Montezuma's Daughter eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 532 pages of information about Montezuma's Daughter.

Montezuma's Daughter eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 532 pages of information about Montezuma's Daughter.

And without more ado he put me many questions, each of them so shrewd and going so directly to the heart of the matter in hand, that I marvelled at his sagacity.  Some of these questions were medical, dealing chiefly with the ailments of women, others were general and dealt more with their characters.  At length he finished.

‘You will do, senor,’ he said; ’you are a young man of parts and promise, though, as was to be expected from one of your years, you lack experience.  There is stuff in you, senor, and you have a heart, which is a good thing, for the blunders of a man with a heart often carry him further than the cunning of the cynic; also you have a will and know how to direct it.’

I bowed, and did my best to hold back my satisfaction at his words from showing in my face.

‘Still,’ he went on, ’all this would not cause me to submit to you the offer that I am about to make, for many a prettier fellow than yourself is after all unlucky, or a fool at the bottom, or bad tempered and destined to the dogs, as for aught I know you may be also.  But I take my chance of that because you suit me in another way.  Perhaps you may scarcely know it yourself, but you have beauty, senor, beauty of a very rare and singular type, which half the ladies of Seville will praise when they come to know you.’

‘I am much flattered,’ I said, ’but might I ask what all these compliments may mean?  To be brief, what is your offer?’

’To be brief then, it is this.  I am in need of an assistant who must possess all the qualities that I see in you, but most of all one which I can only guess you to possess—­discretion.  That assistant would not be ill-paid; this house would be at his disposal, and he would have opportunities of learning the world such as are given to few.  What say you?’

’I say this, senor, that I should wish to know more of the business in which I am expected to assist.  Your offers sound too liberal, and I fear that I must earn your bounty by the doing of work that honest men might shrink from.’

’A fair argument, but, as it happens, not quite a correct one.  Listen:  you have been told that yonder physician, to whose house you went but now, and these’—­here he repeated four or five names—­’are the greatest of their tribe in Seville.  It is not so.  I am the greatest and the richest, and I do more business than any two of them.  Do you know what my earnings have been this day alone?  I will tell you; just over twenty-five gold pesos,* more than all the rest of the profession have taken together, I will wager.  You want to know how I earn so much; you want to know also, why, if I have earned so much, I am not content to rest from my labours.  Good, I will tell you.  I earn it by ministering to the vanities of women and sheltering them from the results of their own folly.  Has a lady a sore heart, she comes to me for comfort and advice.  Has she pimples on her face, she flies to me to cure them.  Has she a

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Montezuma's Daughter from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.