful an acceptance of heavy weather and a clumsy deck- cargo. " They will be less trouble than the empty casks, at all events," said Conyngham, '•* because they will keep below." The sailor shook his head forebodingly, and took an heroic pinch of snuff. " One 's as capable of carrying mischief as the other," he muttered, in the bigoted voice of a married teetotaler. The ship was ready for sea, and this mariner's spirit was ever uneasy and restless till the anchor was Oh deck and the hawser stowed. " There 's a boat leaving the quay now," he added. " Seems she 's lumbered up forrard wi' women's hamper." And, indeed, the black form of a skiff so laden could be seen approaching through the driving t"»ow and gloom. The mate called to the steward to come on deck, and this bearded servitor of ii^,. ki5i* LIKE SHIPS UPON THE SEA 25 dames emerged from the galley with up-rolled sleeves and a fine contempt for cold winds. A boy went forward with a coil of rope on his arm, for the tide was running hard, and the Garonne is no ladies' pleasure stream. It is no easy matter to board a ship in mid-current when tide and wind are at variance and the fingers so cold that a rope slips through them like a log-line. The " Gran- ville," having still on board her cargo of coal for Algeciras, lay low in the water, with both her anchors out, and the tide singing round her old- fashioned hempen hawsers. " Now see ye throw a clear rope," shouted the mate to the boy, who had gone forward. The proximity of the land and the approach of women — a bete noire no less dreaded — seemed to flurry the brined spirit of the " Granville's " mate. Perhaps the knowledge that the end of a rope, not judged clear, would inevitably be applied to his own person, shook the nerve of the boy on the forecastle ; perhaps his hands were cold and his faculties benumbed. He cast a line which seemed to promise well at first. Two coils of it unfolded themselves gradually against the gray sky, and then confusion took the others for herself A British oath from the deck of the ship went out to meet a fine French explosion of profanity from the boat, both forestalling the splash of the tangled rope into the water under the bows of the ship, 11 IN KEDAR'S TENTS and a full ten yards out of the reach of the man who stood, boat-hook in hand, ready to catch it. There were two ladies in the stem of the boat muffled up to the eyes, and betokening by their attitude the hopeless despair and misery which sei/-e the St)uthern fair the moment they embark in so much as a ferry-boat. The forepart of the heavy craft was piled up with trunks and other impedimenta of a feminine incongruity. A single boatman had rowed the boat from the shore, guid- ing it into mid-stream, and there describing a circle calculated to ensure a gentle approach on the lee side. This man, having laid aside his oars, now stood, boat-hook in hand, awaiting the inevitable crash. The offending boy in the bows was mak- ing frantic efforts to haul in his misguided rope, but the possibility of making a second cast was unworthy of consideration. The mate muttered such a string of foreboding expletives as augured ill for the delinquent. The boatman was prepar- ing to hold on and fend off at the same moment. A sudden gust of wind gave the boat a sharp buffet, just as the man grappled the mizzen-chains ; he over-balanced himself, fell and recovered himself, but only to be jerked backward into the water by the boat-hook, which struck him in the chest. " A mot ! " cried the man, and disappeared in the muddy water. He rose to the surface under the ship's quarter, and the mate, quick as light- I.IKK SHIPS UPON I'HK SKA 27 ning, (lumped the whole coil of the slack of the main sheet on to the top of him. In a moment he was at the level of the rail, the mate and the steward hauling steadily on the rope, to which he clung with the tenacity and somewhat the attitude of a monkey. At the same instant a splash made the rescuers turn in time to sec Conyngham, whose coat lay thrown on the deck behind them, rise to the surface ten yards astern of the " (jranville," and strike out toward the boat, now almost disap- pearing in the gloom of the night. The water, which had flowed through the sun- niest of the sunny plains of France, was surpris- ingly warm, and Conyngham, soon recovering from the shock of his dive, settled into a (juick side-stroke. The boat was close in front of him, and in the semi-darkness he could see one of the women rise from her seat and make her way for- ward, while her companion crouched lower and gave voice to her dismay in a series of wails and groans. The more intrepid lady was engaged in lifting one of the heavy oars, when Conyngham called out in French : " Courage, mesdames ! I will be with you in a moment." Both turned, and the pallor of their faces shone whitely through the gloom. Neither spoke, and in a few strokes Conyngham came alongside. He clutched the gunwale with his right hand and drew himself breast-high. 28 IN KEDAR'S TENTS «i " If these ladies," he said, " will kindly go to the opposite side of the boat, I shall be able to climb in without danger of upsetting." " If mamma inclines that way, I think it will be sufficient," answered the muffled form which had made its way forward. The voice was clear and low, remarkably self-possessed, and not without a suggestion that its possessor bore a grudge against some person present. "Perhaps mademoiselle is right," said Conyng- ham, with becoming gravity, and the lady in the stern obeyed her daughter's suggestion with the result anticipated. Indeed, the boat heeled over with so much good will, that Conyngham was lifted right out of the water. He clambered on board, and immediately began shivering, for the wind cut like a knife. The younger lady made her way cautiousV back to the seat which she had recently quitte(i, and began at once to speak very severely to her mother. This stout and emotional person was swaying backward and forward, and, in the inter- vals of wailing and groaning called in Spanish upon several selected saints to assist her. At times, and apparently by way of a change, she appealed to yet higher powers to receive her soul. " My mother," said the young lady to Conyng- ham, who had already got the oars out, " has the heart of a rabbit — but yes, of a very young rabbit ! » I l^- y^ , ^„y . ■!WffR«fff««W»?^W*ip«Wf LIKE SHIPS UPON THE SEA 29 " Madame may rest issurcd that there is no danger," said Conyngham. " Monsieur is an Englishman ? " " Yes ; and a very cold one at the moment. If madame could restrain her religious enthusiasm so much as to sit still we should make better progress." He spoke rather curtly, as if refusing to admit the advisability of manning the boat with a crew of black-letter saints. The manner in which the boat leapt forward under each stroke of the oars testified to the strength of his arms, and madame presently subsided into whispers of thankfulness, having reason, it would seem, to be content with mere earthly aid in lieu of that heavenly interven- tion which ladies of her species summon at every turn of life. " I wish I could help you," said the younger woman, presently, in a voice and manner suggestive of an energy unusual to her countrywomen. She spoke in French, but with an accent somewhat round and full, like an English accent, and Conyng- ham divined that she was Spanish. He thought also that under their outer wraps the ladies wore the mantilla, and had that graceful carriage of the head which is only seen in the Peninsula. " Thank you, mademoiselle, but I am making good progress now. Can you see the ship ? " She rose and stood peering into the darkness ahead, a graceful, swaying figure. A faint scent, M \i k 30 IN KEDAR'S TENTS as of some flower, was wafted on the keen wind to C'onvngham, who had ahcady decided, with char- acteristic haste, that this young person was as beautiful as she was intrepid. " Yes," she answered ; " it is cpiite clear. They are also showing lights to guide us." She stood looking apparently over his head toward the "Granville," but when she spoke, it would seem that her thoughts had not been fixed on that vessel. " Is monsieur a sailor ? " she asked. " No ; but 1 fortunately have a little knowledge of such matters — fortunate since I have been able to turn it to the use of these ladies." " Hut you are travelling in the ' Granville.' " "Yes, I am travelling in the '■ Granville.'" Over his oars Conyngham looked hard at his interlocutrice, but could make out nothing of her features. Her voice interested him, however, and he wondered whether there were ever calms on the coast of Spain at this time of the year. " Our sailors," said the young ladv, " in Spain are brave, but thev are very cautious. I think none of them would have done such a thing as you have just done for us. We were in danger. I knew it. Was it not so ? " "The boat might have drifted against some ship at anchor and have upset ; you might also have been driven out to sea. They had no boat on board the 'Granville ' ready to put out and follow ^ou. . M '"11 .>j;»jpp»aB»;rgBCT7i [JKK SHIPS UPON THK SKA 31 "Yes; and you saved us. Mut you Kiiglish are of a great courage. Ami inv mother, instead of thanking you, is offering her gratitude to James and John, the sons of Zebedeej as if they had done it." " I am no relation to Zehedee," said Conyng- ham, with a gay laugh ; " madame may rest assured of that." " Julia ! " said the elder ladv, severely, and m a voice that seemed to emanate from a chest as deep and hollow as an octave cask, " I shall tell Father Concha, who will assuredly reprove you. The saints upon whom I called were fishermen, and therefore the more capable of understanding our great danger. As for monsieur, he knows that he will always be in my prayers." " Thank you, madame," said Conyngham, gravely. " And at a fitter time I hope to tender him my thanks." At this moment a voice from the "Granville" hailed the boat, asking whether all were well and Mr. Conyngham on board. Being reassured on this point, the mate apparently attended to another matter requiring his attention, the mingled cries and expostulations of the cabin-boy sufficiently indicating its nature. The boat, under Conyngham's strong and steady strokes, now came slowly and without mishap alongside the great black hull of the vessel, and it 32 IN KEDAR'S TENTS soon became manifest that, although all danger was past, there yet remained difficulty ahead ; for when the boat was made fast and the ladder lowered, the elder of the two ladies firmly and emphatically denied her ability to make its ascent. The French boatman, shivering in a borrowed greatcoat, nnd with a vociferation which flavoured the air with cognac, added his entreaties to those of the mate and steward. In the small boat Conyngham, in FVench, and the lady's daughter, in Spanish, represented that at least half of the heavenly host having intervened to save her from so great a peril as that safely passed through, could surely accomplish this smaller feat with ease. But the lady still hesitated, and the mate, having clam- bered down into the boat, grabbed Conyngham's arm with a large and not unkindly hand, and pushed him forcibly toward the ladder. "You hadn't no business, Mr. Conyngham," he said gruffly, " to leave the ship like that, and like as not you 've got your death of cold. Just you get aboard and leave these women to me. You get to your bunk, mister, and stooard '11 bring you something hot." There was naught but obedience in the matter, and Conyngham was soon between the blankets, alternately shivering and burning in the first stages of a severe chill. The captain having come on board, the " Gran- ville " presently weighed anchor, and on the bosom LIKE SHIPS UPON THE SEA 33 of an ebbing tide turned her blunt prow toward the winter sea. The waves out there beat high, and before the lights of Paullac, then a mere cluster of fishers' huts, had passed away astern, the good ship was lifting her bow with a sense of anticipatipn, while her great wooden beams and knees began to strain and creak. During the following days, while the sense of spring and warmth slowly gave life to those who could breathe the air on deck, Conyngham lay in his little cabin and heeded nothing, for when the fever left him he was only conscious of a great lassitude, and scarce could raise himself to take such nourishment as the steward, with a rough but kindly skill, prepared for him. " Why the deuce I ever came, why the deuce I ever went overboard after a couple of seiioras, I don't know," he repeated to himself during the long hours of that long watch below. Why, indeed ? except that youth must needs go forth into the world and play the only stake it owns there. Nor is Frederick Conyngham the first who, having no knowledge of the game of life, throws all upon the board to wait upon the hazard of a die. 'j III. CHAPTER IV LE PREMIER PAS •' Be as one that knoweth and yet holdeth his tongue." The little town of Algcciras lies, as many know, within sight of Gibraltar, and separated from that stronghold by a broad bay. It is on the mainland of Spain, and in direct communication by road with the great port of Cadiz. Another road, little better than a bridle-path, runs northward toward Ximena, and through the corkwood forests of that plain toward the mountain ranges that rise between Ronda and the sea. By this bridle-path, it is whispered, a vast smuggled commerce has ever found passage to the mainland, and scarce a boatman or passenger lands at Algeciras from Gibraltar but carries somewhere on his person as much tobacco as he may hope to conceal with safety. Algeciras, with its fair, white houses, its prim church and sleepy quay, where the blue waters lap and sparkle in innocent sunlight, is, it is to be feared, a town of small virtue, and the habitation of scoundrels ; for this is the stronghold of those contrahand'ista whom song and legend have praised as the boldest, the merri- i LE PREMIER PAS 35 est, the most romantic of law-breakers. Indeed, in this country the man who can boast of a smuggling ancestry holds high his head and looks down on honest folk. The " Granville," having dropped anchor to the north of the rough stone pier, was soon disburdened of her passengers, the ladies going ashore with undisguised delight, and leaving behind them many gracious messages of thanks to the gentleman whose gallantry had resulted so disastrously, for Conyngham was still in bed, though now nearly recovered. Truth to tell, he did not hurry to make his appearance in the general cabin, and came on deck a few hours after the departure of the ladies, whose gratitude he desired to avoid. Two days of the peerless sunshine of these southern waters completely restored him to health, and he prepared to go ashore. It was afternoon when his boat touched the beach, and the idlers, without whom no Mediterranean seaboard is complete, having passed the heat of the day in a philosophic apathy, amounting in many cases to a siesta, now roused themselves sufficiently to take a dignified and indifferent interest in the new arrival. A number of boys, an old soldier, several artillery men from the pretty and absolutely useless fort, a priest, and a female vendor of oranges put themselves about so much as to congregate in a little knot at the spot where Conyngham landed. " Body of Bacchus ! " said the priest, with a M 36 IN KEDAR'S TENTS i pinch of snuff poised before his long nose; "an Englishman. See his gold watch-chain." This remark called forth several monosyllabic sounds, and the onlookers watched the safe dis- charge of Conyngham's personal effects with a characteristic placidity of demeanour, which was at once tolerant and gently surprised. That any one should have the energy to come ashore when he was comfortable on board, or leave the shore when amply provided there with sunshine, elbow- room, and other necessaries of life, presented itself to them as a fact worthy of note, but not of emulation. The happiest man is he who has reduced the necessities of life to a minimum. No one offered to assist Conyngham. In Spain the onlooker keeps his hands in his pockets. " The English, see you, travel for pleasure," said the old soldier, nodding his head in the direc- tion of Gibraltar, pink and shimmering across the bay. The priest brushed some str?y grains of snuff from the front of his faded cassock, once black, but now of a greeny-brown. He was a singularly tall man, gaunt and gray, with deep lines drawn downward from eye to chin. His mouth was large and tender, with a humorous corner ever awaiting a jest. His eye. were sombre and deeply shaded by gray brows, but one of them had a twinkle lurking and waiting, as in the corner of his mouth. 'WWJI'L K^M.ttm LE PREMIER PAS 37 *•• Every one stretches his legs according to the length of his coverlet," he said, and, turning, he courteously raised his hat to Conyngham, who passed at that moment on his way to the hotel. The little knot of onlookers broke up, and the boys wandered toward the fort, before the gate of which a game at bowls was in progress. " The padre has a hungry look," reflected Conyngham. " Think I '11 invite him to dinner." For Geoffrey Horner had succeded in conveying more money to the man who had taken his sins upon himself, and while Conyngham possessed money he usually had the desire to spend it. Conyngham went to the P'onda della Marina, which stands to-day, a house of small comfort and no great outward cleanliness ; but, as in most Spanish inns, the performance was better than the promise, and the bedroom offered to the traveller was nothing worse than bare and ill-furnished. With what Spanish heat this time possessed the English- man made known his wants, and inquired of the means of prosecuting his journey to Ronda. " You know the Captain-General Vincente of Ronda ? " he asked. " But yes i by reputation. Who does not in Andalusia ? " replied the host, a stout man who had once cooked for a military mess at Gibraltar, and professed himself acquainted with the require- ments of English gentlemen. " I have a letter to General Vincente, and \i I 1 1 If I i I 38 IN KKDAR'S TKNTS nuist go to Roiula as soon as possible. These arc stirring times in Spain." 'I'hc man's bhnul tare siultlenly assumed an air of cunning, anc' he glanced over his shoulder to see that none .\ l. r ard, " Your exceilencv is right," he answered. " But for such as myself one side is as gt)od as another. Is it not so ? Carlist or C'hristino — the money is the same." " Hut here in ;it tt! there are no C'arlists." " Who knows ? " y\ld 'he innkrper, with out- spread IliiuIs, '•' \^vthi< -lat his excellency reijuires shall Ic foiincor.r.w •.;• added grandi- osely. " This is the dining-room, and here at the side a little saloon where the ladies sit. Hut at present we have only gentlemen in the hotel, it being the winter time." "Then you have other guests?" incpiired Conyngham. " Hut yes \ always. In Algeciras there are always travellers — noblemen, like his excellency, for pleasure ; others for commerce, the government, the politics." "No Hies enter a shut mouth, my friend," said a voice at the door, and both turned to see the priest who had witnessed Conyngham's arrival standing in the doorway. " Pardon, senor," said the old man, coming forward with his shabby hat in his hand — " pardon my interruption. I came at an opportune moment, for I heard the word politics." iHNinMi LK i»rI':mikr pas 39 Me till lied and shook a lean fi/if^ci' at the inn- keeper, who was hacking toward the (l<;or with many bows. " Ah, l>ad Miguel ! " he said. "Will you make it ini|)ossihle for gentlemen to put up at your execra- ble inn ? I'he man's cooking is su()erior to his discretion, senor. I, too, am a traveller, and for the monient a guest here. I have the honour. My name is Concha, the Padre Concha, a |)riest, as you see." Conyngham nodded and laughed frankly. "(ilad to meet you," he said. *' I saw you as I came along. My name is Conyngham, and I am an Knglishman, as you hear. I know very little Spanish." " That will come, that will come," said the priest, moving toward the window. " Perhaps t(jo soon, if you arc going to stay any length of time in this country. Let me advise you ; do not learn our language too (juickly." He shook his head and moved toward the open window. " Sec to your girths before you mount. Kh ? Here is the veranda, where it is pleasant in the afternoon. Shall wc be seated ? That chair has but three legs. Allow me ; this one is better." He spoke with the grave courtesy of his country- men, for every Spaniard, even the lowest muleteer, esteems himself a gentleman, and knows how to act as such. The Padre Concha had a pleasant 40 IN KKDAK'S I'KN l\S . voice, ;uul a \\a\u\ of |>('siitulatln}r sIdwIv with one \^v^^'• aiul \\o{ too v Iran h.iml thai s»i|t,f»(sit'il thr pulpit. I If hail U\\ thr wav to a spat loiis vciaiula, wluMO (hriv xvcir small tables an»l i haiis, ami at thr otitct vomcis oiaii|^»,c- tiers in sipi.iic j^'jrcu l>»>\os. ^' \V(^ will ha\r a hottlr of wiitc. Is it not so ? Yes," he saul, aiul ^tavelv elappeil his haiuls tt»- ^etluM tv> siimiuoi\ the waiter, an ()iiental etistiUti still in vise in the Peninsula. The w ine was hrou^ht aiul ilulv une«)rkeil, (lut- ing whieh eeieiuoiu the priest waiteil aiul watt hetl with the preoieupi(\l air of a h«>st earelul for the cntertaimuent ot his guest, lie tasteil the wine critieallv. *^ It nnght he woise," he saiil. ** 1 beg you to excuse it not being better." There was something sin\ple in the oU\ man's manner that \v<>n (.'onvnsiham's reganl. "The wine is excellent," he said, "it is mv welcome io Spain." ** .\h ' Then this is your first visit to this country," the priest saiil iiulit^'erentlv, his eves waiuleiing to the open sea, where a tew feluccas lav becalmed. "Yes." Convngham turned and looked toward the sea also. It was late in the afternoon, and a certain drowsiness of the atmosphere made conversation even between comparative strangers a slower, J.K I'KI-MIKK I'AS 4' rasin miiltci 1)1,111 with iis in tlir liii.k Nodli. Afin .1 mnmnil ilic l',ii)'lisliin,in fiii/icd wifli, pf-r- h.ips, tlic iiilciitiiin nf stiiilyini'; his ( oi[i|i.iiii(im\ racr, only »<> lind llic tlccp gi.iy eyes lix''| on Ins (»WU. " Sp.iin," said (he p.idic, " is ;i vvftndriful ( oiin- (ty • ii( h, licaiitilid, willi .1 ( litii.ilr like iioiic 111 i')iii(ip(* } . . . I)iit ( lod .iiid tli(* devil ( oiiK- tn closri (piiiitciH licic ill. Ill AT RONDA I 67 He left Conyngham and walked slowly on with one hand at his daughter's waist. " I was very happy in England," said Estella to Conyngham, who walked at her other side j " but happier still to get home to Spain." Her voice was rather low, and Conyngham had an odd jensation of having heard it before. " Why did you leave your home ? " she con- tinued, in a leisurely, conversational way, which seemed natural to the environments. The question rather startled the Englishman, for the only answer seemed to be that he had quitted England in order to come to Ronda and to her, following the path in life that P'ate had assigned to him. "We have troubles in England also — political troubles," he said, after a pause. " The Chartists," said the general, cheerfully. " We know all about them, for we have the Eng- lish newspapers. I procure them in order to have reliable news of Spain." He broke off with a little laugh, and looked toward his daughter. " In the evening Estella reads them to me. And it was on account of the Chartists that you left England ? " " Yes." *' Ah ! you are a Chartist, Mr. Conyngham ? " " Yes," admitted the Englishman, after a pause, and he glanced at Estella. CHAPTER VII IN A MOORISH CARDFN *' When love is not a blasphemy, it is a religion." Thkrf. is, perhaps, a subtle signilicance in the fact that the greatest, the cruelest, the most barbarous civil war of modern days, if not of all time, has owed its outbreak and its long continuance to the influence of a woman. When Ferdinand VII. of Spain died in 1833, after a reign broken and dis- turbed by the passage of that human cyclone, Napoleon the Cireat, he bequeathed his kingdom, in defiance of the Salic Law, to his daughter Isabella. Ferdinand's brother Carlos, however, claimed the throne, under the very just contention that the Salic Law, by which women were ex- cluded from the heritage of the crown, had never been legally abrogated. This was the spark that fell in a tinder made up of ambition, unscrupulousness, cruelty, bloodthirst- iness, self-seeking, and jealousy — the morale, in a word, of the Spain of sixty years ago. Some sided with the Queen Regent Christina and rallied round the child-queen, because they saw that that way lay glory and promotion. Others flocked to I » >> 'Ir IN A MOORISH (]ARI)KN 69 the standard of Don Carlos, because they were poor and of no influence at court. The Church, as a whole, raised its whispering voice for the Pre- tender ; for the rest, patriotism was nowhere, and ambition on every side. " For five years we have fought the Carlists, hunger, privation, and the politicians at Madrid ! And the holy saints only know which has been the worst enemy," said (jeneral Vincente to Conyngham, when explaining the above related details. And, indeed, the story of this war reads like a romance, for there came from neutral countries foreign legions, as in the olden days. From Eng- land an army of ten thousand mercenaries landed in Spain, prepared to fight for the cause of ^ueen Christina, and very modestly estimating the worth of their services at the sum of thirteen pence a diem. After all, the value of a man's life is but the price of his daily hire. "We did not pay them much," said General Vincente, with a deprecating little smile, " but they did not fight much. Their pay was gener- ally in arrears, and they were usually in the rear as well. What will you, my dear Convngham ; you are a commercial people, you keep good soldiers in the shop window, and when a buyer comes you serve him with second-class goods from behind the counter." He beamed on Conyngham with a pleasant air •-M«>MnaatiM[ ro IN KKDAR'S IKN I\S t»t hrnign t'omiiv;nuo in a very legitimate com- nu'ieial tiansai tiim. This is MO time or plaee to j^o Into the history of* the l''nj;lish legion in Spain, whieli, inileed, ha«l (juitteil that eountrv liefore C'onN nj;han) landeil there, horritied by the l>aiharities ol a eruel war, wheie prisoners reeeivcd no ijuarter, ami the soldiers on either siile wi-re lett without pa\ or rati^^ns. in a hall-hearted manner i'ulil have been better for us Knh hail we owed you a little nn)re." During the five years prior to C\)nyngham's arrival at Ronda the war had raged with unabated fury, swaying from the West to I'.ast Coast, as fortune smiled or frowned on the C'arlist eausc. At one time it almost appeared eertain that the Christina forees were unable to stem the rising tide, which bade fair to spread o\ er all Spain, so unfortunate were their generals, so futile the best endeavours oi' the bravest and most patient soldiers. General N'incente was not alone in his conviction that had the gallant Carlist leader Zunialacarreguy lived, he might have carried all before him. But this great leader at the height of his fame, beloved by all his soldiers, worshipped by his subordinate IN A MOOKISII (;/\UI)l',N olHic'is, (lied siidilciilv l>v |)<»ise eyes of a few old njen still livinjj;, who fought with or against him, flash in the light of other days al the mere nu-ntion of it. Among the many leaders who had attempted in vain to overcome by skill and patriotism the thous- and diflieulties placed in their way by successive, unstalde, insincere Ministers of War, (ieneral Vincente occupied an honoured place. This mild-mannered tactician enjoyed the envial>le repu- tation of" being alike incon(pierable and incorrupti- ble. His smiling presence on the battlefield was in itself worth half a dozen battalions, while at Madrid the dishonest politicians, who through these years of" Spain's great trial systematically bartered their honour for immediate gain, dreaded and respected him. During the days that followed his arrival at Ronda and release from the prison there, Frederick Conyngham learnt much from his host and little of him, for (icneral Vincente had that in him which no leader, no great man in any walk of life, can well dispense with — an unsuundable depth. 7a IN KEDAR'S I ENTS HI! Conyngham learnt also that the human heart is capable of rising at one bound above difficulties of race or custom, creed and spoken language. He walked with Estella in that quiet garden between high walls on the trim Moorish paths, and often the murmur of the running water, which ever graced the Moslem palaces, was the only break upon their silence ; for this thing had come into the Englishman's life suddenly, leaving him dazed and uncertain. Estella, on the other hand, had a quiet savoir-faire that sat strangely on her young face. She was only nineteen, and yet had a cer- tain air of authority, handed down to her from two great races of noble-men and women. " Do all your countrymen take life thus gaily ? " she asked Conyngham one day. " Surely it is a more serious affair than you think it." " I have never found it very serious, seiiorita," he answered. " There is usually a smile in human affairs if one takes the trouble to look for it." " Have you always found it so ? " He did not answer at once, pausing to lift the branch of a mimosa-tree that hung in yellow pro- fusion across the pathway. " Yes, senorita, I think so," he answered at length slowly. There was a sense of eternal rest- fulness in this old Moorish garden, which acted as a brake on the thoughts, and made conversation halt and drag in an Oriental way that Europeans rarely understand. I til ( IN A MOORISH GARDKN 73 " And yet you say you remember your father's death ? " " He made a joke to the doctor, senorita, and was not afraid." Estella smiled in a queer way, and then looked grave again. " And you have always been poor, you say — sometimes almost starving ? " "Yes; always poor, deadly poor, senorita," answered Conyngham, with a gay laugh. " And since I have been on my own resources frequently, well— very hungry ! The appetite has been large and the resources have been small. But when I get into the Spanish army they will, no doubt, make me a general, and all will be well." He laughed again and slippcl his hand into his jacket-pocket. "See here," he said; "your father's recom- mendation to General Espartero in a confidential letter." But the envelope he produced was that pink one, which the man called Larralde had given him at Algeciras. "No; it is not that," he said, searching in another pocket. "Ah' here it is, addressed to General Espartero, Duke of Vittoria." He showed her the superscription, which she read with a little inclination of the head, as if in salutation of the great name written there, for the greatest names are those that men have made for m^ m\<^vti,Nnv, r)>\ U' NX V u- \u u\\ \>l\<' kniW \\U' Usivnn.iv \hM \XvMi1xl l.un h n , 1>. . n .«M. «.' « 1 mn a^^^osu>^.■^^^^^• vx'.M«Ki n,^^ «1<^ "^.^ <>m \\w v <|M nn \vl<, .uul nv,v».l l>m IniU n» jK v,N on xNi K^^n^i.^ \xl>viv <.M \\w wnu l^inp, lu- vVmiKK^m i\\^\invv1 t^v> i\\\\\w\ i>i<«Mn\,(',vN»Nl \hc Knoi (ion\ \\\s m\}\\. Vxv^v.v v\\^nu\i UM )Mn\ <»> h.>vv nu>\»»'. m}^Ki^ xvithm tlv l^v; toxx vlu v, .r.ul \\w xxoiUl ol r^xs^sK^i^ 'nns Am^ casiu;! .u.^vi.unt.uu<\ uwo \\\\w\\ he hj»x^ stq%jx\'. .v.> h,s .U!5\.;l u\ Sp.nr., xx.is y\u\\c anvvth^: n\M->i that in xxhwh Vstcll.i n\v>\ rvl .>l I Ill A M' »M|' ( ,11 ' ; A (' I H M /', •' I lllH':! >■» ( "i(» Im( r I I'licl III I f' •' 'I I/' if fli' I III ,( III iiil^ I |i intiml' I ll' I " II 'I . " ImiI I nil ill |M| ip llll I III, Till, '(>' ' III ' ,MM I'll III' l)llf pm ;|t|l| \MIII I till' I -ill ll'll ll' ''lllllll;' 'I'll'll Mill il ill' |iMII|i |i<:|i II I l|.. ,1- III I ll' I I ••■l(li I IimI' I iMi^li I lin tll'in \v;r; illll'l'lil (I'llli til' |Ml(p' < lIl'iK ; ll'l' 'I' , llli|i Hill miIhi; -ll'l ll I'l lillll'M'i li'i';»''l lli'iJ |i f:|w I I lull', in ti' ll 1 1 ,' I ll' II I'llMII ll I' '11 «• ,\(|i| lil|(' (1:1, '; ;l|"i y"'l 'll'l li'il I'li'rf/ 'if 'lUt »• vi'lt I II' I , I" ll'l " III lliM' 'liy: I mill lniy !■' 'I' I'l ''f in illh'-v^ III n llH ll III Ijilinl' 'I ill' ' ■' I .1' ll' ' , .' ll'iMl.l , Ifl I III I I i| I \ I Ml I ll III' 1111/ III III I'l' III! •;' I -ifd' 'if ||;|||ll\ |i» I ll Iji III I III ' ' lllllltll' ■•, " Am'I III I'lnl'i'l ,l(tl| III III ImiIiI '.f ll' f (fl '(f'I'f to ,l\ I i|il III , I \ ' '1. " '» I nil ; •,\ill iKv.iy'! ll' ^''I'i'/, I lliHi)'," .ll' -.'I ', " III ( III .1 \ "II ii'vi I .< ' Ml I'l i"» ll' \'i r/ ill'' •,i(rr,i' '-^ :l I II I I III I III III In ' III' I . ll I |i|r/ ' (i''ii;'h " III Mini' .'iMi' li;'lil iM.//'r, -iM'( lit'/ -f/AWf'A III) liriii.illi ill' 'ii.iii;" ll'' ., I. '""Ill'/ '.f fli' s/ ^ri'l ollici III, III! I ,, will' ll !'(-;' I lii'V vv'M' lliir. 'I.!'.!!"'! '//ll'll 'h' •/ r/iiri^ ' wrn'- Im aiiiiniiiH !• ili.ii ill'- li"i . , v/lii' ll fh'- ;"n'r(l \.'^'\ pl.K rii .ll ( oiiyii('li,iMr . 'll .pOwil, '//.i-. ^f Ui'- A'iftt ill ii( ( okI.iik <• Willi tlir iMr.'li .lirn^iri'-, '/v/ri ''>rr.':r. II 76 IN Kl'DAR'S IKN rs \\c wriK Aw.w SOI low (iill\ (Mio\i;,h, only liaH < on- soli^l In (he inloim.uion \\\m I'.sicll.j was about to attnul A scivuc at llu' (,'luinh oT Sania Maria, and roviKl not lia\(' staNcd loni\(M in llu^ I'.anlcn. riu- hoiM »>1 tl\c siesta was si .me oxer, and as C\>nyni\hain lodc thiouj'h \hr » Icanh sticcts ol the anviont town nunc than one louscd IninscU lion\ the shadtwv ol a dooiwa\ to sec him p.jss. I heir arc few old(M towns in Andahisia than I^ond.i, and scatvo an\wh(Mr the habits o( the Moots are so closely tolK)\\ed. The stieets .\\v elean,the houses whitewaslunl wnhin aiul without. !"he tiappinj;s of" the nuil(s and n\uv h of the eostuine of" the people are (>iiental in texture ami hnlliam \ . C\in\ nohani askinl a passei-bv to iiuiieate the wa\ to the CvMdina loail, ami the polite Spaniard turned ami walkeil b\ his stirruji until a mistake was no longer possible. ^* It is not the nuv.t be.uitiful approach tt) Ronda,"" said this garruUms person, ••*• but well onouirh m tjie summer, when the flowers are w bKvMU .iiul the vineyards i!;reen. Ilie road is straight and dustx until y-nc .irri\es at llie posses- sitin eit the Senoi \ Haienna, a li!i,ht road t»> the riiiht leadiiiii up into the mountain. One can per- ceiye the house — oh, yes — upon the hillside, onee beautiful, but now vild and decayed. Mistake is now impossible. It is a straight way. I wish vou a good iourtie\ ." Convn^rham rode on, vaiiuclv turninu; over in IN A MOOKISII (iAKDKN 11 Ills niiiiil a half -matiiicd pl.iii of (fl((iiiijf a fifctn- inf'Jv a((i(l(iilal (iitiy l<» iIh' house of ScMoia Harriiiia, in the h(»|i(" of iiicctiiig that hidy's (iaiii^'Jilci III ihc ^.11(1(11 oi ^rioiinds. ( )ii< c outside (h(" walls nf the lovvii lie found the (oiiiiliy open aiul hare, ( oiisisliii}!, . 1 h h CHAPTER VIII THE L O V E-L E T T E R <( I must mix myself with action lest I wither by despair/' " No one," Conyngham heard a voice exclaiming, as he went into the garden on returning from his fruitless ride — " no one knows what I have suffered." He paused in the dark doorway, not wishing to intrude upon Estella and her visitors, for he per- ceived the forms of three ladies seated within a miniature jungle of bamboo, which grew in feath- ery luxuriance around a fountain, it was not diffi- cult to idenrifv the voice as that of the eldest lady, who was stoi : and spoke in deep, almost manly tones. So far as he was able to judge, the suffer- ing mentioned had left but small record on its vic- tim's outward appearance. " Old girl seems to have stood it well," com- mented the Englishman in his mind. " Never again, my dear Estella, do I leave Ronda ; except, indeed, for Toledo, where, of course* we shall go in the summer if this terrible Don Carlos is reallv driven from the country. Ah ! but what suffering ! Mv mind is never at ease. I expect to wake up at night and hear that Julia is -I 'I THE LOVE-LETTER 81 being murdered in her bed. For me it docs not matter ; mv life is not so gay that it will cost me much to part from it. No one would molest an old woman, you think ? Well, that may be so. But I know all the anxiety, for I was once beau- tiful. Ah ! more beautiful than you or Julia ; and my hands and feet — haye you eyer noticed my foot, Estella ? Even now ..." And a sonorous sigh completed the sentence. Conyngham stepped out of the doorway, the clank of his spurred heel on the marble pavement causing the sigh to break off in a little scream. He had caught the name of Julia, and hastily concluded that these ladies must be no other than Madame Barenna and her daughter. In the little bamboo grove he found the elder lady lying back in her chair, which creaked ominously, and asking in a faint voice whether he was Don Carlos. " No," answered Estella, with a momentary twinkle in her grave, dark eyes; "this is Mr. Conyngham. My aunt, Senora Barenna, and my cousin Julia." The ladies bowed. " You must excuse me," said Madame Barenna, volubly; " but your approach was so sudden. I am a great sufferer — my nerves, you know. But young people do not understand." And she sighed heavily, with a side glance at her daughter, who did not even appear to be trying to do so. Julia Barenna was darker than her 6 82 IN KEDAR'S TENTS fl ' cousin, (jiiickcr in manner, with an air of worldly capability which Estclla lacked. Her eyes were quick and restless, her face less beautiful, but expressive of a great intelligence, which if brought to bear upon men in the form of co(|uetrv was likely to be infinitely dangerous. " It is always best to approach mv mother with caution," she said, with a restless movement of her hands. This was not a woman at her ease in the world or at peace with it. She laughed as she spoke, but her eyes were grave even while her lips smiled, and watched the Englishman's face with an air almost of anxiety. There are some faces that seem to be watching and waiting. Julia Barenna's had such a look. *' Convngham," said Madame Barcnna, reflec- tively. " Surely I have heard that name before. You are not the P^nglishman with whom Eather Concha is so angry, who sells forbidden books — the Bible, it is said." "No, senora," ?nswercd Conyngham, with perfect gravity ; " i have nothing to sell." He laughed suddenly, and looked at the elder lady with that air of good-humour which won for him more friends than he ever wanted, for this Irishman had a ray of sunshine in his heart which shone upon his path through life, and made that uneven way easier for his feet. He glanced at Julia, and saw in her eyes the look of expectancy which was in reality always there. The thought I THK LOVK-LETTKR 83 \\ flashed through his mind that by some means, or, perhaps feminine intuition beyond his comprehen- sion, she knew that he possessed the letter addressed to her, and was eagerly awaiting it. This letter seemed to have been gaining in importance the longer he carried it, and this opportunity of giving it to her came at the right moment. He remem- bered Larralde's .;rds concerning the person to whom the missive was addressed, and the h'gh- flown sentiments of that somewhat theatrical gen- tleman became in some degree justified. Julia Barenna was a woman who might well awaken a passionate love. Convngham realised this, as from a distance, while Julia's mother spoke of some trivial matter of the moment to unheeding ears. That distance seemed now to exist between him and all women. It h;id come suddenly, and one glance of Estella's eyes had called it into existence. " Yes," Senora Barenna was saying, " Father C( ncha is very angry with the English. What a terrible man ! You do not know him, Senor Conyngham ? " " I think I have met him, senora." " Ah ! but you have never seen him angry. You have never confessed to him ! A little, little sin, no longer than the eye of a fly — a little bite of a calf's sweetbread on Friday in mere forgetful- ness — and, Sancta Maria, what a penance is required ! What suffering ! It is a purgatory to have such a confessor." 84 IN KEI^AR'S rEN'IS f I " Surely madamc can have no sins," said Convngham, pleasantly. " Not now," said Senora l^arcnna, with a deep sigh. " Whcji 1 was young it was ditt'crcnt." And the memory of her sinful da\ s almost moved her to tears. She glanced at Convngham with a tragic air of mutual understanding, as if drawing a veil over that blissful past in the pre- sence of Julia and Estella. " Ask me another time," that glance seemed to say. " Yes," the lady continued ; " Father Concha is very angry with the English. Firstly, because of these Bibles. Blessed Heaven, what does it mat- ter ! No one can read them except the priests, and they do not want to do so. Secondlv, be- cause the English have helped to overthrow Don Carlos — " ^ " You will have a penance," interrupted Miss Julia Barenna, quietly, " from P'ather Concha for talking politics." " But how will he know ^ " asked Senora Barenna, sharply, and the two young ladies laughed. Senora Barenna looked from one to the other and shrugged her shoulders. Like many women, she was a strange mixture of foolishness and worldly wisdom. She adjusted her mantilla and mutely appealed to heaven with a glance of her upturned eyes. Conyngham, who was no diplomatist nor pos- sessed any skill in concealing his thoughts, looked said deep most rham as if • pre- iDther oncha ,use of mat- jiiests, ly, be- V Don d Miss cha for Seiiora aughed. He other women, ess and tilla and Ice of her nor pos- ts, looked THK LOVK-LKTTKR SS with sonic interest at Julia Barenna, and Estella watched him. " Julia is right," Sciiora Harcnna was saving, though nobody heeded her. " One must not talk nor even think politics in this country. You are no politician, I trust, Senor Convngham. Senor Convngham, I ask you, vou are no politician ? " "No, senora," replied Conyngham, hastily — " no ; and if I were, 1 should never understand Spanish politics." " Father Concha says that Spanish politics are the same as those of any other country — each man for himself," said Julia, with a bitter laugh. " And he is, no doubt, right." "Do you really think so?" asked Julia Ha- renna, with more earnestness than the question would seem to require. "Are there not true patriots who sacrifice all — not only their friends, but themselves — to the cause of their country ? " " Without the hope of reward ^ " " Yes." " There may be, senorita, a few," answered Conyngham, with a laugh ; " but not in my country. They must all be in Spain." She smiled and shook her head in doubt, but it was a worn smile. The Englishman turned away and looked through the trees. He was wondering how he could get speech with Julia alone for a moment. "You are admiring the garden," said that young IMAGE EVALUATION TEST TARGET (MT-S) 1.0 I.I ^fflllM IliM 22 2.0 1.8 1.25 1.4 1.6 ^ 6" — ► v] <^ /}. c^l .o^ c^l £? >>. / ?s /li Photographic Sciences Corporation S ■6>' S ^^ V \ \ "^h V w^^? & <> ^^ ^9>'- 23 WEST MAIN STREET WEBSTER, NY. 14580 (716) 872-4503 4^ M^i h \ \ 6^ >> ffr I I m IN KEDAR'S TENTS ^ I ii lady, and this time he knew that there had in reality been that meaning in her eyes which he had imrjjined to be there. *' Yes, senorita ; I think it must be the most beautiful garden in the world." He turned as he spoke and looked at Estella, who met his glance quietly. Her repose of manner struck him afresh. Here was a woman having that air of decision which exacts respect alike from men and women. Seen thus with the more vivacious Julia at her side, Estella gained suddenly in moral strength and depth, suggesting a hidden fire in contrast to a flickering will-o'-the-wisp blown hither and thither on every zephyr. Yet Julia Barenna would pass anywhere as a woman of will and purpose. Julia had risen, and was moving toward the exit of the little grove in which they found them- selves. Conyngham had never been seated. " Are the violets in bloom, Estella ? 1 must see them," said the visitor. "We have none at home, where all is dry and parched." " So bad for the nerves — what suffering ! — such a dry soil that one cannot sleep at night," murmured Madame Barenna, preparing to rise from her seat. Julia and Conyngham naturally led the way. The paths winding in and out among the palms and pepper-trees were of a width that allowed two to walk abreast. THE LOVE-LETTER " Senorita, I have a letter for you.'* " Not yet ; wait." Senora Barenna was chattering in her deep, husky tones immediately behind them. Julia turned and looked up at the windows of the house, which commanded a full view of the garden. The dwelling-rooms were, as usual, upon the first floor, and the windows were lightly barred with curiously wrought iron. Each window was curtained within with lace and muslin. The paths wound in and out among the trees, but none of these was large enough to afford a secure screen from the eye of any watcher within the house. There was neither eucalyptus nor ilex in the garden, which are heavy-leafed and afford shelter. Julia and Conyngham walked on, outdistancing the elder lady and Estella. From these, many a turn in the path hid them from time to time, but Julia was distrustful of the windows, and hesitated in an agony of nervousness. Conyng- ham saw that her face was quite colourless, and her teeth closed convulsively over her lower lip. He continued to talk of indifferent topics, but the answers she made were incoherent and broken. The course of true love did not seem to run smooth here. " Shall I give you the letter ? No one can see us, senorita. Besides, I was informed that it is of no importance except to yourself. You have doubtless had many such before, unless the Spanish gentlemen are blind." \r- 88 IN KEDAR'S TENTS ii He laughed and felt in his pocket. " Yes," she whispered. *' Quickly now ! " He gave her the letter in its romantic, pink, scented envelope, with a half-suppressed smile at her eagerness. Would anybody, would Estella ever be thus agitated at the receipt of a letter from himself? They were at the lower end of the garden, which was divided almost in two by a broader pathway leading from the house to the centre of the garden, where a fountain of Moorish marble formed a sort of carrefour^ from which the narrower pathways diverged in all directions. Descending the steps into the garden from the house were two men, one talking violently, the other seeking to calm him. " My uncle and the alcalde. They have seen us from the windows," said Julia, quickly. All her nervousness of manner seemed to have vanished, leaving her concentrated and alert. Some men are thus in warfare, nervous until the rifles open fire, and then cool and ready. " Quick," whispered Julia, " let us turn back." She wheeled round and Conyngham did the same. "Julia," they heard General Vincente call in his gentle voice. Julia, who was tearing the pink envelope, took no heed. Within the first covering a second envelope appeared bearing a longer address. " Give that to the man whose address it bears, iP*^- THE LOVE-LETTER 89 and save me from ruin," said the girl, thrusting the letter into Conyngham's hand. She kept the pink envelope. When, a minute later, thcv came face to face with General Vincente and ^is companion, a white- faced, fluttering man of sixty years, Julia Barcnna received them with a smile. There are some men who, conscious of their own quickness of resource, are careless of danger and run into it from mere heedlessness, trusting to good fortune to aid »^hem should peril arise. Frederick Conyngham was one of these. He now suspected that this was no love-letter which the man called Larralde had given him in Algeciras. " Julia," said the general, " the alcaide desires to speak with you." Julia bowed with that touch of hauteur which in Spain the nobles ever observe in their manner toward the municipal authorities. " Mr. Conyngham," continued the general, "this is our brave mayor, in whose hands rests the well-being of the people of Ronda," " Honoured to meet you," said Conyngham, holding out his hand with that frankness of man- ner which he accorded to great and small alike. The alcalde, a man of immense importance in his own estimation, hesitated before accepting it. " General," he said, turning and bowing very low to Sefiora Barenna and Estella, who now joined them — " general, I leave you to ex- 90 IN KEDAR'S TENTS plain to your niece the painful duties of my office." The general smiled, and raised a deprecating shoulder. " Well, my dear," he said kindly to Julia, " it appears that our good alcalde has news of a letter which is at present passing from hand to hand in Andalusia. It is a letter of some importance. Our good mayor, who was at the window a r lin- ute ago, saw Mr. Conyngham hand you a letter. Between persons w'.jo only met in this garden five minutes ago, such a transaction had a strange aik . Our good friend, who is all zeal for Spain and the people of Ronda, merely asks you if his eyes de- ceived him. It is a matter over which we shall all laugh presently over a lemonade ; is it not so .? A trifle — eh?" He passed his handkerchief across his mous- tache, and looked affectionately at his niece. "A letter!" exclaimed Julia. "Surely the alcalde presumes. He takes too much upon himself." The official stepped forward. " Seiiorita," he said, " I must be allowed to take that risk. Did this gentleman give you a letter three minutes ago ? " Julia laughed and shrugged her shoulders. "Yes." " May I ask the nature of the letter ? " " It was a love-letter." ,ii THE LOVE-LETTER ^S Conyngham bit his lip and looked at Esteila. The alcalde looked doubtful, with the cunning lips of a cheap country lawyer. " A love-letter from a gentleman you have never seen before," he said, with a forced laugh. " Pardon me, Scnor Alcalde, this gentleman travelled in the same ship with my mother and myself from Bordeaux to Algeciras, and he saved my life." She cast a momentary glance at Conyngham, which would have sealed his fate had the Hery Mr. Larralde been there to see it. The prefect paused, somewhat taken aback. There was a momentary silence, and every moment gave Julia and Conyng- ham time to think. Then the alcalde turned to Conyngham. " It will give me the greatest pleasure," he said, " to learn that I have been mistaken. I have only to ask this gentleman's confirmation of what the senorita has said. Is it true, senor, that you surreptitiously handed to the Senorita Barenna a letter expressing your love ? " " Since the senorita has done me the honour of confessing it, I must ask you to believe it," answered Conyngham, steadily and with coldness. CHAPTER IX A WAR OF WIT ** La discretion est I'art du mensonge." The alcalde blew out his cheeks and looked at General Vincente. Sefiora Barenna would with small encouragement have thrown herself into Conyngham's arms, but she received none what- ever, and instead frowned at Julia. Estella was looking haughtily at her father, and would not meet Conyngham's glance. " I feel sure," said General Vincente, in his most conciliating manner, " that my dear Julia will see the necessity of satisfying the good alcalde by showing him the letter, with, of course, the con- sent of my friend Conyngham." He laughed and slipped his hand within Conyng- ham's arm. " You see, my dear friend," he said in English, " these local magnates are a little inflated ; local magnitude is a little inclined to inflate — eh ? Ha ! ha ! And it is so easy to conciliate them. I always try to do so myself. Peace at any price, that is my motto." And he turned aside to arrange his sword, which dragged on the ground. A WAR OF WIT 93 " Tell her, my dear Conyngham, to let the old gentleman read the letter." " But it is nothing to do with me, general." " I know that, my friend, as well as you do," said Vincente, with a sudden change of manner which left the Englishman with an uncomfortable desire to know what he meant. But General Vincente, in pursuit of that peace which had earned him such a terrible reputation in war, turned to Seiiora Barenna with his most reassuring smile. " It is nothing, my dear Inez," he said. " In these times of trouble, the officials are so suspi- cious, and our dear alcalde knows too much. He remembers dear Julia's little affair with Esteban Larralde, now long since lived down and for- gotten. Larralde is, it appears, a malcontent, and on the wrong side of the wall. You need have no uneasiness. Ah ! your nerves ; yes, I know. A great sufferer — yes, I remember. Patience, dear Inez, patience." And he patted her stout white hand affection- ately. ■J The alcalde was taking snuff with a stubborn air of disbelief, glancing the while suspiciously at Conyngham, who had eyes for none but Estella. " Alcalde," said General Vincente, " the inci- dent is past, as we say in the diplomatic service — a lemonade now." r 94 IN KEDAR'S TENTS " No, general, the incident is not past, and I will not have a lemonade." " Oh ! " exclaimed General Vincente, in gentle horror. " Yes. This young lady must give me the letter or I call in my men." " But your men could not touch a lady, my dear alcalde." " You may be the alcalde of Ronda," said Conyngham, cheerfully, in continuation of the general's argument, " but if you offer such an insult to Senorita Barer. na, I throw you into the fountain — in the deepest part, where it is wettest — just there by the marble dolphin." And Conyngham indicated the exact spot with his riding-whip. " Who is this gentleman ? " asked the alcalde. The question was, in the first place, addressed to space and the gods. After a moment the speaker turned to General Vincente. " A prospective aide-de camp of General Espartero." At the mention of the great name the mayor of Ronda became beautifully less, and half bowed to Conyngham. " I must do mv duty," he said, with the stub- bornness of a small mind. " And what do you conceive that to be, my dear alcalde ? " inquired the general. " To place the Senorita Barenna under arrest, A WAR OF WIT 95 unless she will hand to me the letter she has in her possession." Julia looked at him with a smile. She was a brave woman playing a dangerous game with con- summate courage, and never glanced at Conyngham, who with an effort kept his hand away from the pocket where the letter lay concealed. The man- ner in which she trusted him unreservedly and entirely was in itself cunning enough, for it ap- pealed to *'iat sense of chivalry which is not yet dead in men despite the advance of women. " Place me under arrest, Senor Alcalde," she said indifferently, " and when you have satisfied me that you have a right to inspect a lady's private correspondence, I will submit to be searched, but not before." She made a little signal to Conyngham not to interfere. Senora Barenna took this opportunity of assert- ing herself and nerves. She sat heavily down on a stone seat and wept. She could hardly have done better, for she was a countess in her own right, and the sight of high-born tears distinctly unnerved the alcalde. " Well," he said, " the senorita has made her own choice. In these times," he glanced nervously at the weeping lady, " one must do one's duty." " My dear Julia," protested the general, " you who are so sensible — " Julia shrugged her shoulders and laughed. She E IN KEDAR'S TENTS not only trusted Conyngham, hut relied upon his intelligence. It is, as a rule, safer to confide in the honesty of one's neighbour than in his wit. Better still, trust in neither. Conyngham, who was quick enough when the moment required it, knew that she was fostering the belief that the let- ter at that moment in his pocket was in her pos- session. He suspected also that he and Julia Barenna were playing with life and death. Further, he recognised her and her voice. This was the woman who had shown discrimination and calmness in face of a great danger on the Garonne. Had this Englishman, owning as he did to a strain of Irish blood, turned his back upon her and danger at such a moment, he would assuredly have proved himself untrue to the annals of that race which has made a mark upon the world that will never be wiped out. He looked at the alcalde and smiled, whereupon that official turned and made a signal with his hand to a man who, dressed in a quiet uniform, had appeared in the doorway of the house. " What the deuce we are all trying to do I don't know," reflected Conyngham, who, indeed, was sufficiently at sea to awake the most dormant suspicions. The alcalde, now thoroughly aroused, protested his inability to neglect a particle of his duty at this troubled period of Spain's history, and announced his intention of placing Julia Barenna under sur- A WAR OF WIT 97 veillance until she handed to him the letter she had received from Conyngham. " I am quite prepared," he added, " to give this eaballero the benefit of the doubt, and assume that he has been in this matter the tool of unscrupulous persons. Seeing that he is a friend of General Vincente's, and has an introduction to his excel- lency the Duke of Vittoria, he is without the pale of my jurisdiction." The alcalde made Conyngham a profound bow, and proceeded to conduct Julia and her indignant mother to their carriage. " There goes," said General Vincente, with his most optimistic little chuckle, " a young woman whose head will always be endangered by her heart." And he nodded toward Julia's retreating form. Estella turned and walked away by herself. " Come," said the general to Conyngham, " let us sit down ; I have news for you. But what a susceptible heart, my dear young friend — what a susceptible heart ! Julia is, I admit, a very pretty gill — la heaut'e du diable — eh ? But on so short an acquaintance rather rapid — rather rapid ! " As he spoke he was searching among some let- ters, which he had produced from his pocket, and at length found an official envelope that had already been opened. " I have here," he said, " a letter from Madrid. You have only to proceed to ihe capital, and there, 7 ^ !i l-i K ' 98 IN KEDAR'S TENTS I hope, a post awaits you. Your duties will at present be of a semi-military character, but later, I hope, we can show you some fighting. This pestilential Cabrera is not yet quelled, and Morella still holds out. Yes, there will be fighting." He closed the letter and looked at Conyngham. " If that is what you want," he added. " Yes, that is what I want." The general nodded and rose, pausing to brush a few grains of dust from his dapper riding breeches. "Come," he said, " I have seen a horse which will suit you, at the cavalry quarters in the Calle de Bobadilla. Shall we go and look at him ? " Conyngham expressed his readiness to do as the general proposed. " When shall I start for Madrid ? " he asked. " Oh, to-morrow morning will be time enough," was the reply, uttered in an easy-going, indolent tone, " if you are early astir. You see, it is now nearly five o'clock, and you could scarcely be in the saddle before sunset." " No," laughed Conyngham ; " scarcely, consid- ering that I have not yet bought the saddle or the horse." The general led the way into the house, and Conyngham thought of the letter in his pocket. He had not yet read the address. Julia relied upon him to deliver it, and her conduct toward the alcalde had the evident object of gaining time for A WAR OF WIT him to do so. She had unhesitatingly thrust her- self into a position of danger to screen him and