The morning following the events recorded
in the last chapter was ushered in with bright sunshine,
and everything pleasant, so far as outward appearances
went, in and out of the mill, though some hearts were
restless or uneasy as to how it would be when the sun
rose to run his accustomed course the next morning.
Charlie was perhaps the happiest of all those whose
fortunes we are now following. He had but slight
clouds to dim his horizon; at least his horizon as
seen by his own eyes. He went cheerfully and
gladly through his duties that morning, and never
did he more fully merit the name of “Happy Charlie”
bestowed on him by his comrades in the gallant 22nd
than he did on the morning in question. The truth
was he was beginning to tire of old Pierre Moullin’s
determined refusal to have anything to say to him in
the character of son-in-law. He had made up his
mind (and being of a hopeful nature, considered more
than half the battle was fought in consequence), that
come what might, he would prevail on Marguerite to
marry him at once, and trust to gain her Father’s
forgiveness when the deed was done beyond recall.
And so our friend Charlie whistled and sang through
this day, building all sorts of pleasant castles about
his future life, little thinking what a train was
being laid, to which, if the match were applied, he
and his castles would be blown up in a more sanguinary,
if not more decisive manner, than these airy fabrications
generally have to yield to!
Hirzel had been detained on various
pretexts by his Father; in consequence he was rather
late in starting for this important business on which
he was to be despatched. From the time he managed
to get off, it was not at all likely that he could
be back before 10 o’clock. Marguerite’s
heart quite misgave her when she heard this, but as
time moved on, and it came to half-past 7, she was
re-assured to find that Jacques Gaultier was putting
away his tools, and finally left the house, saying
that he had “work for himself at home, but would
return the following morning to finish repairing those
rafters that had so suddenly got out of repair.”
Matters seemed better still when her
Father said he did not feel at all himself that night,
and that he thought he would go off to bed. Marguerite
wished him “Good night;” and at 8 o’clock
found herself alone and mistress of her own actions.
She might now have brought Charlie into the house,
but that she remembered her Father’s prohibition
of such a thing; and at least she thought it best
and fittest to leave him master in his own house,
at the same time reserving to herself liberty to control
her own actions. This was fair enough.
At about 8 o’clock, as agreed
on, Marguerite took her little lantern, and going
round the path to where they had been standing two
evenings before, she flashed the light three times
trusting that Charlie would be able to see it.
Meanwhile Jacques had come out from one of the mill
sheds, where he had been concealed, and went quickly
up to the room behind the granary, only pausing on
his way to tell old Pierre that he was there.
We will leave him waiting for his
prey, with a dark sardonic smile on his ill-favoured
countenance, and return to Marguerite, who is waiting
in the granary for her lover, confident that “all
is well,” and having no thoughts but pleasant
ones concerning the coming meeting. Even the
remembrance of Hirzel’s absence brings no disquietude
with it. Her thoughts shape themselves into a
blessing when her brother’s bright manly face
comes before her, and then she bends all her attention
to listen for Charlie’s approach.
She had been waiting for rather more
than an hour, when she heard her name called softly;
then up Charlie scrambled, and when standing on the
wheel his head comes just half way up the window.
“Well, here I am, Marguerite;
I hope you were not alarmed at the time I have taken,
but I was on duty when I saw your signal, and it was
some little time before I could get away.”
“I was getting a little anxious,
Charlie, but ‘all is well’ now that you
have come.”
“Ah, that is right! but how
are you to-night, little woman all the
fancies fled?”
“Almost Charlie, but still not
quite; you will think me very foolish, I know, but
everything was so beautifully arranged for my seeing
you easily to-night that I can’t help thinking
that some one else has been arranging too for some
purpose of his own.”
“Come, come, you little croaker,
try and put such thoughts out of your pretty head,
and remember I ‘deserve the fair’ after
having been so ‘brave’ as to mount this
rickety wheel, but I wish you would take this parcel
from me; the bobbins are in it, which I have perilled
my life to bring! I hope you see my devotion
clearly, eh?”
“I do, indeed, Charlie, and
now I shall work all the better and be more in earnest;
I don’t mean you to have all the work on your
shoulders when we marry; I know I shall be able to
get sale for my lace amongst the beautiful ladies
you tell me of in England.”
“Ah, Marguerite, that is just
what I wanted to speak to you about; I suppose your
Father still wishes you to marry that rascal Gaultier?
By the way, I believe he or some one very like him
was sneaking round the cliffs on Monday night.
After I left you, I fancied I saw him; it might be
only fancy. Did you see anything of him?
“I wish.”
Alas! poor Charlie! Will you
speak again to finish that sentence and tell what
you wish? For suddenly the mill wheel has turned
round with a tremendous crash, and the brave young
soldier has been hurled down! And Marguerite,
what of her? With one agonized cry she rushed
to the door intending to run outside to see if anything
could be done for Charlie, when she came face to face
with Jacques Gaultier! In an instant it all flashed
on her that he must have wrought this terrible work,
and, overcome by grief and horror, she sank down in
a deadly faint. Bad man as he was, Jacques was
really overcome at the consequences of his act, for
he thought he had also killed Marguerite. He called
loudly to her Father, who came up hurriedly.
He was also seriously alarmed when his gaze rested
on his child lying like one dead on the floor.
Between them they carried her downstairs and laid
her on her bed. They applied such restoratives
as suggested themselves, but as everything was for
sometime quite unavailing, a more miserable pair it
would have been difficult to discover.
Hirzel now came in. He was running
upstairs to the granary when his Father called him
in to see if he could do anything for his poor sister.
“A pretty night’s work
this,” he said, when he came into the room and
saw his sister lying there.
At this moment she opened her eyes,
and he went close to her and raised her in his arms.
With an expression of deep thankfulness, Marguerite’s
first words were to send that murderer, Jacques Gaultier,
away out of her sight. Hirzel ordered him to
leave the room, with more fierceness in his tone than
anyone had heard there before.
“Oh! Hirzel, what shall
I do without Charlie? Stay with me, only you,
and I will tell you all.”
Hearing this her Father left the room,
and Hirzel bent down and whispered to her
“Charlie is alive and well.
He told me to tell you this himself.”
“Oh! Hirzel, you are deceiving
me. How could he be alive after such a dreadful
fall? It was terrible.”
Here Marguerite’s fortitude
gave way, and she indulged in a flood of tears, while
Hirzel looked at her with the masculine helplessness
usual on such occasions, and indeed it seemed to cost
the fine tender-hearted fellow an effort to keep from
joining in them too. At last he said, “Well
Marguerite, if you don’t stop, I’ll go
off, and tell Charlie you only cried after you heard
he was alive and well.”
“Ah! Hirzel, is that not
the way with our sex. Sometimes, to cry over
the best and happiest times while the worst is bravely
borne?”
Hirzel then told Marguerite how he
had met Charlie just outside at the foot of the lane,
considerably bruised and knocked about, though without
any internal injuries. How he escaped was nothing
short of a miracle, one of those things which occasionally
happen, perhaps, to show what can be done when there
is the will to do it.
There was an iron loop which projected
about a foot from the walls, this Charlie made a spring
at after the manner of a gymnast; he caught it, and
although it came away in his grasp, yet it broke his
fall, and what was of more importance, changed the
direction of his course to the brickwork alongside
the wheel, instead of the water under it. Once
on the brickwork he jumped down into the garden, and
went out into the lane, where he met Hirzel.
Charlie did not for a moment suspect
that there was anything but pure accident in what
had happened, and as he met Hirzel just at that moment
he judged it wisest not to return near the house in
case he should get Marguerite into trouble; but after
telling Hirzel to assure his sister that he was safe,
he set off to the fortress, little thinking he was
supposed to be lying dead at the foot of the Moulin
Huet cliffs, carried there by the mill stream.
Marguerite now told to her brother,
her suspicions of how all had happened. He wished
to go immediately and tax Jacques with the crime;
but, in deference to his sister’s wishes, remained
where he was. The noise of the mill wheel turning
round suddenly ceased, and on Hirzel’s going
up to ascertain the cause, he found his Father tying
up the rope in the room behind the granary. This
rope passed out of a small round hole in the wall
of this room, and round the corner of the house where
it was attached to the wheel. The window through
which Charlie and Marguerite had been talking was
rather a large one, but had some iron bars across
which had prevented Marguerite leaning out to see what
had become of Charlie. This perhaps was as well,
for at best his descent would have been extremely
trying to look at.
The next morning did not bring Jacques
to finish his work, but in the evening he appeared,
after vainly trying to induce Marguerite to speak
to him, which naturally she was very loath to do, went
and commenced his work, which he went steadily on
with, though he was very much fatigued by having no
rest the preceding night, and now had been out fishing
all day. He sat down to rest for a few minutes
when he fell asleep. After dark old Pierre came
round to lock all the doors, as was his nightly custom.
Looking in and not seeing Jacques he supposed he had
gone and locked that door also. Pierre then went
to rest himself, and all were buried in slumber, with
the exception of Hirzel, who had gone over to Jerbourg
to acquaint Charlie with all that had happened.
About 9 o’clock, as Charlie and Hirzel were
coming out of the barracks, they saw flames rising
in the direction of the mill. It was but the work
of a moment for Charlie to run back and get leave
for some of his comrades to come with him, and off
they set for the mill. On arriving there they
found their surmises correct: both house and mill
were enveloped in flames. Marguerite and her
Father were safely out, but the latter was in a dreadful
state of misery at seeing all his property go like
this. Charlie went up to him after he had spoken
to Marguerite, and said he would try and save the
wheel for future murders. Seeing Charlie, whom
he fully thought to be dead, and hearing these words,
the old man shrank back with horror. He fell
on his knees and begged Charlie to forgive him, adding
that it was not he who had done it, but Jacques.
Charlie raised the old man, saying all should be forgiven
and forgotten on one condition. That condition
we need hardly state was permission to marry Marguerite
without further trouble. Until Pierre had said
so Charlie, had no idea that he knew any thing of
his intended destruction. It saddened him very
much and made him very sorry for the old man; however,
he had other things to think of, so he set all the
other soldiers to hand up water from the mill stream,
which was now running for some little time. Suddenly
a shout from one of the soldiers called Charlie’s
attention, and on going to see what it was, he found
him dragging a body out of the mill stream. With
some difficulty he recognized Jacques Gaultier, as
it was rather dark just there. Jacques revived
a little, and told Charlie how on waking he had found
the room full of smoke, and finding the door locked
he broke it down, but the door of the granary resisted
all his efforts, so he put all his strength towards
tearing the bars from the window. He succeeded
in this and got out on the wheel, but directly he
tried to get down the rope which doubtless
had been much charred by the flames gave
way, and down he went. He had seen from the window,
Charlie and his comrades coming, and this endued him
with further strength, but all to no purpose.
He implored Charlie’s forgiveness, and turning
over with a groan he died.
Little now remains to be told.
Owing to the exertions of the soldiers some of the
machinery was saved, but the old man never made any
use of it; he had too great a horror of anything like
a mill after his past experiences. Charlie and
Marguerite were soon married. They lived at Castle
Cornet for some time, and after the restoration went
with the Regiment to England, where Marguerite could
display her loyalty undisturbed. Hirzel remained
heart-whole to the last we hear of him, and after
his Father’s death went and lived with his sister
in England, to see for himself some of the wonders
which Charlie had described to him in his own little
Island home.