The Doomswoman eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 187 pages of information about The Doomswoman.
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The Doomswoman eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 187 pages of information about The Doomswoman.

“Oh, never mind that; the ride will interest you just the same.”  And he lifted her to the horse, sprang on another, caught her bridle, lest she should rebel, and galloped up the road.  When they were on the other side of hill he slackened speed and looked at her with a smile.  She was inclined to be angry, but found herself watching the varying expressions of his mouth, which diverted her mind.  It was a baffling mouth, even to experienced women, and Chonita could make nothing of it.  It had neither sweetness nor softness, but she had never felt impelled to study the mouth of a caballero.  And then she wondered how a man with a mouth like that could have manners so gentle.

“Are you aware,” he said, abruptly, “that your brother is accused of conspiracy?”

“What?” She looked at him as if she inferred that this was the order of badinage that an Iturbi y Moncada might expect from an Estenega.

“I am not joking.  It is quite true.”

“It is not true!  Reinaldo conspire against his government?  Some one has lied.  And you are ready to believe!”

“I hope some one has lied.  The news is very direct, however.”  He looked at her speculatively.  “The more obstacles the better,” he thought; “and we may as well declare war on this question at once.  Besides, it is no use to begin as a hypocrite, when every act would tell her what I thought of him.  Moreover, he will have more or less influence over her until her eyes are opened to his true worth.  She will not believe me, of course, but she is a woman who only needs an impetus to do a good deal of thinking and noting.”  “I am going to make you angry,” he said.  “I am going to tell you that I do not share your admiration of your brother.  He has ten thousand words for every idea, and although, God knows, we have more time than anything else in this land of the poppy where only the horses run, still there are more profitable ways of employing it than to listen to meaningless and bombastic words.  Moreover, your brother is a dangerous man.  No man is so safe in seclusion as the one of large vanities and small ambitions.  He is not big enough to conceive a revolution, but is ready to be the tool of any unscrupulous man who is, and, having too much egotism to follow orders, will ruin a project at the last moment by attempting to think for himself.  I do not say these things to wantonly insult you, senorita, only to let you know at once how I regard your brother, that you may not accuse me of treachery or hypocrisy later.”

He had expected and hoped that she would turn upon him with a burst of fury; but she had drawn herself up to her most stately height, and was looking at him with cold hauteur.  Her mouth was as hard as a pink jewel, and her eyes had the glitter of ice in them.

“Senor,” she said, “it seems to me that you, too, waste many words—­in speaking of my brother; for what you say of him cannot interest me.  I have known him for twenty-two years; you have seen him four or six times.  What can you tell me of him?  Not only is he my brother and the natural object of my love and devotion, but he is Reinaldo Iturbi y Moncada, the last male descendant of his house, and as such I hold him in a regard only second to that which I bear to my father.  And with the blood in him he could not be otherwise than a great and good man.”

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The Doomswoman from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.