“How dreadful the dominion of the
impure!”
The September days gave place to October
ones and still Miss Clairville remained away.
The tourists had departed and Ringfield could judge
more accurately of the mental and moral status of the
countryside. The congregation of Sunday scarcely
numbered two score, but Amable Poussette and
wife were always present and the rule seemed to be
that any who had tired of Father Rielle came to Ringfield
whether they understood him or not; poor Catholics
were thus in danger of becoming even worse Methodists,
and he exerted all his faculties and talents in general
directions concerning conduct and character.
The beautiful skies and water, the rocks and great
Fall, were as impressive as before, but they no longer
filled so much space in the mind of the young preacher,
who now saw all things in the visible universe from
the standpoint and through the jaundiced eye of the
disappointed and unhappy lover. All Nature mocked
him and it would go hard indeed with him should religion,
too, fail him in such a juncture, but the spirit of
work and priestly endeavour kept him as yet from sheer
wretchedness; he prayed daily to think less of the
world and more of his calling and it seemed as if
the fate which brought him back to St. Ignace to love
and suffer in loving would spare him further, since
there was no sign of Miss Clairville’s return.
His preaching could not fail, because he brought
to it a fine original gift and an automatic precision
and certainty resulting from the excellent training
of his Church, but between Sundays the time dragged.
His labours among the few scattered and uneducated
families of conflicting race and origin seemed unconvincing
and empty, and a new shyness possessed him; he disliked
hearing any mention of the Clairvilles, for Crabbe’s
story he had come to accept as true without a word
of questioning; indeed, Miss Clairville’s own
words came back to him as a proof.
“Another patient of the soul,”
she had said. Also, she had referred to something
dark and of sinister import, fatal yet compelling,
which always drew her back from livelier and more
congenial places, and, as he judged, from a sphere
of work which paid, to the house at Lac Calvaire.
That the society of her brother was the attraction,
Ringfield could not admit, and what other ties or friends
had she? So far as he could learn none,
and thus he read her story; growing up unprotected
and motherless, without any standard to judge by, she
must have accepted the attentions and fallen under
the spell of a man who probably appealed to her pity
and also to her intellect. Crabbe had been the
only man in the neighbourhood capable of understanding
her cultivated allusions; the remnants of the mixed
education she had drawn from the school at Sorel and
the pedantic dreary associations of the manor house.
But in the contemplation of such a thing as her marriage
to such a man Ringfield’s fancy failed.
The whole plan of creation was altered and blackened.
He did not wish to know on what terms Pauline and
this man now met. He tried to shut out all the
images such a story conveyed, and thus he asked no
questions nor did he hear any gossip, proving that
the affair was old, and if once known to the country
people, accepted and forgotten. Why could he
not treat it in the same fashion? His faith
was not shaken in the sense of belief in a Supreme
Being, but he no longer lived so much for and by his
faith; Nature and God were put back in the past, as
he had said to Crabbe, and all his thought was for
the duty of the hour and for the guidance and sustenance
of others. He imagined he had lowered his own
dignity by writing, on the first impulse of desperate
first love, the letter which Crabbe had read with
Pauline, and he strove to regain that clerical calm
and judicial bearing that had suffered so violent a
shock. But when six weeks of this repressed
existence had sped and autumnal winds were sweeping
down from the glacial north of Terrebonne, bringing
cold rains and occasional snow flurries with them,
he felt that he must at least call at the manor to
inquire after Henry Clairville. Little at any
time was heard of the latter except when “Ma’amselle”
returned to her native heath, at which times the Archambaults
were whipped into work and obedience by the forcible
tongue and stormy temper of their mistress.
Messages and parcels then passed between the domain
and the village; Father Rielle made his call and the
whole village and paroisse quickened with energy
under Pauline’s determined sway. Crabbe this
Ringfield heard from Poussette was also
sent about his business; he was no longer encouraged
to play cards and drink with Henry, who fared as he
might at the hands of the tyrant family swarming all
over the estate.
On a chilly October day, Ringfield
once again traversed the muddy road leading to Lac
Calvaire, his heart sore over the revelation that
had reached him, and he could not repress a painful
sigh as he came in sight of the metairie.
The lake was dull grey, the maples were shedding
their leaves without painting them red and yellow,
and the pines looked unusually sombre against a pale
and cheerless sky. A pair of kingfishers were
flying from side to side of the road, and a forked
object sailing high up in the air proclaimed itself
a bird, otherwise there was no sign of life till,
approaching the front of the metairie, he observed
the peacock taking its airing in a neglected garden.
Nothing had affected the pose and
splendour of this radiant creature as it paraded up
and down, gently swaying its lustrous and shimmering
tail; the drooping fortunes of the house were not reflected
in its mien or expression, and it was not until Ringfield
was met by four lean cats prowling about him in evident
expectation of food and petting that he descried unusual
neglect in the appearance of house and garden.
Three ugly blotched and snorting pigs ran out from
under some bushes and followed him. He saw no
smoke arising, no face at any window, heard no lively
bustle in the farm-yard, no amusing and contentious
chatter in Canadian French from the barns and out-buildings
which sheltered the various members of the Archambault
family. A curious feeling rushed over him and
with it a conviction the place was deserted.
He went at once to the chain of farm buildings and
examined them all; all were empty, with every sign
of hurried and agitated flight rather than of orderly
and complacent departure. The horses were gone,
the two wagons and buggy, the buckboard. Traces
of fright and apprehension were met at every step;
a dirty hairbrush dropped on the ground; a clock abandoned
on a bench outside the door as if too heavy; tins opened
and rifled of their contents; a tub half full of soiled
clothes in foul water. All these he saw, scarcely
taking in their meaning, until returning to the manor
he opened the front door and went in. There in
the usual place he found Henry Clairville, alive, and
no more. Still clad in the greasy dressing-gown
and still seated in the tattered arm-chair, the unfortunate
man was clearly very ill. Patches appeared on
his face, which was both pallid and flushed; his neck
showed red and sore and his body hung down limply
over the side of the chair. Evidently he had
tried to get to his bed which stood in a corner, and
failed. His eyes were staring and full, yet glassy;
sense and recognition alike were wanting, while the
delirious accents which escaped now and then from
his parched lips were altogether in French. In
short, Ringfield, though unaccustomed to disease, knew
that the man before him was very ill, of what did
not enter his head, although there came to his mind
a description of the plague in a boy’s story-book.
He did what he could, singlehanded, which was to
snatch some warm clothing from the bed, cover up the
sufferer so that draughts might not reach him, fetch
water and leave it on the table near the chair and
see that all animals were excluded. He then
quickly sought for a secluded spot near the lake,
hung his own clothes about on branches to air, and
took a plunge into the clean, cool water, after which
he was ready to return to St. Ignace and get assistance.
Dr. Renaud, the village practitioner,
drove out at once, taking a woman with him, who, as
soon as she learned she had to deal with the “Pic”
ran screaming from the house, thus clearing up the
mystery of the Archambaults.
“They knew,” said Ringfield,
“and I didn’t. But I guessed something
of the kind and took the only precaution open to me.
I washed in pure water. And now what are we
to do? Has M. Clairville no one belonging to
him but his sister?”
“Not to my knowledge,”
said Dr. Renaud, who spoke good English, “and
we do not wish her to return.”
“Certainly not.”
“Then I can only think of one person in the
village.”
“A nurse?”
“Not a professional nurse, but,
as I say, the only person I know of close at hand
who can do what is necessary until we get a nurse,
if the man lives to require one. A male nurse
would be better, but who is there here? No.
I am thinking of the right one if I can only get her,
if I can only get her?”
“She lives in the village?”
Ringfield was curious; he thought he had met every
one in the village, yet here was some paragon of female
skill, virtue and strength with whom he was not acquainted.
“You must have met her.
Of course you know her. I speak of Mme.
Poussette. Ah! You shall smile and you
shall frown, but you shall see what a miracle she
can work! You shall yet envy this sick seigneur.
Madame is noted for her care of the sick and dying.
You are surprised? Yes?”
“I cannot help it. Anyone
would be. She looks so frail, so delicate, and
surely she is also what we call afflicted, peculiar.
Is she a fit and sensible person for a case like
this?”
“Ah! Mon Dieu!”
exclaimed the doctor with a slight impatience.
“These afflicted ones, these peculiar ones they
are still capable of something. Many times have
I seen it; the old, old tottering grandmere,
the crazy aunt, the bad-tempered husband, even the
inebriate, can find, when they are guided, work which
suits and maintains them. Even when the mind
is shaken, if it is only a little, just a little,
to care for others, a bird or a cat, or a sick person,
this will keep the wits steady. A case like this
moreover!” repeated Dr. Renaud, laying his finger
to his nose. He was round, jolly, bow-legged,
and brusque, with pronounced features overstrong for
his height, merry eyes, and a red birthmark.
“This is the case. We are, you and I
and presently Father Rielle, responsible for M. Clairville.
He must not be moved except to his bed; he is too far
gone for more. The wife of Poussette is, to my
knowledge, the only person we can get to sit here,
administer drink and medicine, make him comfortable.
Well, not even she can do that but you comprenez.
And she is capable, I know her well. She is
as she is” (and the doctor made the sign of
the Cross), “yet she is worth ten saner women,
for she has no nerves, no fears, no imagination.
Tell her what to do, place her here to do it, and
she will not fail; I have seen her a dozen times in
the village nursing sick women and their babies.
She’s as good as most doctors and better than
most nurses. Yes, yes, we will get madame
to him at once.”
“But she may take it!”
“I think not. Her body
like her mind is purged of all evil humours, mon
ami. She is already more than half spirit
and waits in peace for old age and quiet decay.”
Ringfield got into the doctor’s
buggy in silent surprise.
“Besides, if she did take it,
and it killed her, I cannot see any great calamity.
I will tell you her history. She was well educated
at a good convent near Montreal; her father was a
doctor, as I am, but a far cleverer one. Yes,
I lift the chapeau to that one, that old Dr.
Pacquette as regards the great art and science of medicine.
But as a father ah! God pity him
where he is now, according to our belief, in purgatory
for many long years to come. Bien! Dr.
Pacquette had lost his wife, and his daughter, a fairy
thing, was allowed, even encouraged, to grow up as
she pleases. They have grand friends in Montreal,
her father’s people still live on Rue St. Denis,
great rich people; if you go there, drive out over
the mountain and you shall see her old home, the Pacquette
Chateau. Well, this Mme. Poussette when
she is a girl (Natalie-Elmire-Alexandre, I don’t
give you all her name) she is very pretty, and the
old doctor wish her to make a grand marriage, and
he has every one up to the house and make a big time
for them, and introduce her to all the young men,
all the rich young men. But while she
has been at that convent she has met with Amable
Poussette, who was not so stout then, had a good figure
and a lively tongue, and the end is, they are married
at Ancien Lorette by a young priest, who might have
known better. Some months after, she goes home
to her father to be taken in and forgiven and nursed,
for she has by this time a young infant about six
weeks old. Well, you can perhaps imagine le
vieux Pacquette when it is all explained.
He is enraged, he drives her from his door, she passes
all one long, cold night in the snow outside the chateau
on Cote des Neiges hill and when she
is found by the servants two days later, she is as
you see her, monsieur, and the baby is dead!
Never again the bright little Natalie-Elmire, but
instead, a pale, faded, vacant-eyed, timid woman.
Ah! If I ever meet le vieux Pacquette
in the next world!”
The doctor nodded his bald head sagaciously;
as for Ringfield, he was thinking that here was the
opportunity for which he unconsciously had been waiting,
to ask for and probably receive Miss Clairville’s
equally dramatic story, when he beheld another buggy
coming around a corner of the road driven recklessly
by one of the Archambault boys and in the buggy sat
mademoiselle herself. Her attire, always so different
from village modes, was true on this occasion to her
theatrical calling, for to Ringfield’s eye at
least she appeared like some Oriental personage, caught
and brought home in native garb, coupled with a very
bad temper. Red and black was her habit and black
and red her eyes and angry compressed lips.
The doctor stood up in his buggy and
Miss Clairville in hers, and, as for a quarter of
an hour the excited talk was in rapid French, Ringfield
could only gather that the doctor was endeavouring
to restrain her from going to see her brother.
At last, turning away from Renaud with an imperious
wave of the hand, she addressed herself to the minister
in English.
“I understand it is to you the
doctor owes his knowledge of my poor brother’s
sickness. I only heard of it myself last night
on the stage at eleven o’clock, but I came at
once look at me in all this sinful finery,
I can see you are calling it! Oh, yes, you are.
Well, now that I have come and thrown up my part
and my place in the company in Montreal, he will not
allow me to finish my journey and go on to Clairville!”
“Certainly, you must not think
of going!” cried Ringfield. “On no
account must you do such a thing. Do you know
what is the matter with him?”
“Oh, the ‘Pic’ I suppose, but I’m
not afraid of it.”
“Yet you have not been vaccinated, I fear!”
“Who told you that? Dr.
Renaud, I suppose. Of course. No!
No one is ever vaccinated here, no good Catholics
at any rate. Good orthodox ones, like myself.”
The doctor frowned, for he disliked
the tone of bravado in which these words were uttered.
“It’s no question of faith.
It’s a question of common sense and precaution.
I have charge of the case and I will not permit you
or anyone else to cross the threshold of Clairville
Manor.”
“You would class me then with
the Archambaults! My own people, who eat and
drink at my expense and who turn their backs on me
in the hour of trial! Poor Henry, it will finish
him, I fear, yet I and none other must be there to
nurse him. Mon Dieu, but it is a shame!”
“Silly girl!” snapped
Renaud. “There is no nursing for you in
this case. Assuredly, Mlle. Pauline, you
do not enter the house, I cannot allow it. Besides,
mademoiselle, you return home too late. If you
remained at Clairville longer, and had the place cleaned
out, and saw to it that it was kept clean, your brother
might escape these sicknesses, but poor girl, poor
girl, I find it hard to blame you. Antoine! turn
back and drive to the village. Mademoiselle goes
now along with us.”
His allusions if they pained did not
soften her, but it was at Ringfield she continued
to look.
“I shall have no place to stay,” she said
poutingly.
“It’s a pity you came
at all,” said the doctor. “They can
find you a room at Poussette’s.”
“I will die sooner than go to
that man’s house. It is a common place,
not fit for me.”
“Come, come, you are excited.
We know Poussette’s weakness for a pretty face
and a fine figure, but here is our new and true friend
to look after you.”
“Mine is not a pretty face,
Dr. Renaud, and I prefer to look after myself.
You do not understand, I am out of a position by coming
here. I only heard last night that Henry was
ill and I came at once, expecting to be in my own
home; I did not know what was the sickness he had;
I have left the theatre to come here and now I have
nowhere to go.”
Ringfield spoke at last.
“There need be no difficulty
at all about your going to Poussette’s, Miss
Clairville. You will oblige me by taking my room,
which is the largest and best in the house.
As for me, I can do with anything. If you wish
I will go back to your house, sleep there in place
of the servants, and keep you aware of all that goes
on, of your brother’s progress at least.”
“Quite unnecessary,” broke
in the doctor testily. “I am in charge
of this case, and one patient at one time is all I
care for. Drive back, Antoine, to Poussette’s,
where you will leave ma’amselle. Drive
quick, too, for I wish to see the carpenter, Alexis
Gagnon, next door to M. Poussette, where I think a
room can be got for Mr. Ringfield. Allons! we
have wasted one good half-hour already!”
“You blame me of course for
that!” said Pauline, still gazing at Ringfield,
but talking to the doctor.
“Faith, I do,” said the
latter grimly, and she said no more.
In the Maison Pension of Alexis Gagnon,
the village wag, carpenter and undertaker, Ringfield
was accommodated with a room which had a balcony at
the back looking on a square of Arctic garden, where
amid circles and triangles of whitewashed stones the
tobacco plant and some sunflowers lasted into the
autumn. The news of monsieur’s serious
illness had now filtered through the parish, and Poussette’s
was full of men discussing the affair, as Pauline,
looking like an outraged and defeated savage queen,
passed into the hall, trailing her cheap red silken
draperies up to Ringfield’s room. The door
to the bar was partly open; whisky was going round
as supposed to be good to ward off the “Pic,”
and prominent in the noisy crowd was the shambling
figure of Crabbe, who did not appear to notice Pauline,
nor she him, and Ringfield, observing them both, could
hardly bring himself to believe their extraordinary
story. The brilliant if wayward actress, with
her fine carriage and white hands, could never have
belonged to that derelict of a man, lower even than
the rough Frenchmen from the rafts and chantiers
now demanding more “visky blanc”.
Yet in youth many things are possible, and the recital
of Mme. Poussette’s history seemed to prepare
the way for Pauline’s. Meanwhile Dr. Renaud
had spoken to madame, and within an hour she
was ready, and, being driven to Lac Calvaire,
entered upon her labours without qualm or protest.