The Governor was surprised and delighted
to encounter Lady de Tilly and her fair niece, both
of whom were well known to and highly esteemed by
him. He and the gentlemen of his suite saluted
them with profound respect, not unmingled with chivalrous
admiration for noble, high-spirited women.
“My honored Lady de Tilly and
Mademoiselle de Repentigny,” said the Governor,
hat in hand, “welcome to Quebec. It does
not surprise, but it does delight me beyond measure
to meet you here at the head of your loyal censitaires.
But it is not the first time that the ladies of the
House of Tilly have turned out to defend the King’s
forts against his enemies.”
This he said in allusion to the gallant
defence of a fort on the wild Iroquois frontier by
a former lady of her house.
“My Lord Count,” replied
the lady, with quiet dignity, “’tis no
special merit of the house of Tilly to be true to
its ancient fame it could not be otherwise.
But your thanks are at this time more due to these
loyal habitans, who have so promptly obeyed your proclamation.
It is the King’s corvee to restore the
walls of Quebec, and no Canadian may withhold his
hand from it without disgrace.”
“The Chevalier La Corne St.
Luc will think us two poor women a weak accession
to the garrison,” added she, turning to the Chevalier
and cordially offering her hand to the brave old officer,
who had been the comrade in arms of her husband and
the dearest friend of her family.
“Good blood never fails, my
Lady,” returned the Chevalier, warmly grasping
her hand. “You out of place here? No!
no! you are at home on the ramparts of Quebec, quite
as much as in your own drawing-room at Tilly.
The walls of Quebec without a Tilly and a Repentigny
would be a bad omen indeed, worse than a year without
a spring or a summer without roses. But where
is my dear goddaughter Amelie?”
As he spoke the old soldier embraced
Amelie and kissed her cheek with fatherly effusion.
She was a prodigious favorite. “Welcome,
Amelie!” said he, “the sight of you is
like flowers in June. What a glorious time you
have had, growing taller and prettier every day all
the time I have been sleeping by camp-fires in the
forests of Acadia! But you girls are all alike;
why, I hardly knew my own pretty Agathe when I came
home. The saucy minx almost kissed my eyes out to
dry the tears of joy in them, she said!”
Amelie blushed deeply at the praises
bestowed upon her, yet felt glad to know that her
godfather retained all his old affection. “Where
is Le Gardeur?” asked he, as she took his arm
and walked a few paces apart from the throng.
Amelie colored deeply, and hesitated
a moment. “I do not know, godfather!
We have not seen Le Gardeur since our arrival.”
Then after a nervous silence she added, “I have
been told that he is at Beaumanoir, hunting with His
Excellency the Intendant.”
La Corne, seeing her embarrassment,
understood the reluctance of her avowal, and sympathized
with it. An angry light flashed beneath his shaggy
eyelashes, but he suppressed his thoughts. He
could not help remarking, however, “With the
Intendant at Beaumanoir! I could have wished
Le Gardeur in better company! No good can come
of his intimacy with Bigot; Amelie, you must wean
him from it. He should have been in the city
to receive you and the Lady de Tilly.”
“So he doubtless would have
been, had he known of our coming. We sent word,
but he was away when our messenger reached the city.”
Amelie felt half ashamed, for she
was conscious that she was offering something unreal
to extenuate the fault of her brother her
hopes rather than her convictions.
“Well, well! goddaughter! we
shall, at any rate, soon have the pleasure of seeing
Le Gardeur. The Intendant himself has been summoned
to attend a council of war today. Colonel Philibert
left an hour ago for Beaumanoir.”
Amelie gave a slight start at the
name; she looked inquiringly, but did not yet ask
the question that trembled on her lips.
“Thanks, godfather, for the
good news of Le Gardeur’s speedy return.”
Amelie talked on, her thoughts but little accompanying
her words as she repeated to herself the name of Philibert.
“Have you heard that the Intendant wishes to
bestow an important and honorable post in the Palace
upon Le Gardeur my brother wrote to that
effect?”
“An important and honorable
post in the Palace?” The old soldier emphasized
the word honorable. “No, I had not
heard of it, never expect to hear of an
honorable post in the company of Bigot, Cadet, Varin,
De Pean, and the rest of the scoundrels of the Friponne!
Pardon me, dear, I do not class Le Gardeur among them,
far from it, dear deluded boy! My best hope is
that Colonel Philibert will find him and bring him
clean and clear out of their clutches.”
The question that had trembled on
her lips came out now. For her life she could
not have retained it longer.
“Who is Colonel Philibert, godfather?”
asked she, surprise, curiosity, and a still deeper
interest marking her voice, in spite of all she could
do to appear indifferent.
“Colonel Philibert?” repeated
La Corne. “Why, do not you know? Who
but our young Pierre Philibert; you have not forgotten
him, surely, Amelie? At any rate he has not forgotten
you: in many a long night by our watch-fires
in the forest has Colonel Philibert passed the hours
talking of Tilly and the dear friends he left there.
Your brother at any rate will gratefully remember
Philibert when he sees him.”
Amelie blushed a little as she replied
somewhat shyly, “Yes, godfather, I remember
Pierre Philibert very well, with gratitude
I remember him, but I never heard him called
Colonel Philibert before.”
“Oh, true! He has been
so long absent. He left a simple ensign en second
and returns a colonel, and has the stuff in him to
make a field-marshal! He gained his rank where
he won his glory in Acadia. A noble
fellow, Amelie! loving as a woman to his friends,
but to his foes stern as the old Bourgeois, his father,
who placed that tablet of the golden dog upon the
front of his house to spite the Cardinal, they say, the
act of a bold man, let what will be the true interpretation
of it.”
“I hear every one speak well
of the Bourgeois Philibert,” remarked Amelie.
“Aunt de Tilly is ever enthusiastic in his commendation.
She says he is a true gentleman, although a trader.”
“Why, he is noble by birth,
if that be needed, and has got the King’s license
to trade in the Colony like some other gentlemen I
wot of. He was Count Philibert in Normandy, although
he is plain Bourgeois Philibert in Quebec; and a wise
man he is too, for with his ships and his comptoirs
and his ledgers he has traded himself into being the
richest man in New France, while we, with our nobility
and our swords, have fought ourselves poor, and receive
nothing but contempt from the ungrateful courtiers
of Versailles.”
Their conversation was interrupted
by a sudden rush of people, making room for the passage
of the Regiment of Bearn, which composed part of the
garrison of Quebec, on their march to their morning
drill and guard-mounting, bold, dashing
Gascons in blue and white uniforms, tall caps, and
long queues rollicking down their supple backs, seldom
seen by an enemy.
Mounted officers, laced and ruffled,
gaily rode in front. Subalterns with spontoons
and sergeants with halberds dressed the long line of
glistening bayonets. The drums and fifes made
the streets ring again, while the men in full chorus,
a gorge deployee, chanted the gay refrain of La Belle
Canadienne in honor of the lasses of Quebec.
The Governor and his suite had already
mounted their horses, and cantered off to the Esplanade
to witness the review.
“Come and dine with us today,”
said the Lady de Tilly to La Corne St. Luc, as he
too bade the ladies a courteous adieu, and got on horseback
to ride after the Governor.
“Many thanks! but I fear it
will be impossible, my Lady: the council of war
meets at the Castle this afternoon. The hour may
be deferred, however, should Colonel Philibert not
chance to find the Intendant at Beaumanoir, and then
I might come; but best not expect me.”
A slight, conscious flush just touched
the cheek of Amelie at the mention of Colonel Philibert.
“But come if possible, godfather,”
added she; “we hope to have Le Gardeur home
this afternoon. He loves you so much, and I know
you have countless things to say to him.”
Amelie’s trembling anxiety about
her brother made her most desirous to bring the powerful
influence of La Corne St. Luc to bear upon him.
Their kind old godfather was regarded
with filial reverence by both. Amelie’s
father, dying on the battle-field, had, with his latest
breath, commended the care of his children to the
love and friendship of La Corne St. Luc.
“Well, Amelie, blessed are they
who do not promise and still perform. I must
try and meet my dear boy, so do not quite place me
among the impossibles. Good-by, my Lady.
Good-by, Amelie.” The old soldier gaily
kissed his hand and rode away.
Amelie was thoroughly surprised and
agitated out of all composure by the news of the return
of Pierre Philibert. She turned aside from the
busy throng that surrounded her, leaving her aunt engaged
in eager conversation with the Bishop and Father de
Berey. She sat down in a quiet embrasure of the
wall, and with one hand resting her drooping cheek,
a train of reminiscences flew across her mind like
a flight of pure doves suddenly startled out of a
thicket.
She remembered vividly Pierre Philibert,
the friend and fellow-student of her brother:
he spent so many of his holidays at the old Manor-House
of Tilly, when she, a still younger girl, shared their
sports, wove chaplets of flowers for them, or on her
shaggy pony rode with them on many a scamper through
the wild woods of the Seigniory. Those summer
and winter vacations of the old Seminary of Quebec
used to be looked forward to by the young, lively
girl as the brightest spots in the whole year, and
she grew hardly to distinguish the affection she bore
her brother from the regard in which she held Pierre
Philibert.
A startling incident happened one
day, that filled the inmates of the Manor House with
terror, followed by a great joy, and which raised
Pierre Philibert to the rank of an unparalleled hero
in the imagination of the young girl.
Her brother was gambolling carelessly
in a canoe, while she and Pierre sat on the bank watching
him. The light craft suddenly upset. Le Gardeur
struggled for a few moments, and sank under the blue
waves that look so beautiful and are so cruel.
Amelie shrieked in the wildest terror
and in helpless agony, while Philibert rushed without
hesitation into the water, swam out to the spot, and
dived with the agility of a beaver. He presently
reappeared, bearing the inanimate body of her brother
to the shore. Help was soon obtained, and, after
long efforts to restore Le Gardeur to consciousness, efforts
which seemed to last an age to the despairing girl, they
at last succeeded, and Le Gardeur was restored to the
arms of his family. Amelie, in a delirium of joy
and gratitude, ran to Philibert, threw her arms round
him, and kissed him again and again, pledging her
eternal gratitude to the preserver of her brother,
and vowing that she would pray for him to her life’s
end.
Soon after that memorable event in
her young life, Pierre Philibert was sent to the great
military schools in France to study the art of war
with a view to entering the King’s service, while
Amelie was placed in the Convent of the Ursulines
to be perfected in all the knowledge and accomplishments
of a lady of highest rank in the Colony.
Despite the cold shade of a cloister,
where the idea of a lover is forbidden to enter, the
image of Pierre Philibert did intrude, and became
inseparable from the recollection of her brother in
the mind of Amelie. He mingled as the fairy prince
in the day-dreams and bright imaginings of the young,
poetic girl. She had vowed to pray for him to
her life’s end, and in pursuance of her vow added
a golden bead to her chaplet to remind her of her
duty in praying for the safety and happiness of Pierre
Philibert.
But in the quiet life of the cloister,
Amelie heard little of the storms of war upon the
frontier and down in the far valleys of Acadia.
She had not followed the career of Pierre from the
military school to the camp and the battlefield, nor
knew of his rapid promotion, as one of the ablest
officers in the King’s service, to a high command
in his native Colony.
Her surprise, therefore, was extreme
when she learned that the boy companion of her brother
and herself was no other than the renowned Colonel
Philibert, Aide-de-Camp of His Excellency the Governor-General.
There was no cause for shame in it;
but her heart was suddenly illuminated by a flash
of introspection. She became painfully conscious
how much Pierre Philibert had occupied her thoughts
for years, and now all at once she knew he was a man,
and a great and noble one. She was thoroughly
perplexed and half angry. She questioned herself
sharply, as if running thorns into her flesh, to inquire
whether she had failed in the least point of maidenly
modesty and reserve in thinking so much of him; and
the more she questioned herself, the more agitated
she grew under her self-accusation: her temples
throbbed violently; she hardly dared lift her eyes
from the ground lest some one, even a stranger, she
thought, might see her confusion and read its cause.
“Sancta Maria,” she murmured, pressing
her bosom with both hands, “calm my soul with
thy divine peace, for I know not what to do!”
So she sat alone in the embrasure,
living a life of emotion in a few minutes; nor did
she find any calm for her agitated spirits until the
thought flashed upon her that she was distressing herself
needlessly. It was most improbable that Colonel
Philibert, after years of absence and active life
in the world’s great affairs, could retain any
recollection of the schoolgirl of the Manor House
of Tilly. She might meet him, nay, was certain
to do so in the society in which both moved; but it
would surely be as a stranger on his part, and she
must make it so on her own.
With this empty piece of casuistry,
Amelie, like others of her sex, placed a hand of steel,
encased in a silken glove, upon her heart, and tyrannically
suppressed its yearnings. She was a victim, with
the outward show of conquest over her feelings.
In the consciousness of Philibert’s imagined
indifference and utter forgetfulness, she could meet
him now, she thought, with equanimity nay,
rather wished to do so, to make sure that she had
not been guilty of weakness in regard to him.
She looked up, but was glad to see her aunt still engaged
in conversation with the Bishop on a topic which Amelie
knew was dear to them both, the care of
the souls and bodies of the poor, in particular those
for whom the Lady de Tilly felt herself responsible
to God and the King.
While Amelie sat thinking over the
strange chances of the morning, a sudden whirl of
wheels drew her attention.
A gay caleche, drawn by two spirited
horses en fleche, dashed through the gateway
of St. John, and wheeling swiftly towards Amelie, suddenly
halted. A young lady attired in the gayest fashion
of the period, throwing the reins to the groom, sprang
out of the caleche with the ease and elasticity of
an antelope. She ran up the rampart to Amelie
with a glad cry of recognition, repeating her name
in a clear, musical voice, which Amelie at once knew
belonged to no other than the gay, beautiful Angelique
des Meloises. The newcomer embraced Amelie
and kissed her, with warmest expressions of joy at
meeting her thus unexpectedly in the city. She
had learned that Lady de Tilly had returned to Quebec,
she said, and she had, therefore, taken the earliest
opportunity to find out her dear friend and school-fellow
to tell her all the doings in the city.
“It is kind of you, Angelique,”
replied Amelie, returning her caress warmly, but without
effusion. “We have simply come with our
people to assist in the King’s corvee;
when that is done, we shall return to Tilly.
I felt sure I should meet you, and thought I should
know you again easily, which I hardly do. How
you are changed for the better, I should
say, since you left off conventual cap and costume!”
Amelie could not but look admiringly on the beauty
of the radiant girl. “How handsome you
have grown! but you were always that. We both
took the crown of honor together, but you would alone
take the crown of beauty, Angelique.” Amelie
stood off a pace or two, and looked at her friend
from head to foot with honest admiration, “and
would deserve to wear it too,” added she.
“I like to hear you say that,
Amelie; I should prefer the crown of beauty to all
other crowns! You half smile at that, but I must
tell the truth, if you do. But you were always
a truth-teller, you know, in the convent, and I was
not so! Let us cease flatteries.”
Angelique felt highly flattered by
the praise of Amelie, whom she had sometimes condescended
to envy for her graceful figure and lovely, expressive
features.
“Gentlemen often speak as you
do, Amelie,” continued she, “but, pshaw!
they cannot judge as girls do, you know. But do
you really think me beautiful? and how beautiful?
Compare me to some one we know.”
“I can only compare you to yourself,
Angelique. You are more beautiful than any one
I know,” Amelie burst out in frank enthusiasm.
“But, really and truly, do you
think me beautiful, not only in your eyes, but in
the judgment of the world?”
Angelique brushed back her glorious
hair and stared fixedly in the face of her friend,
as if seeking confirmation of something in her own
thoughts.
“What a strange question, Angelique!
Why do you ask me in that way?”
“Because,” replied she
with bitterness, “I begin to doubt it. I
have been praised for my good looks until I grow weary
of the iteration; but I believed the lying flattery
once, as what woman would not, when it is
repeated every day of her life?”
Amelie looked sufficiently puzzled.
“What has come over you, Angelique? Why
should you doubt your own charms? or really, have you
found at last a case in which they fail you?”
Very unlikely, a man would say at
first, second, or third sight of Angelique des
Meloises. She was indeed a fair girl to look upon, tall,
and fashioned in nature’s most voluptuous mould,
perfect in the symmetry of every part, with an ease
and beauty of movement not suggestive of spiritual
graces, like Amelie’s, but of terrestrial witcheries,
like those great women of old who drew down the very
gods from Olympus, and who in all ages have incited
men to the noblest deeds, or tempted them to the greatest
crimes.
She was beautiful of that rare type
of beauty which is only reproduced once or twice in
a century to realize the dreams of a Titian or a Giorgione.
Her complexion was clear and radiant, as of a descendant
of the Sun God. Her bright hair, if its golden
ripples were shaken out, would reach to her knees.
Her face was worthy of immortality by the pencil of
a Titian. Her dark eyes drew with a magnetism
which attracted men, in spite of themselves, whithersoever
she would lead them. They were never so dangerous
as when, in apparent repose, they sheathed their fascination
for a moment, and suddenly shot a backward glance,
like a Parthian arrow, from under their long eyelashes,
that left a wound to be sighed over for many a day.
The spoiled and petted child of the
brave, careless Renaud d’Avesne des Meloises,
of an ancient family in the Nivernois, Angelique grew
up a motherless girl, clever above most of her companions,
conscious of superior charms, always admired and flattered,
and, since she left the Convent, worshipped as the
idol of the gay gallants of the city, and the despair
and envy of her own sex. She was a born sovereign
of men, and she felt it. It was her divine right
to be preferred. She trod the earth with dainty
feet, and a step aspiring as that of the fair Louise
de La Valliere when she danced in the royal ballet
in the forest of Fontainebleau and stole a king’s
heart by the flashes of her pretty feet. Angelique
had been indulged by her father in every caprice, and
in the gay world inhaled the incense of adulation
until she regarded it as her right, and resented passionately
when it was withheld.
She was not by nature bad, although
vain, selfish, and aspiring. Her footstool was
the hearts of men, and upon it she set hard her beautiful
feet, indifferent to the anguish caused by her capricious
tyranny. She was cold and calculating under the
warm passions of a voluptuous nature. Although
many might believe they had won the favor, none felt
sure they had gained the love of this fair, capricious
girl.