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Padre Ignacio, or The Song of Temptation
by
Then the host remembered his guest. “I am ashamed of my selfishness,” he said. “It is already to-morrow.”
“I have sat later in less good company,” answered the pleasant Gaston. “And I shall sleep all the sounder for making a convert.”
“You have dispensed roadside alms,” said the Padre, smiling, “and that should win excellent dreams.”
Thus, with courtesies more elaborate than the world has time for at the present day, they bade each other good-night and parted, bearing their late candles along the quiet halls of the mission. To young Gaston in his bed easy sleep came without waiting, and no dreams at ail. Outside his open window was the quiet, serene darkness, where the stars shone clear, and tranquil perfumes hung in the cloisters. But while the guest lay sleeping all night in unchanged position like a child, up and down between the oleanders went Padre Ignacio, walking until dawn. Temptation indeed had come over the hill and entered the cloisters.
III
Day showed the ocean’s surface no longer glassy, but lying like a mirror breathed upon; and there between the short headlands came a sail, gray and plain against the flat water. The priest watched through his glasses, and saw the gradual sun grow strong upon the canvas of the barkentine. The message from his world was at hand, yet to-day he scarcely cared so much. Sitting in his garden yesterday, he could never have imagined such a change. But his heart did not hail the barkentine as usual. Books, music, pale paper, and print–this was all that was coming to him, some of its savor had gone; for the siren voice of Life had been speaking with him face to face, and in his spirit, deep down, the love of the world was restlessly answering it. Young Gaston showed more eagerness than the Padre over this arrival of the vessel that might be bringing Trovatore in the nick of time. Now he would have the chance, before he took his leave, to help rehearse the new music with the choir. He would be a missionary, too: a perfectly new experience.
“And you still forgive Verdi the sins of his youth?” he said to his host. “I wonder if you could forgive mine?”
“Verdi has left his behind him,” retorted the Padre.
“But I am only twenty-five!” exclaimed Gaston, pathetically.
“Ah, don’t go away soon!” pleaded the exile. It was the first unconcealed complaint that had escaped him, and he felt instant shame.
But Gaston was too much elated with the enjoyment of each new day to comprehend the Padre’s soul. The shafts of another’s pain might hardly pierce the bright armor of his gaiety. He mistook the priest’s entreaty, for anxiety about his own happy spirit.
“Stay here under your care?” he asked. “It would do me no good, Padre. Temptation sticks closer to me than a brother!” and he gave that laugh of his which had disarmed severer judges than his host. “By next week I should have introduced some sin or other into your beautiful Garden of Ignorance here. It will be much safer for your flock if I go and join the other serpents at San Francisco.”
Soon after breakfast the Padre had his two mules saddled, and he and his guest set forth down the hills together to the shore. And, beneath the spell and confidence of pleasant, slow riding and the loveliness of everything, the young man talked freely of himself.
“And, seriously,” said he, “if I missed nothing else at Santa Ysabel, I should long for–how shall I say it?–for insecurity, for danger, and of all kinds–not merely danger to the body. Within these walls, beneath these sacred bells, you live too safe for a man like me.”
“Too safe!” These echoed words upon the lips of the pale Padre were a whisper too light, too deep, for Gaston’s heedless ear.
“Why,” the young man pursued in a spirit that was but half levity, “though I yield often to temptation, at times I have resisted it, and here I should miss the very chance to resist. Your garden could never be Eden for me, because temptation is absent from it.”