Lalotte Dubray had had the gala day
of her life. Her peasant wedding had been simple
enough. The cure’s blessing after the civil
ceremony, the dance on the green, the going home to
the one room in the small thatched hut, the bunk-like
bed along the wall, the two chests that answered for
seats, a kitchen table, two shelves for a rude dresser,
with dishes that had been earned by the hardest toil,
but they were better off than some, for there was
a pig grunting and squealing outside, and a little
garden.
Times had grown harder and harder.
Antoine had been compelled to join the army and fight
for he knew not what. Then he had decamped, and
instead of being shot had been sent to New France.
Lalotte was willing enough to go with him.
Hard as it was, it bettered their
fortunes. He had gone out once as a sort of servant
and handy man to the company. Then he had struck
out for himself. He was shrewd and industrious,
and did not mind hard work, nor hardships.
Now he was in the lightest of spirits.
He had some choice furs that were eagerly snapped
up. The Indian women had been shrewd enough to
arrange tempting booths, where frying fish and roasted
birds gave forth an appetizing fragrance. There
were cakes of ground maize baked on hot stones, and
though Champlain had used his best efforts to keep
some restraint on spirituous liquors, there were many
ways of evading.
Lalotte was fairly stupefied with
amazement at her husband’s prosperity.
“Why, you are rich with that
bag of money,” she cried. “I never
saw so much.”
He laughed jovially. “Better
than standing up to be shot he! he!
Jacques Lallemont had the idea, and they wanted emigrants
for New France bad enough. Why don’t they
send more? The English understand better. Sacre!
But it is a great country. Only Quebec stays little,
when it should be a great place. Why can they
not see?”
Lalotte could venture no explanation
of that. She seemed to be in a maze herself.
Vessels were taking on cargoes of
furs as soon as they were inspected. The river
as far as Tadoussac looked thriving enough. Antoine
met old friends, but he was more level-headed than
some, and did not get tipsy. Lalotte held her
head higher than ever.
When it was getting rather too rough
they made their way out.
“Oh, the child!” she exclaimed,
with a sudden twinge of conscience. “And
those wretched slave boys. If your back is turned
they are in league with the evil one himself.
Baptism does not seem to drive it out. Whether
the poor thing had her breakfast.”
“Let that alone. It was
mighty cool in Jean Arlac to foist her on thee.
And now that we have left the crowd behind and are
comfortable in the stomach.”
“But the cost, Antoine. I could have gotten
it for half!”
“A man may treat his wife, when
he has not seen her for two years,” and he gave
a short chuckling laugh. “There has been
a plan in my head, hatched in the long winter nights
up at the bay. Why should man and wife be living
apart when they might be together? Thou hast a
hot temper, Lalotte, but it will serve to warm up
the biting air.”
“A hot temper!” resentfully.
“Much of it you have taken truly! Two years
soldiering months in prison, and now two
years again ”
He laughed good-humoredly, if it was
loud enough to wake echoes.
“The saints know how I have
wished for the sound of your voice. Indian women
there are ready enough to be a wife for six months,
and then perhaps some brave steals in at night and
pouf! out goes your candle.”
“The sin of it!” holding up
both hands.
“Sins are not counted in this
wild land. But there are no old memories, no
talks with each other. Oh, you cannot think how
the loneliness almost freezes up one’s very
vitals. And I said to myself I will
bring Lalotte back with me. Why should we not
share the same life and live over together our memories
of sunny France? not always sunny, either.”
“To take me with you” gasping.
“Yes, why not? As if a
man cannot order his wife about!” he exclaimed
jocosely, catching her around the waist and imprinting
half a dozen kisses with smacks that were like an
explosion. “Yes I have sighed
for thee many a night. There are high logs for
firing, there are piles of bearskins, thick and fleecy
as those of our best sheep at home. There is
enough to eat at most times, and with thy cookery,
ma mie, a man would feast. It is a rough
journey, to be sure, but then thou wilt not refuse,
or I shall think thou hast a secret lover.”
“The Virgin herself knows I
shall be glad to go with thee, Antoine,” and
the tears of joy stood in her eyes. “There
is nothing in all Quebec to compare with thee.
And heaven knows one sometimes grows hungry of a winter
night, when food is scarce and one depends upon sleep
to make it up. No, I should be happy anywhere
with thee.”
They jogged along in a lover-like
fashion, but they were not quite out of hearing of
the din. At nightfall all dickering was stopped
and guards placed about. But in many a tent there
were drinking and gambling, and more than one affray.
They came to the small unpretentious
cabin. The door stood wide open, and the shaggy
old dog was stretched on the doorstep, dozing.
No soul was to be seen.
“Where is the child, Britta?
Why, she must have been carried off. She could
not walk any distance.”
The dog gave a wise look and flicked
her ear. Lalotte searched every nook.
“Where could she have gone?” in dismay.
“Let the child alone. What
is she to us? Does Jean Arlac stay awake nights
with trouble in his conscience about her? She
was not his wife’s child and so nothing to him.
What more is she to us? Come, get some supper;
I’ve not tasted such fried fish in an age as
yours last night.”
“The fish about here has a fine
flavor, that is true. Those imps of boys, and
not a stick of wood handy. Their skins shall be
well warmed; just wait until I get at them.”
“Nay, I will get some wood.
I am hungry as a bear in the thaw, when he crawls
out.”
But Lalotte, armed with a switch,
began a survey of the garden. The work had been
neglected, that was plain. There under a clump
of bushes lay Pani, sleeping, with no fear of retribution
on his placid face. And Lalotte put in some satisfactory
work before he even stirred.
But he knew nothing of his compeer,
only they had been down to the river together.
As for the child, when he returned she was gone.
“Let the child alone, I say!”
and Antoine brought his fist heavily down on the table.
“Next thing you will be begging that we take
her. Since the good Lord in His mercy has refrained
from giving us any mouths to feed, we will not fly
in His face for those who do not concern us. And
the puling thing would die on the journey and have
to be left behind to feed the wolves. Come! come!
Attend to thy supper.”
The slim Indian convert was coming
up the path. She was one of the Abenaqui tribe,
and she had mostly discarded the picturesque attire.
“The lady Madame Giffard sent
me to say the girl is safe with her and will not be
able to return to-night.”
“So much the better,”
growled Antoine, looking with hungry eyes on the fish
browning before the coals.
“Did she come and take her?
I went with my husband to see the traders.”
“She has been very poorly, but
is much better now. And miladi thought ”
“Oh, yes, it is all right.
Yes, I am glad,” nodding definitely, as if the
matter was settled. She did not want to quarrel
with Antoine about a child that was no kin to them,
when he was so much like her old lover. He seemed
to bring back the hopes of youth and a certain gayety
to which she had long been a stranger.
After enjoying his meal he brought
out his pipe and stretched himself in a comfortable
position, begging her to attend to him and let the
slave boy take the fragments. He went on to describe
the settlement of the fur merchants and trappers at
Hudson Bay, but toned down much of the rudeness of
the actual living. A few of the white women, wives
of the leaders and the men in command, formed a little
community. There was card-playing and the relating
of adventures through the long winter evenings, that
sometimes began soon after three. Dances, too,
Indian entertainments, and for daylight, flying about
on snowshoes, and skating. There was a short
summer. The Indian women were expert in modelling
garments everything was of fur and dressed
deerskins.
Few knew how to read at that day among
the seekers of fortune and adventurers, but they were
shrewd at keeping accounts, nevertheless. There
were certain regulations skilfully evaded by the knowing
ones.
No, it would never do to take the
child. She had no real mother love for it, yet
she often wondered whose child it might be, since it
was not Catherine Arlac’s? Strange stories
about foundlings often came to light in old France.
The death of the King rather disorganized
matters, for no one quite knew what the new order
of things would be. The Sieur de Champlain
sorrowed truly, for he had ever been a staunch admirer
of Henry of Navarre. Demont had not had his concession
renewed and to an extent the fur trade had been thrown
open. Several vessels were eagerly competing for
stores of Indian peltries, as against those of the
company. Indeed it was a regular carnival time.
One would think old Quebec a most prosperous settlement,
if judged only by that. But none of the motley
crew were allowed inside the palisades. The Sieur
controlled the rough community with rare good judgment.
He had shown that he could punish as well as govern;
fight, if need be, and then be generous to the foe.
Indeed in the two Indian battles he had won much prestige,
and had frowned on the torture of helpless prisoners.
Madame Giffard besought her husband
that evening to consent to her taking the care of
little Rose, at least while they remained in Canada,
the year and perhaps more.
“And that may unfit her for
her after life. You will make a pet and plaything
of her, and then it would be cruel to return her to
this woman to whom it seems she was given. She
may be claimed some day.”
“And if we liked her, might
we not take her home with us? There seems no
doubt but what she came from France. Not that
I could put any one quite in the place of my lost
darling, but it will afford me much interest through
the winter, which, by all accounts, is dreary.
I can teach her to read she hardly knows
a French letter. M. Destournier has taken a great
interest in her. And she needs care now, encouragement
to get well.”
“Let us do nothing rash.
The Sieur may be able to advise what is best,”
he returned gently. He felt he would rather know
more of the case before he took the responsibility.
“She is so sweet, so innocent.
She did not really know what love was,” and
Madame laughed softly. “This Catherine Arlac
must have been a maid, I think. Yes, I am sure
she must have come from gentle people. She has
every indication of it.”
“Well, thou canst play nurse
a while and it will interest thee, and fill up thy
lonely hours, for I have much to do and must take some
journeys quite impossible for a woman. And then
we will decide, if this woman is ready to part with
her. Ma mie, thou knowest I would not refuse
thee any wish that was possible.”
“That is true, Laurent,” and she kissed
him fondly.
Destournier had been busy every moment
of the day and had been closeted with the Sieur
until late in the evening. Champlain felt now
that he must give up an exploring expedition, on which
his heart was set, and return to France, where large
interests of the colony were at stake. There
was much to be arranged.
So it was not until the next morning
that he found his way to the Dubray house, and then
he was surprised at the tidings. Lalotte was almost
a girl again in her interest in the new plans.
As soon as a sufficient number had sold their wares
to make a journey safe from marauders they would start
for Hudson’s Bay, while the weather was pleasant.
Of course the child must be left behind. She
had no real claim on them; neither could she stand
the journey. She was now with Madame Giffard.
Thither he hurried. Little Rose
had improved wonderfully, though she was almost transparently
thin, and her eyes seemed larger and softer in their
mysterious darkness. Already love had done much
for her.
He told his story and the plans of the Dubrays.
“Then I can stay here,”
she cried with kindling eyes, reaching out her small
hand as if to sign her right in Madame’s.
Madame’s eyes, too, were joyous
as she raised them in a sort of gratitude to her visitor.
“How strange it comes about,”
she cried. “And now, M. Destournier, will
you learn all you can about this Catherine Arlac; where
she came from in France, and if she was any sort of
a trustworthy person? It may some day be of importance
to the child.”
“Yes, anything I can do to advance
her interest you may depend on. Are you happy,
little one?”
“I could fly like a bird, I
am so light with joy. But I would not fly away
from here. Oh, then I shall not have to go back!
I was frightened at M. Dubray.”
“I don’t wonder.
Yet these are the kind of men New France needs, who
are not afraid of the wilderness and its trials.
The real civilization follows on after the paths are
trodden down. Did you go out yesterday?”
to the lady.
“Only on the gallery.”
“That was safest. Such
a crowd was fit only for Indian women, and some of
them shrank from it, I noticed. You heard the
news about the King?”
“The sad, sad news. Yes.”
“And the Sieur feels he must go back to
France.”
“What is Quebec to do?
And if there is an Indian raid? Oh, this new land
is full of fears.”
“And think of the strifes and
battles of the old world! Ah, if peace could
reign. Yet the bravest of men are in the forefront.”
Then he came over to the child.
“Who brought you here yesterday?” he asked,
with a smile.
“I was all alone. I had
nothing to eat. I wanted to get out in the sunshine.
I walked, but presently I shook so, I crawled up on
the gallery. And then ”
She looked wistfully at miladi, who took up the rest
of the journey.
“You were a brave little girl.
But what if Madame had not chanced to come out?
Why, you might have died.”
The dark eyes grew humid. “It
does not hurt to die,” she said slowly.
“Only if you did not have to be put in the ground.”
“Don’t talk of such things,”
interposed Madame, with a half shudder. “You
are going to get well now, and run about and show me
the places you love. And we can sail up to the
islands and through the St. Charles, that looks so
fascinating and mysterious, can we not?” smiling
up at Destournier.
“Oh, yes, a month will finish
the trading, for the ships will want to start with
their freight, while the weather is fine. True,
the Indians and many of the coureurs de bois
will loiter about until the last moment. There
is to be a great Indian dance, I hear. They generally
break up with one that has a good deal of savagery
in it, but this early one is quite mild, I have understood,
and gives one an opportunity to see them in their
fine feathers and war paint.”
“Oh, it must be interesting.
Would it be safe to go?” she inquired.
“With a bodyguard, yes.
Your husband and myself, and we might call in the
services of the Dubrays. Madame is a host in herself.
And they are glad, it seems, to shift the care of
the child on some one else,” lowering his voice.
“You will not forget to inquire ”
“Why, there must be a record
here. The Sieur has the name and addresses
of all the emigrants, I think. There have not
been many shiploads of women.”
“She has no indication of peasant
parentage. There is a curious delicacy about
her, but merci! what wonderful and delightful
ignorance. It is like a fallow field. Mere
Dubray seems to have sown nothing in it. Oh, I
promise myself rare pleasure in teaching her many things.”
“She has a quick and peculiar
imagination. I am glad she has fallen into other
hands. Settling a new country is a great undertaking,
especially when one has but a handful of people and
you have to uproot other habits of life and thought.
I wonder if one can civilize an Indian!” and
he laughed doubtfully.
“But it is to save their souls, I thought!”
“Yet some of them worship the
same God that we do, only He is called the Great Manitou.
And they have an hereafter for the braves at least,
a happy hunting ground. But they are cruel and
implacable enemies with each other. And we have
wars at home as well. It is a curious muddle,
I think. You come from a Huguenot family, I believe.”
“My mother did. But she
went with my father. There were no family dissensions.
Does it make so much difference if one is upright and
honest and kindly?”
“Kindly. If that could
be put in the creed. ’Tis a big question,”
and he gave a sigh. “At least you are proving
that part of the creed,” and he crossed over
to the child, chatting with her in a pleasant manner
until he left them.
That evening there was a serious discussion
in the Sieur’s study. Captain Chauvin was
to return also, and who was most trustworthy to be
put in command of the infant colony was an important
matter. There had been quite an acreage of grain
sown the year before, maize was promising, and a variety
of vegetables had been cultivated. Meats and
fish were dried and salted. They had learned how
to protect themselves from serious inroads of the
scurvy. The houses in the post were being much
improved and made more secure against the rigors of
the long winter.
An officer who had spent the preceding
winter at the fort was put in command, and the next
day the garrison and the workmen were called in and
enjoined to render him full obedience.
Destournier and Gifford were to undertake
some adventures in a northerly direction, following
several designated routes that Champlain had expected
to pursue. Their journeys would not be very long.
As for Rose, she improved every day
and began to chatter delightfully, while her adoration
of Madame Giffard was really touching, and filled
hours that would otherwise have been very tedious.
They had brought with them a few books.
Madame was an expert at embroidery and lace-making,
but was aghast when she realized her slender stock
of materials, and that it would be well-nigh a year
before any could come from France.
“But there is bead work, and
the Indian women make threads out of grasses,”
explained Wanamee. “And feathers of birds
are sewed around garments and fringes are cut.
Oh, miladi will find some employment for her fingers.”
Mere Dubray made no objection to accompanying
them to the Indian dance. She had been to several
of them, but they were wild things that one could
not well understand; nothing like the village dances
at home. “But what would you? These
were savages!”
“I wish I could go, too,”
the child said wistfully. “But I could not
climb about nor stand up as I used. When will
I be able to run around again?”
She was gaining every day and went
out on the gallery for exercise. She was a very
cheerful invalid; indeed miladi was so entertaining
she was never weary when with her, and if her husband
needed her, Wanamee came to sit with the child.
Rose knew many words in the language, as well as that
of the unfortunate Iroquois.
All they had been able to learn about
Catherine Arlac was that she had come from Paris to
Honfleur, a widow, with a little girl. And Paris
was such a great and puzzling place for a search.
“But she is a sweet human rose
with no thorns, and I must keep her,” declared
miladi.
Laurent Giffard made no demur.
He was really glad for his wife to have an interest
while he was away.
The party threaded their way through
the narrow winding paths that were to be so famous
afterward and witness the heroic struggle, when the
lilies of France went down for the last time, and the
heritage that had cost so much in valiant endeavor
and blood and treasure was signed away.
There were flaming torches and swinging
lanterns and throngs wending to the part beyond the
tents. The dance was not to pass a certain radius,
where guards were stationed. Already there was
a central fire of logs, around which the braves sat
with their knees drawn up and their chins resting
upon them, looking as if they were asleep.
“A fire this warm night,” said miladi,
in irony.
“We could hardly see them without it,”
returned her husband.
At the summons of a rude drum that
made a startling noise, the braves rose, threw down
their blankets and displayed their holiday attire of
paint, fringes, beads, and dressed deerskins with great
headdresses of feathers. Another ring formed
round them. One brave, an old man, came forward,
and gesticulating wildly, went through a series of
antics. One after another fell in, and the slow
tread began to increase. Then shrill songs, with
a kind of musical rhythm, low at first, but growing
louder and louder, the two or three circles joining
in, the speed increasing until they went whirling
around like madmen, shouting, thrusting at each other
with their brawny arms, until all seemed like a sudden
frenzy.
“Oh, they will kill each other!” almost
shrieked Madame.
“Non, non, but small
loss if they did,” commented Madame Dubray.
They paused suddenly. It seemed
like disentangling a chain. The confusion was
heightened by the cries and the dancing feather headdresses
that might have been a flock of giant birds. But
presently they resolved into a circle again, and began
to march to a slow chant. One young fellow seized
a brand from the fire and began a wild gyration, pointing
the end to the circle, at random, it seemed. Then
another and another until the lights flashed about
madly and there was a scent of burning feathers.
The circle stood its ground bravely, but there were
shrieks and mocking laughter as they danced around,
sometimes making a lunge out at the spectators, who
would draw back in affright, a signal for roars of
mirth.
“They will burn each other up,”
cried Madame. “Oh, let us go. The noise
is more than I can bear. And if they should attack
us. Do you remember what M. du Parc was telling
us?”
“I think we have had enough
of it,” began M. Giffard. “They are
said to be very treacherous. What is to hinder
them from attacking the whites?”
“The knowledge that they have
not yet received any pay, and their remaining stock
would be confiscated. They are not totally devoid
of self-interest, and most of them have a respect
for the fighting powers of the Sieur and his
punishing capacity, as well.”
As they left the place the noise seemed
to subside, though it was like the roar of wild animals.
“Am I to remain here all winter
with these savages? Can I not return with M.
de Champlain?” pleaded Madame Giffard.
“Such a time would be almost
a Godsend in the winter,” declared Destournier.
“But they will be hundreds of miles away, and
the near Indians are sometimes too friendly, when
driven by hunger to seek the fort. Oh, you will
find no cause for alarm, I think.”
“And how long will they keep
this up?” she asked, as they were ascending
the parapet from which they could still see the moving
mass and the flashing lights, weird amid the surrounding
darkness.
“They will sit in a ring presently
and smoke the pipe of peace and enjoyment, and drop
off to sleep. And for your satisfaction, not a
few among those were fur-hunters and traders, white
men, who have given up the customs of civilized life
and enjoy the hardships of the wilderness, but who
will fight like tigers for their brethren when the
issue comes. They are seldom recreant to their
own blood.”
“I do not want to see it again,
ever,” she cried passionately. “I
shall hardly sleep for thinking of it and some horrible
things a sailor told on shipboard. I can believe
them all true now.”
“And we have had horrible battles,
cruelty to prisoners,” declared her husband.
“These poor savages have never been taught anything
better, and are always at war with each other.
But for us, who have a higher state of civilization,
it seems incredible that we should take a delight in
destroying our brethren.”
It was quiet and peaceful enough inside
the fort. The Sieur was still engrossed
with his papers, marking out routes and places where
lakes and rivers might be found and where trading
posts might be profitably set, and colonies established.
It was a daring ambition to plant the lilies of France
up northward, to take in the mighty lakes they had
already discovered and to cross the continent and
find the sure route to India. There were heroes
in those days and afterwards.