The Coast of Adventure. Harold Bindloss

The Coast of Adventure - Harold  Bindloss


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       Harold Bindloss

      The Coast of Adventure

      Published by Good Press, 2021

       [email protected]

      EAN 4057664609052

       CHAPTER I FATHER AGUSTIN'S SHEEP

       CHAPTER II THE ADVENTURES BEGIN

       CHAPTER III HIGH STAKES

       CHAPTER IV THE "ENCHANTRESS"

       CHAPTER V THE CALL OF THE UNKNOWN

       CHAPTER VI ON THE SPANISH MAIN

       CHAPTER VII MANGROVE CREEK

       CHAPTER VIII THE TRAITOR

       CHAPTER IX STRANDED

       CHAPTER X THE PEON PILOT

       CHAPTER XI A MODERN DON QUIXOTE

       CHAPTER XII BAITING THE SMUGGLERS

       CHAPTER XIII THE EMERALD RING

       CHAPTER XIV SMOOTH WATER

       CHAPTER XV THE TORNADO

       CHAPTER XVI THE RUSE

       CHAPTER XVII ELUDING THE GUNBOAT

       CHAPTER XVIII THE TEST OF LOVE

       CHAPTER XIX THE CUBAN SPY

       CHAPTER XX THE ARREST OF CASTILLO

       CHAPTER XXI A HALF-BREED'S TRICK

       CHAPTER XXII HELD FOR RANSOM

       CHAPTER XXIV IN THE CAMP OF THE HILLSMEN

       CHAPTER XXV A TRIAL OF SPEED

       CHAPTER XXVI TRAPPED

       CHAPTER XXVII HANDS DOWN

       CHAPTER XXVIII THE PRESIDENT'S DESPATCHES

       CHAPTER XXIX THE PRESIDIO

       CHAPTER XXX THE ESCAPE

       CHAPTER XXXI THE AMERICAN TRADER

       CHAPTER XXXII LOVE'S VISION

       CHAPTER XXXIII THE HERO OF RIO FRIO

       CHAPTER XXXIV THE COMING DAWN

       FATHER AGUSTIN'S SHEEP

       Table of Contents

      High on the sun-scorched hillside above the steamy littoral of the Caribbean Sea the Spanish-Indian town of Rio Frio lay sweltering in the heat of afternoon. The flat-topped, white houses surrounding the plaza reflected a dazzling glare, and the heat shimmered mercilessly upon the rough paving-stones. Flakes of plaster had fallen from the buildings; a few of them were mere ruins, relics of a past age; for the town had been built when conquistadores from Spain first plunged into the tropic forest to search for El Dorado. Here and there dilapidated green lattices shaded upper windows, and nearer the ground narrow openings were guarded by rusty iron bars; but some of the houses showed blank outer walls, and the plaza had rather an Eastern than an American look. Spain has set upon the New World the stamp the Moors impressed on her.

      At one end of the plaza stood the Café Four Nations, a low, open-sided room, with a row of decaying pillars dividing it from the pavement. It was filled with flies, which stuck in black clusters to the papers hanging from the tarnished lamps and crawled about the dusty tables. The hot air was tainted with aniseed, picadura tobacco, and the curious musky smell which is a characteristic of ancient Spanish towns. On the right-hand side of the square rose the twin towers of the church of San Sebastian. Wide steps led up to the patch of shadow where a leather curtain left uncovered part of the door, and a niche above sheltered an image of the martyr with an arrow in his breast. The figure was well modeled and grimly realistic.

      Opposite the café, the calle Mercedes cut a cool, dark gap through the dazzling town. On its outskirts, the hillside fell sharply to a wide, green level. Beyond this a silver gleam indicated the sea.

      The café was in shadow, and at its inner end a number of citizens lounged, half asleep, in low cane chairs. The hour of the siesta had slipped away, but it was not yet time for dinner, and, having read the newspaper and guardedly discussed politics, the leading inhabitants of Rio Frio had nothing else to do. They were men with formal manners, a few dressed in rusty black, and some in white cotton, but all were not of pure European blood. One or two, indeed, plainly showed their Negro descent; others the melancholy of the Indian aboriginal.

      Near the front pillars, a priest and two men of lighter color were seated at a table. Father Agustin wore a threadbare cassock and clumsy rawhide shoes, but he had an air of quiet dignity, and his sharply cut features were of the Gothic type, which is not uncommon in Spain. His accent was also clean Peninsular. James Grahame, who sat opposite across the chessboard, wore the


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