Read CHAPTER III of When Valmond Came to Pontiac, free online book, by Gilbert Parker, on ReadCentral.com.

In less than one week Valmond was as outstanding from Pontiac as Dalgrothe Mountain, just beyond it in the south.  His liberality, his jocundity, his occasional abstraction, his meditative pose, were all his own; his humour that of the people.  He was too quick in repartee and drollery for a bourgeois, too “near to the bone” in point for an aristocrat, with his touch of the comedian and the peasant also.  Besides, he was mysterious and picturesque, and this is alluring to women and to the humble, if not to all the world.  It might be his was the comedian’s fascination, but the flashes of grotesqueness rather pleased the eye than hurt the taste of Pontiac.

Only in one quarter was there hesitation, added to an anxiety almost painful; for to doubt Monsieur Valmond would have shocked the sense of courtesy so dear to Monsieur the Cure, Monsieur Garon, the Little Chemist, and even Medallion the auctioneer, who had taken into his bluff, odd nature something of the spirit of those old-fashioned gentlemen.  Monsieur De la Riviere, the young Seigneur, had to be reckoned with independently.

It was their custom to meet once a week, at the house of one or another, for a “causerie,” as the avocat called it.  On the Friday evening of this particular week, all were seated in the front garden of the Cure’s house, as Valmond came over the hill, going towards the Louis Quinze.  His step was light, his head laid slightly to one side, as if in pleased and inquiring reverie, and there was a lifting of one corner of the mouth, suggesting an amused disdain.  Was it that disdain which comes from conquest not important enough to satisfy ambition?  The social conquest of a village ­to be conspicuous and attract the groundlings in this tiny theatre of life, that seemed little!

Valmond appeared not to see the little coterie, but presently turned, when just opposite the gate, and, raising his hat, half paused.  Then, without more ado, he opened the gate and advanced to the outstretched hand of the Cure, who greeted him with a courtly affability.  He shook hands with, and nodded good-humouredly at, Medallion and the Little Chemist, bowed to the avocat, and touched off his greeting to Monsieur De la Riviere with deliberation, not offering his hand ­this very reserve a sign of equality not lost on the young Seigneur.  He had not this stranger at any particular advantage, as he had wished, he knew scarcely why.  Valmond took the seat offered him beside the Cure, who remarked presently: 

“My dear friend, Monsieur Garon, was saying just now that the spirit of France has ever been the Captain of Freedom among the nations.”

Valmond glanced quickly from the Cure to the others, a swift, inquisitive look, then settled back in his chair, and turned, bowing, towards Monsieur Garon.  The avocat’s pale face flushed, his long, thin fingers twined round each other and untwined, and presently he said, in his little chirping voice, so quaint as to be almost unreal: 

“I was saying that the spirit of France lived always ahead of the time, was ever first to conceive the feeling of the coming century, and by its own struggles and sufferings ­sometimes too abrupt and perilous ­made easy the way for the rest of the world.”

During these words a change passed over Valmond.  His restless body became still, his mobile face steady and almost set ­all the life of him seemed to have burnt into his eyes; but he answered nothing, and the Cure, in the pause, was constrained to say: 

“Our dear Monsieur Garon knows perfectly the history of France, and is devoted to the study of the Napoleonic times and of the Great Revolution ­alas for our people and the saints of Holy Church who perished then!”

The avocat lifted a hand in mute disacknowledgment.  Again there was a silence, and out of the pause Monsieur De la Riviere’s voice was heard.

“Monsieur Valmond, how fares this spirit of France now ­you come from France?”

There was a shadow of condescension and ulterior meaning in De la Riviere’s voice, for he had caught the tricks of the poseur in this singular gentleman.

Valmond did not stir, but looked steadily at De la Riviere, and said slowly, dramatically, yet with a strange genuineness also: 

“The spirit of France, monsieur, the spirit of France looks not forward only, but backward, for her inspiration.  It is as ready for action now as when the old order was dragged from Versailles to Paris, and in Paris to the guillotine, when France got a principle and waited, waited ­”

He did not finish his sentence, but threw back his head with a sort of reflective laugh.

“Waited for what?” asked the young Seigneur, trying to conquer his dislike.

“For the Man!” came the quick reply.

The avocat rubbed his hands in pleasure.  He instantly divined one who knew his subject, though he talked this melodramatically:  a thing not uncommon among the habitants and the professional story-tellers, but scarcely the way of the coterie.

“Ah, yes, yes,” he said, “for ? monsieur, for ?” He paused, as if to give himself the delight of hearing their visitor speak.

“For Napoleon,” was the abrupt reply.

“Ah, yes, dear Lord, yes ­a Napoleon ­of ­of the Empire.  France can only cherish an idea when a man is behind it, when a man lives it, embodies it.  She must have heroes.  She is a poet, a poet ­and an actress.”

“So said the Man, Napoleon,” cried Valmond, getting to his feet.  “He said that to Barras, to Remusat, to Josephine, to Lucien, to ­to another, when France had for the moment lost her idea ­and her man.”

The avocat trembled to his feet to meet Valmond, who stood up as he spoke, his face shining with enthusiasm, a hand raised in broad dramatic gesture, a dignity come upon him, in contrast to the figure which had disported itself through the village during the past week.  The avocat had found a man after his own heart.  He knew that Valmond understood whereof he spoke.  It was as if an artist saw a young genius use a brush on canvas for a moment; a swordsman watch an unknown master of the sword.  It was not so much the immediate act, as the divination, the rapport, the spirit behind the act, which could only come from the soul of the real thing.

“I thank you, monsieur; I thank you with all my heart,” the avocat said.  “It is the true word you have spoken.”

Here a lad came running to fetch the Little Chemist, and Medallion and he departed, but not without the auctioneer having pressed Valmond’s hand warmly, for he was quick of emotion, and, like the avocat, he recognised, as he thought, the true word behind the dramatic trappings.

Monsieur Garon and Valmond talked on, eager, responsive, Valmond lost in the discussion of Napoleon, Garon in the man before him.  By pregnant allusions, by a map drawn hastily on the ground here, and an explosion of secret history there, did Valmond win to a sort of worship this fine little Napoleonic scholar, who had devoured every book on his hero which had come in his way since boyhood.  Student as he was, he had met a man whose knowledge of the Napoleonic life was vastly more intricate, searching and vital than his own.  He, Monsieur Garon, spoke as from a book or out of a library, but this man as from the Invalides, or, since that is anachronistic, from the lonely rock of St. Helena.  A private saying of Napoleon’s, a word from his letters and biography, a phrase out of his speeches to his soldiers, sent tears to the avocat’s eyes, and for a moment transformed Valmond.

While they talked, the Cure and the young Seigneur listened, and there passed into their minds the same wonder that had perplexed Elise Malboir; so that they were troubled, as was she, each after his own manner and temperament.  Their reasoning, their feelings were different, but they were coming to the point the girl had reached when she cried into the darkness of the night, “Napoleon ­Napoleon!”

They sat forgetful of the passing of time, the Cure preening with pleasure because of Valmond’s remarks upon the Church when quoting the First Napoleon’s praise of religion.

Suddenly a carriage came dashing up the hill, with four horses and a postilion.  The avocat was in the house searching for a book.  De la Riviere, seeing the carriage first, got to his feet with instant excitement, and the others turned to look.  As it neared the house, the Cure took off his baretta, and smiled expectantly, a little red spot burning on both cheeks.  These deepened as the carriage stopped, and a lady, a little lady like a golden flower, with sunny eyes and face ­how did she keep so fresh in their dusty roads? ­stood up impulsively, and before any one could reach the gate was entering herself, her blue eyes swimming with the warmth of a kind heart ­or a warm temperament, which may exist without a kind heart.

Was it the heart, or the temperament, or both, that sent her forward with hands outstretched, saying:  “Ah, my dear, dear Cure, how glad I am to see you once again!  It is two years too long, dear Cure.”

She held his hand in both of hers, and looked up into his eyes with a smile at once child-like and naïve ­and masterful; for behind the simplicity and the girlish manner there was a power, a mind, with which this sweet golden hair and cheeks like a rose-garden had nothing to do.  The Cure, beaming, touched by her warmth, and by her tiny caressing fingers, stooped and kissed them both like an old courtier.  He had come of a good family in France long ago, very long ago, ­and even in this French-Canadian village; where he had taught and served and lingered forty years, he had kept the graces of his youth, and this beautiful woman drew them all out.  Since his arrival in Pontiac, he had never kissed a woman’s hand ­women had kissed his; and this woman was a Protestant, like Medallion!

Turning from the Cure, she held out a hand to the young Seigneur with a little casual air, as if she had but seen him yesterday, and said:  “Monsieur De la Riviere ­what, still buried? ­and the world waiting for the great touch!  But we in Pontiac gain what the world loses.”

She turned to the Cure again, and said, placing a hand upon his arm: 

“I could not pass without stepping in upon my dear old friend, even though soiled and unpresentable.  But you forgive that, don’t you?”

“Madame is always welcome, and always unspotted of the dusty world,” he answered gallantly.

She caught his fingers in hers as might a child, turned full upon Valmond, and waited.  The Cure instantly presented Valmond to her.  She looked at him brightly, alluringly, apparently so simply; yet her first act showed the perception behind that rosy and golden face, and the demure eyes whose lids languished now and then ­to the unknowing with an air of coquetry, to the knowing ­did any know her? ­as one would shade one’s eyes to see a landscape clearly, or make out a distant figure.  As Valmond bowed, a thought seemed to fetch down the pink eyelids, and she stretched out her hand, which he took and kissed, while she said in English, though they had been talking in French: 

“A traveller too, like myself, Monsieur Valmond?  But Pontiac ­why Pontiac?”

A furtive, inquiring look shot from the eyes of the young Seigneur, a puzzled glance from the Cure’s, as they watched Valmond; for they did not know that he had knowledge of English; he had not spoken it to Medallion, who had sent into his talk several English words.  How did this woman divine it?

A strange suspicion flashed into Valmond’s face, but it was gone on the instant, and he replied quickly: 

“Yes, madame, a traveller; and for Pontiac ­there is as much earth and sky about Pontiac as about Paris or London or New York.”

“But people count, Monsieur-Valmond.”

She hesitated before the name, as if trying to remember, though she recalled perfectly.  It was her tiny fashion to pique, to appear unknowing.

“Truly, Madame Chalice,” he answered instantly, for he did not yield to the temptation to pause before her name; “but sometimes the few are as important to us as the many ­eh?”

She almost started at the eh, for it broke in grimly upon the gentlemanly flavour of his speech.

“If my reasons for coming were only as good as madame’s ­” he added.

“Who knows!” she said, with her eyes resting idly on his flowered waistcoat, and dropping to the incongruous enamelled knee-boots with their red tassels.  She turned to the Cure again, but not till Valmond had added: 

“Or the same ­who knows?”

Again she looked at him with drooping eyelids and a slight smile so full of acid possibilities that De la Riviere drew in a sibilant breath of delight.  Her movement had been as towards an impertinence; but as she caught Valmond’s eye, something in it, so really boylike, earnest, and free from insolence, met hers, that, with a little way she had, she laid back her head slowly, her lips parted in a sweet, ambiguous smile, her eyes dwelt on him with a humorous interest, or flash of purpose, and she said softly: 

“Nobody knows ­eh?”

She could not resist the delicate malice of the exclamation, she imitated the gaucherie so delightfully.

Valmond did not fail to see her meaning, but he was too wise to show it.

He hardly knew how it was he had answered her unhesitatingly in English, for it had been his purpose to avoid speaking English in Pontiac.

Presently Madame Chalice caught sight of Monsieur Garon coming from the house.  When he saw her, he stopped short in delighted surprise.  Gathering up her skirts, she ran to him, put both hands on his shoulders, kissed him on the cheek, and said: 

“Monsieur Garon, Monsieur Garon, my good avocat, my Solon! are the coffee, and the history, and the blest madeira still chez-toi?”

There was no jealousy in the Cure; he smiled at the scene with great benevolence, for he was as a brother to Monsieur Garon.  If he had any good thing, it was his first wish to share it with him; even to taking him miles away to some simple home where a happy thing had come to poor folk ­the return of a prodigal son, a daughter’s fortunate marriage, or the birth of a child to childless people; and there together they exchanged pinches of snuff over the event, and made compliments from the same mould, nor desired difference of pattern.  To the pretty lady’s words, Monsieur Garon blushed, and his thin hand fluttered to his lips.  As if in sympathy, the Cure’s fingers trembled to his cassock cord.  “Madame, dear madame,” ­the Cure approved by a caressing nod, “we are all the same here in our hearts and in our homes, and if anything seem good in them to us, it is because you are pleased.  You bring sunshine and relish to our lives, dear madame.”

The Cure beamed.  This was after his own heart and he had ever said that his dear avocat would have been a brilliant orator, were it not for his retiring spirit.

For himself, he was no speaker at all; he could only do his duty and love his people.  So he had declared over and over again, and the look in his eyes said the same now.

Madame’s eyes were shining with tears.  This admiration of her was too real to be doubted.

“And yet ­and yet” ­she said, with a hand in the Cure’s and the avocat’s, drawing them near her ­“a heretic, a heretic, my dear friends!  How should I stand in your hearts if I were only of your faith?  Or is it so that you yearn over the lost sheep, more than over the ninety and nine of the fold?”

There was a real moisture in her eyes, and in her own heart she wondered, this fresh and venturing spirit, if she cared for them as they seemed to care for her ­for she felt she had an inherent strain of the actress temperament, while these honest provincials were wholly real.

But if she made them happy by her gaiety, what matter!  The tears dried, and she flashed a malicious look at the young Seigneur, as though to say:  “You had your chance, and you made nothing of it, and these simple gentlemen have done the gracious thing.”

Perhaps it was a liberal interpretation of his creed which prompted the Cure to add with a quaint smile: 

“‘Thou art not far from the Kingdom,’ my daughter.”

The avocat, who had no vanity, hastened to add to his former remarks, as if he had been guilty of an oversight: 

“Dear madame, you have flattered my poor gleanings in history; I am happy to tell you that there is here another and a better pilot in that sea.  It is Monsieur Valmond,” he added, his voice chirruping in his pleasure.  “For Napoleon ­”

“Ah, Napoleon ­yes, Napoleon?” she said, turning to Valmond, with a look half of interest, half of incredulity.

“ ­For Napoleon is, through him, a revelation,” the avocat went on.  “He fills in the vague spaces, clears up mysteries of incident, and gives, instead, mystery of character.”

“Indeed,” she added, still incredulous, but interested in this bizarre figure who had so worked upon her old friend, interested because she had a keen scent for mystery, and instinctively felt it here before her.  Like De la Riviere, she perceived a strange combination of the gentleman and ­something else; but, unlike him, she saw also a light in the face and eyes that might be genius, poetry, adventure.  For the incongruities, what did they matter to her?  She wished to probe life, to live it, to race the whole gamut of inquiry, experiences, follies, loves, and sacrifices, to squeeze the orange dry, and then to die while yet young, having gone the full compass, the needle pointing home.  She was as broad as sumptuous in her nature; so what did a gaucherie matter? or a dash of the Oriental in a citizen of the Occident?

“Then we must set the centuries right, and so on ­if you will come to see me when I am settled at the Manor,” she added, with soft raillery, to Valmond.  He bowed, expressed his pleasure a little oracularly, and was about to say something else, but she turned deftly to De la Riviere, with a sweetness which made up for her previous irony to him, and said: 

“You, my kind Seigneur, will come to breakfast with me one day?  My husband will be here soon.  When you see our flag flying, you will find the table always laid for four.”

Then to the Cure and the avocat:  “You shall visit me whenever you will, and you are to wait for nothing, or I shall come to fetch you.  Voila!  I am so glad to see you.  And now, dear Cure, will you take me to my carriage?”

Soon there was a surf of dust rising behind the carriage, hiding her; but four men, left behind in the little garden, stood watching, as if they expected to see a vision in rose and gold rise from it; and each was smiling unconsciously.