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.

‘I incline to do so.’

’Then you will take it.  Now I have something more to say before we come to terms.  I do not want you to play the part of an apothecary’s drudge.  You will figure before the world as my nephew, come from abroad to learn my trade.  You will help me in it indeed, but that is not all your duty.  Your part will be to mix in the life of Seville, and to watch those whom I bid you watch, to drop a word here and a hint there, and in a hundred ways that I shall show you to draw grist to my mill—­and to your own.  You must be brilliant and witty, or sad and learned, as I wish; you must make the most of your person and your talents, for these go far with my customers.  To the hidalgo you must talk of arms, to the lady, of love; but you must never commit yourself beyond redemption.  And above all, young man’—­and here his manner changed and his face grew stern and almost fierce—­’you must never violate my confidence or the confidence of my clients.  On this point I will be quite open within you, and I pray you for your own sake to believe what I say, however much you may mistrust the rest.  If you break faith with me, you die.  You die, not by my hand, but you die.  That is my price; take it or leave it.  Should you leave it and go hence to tell what you have heard this day, even then misfortune may overtake you suddenly.  Do you understand?’

‘I understand.  For my own sake I will respect your confidence.’

’Young sir, I like you better than ever.  Had you said that you would respect it because it was a confidence, I should have mistrusted you, for doubtless you feel that secrets communicated so readily have no claim to be held sacred.  Nor have they, but when their violation involves the sad and accidental end of the violator, it is another matter.  Well now, do you accept?’

‘I accept.’

’Good.  Your baggage I suppose is at the inn.  I will send porters to discharge your score and bring it here.  No need for you to go, nephew, let us stop and drink another glass of wine; the sooner we grow intimate the better, nephew.’

It was thus that first I became acquainted with Senor Andres de Fonseca, my benefactor, the strangest man whom I have ever known.  Doubtless any person reading this history would think that I, the narrator, was sowing a plentiful crop of troubles for myself in having to deal with him, setting him down as a rogue of the deepest, such as sometimes, for their own wicked purposes, decoy young men to crime and ruin.  But it was not so, and this is the strangest part of the strange story.  All that Andres de Fonseca told me was true to the very letter.

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Montezuma's Daughter from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.