“Ya, goot–mucha bueno!” exclaimed the Austrian with enthusiasm, while the color sergeant, who had a red nose, wet his lips hopefully. He believed that an acquitted outlaw, if a gentleman, would stand a bottle.
“And as to the first charge,” continued the president, “here is the deposition of the Señorita d’Aumerle, which I have held till now for this purpose. Read it, and you will note that though the marquesa bears out the Señor Ney, she further 177testifies to the prisoner having later saved her from this very Rodrigo Galán at peril to himself. Bien, señores, have you any further questions?”
The Austrian crinkled his brow, and after a momentous pause, shook his head till his cheeks rattled. The Dragoon promptly replied, “No, mi coronel.” Then the three withdrew, and when they came back, the Dragoon wiping his lips, they informed the accused that he was not guilty.
“Which isn’t news,” said Driscoll as he thanked them.
Murguía’s turn came next. The proof of the old man’s guilt blossomed almost of itself. Jacqueline, to clear her protector, had been forced to depose how Murguía had willingly betrayed her into Rodrigo’s hands. But she described the old man’s reluctance. He would have saved her, except for his terror of the outlaw. The sole case for the defence was Murguía’s character for stinginess; such a miser could not be accused of aiding the guerrillas. But this very point seemed to heighten Lopez’s prejudice against him. Driscoll, being held to testify, only talked sociably, and told nothing, and when under the quizzing he finally lost patience, he said, “Oh, let him go! What’s the use?”
But they were so far from any such thing that they condemned him to be shot.
Then a voice was heard at the door. The sentinel there stumbled back, and Don Tiburcio brushed by him into the room.
“Old man,” he called, “come with me! Your daughter––”
Murguía started up, weakly swaying. The senile eyeballs, so lately parched by fear, swam in a moisture not of avarice. Someone was speaking to him of his daughter. He had not seen her yet. They would not let him. And now he must think of her in this new connection, which was his death. And her misery to learn it, and her misery, afterward! On the morrow they would be taking him to the capital, his 178sentence would be confirmed, he would be shot. Nothing of this he doubted. And he would never see her again.
Murguía stretched out his arms toward the president of the court, “You will let me go to her, señor? Your Mercy will let me go to her?” He murmured her name over and over, “María de la Luz! María–Luzita mia!” until the words became a kind of crooning. Then he would break forth again, entreating, commanding, “Your Mercy will let me see her? Señor, you will let me see her!”