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<h2> CHAPTER XXIII </h2>
<p>She then led me to the kitchen at the end of the house. It was one of
those roomy, old-fashioned kitchens still to be found in a few <i>estancia</i>
houses built in colonial times, in which the fireplace, raised a foot or
two above the floor, extends the whole width of the room. It was large and
dimly lighted, the walls and rafters black with a century's smoke and
abundantly festooned with sooty cobwebs; but a large, cheerful fire blazed
on the hearth, while before it stood a tall, gaunt woman engaged in
cooking the supper and serving <i>maté</i>. This was Ramona, an old
servant on the <i>estancia</i>.</p>
<p>There also sat my friend of the tangled tresses, which he had evidently
succeeded in combing well out, for they now hung down quite smooth on his
back and as long as a woman's hair. Another person was also seated near
the fire, whose age might have been anything from twenty-five to
forty-five, for he had, I think, a mixture of Indian blood in his veins,
and one of those smooth, dry, dark faces that change but little with age.
He was an undersized, wiry-looking man with a small, intensely black
moustache, but no whiskers or beard. He seemed to be a person of some
consequence in the house, and when my conductress introduced him to me as
“Don Hilario,” he rose to his feet and received me with a profound bow. In
spite of his excessive politeness I conceived a feeling of distrust
towards him from the moment I saw him; and this was because his small,
watchful eyes were perpetually glancing at my face in a furtive manner,
only to glance swiftly away again whenever I looked at him; for he seemed
quite incapable of meeting the gaze of another. We drank <i>maté</i> and
talked a little, but were not a lively party. Doña Demetria, though she
sat with us, scarcely contributed a word to the conversation; while the
long-haired man—Santos by name, and the only peon on the
establishment—smoked his cigarette and sipped his <i>maté</i> in
absolute silence.</p>
<p>Bony old Ramona at length dished up the supper and carried it out of the
kitchen; we followed to the large living-room, where I had been before,
and gathered round a small table; for these people, though apparently
poverty-stricken, ate their meals after the manner of civilised beings. At
the head of the table sat the fierce old white-haired man, staring at us
out of his sunken eyes as we entered. Half rising from his seat, he
mentioned to me to take a chair near him, then, addressing Don Hilario,
who sat opposite, he said, “This is my son Calixto, just returned from the
wars, where, as you know, he has greatly distinguished himself.”</p>
<p>Don Hilario rose and bowed gravely. Demetria took the other end of the
table, while Santos and Ramona occupied the two remaining seats.</p>
<p>I was greatly relieved to find that the old man's mood had changed; there
were no more wild outbursts like the one I had witnessed earlier in the
evening; only occasionally he would fix his strange, burning eyes on me in
a way that made me exceedingly uncomfortable. We began the meal with
broth, which we finished in silence; and while we ate, Don Hilario's swift
glances incessantly flew from face to face; Demetria, pale and evidently
ill at ease, keeping her eyes cast down all the time.</p>
<p>“Is there no wine this evening, Ramona?” asked the old man in querulous
tones when the old woman rose to remove the broth basins.</p>
<p>“The <i>master</i> has not ordered me to put any on the table,” she
replied with asperity, and strongly emphasising the obnoxious word.</p>
<p>“What does this mean, Don Hilario?” said the old man, turning to his
neighbour. “My son has just returned after a long absence; are we to have
no wine for an occasion like this?”</p>
<p>Don Hilario, with a faint smile on his lips, drew a key from his pocket
and passed it silently to Ramona. She rose, muttering, from the table and
proceeded to unlock a cupboard, from which she took a bottle of wine.
Then, going round the table, she poured out half a tumblerful for each
person, excepting herself and Santos, who, to judge from his stolid
countenance, did not expect any.</p>
<p>“No, no,” said old Peralta, “give Santos wine, and pour yourself out a
glass also, Ramona. You have both been good, faithful friends to me, and
have nursed Calixto in his infancy. It is right that you should drink his
health and rejoice with us at his return.”</p>
<p>She obeyed with alacrity, and old Santos' wooden face almost relaxed into
a grin when he received his share of the purple fluid (I can scarcely call
it juice) which maketh glad the heart of man.</p>
<p>Presently old Peralta raised his glass and fixed his fierce, insane eyes
on me. “Calixto, my son, we will drink your health,” he said, “and may the
curse of the Almighty fall on our enemies; may their bodies lie where they
fall, till the hawks have consumed their flesh, and their bones have been
trodden into dust by the cattle; and may their souls be tormented with
everlasting fire.”</p>
<p>Silently they all raised their glasses to their lips, but when they set
them down again, the points of Don Hilario's black moustache were raised
as if by a smile, while Santos smacked his lips in token of enjoyment.</p>
<p>After this ghastly toast nothing more was spoken by anyone at the table.
In oppressive silence we consumed the roast and boiled meat set before us;
for I dared not hazard even the most commonplace remark for fear of
rousing my volcanic host into a mad eruption. When we had finished eating,
Demetria rose and brought her father a cigarette. It was the signal that
supper was over; and immediately afterwards she left the room, followed by
the two servants. Don Hilario politely offered me a cigarette and lit one
for himself. For some minutes we smoked in silence, until the old man
gradually dropped to sleep in his chair, after which we rose and went back
to the kitchen. Even that sombre retreat now seemed cheerful after the
silence and gloom of the dining-room. Presently Don Hilario got up, and,
with many apologies for leaving me, explaining that he had been invited to
assist at a dance at a neighbouring <i>estancia</i>, took himself off.
Soon afterwards, though it was only about nine o'clock, I was shown to a
room where a bed had been prepared for me. It was a large, musty-smelling
apartment, almost empty, there being only my bed and a few tall, upright
chairs bound with leather and black with age. The floor was tiled, and the
ceiling was covered with a dusty canopy of cobwebs, on which flourished a
numerous colony of long-legged house-spiders. I had no disposition to
sleep at that early hour, and even envied Don Hilario, away enjoying
himself with the Rocha beauties. My door, looking out to the front, was
standing wide open; the full moon had just risen and was filling the night
with its mystic splendour. Putting out my candle, for the house was now
all dark and silent, I softly went out for a stroll. Under a clump of
trees not far off I found an old rustic bench, and sat down on it; for the
place was all such a tangled wilderness of great weeds that walking was
scarcely practicable and very unpleasant.</p>
<p>The old, half-ruined house in the midst of the dusky desolation began to
assume in the moonlight a singularly weird and ghost-like appearance. Near
me on one side was an irregular row of poplar-trees, and the long, dark
lines cast from them by the moon fell across a wide, open space where the
rank-growing thorn-apples predominated. In the spaces between the broad
bands made by the poplar-tree shadows, the foliage appeared of a dim,
hoary blue, starred over with the white blossoms of this night-flowering
weed. About these flowers several big, grey moths were hovering, suddenly
appearing out of the black shadows and when looked for, noiselessly
vanishing again in their mysterious ghost-like manner. Not a sound
disturbed the silence except the faint, melancholy trill of one small
night-singing cicada from somewhere near—a faint, aerial voice that
seemed to be wandering lost in infinite space, rising and floating away in
its loneliness, while earth listened, hushed into preternatural stillness.
Presently a large owl came noiselessly flying by, and, perching on the
topmost boughs of a neighbouring tree, began hooting a succession of
monotonous notes, sounding like the baying of a bloodhound at a vast
distance. Another owl by and by responded from some far-off quarter, and
the dreary duet was kept up for half an hour. Whenever one bird ceased his
solemn <i>boo-boo-boo-boo-boo</i>, I found myself with stilled breath
straining my sense to catch the answering notes, fearing to stir lest I
should lose them. A phosphorescent gleam swept by close to my face, making
me start at its sudden appearance, then passed away, trailing a line of
faint light over the dusky weeds. The passing firefly served to remind me
that I was not smoking, and the thought then occurred to me that a cigar
might possibly have the effect of relieving me from the strange,
indefinable feeling of depression that had come over me. I put my hand
into my pocket and drew out a cigar, and bit the end off; but when about
to strike a vesta on my matchbox, I shuddered and dropped my hand.</p>
<p>The very thought of striking a loud, exploding match was unendurable to
me, so strangely nervous did I feel. Or possibly it was a superstitious
mood I had fallen into. It seemed to me at that moment that I had somehow
drifted into a region of mystery, peopled only by unearthly, fantastic
beings. The people I had supped with did not seem like creatures of flesh
and blood. The small, dark countenance of Don Hilario, with its shifty
glances and Mephistophelian smile; Demetria's pale, sorrowful face; and
the sunken, insane eyes of her old, white-haired father—were all
about me in the moonlight and amongst the tangled greenery. I dared not
move; I scarcely breathed; the very weeds with their pale, dusky leaves
were like things that had a ghostly life. And while I was in this morbid
condition of mind, with that irrational fear momentarily increasing on me,
I saw at a distance of about thirty yards a dark object, which seemed to
move, fluttering in an uncertain way towards me. I gazed intently on it,
but it was motionless now, and appeared like a black, formless shadow
within the shade of the trees. Presently it came again towards me, and,
passing into the clear moonlight, revealed a human figure. It flitted
across the bright space and was lost in the shade of other trees; but it
still approached, a waving, fluttering figure, advancing and receding, but
always coming nearer. My blood turned cold in my veins; I could feel my
hair standing up on my head, until, unable to endure the terrible suspense
longer, I jumped up from my seat. A loud exclamation of terror came from
the figure, and then I saw that it was Demetria. I stammered out an
apology for frightening her by jumping up, and, finding that I had
recognised her, she advanced to me.</p>
<p>“Ah, you are not asleep, señor,” said she quietly. “I saw you from my
window come out here more than an hour ago. Finding you did not return, I
began to grow anxious, and thought that, tired with your journey, you had
fallen asleep out here. I came to wake you, and to warn you that it is
very dangerous to lie sleeping with your face exposed to the full moon.”</p>
<p>I explained that I had felt restless and disinclined to sleep, regretted
that I had caused her anxiety, and thanked her for her thoughtful
kindness.</p>
<p>Instead of leaving me then, she sat quietly down on the bench. “Señor,”
she said, “if it is your intention to continue your journey to-morrow, let
me advise you not to do so. You can safely remain here for a few days, for
in this sad house we have no visitors.”</p>
<p>I told her that, acting on Santa Coloma's advice, given to me before the
fight, I was going on to the Lomas de Rocha to see a person named
Florentino Blanco in that place, who would probably be able to procure me
a passport from Montevideo.</p>
<p>“How fortunate it is that you have told me this!” she replied. “Every
stranger now entering the Lomas is rigorously examined, and you could not
possibly escape arrest if you went there. Remain with us, señor; it is a
poor house, but we are well disposed towards you. To-morrow Santos shall
go with a letter from you to Don Florentino, who is always ready to serve
us, and he will do what you wish without seeking you.”</p>
<p>I thanked her warmly and accepted the offer of a refuge in her house.
Somewhat to my surprise, she still remained seated on the bench. Presently
she said:</p>
<p>“It is natural, señor, that you should not be glad to remain in a house so
<i>triste</i>. But there will be no repetition of all you were obliged to
endure on first entering it. Whenever my father sees a young man, a
stranger to him, he receives him as he received you to-day, mistaking him
for his son. After the first day, however, he loses all interest in the
new face, becoming indifferent, and forgetting all he has said or
imagined.”</p>
<p>This information relieved me, and I remarked that I supposed the loss of
his son had been the cause of his malady.</p>
<p>“You are right; let me tell you how it happened,” she replied. “For this
<i>estancia</i> must seem to you a place unlike all others in the world,
and it is only natural that a stranger should wish to know the reason of
its sad condition. I know that I can speak without fear of these things to
one who is a friend to Santa Coloma.”</p>
<p>“And to you, I hope, señorita,” I said.</p>
<p>“Thank you, señor. All my life has been spent here. When I was a child my
brother went into the army, then my mother died, and I was left here
alone, for the siege of Montevideo had begun and I could not go there. At
length my father received a terrible wound in action and was brought here
to die, as we thought. For months he lay on his bed, his life trembling in
the balance. Our enemies triumphed at last; the siege was over, the Blanco
leaders dead or driven into exile. My father had been one of the bravest
officers in the Blanco forces, and could not hope to escape the general
persecution. They only waited for his recovery to arrest him and convey
him to the capital, where, doubtless, he would have been shot. While he
lay in this precarious condition every wrong and indignity was heaped upon
us. Our horses were seized by the commander of the department, our cattle
slaughtered or driven off and sold, while our house was searched for arms
and visited every week by an officer who came to report on my father's
health. One reason for this animosity was that Calixto, my brother, had
escaped and maintained a guerilla war against the government on the
Brazilian frontier. At length my father recovered so far from his wounds
as to be able to creep out for an hour every day leaning on someone for
support; then two armed men were sent to keep guard here to prevent his
escape. We were thus living in continual dread when one day an officer
came and produced a written order from the Comandante. He did not read it
to me, but said it was an order for every person in the Rocha department
to display a red flag on his house in token of rejoicing at a victory won
by the government troops. I told him that we did not wish to disobey the
Comandante's orders, but had no red flag in the house to hang up. He
answered that he had brought one for that purpose with him. He unrolled it
and fastened it to a pole; then, climbing to the roof of the house, he
raised and made it fast there. Not satisfied with these insults, he
ordered me to wake my father, who was sleeping, so that he also might see
the flag over his house. My father came out leaning on my shoulder, and
when he had cast up his eyes and seen the red flag he turned and cursed
the officer. 'Go back,' he cried, 'to the dog, your master, and tell him
that Colonel Peralta is still a Blanco in spite of your dishonourable
flag. Tell that insolent slave of Brazil that when I was disabled I passed
my sword on to my son Calixto, who knows how to use it, fighting for his
country's independence.' The officer, who had mounted his horse by this
time, laughed, and, tossing the order from the <i>comandancia</i> at our
feet, bowed derisively and galloped away. My father picked up the paper
and read these words: 'Let there be displayed on every house in this
department a red flag, in token of joy at the happy tidings of a victory
won by the government troops, in which that recreant son of the republic,
the infamous assassin and traitor, Calixto Peralta, was slain!' Alas,
señor, loving his son above all things, hoping so much from him, and
enfeebled by long suffering, my poor father could not resist this last
blow. From that cruel moment he was deprived of reason; and to that
calamity we owe it that he was not put to death and that our enemies
ceased to persecute us.”</p>
<p>Demetria shed some tears when telling me this tragical story. Poor woman,
she had said little or nothing about herself, yet how great and enduring
must have been her grief. I was deeply moved, and, taking her hand, told
her how deeply her sad story had pained me. Then she rose and bade me good
night with a sad smile—sad, but the first smile that had visited her
grief-clouded countenance since I had seen her. I could well imagine that
even the sympathy of a stranger must have seemed sweet to her in that
dreary isolation.</p>
<p>After she left me I lit my cigar. The night had lost its ghostly character
and my fantastic superstitions had vanished. I was back once more in the
world of men and women, and could only think of the inhumanity of man to
man, and of the infinite pain silently endured by many hearts in that
Purple Land. The only mystery still unsolved in that ruinous <i>estancia</i>
was Don Hilario, who locked up the wine and was called <i>master</i> with
bitter irony by Ramona, and who had thought it necessary to apologise to
me for depriving me of his precious company that evening.</p>
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