The Rover of the Andes, Robert Michael Ballantyne [my reading book .TXT] 📗
- Author: Robert Michael Ballantyne
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said of ourselves."
"Not so, massa, 'cause we nebber said it would be `dooced good fun.'"
"There's something in that, Quash, but you shouldn't let feelings of ill-will to any one get the mastery of you. Men of his stamp are often very good fellows at bottom, though they do `aw' in a most ridiculous and unaccountable manner. Besides, he has done you no harm."
"Done me no harm!" repeated the negro, indignantly, "didn't he say you was mad or drunk?"
"Well, well," said Lawrence, laughing, "that was a very innocent remark. It did no harm to either of us."
"You's wrong, massa," returned Quashy in a magnificently hurt tone. "It dood no harm to you, but it hurt my _feelin's_, an' dat's wuss dan hurtin' my body."
At this point in the conversation the troop passed over the brow of an eminence, and beheld the wide rolling sea of the illimitable South American Pampas, or plains, stretching away on all sides to the horizon. During the whole morning they had been galloping through the region of the _Monte_, or bush, that border-land which connects the treeless plains with the tropical forests of the north, where thorny shrubs covered the ground in more or less dense patches, where groves of the algaroba--a noble tree of the mimosa species,--and trees laden with a peach-like but poisonous fruit, as well as other trees and shrubs, diversified the landscape, and where the ground was carpeted with beautiful flowering plants, among which were the variegated blossoms of verbena, polyanthus, and others.
But now, all was changed. It seemed as if the party had reached the shores of a great, level, grassy sea, with only here and there a seeming islet, where a thicket grew, to break the sky-line of the horizon. For a few minutes the rear-guard drew up to collect the straggling baggage-mules, and then away they went with a wild shout, as if they were moved by the same glad feeling of freedom that affects the petrel when it swoops over the billows of the mighty ocean.
The scene and the sensations were absolutely new to Lawrence and Quashy. Both were mounted on very good horses, which seemed to sympathise with their riders, for they required no spur to urge them over the grassy plain. The sun was bright, and Lawrence had been too long accustomed to the leaden skies of old England to quarrel with the sunshine, however hot it might be; besides, he rather enjoyed heat, and as for Quashy, heat was his native element. A pleasant air was blowing, too. In short, everything looked beautiful, especially to our hero, who knew--at least supposed--that a certain princess of the Incas was in the band immediately in front of him. He was not aware, you see, that she was with the advance-guard!
"Das am mug-nifercent!" exclaimed Quashy, as his horse put his foot into a biscacho-hole, and only escaped a fall by making a splendid bound, where by its haunch, striking the negro's back, sent him plunging on to its neck.
"Oh! I _does_ like to be shook like dat, massa."
"If you get shook much worse than that," cried Lawrence, "I'll have to stop to pick you up."
"No fear, massa. Howebber much I wobbles I nebber comes off."
An islet of bushes at this point necessitated a slight detour. On the other side of it they found that the main body of the troop had halted for rest and food.
Right glad was Lawrence to find that Colonel Marchbanks's humour was entirely changed, that the asperity of the previous night had passed away, and that the natural urbanity of his nature had returned.
"A pleasant gallop, was it not, Senhor Armstrong?" he said, as our hero joined the group of officers around him.
"Delightful, and quite new to me," said Lawrence. "I have often read of but never seen the Pampas till now."
He looked furtively about as he spoke. The colonel marked the look, and with a somewhat grim smile observed that they should see more than enough of the Pampas for some days to come.
"The sea of long yellow-brown grass and thistles," he added, "gets to be rather monotonous at last; but I never weary of the feeling of immensity and freedom which it inspires. Come, dine with us, senhor."
Lawrence gladly accepted the invitation.
"We make but a brief halt," said the colonel, "for time presses and distances are great. Our next shall be at the Estancia Algaroba, where we shall spend the night. Your friend Pedro will make arrangements for us. He is with the advance-guard."
"Oh, indeed," said Lawrence; then, feeling that he ought to say something more, "I suppose his newly-found daughter is with him?"
"Yes," replied the colonel, curtly, as he shot a suspicious glance at the youth from under his shaggy brows.
After dining, Lawrence returned to the baggage-mules with an unaccountable depression of spirits upon him, and deeply absorbed with the question whether rear-guards ever overtook advance-guards, and what, if they did, usually became of intervening main bodies. With such puzzling military questions on his mind, the remainder of that day's journey was not equal to the first part, and even Quashy, the sympathetic, failed to interest him!
The estancia, previously referred to by the colonel, stood on a slight eminence surrounded by the grove of algaroba-trees from which it derived its name. The fruit of this tree forms excellent food for cattle, and Lawrence found himself busily engaged during the first hour after arrival in procuring it for his mules, and otherwise looking after his charge. When this duty was done, feeling no disposition to join his comrades at supper, he sauntered into a garden in rear of the estancia, where he found a rustic seat under an algaroba-tree, and sat down to meditate.
It was a calm, peaceful, moonlight night, with an air, so he felt, of sadness about it which harmonised with his melancholy thoughts. He now believed he saw through Colonel Marchbanks's plan, and had given up all hope of seeing Manuela again. In these circumstances, being a man of submissive spirit yet powerful will, he set himself resolutely to think of the important object in which he was engaged. Somewhat thus his meditations ran--
"I am no soldier, but I am a man, and I should be less than a man-- unworthy to live--if I were not ready to help in the rescue of women and children. Some of the girls, poor things, may be like Manu--that is--. Now, although I hate war, and do not approve of settling disputes by the sword, I feel that self-defence, or the defence of the helpless, justifies war,--ay, to the knife. Of course it does. Was I not thoroughly justified in fighting the robbers when Manu--. Well, then, let me think it out. A thing is not properly thought at all until it is thought out, and _found_ out. Talking of that, how fortunate that Pedro's little daughter was found out. It is most interesting! I delight to think of her. And she's so pretty, too--quite beautiful, though, of course, not so beautiful as Man--"
"Bother Manuela!" he exclaimed aloud, starting up.
As he spoke, Manuela herself--the princess of the Incas--stood before him!
In order to account for this sudden miscarriage of the colonel's plans, we must turn aside to state that the princess, being of an active disposition, and not easily tired, had said to Pedro that evening, when his detachment was encamping under a group of trees not far from the estancia, that she would ride back to the main body to see her father.
"But my strict orders are," said Pedro, "that I am to keep you with the advance-guard, and you know that your father is not a man to be disobeyed."
"Quite true," returned the princess, looking with a solemn expression down at Pedro--for she was still on horseback, while he and his men were dismounted, preparing the camp. "You must on no account disobey my father, Pedro."
"Well then, you see," returned the guide, with an amused look, "I cannot give you permission to leave us."
"Of course not. That would be insubordination, Pedro, would it not? which, in time of war, is punishable, I think, with death. I would never think of asking permission, or tempting you to disobey. I will be sure to tell my father that you positively refused to let me go. Adieu, Senhor Pedro. A good appetite and sweet repose!"
She touched her splendid horse with a switch, and next moment was flying over the Pampas at a pace that rendered pursuit useless.
Dismounting and fastening her steed to a tree, she passed through the garden towards the house, and naturally, as we have seen, came upon Lawrence.
"Manuela!" he exclaimed.
"Si, senhor," she replied.
He advanced a step with outstretched arms, and then, checking himself, clasped his hands.
"Is it--can it be--a dream?"
"What doos you dream, senhor?" asked the girl, in the old familiar broken English.
"Manuela, dear girl, do not trifle with me. It seems like magic. Did I not see you--in the ballroom--white--the daughter of Colonel Marchbanks?"
"Well, Senhor Armstrong," said Manuela, earnestly, and in good English, "I admit that I am the daughter of Colonel Marchbanks, but I did not-- indeed I did not _wish_ to deceive--"
"Deceive!" interrupted Lawrence, quickly, "as well might you tell me that one of the unfallen angels did not mean to deceive. O dear one, forgive me! I know not how to tell it--but--but--_can_ you believe that a great stupid fellow like myself loves you so that--that--I--well--it's of no use. I'll never act wisely if I try to--to--"
He seized her hand. She did not withdraw it. He drew her to him. She did not resist; and there followed a sound--a very slight sound; yet it was not so slight but that it sent a shock of alarm and anger to the soul of Colonel Marchbanks, who came up at that awkward moment.
"Sir! sirrah! senhor,--rascal!" spluttered the old man, as Manuela ran away from the scene, "what--why--what do you mean?"
Drawing himself up, Lawrence said, with a look of dignity--
"Colonel Marchbanks, I can look you honestly in the face, and say that neither in word nor deed have I done you or your daughter wrong."
"No--have you _not_?" shouted the colonel. "Sir! rascal!--there is a looking-glass over the mantelpiece in the estancia. Go there, look _yourself_ in the face, and say, if you dare, that you have done me no wrong!"
He wheeled about violently and strode away, fuming.
Lawrence went to his chamber, wondering at such a display of wrath in one so genial.
He glanced at the looking-glass in passing through the chief room of the estancia. The glance revealed to him the fact that there was a large rich brown patch in the region of his mouth and nose!
CHAPTER TWENTY THREE.
TREATS OF SAVAGES, CAPTIVES, CHASES, ACCIDENTS, INCIDENTS, AND PERPLEXITIES.
"Not so, massa, 'cause we nebber said it would be `dooced good fun.'"
"There's something in that, Quash, but you shouldn't let feelings of ill-will to any one get the mastery of you. Men of his stamp are often very good fellows at bottom, though they do `aw' in a most ridiculous and unaccountable manner. Besides, he has done you no harm."
"Done me no harm!" repeated the negro, indignantly, "didn't he say you was mad or drunk?"
"Well, well," said Lawrence, laughing, "that was a very innocent remark. It did no harm to either of us."
"You's wrong, massa," returned Quashy in a magnificently hurt tone. "It dood no harm to you, but it hurt my _feelin's_, an' dat's wuss dan hurtin' my body."
At this point in the conversation the troop passed over the brow of an eminence, and beheld the wide rolling sea of the illimitable South American Pampas, or plains, stretching away on all sides to the horizon. During the whole morning they had been galloping through the region of the _Monte_, or bush, that border-land which connects the treeless plains with the tropical forests of the north, where thorny shrubs covered the ground in more or less dense patches, where groves of the algaroba--a noble tree of the mimosa species,--and trees laden with a peach-like but poisonous fruit, as well as other trees and shrubs, diversified the landscape, and where the ground was carpeted with beautiful flowering plants, among which were the variegated blossoms of verbena, polyanthus, and others.
But now, all was changed. It seemed as if the party had reached the shores of a great, level, grassy sea, with only here and there a seeming islet, where a thicket grew, to break the sky-line of the horizon. For a few minutes the rear-guard drew up to collect the straggling baggage-mules, and then away they went with a wild shout, as if they were moved by the same glad feeling of freedom that affects the petrel when it swoops over the billows of the mighty ocean.
The scene and the sensations were absolutely new to Lawrence and Quashy. Both were mounted on very good horses, which seemed to sympathise with their riders, for they required no spur to urge them over the grassy plain. The sun was bright, and Lawrence had been too long accustomed to the leaden skies of old England to quarrel with the sunshine, however hot it might be; besides, he rather enjoyed heat, and as for Quashy, heat was his native element. A pleasant air was blowing, too. In short, everything looked beautiful, especially to our hero, who knew--at least supposed--that a certain princess of the Incas was in the band immediately in front of him. He was not aware, you see, that she was with the advance-guard!
"Das am mug-nifercent!" exclaimed Quashy, as his horse put his foot into a biscacho-hole, and only escaped a fall by making a splendid bound, where by its haunch, striking the negro's back, sent him plunging on to its neck.
"Oh! I _does_ like to be shook like dat, massa."
"If you get shook much worse than that," cried Lawrence, "I'll have to stop to pick you up."
"No fear, massa. Howebber much I wobbles I nebber comes off."
An islet of bushes at this point necessitated a slight detour. On the other side of it they found that the main body of the troop had halted for rest and food.
Right glad was Lawrence to find that Colonel Marchbanks's humour was entirely changed, that the asperity of the previous night had passed away, and that the natural urbanity of his nature had returned.
"A pleasant gallop, was it not, Senhor Armstrong?" he said, as our hero joined the group of officers around him.
"Delightful, and quite new to me," said Lawrence. "I have often read of but never seen the Pampas till now."
He looked furtively about as he spoke. The colonel marked the look, and with a somewhat grim smile observed that they should see more than enough of the Pampas for some days to come.
"The sea of long yellow-brown grass and thistles," he added, "gets to be rather monotonous at last; but I never weary of the feeling of immensity and freedom which it inspires. Come, dine with us, senhor."
Lawrence gladly accepted the invitation.
"We make but a brief halt," said the colonel, "for time presses and distances are great. Our next shall be at the Estancia Algaroba, where we shall spend the night. Your friend Pedro will make arrangements for us. He is with the advance-guard."
"Oh, indeed," said Lawrence; then, feeling that he ought to say something more, "I suppose his newly-found daughter is with him?"
"Yes," replied the colonel, curtly, as he shot a suspicious glance at the youth from under his shaggy brows.
After dining, Lawrence returned to the baggage-mules with an unaccountable depression of spirits upon him, and deeply absorbed with the question whether rear-guards ever overtook advance-guards, and what, if they did, usually became of intervening main bodies. With such puzzling military questions on his mind, the remainder of that day's journey was not equal to the first part, and even Quashy, the sympathetic, failed to interest him!
The estancia, previously referred to by the colonel, stood on a slight eminence surrounded by the grove of algaroba-trees from which it derived its name. The fruit of this tree forms excellent food for cattle, and Lawrence found himself busily engaged during the first hour after arrival in procuring it for his mules, and otherwise looking after his charge. When this duty was done, feeling no disposition to join his comrades at supper, he sauntered into a garden in rear of the estancia, where he found a rustic seat under an algaroba-tree, and sat down to meditate.
It was a calm, peaceful, moonlight night, with an air, so he felt, of sadness about it which harmonised with his melancholy thoughts. He now believed he saw through Colonel Marchbanks's plan, and had given up all hope of seeing Manuela again. In these circumstances, being a man of submissive spirit yet powerful will, he set himself resolutely to think of the important object in which he was engaged. Somewhat thus his meditations ran--
"I am no soldier, but I am a man, and I should be less than a man-- unworthy to live--if I were not ready to help in the rescue of women and children. Some of the girls, poor things, may be like Manu--that is--. Now, although I hate war, and do not approve of settling disputes by the sword, I feel that self-defence, or the defence of the helpless, justifies war,--ay, to the knife. Of course it does. Was I not thoroughly justified in fighting the robbers when Manu--. Well, then, let me think it out. A thing is not properly thought at all until it is thought out, and _found_ out. Talking of that, how fortunate that Pedro's little daughter was found out. It is most interesting! I delight to think of her. And she's so pretty, too--quite beautiful, though, of course, not so beautiful as Man--"
"Bother Manuela!" he exclaimed aloud, starting up.
As he spoke, Manuela herself--the princess of the Incas--stood before him!
In order to account for this sudden miscarriage of the colonel's plans, we must turn aside to state that the princess, being of an active disposition, and not easily tired, had said to Pedro that evening, when his detachment was encamping under a group of trees not far from the estancia, that she would ride back to the main body to see her father.
"But my strict orders are," said Pedro, "that I am to keep you with the advance-guard, and you know that your father is not a man to be disobeyed."
"Quite true," returned the princess, looking with a solemn expression down at Pedro--for she was still on horseback, while he and his men were dismounted, preparing the camp. "You must on no account disobey my father, Pedro."
"Well then, you see," returned the guide, with an amused look, "I cannot give you permission to leave us."
"Of course not. That would be insubordination, Pedro, would it not? which, in time of war, is punishable, I think, with death. I would never think of asking permission, or tempting you to disobey. I will be sure to tell my father that you positively refused to let me go. Adieu, Senhor Pedro. A good appetite and sweet repose!"
She touched her splendid horse with a switch, and next moment was flying over the Pampas at a pace that rendered pursuit useless.
Dismounting and fastening her steed to a tree, she passed through the garden towards the house, and naturally, as we have seen, came upon Lawrence.
"Manuela!" he exclaimed.
"Si, senhor," she replied.
He advanced a step with outstretched arms, and then, checking himself, clasped his hands.
"Is it--can it be--a dream?"
"What doos you dream, senhor?" asked the girl, in the old familiar broken English.
"Manuela, dear girl, do not trifle with me. It seems like magic. Did I not see you--in the ballroom--white--the daughter of Colonel Marchbanks?"
"Well, Senhor Armstrong," said Manuela, earnestly, and in good English, "I admit that I am the daughter of Colonel Marchbanks, but I did not-- indeed I did not _wish_ to deceive--"
"Deceive!" interrupted Lawrence, quickly, "as well might you tell me that one of the unfallen angels did not mean to deceive. O dear one, forgive me! I know not how to tell it--but--but--_can_ you believe that a great stupid fellow like myself loves you so that--that--I--well--it's of no use. I'll never act wisely if I try to--to--"
He seized her hand. She did not withdraw it. He drew her to him. She did not resist; and there followed a sound--a very slight sound; yet it was not so slight but that it sent a shock of alarm and anger to the soul of Colonel Marchbanks, who came up at that awkward moment.
"Sir! sirrah! senhor,--rascal!" spluttered the old man, as Manuela ran away from the scene, "what--why--what do you mean?"
Drawing himself up, Lawrence said, with a look of dignity--
"Colonel Marchbanks, I can look you honestly in the face, and say that neither in word nor deed have I done you or your daughter wrong."
"No--have you _not_?" shouted the colonel. "Sir! rascal!--there is a looking-glass over the mantelpiece in the estancia. Go there, look _yourself_ in the face, and say, if you dare, that you have done me no wrong!"
He wheeled about violently and strode away, fuming.
Lawrence went to his chamber, wondering at such a display of wrath in one so genial.
He glanced at the looking-glass in passing through the chief room of the estancia. The glance revealed to him the fact that there was a large rich brown patch in the region of his mouth and nose!
CHAPTER TWENTY THREE.
TREATS OF SAVAGES, CAPTIVES, CHASES, ACCIDENTS, INCIDENTS, AND PERPLEXITIES.
Not unfrequently, in human affairs, evil consequences are happily averted by unforeseen circumstances. It was so on the present occasion.
What Colonel Marchbanks's wrath might have led to no one can tell, for, a little before dawn on the following morning, there came a messenger in hot haste from Pedro
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