Оглавление
- Chapter One. Volunteers for Texas
- Chapter Two. A Lady in the Case
- Chapter Three. Officering the Filibusters
- Chapter Four. An Invitation to Supper
- Chapter Five. A Studied Insult
- Chapter Six. “To the Salute!”
- Chapter Seven. A Duel “to the Death.”
- Chapter Eight. A Disgraced Duellist
- Chapter Nine. A Spartan Band
- Chapter Ten. The Acordada
- Chapter Eleven. A Colonel in Full Feather
- Chapter Twelve. “Do your darndest.”
- Chapter Thirteen. The Exiles Returned
- Chapter Fourteen. On the Azotea
- Chapter Fifteen. Waiting and Watching
- Chapter Sixteen. A Mutual Misapprehension
- Chapter Seventeen. Por Las Zancas
- Chapter Eighteen. Tyrant and Tool
- Chapter Nineteen. A Wooden-Legged Lothario
- Chapter Twenty. A Pair of Beautiful Petitioners
- Chapter Twenty One. A Woman’s Scheme
- Chapter Twenty Two. In the Sewers
- Chapter Twenty Three. The Procession
- Chapter Twenty Four. Significant Glances
- Chapter Twenty Five. A Mysterious Missive
- Chapter Twenty Six. The Play of Eyes
- Chapter Twenty Seven. A Letter Dexterously Delivered
- Chapter Twenty Eight. Looking out for a Landau
- Chapter Twenty Nine. A Clumsy Cochero
- Chapter Thirty. The Poor Ladies
- Chapter Thirty One. A Transformation
- Chapter Thirty Two. An Unlooked-for Salute
- Chapter Thirty Three. “Is it a Grito?”
- Chapter Thirty Four. An ill-used Coachman
- Chapter Thirty Five. Double Mounted
- Chapter Thirty Six. The Pedregal
- Chapter Thirty Seven. A Suspicion of Connivance
- Chapter Thirty Eight. The Report of the Pursuer
- Chapter Thirty Nine. Up the Mountain
- Chapter Forty. A Faithful Steward
- Chapter Forty One. Anxious Hours
- Chapter Forty Two. A Holy Brotherhood
- Chapter Forty Three. What are they?
- Chapter Forty Four. The Abbot
- Chapter Forty Five. The Free Lances
- Chapter Forty Six. Saint Augustine of the Caves
- Chapter Forty Seven. Over the Cliff
- Chapter Forty Eight. On down the Mountain
- Chapter Forty Nine. A Tale of Starvation
- Chapter Fifty. An Encounter with Old Acquaintances
- Chapter Fifty One. A Grumbling Guard
- Chapter Fifty Two. A Danae’s Shower
- Chapter Fifty Three. A Series of Surprises
- Chapter Fifty Four. Monks no More
- Chapter Fifty Five. “Only empty Bottles.”
- Chapter Fifty Six. A Day of Suspense
- Chapter Fifty Seven. Under Arrest
- Chapter Fifty Eight. The Cochero Dogged
- Chapter Fifty Nine. Ready to Start
- Chapter Sixty. “Surrender!”
- Chapter Sixty One. Conclusion
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- Chapter Fourteen. On the AzoteaChapter Fourteen. On the Azotea
Chapter Fourteen. On the Azotea
In the city of Mexico the houses are flat-roofed, the roof bearing the name of azotea. A parapetted wall, some three or four feet in height, runs all round to separate those of the adjacent houses from one another when they chance to be on the same level, and also prevent falling off. Privacy, besides, has to do with this protective screen; the azotea being a place of almost daily resort, if the weather be fine, and a favourite lounging place, where visitors are frequently received. This peculiarity in dwelling-house architecture has an oriental origin, and is still common among the Moors, as all round the Mediterranean. Strange enough, the Conquistadors found something very similar in the New World – conspicuously among the Mexicans – where the Aztecan houses were flat or terrace-topped. Examples yet exist in Northern and New Mexico, in the towns of the Pecos Zuñis, and Moquis. It is but natural, therefore, that the people who now call themselves Mexicans should have followed a pattern thus furnished them by their ancestry in both hemispheres.
Climate has much to do with this sort of roof, as regards its durability; no sharp frosts or heavy snows being there to affect it. Besides, in no country in the world is out-door life more enjoyable than in Mexico, the rainy months excepted; and in them the evenings are dry. Still another cause contributes to make the roof of a Mexican house a pleasant place of resort. Sea-coal and its smoke are things there unknown; indeed chimneys, if not altogether absent, are few and far between; such as there are being inconspicuous. In the siempre-verano (eternal spring) of Anahuac there is no call for them; a wood fire here and there kindled in some sitting-room being a luxury of a special kind, indulged in only by the very delicate or very rich. In the kitchens, charcoal is the commodity employed, and as this yields no visible sign, the outside atmosphere is preserved pure and cloudless as that which overhung the Hesperides.
A well-appointed azotea is provided with pots containing shrubs and evergreen plants; some even having small trees, as the orange, lime, camellia, ferns, and palms; while here and there one is conspicuous by a mirador (belvedere) arising high above the parapet to afford a better view of the surrounding country.
It would be difficult to find landscape more lovely, or more interesting, than that which surrounds the city of Mexico. Look in what direction one will, the eye is furnished with a feast. Plains, verdant and varied in tint, from the light green of the milpas (young maize), to the more sombre maguey plants, which, in large plantations (magueyals), occupy a considerable portion of the surface; fields of chili pepper and frijoles (kidney beans); here and there wide sheets of water between, glistening silver-like under the sun; bounding all a periphery of mountains, more than one of their summits white with never-melting snow – the grandest mountains, too, since they are the Cordilleras of the Sierra Madre or main Andean chain, which here parted by some Plutonic caprice, in its embrace the beautiful valley of Mexico, elevated more than seven thousand feet above the level of the sea.
Surveying it from any roof in the city itself, the scene is one to delight the eye and gladden the heart. And yet on the azotea of a certain house, or rather in the mirador above it, stood a young lady, who looked over it without delight in her eye or gladness in her heart. Instead, the impression upon her countenance told of thoughts that, besides being sad, dwelt not on the landscape or its beauties.
Luisa Valverde it was, thinking of another land, beautiful too, where she had passed several years in exile; the last of them marked by an era the sweetest and happiest of her life. For it was there she first loved; Florence Kearney being he who had won her heart. And the beloved one – where was he now? She knew not; did not even know whether he still lived. He had parted from her without giving any clue, though it gave pain to her – ignorant of the exigencies which had ruled his sudden departure from New Orleans. He had told her, however, of his becoming captain of the volunteer band; which, as she soon after became aware, had proceeded direct to Texas. Furthermore, she had heard all about the issue of the ill-fated expedition; of the gallant struggle made by the men composing it, with the havoc caused in their ranks; of the survivors being brought on to the city of Mexico, and the cruel treatment they had been submitted to on the march; of their daring attempt to escape from the Guards, its successful issue for a time, till their sufferings among the mountains compelled them to a second surrender – in short, everything that had happened to that brave band of which her lover was one of the leaders.
She had been in Mexico throughout all this; for shortly after the departure of the volunteers for Orleans, her father had received the pardon we have spoken of. And there she had been watching the Mier Expedition through every step of its progress, eagerly collecting every scrap of information relating to it published in the Mexican papers; with anxious heart, straining her ears over the lists of killed and wounded. And when at length the account came of the shootings at El Salado, apprehensively as ever scanned she that death-roll of nigh twenty names – the decimated; not breathing freely until she had reached the last, and saw that no more among these was his she feared to find.
So far her researches were, in a sense, satisfactory. Still, she was not satisfied. Neither to read or hear word of him – that seemed strange; was so in her way of thinking. Such a hero as he, how could his name be hidden? Gallant deeds were done by the Tejanos, their Mexican enemies admitted it. Surely in these Don Florencio had taken part, and borne himself bravely? Yes, she was sure of that. But why had he not been mentioned? And where was he now?
The last question was that which most frequently occupied her mind, constantly recurring. She could think of but one answer to it; this saddening enough. He might never have reached the Rio Grande, but perished on the way. Perhaps his life had come to an inglorious though not ignominious end – by disease, accident, or other fatality – and his body might now be lying in some lonely spot of the prairies, where his marching comrades had hastily buried it.
More than once had Luisa Valverde given way to such a train of reflection during the months after her return to Mexico. They had brought pallor to her cheeks and melancholy into her heart. So much, that not all the honours to which her father had been restored – not all the compliments paid to herself, nor the Court gaieties in which she was expected to take part – could win her from a gloom that seemed likely to become settled on her soul.