Twenty men had suddenly disappeared
from Bonaventure on the day that Ferrol visited Sophie
Farcinelle, and it was only the next morning that
the cause of their disappearance was generally known.
There had been many rumours abroad
that a detachment of men from the parish were to join
Papineau. The Rebellion was to be publicly declared
on a certain date near at hand, but nothing definite
was known; and because the Cure condemned any revolt
against British rule, in spite of the evils the province
suffered from bad government, every recruit who joined
Nic Lavilette’s standard was sworn to secrecy.
Louis Lavilette and his wife knew nothing of their
son’s complicity in the rumoured revolt one’s
own people are generally the last to learn of one’s
misdeeds. Madame would have been sorely frightened
and chagrined if she had known the truth, for she
was partly English. Besides, if the Rebellion
did not succeed, disgrace must come, and then good-bye
to the progress of the Lavilettes, and goodbye, maybe,
to her son!
In spite of disappointments and rebuffs
in many quarters, she still kept faith with her ambitions,
and, fortunately for herself, she did not see the
abject failure of many of her schemes. Some of
the gentry from the neighbouring parishes had called,
chiefly, she was aware, because of Mr. Ferrol.
She was building the superstructure of her social ambitions
on that foundation for the present. She told
Louis sometimes, with tears of joy in her eyes, that
a special Providence had sent Mr. Ferrol to them,
and she did not know how to be grateful enough.
He suggested a gift to the church in token of gratitude,
but her thanksgiving did not take that form.
Nic was entirely French at heart,
and ignored his mother’s nationality. He
resented the English blood in his veins, and atoned
for it by increased loyalty to his French origin.
This was probably not so much a principle as a fancy.
He had a kind of importance also in the parish, and
in his own eyes, because he made as much in three months
by buying and selling horses as most people did in
a year. The respect of Bonaventure for his ability
was considerable; and though it had no marked admiration
for his character, it appreciated his drolleries, and
was attracted by his high spirits. He had always
been erratic, so that when he disappeared for days
at a time no one thought anything of it, and when
he came home to the Manor at unearthly hours it created
no peculiar notice.
He had chosen very good men for his
recruits; for, though they talked much among themselves,
they drew a cordon of silence round their little society
of revolution. They vanished in the night, and
Nic with them; but he returned the next afternoon
when the fire of excitement was at its height.
As he rode through the streets, people stopped him
and poured out questions; but he only shrugged his
shoulders, and gave no information, and neither denied
nor affirmed anything.
Acting under orders, he had marched
his company to make conjunction with other companies
at a point in the mountains twenty miles away, but
had himself returned to get the five thousand dollars
gathered by Papineau’s agent. Now that
the Rebellion was known, Nicolas intended to try and
win his father and his father’s money and horses
over to the cause.
Because Ferrol was an Englishman he
made no confidant of him, and because he was a dying
man he saw in him no menace to the cause. Besides,
was not Ferrol practically dependent upon their hospitality?
If he had guessed that his friend knew accurately of
his movements since the night he had seen Vanne Castine
hand him his commission from Papineau, he would have
felt less secure: for, after all, love or
prejudice of country is a principle in the
minds of most men deeper than any other. When
all other morals go, this latent tendency to stand
by the blood of his clan is the last moral in man that
bears the test without treason. If he had known
that Ferrol had written to the Commandant at Quebec,
telling him of the imminence of the Rebellion, and
the secret recruiting and drilling going on in the
parishes, his popular comrade might have paid a high
price for his disclosure.
That morning at sunrise, Christine,
saying she was going upon a visit to the next parish,
started away upon her mission to the English province.
Ferrol had urged her to let him go, but she had refused.
He had not yet fully recovered from his adventure
with the bear, she said. Then he said they might
go together; but she insisted that she must make the
way clear, and have everything ready. They might
go and find the minister away, and then voila,
what a chance for cancan! So she went alone.
From his window he watched her depart;
and as she drove away in the fresh morning he fell
to thinking what it might seem like if he had to look
forward to ten, twenty, or forty years with just such
a woman as his wife. Now she was at her best
(he did not deceive himself), but in ten years or
less the effects of her early life would show in many
ways. She had once loved Vanne Castine! and now
vanity and cowardice, or unscrupulousness, made her
lie about it. He would have her at her best a
young, vigorous radiant nature for his short
life, and then, good-bye, my lover, good-bye!
Selfish? Of course. But she would rather she
had said it have him for the time he had
to live than not at all. Position? What
was his position? Cast off by his family, forgotten
by his old friends, in debt, penniless let
position be hanged! Self-preservation was the
first law. What was the difference between this
girl and himself? Morals? She was better
than himself, anyhow. She had genuine passions,
and her sins would be in behalf of those genuine passions.
He had kicked over the moral traces many a time from
absolute selfishness. She had clean blood in her
veins, she was good-looking, she had a quick wit,
she was an excellent horse-woman what then?
If she wasn’t so “well bred,” that
was a matter of training and opportunity which had
never quite been hers. What was he himself?
A loafer, “a deuced unfortunate loafer,”
but still a loafer. He had no trade and no profession.
Confound it! how much better off, and how much better
in reality, were these people who had trades and occupations.
In the vigour and lithe activity of that girl’s
body was the force of generations of honest workers.
He argued and thought as every intelligent
man in his position would have done until
he had come into the old life again, and into the
presence of the old advantages and temptations!
Christine pulled up for a moment on
a little hill, and waved her whip. He shook his
handkerchief from the window. That was their prearranged
signal. He shook it until she had driven away
beyond the hill and was lost to sight, and still stood
there at the window looking out.
Presently Madame Lavilette appeared
in the garden below, and he was sure, from the way
she glanced up at the window, and from her position
in the shrubbery, that she had seen the signal.
Madame did not look displeased. On the contrary,
though an alliance with Christine now seemed unlikely,
because of the state of Ferrol’s health and his
religion and nationality, it pleased her to think that
it might have been.
When she had passed into the house,
Ferrol sat down on the broad window-sill, and looked
out the way Christine had gone. He was thinking
of the humiliation of his position, and how it would
be more humiliating when he married Christine, should
the Lavilettes turn against them which
was quite possible. And from outside: the
whole parish a few excepted sympathised
with the Rebellion, and once the current of hatred
of the English set in, he would be swept down by it.
There were only three English people in the place.
Then, if it became known that he had given information
to the authorities, his life would be less uncertain
than it was just now. Yet, confound the dirty
lot of little rebels, it served them right! He
couldn’t sit by and see a revolt against British
rule without raising a hand. Warn Nic? To
what good? The result would be just the same.
But if harm came to this intended brother-in-law-well,
why borrow trouble? He was not the Lord in Heaven,
that he could have everything as he wanted it!
It was a toss-up, and he would see the sport out.
“Have to cough your way through, my boy!”
he said, as he swayed back and forth, the hard cough
hacking in his throat.
As he had said yesterday, there was
only one thing to do: he must have that five
thousand dollars which was to be handed over by the
old seigneur. This time he did not attempt to
find excuses; he called the thing by its proper name.
“Well, it’s stealing,
or it’s highway robbery, no matter how one looks
at it,” he said to himself. “I wonder
what’s the matter with me. I must have
got started wrong somehow. Money to spend, playing
at soldiering, made to believe I’d have a pot
of money and an estate, and then told one fine day
that a son and heir, with health in form and feature,
was come, and Esau must go. No profession, except
soldiering, debt staring me in the face, and a nasty
mess of it all round. I wonder why it is that
I didn’t pull myself together, be honest to a
hair, and fight my way through? I suppose I hadn’t
it in me. I wasn’t the right metal at the
start. There’s always been a black sheep
in our family, a gentleman or a lady, born without
morals, and I happen to be the gentleman this generation.
I always knew what was right, and liked it, and I always
did what was wrong, and liked it nearly
always. But I suppose I was fated. I was
bound to get into a hole, and I’m in it now,
with one lung, and a wife in prospect to support.
I suppose if I were to write down all the decent things
I’ve thought in my life, and put them beside
the indecent things I’ve done, nobody would
believe the same man was responsible for them.
I’m one of the men who ought to be put above
temptation; be well bridled, well fed, and the mere
cost of comfortable living provided, and then I’d
do big things. But that isn’t the way of
the world; and so I feel that a morning like this,
and the love of a girl like that” (he nodded
towards the horizon into which Christine had gone)
“ought to make a man sing a Te Deum. And
yet this evening, or to-morrow evening, or the next,
I’ll steal five thousand dollars, if it can be
done, and risk my neck in doing it to say
nothing of family honour, and what not.”
He got up from the window, went to
his trunk, opened it, and, taking out a pistol, examined
it carefully, cocking and uncorking it, and after
loading it, and again trying the trigger, put it back
again. There came a tap at the door, and to his
call a servant entered with a glass of milk and whiskey,
with which he always began the day.
The taste of the liquid brought back
the afternoon of the day before, and he suddenly stopped
drinking, threw back his head, and laughed softly.
“By Jingo, but that liqueur
was stunning and so was-Sophie... Sophie!
That sounds compromisingly familiar this morning, and
very improper also! But Sophie is a very nice
person, and I ought to be well ashamed of myself.
I needed the bit and curb both yesterday. It’ll
never do at all. If I’m going to marry
Christine, we must have no family complications.
’Must have’!” he exclaimed.
“But what if Sophie already? good
Lord!”
It was a strange sport altogether,
in which some people were bound to get a bad fall,
himself probably among the rest. He intended to
rob the brother, he had set the government going against
the brother’s revolutionary cause, he was going
to marry one sister, and the other the
less thought and said about that matter the better.
The afternoon brought Nic, who seemed
perplexed and excited, but was most friendly.
It seemed to Ferrol as if Nic wished to disclose something;
but he gave him no opportunity. What he knew he
knew, and he could make use of; but he wanted no further
confidences. Ever since the night of the fight
with the bear there had been nothing said on matters
concerning the Rebellion. If Nicolas disclosed
any secret now, it must surely be about the money,
and that must not be if he could prevent it.
But he watched his friend, nevertheless.
Night came, and Christine did not
return; eight o’clock, nine o’clock.
Lavilette and his wife were a little anxious; but Ferrol
and Nicolas made excuses for her, and, in the wild
talk and gossip about the Rebellion, attention was
easily shifted from her. Besides, Christine was
well used to taking care of herself.
Lavilette flatly refused to give Nic
a penny for “the cause,” and stormed at
his connection with it; but at last became pacified,
and agreed it was best that Madame Lavilette should
know nothing about Nic’s complicity just yet.
At half past nine o’clock Nic left the house
and took the road towards the Seigneury.