“Lights Out!”
The bugle-call rang softly down the
valley, echoed away tenderly in the hills, and was
lost in the distance. Roused by the clear call,
Elise rose from watching beside Valmond’s couch,
and turned towards the door of the tent. The
spring of a perfect joy at his safety had been followed
by an aching in all her body and a trouble at her heart.
Her feet were like lead, her spirit quivered and shrank
by turn. The light of the campfires sent a glow
through the open doorway upon the face of the sleeper.
She leaned over him. The look
she gave him seemed to her anxious spirit like a farewell.
This man had given her a new life, and out of it had
come a new sight. Valmond had escaped death, but
in her poor confused way she felt another storm gathering
about him. A hundred feelings possessed her;
but one thought was master of them all: when trouble
drew round him, she must be near him, must be strong
to help him, protect him, if need be. Yet a terrible
physical weakness was on her. Her limbs trembled,
her head ached, her heart throbbed in a sickening way.
He stirred in his sleep; a smile passed
over his face. She wondered what gave it birth.
She knew well it was not for her, that smile.
It belonged to his dream of success when
a thousand banners should flaunt in the gardens of
the Tuileries. Overcome by a sudden rush of emotion,
she fell on her knees at his side, bursting into noiseless
sobs, which shook her from head to foot.
Every nerve in her body responded
to the shock of feeling; she was having her dark hour
alone.
At last she staggered to her feet
and turned to the open door. The tents lay silent
in the moonshine, but wayward lights flickered in the
sumptuous dusk, and the quiet of the hills hung like
a canopy over the bivouac of the little army.
No token of misfortune came out of this peaceful encampment,
no omen of disaster crossed the long lane of drowsy
fires and huge amorous shadows. The sense of doom
was in the girl’s own heart, not in this deep
cradle of the hills.
Now and again a sentinel crossed the
misty line of vision, silent, and majestically tall,
in the soft haze, which came down from Dalgrothe Mountain
and fell like a delicate silver veil before the face
of the valley.
As she looked, lost in a kind of dream,
there floated up from the distant tent the refrain
she knew so well:
“Oh, say, where goes
your love?
O gai, vine lé roi!”
Her hand caught her bosom as if to
stifle a sudden pain. That song had been the
keynote to her new life, and it seemed now as if it
were also to be the final benediction. All her
spirit gathered itself up for a great resolution:
she would not yield to this invading weakness, this
misery of body and mind.
Some one drew out of the shadows and
came towards her. It was Madame Degardy.
She had seen the sobbing figure inside the tent, but,
with the occasional wisdom of the foolish of this
world, she had not been less considerate than the
children of light.
With brusque, kindly taps of her stick,
she drove the girl to her own tent, and bade her sleep:
but sleep was not for Elise that night; and in the
grey dawn, while yet no one was stirring in the camp,
she passed slowly down the valley to her home.
Madame Chalice was greatly troubled
also. Valmond’s life was saved. In
three days he was on his feet, eager and ardent again,
and preparing to go to the village; but what would
the end of it all be? She knew of De la Riviere’s
intentions, and she foresaw a crisis. If Valmond
were in very truth a Napoleon, all might be well,
though this crusade must close here. If he were
an impostor, things would go cruelly hard with him.
Impostor? Strange how, in spite of all evidence
against him, she still felt a vital sureness in him
somewhere; a radical reality, a convincing quality
of presence. At times he seemed like an actor
playing his own character. She could never quite
get rid of that feeling.
In her anxiety for she
was in the affair for good or ill she went
again to Monsieur Garon.
“You believe in Monsieur Valmond,
dear avocat?” she asked.
The little man looked at her admiringly,
though his admiration was a quaint, Arcadian thing;
and, perching his head on one side abstractedly, he
answered:
“Ah, yes, ah, yes! Such
candour! He is the son of Napoleon and a certain
princess, born after Napoleon’s fall, not long
before his death.”
“Then, of course, Monsieur Valmond
is really nameless?” she asked.
“Ah, there is the point the
only point; but His Excellency can clear up all that,
and will do so in good time, he says. He maintains
that France will accept him.”
“But the Government here, will
they put him down? proceed against him? Can they?”
“Ah, yes, I fear they can proceed
against him. He may recruit men, but he may not
drill and conspire, you see. Yet” the
old man smiled, as though at some distant and pleasing
prospect “the cause is a great one; it is great.
Ah, madame, dear madame” he
got to his feet and stepped into the middle of the
floor “he has the true Napoleonic
spirit. He loves it all. At the very first,
it seemed as if he were going to be a little ridiculous;
now it is as if there was but one thing for him love
of France and loyalty to the cause. Ah, think
of the glories of the Empire! of France as the light
of Europe, of Napoleon making her rich and proud and
dominant! And think of her now, sinking into the
wallow of bourgeois vulgarity! If if,
as His Excellency said, the light were to come from
here, even from this far corner of the world, from
this old France, to be the torch of freedom once again from
our little parish here!”
His face was glowing, his thin hands
made a quick gesture of charmed anticipation.
Madame Chalice looked at him in a
sort of wonder and delight. Dreamers all!
And this visionary Napoleon had come into the little
man’s quiet, cultured, passive life, and had
transformed him, filled him with adventure and patriotism.
There must be something behind Valmond, some real,
even some great thing, or this were not possible.
It was not surprising that she, with the spirit of
dreams and romance deep in her, should be sympathetic,
even carried away for the moment.
“How is the feeling in the country
since his illness?” she asked.
“Never so strong as now.
Many new recruits come to him. Organisation goes
on, and His Excellency has issued a proclamation.
I have advised him against that it is not
necessary, it is illegal. He should not tempt
our Government too far. But he is a gentleman
of as great simplicity as courage, of directness and
virtue a wholesome soldier ”
She thought again of that moonlit
night, and Elise’s window, and a kind of hatred
of the man came up in her. No, no, she was wrong;
he was not the true thing.
“Dear avocat,” she said
suddenly, “you are a good friend. May I
have always as good! But have you ever thought
that this thing may end in sore disaster? Are
we doing right? Is the man worthy our friendship
and our adherence?”
“Ah, dear madame, convictions,
principles, truth, they lead to good ends somewhere.
I have a letter here from Monsieur Valmond. It
breathes noble things; it has humour, too ah,
yes, so quaint! I am to see him this afternoon he
returns to the Louis Quinze to-day. The Cure and
I ”
She laid her hand on his arm, interrupting
him. “Will you take me this evening to
Monsieur Valmond, dear friend?” she asked.
She saw now how useless it was to
attempt anything through these admirers of Valmond;
she must do it herself. He must be firmly and
finally warned and dissuaded. The conviction had
suddenly come to her with great force, that the end
was near come to her as it came to Elise.
Her wise mind had seen the sure end; Elise’s
heart had felt it.
The avocat readily promised.
She was to call for him at a little before eight o’clock.
But she decided that she would first seek Elise; before
she accused the man, she would question the woman.
Above and beyond all anger she felt at this miserable
episode, there was pity in her heart for the lonely
girl. She was capable of fierce tempers, of great
caprices, of even wild injustice, when her emotions
had their way with her; but her heart was large, her
nature deep and broad, and her instincts kind.
The little touch of barbarism in her gave her, too,
a sense of primitive justice. She was self-analytical,
critical of life and conduct, yet her mind and her
heart, when put to the great test, were above mere
anatomising. Her rich nature, alive with these
momentous events, feeling the prescience of coming
crisis, sent a fine glow into her face, into her eyes.
Excitement gave a fresh elasticity to her step.
In spite of her serious thoughts,
she looked very young, almost irresponsible.
No ordinary observer could guess the mind that lay
behind the eloquent, glowing eyes. Even the tongue
at first deceived, till it began to probe, to challenge,
to drop sharp, incisive truths in little gold-leaped
pellets, which brought conviction when the gold-leaf
wore off.
The sunlight made her part of the
brilliant landscape, and she floated into it, neither
too dainty nor too luxurious. The greatest heat
of the day was past, and she was walking slowly under
the maples, on the way to Elise’s home, when
she was arrested by a voice near her. Then a tall
figure leaped the fence, and came to her with outstretched
hand and an unmistakable smile of pleasure.
“I’ve called at the Manor
twice, and found you out; so I took to the highway,”
said the voice gaily.
“My dear Seigneur,” she
answered, with mock gravity, “ancestors’
habits show in time.”
“Come, that’s severe, isn’t it?”
“You have waylaid me in a lonely
place, master highwayman!” she said, with a
torturing sweetness.
He had never seen her so radiantly
débonnaire; yet her heart was full of annoying
anxiety.
“There’s so much I want
to say to you,” he answered more seriously.
“So very much?”
“Very much indeed.”
She looked up the road. “I
can give you ten minutes,” she said. “Suppose
we walk up and down under these trees. It is shady
and quiet here. Now proceed, monsieur. Is
it my money or my life?”
“You are in a charming mood to-day.”
“Which is more than I could
say for you the last time we met. You threatened,
stormed, were childish, impossible to a degree.”
His face became grave. “We were such good
friends once!”
“Once once?”
she asked maliciously. “Once Cain and Abel
were a happy family. When was that once?”
“Two years ago. What talks
we had then! I had so looked forward to your
coming again. It was the alluring thing in my
life, your arrival,” he went on; “but
something came between.”
His tone nettled her. He talked
as if he had some distant claim on her.
“Something came between?”
she repeated slowly, mockingly. “That sounds
melodramatic indeed. What was it came between a
coach-and-four, or a grand army?”
“Nothing so stately,”
he answered, piqued by her tone: “a filibuster
and his ragamuffins.”
“Ragamufins would be appreciated
by Monsieur Valmond’s followers, spoken at the
four corners,” she answered.
“Then I’ll change it,”
he said: “a ragamuffin and his filibusters.”
“The ‘ragamuffin’
always speaks of his enemies with courtesy, and the
filibusters love their leader,” was her pointed
rejoinder.
“At half a dollar a day,” he answered
sharply.
“They get that much from His
Excellency, do they?” she asked in real surprise.
“That doesn’t look like filibustering,
does it?”
“‘His Excellency!’”
he retorted. “Why won’t you look this
matter straight in the face? Napoleon or no Napoleon,
the end of this thing is ruin.”
“Take care that you don’t
get lost in the debris,” she said bitingly.
“I can take care of myself.
I am sorry to have you mixed up in it.”
“You are sorry? How good of you! How
paternal!”
“If your husband were here ”
“If my husband were here, you
would probably be his best friend,” she rejoined,
with acid sweetness; “and I should still have
to take care of myself.”
Had he no sense of what was possible
to leave unsaid to a woman? She was very angry,
though she was also a little sorry for him; for perhaps
in the long run he would be in the right. But
he must pay for his present stupidity.
“You wrong me,” he answered,
with a quick burst of feeling. “You are
most unfair. You punish me because I do my public
duty; and because I would do anything in the world
for you, you punish me the more. Have you forgotten
two years ago? Is it so easy to your hand, a true
and constant admiration, a sincere homage, that you
throw it aside like ”
“Monsieur De la Riviere,”
she said, with exasperating deliberation, her eyes
having a dangerous light, “your ten minutes is
more than up. And it has been quite ten minutes
too long.”
“If I were a filibuster” he
answered bitterly and suggestively.
She interrupted him, saying, with
a purring softness: “If you had only courage
enough ”
He waved his hand angrily. “If
I had, I should hope you would prove a better friend
to me than you are to this man.”
“Ah, in what way do I fail towards ’this
man’?”
“By encouraging his downfall.
See I know I am taking my life in my hands,
as it were, but I tell you this thing will do you harm
when it goes abroad.”
She felt the honesty of his words,
though they angered her. He seemed to impute
some personal interest in Valmond. She would not
have it from any man in the world.
“If you will pick up my handkerchief ah,
thank you! We must travel different roads in
this matter. You have warned; let me prophesy.
His Highness Valmond Napoleon will come out of this
with more honour than yourself.”
“Thanks to you, then,”
he said gallantly, for he admired her very stubbornness.
“Thanks to himself. I honestly
believe that you will be ashamed of your part in this,
one day.”
“In any case, I will force the
matter to a conclusion,” he answered firmly.
“The fantastic thing must end.”
“When?”
“Within a few days.”
“When all is over, perhaps you
will have the honesty to come and tell me which was
right you or I. Goodbye.”
Elise was busy at her kitchen fire.
She looked up, startled, as her visitor entered.
Her heavy brow grew heavier, her eyes gleamed sulkily,
as she dragged herself forward with weariness, and
stood silent and resentful. Why had this lady
of the Manor come to her? Madame Chalice scarcely
knew how to begin, for, in truth, she wanted to be
the girl’s friend, and she feared making her
do or say some wild thing.
She looked round the quiet room.
Some fruit was boiling on a stove, giving out a fragrant
savour, and Elise’s eye was on it mechanically.
A bit of sewing lay across a chair, and on the wall
hung a military suit of the old sergeant, beside it
a short sabre. An old Tricolor was draped from
a beam, and one or two maps of France were pinned on
the wall. She fastened her look on the maps.
They seemed to be her cue.
“Have you any influence with your uncle?”
she asked.
Elise remained gloomily silent.
“Because,” Madame Chalice
went on smoothly, ignoring her silence, “I think
it would be better for him to go back to Ville Bambord I
am sure of it.”
The girl’s lip curled angrily.
What right had this great lady to interfere with her
or hers? What did she mean?
“My uncle is a general and a
brave man; he can take care of himself,” she
answered defiantly. Madame Chalice did not smile
at the title. She admired the girl’s courage.
She persisted however. “He is one man,
and ”
“He has plenty of men, madame, and
His Excellency ”
“His Excellency and hundreds
of men cannot stand, if the Government send soldiers
against them.”
“Why should the Gover’ment
do that? They’re only going to France; they
mean no trouble here.”
“They have no right to drill and conspire here,
my girl.”
“Well, my uncle and his men
will fight; we’ll all fight,” Elise retorted,
her hands grasping the arms of the rocking-chair she
sat in.
“But why shouldn’t we
avoid fighting? What is there to fight for?
You are all very happy here. You were very happy
here before Monsieur Valmond came. Are you happy
now?”
Madame Chalice’s eyes searched
the flushed face anxiously. She was growing more
eager every moment to serve, if she could, this splendid
creature.
“We would die for him!” answered the girl
quickly.
“You would die for him,” came the reply,
slowly, meaningly.
“And what’s it to you,
if I would?” came the sharp retort. “Why
do you fine folk meddle yourselves with poor folk’s
affairs?”
Then, remembering she was a hostess,
with the instinctive courtesy of her race, she said:
“Ah, pardon, madame; you meant
nothing, I’m sure.”
“Why should fine folk make poor
folk unhappy?” said Madame Chalice, quietly
and sorrowfully, for she saw that Elise was suffering,
and all the woman in her came to her heart and lips.
She laid her hand on the girl’s arm. “Indeed
yes, why should fine folk make poor folk unhappy?
It is not I alone who makes you unhappy, Elise.”
The girl angrily shook off the hand,
for she read the true significance of the words.
“What are you trying to find
out?” she asked fiercely. “What do
you want to do? Did I ever come in your way?
Why do you come into mine? What’s my life
to you? Nothing, nothing at all. You’re
here to-day and away to-morrow. You’re
English; you’re not of us. Can’t you
see that I want to be left alone?
“If I were unhappy, I could
look after myself. But I’m not, I’m
not I tell you I’m not! I’m
happy. I never knew what happiness was till now.
I’m so happy that I can stand here and not insult
you, though you’ve insulted me.”
“I meant no insult, Elise.
I want to help you; that is all. I know how hard
it is to confide in one’s kinsfolk, and I wish
with all my heart I might be your friend, if you ever
need me.”
Elise met her sympathetic look clearly
and steadily. “Speak plain to me, madame,”
she said.
“Elise, I saw some one climb
out of your bedroom window,” was the slow reply.
“Oh, my God!” said the
girl; “oh, my God!” and she stared blankly
for a moment at Madame Chalice. Then, trembling
greatly, she reached to the table for a cup of water.
Madame Chalice was at once by her
side. “You are ill, poor girl,” she
said anxiously, and put her arm around her.
Elise drew away.
“I will tell you all, madame,
all; and you must believe it, for, as God is my judge,
it is the truth.” Then she told the whole
story, exactly as it happened, save mention of the
kisses that Valmond had given her. Her eyes now
and again filled with tears, and she tried, in her
poor untutored way, to set him right. She spoke
for him altogether, not for herself; and her listener
saw that the bond which held the girl to the man might
be proclaimed in the streets, with no dishonour.
“That’s the story, and
that’s the truth,” said Elise at last.
“He’s a gentleman, a great man, and I’m
a poor girl, and there can be nothing between us;
but I’d die for him.”
She no longer resented Madame Chalice’s
solicitude: she was passive, and showed that
she wished to be alone.
“You think there’s going
to be great trouble?” she asked, as Madame Chalice
made ready to go.
“I fear so, but we will do all
we can to prevent it.” Elise watched her
go on towards the Manor in the declining sunlight,
then turned heavily to her work again.
There came to her ears the sound of
a dog-churn in the yard outside, and the dull roll
and beat seemed to keep time to the aching pulses in
her head, in all her body. One thought kept going
through her brain: there was, as she had felt,
trouble coming for Valmond. She had the conviction,
too, that it was very near. Her one definite idea
was, that she should be able to go to him when that
trouble came; that she should not fail him at his
great need. Yet these pains in her body, this
alternate exaltation and depression, this pitiful weakness!
She must conquer it. She remembered the hours
spent at his bedside; the moments when he was all
hers by virtue of his danger and her own
unwavering care of him. She recalled the dark
moment when Death, intrusive, imminent, lurked at
the tent door, and in its shadow she emptied out her
soul in that one kiss of fealty and farewell.
That kiss there came to
her again, suddenly, Madame Degardy’s cry of
warning: “Don’t get his breath it’s
death, idiot!”
That was it: the black fever
was in her veins! That one kiss had sealed her
own doom. She knew it now.
He had given her life by giving her
love. Well, he should give her death too her
lord of fife and death. She was of the chosen
few who could drink the cup of light and the cup of
darkness with equally regnant soul.
But it might lay her low in the very
hour of Valmond’s trouble. She must conquer
it how? To whom could she turn for
succour? There was but one, yet she
could not seek Madame Degardy, for the old woman would
drive her to her bed, and keep her there. There
was only this to do: to possess herself of those
wonderful herbs which had been given her Napoleon
in his hour of peril.
Dragging herself wearily to the little
but by the river, she knocked, and waited. All
was still, and, opening the door, she entered.
Striking a match, she found a candle, lighted it,
and then began her search. Under an old pan on
a shelf she found both herbs and powder. She
snatched up a handful of the herbs, and kissed them
with joyful heart. Saved she was saved!
Ah, thank the Blessed Virgin! She would thank
her for ever!
A horrible sinking sensation seized
her. Turning in dismay, she saw the face of Parpon
at the window. With a blind instinct for protection,
she staggered towards the door, and fell, her fingers
still clasping the precious herbs.
As Parpon hastily entered, Madame
Degardy hobbled out of the shadow of the trees, and
furtively watched the hut. When a light appeared,
she crept to the door, opened it stealthily upon the
intruders of her home, and stepped inside.
Parpon was kneeling by Elise, lifting
up her head, and looking at her in horrified distress.
With a shrill cry the old woman came
forward and dropped on her knees at the other side
of Elise. Her hand, fumbling anxiously over the
girl’s breast, met the hard and warty palm of
the dwarf. She stopped suddenly, raised the sputtering
candle, and peered into his eyes with a vague, wavering
intensity. For minutes they knelt there, the silence
clothing them about, the body of the unconscious girl
between them. A lost memory was feeling blindly
its way home again. By and by, out of an infinite
past, something struggled to the old woman’s
eyes, and Parpon’s heart almost burst in his
anxiety. At length her look steadied. Memory,
recognition, showed in her face.
With a wild cry her gaunt arms stretched
across, and caught the great head to her breast.
“Where have you been so long, Parpon my
son?” she said.