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"There is little to do. Arturo had gone for Father Ramirez.
"If only the Senora will speak to my unhappy child, I shall be most thankful. Tell her that her grandmother is no more, but restrain her from coming for a time into the chamber of death.
"Soon I shall have done all. I shall then come for my child and lead her to the dear one."
As the Dona Maria finished speaking, she vanished from my side.
As I heard her close the door of her mother's room, I knew that she would first pray before the shrine of the little Virgin.
For a moment I listened in the silence, almost longing myself to entreat comfort of the image.
I remembered how I had fainted Christmas morning, and how gladly I had regained consciousness in the protecting presence of the little Mother.
I knew that the Dona Maria would gain strength and courage before the shrine of her implicit faith, and my own heart hungered for a touch of palpable comfort.
What if the little image was only painted wood? It whispered something to the simple, aching heart that a stern theology could never say.
Alas! I knew that for myself there was nothing but blind hope and fruitless speculation. I could never have knelt before a picture or a shrine, but I envied, none the less, the Spanish woman who found peace and comfort, while I so often suffered in the dark, unsatisfied and rebellious.
When at last I heard quiet steps, I knew that the Dona Maria had arisen from her prayers. I knew that in her sorrowing heart there was a blessed faith, childlike and strong, that would help her to perform, quietly and correctly, the last sad offices for her dead.
CHAPTER XXII.
I sought in vain about the house and garden for Mariposilla.
The child had not been away from the ranch since the news of Sidney's marriage, and her sudden absence alarmed me.
I remembered that it was Sat.u.r.day. Perhaps Mariposilla had gone to the old church for confession. Arturo had the pony, and for a moment I was in despair.
Fortunately a neighbor arrived with a horse and buggy, which I borrowed.
I was determined not to alarm the Dona Maria, and drove away at once in the direction of the Old Mission. The road, for the first time, seemed long and uninteresting. The neighbor's horse was an ancient nag, who discovered at once my impatience and inexperience. He absolutely refused to accelerate his midsummer dog-trot. The persuasions of a stranger he ignored.
Despairing, I submitted, while I vaguely questioned myself as to what I should do, in case Mariposilla had not gone to the church.
When at last I caught sight of the long, gray outline, hiding among cool, green peppers, my heart seemed to stand still.
As I turned into the main approach leading to the Mission, the old bells broke suddenly the oppressive silence. Their melancholy strokes were for the dead; perhaps for the Dona Maria's mother, I thought.
Mechanically I counted the tolls, until their number had reached sixteen, then the old bells paused a moment before they again repeated the years of the youthful dead.
Upon approaching nearer I perceived that a funeral procession had just left the church. An a.s.sistant priest and a barefooted Mexican altar-boy stood framed in the arch of the ancient portal.
The sad little procession was now entering the old graveyard at the rear of the Mission. I could hear the sobs of the mourners, and my heart went out to the poor mother, garbed in faded mourning, bowed with both grief and labor.
The little coffin was borne on a bier by six swarthy young Mexicans, possibly one of them the lover of the dead girl.
The sight was pathetic, and at this particular time I felt it to be more than I could bear.
A moment later I peered into the old church--it was empty.
Where now could I go? To whom should I apply for help?
Father Ramirez was evidently not about; a strange priest had followed the funeral procession, and doubtless the old friend of the Del Valles had gone at once with Arturo.
I had probably missed pa.s.sing them by taking a different road, having endeavored to shorten the distance by a cut through a ranch.
Mechanically I climbed into the buggy, believing that there was no course left but to return home for a.s.sistance, when in the distance I saw, almost like a sign from on high, the deserted hotel of East San Gabriel.
Without stopping to consider the probable absurdity of my surmise, I started the old horse upon the maddest race of his life.
In my excitement the wielding of the whip was a nervous joy.
The old bones of the beast seemed almost to crack as he leaped along the road.
All at once I seemed to be acting without reason, for when I at last entered the grounds of the deserted caravansary, there were no evidences to justify my suspicions.
The summer's silence was intense; not a human being was visible, and the desolation pervading the deserted resort was sickening as well as satisfying.
I felt that I had been absurd to believe for a moment that Mariposilla could have wished to reenter the place, and I was also convinced that, in her feeble condition, she could never have walked the distance from the ranch.
The old horse was now resting in front of the silent hotel, and my very inaction was unbearable. I racked my brain to the verge of despair, before I again hit upon a possible explanation for Mariposilla's disappearance.
Why had I not thought of it before? Why had I taken it for granted that Arturo had gone alone for Father Ramirez? The priest drove always in his own conveyance, and what could be more natural than to believe that Arturo had induced Mariposilla to accompany him upon his errand? Was it not reasonable to believe that the young people had laid aside their personal feelings at such a time, desiring to perform together a last, trifling duty to the dead grandmother?
True to the comforting inspiration, I had turned the reluctant horse to leave the grounds, when, rus.h.i.+ng joyfully in front of the astonished brute, I beheld the hounds, Mariposilla's grayhounds, who knew where their little mistress was hiding.
Hastily hitching the horse to the nearest tree I reconnoitered at once the long veranda. Each door that I tried was locked; the windows were fastened, and the inside blinds closed.
Close at my heels followed the dogs, now wildly excited.
As a last resort, I decided to urge them to lead me.
"Dear Pachita! dear Pancho!" I cried, patting encouragingly their long, beautiful heads, while I entreated their almost human eyes to reply.
"Take me to Mariposilla."
"Where is Mariposilla?" I repeated, slowly, "your dear little mistress, Mariposilla?"
For a moment, the poor brutes whined piteously; the next, they had darted away to the rear of the hotel.
I followed hotly, and at the corner of the house I perceived them wild with excitement at the foot of the escape ladder, leading from the ground to the upper veranda.
I needed no more to convince me of the truth.
Mariposilla had ascended the ladder which the dogs had not been able to scale. The half-frantic girl had sought to enter again the rooms once occupied by the Sandersons.