<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XXVII" id="CHAPTER_XXVII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXVII</h2>
<h3>HIDDEN THINGS</h3>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_258" id="Page_258"></SPAN></span>The next day Señor Don Guzman de Cardona arrived,
and the whole house was in a commotion of excitement.
There was to be no school, and everything was bustle and
confusion. I passed my time in my own room in reflecting
severely upon myself for the imprudent words by which I
had thrown one more difficulty in the way of this poor
harassed child.</p>
<p>Dolores this day seemed perfectly passive in the hands
of her mother and sisters, who appeared disposed to show
her great attention. She allowed them to array her in her
most becoming dress, and made no objection to anything
except removing the bracelet from her arm. "Nobody's
gifts should take the place of her mother's," she said, and
they were obliged to be content with her wearing of the
diamond bracelet on the other arm.</p>
<p>Don Guzman was a large, plethoric man, with coarse
features and heavy gait. Besides the scar I have spoken
of, his face was adorned here and there with pimples,
which were not set down in the miniature. In the course
of the first hour's study, I saw him to be a man of much
the same stamp as Dolores's father—sensual, tyrannical,
passionate. He seemed in his own way to be much struck
with the beauty of his intended wife, and was not wanting
in efforts to please her. All that I could see in her was
the settled, passive paleness of despair. She played, sang,
exhibited her embroidery and painting, at the command of
Madame Mendoza, with the air of an automaton; and Don<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_259" id="Page_259"></SPAN></span>
Guzman remarked to her father on the passive obedience
as a proper and hopeful trait. Once only when he, in
presenting her a flower, took the liberty of kissing her
cheek, did I observe the flashing of her eye and a movement
of disgust and impatience, that she seemed scarcely
able to restrain.</p>
<p>The marriage was announced to take place the next
week, and a holiday was declared through the house.
Nothing was talked of or discussed but the <i>corbeille de
mariage</i> which the bridegroom had brought—the dresses,
laces, sets of jewels, and cashmere shawls. Dolores never
had been treated with such attention by the family in
her life. She rose immeasurably in the eyes of all as the
future possessor of such wealth and such an establishment
as awaited her. Madame Mendoza had visions of future
visits in Cuba rising before her mind, and overwhelmed
her daughter-in-law with flatteries and caresses, which she
received in the same passive silence as she did everything
else.</p>
<p>For my own part, I tried to keep entirely by myself. I
remained in my room reading, and took my daily rides,
accompanied by my servant—seeing Dolores only at mealtimes,
when I scarcely ventured to look at her. One
night, however, as I was walking through a lonely part of
the garden, Dolores suddenly stepped out from the shrubbery
and stood before me. It was bright moonlight, by
which her face and person were distinctly shown. How
well I remember her as she looked then! She was dressed
in white muslin, as she was fond of being, but it had been
torn and disordered by the haste with which she had come
through the shrubbery. Her face was fearfully pale, and
her great, dark eyes had an unnatural brightness. She laid
hold on my arm.</p>
<p>"Look here," she said, "I saw you and came down to
speak with you."<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_260" id="Page_260"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>She panted and trembled, so that for some moments she
could not speak another word. "I want to ask you," she
gasped, after a pause, "whether I heard you right? Did
you say"—</p>
<p>"Yes, Dolores, you did. I did say what I had no right
to say, like a dishonorable man."</p>
<p>"But is it true? Are you sure it is true?" she said,
scarcely seeming to hear my words.</p>
<p>"God knows it is," said I despairingly.</p>
<p>"Then why don't you save me? Why do you let them
sell me to this dreadful man? He don't love me—he
never will. Can't you take me away?"</p>
<p>"Dolores, I am a poor man. I cannot give you any of
these splendors your father desires for you."</p>
<p>"Do you think I care for them? I love you more than
all the world together. And if you do really love me, why
should we not be happy with each other?"</p>
<p>"Dolores," I said, with a last effort to keep calm, "I am
much older than you, and know the world, and ought not
to take advantage of your simplicity. You have been so
accustomed to abundant wealth and all it can give, that
you cannot form an idea of what the hardships and discomforts
of marrying a poor man would be. You are unused
to having the least care, or making the least exertion
for yourself. All the world would say that I acted a very
dishonorable part to take you from a position which offers
you wealth, splendor, and ease, to one of comparative hardship.
Perhaps some day you would think so yourself."</p>
<p>While I was speaking, Dolores turned me toward the
moonlight, and fixed her great dark eyes piercingly upon
me, as if she wanted to read my soul. "Is that all?" she
said; "is that the only reason?"</p>
<p>"I do not understand you," said I.</p>
<p>She gave me such a desolate look, and answered in a
tone of utter dejection, "Oh, I didn't know, but perhaps<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_261" id="Page_261"></SPAN></span>
<i>you</i> might not want me. All the rest are so glad to sell
me to anybody that will take me. But you really do love
me, don't you?" she added, laying her hand on mine.</p>
<p>What answer I made I cannot say. I only know that
every vestige of what is called reason and common sense
left me at that moment, and that there followed an hour of
delirium in which I—we both were <i>very</i> happy—we forgot
everything but each other, and we arranged all our
plans for flight. There was fortunately a ship lying in the
harbor of St. Augustine, the captain of which was known
to me. In course of a day or two passage was taken, and
my effects transported on board. Nobody seemed to suspect
us. Everything went on quietly up to the day before
that appointed for sailing. I took my usual rides, and did
everything as much as possible in my ordinary way, to disarm
suspicion, and none seemed to exist. The needed
preparations went gayly forward. On the day I mentioned,
when I had ridden some distance from the house,
a messenger came post-haste after me. It was a boy who
belonged specially to Dolores. He gave me a little hurried
note. I copy it:—</p>
<div class="blockquot"><p>"Papa has found all out, and it is dreadful. No one
else knows, and he means to kill you when you come back.
Do, if you love me, hurry and get on board the ship. I
shall never get over it, if evil comes on you for my sake.
I shall let them do what they please with me, if God will
only save <i>you</i>. I will try to be good. Perhaps if I bear
my trials well, he will let me die soon. That is all I ask.
I love you, and always shall, to death and after.</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Dolores.</span>"</p>
</div>
<p>There was the end of it all. I escaped on the ship. I
read the marriage in the paper. Incidentally I afterwards
heard of her as living in Cuba, but I never saw her again<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_262" id="Page_262"></SPAN></span>
till I saw her in her coffin. Sorrow and death had changed
her so much that at first the sight of her awakened only a
vague, painful remembrance. The sight of the hair bracelet
which I had seen on her arm brought all back, and I
felt sure that my poor Dolores had strangely come to sleep
her last sleep near me.</p>
<p>Immediately after I became satisfied who you were, I
felt a painful degree of responsibility for the knowledge.
I wrote at once to a friend of mine in the neighborhood of
St. Augustine, to find out any particulars of the Mendoza
family. I learned that its history had been like that of
many others in that region. Don José had died in a bilious
fever, brought on by excessive dissipation, and at his
death the estate was found to be so incumbered that the
whole was sold at auction. The slaves were scattered
hither and thither to different owners, and Madame Mendoza,
with her children and remains of fortune, had gone
to live in New Orleans.</p>
<p>Of Dolores he had heard but once since her marriage.
A friend had visited Don Guzman's estates in Cuba. He
was living in great splendor, but bore the character of a
hard, cruel, tyrannical master, and an overbearing man.
His wife was spoken of as being in very delicate health,—avoiding
society and devoting herself to religion.</p>
<p>I would here take occasion to say that it was understood
when I went into the family of Don José, that I should
not in any way interfere with the religious faith of the
children, the family being understood to belong to the
Roman Catholic Church. There was so little like religion
of any kind in the family, that the idea of their belonging
to any faith savored something of the ludicrous. In the
case of poor Dolores, however, it was different. The
earnestness of her nature would always have made any
religious form a reality to her. In her case I was glad to
remember that the Romish Church, amid many corruptions,<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_263" id="Page_263"></SPAN></span>
preserves all the essential beliefs necessary for our salvation,
and that many holy souls have gone to heaven through
its doors. I therefore was only careful to direct her principal
attention to the more spiritual parts of her own faith,
and to dwell on the great themes which all Christian people
hold in common.</p>
<p>Many of my persuasion would not have felt free to do
this, but my liberty of conscience in this respect was perfect.
I have seen that if you break the cup out of which
a soul has been used to take the wine of the gospel, you
often spill the very wine itself. And after all, these forms
are but shadows of which the substance is Christ.</p>
<p>I am free to say, therefore, that the thought that
your poor mother was devoting herself earnestly to religion,
although after the forms of a church with which I
differ, was to me a source of great consolation, because I
knew that in that way alone could a soul like hers find
peace.</p>
<p>I have never rested from my efforts to obtain more information.
A short time before the incident which cast you
upon our shore, I conversed with a sea-captain who had
returned from Cuba. He stated that there had been an
attempt at insurrection among the slaves of Don Guzman,
in which a large part of the buildings and out-houses of
the estate had been consumed by fire. On subsequent inquiry
I learned that Don Guzman had sold his estates and
embarked for Boston with his wife and family, and that
nothing had subsequently been heard of him.</p>
<p>Thus, my young friend, I have told you all that I know
of those singular circumstances which have cast your lot on
our shores. I do not expect at your time of life you will
take the same view of this event that I do. You may
possibly—very probably will—consider it a loss not to
have been brought up as you might have been in the splendid
establishment of Don Guzman, and found yourself heir<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_264" id="Page_264"></SPAN></span>
to wealth and pleasure without labor or exertion. Yet I
am quite sure in that case that your value as a human
being would have been immeasurably less. I think I have
seen in you the elements of passions, which luxury and
idleness and the too early possession of irresponsible power,
might have developed with fatal results. You have simply
to reflect whether you would rather be an energetic, intelligent,
self-controlled man, capable of guiding the affairs of
life and of acquiring its prizes,—or to be the reverse of
all this, with its prizes bought for you by the wealth of
parents. I hope mature reflection will teach you to regard
with gratitude that disposition of the All-Wise, which cast
your lot as it has been cast.</p>
<p>Let me ask one thing in closing. I have written for
you here many things most painful for me to remember,
because I wanted you to love and honor the memory of
your mother. I wanted that her memory should have
something such a charm for you as it has for me. With
me, her image has always stood between me and all other
women; but I have never even intimated to a living being
that such a passage in my history ever occurred,—no, not
even to my sister, who is nearer to me than any other
earthly creature.</p>
<p>In some respects I am a singular person in my habits,
and having once written this, you will pardon me if I observe
that it will never be agreeable to me to have the subject
named between us. Look upon me always as a friend,
who would regard nothing as a hardship by which he might
serve the son of one so dear.</p>
<p>I have hesitated whether I ought to add one circumstance
more. I think I will do so, trusting to your good
sense not to give it any undue weight.</p>
<p>I have never ceased making inquiries in Cuba, as I found
opportunity, in regard to your father's property, and late
investigations have led me to the conclusion that he left a<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_265" id="Page_265"></SPAN></span>
considerable sum of money in the hands of a notary, whose
address I have, which, if your identity could be proved,
would come in course of law to you. I have written an
account of all the circumstances which, in my view, identify
you as the son of Don Guzman de Cardona, and had
them properly attested in legal form.</p>
<p>This, together with your mother's picture and the bracelet,
I recommend you to take on your next voyage, and to
see what may result from the attempt. How considerable
the sum may be which will result from this, I cannot say,
but as Don Guzman's fortune was very large, I am in hopes
it may prove something worth attention.</p>
<p>At any time you may wish to call, I will have all these
things ready for you.</p>
<p style="margin-left:20em">
I am, with warm regard,<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 4em;">Your sincere friend,</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 7em;"><span class="smcap">Theophilus Sewell</span>.</span><br/></p>
<p>When Moses had finished reading this letter, he laid it
down on the pebbles beside him, and, leaning back against
a rock, looked moodily out to sea. The tide had washed
quite up to within a short distance of his feet, completely
isolating the little grotto where he sat from all the surrounding
scenery, and before him, passing and repassing on
the blue bright solitude of the sea, were silent ships, going
on their wondrous pathless ways to unknown lands. The
letter had stirred all within him that was dreamy and
poetic: he felt somehow like a leaf torn from a romance,
and blown strangely into the hollow of those rocks. Something
too of ambition and pride stirred within him. He
had been born an heir of wealth and power, little as they
had done for the happiness of his poor mother; and when
he thought he might have had these two wild horses which
have run away with so many young men, he felt, as young
men all do, an impetuous desire for their possession, and<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_266" id="Page_266"></SPAN></span>
he thought as so many do, "Give them to me, and I'll risk
my character,—I'll risk my happiness."</p>
<p>The letter opened a future before him which was something
to speculate upon, even though his reason told him
it was uncertain, and he lay there dreamily piling one air-castle
on another,—unsubstantial as the great islands of
white cloud that sailed through the sky and dropped their
shadows in the blue sea.</p>
<p>It was late in the afternoon when he bethought him he
must return home, and so climbing from rock to rock he
swung himself upward on to the island, and sought the
brown cottage. As he passed by the open window he
caught a glimpse of Mara sewing. He walked softly up
to look in without her seeing him. She was sitting with
the various articles of his wardrobe around her, quietly and
deftly mending his linen, singing soft snatches of an old
psalm-tune.</p>
<p>She seemed to have resumed quite naturally that quiet
care of him and his, which she had in all the earlier years
of their life. He noticed again her little hands,—they
seemed a sort of wonder to him. Why had he never seen,
when a boy, how pretty they were? And she had such
dainty little ways of taking up and putting down things as
she measured and clipped; it seemed so pleasant to have
her handling his things; it was as if a good fairy were
touching them, whose touch brought back peace. But
then, he thought, by and by she will do all this for some
one else. The thought made him angry. He really felt
abused in anticipation. She was doing all this for him
just in sisterly kindness, and likely as not thinking of
somebody else whom she loved better all the time. It is
astonishing how cool and dignified this consideration made
our hero as he faced up to the window. He was, after
all, in hopes she might blush, and look agitated at seeing
him suddenly; but she did not. The foolish boy did not<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_267" id="Page_267"></SPAN></span>
know the quick wits of a girl, and that all the while that
he had supposed himself so sly, and been holding his breath
to observe, Mara had been perfectly cognizant of his presence,
and had been schooling herself to look as unconscious
and natural as possible. So she did,—only saying,—</p>
<p>"Oh, Moses, is that you? Where have you been all
day?"</p>
<p>"Oh, I went over to see Parson Sewell, and get my
pastoral lecture, you know."</p>
<p>"And did you stay to dinner?"</p>
<p>"No; I came home and went rambling round the rocks,
and got into our old cave, and never knew how the time
passed."</p>
<p>"Why, then you've had no dinner, poor boy," said
Mara, rising suddenly. "Come in quick, you must be fed,
or you'll get dangerous and eat somebody."</p>
<p>"No, no, don't get anything," said Moses, "it's almost
supper-time, and I'm not hungry."</p>
<p>And Moses threw himself into a chair, and began abstractedly
snipping a piece of tape with Mara's very best
scissors.</p>
<p>"If you please, sir, don't demolish that; I was going to
stay one of your collars with it," said Mara.</p>
<p>"Oh, hang it, I'm always in mischief among girls'
things," said Moses, putting down the scissors and picking
up a bit of white wax, which with equal unconsciousness,
he began kneading in his hands, while he was dreaming
over the strange contents of the morning's letter.</p>
<p>"I hope Mr. Sewell didn't say anything to make you
look so very gloomy," said Mara.</p>
<p>"Mr. Sewell?" said Moses, starting; "no, he didn't;
in fact, I had a pleasant call there; and there was that
confounded old sphinx of a Miss Roxy there. Why don't
she die? She must be somewhere near a hundred years
old by this time."<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_268" id="Page_268"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Never thought to ask her why she didn't die," said
Mara; "but I presume she has the best of reasons for
living."</p>
<p>"Yes, that's so," said Moses; "every old toadstool, and
burdock, and mullein lives and thrives and lasts; no danger
of their dying."</p>
<p>"You seem to be in a charitable frame of mind," said
Mara.</p>
<p>"Confound it all! I hate this world. If I could have
my own way now,—if I could have just what I wanted,
and do just as I please exactly, I might make a pretty
good thing of it."</p>
<p>"And pray what would you have?" said Mara.</p>
<p>"Well, in the first place, riches."</p>
<p>"In the first place?"</p>
<p>"Yes, in the first place, I say; for money buys everything
else."</p>
<p>"Well, supposing so," said Mara, "for argument's sake,
what would you buy with it?"</p>
<p>"Position in society, respect, consideration,—and I'd
have a splendid place, with everything elegant. I have
ideas enough, only give me the means. And then I'd
have a wife, of course."</p>
<p>"And how much would you pay for her?" said Mara,
looking quite cool.</p>
<p>"I'd buy her with all the rest,—a girl that wouldn't
look at <i>me</i> as I am,—would take me for all the rest, you
know,—that's the way of the world."</p>
<p>"It is, is it?" said Mara. "I don't understand such
matters much."</p>
<p>"Yes; it's the way with all you girls," said Moses;
"it's the way you'll marry when you do."</p>
<p>"Don't be so fierce about it. I haven't done it yet,"
said Mara; "but now, really, I must go and set the supper-table
when I have put these things away,"—and Mara<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_269" id="Page_269"></SPAN></span>
gathered an armful of things together, and tripped singing
upstairs, and arranged them in the drawer of Moses's room.
"Will his wife like to do all these little things for him as
I do?" she thought. "It's natural I should. I grew up
with him, and love him, just as if he were my own brother,—he
is all the brother I ever had. I love him more
than anything else in the world, and this wife he talks
about could do no more."</p>
<p>"She don't care a pin about me," thought Moses; "it's
only a habit she has got, and her strict notions of duty,
that's all. She is housewifely in her instincts, and seizes
all neglected linen and garments as her lawful prey,—she
would do it just the same for her grandfather;" and Moses
drummed moodily on the window-pane.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />