The War Trail | Page 9

Captain Mayne Reid
see, as the goat-skin armas-de-agua were drawn over them; but I caught a glimpse of a gold spur, and a heel of a tiny red boot to which it was attached. The clubbed hair, too, loosened by the violent motion, had fallen backward, and in two thick plaits, slightly dishevelled, rested upon the croup of the horse. A young Indian's might have been equally as long, but his tresses would have been jet-black and coarse-grained, whereas those under my eyes were soft, silky, and nut-brown. Neither the style of riding--a la Duchesse de Berri--nor the manlike costume of manga and hat, were averse to the idea that the rider was a woman. Both the style and costume are common to the rancheras of Mexico. Moreover, as the mustang made his last double, I had caught a near view of the side face of the rider. The features of no man--not of the Trojan shepherd, not of Adonis or Endymion--were so exquisitely chiselled as they. Certainly a woman! Her declaration at once put an end to my conjectures, but, as I have said, did not astonish me.
I was astonished, however, by its tone and manner. Instead of being uttered in accents of alarm, it was pronounced as coolly as if the whole thing had been a jest! Sadness, not supplication, was the prevailing tone, which was further carried out as she knelt to the ground, pressed her lips to the muzzle of the still breathing mustang, and exclaimed--
"Ay-de-mi! pobre yegua! muerte! muerte!" (Alas me! poor mare! dead! dead!)
"A woman?" said I, feigning astonishment. My interrogatory was unheeded; she did not even look up.
"Ay-de-mi! pobre yegua! Lola, Lolita!" she repeated, as coolly as if the dead mustang was the only object of her thoughts, and I, the armed assassin, fifty miles from the spot! "A woman?" I again ejaculated--in my embarrassment scarcely knowing what to say.
"Si, senor; nada mas--que quiere V.?" (Yes, sir nothing more--what do you want?)
As she made this reply, she rose to her feet, and stood confronting me without the slightest semblance of fear. So unexpected was the answer, both in tone and sentiment, that for the life of me I could not help breaking into a laugh.
"You are merry, sir. You have made me sad; you have killed my favourite!"
I shall not easily forget the look that accompanied these words--sorrow, anger, contempt, defiance, were expressed in one and the same glance. My laughter was suddenly checked; I felt humiliated in that proud presence.
"Senorita," I replied, "I deeply regret the necessity I have been under: it might have been worse--"
"And how, pray?--how worse?" demanded she, interrupting me.
"My pistol might have been aimed at yourself, but for a suspicion--"
"Carrambo!" cried she, again interrupting me, "it could not have been worse! I loved that creature dearly--dearly as I do my life--as I love my father--pobre yegua--yeguita--ita--ita!"
And as she thus wildly expressed herself, she bent down, passed her arms around the neck of the mustang, and once more pressed her lips to its velvet muzzle. Then gently closing its eyelids, she rose to an erect attitude, and stood with folded arms, regarding the lifeless form with a sad and bitter expression of countenance.
I scarcely knew what to do. I was in a dilemma with my fair captive. I would have given a month of my "payroll" to have restored the spotted mustang to life; but as that was out of the question, I bethought me of some means of making restitution to its owner. An offer of money would not be delicate. What then?
A thought occurred to me, that promised to relieve me from my embarrassment. The eagerness of the rich Mexicans to obtain our large American horses--frisones, as they term them--was well known throughout the army. Fabulous prices were often paid for them by these ricos, who wanted them for display upon the Paseo. We had many good half-bred bloods in the troop; one of these, thought I, might be acceptable even to a lady who had lost her pet.
I made the offer as delicately as I could. It was rejected with scorn!
"What, senor!" cried she, striking the ground with her foot till the rowels rang--"what? A horse to me?--Mira!" she continued, pointing to the plain: "look there, sir! There are a thousand horses; they are mine. Now, know the value of your offer. Do I stand in need of a horse?"
"But, senorita," stammered I apologisingly, "these are horses of native race. The one I propose to--"
"Bah!" she exclaimed, interrupting me, and pointing to the mustang; "I would not have exchanged that native for all the frisones in your troop. Not one of them was its equal!"
A personal slight would not have called forth a contradiction; yet this defiance had that effect. She had touched the chord of my vanity--I might
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