By
Frances Hodgson Burnett
“Prut!” said Annot, her
sabots clattering loudly on the brick floor as
she moved more rapidly in her wrath. “Prut!
Madame Giraud, indeed! There was a time, and
it was but two years ago, that she was but plain Mere
Giraud, and no better than the rest of us; and it seems
to me, neighbors, that it is not well to show pride
because one has the luck to be favored by fortune.
Where, forsooth, would our ‘Madame’ Giraud
stand if luck had not given her a daughter pretty enough
to win a rich husband?”
“True, indeed!” echoed
two of the gossips who were her admiring listeners.
“True, beyond doubt. Where, indeed?”
But the third, a comely, fresh-skinned
matron, who leaned against the door, and knitted a
stout gray stocking with fast-clashing needles, did
not acquiesce so readily.
“Well, well, neighbors,”
she said, “for my part, I do not see so much
to complain of. Mere Giraud she is
still Mere Giraud to me is as honest and
kindly a soul as ever. It is not she who has called
herself Madame Giraud; it is others who are foolish
enough to fancy that good luck must change one’s
old ways. If she had had the wish to be a grand
personage, would she not have left our village before
this and have joined Madame Legrand in Paris.
On the contrary, however, she remains in her cottage,
and is as good a neighbor as ever, even though she
is fond of talking of the carriages and jewels of
Madame Legrand and her establishment on the Boulevard
Malesherbes. In fact, I ask you, who of us would
not rejoice also to be the mother of a daughter whose
fortune had been so good?”
“That also is true,” commented
the amiable couple, nodding their white-capped heads
with a sagacious air. “True, without doubt.”
But Annot replied with a contemptuous
shrug of her shoulders:
“Wait until Madame Giraud is
invited to visit the Boulevard Malesherbes,”
she said. “We have not heard that this has
happened yet.”
“She would’ not go if
she were, at least not to remain. Her heart has
grown to the old place she bore her children in, and
she has herself said to me most sensibly: ’Laure
is young, and will learn easily the ways of the great
world; I am old, and cannot; I am better at home among
my neighbors.’ Doubtless, however, In course
of time she will pay Madame Legrand a visit at her
home in Paris, or at the chateau which Monsieur Legrand
of course possesses, as the rich and aristocratic always
do.”
“Doubtless!” said Annot, grimly; “doubtless.”
Honest Jeanne Tallot passed the sneer
by, and went on with stout gravity of demeanor:
“There is only one thing for
which I somewhat blamed Mere Giraud, and that is that
I think she has scarcely done her duty toward Valentin.
He disappointed her by being an ugly lad instead of
a pretty girl, and she had not patience with him.
Laure was the favorite. Whatever Laure did was
right, and it was not so with the other, though I myself
know that Valentin was a good lad, and tender-hearted.”
“Once,” put in a white
cap, “I saw her beat him severely because he
fell with the little girl in his arms and scratched
her cheek, and it was not his fault. His foot
slipped upon a stone. He was carrying the child
carefully and tenderly enough. You are right in
calling him a good lad, neighbor Tallot. He was
a good lad, Valentin Giraud, and
fond of his mother, notwithstanding that she was not
fond of him.”
“Yes,” added her companion;
“but it is a truth that he was a great contrast
to the girl. Mon Dieu! his long limbs and awkward
body, his great sad eyes and ugly face! While
Laure, was she not tall and slender and
white, like a lily in a garden? And her voice
was like the ringing of silver, and her eyes so soft
and large. As an infant, she reminded one of
the little Jesu as one sees him in the churches.
No wonder that Mere Giraud fretted at the difference
between the two. And Valentin was her first,
and what mother does not look for great things in her
first? We cannot help feeling that something
must come of one’s own charms if one has any,
and Mere Giraud was a handsome bride. An ugly
bantling seems to offer one a sort of insult, particularly
at first, when one is young and vain.”
“There was no more beautiful
young girl than Laure Giraud at sixteen,” said
Jeanne Tallot.
“And none more useless,”
said Annot loudly. “Give me a young girl
who is industrious and honest. My Margot is better
provided for than Laure Giraud was before her marriage;
but her hands are not white, nor is her waist but
a span around. She has too much work to do.
She is not a tall, white, swaying creature who is
too good to churn and tend the creatures who give
her food. I have heard it said that Laure would
have worked if her mother had permitted it, but I
don’t believe it. She had not a working
look. Mademoiselle Laure was too good for the
labor of humble people; she must go to Paris and learn
a fine, delicate trade.”
“But good came of it,”
put in Jeanne Tallot, “It proved all the better
for her.”
“Let her mother thank the Virgin,
then,” cried Annot, contemptuously. “It
might not have proved the better; ’it might have
proved the worse; evil might have come of it instead
of good. Who among us has not heard of such things?
Did not Marie Gautier go to Paris too?”
“Ah, poor little one, indeed!” sighed
the white caps.
“And in two years,” added Annot, “her
mother died of a broken heart.”
“But,” said cheerful Jeanne,
somewhat dryly, “Laure’s mother is not
dead yet, so let us congratulate ourselves that to
go to Paris has brought luck to one of our number
at least, and let us deal charitably with Mere Giraud,
who certainly means well, and is only naturally proud
of her daughter’s grandeur. For my part,
I can afford to rejoice with her.”
She rolled up her stout stocking into
a ball, and stuck her needles through it, nodding
at the three women.
“I promised I would drop in
and spend a few minutes with her this morning,”
she said; “so I will bid you good-day,”
and she stepped across the threshold and trudged off
in the sunshine, her wooden shoes sounding bravely
on the path.
It was only a little place, St.
Croix, as we shall call it for want of a better name, a
little village of one street, and of many vines, and
roses, and orchards, and of much gossip. Simple
people inhabited it, simple, ignorant folk,
who knew one another, and discussed one another’s
faults and grape-crops with equal frankness, worked
hard, lived frugally, confessed regularly, and slept
well. Devout people, and ignorant, who believed
that the little shrines they erected in their vineyards
brought blessings upon their grapes, and who knew nothing
of the great world beyond, and spoke of Paris with
awe, and even a shade of doubt. Living the same
lives generation after generation, tilling the same
crops, and praying before the same stone altar in the
small, quaint church, it is not to be wondered at
that when a change occurred to any one of their number,
it was regarded as a sort of social era. There
were those in St. Croix who had known Mere Giraud’s
grandfather, a slow-spoken, kindly old peasant, who
had drunk his vin ordinaire, and smoked his
pipe with the poorest; and there was not one who did
not well know Mere Giraud herself, and who had not
watched the growth of the little Laure, who had bloomed
into a beauty not unlike the beauty of the white Provence
roses which climbed over and around her mother’s
cottage door. “Mere Giraud’s little
daughter,” she had been called, even after she
grew into the wonderfully tall and wonderfully fair
creature she became before she left the village, accompanying
her brother Valentin to Paris.
“Ma foi!” said
the men, “but she is truly a beauty, Mere Giraud’s
little daughter!”
“She should be well looked to,”
said the wiseacres, “Mere Giraud’s
little daughter.”
“There is one we must always
give way before,” said the best-natured among
the girls, “and that one is Mere Giraud’s
little daughter.”
The old Cure the parish took
interest in her, and gave her lessons, and, as Mere
Giraud would have held her strictly to them, even if
she had not been tractable and studious by nature,
she was better educated and more gently trained than
her companions. The fact was, however, that she
had not many companions. Some element in her grace
and beauty seemed to separate her from the rest of
her class. Village sports and festivities had
little attraction for her, and, upon the whole, she
seemed out of place among them. Her stature, her
fair, still face, and her slow, quiet movements, suggested
rather embarrassingly to the humble feasters the presence
of some young princess far above them.
“Pouf!” said a
sharp-tongued belle one day, “I have no patience
with her. She is so tall, this Laure, that one
must be forever looking up to her, and I, for one,
do not care to be forever looking up.”
The hint of refined pride in her demeanor
was Mere Giraud’s greatest glory.
“She is not like the rest, my
Laure,” she would say to her son. “One
can see it in the way in which she holds her head’.
She has the quiet, grave air of a great personage.”
There were many who wondered that
Valentin showed no jealousy or distaste at hearing
his sister’s praises sounded so frequently to
his own detriment. There was no praise for him.
The poor, fond mother’s heart was too full of
Laure. Her son had been a bitter disappointment
to her, and, to her mind, was fitted for nothing but
to make himself an adoring slave to his sister’s
beauty; and this, the gentle, generous fellow certainly
was. He was always ready to serve her; always
affectionate, always faithful; and Mere Giraud, who
was blind to, or careless of, all his loving, constant
labor for her own comfort, deigned to see that he
did his duty toward Laure.
“He has at least the sense to
appreciate her as far as he is able,” she said.
So when Valentin, who had a talent
for engraving, was discovered by some one who understood
his genius, and could make use of it, and was offered
a place in the great, gay city, Mere Giraud formed
an ambitious plan. He should take Laure and find
her a position also; she had the fingers of a fair
magician, and could embroider marvelously. So
she trusted Laure to him, and the two bade farewell
to St. Croix and departed together. A month passed,
and then there came a letter containing good news.
Valentin was doing well, and Laure also. She had
found a place in a great family where she was to embroider
and wait upon a young lady. They were rich people,
and were kind, and paid her well, and she was happy.
“When they first saw her, they
were astonished,” wrote the simple, tender Valentin.
“I went with her to present herself. My
employer had recommended her. There is a son
who is past his youth, and who has evidently seen
the world. He is aristocratic and fair, and slightly
bald, but extremely handsome still. He sat holding
a newspaper in his long, white fingers, and when we
entered, he raised his eyes above it and looked at
Laure, and I heard him exclaim under his breath, ’Mon
Dieu! as if her beauty fairly startled him.”
When the Cure, to whom the
proud mother showed the letter, read this part, he
did not seem as rejoiced as Mere Giraud had expected.
On the contrary, he looked a little grave, and rubbed
his forehead.
“Ah, ah!” he said; “there lies the
danger.”
“Danger!” exclaimed Mere Giraud, starting.
He turned, and regarded her with a
rather hesitant air, as if he were at once puzzled
and fearful, puzzled by her simplicity,
and fearful of grieving her unnecessarily.
“Valentin is a good lad,”
he said. “Valentin will be watchful, though
perhaps he is too good to suspect evil.”
Mere Giraud put her hand to her heart.
“You are not afraid?”
she said, quite proudly, beginning at last to comprehend.
“You are not afraid of evil to Laure?”
“No, no, no,” he answered; “surely
not.”
He said no more then, but he always
asked to see the letters, and read them with great
care, sometimes over and over again. They came
very regularly for six or seven months, and then there
was a gap of a few weeks, and then came a strange,
almost incomprehensible, letter from Valentin, containing
news which almost caused Mere Giraud’s heart
to burst with joy and gratitude. Laure was married,
and had made such a marriage as could scarcely have
been dreamed of. A rich aristocrat, who had visited
her employers, had fallen in love with her, and married
her. He had no family to restrain him, and her
beauty had won him completely from the first hour.
He had carried her away with him to make a prolonged
tour. The family with whom she had lived had been
lavish in their gifts and kindness, but they had left
Paris also and were voyaging. The name of Laure’s
bridegroom was Legrand, and there came messages from
Laure, and inclosed was a handsome present of money.
Mere Giraud was overwhelmed with joy.
Before three hours had passed, all St Croix knew the
marvelous news. She went from house to house showing
the letter and the money, and it was not until night
that she cooled down sufficiently to labor through
a long epistle to Valentin.
It was a year before Laure returned
to Paris, and during that time she wrote but seldom;
but Valentin wrote often, and answered all his mother’s
questions, though not as fluently, nor with so many
words as she often wished. Laure was rich, and
beautiful as ever; her husband adored her, and showered
gifts and luxuries upon her; she had équipages
and jewels; she wore velvet and satin and lace every
day; she was a great lady, and had a house like a
palace. Laure herself did not say so much.
In her secret heart, Mere Giraud often longed for more,
but she was a discreet and farseeing woman.
“What would you?” she
said. “She must drive out in her equipage,
and she must dress and receive great people, and I
am not so blind a mother as not to see that she will
have many things to learn. She has not time to
write long letters, and see how she cares
for me, money, see you, by every letter,
and a silk dress and lace cap she herself has chosen
in the Boulevard Capucines. And I must
care for myself, and furnish the cottage prettily,
and keep a servant. Her wealth and great fortune
have not rendered her undutiful, my Laure.”
So she talked of Madame Legrand, and
so all St. Croix talked of Madame Legrand, and some,
of course, were envious and prophesied that the end
had not come yet, and Mere Giraud would find herself
forgotten some fine day; and others rejoiced with
her, and congratulated themselves that they knew so
aristocratic a person as Madame Legrand.
Jeanne Tallot was of those who sympathized
with her in all warm-heartedness and candor.
With her knitting in her hand ready
for action, and with friendly unceremoniousness, she
presented herself at the cottage door one morning,
nodding and speaking before she had crossed the threshold.
“Good-day, neighbor Giraud.
Any letters from Laure this morning?”
Mere Giraud, who sat before the window
under the swinging cage of her bird, looked up with
an air a little more serious than usual.
“Ah!” she said, “I
am glad it is you, Jeanne. I have been wishing
to see you.”
Jeanne seated herself, smiling.
“Then,” said she, “it is well I
came.”
But immediately she noticed the absent
look of her friend, and commented upon it.
“You do not look at your best
this morning,” she said. “How does
it occur?”
“I am thinking,” said
Mere Giraud with some importance of manner, “I
am thinking of going to Paris.”
“To Paris!”
“I am anxious,” shaking
her head seriously. “I had last night a
bad dream. I wish to see Laure.”
Then she turned and looked at Jeanne almost wistfully.
“It is a long time since I have seen her,”
she said.
“Yes,” answered Jeanne in a little doubt;
“but Paris is a long way off.”
“Yes,” said Mere Giraud;
“but it appears that all at once I realize how
long it is since I have seen my child. I am getting
old, you see. I was not very young when she was
born, and, as one grows older, one becomes more uneasy
and obstinate in one’s fancies. This morning
I feel that I must see my Laure. My heart yearns
for her, and” hastily “she
will undoubtedly be rejoiced to see me. She has
often said that she wished she might lay her head
upon my breast again.”
It seemed that she was resolved upon
the journey. She was in a singular, uneasy mood,
and restless beyond measure. She who had never
been twenty miles from St. Croix had made up her mind
to leave it at once and confront all the terrors of
a journey to Paris, for there were terrors
in such a journey to the mind of a simple peasant who
had so far traveled but in one groove. She would
not even wait to consult Monsieur lé Cure,
who was unfortunately absent. Jeanne discovered
to her astonishment that she had already made her
small preparations, had packed her best garments in
a little wooden box, laying the silk gown and lace
cap at the top that they might be in readiness.
“I will not interfere at all,
and I shall not remain long,” she said.
“Only long enough to see my Laure, and spend
a few days with her quietly. It is not Paris
I care for, or the great sights; it is that I must
see my child.”
St. Croix was fairly bewildered at
the news it heard the next day. Mere Giraud had
gone to Paris to visit Madame Legrand had
actually gone, sending her little servant home, and
shutting up her small, trim cottage.
“Let us hope that Madame Legrand
will receive her as she expects to be received,”
said Annot. “For my part I should have preferred
to remain in St. Croix. Only yesterday Jeanne
Tallot told us that she had no intention of going.”
“She will see wonderful things,”
said the more simple and amiable. “It is
possible that she may be invited to the Tuileries,
and without doubt she will drive to the Bois de Boulogne
in Madame Legrand’s carriage, with servants
in livery to attend her. My uncle’s sister’s
son, who is a valet de place in a great family,
tells us that the aristocracy drive up and down the
Champs Ellysees every afternoon, and the sight is
magnificent.”
But Mere Giraud did not look forward
to such splendors as these. “I shall see
my Laure as a great lady,” she said to herself.
“I shall hold her white hands and kiss her cheeks.”
The roar of vehicles, and the rush
and crowd and bustle bewildered her; the brightness
and the rolling wheels dazzled her old eyes, but she
held herself bravely. People to whom she spoke
smiled at her patois and her innocent questions,
but she did not care.
She found a fiacre which took
her to her destination; and when, after she had paid
the driver, he left her, she entered the wide doors
with a beating heart, the blood rising on her cheek,
and glowing through the withered skin.
“Madame Legrand,” she
said a little proudly to the concierge, and
the woman stared at her as she led her up the staircase.
She was so eager that she scarcely saw the beauty
around her, the thick, soft carpets, the
carved balustrades, the superb lamps. But when
they stopped before a door she touched the concierge
upon the arm.
“Do not say my name,” she said. “I
am her mother.”
The woman stared at her more than ever.
“It is not my place to announce
you,” she said. “I only came up because
I thought you would not find the way.”
She could not have told why it was
or how it happened, but when at last she was ushered
into the salon a strange sense of oppression
fell upon her. The room was long and lofty, and
so shadowed by the heavy curtains falling across the
windows that it was almost dark.
For a few seconds she saw nobody,
and then all at once some one rose from a reclining
chair at the farther end of the apartment and advanced
a few steps toward her a tall and stately
figure, moving slowly.
“Who?” she
heard a cold, soft voice say, and then came a sharp
cry, and Laurel white hands were thrown out in a strange,
desperate gesture, and she stopped and stood like
a statue of stone. “Mother mother mother!”
she repeated again and again, as if some indescribable
pain shook her.
If she had been beautiful before,
now she was more beautiful still. She was even
taller than ever, she was like a queen.
Her long robe was of delicate gray velvet, and her
hair and throat and wrists were bound with pearls
and gold. She was so lovely and so stately that
for a moment Mere Giraud was half awed, but the next
it was as if her strong mother heart broke loose.
“My Laure!” she cried
out. “Yes, it is I, my child it
is I, Laure;” and she almost fell upon her knees
as she embraced her, trembling for very ecstasy.
But Laure scarcely spoke. She
was white and cold, and at last she gasped forth three
words.
“Where is Valentin?”
But Mere Giraud did not know.
It was not Valentin she cared to see. Valentin
could wait, since she had, her Laure. She sat
down beside her in one of the velvet chairs, and she
held the fair hand in her own. It was covered
with jewels, but she did not notice them; her affection
only told her that it was cold and tremulous.
“You are not well, Laure?”
she said. “It was well that my dream warned
me to come. Something is wrong.”
“I am quite well,” said Laure. “I
do not suffer at all.”
She was so silent that if Mere Giraud
had not had so much to say she would have been troubled
\ as it was, however, she was content to pour forth
her affectionate speeches one after another without
waiting to be answered.
“Where is Monsieur Legrand?” she ventured
at last.
“He is,” said Laure, in a hesitant voice, “he
is in Normandy.”
“Shall I not see him?” asked Mere Giraud.
“I am afraid not, unless your
visit is a long one. He will be absent for some
months.”
She did not speak with any warmth.
It was as if she did not care to speak of him at all, as
if the mention of him even embarrassed her a little.
Mere Giraud felt a secret misgiving.
“I shall not stay long,”
she said; “but I could not remain away.
I wished so eagerly to see you, and know that you
were happy. You are happy, my Laure?”
Laure turned toward her and gave her
a long look a look which seemed unconsciously
to ask her a question.
“Happy!” she answered
slowly and deliberately, “I suppose so.
Yes.”
Mere Giraud caressed her hand again
and again. “Yes,” she said, “it
must be so. The good are always happy; and you,
my Laure, have always been dutiful and virtuous, and
consequently you are rewarded. You have never
caused me a grief, and now, thank the good God you
are prosperous.” She looked at her almost
adoringly, and at last touched the soft thick gray
velvet of her drapery with reverence. “Do
you wear such things as this every day?” she
asked.
“Yes,” Laure answered, “every day.”
“Ah!” sighed the happy mother. “How
Monsieur Legrand must adore you!”
At length she found time to ask a few questions concerning
Valentin.
“I know that he is well and
as prosperous as one could expect him to be; but I
hope” bridling a little with great
seriousness “I hope he conducts himself
in such a manner as to cause you no embarrassment,
though naturally you do not see him often.”
“No,” was the answer, they
did not see him often.
“Well, well,” began Mere
Giraud, becoming lenient in her great happiness, “he
is not a bad lad Valentin. He means
well”
But here she stopped, Laure
checked her with a swift, impassioned movement.
“He is what we cannot understand,”
she said in a hushed, strained voice. “He
is a saint. He has no thought for himself.
His whole life is a sacrifice. It is not I you
should adore it is Valentin.”
“Valentin!” echoed Mere Giraud.
It quite bewildered her, the mere thought of adoring
Valentin.
“My child,” she said when
she recovered herself, “it is your good heart
which says this.”
The same night Valentin came.
Laure went out into the antechamber to meet him, and
each stood and looked at the other with pale face and
anguished eyes. Valentin’s eyes were hollow
and sunken as if with some great sorrow, and his large
awkward frame seemed wasted. But there was no
reproach mingled with the indescribable sadness of
his gaze.
“Your note came to me,” he said.
“Our mother “
“She is in there,” said
Laure in a low, hurried, shaken voice, and she pointed
to the salon. “She has come to embrace
me, to make sure that I am happy.
Ah, my God!” and she covered her deathly face
with her hands.
Valentin did not approach her.
He could only stand still and look on. One thought
filled his mind.
“We have no time to weep, Laure,”
he said gently. “We must go on as we have
begun. Give me your hand.”
This was all, and then the two went
in together, Laure’s hand upon her brother’s
arm.
It was a marvelous life Mere Giraud
lived during the next few days. Certainly she
could not complain that she was not treated with deference
and affection. She wore the silk dress every day;
she sat at the wonderful table, and a liveried servant
stood behind her chair; she drove here and there in
a luxurious carriage; she herself, in fact, lived
the life of an aristocrat and a great lady. Better
than all the rest, she found her Laure as gracious
and dutiful as her fond heart could have wished.
She spent every hour with her; she showed her all her
grandeurs of jewelry and toilette; she
was not ashamed of her mother, untutored and simple
as she might be.
“Only she is very pale and quiet,”
she remarked to Valentin once; “even paler and
more quiet than I should have expected. But then
we know that the rich and aristocratic are always
somewhat reserved. It is only the peasantry and
provincials who are talkative and florid.
It is natural that Laure should have gained the manner
of the great world.”
But her happiness, poor soul, did
not last long, and yet the blow God sent was a kindly
one.
One morning as they went out to their
carriage Laure stopped to speak to a woman who crouched
upon the edge of the pavement with a child in her
arms. She bent down and touched the little one
with her hand, and Mere Giraud, looking on, thought
of pictures she had seen of the Blessed Virgin, and
of lovely saints healing the sick.
“What is the matter?” asked Laure.
The woman looked down at the child and shivered.
“I do not know,” she answered
hoarsely. “Only we are ill, and God has
forsaken us. We have not tasted food for two days.”
Laure took something from her purse
and laid it silently in the child’s small, fevered
hand. The woman burst into tears.
“Madame,” she said, “it is a twenty-franc
piece.”
“Yes,” said Laure gently.
“When it is spent come to me again,” and
she went to her carriage.
“My child,” said Mere
Giraud, “it is you who are a saint. The
good God did wisely in showering blessings upon you.”
A few days longer she was happy, and
then she awakened from her sleep one night, and found
Laure standing at her bedside looking down at her
and shuddering. She started up with an exclamation
of terror.
“Mon Dieu!” she said. “What
is it?”
She was answered in a voice she had
never heard before, Laure’s, but
hoarse and shaken. Laure had fallen upon her knees,
and grasped the bedclothes, hiding her face in the
folds.
“I am ill,” she answered
in this strange, changed tone. “I am I
am cold and burning I am dying.”
In an instant Mere Giraud stood upon
the floor holding her already insensible form in her
arm’. She was obliged to lay her upon the
floor while she rang the bell to alarm the servants.
She sent for Valentin and a doctor. The doctor,
arriving, regarded the beautiful face with manifest
surprise and alarm. It was no longer pale, but
darkly flushed, and the stamp of terrible pain was
upon it.
“She has been exposed to infection,”
he said. “This is surely the case.
It is a malignant fever.”
Then Mere Giraud thought of the poor mother and child.
“O my God!” she prayed, “do not
let her die a martyr.”
But the next day there was not a servant
left in the house; but Valentin was there, and there
had come a Sister of Mercy. When she came, Valentin
met her, and led her into the salon. They
remained together for half an hour, and then came
out and went to the sick-room, and there were traces
of tears upon the Sister’s face. She was
a patient, tender creature, who did her work well,
and she listened with untiring gentleness to Mere
Giraud’s passionate plaints.
“So beautiful, so young, so
beloved,” cried the poor mother; “and
Monsieur absent in Normandy, though it is impossible
to say where! And if death should come before
his return, who could confront him with the truth?
So beautiful, so happy, so adored!”
And Laure lay upon the bed, sometimes
wildly delirious, sometimes a dreadful statue of stone, unhearing,
unseeing, unmoving, death without death’s
rest, life in death’s bonds of iron.
But while Mere Giraud wept, Valentin
had no tears. He was faithful, untiring, but
silent even at the worst.
“One would think he had no heart,”
said Mere Giraud; “but men are often so, ready
to work, but cold and dumb. Ah! it is only a mother
who bears the deepest grief.”
She fought passionately enough for
a hope at first, but it was forced from her grasp
in the end. Death had entered the house and spoken
to her in the changed voice which had summoned her
from her sleep.
“Madame,” said the doctor
one evening as they stood over the bed while the sun
went down, “I have done all that is possible.
She will not see the sun set again. She may not
see it rise.”
Mere Giraud fell upon her knees beside
the bed, crossing herself and weeping.
“She will die,” she said,
“a blessed martyr. She will die the death
of a saint.”
That very night only a
few hours later there came to them a friend, one
they had not for one moment even hoped to see, a
gentle, grave old man, in a thin, well-worn black
robe, the Cure of St. Croix.
Him Valentin met also, and when the
two saw each other, there were barriers that fell
away in their first interchange of looks.
“My son,” said the old
man, holding out his hands, “tell me the truth.”
Then Valentin fell into a chair and hid his face
“She is dying,” he said, “and I
cannot ask that she should live.”
“What was my life” he
cried passionately, speaking again “what
was my life to me that I should not have given it
to save her, to save her to her beauty
and honor, and her mother’s love! I would
have given it cheerfully, a thousand times, a
thousand times again and again. But it was not
to be; and, in spite of my prayers, I lost her.
O my God!” with a sob of agony, “if to-night
she were in St. Croix and I could hear the neighbors
call her again as they used, ‘Mere Giraud’s
little daughter!’”
The eyes of the Cure had tears in them also.
“Yesterday I returned to St.
Croix and found your mother absent,” he said.
“I have had terrible fears for months, and when
I found her house closed, they caused me to set out
upon my journey at once.”
He did not ask any questions.
He remembered too well the man of whom Valentin had
written; the son who was “past his youth, and
had evidently seen the world;” the pale aristocrat,
who had exclaimed “Mon Dieu!” at
the sight of Laure’s wondrous beauty.
“When the worst came to the
worst,” said Valentin, “I vowed myself
to the labor of sparing our mother. I have worked
early and late to sustain myself in the part I played.
It was not from Laure the money came. My God!
Do you think I would have permitted my mother’s
hand to have touched a gift of hers? She wrote
the letters, but the money I had earned honestly.
Heaven will justify me for my falsehood since I have
suffered so much.”
“Yes,” responded the Cure,
looking at his bent form with gentle, pitying eyes,
“Heaven will justify you, my son.”
They watched by Laure until the morning,
but she did not see them; she saw nothing; to-night
it was the statue of marble which lay before them.
But in the early morning, when the sky was dappled
with pink and gold, and the air was fresh and cool,
and a silence, even more complete than that of the
night, seemed to reign, there came a change. The
eyes they had seen closed for so many hours were opened,
and the soft voice broke in upon the perfect stillness
of the room:
“The lilies in the garden are
in bloom to-day. They were never so tall, and
white, and fair before. I will gather them for
the altar to give to the Virgin at
my confession. Mea culpa Mea” and
all was over, and Mere Giraud fell upon her knees
again, crying, as she had cried before, amid a passion
of sobs and tears:
“She has died, my child, the death of a blessed
martyr.”
It was rather strange, the villagers
said, that Madame Legrand should have been buried
in the little graveyard at St. Croix instead of in
some fine tomb at Pere la Chaise; but it
was terribly sad! her husband was away,
they knew not where, and it was Valentin’s wish,
and Mere Giraud’s heart yearned so over her
beloved one. So she was laid there, and a marble
cross was placed at her head a tall, beautiful
cross by Monsieur Legrand, of course.
Only it was singular that he never came, though perhaps
that is the way of the great not to mourn
long or deeply even for those who have been most lovely,
and whom they have most tenderly loved.