<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0026" id="link2HCH0026"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER VI. THE LAST BLOW </h2>
<p>WHILE JOAM DACOSTA was undergoing this examination, Yaquita, from an
inquiry made by Manoel, ascertained that she and her children would be
permitted to see the prisoner that very day about four o'clock in the
afternoon.</p>
<p>Yaquita had not left her room since the evening before. Minha and Lina
kept near her, waiting for the time when she would be admitted to see her
husband.</p>
<p>Yaquita Garral or Yaquita Dacosta, he would still find her the devoted
wife and brave companion he had ever known her to be.</p>
<p>About eleven o'clock in the morning Benito joined Manoel and Fragoso, who
were talking in the bow of the jangada.</p>
<p>"Manoel," said he, "I have a favor to ask you."</p>
<p>"What is it?"</p>
<p>"And you too, Fragoso."</p>
<p>"I am at your service, Mr. Benito," answered the barber.</p>
<p>"What is the matter?" asked Manoel, looking at his friend, whose
expression was that of a man who had come to some unalterable resolution.</p>
<p>"You never doubt my father's innocence? Is that so?" said Benito.</p>
<p>"Ah!" exclaimed Fragoso. "Rather I think it was I who committed the
crime."</p>
<p>"Well, we must now commence on the project I thought of yesterday."</p>
<p>"To find out Torres?" asked Manoel.</p>
<p>"Yes, and know from him how he found out my father's retreat. There is
something inexplicable about it. Did he know it before? I cannot
understand it, for my father never left Iquitos for more than twenty
years, and this scoundrel is hardly thirty! But the day will not close
before I know it; or, woe to Torres!"</p>
<p>Benito's resolution admitted of no discussion; and besides, neither Manoel
nor Fragoso had the slightest thought of dissuading him.</p>
<p>"I will ask, then," continued Benito, "for both of you to accompany me. We
shall start in a minute or two. It will not do to wait till Torres has
left Manaos. He has no longer got his silence to sell, and the idea might
occur to him. Let us be off!"</p>
<p>And so all three of them landed on the bank of the Rio Negro and started
for the town.</p>
<p>Manaos was not so considerable that it could not be searched in a few
hours. They had made up their minds to go from house to house, if
necessary, to look for Torres, but their better plan seemed to be to apply
in the first instance to the keepers of the taverns and lojas where the
adventurer was most likely to put up. There could hardly be a doubt that
the ex-captain of the woods would not have given his name; he might have
personal reasons for avoiding all communication with the police.
Nevertheless, unless he had left Manaos, it was almost impossible for him
to escape the young fellows' search. In any case, there would be no use in
applying to the police, for it was very probable—in fact, we know
that it actually was so—that the information given to them had been
anonymous.</p>
<p>For an hour Benito, Manoel, and Fragoso walked along the principal streets
of the town, inquiring of the tradesmen in their shops, the tavern-keepers
in their cabarets, and even the bystanders, without any one being able to
recognize the individual whose description they so accurately gave.</p>
<p>Had Torres left Manaos? Would they have to give up all hope of coming
across him?</p>
<p>In vain Manoel tried to calm Benito, whose head seemed on fire. Cost what
it might, he must get at Torres!</p>
<p>Chance at last favored them, and it was Fragoso who put them on the right
track.</p>
<p>In a tavern in Holy Ghost Street, from the description which the people
received of the adventurer, they replied that the individual in question
had put up at the loja the evening before.</p>
<p>"Did he sleep here?" asked Fragoso.</p>
<p>"Yes," answered the tavern-keeper.</p>
<p>"Is he here now?"</p>
<p>"No. He has gone out."</p>
<p>"But has he settled his bill, as a man would who has gone for good?"</p>
<p>"By no means; he left his room about an hour ago, and he will doubtless
come back to supper."</p>
<p>"Do you know what road he took when he went out?"</p>
<p>"We saw him turning toward the Amazon, going through the lower town, and
you will probably meet him on that side."</p>
<p>Fragoso did not want any more. A few seconds afterward he rejoined the
young fellows, and said:</p>
<p>"I am on the track."</p>
<p>"He is there!" exclaimed Benito.</p>
<p>"No; he has just gone out, and they have seen him walking across to the
bank of the Amazon."</p>
<p>"Come on!" replied Benito.</p>
<p>They had to go back toward the river, and the shortest way was for them to
take the left bank of the Rio Negro, down to its mouth.</p>
<p>Benito and his companions soon left the last houses of the town behind,
and followed the bank, making a slight detour so as not to be observed
from the jangada.</p>
<p>The plain was at this time deserted. Far away the view extended across the
flat, where cultivated fields had replaced the former forests.</p>
<p>Benito did not speak; he could not utter a word. Manoel and Fragoso
respected his silence. And so the three of them went along and looked
about on all sides as they traversed the space between the bank of the Rio
Negro and that of the Amazon. Three-quarters of an hour after leaving
Manaos, and still they had seen nothing!</p>
<p>Once or twice Indians working in the fields were met with. Manoel
questioned them, and one of them at length told him that a man, such as he
described, had just passed in the direction of the angle formed by the two
rivers at their confluence.</p>
<p>Without waiting for more, Benito, by an irresistible movement, strode to
the front, and his two companions had to hurry on to avoid being left
behind.</p>
<p>The left bank of the Amazon was then about a quarter of a mile off. A sort
of cliff appeared ahead, hiding a part of the horizon, and bounding the
view a few hundred paces in advance.</p>
<p>Benito, hurrying on, soon disappeared behind one of the sandy knolls.</p>
<p>"Quicker! quicker!" said Manoel to Fragoso. "We must not leave him alone
for an instant."</p>
<p>And they were dashing along when a shout struck on their ears.</p>
<p>Had Benito caught sight of Torres? What had he seen? Had Benito and Torres
already met?</p>
<p>Manoel and Fragoso, fifty paces further on, after swiftly running round
one of the spurs of the bank, saw two men standing face to face to each
other.</p>
<p>They were Torres and Benito.</p>
<p>In an instant Manoel and Fragoso had hurried up to them. It might have
been supposed that in Benito's state of excitement he would be unable to
restrain himself when he found himself once again in the presence of the
adventurer. It was not so.</p>
<p>As soon as the young man saw himself face to face with Torres, and was
certain that he could not escape, a complete change took place in his
manner, his coolness returned, and he became once more master of himself.</p>
<p>The two men looked at one another for a few moments without a word.</p>
<p>Torres first broke silence, and, in the impudent tone habitual to him,
remarked:</p>
<p>"Ah! How goes it, Mr. Benito Garral?"</p>
<p>"No, Benito Dacosta!" answered the young man.</p>
<p>"Quite so," continued Torres. "Mr. Benito Dacosta, accompanied by Mr.
Manoel Valdez and my friend Fragoso!"</p>
<p>At the irritating qualification thus accorded him by the adventurer,
Fragoso, who was by no means loath to do him some damage, was about to
rush to the attack, when Benito, quite unmoved, held him back.</p>
<p>"What is the matter with you, my lad?" exclaimed Torres, retreating for a
few steps. "I think I had better put myself on guard."</p>
<p>And as he spoke he drew from beneath his poncho his manchetta, the weapon,
adapted at will for offense or defense, which a Brazilian is never
without. And then, slightly stooping, and planted firmly on his feet, he
waited for what was to follow.</p>
<p>"I have come to look for you, Torres," said Benito, who had not stirred in
the least at this threatening attitude.</p>
<p>"To look for me?" answered the adventurer. "It is not very difficult to
find me. And why have you come to look for me?"</p>
<p>"To know from your own lips what you appear to know of the past life of my
father."</p>
<p>"Really?"</p>
<p>"Yes. I want to know how you recognized him, why you were prowling about
our fazenda in the forest of Iquitos, and why you were waiting for us at
Tabatinga."</p>
<p>"Well! it seems to me nothing could be clearer!" answered Torres, with a
grin. "I was waiting to get a passage on the jangada, and I went on board
with the intention of making him a very simple proposition—which
possibly he was wrong in rejecting."</p>
<p>At these words Manoel could stand it no longer. With pale face and eye of
fire he strode up to Torres.</p>
<p>Benito, wishing to exhaust every means of conciliation, thrust himself
between them.</p>
<p>"Calm yourself, Manoel!" he said. "I am calm—even I."</p>
<p>And then continuing:</p>
<p>"Quite so, Torres; I know the reason of your coming on board the raft.
Possessed of a secret which was doubtless given to you, you wanted to make
it a means of extortion. But that is not what I want to know at present."</p>
<p>"What is it, then?"</p>
<p>"I want to know how you recognized Joam Dacosta in the fazenda of
Iquitos?"</p>
<p>"How I recognized him?" replied Torres. "That is my business, and I see no
reason why I should tell you. The important fact is, that I was not
mistaken when I denounced in him the real author of the crime of Tijuco!"</p>
<p>"You say that to me?" exclaimed Benito, who began to lose his
self-possession.</p>
<p>"I will tell you nothing," returned Torres; "Joam Dacosta declined my
propositions! He refused to admit me into his family! Well! now that his
secret is known, now that he is a prisoner, it is I who refuse to enter
his family, the family of a thief, of a murderer, of a condemned felon,
for whom the gallows now waits!"</p>
<p>"Scoundrel!" exclaimed Benito, who drew his manchetta from his belt and
put himself in position.</p>
<p>Manoel and Fragoso, by a similar movement, quickly drew their weapons.</p>
<p>"Three against one!" said Torres.</p>
<p>"No! one against one!" answered Benito.</p>
<p>"Really! I should have thought an assassination would have better suited
an assassin's son!"</p>
<p>"Torres!" exclaimed Benito, "defend yourself, or I will kill you like a
mad dog!"</p>
<p>"Mad! so be it!" answered Torres. "But I bite, Benito Dacosta, and beware
of the wounds!"</p>
<p>And then again grasping his manchetta, he put himself on guard and ready
to attack his enemy.</p>
<p>Benito had stepped back a few paces.</p>
<p>"Torres," he said, regaining all his coolness, which for a moment he had
lost; "you were the guest of my father, you threatened him, you betrayed
him, you denounced him, you accused an innocent man, and with God's help I
am going to kill you!"</p>
<p>Torres replied with the most insolent smile imaginable. Perhaps at the
moment the scoundrel had an idea of stopping any struggle between Benito
and him, and he could have done so. In fact he had seen that Joam Dacosta
had said nothing about the document which formed the material proof of his
innocence.</p>
<p>Had he revealed to Benito that he, Torres, possessed this proof, Benito
would have been that instant disarmed. But his desire to wait till the
very last moment, so as to get the very best price for the document he
possessed, the recollection of the young man's insulting words, and the
hate which he bore to all that belonged to him, made him forget his own
interest.</p>
<p>In addition to being thoroughly accustomed to the manchetta, which he
often had had occasion to use, the adventurer was strong, active, and
artful, so that against an adversary who was scarcely twenty, who could
have neither his strength nor his dexterity, the chances were greatly in
his favor.</p>
<p>Manoel by a last effort wished to insist on fighting him instead of
Benito.</p>
<p>"No, Manoel," was the cool reply, "it is for me alone to avenge my father,
and as everything here ought to be in order, you shall be my second."</p>
<p>"Benito!"</p>
<p>"As for you, Fragoso, you will not refuse if I ask you to act as second
for that man?"</p>
<p>"So be it," answered Fragoso, "though it is not an office of honor.
Without the least ceremony," he added, "I would have killed him like a
wild beast."</p>
<p>The place where the duel was about to take place was a level bank about
fifty paces long, on the top of a cliff rising perpendicularly some fifty
feet above the Amazon. The river slowly flowed at the foot, and bathed the
clumps of reeds which bristled round its base.</p>
<p>There was, therefore, none too much room, and the combatant who was the
first to give way would quickly be driven over into the abyss.</p>
<p>The signal was given by Manoel, and Torres and Benito stepped forward.</p>
<p>Benito had complete command over himself. The defender of a sacred cause,
his coolness was unruffled, much more so than that of Torres, whose
conscience insensible and hardened as it was, was bound at the moment to
trouble him.</p>
<p>The two met, and the first blow came from Benito. Torres parried it. They
then jumped back, but almost at the same instant they rushed together, and
with their left hands seized each other by the shoulder—never to
leave go again.</p>
<p>Torres, who was the strongest, struck a side blow with his manchetta which
Benito could not quite parry. His left side was touched, and his poncho
was reddened with his blood. But he quickly replied, and slightly wounded
Torres in the hand.</p>
<p>Several blows were then interchanged, but nothing decisive was done. The
ever silent gaze of Benito pierced the eyes of Torres like a sword blade
thrust to his very heart. Visibly the scoundrel began to quail. He
recoiled little by little, pressed back by his implacable foe, who was
more determined on taking the life of his father's denouncer than in
defending his own. To strike was all that Benito longed for; to parry was
all that the other now attempted to do.</p>
<p>Soon Torres saw himself thrust to the very edge of the bank, at a spot
where, slightly scooped away, it overhung the river. He perceived the
danger; he tried to retake the offensive and regain the lost ground. His
agitation increased, his looks grew livid. At length he was obliged to
stoop beneath the arm which threatened him.</p>
<p>"Die, then!" exclaimed Benito.</p>
<p>The blow was struck full on its chest, but the point of the manchetta was
stopped by a hard substance hidden beneath the poncho of the adventurer.</p>
<p>Benito renewed his attack, and Torres, whose return thrust did not touch
his adversary, felt himself lost. He was again obliged to retreat. Then he
would have shouted—shouted that the life of Joam Dacosta depended on
his own! He had not time!</p>
<p>A second thrust of the manchetta pierced his heart. He fell backward, and
the ground suddenly failing him, he was precipitated down the cliff. As a
last effort his hands convulsively clutched at a clump of reeds, but they
could not stop him, and he disappeared beneath the waters of the river.</p>
<p>Benito was supported on Manoel's shoulder; Fragoso grasped his hands. He
would not even give his companions time to dress his wound, which was very
slight.</p>
<p>"To the jangada!" he said, "to the jangada!"</p>
<p>Manoel and Fragoso with deep emotion followed him without speaking a word.</p>
<p>A quarter of an hour afterward the three reached the bank to which the
raft was moored. Benito and Manoel rushed into the room where were Yaquita
and Minha, and told them all that had passed.</p>
<p>"My son!" "My brother!"</p>
<p>The words were uttered at the same moment.</p>
<p>"To the prison!" said Benito.</p>
<p>"Yes! Come! come!" replied Yaquita.</p>
<p>Benito, followed by Manoel, hurried along his mother, and half an hour
later they arrived before the prison.</p>
<p>Owing to the order previously given by Judge Jarriquez they were
immediately admitted, and conducted to the chamber occupied by the
prisoner.</p>
<p>The door opened. Joam Dacosta saw his wife, his son, and Manoel enter the
room.</p>
<p>"Ah! Joam, my Joam!" exclaimed Yaquita.</p>
<p>"Yaquita! my wife! my children!" replied the prisoner, who opened his arms
and pressed them to his heart.</p>
<p>"My Joam, innocent!"</p>
<p>"Innocent and avenged!" said Benito.</p>
<p>"Avenged? What do you mean?"</p>
<p>"Torres is dead, father; killed by my hand!"</p>
<p>"Dead!—Torres!—Dead!" gasped Joam Dacosta. "My son! You have
ruined me!"</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />