An hour later he stood among a few
companies of British soldiers in front of the massive
stone store-house of the Lavilettes’ abandoned
farmhouse, with its thick shuttered windows and its
solid oak doors. It was too late to attempt the
fugitive’s escape, save by strategy. Over
half an hour Nic had kept them at bay. He had
made loopholes in the shutters and the door, and from
these he fired upon his assailants. Already he
had wounded five and killed two.
Men had been sent for timber to batter
down the door and windows. Meanwhile, the troops
stood at a respectful distance, out of the range of
Nic’s firing, awaiting developments.
Ferrol consulted with the officers,
advising a truce and parley, offering himself as mediator
to induce Nic to surrender. To this the officers
assented, but warned him that his life might pay the
price of his temerity. He laughed at this.
He had been talking, with his head and throat well
muffled, and the collar of his greatcoat drawn about
his ears. Once or twice he coughed, a hacking,
wrenching cough, which struck the ears of more than
one of the officers painfully; for they had known
him in his best and gayest days at Quebec.
It was arranged that he should advance,
holding out a flag of truce. Before he went he
drew aside one of the younger lieutenants, in whose
home at Quebec his sister had always been a welcome
visitor, and told him briefly the story of his marriage,
of his wife and of Nicolas. He sent Christine
a message, that she should not forget to carry his
last token to his sister! Then turning, he muffled
up his face against the crisp, harsh air (there was
design in this also), and, waving a white handkerchief,
advanced to the door of the store-room.
The soldiers waited anxiously, fearing
that Nic would fire, in spite of all; but presently
a spot of white appeared at one of the loopholes;
then the door was slowly opened. Ferrol entered,
and it was closed again.
Nicolas Lavilette grasped his hand.
“I knew you wouldn’t go
back on me,” said he. “I knew you
were my friend. What the devil do they want out
there?”
“I am more than your friend:
I’m your brother,” answered Ferrol, meaningly.
Then, quickly taking off his greatcoat, cap, muffler
and boots: “Quick, on with these!”
he said. “There’s no time to lose!”
“What’s all this?” asked Nic.
“Never mind; do exactly as I say, and there’s
a chance for you.”
Nic put on the overcoat. Ferrol
placed the cap on his head, and muffled him up exactly
as he himself had been, then made him put on his own
top-boots.
“Now, see,” he said, “everything
depends upon how you do this thing. You are about
my height. Pass yourself off for me. Walk
loose and long as I do, and cough like me as you go.”
There was no difficulty in showing
him what the cough was like: he involuntarily
offered an illustration as he spoke.
“As soon as I shut the door
and you start forward, I’ll fire on them.
That’ll divert their attention from you.
They’ll take you for me, and think I’ve
failed in persuading you to give yourself up.
Go straight on-don’t hurry coughing
all the time; and if you can make the dark, just beyond
the soldiers, by the garden bench, you’ll find
two men. They’ll help you. Make for
the big tree on the Seigneury road you know:
where you were robbed. There you’ll find
the fastest horse from your father’s stables.
Then ride, my boy, ride for your life to the State
of New York!”
“And you you?” asked Nicolas.
Ferrol laughed.
“You needn’t worry about
me, Nic. I’ll get out of this all right;
as right as rain! Are you ready? Steady now,
steady. Let me hear you cough.” Nic
coughed.
“No, that isn’t it.
Listen and watch.” Ferrol coughed.
“Here,” he said, taking something from
his pocket, “open your mouth.” He
threw some pepper down the other’s throat.
“Now try it.”
Nic coughed almost convulsively.
“Yes, that’s it, that’s
it! Just keep that up. Come along now.
Quick-not a moment to lose! Steady! You’re
all right, my boy; you’ve got nerve, and that’s
the thing. Good-bye, Nic, good luck to you!”
They grasped hands: the door
opened swiftly, and Nic stepped outside. In an
instant Ferrol was at the loophole. Raising a
rifle, he fired, then again and again. Through
the loophole he could see a half-dozen men lift a
log to advance on the door as Nic passed a couple of
officers, coughing hard, and making spasmodic motions
with his hand, as though exhausted and unable to speak.
He fired again, and a soldier fell.
The lust of fighting was on him now. It was not
a question of country or of race, but only a man crowding
the power of old instincts into the last moments of
his life. The vigour and valour of a reconquered
youth seemed to inspire him; he felt as he did when
a mere boy fighting on the Danube. His blood rioted
in his veins; his eyes flashed. He lifted the
flask of whiskey and gulped down great mouthfuls of
it, and fired again and again, laughing madly.
“Let them come on, let them
come on,” he cried. “By God, I’ll
settle them!” The frenzy of war possessed him.
He heard the timber crash against the door once,
twice, thrice, and then give away. He swung round
and saw men’s faces glowing in the light of the
fire, and then another face shot in before the others that
of Vanne Castine.
With a cry of fury he ran forward
into the doorway. Castine saw him at the same
moment. With a similar instinct each sprang for
the other’s throat, Castine with a knife in
his hand.
A cry of astonishment went up from
the officers and the men without. They had expected
to see Nic; but Nic was on his way to the horse beneath
the great elm tree, and from the elm tree to the State
of New York and safety.
The men and the officers fell back
as Castine and Ferrol clinched in a death struggle.
Ferrol knew that his end had come. He had expected
it, hoped for it. But, before the end, he wanted
to kill this man, if he could. He caught Castine’s
head in his hands, and, with a last effort, twisted
it back with a sudden jerk.
All at once, with the effort, blood
spurted from his mouth into the other’s face.
He shivered, tottered and fell back, as Castine struck
blindly into space. For a moment Ferrol swayed
back and forth, stretched out his hands convulsively
and gasped, trying to speak, the blood welling from
his lips. His eyes were wild, anxious and yearning,
his face deadly pale and covered with a cold sweat.
Presently he collapsed, like a loosened bundle, upon
the steps.
Castine, blinded with blood, turned
round, and the light of the fire upon his open mouth
made him appear to grin painfully an involuntary
grimace of terror.
At that instant a rifle shot rang
out from the shrubbery, and Castine sprang from the
ground and fell at Ferrol’s feet. Then,
with a contortive shudder, he rolled over and over
the steps, and lay face downward upon the ground-dead.
A girl ran forward from the trees,
with a cry, pushing her way through to Ferrol’s
body. Lifting up his head, she called to him in
an agony of entreaty. But he made no answer.
“That’s the woman who
fired the shot!” said a subaltern officer excitedly.
“I saw her!”
“Shut up, you fool it
was his wife!” exclaimed the young captain to
whom Ferrol had given his last message for Christine.