The village had no thought or care
for anything except the Rebellion and news of it;
and for several days Ferrol and Christine lived their
new life unobserved by the people of the village,
even by the household of Manor Casimbault.
It almost seemed that Ferrol’s
prophecy regarding himself was coming true, for his
cheek took on a heightened colour, his step a greater
elasticity, and he flung his shoulders out with a little
of the old military swagger: cheerful, forgetful
of all the world, and buoyant in what he thought to
be his new-found health and permanent happiness.
Vague reports came to the village
concerning the Rebellion. There were not a dozen
people in the village who espoused the British cause;
and these few were silent. For the moment the
Lavilettes were popular. Nicolas had made for
them a sort of grand coup. He had for the moment
redeemed the snobbishness of two generations.
After his secret marriage, Ferrol
was not seen in the village for some days, and his
presence and nationality were almost forgotten by the
people: they only thought of what was actively
before their eyes. On the fifth day after his
marriage, which was Saturday, he walked down to the
village, attracted by shouting and unusual excitement.
When he saw the cause of the demonstration he had
a sudden flush of anger. A flag-staff had been
erected in the centre of the village, and upon it had
been run up the French tricolour. He stood and
looked at the shouting crowd a moment, then swung
round and went to the office of the Regimental Surgeon,
who met him at the door. When he came out again
he carried a little bundle under his left arm.
He made straight for the crowd, which was scattered
in groups, and pushed or threaded his way to the flag-staff.
He was at least a head taller than any man there, and
though he was not so upright as he had been, the lines
of his figure were still those of a commanding personality.
A sort of platform had been erected around the flag-staff
and on it a drunken little habitant was talking treason.
Without a word, Ferrol stepped upon the platform, and,
loosening the rope, dropped the tricolour half-way
down the staff before his action was quite comprehended
by the crowd. Presently a hoarse shout proclaimed
the anger and consternation of the habitants.
“Leave that flag alone,”
shouted a dozen voices. “Leave it where
it is!” others repeated with oaths.
He dropped it the full length of the
staff, whipped it off the string, and put his foot
upon it. Then he unrolled the bundle which he
had carried under his arm. It was the British
flag. He slipped it upon the string, and was
about to haul it up, when the drunken orator on the
platform caught him by the arm with fiery courage.
“Here, you leave that alone:
that’s not our flag, and if you string it up,
we’ll string you up, bagosh!” he roared.
Ferrol’s heavy walking-stick
was in his right hand. “Let go my arm-quick!”
he said quietly.
He was no coward, and these people
were, and he knew it. The habitant drew back.
“Get off the platform,” he said with quiet
menace.
He turned quickly to the crowd, for
some had sprung towards the platform to pull him off.
Raising his voice, he said:
“Stand back, and hear what I’ve
got to say. You’re a hundred to one.
You can probably kill me; but before you do that I
shall kill three or four of you. I’ve had
to do with rioters before. You little handful
of people here little more than half a
million imagine that you can defeat thirty-five
millions, with an army of half a million, a hundred
battle-ships, ten thousand cannon and a million rifles.
Come now, don’t be fools. The Governor
alone up there in Montreal has enough men to drive
you all into the hills of Maine in a week. You
think you’ve got the start of Colborne?
Why, he has known every movement of Papineau and your
rebels for the last two months. You can bluster
and riot to-day, but look out for to-morrow.
I am the only Englishman here among you. Kill
me; but watch what your end will be! For every
hair of my head there will be one less habitant in
this province. You haul down the British flag,
and string up your tricolour in this British village
while there is one Britisher to say, ’Put up
that flag again!’ You fools!”
He suddenly gave the rope a pull,
and the flag ran up half-way; but as he did so a stone
was thrown. It flew past his head, grazing his
temple. A sharp point lacerated the flesh, and
the blood flowed down his cheek. He ran the flag
up to its full height, swiftly knotted the cord and
put his back against the pole. Grasping his stick
he prepared himself for an attack.
“Mind what I say,” he
cried; “the first man that comes will get what
for!”
There was a commotion in the crowd;
consternation and dismay behind Ferrol, and excitement
and anger in front of him. Three men were pushing
their way through to him. Two of them were armed.
They reached the platform and mounted it. It
was the Regimental Surgeon and two British soldiers.
The Regimental Surgeon held a paper in his hand.
“I have here,” he said
to the crowd, “a proclamation by Sir John Colborne.
The rebels have been defeated at three points, and
half of the men from Bonaventure who joined Papineau
have been killed. The ringleader, Nicolas Lavilette,
when found, will be put on trial for his life.
Now, disperse to your homes, or every man of you will
be arrested and tried by court-martial.”
The crowd melted away like snow, and
they hurried not the less because the stone which
some one had thrown at Ferrol had struck a lad in the
head, and brought him senseless and bleeding to the
ground.
Ferrol picked up the tricolour and
handed it to the Regimental Surgeon.
“I could have done it alone,
I believe,” he said; “and, upon my soul,
I’m sorry for the poor devils. Suppose we
were Englishmen in France, eh?”