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"Oh, Excellency!" he said, reproachfully, "How is it possible that you, who have hitherto been so kind to us, could have had the thought of committing such an act of cruelty?"
The General burst out laughing.
"Do you imagine I would have done it?" he said, with a shrug of his shoulder.
The merchant struck his forehead with a gesture of despair.
"Ah!" he exclaimed, "We were idiots."
"Hang it, did you have such a bad opinion of me? Caramba, Señor, I do not commit such acts as that."
"Ah," the merchant said, with a laugh, "I have not paid yet."
"Which means?"
"That now I know what I have to expect. I shall not pay."
"Really, I believed you cleverer than that."
"Why so?"
"What? You do not understand that a man may hesitate to execute thirty persons, but when it comes to only one man, who, like yourself, has a great number of misdeeds on his conscience, his execution is considered an act of justice, and carried out without hesitation?"
"Then, you would shoot me?"
"Without the slightest remorse."
"Come, come, General, you are decidedly stronger than I am."
"You flatter me, Señor Lionel."
"No, I tell you what I think; it was cleverly played."
"You are a judge."
"Thanks," he answered, with a modest smile. "To spare you the trouble of having me executed, I will execute myself," he added, good temperedly, as he felt his coat pocket.
He drew out a pocketbook crammed with Bank of England notes, and made up the sum of two thousand piastres, which he laid on the table.
"I have now only to thank you," the General said, as he picked up the notes.
"And I you, Excellency," he answered.
"Why so?"
"Because you have given me a lesson by which I shall profit when the occasion offers."
"Take care, Señor Lionel," the General said, meaningly; "you will not, perhaps, come across a man so good-natured as myself."
The merchant restored the portfolio to his pocket, bowed to the General, and went out. It was three o'clock; all had been finished in less than an hour; it was quick work.
"Poor scamps, after all, those gringos," the General said, when he was alone; "oh, if we had not to deal with mountaineers and campesinos we should soon settle this population."
"General," said an aide-de-camp, as he opened the door, "Colonel Melendez asks whether you will deign to receive him, in spite of the late hour?"
"Is Colonel Melendez here?" the General asked in surprise.
"He has this instant arrived, General; can he come in?"
"Of course; show him in at once."
In a few minutes the Colonel appeared.
"Here you are at last," the General cried, as he went to meet him; "I fancied you were either dead or a prisoner."
"It was a tossup that one of the two events did not happen."
"Oh, oh! Then you have something serious to tell me."
"Most serious, General."
"Hang it, my friend, take a chair and let us talk."
"Before all, General," the Colonel remarked, "do you know our position?"
"What do you mean?"
"Only, General, that you may possibly be ignorant of certain events that have happened."
"I think I have heard grave events rumoured, though I do not exactly know what has happened."
"Listen, then! The Libertad corvette is in the hands of the insurgents."
"Impossible!" the General exclaimed, bounding in his chair.
"General," the young officer said, in a mournful voice, "I have to inform you of something more serious still."
"Pardon me, my friend, perhaps I am mistaken, but it seems to me highly improbable that you could have obtained such positive news during the pleasure trip you have been making."
"Not only, General, have the insurgents seized the Libertad, but they have also made themselves masters of the Fort of the Point."
"Oh!" the General shouted, as he rose passionately, "this time, Colonel, you are badly informed; the Fort of the Point is impregnable."
"It was taken in an hour by thirty Freebooters, commanded by the Jaguar."
The General hid his face in his hands, with an expression of despair impossible to render.
"Oh! It is too much at once," he exclaimed.
"That is not all," the Colonel continued, sharply.
"What have you to tell me more terrible than what you have just said?"
"A thing that will make you leap with rage and blush with shame, General."
The old soldier laid his hand on his heart, as if wishful to arrest its hurried beating, and then said to the Colonel, in a tone of supreme resignation
"Speak, my friend; I am ready to hear all."
The Colonel remained silent for some minutes; the despair of the brave old soldier made him shiver.
"General," he said, "perhaps it would be better to defer till tomorrow what I have to say to you; you appear fatigued, and a few hours, more or less, are not of much consequence."
"Colonel Melendez," the General said, giving the young officer a searching glance, "under present circumstances a minute is worth an age. I order you to speak."
"The insurgents request a parley," the Colonel said, distinctly.
"To parley with me?" the General answered, with an almost imperceptible tinge of irony in his voice. "These Caballeros do me a great honour. And what about, pray?"
"As they think themselves capable of seizing Galveston, they wish to avoid bloodshed by treating with you."
The General rose, and walked sharply up and down the room for some minutes. At length he stopped before the Colonel.
"And what would you do in my place?"
"I should treat," the young officer replied, unhesitatingly.
CHAPTER III
THE RETREAT
After this frankly expressed opinion there was a rather lengthened silence, and the Colonel was the first to resume the conversation.
"General," he went on, "you evidently know nothing of the events that have occurred during the last four and twenty hours."
"How could I know anything? These demons of insurgents have organised Guerillas, who hold the country and so thoroughly intercept the communications, that out of twenty spies I have sent out, not one has returned."
"And not one will return, be assured."
"What is to be done, then?"
"Do you really wish for my advice, General?"
"On my honour, I desire to know your real opinion; for you are the only one among us, I fancy, who really knows what is going on."
"I am aware of it. Listen to me, then, and do not feel astonished at anything you may hear, for all is positively true. The information I am about to have the honour of communicating to you was given me, by the Jaguar himself, scarce three hours back, at the Salto del Frayle, whither he invited me to come to converse about some matters in no way connected with politics."
"Very good," the General remarked, with a slight smile. "Go on, I am listening to you with the deepest attention."
The Colonel felt himself blush under his chief's slightly ironical smile; still he recovered himself, and continued
"In two words, this is our position: while a few bold men, aided by a privateer brig under the American flag, carried by surprise the Libertad "
"One of the finest ships in our navy!" the General interrupted, with a sigh.
"Yes, General, but unhappily it is now an accomplished fact. While this was taking place, other insurgents, commanded by the Jaguar in person, got into the Fort of the Point, and carried it almost without a blow."
"But what you tell me is impossible!" the old soldier interrupted with a burst of passion.
"I tell you nothing that is not rigorously true, General."
"The vague rumours that have reached me, led me to suppose that the insurgents had dealt us a fresh blow but I was far from suspecting such a frightful catastrophe."