About half-way between the Seigneury
and the main street of the village there was a huge
tree, whose limbs stretched across the road and made
a sort of archway. In the daytime, during the
summer, foot travellers, carts and carriages, with
their drivers, loitered in its shade as they passed,
grateful for the rest it gave; but at night, even when
it was moonlight, the wide branches threw a dark and
heavy shadow, and the passage beneath them was gloomy
travel. Many a foot traveller hesitated to pass
into that umbrageous circle, and skirted the fence
beyond the branches on the further side of the road
instead.
When Nicolas Lavilette, returning
from the Seigneury with the precious bag of gold for
Papineau, came hurriedly along the road towards the
village, he half halted, with sudden premonition of
danger, a dozen feet or so from the great tree.
But like most young people, who are inclined to trust
nothing but their own strong arms and what their eyes
can see, he withstood the temptation to skirt the
fence; and with a little half-scornful laugh at himself,
yet a little timidity also (or he would not have laughed
at all), he hurried under the branches. He had
not gone three steps when the light of a dark lantern
flashed suddenly in his face, and a pistol touched
his forehead. All he could see was a figure clothed
entirely in black, even to hands and face, with only
holes for eyes, nose and mouth.
He stood perfectly still; the shock
was so sudden. There was something determined
and deadly in the pose of the figure before him, in
the touch of the weapon, in the clearness of the light.
His eyes dropped, and fixed involuntarily upon the
lantern.
He had a revolver with him; but it
was useless to attempt to defend himself with it.
Not a word had been spoken. Presently, with the
fingers that held the lantern, his assailant made
a motion of Hands up! There was no reason why
he should risk his life without a chance of winning,
so he put up his hands. At another motion he drew
out the bag of gold with his left hand, and, obeying
the direction of another gesture, dropped it on the
ground. There was a pause, then another gesture,
which he pretended not to understand.
“Your pistol!” said the
voice in a whisper through the mask.
He felt the cold steel at his forehead
press a little closer; he also felt how steady it
was. He was no fool. He had been in trouble
before in his lifetime; he drew out the pistol, and
passed it, handle first, to three fingers stretched
out from the dark lantern.
The figure moved to where the money
and the pistol were, and said, in a whisper still:
“Go!”
He had one moment of wild eagerness
to try his luck in a sudden assault, but that passed
as suddenly as it came; and with the pistol still
covering him, he moved out into the open road, with
a helpless anger on him.
A crescent moon was struggling through
floes of fleecy clouds, the stars were shining, and
so the road was not entirely dark. He went about
thirty steps, then turned and looked back. The
figure was still standing there, with the pistol and
the light. He walked on another twenty or thirty
steps, and once again looked back. The light and
the pistol were still there. Again he walked
on. But now he heard the rumble of buggy wheels
behind. Once more he looked back: the figure
and the light had gone. The buggy wheels sounded
nearer. With a sudden feeling of courage, he
turned round and ran back swiftly. The light suddenly
flashed again.
“It’s no use,” he
said to himself, and turned and walked slowly along
the road.
The sound of the buggy wheels came
still nearer. Presently it was obscured by passing
under the huge branches of the tree. Then the
horse, buggy and driver appeared at the other side,
and in a few moments had overtaken him. He looked
up sharply, scrutinisingly. Suddenly he burst
out:
“Holy mother, Chris, is that
you! Where’ve you been? Are you all
right?”
She had whipped up her horse at first
sight of him, thinking he might be some drunken rough.
“Mais, mon dieu,
Nic, is that you? I thought at first you were
a highwayman!”
“No, you’ve passed the highwayman!
Come, let me get in.”
Five minutes afterwards she knew exactly what had
happened to him.
“Who could it be?” she asked.
“I thought at first it was that
beast Vanne Castine!” he answered; “he’s
the only one that knew about the money, besides the
agent and the old seigneur. He brought word from
Papineau. But it was too tall for him, and he
wouldn’t have been so quiet about it. Just
like a ghost. It makes my flesh creep now!”
It did not seem such a terrible thing
to her at the moment, for she had in her pocket the
licence to marry the Honourable Tom Ferrol upon the
morrow, and she thought, with joy, of seeing him just
as soon as she set foot in the doorway of the Manor
Casimbault.
It was something of a shock to her
that she did not see him for quite a half hour after
she arrived home, and that was half past ten o’clock.
But women forget neglect quickly in the delight of
a lover’s presence; so her disappointment passed.
Yet she could not help speaking of it.
“Why weren’t you at the
door to meet me when I came back to-night with that-that
in my pocket?” she asked him, his arm round her.
“I’ve got a kicking lung,
you know,” he said, with a half ironical, half
self-pitying smile.
“Oh, forgive me, forgive me,
Tom, my love!” she said as she buried her face
on his breast.