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"I accept Lynch Law," he said.
"Yes," all present shouted, "Lynch Law."
A few hours later, Bloodson regained his camp, and it was after this interview that Valentine had the conversation with Don Pablo, as he returned from Red Cedar's jacal, which we described at the beginning of the volume.
CHAPTER XX.
RED CEDAR.
Now that we have explained the incidents that took place during the six months that had elapsed between Dona Clara's death and the conversation in the cavern during the storm, we will resume our narrative where we left it at the end of chapter three.
Only a few minutes after the hacendero's son had left, the door of the jacal was roughly opened--four men entered. They were Red Cedar, Fray Ambrosio, Sutter, and Nathan. They appeared sad and gloomy, and the water poured down from their clothes as if they had come out of the river.
"Halloh," the monk said; "what! No fire or light, and nothing in the calli to greet us. You do not care much for us, I fancy."
Red Cedar kissed his daughter on the forehead, and turning to Fray Ambrosio, to whom he gave a pa.s.sionate glance, he said roughly--
"You are in my house, my master: do not oblige me to remind you of that fact; so begin by being civil to my daughter, if you do not wish me to give you a lesson."
"Hum!" the monk remarked with a growl; "Is this young woman so sacred, that you should fire up at the slightest word addressed to her?"
"I do not fire up," the squatter replied, sharply, as he struck the table with his fist; "but your way of speaking does not please me, I tell you; so do not oblige me to repeat it."
Fray Ambrosio made no answer; he understood that Red Cedar was in a state of mind unfavourable for a discussion; he therefore prudently refrained from any remark that might lead to a quarrel, which he seemed as anxious to avoid as the squatter to pick it. During the exchange of these few sentences, Ellen, helped by her brothers, had lit a torch of candle wood, rekindled the fire, the absence of which was felt, and placed on the table a meal, sufficient, if not luxurious.
"Caballeros," she said in her gentle voice, "you are served."
The four men sat round the table with the eagerness of hungry persons who are desirous of breaking a long fast. Before raising the first morsel to his lips, the squatter, however, turned to his daughter.
"Ellen," he said to her kindly, "will you not sit down with us?"
"Thank you, father, but I am not hungry; it would be really impossible for me to swallow the least morsel."
The squatter sighed, but raising no objection, he began to serve his guests, while Ellen retired into the darkest corner of the shanty. The meal was sad; the four men seemed busy in thought, and ate quickly and silently. When their hunger was appeased, they lit their pipes.
"Father," Nathan suddenly said to Red Cedar, who was sorrowfully watching the smoke ascend in spirals to the roof; "I have found a trail."
"So have I," the monk remarked.
"And I, too," the squatter said; "what of that?"
"What of that?" Fray Ambrosio shouted. "Canarios, gossip, you take things very lightly. A trail in the desert always reveals an enemy."
"What do I care for that?" Red Cedar replied, with a shrug of his shoulders.
"What?" the monk shouted, as he sprang up; "That is very fine, on my word; to hear you, one might fancy you were an entire stranger to the question, and that your life is not at stake like ours."
"Who tells you that I wish to defend it?" the squatter replied, giving him a look which made his eyes fall.
"Hum!" the monk remarked, after a moment's silence; "I can understand that you do not cling to life; you have gone through so much, that you would not regret death; but there is one thing you forget, gossip, not referring to myself, though I have a right to reproach you."
The squatter carelessly shook the ashes out of his pipe, filled it again, and went on smoking as if not paying the slightest attention to the monk's remarks. The latter frowned and clenched his fists, but recovering his temper almost immediately, he continued, with feigned indifference, while playing with his knife--
"Yes, you forget one thing, gossip, which however, is worth remembering."
"What is it?"
"Your children, cospita!"
The squatter gave him an ironical glance.
"Oh, _por Dios santo!_" the monk went on; "I do not refer to your sons, for they are strong and resolute men, who can always get out of a sc.r.a.pe; I do not trouble myself about them at all."
"About whom, then?" the squatter asked, looking at him sharply.
"Why, for your daughter Ellen, canarios! What will become of her, if you die?" the monk said, with that boldness peculiar to timid persons, who wish to know at once if the mine they have fired will crush them. The squatter shook his head sadly.
"That is true," he said, with a glance at his daughter.
The monk smiled--the blow had told, so he went on.
"In destroying yourself, you destroy her," he said; "your obstinacy may cause her death, so take care."
"What is to be done?" the squatter asked.
"Take our precautions, _voto de Dios!_ believe me, we are watched; remaining longer here would be the utmost imprudence."
The squatter's sons nodded their a.s.sent.
"It is evident," Sutter observed, "that our enemies have discovered our trail."
"And that they will soon be here," Nathan added.
"You hear?" the monk went on.
"Once again I ask, what is to be done?" Red Cedar asked.
"Caspita, be off as speedily as possible."
"Where can we go at this advanced season of the year? The snow will soon cover the ground, and interrupt all communication; if we leave the jacal, we run a risk of dying of hunger."
"Yes, if we remain in the desert," the monk observed, in an insinuating voice.
"Where do you propose going then?" the squatter asked.