Marie was tired. She had been
walking nearly the whole day, and now the sun was
low in the west, and long level rays of yellow light
were spreading over the country, striking the windows
of a farmhouse here and there into sudden flame, or
resting more softly on tree-tops and hanging slopes.
They were like fiddle-bows, Marie thought; and at
the thought she held closer something that she carried
in her arms, and murmured over it a little, as a mother
coos over her baby. It seemed a long time since
she had run away from the troupe: she would
forget all about them soon, she thought, and their
ugly faces. She shivered slightly as she recalled
the face of “Le Boss” as it was last bent
upon her, frowning and dark, and as ugly as a hundred
devils, she was quite sure. Ah, he would take
away her violin Le Boss! he would give it
to his own girl, whom she, Marie, had taught till
she could play a very little, enough to keep the birds
from flying away when they saw her, as they otherwise
might; she was to have the violin, the Lady, one’s
own heart and life, and Marie was to have a fiddle
that he had picked up anywhere, found on an ash-heap,
most likely! Ah, and now he had lost the Lady
and Marie too, and who would play for him this evening,
and draw the children out of the houses? he!
let some one tell Marie that! It had not been
hard, the running away, for no one would ever have
thought of Marie’s daring to do such a thing.
She belonged to Le Boss, as much as the tent or the
ponies, or his own ugly girl: so they all thought
in the troupe, and so Marie herself had thought
till that day; that is, she had not thought at all.
While she could play all the time, and had often
quite enough to eat, and always something, a piece
of bread in the hand if no more, and La
Patronne, Le Boss’s wife, never too unkind,
and sometimes even giving her a bit of ribbon for the
Lady’s neck when there was to be a special performance, why,
who would have thought of running away? she had been
with them so long, those others, and that time in
France was so long ago, hundreds of years
ago!
So no one had thought of noticing
when she dropped behind to tune her violin and practise
by herself; it was a thing she did every day, they
all knew, for she could not practise when the children
pulled her gown all the time, and wanted to dance.
She had chosen the place well, having been on the
lookout for it all day, ever since Le Boss told her
what he meant to do, that infamy which the
good God would never have allowed, if He had not been
perhaps tired with the many infamies of Le Boss,
and forgotten to notice this one. She had chosen
the place well! A little wood dipped down to
the right, with a brook running beyond, and across
the brook a sudden sharp rise, crowned with a thick
growth of birches. She had played steadily as
she passed through the wood and over the stream, and
only ceased when she gained the brow of the hill and
sprang like a deer down the opposite slope. No
one had seen her go, she was sure of that; and now
they could never tell which way she had turned, and
would be far more likely to run back along the road.
How they would shout and scream, and how Le Boss would
swear! Ah, no more would he swear at Marie because
people did not always give money, being perhaps poor
themselves, or unwilling to give to so ugly a face
as his girl’s, who carried round the dish.
No more! And La Patronne would be sorry perhaps
a little, she had the good heart, La Patronne,
under all the fat, and Old Billy, he would
be too sorry, she was sure. Poor Old Billy! it
was cruel to leave him, when he had such joy of her
playing, the good old man, and a hard life taking care
of the beasts, and bearing all the blame if any of
them died through hunger. But it would have
been sadder for Old Billy to see her die, Marie, and
she would have died, of course she would! To
live without the Lady, a pretty life that would be!
far sooner would one go at once to the good God, where
the angels played all day, even if one were not allowed
to play oneself just at first. Afterward, of
course, when they found out how she had played down
here, it would be otherwise.
Meanwhile, all these thoughts did
not keep Marie from being tired, and hungry too; and
she was glad enough to see some brown roofs clustered
together at a little distance, as she turned a corner
of the road. A village! good! Here would
be children, without doubt; and where there were children,
Marie was among friends. She stopped for a moment,
to push back her hair, which had fallen down in the
course of her night, and to tie the blue handkerchief
neatly over it, and shake the dust from her bare feet.
They were pretty feet, so brown and slender!
She had shoes, but they were in the wagon; La Patronne
took care of all the Sunday clothes, and there had
been no chance to get at anything, even if she could
have been hampered by such things as shoes, with the
Lady to carry. It did not in the least matter
about shoes, when it was summer: when the road
was hot, one walked in the cool grass at the side;
when there was no grass eh, one waited till
one came to some. They were only for state, these
shoes. They were stiff and hard, and the heel-places
hurt: it was different for La Patronne, who wore
stockings under hers. But here were the houses,
and it was time to play. They were pleasant-looking
houses, Marie thought, they looked as if persons lived
in them who stayed at home and spun, as the women did
in Brittany. Ah, that it was far away, Brittany!
she had almost forgotten it, and now it all seemed
to come back to her, as she gazed about her at the
houses, some white, some brown, all with an air of
thrift and comfort, as becomes a New England village.
That white house there, with the bright green blinds!
That pleased her eye. And see! there was a
child’s toy lying on the step, a child’s
face peeping out of the window. Decidedly, she
had arrived.
Marie took out her violin, and tuned
it softly, with little rustling, whispering notes,
speaking of perfect accord between owner and instrument;
then she looked up at the child and smiled, and began
to play “En revenant d’Auvergne.”
It was a tune that the little people always loved,
and when one heard it, the feet began to dance before
the head. Sure enough, the door opened in another
moment, and the child came slipping out: not
with flying steps, as a city child would come, to
whom wandering musicians were a thing of every day;
but shyly, with sidelong movements, clinging to the
wall as it advanced, and only daring by stealth to
lift its eyes to the strange woman with the fiddle,
a sight never seen before in its little life.
But Marie knew all about the things that children
think. What was she but a child herself? she
had little knowledge of grown persons, and regarded
them all as ogres, more or less, except Old Billy,
and La Patronne, who really meant to be kind.
“Come, lit’ girl!”
she said in her clear soft voice. “Come
and dance! for you I play, for you I sing too, if
you will. Ah, the pretty song, ‘En revenant
d’Auvergne!’” And she began to sing
as she played:
“Eh, gai, Coco!
Eh, gai, Coco!
Eh, venez voir la danse
Du petit marmot!
Eh, venez voir la danse
Du petit marmot!”
The little girl pressed closer against
the wall, her eyes wide open, her finger in her mouth,
yet came nearer and nearer, drawn by the smile as
well as the music. Presently another came running
up, and another; then the boys, who had just brought
their cows home and were playing marbles on the sly,
behind the brown barn, heard the sound of the fiddle
and came running, stuffing their gains into their pockets
as they ran. Then Mrs. Piper, who was always
foolish about music, her neighbors said, came to her
door, and Mrs. Post opposite, who was as deaf as her
namesake, came to see what Susan Piper was after, loitering
round the door when the men-folks were coming in to
their supper: and so with one thing and another,
Marie had quite a little crowd around her, and was
feeling happy and pleased, and sure that when she stopped
playing and carried round her handkerchief knotted
at the four corners so as to form a bag, the pennies
would drop into it as fast, yes, and maybe a good
deal faster, than if Le Boss’s ugly daughter
was carrying it, with her nose turned up and one eye
looking round the corner to see where her hair was
gone to. Ah, Le Boss, what was he doing this
evening for his music, with no Marie and no Lady!
And it was just at this triumphant
moment that Jacques De Arthenay came round the corner
and into the village street.