However, Father Sarria was not in the church.Vanamee took a couple of turns the length of the aisle, looking about into the chapels on either side of the chancel.But the building was deserted.The priest had been there recently, nevertheless, for the altar furniture was in disarray, as though he had been rearranging it but a moment before.On both sides of the church and half-way up their length, the walls were pierced by low archways, in which were massive wooden doors, clamped with iron bolts.One of these doors, on the pulpit side of the church, stood ajar, and stepping to it and pushing it wide open, Vanamee looked diagonally across a little patch of vegetables--beets, radishes, and lettuce--to the rear of the building that had once contained the cloisters, and through an open window saw Father Sarria diligently polishing the silver crucifix that usually stood on the high altar.Vanamee did not call to the priest.
Putting a finger to either temple, he fixed his eyes steadily upon him for a moment as he moved about at his work.In a few seconds he closed his eyes, but only part way.The pupils contracted; his forehead lowered to an expression of poignant intensity.Soon afterward he saw the priest pause abruptly in the act of drawing the cover over the crucifix, looking about him from side to side.He turned again to his work, and again came to a stop, perplexed, curious.With uncertain steps, and evidently wondering why he did so, he came to the door of the room and opened it, looking out into the night.Vanamee, hidden in the deep shadow of the archway, did not move, but his eyes closed, and the intense expression deepened on his face.The priest hesitated, moved forward a step, turned back, paused again, then came straight across the garden patch, brusquely colliding with Vanamee, still motionless in the recess of the archway.
Sarria gave a great start, catching his breath.
"Oh--oh, it's you.Was it you I heard calling?No, I could not have heard--I remember now.What a strange power! I am not sure that it is right to do this thing, Vanamee.I--I HAD to come.Ido not know why.It is a great force--a power--I don't like it.
Vanamee, sometimes it frightens me."
Vanamee put his chin in the air.
"If I had wanted to, sir, I could have made you come to me from back there in the Quien Sabe ranch."The priest shook his head.
"It troubles me," he said, "to think that my own will can count for so little.Just now I could not resist.If a deep river had been between us, I must have crossed it.Suppose I had been asleep now?""It would have been all the easier," answered Vanamee."Iunderstand as little of these things as you.But I think if you had been asleep, your power of resistance would have been so much the more weakened.""Perhaps I should not have waked.Perhaps I should have come to you in my sleep.""Perhaps."
Sarria crossed himself."It is occult," he hazarded."No; I do not like it.Dear fellow," he put his hand on Vanamee's shoulder, "don't--call me that way again; promise.See," he held out his hand, "I am all of a tremble.There, we won't speak of it further.Wait for me a moment.I have only to put the cross in its place, and a fresh altar cloth, and then I am done.To-morrow is the feast of The Holy Cross, and I am preparing against it.The night is fine.We will smoke a cigar in the cloister garden."A few moments later the two passed out of the door on the other side of the church, opposite the pulpit, Sarria adjusting a silk skull cap on his tonsured head.He wore his cassock now, and was far more the churchman in appearance than when Vanamee and Presley had seen him on a former occasion.
They were now in the cloister garden.The place was charming.
Everywhere grew clumps of palms and magnolia trees.A grapevine, over a century old, occupied a trellis in one angle of the walls which surrounded the garden on two sides.Along the third side was the church itself, while the fourth was open, the wall having crumbled away, its site marked only by a line of eight great pear trees, older even than the grapevine, gnarled, twisted, bearing no fruit.Directly opposite the pear trees, in the south wall of the garden, was a round, arched portal, whose gate giving upon the esplanade in front of the Mission was always closed.Small gravelled walks, well kept, bordered with mignonette, twisted about among the flower beds, and underneath the magnolia trees.
In the centre was a little fountain in a stone basin green with moss, while just beyond, between the fountain and the pear trees, stood what was left of a sun dial, the bronze gnomon, green with the beatings of the weather, the figures on the half-circle of the dial worn away, illegible.
But on the other side of the fountain, and directly opposite the door of the Mission, ranged against the wall, were nine graves--three with headstones, the rest with slabs.Two of Sarria's predecessors were buried here; three of the graves were those of Mission Indians.One was thought to contain a former alcalde of Guadalajara; two more held the bodies of De La Cuesta and his young wife (taking with her to the grave the illusion of her husband's love), and the last one, the ninth, at the end of the line, nearest the pear trees, was marked by a little headstone, the smallest of any, on which, together with the proper dates--only sixteen years apart--was cut the name "Angele Varian."But the quiet, the repose, the isolation of the little cloister garden was infinitely delicious.It was a tiny corner of the great valley that stretched in all directions around it--shut off, discreet, romantic, a garden of dreams, of enchantments, of illusions.Outside there, far off, the great grim world went clashing through its grooves, but in here never an echo of the grinding of its wheels entered to jar upon the subdued modulation of the fountain's uninterrupted murmur.