The weeks went by. Sophie had
become the wife of the member for the country, and
had instantly settled down to a quiet life. This
was disconcerting to Madame Lavilette, who had hoped
that out of Farcinelle’s official position she
might reap some praise and pence of ambition.
Meanwhile, Ferrol became more and more a cherished
and important figure in the Manor Casimbault, where
the Lavilettes had made their home soon after the
wedding. The old farmhouse had also secretly
become a rendezvous for the mysterious Nicolas Lavilette
and his rebel comrades. This was known to Mr.
Ferrol. One evening he stopped Nic as he was
leaving the house, and said:
“See, Nic, my boy, what’s
up? I know a thing or so what’s
the use of playing peek-a-boo?”
“What do you know, Ferrol?”
“What’s between you and
Vanne Castine, for instance. Come, now, own up
and tell me all about it. I’m British; but
I’m Nic Lavilette’s friend anyhow.”
He insinuated into his tone that little
touch of brogue which he used when particularly persuasive.
Nic put out his hand with a burst of good-natured
frankness.
“Meet me in the store-room of
the old farmhouse at nine o’clock, and I’ll
tell you. Here’s a key.” Handing
over the key, he grasped Ferrol’s hand with
an effusive confidence, and hurried out. Nic Lavilette
was now an important person in his own sight and in
the sight of others in Bonaventure. In him the
pomp of his family took an individual form.
Earlier than the appointed time, Ferrol
turned the key and stepped inside the big despoiled
hallway of the old farmhouse. His footsteps sounded
hollow in the empty rooms. Already dust had gathered,
and an air of desertion and decay filled the place
in spite of the solid timbers and sound floors and
window-sills. He took out his watch; it was ten
minutes to nine. Passing through the little hallway
to the store-room, he opened the door. It was
dark inside. Striking a match, he saw a candle
on the window-sill, and, going to it, he lighted it
with a flint and steel lying near. The window
was shut tight. From curiosity only he tried
to open the shutter, but it was immovable. Looking
round, he saw another candle on the window-sill opposite.
He lighted it also, and mechanically tried to force
the shutters of the window, but they were tight also.
Going to the door, which opened into
the farmyard, he found it securely fastened.
Although he turned the lock, the door would not open.
Presently his attention was drawn
by the glitter of something upon one of the crosspieces
of timber halfway up the wall. Going over, he
examined it, and found it to be a broken bayonet left
there by a careless rebel. Placing the steel
again upon the ledge, he began walking up and down
thoughtfully.
Presently he was seized with a fit
of coughing. The paroxysm lasted a minute or
more, and he placed his arm upon the window-sill, leaning
his head upon it. Presently, as the paroxysm
lessened, he thought he heard the click of a lock.
He raised his head, but his eyes were misty, and,
seeing nothing, he leaned his head on his arm again.
Suddenly he felt something near him.
He swung round swiftly, and saw Vanne Castine’s
bear not fifteen-feet away from him! It raised
itself on its hind legs, its red eyes rolling, and
started towards him. He picked up the candle
from the window-sill, threw it in the animal’s
face, and dashed towards the door.
It was locked. He swung round.
The huge beast, with a loud snarl, was coming down
upon him.
Here he was, shut within four solid
walls, with a wild beast hungry for his life.
All his instincts were alive. He had little hope
of saving himself, but he was determined to do what
lay in his power.
His first impulse was to blow out
the other candle. That would leave him in the
dark, and it struck him that his advantage would be
greater if there were no light. He came straight
towards the bear, then suddenly made a swift movement
to the left, trusting to his greater quickness of
movement. The beast was nearly as quick as he,
and as he dashed along the wall towards the candle,
he could hear its breath just behind him.
As he passed the window, he caught
the candle in his hands, and was about to throw it
on the floor or in the bear’s face, when he remembered
that, in the dark, the bear’s sense of smell
would be as effective as eyesight, while he himself
would be no better off.
He ran suddenly to the centre of the
room, the candle still in his hand, and turned to
meet his foe. It came savagely at him. He
dodged, ran past it, turned, doubled on it, and dodged
again. A half-dozen times this was repeated,
the candle still flaring. It could not last long.
The bear was enraged. Its movements became swifter,
its vicious teeth and lips were covered with froth,
which dripped to the floor, and sometimes spattered
Ferrol’s clothes as he ran past. No matador
ever played with the horns of a mad bull as Ferrol
played his deadly game with Michael, the dancing bear.
His breath was becoming shorter and shorter; he had
a stifling sensation, a terrible tightness across
his chest. He did not cough, however, but once
or twice he tasted warm drops of his heart’s
blood in his mouth. Once he drew the back of
his hand across his lips mechanically, and a red stain
showed upon it.
In his boyhood and early manhood he
had been a good sportsman; had been quick of eye,
swift of foot, and fearless. But what could fearlessness
avail him in this strait? With the best of rifles
he would have felt himself at a disadvantage.
He was certain his time had come; and with that conviction
upon him, the terror of the thing and the horrible
physical shrinking almost passed away from him.
The disease, eating away his life, had diminished
that revolt against death which is in the healthy
flesh of every man. He was levying upon the vital
forces remaining in him, which, distributed naturally,
might cover a year or so, to give him here and now
a few moments of unnatural strength for the completion
of a hopeless struggle.
It was also as if two brains in him
were working: one busy with all the chances and
details of his wild contest, the other with the events
of his life.
Pictures flashed before him.
Some having to do with the earliest days of his childhood;
some with fighting on the Danube, before he left the
army, impoverished and ashamed; some with idle hours
in the North Tower in Stavely Castle; and one with
the day he and his sister left the old castle, never
to return, and looked back upon it from the top of
Farcalladen Moor, waving a “God bless you”
to it. The thought of his sister filled him with
a desire, a pitiful desire to live.
Just then another picture flashed
before his eyes. It was he himself, riding the
mad stallion, Bolingbroke, the first year he followed
the hounds: how the brute tried to smash his
leg against a stone wall; how it reared until it almost
toppled over and backwards; how it jibbed at a gate,
and nearly dashed its own brains out against a tree;
and how, after an hour’s hard fighting, he made
it take the stiffest fence and water-course in the
county.
This thought gave him courage now.
He suddenly remembered the broken bayonet upon the
ledge against the wall. If he could reach it there
might be a chance chance to strike one blow
for life. As his eye glanced towards the wall
he saw the steel flash in the light of the candle.
The bear was between him and it.
He made a feint towards the left, then as quickly
to the right. But doing so, he slipped and fell.
The candle dropped to the floor and went out.
With a lightning-like instinct of self-preservation
he swung over upon his face just as the bear, in its
wild rush, passed over his head. He remembered
afterwards the odour of the hot, rank body, and the
sprawling huge feet and claws. Scrambling to
his feet swiftly, he ran to the wall. Fortune
was with him. His hand almost instantly clutched
the broken bayonet. He whipped out his handkerchief,
tore the scarf from his neck, and wound them around
his hand, that the broken bayonet should not tear
the flesh as he fought for his life; then, seizing
it, he stood waiting for the bear to come on.
His body was bent forwards, his eyes straining into
the dark, his hot face dripping, dripping sweat, his
breath coming hard and laboured from his throat.
For a minute there was absolute silence,
save for the breathing of the man and the savage panting
of the beast. Presently he felt exactly where
the bear was, and listened intently. He knew that
it was now but a question of minutes, perhaps seconds.
Suddenly it occurred to him that if he could but climb
upon the ledge where the bayonet had been, there might
be safety. Yet again, in getting up, the bear
might seize him, and there would be an end to all
immediately. It was worth trying, however.
Two things happened at that moment
to prevent the trial: the sound of knocking on
a door somewhere, and the roaring rush of the bear
upon him. He sprang to one side, striking at
the beast as he did so. The bayonet went in and
out again. There came voices from the outside;
evidently somebody was trying to get in.
The bear roared again and came on.
It was all a blind man’s game. But his
scent, like the animal’s, was keen. He had
taken off his coat, and he now swung it out before
him in a half-circle, and as it struck the bear it
covered his own position. He swung aside once
more and drove his arm into the dark. The bayonet
struck the nose of the beast.
Now there was a knocking and a hammering
at the window, and the wrenching of the shutters.
He gathered himself together for the next assault.
Suddenly he felt that every particle of strength had
gone out of him. He pulled himself up with a
last effort. His legs would not support him;
he shivered and swayed. God, would they never
get that window open!
His senses were abnormally acute.
Another sound attracted him: the opening of the
door, and a voice Vanne Castine’s calling
to the bear.
His heart seemed to give a leap, then
slowly to roll over with a thud, and he fell to the
floor as the bear lunged forwards upon him.
A minute afterwards Vanne Castine
was goading the savage beast through the door and
out to the hallway into the yard as Nic swung through
the open window into the room.
Castine’s lantern stood in the
middle of the floor, and between it and the window
lay Ferrol, the broken bayonet still clutched in his
right hand. Lavilette dropped on his knees beside
him and felt his heart. It was beating, but the
shirt and the waistcoat were dripping with blood where
the bear had set its claws and teeth in the shoulder
of its victim.
An hour later Nic Lavilette stood
outside the door of Ferrol’s bedroom in the
Manor Casimbault, talking to the Regimental Surgeon,
as Christine, pale and wildeyed, came running towards
them.