The Story of a Mine eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 142 pages of information about The Story of a Mine.

The Story of a Mine eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 142 pages of information about The Story of a Mine.

“Gracias, Senor.”

They walked slowly back to the house, Thatcher with a masculine sense of being unreasonably afflicted, Carmen with a woman’s instinct of being hopelessly crushed.  No word was spoken until they reached the door.  Then Carmen suddenly, in her old, impulsive way, and in a childlike treble, sang out merrily, “Good night, O Don Royal, and pleasant dreams.  Hasta manana.”

Thatcher stood dumb and astounded at this capricious girl.  She saw his mystification instantly.  “It is for the old Cat!” she whispered, jerking her thumb over her shoulder in the direction of the sleeping Mrs. P.  “Good night,—­go!”

He went to give orders for a peon to attend the ladies and their equipage the next day.  He awoke to find Miss De Haro gone, with her escort, towards Monterey.  And without the Plodgitt.

He could not conceal his surprise from the latter lady.  She, left alone,—­a not altogether unavailable victim to the wiles of our sex,—­was embarrassed.  But not so much that she could not say to Thatcher:  “I told you so,—­gone to her uncle. . . .  To tell him all!”

“All.  D—­n it, what can she tell him?” roared Thatcher, stung out of his self-control.

“Nothing, I hope, that she should not,” said Mrs. P., and chastely retired.

She was right.  Miss Carmen posted to Monterey, running her horse nearly off its legs to do it, and then sent back her beast and escort, saying she would rejoin Mrs. Plodgitt by steamer at San Francisco.  Then she went boldly to the law office of Saponaceous Wood, District Attorney and whilom solicitor of her uncle.

With the majority of masculine Monterey Miss Carmen was known and respectfully admired, despite the infelix reputation of her kinsman.  Mr. Wood was glad to see her, and awkwardly gallant.  Miss Carmen was cool and business-like; she had come from her uncle to “regard” the papers in the “Red-Rock Rancho” case.  They were instantly produced.  Carmen turned to the application for the grant.  Her cheek paled slightly.  With her clear memory and wonderful fidelity of perception she could not be mistaken.  The signature of Micheltorena was in her own handwriting!

Yet she looked up to the lawyer with a smile:  “May I take these papers for an hour to my uncle?”

Even an older and better man than the District Attorney could not have resisted those drooping lids and that gentle voice.

“Certainly.”

“I will return them in an hour.”

She was as good as her word, and within the hour dropped the papers and a little courtesy to her uncle’s legal advocate, and that night took the steamer to San Francisco.

The next morning Victor Garcia, a little the worse for the previous night’s dissipation, reeled into Wood’s office.  “I have fears for my niece Carmen.  She is with the enemy,” he said thickly.  “Look you at this.”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Story of a Mine from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.