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"In twice three movements the thing is ready, captain," replied Sans-Plume, running with his companion toward the large trees which hung over the wall near which they had at first stood.
CHAPTER III.
While these events were transpiring on the boulevard, and a little before half after seven had sounded, another scene was taking place in the interior of the convent garden. Sister Prudence, the mother superior, and Dolores Salcedo were walking in the garden, notwithstanding the advanced hour of the evening.
Dolores, a brunette of charming appearance, united in herself the rare and bewitching perfections of Spanish beauty. Hair of a blue black, which, when uncoiled, dragged upon the floor; a pale complexion warmed by the sun of the South; large eyes, by turns full of fire and languid sweetness; a little mouth as red as the bud of the pomegranate steeped in dew; a delicate and voluptuous form, tapering fingers, and an Andalusian foot and ankle, completed her list of charms. As to the exquisite grace of her figure and gait, one must, to have any idea of it, have seen the undulating movements of the beautiful senoras of Seville or Cadiz, when, speaking with their eyes or playing with their fans, they slowly promenade, a beautiful summer evening, on the marble floor of the Alameda.
Dolores accompanied Sister Prudence. Walking and talking, the two women approached the wall behind which Captain Horace and his sailor had stopped.
"You see, my dear daughter," said the mother superior to Dolores, "I grant you all you desire, and, although the rules of the house forbid promenades in the garden after nightfall, I have consented to stay here until half-past seven o'clock, our supper hour, which will soon sound."
"I thank you, madame," said Dolores, with a slight Spanish accent, and in a voice deliciously resonant. "I feel that this promenade will do me good."
"You must call me mother and not madame, my dear daughter, I have already told you that it is the custom here."
"I will conform to it, if I can, madame."
"Again!"
"It is difficult to call a person mother who is not your mother," said Dolores, with a sigh.
"I am your spiritual mother, my dear daughter; your mother in G.o.d, as you are, as you will be, my daughter in G.o.d; because you will leave us no more, you will renounce the deceitful pleasures of a perverse and corrupt world, you will have here a heavenly foretaste of eternal peace."
"I begin to discover it, madame."
"You will live in prayer, silence, and meditation."
"I have no other desire, madame."
"Well, well, my dear daughter, after all, what will you sacrifice?"
"Oh, nothing, absolutely nothing!"
"I like that response, my dear daughter; really, it is nothing, less than nothing, these wicked and worldly pa.s.sions which cause us so much sorrow and throw us in the way of perdition."
"Just Heaven! it makes me tremble to think of it, madame."
"The Lord inspires you to answer thus, my dear daughter, and I am sure now that you can hardly understand how you have been able to love this miscreant captain."
"It is true, madame, I was stupid enough to dream of happiness and the joys of family affection; criminal enough to find this happiness in mutual love and hope to become, like many others, a devoted wife and tender mother; it was, as you have told me, an offence to Heaven. I repent my impious vows, I comprehend all that is odious in them; you must pardon me, madame, for having been wicked and silly to such a degree."
"It is not necessary to exaggerate, my dear daughter," said Sister Prudence, struck with the slightly ironical accent with which Dolores had uttered these last words. "But," added she, observing the direction taken by the young girl, "what is the good of returning to this walk? It will soon be the hour for supper; come, my dear daughter, let us go back to the house."
"Oh, madame, do you not perceive that sweet odour on this side of the grove?"
"Those are a few cl.u.s.ters of mignonette. But come, it is getting cool; I am not sixteen like you, my dear daughter, and I am afraid of catching cold."
"Just one moment, please, that I may gather a few of these flowers."
"Go on, then, you must do everything you wish, my dear daughter; stop, the night is clear enough for you to see this mignonette ten steps away; go and gather a few sprigs and return."
Dolores, letting go the arm of the mother superior, went rapidly toward the cl.u.s.ters of flowers.
At this moment half-past seven o'clock sounded.
"Half-past seven," murmured Dolores, trembling and turning her ear to listen, "he is there, he will come!"
"My dear daughter, it is the hour for supper," said the mother superior, walking on ahead of the canon's niece. "Stop, do you not hear the clock?
Quick! quick! come, it will take ten minutes to reach the house, for we are at the bottom of the garden."
"Here I am, madame," replied the young girl, running before the mother superior, who said to her, with affected sweetness:
"Oh, you foolish little thing, you run like a frightened fawn."
Suddenly Dolores shrieked, and fell on her knees.
"Great G.o.d!" cried Sister Prudence, running up to her, "what is the matter, dear daughter? Why did you scream? What are you on your knees for?"
"Ah, madame!"
"But what is it?"
"What pain!"
"Where?"
"In my foot, madame, I have sprained my ankle. Oh, how I suffer! My G.o.d, how I suffer!"
"Try to get up, my dear child," said the mother, approaching Dolores with a vague distrust, for this sprain seemed to her quite unnatural.
"Oh, impossible, madame, I cannot make a movement."
"But try, at least."
"I wish I could."
And the young girl made a show of wishing to stand up, but she fell again on her knees, with a shriek that could be heard on the other side of the garden wall.
Then Dolores said, with a groan:
"You see, madame, it is impossible for me to move. I pray you return to the house, and tell some one to come for me with a chair or a litter.
Oh, how I suffer! My G.o.d, how I suffer! For pity's sake, madame, go back quick to the house; it is so far, I shall never be able to drag myself there."
"Mademoiselle," cried the mother superior, "I am not your dupe! You have no more of a sprain than I have, it is an abominable falsehood! You wish, I know not for what reason, to send me away, and remain alone in the garden. Ah, indeed you make me repent of my condescension."