Remember the Alamo by Amelia Edith Huddleston Barr
page 63 of 339 (18%)
page 63 of 339 (18%)
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"What is the matter? What is the matter, Roberto? I have
been made sick with these uncertainties. Why did you not come home at the Angelus?" "I have had a good reason for my delay, Maria. About three o'clock I received a message from the Senora Alveda, and I visited her. She is in great trouble, and she had not been able to bear it with her usual fortitude. She bad fainted." "Ah, the poor mother! She has a son who will break her heart." "She made no complaint of Luis. She is distracted about her country, and as I came home I understood why. For she is a very shrewd woman, and she perceives that Santa Anna is preparing trouble enough for it." "Well, then, what is it?" "When I left her house, I noticed many Americans, as well as many Mexicans, on the streets. They were standing together, too; and there was something in their faces, and in the way their arms were carried, which was very striking and portentous. I fancied they looked coldly on me, and I was troubled by the circumstance. In the Plaza I saw the military band approaching, accompanied by half a dozen officers and a few soldiers. The noise stopped suddenly, and Captain Morello proclaimed as a bando (edict) of the highest authority, an order for all Americans to surrender their arms of every |
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