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lligent boy; "only to inquire if you had arrived safe." She had been anxious then! I separated the branchlet into two equal parts: one I placed in my bosom; the other, having fervently kissed, I enclosed in a folded sheet, upon which I wrote the words-- "_Tuyo_--_tuyo_--_hasta la muerte_!" Cyprio bore back my parting message. At midnight Holingsworth and his party came in from the scout. Nothing had been seen of the guerrilla. CHAPTER FIFTY TWO. THE ROUTE. It was a struggle between Aurora and the moon which of them should rule the sky, when our bugle rang its clear _reveille_, rousing the rangers from their slumber, and startling their steeds at the stall. The goddess of morning soon triumphed, and under her soft blue light, men and horses could be seen moving about, until the bugle again sounded-- this time to "boot and saddle"--and the rangers began to form in the piazza, and prepare for the route. A single wagon with its white tilt and long team of mules, already "hitched up," stood near the centre of the square. It constituted the whole baggage-train of the corps, and served as an ambulance for our invalids. Both baggage and sick had been safely stowed, and the vehicle was ready for the road. The bugler, already in his saddle, awaited orders to sound the "forward." I had climbed to my favourite "smoking-room," the azotea. Perhaps it was the last time I should ever set foot on those painted tiles. My eyes wandered over the piazza, though I little heeded what was passing there. Only the salient points of the picture were noted by me--steeds under saddle and bridle; men buckling on folded blankets, holsters, and valises; a few already in the saddle; a few more standing by the heads of their horses, and still another few grouped round the door of the _pulperia_, having a last drink of _mezcal_ or _Catalan_ with their swarthy Mexican acquaintances. Here and there, in front of some adobe hut, might be observed a more tender leave-taking. The ranger fully equipped--with arms, haversack, and canteen--leaning against the heavy bars of a window, his face turned inward, as though he was talking to some prisoner through the grating of a jail. But he is himself the real captive, ensnared during his short sojourn, and still held in chains by the olive-skinned _poblana_, whose dark liquid eyes may be seen on the other side of the reja, flashing with love, or melting with sad tenderness at th
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