I felt foolish for a moment.
I had careful plans for Mme. St. Jovite.
She would have vanished utterly on our return; so,
I fancy, none would have been the wiser. But
in that brief sally I had killed the madame;
she could serve me no more. I have been careful
in my account of this matter to tell all just as it
happened, to put upon it neither more nor less of romantic
color than we saw. Had I the skill and license
of a novelist, I could have made much of my little
mystery; but there are many now living who remember
all these things, and then, I am a soldier, and too
old for a new business. So I make as much of
them as there was and no more.
In private theatricals, an evening
at the Harbor, I had won applause with the rig, wig,
and dialect of my trip to Wrentham Square. So,
when I proposed a plan to my friend the general, urging
the peril of a raw hand with a trust of so much importance,
he had no doubt of my ability.
I borrowed a long coat, having put
off my dress, and, when all was ready, went with a
lantern to get the ladies. Louise recognized
me first.
“Grace au ciel!
lé capitaine!” said she, running to
meet me.
I dropped my lantern as we came face
to face, and have ever been glad of that little accident,
for there in the dark my arms went around her, and
our lips met for a silent kiss full of history and
of holy confidence. Then she put her hand upon
my face with a gentle caressing touch, and turned
her own away.
“I am very, very glad to see you,” I said.
“Dieu!” said her sister,
coming near, “we should be glad to see you,
if it were possible.”
I lighted the lantern hurriedly.
“Ciel! the light becomes him,” said Louison,
her grand eyes aglow.
But before there was time to answer I had kissed her
also.
“He is a bold thing,” she added, turning
soberly to the baroness.
“Both a bold and happy thing,”
I answered. “Forgive me. I should
not be so bold if I were not-well-insanely
happy.”
“He is only a boy,” said the baroness,
laughing as she kissed me.
“Poor little ingenu!” said Louison, patting
my arm.
Louise, tall and lovely and sedate
as ever, stood near me, primping her bonnet.
“Little ingenu!” she repeated,
with a faint laugh of irony as she placed the dainty
thing on her head.
“Well, what do you think
of him?” said Louison, turning to help her.
“Dieu! that he is very big and
dreadful,” said the other, soberly. “I
should think we had better be going.”
These things move slowly on paper,
but the greeting was to me painfully short, there
being of it not more than a minuteful, I should say.
On our way to the lights they plied me with whispered
queries, and were in fear of more fighting. The
prisoners were now in the coach, and our men-there
were twelve-stood on every side of it,
their pikes in hand. The boats were near, and
we hurried to the river by a toteway. Our schooner
lay some twenty rods off a point. A bateau and
six canoes were waiting on the beach, and when we
had come to the schooner I unbound the prisoners.
“You can get ashore with this
bateau,” I said. “You will find the
horses tied to a tree.”
“Wha’ does thet mean?” said D’ri.
“That we have no right to hold
them,” was my answer. “Ronley was,
in no way responsible for their coming.”
Leaning over the side with a lantern,
while one of our men held the bateau, I motioned to
the coachman.
“Give that ‘humberreller’
to the butler, with my compliments,” I whispered.
Our anchors up, our sails took the wind in a jiffy.
“Member how we used ye,”
D’ri called to the receding Britishers, “an’
ef ye ever meet a Yankee try t’ be p’lite
tew ’im.”
Dawn had come before we got off at
the Harbor dock. I took the ladies to an inn
for breakfast, wrote a report, and went for my horse
and uniform. General Brown was buttoning his
suspenders when they admitted me to his room.
“What luck, my boy?” said he.
“All have returned safely, including
the ladies,” I replied quickly, “and I
have the honor to submit a report.”
He took a chair, and read the report
carefully, and looked up at me, laughing.
“What a lucky and remarkable
young man!” said he. “I declare,
you should have lived in the Middle Ages.”
“Ah, then I should not have
enjoyed your compliments or your friendship,”
was my answer.
He laughed again heartily.
“Nor the demoiselles’,”
said he. “I congratulate you. They
are the loveliest of their sex; but I’m sorry
they’re not Americans.”
“Time enough. I have decided
that one of them shall become an American,”
said I, with all the confidence of youth.
“It is quite an undertaking,”
said he. “You may find new difficulties.
Their father is at the chateau.”
“M’sieur de Lambert?” I exclaimed.
“M’sieur de Lambert.
Came yesterday, via Montreal, with a fine young nobleman-the
Count Esmon de Brovel,” said he. “You
must look out for him; he has the beauty of Apollo
and the sword of a cavalier.”
“And I no fear of him,”
I answered soberly, with a quick sense of alarm.
“They rode over in the afternoon
with Chaumont,” he went on. “It
seems the young ladies’ father, getting no news
of them, had become worried. Well, you may go
and have three days for your fun; I shall need you
presently.”
Breakfast over, I got a team for the
ladies, and, mounting my own horse, rode before them.
I began to consider a very odd thing in this love
experience. While they were in captivity I had
begun to think less of Louison and more of Louise.
In truth, one face had faded a little in my memory;
the other, somehow, had grown clearer and sweeter,
as if by a light borrowed from the soul behind it.
Now that I saw Louison, her splendid face and figure
appealed to me with all the power of old. She
was quick, vivacious, subtle, aggressive, cunning,
aware and proud of her charms, and ever making the
most of them. She, ah, yes, she could play with
a man for the mere pleasure of victory, and be very
heartless if-if she were not in love with
him. This type of woman had no need of argument
to make me feel her charms. With her the old
doubt had returned to me; for how long? I wondered.
Her sister was quite her antithesis-thoughtful,
slow, serious, even-tempered, frank, quiet, unconscious
of her beauty, and with that wonderful thing, a voice
tender and low and sympathetic and full of an eloquence
I could never understand, although I felt it to my
finger-tips. I could not help loving her, and,
indeed, what man with any life in him feels not the
power of such a woman? That morning, on the
woods-pike, I reduced the problem to its simplest terms:
the one was a physical type, the other a spiritual.
“M’sieur lé Capitaine,”
said Louison, as I rode by the carriage, “what
became of the tall woman last night?”
“Left us there in the woods,”
I answered. “She was afraid of you.”
“Afraid of me! Why?”
“Well, I understand that you boxed her ears
shamefully.”
A merry peal of laughter greeted my words.
“It was too bad; you were very harsh,”
said Louise, soberly.
“I could not help it; she was
an ugly, awkward thing,” said Louison.
“I could have pulled her nose’”
“And it seems you called her
a géante also,” I said. “She
was quite offended.”
“It was a compliment,”
said the girl. “She was an Amazon-like
the count’s statue of Jeanne d’Arc.”
“Poor thing! she could not help it,” said
Louise.
“Well,” said Louison,
with a sigh of regret, “if I ever see her again
I shall give her a five-franc piece.”
There was a moment of silence, and she broke it.
“I hope, this afternoon, you will let me ride
that horse,” said she.
“On one condition,” was my reply.
“And it is ?”
“That you will let me ride yours at the same
time.”
“Agreed,” was her answer. “Shall
we go at three?”
“With the consent of the baroness and-and
your father,” I said.
“Father!” exclaimed the two girls.
/
“Your father,” I repeated. “He
is now at the chateau.”
“Heavens!” said Louison.
“What will he say?” said the baroness.
“I am so glad-my dear papa!”
said Louise, clapping her hands.
We were out of the woods now, and
could see the chateau in the uplands.