The Splendid Idle Forties eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 319 pages of information about The Splendid Idle Forties.
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The Splendid Idle Forties eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 319 pages of information about The Splendid Idle Forties.

“When we go, we will take her,” said Rotscheff to his distracted wife.

But when they went, a year or two after, in the hurry of departure they forgot her until too late.  They promised to return.  But they never came, and she sleeps there still, on the lonely knoll between the sunless forest and the desolate ocean.

THE VENGEANCE OF PADRE ARROYO

I

Pilar, from her little window just above the high wall surrounding the big adobe house set apart for the women neophytes of the Mission of Santa Ines, watched, morning and evening, for Andreo, as he came and went from the rancheria.  The old women kept the girls busy, spinning, weaving, sewing; but age nods and youth is crafty.  The tall young Indian who was renowned as the best huntsman of all the neophytes, and who supplied Padre Arroyo’s table with deer and quail, never failed to keep his ardent eyes fixed upon the grating so long as it lay within the line of his vision.  One day he went to Padre Arroyo and told him that Pilar was the prettiest girl behind the wall—­the prettiest girl in all the Californias—­and that she should be his wife.  But the kind stern old padre shook his head.

“You are both too young.  Wait another year, my son, and if thou art still in the same mind, thou shalt have her.”

Andreo dared to make no protest, but he asked permission to prepare a home for his bride.  The padre gave it willingly, and the young Indian began to make the big adobes, the bright red tiles.  At the end of a month he had built him a cabin among the willows of the rancheria, a little apart from the others:  he was in love, and association with his fellows was distasteful.  When the cabin was builded his impatience slipped from its curb, and once more he besought the priest to allow him to marry.

Padre Arroyo was sunning himself on the corridor of the mission, shivering in his heavy brown robes, for the day was cold.

“Orion,” he said sternly—­he called all his neophytes after the celebrities of earlier days, regardless of the names given them at the font—­“have I not told thee thou must wait a year?  Do not be impatient, my son.  She will keep.  Women are like apples:  when they are too young, they set the teeth on edge; when ripe and mellow, they please every sense; when they wither and turn brown, it is time to fall from the tree into a hole.  Now go and shoot a deer for Sunday:  the good padres from San Luis Obispo and Santa Barbara are coming to dine with me.”

Andreo, dejected, left the padre.  As he passed Pilar’s window and saw a pair of wistful black eyes behind the grating, his heart took fire.  No one was within sight.  By a series of signs he made his lady understand that he would place a note beneath a certain adobe in the wall.

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The Splendid Idle Forties from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.