BUILDING FROM WHICH STANISLAUS AND HIS FOLLOWERS STOLE TWO HUNDRED INDIAN MAIDEN
BUILDING FROM WHICH STANISLAUS AND HIS FOLLOWERS
STOLE TWO HUNDRED INDIAN MAIDEN
"When Padre Osuna trails us he can perform
a hundred double weddings at once"
The Bride of Mission
San JosÉ
A Tale of Early California
By
JOHN AUGUSTINE CULL
THE ABINGDON PRESS
NEW YORK CINCINNATI
Copyright, 1920, by
JOHN AUGUSTINE CULL
CHARACTERS PROMINENT IN THE STORY
SEÑOR MENDOZA, former Colonel in Napoleonic wars; subsequently, Administrator of Mission San JosÉ de Guadalupe, Santa Clara Valley, California; later Governor of the province.
CARMELITA MENDOZA, daughter of SeÑor Mendoza.
PADRE LUSCIANO OSUNA, Spiritual Head of Mission San JosÉ de Guadalupe.
CAPTAIN MORANDO, Comandante of the Pueblo of San JosÉ; afterward General of all the land forces of the department of California.
COLONEL BARCELO, Comandante of the Presidio of Monterey, and acting Governor of California.
CHARLES O'DONNELL, in the secret service of the United States.
SEÑORA VALENTINO, in the secret service of England.
CAPTAIN FARQUHARSON, English representative extraordinary in the province.
COMMODORE BILLINGS, Commanding the American fleet in the Pacific.
ADMIRAL FAIRBANKS, Commanding the British fleet in the Pacific.
YOSCOLO, Famous Indian chief.
STANISLAUS, Lieutenant of Yoscolo.
BROWN, Factotum of Captain Farquharson; later, in the employ of SeÑor Mendoza.
Time: 1842 to 1846.
Contents
Chapter
I. A Serenade in the Moonlight
II. The Lion and the Lamb Lie Down Together
III. A Dip into the Past
IV. A Stranger Visits SeÑor Mendoza
V. Another Stranger Makes a Visit
VI. The Merienda
VII. A Night Spent in a Cave
VIII. The Political Pot Simmers
IX. SeÑora Valentino Seeks to Interest Padre Osuna
X. The Beginning of the Ball at SeÑor Mendoza's Hacienda House
XI. At the Supper
XII. Carmelita Dances El Son
XIII. Returning from the Ball
XIV. O'Donnell Takes A Horseback Ride
XV. SeÑora Valentino Makes a Report
XVI. The SeÑorita of the Window Pane
XVII. O'Donnell Settles with Yoscolo
XVIII. Farquharson Meets with a Loss
XIX. SeÑora Valentino and Captain Morando Continue Conversation
XX. Bitter Sweet
XXI. A Few Diplomatic Touches
XXII. Almost—
XXIII. Pedro Zelaya Brings Important News
XXIV. The Next Day
XXV. Brown Takes a Hand at Diplomacy
XXVI. Braving the Storm
XXVII. But Yet a Woman
XXVIII. A Daughter of the De La Mendoza
XXIX. A Departure
XXX. Odds and Ends
XXXI. Across the Years
XXXII. A Wedding
CHAPTER I
A SERENADE IN THE MOONLIGHT
"Fairer art thou than the lily, than the rose more sweet," sang a mellow baritone voice. A guitar thrummed accompaniment. At the end of his improvisation the singer waved the instrument gracefully, now in sweeping stroke, again in shorter measure, as if he were a maestro directing his musicians. Then he touched the strings in melancholy strain:
"Beat, beat, little dove, thy tender wings against thy iron cage."
Next triumphantly he intoned:
"Fly away, little dove, fly away; the cruel bars are broken."
Once more in pantomime he directed his fancied musicians.
"What is it, Don Alfredo? Art fanning thyself, or do mosquitoes annoy thee?"
He looked upward into a pair of dark, laughing eyes not three feet distant.
"O, DoÑa Carmelita," rapturously, "I was marking rhythm for the angel choirs which sing in praise of thy beauty and charm. They sing of one angel, even thou, DoÑa mia, more fair than they."
The girl withdrew from the embrasure, brushing her fan across its iron-barred front.
"I shut out, Don Alfredo, thy foolish words. I drive them back into the air. I fear the angels are displeased at thy presumption. Many nights have you sung here meaningless words, empty nothings; but even better such than to speak thoughts which must offend the saints in heaven."
"O, DoÑa Carmelita, let me once again see thy eyes sparkle in the moonlight; add a flash or two from thy teeth of pearl——"
"Hush, Don Alfredo, or I leave. Perhaps at other embrasures not far away wait caballeros, not so vain as to fancy themselves directors of the music celestial. Good night, Don Alfredo. Clip the wings of thy imagination lest thou fly too near the sun."
"O, DoÑa mia, do not go away. If it please thee I'll praise the heavenly angels."
The window was suddenly closed.
"Caramba! again. It's difficult for a soldier to trim his tongue that he may speak words of love to the tender ears of the capricious seÑorita."
"Good evening, Captain Morando."
The soldier turned abruptly. At his side stood SeÑor Mendoza, administrator of the Mission of San JosÉ, gravely looking at him.
"Good evening, your Excellency. I hope your health is all of the best," somewhat discomposedly.
"Many thanks, Captain. Your hope is generously fulfilled in me, for my health is indeed good."
The Administrator's expression became quizzical. "May I ask you, brave soldier, why you stand on guard here in the moonlight, bearing that singular-appearing firearm?" pointing to the guitar. "Can it be that renegade Indians threaten?"
"When a soldier stands at guard, SeÑor Administrator, may there not be motives many, other than renegade Indians?"
The other laughed and changed the subject. "Did I but dream the comandante of the pueblo of San JosÉ was to be here to-night, he would have been invited to sit with our council meeting but now concluded. Spring advances, and the rains fall not. Never has Alta California seen such drought. Our live stock sadly need grazing and water. Hence I called the council. I would that you had been present. The military mind is fertile in expedient."
"I fear it would be sadly deficient in surmounting the need of a south wind."
"Our Captain has wit, as well as vigilance. But I am forgetting hospitality, soldier protector of the Mission. Come within. Let others woo, if they will, the goddess of dreams, but for you and me the pleasures of fellowship will hasten lagging hours."
"I thank you, SeÑor Mendoza, but I fear——"
"Fear never a moment, friend Morando. Sentinels watch over us in valley and on hill, men trusty, tried, and true. Eyes have they as keen as eagles; the ears and the swiftness of the fox are theirs. Therefore no vigil need thou keep for us."
Morando still hesitated.
"Come now. Right glad am I that you are here. Within, a glass of wine, a chat, perhaps a harmless game at cards, await us. Soon roll the hours away. Then you gallop across the pastures, alas! dry and bare now, to the pueblo of San JosÉ. I seek my couch soothed by your young companionship. Now, what wilt thou?"
An inarticulate sound behind the embrasure. Don Alfredo could have sworn it concealed a silvery laugh from the fair DoÑa Carmelita.
"The night birds are calling, Don Alfredo. Did you not just hear them?" looking slyly at the captain. "They are sleepy and we arouse them."
Holding his arm and talking the while about the drought and other difficulties the Administrator led Don Alfredo within.
"Brave Captain, place that death-dealing weapon on the chair," pointing a second time to the guitar. "Some new invention, of course, though I seem to see something familiar about it. Seat yourself on that settee. It came to me from Madrid."
"Thank you, seÑor."
With a smile as gracious as the moonlight the seÑor said: "At another time I would ask my daughter, the DoÑa Carmelita, to join us for a little visit, but the child is young and the night already late. She would doubtless wish to sleep."
They were in the Administrator's private sitting room, the duplicate of a room in his father's castle in Spain. Priceless Persian rugs were on the floor, with high-back chairs of solid mahogany everywhere about. A massive secretary, likewise of mahogany, stood at one side. Tapestries designed in Seville hung on one of the walls; weapons of the hunt and of war, another; while oil paintings of battles, in many of which the family Mendoza had been distinguished, completed the adornment.
"Caramba! I ride miles to serenade the daughter; and here I am in the hacienda house, the guest of the father, while the seÑorita is somewhere in the courtyard, laughing, I'm sure—yes, laughing," thought the young soldier.
"Some wine, my Captain? Genuine Malaga it is, guaranteed by government stamp, not the juice of the old Mission grape, excellent as that is. Now, the cigarros. Let us speak, SeÑor Captain, of the General Guerrero. I understand he was once commander of that division in Spain from which you have so lately come. Am I correct?"
"You are, seÑor. The General was my commander so recently that one year will more than bridge the time."
"Guerrero was my captain when, as a subaltern, I sailed these western seas, and saw service in the Philippines—service that was service. Tell me of my one-time leader. Is he well?"
"He is well, and the years have small meaning to his strength."
Captain Morando talked with his host of the campaigns of General Guerrero in the Spanish trans-Mediterranean dependencies; of the newly concluded peace there; and of the retirement of the General by the age limit, but all the while his mind was fashioning love songs outside the window of the fair seÑorita. Through the haze of tobacco smoke the strong, kindly face of the Administrator of Mission San JosÉ de Guadalupe softened into the sweet face of the doÑa, with her laughing eyes and beautiful hair; his deep voice gave way to the lighter tones of the daughter.
"Peace in North Africa brought relief to the young soldier from discomforts of the campaign. Was it not so?"
"SeÑor Mendoza, it brought the weariness of camp and garrison. The morning drill, the after-luncheon parade, the society function in the evening, ill filled my idea of the life a man should live. Besides, the ambitious soldier sees advancement only in a life of action. I sought a change and I found one. My resignation was easily effected. I then carried my letters to the Mexican war secretary, whom I made acquainted with my preference. Accordingly, came my assignment to San JosÉ pueblo."
"Good! Good, my Captain! During my visit in Mexico just concluded I learned that you had been appointed comandante. Some wine in your glass?"
"No more, thank you."
"What, not any? The young man is abstemious. That is well. Strong and lusty age follows youth lived along the way of moderation."
The men puffed their cigars. Higher and higher, in widening circles, rose the incense of the fragrant leaf. The Administrator was busy with his thoughts; likewise the guest. "His daughter, he intimates, is too young for late hours. Many a night, at low twelve, during his sojourn in Mexico, have I sung to her from my corner in the courtyard. What would he say if he knew that to-night is not my first visit thither—nor yet my second—nor my third—nor yet——"
The older man broke the silence. "Soldier, our California needs men."
Morando started slightly, then signified by a movement of the head that he had heard. Mendoza exhaled several whiffs of his Havana before speaking further, meanwhile surveying the alert form and soldierly features of the Captain.
"Life is not all play, as many appear to think it is. Our province has passed the years of childhood. With maturity comes duty as waking with day."
The soldier listened with interest.
"I believe the cleavage of California and Mexico is near at hand. They fall apart by their own weight. Even the Mexican secretary of state spoke openly of this to me a month ago."
"Then what comes, SeÑor Mendoza?"
"There comes that which we ourselves make. On an ethical foundation of the highest order must we build our body politic. Then, when our province becomes free, some protecting nation will extend to us a sister's hand. If in this fruitful land there should prevail the spirit of sweet-do-nothingness, how can we hope that others will consider us highly while we deem ourselves lightly?"
"My time here has been too short to have studied these matters carefully. However, I have heard men speak of a California republic."
"The vision of dreamers, my Captain. We have neither army nor navy, nor can we hope to have them. How could we unaided hold this province situated as it is, the commercial center of these seas and the bosom of resources as yet scarcely touched?"
"Then, in your judgment, it should not be a question of absolute independence?"
"In one sense, no. Yet, I favor a rule by the people. People of enlightenment will govern wisely. Captain Morando, we need men, more men, who will place the common good above their private interest."
"You speak the duty of the soldier, SeÑor Mendoza."
"It is so, Captain." Then turning the conversation back to the situation in the Santa Clara valley: "Have you run across Stanislaus yet? No? Nor Yoscolo? Well, I hope you will soon see both over your pistol barrel. They are a menace to the peace in our valley. Yoscolo is the abler of the two. Many a lively skirmish have my fighting peons had with the scoundrel."
During this time the DoÑa Carmelita mounted a staircase and walked along a passage which had its way over a high, wide adobe wall leading from one part of the house to another. The moonlight fell in weird fantasy on the hacienda grounds. Palms, evergreens, flowers assumed moving shapes, as if engaged in low but animated conversation.
Breezes from San Francisco Bay flowed intermittently into the courtyard, shaking the branches and rattling the leaves. One stronger gust caught spray from a fountain and sent it eddying into the white night. The awakened birds murmured sleepily and myriad crickets chirped remonstrance. Three Spanish mastiffs, guardians of the inclosure, edged away from the impromptu shower, then looked up furtively at the girl, ashamed of temporary cowardice.
Anon there floated down to her from the heights beyond the call of the Indian sentinel as he made his rounds, "Love to God!" followed by the reply from one of his fellows, "Love to God!" With a dozen tongues the hills took up the refrain, "Love to God! Love to God!"
"What can my father and Captain Morando find to talk about so long! Men can gossip as well as women when they are so minded."
She mounted another flight of outside stairs that led to the top of the buildings which formed three sides of the courtyard. The courtyard door was open. Several peons were holding the struggling watchdog while another brought Morando's horse.
"Hold fast those dogs!" SeÑor Mendoza said to the Indians. "They are as fierce as tigers. Good-night, Captain Morando. Remember two weeks from Thursday evening, at six. My daughter's dueÑa will be home from Monterey, and we'll have both to dine with us, with perhaps a few friends, just a valecito casero—a little house party. Good-night. Glad you've some men in the village. The country won't be safe till we rid it of those miscreant renegades. Good-night, Captain."
The heavy door closed. The doÑa saw that Captain Morando rode around the courtyard to the embrasure window, halted and looked up anxiously. Walking to the edge of the roof she stood there, a beautiful picture. He waved his hand.
"O, doÑa mia—" he began. Unfastening a rose from her hair she tossed it to him. The pulsing air caught it, and swaying, whirling, it fell. He reined in his horse, urged it forward, swung it around, keeping in the uncertain downward path of the rose, till finally its stem rested in his hand.
He kissed the flower again and again; then holding it up to her, waved it in rhythmic motion as he had done before with the guitar.
"O, doÑa mia—" he began once more, but the watchdogs bayed savagely and rushed against the adobe fence. His horse shied and sprang away. He wheeled back again.
The seÑorita had disappeared.
CHAPTER II
THE LION AND THE LAMB LIE DOWN TOGETHER
Most unwonted drought had laid a withering hand on fertile Santa Clara valley that year. March had come and no vast stretches of wild oats measured the way from foothill to bay; no juicy grazing for cattle and horses on the rich bottom lands. The plain-brown color-tone of autumn prevailed, not that of spring, in triumphant green and promise of rich harvest.
This interchange prevailed almost everywhere except around the gushing springs at the Mission San JosÉ. Here rioted nature in her proudest fancy, for the intense warmth of day and night had brought to blossom before their time wild plant, oleander, and fruit tree. Here was green grass in luxuriant abundance, while the tall mustard flaunted its yellow top as usual, and afforded a resting place for chattering blackbird and twittering linnet.
The springs on the Administrator's property several miles north of Mission San JosÉ had gradually diminished in flow until only unsightly, trampled mud remained where was a limpid lake in happier years.
The geyserlike warm springs on the property of Don Fulgencio Higuera, SeÑor Mendoza's neighbor to the south, had suddenly run dry. In fact, not more than half a dozen sources of water-supply remained within a radius of a score of miles. The like had never been known, not even in the memory of the oldest Indian in the valley.
Weird relics of Druidic worship, half forgotten under the tutelage of the Mission padres, were revived in forest and mountain. Vast columns of smoke, odoriferous of cedar and bay-leaf, reached high toward heaven in the motionless air. The ancient name of Oroysom replaced on many a tongue that of the smoothly flowing Mission San JosÉ de Guadalupe, which name the missionaries had given the region when their work of Christianizing the Indians began.
"Oroysom, Oroysom, begs thee, Great Spirit, to awake," sang the aborigine. "Let the perfume of laurel propitiate thee. Let the sweetness of the smoke of cedar be a gracious offering unto thee. On the fields of Oroysom no food for beast is found. Gaunt famine is rushing hither in wind-swift pace. Our hunters search stream and wildwood, but find no food for the child, the women, the old people. There is no maize, no field of growing wheat; and, lo! the garden is dry and empty. Oroysom calls on thee, Father of the rain, Source of the springs, and Giver of the harvest, to arouse from slumber and forget no longer the people who from old have honored thee."
Around the great fires at night the Indians swung hand in hand, swaying in willowy motion as they chanted their incantation. Their shadows danced in wildest abandon on the mammoth rocks or mountain peaks which formed the background of the strange scene.
SeÑor Mendoza, the leading spirit among the landholders on the eastern side of the valley, endeavored, as, indeed, did his neighbors, to maintain equanimity, but there was much anxiety among all.
Even water for family use had to be carried on horseback, the vaqueros from ranchos miles away coming to the few remaining water-supplies, and riding back with the precious water skins over the pommel of the saddle.
It was the last week of January when the Administrator first called his fellow landowners together to consider what could be done. They gathered in his sitting room. Graybeards they were, the most of them, and rich in the wisdom of many years, as well as in landed possessions.
Long they smoked the cigarros of the provident Administrator and sipped his rare wines, the while exchanging polite remarks on the nothings of the day. This was their way while waiting to begin attack on some weighty subject. Finally SeÑor Mendoza ordered the serving peons to bring on his choicest cognac, a select French product.
"The Administrator is vastly disturbed over this rainless winter," whispered Don Pedro Zelaya, of the rancho San Lorenzo, to Don Fulgencio Higuera, of the rancho Aguas Calientes. "Paris knows no better cognac than I see here. I divine his anxiety by the quality of his liquors. Last year when renegade Indians threatened he furnished our meeting here with a Portuguese cordial mild as milk. Much as he fears the prowling Yoscolo and Stanislaus, he measures them not high in comparison with this drought."
The leonine-appearing SeÑor Higuera squared his yard-wide shoulders to attention as he sat in his high-backed chair. His eye ran slowly over the slender and dapper SeÑor Zelaya. A trace of humor stole into his eyes, then over his bearded face. "Brandy in the head seldom lends swiftness to the feet. Is it not so?"
Pedro Zelaya was the swiftest foot-racer in the province of California. He was also a lover of good eating and drinking. When training for his famous races he must forego the delicacies of his French cook, and the bouquet of imported wine, which deprivations he relished not over well.
"A thimbleful of brandy is given even to a bull-fighter before the contest," replied SeÑor Zelaya, bowing politely and suavely smiling.
Years before the doughty SeÑor Higuera had seized and held by the horns an infuriated bull which, maddened by eating the dreaded rattleweed, a venomous plant then common, had left the herd and rushed up on Higuera, who was standing, with his wife and children, in the open before the courtyard of his hacienda house.
The peons served the cognac in long, slender-stemmed goblets. SeÑor Mendoza raised his glass, looked for a moment at the amber liquid, then sipped it gently. Lowering the glass he glanced around at the assembled company. Each man, following the example of the host, tasted the contents of his own glass, and then allowed his eyes to rest on the SeÑor Administrator.
This process was repeated once, twice, three times, until each had finished his beverage.
SeÑor Mendoza's aquiline features, garnished by mustache and imperial, and embellished by a waving iron-gray hair, fell into severer mold.
"SeÑors, my friends, may I have your attention?"
No one spoke.
"SeÑors," his tones serious and resonant, "it is not raining to-day."
His assertion was not disputed. The rays of the sun streamed into the room. It was afternoon and the delicately tinted stained glass of the windows was resplendent in the light.
"It rained not yesterday, nor in the yesterday of many months," looking from one to another of his company, as if in search of opposition.
The seÑors, in solemn concord, bowed in corroboration of his statement.
"The soft south wind blows not. Overhead is the summer sun. I see no hope of rain to-morrow."
The grave seÑors acquiesced.
"Indians in thousands, beasts in tens of thousands, are on our lands. Responsibilities, neither few nor doubtful, weigh on our shoulders. If it rains not to-morrow, nor yet till the to-morrows touch late spring, how can we fulfill the duty this province of Alta California lays at our door, that our aborigine wards lack not the sustenance their condition demands?"
His look went from face to face. Suddenly he stood upright.
"SeÑors, to save our people we must save our cattle. Even if the rain comes, the feed will be late. Therefore our herds must go elsewhere soon, or only their dried bones will see another year. Whither shall we take them?"
The foremost in the council gave their views.
"The river to the north, called Russian, nourishes vast caÑons of redwood forest. The soil is ever moist where the heaven-searching redwood grows. Let rafts be made to ferry the animals to the shore of Contra Costa. In another year they will return, with increase, fat and safe. Our peons throughout the year can call hither from that region the supplies we need." Thus Don Antonio Peralta.
As he concluded the other leaders bowed to him solemnly.
The dapper Zelaya indicated to his host, who was yet standing, his wish to speak.
The quiet humor in the heart of SeÑor Higuera stole again into his eyes and over his face and reached his tongue. "Swiftness in the feet means quickness in the mind directing those feet. Let us hear SeÑor Zelaya."
The lord of the rancho San Lorenzo looked musingly at his friend. "I doubt greatly that even SeÑor Higuera could hold a grizzly bear by the horns, since that creature possesses none. At any rate, the grizzly has strength yet greater than our mighty Higuera here. The deep shadows of the Russian river caÑons shelter these enemies in numbers. Our vaqueros could little protect their charges in those glades and thickets. SeÑors," impressively, "if our live stock are to leave their bones bleaching anywhere this season, why send them abroad to seek this privilege?"
"Brava!" said the giant Higuera, smiling approval.
Some one then spoke of the pasturage away to the south, in the valley of the Salinas, or even the rolling lands of Santa Barbara. But the feed could but poorly support the herds already there, so one said who recently had traveled about.
Mendoza resumed his seat, since no one spoke further. For a moment he silently regarded his neighbors. At last: "Friends and brothers mine, SeÑor Peralta has spoken of the north country as a possible solution for our imminent difficulties. SeÑor Zelaya is right. The Russian bear, as well as the California grizzly, would divide our property by piecemeal there. There are yet the river beds of the Sacramento and the San Joaquin."
"But Yoscolo and Stanislaus and their thousand renegades!" objected one. "We go to the mouth of the tiger. More than ever are these men active now."
"Our fighting peons equal in strength their recreant fellows. Nothing remains but for us to cross the passes to the soft bottom lands in the eastern valleys. SeÑors, shall we go?"
The Administrator's judgment was accepted, and the visitors, standing, drank another glass of brandy and departed.
Early the next day began a great exodus of cattle and horses through mountain defile, north and south, to the flat lowlands across the mountain ranges, Indian vaqueros, peons armed with bows and arrows, and here and there a Spaniard with a flint-lock musket going with the herds.
Despite the general departure of live stock the late spring saw wondrous commotion about the watering troughs of SeÑor Mendoza. Cattle from the hills, from the marshes of the bay, from no one knew where, scented water and rushed in thirst-madness to the Mission of San JosÉ; bellowing, leaping, rolling over and over in their frenzy to reach the water!
All day long did the vaqueros rush into the surging tumult, springing with the swiftness of the cat from back to back of cattle or horse in the plunging mass, separating the press here to save the weaker animals from suffocation, opening lanes there to allow ingress to the troughs. Bellowing of cattle mingled with neighing of horses in wildest confusion. Famine showed feverlike in their eyes and echoed madly in their cries. During the day the battle raged, but at night they drew away to the hills looking for the lower tree-foliage and the scanty leaf-forage.
Then came other animals to the water. Thirst drew them from the mountains and drove away their fear of man. The gaunt bear lapped from the trough, and though the bow of the hunter was bent and the arrow aimed to slay, pity withheld the arrow.
The timid deer stood unafraid at the side of its ancient enemies, man and bear. The scream of the mountain lion mingled with the howl of the wolf, as they ran about among men, looking for food after they had quenched their thirst at the watering place.
Some strange chivalry, deep residing in the beasts of prey, held the weaker denizens of the wildwood in safety from claw and fang. In their dire adversity came a literal fulfillment of the old prophecy that the lion and the lamb should lie down together.
SeÑor Mendoza and his friends faced bravely the difficult situation.
"Our Indian brother shows now his likeness of spirit to the four-footed dwellers of the wood. Famine madness possesses both. Together do they roam by day and weirdly cry by night," said Mendoza in the council of his neighbors.
"The Indians lack not food or water," said some one. "What need of such strange actions?"
"The savage is close to the surface in every nature," replied Mendoza. "Among our Indian friends the outcropping is more easily apparent."
Several began speaking at the same time, an unusual thing in that placid assembly. Like a murmur it began, but rose to distinct word and ordered expression. "Our wives, our children, our lives, are in danger from these mad wards the province has given us."
"Our soldiers are at the pueblo," said one.
"They number less than fifty. The Indians have strength and to spare to drive our few troopers into the San Francisco bay," said Zelaya.
"Why were so many aborigines trained in the use of the musket and lance?" from some one else.
"They have fought our battles against their untamed brethren for a generation," replied Mendoza.
As usual this meeting was in Mendoza's house. Directly across the road was the Mission church.
As if to give emphasis to the fears but just expressed from everywhere there came the peculiar semitone that only moccasined feet can make. A thousand footfalls centered their way to the old adobe church. The Indians poured through the open doors into the auditorium until it overflowed. Like restless ants those who could not get within ran around the building, filling every approach, surging in resistless multitude, as did the thirst-driven cattle around the water source.
"They have gone entirely mad! First they will destroy the church, then fall on our families and on us," came somewhere from the elders. "Let us fly to our hacienda houses, barricade our gates, and fight to the end."
"Let us wait," suggested Mendoza, "and see further."
With sudden impulse the aborigines began to move from side to side in singular unison. At first they uttered no sound, then came a crooning of strange medleys in lifeless, indistinct tones.
"They commence thus their war dance!"
SeÑor Mendoza shrugged.
A tall Indian mounted the church steps. He turned. His face was wrinkled, his long hair, white, yet straight and sturdy he stood before the undulating throng.
"'Tis old Juan Antonio, major-domo of the Mission there. When did he come from the region of the San Joaquin? He and the padre drove thither their cattle even before we sent away ours."
The man waved his hand over the people. The tumult was lessened. From the church came the soft chords of the organ. A powerful voice intoned.
"My soul hath magnified the Lord and my spirit hath rejoiced in God, my Saviour."
The organ swelled in thunder notes, as the faithful within the church took up the antistrophe:
"For behold he hath regarded the humility of his handmaid, and from henceforth all generations shall call me blessed."
Thus was sung the Magnificat.
A man came out to the church door. Youth was on face and figure, but care and illness lined his features and bowed the shoulders that showed broad even under his friar's robe. In movements as graceful as a feather's dip he pointed to the Indians, then to their homes scattered over valley and hill. In another gesture he motioned to the neophytes to be on their way. They looked stolidly at one another, then back to the padre who remained standing with his arm outstretched. Savagery flamed anew in their faces. With the growl of an angry beast about to rend its prey they rushed up the steps. The friar, motionless, still stood before them, still pointing to their houses. The mob charged on. They were but a pace distant when, as one man, they paused, held in check by the unswerving calm of the churchman. Back from him, step by step, they went till the ground was reached. Again they paused and looked up at the friar, indecision written on their faces. The padre did not move. With a single impulse they turned homeward and silently filed along the road, in obedience to Padre Osuna's unspoken command. Soon the friar and Juan Antonio were alone. They walked down to a courtyard gate not unlike SeÑor Mendoza's, and disappeared within.
Mendoza and his friends had witnessed the drama to its close.
A rumbling sounded in the distance which soon resolved itself into the measured tramp of horses, so many that their coming shook the ground. The riders, in uniform, with lance in hand and carbine slung over shoulder, pushed their mounts foaming at mouth and flank to the courtyard gate.
"The cavalry from San JosÉ!" cried Mendoza. "What brings them in such haste?"
An officer sprang from his horse.
The Administrator opened his window. "Captain Morando!"
The Captain saluted.
"Why this force, SeÑor Captain?"
"Message was hurried to me that your Indians, frenzied by pagan rites, were about to make an attack. I gathered my men, together with such volunteers as the pueblo afforded, and hot-foot came to the rescue. I see, instead, the Indians going quietly to their homes. What does it mean?"
"Come within, SeÑor Captain."
In a moment Morando stood with the others.
The seÑor told him of the coming of the padre and his dispersal of the Indians.
SeÑorita Carmelita entered the room, bowing to her father, then to the others.
"O, papacito, my Indian maids who ran away last week, in their madness, are back all sane and cool. They ask your forgiveness and a new lease of service."
"You alone have to do with them, my child."
The Captain was standing at attention. Red lightly tinged the girl's cheek as she saw him. She again bowed, and went out, with "I thank you, papacito."
The Indian maidens were heard on the outside loudly wailing their thanks to the seÑorita, as was the way of children of the wild when penitent.
"SeÑors, we need——"
"Rain," interrupted the quiet Higuera.
"SeÑors," continued Zelaya, taking no notice of the interruption, "we need thank the reverend padre for his work this day. Besides, he is ill, and even an enemy who is ill is entitled to our consideration and sympathy. I do not mean he is our enemy," he quickly added.
"I shall do myself the honor of calling upon him," came from Mendoza. "As Administrator of this Mission and its lands I am interested in everyone in the Mission, including its spiritual head. Some Jesuit bark I chance to have will not come amiss in this fever of the river bottoms. I fancy but little remains in the province."
The company departed, the soldiery to the San JosÉ pueblo, the land barons to their hacienda houses.
The hundreds of white adobe cots which swarmed around each grandee's mansion, as well as around the Mission buildings, sheltered that evening the retainer occupants who for days had forgotten service to their feudal lords and the ways civilization had taught them. Once more hill and valley were dotted with the blaze of camp fires before the Indian doorposts.
CHAPTER III
A DIP INTO THE PAST
The family Mendoza had deserved well of the Spanish crown. Stanch supporters of the kingdom had they ever been. Their talents, their wealth, their lives they held only as in trust to be devoted, whenever came the call, to the higher, the nobler good.
Adventurous too were the citizens of that name. With Pizarro they overthrew the Incas of Peru. With Hernando Cortez they stormed the place of strength of the Montezumas. Their swords flashed north and south in the conquering of vast empires. Few of them returned from these scenes of glory, and of those few the greater part were maimed and broken men. The native arrow or the fever swamp claimed life or health of the valiant conquistador, not excepting the famous Mendozas.
Thus sifted in the sieve of centuries, the family Mendoza fell gradually in numbers from men sufficient to fill half a regiment, as in the old crusader times, to but two representatives, of whom the younger was Jesus Maria y JosÉ.
By law of entail the elder brother received the land and fortunes of that once powerful family. A lieutenantship in the army was the portion of the young Jesus Maria y JosÉ, a slender consolation, it might seem, but the bold-spirited youth accepted it with gracious willingness.
His eighteenth year found him embarking on a transport bound for the dangerous service of the Philippines, with a soldiery gathered from the Spanish prisons. To quell and govern such men was a pleasing experience to the Castilian boy; not that the task was an easy one, or that he would have it so.
In the becalmed waters of the tropics the sterling metal of the youthful officer first showed itself. Here the mutinous intent of the men, long smoldering under restraint of discipline, resolved into action.
Early one morning the alarm bell rang loud of danger. The officers hurried on deck to find nearly every soldier under arms and calling aloud for vengeance on the oppressors, as they called their superiors. The leader was a huge, bull-necked cutthroat who once had been a bandit in the Pyrenees.
"Each mincing ladies' man among you shall walk the plank, before the guns of my brave fellows here, and we'll cheer you pretty, scented gentlemen as you battle in the water with the sharks," shouted the jeering leader.
Shouts of applause came from the men, mingled with jibes and curses.
Mendoza asked of his captain that he be allowed to speak with the chief mutineer. He stated briefly his purpose. Permission was given, for the situation was desperate.
The officers, but a score, faced full five hundred men, all armed. Even the artillery of the regiment, shotted to the mouth, was gaping angrily at them from the ranks of the ruffians across deck.
The lieutenant walked to the front bearing his naked rapier in his hand, while the mutinous soldiers, half drunken with liquor looted from the stores of the ship, howled at him.
"Mamma's pet comes straight from the bath to drive about as cattle men that are men. Back to your crib, you reptile infant, or I'll grind you under my heel," threatened the leader.
In incoherent echo his followers stormed: "Throw him to the sharks, for cubs become wolves—cut him into pieces—cast him into the ovens!"
"Attention!" called the young man.
Something, perhaps innate animal respect for bravery, called for obedience. Silence and expectancy fell over them.
"You pretend to despise all your officers. I am the youngest and least among them, yet I dare the best among you to fight me here, I with this light rapier against your heavy cutlass."
The boastful leader pushed forward. Around the villain's head swung his cutlass flaming and glancing in the tropic sun.
"Aha! Aha! young sprig!" in half-drunken glee. "Hear the whistling air divide before my cutlass's edge. I'll strip you from your skin, inch by inch, and dry it on your cabin door. Come now, point to point, you young patrician fool!"
He struck a cleaving blow at the figure before him. The lieutenant's rapier caught the descending blade, wound itself in serpentine curves around it and drew away. The cutlass hurtled to the floor a half dozen paces distant. Numbness seized the mutineer's arm from wrist to shoulder. He examined the member in search of a wound, but found none.
The pack of insubordinates, impelled by their wolf-nature, would follow the leader if he conquered, or rend him if he fell.
Murmurs like the first swell of an angry sea rose among the mob, then burst into yells of derision.
"A schoolboy makes our mighty leader play the fool!"
"Yes, he swings his cutlass as a housewife the broom."
"Throw him overboard and elect a man, not some awkward cow!"
Young Mendoza stood with rapier poised, aimed at his opponent's heart.
"Curse the tricks of feinting and legerdemain your namby-pamby schools teach you in Madrid. Drop your steel fork there and I'll tear you to pieces with my hands."
Instantly the rapier was side by side with the cutlass.
The leader darted forward, his fists striking flaillike blows at the lithe form of the lieutenant.
Mendoza stepped lightly to one side. The opponent stumbled past him.
As the mutineer turned, the open palms of the clever boxer landed right and left with resounding smack on his nose and mouth. Raging and cursing, the ruffian again sprang at the officer. Once, twice, thrice, did the youth's palms beat tattoo on his adversary's bleeding features. Dazed by the blows the man at last fell to the deck.
Hoarse, derisive cries from the band of mutineers again greeted the prostrate man.
"He went forth to chastise a babe, but, behold! it is a wondrous infant," groaned some fellow. "Rise up, brave one, a chance this time may help thee land that useless fist of thine."
The leader writhed alike at the ignominy of defeat and at the irony of his followers. Drawing a knife, as he gained his feet, he flew at Mendoza, despite warning cries even from the ranks of his own men.
The weapon drove straight out with murderous intent. A hush fell over both officers and mutineers.
It seemed an age before the blow came.
It struck on empty air, for the youth, as before, had deftly stood aside. As the other was driven past by his own momentum the boy seized him by the waist and neckband, raised him from the deck, and whirling him over his head, flung him headlong from the taffrail to the sea below.
A man-eating shark which had been following the ship swam toward its prospective prey. Its back fins swirled through the water, as it came dashing up. The poor wretch shrieked in agony. He tried to climb the slippery wood of the ship's side. Time after time he struck deep into the planks the knife which he still held, in vain endeavor to raise himself out of the water by this leverage.
"Help! help, friends, in the Virgin's name!" he entreated.
The shark had nearly reached him and was already turning on its side in preparation for its stroke of death.
Helplessness seemed to possess all.
A figure fell from the taffrail to the side of the desperate man. It was none other than Lieutenant Mendoza. Balancing himself lightly in the water, he wrenched the knife from his enemy's hand, and, as the shark came up, he buried it to the handle in the monster's brain. Its jaws snapped sullenly not the inches of a span away from the head of the screaming bully. Floundering helplessly the creature rolled away. Other man-eating sharks came to the scene. Some of them seized on their helpless brother and tore at his flesh while he still lived. Others swam straight for the human beings at the side of the ship.
By this time the spectators had recovered power of action. A boat was quickly lowered. Muskets and pistols in numbers were fired at the onrushing school of sharks.
Soon the rescued and rescuer were safe on board. There was talk among the officers of court-martials and executions, with the outcome, that, after much persuasion on the part of the young lieutenant, the commander granted his request that the leader be pardoned pending his good behavior.
The troops were not again recalcitrant.
From the swamps and the heat of the Philippines Captain Mendoza—for he had been promoted—returned to Europe. Events which shook the world were stirring there. As an eagle flies to the rescue of its eyrie so hastened the descendant of the valiant Mendozas to the Spain of his fathers, to do battle for its safety.
The figure of Napoleon loomed ominously against Europe's peace. His ambitious hand was reaching for the crown of Spain, as, indeed, for all other crowns.
Into the awful carnage plunged Mendoza. A hundred blows he struck at the terrible Corsican, even though, often enough, the recoil threw him and his command reeling backward in defeat. Nevertheless, did he right nobly add honor and renown to the spotless banner of his house.
Only when Napoleon was exiled to Elba did he leave the field. Then, in command of his regiment, as colonel, he returned to Madrid.
His elder brother, rich in titles and wealth, influential at the Cortes, united his personal petition with the strong voice of the colonel's service in the field, to obtain for the younger man place and emolument.
The vast region of Alta California was then coming into great and favorable notice. Need there would surely be, in the Californias, of men of mettle and of wisdom to hold that province and its riches secure to Spanish rule.
Accordingly, large parcels of land in the valley of Santa Clara, fairest and most fertile in all that western Eden, California, were conferred by letters-patent on the soldier, Mendoza.
He loved a lady fair—Romalda. What man of his family had not? Every knight of La Mancha had his Dulcinea, and Jesus Maria y JosÉ was true to his descent, even to the very finger-tips. The old crusader Mendozas, whose faces were carved in marble or painted on canvas in the ancestral home in Castile, had not been more chivalrous and romantic than was this now famous colonel.
Beautiful daydreams he wove and told to the listening ears of the noble lady. He had seen California, and knew well that part of it where his estate lay. The fire of poetry touched his words, as he sketched for her the estate mightier in length and breadth than any in Castile, fairer than Elysian fields, more fertile than the Andalusian meadows.
No landscape painter could limn mountains more picturesque and stately than did the words of Don Jesus Maria y JosÉ describe the eastern boundary of their domain in the land of far-away California. No minstrel could tell, in song or verse, of lake or bay so fair, so blue, as the inland sea which laved the western limit of their home-to-be.
Lady Romalda hearkened, and she smiled approvingly as she gave him her hand to kiss at parting.
"Soon will I return and claim my bride. The days I spend in the Californias, in preparation for your coming, will be as months and years to me."
She smiled kindly yet again, and waved a kiss at him as he rode forth from her father's gate to prepare the home for her across the many seas.
The soldier reached his California estate in due season, and with industry set about his task of love.
A hacienda house reached high its walls on an eminence near the mountain side of the estate. Moorish in architecture, its towers proudly surveyed the leagues of miles comprising the Mendoza grant. Tree and plant and flower smiled around it in the genial warmth of semitropic atmosphere. Avenues of olive lined its approaches. The Mission grapevine draped many arbors which were arranged in labyrinthine plan, all centering, after infinite curious turns, at the front door of the mansion.
Many ships brought furnishings from the world over for this wonderful palace.
The herds fattened for the killing, and were of great increase on this domain, as needs be, for the expense of the hacienda house was in keeping with its size and beauty.
At last all was ready for the bride. But——
Mexico had declared for independence, and was making good this declaration by force of arms. California would be compelled either to stand with Mexico or to fall with mother Spain. Colonel Mendoza's natural gifts included statecraft. He did not oppose the inevitable. California became a province of the republic of Mexico.
Now hastened the Colonel to claim his bride. In Madrid he found his brother dead, leaving no direct heir. The soldier-cavalier claimed title and estates, but the royal court rebuffed him. He was a foreigner now. His acceptance of Mexican dominion had cost him his Spanish citizenship. The laws of entail debarred him from succession.
He urged the inevitableness of the separation of Mexico from Spain, also his years of service in the Spanish army; likewise the claims of his family to the good will of the kingdom. All was in vain.
Hastening to the castle of his betrothed, he made known his presence, and asked to see the Lady Romalda.
Her father met him in his stead.
"My daughter, the noble doÑa, desires to see you not, Sir Foreigner. For my part I request that you depart from this place and never return."
"Foreigner or not, I'll hear the rejection from the lady's own lips. I demand to see the Lady Romalda, my affianced wife."
After much parley the father brought his daughter to see the determined man.
Mendoza told her again of the home prepared for her near the shores of the sunny Pacific, of the beauty and luxuriance well-nigh Oriental, of the wealth of the land, of the promise of the future.
"Peons, slaves, seÑorita, numbering hundreds, await your pleasure there. A princess will you be, and I will be your lover-husband. Say you will come with me."
The Lady Romalda smiled coldly. "You may become a self-styled prince among a barbarous and rebellious people. Be assured I shall never be a princess of such dishonor."
She swept in disdain from the room.
Mendoza returned to Madrid. Calling on the commander-in-chief of the Spanish army, he held before him the written letters of his colonelcy.
"This paper means I am a colonel in the army of this kingdom. I am such no more." He tore in halves the commission.
"Are you a madman, Colonel Mendoza?" asked the general.
"Behold!"
Bending his sword over his knee he broke it into pieces and cast them on the floor. "By this act I forswear Spain forever."
The old general began to remonstrate with him, but Mendoza turned on his heel and was gone.
Great preparations were under way for the return to California of the lord of the rancho Mendoza with his lady bride. The whole valley was ready to make the occasion a gala time.
Alone, and by night, he came. Calling his major-domos and head peons together, he gave orders which were to be executed early on the morrow, by his thousand vassals.
They were frightened. "Our master is out of his head!" they exclaimed in awe-struck tones. Hastening they told some of the Spanish neighbors of the return of SeÑor Mendoza and of his startling commands.
The Spanish confreres were soon at the castlelike hacienda house.
"SeÑor, the Colonel Mendoza——" began one.
"SeÑor Mendoza I am. Never again colonel."
"But, seÑor, the peons tell us of your strange desires."
"My desires shall be executed, strange or not. At daybreak to-morrow not a stone stands on stone in this hacienda house. On these grounds not tree or plant or shrub stands unuprooted before the darkness of another day."
"But, seÑor, has your visit to Spain affected——"
"My visit to Spain has affected me greatly. Friends and neighbors, at another time I, and all I have, shall be at your disposal. Permit me now to bid you good-night."
Very early next morning the hills echoed to the titanic roar of the powder magazine under the hacienda house, which had been kept there for uses of the hunt, and for defense and offense. SeÑor Mendoza's own hand had lighted the train. Soon fire skirted toppling tower and parapet, searched ruined reception halls, licked up furniture and bric-À-brac, and charred rare valuables. Daylight saw not Moorish castle, but blocks of blackened building stones and smoking rubbish.
Countless peons, with spades, picks and axes, dug up the green and growing things, broke down terraces, tore away grape arbors, and everywhere did works of devastation.
SeÑor Mendoza, as if commanding in battle, directed his workmen. Trees and shrubs were piled high. Fire, made hotter by kegs of turpentine, soon brought all to ash-heaps. Great pits were dug into which the stones of the hacienda building were placed, also the ashes from the bonfires.
"Now," commanded Mendoza, "fill in these trenches."
It was done.
"SeÑors," he said at nightfall, when all was over, "thus I bury the past. Henceforth, remember, I pray you, that I am SeÑor Mendoza, the Californian, that, and that only."
The rains of the following winter made the site of the once-beautiful castle and grounds again a part of the rolling, grassy lands overlooking the valley.
SeÑor Mendoza devoted himself faithfully to the interests of his rancho and the welfare of California.
He built another home five miles from where the first had been, and altogether out of sight of it; a house of California style, the buildings forming three sides of a square, with a wall making the fourth side of the courtyard within.
In middle life the wish had come to found a family to succeed him in his possessions. He married the daughter of a neighbor, a maiden of Castilian blood, but of California birth. A child was born to them, a daughter, and in that hour his wife died. Never was parent kinder or gentler than SeÑor Mendoza to the DoÑa Carmelita, his pride and joy.
The authorities in Mexico City thought it right to deprive the Franciscan friars of a part of the lands they held in Alta California, this act of the secularization of the missions causing comment of both approval and disapproval.
The leaders in the capital city chose SeÑor Mendoza to administer the claims of church and state in the valley of Santa Clara. Thus he became administrator of the Mission of San JosÉ, where the opening of this story found him, a man of strength and of honesty, a statesman and a courtly gentleman.
CHAPTER IV
A STRANGER VISITS SEÑOR MENDOZA
"Papacito mine, I'm all ready for the party this evening. My maids have just finished with me. What do you think of me?"
The SeÑorita Carmelita pirouetted into her father's sitting room, stood on one foot, then on the other, finally turning completely around.
"Papacito, what do you think of me?" she asked again.
The father knit his brows in pretended deep consideration.
"Hurry! Hurry, papacito! Really I can't wait any longer, I'm so anxious to know."
"My child, you make me think of a very pretty, very dainty wild flower."
"Just a flower, papacito?" in mock disappointment.
"Well, a flower with laughing eyes, splendid hair, and white plumage," pointing to her dress.
"That's better, little papa, somewhat better. Isn't it magnificent that we're to have a valecito casero? In school in Mexico City we went to bed regularly at eight o'clock. To-night it will be midnight, and later. When I think of my present freedom and the old school days my heart rejoices itself; yet I loved the school and everyone in it. Often in dreams I am in those old rooms overlooking the Plaza Mercedes, and I hear the splashing of the fountains and the singing of the birds."
"My child's heart lives in scenes left behind months ago, yet the spirit rejoices in present liberty. Well, it is the way of the world."
Carmelita was sitting on the arm of her father's chair stroking his face and hands, and occasionally giving gentle pulls to his long mustache. Strangely alike were these two, the slender, dark-eyed girl, and the stalwart, graying man, athletic-appearing even in his years. The waving mane above his forehead was the prototype of the coal-black hair of the seÑorita which billowed over her shoulders and fell below her waist.
His cheek was bronze, showing dashes of red; hers was creamy, with the blush of youth surmounting; but it was the contour of face and form of both, strongly chiseled, yet superbly fine, that bespoke a model fashioned and perfected generations before in aristocratic Spain.
"What a philosopher my father is!" Then, after a moment: "Yesterday SeÑor Zelaya said to SeÑor Higuera, as they passed along the corridor, 'But the Administrator says that we must educate ourselves to a deeper appreciation—' I did not catch the rest. SeÑor Higuera replied, 'And the Administrator has a philosophy of deep and wide application.' Tell me about it."
"My daughter, I think you would prefer a more interesting story. My philosophy, if you made it rightly, has been long in coming to me. On the other hand, the estate of womanhood now present with you seems to have grown overnight."
Carmelita arose, curtsied to her father, then resumed her seat.
"But my philosophy touches not any abstract principle. It deals only with powers that move the human heart."
"Vast political forces are astir in this old world of ours. The theory that God appoints kings is rapidly dissipating. The sun of democracy, long mantled by the fog of tyranny, shines soon in unobscured ray. In the to-morrow of to-morrow shall the people rule, as their right divine."
The seÑorita smiled into her father's eyes. "Lolita Hernandez once said to me, a long time ago, when she was petulant, that my father is a rebel. I replied by calling her a minx."
The old don made no reply; but continued: "'Westward the course of empire takes its way.' An English poet sings this truly and well. To the east of California is a republic destined to a colossal future, because it is founded on the principle that all men are created equal, and its national life rises toward a realization of that truth. To that height must rise not alone the Saxon but the Latin as well.
"The geography of nations in our Western world must soon change, under the influence of the democratic idea. As certain as the sun rose this morning and now urges to the setting, will either the American or the English flag float from the staff within our courtyard before our province has seen but a few more years of life."
"But," hesitatingly from the girl, "will you not fight against this aggression?"
"No; nor could I stem the tide if I did. The logic of events grinds, as do the mills of the gods, exceeding fine. In the great world battle between people and potentate, victory, final and complete, will rest one day with the people. The cost of that battle will be measured in centuries of time, the blood of nations, the sacrifice of warriors and statesmen. Runnymede, in the south of England, in the year 1215, saw the beginning of the conflict when the people forced King John to sign the Magna Charta!"
"History speaks of the family de la Mendoza as made up of warriors. Your own name, father mine, is mentioned, and not as the least, yet you will never speak to me of any battle."
He pointed to a small painting. It depicted Waterloo.
"I'd give my experience of all the battles I've seen could I have stood there that evening with Wellington, on Mount Saint Jean, when the sun of day had set and Napoleon's sun of destiny with it. I would have rejoiced to have chased the emperor of the French over the plowed field at night, as does a hound drive the hare. Yet—what matters it all? As well for Napoleon to rule, or misrule, as for any other tyrant, be he anointed king or not. The day of the people comes, and I rejoice."
"Shall we follow new ways and customs then, my father?"
"Quite possibly. And yet, think you not it a pretty custom when the Spaniard comes with his guitar and improvises sweet music outside the embrasure window of the seÑorita? No?"
The doÑa blushed rosy red.
"What a papacito!" kissing him to cover her confusion. "How shall the seÑorita inside the embrasure prevent the music-inclined caballero on the outside from touching the strings of his guitar?"
Mendoza laughed while looking fondly at his daughter.
"You ask me how the doÑa may discourage the suitor? Ah, little one, how can I tell you? The claws show sharp and repelling, or presto! all is soft and smooth as velvet. What works the wonder, ask you? Ah, Carmelita mia! Lolita Hernandez is not the only minx in the world."
The girl playfully tugged at her father's thick hair.
"What a father is mine! He has seen all things and has accomplished all things," changing the subject. "Has ever there been an ungratified wish in your life, except the one to chase the emperor of the French across plowed fields? If so, now is your chance. I will be your fairy godmother. Come, make your wish, and, behold! It is done."
She had slipped from the chair and standing, held her arms extended over him. "Make your wish now," laughingly.
"My child, I have a wish, but its fulfillment would involve the folding together of events that time has unfolded; indeed, the turning backward of time."
She dropped her hands in concern. "O, papacito, tell me your desire," coming again to the arm of his chair.
He did not reply.
"O, little papa, you are so serious. Please tell me what it is."
"I wish, little girl, that as a stripling I had come here and had built my life into this Western world. That favor of kings I had never known—I care nothing for their disfavor—but of my own self, coupled with the resources with which nature has endowed California, I had evolved the best that fortune would have sent me, were it hacienda house and administratorship, or a humble hut with modest plot of ground, such as has the least of my peons."
A tap at the door.
"Enter," from Mendoza.
A peon stepped within. Thrice he bowed low to the master, then to the doÑa.
"SeÑor Mendoza, a stranger awaits you in the outer office."
"Does he give his name?"
"Here it is, seÑor."
The peon porter handed Mendoza a piece of paper on which was written, in bold, rough characters, "Charles O'Donnell."