登陆注册
15455000000009

第9章 CHAPTER III. BUILDERS OF THE COMMONWEALTH.(2)

The doctor had quite refreshed himself, and, in a house-suit of clean, white linen, was lying on a couch reading. He arose with alacrity, and with his pleasant smile seemed to welcome the intruder, as he stepped behind him and closed the door.

Antonia had disappeared. They were quite alone.

"You are Doctor Robert Worth, sir?"

Their eyes met, their souls knew each other.

"And you are Sam Houston?"

The questions were answered in a hand grip, a sympathetic smile on both faces--the freemasonry of kindred spirits.

"I have a letter from your son Thomas, doctor, and I think, also, that you will have something to say to me, and I to you."

The most prudent of patriots could not have resisted this man.

He had that true imperial look which all born rulers of men possess--that look that half coerces, and wholly persuades.

Robert Worth acknowledged its power by his instant and decisive answer.

"I have, indeed, much to say to you. We shall have dinner directly, then you will give the night to me?"

After a short conversation he led him into the sala and introduced him to Antonia. He himself had to prepare the Senora for her visitor, and he had a little quaking of the heart as he entered her room. She was dressed for dinner, and turned with a laughing face to meet him.

"I have been listening to the cooks quarrelling over the olla, Roberto. But what can my poor Manuel say when your Irishwoman attacks him. Listen to her! `Take your dirty stew aff the fire then! Shure it isn't fit for a Christian to ate at all!'"

"I hope it is, Maria, for we have a visitor to-night."

"Who, then, my love?"

"Mr. Houston."

"Sam Houston? Holy Virgin of Guadalupe preserve us! I will not see the man."

"I think you will, Maria. He has brought this letter for you from our son Thomas; and he has been so kind as to take charge of some fine horses, and sell them well for him in San Antonio. When a man does us a kindness, we should say thank you."

"That is truth, if the man is not the Evil One. As for this Sam Houston, you should have heard what was said of him at the Valdez's."

"I did hear. Everything was a lie."

"But he is a very common man."

"Maria, do you call a soldier, a lawyer, a member of the United States Congress, a governor of a great State like Tennessee, a common man? Houston has been all of these things."

"It is, however, true that he has lived with Indians, and with those Americans, who are bad, who have no God, who are infidels, and perhaps even cannibals. If he is a good man, why does he live with bad men? Not even the saints could do that. A good man should be in his home. Why does he not stay at home."

"Alas! Maria, that is a woman's fault. He loved a beautiful girl. He married her. My dear one, she did not bless his life as you have blessed mine. No one knows what his sorrow was, for he told no one. And he never blamed her, only he left his high office and turned his back forever on his home."

"Ah! the cruel woman. Holy Virgin, what hard hearts thou hast to pray for!"

"Come down and smile upon him, Maria. I should like him to see a high-born Mexican lady. Are they not the kindest and fairest among all God's women? I know, at least, Maria, that you are kind and fair"; and he took her hands, and drew her within his embrace.

What good wife can resist her husband's wooing? Maria did not. She lifted her face, her eyes shone through happy tears, she whispered softly: "My Robert, it is a joy to please you.

I will be kind; I will be grateful about Thomas. You shall see that I will make a pleasant evening."

So the triumphant husband went down, proud and happy, with his smiling wife upon his arm. Isabel was already in the room.

She also wore a white frock, but her hair was pinned back with gold butterflies, and she had a beautiful golden necklace around her throat. And the Senora kept her word. She paid her guest great attention. She talked to him of his adventures with the Indians. She requested her daughters to sing to him. She told him stories of the old Castilian families with which she was connected, and described her visit to New Orleans with a great deal of pleasant humor. She felt that she was doing herself justice; that she was charming; and, consequently, she also was charmed with the guest and the occasion which had been so favorable to her.

After the ladies had retired, the doctor led his visitor into his study. He sat down silently and placed a chair for Houston. Both men hesitated for a moment to open the conversation. Worth, because he was treading on unknown ground; Houston, because he did not wish to force, even by a question, a resolution which he felt sure would come voluntarily.

The jar of tobacco stood between them, and they filled their pipes silently. Then Worth laid a letter upon the table, and said: "I unstand{sic} from this, that my son Thomas thinks the time has come for decisive action."

"Thomas Worth is right. With such souls as his the foundation of the state must be laid."

"I am glad Thomas has taken the position he has; but you must remember, sir, that he is unmarried and unembarrassed by many circumstances which render decisive movement on my part a much more difficult thing. Yet no man now living has watched the Americanizing of Texas with the interest that I have."

"You have been long on the watch, sir."

"I was here when my countrymen came first, in little companies of five or ten men. I saw the party of twenty, who joined the priest Hidalgo in eighteen hundred and ten, when Mexico made her first attempt to throw off the Spanish yoke."

"An unsuccessful attempt."

"Yes. The next year I made a pretended professional journey to Chihuahua, to try and save their lives. I failed.

They were shot with Hidalgo there."

"Yet the strife for liberty went on."

"It did. Two years afterwards, Magee and Bernardo, with twelve hundred Americans, raised the standard of independence on the Trinity River. I saw them them{sic} take this very city, though it was ably defended by Salcedo. They fought like heroes. I had many of the wounded in my house. I succored them with my purse.

"It was a great deed for a handful of men."

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 美而别致的

    美而别致的

    叛逆一次又怎么样,你遇见的那个人有并不是我。是不是应该改变呢,借了不属于我的人生,所以........对不起,真的不想还给你。[本文是青春校园系列,作者第一次写作,不喜欢勿喷]
  • 和同事说说心里话

    和同事说说心里话

    在工作中,我们所面对的不仅有领导,还有一大帮同事。同事既是你的同盟,也是你的竞争对手,大家都站在同样的起跑线上,期望通过自己的表现得到领导的赏识,最终获得晋升。有句俗话:同行是冤家,同事是对头。同事是与自己一起工作的人,与同事相处得如何,直接关系到自己工作、事业的进步与发展。本书站在同事的角度,针对同事相处中出现的问题进行叙述,以此来帮助读者解决与同事之间的矛盾,从而使同事关系融洽、和谐,最终促进读者事业的发展。
  • 少年对不起

    少年对不起

    tfboys易烊千玺和严糯的爱恨情仇,微虐故事,喜欢TF的朋友可以看一看,特别是千纸鹤!
  • 权谋之星际争霸

    权谋之星际争霸

    公元5412年,一个星际阴谋正在称霸半个银河系的地球潜藏,这是一场科幻与军事的邂逅。讲述的是战神柏苏横扫宇宙的军事谋略故事和可歌可泣的爱情故事。
  • 豪门蜜宠:腹黑总裁不好惹

    豪门蜜宠:腹黑总裁不好惹

    一只被“禽兽”看上的小白兔,在婚后不断跟禽兽抗争,却慢慢发现禽兽对自己似乎“别有用心”的故事,沈糖在顾行北的精心设计下不得不嫁到顾家,却对初恋情人恋恋不忘,始终不明白为什么那个信誓旦旦说将来一定会娶自己的男人为什么一夜之间就娶了别的女人,顾行北从来不擅长表达自己的任何情感,他对沈糖的付出从来都是默默无闻,但好在只要真心总能被发现,他们在经历了一系列的事情之后,总算明白了彼此的心意,从此携手不再孤独!
  • 穷根寻叶

    穷根寻叶

    在另一个世界里,我们看到了不一样。于是满怀欣喜的开始了那段旅程,有时也会想世界随我转动,在漫天的星河里找寻自己。
  • 遮天蔽地

    遮天蔽地

    谁能在那千年的轮回中,拨开重重云雾,找到长生之路。作为一个女修士,长生路上何其残酷,但就是在这个绝世女子身上,隐藏着一颗惊天动地的心,她似是有情,似是无情。但总能坚定往前,且看一个女子平淡而又逆天的修仙。洛凡的死,娘亲的离,让小小的洛颜迅速成长起来,吴家仇人,洗干净脖子等着我来!岚音学院,一个个伙伴,与洛颜并肩作战。大劫来临,共同面对。区区妖魔,奈我何?兄弟齐心,其利断金。几次面临的绝望,背后都隐藏希望,任何都有两面性。天下之大,何其不有?洛颜,要站到那巅峰!
  • 丹若开花之逆流而上

    丹若开花之逆流而上

    一段被人视为禁忌之恋,两个人不被看的人,不顾世俗的眼光,坚持逆流而上......
  • 鬼玺

    鬼玺

    盗墓世家屡遭毒手,族人神秘失踪。镇守轮回大门的盗墓古派离奇灭门。盗墓界风雨飘摇。归根结底竟是一块小小的鬼玺。当鬼玺集成之日,必将是轮回开启之时。幕后黑手现身,新纪元的到来。盗墓界需要希望,这个男人叫陆安。
  • 天使的献祭

    天使的献祭

    天使有罪吗?恶魔知道答案。在天使与恶魔的夹缝中生存的人类,该何去何从?走进天使的献祭,解开被封尘的秘密。