That night the British soldiers camped
in the village. All over the country the rebels
had been scattered and beaten, and Bonaventure had
been humbled and injured. After the blind injustice
of the fearful and the beaten, Nicolas Lavilette and
his family were blamed for the miseries which had
come upon the place. They had emerged from their
isolation to tempt popular favour, had contrived many
designs and ambitions, and in the midst of their largest
hopes were humiliated, and were followed by resentment.
The position was intolerable. In happy circumstances,
Christine’s marriage with Ferrol might have been
a completion of their glory, but in reality it was
the last blow to their progress.
In the dusk, Ferrol and Christine
sat in his room: she, defiant, indignant, courageous;
he hiding his real feelings, and knowing that all
she now planned and arranged would come to naught.
Three times that day he had had violent paroxysms
of coughing; and at last had thrown himself on his
bed, exhausted, helplessly wishing that something would
end it all. Illusion had passed for ever.
He no longer had a cold, but a mortal trouble that
was killing him inch by inch. He remembered how
a brother officer of his, dying of an incurable disease,
and abhorring suicide, had gone into a cafe and slapped
an unoffending bully and duellist in the face, inviting
a combat. The end was sure, easy and honourable.
For himself he looked at Christine.
Not all her abounding vitality, her warm, healthy
body, or her overwhelming love, could give him one
extra day of life, not one day. What a fool he
had been to think that she could do so! And she
must sit and watch him she, with her primitive
fierceness of love, must watch him sinking, fading
helplessly out of life, sight and being.
A bottle of whiskey was beside him.
During the two hours just gone he had drunk a whole
pint of it. He poured out another half-glass,
filled it up with milk, and drank it off slowly.
At that moment a knock came to the door. Christine
opened it, and admitted one of the fugitives of Nicolas’s
company of rebels. He saw Ferrol, and came straight
to him.
“A letter for M’sieu’
the Honourable,” said he “from M’sieu’
lé Capitaine Lavilette.”
Ferrol opened the paper. It contained
only a few lines. Nicolas was hiding in the store-room
of the vacant farmhouse, and Ferrol must assist him
to escape to the State of New York.
He had stolen into the village from
the north, and, afraid to trust any one except this
faithful member of his company, had taken refuge in
a place where, if the worst came to the worst, he
could defend himself, for a time at least. Twenty
rifles of the rebels had been stored in the farmhouse,
and they were all loaded! Ferrol, of course, could
go where he liked, being a Britisher, and nobody would
notice him. Would he not try to get him away?
While Christine questioned the fugitive,
Ferrol thought the matter over. One thing he
knew: the solution of the great problem had come;
and the means to the solution ran through his head
like lightning. He rose to his feet, drank off
a few mouthfuls of undiluted whiskey, filled a flask
and put it in his pocket. Then he found his pistols,
and put on his greatcoat, muffler and cap, before
he spoke a word.
Christine stood watching him intently.
“What are you going to do, Tom?”
she said quietly. “I am going to save your
brother, if I can,” was his reply, as he handed
her Nic’s letter.