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"Any theory as to what you've got there?"
"Y'r Mercy's supper. The Senor Coronel Lopez does not desire that Y'r Mercy should have any complaint."
"Oh, none whatever, Johnny, except what I'm to die of. Set it down, here on the feather bed."
There were a few native dishes, with a botellon of water and a jar of wine. Driscoll tipped the botellon to his lips. His whiskey flask had contained poison, though the poison of ink, and as he drank, he pondered on why water should not be an antidote for the poisons that lurk in whiskey flasks. Then he wondered why such foolish conceits at such times persist in shouldering death itself out of a man's thoughts. And meanwhile, there stood the precursor of his end, in the emblematic person of a very brown John the Baptist. The fellow's gorgeous red jacket was unb.u.t.toned, revealing a sordid dirty s.h.i.+rt. He was officer of the guard, and had a curiosity as to how a Gringo about to be shot would act. He waited clumsily, lantern in hand. But he was disappointed. There seemed to be nothing out of the commonplace. Some condemned Mexican, though a monotonously familiar spectacle, would yet have been more entertaining.
Driscoll looked at him over the botellon. That earthen bottle had not left the prisoner's lips. It had stopped there, poised aloft by an idea.
"See here," Driscoll complained, "where's the rest of the water I'm to have?"
"Of what water, senor?"
"For my bath, of course. Don't I die to-morrow?"
"Yes, but----"
"Here, this wine is too new for me. Drink it yourself, if you want."
"Many thanks, senor, with pleasure. But a bath? I don't understand."
"No? Don't you Mexicans ever bathe before you die?"
"We send for the padre."
"Oh, that's it! And he spiritually washes your sins away? But suppose you couldn't get your padre?"
The Indian shuddered. "Ai, Maria purisima, one's soul would go to everlasting torment!"
"There! Now you can understand why I count so much on ablution. It's absolution."
The native readily believed. Like others of his cla.s.s, he thought all Protestants pagans, and none Catholic but a Mexican. "Must be something like John the Baptist's day, verdad, senor?" he said. "On that holy day, once a year, we must all take a bath."
"Quite right too," Driscoll returned soberly. "A man should go through most anything for his religion.--Haven't noticed my horse there, have you, Johnny?" The guard p.r.i.c.ked up his ears. "Of course not," Driscoll went on, "you're worrying about my soul instead. Well, so am I. We Americans, you know, save our yearly baths for one big solemn final one, just before we die. And if I don't get mine to-night, I'll be a.s.sociating with you unshrived Mexicans hereafter, and that would be pretty bad, wouldn't it? It's what made me think of my horse there. That horse, Johnny, is heavy on my soul. He's most too heavy to wash away.
Now, I'm not going to tell you that I actually stole him; but just the same, if a good man like you would take him, after I'm gone--why, I'd feel that he was washed off pretty well."
The Mexican's sympathy grew more keen.
"But the other sins," Driscoll added, "they'll need water, and a great plenty, too."
Juan Bautista was feeling the buckskin's knees. Driscoll longed to choke him, but instead, he drove again at the wedge. "Another thing, I'll have to leave my money behind." He mentioned it casually, but his breath stopped while he waited for the effect. The guard straightened.
Demijohn's knees seemed to be all right. He took up the tray, and opened the door, yet without a word. Driscoll's fist doubled, to strike and run for it. Then the fellow spoke.
"Does Y'r Mercy want soap too?"
The fist unclenched. "No," came the reply, almost in a joyful gasp, "this is for, for G.o.dliness only."
"One jar, senor?"
"Bless me, no! Two big ones, bigger'n a barrel."
With a parting glance at Demijohn, the guard stole forth to gratify the heathen's whim.
"I'll give him enough to _buy_ a horse," Driscoll resolved.
CHAPTER XXIV
THE MAN WHO DID NOT WANT TO BE SHOT
"A horse and a man Is more than one, And yet not many."
--_Taming of the Shrew_.
"Now Berthe--why, what in the world----" Jacqueline began.
It was her second morning to awake in the hacienda house, and the little Bretonne tripped into her room under a starchy mountain heaped high.
"Clothes, madame," she replied.
"He mais----"
"They were made yesterday by some of the ranchero women. Madame will look?"
"Calico! Grands dieux!"
There were two dresses, one for each girl. The native seamstresses had slyly taken stock of mademoiselle the day before, only to discover that a "simple" frock from Paris was a formidable thing to duplicate. The marchioness smiled, and the maid also.
"But, for example, Berthe, who inspired this?"
"He did."
"He?"
"The American monsieur, of course."
"Oh, the American monsieur, of course! So, monsieur permits himself to observe that I need a wardrobe? But you, Berthe, you surely did not----"
"Oh, no, madame! I knew nothing, till just now, when the woman brought them. The monsieur ordered them yesterday, she said. And naturally, madame, if he could have found better material, I do not doubt----"
"There, child, I'll not be reproached by your even thinking it necessary to defend----"
"And madame will see, too, that they will do nicely." She spread the frocks on the bed, and began snipping here and there with the scissors and taking st.i.tches everywhere. "By letting it out this way--voila, if madame will kindly slip it on?"
"Berthe, you can't mean--Oh nonsense!"
None the less the skirt pa.s.sed over her head, and the maid's deft fingers kept on busily. "And why not?" she talked as she worked, "unless one likes rags better. And who will see? Only men. Poof, those citizens do not know percale from a Parisian toilette."