CHAPTER IX

“Is he dead? is he dead?” she asked distractedly. “I’ve just come from the village. Why didn’t you send for me? Tell me, is he dead? Oh, tell me at once!”

She caught the Regimental Surgeon’s arm. He looked down at her, over his glasses, benignly, for she had always been a favourite of his, and answered:

“Alive, alive, my dear. Bad rip in the shoulder—worn out—weak—shattered—but good for a while yet—yes, yes—certainement!”

With a wayward impulse, she threw her arms around his neck and kissed him on the cheek. The embrace disarranged his glasses and flushed his face like a schoolgirl’s, but his eyes were full of embarrassed delight.

“There, there,” he said, “we’ll take care of him—!” Then suddenly he paused, for the real significance of her action dawned upon him.

“Dear me,” he said in disturbed meditation; “dear me!”

She suddenly opened the bedroom door and went in, followed by Nic. The Regimental Surgeon dropped his mouth and cheeks in his hand reflectively, his eyes showing quaintly and quizzically above the glasses and his fingers.

“Well, well! Well, well!” he said, as if he had encountered a difficulty. “It—it will never be possible. He would not marry her,” he added, and then, turning, went abstractedly down the stairs.

Ferrol was in a deep sleep when Christine and her brother entered the chamber. Her face turned still more pale when she saw him, flushed, and became pale again. There were leaden hollows round his eyes, and his hair was matted with perspiration. Yet he was handsome—and helpless. Her eyes filled with tears. She turned her head away from her brother and went softly to the window, but not before she had touched the pale hand that lay nerveless upon the coverlet.

“It’s not feverish,” she said to Nic, as if in necessary explanation of the act.

She stood at the window for a moment, looking out, then said:

“Come here, Nic, and tell me all about it.”

He told her all he knew: how he had come to the old house by appointment with Ferrol; had tried to get into the store-room; had found the doors bolted; had heard the noise of a wild animal inside; had run out, tried a window, at last wrenched it open and found Ferrol in a dead faint. He went to the table and brought back the broken bayonet.

“That’s all he had to fight with,” he said. “Fire of a little hell, but he had grit—after all!”

“That’s all he had to fight with!” she repeated, as she untwisted the handkerchief from the hilt end. “Why did you say he had true grit—‘after all’? What do you mean by that ‘after all’?”

“Well, you don’t expect much from a man with only one lung—eh?”

“Courage isn’t in the lungs,” she answered. Then she added: “Go and fetch me a bottle of brandy—I’m going to bathe his hands and feet in brandy and hot water as soon as he’s awake.”

“Better let mother do that, hadn’t you?” he asked rather hesitatingly, as he moved towards the door.

Her eyes snapped fire. “Nic—mon Dieu, hear the nice Nic!” she said. “The dear Nic, who went in swimming with—”

She said no more, for he had no desire to listen to an account of his misdeeds, which were not a few,—and Christine had a galling tongue.

When the door was shut she went to the bed, sat down on a chair beside it, and looked at Ferrol earnestly and sadly.

“My dear! my dear, dear, dear!” she said in a whisper, “you look so handsome and so kind as you lie there—like no man I ever saw in my life. Who’d have fought as you fought—and nearly dead! Who’d have had brains enough to know just what to do! My darling, that never said ‘my darling’ to me, nor heard me call you so. Suppose you haven’t a dollar, not a cent, in the world, and suppose you’ll never earn a dollar or a cent in the world, what difference does that make to me? I could earn it; and I’d give more for a touch of your finger than a thousand dollars; and more for a month with you than for a lifetime with the richest man in the world. You never looked cross at me, or at any one, and you never say an unkind thing, and you never find fault when you suffer so. You never hurt any one, I know. You never hurt Vanne Castine—”

Her fingers twitched in her lap, and then clasped very tight, as she went on:

“You never hurt him, and yet he’s tried to kill you in the most awful way. Perhaps you’ll die now—perhaps you’ll die to-night—but no, no, you shall not!” she cried in sudden fright and eagerness, as she got up and leaned over him. “You shall not die; you shall live—for a while—oh! yes, for a while yet,” she added, with a pitiful yearning in her voice; “just for a little while—till you love me, and tell me so! Oh, how could that devil try to kill you!”

She suddenly drew herself up.

“I’ll kill him and his bear too—now, now, while you lie there sleeping. And when you wake I’ll tell you what I’ve done, and you’ll—you’ll love me then, and tell me so, perhaps. Yes, yes, I’ll—”

She said no more, for her brother entered with the brandy.

“Put it there,” she said, pointing to the table. “You watch him till I come. I’ll be back in an hour; and then, when he wakes, we’ll bathe him in the hot water and brandy.”

“Who told you about hot water and brandy?” he asked her, curiously.

She did not answer him, but passed through the door and down the hall till she came to Nic’s bedroom; she went in, took a pair of pistols from the wall, examined them, found they were fully loaded, and hurried from the room.

About a half-hour later she appeared before the house which once had belonged to Vanne Castine. The mortgage had been foreclosed, and the place had passed into the hands of Sophie and Magon Farcinelle; but Castine had taken up his abode in the house a few days before, and defied anyone to put him out.

A light was burning in the kitchen of the house. There were no curtains to the window, but an old coat had been hung up to serve the purpose, and light shone between a sleeve of it and the window-sill. Putting her face close to the window, the girl could see the bear in the corner, clawing at its chain and tossing its head from side to side, still panting and angry from the fight.

Now and again, also, it licked the bayonet-wound between its shoulders, and rubbed its lacerated nose on its paw. Castine was mixing some tar and oil in a pan by the fire, to apply to the still bleeding wounds of his Michael. He had an ugly grin on his face.

He was dressed just as in the first day he appeared in the village, even to the fur cap; and presently, as he turned round, he began to sing the monotonous measure to which the bear had danced. It had at once a soothing effect upon the beast.

After he had gone from the store-room, leaving Ferrol dead, as he thought, it was this song alone which had saved himself from peril; for the beast was wild from pain, fury and the taste of blood. As soon as they had cleared the farmyard, he had begun this song, and the bear, cowed at first by the thrusts of its master’s pike, quieted to the well-known ditty.

He approached the bear now, and, stooping, put some of the tar and oil upon its nose. It sniffed and rubbed off the salve, but he put more on; then he rubbed it into the wound of the breast. Once the animal made a fierce snap at his shoulder, but he deftly avoided it, gave it a thrust with a sharp-pointed stick, and began the song again. Presently he rose and came towards the fire.

As he did so he heard the door open. Turning round quickly, he saw Christine standing just inside. She had a shawl thrown round her, and one hand was thrust in the pocket of her dress. She looked from him to the bear, then back again to him.

He did not realise why she had come. For a moment, in his excited state, he almost thought she had come because she loved him. He had seen her twice since his return; but each time she would say nothing to him further than that she wished not to meet or to speak to him at all. He had pleaded with her, had grown angry, and she had left him. Who could tell—perhaps she had come to him now as she had come to him in the old days. He dropped the pan of tar and oil. “Chris!” he said, and started forward to her.

At that moment the bear, as if it knew the girl’s mission, sprang forward, with a growl. Its huge mouth was open, and all its fierce lust for killing showed again in its wild lunges. Castine turned, with an oath, and thrust the steel-set pike into its leg. It cowered at the voice and the punishment for an instant, but came on again.

Castine saw the girl raise a pistol and fire at the beast. He was so dumfounded that at first he did not move. Then he saw her raise another pistol. The wounded bear lunged heavily on its chain—once—twice—in a devilish rage, and as Christine prepared to fire, snapped the staple loose and sprang forward.

At the same moment Castine threw himself in front of the girl, and caught the onward rush. Calling the beast by its name, he grappled with it. They were man and servant no longer, but two animals fighting for their lives. Castine drew out his knife, as the bear, raised on its hind legs, crushed him in its immense arms, and still calling, half crazily, “Michael! Michael! down, Michael!” he plunged the knife twice in the beast’s side.

The bear’s teeth fastened in his shoulder; the horrible pressure of its arms was turning his face black; he felt death coming, when another pistol shot rang out close to his own head, and his breath suddenly came back. He staggered to the wall, and then came to the floor in a heap as the bear lurched downwards and fell over on its side, dead.

Christine had come to kill the beast and, perhaps, the man. The man had saved her life, and now she had saved his; and together they had killed the bear which had maltreated Tom Ferrol.

Castine’s eyes were fixed on the dead beast. Everything was gone from him now—even the way to his meagre livelihood; and the cause of it all, as he in his blind, unnatural way thought, was this girl before him—this girl and her people. Her back was towards the door. Anger and passion were both at work in him at once.

“Chris,” he said, “Chris, let’s call it even-eh? Let’s make it up. Chris, ma cherie, don’t you remember when we used to meet, and was fond of each other? Let’s make it up and leave here—now—to-night-eh?

“I’m not so poor, after all. I’ll be paid by Papineau, the leader of the Rebellion—” He made a couple of unsteady steps towards her, for he was weak yet. “What’s the good—you’re bound to come to me in the end! You’ve got the same kind of feelings in you; you’ve—”

She had stood still at first, dazed by his words; but she grew angry quickly, and was about to speak as she felt, when he went on:

“Stay here now with me. Don’t go back. Don’t you remember Shangois’s house? Don’t you remember that night—that night when—ah! Chris, stay here—”

Her face was flaming. “I’d rather stay in a room full of wild beasts like that”—she pointed to the bear, “than be with you one minute—you murderer!” she said, with choking anger.

He started towards her, saying:

“By the blood of Joseph! but you’ll stay just the same; and—”

He got no further, for she threw the pistol in his face with all her might. It struck between his eyes with a thud, and he staggered back, blind, bleeding and faint, as she threw open the door and sped away in the darkness.

Reaching the Manor safely, she ran up to her room, arranged her hair, washed her hands, and came again to Ferrol’s bedroom. Knocking softly she was admitted by Nic. There was an unnatural brightness in her eyes. “Where’ve you been?” he asked, for he noticed this. “What’ve you been doing?”

“I’ve killed the bear that tried to kill him,” she answered.

She spoke louder than she meant. Her voice awakened Ferrol.

“Eh, what?” he said, “killed the bear, mademoiselle,—my dear friend,” he added, “killed the bear!” He coughed a little, and a twinge of pain crossed over his face.

She nodded, and her face was alight with pleasure. She lifted up his head and gave him a little drink of brandy. His fingers closed on hers that held the glass. His touch thrilled her.

“That’s good, that’s easier,” he remarked.

“We’re going to bathe you in brandy and hot water, now—Nic and I,” she said.

“Bathe me! Bathe me!” he said, in amused consternation.

“Hands and feet,” Nic explained.

A few minutes later as she lifted up his head, her face was very near him; her breath was in his face. Her eyes half closed, her fingers trembled. He suddenly drew her to him and kissed her. She looked round swiftly, but her brother had not noticed.

Ferrols’s recovery from his injuries was swifter than might have been expected. As soon as he was able to move about Christine was his constant attendant. She had made herself his nurse, and no one had seriously interfered, though the Cure had not at all vaguely offered a protest to Madame Lavilette. But Madame Lavilette was now in the humour to defy or evade the Cure, whichever seemed the more convenient or more necessary. To be linked by marriage with the nobility would indeed be the justification of all her long-baffled hopes. Meanwhile, the parish gossiped, though little of that gossip was heard at the Manor Casimbault. By and by the Cure ceased to visit the Manor, but the Regimental Surgeon came often, and sometimes stayed late. He, perhaps, could have given Madame Lavilette the best advice and warning; but, in truth, he enjoyed what he considered a piquant position. Once, drawing at his pipe, as little like an Englishman as possible, he tried to say with an English accent, “Amusing and awkward situation!” but he said, “Damn funny and chic!” instead. He had no idea that any particular harm would be done—either by love or marriage; and neither seemed certain.

One day as Ferrol, entirely convalescent, was sitting in an arbour of the Manor garden, half asleep, he was awakened by voices near him.

He did not recognise one of the voices; the other was Nic Lavilette’s.

The strange voice was saying: “I have collected five thousand dollars—all that can be got in the two counties. It is at the Seigneury. Here is an order on the Seigneur Duhamel. Go there in two days and get the money. You will carry it to headquarters. These are General Papineau’s orders. You will understand that your men—”

Ferrol heard no more, for the two rebels passed on, their voices becoming indistinct. He sat for a few moments moveless, for an idea had occurred to him even as Papineau’s agent spoke.

If that money were only his!

Five thousand dollars—how that would ease the situation! The money belonged to whom? To a lot of rebels: to be used for making war against the British Government. After the money left the hands of the men who gave it—Lavilette and the rest—it wasn’t theirs. It belonged to a cause. Well, he was the enemy of that cause. All was fair in love and war!

There were two ways of doing it. He could waylay Nicolas as he came from the house of the old seigneur, could call to him to throw up his hands in good highwayman fashion, and, well disguised, could get away with the money without being discovered. Or again, he could follow Nic from the Seigneury to the Manor, discover where he kept the money, and devise a plan to steal it.

For some time he had given up smoking; but now, as a sort of celebration of his plan, he opened his cigar case, and finding two cigars left, took one out and lighted it.

“By Jove,” he said to himself, “thieving is a nice come-down, I must say! But a man has to live, and I’m sick of charity—sick of it. I’ve had enough.”

He puffed his cigar briskly, and enjoyed the forbidden and deadly luxury to the full.

Presently he got up, took his stick, came down-stairs, and passed out into the garden. The shoulder which had been lacerated by the bear drooped forward some what, and seemed smaller than the other. Although he held himself as erect as possible, you still could have laid your hand in the hollow of his left breast, and it would have done no more than give it a natural fulness. Perhaps it was a sort of vanity, perhaps a kind of courage, which made him resolutely straighten himself, in spite of the deadly weight dragging his shoulder down. He might be melancholy in secret, but in public he was gay and hopeful, and talked of everything except himself. On that interesting topic he would permit no discussion. Yet there often came jugs and jars from friendly people, who never spoke to him of his disease—they were polite and sensitive, these humble folk—but sent him their home-made medicines, with assurances scrawled on paper that “it would cure Mr. Ferrol’s cold, oh, absolutely.”

Before the Lavilettes he smiled, and received the gifts in a debonair way, sometimes making whimsical remarks. At the same time the jugs and jars of cordial (whose contents varied from whiskey, molasses and boneset, to rum, licorice, gentian and sarsaparilla roots) he carried to his room; and he religiously tried them all by turn. Each seemed to do him good for a few days, then to fail of effect; and he straightway tried another, with renewed hope on every occasion, and subsequent disappointment. He also secretly consulted the Regimental Surgeon, who was too kindhearted to tell him the truth; and he tried his hand at various remedies of his own, which did no more than to loosen the cough which was breaking down his strength.

As now, he often walked down the street swinging his cane, not as though he needed it for walking, but merely for occupation and companionship. He did not delude the villagers by these sorrowful deceptions, but they made believe he did. There were a few people who did not like him; but they were of that cantankerous minority who put thorns in the bed of the elect.

To-day, occupied with his thoughts, he walked down the main road, then presently diverged on a side road which led past Magon Farcinelle’s house to an old disused mill, owned by Magon’s father. He paused when he came opposite Magon’s house, and glanced up at the open door. He was tired, and the coolness of the place looked inviting. He passed through the gate, and went lightly up the path. He could see straight through the house into the harvest-fields at the back. Presently a figure crossed the lane of light, and made a cheerful living foreground to the blue sky beyond the farther door. The light and ardour of the scene gave him a thrill of pleasure, and hurried his footsteps. The air was palpitating with sleepy comfort round him, and he felt a new vitality pass into him: his imagination was feeding his enfeebled body; his active brain was giving him a fresh counterfeit of health. The hectic flush on his pale face deepened. He came to the wooden steps of the piazza, or stoop, and then paused a moment, as if for breath; but, suddenly conscious of what he was doing, he ran briskly up the steps, knocked with his cane upon the door jamb, and, without waiting, stepped inside.

Between him and the outer door, against the ardent blue background, stood Sophie Farcinelle—the English faced Sophie—a little heavy, a little slow, but with the large, long profile which is the type of English beauty—docile, healthy, cow-like. Her face, within her sunbonnet, caught the reflected light, and the pink calico of her dress threw a glow over her cheeks and forehead, and gave a good gleam to her eyes. She had in her hands a dish of strawberries. It was a charming picture in the eyes of a man to whom the feelings of robustness and health were mostly a reminiscence. Yet, while the first impression was on him, he contrasted Sophie with the impetuous, fiery-hearted Christine, with her dramatic Gallic face and blood, to the latter’s advantage, in spite of the more harmonious setting of this picture.

Sophie was in place in this old farmhouse, with its dormer windows, with the weaver’s loom in the large kitchen, the meat-block by the fireplace, and the big bread-tray by the stove, where the yeast was as industrious as the reapers beyond in the fields. She was in keeping with the chromo of the Madonna and the Child upon the wall, with the sprig of holy palm at the shrine in the corner, with the old King Louis blunderbuss above the chimney.

Sophie tried to take off her sunbonnet with one hand, but the knot tightened, and it tipped back on her head, giving her a piquant air. She flushed.

“Oh, m’sieu’!” she said in English, “it’s kind of you to call. I am quite glad—yes.”

Then she turned round to put the strawberries upon a table, but he was beside her in an instant and took the dish out of her hands. Placing it on the table, he took a couple of strawberries in his fingers.

“May I?” he asked in French.

She nodded as she whipped off the sunbonnet, and replied in her own language:

“Certainly, as many as you want.”

He bit into one, but got no further with it. Her back was turned to him, and he threw the berry out of the window. She felt rather than saw what he had done. She saw that he was fagged. She instantly thought of a cordial she had in the house, the gift of a nun from the Ursuline Convent in Quebec; a precious little bottle which she had kept for the anniversary of her wedding day. If she had been told in the morning that she would open that bottle now, and for a stranger, she probably would have resented the idea with scorn.

His disguised weariness still exciting her sympathy, she offered him a chair.

“You will sit down, m’sieu’?” she asked. “It is very warm.”

She did not say: “You look very tired.” She instinctively felt that it would suggest the delicate state of his health.

The chair was inviting enough, with its chintz cover and wicker seat, but he would never admit fatigue. He threw his leg half jauntily over the end of the table and said:

“No—no, thanks; I’d rather not sit.”

His forehead was dripping with perspiration. He took out his handkerchief and dried it. His eyes were a little heavy, but his complexion was a delicate and unnatural pink and white-like a piece of fine porcelain. It was a face without care, without vice, without fear, and without morals. For the absence of vice with the absence of morals are not incongruous in a human face. Sophie went into another room for a moment, and brought back a quaint cut-glass bottle of cordial.

“It is very good,” she said, as she took the cork out; “better than peach brandy or things like that.”

He watched her pour it out into a wine-glass, and as soon as he saw the colour and the flow of it he was certain of its quality.

“That looks like good stuff,” he said, as she handed him a glass brimming over; “but you must have one with me. I can’t drink alone, you know.”

“Oh, m’sieu’, if you please, no,” she answered half timidly, flattered by the glance of his eye—a look of flattery which was part of his stock-in-trade. It had got him into trouble all his life.

“Ah, madame, but I plead yes!” he answered, with a little encouraging nod towards her. “Come, let me pour it for you.”

He took the odd little bottle and poured her glass as full as his own.

“If Magon were only here—he’d like some, I know,” she said, vaguely struggling with a sense of impropriety, though why, she did not know; for, on the surface, this was only dutiful hospitality to a distinguished guest. The impropriety probably lay in the sensations roused by this visit and this visitor. “I intended—”

“Oh, we must try to get along without monsieur,” he said, with a little cough; “he’s a busy gentleman.” The rather rude and flippant sentiment seemed hardly in keeping with the fatal token of his disease.

“Of course, he’s far away out there in the field, mowing,” she said, as if in apology for something or other. “Yes, he’s ever so far away,” was his reply, as he turned half lazily to the open doorway.

Neither spoke for a moment. The eyes of both were on the distant harvest-fields. Vaguely, not decisively, the hazy, indolent air of summer was broken by the lazy droning of the locusts and grasshoppers. A driver was calling to his oxen down the dusty road, the warning bark of a dog came across the fields from the gap in the fence which he was tending, and the blades of the scythes made three-quarter circles of light as the mowers travelled down the wheat-fields.

When their eyes met again, the glasses of cordial were at their lips. He held her look by the intentional warmth and meaning of his own, drinking very slowly to the last drop; and then, like a bon viveur, drew a breath of air through his open mouth, and nodded his satisfaction.

“By Jove, but it is good stuff!” he said. “Here’s to the nun that made it,” he added, making a motion to drink from the empty glass.

Sophie had not drunk all her cordial. At least one third of it was still in the glass. She turned her head away, a little dismayed by his toast.

“Come, that’s not fair,” he said. “That elixir shouldn’t be wasted. Voila, every drop of it now!” he added, with an insinuating smile and gesture.

“Oh, m’sieu’!” she said in protest, but drank it off. He still held the empty glass in his hand, twisting it round musingly.

“A little more, m’sieu’?” she asked, “just a little?” Perhaps she was surprised that he did not hesitate. He instantly held out his glass.

“It was made by a saint; the result should be health and piety—I need both,” he added, with a little note of irony in his voice.

“So, once again, my giver of good gifts—to you!” He raised his glass again, toasting her, but paused. “No, this won’t do; you must join me,” he added.

“Oh, no, m’sieu’, no! It is not possible. I feel it now in my head and in all of me. Oh, I feel so warm all, through, and my heart it beats so very fast! Oh, no, m’sieu’, no more!”

Her cheeks were glowing, and her eyes had become softer and more brilliant under the influence of the potent liqueur.

“Well, well, I’ll let you off this time; but next time—next time, remember.”

He raised the glass once more, and let the cordial drain down lazily.

He had said, “next time”—she noticed that. He seemed very fond of this strong liqueur. She placed the bottle on the table, her own glass beside it.

“For a minute, a little minute,” she said suddenly, and went quickly into the other room.

He coolly picked up the bottle of liqueur, poured his glass full once more, and began drinking it off in little sips. Presently he stood up, and throwing back his shoulder, with a little ostentation of health, he went over to the chintz-covered chair, and sat down in it. His mood was contented and brisk. He held up the glass of liqueur against the sunlight.

“Better than any Benedictine I ever tasted,” he said. “A dozen bottles of that would cure this beastly cold of mine. By Jove! it would. It’s as good as the Gardivani I got that blessed day when we chaps of the Ninetieth breakfasted with the King of Savoy.” He laughed to himself at the reminiscence. “What a day that was, what a stunning day that was!”

He was still smiling, his white teeth showing humorously, when Sophie again entered the room. He had forgotten her, forgotten all about her. As she came in he made a quick, courteous movement to rise—too quick; for a sharp pain shot through his breast, and he grew pale about the lips. But he made essay to stand up lightly, nevertheless.

She saw his paleness, came quickly to him, and put out her hand to gently force him back into his seat, but as instantly decided not to notice his indisposition, and turned towards the table instead. Taking the bottle of cordial, she brought it over, and not looking at him, said:

“Just one more little glass, m’sieu’?” She had in her other hand a plate of seed-cakes. “But yes, you must sit down and eat a cake,” she added adroitly. “They are very nice, and I made them myself. We are very fond of them; and once, when the bishop stayed at our house, he liked them too.”

Before he sat down he drank off the whole of the cordial in the glass.

She took a chair near him, and breaking a seed-cake began eating it. His tongue was loosened now, and he told her what he was smiling at when she came into the room. She was amused, and there was a little awe to her interest also. To think—she was sitting here, talking easily to a man who had eaten at kings’ tables—with the king! Yet she was at ease too—since she had drunk the cordial. It had acted on her like some philtre. He begged that she would go on with her work; and she got the dish of strawberries, and began stemming them while he talked.

It was much easier talking or listening to him while she was so occupied. She had never enjoyed anything so much in her life. She was not clever, like Christine, but she had admiration of ability, and was obedient to the charm of temperament. Whenever Ferrol had met her he had lavished little attentions on her, had said things to her that carried weight far beyond their intention. She had been pleased at the time, but they had had no permanent effect.

Now everything he said had a different influence: she felt for the first time that it was not easy to look into his eyes, and as if she never could again without betraying—she knew not what.

So they sat there, he talking, she listening and questioning now and then. She had placed the bottle of liqueur and the seed-cakes at his elbow on the windowsill; and as if mechanically, he poured out a glassful, and after a little time, still another, and at last, apparently unconsciously, poured her out one also, and handed it to her. She shook her head; he still held the glass poised; her eyes met his; she made a feeble sort of protest, then took the glass and drank off the liqueur in little sips.

“Gad, that puts fat on the bones, and gives the gay heart!” he said. “Doesn’t it, though?”

She laughed quietly. Her nature was warm, and she had the animal-like fondness for physical ease and content.

“It’s as if there wasn’t another stroke of work to do in the world,” she answered, and sat contentedly back in her chair, the strawberries in her lap. Her fingers, stained with red, lay beside the bowl. All the strings of conscious duty were loose, and some of them were flying. The bumble-bee that flew in at the door and boomed about the room contributed to the day-dream.

She never quite knew how it happened that a moment later he was bending over the back of her chair, with her face upturned to his, and his lips—With that touch thrilling her, she sprang to her feet, and turned away from him towards the table. Her face was glowing like a peony, and a troubled light came into her eyes. He came over to her, after a moment, and spoke over her shoulders as he just touched her waist with his fingers.

“A la bonne heure—Sophie!”

“Oh, it isn’t—it isn’t right,” she said, her body slightly inclining from him.

“One minute out of a whole life—What does it matter! Ce ne fait rien! Good-bye-Sophie.”

Now she inclined towards him. He was about to put his arms round her, when he heard the distant sound of a horse’s hoofs. He let her go, and turned towards the front door. Through it he saw Christine driving up the road. She would pass the house.

“Good-bye-Sophie,” he said again over her shoulder, softly; and, picking up his hat and stick, he left the house.

Her eyes followed him dreamily as he went up the road. She sat down in a chair, the trance of the passionate moment still on her, and began to brood. She vaguely heard the rattle of a buggy—Christine’s—as it passed the house, and her thoughts drifted into a new-discovered hemisphere where life was all a somnolent sort of joy and bodily love.

She was roused at last by a song which came floating across the fields. The air she knew, and the voice she knew. The chanson was, “Le Voleur de grand Chemin!” The voice was her husband’s.

She knew the words, too; and even before she could hear them, they were fitting into the air:

“Qui va la! There’s some one in the orchard,There’s a robber in the apple-trees;Qui va la! He is creeping through the doorway.Ah, allez-vous-en! Va-t’-en!”

She hurriedly put away the cordial and the seed-cakes. She picked up the bottle. It was empty. Ferrol had drunk near half a pint of the liqueur! She must get another bottle of it somehow. It would never do for Magon to know that the precious anniversary cordial was all gone—in this way.

She hurried towards the other room. The voice of the farrier-farmer was more distinct now. She could hear clearly the words of the song. She looked out. The square-shouldered, blue-shirted Magon was skirting the turnip field, making a short cut home. His straw hat was pushed back on his head, his scythe was over his shoulder. He had cut the last swathe in the field—now for Sophie. He was not handsome, and she had known that always; but he seemed rough and coarse to-day. She did not notice how well he fitted in with everything about him; and he was so healthy that even three glasses of that cordial would have sent him reeling to bed.

As she passed into the dining-room, the words of the song followed her:

“Qui va la! If you please, I own the mansion,And this is my grandfather’s gun!Qui va la! Now you’re a dead man, robberAh, allez-vous-en! Va-t’-en!”

“You have been to see Magon and Sophie?” she asked.

“Yes, for a minute,” he answered. “Where are you going?”

“Just for a drive,” she replied. “Come, won’t you?” He got in, and she drove on.

“Where were you going?” she asked.

“Why, to the old mill,” was his reply. “I wanted a little walk, then a rest.”

Ten minutes later they were looking from a window of the mill, out upon the great wheel which had done all the work the past generations had given it to do, and was now dropping into decay as it had long dropped into disuse. Moss had gathered on the great paddles; many of them were broken, and the debris had been carried away by the freshets of spring and the floods of autumn.

They were silent for a time. Presently she looked up at him.

“You’re much better to-day,” she said; “better than you’ve been since—since that night!”

“Oh, I’m all right,” he answered; “right as can be.” He suddenly turned on her, put his hand upon her arm, and said:

“Come, now, tell me what there was between you and Vanne Castine—once upon a time.

“He was in love with me five years ago,” she said.

“And five years ago you were in love with him, eh?” “How dare you say that to me!” she answered. “I never was. I always hated him.”

She told her lie with unscrupulous directness. He did not believe her; but what did that matter! It was no reason why he should put her at a disadvantage, and, strangely enough, he did not feel any contempt for her because she told the lie, nor because she had once cared for Castine. Probably in those days she had never known anybody who was very much superior to Castine. She was in love with himself now; that was enough, or nearly enough, and there was no particular reason why he should demand more from her than she demanded from him. She was lying to him now because—well, because she loved him. Like the majority of men, when women who love them have lied to them so, they have seen in it a compliment as strong as the act was weak. It was more to him now that this girl should love him than that she should be upright, or moral, or truthful. Such is the egotism and vanity of such men.

“Well, he owes me several years of life. I put in a bad hour that night.”

He knew that “several years of life” was a misstatement; but, then, they were both sinners.

Her eyes flashed, she stamped her foot, and her fingers clinched.

“I wish I’d killed him when I killed his bear!” she said.

Then excitedly she described the scene exactly as it occurred. He admired the dramatic force of it. He thrilled at the direct simplicity of the tale. He saw Vanne Castine in the forearms of the huge beast, with his eyes bulging from his head, his face becoming black, and he saw blind justice in that death grip; Christine’s pistol at the bear’s head, and the shoulder in the teeth of the beast, and then!

“By the Lord Harry,” he said, as she stood panting, with her hands fixed in the last little dramatic gesture, “what a little spitfire and brick you are!”

All at once he caught her away from the open window and drew her to him. Whether what he said that moment, and what he did then, would have been said and done if it were not for the liqueur he had drunk at Sophie’s house would be hard to tell; but the sum of it was that she was his and he was hers. She was to be his until the end of all, no matter what the end might be. She looked up at him, her face glowing, her bosom beating—beating, every pulse in her tingling.

“You mean that you love me, and that—that you want-to marry me?” she said; and then, with a fervent impulse, she threw her arms round his neck and kissed him again and again.

The directness of her question dumfounded him for the moment; but what she suggested (though it might be selfish in him to agree to it) would be the best thing that could happen to him. So he lied to her, and said:

“Yes, that’s what I meant. But, then, to tell you the sober truth, I’m as poor as a church mouse.”

He paused. She looked up at him with a sudden fear in her face.

“You’re not married?” she asked, “you’re not married?” then, breaking off suddenly: “I don’t care if you are, I don’t! I love you—love you! Nobody would look after you as I would. I don’t; no, I don’t care.”

She drew up closer and closer to him.

“No, I don’t mean that I was married,” he said. “I meant—what you know—that my life isn’t worth, perhaps, a ten-days’ purchase.”

Her face became pale again.

“You can have my life,” she said; “have it just as long as you live, and I’ll make you live a year—yes, I’ll make you live ten years. Love can do anything; it can do everything. We’ll be married to-morrow.”

“That’s rather difficult,” he answered. “You see, you’re a Catholic, and I’m a Protestant, and they wouldn’t marry us here, I’m afraid; at least not at once, perhaps not at all. You see, I—I’ve only one lung.”

He had never spoken so frankly of his illness before. “Well, we can go over the border into the English province—into Upper Canada,” she answered. “Don’t you see? It’s only a few miles’ drive to a village. I can go over one day, get the licence; then, a couple of days after, we can go over together and be married. And then, then—”

He smiled. “Well, then it won’t make much difference, will it? We’ll have to fit in one way or another, eh?”

“We could be married afterwards by the Cure, if everybody made a fuss. The bishop would give us a dispensation. It’s a great sin to marry a heretic, but—”

“But love—eh, ma cigale!” Then he took her eagerly, tenderly into his arms; and probably he had then the best moment in his life.

Sophie Farcinelle saw them driving back together. She was sitting at early supper with Magon, when, raising her head at the sound of wheels, she saw Christine laughing and Ferrol leaning affectionately towards her. Ferrol had forgotten herself and the incident of the afternoon. It meant nothing to him. With her, however, it was vital: it marked a change in her life. Her face flushed, her hands trembled, and she arose hurriedly and went to get something from the kitchen, that Magon might not see her face.


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