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"I can be quite as foolish as you," Inez repeated as Roddy continued to regard her. "Some day, when this is over, when you have made it all come right, we will sit out here and pretend that we have escaped from Venezuela, that we are up North in my mother's country--in your country. We will play these are the rocks at York Harbor, and we'll be quite young and quite happy. Have you ever sat on the rocks at York Harbor," she demanded eagerly, "when the spray splashed you, and the waves tried to catch your feet?"
Roddy was regarding her in open suspicion. He retreated warily.
"York Harbor!" he murmured. "I discovered it! It is named after me.
But you! I never imagined you'd been there, and I never imagined you could be anything but serious, either. It makes you quite dangerous."
"Dangerous?" murmured the girl.
"One is dangerous," said Roddy, "when one is completely charming."
The girl frowned, and her shoulders moved slightly. "You speak," she said, "like a Venezuelan."
But Roddy was in no mood to accept reproof.
"I told you," he said, "I admire the fools who rush in where angels fear to tread. There is another man I admire equally, 'the man who runs away.' It takes great courage to run away. I must do it now."
He retreated from her. His eyes were filled with a sudden, deep delight in her, and a growing wonder. The girl regarded him steadily.
"Come here," she commanded, "and say 'Good-by' to me."
Roddy took the slim, gauntleted hand stretched out to him, and for an instant the girl held his hand firmly, and then nodded. The smile this time was very near to tears.
"What you are going to do," she said, "is the dangerous thing. You don't know how dangerous. If I should not see you again----"
Roddy looked down into her eyes, and laughed from utter happiness.
"You will see _me_ again," he said.
His tone gave to the words a meaning which the girl entirely disregarded.
"You will remember," she went on, as though he had not spoken, "that we--that I am grateful."
Roddy turned and smiled out at the sunlit sea.
"You have given me," he answered, "other things to remember."
He pulled off his sombrero and took the gauntleted hand in both of his. He bowed over it and brushed it with his lips. The girl still regarded him steadily, questioningly.
"Good-by," faltered Roddy.
His eyes sought hers wistfully, appealingly, with all that he felt showing in them. But her own told him nothing. Roddy released her hand with an effort, as though it were bound to his with manacles.
"Now I know," he said gently, "why I came to Venezuela."
The girl made no answer, and silently Roddy mounted and rode away.
When he had reached the place where the rocks would hide her from sight he glanced back. He saw Inez standing beside her pony, leaning with her arms across the saddle, looking after him. Then, as he waved his hand, she raised hers with a gesture that seemed to Roddy partly a farewell, partly a benediction.
The stable at which Roddy had told Pedro he would leave the pony was far in the suburbs, and by the time he had walked to Willemstad the morning was well advanced.
[Ill.u.s.tration: "Now I know why I came to Venezuela!"]
As he approached the quay he recognized that in his absence some event of unusual interest had claimed the attention of the people.
Everywhere men were gathered in little groups, gesticulating, laughing, frowning importantly, and at the hotel Roddy was surprised to see, on the balcony leading from his room, Peter and the American Consul. The sight of him apparently afforded them great satisfaction, and they waved and beckoned to him frantically. Ignoring their last meeting, the Consul greeted Roddy as though he were an old friend.
"Have you heard the news?" he demanded. "It is of great local interest, and it should interest you. Last night," he explained, "President Alvarez declared an amnesty for his political opponents living in foreign countries. All exiles may now return to their homes."
He pointed at the small pa.s.senger steamer lying at the quay directly below the window. The _Blue Peter_ was at the fore, and her deck was crowded with excited, jubilant Venezuelans.
"You see," explained Captain Codman, "they have lost no time."
In a tone that precluded the possibility of discussion, Peter briskly added: "And _we_ are going with them. I have packed your bag and paid the bill. We sail in an hour."
The news of the amnesty bewildered Roddy. The wonderful possibilities it so suddenly presented thrilled him. They were so important that with difficulty he made his voice appear only politely interested.
"And Senora Rojas?" he asked.
"I regret to say," answered Captain Codman, "she decides to take advantage of the amnesty. As soon as she can arrange her affairs here she will return to Miramar, her home in Porto Cabello."
To Miramar! Roddy turned suddenly to the window, and with unseeing eyes stared at the busy harbor. By sight he knew the former home of the Rojas family. In his walks he had often pa.s.sed before its yellow-pillared front and windows barred with intricate screens of wrought iron. Through the great gates that had hung before Miramar since it had been the palace of the Spanish Governor-General, and through which four horses could pa.s.s abreast, he had peered at the beautiful gardens. He had wondered at the moss-covered statues, at the orchids on the flamboyant trees, with their flowers of scarlet, at the rare plants, now neglected and trailing riotously across the paths, choked with unkempt weeds. Not an hour before, when he had parted from Inez, he had determined to make sentimental journeys to that same house. For she had walked in those gardens, it was through those gates she had swept in her carriage to take the air in the Plaza; at night, when she slept, some high-ceilinged, iron-barred room of that house had sheltered her. He had pictured himself prowling outside the empty mansion and uncared-for garden, thinking of the exile, keeping vigil in the shadow of her home, freshly resolving to win back her father to health and freedom.
And now, by a scratch of the pen, the best that could happen had come to him. The house would waken to life. Instead of only the fragrance clinging to the vase, the rose itself would bloom again. Again Inez would walk under the arch of royal palms, would drive in the Alameda, would kneel at Ma.s.s in the cool, dark church, while, hidden in the shadows, he could stand and watch her. And though, if he hoped to save her father, stealth and subterfuge would still be necessary, he could see her, perhaps, speak to her; at least by the faithful Pedro he could send her written words, flowers, foolish gifts, that were worth only the meaning they carried with them.
Feeling very much of a hypocrite, Roddy exclaimed fervently:
"How wonderful for Senora Rojas! To be near him again! Is she happy?
Does it make it easier for her?"
With a disturbed countenance the Consul nodded gravely.
"Yes," he answered, "she welcomed the change. She believes it means for her husband better conditions. She hopes even for his pardon; but--" The Consul shook his head impatiently, and with pitying eyes looked down upon the excited men on the steamer below them.
"But what?" demanded Roddy.
"I suspect every act of Alvarez," the Consul explained. "This _looks_ like the act of a generous opponent. But I cannot believe it is that.
I believe he knows all that is being plotted against him. I believe this act of amnesty is only a device to put the plotters where he can get his hand on them. He is the spider inviting the flies into his parlor."
As the little steamer pa.s.sed the harbor mouth and pushed her nose toward Porto Cabello, Roddy, with Peter at his side, leaned upon the starboard rail. Roddy had a.s.sured Inez that Peter must be given their full confidence, and he now only waited a fitting moment to tell him of what had occurred that morning, in so far, at least, as it referred to the tunnel.
The eyes of both were turned toward Casa Blanca, now rapidly retreating from them. And, as they watched it, the mind of each occupied with thoughts of its inmates, they saw a white figure leave the house, and, moving slowly, halt at the edge of the cliff.
Roddy, his eyes straining toward the coast-line, took off his hat and stood with it clasped in his hands. Peter saw the movement, and to hide a smile of sympathy, looked down at the white foam rus.h.i.+ng below them.