The Crusade of the Excelsior eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 271 pages of information about The Crusade of the Excelsior.

The Crusade of the Excelsior eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 271 pages of information about The Crusade of the Excelsior.

“I am so glad that you have come,” she said, with a youthful, unrestrained earnestness that was as convincing as it was fascinating, “for you will help me to persuade this gentleman that poor Captain Bunker is suffering more from excitement of mind than body, and that bleeding him is more than folly.”

“The man’s veins are in a burning fever and delirium from aguardiente,” said the little doctor excitedly, “and the fire must first be put out by the lancet.”

“He is only crazy with remorse for having lost his ship through his own carelessness and the treachery of others,” said Miss Keene doughtily.

“He is a maniac and will kill himself, unless his fever is subdued,” persisted the doctor.

“And you would surely kill him by your way of subduing it,” said the young girl boldly.  “Better for him, a disgraced man of honor, to die by his own hand, than to be bled like a calf into a feeble and helpless dissolution.  I would, if I were in his place—­if I had to do it by tearing off the bandages.”

She made a swift, half unconscious gesture of her little hand, and stopped, her beautiful eyes sparkling, her thin pink nostrils dilated, her red lips parted, her round throat lifted in the air, and one small foot advanced before her.  The men glanced hurriedly at each other, and then fixed their eyes upon her with a rapt yet frightened admiration.  To their simple minds it was Anarchy and Revolution personified, beautiful, and victorious.

“Ah!” said the secretary to Padre Esteban, in Spanish, “it is true! she knows not fear!  She was in the room alone with the madman; he would let none approach but her!  She took a knife from him—­else the medico had suffered!”

“He recognized her, you see!  Ah! they know her power,” said the Comandante, joining the group.

“You will help me, Father Esteban?” said the young girl, letting the fire of her dark eyes soften to a look of almost childish appeal—­“you will help me to intercede for him?  It is the restraint only that is killing him—­that is goading him to madness!  Think of him, Father—­think of him:  ruined and disgraced, dying to retrieve himself by any reckless action, any desperate chance of recovery, and yet locked up where he can do nothing—­attempt nothing—­not even lift a hand to pursue the man who has helped to bring him to this!”

“But he can do nothing!  The ship is gone!” remonstrated the Comandante.

“Yes, the ship is gone; but the ocean is still there,” said Miss Keene.

“But he has no boat.”

“He will find or make one.”

“And the fog conceals the channel.”

“He can go where they have gone, or meet their fate.  You do not know my countrymen, Senor Comandante,” she said proudly.

“Ah, yes—­pardon!  They are at San Antonio—­the baker, the buffoon, the two young men who dig.  They are already baking and digging and joking.  We have it from my officer, who has just returned.”

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The Crusade of the Excelsior from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.