Don Rodriguez; chronicles of Shadow Valley eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 260 pages of information about Don Rodriguez; chronicles of Shadow Valley.

Don Rodriguez; chronicles of Shadow Valley eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 260 pages of information about Don Rodriguez; chronicles of Shadow Valley.

Mine host entered, bowed without grace in the doorway, and extended his left hand, pointing into the room.  The draughts that blew from the rat-holes in the wainscot, or the mere action of entering, beat down the flame of the squat, guttering candle so that the chamber remained dim for a moment, in spite of the candle, as would naturally be the case.  Yet the impression made upon Rodriguez was as of some old darkness that had been long undisturbed and that yielded reluctantly to that candle’s intrusion, a darkness that properly became the place and was a part of it and had long been so, in the face of which the candle appeared an ephemeral thing devoid of grace or dignity or tradition.  And indeed there was room for darkness in that chamber, for the walls went up and up into such an altitude that you could scarcely see the ceiling, at which mine host’s eyes glanced, and Rodriguez followed his look.

He accepted his accommodation with a nod; as indeed he would have accepted any room in that inn, for the young are swift judges of character, and one who had accepted such a host was unlikely to find fault with rats or the profusion of giant cobwebs, dark with the dust of years, that added so much to the dimness of that sinister inn.  They turned now and went back, in the wake of that guttering candle, till they came again to the humbler part of the building.  Here mine host, pushing open a door of blackened oak, indicated his dining-chamber.  There a long table stood, and on it parts of the head and hams of a boar; and at the far end of the table a plump and sturdy man was seated in shirt-sleeves feasting himself on the boar’s meat.  He leaped up at once from his chair as soon as his master entered, for he was the servant at the Dragon and Knight; mine host may have said much to him with a flash of his eyes, but he said no more with his tongue than the one word, “Dog”:  he then bowed himself out, leaving Rodriguez to take the only chair and to be waited upon by its recent possessor.  The boar’s meat was cold and gnarled, another piece of meat stood on a plate on a shelf and a loaf of bread near by, but the rats had had most of the bread:  Rodriguez demanded what the meat was.  “Unicorn’s tongue,” said the servant, and Rodriguez bade him set the dish before him, and he set to well content, though I fear the unicorn’s tongue was only horse:  it was a credulous age, as all ages are.  At the same time he pointed to a three-legged stool that he perceived in a corner of the room, then to the table, then to the boar’s meat, and lastly at the servant, who perceived that he was permitted to return to his feast, to which he ran with alacrity.  “Your name?” said Rodriguez as soon as both were eating.  “Morano,” replied the servant, though it must not be supposed that when answering Rodriguez he spoke as curtly as this; I merely give the reader the gist of his answer, for he added Spanish words that correspond in our depraved and decadent language of to-day to such words as “top dog,” “nut” and “boss,” so that his speech had a certain grace about it in that far-away time in Spain.

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Don Rodriguez; chronicles of Shadow Valley from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.