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Just as he spoke the door opened, and the gaoler, whispering to them to walk carefully, beckoned them to follow him, while he led the way to the cell of the young Goncalo. The son uttered a cry of joy, as he rose to embrace his father, and then sunk down languidly on his couch. For many minutes they remained in earnest conversation; the fidalgo seeming to forget his daughter in the joy of recovering his son, while Luis, in the mean time, explained to Fre Diogo the importance of the paper he had preserved, beseeching him to lend his a.s.sistance, either in aiding his escape, or in forwarding the fidalgo's despatch to Oporto.
"I am happy to do all I can to mitigate the irksomeness of your imprisonment, my friend; but it is more than I can do to risk my neck in aiding your escape, or carrying any communication beyond the walls of the prison, which would, most certainly, be discovered, and punished with almost equal severity. Think better of it, Count; there is no use running so much risk for the sake of any girl under the sun. Let her take the veil, she will be happy enough; and, when you get out of this place, you can easily find another to make amends for her loss."
"You have never been in love, to speak thus," exclaimed Luis.
"No, thank Heaven, I never have," answered the Friar. "I never saw any good come of such folly."
"Then, have I no hopes of your a.s.sistance?" asked Luis.
The Friar shook his head.
Meantime the fidalgo rose from his son's couch, over which he had been leaning, and took the Count's hand--"Pardon me, for all the wrong I have done you!" he exclaimed; "but you see how severely I have been punished.
My poor boy!" and he pointed to young Goncalo, and his voice faltered--"and my fair daughter. Have you persuaded the good Friar to forward the letter I will write to the Lady Abbess?"
"He refuses to aid me," answered Luis, again appealing, in vain, to the Friar.
"Then I have no hope!" exclaimed the unhappy father, sinking into a chair.
The bolts, as he spoke, were heard to be withdrawn, and a stranger entered the cell.
Volume 3, Chapter XXI.
The day following the execution of the Duke of Aveiro and his unhappy companions, a fine merchant s.h.i.+p was seen to glide slowly up the broad Tagus, dropping her anchor within a short distance of a frigate, which lay off Lisbon. A person of some consequence seemed to be on board the former, for a boat quickly pushed off from the sides of the frigate, bearing her Captain; and approached the merchantman. He eagerly stepped on board, and hastened towards a venerable and dignified-looking man, who was pacing the deck, with short and hurried steps, casting anxious glances towards the city, while several attendants stood round, and various chests and packages lay about, as if ready for speedy disembarkation.
No sooner did the stranger see the Captain of the frigate, than he advanced to embrace him, with an expression of satisfaction, "Ah! my kind friend, Captain Pinto," he exclaimed, "this is kind indeed! The last to see me off, and the first to welcome my return to Portugal, no longer a wanderer and an outcast, but at length with my toils at an end, and my property secured."
"I rejoice to hear it," answered our old friend, Captain Pinto, "though I have some sad news to give in return, which I will communicate as we pull on sh.o.r.e, if you are now prepared to accompany me."
"Gladly! I long once more to tread my native land," returned the stranger, as he descended with the Captain into the boat. The distance to the landing-place was not great; but, during the short time occupied in reaching it, many important matters were discussed; and, for the first time, the stranger learned of the conspiracy, and the dreadful punishment of those supposed to be the chief leaders, and the imprisonment of many hundreds of others implicated in it.
"Poor boy! it wrings my heart with grief to hear it!" exclaimed the stranger, as they neared the sh.o.r.e: "I cannot believe him guilty."
"Nor I neither," said the Captain. "I have in vain endeavoured to discover the place of his imprisonment, and would risk all to save him.
It is reported that the Minister has determined to punish many more, either by banishment to the coast of Africa, or by death; but, without interest, as I am, I could do nothing till your arrival, for which I have anxiously waited. Our only chance of success is by an appeal to the Minister himself."
"To the Minister we will appeal, then," said the stranger; "I have some hope through him. He will scarcely refuse the first pet.i.tion of an old and long-lost friend."
"We have not a moment to lose; for Sebastiao Joze is a man both quick to think and to execute, and even now my young friend may be embarking for Angola," said the Captain, as the boat touched the sh.o.r.e.
A smile of satisfaction pa.s.sed over the stranger's features, as he once more landed in his native country, but it quickly vanished as he thought of all the miseries that country was suffering; and, accompanied by Captain Pinto, whose well-known person enabled him to pa.s.s without the interference of the police, he hurried towards the residence of the Minister. As they arrived in sight of the house, they observed a strong body of cavalry das.h.i.+ng down the street at full speed, who halted in front of it, and, from among them, the commanding figure of Carvalho was seen to dismount from his horse, and enter the building.
"What means this?" asked the stranger. "Does the preserver of his country require a body-guard?"
"The corrector of abuses, we should say, or the despotic tyrant, as his enemies call him, does," observed the Captain, cautiously. "Alas! by such means only can our countrymen be governed."
When they arrived, they found a guard drawn up in the entrance-hall; and after Captain Pinto had sent up his name, requesting an audience, they were compelled to wait a considerable time in an ante-room, before they were admitted.
The stranger smiled,--"Times have changed since we parted," he said.
The great Minister rose to receive them, with his usual courtesy, as they entered, desiring them to be seated, while his piercing eye glanced sternly at the stranger with an inquiring look, as he demanded of the Captain the cause of his visit.
"I came, your Excellency, to introduce one, whom, with your permission, I will now leave to plead his cause with you," and, bowing profoundly, he withdrew.
The Minister rose, as did the stranger.
"I cannot be surprised that you should not recognise in these furrowed and care-worn features the countenance of him who was the friend of your youth," said the latter.
"My recollection is not liable to be deceived," said the Minister, scanning the stranger still more earnestly. "They recall the likeness of one long since dead, and truly mourned--one to whom I owed a debt of grat.i.tude never to be repaid--the preserver of my life!"
A gleam of satisfaction pa.s.sed over the stranger's features. "I am not forgotten, then!" he exclaimed. "You see before you one long supposed dead--him, I trust, of whom you speak."
"What!" cried the Minister, grasping the stranger's hand. "Speak! are you the friend of my days of neglect and poverty,--does the Luis d'Almeida I loved so well still live?"
"The same, my friend," cried the stranger, as they warmly embraced; "and great is my satisfaction to find that I am not forgotten."
"'Tis a happiness I can seldom, if ever, enjoy, to call any one my friend," said the proud Minister; and a shade pa.s.sed across his brow, as he thought how completely he had isolated himself from his fellow-men.
He had chosen his station--it was one of power and grandeur, but of danger and remorse. In each statesman of the country he saw a foe eager to hurl him from his post; and in no one who exhibited talent would he place confidence; he perceived treachery and hatred in the glance of every courtier around him, though he felt he could rule them but with a rod of iron.
The two friends talked long and earnestly together, forgetful of the flight of time.
"I have one pet.i.tion to make to you," said Senhor d'Almeida, for so we may call the stranger; "it is my first, and it shall be my last."
"What! cannot I see my only friend without hearing that hateful word?"
interrupted Carvalho, and a frown darkened his brow. "Yet let me hear it, for I would not willingly refuse you."
"I would ask for the pardon of one in whom all my affections are centred--the young Count d'Almeida, my nephew."
"Ah! I have been deceived in that youth! He is accused of the darkest treason," exclaimed the Minister.
"I will answer for his innocence--he is incapable of a dishonourable deed," answered the uncle, warmly.
"He is in prison with others equally culpable, and I have vowed to show no mercy to any," returned the Minister. "If I waver, they deem mercy arises from weakness, and my power is at an end."
"Then have I lived and toiled in vain," said the stranger. "Pardon me, I ask but this grace, and I find that I have presumed too far on the love you bore me."
"Stay, my friend!" exclaimed the Minister. "You wrong me and yourself: I will not refuse your request, but on one condition: your nephew must forthwith quit the country, and till he embarks, appear to no one. He is not proved innocent, and the guilty must not escape punishment. I will send some one who will, this night, set him at liberty, and conduct him to the house where you reside: from thenceforward he is under your charge; and remember, he must run no risk of being retaken."
The stranger expressed his sincere thanks to his powerful friend; and at length rose to depart. Carvalho accompanied him to the ante-room, and as he saw the worthy Captain Pinto still waiting--"Senhor Pinto," he said, "prepare to sail, to-morrow morning, for England; I have despatches to send by you."
The Captain intimated the readiness of his s.h.i.+p for sea; and, accompanied by the stranger, whom the Minister again affectionately embraced, he withdrew.
Volume 3, Chapter XXII.
We must once more return to the cell of the younger Goncalo Christovao, in the Jungueira prison. The person who entered, narrowly scrutinised the features of all the occupants; the only one of whom that seemed rather uneasy under his glance being the good Fre Diogo.
"What! you here, and in this disguise, my old friend," he said, laughing. "Are you caught at last, then?"
"I am in no disguise, but in the habit of the order to which I belong, Senhor Antonio," said the Friar.