We got our bearings, a pair of boots
for D’ri, and a hearty meal in the cabin of
a settler. The good man was unfamiliar with the
upper shore, and we got no help in our mystery.
Starting west, in the woods, on our way to the Harbor,
we stopped here and there to listen, but heard only
wood-thrush and partridge-the fife and drum
of nature. That other music had gone out of hearing.
We had no compass, but D’ri knew the forest
as a crow knows the air. He knew the language
of the trees and the brooks. The feel of the
bark and what he called “the lean of the timber”
told him which way was south. River and stream
had a way of telling him whence they had come and
where they were going, but he had no understanding
of a map. I remember, after we had come to the
Harbor at dusk and told our story, the general asked
him to indicate our landing-place and our journey
home on a big map at headquarters. D’ri
studied the map a brief while. There was a look
of embarrassment on his sober face.
“Seems so we come ashore ’bout
here,” said he, dropping the middle finger of
his right hand in the vicinity of Quebec. “Then
we travelled aw-a-a-ay hellwards over ’n this
’ere direction.” With that illuminating
remark he had slid his finger over some two hundred
leagues of country from Quebec to Michigan.
They met us with honest joy and no
little surprise that evening as we came into camp.
Ten of our comrades had returned, but as for ourselves,
they thought us in for a long stay. We said little
of what we had gone through, outside the small office
at headquarters, but somehow it began to travel, passing
quickly from mouth to mouth, until it got to the newspapers
and began to stir the tongue of each raw recruit.
General Brown was there that evening, and had for
me, as always, the warm heart of a father. He
heard our report with a kindly sympathy.
Next morning I rode away to see the
Comte de Chaumont at Leraysville. I had my life,
and a great reason to be thankful, but there were
lives dearer than my own to me, and they were yet in
peril. Those dear faces haunted me and filled
my sleep with trouble. I rode fast, reaching
the chateau at luncheon time. The count was
reading in a rustic chair at the big gate. He
came running to me, his face red with excitement.
“M’sieur lé Capitaine!”
he cried, my hand in both of his, “I thought
you were dead.”
“And so I have been-dead
as a cat drowned in a well, that turns up again as
lively as ever. Any news of the baroness and
the young ladies?”
“A letter,” said he.
“Come, get off your horse. I shall read
to you the letter.”
“Tell me-how were they taken?”
I was leading my horse, and we were walking through
the deep grove.
“Eh bien, I am not
able to tell,” said he, shaking his head soberly.
“You remember that morning-well,
I have twenty men there for two days. They are
armed, they surround the Hermitage, they keep a good
watch. The wasp he is very troublesome, but they
see no soldier. They stay, they burn the smudge.
By and by I think there is nothing to fear, and I
bring them home, but I leave three men. The
baroness and the two girls and their servants they
stay awhile to pack the trunk. They are coming
to the chateau. It is in the evening; the coach
is at the door; the servants have started. Suddenly-the
British! I do not know how many. They
come out of the woods like a lightning, and bang! bang!
bang! they have killed my men. They take the
baroness and the Misses de Lambert, and they drive
away with them. The servants they hear the shots,
they return, they come, and they tell us. We
follow. We find the coach; it is in the road,
by the north trail. Dieu! they are all gone!
We travel to the river, but-” here
he lifted his shoulders and shook his head dolefully-“we
could do nothing.”
“The general may let me go after
them with a force of cavalry,” I said.
“I want you to come with me and talk to him.”
“No, no, my capitaine!”
said he; “it would not be wise. We must
wait. We do not know where they are. I
have friends in Canada; they are doing their best,
and when we hear from them-eh bien,
we shall know what is necessary.”
I told him how I had met them that
night in Canada, and what came of it.
“They are a cruel people, the
English,” said he. “I am afraid to
find them will be a matter of great difficulty.”
“But the letter-”
“Ah, the letter,” he interrupted,
feeling in his pocket. “The letter is
not much. It is from Tiptoes-from
Louison. It was mailed this side of the river
at Morristown. You shall see; they do not know
where they are.”
He handed me the letter. I read
it with an eagerness I could not conceal. It
went as follows:-
“My dear count:
If this letter reaches you, it will, I hope, relieve
your anxiety. We are alive and well, but where?
I am sure I have no better idea than if I were a
baby just born. We came here with our eyes covered
after a long ride from the river, which we crossed
in the night. I think it must have taken us three
days to come here. We are shut up in a big house
with high walls and trees and gardens around it-a
beautiful place. We have fine beds and everything
to eat, only we miss the bouillabaisse, and the jokes
of M. Pidgeon, and the fine old claret. A fat
Englishwoman who waddles around like a big goose and
who calls me Mumm (as if I were a wine-maker!) waits
upon us. We do not know the name of our host.
He is a tall man who says little and has hair on his
neck and on the back of his hands. Dieu! he
is a lord who talks as if he were too lazy to breathe.
It is ‘Your Lordship this’ and ’Your
Lordship that.’ But I must speak well of
him, because he is going to read this letter:
it is on that condition I am permitted to write.
Therefore I say he is a great and good man, a beautiful
man. The baroness and Louise send love to all.
Madame says do not worry; we shall come out all right:
but I say worry! and, good man, do not cease
to worry until we are safe home. Tell the cure
he has something to do now. I have worn out my
rosary, and am losing faith. Tell him to try
his.
“Your affectionate
“Louison.”
“She is an odd girl,”
said the count, as I gave back the letter, “so
full of fun, so happy, so bright, so quick-always
on her tiptoes. Come, you are tired; you have
ridden far in the dust. I shall make you glad
to be here.”
A groom took my horse, and the count
led me down a wooded slope to the lakeside.
Octagonal water-houses, painted white, lay floating
at anchor near us. He rowed me to one of them
for a bath. Inside was a rug and a table and
soap and linen. A broad panel on a side of the
floor came up as I pulled a cord, showing water clear
and luminous to the sandy lake-bottom. The
glow of the noonday filled the lake to its shores,
and in a moment I clove the sunlit depths-a
rare delight after my long, hot ride.
At luncheon we talked of the war,
and he made much complaint of the Northern army, as
did everybody those days.
“My boy,” said he, “you
should join Perry on the second lake. It is
your only chance to fight, to win glory.”
He told me then of the impending battle
and of Perry’s great need of men. I had
read of the sea-fighting and longed for a part in
it. To climb on hostile decks and fight hand
to hand was a thing to my fancy. Ah, well!
I was young then. At the count’s table
that day I determined to go, if I could get leave.
Therese and a young Parisienne,
her friend, were at luncheon with us. They bade
us adieu and went away for a gallop as we took cigars.
We had no sooner left the dining room than I called
for my horse. Due at the Harbor that evening,
I could give myself no longer to the fine hospitality
of the count. In a few moments I was bounding
over the road, now cool in deep forest shadows.
A little way on I overtook Therese and the Parisienne.
The former called to me as I passed. I drew
rein, coming back and stopping beside her. The
other went on at a walk.
“M’sieur lé Capitaine,
have you any news of them-of Louise and
Louison?” she inquired. “You and
my father were so busy talking I could not ask you
before.”
“I know this only: they
are in captivity somewhere, I cannot tell where.”
“You look worried, M’sieur
lé Capitaine; you have not the happy face, the
merry look, any longer. In June you were a boy,
in August-voila! it is a man! Perhaps
you are preparing for the ministry.”
She assumed a solemn look, glancing
up at me as if in mockery of my sober face.
She was a slim, fine brunette, who, as I knew, had
long been a confidante of Louison.
“Alas! ma’m’selle,
I am worried. I have no longer any peace.”
“Do you miss them?” she
inquired, a knowing look in her handsome eyes.
“Do not think me impertinent.”
“More than I miss my mother,” I said.
“I have a letter,” said
she, smiling. “I do not know-I
thought I should show it to you, but-but
not to-day.”
“Is it from them?”
“It is from Louison-from Tiptoes.”
“And-and it speaks of me?”
“Ah, m’sieur,” said
she, arching her brows, “it has indeed much to
say of you.”
“And-and may I not
see it?” I asked eagerly. “Ma’m’selle,
I tell you I-I must see it.”
“Why?” She stirred the
mane of her horse with a red riding-whip.
“Why not?” I inquired, my heart beating
fast.
“If I knew-if I were
justified-you know I am her friend.
I know all her secrets.”
“Will you not be my friend also?” I interrupted.
“A friend of Louison, he is mine,” said
she.
“Ah, ma’m’selle, then I confess
to you-it is because I love her.”
“I knew it; I am no fool,”
was her answer. “But I had to hear it
from you. It is a remarkable thing to do, but
they are in such peril. I think you ought to
know.”
She took the letter from her bosom,
passing it to my hand. A faint odor of violets
came with it. It read:-
“My dear Therese:
I wish I could see you, if only for an hour.
I have so much to say. I have written your father
of our prison home. I am going to write you
of my troubles. You know what we were talking
about the last time I saw you-myself and
that handsome fellow. Mon Dieu! I shall
not name him. It is not necessary. Well,
you were right, my dear. I was a fool; I laughed
at your warning; I did not know the meaning of that
delicious pain. But oh, my dear friend, it has
become a terrible thing since I know I may never see
him again. My heart is breaking with it.
Mere de Dieu! I can no longer laugh or jest
or pretend to be happy. What shall I say?
That I had rather die than live without him?
No; that is not enough. I had rather be an
old maid and live only with the thought of him
than marry another, if he were a king. I remember
those words of yours, ‘I know he loves you.’
Oh, my dear Therese, what a comfort they are to me
now! I repeat them often. If I could
only say, ‘I know’! Alas! I
can but say, ’I do not know,’ nay, even,
‘I do not believe.’ If I had not
been a fool I should have made him tell me, for I
had him over his ears in love with me one day, or
I am no judge of a man. But, you know, they
are so fickle! And then the Yankee girls are
pretty and so clever. Well, they shall not have
him if I can help it. When I return there shall
be war, if necessary, between France and America.
And, Therese, you know I have weapons, and you have
done me the honor to say I know how to use them.
I have told Louise, and-what do you think?-the
poor thing cried an hour-for pity of me!
As ever, she makes my trouble her own. I have
been selfish always, but I know the cure. It
is love toujours l’amour.
Now I think only of him, and he recalls you and your
sweet words. God make you a true prophet!
With love to you and the marquis, I kiss each line,
praying for happiness for you and for him. Believe
me as ever,
“Your affectionate
“LOUISON.
“P.S. I feel better now
I have told you. I wonder what his Lordship
will say. Poor thing! he will read this; he will
think me a fool. Eh bien, I have no
better thought of him. He can put me under lock
and key, but he shall not imprison my secrets; and,
if they bore him, he should not read my letters.
L.”
I read it thrice, and held it for
a moment to my lips. Every word stung me with
the sweet pain that afflicted its author. I could
feel my cheeks burning.
“Ma’m’selle, pardon
me; it is not I she refers to. She does not
say whom.”
“Surely,” said Therese,
flirting her whip and lifting her shoulders.
“M’sieur Le Capitaine is never a stupid
man. You-you should say something
very nice now.”
“If it is I-thank
God! Her misery is my delight, her liberation
my one purpose.”
“And my congratulations,”
said she, giving me her hand. “She has
wit and beauty, a true heart, a great fortune, and-good
luck in having your love.”
I raised my hat, blushing to the roots of my hair.
“It is a pretty compliment,”
I said. “And-and I have no gift
of speech to thank you. I am not a match for
you except in my love of kindness and-and
of Louison. You have made me happier than I have
been before.”
“If I have made you alert, ingenious,
determined, I am content,” was her answer.
“I know you have courage.”
“And will to use it.”
“Good luck and adieu!”
said she, with a fine flourish of her whip; those
people had always a pretty politeness of manner.
“Adieu,” I said, lifting
my hat as I rode off, with a prick of the spur, for
the road was long and I had lost quite half an hour.
My elation gave way to sober thought
presently. I began to think of Louise-that
quiet, frank, noble, beautiful, great-hearted girl,
who might be suffering what trouble I knew not, and
all silently, there in her prison home. A sadness
grew in me, and then suddenly I saw the shadow of
great trouble. I loved them both; I knew not
which I loved the better. Yet this interview
had almost committed me to Louison.