At Fort Latrobe sentiment was not
of the most refined kind. Local customs were
pronounced and crude in outline; language was often
highly coloured, and action was occasionally accentuated
by a pistol shot. For the first few months of
its life the place was honoured by the presence of
neither wife, nor sister, nor mother. Yet women
lived there.
When some men did bring wives and
children, it was noticed that the girl Blanche was
seldom seen in the streets. And, however it was,
there grew among the men a faint respect for her.
They did not talk of it to each other, but it existed.
It was known that Blanche resented even the most casual
notice from those men who had wives and homes.
She gave the impression that she had a remnant of
conscience.
“Go home,” she said to
Harry Delong, who asked her to drink with him on New
Year’s Day. “Go home, and thank God
that you’ve got a home and a wife.”
After Jacques, the long-time friend
of Pretty Pierre, came to Fort Latrobe, with his sulky
eye and scrupulously neat attire, Blanche appeared
to withdraw still more from public gaze, though no
one saw any connection between these events.
The girl also became fastidious in her dress, and
lost all her former dash and smart aggression of manner.
She shrank from the women of her class, for which,
as might be expected, she was duly reviled. But
the foxes have holes, and the birds of the air have
nests, nor has it been written that a woman may not
close her ears, and bury herself in darkness, and
travel alone in the desert with her people those
ghosts of herself, whose name is legion, and whose
slow white fingers mock more than the world dare at
its worst.
Suddenly, she was found behind the
bar of Weir’s Tavern at Cedar Point, the resort
most frequented by Jacques. Word went about among
the men that Blanche was taking a turn at religion,
or, otherwise, reformation. Soldier Joe was something
sceptical on this point from the fact that she had
developed a very uncertain temper. This appeared
especially noticeable in her treatment of Jacques.
She made him the target for her sharpest sarcasm.
Though a peculiar glow came to his eyes at times, he
was never roused from his exasperating coolness.
When her shafts were unusually direct and biting,
and the temptation to resent was keen, he merely shrugged
his shoulders, almost gently, and said: “Eh,
such women!”
Nevertheless, there were men at Fort
Latrobe who prophesied trouble, for they knew there
was a deep strain of malice in the French half-breed
which could be the more deadly because of its rare
use. He was not easily moved, he viewed life
from the heights of a philosophy which could separate
the petty from the prodigious. His reputation
was not wholly disquieting; he was of the goats, he
had sometimes been found with the sheep, he preferred
to be numbered with the transgressors. Like Pierre,
his one passion was gambling. There were legends
that once or twice in his life he had had another
passion, but that some Gorgon drew out his heartstrings
painfully, one by one, and left him inhabited by a
pale spirit now called Irony, now Indifference under
either name a fret and an anger to women.
At last Blanche’s attacks on
Jacques called out anxious protests from men like
rollicking Soldier Joe, who said to her one night,
“Blanche, there’s a devil in Jacques.
Some day you’ll startle him, and then he’ll
shoot you as cool as he empties the pockets of Freddy
Tarlton over there.”
And Blanche replied: “When
he does that, what will you do, Joe?”
“Do? Do?” The man
stroked his beard softly. “Why, give him
ditto cold.”
“Well, then, there’s nothing
to row about, is there?” And Soldier Joe was
not on the instant clever enough to answer her sophistry;
but when she left him and he had thought awhile, he
said, convincingly:
“But where would you be then,
Blanche?... That’s the point.”
One thing was known and certain:
Blanche was earning her living by honest, if not high-class,
labour. Weir the tavern-keeper said she was “worth
hundreds” to him. But she grew pale, her
eyes became peculiarly brilliant, her voice took a
lower key, and lost a kind of hoarseness it had in
the past. Men came in at times merely to have
a joke at her expense, having heard of her new life;
but they failed to enjoy their own attempts at humour.
Women of her class came also, some with half-uncertain
jibes, some with a curious wistfulness, and a few with
scornful oaths; but the jibes and oaths were only for
a time. It became known that she had paid the
coach fare of Miss Dido (as she was called) to the
hospital at Wapiti, and had raised a subscription for
her maintenance there, heading it herself with a liberal
sum. Then the atmosphere round her became less
trying; yet her temper remained changeable, and had
it not been that she was good-looking and witty, her
position might have been insecure. As it was,
she ruled in a neutral territory where she was the
only woman. One night, after an inclement remark
to Jacques, in the card-room, Blanche came back to
the bar, and not noticing that, while she was gone,
Soldier Joe had entered and laid himself down on a
bench in a corner, she threw her head passionately
forward on her arms as they rested on the counter,
and cried: “O my God! my God!”
Soldier Joe lay still as if sleeping,
and when Blanche was called away again he rose, stole
out, went down to Freddy Tarlton’s office, and
offered to bet Freddy two to one that Blanche wouldn’t
live a year. Joe’s experience of women
was limited. He had in his mind the case of a
girl who had accidentally smothered her child; and
so he said:
“Blanche has something on her
mind that’s killing her, Freddy. When trouble
fixes on her sort it kills swift and sure. They’ve
nothing to live for but life, and it isn’t good
enough, you see, for for ”
Joe paused to find out where his philosophy was taking
him.
Freddy Tarlton finished the sentence
for him: “For an inner sorrow is a consuming
fire.”
Fort Latrobe soon had an unexpected
opportunity to study Soldier Joe’s theory.
One night Jacques did not appear at Weir’s Tavern
as he had engaged to do, and Soldier Joe and another
went across the frozen river to his log-hut to seek
him. They found him by a handful of fire, breathing
heavily and nearly unconscious. One of the sudden
and frequently fatal colds of the mountains had fastened
on him, and he had begun a war for life. Joe
started back at once for liquor and a doctor, leaving
his comrade to watch by the sick man.
He could not understand why Blanche
should stagger and grow white when he told her; nor
why she insisted on taking the liquor herself.
He did not yet guess the truth.
The next day all Fort Latrobe knew
that Blanche was nursing Jacques, on what was thought
to be his no-return journey. The doctor said it
was a dangerous case, and he held out little hope.
Nursing might bring him through, but the chance was
very slight. Blanche only occasionally left the
sick man’s bedside to be relieved by Soldier
Joe and Freddy Tarlton. It dawned on Joe at last,
it had dawned on Freddy before, what Blanche meant
by the heart-breaking words uttered that night in Weir’s
Tavern. Down through the crust of this woman’s
heart had gone something both joyful and painful.
Whatever it was, it made Blanche a saving nurse, a
good apothecary; for, one night the doctor pronounced
Jacques out of danger, and said that a few days would
bring him round if he was careful.
Now, for the first time, Jacques fully
comprehended all Blanche had done for him, though
he had ceased to wonder at her changed attitude to
him. Through his suffering and his delirium had
come the understanding of it. When, after the
crisis, the doctor turned away from the bed, Jacques
looked steadily into Blanche’s eyes, and she
flushed, and wiped the wet from his brow with her
handkerchief. He took the handkerchief from her
fingers gently before Soldier Joe came over to the
bed.
The doctor had insisted that Blanche
should go to Weir’s Tavern and get the night’s
rest, needed so much, and Joe now pressed her to keep
her promise. Jacques added an urging word, and
after a time she started. Joe had forgotten to
tell her that a new road had been made on the ice since
she had crossed, and that the old road was dangerous.
Wandering with her thoughts she did not notice the
spruce bushes set up for signal, until she had stepped
on a thin piece of ice. It bent beneath her.
She slipped: there was a sudden sinking, a sharp
cry, then another, piercing and hopeless and
it was the one word “Jacques!”
Then the night was silent as before. But someone
had heard the cry. Freddy Tarlton was crossing
the ice also, and that desolating Jacques! had reached
his ears. When he found her he saw that she had
been taken and the other left. But that other,
asleep in his bed at the sacred moment when she parted,
suddenly waked, and said to Soldier Joe: “Did
you speak, Joe? Did you call me?”
But Joe, who had been playing cards
with himself, replied, “I haven’t said
a word.”
And Jacques then added: “Perhaps I dream perhaps.”
On the advice of the doctor and Freddy
Tarlton, the bad news was kept from Jacques.
When she did not come the next day, Joe told him that
she couldn’t; that he ought to remember she
had had no rest for weeks, and had earned a long rest.
And Jacques said that was so.
Weir began preparations for the funeral,
but Freddy Tarlton took them out of his hands Freddy
Tarlton, who visited at the homes of Fort Latrobe.
But he had the strength of his convictions such as
they were. He began by riding thirty miles and
back to ask the young clergyman at Purple Hill to
come and bury Blanche. She’d reformed and
been baptised, Freddy said with a sad sort of humour.
And the clergyman, when he knew all, said that he
would come. Freddy was hardly prepared for what
occurred when he got back. Men were waiting for
him, anxious to know if the clergyman was coming.
They had raised a subscription to cover the cost of
the funeral, and among them were men such as Harry
Delong.
“You fellows had better not
mix yourselves up in this,” said Freddy.
But Harry Delong replied quickly:
“I am going to see the thing through.”
And the others endorsed his words. When the clergyman
came, and looked at the face of this Magdalene, he
was struck by its comeliness and quiet. All else
seemed to have been washed away. On her breast
lay a knot of white roses white roses in
this winter desert.
One man present, seeing the look of
wonder in the clergyman’s eyes, said quietly:
“My my wife sent them. She brought
the plant from Quebec. It has just bloomed.
She knows all about her.”
That man was Harry Delong. The
keeper of his home understood the other homeless woman.
When she knew of Blanche’s death she said:
“Poor girl, poor girl!” and then she had
gently added, “Poor Jacques!”
And Jacques, as he sat in a chair
by the fire four days after the tragedy, did not know
that the clergyman was reading over a grave on the
hillside, words which are for the hearts of the quick
as for the untenanted dead.
To Jacques’s inquiries after
Blanche, Soldier Joe had made changing and vague replies.
At last he said that she was ill; then, that she was
very ill, and again, that she was better, almighty
better now. The third day following
the funeral, Jacques insisted that he would go and
see her. The doctor at length decided he should
be taken to Weir’s Tavern, where, they declared,
they would tell him all. And they took him, and
placed him by the fire in the card-room, a wasted
figure, but fastidious in manner and scrupulously
neat in person as of old. Then he asked for Blanche;
but even now they had not the courage for it.
The doctor nervously went out, as if to seek her;
and Freddy Tarlton said, “Jacques, let us have
a little game, just for quarters, you know. Eh?”
The other replied without eagerness:
“Voila, one game, then!”
They drew him to the table, but he
played listlessly. His eyes shifted ever to the
door. Luck was against him. Finally he pushed
over a silver piece, and said: “The last.
My money is all gone. ‘Bien!’”
He lost that too.
Just then the door opened, and a ranchman
from Purple Hill entered. He looked carelessly
round, and then said loudly:
“Say, Joe, so you’ve buried
Blanche, have you? Poor old girl!”
There was a heavy silence. No
one replied. Jacques started to his feet, gazed
around searchingly, painfully, and presently gave a
great gasp. His hands made a chafing motion in
the air, and then blood showed on his lips and chin.
He drew a handkerchief from his breast.
“Pardon!... Pardon!”
he faintly cried in apology, and put it to his mouth.
Then he fell backwards in the arms
of Soldier Joe, who wiped a moisture from the lifeless
cheek as he laid the body on a bed.
In a corner of the stained handkerchief
they found the word,
Blanche.