Kate looked at Ramón, blushing. He looked back at her, she thought, very remote, as if looking at her from far, far away.
“The bride of Huitzilopochtli,” he said, with a faint smile.
“Thou, Quetzalcoatl, thou wilt have to marry us,” said Cipriano.
“Do you wish it?” said Ramón.
“Yes!” she said. “I want you to marry us, only you.”
“When the sun goes down,” said Ramón.
And he went away to his room. Cipriano showed Kate to her room, then left her and went to Ramón.
The cool water continued to come down, rushing with a smoke of speed down from heaven.
As the twilight came through the unceasing rain, a woman-servant brought Kate a sleeveless dress or chemise of white linen, scalloped at the bottom and embroidered with stiff blue flowers upside-down on the black stalks, with two stiff green leaves. In the centre of the flowers was the tiny Bird of Quetzalcoatl.
“The Patrón asks that you put this on!” said the woman, bringing also a lamp and a little note.