I.
It was close upon high tide, and the
creek that wound in through the diked marshes was
rapidly filling to the brim with the swirling, cold,
yellow-gray waters of Minas. The sun, but half
risen, yet lingered on the wooded crest of the Gaspereau
hills; while above hung a dappled sky of pink and
pale amber and dove-color. A yellow light streamed
sharply down across the frost-whitened meadows, the
smouldering ruins of Grand Pre village, and out upon
the glittering expanse of Minas Basin. The beams
tinged brightly the cordage and half-furled sails of
two ships that rode at anchor in the Basin, near the
shore. With a pitilessly revealing whiteness
the rays descended on the mournful encampment at the
creek’s mouth, where a throng of Acadian peasants
were getting ready to embark for exile.
“Late grew the year,
and stormy was the sea.”
Already had five ships sailed away
with their sorrowful freight, disappearing around
the towering front of Blomidon, from the straining
eyes of friends and kinsfolk left behind. Another
ship would sail out with the next ebb, and all was
sad confusion and unwilling haste till the embarkation
should be accomplished. The ship’s boats
were loaded down with rude household stuff, and boxes
full of homespun linens and woollens.
Children were crying with the cold,
and a few women were weeping silently; but the partings
which had succeeded each other at intervals throughout
the last few weeks had dulled the edge of anguish,
and most of the Acadians wore an air of heavy resignation.
The New England soldiers on guard gave what help they
could, but sullenly; for they were weary of the misery
that they had so long been forced to watch.
The people were huddled on a little
patch of marsh within a curve of the dike. Beyond
the dike there spread a stretch of reddish brown salt-flats,
covered with water only at the highest spring-tides,
and now meagrely sprinkled with sharp-edged blades
and tufts of the gray salt-grasses. The flats
were soft between the bunches of the grass, and a
broad track was trampled into mire by the passing down
of many feet from the dike’s edge to the boats.
In a work like this there are always
a thousand unlooked-for delays, and before half the
embarkation was effected the tide had reached the full,
and paused and turned to ebb. As the strip of
shining red mud began to widen between the grasses
and the water’s edge, the bustle and confusion
increased. Sometimes a woman who had already stepped
into the boat, thinking that her people had preceded
her, would spring over the side into the shallow water,
and rush, sobbing with anxious fear, back to the encampment.
Sometimes a child would lose sight of its father or
mother in the press, and lift its shrill voice in
a wail of desolation which found piteous echo in every
Acadian heart.
Lower and lower fell the tide.
The current was now thick and red with the mud which
it was dragging from the flats to re-deposit on some
crescent shoal at the mouth of the Canard or Piziquid.
Over the dike and down toward the waiting boats came
an old man, bent with years, supported by his son
and his son’s wife a middle-aged couple.
The decrepit figure in its quaint Acadian garb was
one to be remembered. Old Remi Corveau was a
man of means among the Acadian peasants. His feet
were incased in high-top moccasins of vividly embroidered
moose-hide, and his legs in gaiters, or mitasses,
of dark blue woollen homespun, laced with strips of
red cloth. His coat was a long and heavy garment
of homespun blanket, dyed to a yellowish brown with
many decoctions of a plant which the country-folk
now know as “yaller-weed.” A cap of
coarse sealskin covered his head, and was tied beneath
his chin with a woollen scarf of dull red. The
old man clutched his stick in his mittened right hand,
muttering to himself, and seemed but half aware of
what was going on. When he came to the edge of
the wet, red clay, however, he straightened himself
and looked about him. He gazed at the boats and
at the anchored ships beyond. A light of sudden
intelligence flashed into his feeble eyes. He
turned half round and looked back upon the ruined
village, while his son and daughter paused respectfully.
“Hurry along there now,”
exclaimed one of the guards, impatiently; and the
Acadian couple, understanding the tone and gesture,
pulled at their father’s arms to lead him into
the boat. The old man’s eyes flamed wildly,
and crying, “J’ne veux pas! j’ne
veux pas!” he broke from them and struggled
back toward the dike. Instantly his son overtook
him, picked him up in his arms, and carried him, now
sobbing feebly, down to the boat, where he laid him
on a pile of blankets. As the laden craft moved
slowly toward the ship the old man’s complainings
ceased. When they went to hoist him over the
ship’s side they discovered that he was dead.
And now the very last boatload was
well-nigh ready to start. The parish priest,
who was staying behind to sail with the next and final
ship, was bidding his sad farewells. A young
woman drew near the boat, but hardly seemed to see
the priest’s kind face of greeting, so anxiously
was she fumbling in the depths of a small bag which
she carried on her arm.
The bag was of yellow caribou-skin,
worked by Indian fingers in many-colored designs of
dyed porcupine quills.
“What’s the matter, Marie,
my child?” inquired the priest, gently.
“Hast thou lost something more, besides thy
country and thy father’s house?”
As he spoke the girl, whose name was
Marie Beaugrand, looked up with a sigh of relief,
and turned to him affectionately.
“I have found it, Father! V’la!”
she exclaimed, holding up a gigantic amethyst of marvellous
brilliancy. “Pierrot gave it to me to keep
for him, you know,” she added timidly, “because
of the bad luck that goes with it when a man
has it!”
This was no time to chide the girl
for her belief in the superstition which he knew was
connected with the wondrous jewel. The priest
merely smiled and said: “Well, well, guard
it carefully, my little one; and may the Holy Saints
enable it to mend the fortunes of thee and thy Pierrot!
Farewell; and God have thee ever in his keeping, my
dear child!”
Hardly were the words well past his
lips when the girl gave a scream of dismay, and sprang
forward down the slippery red incline. She had
dropped the amethyst, by some incomprehensible mischance.
The priest beheld the purple gleam as it flashed from
between the girl’s fingers. Her high cap
of coarse undyed French linen fell away from her black
locks as she stooped to grope passionately in the ooze
which had swallowed up her treasure. In a moment
the comely picture of her dark blue sleeves, gray
petticoat, and trim red stockings was sadly disfigured
by the mud. The girl’s despair was piercing;
but the impatient guards, who knew not what she had
lost, were on the point of taking her forcibly to
the boat, when Colonel Winslow, who stood near by,
checked them peremptorily.
Seeing the priest gird up his cassock
and step forward to help the sobbing girl in her search;
Colonel Winslow questioned of the interpreter as to
what the damsel had lost to cause such lament.
“A toy, a mere gaud, your Excellency,”
said the shrewd interpreter, giving Winslow a title
which he would not have employed had there been any
one present of higher rank than the New England Colonel.
“A mere gaud of a purple stone; but they do
say it would be worth a thousand pounds if one had
it in London. These poor folk call it the ’Witch
Stone,’ because, they say, it brings bad luck
to the man that has it. The more learned sort
smile at such a superstition, and call the stone ‘The
Star’ by reason of its surpassing beauty, Pierrot
Desbarat’s star, they call it now, since that
youth picked it up last spring on Blomidon, where
it had once before been found and strangely lost again.
They say the youth gave the jewel to his betrothed
yonder to keep for him, if so she might ward off the
evil fortune.”
The New England colonel’s high-arched
eyebrows went up into his forehead at this tale.
His round and ruddy face softened with sympathy for
the poor girl’s despair. Winslow was convinced
of the wisdom and justice of the orders which he was
carrying out so firmly; but he wished the task of
removing the Acadians had been confided to any other
hands than his. “This affair is more grievous
to me,” he wrote to a friend about this time,
“than any service I was ever employed in.”
Presently, remarking that the girl’s
efforts were fruitless, and the tide ebbing rapidly,
Winslow ordered several of his soldiers down into
the mud to assist her search. Veiling their reluctance
the men obeyed, and the ooze was explored to the very
water’s edge. At length, realizing that
the departure could not safely be longer delayed, Winslow
ordered the quest to cease.
As the girl turned back to the boat
the colonel caught sight of the despair upon her face;
and reddening in the folds of his double chin he slipped
some gold pieces into the muddy hand of the priest.
“Be good enough, sir, to give
the damsel these,” he said, stiffly. “Tell
her I will have the search continued. If the stone
is found she shall have it. If any one steals
it I will hang him.”
As the priest, leaning over the boat-side,
slipped the pieces into the buckskin bag, Colonel
Winslow turned away, and rather roughly ordered the
bespattered soldiers back to camp to clean themselves.
After the priest had bid farewell
to the still weeping Marie and the little company
about her, he stood waiting to receive the other boat
which was now returning from the ship. He saw
that something unexpected had taken place. His
old parishioner was lying back in the stern, covered
with a blanket, while his son and daughter lamented
over him with the unrestraint of children. On
the following day, under the stern guard of the Puritan
soldiers, there was a funeral in the little cemetery
on the hillside, and the frozen sods were heaped upon
the last Acadian grave of Grand Pre village.
Remi Corveau had chosen death rather than exile.
And what was the jewel whose loss
had caused such grief to Marie Beaugrand? For
generations the great amethyst had sparkled in the
front of Blomidon, visible at intervals in certain
lights and from certain standpoints, and again unseen
for months or years together. The Indians called
it “The Eye of Gluskap,” and believed that
to meddle with it at all would bring down swiftly
the vengeance of the demigod. Fixed high on the
steepest face of the cliff, the gem had long defied
the search of the most daring climbers. It lurked,
probably, under some over-hanging brow of ancient
rock, as in a fit and inviolable setting. At length,
some years before the date of the events I have been
describing, a French sailor, fired by the far-off
gleaming of the gem, had succeeded in locating the
spot of splendor. Alone, with a coil of rope,
he made his way to the top of the ancient cape.
A few days later his bruised and lifeless body was
found among the rocks below the height, and taken for
burial to the little hillside cemetery by the Gaspereau.
The fellow had evidently succeeded in finding the
amethyst and dislodging it from its matrix, for when
next the elfin light gleamed forth it was seen to come
from a point far down the cliff, not more than a hundred
feet above the tide.
Here it had been found by Pierrot
Desbarats, who, laughing to scorn the superstitious
fears of his fellow-villagers, had brought it home
in triumph. It was his purpose to go, at some
convenient season, to Halifax, and there sell the
matchless crystal, of whose value the priest had been
able to give him some idea. But that very spring
ill luck had crossed the threshold of Pierrot’s
cabin, a threshold over which he was even then preparing
to lead Marie Beaugrand as his bride. Two of his
oxen died mysteriously, his best cow slipped her calf,
his horse got a strain in the loins, and his apple
blossoms were nipped by a frost which passed by his
neighbors’ trees. Thereupon, heeding the
words of an old Micmac squaw, who had said that the
spell of the stone had no power upon a woman, Pierrot
had placed his treasure in Marie’s keeping till
such time as it could be transformed into English
gold and from that day the shadow of ill-fate
had seemed to pass from him, until the edict of banishment
came upon Grand Pre like a bolt out of a cloudless
heaven.
From the ship, on whose deck he awaited
her coming, Pierrot saw the apparently causeless accident
which had befallen the gem, and watched with dry lips
and burning eyes the vain endeavors of the search.
His hands trembled and his heart was bitter against
the girl for a few moments; but as the boat drew near,
and he caught the misery and fathomless self-reproach
on her averted face, his anger melted away in pity.
He took Marie’s hand as she came over the bulwarks,
and whispered to her: “Don’t cry
about it, ’Tite Cherie, it would have
brought us bad luck anywhere we went. Let’s
thank the Holy Saints it’s gone.”
As the ship forged slowly across the
Basin and came beneath the shadow of the frown of
Blomidon, Pierrot pointed out first the perilous ledge
to which he had climbed for the vanished “star,”
and then the tide-washed hollow under the cliff, where
they had picked up the body of the luckless sailor
from St. Malo. “Who knows, Marie,”
continued Pierrot, “if thou hadst not lost that
evil stone thou might’st one day have seen me
in such a case as that sailor came unto!” And
then, not because she was at all convinced by such
reasoning, but because her lover’s voice was
kind, the girl looked up into Pierrot’s face
and made shift to dry her tears.
II.
Late in December the last ship sailed
away. Then the last roof-tree of Grand Pre village
went down in ashes; and Winslow’s lieutenant,
Osgood, with a sense of heavy duty done, departed
with his New England troops. Winslow himself
had gone some weeks before.
For five years after the great exile
the Acadian lands lay deserted, and the fogs that
gathered morning by morning on the dark top of Blomidon
looked down on a waste where came and went no human
footstep. All the while the fated amethyst lay
hidden, as far as tradition tells, beneath the red
ooze and changing tides of the creek.
Then settlers began to come in, and
the empty fields were taken up by men of English speech.
Once more a village arose on Grand Pre, and cider-presses
creaked on the hills of Gaspereau. Of the Acadians,
to keep their memory green on the meadows they had
captured from the sea, there remained the interminable
lines of mighty dike, the old apple orchards and the
wind-breaks of tall poplars, and some gaping cellars
full of ruins wherein the newcomers dug persistently
for treasure.
By and by certain of the settlers,
who occupied the higher grounds back of the village,
began to talk of a star which they had seen, gleaming
with a strange violet radiance from a patch of unreclaimed
salt marsh by the mouth of the creek. In early
evening only could the elfin light be discerned, and
then it was visible to none but those who stood upon
the heights. Soon, from no one knew where, came
tales of “The Eye of Gluskap,” and “The
Witch’s Stone,” and “L’Etoile
de Pierrot Desbarat,” and the death of the
sailor of St. Malo, and the losing of the gem on the
day the ship sailed forth. Of the value of the
amethyst the most fabulous stories went abroad, and
for a season the good wives of the settlers had but
a sorry time of it, cleansing their husbands’
garments from a daily defilement of mud.
While the vain search was going on,
an old Scotchman, shrewder than his fellows, was taking
out his title-deeds to the whole expanse of salt-flats,
which covered perhaps a score of acres. Having
quietly made his position secure at Halifax, Dugald
McIntyre came down on his fellow-villagers with a
firm celerity, and the digging and the defiling of
garments came suddenly to an end by Grand Pre Creek.
Soon a line of new dike encompassed the flats, the
spring tides swept no more across those sharp grasses
which had bent beneath the unreturning feet of the
Acadians, and the prudent Scot found himself the richer
by twenty acres of exhaustlessly fertile meadow, worth
a hundred dollars an acre any day. Moreover,
he felt that he had the amethyst. Could
he not see it almost any evening toward sundown by
merely climbing the hillside back of his snug homestead?
How divinely it gleamed, with long, pale, steady rays,
just inside the lines of circumvallation which he had
so cunningly drawn about it! In its low lurking-place
beside the hubbub of the recurring ebb and flow, it
seemed to watch, like an unwinking eye, for the coming
of curious and baleful fates.
But it never fell to the Scotchman’s
fortune to behold his treasure close at hand.
To the hill-top he had to go whenever he would gloat
upon its beauty. To the most diligent and tireless
searching of every inch of the marsh’s surface
it refused to yield up its implacably virginal lustre.
Sometimes, though rarely, it was visible as the moon
drew near her setting, and then it would glitter whitely
and malignantly, like a frosty spear-point.
At last the settlers began to whisper
that the Star was not in the marsh at all, but that
Dugald McIntyre, after the fashion of these canny folk,
had o’er-reached himself, and run the lines of
the dike right over it. That it could continue
to shine under such discouraging circumstances, the
settlement by this time scorned to doubt. To “The
Eye of Gluskap” the people were ready to attribute
any powers, divine or devilish.
Whether the degree of possession to
which Dugald McIntyre had attained could be considered
to constitute a legal ownership of the jewel or not
is a question for lawyers, not for the mere teller
of a plain tale, the mere digger among the facts of
a perishing history. Suffice it to say that the
finger of ill-fortune soon designated Dugald McIntyre
as the man whose claim to the “Eye” was
acknowledged by the Fates.
From the time of the completion of
the new dike dated the Scotchman’s troubles.
His cattle one year, his crops another, seemed to find
the seasons set against them. Dugald’s
prudence, watchfulness, and untiring industry minimized
every stroke; nevertheless, things went steadily to
the worse.
It was Destiny versus Dugald
McIntyre, and with true Scottish determination Dugald
braced himself to the contest. He made a brave
fight; but wherever there was a doubtful point at issue,
the Court Invisible ruled inexorably and without a
scruple against the possessor of the “Eye of
Gluskap.” When he was harvesting his first
crop of hay off the new dike and a fine
crop it seemed likely to be the rains set
in with a persistence that at length reduced the windrows
to a condition of flavorless gray straw. Dugald
McIntyre set his jaws grimly together, took good hay
from another meadow to mix with the ruined crop, and
by a discreet construction of his bundles succeeded
in selling the whole lot at a good price to his most
gracious Majesty’s government at Halifax.
This bold stroke seemed to daunt the Fates for a time,
and while they were recovering from their confusion
affairs went bravely with Dugald. When haying
season came round again the weather kept favorable,
and the hay was all harvested in perfect shape.
Dugald was much too prudent to boast; but in his innermost
heart he indulged a smile of triumph. That night
his barns and outbuildings were burned to the ground,
and two fine horses with them; and his house was saved
hardly. This was too much even for him.
Refusing to play longer a losing game, he sold the
“New Marsh” at some sacrifice to a settler
who laughed at superstition. This sceptical philosopher,
however, proved open to conviction. A twelvemonth
later he was ready almost to give the land away, and
the “Eye of Gluskap” with it. For
a mere song the rich and smiling tract, carrying a
heavy crop just ready for the scythe, was purchased
by a young New Englander with an admirable instinct
for business. This young man went to Halifax
and mortgaged the land and crop to their full value;
and with the cash he left to seek his fortune.
Thus the “Eye of Gluskap,” and the Marsh
with it, came into the possession of a widow of great
wealth, on whom the spell, it seemed, was of none
effect. Her heirs were in England, and it came
to pass, in the course of a generation, that Grand
Pre knew not the owners of the fated Marsh, and could
not tell what troubles, if any, were falling upon
the possessors of “The Star.” Nevertheless
the star kept up its gleaming, a steady eye of violet
under the sunsets, a ray of icy pallor when the large
moon neared her setting; and at length it was discovered
that the enchanted jewel had yet other periods of
manifestation. Belated wayfarers, on stormy December
nights, had caught the unearthly eye-beam when no
other light could be seen in earth or sky. When
this took place the tide was always near about the
full, and beating hoarsely all along the outer dykes.
Then would be heard, between the pauses of the wind,
the rattle of oars at the mouth of the creek, and
the creaking of ships’ cordage, and anon the
sound of children crying with the cold. If voices
came from the spot where the “New Marsh”
lay unseen and the “Star” shone coldly
watchful, they were for the most part in a tongue
which the wayfarers could not understand. But
now and again, some said, there were orders spoken
in English, and then the clank of arms and the tramp
of marching feet. Of course these things were
held in question by many of the settlers, but there
were none so hardy as to suffer themselves to be caught
upon the “New Marsh” after nightfall.
“The Eye of Gluskap” discerned a supernatural
terror in many a heart that claimed renown for courage.
III.
A hundred years had rolled down the
hillsides of the Gaspereau and out across the Minas
tides into the fogs and hollows of the past; and still
the patch of dyked land at the creek’s mouth
was lit by the unsearchable lustre of the “Eye
of Gluskap.”
As for the various distinguished scientists
who undertook to unravel the mystery, either much
study had made them blind, or the lights were unpropitious;
for not one of them ever attained to a vision of the
violet gleam. They went away with laughter on
their lips.
One spring there came to Grand Pre
a young Englishman named Desbra, a long-limbed, ample-chested
youth, with whitish hair and ruddy skin, and clear,
straightforward blue eyes. Desbra was resolved
to learn farming in a new country, so he bought an
old farm on the uplands, with an exhausted orchard,
and was for a time surprised at the infertility of
the soil.
Gradually he made himself master of
the situation, and of some more desirable acres, and
also, incidentally it seemed, of the affections of
a maiden who lived not far from Grand Pre.
Dugald McIntyre had prospered again
when the “Eye of Gluskap” no longer looked
malignantly on his fortunes; and to his descendants
he had left one of the finest properties within view
of Blomidon. It was Jessie McIntyre, his great-grandchild,
who had captured the heart of young Desbra.
One rosy September afternoon, as Jessie
stood in the porch where the wild grapes clustered
half ripe, the young Englishman came swinging his
long legs up the slope, sprang over the fence between
the apple trees, and caught the maiden gleefully in
his arms.
“Congratulate me, Mistress McIntyre,”
he cried, as the girl pushed him away in mock disapproval.
“I have just made a bargain, a famous
bargain, a thing I never did before in my
life.”
“Good boy,” replied Jessie,
standing a-tip-toe to pat the pale brush of her lover’s
well-cropped hair. “Good boy, we’ll
make a Blue Nose of you yet! And what is this
famous bargain, may I ask?”
“Why, I’ve just bought
what so many of your fellow-countrymen call the ‘Noo
Ma’sh,’” answered Desbra. “I
have got it for twenty dollars an acre, and it’s
worth a hundred any day! I’ve got the deed,
and the thing’s an accomplished fact.”
Jessie looked grave, and removed herself
from her lover’s embrace in order to lend impressiveness
to her words. “Oh, Jack, Jack!” she
said, “you don’t know what you have done!
You have become a man of Destiny, which I don’t
believe you want to be at all. You have bought
the ‘Star.’ You have made yourself
the master of the ‘Witch’s Stone.’
You have summoned the ‘Eye of Gluskap’
to keep watch upon you critically. In fact, it
would take a long time to tell you all you have done.
But one thing more you must do, you must
get rid of that famous bargain of yours without delay.
I’m not superstitious, Jack, but truly in this
case I am disturbed. Bad luck, horrid bad luck,
has always befallen any man owning that piece of Marsh,
for the Marsh contains the Witch’s Stone, and
a spell is on the man that possesses that fatal jewel.”
Jack Desbra laughed and recaptured
the maiden. “All right,” said he,
“if a man mustn’t possess it, I shall
give it away to a woman! How will that suit you,
my lady?”
Jessie looked dubious, but said anything
would be better than for him to keep it himself.
Whereupon the young man continued: “Put
on your hat, then, and come down into the village
with me, and I will forthwith transfer the property,
with all appurtenances thereof, to Jessie McIntyre,
spinster, of the parish of Grand Pre, County of Kings,
Province of Nova Scotia, in her Majesty’s Dominion
of Canada; and the ‘Eye of Gluskap’ will
find something better to keep watch upon than me!”
To this proposal Miss Jessie, being
in the main a very level-headed young lady, in spite
of her little superstitions, assented without demur,
and the two proceeded to the village.
On the way thither and back, Desbra
learned all the history of the “Star on the
Marsh,” as I have endeavored to unfold it in
the preceding pages. As it happened, however,
there was no mention of Pierrot Desbarat’s surname
in Jessie’s account. Marie Beaugrand she
spoke of, but Marie’s fiance, the last
finder of the amethyst, she simply called Pierrot.
“But have you yourself ever
seen the sinister glory you describe?” asked
Desbra, as they neared the McIntyre home. Jessie’s
story had interested him keenly. He was charmed
with the tale as constituting at least a notable bit
of folk-lore.
“Of course I’ve seen it,”
replied Jessie, almost petulantly. “I dare
say I can show it to you now. Let us go to the
top of the hill yonder, where that old poplar stands
up all by itself. That tree is a relic of the
Acadians, and the ‘Eye’ watches it, I fancy,
when it has nothing better to look at!”
When the lovers reached the hill-top
and paused beside the ancient and decaying poplar,
the sun had just gone down behind North Mountain, and
a sombre splendor flooded the giant brow of Blomidon.
The girl pointed toward the mouth of the creek.
Desbra could not restrain a cry of astonishment.
From just inside the dike, in a deep belt of olive
shadow, came a pale, fine violet ray, unwavering and
inexplicable. Presently he remarked:
“That is a fine gem of yours,
my dear; and if I owned such a treasure I shouldn’t
leave it lying around in that careless fashion.
Who knows what might happen to it, away down there
on the New Marsh? What if a gull, now, should
come along and swallow it, to help him grind his fish
bones.”
“Don’t be silly, Jack!”
said the girl, her eyes dilating as she watched the
mystic beam. “You know you don’t half
like the look of it yourself. It makes you feel
uncanny, and you’re just talking nonsense to
make believe you don’t think there is anything
queer about it!”
“Quite the contrary, I assure
you, O Mistress of the Witch Stone, O Cynosure of
the ‘Eye of Gluskap!’” answered Desbra.
“I am, indeed, so much impressed that I was
taking pains to remind the Powers of the transfer
I have just effected! I desire to hide me from
the ’Eye of Gluskap’ by taking refuge
behind a certain little spinster’s petticoats!”
There was a long silence, while Desbra
kept gazing on the mystic gleam as if fascinated.
At last Jessie made a move as if she thought it time
to return to the house, whereupon the young man, waking
out of his fit of abstraction, said slowly:
“Do you know, it seems to me
now as if you had been telling me an old story.
I feel as if you had merely recalled to my memory incidents
which I had long forgotten. I remember it all
now, with much that I think you did not tell me.
Looking at that strange point of light I have seen, did
you tell me anything of an old man dying in a boat
and being brought to shore just as Marie was leaving
for the ship? That is a scene that stands out
upon my memory sharply now. And did you say anything
about an old priest? I saw him leaning over the
side of the boat and slipping something into Mane’s
sack.”
“No,” said Jessie, “I
didn’t tell you any of that, though it all happened
as you say. Let us go home, Jack, it frightens
me terribly. Oh, I wish you hadn’t bought
that Marsh!” and she clung trembling to the
young man’s arm.
“But what can it mean?”
persisted Desbra, as they descended the hill.
“Why should I think that I was there when it
all happened, that it all happened to me,
in fact? My grandmother was of French blood, perhaps
Acadian blood, for my grandfather married her, in the
West Indies. After the exile the Acadians, you
say, were scattered all over the face of the New World!
Can there be in my veins any of the blood of that unhappy
people?”
Jessie stopped short and looked up
at her lover’s face. “Why, your name,”
she cried, “sounds as if it might have been French
once!”
“My grandfather’s name
was Manners Sutton,” responded Desbra, musing.
“My father had to take my grandfather’s
name to inherit some property in Martinique.
I, of course, pronounce my name in English fashion,
but it is spelled just as my father’s was D-e-s-b-r-a!”
As the young Englishman gave his name
its French accent and pronunciation, Jessie uttered
a little cry of intelligence and wonder. She
looked at her lover a moment in silence, and then said
very slowly, very deliberately, pausing for every
word to tell.
“The name of Marie’s lover,
the young man who found the ‘Witch’s Stone,’
was Pierrot Desbarats! D-e-s-b-a-r-a-t-s.
You are none other, Jack, than the great-grandson
of Marie and Pierrot.”
“Truly,” said Desbra,
“when I come to think of it, the name was spelled
that way once upon a time!”
“Well, you shall not
be a man of Destiny, Jack!” exclaimed the girl.
“I won’t have it! But as for me, that
is another matter. We shall see if the ‘Eye
of Gluskap’ has any malign influence over me!”
IV.
Early in December, having just returned
to Grand Pre from their wedding journey, Jack Desbra
and his wife were standing one evening in a window
that looked out across the marshes and the Basin.
It was a wild night. A terrific wind had come
up with the tide, and the waves raged in thunderously
all along the Minas Dykes. There was nothing visible
without, so thick was the loud darkness of the storm;
but the young Englishman had suggested that they should
look to see if the “Star” would shine
a welcome to their home-coming.
“It is my Star, remember,
Jack,” said his wife, “and it will be guilty
of no such irregularity as showing itself on a night
like this.”
“You forget, my lady,”
was the reply, “that the Star is now mine.
The Marsh has the Star, and my lady has the Marsh;
but I have my lady, and so possess all!”
“Oh, Jack,” cried the
girl, with a shudder, “there it is! I am
sure something will happen. Let us sell the Marsh
to-morrow, dear; for now that I belong to you I can
no longer protect you from the spell. I had forgotten
that!”
“Very well,” said Desbra,
lightly, “if you say so, we’ll sell to-morrow.”
As the two stood locked in each other’s
arms, and straining their eyes into the blackness,
the violet ray gathered intensity, and almost seemed
to reveal, by fits, the raving turmoil of the rapidly
mounting tide.
In a few moments Desbra became absorbed,
as it were, in a sort of waking dream. His frank,
merry, almost boyish countenance took on a new expression,
and his eyes assumed the strange, far-focused steadfastness
of the seer’s. His wife watched, with a
growing awe which she could not shake off, the change
in her husband’s demeanor; and the fire-light
in the cheerful room died away unnoticed.
At last the girl could bear no longer
the ghostly silence, and that strange look in her
husband’s face. “What do you see,
Jack?” she cried. “What do you see?
Oh, how terribly it shines!”
When Desbra replied, she hardly recognized his voice.
“I see many ships,” said
he, slowly, and as if he heard not the sound of his
own words. “They sail in past Blomidon.
They steer for the mouths of the Canard and Gaspereau.
Some are already close at hand. The strange light
of the ‘Eye of Gluskap,’ is on the sails
of all. From somewhere I hear voices singing,
‘Nos bonnes gens reviendront.’ The
sound of it comes beating on the wind. Hark!
how it swells over the marshes!”
“I do not hear anything, Jack,
dear, except these terrible gusts that cry past the
corners of the house,” said Jessie, tremulously.
“How light it grows upon the
New Marsh, now!” continued her husband, in the
same still voice. “The ‘Eye’
shines everywhere. I hear no more the children
crying with the cold; but on the Marsh I see an old
man standing. He is waiting for the ships.
He waves his stick exultantly to welcome them.
I know him, it is old Remi Corveau.
They told me he died and was buried when the ships
sailed away from Grand Pre.
“There comes a great ship heading
for Long Island shoal. Cannot the captain see
how the waves break furiously before him? No ship
will live a moment that strikes the shoal to-night.
She strikes! God have No! she sails
straight through the breakers! and not three
feet of water on the shoal!
“Two ships have reached the
creek,” continued Desbra, speaking more rapidly.
“How the violet light shines through their sails!
How crowded the decks are! All the faces are
turned toward shore, with laughter and with streaming
eyes, and hands outstretched to the fields of Grand
Pre. I know the faces. There is Evangeline,
and there is Jaques Le May, but why don’t
they drop anchor? They will ground if they come
any nearer shore! And in this sea Merciful
Heaven, they are on the dikes! They strike and
the dike goes down before them! The great white
waves throng in behind them the Marsh is
buried and the light goes out!”
The young man started back and put
his hand to his eyes, as if awaking from a dream.
He caught the sound of his wife’s sobbing, and,
throwing both arms about her, he stooped to kiss her
hair, which gleamed in the dark.
“What’s the matter, darling?”
he whispered, anxiously. “And what has
become of our fire?”
“Oh, Jack, you have frightened
me so!” replied the girl. “You have
been dreaming or in a trance, and seeing dreadful
things that I could not see at all! I could see
nothing but that hateful ‘Eye,’ which has
been shining as if all the fires of hell were in it.
Come away! we will sell the Marsh to-morrow at any
price!”
“But, dear,” said Desbra,
“the Star has gone out! There is not a sign
of it to be seen. All outside is black as Egypt.
Look!”
Reluctantly the girl turned toward
the window. She gave a little cry. “That’s
just what you said a minute ago!” she exclaimed.
“You said ’the light goes out,’
and then you came to yourself. I believe the dike
is washed away!”
“Well,” said Desbra, “we’ll
see to-morrow.” And they drew the curtains
and lit the lamps and stirred the fire to a blaze;
and between the shriekings of the wind they heard
the roar of the breakers, trampling the low and naked
coast.
When morning broke over the Gaspereau
hills, and men looked out of their windows, every
vestige of the dike that had inclosed the New Marsh
was gone. The site of the Marsh was much eaten
away, and a bank of sand was piled at the other side
of the creek, near the mouth, in such a way as to
divert the channel many feet from its old course.
Thereafter the tides foamed in and
out with daily and nightly clamor across the spot
where the “Star on the Marsh” had gleamed;
and men made no new effort to reclaim the ruined acres.