The child sat in a dream on a rude,
squarely-built settle with a coarse blanket on it
of Indian make and some skins thrown over the back,
for often at sundown the air grew cool and as yet
women were not spinning or weaving as in old France.
A few luxuries had been brought thither, but the mother
government had a feeling that the colonists ought mostly
to provide for themselves, and was often indifferent
to the necessary demands.
Mere Dubray went out to the kitchen
and began to prepare supper. There was a great
stone chimney with a bench at each side, and for a
fireplace two flat stones that would be filled in
with chunks of wood. When the blaze had burned
them to coals the cooking began. Corn bread baked
on both sides, sometimes rye or wheaten cakes, a kettle
boiled, though the home-brewed beer was the common
drink in summer, except among those who used the stronger
potions. The teas were mostly fragrant herbs,
thought to be good for the stomach and to keep the
blood pure.
Mere Dubray dressed half a dozen birds
in a trice. It was true that in the summer they
could live on the luxuries of the land in some respects.
Fish and game of all kinds were abundant, and as there
were but few ways of keeping against winter it was
as well to feast while one could. They dried
and smoked eels and some other fish, and salted them,
but they had learned that too much of this diet induced
scurvy.
The birds were hung on an improvised
spit, with a pan below to catch the drippings with
which they were basted. Between whiles the worthy
woman unexpectedly bolted out to the garden with a
switch in her hand and laid it about the two Indian
boys, who did not bear it with the stoicism of their
race, as they learned the greater the noise the shorter
their punishment.
The little girl did not heed the screams
or the shrill scolding, or even the singing of the
birds that grew deliciously tender toward nightfall.
She often watched the waving branches as the wind blew
among them until it seemed as if they must be alive,
bending over caressing each other and murmuring in
low tones. If she could only know what they said.
Of course they must be alive; she heard them cry piteously
in winter when they were stripped of their covering.
Why did God do it? Why did He send winter when
summer was so much better, when people were merry and
happy and could hunt and fish and wander in the woods
and fight Indians? She had not had much of an
idea of God hitherto only as a secret charm connected
with Mere Dubray’s beads, but now it was some
great power living beyond the sky, just as the Indians
believed. You could only go there by growing
cold and stiff and being put in the ground. She
shrank from that thought.
Something new had come in her life
now. There was a vague, confused idea of gods
and goddesses, that she had gathered from the Latin
verses that she no more understood than the language.
And this must be one that descended upon her this
afternoon. The soft, sweet voice still lingered
in her ears, entrancing her. The graceful figure
that was like some delicate swaying branch, the attire
the like of which she had never even dreamed of.
How could she indeed, when the finest things she had
seen were the soldiers’ trappings?
And this beautiful being had kissed
her. Only once she remembered being kissed, but
Catherine’s lips were so cold that for days when
she thought of it she shuddered and connected it with
that mysterious going away, that horrid, underground
life. This was warm and sweet and strange, like
the nectar of flowers she had held to her lips.
Oh, would the lovely being come again? But M’sieu
Ralph had said so, and what he promised came to pass.
There was a sudden ecstasy as if she could not wait,
as if she could fly out of the body after her charmer.
Whither was she going? Oh, M’sieu Ralph
would know. But could she wait until to-morrow?
Into this half-delirious vision broke
the strong, rather harsh voice that filled her for
an instant with a curious hate so acute that if she
had been large enough, strong enough, she would have
thrust the woman out of doors.
“Oh, have you been asleep?
Your eyes look wild. And your cheeks! Is
it the fever coming back again? That chatter
went through my head. And to be gowned as if
she were going to have audience with the Queen!
I don’t know about such things. There is
a King always I suppose there must be a
Queen.”
The child had recovered herself a
little and the enraptured dream was slipping by.
“And here is your supper.
Such a great dish of raspberries, and some juice pressed
out for wine. And the birds broiled to a turn.
Here is a little wheaten cake. The Sieur
sent the wheat and it is a great rarity. And
now eat like a hungry child.”
She raised her up and put a cushion
of dried hay at her back. The food was on a small
trencher with a flat bottom, and was placed on the
settle beside her.
“No, no, the tea first,”
she said, holding a birch-bark cup to her lips.
Rose made a wry face, but drank it,
nevertheless. Then she took the raspberry juice,
which was much pleasanter.
“Yes, a great lady, no doubt.
We have few of them. This is no place for silken
hose and dainty slippers, and gowns slipping off the
shoulders, and my lady will soon find that out.
I wondered at M. Destournier. The saints forbid
that we should import these kind of cattle to New
France.”
“She is very sweet” protestingly.
“Oh, yes. So is the flower
sweet, and it drops off into withered leaves.
And her eyes looked askance at M’sieu Ralph,
yet she hath a husband. Come, eat of thy bird
and bread, and to-morrow maybe thou wilt run about
lest thy limbs stiffen up to a palsy.”
“Mistress, mistress,”
called Pani “here is a man to see
thee.”
She went through both rooms.
The man stood without, rather rough, unkempt, with
buckskin breeches, fringed leggings, an Indian blanket,
a grizzled beard hanging down on his breast, and his
tousled hair well sprinkled with white; his face wrinkled
with the hardships he had passed through, but the
gray-blue eyes twinkled.
“Ha! ha!” A coarse, but
not unfriendly laugh finished the greeting as he caught
both hands in an impetuous embrace. “Lalotte,
old girl, has thy memory failed in two years?
Or hast thou gotten another husband?”
The woman gave a shriek of mingled
surprise and delight. “The saints be praised,
it is Antoine. And how if thou hast taken some
Indian woman to wife? Braves do not consort with
white women who cannot be made into slaves,”
she answered, with spirit.
“Lalotte, thou wert hard to
win in those early days. But now a dozen good
kisses with more flavor in them than Burgundy wine,
and I will prove to you I am the same old Antoine.
And then but thy supper smell is good to
a hungry man. And a dish of shallots. It
takes a man back to old Barbizon.”
Stout and strong as was Madame Dubray,
her husband almost kissed the breath out of her body
in his rapturous embrace.
“But I had no word of your coming ”
“How could you, pardieu!
But you knew the traders were coming in. And a
man can’t send messengers hundreds of miles.”
“I looked last year ”
“Pouf! There are men who
stay five or ten years, and have left a wife in France.
You can’t blame them for taking a new one when
you are invited to. It is a wild, hard life,
but not worse than a soldier’s. And when
you are your own master the hardships are light.
But some of this good supper.”
“Out with you,” she said
to the Indian boys, who had snatched a piece of the
broiled fish. Then she put down a plate, took
up two birds that dripped delicious gravy, and a squirrel
browned to a turn. From the cupboard beside the
great stone chimney, so cunningly devised that no
one would have suspected it, she brought forth a bottle
of wine from the old world, her last choice possession,
that she had dreamed of saving for Antoine, and now
her dream had come true.
There was much to tell on both sides,
though her life had been comparatively uneventful.
He related incidents of his wilder experiences far
away from civilization that he had grown to enjoy in
its perfect freedom that often lapped over into lawlessness.
And he ate until squirrel, fish, and the cakes, both
of rye and corn, had disappeared. The slave boys
fared ill that night.
Rose had eaten her supper more daintily.
The great pile of raspberries was a delight; large,
luscious; melting in one’s mouth without the
aid of sugar, and being picked up with the fingers.
She had been startled at the sudden appearance of
the husband she had heard talked of, but of course
not seen. His loud voice grated on her ears, made
more sensitive by illness, and when, a long while
after, the pine torch that was flaring in the kitchen
defined his brawny frame as he stood in the doorway,
she wanted to scream.
“Oh what have you here a
ghost?” he asked.
“A child who was left here more
than a year ago. Jean Arlac lost his wife, and
not knowing what to do with her she was
not his own child left her here. He
went out with the fur-hunters.”
“Jean Arlac!” Antoine
scratched among his rough locks as if to assist his
memory. “Yes. And on the way he picked
up a likely Indian girl who has given him a son.
And he saddled her on you?”
“Oh, the Sieur will look
after her perhaps take her back to France,”
she answered, indifferently.
“The best place for her, no
doubt. She looks a frail reed. And women
need strength in this new world. A little infusion
of Indian blood will do no harm. I wouldn’t
mind a son myself, but a girl pouf!”
The child was glad he would not want
her. She turned her face to the wall. She
had not known what loneliness was before, but now she
felt it through all her body, like a great pain.
On the opposite side of the room was
another settle, part of which turned over and was
upheld by drawing out two rounds of logs. Mere
Dubray made up the wider bed now, and soon Antoine
was snoring lustily. At first it frightened the
child, though she was used to the screech of the owl
that spent his nights in the great walnut tree inside
the palisade.
Was it a dream, she wondered the next
morning. She slept soundly at last and late and
found herself alone in the house. She put on her
simple frock and went to the doorway. Ah, what
a splendid glowing morning it was! The sunshine
lay in golden masses and fairly gilded the green of
the maize, the waving grasses, the bronze of the trees,
and the river threw up lights and shadows like birds
skimming about.
No one was in the garden. The
table had been despoiled to the last crumb. Even
the cupboard had been ransacked and all that remained
was some raw fish. She was not hungry and the
fragrant air was reviving. It seemed to speed
through every pulse. Why, she suddenly felt strong
again.
She wandered out of the enclosure
and climbed the steps, sitting down now and then and
drawing curious breaths that frightened her, they came
so irregularly. There were workmen building additional
fortifications around the post, there were houses
going up. It was like a strange place. She
reached the gallery presently and looked over what
was sometime to be the city of Quebec. The long
stretch was full of tents and tepees and throngs of
men of every description, it would seem; Indians,
swarthy Spaniards who had roamed half round the world,
French from the jaunty trader, with a certain air
of breeding, down to the rough, unkempt peasant, who
had been lured away from his native land with visions
of an easily-made fortune and much liberty in New France,
and convicts who had been given a choice between death
and expatriation. Great stacks of furs still
coming in from some quarter, haranguing, bargaining,
shouting, coming to blows, and the interference of
soldiers. Was it so last summer when she sometimes
ran out with Pani, though she had been forbidden to?
It was growing very hot up here.
The sun that looked so glorious through the long stretches
of the forest and played about the St. Lawrence as
if in a game of hide-and-seek with the boats, grew
merciless. All the air was full of dancing stars
and she was so tired trying to reach out to them,
as if they were a stairway leading up to heaven, so
that one need not be put in the dark, wretched ground.
Oh, yes, she could find the way, and she half rose.
It seemed a long journey in the darkness.
Then there was a coolness on her brow, a soft hand
passed over it, and she heard some murmuring, caressing
words. She opened her eyes, she tried to rise.
“Lie still, little one,”
said the voice that soothed and somehow made it easy
to obey. She was fanned slowly, and all was peace.
“Did you climb up to the gallery
all alone? And yesterday you seemed so weak,
so fragile.”
“I wanted some one. They had
all gone ”
“Quebec looks like a besieged
camp. Laurent, that is my husband,” with
a bright color, “said I could see it from the
gallery, and that it resembled a great show.
I went out and found you. At first I thought you
were dead. But the Indian woman, Jolette is her
Christian name, but I should have liked Wanamee better,
carried you in here and after a while brought you
to. But I thought sure you were dead. Poor
little white Rose! Truly named.”
“But once I had red cheeks,” in a faint
voice.
“Then thou wouldst have been a red Rose.”
She sang a delicious little chanson
to a red rose from a lover. The child sighed
in great content.
“Were they good to you down
there? That woman seemed well, hard.
And were you left all alone?”
Rose began to tell the story of how
the husband came home, and Madame Giffard could see
that she shrank from him. “And when she
woke they had all gone away. There was nothing
to eat.”
“Merci! How careless
and unkind!” But Madame Giffard could not know
the little slave boys had ransacked the place.
“I was not hungry. And
it was so delightful to walk about again. Though
I trembled all over and thought I should fall down.”
“As you did. Now I have
ordered you some good broth. And you must lie
still to get rested.”
“But it is so nice to talk.
You were so beautiful yesterday I was afraid.
I never saw such fine clothes.”
Madame Giffard was in a soft gray
gown to-day that had long wrinkled sleeves, a very
short waist, and a square neck filled in with ruffles
that stood up in a stiff fashion. She looked very
quaint and pretty, more approachable, though the child
felt rather than understood.
“Are there no women here, and
no society? Merci! but it is a strange place,
a wilderness. And no balls or dinners or excursions,
with gay little luncheons? There is war all the
time at home, but plenty of pleasure, too. And
what is one to do here!”
“The Indians have some ball
games. But they often fight at the end.”
The lady laughed. What a charming
ripple it was, like the falls here and there, and
there were many of them.
“Not that kind,” she said,
in her soft tone that could not wound the child.
“A great room like a palace, and lights everywhere,
hundreds of candles, and mirrors where you see yourself
at every turn. Then festoons of gauzy things
that wave about, and flowers not always
real ones, they fade so soon. And the men there
are officers and counts and marquises, and their habiliments
are well, I can’t describe them so
you would understand, but a hundred times finer than
those of the Sieur de Champlain. And
the women oh, if I had worn a ball dress
yesterday, you would have been speechless.”
She laughed again gayly at the child’s
innocence. And just then Wanamee came in with
the broth.
“Madame Dubray’s husband has come,”
nodding to the child.
“Yes, yesterday, just at night.”
“He has great stores, they say.
He is shrewd and means to make money. But there
will be no quiet now for weeks. And it will hardly
be safe to venture outside the palisades.”
Jolette had been among the first converts,
a prisoner taken in one of the numerous Indian battles,
rescued and saved from torture by the Sieur himself,
and though she had been a wife of one of the chiefs,
she had been beaten and treated like a slave.
Champlain found her amenable to the influences of
civilization, and in some respects really superior
to the emigrants that had been sent over, though most
of them were eagerly seized upon as wives for the
workmen. Frenchwomen were not anxious to leave
their native land.
Madame Giffard fed her small protegee
in a most dainty and enticing manner. The little
girl would have thought herself in an enchanted country
if she had known anything about enchantment. But
most of the stories she had heard were of Indian superstition,
and so horrid she never wanted to recur to them.
Madame Dubray was much too busy to allow her thoughts
to run in fanciful channels, and really lacked any
sort of imagination.
After she had been fed she leaned
back on the pillow again. Madame soon sang her
to sleep. The child was very much exhausted and
in the quietude of slumber looked like a bit of carving.
“Her eyelashes are splendid,”
thought her watcher, “and her lips have pretty
curves. There is something about her she
must have belonged to gentle people. But she
will grow coarse under that woman’s training.”
She sighed a little. Did she
want the child, she wondered. If Laurent could
make a fortune here in this curious land where most
of the population seemed barbarians.
She drew from a work-bag a purse she
was knitting of silken thread, and worked as she watched
the sleeping child. Once she rose, but the view
from the window did not satisfy her, so she went out
on the gallery. A French vessel was coming up
into port, with its colors at half mast and its golden
lilies shrouded with crape. Some important personage
must be dead was it the King?
She heard her husband’s voice
calling her and turned, took a few steps forward.
“Oh, what has happened?” she cried.
“The King! Our heroic Bearnese!
For though we must always regret his change of religion,
yet it was best for France and his rights. And
a wretched miscreant stabbed him in his carriage,
but he has paid the penalty. And the new King
is but a child, so a woman will rule. There is
no knowing what policies may be overturned.”
“Our brave King!” There were tears in
her eyes.
“They are loading vessels to
return. Ah, what a rich country, even if they
cannot find the gold the Spaniards covet. Such
an array of choice furs bewilders one, and to see
them tossed about carelessly makes one almost scream
with rage. Ah, my lady, you shall have in the
winter what the Queen Mother would envy.”
“Then you mean to stay” uncertainly.
“Yes, unless there should be
great changes. I have not seen the Sieur
since the news came. He was to go to Tadoussac
the first of the week, and I had permission to go
with him. One would think to-day that Quebec
was one of the most flourishing of towns, and it is
hard to believe the contrary. But every soldier
is on the watch. They trust no one. What
have you been doing, ma mie?”
“Oh, I have something to show you. Come.”
She placed her finger to her lips
in token of silence and led him back to the room she
had left. The child was still sleep.
“What an angel,” he murmured.
“Is it how did it come here?
I thought you said the little girl was ill.”
“She was, and is. Doesn’t
she look like a marvellous statue? But no one
seems to regard her beauty here.”
“She is too delicate.”
“But she was well and strong
and daring, and could climb like a deer, M. Destournier
says. She will be well again with good care.
I want to keep her.”
“She will be a good plaything
for thee when I am away. Though this may change
many plans. The Sieur is bent on discoveries,
and now he has orders to print his book. The
maps are wonderful. What a man! He should
be a king in this new world. France does not understand
the mighty empire he is founding for her.”
“Then you do not mind if
I keep the child? She has crept into the empty
niche in my heart. I must have been directed by
the saints when I felt the desire to go out.
She would have died from exhaustion in the broiling
sun.”
“Say the good Father, rather.”
“And yet we must adore the saints,
the old patriarchs. Did not the disciples desire
to build a memento to them?”
“They were not such men as have
disgraced the holy calling by fire and sword and persecution.
And if one can draw a free breath in this new land.
The English with all their faults allow freedom in
religion. It is these hated Jesuits. And
I believe they are answerable for the murder of our
heroic King.”
Wanamee summoned them to the midday
repast. The plain walnut boards that formed the
table had been polished until the beautiful grain and
the many curvings were brought out like the shades
of a painting. If the dishes were a motley array,
a few pieces of silver and polished pewter with common
earthenware and curious cups of carved wood as well
as birch-bark platters, the viands were certainly
appetizing.
“One will not starve in this new country,”
he said.
“But it is the winter that tries one, M. Destournier
says.”
“There must be plenty of game.
And France sends many things. But a colony must
have agricultural resources. And the Indian raids
are so destructive. We need more soldiers.”
He was off again to plunge in the
thick of business. It was supposed the fur company
and the concessions ruled most of the bargain-making,
but there were independent trappers who had not infrequently
secured skins that were well-nigh priceless when they
reached the hands of the Paris furrier. And toward
night, when wine and whiskey had been passed around
rather freely, there were broils that led to more than
one fatal ending. Indian women thronged around
as well, with curious handiwork made in their forest
fastnesses.
The child slept a long while, she was so exhausted.
“Why, the sun is going over
the mountains,” she began, in vague alarm.
“I must go home. I did not mean to run away.”
She sprang up on her feet, but swayed
so that she would have fallen had not Madame caught
her.
“Nay, nay, thou art not well
enough to run away from me, little one. I will
send word down to the cabin of Mere Dubray. She
has her husband, whom she has not seen for two years,
and will care naught for thee. Women are all
alike when a man’s love is proffered,”
and she gave a gay little laugh.
“My head feels light and swims
around as if it was on the rapid river. But I
must go home, I ”
“Art afraid? Well, I promise
nothing shall harm thee. Lie down again.
I will send Wanamee with the word. Will it make
thee happy content?”
The child looked at her hostess as
if she was studying her, but her intellect had never
been roused sufficiently for that. There was a
vague delight stealing over her as slumber does at
times, a confusion of what might have been duty if
she had understood that even, in staying away from
what was really her home. Mere Dubray would be
angry. She would hardly beat her, she had only
slapped her once during her illness, and that was
to make her swallow some bitter tea. And something
within her seemed to cry out for the adjuncts of this
place. She had been in the room before, she had
even peered into the Sieur’s study. He always
had a kindly word for her, she was different from
the children of the workmen, and looked at one with
sober, wondering eyes, as if she might fathom many
things.
“You do not want to go back?” persuasively.
Was it the pretty lady who changed the aspect of everything
for her?
“Oh, if I could stay here always!”
she cried, with a vehemence of more years than had
passed over her head. “It is better than
the beautiful world where I sit on the rocks and wonder,
and dream of the great beyond that goes over and meets
the sky. There are no cruel Indians then, and
I want to wander on and on and listen to the voices
in the trees, the plash of the great river, and the
little stream that plays against the stones almost
like the song you sung. If one could live there
always and did not get hungry or cold ”
“What a queer, visionary child!
One would not look for it in these wilds. The
ladies over yonder talk of them because it is a fashion,
but when they ride through the parks and woods they
want a train of admirers. And with you it is
pure love. Could you love any one as you do nature?
Was any one ever so good to you that you could fall
down at their feet and worship them? Surely you
do not love Madame Dubray?”
“M’sieu Ralph has been
very kind. But you are like a wonderful flower
one finds now and then, and dares not gather it lest
the gods of the woods and trees should be angry.”
“But I will gather you to my
heart, little one,” and she slipped down beside
the couch, encircling the child in her arms, and pressing
kisses on brow and legs and pallid cheeks, bringing
a roseate tint to them.
“And you must love me, you must
want to stay with me. Oh, there was a little
one once who was flesh of my flesh, on whom I lavished
the delight and tenderness of my soul, and the great
Father took her. He sent nothing in her place,
though I prayed and prayed. And now I shall put
you there. Surely the good God cannot be angry,
for you have no one.”
She had followed a sudden impulse,
and was not quite sure it was for the best. Only
her mother heart cried out for love.
The child stared, motionless, and
it dampened her ardor for the moment. She could
not fathom the eyes.
“Are you not glad? Would you not like to
live with me?”
“Oh, oh!” It was a cry
of rapture. She caught the soft white hands and
kissed them. The joy was so new, so unexpected,
she had no words for it.