The Laird's Luck and Other Fireside Tales eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 310 pages of information about The Laird's Luck and Other Fireside Tales.

The Laird's Luck and Other Fireside Tales eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 310 pages of information about The Laird's Luck and Other Fireside Tales.

“Come, come,” said Felipe, and found no more to say.

I can guess now a little of what was passing through her unhappy mind.  Women are women and understand one another.  And Teresa, unclean and abandoned old hulk though she was, had stood by this girl when she came to us flying out of the wrack like a lost ship.  “Dear, dear, dear”—­I remembered scraps of her talk—­“the good Lord is debonair, and knows all about these things.  He isn’t like a man, as you might say”:  and again, “Why bless you, He’s not going to condemn you for a matter that I could explain in five minutes.  ‘If it comes to that,’ I should say—­and I’ve often noticed that a real gentleman likes you all the better for speaking up—­’If it comes to that, Lord, why did You put such bloody-minded pirates into the world?’ Now to my thinking”—­and I remember her rolling a leaf of tobacco as she said it—­“it’s a great improvement to the mind to have been through the battle, whether you have won or lost; and that’s why, when on earth, He chose the likes of us for company.”

This philosophy was not the sort to convince a religious girl:  but I believe it comforted her.  Women are women, as I said; and when the ship goes down a rotten plank is better than none.  So the Carmelite had dropped asleep last night with her hand locked round Teresa’s:  and so it happened to Teresa this morning to be lamented, and sincerely lamented, by one of the devout.  It was almost an edifying end; and the prospect of it, a few days ago, would have tickled her hugely.

“But what did she die of?” I asked Felipe, when we had in delicacy withdrawn to the fountain, leaving the Carmelite alone with her grief.

He opened his mouth and pointed a finger at it.

“But only last evening I offered to share my bone with her:  and she told me to keep it for myself.”

“Your Excellency does not reason so well as usual,” said Felipe, without a smile on his face.  “The illustrious defunct had a great affection for her grandchild, which caused her to overlook the ambiguity of the relationship—­and other things.”

“But do you mean to say—­”

“She was a personage of great force of character, and of some virtues which escaped recognition, being unusual.  I pray,” said he, lifting the rim of his rusty hat, “that her soul may find the last peace!  I had the honour to follow her career almost from the beginning.  I remember her even as a damsel of a very rare beauty:  but even then as I say, her virtues were unusual, and less easily detected than her failings.  I, for example, who supposed myself to know her thoroughly, missed reckoning upon her courage, or I had spent last night in seeking food.  I am a fool and a pig.”

“And consequently, while we slept—­”

“Excuse me, I have not slept.”

“You have been keeping watch?”

“Not for the buccaneers, my Lord.  They left before daybreak.  But the dogs of the city are starving, even as we:  and like us they have taken to hunting in company.  Now this is a handsome courtyard, but the gate does not happen to be too secure.”

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The Laird's Luck and Other Fireside Tales from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.