It was a day of “mistral”
in the valley of the Rhone high, brave,
triumphant mistral, the wind of God sent to sweep out
the foul odours of little tightly-packed towns with
tortuous streets, to dry the good rich earth after
the rain, and to call forth the corn from the corn-land,
the grapes from the ranged vines, and to prove for
the thousandth time the strength and endurance of
the misty, dusty, grey-blue olive trees, that streamed
away from the north-east like a faint-blown river of
smoke.
A brave day it was for those who loved
such days of whom was not Claire Agnew certainly
a brave day for the whirling wheels, the vast bird-pinions
of Jean-Marie’s new windmills on the mountain
of Barbentane.
Jean-Marie found his abode to his
taste. At first he had installed Claire with
a decent Provencal couple at the famous cross-roads
called in folk-speech “Le Long lé
Chemin,” till he should find some resting-place
other than the ground-floor of the creaking and straining
monsters where he himself spread his mattress, and
slept, bearded and night-capped, among his rich farina
dust and the pell-mell of bags of corn yet to be ground.
By the time, however, that Madame
Amelie with Professor Anatole was able to reach France
(thanks to the care of the good Bishop of Elne, and
the benevolence of the more secular powers set in
motion by the Viceroy of Catalonia), a new Mas had
been bought. The gold laid carefully up with
Pereira, the honest Hebrew of Bayonne, had been paid
out, and the scattered wanderers had once more a home,
secure and apart, in the fairest and quietest province
of France.
Nay more, though the way was long,
the cattle-tracks across the lower Canigou were so
well known and so constantly followed, that Jean-aux-Choux
had been able to bring forward the most part of Dame
Amelie’s bestial. Even her beloved goats
bleated on the rocks round the Mas of the mountain.
The fowls indeed were other, but to the common eye
even they seemed unchanged, for Jean-Marie had been
at some pains to match them before the arrival of
his mother. Doves roo-cooed about the
sheds and circled the tall pigeon-cote on its black
pole with flapping wings.
The house mistress was coming home.
That day Madame Amelie was to arrive
with her son, the Professor, and Jean-aux-Choux for
an escort. And then at last Claire would learn what
she had been wilfully kept in ignorance of by Jean-Marie the
reason for the sudden desertion of the Abbe John on
the sea-shore at Collioure.
There had been a struggle long and
mighty within the stout breast of the Miller-Alcalde
before he could bring himself to play the traitor.
After all (so he argued with his conscience), he was
only keeping his promise. John d’Albret
had bidden him be silent. Nevertheless, when he
saw Claire’s wan and anxious face, he was often
prompted to speak, even though by so doing he might
lose all hope of securing a mistress for the new Mas
of the Mountain, who in course of time would succeed
Madame Amelie there.
The grave, strong, sententious ex-Alcalde
had allowed no lines of meal dust to gather in the
frosty curls of his beard since he had brought Claire
Agnew to France. Busy all day, he had rejoiced
in working for her. Then, spruce as any love-making
youth, he had promenaded lengthily and silently with
her in the twilight, looking towards the distant sea,
across which from the southward his mother and his
brothers were to come.
The Miller Jean-Marie loved after
a fashion, his own silent, dour, middle-aged fashion the
young girl Claire Agnew, whom he called his “niece”
in that strange land. For in this he followed
the example of his brother, judging that what was
right for a learned professor of the Sorbonne could
not be wrong for a rough miller, earning his bread
(and his “niece’s”) by the turning
of his grindstones and the gigantic whirl of his sails.
Still, he had never spoken his love,
but on this final morning the miller had not gone
forth. He was determined to speak at last.
His mother and brother were soon to arrive. The
mistral drave too strong for work.
He had indeed little corn to grind nothing
that an hour earlier on the morrow could not put to
rights. Then and there he would speak to Claire.
At long and last he was sure of himself. His courage
would not, as usual, ooze away from his finger nails.
He and she were alone in the newly-furnished rooms
of the Mas of the Mountain for only a few
portable items such as his mother’s chair and
the ancient pot-bellied horologe had been brought
in a tartana from La Masane to the little harbour
of Les Saintes Maries, where the big mosquitoes are.
“It is not good for man to be
alone,” began Jean-Marie, even more sententiously
than usual; “I have heard you read that out of
your Bible of Geneva do you believe it,
Claire?”
“Indeed I do,” said the
girl, looking up brightly; “I have longed ah,
how I have longed all these weeks for
your mother!”
“I was thinking of myself!” said the miller
heavily.
“Ah, well, that will soon be
at an end,” returned Claire; “I am sorry,
but I did my best. I have often heard you sigh
and sigh and sigh when you and I walked together of
the evening. And I knew I was no company for
you. I was too young and too foolish, was it not
so? But now you will have your mother and your
brother, the Professor, who is learned. He knows
all about how to grow onions according to the methods
of Virgil! He told me so himself!”
The big ex-Alcalde looked doubtfully
sidelong at his little friend. He was not a suspicious
man, and usually considered Claire as innocent as a
frisking lambling. But now no, it could
not be. She was not making fun of him of
the man who had done all these things, who had brought
her in safety by paths perilous to this new home!
So very wisely he decided to take
Claire’s words at their face value.
“My mother is my mother,”
he said, deciding that the time had come at last,
and that nothing was to be gained by putting it off.
“Doctor Anatole is my elder brother, and as
for me, I have all the family affections. But
a man of my age needs something else!”
“What, another windmill?”
cried Claire; “well, I will help you. I
saw such a splendid place for one yesterday, right
at the top of the rocky ridge they call Frigolet.
It is not too high, yet it catches every wind, and
oh you can see miles and miles all about right
to the white towers of Arles, and away to the twin
turrets of Chateau Renard among the green vineyards.
There is no such view in all the mountains. And
I will go up there every day and knit my stocking!”
“Oh, if only it were my
stocking!” groaned the miserable, tongue-tied
miller, “then I might think about the matter
of the windmill.”
Foiled in a direct line, he was trying
to arrive at his affair by a side-wind.
But Claire clapped her hands joyously,
glad to get her own way on such easy terms.
“Of course, Jean-Marie, I will
knit you a pair of hose most gladly winter
woollen ones of the right Canigon fashion ”
“I did not mean one pair only,”
said the miller, with a slightly more brisk air, and
an attempt at a knowing smile, “but for
all my life!”
“Come, you are greedy,”
cried Claire; “and must your mother go barefoot and
your brother the Professor, and Don Jordy, and ”
She was about to add another name,
which ought to have been that of Jean-aux-Choux, but
was not. She stopped, however, the current of
her gay words swiftly arrested by that unspoken name.
“Jean-Marie, answer me,”
she said, standing with her back resolutely to the
door, “there is a thing I must know. Tell
me, as you are an honest man, what became of Jean
d’Albret that night on the sand-dunes at Collioure?
It is in my mind that you know more than you have told
me. You do know, my brave Alcalde! I am
sure of it. For it was you who came to borrow
my hood and mantle, also my long riding-cape to give
to him. And I have never seen them since.
If, then, this Abbe John is a thief and a robber,
you are his accomplice. Nothing better. Come out
with it!”
Jean-Marie stood mumbling faintly
words without order or significance.
Claire crossed her arms and set her
back to the oaken panels. The miller would gladly
have escaped by the window, but the sill was high.
Moreover, he felt that escalade hardly became either
his age or habit of body.
Therefore, like many another in a
like difficulty, he took refuge in prevarication to
use which well requires, in a man, much practice and
considerable solidity of treatment. Women are
naturally gifted in this direction.
“He bade I mean he
forbade me to reveal the matter to you!”
“Then it had to do with me,”
she cried, fixing the wretched man with her forefinger;
“now I have a right I demand to know.
I will not stay a moment longer in the house if I
am not told.”
As she spoke Claire turned the key
twice in the lock, extracted it, and slid it into
her pocket. These are not the usual preliminaries
for quitting a house for ever in hot indignation.
But the ex-Alcalde was too flustered to notice the
inconsistency.
“Speak!” she cried, stamping
her foot. And the broad, serious-faced Jean-Marie
found, among all his wise saws and instances, none
wherewith to answer her. “Where did he
go, and what did he do with my long cloak and lace
mantilla?” she demanded. “Were they
a disguise to provide only for his own safety the
coward?”
The miller flushed. Up till now
he had sheltered himself behind the Abbe John’s
express command to say nothing. Now he must speak,
and this proud girl must take that which she had brought
on her own head. It was clear to Jean-Marie,
as it had been to numerous others, that she had no
heart. She was a block of ice, drifted from far
northern seas.
“Well, since you will have it,
I will tell you,” he said, speaking slowly and
sullenly, “but do not blame me if the news proves
unwelcome. Jean d’Albret borrowed your
cloak and mantilla so that he might let himself be
taken in your place so as to give you you you he
cared not for the others time to escape
from the familiars of the Inquisition sent to take
you!”
He nodded his head almost at each
word and opened his hand as if disengaging himself
from further responsibility. He looked to see
the girl overwhelmed. But instead she rose, as
it were, to the stature of a goddess, her face flushed
and glorious.
“Tell it me again,” she
said hoarsely, even as Valentine la Nina had once
pleaded to be told, “tell me again he
did that for me?”
“Aye, for you! Who else?”
said the miller scornfully “for whom
does a man do anything but for a silly girl not worth
the trouble!”
She did not heed him.
“He went to the death for me to
save me he did what none else could have
done saying nothing about it, bidding them
keep it from me, lest I should know! Oh, oh!”
The miller turned away in disgust.
He pronounced an anathema on the hearts of women.
But she wheeled him round and, laying her hands on
both his shoulders, flashed wet splendid eyes upon
him, the like of which he had never seen.
“Oh, I am glad I
am glad!” she cried; “I could kiss you
for your news, Jean-Marie!”
And she did so, her tears dropping on his hands.
“This thing I do not understand!”
said the miller to himself, when, no longer a prisoner,
he left Claire to sink her brow into a freshly-lavendered
pillow in her own chamber.
And he never would know.
Yet Valentine la Nina would have done
the same thing. For in their hearts all women
wish to be loved “like that.”
The word is their own and
the voice in which they say it.