Manuela was tall and slender and graceful,
and once you knew her the lithe form could never be
mistaken. She walked with the easy spring that
comes from a perfectly arched foot. To-day she
swept swiftly down Marais Street, casting a quick
glance here and there from under her heavy veil as
if she feared she was being followed. If you
had peered under the veil, you would have seen that
Manuela’s dark eyes were swollen and discoloured
about the lids, as though they had known a sleepless,
tearful night. There had been a picnic the day
before, and as merry a crowd of giddy, chattering
Creole girls and boys as ever you could see boarded
the ramshackle dummy-train that puffed its way wheezily
out wide Elysian Fields Street, around the lily-covered
bayous, to Milneburg-on-the-Lake. Now, a picnic
at Milneburg is a thing to be remembered for ever.
One charters a rickety-looking, weather-beaten dancing-pavilion,
built over the water, and after storing the children for
your true Creole never leaves the small folks at home and
the baskets and mothers downstairs, the young folks
go up-stairs and dance to the tune of the best band
you ever heard. For what can equal the music
of a violin, a guitar, a cornet, and a bass viol to
trip the quadrille to at a picnic?
Then one can fish in the lake and
go bathing under the prim bath-houses, so severely
separated sexually, and go rowing on the lake in a
trim boat, followed by the shrill warnings of anxious
mamans. And in the evening one comes home,
hat crowned with cool gray Spanish moss, hands burdened
with fantastic latanier baskets woven by
the brown bayou boys, hand in hand with your dearest
one, tired but happy.
At this particular picnic, however,
there had been bitterness of spirit. Theophile
was Manuela’s own especial property, and Theophile
had proven false. He had not danced a single
waltz or quadrille with Manuela, but had deserted
her for Claralie, blonde and petite. It was Claralie
whom Theophile had rowed out on the lake; it was Claralie
whom Theophile had gallantly led to dinner; it was
Claralie’s hat that he wreathed with Spanish
moss, and Claralie whom he escorted home after the
jolly singing ride in town on the little dummy-train.
Not that Manuela lacked partners or
admirers. Dear no! she was too graceful and
beautiful for that. There had been more than
enough for her. But Manuela loved Theophile,
you see, and no one could take his place. Still,
she had tossed her head and let her silvery laughter
ring out in the dance, as though she were the happiest
of mortals, and had tripped home with Henri, leaning
on his arm, and looking up into his eyes as though
she adored him.
This morning she showed the traces
of a sleepless night and an aching heart as she walked
down Marais Street. Across wide St. Rocque
Avenue she hastened. “Two blocks to the
river and one below ” she repeated
to herself breathlessly. Then she stood on the
corner gazing about her, until with a final summoning
of a desperate courage she dived through a small wicket
gate into a garden of weed-choked flowers.
There was a hoarse, rusty little bell
on the gate that gave querulous tongue as she pushed
it open. The house that sat back in the yard
was little and old and weather-beaten. Its one-story
frame had once been painted, but that was a memory
remote and traditional. A straggling morning-glory
strove to conceal its time-ravaged face. The
little walk of broken bits of brick was reddened carefully,
and the one little step was scrupulously yellow-washed,
which denoted that the occupants were cleanly as well
as religious.
Manuela’s timid knock was answered by a harsh
“Entrez.”
It was a small sombre room within,
with a bare yellow-washed floor and ragged curtains
at the little window. In a corner was a diminutive
altar draped with threadbare lace. The red glow
of the taper lighted a cheap print of St. Joseph and
a brazen crucifix. The human element in the
room was furnished by a little, wizened yellow woman,
who, black-robed, turbaned, and stern, sat before
an uncertain table whereon were greasy cards.
Manuela paused, her eyes blinking
at the semi-obscurity within. The Wizened One
called in croaking tones:
“An’ fo’ w’y you come here?
Assiez-la, ma’amzelle.”
Timidly Manuela sat at the table facing the owner
of the voice.
“I want,” she began faintly;
but the Mistress of the Cards understood: she
had had much experience. The cards were shuffled
in her long grimy talons and stacked before Manuela.
“Now you cut dem in tree part, so un, deux, trois,
bien! You mek’ you’ weesh wid
all you’ heart, bien! Yaas, I see,
I see!”
Breathlessly did Manuela learn that
her lover was true, but “dat light gal, yaas,
she mek’ nouvena in St. Rocque fo’ hees
love.”
“I give you one lil’ charm,
yaas,” said the Wizened One when the séance
was over, and Manuela, all white and nervous, leaned
back in the rickety chair. “I give you
one lil’ charm fo’ to ween him back, yaas.
You wear h’it ‘roun’ you’ wais’,
an’ he come back. Den you mek prayer at
St. Rocque an’ burn can’le. Den you
come back an’ tell me, yaas. Cinquante
sous, ma’amzelle. Merci.
Good luck go wid you.”
Readjusting her veil, Manuela passed
out the little wicket gate, treading on air.
Again the sun shone, and the breath of the swamps
came as healthful sea-breeze unto her nostrils.
She fairly flew in the direction of St. Rocque.
There were quite a number of persons
entering the white gates of the cemetery, for this
was Friday, when all those who wish good luck pray
to the saint, and wash their steps promptly at twelve
o’clock with a wondrous mixture to guard the
house. Manuela bought a candle from the keeper
of the little lodge at the entrance, and pausing one
instant by the great sun-dial to see if the heavens
and the hour were propitious, glided into the tiny
chapel, dim and stifling with heavy air from myriad
wish-candles blazing on the wide table before the altar-rail.
She said her prayer and lighting her candle placed
it with the others.
Mon Dieu! how brightly the sun seemed
to shine now, she thought, pausing at the door on
her way out. Her small finger-tips, still bedewed
with holy water, rested caressingly on a gamin’s
head. The ivy which enfolds the quaint chapel
never seemed so green; the shrines which serve as
the Way of the Cross never seemed so artistic; the
baby graves, even, seemed cheerful.
Theophile called Sunday. Manuela’s
heart leaped. He had been spending his Sundays
with Claralie. His stay was short and he was
plainly bored. But Manuela knelt to thank the
good St. Rocque that night, and fondled the charm
about her slim waist. There came a box of bonbons
during the week, with a decorative card all roses and
fringe, from Theophile; but being a Creole, and therefore
superstitiously careful, and having been reared by
a wise and experienced maman to mistrust the
gifts of a recreant lover, Manuela quietly thrust bonbons,
box, and card into the kitchen fire, and the
Friday following placed the second candle of her nouvena
in St. Rocque.
Those of Manuela’s friends who
had watched with indignation Theophile gallantly leading
Claralie home from High Mass on Sundays, gasped with
astonishment when the next Sunday, with his usual bow,
the young man offered Manuela his arm as the worshippers
filed out in step to the organ’s march.
Claralie tossed her head as she crossed herself with
holy water, and the pink in her cheeks was brighter
than usual.
Manuela smiled a bright good-morning
when she met Claralie in St. Rocque the next Friday.
The little blonde blushed furiously, and Manuela
rushed post-haste to the Wizened One to confer upon
this new issue.
“H’it ees good,”
said the dame, shaking her turbaned head. “She
ees ‘fraid, she will work, maïs you’
charm, h’it weel beat her.”
And Manuela departed with radiant eyes.
Theophile was not at Mass Sunday morning,
and murderous glances flashed from Claralie to Manuela
before the tinkling of the Host-Bell. Nor did
Theophile call at either house. Two hearts beat
furiously at the sound of every passing footstep,
and two minds wondered if the other were enjoying
the beloved one’s smiles. Two pair of eyes,
however, blue and black, smiled on others, and their
owners laughed and seemed none the less happy.
For your Creole girls are proud, and would die rather
than let the world see their sorrows.
Monday evening Theophile, the missing,
showed his rather sheepish countenance in Manuela’s
parlour, and explained that he, with some chosen spirits,
had gone for a trip “over the Lake.”
“I did not ask you where you
were yesterday,” replied the girl, saucily.
Theophile shrugged his shoulders and
changed the conversation.
The next week there was a birthday
fête in honour of Louise, Theophile’s young
sister. Everyone was bidden, and no one thought
of refusing, for Louise was young, and this would
be her first party. So, though the night was
hot, the dancing went on as merrily as light young
feet could make it go. Claralie fluffed her dainty
white skirts, and cast mischievous sparkles in the
direction of Theophile, who with the maman and
Louise was bravely trying not to look self-conscious.
Manuela, tall and calm and proud-looking, in a cool,
pale yellow gown was apparently enjoying herself without
paying the slightest attention to her young host.
“Have I the pleasure of this
dance?” he asked her finally, in a lull of the
music.
She bowed assent, and as if moved
by a common impulse they strolled out of the dancing-room
into the cool, quaint garden, where jessamines gave
out an overpowering perfume, and a caged mocking-bird
complained melodiously to the full moon in the sky.
It must have been an engrossing tete-a-tete,
for the call to supper had sounded twice before they
heard and hurried into the house. The march
had formed with Louise radiantly leading on the arm
of papa. Claralie tripped by with Leon.
Of course, nothing remained for Theophile and Manuela
to do but to bring up the rear, for which they received
much good-natured chaffing.
But when the party reached the dining-room,
Theophile proudly led his partner to the head of the
table, at the right hand of maman, and smiled
benignly about at the delighted assemblage. Now
you know, when a Creole young man places a girl at
his mother’s right hand at his own table, there
is but one conclusion to be deduced therefrom.
If you had asked Manuela, after the
wedding was over, how it happened, she would have
said nothing, but looked wise.
If you had asked Claralie, she would
have laughed and said she always preferred Leon.
If you had asked Theophile, he would
have wondered that you thought he had ever meant more
than to tease Manuela.
If you had asked the Wizened One,
she would have offered you a charm.
But St. Rocque knows, for he is a
good saint, and if you believe in him and are true
and good, and make your nouvenas with a clean heart,
he will grant your wish.