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At short intervals he shouted with all his might, but the wind hurled back his cries, mingled with the spray that was dashed in his face.
No succour appeared within sight or hearing. Costal had no doubt been either drowned or devoured; and the unhappy officer had arrived at the full conviction, that such was to be his own fate; when, all of a sudden, some object came under his eyes that caused him to quiver with joy. Under the glare of the lightning, the barges were visible mounted on the crest of a huge dark wave!
Only a momentary glance did he obtain of them; for, after the flash had pa.s.sed, the boats were again shrouded in the obscurity of the night.
Do Cornelio raised a loud cry, and listened for the response. No voice reached him. His own was drowned; midst the roaring of the waters, and could not have been heard by the people on board the boats.
He shouted repeatedly, but with the like result--no response.
Once more was he plunged into the deepest anxiety--approaching almost to despair--when on the next flashing of lightning he once more beheld the barges at a little distance from him, but in a direction altogether opposite! They had pa.s.sed him in the darkness, and were now rowing away!
This was his reflection, though it was an erroneous one. The boats were still in the same direction as at first, but now appeared in the opposite quarter. This deception arose from Don Cornelio himself having turned round on the broken canoe, which kept constantly spinning about upon the waves.
At this moment a rocket shooting up into the dark sky inspired the castaway with fresh hope; and he once more raised his voice, and shouted with all the concentrated power of throat and lungs. After delivering the cry, he remained in breathless expectation, equally concentrating all his strength in the act of listening.
This time a responsive cry came back--a sound all the more joyful to his ears from his recognising it as the voice of Costal.
Don Cornelio now repeated his cries, thick and fast after each other, until his throat and jaws almost refused to give out the slightest sound. Nevertheless he kept on shouting, until one of the barges, bounding over the waves, forged close up to the side of the canoe. Then he felt himself seized by strong arms--they were those of Costal and Galeana--and the moment after he was lifted into the boot, where, like the ex-pearl-diver, but from a very different cause, he fell fainting upon the deck.
It was fortunate for Don Cornelio that Costal had remained only a short time under the influence of his syncope. Recovering from it, the Indian had, in a few words, revealed the situation of the canoe. The signal agreed upon was at once made; and led, as described, to the rescue of his companion from his perilous position.
CHAPTER THIRTY SEVEN.
A DEED A LA CORTEZ.
Notwithstanding the alarm given by the schooner, the barges of Galeana found no difficulty in effecting a landing upon the isle--but on the opposite side to that where the war vessel lay. The stormy night favoured the attempt; the garrison of La Roqueta not dreaming that on such a night any attack would be made upon the fort.
Lantejas still remained unconscious; and, when at last he came to his senses, he found himself on land, the branches of tall trees extending over him, through which the wind was whistling with all the fury of a tempest. The rustling of the leaves was the sweetest melody he had ever heard: since it told him he was once more on _terra firma_--though at the same time the thunder rolling around appeared to shake the foundations of the isle.
On awakening to consciousness, he looked around him. He saw men reclining, or sitting in groups--most of them with arms in their hands.
He recognised them as the people of the expedition.
Costal, asleep, was lying upon the ground close at hand.
"Where are we, Costal?" inquired Lantejas, after rousing the Indian from his slumber.
"Where? _Por Dios_! where should we be, but on the isle of Roqueta?"
"But how did we get ash.o.r.e?"
"Easily enough, Senor Capitan. We had no opposition to contend against.
Not one of the Spanish garrison suspects our presence here; for who would think of sixty men venturing to sea on such a night as this? We shall take the enemy completely by surprise."
"And what hinders the Marshal from attacking them now?"
"We have not yet found them. We neither know where the fort is, nor where we are ourselves. Don't you see that the night is as dark as the inside of a cannon, and one can't make out his finger before him?
They're safe enough while this storm lasts; and, by good luck, so are we."
It was in truth to the storm that the Mexicans owed their present security. Few in numbers, and ignorant of the locality in which they had landed, an attack by the troops of the garrison might have proved fatal to them. Thanks to the tempestuous character of the night, they had not only found an opportunity of debarking on the isle, but time to mature their plans for a.s.saulting the fort.
It was now about four in the morning, and the wind, still blowing with all its fury, was causing the large waves to roll up against the beach, threatening to break the cables by which the barges were moored to the sh.o.r.e. Don Cornelio cast glances of fear upon that mighty ocean that, but a few hours before, had come so near engulfing him within its dark depths.
While he sat with his face turned seaward, his eye fell upon the figure of a man who was pa.s.sing from the spot where the groups were scattered downward to the beach. This man having approached the place where the barges were moored, for some moments appeared to be occupied with them, as if looking to their security. This was Don Cornelio's first impression on seeing the figure bending over the cables; but the moment after, the blade of a knife glancing in the man's fingers, was revealed by a flash of lightning; and this gave a sudden turn to the captain's thoughts.
"What is he about to do?" inquired he of Costal, at the same time pointing out the individual so mysteriously occupied about the barges.
"_Carrambo_! he is cutting the cables!" cried the Indian, springing to his feet, and rushing towards the boats, followed by Don Cornelio.
On drawing nearer the beach, both recognised, under the pale reflection of the foaming waves, the Marshal himself--Don Hermenegildo Galeana!
"Ah! Captain Lantejas, it is you!" cried the Marshal as they approached. "Good. I want you to lend me a hand here in cutting these hawsers: they are hard as iron chains."
"Cut the hawsers!" echoed the astonished captain. "And what, General, if we are compelled to retreat before a superior force?"
"That's just what I wish to provide against," replied Don Hermenegildo, laughing. "Some people fight but poorly when they know they may run away; and I wish our people to fight well."
Don Cornelio saw it was no use to attempt remonstrance with the chivalric Galeana, and both he and Costal went to work to a.s.sist the Marshal in his daring design.
"All right, comrades!" cried Don Hermenegildo, as soon as the three hawsers were parted; "it only remains for us to get the signal rockets out of the boats, and then let them go to sea of themselves."
So saying, the energetic leader stepped aboard one of the barges, seized hold of the rocket case, and, a.s.sisted by Costal and Don Cornelio, carried it on sh.o.r.e. Then, giving each of the boats a shove from the beach, the Marshal had the satisfaction--not shared by the Captain, however--of seeing all three of them the next moment carried far away from the sh.o.r.e, and still tossing seaward on the crests of the foaming waves! Retreat was no longer possible. The people of the expedition must either conquer or succ.u.mb.
"Now, Captain Lantejas," said the Marshal, addressing Don Cornelio, "you had better go and get some sleep. You have need of rest, after what you have pa.s.sed through. I shall cause you to be awakened in good time.
Meanwhile Costal will make a reconnaissance, to discover, if possible, the whereabouts of our enemy. By daybreak both the fort and schooner must be ours."
With this finish to the conversation, Don Hermenegildo folded his cloak around him and walked away. Costal and the captain returned to the temporary encampment among the trees. There the Indian, without communicating his thoughts to his companion, silently divested himself of the little remnant of clothing that remained to him, and glided off among the bushes--like a jaguar advancing through the underwood to surprise the gaunt alligator on the bank of some solitary lagoon.
CHAPTER THIRTY EIGHT.
THE CAPTURE OF LA ROQUETA.
It was in vain that Don Cornelio attempted to sleep. Although more than a year of campaigning and the experience of many sanguinary engagements had inured him to danger, there was something in the peril to which he was now exposed that was altogether novel and unpleasant.
Their leader had provided against retreat, and to conquer or die had become a positive obligation of the expeditionary force. This was sufficient to keep the involuntary soldier awake for the remainder of the night.
He pa.s.sed the time in reflecting upon the singular _contretemps_ that had so interfered with his plans of life, and changed, as it were, his very destiny. He could now only entertain but one hope and wish, and that was that the fortress of Acapulco should be taken as soon as possible: since upon that event being completed, Morelos had promised to grant him leave of absence from the army.
In about an hour afterwards, Costal returned from his scout, and reported to him the result of his explorations, which he had already detailed to the Marshal.
According to the information collected by the Indian, the Spanish garrison consisted of about two hundred men; who were entrenched in a small earthwork on the southern side of the isle, and not more than cannon-shot distance from the Mexican encampment. Two field pieces, set in battery, defended the work; and the schooner, whose unlucky shot had swamped the canoe, lay at a cable's length from the land, in a little bay that ran up to the fort.
The Mexican leader now knew the position of his enemy, their numbers, and means of defence; and, as soon as the dawn began to appear, he summoned his little band, and formed them into rank. At the same time he caused the signal rockets to be carried to an eminence that was near their encampment.
"Now, _muchachos_!" said he, addressing his soldiers in an undertone, "whatever point we attack, may be considered as taken. We are about to a.s.sault the enemy. We may therefore at once announce to our general-in-chief, without fear of disappointment, that the isle and fortress of La Roqueta are in our hands. I have promised it."