The sickness had come like a whirlwind:
when it passed, what would be left? The fight
went on in the quiet hills a man of no great
stature or strength, against a monster who racked
him in a fierce embrace. A thousand scenes flashed
through Valmond’s brain, before his eyes, while
the great wheel of torture went round, and he was broken,
broken-mended and broken again, upon it. Spinning he
was for ever spinning, like a tireless moth through
a fiery air; and the world went roaring past.
In vain he cried to the wheelman to stop the wheel:
there was no answer. Would those stars never
cease blinking in and out, or the wind stop whipping
the swift clouds past? So he went on, endless
years, driving through space, some terrible intangible
weight dragging at his heart, and all his body panting
as it spun.
Grotesque faces came and went, and
bright-eyed women floated by, laughing at him, beckoning
to him; but he could not come, because of this endless
going. He heard them singing, he felt the divine
notes in his battered soul; he tried to weep for the
hopeless joy of it; but the tears came no higher than
his throat. Why did they mock him so? At
last, all the figures merged into one, and she had
the face ah, he had seen it centuries ago! of
Madame Chalice. Strange that she was so young
still, and that was so long past when he
stood on a mountain, and, clambering a high wall of
rock, looked over into a happy No-man’s Land.
Why did the face elude him so, flashing
in and out of the vapours? Why was its look sorrowful
and distant? And yet there was that perfect smile,
that adorable aspect of the brow, that light in the
deep eyes. He tried to stop the eternal spinning,
but it went remorselessly on; and presently the face
was gone; but not till it had given him ease of his
pain.
Then came fighting, fighting, nothing
but fighting endless charges of cavalry,
continuous wheelings and advancings and retreatings,
and the mad din of drums; afterwards, in a swift quiet,
the deep, even thud of the horses’ hoofs striking
the ground. Flags and banners flaunted gaily
by. How the helmets flashed, and the foam flew
from the bits! But those flocks of blackbirds
flying over the heads of the misty horsemen they
made him shiver. Battle, battle, battle, and death,
and being born he felt it all.
All at once there came a wide peace
and clearing, and the everlasting jar and movement
ceased. Then a great pause, and light streamed
round him, comforting him.
It seemed to him that he was lying
helpless and still by falling water in a valley.
The water soothed him, and he fell asleep. After
a long time he waked, and dimly knew that a face,
good to look at, was bending over him. In a vague,
far-off way he saw that it was Elise Malboir; but
even as he saw, his eyes closed, the world dropped
away, and he sank to sleep again.
It was no vision or delirium; for
Elise had come. She had knelt beside his bed,
and given him drink, and smoothed his pillow; and once,
when no one was in the tent, she stooped and kissed
his hot dark lips, and whispered words that were not
for his ears to hear, nor to be heard by any one of
this world. The good Cure found her there.
He had not heart to bid her go home, and he made it
clear to the villagers that he approved of her great
kindness. But he bade her mother also come, and
she stayed in a tent near by.
Lagroin and two hundred men held the
encampment, and every night the recruits arrived from
the village, drilled as before, and waited for the
fell disease to pass. No one knew its exact nature,
but now and again, in long years, some one going to
Dalgrothe Mountain was seized by it, and died, or
was left stricken with a great loss of the senses,
or the limbs. Yet once or twice, they said, men
had come up from it no worse at all. There was
no known cure, and the Little Chemist could only watch
the swift progress of the fever, and use simple remedies
to allay the suffering. Parpon knew that the
disease had seized upon Valmond the night of the burial
of Gabriel. He remembered now the sickly, pungent
air that floated past, and how Valmond, weak from the
loss of blood in the fight at the smithy, shuddered,
and drew his cloak about him. A few days would
end it, for good or ill.
Madame Chalice heard the news with
consternation, and pity would have sent her to Valmond’s
bedside, but that she found Elise was his faithful
nurse and servitor. This fixed in her mind the
belief that if Valmond died, he would leave both misery
and shame behind; if he lived, she should, in any
case, see him no more. But she sent him wines
and delicacies, and she also despatched a messenger
to a city sixty miles away, for the best physician.
Then she sought the avocat, to discover whether he
had any exact information as to Valmond’s friends
in Quebec, or in France. She had promised not
to be his enemy, and she remembered with a sort of
sorrow that she had told him she meant to be his friend;
but, having promised, she would help him in his sore
strait.
She had heard of De la Riviere’s
visit to Valmond, and she intended sending for him,
but delayed it. The avocat told her nothing:
matters were in abeyance, and she abided the issue;
meanwhile getting news of the sick man twice a day.
More, she used all her influence to keep up the feeling
for him in the country, to prevent flagging of enthusiasm.
This she did out of a large heart, and a kind of loyalty
to her temperament and to his own ardour for his cause.
Until he was proved the comedian (in spite of the
young Seigneur) she would stand by him, so far as
his public career was concerned. Misfortune could
not make her turn from a man; it was then she gave
him a helping hand. What was between him and
Elise was for their own souls and consciences.
As she passed the little cottage in
the field the third morning of Valmond’s illness,
she saw the girl entering. Elise had come to get
some necessaries for Valmond and for her mother.
She was pale; her face had gained a spirituality,
a refinement, new and touching. Madame Chalice
was tempted to go and speak to her, and started to
do so, but turned back.
“No, no, not until we know the
worst of this illness then!” she said
to herself.
But ten minutes later De la Riviere
was not so kind. He had guessed a little at Elise’s
secret, and as he passed the house on the way to visit
Madame Chalice, seeing the girl, he came to the door
and said:
“How goes it with the distinguished
gentleman, Elise? I hear you are his slave.”
The girl turned a little pale.
She was passing a hot iron over some coarse sheets,
and, pausing, she looked steadily at him and replied:
“It is not far to Dalgrothe Mountain, monsieur.”
“The journey’s too long
for me; I haven’t your hot young blood,”
he said suggestively.
“It was not so long a dozen
years ago, monsieur.” De la Riviere flushed
to his hair. That memory was a hateful chapter
in his life a boyish folly, which involved
the miller’s wife. He had buried it, the
village had forgotten it, such of it as
knew, and the remembrance of it stung him.
He had, however, brought it on himself, and he must
eat the bitter fruit.
The girl’s eyes were cold and
hard. She knew him to be Valmond’s enemy,
and she had no idea of sparing him. She knew also
that he had been courteous enough to send a man each
day to inquire after Valmond, but that was not to
the point; he was torturing her, he had prophesied
the downfall of her “spurious Napoleon.”
“It will be too long a journey
for you, and for all, presently,” he said.
“You mean that His Excellency
will die?” she asked, her heart beating so hard
that it hurt her. Yet the flat-iron moved backwards
and forwards upon the sheets mechanically.
“Or fight a Government,”
he answered. “He has had a good time, and
good times can’t last for ever, can they, Elise?
Have you ever thought of that?”
She turned pale and swayed over the
table. In an instant he was beside her; for though
he had been irritable and ungenerous, he had at bottom
a kind heart. Catching up a glass of water, he
ran an arm round her waist and held the cup to her
lips.
“What’s the matter, my
girl?” he asked. “There, pull yourself
together.”
She drew away from him, though grateful
for his new attitude. She could not bear everything.
She felt nervous and strangely weak.
“Won’t you go, monsieur?”
she said, and turned to her ironing again.
He looked at her closely, and not
unkindly. For a moment the thought possessed
him that evil and ill had come to her. But he
put it away from him, for there was that in her eyes
which gave his quick suspicions the lie. He guessed
now that the girl loved Valmond, and he left her with
that thought. Going up the hill, deep in thought,
he called at the Manor, to find that Madame Chalice
was absent, and would not be back till evening.
When Elise was left alone, a weakness
seized her again, as it had done when De la Riviere
was present. She had had no sleep in four days,
and it was wearing on her, she said to herself, refusing
to believe that a sickness was coming. Leaving
the kitchen, she went up to her bedroom. Opening
the window, she sat down on the side of the bed and
looked round. She figured Valmond in her mind
as he stood in this place and that, his voice, his
words to her, the look in his face, the clasp of his
hand.
All at once she sprang up, fell on
her knees before the little shrine of the Virgin,
and burst into tears. Her rich hair, breaking
loose, flowed round her-the picture of a Magdalen;
but it was, in truth, a pure girl with a true heart.
At last she calmed herself and began to pray:
“Ah, dear Mother of God, thou
who dost speak for the sorrowful before thy Son and
the Father, be merciful to me and hear me. I am
but a poor girl, and my life is no matter. But
he is a great man, and he has work to do, and he is
true and kind. Oh, pray for him, divine Mother,
sweet Mary, that he may be saved from death!
If the cup must be emptied, may it be given to me
to drink! Oh, see how all the people come to him
and love him! For the saving of Madelinette,
oh, may his own life be given him! He cannot
pray for himself, but I pray for him. Dear Mother
of God, I love him, and I would lose my life for his
sake. Sweet Mary, comfort thy child, and out
of thy own sorrow be good to my sorrow. Hear me
and pray for me, divine Mary. Amen.”
Her whole nature had been emptied
out, and there came upon her a calm, a strange clearness
of brain, exhausted in body as she was. For an
instant she stood thinking.
“Madame Degardy! Madame
Degardy!” she cried, with sudden inspiration.
“Ah, I will find her; she may save him with her
herbs!”
She hurried out of the house and down
through the village to the little hut by the river,
where the old woman lived.
Elise had been to Madame Degardy as
good a friend as a half-mad creature, with no memory,
would permit her. Parpon had lived for years
in the same village, but, though he was her own son,
she had never given him a look of recognition, had
used him as she used all others. In turn, the
dwarf had never told any one but Valmond of the relationship;
and so the two lived their strange lives in their
own singular way. But the Cure knew who it was
that kept the old woman’s house supplied with
wood and other necessaries. Parpon himself had
tried to summon her to Valmond’s bedside, for
he knew well her skill with herbs, but the little
hut was empty, and he could get no trace of her.
She had disappeared the night Valmond was seized of
the fever, and she came back to her little home in
the very hour that Elise visited her. The girl
found her boiling herbs before a big fire. She
was stirring the pot diligently, now and then sprinkling
in what looked like a brown dust, and watching the
brew intently.
She nodded, but did not look at Elise, and said crossly:
“Come in, come in, and shut the door, silly.”
“Madame,” said the girl, “His Excellency
has the black fever.”
“What of that?” she returned irritably.
“I thought maybe your herbs
could cure him. You’ve cured others, and
this is an awful sickness. Ah, won’t you
save him, if you can?”
“What are you to him, pale-face?”
she said, her eyes peering into the pot.
“Nothing more to him than you are, madame,”
the girl answered wearily.
“I’ll cure because I want, not because
you ask me, pretty brat.”
Elise’s heart gave a leap:
these very herbs were for Valmond! The old woman
had travelled far to get the medicaments immediately
she had heard of Valmond’s illness. Night
and day she had trudged, and she was more brown and
weather-beaten than ever.
“The black fever! the black
fever!” cried the old woman. “I know
it well. It’s most like a plague.
I know it. But I know the cure-ha, ha! Come
along now, feather-legs, what are you staring there
for? Hold that jug while I pour the darling liquor
in. Ha, ha! Crazy Joan hasn’t lived
for nothing. They have to come to her; the great
folks have to come to her!”
So she meandered on, filling the jug.
Later, in the warm dusk, they travelled up to Dalgrothe
Mountain, and came to Valmond’s tent. By
the couch knelt Parpon, watching the laboured breathing
of the sick man. When he saw Madame Degardy,
he gave a growl of joy, and made way for her.
She pushed him back with her stick contemptuously,
looked Valmond over, ran her fingers down his cheek,
felt his throat, and at last held his restless hand.
Elise, with the quick intelligence of love, stood
ready. The old woman caught the jug from her,
swung it into the hollow of her arm, poured the cup
half full, and motioned the girl to lift up Valmond’s
head. Elise raised it to her bosom, leaning her
face down close to his. Madame Degardy instantly
pushed back her head.
“Don’t get his breath that’s
death, idiot!” she said, and began to pour the
liquid into Valmond’s mouth very slowly.
It was a tedious process at first, but at length he
began to swallow naturally, and finished the cup.
There was no change for an hour, and
then he became less restless. After another cupful,
his eyes half opened. Within an hour a perspiration
came, and he was very quiet, and sleeping easily.
Parpon crouched near the door, watching it all with
deep, piercing eyes. Madame Degardy never moved
from her place, but stood shaking her head and muttering.
At last Lagroin came, and whisperingly asked after
his chief; then, seeing him in a healthy and peaceful
sleep, he stooped and kissed the hand lying upon the
blanket.
“Beloved sire! Thank the
good God!” he said. Soon after he had gone,
there was a noise of tramping about the tent, and then
a suppressed cheer, which was fiercely stopped by
Parpon, and the soldiers of the Household Troops scattered
to their tents.
“What’s that?” asked
Valmond, opening his eyes bewilderedly.
“Your soldiers, sire,” answered the dwarf.
Valmond smiled languidly. Then he saw Madame
Degardy and Elise.
“I am very sleepy, dear friends,”
he said, with a courteous, apologetic gesture, and
closed his eyes. Presently they opened again.
“My snuff-box in my pocket,”
he said to the old woman, waving a hand to where his
uniform hung from the tent-pole; “it is for you,
madame.”
She understood, smiled grimly, felt
in a waistcoat pocket, found the snuff-box, and, squatting
on the ground like a tailor, she took two pinches,
and sat holding the antique silver box in her hand.
“Crazy Joan’s no fool,
dear lad,” she said at last, and took another
pinch, and knowingly nodded her head again and again,
while he slept soundly.