Concha, after her father left her,
sat for a long while in an attitude of such complete
repose that Sturgis, watching her miserably from the
veranda, remembered the consolations of his sketch
book; and he was able to counterfeit the graceful,
proud figure, under the wall and roses, before she
stirred.
Concha had sent her father away deeply
puzzled. When, after embracing her with unusual
emotion, he had informed her of his consent to her
marriage, she had received the news as a matter of
course, her hopes and desires having mounted too high
to contemplate a fall. Then the Commandante,
after dwelling at some length upon his discussions
with the Governor and the priests, and admonishing
her against conceiving herself too important a factor
in what might prove to be an alliance of international
moment (she had laughed merrily and called him the
most callous of parents and subtlest of diplo-mats),
had announced with some trepidation and his most official
manner that the consent of the Pope and the King would
be sought by Rezanov in per-son, involving a delay
and separation of not less than two years. But
to his surprise she did not fling herself upon his
neck with blandishments and tears. She merely
became quite still, her light high spirits retreating
as a breeze might before one of Nature’s sudden
and portentous calms. Don Jose, after a fruitless
attempt to recapture her interest, mounted his horse
and rode away; and Concha sat down on a bench under
the wall and thought for an hour without moving a
finger.
Her first sensation was one of bitter
anger and disappointment with Rezanov. He had,
apparently, in the first brief interview with their
tribunal, given his consent to this long delay of
their nuptials.
Her thoughts since his advent had
flown on many journeys and known little rest.
She had been rudely awakened and stripped of her
girlish illusions in those days and nights of battle
between pride and her dazzled womanhood when, in the
new humility of love, she believed herself to be but
one of a hun-dred pretty girls in the eyes of this
accomplished and fortunate Russian. The interval
had been brief, but not long enough for the grandeur
in her nature to awaken almost concurrently with her
passions, and she had planned a life, in which, guided
and uplifted by the star of fidelity, and delivered
from the friv-olous and commonplace temptations of
other wom-en, she should devote herself to the improvement
and instruction not only of the Indians but of the
youth of her own class. The schools founded by
the estimable and enterprising Borica had practically
disappeared, and she was by far the best educated
woman in California. For such there was a mani-fest
and an inexorable duty. She would live to be
old, she supposed, like all the Arguellos and Moragas;
but hidden in her unspotted soul would be the flame
of eternal youth, fed by an ideal and a memory that
would outlive her weary, insignifi-cant body.
And in it she would find her courage and her inspiration,
as well as an unwasting sym-pathy for those she taught.
Then had come the sudden and passionate
woo-ing of Rezanov. All other ideals and aspirations
had fled. She had alternated between the tragic
extremes of bliss and despair. So completely
did the ardor of her nature respond to his, so fierce
and primitive was the cry of her ego for its mate,
that she cared nothing for the distress of her parents
nor the fate of California. There is no love
com-plete without this early and absolute selfishness,
which is merely the furious determination of the race
to accomplish its object before the spirit awakens
and the passions cool.
Last night life had seemed serious;
she had been girlishly, romantically happy.
It is true that her heart had thumped against the
wall as he kissed her, and that she had been full
of a wild desire to sing, although she could hardly
shape and utter the words that danced in her throbbing
brain. But she had been conscious through it
all of the romantic circum-stance, of the lonely
beauty of the night, of the de-lightful wickedness
of meeting her lover in the si-lence and the dark,
even with a wall ten feet high be-tween them.
For the wall, indeed, she had been confusedly and
deliciously grateful.
And this was what a man’s love
came to: ardors by night and expedience by day!
Or was it merely that Rezanov was the man of affairs
always, the lover incidentally? But how could
a man who had seemed the very epitome of all the lovers
of all the world but a few hours before, contemplate,
far less permit, a separation of years? Poor
Concha groped toward the great unacceptable fact of
life the whole, lit by love its chief incident; and
had a fleeting vision of the waste lands in the lives
of women oc-cupied only with matrimony. But
she dropped her lashes upon this unalluring vision,
and as she did so, inevitably she began to excuse
the man.
None knew better than she every side
of the great question that was shaking not only her
life but Cali-fornia itself. Appeal from the
dictum of state and clergy would be a mere waste of
time. The only alternative was flight.
That would mean the wreck of Rezanov’s avowed
purposes in coming to this quarter of New Spain, and
perhaps of others she dimly suspected. It would
mean the very acme of misery for his Sitkans, and
an indefensible blow to the Company. It might
even prove the fatal mistake in his career, for which
his enemies were ever on the alert. He was not
communicative about himself except when he had an
object in view, but he had told her something of his
life, and his officers and Langsdorff had told more.
He was no silly cabal-lero warbling and thrumming
at her grating when she longed for sleep, but a man
in his forties whose passions were in the leash of
a remarkably acute and ambitious brain. She
even thrilled with pride in his strength, for she
knew how he loved her; and although his part was action,
her stimulated in-stincts taught her that she would
rarely be long from his mind. And what was she
to seek to roll stumbling blocks into the career of
a man like that? In this very garden, for four
long days, she had dreamed exalted dreams of the manifold
gifts she should develop for his solace at home and
his worldly advancement. She had once felt all
a girl’s impatience when her mother’s
tears made her father’s departure on some distant
mission more difficult than need be, and although
she knew now that her capacity for tenderness was
as great, she resolved to mould herself in a larger
shape than that.
But she sighed and drooped a little.
The burden of woman’s waiting seemed already
to have de-scended upon her. Two years were
long—long. There might be other delays.
He might fall ill; he had been ill before in that
barbarous Russian north. And in all that time
it was doubtful if she received a line from him, a
hint of his welfare. The Boston and British
skippers came no more, and it was cer-tain that no
Russian ship would visit California again until the
treaty was signed and official news of it had made
its slow way to these uttermost shores. She
had resented, in her young ambition and indocility,
the chance that had stranded her, equipped for civilization,
on this rim of the world, but never so much as in
that moment, when she sat with arrested breath and
realized to the full the primitive conditions of a
country thousands of miles from the very outposts
of Europe, and with never the sight of a letter that
did not come from Spain or one of her colonies.
“Would that we lived a generation
later,” she thought with a heavy sigh.
Progress is almost automatic, and to a land as fertile
and desirable as this the stream must turn in due
course. But not in my time. Not in my
time.”
She rose and leaned her elbows in
the embrasure of the grille, where Santiago had restored
the bars, and looked out over the fields of grain
planted by the padres, the immense sand dunes beyond
that shut the lovely bay from sight; the hills embracing
the primitive scene in a frowning arc. With all
her imagination it was long before she could picture
a great city covering that immense and almost deserted
space. A pueblo in time, perhaps, for Rezanov
had awakened her mind to the importance of the har-bor
as a port of call. Many more adobe homes where
the sand was not hot and shifting, a few ships in
the bay when Spain had been compelled to relax her
jealous vigilance—or—who knew?—per-haps!—a
flourishing colony when the Russian bear had devoured
the Spanish lion. She knew some-thing and suspected
more of the rottenness and in-efficiency of Spain,
and, were Russia a nation of Rezanovs, what opposition
in California against the tide thundering down from
the north? Then, per-haps, the city that had
travelled from the brain of the Russian to hers when
the fog had rolled over the heights; the towers and
palaces and bazaars, the thousand little golden domes
with the slender cross atop; the forts on the crags
and the villas in the hollows, and on all the island
and hills. But when she and her lover were dust.
When she and her lover were dust.
But she was too young and too ardent
to listen long to the ravens of the spirit.
Two years are not eternity, and in happiness the past
rolls together like a scroll and is naught.
She fell to dreaming. Her lips that had been
set with the gravity of stone re-laxed in warm curves.
The color came back to her cheek, the light to her
eyes. She was a girl at her grating with the
roses poignant above her, and the world, radiant,
alluring, and all for her, swimming in the violet
haze beyond.