BAYOU FOLK BY KATE CHOPIN
Riverside Press, Cambridge 1894
1.A NO-ACCOUNT
CREOLE 2.IN AND OUT OF OLD
NATCHITOCHES 3.IN SABINE
4.A VERY FINE
FIDDLE 5.BEYOND THE BAYOU
6.OLD AUNT PEGGY
7.THE RETURN OF
ALCIBIADE 8.A RUDE AWAKENING
9.THE BÊNITOUS'
SLAVE 10.DÉSIRÉE'S BABY
11.A TURKEY HUNT
12.MADAME CÉLESTIN'S
DIVORCE 13.LOVE ON THE
BON-DIEU 14.LOKA
15.BOULÔT AND
BOULOTTE 16.FOR MARSE
CHOUCHOUTE 17.A VISIT TO
AVOYELLES 18.A WIZARD FROM
GETTYSBURG 19.MA'AME PÉLAGIE
20.AT 'CADIAN WALL
21.LA BELLE ZORAÏDE
22.A GENTLEMAN OF
BAYOU TÊCHE 23.A LADY OF BAYOU
ST. JOHN
I
One agreeable afternoon
in late autumn two young men stood together on Canal Street, closing a
conversation that had evidently begun within the club-house which they had just
quitted.
"There's big money
in it, Offdean," said the elder of the two. "I would n't have you
touch it if there was n't. Why, they tell me Patchly 's pulled a hundred
thousand out of the concern a'ready."
"That may be,"
replied Offdean, who had been politely attentive to the words addressed to him,
but whose face bore a look indicating that he was closed to conviction. He
leaned back upon the clumsy stick which he carried, and continued: "It's
all true, I dare say, Fitch; but a decision of that sort would mean more to me
than you'd believe if I were to tell you. The beggarly twenty-five thousand's
all I have, and I want to sleep with it under my pillow a couple of months at
least before I drop it into a slot."
"You 'll drop it
into Harding & Offdean's mill to grind out the pitiful two and a half per
cent commission racket; that 's what you 'll do in the end, old fellow—see if
you don't."
"Perhaps I shall;
but it's more than likely I shan't. We 'll talk about it when I get back. You
know I'm off to north Louisiana in the morning"—
"No! What the
deuce"—
"Oh, business of
the firm."
"Write me from
Shreveport, then; or wherever it is."
"Not so far as
that. But don't expect to hear from me till you see me. I can't say when that
will be."
Then they shook hands
and parted. The rather portly Fitch boarded a Prytania Street car, and Mr.
Wallace Offdean hurried to the bank in order to replenish his portemonnaie,
which had been materially lightened at the club through the medium of
unpropitious jack-pots and bobtail flushes.
He was a sure-footed
fellow, this young Offdean, despite an occasional fall in slippery places. What
he wanted, now that he had reached his twenty-sixth year and his inheritance,
was to get his feet well planted on solid ground, and to keep his head cool and
clear.
With his early youth he
had had certain shadowy intentions of shaping his life on intellectual lines.
That is, he wanted to; and he meant to use his faculties intelligently, which
means more than is at once apparent. Above all, he would keep clear of the
maelstroms of sordid work and senseless pleasure in which the average American
business man may be said alternately to exist, and which reduce him, naturally,
to a rather ragged condition of soul.
Offdean had done, in a
temperate way, the usual things which young men do who happen to belong to good
society, and are possessed of moderate means and healthy instincts. He had gone
to college, had traveled a little at home and abroad, had frequented society
and the clubs, and had worked in his uncle's commission-house; in all of which
employments he had expended much time and a modicum of energy.
But he felt all through
that he was simply in a preliminary stage of being, one that would develop
later into something tangible and intelligent, as he liked to tell himself.
With his patrimony of twenty-five thousand dollars came what he felt to be the
turning-point in his life,—the time when it behooved him to choose a course,
and to get himself into proper trim to follow it manfully and consistently.
When Messrs. Harding
& Offdean determined to have some one look after what they called "a
troublesome piece of land on Red River," Wallace Offdean requested to be
intrusted with that special commission of land-inspector.
A shadowy, ill-defined
piece of land in an unfamiliar part of his native State, might, he hoped, prove
a sort of closet into which he could retire and take counsel with his inner and
better self.
II
What Harding &
Offdean had called a piece of land on Red River was better known to the people
of Natchitoches[1] parish as "the old Santien
place."
In the days of Lucien
Santien and his hundred slaves, it had been very splendid in the wealth of its
thousand acres. But the war did its work, of course. Then Jules Santien was not
the man to mend such damage as the war had left. His three sons were even less
able than he had been to bear the weighty inheritance of debt that came to them
with the dismantled plantation; so it was a deliverance to all when Harding
& Offdean, the New Orleans creditors, relieved them of the place with the
responsibility and indebtedness which its ownership had entailed.
Hector, the eldest, and
Grégoire, the youngest of these Santien boys, had gone each his way. Placide
alone tried to keep a desultory foothold upon the land which had been his and
his forefathers'. But he too was given to wandering—within a radius, however,
which rarely took him so far that he could not reach the old place in an
afternoon of travel, when he felt so inclined.
There were acres of open
land cultivated in a slovenly fashion, but so rich that cotton and corn and
weed and "cocoa-grass" grew rampant if they had only the semblance of
a chance. The negro quarters were at the far end of this open stretch, and
consisted of a long row of old and very crippled cabins. Directly back of these
a dense wood grew, and held much mystery, and witchery of sound and shadow, and
strange lights when the sun shone. Of a gin-house there was left scarcely a
trace; only so much as could serve as inadequate shelter to the miserable dozen
cattle that huddled within it in winter-time.
A dozen rods or more
from the Red River bank stood the dwelling-house, and nowhere upon the plantation
had time touched so sadly as here. The steep, black, moss-covered roof sat like
an extinguisher above the eight large rooms that it covered, and had come to do
its office so poorly that not more than half of these were habitable when the
rain fell. Perhaps the live-oaks made too thick and close a shelter about it.
The verandas were long and broad and inviting; but it was well to know that the
brick pillar was crumbling away under one corner, that the railing was insecure
at another, and that still another had long ago been condemned as unsafe. But
that, of course, was not the corner in which Wallace Offdean sat the day
following his arrival at the Santien place. This one was comparatively secure.
A gloire-de-Dijon, thick-leaved and charged with huge creamy blossoms, grew and
spread here like a hardy vine upon the wires that stretched from post to post.
The scent of the blossoms was delicious; and the stillness that surrounded
Offdean agreeably fitted his humor that asked for rest. His old host, Pierre
Manton, the manager of the place, sat talking to him in a soft, rhythmic
monotone; but his speech was hardly more of an interruption than the hum of the
bees among the roses. He was saying:—
"If it would been
me myse'f, I would nevair grumb'. W'en a chimbly breck, I take one, two de
boys; we patch 'im up bes' we know how. We keep on men' de fence', firs' one
place, anudder; an' if it would n' be fer dem mule' of Lacroix—tonnerre! I
don' wan' to talk 'bout dem mule'. But me, I would n' grumb'. It's Euphrasie,
hair. She say dat's all fool nonsense fer rich man lack Hardin'-Offde'n to let
a piece o' lan' goin' lack dat."
"Euphrasie?"
questioned Offdean, in some surprise; for he had not yet heard of any such
person.
"Euphrasie, my
li'le chile. Escuse me one minute," Pierre added, remembering that he was
in his shirt-sleeves, and rising to reach for his coat, which hung upon a peg
near by. He was a small, square man, with mild, kindly face, brown and
roughened from healthy exposure. His hair hung gray and long beneath the soft
felt hat that he wore. When he had seated himself, Offdean asked:—
"Where is your
little child? I have n't seen her," inwardly marveling that a little child
should have uttered such words of wisdom as those recorded of her.
"She yonder to Mme.
Duplan on Cane River. I been kine espectin' hair sence yistiday—hair an'
Placide," casting an unconscious glance down the long plantation road.
"But Mme. Duplan she nevair want to let Euphrasie go. You know it's hair
raise' Euphrasie sence hair po' ma die', Mr. Offde'n. She teck dat li'le chile,
an' raise it, sem lack she raisin' Ninette. But it's mo' 'an a year now
Euphrasie say dat's all fool nonsense to leave me livin' 'lone lack dat, wid
nuttin' 'cep' dem nigger'—an' Placide once a w'ile. An' she came yair bossin'!
My goodness!" The old man chuckled, "Dat's hair been writin' all dem
letter' to Hardin'-Offde'n. If it would been me myse'f"—
[1]Pronounced
Nack-e-tosh.
III
Placide seemed to have
had a foreboding of ill from the start when he found that Euphrasie began to
interest herself in the condition of the plantation. This ill feeling voiced
itself partly when he told her it was none of her lookout if the place went to
the dogs. "It's good enough for Joe Duplan to run things en grand
seigneur, Euphrasie; that's w'at's spoiled you."
Placide might have done
much single-handed to keep the old place in better trim, if he had wished. For
there was no one more clever than he to do a hand's turn at any and every
thing. He could mend a saddle or bridle while he stood whistling a tune. If a
wagon required a brace or a bolt, it was nothing for him to step into a shop
and turn out one as deftly as the most skilled blacksmith. Any one seeing him
at work with plane and rule and chisel would have declared him a born
carpenter. And as for mixing paints, and giving a fine and lasting coat to the
side of a house or barn, he had not his equal in the country.
This last talent he
exercised little in his native parish. It was in a neighboring one, where he
spent the greater part of his time, that his fame as a painter was established.
There, in the village of Orville, he owned a little shell of a house, and
during odd times it was Placide's great delight to tinker at this small home,
inventing daily new beauties and conveniences to add to it. Lately it had
become a precious possession to him, for in the spring he was to bring
Euphrasie there as his wife.
Maybe it was because of
his talent, and his indifference in turning it to good, that he was often
called "a no-account creole" by thriftier souls than himself. But
no-account creole or not, painter, carpenter, blacksmith, and whatever else he
might be at times, he was a Santien always, with the best blood in the country
running in his veins. And many thought his choice had fallen in very low places
when he engaged himself to marry little Euphrasie, the daughter of old Pierre
Manton and a problematic mother a good deal less than nobody.
Placide might have
married almost any one, too; for it was the easiest thing in the world for a
girl to fall in love with him,—- sometimes the hardest thing in the world not
to, he was such a splendid fellow, such a careless, happy, handsome fellow. And
he did not seem to mind in the least that young men who had grown up with him
were lawyers now, and planters, and members of Shakespeare clubs in town. No
one ever expected anything quite so humdrum as that of the Santien boys. As
youngsters, all three had been the despair of the country school-master; then
of the private tutor who had come to shackle them, and had failed in his
design. And the state of mutiny and revolt that they had brought about at the
college of Grand Coteau when their father, in a moment of weak concession to
prejudice, had sent them there, is a thing yet remembered in Natchitoches.
And now Placide was
going to marry Euphrasie. He could not recall the time when he had not loved
her. Somehow he felt that it began the day when he was six years old, and
Pierre, his father's overseer, had called him from play to come and make her
acquaintance. He was permitted to hold her in his arms a moment, and it was
with silent awe that he did so. She was the first white-faced baby he
remembered having seen, and he straightway believed she had been sent to him as
a birthday gift to be his little play-mate and friend. If he loved her, there
was no great wonder; every one did, from the time she took her first dainty
step, which was a brave one, too.
She was the gentlest
little lady ever born in old Natchitoches parish, and the happiest and
merriest. She never cried or whimpered for a hurt. Placide never did, why
should she? When she wept, it was when she did what was wrong, or when he did;
for that was to be a coward, she felt. When she was ten, and her mother was
dead, Mme. Duplan, the Lady Bountiful of the parish, had driven across from her
plantation, Les Chêniers, to old Pierre's very door, and there had gathered up
this precious little maid, and carried her away, to do with as she would.
And she did with the
child much as she herself had been done by. Euphrasie went to the convent soon,
and was taught all gentle things, the pretty arts of manner and speech that the
ladies of the "Sacred Heart" can teach so well. When she quitted
them, she left a trail of love behind her; she always did.
Placide continued to see
her at intervals, and to love her always. One day he told her so; he could not
help it. She stood under one of the big oaks at Les Chêniers. It was midsummer
time, and the tangled sunbeams had enmeshed her in a golden fret-work. When he
saw her standing there in the sun's glamour, which was like a glory upon her,
he trembled. He seemed to see her for the first time. He could only look at
her, and wonder why her hair gleamed so, as it fell in those thick chestnut
waves about her ears and neck. He had looked a thousand times into her eyes
before; was it only to-day they held that sleepy, wistful light in them that
invites love? How had he not seen it before? Why had he not known before that
her lips were red, and cut in fine, strong curves? that her flesh was like
cream? How had he not seen that she was beautiful? "Euphrasie," he
said, taking her hands,—"Euphrasie, I love you!"
She looked at him with a
little astonishment. "Yes; I know, Placide." She spoke with the soft
intonation of the creole.
"No, you don't,
Euphrasie. I did n' know myse'f how much tell jus' now."
Perhaps he did only what
was natural when he asked her next if she loved him. He still held her hands.
She looked thoughtfully away, unready to answer.
"Do you love
anybody better?" he asked jealously. "Any one jus' as well as
me?" "You know I love papa better, Placide, an' Maman Duplan jus' as
well."
Yet she saw no reason
why she should not be his wife when he asked her to.
Only a few months before
this, Euphrasie had returned to live with her father. The step had cut her off
from everything that girls of eighteen call pleasure. If it cost her one
regret, no one could have guessed it. She went often to visit the Duplans,
however; and Placide had gone to bring her home from Les Chêniers the very day
of Offdean's arrival at the plantation.
They had traveled by
rail to Natchitoches, where they found Pierre's no-top buggy awaiting them, for
there was a drive of five miles to be made through the pine woods before the
plantation was reached. When they were at their journey's end, and had driven
some distance; up the long plantation road that led to the house in the rear,
Euphrasie exclaimed:—
"W'y, there's some
one on the gall'ry with papa, Placide!"
"Yes; I see."
"It looks like some
one f'om town. It mus' be Mr. Gus Adams; but I don' see his horse."
"'T ain't no one
f'om town that I know. It's boun' to be some one f'om the city."
"Oh, Placide, I
should n' wonder if Harding & Offdean have sent some one to look after the
place at las'," she exclaimed a little excitedly.
They were near enough to
see that the stranger was a young man of very pleasing appearance. Without
apparent reason, a chilly depression took hold of Placide.
"I tole you it was
n' yo' lookout f'om the firs', Euphrasie," he said to her.
IV
Wallace Offdean
remembered Euphrasie at once as a young person whom he had assisted to a very
high perch on his club-house balcony the previous Mardi Gras night. He had
thought her pretty and attractive then, and for the space of a day or two
wondered who she might be. But he had not made even so fleeting an impression
upon her; seeing which, he did not refer to any former meeting when Pierre
introduced them.
She took the chair which
he offered her, and asked him very simply when he had come, if his journey had
been pleasant, and if he had not found the road from Natchitoches in very good
condition.
"Mr. Offde'n only
come sence yistiday, Euphrasie," interposed Pierre. "We been talk'
plenty 'bout de place, him an' me. I been tole 'im all 'bout it—va! An'
if Mr. Offde'n want to escuse me now, I b'lieve I go he'p Placide wid dat hoss
an' buggy;" and he descended the steps slowly, and walked lazily with his
bent figure in the direction of the shed beneath which Placide had driven,
after depositing Euphrasie at the door.
"I dare say you
find it strange," began. Offdean, "that the owners of this place have
neglected it so long and shamefully. But you see," he added, smiling,
"the management of a plantation does n't enter into the routine of a
commission merchant's business. The place has already cost them more than they
hope to get from it, and naturally they have n't the wish to sink further money
in it." He did not know why he was saying these things to a mere girl, but
he went on: "I'm authorized to sell the plantation if I can get anything
like a reasonable price for it." Euphrasie laughed in a way that made him
uncomfortable, and he thought he would say no more at present,—not till he knew
her better, anyhow.
"Well," she
said in a very decided fashion, "I know you 'll fin' one or two persons in
town who 'll begin by running down the lan' till you would n' want it as a
gif', Mr. Offdean; and who will en' by offering to take it off yo' han's for
the promise of a song, with the lan' as security again."
They both laughed, and
Placide, who was approaching, scowled. But before he reached the steps his
instinctive sense of the courtesy due to a stranger had banished the look of
ill humor. His bearing was so frank and graceful, and his face such a marvel of
beauty, with its dark, rich coloring and soft lines, that the well-clipped and
groomed Offdean felt his astonishment to be more than half admiration when they
shook hands. He knew that the Santiens had been the former owners of this
plantation which he had come to look after, and naturally he expected some sort
of cooperation or direct assistance from Placide in his efforts at
reconstruction. But Placide proved non-committal, and exhibited an indifference
and ignorance concerning the condition of affairs that savored surprisingly of
affectation.
He had positively
nothing to say so long as the talk touched upon matters concerning Offdean's
business there. He was only a little less taciturn when more general topics
were approached, and directly after supper he saddled his horse and went away.
He would not wait until morning, for the moon would be rising about midnight,
and he knew the road as well by night as by day. He knew just where the best
fords were across the bayous, and the safest paths across the hills. He knew
for a certainty whose plantations he might traverse, and whose fences he might
derail. But, for that matter, he would derail what he liked, and cross where he
pleased.
Euphrasie walked with
him to the shed when he went for his horse. She was bewildered at his sudden
determination, and wanted it explained.
"I don' like that
man," he admitted frankly; "I can't stan' him. Sen' me word w'en he's
gone, Euphrasie."
She was patting and
rubbing the pony, which knew her well. Only their dim outlines were discernible
in the thick darkness.
"You are foolish,
Placide," she replied in French. "You would do better to stay and
help him. No one knows the place so well as you"—
"The place isn't
mine, and it's nothing to me," he answered bitterly. He took her hands and
kissed them passionately, but stooping, she pressed her lips upon his forehead.
"Oh!" he
exclaimed rapturously, "you do love me, Euphrasie?" His arms were
holding her, and his lips brushing her hair and cheeks as they eagerly but
ineffectually sought hers.
"Of co'se I love
you, Placide. Ain't I going to marry you nex' spring? You foolish boy!"
she replied, disengaging herself from his clasp.
When he was mounted, he
stooped to say, "See yere, Euphrasie, don't have too much to do with that
d—— Yankee."
"But, Placide, he
is n't a—a—'d—— Yankee;' he's a Southerner, like you,—a New Orleans man."
"Oh, well, he looks
like a Yankee." But Placide laughed, for he was happy since Euphrasie had
kissed him, and he whistled softly as he urged his horse to a canter and
disappeared in the darkness.
The girl stood awhile
with clasped hands, trying to understand a little sigh that rose in her throat,
and that was not one of regret. When shew regained the house, she went directly
to her room, and left her father talking to Offdean in the quiet and perfumed
night.
V
When two weeks had
passed, Offdean felt very much at home with old Pierre and his daughter, and
found the business that had called him to the country so engrossing that he had
given no thought to those personal questions he had hoped to solve in going
there.
The old man had driven
him around in the no-top buggy to show him how dismantled the fences and barns
were. He could see for himself that the house was a constant menace to human
life. In the evenings the three would sit out on the gallery and talk of the
land and its strong points and its weak ones, till he came to know it as if it
had been his own.
Of the rickety condition
of the cabins he got a fair notion, for he and Euphrasie passed them almost
daily on horseback, on their way to the woods. It was seldom that their
appearance together did not rouse comment among the darkies who happened to be
loitering about.
La Chatte, a broad black
woman with ends of white wool sticking out from under her tignon,
stood with arms akimbo watching them as they disappeared one
day. Then she turned and said to a young woman who sat in the cabin door:—
"Dat young man, ef
he want to listen to me, he gwine quit dat ar caperin' roun' Miss
'Phrasie."
The young woman in the
doorway laughed, and showed her white teeth, and tossed her head, and fingered
the blue beads at her throat, in a way to indicate that she was in hearty
sympathy with any question that touched upon gallantry.
"Law! La Chatte,
you ain' gwine hinder a gemman f'om payin' intentions to a young lady w'en he a
mine to."
"Dat all I got to
say," returned La Chatte, seating herself lazily and heavily on the
doorstep. "Nobody don' know dem Sanchun boys bettah 'an I does. Did n' I
done part raise 'em? W'at you reckon my ha'r all tu'n plumb w'ite dat-a-way ef
it warn't dat Placide w'at done it?"
"How come he make
yo' ha'r tu'n w'ite, La Chatte?"
"Dev'ment, pu'
dev'ment, Rose. Did n' he come in dat same cabin one day, w'en he warn't no
bigga 'an dat Pres'dent Hayes w'at you sees gwine 'long de road wid dat cotton
sack 'crost 'im? He come an' sets down by de do', on dat same t'ree-laigged
stool w'at you's a-settin' on now, wid his gun in his ban', an' he say: 'La
Chatte, I wants some croquignoles, an' I wants 'em quick, too.' I 'low: 'G'
'way f'om dah, boy. Don' you see I's flutin' yo' ma's petticoat?' He say: 'La
Chatte, put 'side dat ar flutin'i'on an' dat ar petticoat;' an' he cock dat gun
an' p'int it to my head. 'Dar de ba'el,' he say; 'git out dat flour, git out
dat butta an' dat aigs; step roun' dah, ole 'oman. Dis heah gun don' quit yo'
head tell dem croquignoles is on de table, wid a w'ite table-clof an' a cup o'
coffee.' Ef I goes to de ba'el, de gun's a-p'intin'. Ef I goes to de fiah, de
gun's ar-p'intin'. W'en I rolls out de dough, de gun's a-p'intin'; an' him neva
say nuttin', an' me a-trim'lin' like ole Uncle Noah w'en de mis'ry strike
'im."
"Lordy! w'at you
reckon he do ef he tu'n roun' an' git mad wid dat young gemman f'om de
city?"
"I don' reckon
nuttin'; I knows w'at he gwine do,—same w'at his pa done."
"W'at his pa done,
La Chatte?"
"G' 'long 'bout yo'
business; you's axin' too many questions." And La Chatte arose slowly and went
to gather her party-colored wash that hung drying on the jagged and irregular
points of a dilapidated picket-fence.
But the darkies were
mistaken in supposing that Offdean was paying attention to Euphrasie. Those
little jaunts in the wood were purely of a business character. Offdean had made
a contract with a neighboring mill for fencing, in exchange for a certain
amount of uncut timber. He had made it his work—with the assistance of
Euphrasie—to decide upon what trees he wanted felled, and to mark such for the
woodman's axe.
If they sometimes forgot
what they had gone into the woods for, it was because there was so much to talk
about and to laugh about. Often, when Offdean had blazed a tree with the sharp
hatchet which he carried at his pommel, and had further discharged his duty by
calling it "a fine piece of timber," they would sit upon some fallen
and decaying trunk, maybe to listen to a chorus of mocking-birds above their
heads, or to exchange confidences, as young people will.
Euphrasie thought she
had never heard any one talk quite so pleasantly as Offdean did. She could not
decide whether it was his manner or the tone of his voice, or the earnest
glance of his dark and deep-set blue eyes, that gave such meaning to everything
he said; for she found herself afterward thinking of his every word.
One afternoon it rained
in torrents, and Rose was forced to drag buckets and tubs into Offdean's room
to catch the streams that threatened to flood it. Euphrasie said she was glad
of it; now he could see for himself.
And when he had seen for
himself, he went to join her out on a corner of the gallery, where she stood
with a cloak around her, close up against the house. He leaned against the
house, too, and they stood thus together, gazing upon as desolate a scene as it
is easy to imagine.
The whole landscape was
gray, seen through the driving rain. Far away the dreary cabins seemed to sink
and sink to earth in abject misery. Above their heads the live-oak branches
were beating with sad monotony against the blackened roof. Great pools of water
had formed in the yard, which was deserted by every living thing; for the
little darkies had scampered away to their cabins, the dogs had run to their
kennels, and the hens were puffing big with wretchedness under the scanty
shelter of a fallen wagon-body.
Certainly a situation to
make a young man groan with ennui, if he is used to his daily stroll on Canal
Street, and pleasant afternoons at the club. But Offdean thought it delightful.
He only wondered that he had never known, or some one had never told him, how
charming a place an old, dismantled plantation can be—when it rains. But as
well as he liked it, he could not linger there forever. Business called him
back to New Orleans, and after a few days he went away.
The interest which he
felt in the improvement of this plantation was of so deep a nature, however,
that he found himself thinking of it constantly. He wondered if the timber had
all been felled, and how the fencing was coming on. So great was his desire to
know such things that much correspondence was required between himself and
Euphrasie, and he watched eagerly for those letters that told him of her trials
and vexations with carpenters, bricklayers, and shingle—bearers. But in the
midst of it, Offdean suddenly lost interest in the progress of work on the
plantation. Singularly enough, it happened simultaneously with the arrival of a
letter from Euphrasie which announced in a modest postscript that she was going
down to the city with the Duplans for Mardi Gras.
VI
When Offdean learned
that Euphrasie was coming to New Orleans, he was delighted to think he would
have an opportunity to make some return for the hospitality which he had
received from her father. He decided at once that she must see everything: day
processions and night parades, balls and tableaux, operas and plays. He would
arrange for it all, and he went to the length of begging to be relieved of
certain duties that had been assigned him at the club, in order that he might
feel himself perfectly free to do so.
The evening following
Euphrasie's arrival, Offdean hastened to call upon her, away down on Esplanade
Street. She and the Duplans were staying there with old Mme. Carantelle, Mrs.
Duplan's mother, a delightfully conservative old lady who had not "crossed
Canal Street" for many years.
He found a number of
people gathered in the long high-ceiled drawing-room,—young people and old
people, all talking French, and some talking louder than they would have done
if Madame Carantelle had not been so very deaf.
When Offdean entered,
the old lady was greeting some one who had come in just before him. It was
Placide, and she was calling him Grégoire, and wanting to know how the crops
were up on Red River. She met every one from the country with this stereotyped
inquiry, which placed her at once on the agreeable and easy footing she liked.
Somehow Offdean had not
counted on finding Euphrasie so well provided with entertainment, and he spent
much of the evening in trying to persuade himself that the fact was a pleasing
one in itself. But he wondered why Placide was with her, and sat so
persistently beside her, and danced so repeatedly with her when Mrs. Duplan
played upon the piano. Then he could not see by what right these young creoles
had already arranged for the Proteus ball, and every other entertainment that
he had meant to provide for her.
He went away without
having had a word alone with the girl whom he had gone to see. The evening had
proved a failure. He did not go to the club as usual, but went to his rooms in
a mood which inclined him to read a few pages from a stoic philosopher whom he
sometimes affected. But the words of wisdom that had often before helped him
over disagreeable places left no impress to-night. They were powerless to
banish from his thoughts the look of a pair of brown eyes, or to drown the
tones of a girl's voice that kept singing in his soul.
Placide was not very
well acquainted with the city; but that made no difference to him so long as he
was at Euphrasie's side. His brother Hector, who lived in some obscure corner
of the town, would willingly have made his knowledge a more intimate one; but
Placide did not choose to learn the lessons that Hector was ready to teach. He
asked nothing better than to walk with Euphrasie along the streets, holding her
parasol at an agreeable angle over her pretty head, or to sit beside her in the
evening at the play, sharing her frank delight.
When the night of the
Mardi Gras ball came, he felt like a lost spirit during the hours he was forced
to remain away from her. He stood in the dense crowd on the street gazing up at
her, where she sat on the club-house balcony amid a bevy of gayly dressed
women. It was not easy to distinguish her, but he could think of no more
agreeable occupation than to stand down there on the street trying to do so.
She seemed during all
this pleasant time to be entirely his own, too. It made him very fierce to
think of the possibility of her not being entirely his own. But he had no cause
whatever to think this. She had grown conscious and thoughtful of late about
him and their relationship. She often communed with herself, and as a result
tried to act toward him as an engaged girl would toward her fiancé. Yet a
wistful look came sometimes into the brown eyes when she walked the streets
with Placide, and eagerly scanned the faces of passers-by.
Offdean had written her
a note, very studied, very formal, asking to see her a certain day and hour, to
consult about matters on the plantation, saying he had found it so difficult to
obtain a word with her, that he was forced to adopt this means, which he
trusted would not be offensive.
This seemed perfectly
right to Euphrasie. She agreed to see him one afternoon—the day before leaving
town—in the long, stately drawing-room, quite alone.
It was a sleepy day, too
warm for the season. Gusts of moist air were sweeping lazily through the long
corridors, rattling the slats of the half-closed green shutters, and bringing a
delicious perfume from the courtyard where old Chariot was watering the spreading
palms and brilliant parterres. A group of little children had stood awhile
quarreling noisily under the windows, but had moved on down the street and left
quietness reigning.
Offdean had not long to
wait before Euphrasie came to him. She had lost some of that ease which had
marked her manner during their first acquaintance. Now, when she seated herself
before him, she showed a disposition to plunge at once into the subject that
had brought him there. He was willing enough that it should play some rôle, since
it had been his pretext for coming; but he soon dismissed it, and with it much
restraint that had held him till now. He simply looked into her eyes, with a
gaze that made her shiver a little, and began to complain because she was going
away next day and he had seen nothing of her; because he had wanted to do so
many things when she came—why had she not let him?
"You fo'get I'm no
stranger here," she told him. "I know many people. I've been coming
so often with Mme. Duplan. I wanted to see mo' of you, Mr. Offdean"—
"Then you ought to
have managed it; you could have done so. It's—it's aggravating," he said,
far more bitterly than the subject warranted, "when a man has so set his
heart upon something."
"But it was n'
anything ver' important," she interposed; and they both laughed, and got
safely over a situation that would soon have been strained, if not critical.
Waves of happiness were
sweeping through the soul and body of the girl as she sat there in the drowsy
afternoon near the man whom she loved. It mattered not what they talked about,
or whether they talked at all. They were both scintillant with feeling. If
Offdean had taken Euphrasie's hands in his and leaned forward and kissed her
lips, it would have seemed to both only the rational outcome of things that
stirred them. But he did not do this. He knew now that overwhelming passion was
taking possession of him. He had not to heap more coals upon the fire; on the
contrary, it was a moment to put on the brakes, and he was a young gentleman
able to do this when circumstances required.
However, he held her
hand longer than he needed to when he bade her good-by. For he got entangled in
explaining why he should have to go back to the plantation to see how matters
stood there, and he dropped her hand only when the rambling speech was ended.
He left her sitting by
the window in a big brocaded armchair. She drew the lace curtain aside to watch
him pass in the street. He lifted his hat and smiled when he saw her. Any other
man she knew would have done the same thing, but this simple act caused the
blood to surge to her cheeks. She let the curtain drop, and sat there like one
dreaming. Her eyes, intense with the unnatural light that glowed in them,
looked steadily into vacancy, and her lips stayed parted in the half-smile that
did not want to leave them.
Placide found her thus,
a good while afterward, when he came in, full of bustle, with theatre tickets
in his pocket for the last night. She started up, and went eagerly to meet him.
"W'ere have you
been, Placide?" she asked with unsteady voice, placing her hands on his
shoulders with a freedom that was new and strange to him.
He appeared to her
suddenly as a refuge from something, she did not know what, and she rested her
hot cheek against his breast. This made him mad, and he lifted her face and
kissed her passionately upon the lips.
She crept from his arms
after that, and went away to her room, and locked herself in. Her poor little
inexperienced soul was torn and sore. She knelt down beside her bed, and sobbed
a little and prayed a little. She felt that she had sinned, she did not know
exactly in what; but a fine nature warned her that it was in Placide's kiss.
VII
The spring came early in
Orville, and so subtly that no one could tell exactly when it began. But one morning
the roses were so luscious in Placide's sunny parterres, the peas and
bean-vines and borders of strawberries so rank in his trim vegetable patches,
that he called out lustily, "No mo' winta, Judge!" to the staid Judge
Blount, who went ambling by on his gray pony.
"There's right
smart o' folks don't know it, Santien," responded the judge, with occult
meaning that might be applied to certain indebted clients back on the bayou who
had not broken land yet. Ten minutes later the judge observed sententiously,
and apropos of nothing, to a group that stood waiting for the post-office to
open:—
"I see Santien's
got that noo fence o' his painted. And a pretty piece o' work it is," he
added reflectively.
"Look lack Placide
goin' pent mo' 'an de fence," sagaciously snickered 'Tit-Edouard, a
strolling maigre-échine of indefinite occupation. "I seen
'im, me, pesterin' wid all kine o' pent on a piece o' bo'd yistiday."
"I knows he gwine
paint mo' 'an de fence," emphatically announced Uncle Abner, in a tone
that carried conviction.
"He gwine paint de
house; dat what he gwine do. Did n' Marse Luke Williams orda de paints? An' did
n' I done kyar' 'em up dah myse'f?"
Seeing the deference
with which this positive piece of knowledge was received, the judge coolly
changed the subject by announcing that Luke Williams's Durham bull had broken a
leg the night before in Luke's new pasture ditch,—a piece of news that fell
among his hearers with telling, if paralytic effect.
But most people wanted
to see for themselves these astonishing things that Placide was doing. And the
young ladies of the village strolled slowly by of afternoons in couples and arm
in arm. If Placide happened to see them, he would leave his work to hand them a
fine rose or a bunch of geraniums over the dazzling white fence. But if it
chanced to be 'Tit-Edouard or Luke Williams, or any of the young men of
Orville, he pretended not to see them, or to hear the ingratiating cough that
accompanied their lingering footsteps.
In his eagerness to have
his home sweet and attractive for Euphrasie's coming, Placide had gone less
frequently than ever before up to Natchitoches. He worked and whistled and sang
until the yearning for the girl's presence became a driving need; then he would
put away his tools and mount his horse as the day was closing, and away he
would go across bayous and hills and fields until he was with her again. She
had never seemed to Placide so lovable as she was then. She had grown more
womanly and thoughtful. Her cheek had lost much of its color, and the light in
her eyes flashed less often. But her manner had gained a something of pathetic
tenderness toward her lover that moved him with an intoxicating happiness. He
could hardly wait with patience for that day in early April which would see the
fulfillment of his lifelong hopes.
After Euphrasie's
departure from New Orleans, Offdean told himself honestly that he loved the
girl. But being yet unsettled in life, he felt it was no time to think of
marrying, and, like the worldly-wise young gentleman that he was, resolved to
forget the little Natchitoches girl. He knew it would be an affair of some
difficulty, but not an impossible thing, so he set about forgetting her.
The effort made him
singularly irascible. At the office he was gloomy and taciturn; at the club he
was a bear. A few young ladies whom he called upon were astonished and
distressed at the cynical views of life which he had so suddenly adopted.
When he had endured a
week or more of such humor, and inflicted it upon others, he abruptly changed
his tactics. He decided not to fight against his love for Euphrasie. He would
not marry her,—certainly not; but he would let himself love her to his heart's
bent, until that love should die a natural death, and not a violent one as he
had designed. He abandoned himself completely to his passion, and dreamed of
the girl by day and thought of her by night. How delicious had been the scent
of her hair, the warmth of her breath, the nearness of her body, that rainy day
when they stood close together upon the veranda! He recalled the glance of her
honest, beautiful eyes, that told him things which made his heart beat fast now
when he thought of them. And then her voice! Was there another like it when she
laughed or when she talked! Was there another woman in the world possessed of
so alluring a charm as this one he loved!
He was not bearish now,
with these sweet thoughts crowding his brain and thrilling his blood; but he
sighed deeply, and worked languidly, and enjoyed himself listlessly.
One day he sat in his
room puffing the air thick with sighs and smoke, when a thought came suddenly
to him—an inspiration, a very message from heaven, to judge from the cry of joy
with which he greeted it. He sent his cigar whirling through the window, over
the stone paving of the street, and he let his head fall down upon his arms,
folded upon the table.
It had happened to him,
as it does to many, that the solution of a vexed question flashed upon him when
he was hoping least for it. He positively laughed aloud, and somewhat hysterically.
In the space of a moment he saw the whole delicious future which a kind fate
had mapped out for him: those rich acres upon the Red River his own, bought and
embellished with his inheritance; and Euphrasie, whom he loved, his wife and
companion throughout a life such as he knew now he had craved for,—a life that,
imposing bodily activity, admits the intellectual repose in which thought
unfolds.
Wallace Offdean was like
one to whom a divinity had revealed his vocation in life,—no less a divinity
because it was love. If doubts assailed him of Euphrasie's consent, they were
soon stilled. For had they not spoken over and over to each other the mute and
subtile language of reciprocal love—out under the forest trees, and in the
quiet night-time on the plantation when the stars shone? And never so plainly
as in the stately old drawing-room down on, Esplanade Street. Surely no other
speech was needed then, save such as their eyes told. Oh, he knew that she
loved him; he was sure of it! The knowledge made him all the more eager now to
hasten to her, to tell her that he wanted her for his very own.
VIII
If Offdean had stopped
in Natchitoches on his way to the plantation, he would have heard something
there to astonish him, to say the very least; for the whole town was talking of
Euphrasie's wedding, which was to take place in a few days. But he did not
linger. After securing a horse at the stable, he pushed on with all the speed
of which the animal was capable, and only in such company as his eager thoughts
afforded him.
The plantation was very
quiet, with that stillness which broods over broad, clean acres that furnish no
refuge for so much as a bird that sings. The negroes were scattered about the
fields at work, with hoe and plow, under the sun, and old Pierre, on his horse,
was far off in the midst of them.
Placide had arrived in
the morning, after traveling all night, and had gone to his room for an hour or
two of rest. He had drawn the lounge close up to the window to get what air he
might through the closed shutters. He was just beginning to doze when he heard
Euphrasie's light footsteps approaching. She stopped and seated herself so near
that he could have touched her if he had but reached out his hand. Her nearness
banished all desire to sleep, and he lay there content to rest his limbs and
think of her.
The portion of the
gallery on which Euphrasie sat was facing the river, and away from the road by
which Offdean had reached the house. After fastening his horse, he mounted the
steps, and traversed the broad hall that intersected the house from end to end,
and that was open wide. He found Euphrasie engaged upon a piece of sewing. She
was hardly aware of his presence before he had seated himself beside her.
She could not spesik.
She only looked at him with frightened eyes, as if his presence were that of
some disembodied spirit.
"Are you not glad
that I have come?" he asked her. "Have I made a mistake in
coming?" He was gazing into her eyes, seeking to read the meaning of their
new, and strange expression.
"Am I glad?"
she faltered. "I don' know. W'at has that to do? You've come to see the
work, of co'se. It's—it's only half done, Mr. Offdean. They would n' listen to
me or to papa, an' you did n' seem to care."
"I have n't come to
see the work," he said, with a smile of love and confidence. "I am
here only to see you,—to say how much I want you, and need you—to tell you how
I love you."
She rose, half choking
with words she could not utter. But he seized her hands and held her there.
"The plantation is
mine, Euphrasie,—or it will be when you say that you will be my wife," he
went on excitedly. "I know that you love me"—
"I do not!"
she exclaimed wildly. "W'at do you mean? How do you dare," she
gasped, "to say such things w'en you know that in two days I shall be married
to Placide" The last was said in a whisper; it was like a wail.
"Married to
Placide!" he echoed, as if striving to understand,—to grasp some part of
his own stupendous folly and blindness. "I knew nothing of it," he
said hoarsely. "Married to Placide! I would never have spoken to you as I
did, if I had known. You believe me, I hope? Please say that you forgive
me."
He spoke with long
silences between his utterances.
"Oh, there is n'
anything to fo'give. You've only made a mistake. Please leave me, Mr. Offdean.
Papa is out in the fiel', I think, if you would like to speak with him. Placide
is somew'ere on the place."
"I shall mount my
horse and go see what work has been done," said Offdean, rising. An
unusual pallor had overspread his face, and his mouth was drawn with suppressed
pain. "I must turn my fool's errand to some practical good," he
added, with a sad attempt at playfulness; and with no further word he walked
quickly away.
She listened to his
going. Then all the wretchedness of the past months, together with the sharp
distress of the moment, voiced itself in a sob: "O God—O my God, he'p
me!"
But she could not stay
out there in the broad day for any chance comer to look upon her uncovered
sorrow.
Placide heard her rise
and goto her room. When he had heard the key turn in the lock, he got up, and
with quiet deliberation prepared to go out. He drew on his boots, then his
coat. He took his pistol from the dressing-bureau, where he had placed it a
while before, and after examining its chambers carefully, thrust it into his
pocket. He had certain work to do with the weapon before night. But for
Euphrasie's presence he might have accomplished it very surely a moment ago,
when the hound—as he called him—stood outside his window. He did not wish her
to know anything of his movements, and he left his room as quietly as possible,
and mounted his horse, as Offdean had done.
"La Chatte,"
called Placide to the old woman, who stood in her yard at the wash-tub,
"w'ich way did that man go?"
"W'at man dat? I is
n' studyin' 'bout no mans; I got 'nough to do wid dis heah washin'. 'Fo' God, I
don' know w'at man you's talkin' 'bout"—
"La Chatte, w'ich
way did that man go? Quick, now!" with the deliberate tone and glance that
had always quelled her.
"Ef you 's talkin'
'bout dat Noo Orleans man, I could 'a' tole you dat. He done tuck de road to de
cocoa-patch," plunging her black arms into the tub with unnecessary energy
and disturbance.
"That's enough. I
know now he's gone into the woods. You always was a liar, La Chatte."
"Dat his own
lookout, de smoove-tongue' raskil," soliloquized the woman a moment later.
"I done said he did n' have no call to come heah, caperin' roun' Miss
'Phrasie."
Placide was possessed by
only one thought, which was a want as well,—to put an end to this man who had
come between him and his love. It was the same brute passion that drives the
beast to slay when he sees the object of his own desire laid hold of by
another.
He had heard Euphrasie
tell the man she did not love him, but what of that? Had he not heard her sobs,
and guessed what her distress was? It needed no very flexible mind to guess as
much, when a hundred signs besides, unheeded before, came surging to his
memory. Jealousy held him, and rage and despair.
Offdean, as he rode
along under the trees in apathetic despondency, heard some one approaching him
on horseback, and turned aside to make room in the narrow pathway.
It was not a moment for
punctilious scruples, and Placide had not been hindered by such from sending a
bullet into the back of his rival. The only thing that stayed him was that
Offdean must know why he had to die.
"Mr. Offdean,"
Placide said, reining his horse with one hand, while he held his pistol openly
in the other, "I was in my room 'w'ile ago, and yeared w'at you said to
Euphrasie. I would 'a' killed you then if she had n' been 'longside o' you. I
could 'a' killed you jus' now w'en I come up behine you."
"Well, why did n't
you?" asked Offdean, meanwhile gathering his faculties to think how he had
best deal with this madman.
"Because I wanted
you to know who done it, an' w'at he done it for."
"Mr. Santien, I
suppose to a person in your frame of mind it will make no difference to know
that I'm unarmed. But if you make any attempt upon my life, I shall certainly
defend myself as best I can."
"Defen' yo'se'f,
then."
"You must be
mad," said Offdean, quickly, and looking straight into Placide's eyes,
"to want to soil your happiness with murder. I thought a creole knew
better than that how to love a woman."
"By——! are you
goin' to learn me how to love a woman?"
"No, Placide,"
said Offdean eagerly, as they rode slowly along; "your own honor is going
to tell you that. The way to love a woman is to think first of her happiness.
If you love Euphrasie, you must go to her clean. I love her myself enough to
want you to do that. I shall leave this place to-morrow; you will never see me
again if I can help it. Is n't that enough for you? I'm going to turn here and
leave you. Shoot me in the back if you like; but I know you won't." And
Offdean held out his hand.
"I don' want to
shake han's with you," said Placide sulkily. "Go 'way f'om me."
He stayed motionless watching Offdean ride away. He looked at the pistol in his
hand, and replaced it slowly in his pocket; then he removed the broad felt hat
which he wore, and wiped away the moisture that had gathered upon his forehead.
Offdean's words had
touched some chord within him and made it vibrant; but they made him hate the
man no less.
"The way to love a
woman is to think firs' of her happiness," he muttered reflectively.
"He thought a creole knew how to love. Does he reckon he's goin' to learn
a creole how to love?"
His face was white and
set with despair now. The rage had all left it as he rode deeper on into the
wood.
IX
Offdean rose early, wishing
to take the morning train to the city. But he was not before Euphrasie, whom he
found in the large hall arranging the breakfast-table. Old Pierre was there
too, walking slowly about with hands folded behind him, and with bowed head.
A restraint hung upon
all of them, and the girl turned to her father and asked him if Placide were
up, seemingly for want of something to say. The old man fell heavily into a
chair, and gazed upon her in the deepest distress.
"Oh, my po' li'le
Euphrasie! my po' li'le chile! Mr. Offde'n, you ain't no stranger."
"Bon Dieu!
Papa!" cried the girl sharply, seized with a vague terror. She quitted her
occupation at the table, and stood in nervous apprehension of what might
follow.
"I yaired people
say Placide was one no-'count creole. I nevair want to believe dat, me. Now I
know dat's true. Mr. Offde'n, you ain't no stranger, you."
Offdean was gazing upon
the old man in amazement.
"In de night,"
Pierre continued, "I yaired some noise on de winder. I go open, an' dere
Placide, standin' wid his big boot' on, an' his w'ip w'at he knocked wid on de
winder, an' his hoss all saddle'. Oh, my po' li'le chile! He say, 'Pierre, I
yaired say Mr. Luke William' want his house pent down in Orville. I reckon I go
git de job befo' somebody else teck it.' I say, 'You come straight back,
Placide? 'He say, 'Don' look fer me.' An' w'en I ax 'im w'at I goin' tell to my
li'le chile, he say, 'Tell Euphrasie Placide know better 'an anybody livin'
w'at goin' make her happy.' An' he start 'way; den he come back an' say, 'Tell
dat man '—I don' know who he was talk' 'bout—k tell 'im he ain't goin' learn
nuttin' to a creole.' Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu! I don' know w'at all
dat mean."
He was holding the
half-fainting Euphrasie in his arms, and stroking her hair.
"I always yaired
say he was one no-'count creole. I nevair want to believe dat."
"Don't—don't say
that again, papa," she whisperingly entreated, speaking in French.
"Placide has saved me!"
"He has save' you
f'om w'at, Euphrasie?" asked her father, in dazed astonishment.
"From sin,"
she replied to him under her breath.
"I don' know w'at
all dat mean," the old man muttered, bewildered, as he arose and walked
out on the gallery.
Offdean had taken coffee
in his room, and would not wait for breakfast. When he went to bid Euphrasie
good-by, she sat beside the table with her head bowed upon her arm.
He took her hand and
said good-by to her, but she did not look up.
"Euphrasie,"
he asked eagerly, "I may come back? Say that I may—after a while."
She gave him no answer,
and he leaned down and pressed his cheek caressingly and entreatingly against
her soft thick hair.
"May I,
Euphrasie?" he begged. "So long as you do not tell me no, I shall
come back, dearest one."
She still made him no
reply, but she did not tell him no.
So he kissed her hand
and her cheek,—what he could touch of it, that peeped out from her folded
arm,—and went away.
An hour later, when
Offdean passed through Natchitoches, the old town was already ringing with the
startling news that Placide had been dismissed by his fiancée, and
the wedding was off, information which the young creole was taking the trouble
to scatter broadcast as he went.
2.IN AND OUT OF OLD NATCHITOCHES
Precisely at eight
o'clock every morning except Saturdays and Sundays, Mademoiselle Suzanne St.
Denys Godolph would cross the railroad trestle that spanned Bayou Boispourri.
She might have crossed in the flat which Mr. Alphonse Laballière kept for his
own convenience; but the method was slow and unreliable; so, every morning at
eight, Mademoiselle St. Denys Godolph crossed the trestle.
She taught public school
in a picturesque little white frame structure that stood upon Mr. Laballière's
land, and hung upon the very brink of the bayou.
Laballière himself was
comparatively a new-comer in the parish. It was barely six months since he
decided one day to leave the sugar and rice to his brother Alcée, who had a
talent for their cultivation, and to try his hand at cotton-planting. That was
why he was up in Natchitoches parish on a piece of rich, high, Cane River land,
knocking into shape a tumbled-down plantation that he had bought for next to
nothing.
He had often during his
perambulations observed the trim, graceful figure stepping cautiously over the
ties, and had sometimes shivered for its safety. He always exchanged a greeting
with the girl, and once threw a plank over a muddy pool for her to step upon.
He caught but glimpses of her features, for she wore an enormous sun-bonnet to
shield her complexion, that seemed marvelously fair; while loosely—fitting
leather gloves protected her hands. He knew she was the school-teacher, and
also that she was the daughter of that very pig-headed old Madame St. Denys
Godolph who was hoarding her barren acres across the bayou as a miser hoards
gold. Starving over them, some people said. But that was nonsense; nobody
starves on a Louisiana plantation, unless it be with suicidal intent.
These things he knew,
but he did not know why Mademoiselle St. Denys Godolph always answered his
salutation with an air of chilling hauteur that would easily have paralyzed a
less sanguine man.
The reason was that
Suzanne, like every one else, had heard the stories that were going the rounds
about him. People said he was entirely too much at home with the free
mulattoes.[1] It seems a dreadful thing to
say, and it would be a shocking thing to think of a Laballière; but it was n't
true.
When Laballière took
possession of his land, he found the plantation-house occupied by one Giestin
and his swarming family. It was past reckoning how long the free mulatto and
his people had been there. The house was a six-room, long, shambling affair,
shrinking together from decrepitude. There was not an entire pane of glass in
the structure; and the Turkey-red curtains flapped in and out of the broken
apertures. But there is no need to dwell upon details; it was wholly unfit to
serve as a civilized human habitation; and Alphonse Laballière would no sooner
have disturbed its contented occupants than he would have scattered a family of
partridges nesting in a corner of his field. He established himself with a few
belongings in the best cabin he could find on the place, and, without further
ado, proceeded to supervise the building of house, of gin, of this, that, and
the other, and to look into the hundred details that go to set a neglected
plantation in good working order. He took his meals at the free mulatto's,
quite apart from the family, of course; and they attended, not too skillfully,
to his few domestic wants.
Some loafer whom he had
snubbed remarked one day in town that Laballière had more use for a free
mulatto than he had for a white man. It was a sort of catching thing to say,
and suggestive, and was repeated with the inevitable embellishments.
One morning when
Laballière sat eating his solitary breakfast, and being waited upon by the
queenly Madame Giestin and a brace of her weazened boys, Giestin himself came
into the room. He was about half the size of his wife, puny and timid. He stood
beside the table, twirling his felt hat aimlessly and balancing himself
insecurely on his high-pointed boot-heels.
"Mr.
Laballière," he said, "I reckon I tell you; it's betta you git shed
o' me en' my fambly. Jis like you want, yas."
"What in the name
of common sense are you talking about?" asked Laballière, looking up
abstractedly from his New Orleans paper. Giestin wriggled uncomfortably.
"It 's'heap o'
story goin' roun' 'bout you, if you want b'lieve me." And he snickered and
looked at his wife, who thrust the end of her shawl into her mouth and walked
from the room with a tread like the Empress Eugenie's, in that elegant woman's
palmiest days.
"Stories!"
echoed Laballière, his face the picture of astonishment. "Who—where—what
stories?"
"Yon'a in town en'
all about. It's heap o' tale goin' roun', yas. They say how come you mighty
fon' o' mulatta. You done shoshiate wid de mulatta down yon'a on de suga
plantation, tell you can't res' lessen it's mulatta roun' you."
Laballière had a
distressingly quick temper. His fist, which was a strong one, came down upon
the wobbling table with a crash that sent half of Madame Giestin's crockery
bouncing and crashing to the floor. He swore an oath that sent Madame Giestin
and her father and grandmother, who were all listening in the next room, into
suppressed convulsions of mirth.
"Oh, ho! so I'm not
to associate with whom I please in Natchitoches parish. We'll see about that.
Draw up your chair, Giestin. Call your wife and your grandmother and the rest
of the tribe, and we 'll breakfast together. By thunder! if I want to hobnob
with mulattoes, or negroes or Choctaw Indians or South Sea savages, whose
business is it but my own?"
"I don' know, me.
It's jis like I tell you, Mr. Laballière," and Giestin selected a huge key
from an assortment that hung against the wall, and left the room.
A half hour later,
Laballière had not yet recovered his senses. He appeared suddenly at the door
of the schoolhouse, holding by the shoulder one of Giestin's boys. Mademoiselle
St. Denys Godolph stood at the opposite extremity of the room. Her sun-bonnet
hung upon the wall, now, so Laballière could have seen how charming she was,
had he not at the moment been blinded by stupidity. Her blue eyes that were
fringed with dark lashes reflected astonishment at seeing him there. Her hair
was dark like her lashes, and waved softly about her smooth, white forehead.
"Mademoiselle,"
began Laballière at once, "I have taken the liberty of bringing a new
pupil to you."
Mademoiselle St. Denys
Godolph paled suddenly and her voice was unsteady when she replied:—
"You are too
considerate, Monsieur. Will you be so kine to give me the name of the scholar
whom you desire to int'oduce into this school?" She knew it as well as he.
"What's your name,
youngster? Out with it!" cried Laballière, striving to shake the little
free mulatto into speech; but he stayed as dumb as a mummy.
"His name is André
Giestin. You know him. He is the son"—
"Then,
Monsieur," she interrupted, "permit me to remine you that you have
made a se'ious mistake. This is not a school conducted fo' the education of the
colored population. You will have to go elsew'ere with yo' protégé."
"I shall leave my
protégé right here, Mademoiselle,'and I trust you'll give him the same kind
attention you seem to accord to the others;" saying which Laballière bowed
himself out of her presence. The little Giestin, left to his own devices, took
only the time to give a quick, wary glance round the room, and the next instant
he bounded through the open door, as the nimblest of four-footed creatures
might have done.
Mademoiselle St. Denys
Godolph conducted school during the hours that remained, with a deliberate
calmness that would have seemed ominous to her pupils, had they been better
versed in the ways of young women. When the hour for dismissal came, she rapped
upon the table to demand attention.
"Chil'ren,"
she began, assuming a resigned and dignified mien, "you all have been
witness to-day of the insult that has been offered to yo' teacher by the person
upon whose lan' this schoolhouse stan's. I have nothing further to say on that
subjec'. I only shall add that to-morrow yo' teacher shall sen' the key of this
schoolhouse, together with her resignation, to the gentlemen who compose the school-boa'd."
There followed visible disturbance among the young people.
"I ketch that li'le
m'latta, I make 'im see sight', yas," screamed one.
"Nothing of the
kine, Mathurin, you mus' take no such step, if only out of consideration fo' my
wishes. The person who has offered the affront I consider beneath my notice.
André, on the other han', is a chile of good impulse, an' by no means to blame.
As you all perceive, he has shown mo' taste and judgment than those above him,
f'om whom we might have espected good breeding, at least."
She kissed them all, the
little boys and the little girls, and had a kind word for each. "Et
toi, mon petit Numa, j'espère q'un autre"—She could not finish the
sentence, for little Numa, her favorite, to whom she had never been able to
impart the first word of English, was blubbering at a turn of affairs which he
had only miserably guessed at.
She locked the
schoolhouse door and walked away towards the bridge. By the time she reached
it, the little 'Cadians had already disappeared like rabbits, down the road and
through and over the fences.
Mademoiselle St. Denys
Godolph did not cross the trestle the following day, nor the next nor the next.
Laballière watched for her; for his big heart was already sore and filled with
shame. But more, it stung him with remorse to realize that he had been the
stupid instrument in taking the bread, as it were, from the mouth of
Mademoiselle St. Denys Godolph.
He recalled how
unflinchingly and haughtily her blue eyes had challenged his own. Her sweetness
and charm came back to him and he dwelt upon them and exaggerated them, till no
Venus, so far unearthed, could in any way approach Mademoiselle St. Denys
Godolph. He would have liked to exterminate the Giestin family, from the
great-grandmother down to the babe unborn.
Perhaps Giesten
suspected this unfavorable attitude, for one morning he piled his whole family
and all his effects into wagons, and went away; over into that part of the
parish known as l'Isle des Mulâtres.
Laballière's really
chivalrous nature told him, beside, that he owed an apology, at least, to the
young lady who had taken his whim so seriously. So he crossed the bayou one day
and penetrated into the wilds where Madame St. Denys Godolph ruled.
An alluring little
romance formed in his mind as he went; he fancied how easily it might follow
the apology. He was almost in love with Mademoiselle St. Denys Godolph when he
quitted his plantation. By the time he had reached hers, he was wholly so.
He was met by Madame
mere, a sweet-eyed, faded woman, upon whom old age had fallen too hurriedly to
completely efface all traces of youth. But the house was old beyond question;
decay had eaten slowly to the heart of it during the hours, the days, and years
that it had been standing.
"I have come to see
your daughter, madame," began Laballière, all too bluntly; for there is no
denying he was blunt.
"Mademoiselle St.
Denys Godolph is not presently at home, sir," madame replied. "She is
at the time in New Orleans. She fills there a place of high trus' an' employment,
Monsieur Laballière."
When Suzanne had ever
thought of New Orleans, it was always in connection with Hector Santien,
because he was the only soul she knew who dwelt there. He had had no share in
obtaining for her the position she had secured with one of the leading
dry-goods firms; yet it was to him she addressed herself when her arrangements
to leave home were completed.
He did not wait for her
train to reach the city, but crossed the river and met her at Gretna. The first
thing he did was to kiss her, as he had done eight years before when he left
Natchitoches parish. An hour later he would no more have thought of kissing
Suzanne than he would have tendered an embrace to the Empress of China. For by
that time he had realized that she was no longer twelve nor he twenty-four.
She could hardly believe
the man who met her to be the Hector of old. His black hair was dashed with
gray on the temples; he wore a short, parted beard and a small moustache that
curled. From the crown of his glossy silk hat down to his trimly-gaitered feet,
his attire was faultless. Suzanne knew her Natchitoches, and she had been to
Shreveport and even penetrated as far as Marshall, Texas, but in all her
travels she had never met a man to equal Hector in the elegance of his mien.
They entered a cab, and
seemed to drive for an interminable time through the streets, mostly over
cobble-stones that rendered conversation difficult. Nevertheless he talked
incessantly, while she peered from the windows to catch what glimpses she
could, through the night, of that New Orleans of which she had heard so much.
The sounds were bewildering; so were the lights, that were uneven, too, serving
to make the patches of alternating gloom more mysterious.
She had not thought of
asking him where he was taking her. And it was only after they crossed Canal
and had penetrated some distance into Royal Street, that he told her. He was
taking her to a friend of his, the dearest little woman in town. That was Maman
Chavan, who was going to board and lodge her for a ridiculously small
consideration.
Maman Chavan lived
within comfortable walking distance of Canal Street, on one of those narrow,
intersecting streets between Royal and Chartres. Her house was a tiny,
single-story one, with overhanging gable, heavily shuttered door and windows
and three wooden steps leading down to the banquette. A small garden flanked it
on one side, quite screened from outside view by a high fence, over which
appeared the tops of orange trees and other luxuriant shrubbery.
She was waiting for
them—a lovable, fresh-looking, white-haired, black-eyed, small, fat little
body, dressed all in black. She understood no English; which made no
difference. Suzanne and Hector spoke but French to each other.
Hector did not tarry a
moment longer than was needed to place his young friend and charge in the older
woman's care. He would not even stay to take a bite of supper with them. Maman
Chavan watched him as he hurried down the steps and out into the gloom. Then
she said to Suzanne: "That man is an angel, Mademoiselle, un ange
du bon Dieu."
"Women, my dear
Maman Chavan, you know how it is with me in regard to women. I have drawn a
circle round my heart, so—at pretty long range, mind you—and there is not one
who gets through it, or over it or under it."
"Blagueur, va!"
laughed Maman Chavan, replenishing her glass from the bottle of sauterne.
It was Sunday morning.
They were breakfasting together on the pleasant side gallery that led by a
single step down to the garden. Hector came every Sunday morning, an hour or so
before noon, to breakfast with them. He always brought a bottle of sauterne, a
paté, or a mess of artichokes or some tempting bit of charcuterie.
Sometimes he had to wait till the two women returned from hearing mass at the
cathedral. He did not go to mass himself. They were both making a Novena on
that account, and had even gone to the expense of burning a round dozen of
candles before the good St. Joseph, for his conversion. When Hector
accidentally discovered the fact, he offered to pay for the candles, and was
distressed at not being permitted to do so.
Suzanne had been in the
city more than a month. It was already the close of February, and the air was
flower-scented, moist, and deliciously mild.
"As I said: women,
my dear Maman Chavan"—
"Let us hear no
more about women!" cried Suzanne, impatiently. "Cher Maître! but
Hector can be tiresome when he wants. Talk, talk; to say what in the end?"
"Quite right, my
cousin; when I might have been saying how charming you are this morning. But
don't think that I have n't noticed it," and he looked at her with a
deliberation that quite unsettled her. She took a letter from her pocket and
handed it to him.
"Here, read all the
nice things mamma has to say of you, and the love messages she sends to you."
He accepted the several closely written sheets from her and began to look over
them.
"Ah, la
bonne tante," he laughed, when he came to the tender passages that
referred to himself. He had pushed aside the glass of wine that he had only
partly filled at the beginning of breakfast and that he had scarcely touched.
Maman Chavan again replenished her own. She also lighted a cigarette. So did
Suzanne, who was learning to smoke. Hector did not smoke; he did not use
tobacco in any form, he always said to those who offered him cigars.
Suzanne rested her
elbows on the table, adjusted the ruffles about her wrists, puffed awkwardly at
her cigarette that kept going out, and hummed the Kyrie Eleison that she had
heard so beautifully rendered an hour before at the Cathedral, while she gazed
off into the green depths of the garden. Maman Chavan slipped a little silver
medal toward her, accompanying the action with a pantomime that Suzanne readily
understood. She, in turn, secretly and adroitly transferred the medal to Hector's
coat-pocket. He noticed the action plainly enough, but pretended not to.
"Natchitoches has
n't changed," he commented. "The everlasting can-cans! when
will they have done with them? This is n't little Athénaïse Miché, getting
married! Sapristi! but it makes one old! And old Papa
Jean-Pierre only dead now? I thought he was out of purgatory five years ago.
And who is this Laballière? One of the Laballières of St. James?"
"St. James, mon
cher. Monsieur Alphonse Laballière; an aristocrat from the 'golden coast.'
But it is a history, if you will believe me. Figurez vouz, Maman
Chavan,—pensez donc, mon ami"—And with much dramatic fire, during
which the cigarette went irrevocably out, she proceeded to narrate her
experiences with Laballière.
"Impossible!"
exclaimed Hector when the climax was reached; but his indignation was not so
patent as she would have liked it to be.
"And to think of an
affront like that going unpunished!" was Maman Chavan's more sympathetic
comment.
"Oh, the scholars
were only too ready to offer violence to poor little André, but that, you can
understand, I would not permit. And now, here is mamma gone completely over to
him; entrapped, God only knows how!"
"Yes," agreed
Hector, "I see he has been sending her tamales and boudin blanc."
"Boudin blanc,
my friend! If it were only that! But I have a stack of letters, so high,—I
could show them to you,—singing of Laballière, Laballière, enough to drive one
distracted. He visits her constantly. He is a man of attainment, she says, a
man of courage, a man of heart; and the best of company. He has sent her a
bunch of fat robins as big as a tub"—
"There is something
in that—a good deal in that, mignonne," piped Maman Chavan, approvingly.
"And now boudin
blanc! and she tells me it is the duty of a Christian to forgive. Ah,
no; it's no use; mamma's ways are past finding out."
Suzanne was never in
Hector's company elsewhere than at Maman Chavan's. Beside the Sunday visit, he
looked in upon them sometimes at dusk, to chat for a moment or two. He often treated
them to theatre tickets, and even to the opera, when business was brisk.
Business meant a little note-book that he carried in his pocket, in which he
sometimes dotted down orders from the country people for wine, that he sold on
commission. The women always went together, unaccompanied by any male escort;
trotting along, arm in arm, and brimming with enjoyment.
That same Sunday
afternoon Hector walked with them a short distance when they were on their way
to vespers. The three walking abreast almost occupied the narrow width of the
banquette. A gentleman who had just stepped out of the Hotel Royal stood aside
to better enable them to pass. He lifted his hat to Suzanne, and cast a quick
glance, that pictured stupefaction and wrath, upon Hector.
"It's he!"
exclaimed the girl, melodramatically seizing Maman Chavan's arm.
"Who, he?"
"Laballière!"
"No!"
"Yes!"
"A handsome fellow,
all the same," nodded the little lady, approvingly. Hector thought so too.
The conversation again turned upon Laballière, and so continued till they
reached the side door of the cathedral, where the young man left his two
companions.
In the evening
Laballière called upon Suzanne. Maman Chavan closed the front door carefully
after he entered the small parlor, and opened the side one that looked into the
privacy of the garden. Then she lighted the lamp and retired, just as Suzanne
entered.
The girl bowed a little
stiffly, if it may be said that she did anything stiffly. "Monsieur
Laballière." That was all she said.
"Mademoiselle St.
Denys Godolph," and that was all he said. But ceremony did not sit easily
upon him.
"Mademoiselle,"
he began, as soon as seated, "I am here as the bearer of a message from
your mother. You must understand that otherwise I would not be here."
"I do understan',
sir, that you an' maman have become very warm frien's during my absence,"
she returned, in measured, conventional tones.
"It pleases me
immensely to hear that from you," he responded, warmly; "to believe
that Madame St. Denys Godolph is my friend."
Suzanne coughed more
affectedly than was quite nice, and patted her glossy braids. "The
message, if you please, Mr. Laballière."
"To be sure,"
pulling himself together from the momentary abstraction into which he had
fallen in contemplating her. "Well, it's just this; your mother, you must
know, has been good enough to sell me a fine bit of land—a deep strip along the
bayou"—
"Impossible! Mais,
w'at sorcery did you use to obtain such a thing of my mother, Mr. Laballière?
Lan' that has been in the St. Denys Godolph family since time untole!"
"No sorcery
whatever, Mademoiselle, only an appeal to your mother's intelligence and common
sense; and she is well supplied with both. She wishes me to say, further, that
she desires your presence very urgently and your immediate return home."
"My mother is
unduly impatient, surely," replied Suzanne, with chilling politeness.
"May I ask,
mademoiselle," he broke in, with an abruptness that was startling,
"the name of the man with whom you were walking this afternoon?"
She looked at him with
unaffected astonishment, and told him: "I hardly understan' yo' question.
That gentleman is Mr. Hector Santien, of one of the firs' families of
Natchitoches; a warm ole frien' an' far distant relative of mine."
"Oh, that's his
name, is it, Hector Santien? Well, please don't walk on the New Orleans streets
again with Mr. Hector Santien."
"Yo' remarks would
be insulting if they were not so highly amusing, Mr. Laballière."
"I beg your pardon
if I am insulting; and I have no desire to be amusing," and then
Laballière lost his head. "You are at liberty to walk the streets with
whom you please, of course," he blurted, with ill-suppressed passion,
"but if I encounter Mr. Hector Santien in your company again, in public, I
shall wring his neck, then and there, as I would a chicken; I shall break every
bone in his body"—Suzanne had arisen.
"You have said
enough, sir. I even desire no explanation of yo' words."
"I did n't intend
to explain them," he retorted, stung by the insinuation.
"You will escuse me
further," she requested icily, motioning to retire.
"Not till—oh, not
till you have forgiven me," he cried impulsively, barring her exit; for
repentance had come swiftly this time.
But she did not forgive
him. "I can wait," she said. Then he stepped aside and she passed by
him without a second glance.
She sent word to Hector
the following day to come to her. And when he was there, in the late afternoon,
they walked together to the end of the vine-sheltered gallery,—where the air
was redolent with the odor of spring blossoms.
"Hector," she
began, after a while, "some one has told me I should not be seen upon the
streets of New Orleans with you."
He was trimming a long
rose-stem with his sharp penknife. He did not stop nor start, nor look
embarrassed, nor anything of the sort.
"Indeed!" he
said.
"But, you
know," she went on, "if the saints came down from heaven to tell me
there was a reason for it, I could n't believe them."
"You wouldn't
believe them, ma petite Suzanne?" He was getting all the
thorns off nicely, and stripping away the heavy lower leaves.
"I want you to look
me in the face, Hector, and tell me if there is any reason."
He snapped the
knife-blade and replaced the knife in his pocket; then he looked in her eyes,
so unflinchingly, that she hoped and believed it presaged a confession of
innocence that she would gladly have accepted. But he said indifferently:
"Yes, there are reasons."
"Then I say there
are not," she exclaimed excitedly; "you are amusing
your-self—laughing at me, as you always do. There are no reasons that I will
hear or believe. You will walk the streets with me, will you not, Hector?"
she entreated, "and go to church with me on Sunday; and, and—oh, it's
nonsense, nonsense for you to say things like that!"
He held the rose by its
long, hardy stem, and swept it lightly and caressingly across her forehead,
along her cheek, and over her pretty mouth and chin, as a lover might have done
with his lips. He noticed how the red rose left a crimson stain behind it.
She had been standing,
but now she sank upon the bench that was there, and buried her face in her
palms. A slight convulsive movement of the muscles indicated a suppressed sob.
"Ah, Suzanne,
Suzanne, you are not going to make yourself unhappy about a bon à rien like
me. Come, look at me; tell me that you are not." He drew her hands down
from her face; and held them a while, bidding her good-by. His own face wore
the quizzical look it often did, as if he were laughing at her.
"That work at the
store is telling on your nerves, mignonne. Promise me that you will
go back to the country. That will be best."
"Oh, yes; I am
going back home, Hector."
"That is right,
little cousin," and he patted her hands kindly, and laid them both down
gently into her lap.
He did not return;
neither during the week nor the following Sunday. Then Suzanne told Maman
Chavan she was going home. The girl was not too deeply in love with Hector: but
imagination counts for something, and so does youth.
Laballière was on the
train with her. She felt, somehow, that he would be. And yet she did not dream
that he had watched and waited for her each morning since he parted from her.
He went to her without
preliminary of manner or speech, and held out his hand; she extended her own
unhesitatingly. She could not understand why, and she was a little too weary to
strive to do so. It seemed as though the sheer force of his will would carry
him to the goal of his wishes.
He did not weary her
with attentions during the time they were together. He sat apart from her,
conversing for the most time with friends and acquaintances who belonged in the
sugar district through which they traveled in the early part of the day.
She wondered why he had
ever left that section to go up into Natchitoches. Then she wondered if he did
not mean to speak to her at all. As if he had read the thought, he went and sat
down beside her.
He showed her, away off
across the country, where his mother lived, and his brother Alcée, and his
cousin Clarisse.
On Sunday morning, when
Maman Chavan strove to sound the depth of Hector's feeling for Suzanne, he told
her again:
"Women, my dear
Maman Chavan, you know how it is with me in regard to women," and he
refilled her glass from the bottle of sauterne.
"Farceur va!"
and Maman Chavan laughed, and her fat shoulders quivered under the white volante she
wore.
A day or two later,
Hector was walking down Canal Street at four in the afternoon. He might have
posed, as he was, for a fashion-plate. He looked not to the right nor to the
left; not even at the women who passed by. Some of them turned to look at him.
When he approached the
corner of Royal, a young man who stood there nudged his companion.
"You know who that
is?" he said, indicating Hector.
"No; who?"
"Well, you are an
innocent. Why, that's Deroustan, the most notorious gambler in New
Orleans."
[1]A
term still applied in Louisiana to mulattoes who were never in slavery, and
whose families in most instances were themselves slave owners.
The sight of a human
habitation, even if it was a rude log cabin with a mud chimney at one end, was
a very gratifying one to Grégoire.
He had come out of
Natchitoches parish, and had been riding a great part of the day through the
big lonesome parish of Sabine. He was not following the regular Texas road,
but, led by his erratic fancy, was pushing toward the Sabine River by
circuitous paths through the rolling pine forests.
As he approached the
cabin in the clearing, he discerned behind a palisade of pine saplings an old
negro man chopping wood.
"Howdy,
Uncle," called out the young fellow, reining his horse. The negro looked
up in blank amazement at so unexpected an apparition, but he only answered:
"How you do, suh," accompanying his speech by a series of polite
nods.
"Who lives
yere?"
"Hit's Mas' Bud
Aiken w'at live' heah, suh."
"Well, if Mr. Bud
Aiken c'n afford to hire a man to chop his wood, I reckon he won't grudge me a
bite o' suppa an' a couple hours' res' on his gall'ry. W'at you say, ole
man?"
"I say dit Mas' Bud
Aiken don't hires me to chop 'ood. Ef I don't chop dis heah, his wife got it to
do. Dat w'y I chops 'ood, suh. Go right 'long in, suh; you g'me fine Mas' Bud
some'eres roun', ef he ain't drunk an' gone to bed."
Grégoire, glad to
stretch his legs, dismounted, and led his horse into the small inclosure which
surrounded the cabin. An unkempt, vicious-looking little Texas pony stopped
nibbling the stubble there to look maliciously at him and his fine sleek horse,
as they passed by. Back of the hut, and running plumb up against the pine wood,
was a small, ragged specimen of a cotton-field.
Grégoire was rather
undersized, with a square, well-knit figure, upon which his clothes sat well
and easily. His corduroy trousers were thrust into the legs of his boots; he
wore a blue flannel shirt; his coat was thrown across the saddle. In his keen
black eyes had come a puzzled expression, and he tugged thoughtfully at the
brown moustache that lightly shaded his upper lip.
He was trying to recall
when and under what circumstances he had before heard the name of Bud Aiken.
But Bud Aiken himself saved Grégoire the trouble of further speculation on the
subject. He appeared suddenly in the small doorway, which his big body quite
filled; and then Grégoire remembered. This was the disreputable so-called
"Texan" who a year ago had run away with and married Baptiste
Choupic's pretty daughter, 'Tite Reine, yonder on Bayou Pierre, in Natchitoches
parish. A vivid picture of the girl as he remembered her appeared to him: her
trim rounded figure; her piquant face with its saucy black coquettish eyes; her
little exacting, imperious ways that had obtained for her the nickname of 'Tite
Reine, little queen. Grégoire had known her at the 'Cadian balls that he sometimes
had the hardihood to attend.
These pleasing
recollections of 'Tite Reine lent a warmth that might otherwise have been
lacking to Grégoire's manner, when he greeted her husband.
"I hope I fine you
well, Mr. Aiken," he exclaimed cordially, as he approached and extended
his hand.
"You find me damn'
porely, suh; but you 've got the better o' me, ef I may so say."
He was a big
good-looking brute, with a straw-colored "horse-shoe" moustache quite
concealing his mouth, and a several days' growth of stubble on his rugged face.
He was fond of reiterating that women's admiration had wrecked his life, quite
forgetting to mention the early and sustained influence of "Pike's
Magnolia" and other brands, and wholly ignoring certain inborn
propensities capable of wrecking unaided any ordinary existence. He had been
lying down, and looked frouzy and half asleep.
"Ef I may so say,
you've got the better o' me, Mr.—er"—
"Santien, Grégoire
Santien. I have the pleasure o' knowin' the lady you married, suh; an' I think
I met you befo',—some-w'ere o' 'nother," Grégoire added vaguely.
"Oh," drawled
Aiken, waking up, "one o' them Red River Sanchuns!" and his face
brightened at the prospect before him of enjoying the society of one of the
Santien boys. "Mortimer!" he called in ringing chest tones worthy a
commander at the head of his troop. The negro had rested his axe and appeared
to be listening to their talk, though he was too far to hear what they said.
"Mortimer, come
along here an' take my frien' Mr. Sanchun's hoss. Git a move thar, git a
move!" Then turning toward the entrance of the cabin he called back
through the open door: "Rain!" it was his way of pronouncing 'Tite
Reine's name. "Rain!" he cried again peremptorily; and turning to
Grégoire: "she's 'tendin' to some or other housekeepin' truck." 'Tite
Reine was back in the yard feeding the solitary pig which they owned, and which
Aiken had mysteriously driven up a few days before, saying he had bought it at
Many.
Grégoire could hear her
calling out as she approached: "I'm comin', Bud. Yere I come. W'at you
want, Bud?" breathlessly, as she appeared in the door frame and looked out
upon the narrow sloping gallery where stood the two men. She seemed to Grégoire
to have changed a good deal. She was thinner, and her eyes were larger, with an
alert, uneasy look in them; he fancied the startled expression came from seeing
him there unexpectedly. She wore cleanly homespun garments, the same she had
brought with her from Bayou Pierre; but her shoes were in shreds. She uttered
only a low, smothered exclamation when she saw Grégoire.
"Well, is that all
you got to say to my frien' Mr. Sanchun? That's the way with them Cajuns,"
Aiken offered apologetically to his guest; "ain't got sense enough to know
a white man when they see one." Grégoire took her hand.
"I'm mighty glad to
see you, 'Tite Heine," he said from his heart. She had for some reason
been unable to speak; now she panted somewhat hysterically:—
"You mus' escuse
me, Mista Grégoire. It's the truth I did n' know you firs', stan'in' up
there." A deep flush had supplanted the former pallor of her face, and her
eyes shone with tears and ill-concealed excitement.
"I thought you all
lived yonda in Grant," remarked Grégoire carelessly, making talk for the
purpose of diverting Aiken's attention away from his wife's evident
embarrassment, which he himself was at a loss to understand.
"Why, we did live a
right smart while in Grant; but Grant ain't no parish to make a livin' in. Then
I tried Winn and Caddo a spell; they was n't no better. But I tell you, suh,
Sabine's a damn' sight worse than any of 'em. Why, a man can't git a drink o'
whiskey here without going out of the parish fer it, or across into Texas. I'm
fixin' to sell out an' try Vernon."
Bud Aiken's household
belongings surely would not count for much in the contemplated "selling
out." The one room that constituted his home was extremely bare of
furnishing,—a cheap bed, a pine table, and a few chairs, that was all. On a
rough shelf were some paper parcels representing the larder. The mud daubing
had fallen out here and there from between the logs of the cabin; and into the
largest of these apertures had been thrust pieces of ragged bagging and wisps
of cotton. A tin basin outside on the gallery offered the only bathing
facilities to be seen. Notwithstanding these drawbacks, Grégoire announced his
intention of passing the night with Aiken.
"I'm jus' goin' to
ask the privilege o' layin' down yere on yo' gall'ry to-night, Mr. Aiken. My
hoss ain't in firs'-class trim; an' a night's res' ain't goin' to hurt him o'
me either." He had begun by declaring his intention of pushing on across
the Sabine, but an imploring look from 'Tite Reine's eyes had stayed the words
upon his lips. Never had he seen in a woman's eyes a look of such heartbroken
entreaty. He resolved on the instant to know the meaning of it before setting
foot on Texas soil. Grégoire had never learned to steel his heart against a
woman's eyes, no matter what language they spoke.
An old patchwork quilt
folded double and a moss pillow which 'Tite Reine gave him out on the gallery
made a bed that was, after all, not too uncomfortable for a young fellow of
rugged habits.
Grégoire slept quite
soundly after he laid down upon his improvised bed at nine o'clock. He was
awakened toward the middle of the night by some one gently shaking him. It was
'Tite Reine stooping over him; he could see her plainly, for the moon was
shining. She had not removed the clothing she had worn during the day; but her
feet were bare and looked wonderfully small and white. He arose on his elbow,
wide awake at once. "W'y, 'Tite Reine! w'at the devil you mean? w'ere's
yo' husban'?"
"The house kin fall
on 'im, 'ten goin' wake up Bud w'en he's sleepin'; he drink' too much."
Now that she had aroused Grégoire, she stood up, and sinking her face in her
bended arm like a child, began to cry softly. In an instant he was on his feet.
"My God, 'Tite
Reine! w'at's the matta? you got to tell me w'at's the matta." He could no
longer recognize the imperious 'Tite Reine, whose will had been the law in her
father's household. He led her to the edge of the low gallery and there they
sat down.
Grégoire loved women. He
liked their nearness, their atmosphere; the tones of their voices and the
things they said; their ways of moving and turning about; the brushing of their
garments when they passed him by pleased him. He was fleeing now from the pain
that a woman had inflicted upon him. When any overpowering sorrow came to
Grégoire he felt a singular longing to cross the Sabine River and lose himself
in Texas. He had done this once before when his home, the old Santien place,
had gone into the hands of creditors. The sight of 'Tite Reine's distress now
moved him painfully.
"W'at is it, 'Tite
Reine? tell me w'at it is," he kept asking her. She was attempting to dry
her eyes on her coarse sleeve. He drew a handkerchief from his back pocket and
dried them for her.
"They all well,
yonda?" she asked, haltingly, "my popa? my moma? the chil'en?"
Grégoire knew no more of the Baptiste Choupic family than the post beside him.
Nevertheless he answered: "They all right well, 'Tite Reine, but they
mighty lonesome of you."
"My popa, he got a
putty good crop this yea'?"
"He made right
smart o' cotton fo' Bayou Pierre."
"He done haul it to
the relroad?"
"No, he ain't quite
finish pickin'."
"I hope they all
ent sole 'Putty Girl'?" she inquired solicitously.
"Well, I should say
not! Yo' pa says they ain't anotha piece o' hossflesh in the pa'ish he'd want
to swap fo' 'Putty Girl.'" She turned to him with vague but fleeting
amazement,—"Putty Girl" was a cow!
The autumn night was
heavy about them. The black forest seemed to have drawn nearer; its shadowy
depths were filled with the gruesome noises that inhabit a southern forest at
night time.
"Ain't you 'fraid
sometimes yere, 'Tite Reine?" Grégoire asked, as he felt a light shiver
run through him at the weirdness of the scene.
"No," she
answered promptly, "I ent 'fred o' nothin' 'cep' Bud."
"Then he treats you
mean? I thought so!"
"Mista
Grégoire," drawing close to him and whispering in his face, "Bud's
killin' me." He clasped her arm, holding her near him, while an expression
of profound pity escaped him. "Nobody don' know, 'cep' Unc'
Mort'mer," she went on. "I tell you, he beats me; my back an'
arms—you ought to see—it's all blue. He would 'a' choke' me to death one day
w'en he was drunk, if Unc' Mort'mer had n' make 'im lef go—with his axe ov' his
head." Grégoire glanced back over his shoulder toward the room where the
man lay sleeping. He was wondering if it would really be a criminal act to go
then and there and shoot the top of Bud Aiken's head off. He himself would
hardly have considered it a crime, but he was not sure of how others might
regard the act.
"That's w'y I wake
you up, to tell you," she continued. "Then sometime' he plague me
mos' crazy; he tell me't ent no preacher, it's a Texas drummer w'at marry him
an' me; an' w'en I don' know w'at way to turn no mo', he say no, it's a
Meth'dis' archbishop, an' keep on laughin' 'bout me, an' I don' know w'at the truth!"
Then again, she told how
Bud had induced her to mount the vicious little mustang "Buckeye,"
knowing that the little brute would n't carry a woman; and how it had amused
him to witness her distress and terror when she was thrown to the ground.
"If I would know
how to read an' write, an' had some pencil an' paper, it's long 'go I would
wrote to my popa. But it's no pos'-office, it's no relroad,—nothin' in Sabine.
An' you know, Mista Grégoire, Bud say he's goin' carry me yonda to Vernon, an'
fu'ther off yet,—'way yonda, an' he's goin' turn me loose. Oh, don' leave me
yere, Mista Grégoire! don' leave me behine you!" she entreated, breaking
once more into sobs.
"'Tite Reine,"
he answered, "do you think I'm such a low-down scound'el as to leave you
yere with that"—He finished the sentence mentally, not wishing to offend
the ears of 'Tite Reine.
They talked on a good
while after that. She would not return to the room where her husband lay; the
nearness of a friend had already emboldened her to inward revolt. Grégoire
induced her to lie down and rest upon the quilt that she had given to him for a
bed. She did so, and broken down by fatigue was soon fast asleep.
He stayed seated on the
edge of the gallery and began to smoke cigarettes which he rolled himself of perique
tobacco. He might have gone in and shared Bud Aiken's bed, but preferred to
stay there near 'Tite Reine. He watched the two horses, tramping slowly about
the lot, cropping the dewy wet tufts of grass.
Grégoire smoked on. He
only stopped when the moon sank down behind the pine-trees, and the long deep
shadow reached out and enveloped him. Then he could no longer see and follow
the filmy smoke from his cigarette, and he threw it away. Sleep was pressing
heavily upon him. He stretched himself full length upon the rough bare boards
of the gallery and slept until day-break.
Bud Aiken's satisfaction
was very genuine when he learned that Grégoire proposed spending the day and
another night with him. He had already recognized in the young creole a spirit
not altogether uncongenial to his own.
'Tite Reine cooked
breakfast for them. She made coffee; of course there was no milk to add to it,
but there was sugar. From a meal bag that stood in the corner of the room she
took a measure of meal, and with it made a pone of corn bread. She fried slices
of salt pork. Then Bud sent her into the field to pick cotton with old Uncle
Mortimer. The negro's cabin was the counterpart of their own, but stood quite a
distance away hidden in the woods. He and Aiken worked the crop on shares.
Early in the day Bud
produced a grimy pack of cards from behind a parcel of sugar on the shelf.
Grégoire threw the cards into the fire and replaced them with a spic and span
new "deck" that he took from his saddle-bags. He also brought forth
from the same receptacle a bottle of whiskey, which he presented to his host,
saying that he himself had no further use for it, as he had "sworn
off" since day before yesterday, when he had made a fool of himself in
Cloutierville.
They sat at the pine
table smoking and playing cards all the morning, only desisting when 'Tite
Reine came to serve them with the gumbo-filé that she had come out of the field
to cook at noon. She could afford to treat a guest to chicken gumbo, for she
owned a half dozen chickens that Uncle Mortimer had presented to her at various
times. There were only two spoons, and 'Tite Reine had to wait till the men had
finished before eating her soup. She waited for Grégoire's spoon, though her
husband was the first to get through. It was a very childish whim.
In the afternoon she
picked cotton again; and the men played cards, smoked, and Bud drank.
It was a very long time
since Bud Aiken had enjoyed himself so well, and since he had encountered so
sympathetic and appreciative a listener to the story of his eventful career.
The story of 'Tite Reine's fall from the horse he told with much spirit,
mimicking quite skillfully the way in which she had complained of never being
permitted "to teck a li'le pleasure," whereupon he had kindly suggested
horseback riding. Grégoire enjoyed the story amazingly, which encouraged Aiken
to relate many more of a similar character. As the afternoon wore on, all
formality of address between the two had disappeared: they were "Bud"
and "Grégoire" to each other, and Grégoire had delighted Aiken's soul
by promising to spend a week with him. 'Tite Reine was also touched by the
spirit of recklessness in the air; it moved her to fry two chickens for supper.
She fried them deliciously in bacon fat. After supper she again arranged
Grégoire's bed out on the gallery.
The night fell calm and
beautiful, with the delicious odor of the pines floating upon the air. But the
three did not sit up to enjoy it. Before the stroke of nine, Aiken had already
fallen upon his bed unconscious of everything about him in the heavy drunken
sleep that would hold him fast through the night. It even clutched him more
relentlessly than usual, thanks to Grégoire's free gift of whiskey.
The sun was high when he
awoke. He lifted his voice and called imperiously for 'Tite Reine, wondering
that the coffee-pot was not on the hearth, and marveling still more that he did
not hear her voice in quick response with its, "I'm comin', Bud. Yere I
come." He called again and again. Then he arose and looked out through the
back door to see if she were picking cotton in the field, but she was not
there. He dragged himself to the front entrance. Grégoire's bed was still on
the gallery, but the young fellow was nowhere to be seen.
Uncle Mortimer had come
into the yard, not to cut wood this time, but to pick up the axe which was his
own property, and lift it to his shoulder.
"Mortimer,"
called out Aiken, "whur's my wife?" at the same time advancing toward
the negro. Mortimer stood still, waiting for him. "Whur's my wife an' that
Frenchman? Speak out, I say, before I send you to h—l."
Uncle Mortimer never had
feared Bud Aiken; and with the trusty axe upon his shoulder, he felt a double
hardihood in the man's presence. The old fellow passed the back of his black,
knotty hand unctuously over his lips, as though he relished in advance the
words that were about to pass them. He spoke carefully and deliberately:
"Miss Reine,"
he said, "I reckon she mus' of done struck Natchitoches pa'ish sometime
to'ard de middle o' de night, on dat 'ar swif' hoss o' Mr. Sanchun's."
Aiken uttered a terrific
oath. "Saddle up Buckeye," he yelled, "before I count twenty, or
I 'll rip the black hide off yer. Quick, thar! Thur ain't nothin' four-footed
top o' this earth that Buckeye can't run down." Uncle Mortimer scratched
his head dubiously, as he answered:—
"Yas, Mas' Bud, but
you see, Mr. Sanchun, he done cross de Sabine befo' sun-up on Buckeye."
When the half dozen
little ones were hungry, old Cléophas would take the fiddle from its Hannel bag
and play a tune upon it. Perhaps it was to drown their cries, or their hunger,
or his conscience, or all three. One day Fifine, in a rage, stamped her small
foot and clinched her little hands, and declared:
"It's no two way'!
I'm goin' smash it, dat fiddle, some day in a t'ousan' piece'!"
"You mus' n' do
dat, Fifine," expostulated her father. "Dat fiddle been ol'er 'an you
an' me t'ree time' put togedder. You done yaird me tell often 'nough 'bout
dat Italien w'at give it to me w'en he die, 'long yonder befo'
de war. An' he say, 'Cléophas, dat fiddle—dat one part my life—w'at goin' live
w'en I be dead—Dieu merci! 'You talkin' too fas', Fifine."
"Well, I'm goin' do
some'in' wid dat fiddle, va!" returned the daughter, only half
mollified. "Mine w'at I say."
So once when there were
great carryings-on up at the big plantation—no end of ladies and gentlemen from
the city, riding, driving, dancing, and making music upon all manner of
instruments—Fifine, with the fiddle in its flannel bag, stole away and up to
the big house where these festivities were in progress.
No one noticed at first
the little barefoot girl seated upon a step of the veranda and watching,
lynx-eyed, for her opportunity.
"It's one fiddle I
got for sell," she announced, resolutely, to the first who questioned her.
It was very funny to
have a shabby little girl sitting there wanting to sell a fiddle, and the child
was soon surrounded.
The lustreless
instrument was brought forth and examined, first with amusement, but soon very
seriously, especially by three gentlemen: one with very long hair that hung
down, another with equally long hair that stood up, the third with no hair
worth mentioning.
These three turned the
fiddle upside down and almost inside out. They thumped upon it, and listened.
They scraped upon it, and listened. They walked into the house with it, and out
of the house with it, and into remote corners with it. All this with much
putting of heads together, and talking together in familiar and unfamiliar
languages. And, finally, they sent Fifine away with a fiddle twice as beautiful
as the one she had brought, and a roll of money besides!
The child was dumb with
astonishment, and away she flew. But when she stopped beneath a big
chinaberry-tree, to further scan the roll of money, her wonder was redoubled.
There was far more than she could count, more than she had ever dreamed of
possessing. Certainly enough to top the old cabin with new shingles; to put
shoes on all the little bare feet and food into the hungry mouths. Maybe enough—and
Fifine's heart fairly jumped into her throat at the vision—maybe enough to buy
Blanchette and her tiny calf that Unc' Siméon wanted to sell!
"It's jis like you
say, Fifine," murmured old Cléophas, huskily, when he had played upon the
new fiddle that night. "It's one fine fiddle; an' like you say, it shine'
like satin. But some way or udder, 't ain' de same. Yair, Fifine, take it—put
it 'side. I b'lieve, me, I ain' goin' play de fiddle no mo'."
The bayou curved like a
crescent around the point of land on which La Folle's cabin stood. Between the
stream and the hut lay a big abandoned field, where cattle were pastured when
the bayou supplied them with water enough. Through the woods that spread back
into unknown regions the woman had drawn an imaginary line, and past this
circle she never stepped. This was the form of her only mania.
She was now a large,
gaunt black woman, past thirty-five. Her real name was Jacqueline, but every
one on the plantation called her La Folle, because in childhood she had been
frightened literally "out of her senses," and had never wholly
regained them.
It was when there had
been skirmishing and sharpshooting all day in the woods. Evening was near when
P'tit Maître, black with powder and crimson with blood, had staggered into the
cabin of Jacqueline's mother, his pursuers close at his heels. The sight had
stunned her childish reason.
She dwelt alone in her
solitary cabin, for the rest of the quarters had long since been removed beyond
her sight and knowledge. She had more physical strength than most men, and made
her patch of cotton and corn and tobacco like the best of them. But of the
world beyond the bayou she had long known nothing, save what her morbid fancy
conceived.
People at Bellissime had
grown used to her and her way, and they thought nothing of it. Even when
"Old Mis'" died, they did not wonder that La Folle had not crossed
the bayou, but had stood upon her side of it, wailing and lamenting.
P'tit Maître was now the
owner of Bellissime. He was a middle-aged man, with a family of beautiful
daughters about him, and a little son whom La Folle loved as if he had been her
own. She called him Chéri, and so did every one else because she did.
None of the girls had
ever been to her what Chéri was. They had each and all loved to be with her,
and to listen to her wondrous stories of things that always happened
"yonda, beyon' de bayou."
But none of them had
stroked her black hand quite as Chéri did, nor rested their heads against her
knee so confidingly, nor fallen asleep in her arms as he used to do. For Chéri
hardly did such things now, since he had become the proud possessor of a gun,
and had had his black curls cut off.
That summer—the summer
Chéri gave La Folle two black curls tied with a knot of red ribbon—the water
ran so low in the bayou that even the little children at Bellissime were able
to cross it on foot, and the cattle were sent to pasture down by the river. La
Folle was sorry when they were gone, for she loved these dumb companions well,
and liked to feel that they were there, and to hear them browsing by night up
to her own inclosure.
It was Saturday
afternoon, when the fields were deserted. The men had flocked to a neighboring
village to do their week's trading, and the women were occupied with household
affairs,—La Folle as well as the others. It was then she mended and washed her
handful of clothes, scoured her house, and did her baking.
In this last employment
she never forgot Chéri. To-day she had fashioned croquignoles of the most
fantastic and alluring shapes for him. So when she saw the boy come trudging
across the old field with his gleaming little new rifle on his shoulder, she
called out gayly to him, "Chéri! Chéri!"
But Chéri did not need
the summons, for he was coming straight to her. His pockets all bulged out with
almonds and raisins and an orange that he had secured for her from the very
fine dinner which had been given that day up at his father's house.
He was a sunny-faced
youngster of ten. When he had emptied his pockets, La Folle patted his round
red cheek, wiped his soiled hands on her apron, and smoothed his hair. Then she
watched him as, with his cakes in his hand, he crossed her strip of cotton back
of the cabin, and disappeared into the wood.
He had boasted of the
things he was going to do with his gun out there.
"You think they got
plenty deer in the wood, La Folle?" he had inquired, with the calculating
air of an experienced hunter.
"Non, non,!"
the woman laughed. "Don't you look fo' no deer, Chéri. Dat's too big. But
you bring La Folle one good fat squirrel fo' her dinner to-morrow, an' she
goin' be satisfi'."
"One squirrel ain't
a bite. I 'll bring you mo' 'an one, La Folle," he had boasted pompously
as he went away.
When the woman, an hour
later, heard the report of the boy's rifle close to the wood's edge, she would
have thought nothing of it if a sharp cry of distress had not followed the
sound.
She withdrew her arms
from the tub of suds in which they had been plunged, dried them upon her apron,
and as quickly as her trembling limbs would bear her, hurried to the spot
whence the ominous report had come.
It was as she feared.
There she found Chéri stretched upon the ground, with his rifle beside him. He
moaned piteously:—
"I'm dead, La
Folle! I'm dead! I'm gone!"
"Non, non!"
she exclaimed resolutely, as she knelt beside him. "Put you' arm 'roun' La
Folle's nake, Chéri. Dat's nuttin'; dat goin' be nuttin'." She lifted him
in her powerful arms.
Chéri had carried his
gun muzzle-downward. He had stumbled,—he did not know how. He only knew that he
had a ball lodged somewhere in his leg, and he thought that his end was at
hand. Now, with his head upon the woman's shoulder, he moaned and wept with
pain and fright.
"Oh, La Folle! La
Folle! it hurt so bad! I can' stan' it, La Folle!"
"Don't cry, mon
bébé mon bébé, mon Chéri!" the woman spoke soothingly as she covered the
ground with long strides. "La Folle goin' mine you; Doctor Bonfils goin'
come make mon Chéri well agin."
She had reached the
abandoned field. As she crossed it with her precious burden, she looked
constantly and restlessly from side to side. A terrible fear was upon her,—the
fear of the world beyond the bayou, the morbid and insane dread she had been
under since childhood.
When she was at the
bayou's edge she stood there, and shouted for help as if a life depended upon
it:—
"Oh, P'tit Maître!
P'tit Maître! Venez done! Au secours! Au secours!"
No voice responded.
Chéri's hot tears were scalding her neck. She called for each and every one
upon the place, and still no answer came.
She shouted, she wailed;
but whether her voice remained unheard or unheeded, no reply came to her
frenzied cries. And all the while Chéri moaned and wept and entreated to be
taken home to his mother.
La Folle gave a last
despairing look around her. Extreme terror was upon her. She clasped the child
close against her breast, where he could feel her heart beat like a muffled
hammer. Then shutting her eyes, she ran suddenly down the shallow bank of the
bayou, and never stopped till she had climbed the opposite shore.
She stood there
quivering an instant as she opened her eyes. Then she plunged into the footpath
through the trees.
She spoke no more to
Chéri, but muttered constantly, "Bon Dieu, ayez pitié La Folle! Bon Dieu,
ayez pitié moi!"
Instinct seemed to guide
her. When the pathway spread clear and smooth enough before her, she again
closed her eyes tightly against the sight of that unknown and terrifying world.
A child, playing in some
weeds, caught sight of her as she neared the quarters. The little one uttered a
cry of dismay.
"La Folle!"
she screamed, in her piercing treble. "La Folle done cross de bayer!"
Quickly the cry passed
down the line of cabins.
"Yonda, La Folle
done cross de bayou!"
Children, old men, old
women, young ones with infants in their arms, flocked to doors and windows to
see this awe-inspiring spectacle. Most of them shuddered with superstitious
dread of what it might portend.
"She totin'
Chéri!" some of them shouted.
Some of the more daring
gathered about her, and followed at her heels, only to fall back with new
terror when she turned her distorted face upon them. Her eyes were bloodshot
and the saliva had gathered in a white foam on her black lips.
Some one had run ahead
of her to where P'tit Maître sat with his family and guests upon the gallery.
"P'tit Maître! La
Folle done cross de bayou! Look her! Look her yonda totin' Chéri!" This
startling intimation was the first which they had of the woman's approach.
She was now near at
hand. She walked with long strides. Her eyes were fixed desperately before her,
and she breathed heavily, as a tired ox.
At the foot of the
stairway, which she could not have mounted, she laid the boy in his father's
arms. Then the world that had looked red to La Folle suddenly turned
black,—like that day she had seen powder and blood.—
She reeled for an
instant. Before a sustaining arm could reach her, she fell heavily to the
ground.
When La Folle regained
consciousness, she was at home again, in her own cabin and upon her own bed.
The moon rays, streaming in through the open door and windows, gave what light
was needed to the old black mammy who stood at the table concocting a tisane of
fragrant herbs. It was very late.
Others who had come, and
found that the stupor clung to her, had gone again. P'tit Maître had been
there, and with him Doctor Bonfils, who said that La Folle might die.
But death had passed her
by. The voice was very clear and steady with which she spoke to Tante Lizette,
brewing her tisane there in a corner.
"Ef you will give
me one good drink tisane, Tante Lizette, I b'lieve I'm goin' sleep, me."
And she did sleep; so
soundly, so healthfully, that old Lizette without compunction stole softly
away, to creep back through the moonlit fields to her own cabin in the new
quarters.
The first touch of the
cool gray morning awoke La Folle. She arose, calmly, as if no tempest had
shaken and threatened her existence but yesterday.
She donned her new blue
cottonade and white apron, for she remembered that this was Sunday. When she
had made for herself a cup of strong black coffee, and drunk it with relish,
she quitted the cabin and walked across the old familiar field to the bayou's
edge again.
She did not stop there
as she had always done before, but crossed with a long, steady stride as if she
had done this all her life.
When she had made her
way through the brush and scrub cottonwood-trees that lined the opposite bank,
she found herself upon the border of a field where the white, bursting cotton,
with the dew upon it, gleamed for acres and acres like frosted silver in the
early dawn.
La Folle drew a long,
deep breath as she gazed across the country. She walked slowly and uncertainly,
like one who hardly knows how, looking about her as she went.
The cabins, that
yesterday had sent a clamor of voices to pursue her, were quiet now. No one was
yet astir at Bellissime. Only the birds that darted here and there from hedges
were awake, and singing their matins.
When La Folle came to
the broad stretch of velvety lawn that surrounded the house, she moved slowly
and with delight over the springy turf, that was delicious beneath her tread.
She stopped to find
whence came those perfumes that were assailing her senses with memories from a
time far gone.
There they were,
stealing up to her from the thousand blue violets that peeped out from green,
luxuriant beds. There they were, showering down from the big waxen bells of the
magnolias far above her head, and from the jessamine clumps around her.
There were roses, too,
without number. To right and left palms spread in broad and graceful curves. It
all looked like enchantment beneath the sparkling sheen of dew.
When La Folle had slowly
and cautiously mounted the many steps that led up to the veranda, she turned to
look back at the perilous ascent she had made. Then she caught sight of the
river, bending like a silver bow at the foot of Bellissime. Exultation
possessed her soul.
La Folle rapped softly
upon a door near at hand. Chéri's mother soon cautiously opened it. Quickly and
cleverly she dissembled the astonishment she felt at seeing La Folle.
"Ah, La Folle! Is
it you, so early?"
"Oui,
madame. I come ax how my po' li'le Chéri to, 's mo'nin'."
"He is feeling
easier, thank you, La Folle. Dr. Bonfils says it will be nothing serious. He's
sleeping now. Will you come back when he awakes?"
"Non,
madame. I'm goin' wait yair tell Chéri wake up." La Folle seated herself
upon the topmost step of the veranda.
A look of wonder and
deep content crept into her face as she watched for the first time the sun rise
upon the new, the beautiful world beyond the bayou.
When the war was over,
old Aunt Peggy went to Monsieur, and said:—
"Massa, I ain't
never gwine to quit yer. I'm gittin' ole an' feeble, an' my days is few in dis
heah lan' o' sorrow an' sin. All I axes is a li'le co'ner whar I kin set down
an' wait peaceful fu de en'."
Monsieur and Madame were
very much touched at this mark of affection and fidelity from Aunt Peggy. So,
in the general reconstruction of the plantation which immediately followed the
surrender, a nice cabin, pleasantly appointed, was set apart for the old woman.
Madame did not even forget the very comfortable rocking-chair in which Aunt
Peggy might "set down," as she herself feelingly expressed it,
"an' wait fu de en'."
She has been rocking
ever since.
At intervals of about
two years Aunt Peggy hobbles up to the house, and delivers the stereotyped
address which has become more than familiar:—
"Mist'ess, I's come
to take a las' look at you all. Le' me look at you good. Le' me look at de
chillun,—de big chillun an' de li'le chillun. Le' me look at de picters an' de
photygraphts an' de pianny, an' eve'ything 'fo' it's too late. One eye is done
gone, an' de udder's a-gwine fas'. Any mo'nin' yo' po' ole Aunt Peggy gwine
wake up an' fin' herse'f stone-bline."
After such a visit Aunt
Peggy invariably returns to her cabin with a generously filled apron.
The scruple which
Monsieur one time felt in supporting a woman for so many years in idleness has
entirely disappeared. Of late his attitude towards Aunt Peggy is simply one of
profound astonishment,—wonder at the surprising age which an old black woman
may attain when she sets her mind to it, for Aunt Peggy is a hundred and
twenty-five, so she says.
It may not be true,
however. Possibly she is older.
Mr. Fred Bartner was
sorely perplexed and annoyed to find that a wheel and tire of his buggy
threatened to part company.
"Ef you want,"
said the negro boy who drove him, "we kin stop yonda at ole M'sié Jean
Ba's an' fix it; he got de bes' black-smif shop in de pa'ish on his
place."
"Who in the world
is old Monsieur Jean Ba," the young man inquired.
"How come, suh, you
don' know old M'sié Jean Baptiste Plochel? He ole, ole. He sorter quare in he
head ev' sence his son M'sié Alcibiade got kill' in de wah. Yonda he live';
whar you sees dat che'okee hedge takin' up half de road."
Little more than twelve
years ago, before the "Texas and Pacific" had joined the cities of
New Orleans and Shreveport with its steel bands, it was a common thing to travel
through miles of central Louisiana in a buggy. Fred Bartner, a young commission
merchant of New Orleans, on business bent, had made the trip in this way by
easy stages from his home to a point on Cane River, within a half day's journey
of Natchitoches. From the mouth of Cane River he had passed one plantation
after another,—large ones and small ones. There was nowhere sight of anything
like a town, except the little hamlet of Cloutierville, through which they had
sped in the gray dawn. "Dat town, hit's ole, ole; mos' a hund'ed year'
ole, dey say. Uh, uh, look to me like it heap ol'r an' dat," the darkey
had commented. Now they were within sight of Monsieur Jean Ba's towering
Cherokee hedge.
It was Christmas
morning, but the sun was warm and the air so soft and mild that Bartner found
the most comfortable way to wear his light overcoat was across his knees. At
the entrance to the plantation he dismounted and the negro drove away toward
the smithy which stood on the edge of the field.
From the end of the long
avenue of magnolias that led to it, the house which confronted Bartner looked
grotesquely long in comparison with its height. It was one story, of pale,
yellow stucco; its massive wooden shutters were a faded green. A wide gallery,
topped by the overhanging roof, encircled it.
At the head of the
stairs a very old man stood. His figure was small and shrunken, his hair long
and snow-white. He wore a broad, soft felt hat, and a brown plaid shawl across
his bent shoulders. A tall, graceful girl stood beside him; she was clad in a
warm-colored blue stuff gown. She seemed to be expostulating with the old
gentleman, who evidently wanted to descend the stairs to meet the approaching
visitor. Before Bartner had had time to do more than lift his hat, Monsieur Jean
Ba had thrown his trembling arms about the young man and was exclaiming in his
quavering old tones: "À la fin! mon fils! à la fin!" Tears started to
the girl's eyes and she was rosy with confusion. "Oh, escuse him, sir;
please escuse him," she whisperingly entreated, gently striving to
disengage the old gentleman's arms from around the astonished Bartner. But a
new line of thought seemed fortunately to take possession of Monsieur Jean Ba,
for he moved away and went quickly, pattering like a baby, down the gallery.
His fleecy white hair streamed out on the soft breeze, and his brown shawl
flapped as he turned the corner.
Bartner, left alone with
the girl, proceeded to introduce himself and to explain his presence there.
"Oh! Mr. Fred
Bartna of New Orleans? The commission merchant!" she exclaimed, cordially
extending her hand. "So well known in Natchitoches parish. Not our merchant,
Mr. Bartna," she added, naively, "but jus' as welcome, all the same,
at my gran'father's."
Bartner felt like
kissing her, but he only bowed and seated himself in the big chair which she
offered him. He wondered what was the longest time it could take to mend a
buggy tire.
She sat before him with
her hands pressed down into her lap, and with an eagerness and pretty air of
being confidential that were extremely engaging, explained the reasons for her
grandfather's singular behavior.
Years ago, her uncle
Alcibiade, in going away to the war, with the cheerful assurance of youth, had
promised his father that he would return to eat Christmas dinner with him. He
never returned. And now, of late years, since Monsieur Jean Ba had begun to
fail in body and mind, that old, unspoken hope of long ago had come back to
live anew in his heart. Every Christmas Day he watched for the coming of Alcibiade.
"Ah! if you knew,
Mr. Bartna, how I have endeavor' to distrac' his mine from that thought! Weeks
ago, I tole to all the negroes, big and li'le, 'If one of you dare to say the
word, Christmas gif', in the hearing of Monsieur Jean Baptiste, you will have
to answer it to me.'"
Bartner could not recall
when he had been so deeply interested in a narration.
"So las' night, Mr.
Bartna, I said to grandpère, 'Pépère, you know to-morrow will be the great
feas' of la Trinité; we will read our litany together in the morning and say
a chapelet.' He did not answer a word; il est malin, oui.
But this morning at day-light he was rapping his cane on the back gallery,
calling together the negroes. Did they not know it was Christmas Day, an' a
great dinner mus' be prepare' for his son Alcibiade, whom he was
especting!"
"And so he has
mistaken me for his son Alcibiade. It is very unfortunate," said Bartner,
sympathetically. He was a good-looking, honest-faced young fellow.
The girl arose,
quivering with an inspiration. She approached Bartner, and in her eagerness
laid her hand upon his arm.
"Oh, Mr. Bartna, if
you will do me a favor! The greates' favor of my life!"
He expressed his
absolute readiness.
"Let him believe,
jus' for this one Christmas day, that you are his son. Let him have that
Christmas dinner with Alcibiade, that he has been longing for so many
year'."
Bartner's was not a
puritanical conscience, but truthfulness was a habit as well as a principle
with him, and he winced. "It seems to me it would be cruel to deceive him;
it would not be"—he did not like to say "right," but she guessed
that he meant it.
"Oh, for
that," she laughed, "you may stay as w'ite as snow, Mr. Bartna. I will
take all the sin on my conscience. I assume all the responsibility on my
shoulder'."
"Esmée!" the
old man was calling as he came trotting back, "Esmée, my child," in
his quavering French, "I have ordered the dinner. Go see to the
arrangements of the table, and have everything faultless."
The dining-room was at
the end of the house, with windows opening upon the side and back galleries.
There was a high, simply carved wooden mantelpiece, bearing a wide, slanting,
old-fashioned mirror that reflected the table and its occupants. The table was
laden with an overabundance. Monsieur Jean Ba sat at one end, Esmée at the
other, and Bartner at the side.
Two "grif"
boys, a big black woman and a little mulatto girl waited upon them; there was a
reserve force outside within easy call, and the little black and yellow faces
kept bobbing up constantly above the window-sills. Windows and doors were open,
and a fire of hickory branches blazed on the hearth.
Monsieur Jean Ba ate
little, but that little greedily and rapidly; then he stayed in rapt
contemplation of his guest.
"You will notice,
Alcibiade, the flavor of the turkey," he said. "It is dressed with
pecans; those big ones from the tree down on the bayou. I had them gathered
expressly." The delicate and rich flavor of the nut was indeed very
perceptible.
Bartner had a stupid
impression of acting on the stage, and had to pull himself together every now
and then to throw off the stiffness of the amateur actor. But this discomposure
amounted almost to paralysis when he found Mademoiselle Esmée taking the
situation as seriously as her grandfather.
"Mon Dieu! uncle
Alcibiade, you are not eating! Mais w'ere have you lef' your
appetite? Corbeau, fill your young master's glass. Doralise, you are neglecting
Monsieur Alcibiade; he is without bread."
Monsieur Jean Ba's
feeble intelligence reached out very dimly; it was like a dream which clothes
the grotesque and unnatural with the semblance of reality. He shook his head up
and down with pleased approbation of Esmée's "Uncle Alcibiade," that
tripped so glibly on her lips. When she arranged his after-dinner brûlot,—a
lump of sugar in a flaming teaspoonful of brandy, dropped into a tiny cup of
black coffee,—he reminded her, "Your Uncle Alcibiade takes two lumps,
Esmée. The scamp! he is fond of sweets. Two or three lumps, Esmée."
Bartner would have relished his brûlot greatly, prepared so gracefully as it
was by Esmée's deft hands, had it not been for that superfluous lump.
After dinner the girl
arranged her grandfather comfortably in his big armchair on the gallery, where
he loved to sit when the weather permitted. She fastened his shawl about him
and laid a second one across his knees. She shook up the pillow for his head,
patted his sunken cheek and kissed his forehead under the soft-brimmed hat. She
left him there with the sun warming his feet and old shrunken knees.
Esmée and Bartner walked
together under the magnolias. In walking they trod upon the violet borders that
grew rank and sprawling, and the subtle perfume of the crushed flowers scented
the air deliciously. They stooped and plucked handfuls of them. They gathered
roses, too, that were blooming yet against the warm south end of the house; and
they chattered and laughed like children. When they sat in the sunlight upon
the low steps to arrange the flowers they had broken, Bartner's conscience
began to prick him anew.
"You know," he
said, "I can't stay here always, as well as I should like to. I shall have
to leave presently; then your grandfather will discover that we have been
deceiving him,—and you can see how cruel that will be."
"Mr. Bartna,"
answered Esmée, daintily holding a rosebud up to her pretty nose, "W'en I
awoke this morning an' said my prayers, I prayed to the good God that He would
give one happy Christmas day to my gran'father. He has answered my prayer; an'
He does not sen' his gif's incomplete. He will provide.
"Mr. Bartna, this
morning I agreed to take all responsibility on my shoulder', you remember? Now,
I place all that responsibility on the shoulder' of the blessed Virgin."
Bartner was distracted
with admiration; whether for this beautiful and consoling faith, or its
charming votary, was not quite clear to him.
Every now and then
Monsieur Jean Ba would call out, "Alcibiade, mon fils!"
and Bartner would hasten to his side. Sometimes the old man had forgotten what
he wanted to say. Once it was to ask if the salad had been to his liking, or if
he would, perhaps, not have preferred the turkey aux truffes.
"Alcibiade, mon
fils!" Again Bartner amiably answered the summons. Monsieur Jean Ba
took the young man's hand affectionately in his, but limply, as children hold
hands. Bartner's closed firmly around it. "Alcibiade, I am going to take a
little nap now. If Robert McFarlane comes while I am sleeping, with more talk
of wanting to buy Nég Sévérin, tell him I will sell none of my slaves; not the
least little négrillon. Drive him from the place with the shot-gun.
Don't be afraid to use the shot-gun, Alcibiade,—when I am asleep,—if he
comes."
Esmée and Bartner forgot
that there was such a thing as time, and that it was passing. There were no
more calls of "Alcibiade, mon fils!" As the sun dipped
lower and lower in the west, its light was creeping, creeping up and illuming
the still body of Monsieur Jean Ba. It lighted his waxen hands, folded so
placidly in his lap; it touched his shrunken bosom. When it reached his face,
another brightness had come there before it,—the glory of a quiet and peaceful
death.
Bartner remained over
night, of course, to add what assistance he could to that which kindly
neighbors offered.
In the early morning,
before taking his departure, he was permitted to see Esmée. She was overcome
with sorrow, which he could hardly hope to assuage, even with the keen sympathy
which he felt.
"And may I be
permitted to ask, Mademoiselle, what will be your plans for the future?"
"Oh," she moaned,
"I cannot any longer remain upon the ole plantation, which would not be
home without grandpère. I suppose I shall go to live in New Orleans with
my tante Clémentine." The last was spoken in the depths
of her handkerchief.
Bartner's heart bounded
at this intelligence in a manner which he could not but feel was one of
unbecoming levity. He pressed her disengaged hand warmly, and went away.
The sun was again
shining brightly, but the morning was crisp and cool; a thin wafer of ice
covered what had yesterday been pools or water in the road. Bartner buttoned
his coat about him closely. The shrill whistles of steam cotton-gins sounded
here and there. One or two shivering negroes were in the field gathering what
shreds of cotton were left on the dry, naked stalks. The horses snorted with
satisfaction, and their strong hoof-beats rang out against the hard ground.
"Urge the
horses," Bartner said; "they 've had a good rest and we want to push
on to Natchitoches."
"You right, suh. We
done los' a whole blesse' day,—a plumb day."
"Why, so we
have," said Bartner, "I had n't thought of it."
"Take de do' an'
go! You year me? Take de do'!"
Lolotte's brown eyes
flamed. Her small frame quivered. She stood with her back turned to a meagre
supper-table, as if to guard it from the man who had just entered the cabin.
She pointed toward the door, to order him from the house.
"You mighty cross
to-night, Lolotte. You mus' got up wid de wrong foot to's mo'nin'. Hein,
Veveste? hein, Jacques, w'at you say?"
The two small urchins
who sat at table giggled in sympathy with their father's evident good humor.
"I'm we' out,
me!" the girl exclaimed, desperately, as she let her arms fall limp at her
side. "Work, work! Fu w'at? Fu feed de lazies' man in Natchitoches
pa'ish."
"Now, Lolotte, you
think w'at you say in'," expostulated her father. "Sylveste Bordon
don' ax nobody to feed 'im."
"W'en you brought a
poun' of suga in de house?" his daughter retorted hotly, "or a poun'
of coffee? W'en did you brought a piece o' meat home, you? An' Nonomme all de
time sick. Co'n bread an' po'k, dat's good fu Veveste an' me an' Jacques; but
Nonomme? no!"
She turned as if
choking, and cut into the round, soggy "pone" of corn bread which was
the main feature of the scanty supper.
"Po' li'le Nonomme;
we mus' fine some'in' to break dat fevah. You want to kill a chicken once a
w'ile fu Nonomme, Lolotte." He calmly seated himself at the table.
"Did n' I done put
de las' roostah in de pot?" she cried with exasperation. "Now you
come axen me fu kill de hen'! W'ere I goen to fine aigg' to trade wid, w'en de
hen' be gone? Is I got one picayune in de house fu trade wid, me?"
"Papa," piped
the young Jacques, "w'at dat I yeard you drive in de yard, w'ile go?"
"Dat's it! W'en
Lolotte would n' been talken' so fas', I could tole you 'bout dat job I got fu
to-morrow. Dat was Joe Duplan's team of mule' an' wagon, wid t'ree bale' of
cotton, w'at you yaird. I got to go soon in de mo'nin' wid dat load to de
landin'. An' a man mus' eat w'at got to work; dat's sho."
Lolotte's bare brown
feet made no sound upon the rough boards as she entered the room where Nonomme
lay sick and sleeping. She lifted the coarse mosquito net from about him, sat
down in the clumsy chair by the bedside, and began gently to fan the slumbering
child.
Dusk was falling
rapidly, as it does in the South. Lolotte's eyes grew round and big, as she
watched the moon creep up from branch to branch of the moss-draped live-oak
just outside her window. Presently the weary girl slept as profoundly as Nonomme.
A little dog sneaked into the room, and socially licked her bare feet. The
touch, moist and warm, awakened Lolotte.
The cabin was dark and
quiet. Nonomme was crying softly, because the mosquitoes were biting him. In
the room beyond, old Sylveste and the others slept. When Lolotte had quieted
the child, she went outside to get a pail of cool, fresh water at the cistern.
Then she crept into bed beside Nonomme, who slept again.
Lolotte's dreams that
night pictured her father returning from work, and bringing luscious oranges
home in his pocket for the sick child.
When at the very break
of day she heard him astir in his room, a certain comfort stole into her heart.
She lay and listened to the faint noises of his preparations to go out. When he
had quitted the house, she waited to hear him drive the wagon from the yard.
She waited long, but
heard no sound of horse's tread or wagon-wheel. Anxious, she went to the cabin
door and looked out. The big mules were still where they had been fastened the
night before. The wagon was there, too.
Her heart sank. She
looked quickly along the low rafters supporting the roof of the narrow porch to
where her father's fishing pole and pail always hung. Both were gone.
"'T ain' no use, 't
ain' no use," she said, as she turned into the house with a look of
something like anguish in her eyes.
When the spare breakfast
was eaten and the dishes cleared away, Lolotte turned with resolute mien to the
two little brothers.
"Veveste," she
said to the older, "go see if dey got co'n in dat wagon fu feed deni
mule'."
"Yes, dey got co'n.
Papa done feed 'em, fur I see de co'n-cob in de trough, me."
"Den you goen he'p
me hitch dem mule, to de wagon. Jacques, go down de lane an' ax Aunt Minty if
she come set wid Nonomme w'ile I go drive dem mule' to de landin'."
Lolotte had evidently
determined to undertake her father's work. Nothing could dissuade her; neither
the children's astonishment nor Aunt Minty's scathing disapproval. The fat
black negress came laboring into the yard just as Lolotte mounted upon the
wagon.
"Git down f'om dah,
chile! Is you plumb crazy?" she exclaimed.
"No, I ain't crazy;
I'm hungry, Aunt Minty. We all hungry. Somebody got fur work in dis
fam'ly."
"Dat ain't no work
fur a gal w'at ain't bar' seventeen year ole; drivin' Marse Duplan's mules!
W'at I gwine tell yo' pa?"
"Fu me, you kin
tell 'im w'at you want. But you watch Nonomme. I done cook his rice an' set it
'side."
"Don't you
bodda," replied Aunt Minty; "I got somepin heah fur my boy. I gwine
'ten' to him."
Lolotte had seen Aunt
Minty put something out of sight when she came up, and made her produce it. It
was a heavy fowl.
"Sence w'en you
start raisin' Brahma chicken', you?" Lolotte asked mistrustfully.
"My, but you is a
cu'ious somebody! Ev'ything w'at got fedders on its laigs is Brahma chicken wid
you. Dis heah ole hen"—
"All de same, you
don't got fur give dat chicken to eat to Nonomme. You don't got fur cook 'im in
my house."
Aunt Minty, unheeding,
turned to the house with blustering inquiry for her boy, while Lolotte drove
away with great clatter.
She knew,
notwithstanding her injunction, that the chicken would be cooked and eaten.
Maybe she herself would partake of it when she came back, if hunger drove her
too sharply.
"Nax' thing I'm
goen be one rogue," she muttered; and the tears gathered and fell one by
one upon her cheeks.
"It do look
like one Brahma, Aunt Mint," remarked the small and weazened Jacques, as
he watched the woman picking the lusty fowl.
"How ole is
you?" was her quiet retort.
"I don' know,
me."
"Den if you don't
know dat much, you betta keep yo' mouf shet, boy."
Then silence fell, but
for a monotonous chant which the woman droned as she worked. Jacques opened his
lips once more.
"It do look
like one o' Ma'me Duplan' Brahma, Aunt Mint."
"Yonda, whar I come
f'om, befo' de wah"—
"Ole Kaintuck, Aunt
Mint?"
"Ole
Kaintuck."
"Dat ain't one
country like dis yere, Aunt Mint?"
"You mighty right,
chile, dat ain't no sech kentry as dis heah. Yonda, in Kaintuck, w'en boys says
de word 'Brahma chicken,' we takes an' gags 'em, an' ties dar han's behines
'em, an' fo'ces 'em ter stan' up watchin' folks settin' down eatin' chicken
soup."
Jacques passed the back
of his hand across his mouth; but lest the act should not place sufficient seal
upon it; he prudently stole away to go and sit beside Nonomme, and wait there
as patiently as he could the coming feast.
And what a treat it was!
The luscious soup,—a great pot of it,—golden yellow, thickened with the flaky
rice that Lolotte had set carefully on the shelf. Each mouthful of it seemed to
carry fresh blood into the veins and a new brightness into the eyes of the
hungry children who ate of it.
And that was not all.
The day brought abundance with it. Their father came home with glistening perch
and trout that Aunt Minty broiled deliciously over glowing embers, and basted
with the rich chicken fat.
"You see,"
explained old Sylveste, "w'en I git up to 's mo'nin' an' see it was
cloudy, I say to me, 'Sylveste, w'en you go wid dat cotton, rememba you got no
tarpaulin. Maybe it rain, an' de cotton was spoil. Betta you go yonda to
Lafirme Lake, w'ere de trout was bitin' fas'er 'an mosquito, an' so you git a
good mess fur de chil'en.' Lolotte —w'at she goen do yonda? You ought stop
Lolotte, Aunt Minty, w'en you see w'at she was want to do."
"Did n' I try to
stop 'er? Did n' I ax 'er, 'W'at I gwine tell yo' pa?' An' she 'low, 'Tell 'im
to go hang hisse'f, de triflind ole rapscallion! I's de one w'at's runnin' dis
heah fambly!'"
"Dat don' soun'
like Lolotte, Aunt Minty; you mus' yaird 'er crooked; hein,
Nonomme?"
The quizzical look in
his good-natured features was irresistible. Nonomme fairly shook with
merriment.
"My head feel so
good," he declared. "I wish Lolotte would come, so I could tole
'er." And he turned in his bed to look down the long, dusty lane, with the
hope of seeing her appear as he had watched her go, sitting on one of the
cotton bales and guiding the mules.
But no one came all
through the hot morning. Only at noon a broad-shouldered young negro appeared
in view riding through the dust. When he had dismounted at the cabin door, he
stood leaning a shoulder lazily against the jamb.
"Well, heah you
is," he grumbled, addressing Sylveste with no mark of respect.
"Heah you is,
settin' down like comp'ny, an' Marse Joe yonda sont me see if you was
dead."
"Joe Duplan boun'
to have his joke, him," said Sylveste, smiling uneasily.
"Maybe it look like
a joke to you, but 't aint no joke to him, man, to have one o' his wagons
smoshed to kindlin', an' his bes' team tearin' t'rough de country. You don't
want to let 'im lay ban's on you, joke o' no joke."
"Malédiction!"
howled Sylveste, as he staggered to his feet. He stood for one instant
irresolute; then he lurched past the man and ran wildly down the lane. He might
have taken the horse that was there, but he went tottering on afoot, a
frightened look in his eyes, as if his soul gazed upon an inward picture that
was horrible.
The road to the landing
was little used. As Sylveste went he could readily trace the marks of Lolotte's
wagon-wheels. For some distance they went straight along the road. Then they
made a track as if a madman had directed their course, over stump and hillock,
tearing the bushes and barking the trees on either side.
At each new turn
Sylveste expected to find Lolotte stretched senseless upon the ground, but,
there was never a sign of her.
At last he reached the
landing, which was a dreary spot, slanting down to the river and partly cleared
to afford room for what desultory freight might be left there from time to
time. There were the wagon-tracks, clean down to the river's edge and partly in
the water, where they made a sharp and senseless turn. But Sylveste found no
trace of his girl.
"Lolotte!" the
old man cried out into the stillness. "Lolotte, ma fille,
Lolotte!" But no answer came; no sound but the echo of his own voice, and
the soft splash of the red water that lapped his feet.
He looked down at it,
sick with anguish and apprehension.
Lolotte had disappeared
as completely as if the earth had opened and swallowed her. After a few days it
became the common belief that the girl had been drowned. It was thought that
she must have been hurled from the wagon into the water during the sharp turn
that the wheel-tracks indicated, and carried away by the rapid current.
During the days of
search, old Sylveste's excitement kept him up. When it was over, an apathetic
despair seemed to settle upon him.
Madame Duplan, moved by
sympathy, had taken the little four-year-old Nonomme to the plantation Les
Chêniers, where the child was awed by the beauty and comfort of things that
surrounded him there. He thought always that Lolotte would come back, and
watched for her every day; for they did not tell him the sad tidings of her
loss.
The other two boys were
placed in the temporary care of Aunt Minty; and old Sylveste roamed like a
persecuted being through the country. He who had been a type of indolent
content and repose had changed to a restless spirit.
When he thought to eat,
it was in some humble negro cabin that he stopped to ask for food, which was
never denied him. His grief had clothed him with a dignity that imposed
respect.
One morning very early
he appeared before the planter with a disheveled and hunted look.
"M'sieur
Duplan," he said, holding his hat in his hand and looking away into vacancy,
"I been try ev'thing. I been try settin' down still on de sto' gall'ry. I
been walk, I been run; 't ain' no use. Dey got al'ays some'in' w'at push me. I
go fishin', an' it's some'in' w'at push me worser 'an ever. By gracious!
M'sieur Duplan, gi' me some work!"
The planter gave him at
once a plow in hand, and no plow on the whole plantation dug so deep as that
one, nor so fast. Sylveste was the first in the field, as he was the last one
there. From dawn to nightfall he worked, and after, till his limbs refused to
do his bidding.
People came to wonder,
and the negroes began to whisper hints of demoniacal possession.
When Mr. Duplan gave
careful thought to the subject of Lolotte's mysterious disappearance, an idea
came to him. But so fearful was he to arouse false hopes in the breasts of
those who grieved for the girl that to no one did he impart his suspicions save
to his wife. It was on the eve of a business trip to New Orleans that he told
her what he thought, or what he hoped rather.
Upon his return, which
happened not many days later, he went out to where old Sylveste was toiling in
the field with frenzied energy.
"Sylveste,"
said the planter, quietly, when he had stood a moment watching the man at work,
"have you given up all hope of hearing from your daughter?"
"I don' know, me; I
don' know. Le' me work, M'sieur Duplan."
"For my part, I
believe the child is alive."
"You b'lieve dat,
you?" His rugged face was pitiful in its imploring lines.
"I know it,"
Mr. Duplan muttered, as calmly as he could. "Hold up! Steady yourself,
man! Come; come with me to the house. There is some one there who knows it,
too; some one who has seen her."
The room into which the
planter led the old man was big, cool, beautiful, and sweet with the delicate
odor of flowers. It was shady, too, for the shutters were half closed; but not
so darkened but Sylveste could at once see Lolotte, seated in a big wicker
chair.
She was almost as white
as the gown she wore. Her neatly shod feet rested upon a cushion, and her black
hair, that had been closely cut, was beginning to make little rings about her
temples.
"Aie!" he
cried sharply, at sight of her, grasping his seamed throat as he did so. Then
he laughed like a madman, and then he sobbed.
He only sobbed, kneeling
upon the floor beside her, kissing her knees and her hands, that sought his.
Little Nonomme was close to her, with a health flush creeping into his cheek.
Veveste and Jacques were there, and rather awed by the mystery and grandeur of
everything.
"W'ere'bouts you
find her, M'sieur Duplan?" Sylveste asked, when the first flush of his joy
had spent itself, and he was wiping his eyes with his rough cotton shirt
sleeve.
"M'sieur Duplan
find me 'way yonda to de city, papa, in de hospital," spoke Lolotte,
before the planter could steady his voice to reply. "I did n' know who
ev'ybody was, me. I did n' know me, myse'f, tell I tu'n roun' one day an' see
M'sieur Duplan, w'at stan'en dere."
"You was boun' to
know M'sieur Duplan, Lolotte," laughed Sylveste, like a child.
"Yes, an' I know right
'way how dem mule was git frighten' w'en de boat w'istle fu stop, an' pitch me
plumb on de groun'. An' I rememba it was one mulâtresse w'at
call herse'f one chembamed, all de time aside me."
"You must not talk
too much, Lolotte," interposed Madame Duplan, coming to place her hand
with gentle solicitude upon the girl's forehead, and to feel how her pulse
beat.
Then to save the child
further effort of speech, she herself related how the boat had stopped at this
lonely landing to take on a load of cotton-seed. Lolotte had been found
stretched insensible by the river, fallen apparently from the clouds, and had
been taken on board.
The boat had changed its
course into other waters after that trip, and had not returned to Duplan's
Landing. Those who had tended Lolotte and left her at the hospital supposed, no
doubt, that she would make known her identity in time, and they had troubled
themselves no further about her.
"An' dah you
is!" almost shouted aunt Minty, whose black face gleamed in the doorway;
"dah you is, settin' down, lookin' jis' like w'ite folks!"
"Ain't I always was
w'ite folks, Aunt Mint?" smiled Lolotte, feebly.
"G'long, chile. You
knows me. I don' mean no harm."
"And now,
Sylveste," said Mr. Duplan, as he rose and started to walk the floor, with
hands in his pockets, "listen to me. It will be a long time before Lolotte
is strong again. Aunt Minty is going to look after things for you till the
child is fully recovered. But what I want to say is this: I shall trust these
children into your hands once more, and I want you never to forget again that
you are their father—do you hear?—that you are a man!"
Old Sylveste stood with
his hand in Lolotte's, who rubbed it lovingly against her cheek.
"By gracious!
M'sieur Duplan," he answered, "w'en God want to he'p me, I'm goen try
my bes'!"
Old Uncle Oswald
believed he belonged to the Bênitous, and there was no getting the notion out
of his head. Monsieur tried every way, for there was no sense in it. Why, it
must have been fifty years since the Bênitous owned him. He had belonged to
others since, and had later been freed. Beside, there was not a Bênitou left in
the parish now, except one rather delicate woman, who lived with her little
daughter in a corner of Natchitoches town, and constructed "fashionable
millinery." The family had dispersed, and almost vanished, and the
plantation as well had lost its identity.
But that made no
difference to Uncle Oswald. He was always running away from Monsieur—who kept
him out of pure kindness—and trying to get back to those Bênitous.
More than that, he was
constantly getting injured in such attempts. Once he fell into the bayou and
was nearly drowned. Again he barely escaped being run down by an engine. But
another time, when he had been lost two days, and finally discovered in an
unconscious and half-dead condition in the woods, Monsieur and Doctor Bonfils
reluctantly decided that it was time to "do something" with the old
man.
So, one sunny spring
morning, Monsieur took Uncle Oswald in the buggy, and drove over to
Natchitoches with him, intending to take the evening train for the institution
in which the poor creature was to be cared for.
It was quite early in
the afternoon when they reached town, and Monsieur found himself with several
hours to dispose of before train-time. He tied his horses in front of the
hotel—the quaintest old stuccoed house, too absurdly unlike a "hotel"
for anything—and entered. But he left Uncle Oswald seated upon a shaded bench
just within the yard.
There were people
occasionally coming in and going out; but no one took the smallest notice of
the old negro drowsing over the cane that he held between his knees. The sight
was common in Natchitoches.
One who passed in was a
little girl about twelve, with dark, kind eyes, and daintily carrying a parcel.
She was dressed in blue calico, and wore a stiff white sun-bonnet, extinguisher
fashion, over her brown curls.
Just as she passed Uncle
Oswald again, on her way out, the old man, half asleep, let fall his cane. She
picked it up and handed it back to him, as any nice child would have done.
"Oh, thankee,
thankee, missy," stammered Uncle Oswald, all confused at being waited upon
by this little lady. "You is a putty li'le gal. W'at's yo' name,
honey?"
"My name's Susanne;
Susanne Bênitou," replied the girl.
Instantly the old negro
stumbled to his feet. Without a moment's hesitancy he followed the little one
out through the gate, down the street, and around the corner.
It was an hour later
that Monsieur, after a distracted search, found him standing upon the gallery
of the tiny house in which Madame Bênitou kept "fashionable
millinery."
Mother and daughter were
sorely perplexed to comprehend the intentions of the venerable servitor, who
stood, hat in hand, persistently awaiting their orders.
Monsieur understood and
appreciated the situation at once, and he has prevailed upon Madame Bênitou to
accept the gratuitous services of Uncle Oswald for the sake of the old darky's
own safety and happiness.
Uncle Oswald never tries
to run away now. He chops wood and hauls water. He cheerfully and faithfully
bears the parcels that Susanne used to carry; and makes an excellent cup of
black coffee.
I met the old man the
other day in Natchitoches, contentedly stumbling down St. Denis street with a
basket of figs that some one was sending to his mistress. I asked him his name.
"My name's Oswal',
Madam; Oswal'—dat's my name. I b'longs to de Bênitous," and some one told
me his story then.
As the day was pleasant,
Madame Valmondé drove over to L'Abri to see Désirée and the baby.
It made her laugh to
think of Désirée with a baby. Why, it seemed but yesterday that Désirée was
little more than a baby herself; when Monsieur in riding through the gateway of
Valmondé had found her lying asleep in the shadow of the big stone pillar.
The little one awoke in
his arms and began to cry for "Dada." That was as much as she could
do or say. Some people thought she might have strayed there of her own accord,
for she was of the toddling age. The prevailing belief was that she had been
purposely left by a party of Texans, whose canvas-covered wagon, late in the
day, had crossed the ferry that Coton Maïs kept, just below the plantation. In
time Madame Valmondé abandoned every speculation but the one that Désirée had been
sent to her by a beneficent Providence to be the child of her affection, seeing
that she was without child of the flesh. For the girl grew to be beautiful and
gentle, affectionate and sincere,—the idol of Valmondé.
It was no wonder, when
she stood one day against the stone pillar in whose shadow she had lain asleep,
eighteen years before, that Armand Aubigny riding by and seeing her there, had
fallen in love with her. That was the way all the Aubignys fell in love, as if
struck by a pistol shot. The wonder was that he had not loved her before; for
he had known her since his father brought him home from Paris, a boy of eight,
after his mother died there. The passion that awoke in him that day, when he
saw her at the gate, swept along like an avalanche, or like a prairie fire, or
like anything that drives headlong over all obstacles.
Monsieur Valmondé grew
practical and wanted things well considered: that is, the girl's obscure
origin. Armand looked into her eyes and did not care. He was reminded that she
was nameless. What did it matter about a name when he could give her one of the
oldest and proudest in Louisiana? He ordered the corbeille from Paris, and
contained himself with what patience he could until it arrived; then they were
married.
Madame Valmondé had not
seen Désirée and the baby for four weeks. When she reached L'Abri she shuddered
at the first sight of it, as she always did. It was a sad looking place, which
for many years had not known the gentle presence of a mistress, old Monsieur
Aubigny having married and buried his wife in France, and she having loved her
own land too well ever to leave it. The roof came down steep and black like a
cowl, reaching out beyond the wide galleries that encircled the yellow stuccoed
house. Big, solemn oaks grew close to it, and their thick-leaved, far-reaching
branches shadowed it like a pall. Young Aubigny's rule was a strict one, too,
and under it his negroes had forgotten how to be gay, as they had been during
the old master's easy-going and indulgent lifetime.
The young mother was
recovering slowly, and lay full length, in her soft white muslins and laces,
upon a couch. The baby was beside her, upon her arm, where he had fallen
asleep, at her breast. The yellow nurse woman sat beside a window fanning
herself.
Madame Valmondé bent her
portly figure over Désirée and kissed her, holding her an instant tenderly in
her arms. Then she turned to the child.
"This is not the
baby!" she exclaimed, in startled tones. French was the language spoken at
Valmondé in those days.
"I knew you would
be astonished," laughed Désirée, "at the way he has grown. The
little cochon de lait! Look at his legs, mamma, and his hands
and finger-nails,—real finger-nails. Zandrine had to cut them this morning. Is
n't it true, Zandrine?"
The woman bowed her
turbaned head majestically, "Mais si, Madame."
"And the way he
cries," went on Désirée, "is deafening. Armand heard him the other
day as far away as La Blanche's cabin."
Madame Valmondé had
never removed her eyes from the child. She lifted it and walked with it over to
the window that was lightest. She scanned the baby narrowly, then looked as
searchingly at Zandrine, whose face was burned to gaze across the fields.
"Yes, the child has
grown, has changed;" said Madame Valmondé, slowly, as she replaced it
beside its mother. "What does Armand say?"
Désirée's face became
suffused with a glow that was happiness itself.
"Oh, Armand is the
proudest father in the parish, I believe, chiefly because it is a boy, to bear
his name; though he says not,—that he would have loved a girl as well. But I
know it is n't true. I know he says that to please me. And mamma," she
added, drawing Madame Valmondé's head down to her, and speaking in a whisper,
"he has n't punished one of them—not one of them—since baby is born. Even
Négrillon, who pretended to have burnt his leg that he might rest from work—he
only, laughed, and said Négrillon was a great scamp. Oh, mamma, I'm so happy;
it frightens me."
What Désirée said was
true. Marriage, and later the birth of his son, had softened Armand Aubigny's
imperious and exacting nature greatly. This was what made the gentle Désirée so
happy, for she loved him desperately. When he frowned she trembled, but loved
him. When he smiled, she asked no greater blessing of God. But Armand's dark,
handsome face had not often been disfigured by frowns since the day he fell in
love with her.
When the baby was about
three months old, Désirée awoke one day to the conviction that there was
something in the air menacing her peace. It was at first too subtle to grasp.
It had only been a disquieting suggestion; an air of mystery among the blacks;
unexpected visits from far-off neighbors who could hardly account for their
coming. Then a strange, an awful change in her husband's manner, which she dared
not ask him to explain. When he spoke to her, it was with averted eyes, from
which the old love-light seemed to have gone out. He absented himself from
home; and when there, avoided her presence and that of her child, without
excuse. And the very spirit of Satan seemed suddenly to take hold of him in his
dealings with the slaves. Désirée was miserable enough to die.
She sat in her room, one
hot afternoon, in her peignoir, listlessly drawing through her
fingers the strands of her long, silky brown hair that hung about her
shoulders. The baby, half naked, lay asleep upon her own great mahogany bed,
that was like a sumptuous throne, with its satin-lined half-canopy. One of La
Blanche's little quadroon boys—half naked too—stood fanning the child slowly
with a fan of peacock feathers. Désirée's eyes had been fixed absently and
sadly upon the baby, while she was striving to penetrate the threatening mist
that she felt closing about her. She looked from her child to the boy who stood
beside him, and back again; over and over. "Ah!" It was a cry that
she could not help; which she was not conscious of having uttered. The blood
turned like ice in her veins, and a clammy moisture gathered upon her face.
She tried to speak to
the little quadroon boy; but no sound would come, at first. When he heard his
name uttered, he looked up, and his mistress was pointing to the door. He laid
aside the great, soft fan, and obediently stole away, over the polished floor,
on his bare tiptoes.
She stayed motionless,
with gaze riveted upon her child, and her face the picture of fright.
Presently her husband
entered the room, and without noticing her, went to a table and began to search
among some papers which covered it.
"Armand," she
called to him, in a voice which must have stabbed him, if he was human. But he
did not notice. "Armand," she said again. Then she rose and tottered
towards him. "Armand," she panted once more, clutching his arm,
"look at our child. What does it mean? tell me."
He coldly but gently
loosened her fingers from about his arm and thrust the hand away from him.
"Tell me what it means!" she cried despairingly.
"It means," he
answered lightly, "that the child is not white; it means that you are not
white."
A quick conception of
all that this accusation meant for her nerved her with unwonted courage to deny
it. "It is a lie; it is not true, I am white! Look at my hair, it is
brown; and my eyes are gray, Armand, you know they are gray. And my skin is
fair," seizing his wrist. "Look at my hand; whiter than yours,
Armand," she laughed hysterically.
"As white as La
Blanche's," he returned cruelly; and went away leaving her alone with
their child.
When she could hold a
pen in her hand, she sent a despairing letter to Madame Valmondé.
"My mother, they
tell me I am not white. Armand has told me I am not white. For God's sake tell
them it is not true. You must know it is not true. I shall die. I must die. I
cannot be so unhappy, and live.".
The answer that came was
as brief:
"My own Désirée:
Come home to Valmondé; back to your mother who loves you. Come with your
child."
When the letter reached
Désirée she went with it to her husband's study, and laid it open upon the desk
before which he sat. She was like a stone image: silent, white, motionless
after she placed it there.
In silence he ran his
cold eyes over the written words. He said nothing. "Shall I go,
Armand?" she asked in tones sharp with agonized suspense.
"Yes, go."
"Do you want me to
go?"
"Yes, I want you to
go."
He thought Almighty God
had dealt cruelly and unjustly with him; and felt, somehow, that he was paying
Him back in kind when he stabbed thus into his wife's soul. Moreover he no
longer loved her, because of the unconscious injury she had brought upon his
home and his name.
She turned away like one
stunned by a blow, and walked slowly towards the door, hoping he would call her
back.
"Good-by,
Armand," she moaned.
He did not answer her.
That was his last blow at fate.
Désirée went in search
of her child. Zandrine was pacing the sombre gallery with it. She took the little
one from the nurse's arms with no word of explanation, and descending the
steps, walked away, under the live-oak branches.
It was an October
afternoon; the sun was just sinking. Out in the still fields the negroes were
picking cotton.
Désirée had not changed
the thin white garment nor the slippers which she wore. Her hair was uncovered
and the sun's rays brought a golden gleam from its brown meshes. She did not
take the broad, beaten road which led to the far-off plantation of Valmondé.
She walked across a deserted field, where the stubble bruised her tender feet,
so delicately shod, and tore her thin gown to shreds.
She disappeared among
the reeds and willows that grew thick along the banks of the deep, sluggish
bayou; and she did not come back again.
Some weeks later there
was a curious scene enacted at L'Abri. In the centre of the smoothly swept back
yard was a great bonfire. Armand Aubigny sat in the wide hall-way that
commanded a view of the spectacle; and it was he who dealt out to a half dozen
negroes the material which kept this fire ablaze.
A graceful cradle of
willow, with all its dainty furbishings, was laid upon the pyre, which had
already been fed with the richness of a priceless layette. Then
there were silk gowns, and velvet and satin ones added to these; laces, too,
and embroideries; bonnets and gloves; for the corbeille had
been of rare quality.
The last thing to go was
a tiny bundle of letters; innocent little scribblings that Désirée had sent to
him during the days of their espousal. There was the remnant of one back in the
drawer from which he took them. But it was not Désirée's; it was part of an old
letter from his mother to his father. He read it. She was thanking God for the
blessing of her husband's love:—
"But, above
all," she wrote, "night and day, I thank the good God for having so
arranged our lives that our dear Armand will never know that his mother, who
adores him, belongs to the race that is cursed with the brand of slavery."
Three of Madame's finest
bronze turkeys were missing from the brood. It was nearing Christmas, and that
was the reason, perhaps, that even Monsieur grew agitated when the discovery
was made. The news was brought to the house by Sévérin's boy, who had seen the
troop at noon a half mile up the bayou three short. Others reported the
deficiency as even greater. So, at about two in the afternoon, though a cold
drizzle had begun to fall, popular feeling in the matter was so strong that all
the household forces turned out to search for the missing gobblers.
Alice, the housemaid,
went down the river, and Polisson the yard-boy, went up the bayou. Others
crossed the fields, and Artemise was rather vaguely instructed to "go look
too."
Artemise is in some
respects an extraordinary person. In age she's anywhere between 10 and 15, with
a head not unlike in shape and appearance to a dark chocolate-colored
Easter-egg. She talks most wholly in monosyllables, and has big round glassy
eyes, which she fixes upon one with the placid gaze of an Egyptian sphinx.
The morning after my
arrival at the plantation, I was awakened by the rattling of cups at my
bedside. It was Artemise with the early coffee.
"Is it cold
out?" I asked by way of conversation, as I sipped the tiny cup of
ink-black coffee.
"Ya, 'm."
"Where do you
sleep, Artemise?" I further inquired, with the same intention as before.
"In uh hole,"
was precisely what she said, with a pump-like motion of the arm that she
habitually uses to indicate a locality. What she meant was that she slept in
the hall.
Again, another time, she
came with an armful of wood, and having deposited it upon the hearth, turn to
stare fixedly at me, with folded hands.
"Did Madame send
you to build a fire, Artemise?" I hastened to ask, feeling uncomfortable
under the look.
"Ya, 'm."
"Very well; make
it."
"Matches!" was
all she said.
There happened to be no
matches in my room, and she evidently considered that all personal
responsibility ceased in face of this first and not very serious obstacle.
Pages might be told of her unfathomable ways; but to the turkey hunt.
All afternoon the
searching party kept returning, singly and in couples, and in a more or less
bedraggled condition. All brought unfavorable reports. Nothing could be seen of
the missing fowls. Artemise had been absent probably an hour when she glided
into the hall where the family was assembled, an stood with crossed hands and
contemplative air beside the fire. We could see by the benign expression of her
countenance that she possibly had information to give, if any inducement were
offered her in the shape of a question.
"Have you found the
turkeys, Artemise?" Madame hastened to ask.
"Ya, 'm."
"You
Artemise!" shouted Aunt Florindy, the cook, who was passing through the
hall with a batch of newly baked light bread. "She's a-lyin', mist'ess, if
dey ever was! You foun' dem turkeys?" upon the child.
"Whar was you at, de whole blesse' time? Warn't you stan'in' plank up agin
de back o' de hen-'ous'? Never budged a inch? Don't jaw me down, gal; don't jaw
me!" Artemise was only gazing at Aunt Florindy with unruffled calm.
"I warn't gwine tell on 'er, but arter dat untroof, I boun' to."
"Let her alone,
Aunt Florindy," Madame interfered. "Where are the turkeys,
Artemise?"
"Yon'a," she
simply articulated, bringing the pump-handle motion of her arm into play.
"Where
'yonder'?" Madame demanded, a little impatiently.
"In uh
hen-'ous'!"
Sure enough! The three
missing turkeys had been accidentally locked up in the morning when the
chickens were fed.
Artemise, for some
unknown reason, had hidden herself during the search behind the hen-house, and
had heard their muffled gobble.
Madame Célestin always
wore a neat and snugly fitting calico wrapper when she went out in the morning
to sweep her small gallery. Lawyer Paxton thought she looked very pretty in the
gray one that was made with a graceful Watteau fold at the back: and with which
she invariably wore a bow of pink ribbon at the throat. She was always sweeping
her gallery when lawyer Paxton passed by in the morning on his way to his
office in St. Denis Street.
Sometimes he stopped and
leaned over the fence to say good-morning at his ease; to criticise or admire
her rosebushes; or, when he had time enough, to hear what she had to say.
Madame Célestin usually had a good deal to say. She would gather up the train
of her calico wrapper in one hand, and balancing the broom gracefully in the
other, would go tripping down to where the lawyer leaned, as comfortably as he
could, over her picket fence.
Of course she had talked
to him of her troubles. Every one knew Madame Célestin's troubles.
"Really,
madame," he told her once, in his deliberate, calculating, lawyer—tone,
"it's more than human nature—woman's nature—should be called upon to
endure. Here you are, working your fingers off"—she glanced down at two
rosy finger-tips that showed through the rents in her baggy doe-skin
gloves—"taking in sewing; giving music lessons; doing God knows what in
the way of manual labor to support yourself and those two little ones"—Madame
Célestin's pretty face beamed with satisfaction at this enumeration of her
trials.
"You right, Judge.
Not a picayune, not one, not one, have I lay my eyes on in the pas' fo' months
that I can say Célestin give it to me or sen' it to me."
"The
scoundrel!" muttered lawyer Paxton in his beard.
"An' pourtant,"
she resumed, "they say he's making money down roun' Alexandria w'en he
wants to work."
"I dare say you
have n't seen him for months?" suggested the lawyer.
"It's good six
month' since I see a sight of Célestin," she admitted.
"That's it, that's
what I say; he has practically deserted you; fails to support you. It wouldn't
surprise me a bit to learn that he has ill treated you."
"Well, you know,
Judge," with an evasive cough, "a man that drinks—w'at can you expec'?
An' if you would know the promises he has made me! Ah, if I had as many dolla'
as I had promise from Célestin, I would n' have to work, je vous
garantis."
"And in my opinion,
madame, you would be a foolish woman to endure it longer, when the divorce court
is there to offer you redress."
"You spoke about
that befo', Judge; I'm goin' think about that divo'ce. I believe you
right."
Madame Célestin thought
about the divorce and talked about it, too; and lawyer Paxton grew deeply
interested in the theme.
"You know, about
that divo'ce, Judge," Madame Célestin was waiting for him that morning,
"I been talking to my family an' my frien's, an' it's me that tells you,
they all plumb agains' that divo'ce."
"Certainly, to be
sure; that's to be expected, madame, in this community of Creoles. I warned you
that you would meet with opposition, and would have to face it and brave
it."
"Oh, don't fear,
I'm going to face it! Maman says it's a disgrace like it's neva been in the
family. But it's good for Maman to talk, her. W'at trouble she ever had? She
says I mus' go by all means consult with Père Duchéron—it's my confessor, you
undastan'—Well, I'll go, Judge, to please Maman. But all the confessor' in the
worl' ent goin' make me put up with that conduc' of Célestin any longa."
A day or two later, she
was there waiting for him again. "You know, Judge, about that
divo'ce."
"Yes, yes,"
responded the lawyer, well pleased to trace a new determination in her brown
eyes and in the curves of her pretty mouth. "I suppose you saw Père Duchéron
and had to brave it out with him, too."
"Oh, fo' that, a
perfec' sermon, I assho you. A talk of giving scandal an' bad example that I
thought would neva en'! He says, fo' him, he wash' his hands; I mus' go see the
bishop."
"You won't let the
bishop dissuade you, I trust," stammered the lawyer more anxiously than he
could well understand.
"You don't know me
yet, Judge," laughed Madame Célestin with a turn of the head and a flirt
of the broom which indicated that the interview was at an end.
"Well, Madame
Célestin! And the bishop!" Lawyer Paxton was standing there holding to a
couple of the shaky pickets. She had not seen him. "Oh, it's you,
Judge?" and she hastened towards him with an empressement that
could not but have been flattering.
"Yes, I saw Monseigneur,"
she began. The lawyer had already gathered from her expressive countenance that
she had not wavered in her determination. "Ah, he's a eloquent man. It's
not a mo' eloquent man in Natchitoches parish. I was fo'ced to cry, the way he
talked to me about my troubles; how he undastan's them, an' feels for me. It
would move even you, Judge, to hear how he talk' about that step I want to
take; its danga, its temptation. How it is the duty of a Catholic to stan'
everything till the las' extreme. An' that life of retirement an' self-denial I
would have to lead,—he tole me all that."
"But he has n't
turned you from your resolve, I see," laughed the lawyer complacently.
"For that,
no," she returned emphatically. "The bishop don't know w'at it is to
be married to a man like Célestin, an' have to endu' that conduc' like I have
to endu' it. The Pope himse'f can't make me stan' that any longer, if you say I
got the right in the law to sen' Célestin sailing."
A noticeable change had
come over lawyer Paxton. He discarded his work-day coat and began to wear his
Sunday one to the office. He grew solicitous as to the shine of his boots, his
collar, and the set of his tie. He brushed and trimmed his whiskers with a care
that had not before been apparent. Then he fell into a stupid habit of dreaming
as he walked the streets of the old town. It would be very good to take unto
himself a wife, he dreamed. And he could dream of no other than pretty Madame
Célestin filling that sweet and sacred office as she filled his thoughts, now.
Old Natchitoches would not hold them comfortably, perhaps; but the world was
surely wide enough to live in, outside of Natchitoches town.
His heart beat in a
strangely irregular manner as he neared Madame Célestin's house one morning,
and discovered her behind the rosebushes, as usual plying her broom. She had
finished the gallery and steps and was sweeping the little brick walk along the
edge of the violet border.
"Good-morning,
Madame Célestin."
"Ah, it's you,
Judge? Good-morning." He waited. She seemed to be doing the same. Then she
ventured, with some hesitancy, "You know, Judge, about that divo'ce. I
been thinking,—I reckon you betta neva mine about that divo'ce." She was
making deep rings in the palm of her gloved hand with the end of the broom-handle,
and looking at them critically. Her face seemed to the lawyer to be unusually
rosy; but maybe it was only the reflection of the pink bow at the throat.
"Yes, I reckon you need n' mine. You see, Judge, Célestin came home las'
night. An' he's promise me on his word an' honor he's going to turn ova a new
leaf."
Upon the pleasant
veranda of Père Antoine's cottage, that adjoined the church, a young girl had
long been seated, awaiting his return. It was the eve of Easter Sunday, and
since early afternoon the priest had been engaged in hearing the confessions of
those who wished to make their Easters the following day. The girl did not seem
impatient at his delay; on the contrary, it was very restful to her to lie back
in the big chair she had found there, and peep through the thick curtain of
vines at the people who occasionally passed along the village street.
She was slender, with a
frailness that indicated lack of wholesome and plentiful nourishment. A
pathetic, uneasy look was in her gray eyes, and even faintly stamped her
features, which were fine and delicate. In lieu of a hat, a barege veil covered
her light brown and abundant hair. She wore a coarse white cotton
"josie," and a blue calico skirt that only half concealed her
tattered shoes.
As she sat there, she
held carefully in her lap a parcel of eggs securely fastened in a red bandana
handkerchief.
Twice already a
handsome, stalwart young man in quest of the priest had entered the yard, and
penetrated to where she sat. At first they had exchanged the uncompromising
"howdy" of strangers, and nothing more. The second time, finding the
priest still absent, he hesitated to go at once. Instead, he stood upon the
step, and narrowing his brown eyes, gazed beyond the river, off towards the
west, where a murky streak of mist was spreading across the sun.
"It look like mo'
rain," he remarked, slowly and carelessly.
"We done had 'bout
'nough," she replied, in much the same tone.
"It's no chance to
thin out the cotton," he went on.
"An' the
Bon-Dieu," she resumed, "it's on'y to-day you can cross him on
foot."
"You live yonda on
the Bon-Dieu, donc?" he asked, looking at her for the first
time since he had spoken.
"Yas, by Nid
d'Hibout, m'sieur."
Instinctive courtesy
held him from questioning her further. But he seated himself on the step,
evidently determined to wait there for the priest. He said no more, but sat
scanning critically the steps, the porch, and pillar beside him, from which he
occasionally tore away little pieces of detached wood, where it was beginning
to rot at its base.
A click at the side gate
that communicated with the churchyard soon announced Père Antoine's return. He
came hurriedly across the garden-path, between the tall, lusty rosebushes that
lined either side of it, which were now fragrant with blossoms. His long,
flapping cassock added something of height to his undersized, middle-aged
figure, as did the skullcap which rested securely back on his head. He saw only
the young man at first, who rose at his approach.
"Well,
Azenor," he called cheerily in French, extending his hand. "How is
this? I expected you all the week."
"Yes, monsieur; but
I knew well what you wanted with me, and I was finishing the doors for
Gros-Léon's new house;" saying which, he drew back, and indicated by a
motion and look that some one was present who had a prior claim upon Père
Antoine's attention.—
"Ah, Lalie!"
the priest exclaimed, when he had mounted to the porch, and saw her there
behind the vines. "Have you been waiting here since you confessed? Surely
an hour ago!"
"Yes,
monsieur."
"You should rather
have made some visits in the village, child."
"I am not
acquainted with any one in the village," she returned.
The priest, as he spoke,
had drawn a chair, and seated himself beside her, with his hands comfortably
clasping his knees. He wanted to know how things were out on the bayou.
"And how is the
grandmother?" he asked. "As cross and crabbed as ever? And with
that"—he added reflectively—"good for ten years yet! I said only
yesterday to Butrand—you know Butrand, he works on Le Blôt's Bon-Dieu
place—'And that Madame Zidore: how is it with her, Butrand? I believe God has
forgotten her here on earth.' 'It is n't that, your reverence,' said Butrand,
'but it's neither God nor the Devil that wants her!'" And Père Antoine
laughed with a jovial frankness that took all sting of ill-nature from his very
pointed remarks.
Lalie did not reply when
he spoke of her grandmother; she only pressed her lips firmly together, and
picked nervously at the red bandana.
"I have come to
ask, Monsieur Antoine," she began, lower than she needed to speak—for
Azenor had withdrawn at once to the far end of the porch—"to ask if you
will give me a little scrap of paper—a piece of writing for Monsieur Chartrand
at the store over there. I want new shoes and stockings for Easter, and I have
brought eggs to trade for them. He says he is willing, yes, if he was sure I
would bring more every week till the shoes are paid for."
With good-natured
indifference, Père Antoine wrote the order that the girl desired. He was too
familiar with distress to feel keenly for a girl who was able to buy Easter
shoes and pay for them with eggs.
She went immediately
away then, after shaking hands with the priest, and sending a quick glance of
her pathetic eyes towards Azenor, who had turned when he heard her rise, and
nodded when he caught the look. Through the vines he watched her cross the
village street.
"How is it that you
do not know Lalie, Azenor? You surely must have seen her pass your house often.
It lies on her way to the Bon-Dieu."
"No, I don't know
her; I have never seen her,", the young man replied, as he seated
himself—after the priest—and kept his eyes absently fixed on the store across
the road, where he had seen her enter.
"She is the granddaughter
of that Madame Izidore"—
"What! Ma'ame
Zidore whom they drove off the island last winter?"
"Yes, yes. Well,
you know, they say the old woman stole wood and things,—I don't know how true
it is,—and destroyed people's property out of pure malice."
"And she lives now
on the Bon-Dieu?"
"Yes, on Le Blôt's
place, in a perfect wreck of a cabin. You see, she gets it for nothing; not a
negro on the place but has refused to live in it."
"Surely, it can't
be that old abandoned hovel near the swamp, that Michon occupied ages
ago?"
"That is the one,
the very one."
"And the girl lives
there with that old wretch?" the young man marveled.
"Old wretch to be
sure, Azenor. But what can you expect from a woman who never crosses the
threshold of God's house—who even tried to hinder the child doing so as well?
But I went to her. I said: 'See here, Madame Zidore,'—you know it's my way to
handle such people without gloves,—'you may damn your soul if you choose,' I
told her, 'that is a privilege which we all have; but none of us has a right to
imperil the salvation of another. I want to see Lalie at mass hereafter on
Sundays, or you will hear from me;' and I shook my stick under her nose. Since
then the child has never missed a Sunday. But she is half starved, you can see
that. You saw how shabby she is—how broken her shoes are? She is at Chartrand's
now, trading for new ones with those eggs she brought, poor thing! There is no
doubt of her being ill-treated. Butrand says he thinks Madame Zidore even beats
the child. I don't know how true it is, for no power can make her utter a word
against her grandmother."
Azenor, whose face was a
kind and sensitive one, had paled with distress as the priest spoke; and now at
these final words he quivered as though he felt the sting of a cruel blow upon
his own flesh.
But no more was said of
Lalie, for Père Antoine drew the young man's attention to the carpenter-work
which he wished to intrust to him. When they had talked the matter over in all
its lengthy details, Azenor mounted his horse and rode away.
A moment's gallop
carried him outside the village. Then came a half-mile strip along the river to
cover. Then the lane to enter, in which stood his dwelling midway, upon a low,
pleasant knoll.
As Azenor turned into
the lane, he saw the figure of Lalie far ahead of him. Somehow he had expected
to find her there, and he watched her again, as he had done through Père
Antoine's vines. When she passed his house, he wondered if she would turn to
look at it. But she did not. How could she know it was his? Upon reaching it
himself, he did not enter the yard, but stood there motionless,'his eyes always
fastened upon the girl's figure. He could not see, away off there, how coarse
her garments were. She seemed, through the distance that divided them, as slim
and delicate as a flower-stalk. He stayed till she reached the turn of the lane
and disappeared into the woods.
Mass had not yet begun
when Azenor tiptoed into church on Easter morning. He did not take his place
with the congregation, but stood close to the holy-water font, and watched the
people who entered.
Almost every girl who
passed him wore a white mull, a dotted swiss, or a fresh-starched muslin at
least. They were bright with ribbons that hung from their persons, and flowers
that bedecked their hats. Some carried fans and cambric handkerchiefs. Most of
them wore gloves, and were odorant of poudre de riz and nice
toilet-waters; while all carried gay little baskets filled with Easter-eggs.
But there was one who
came empty-handed, save for the worn prayer-book which she bore. It was Lalie,
the veil upon her head, and wearing the blue print and cotton bodice which she
had worn the day before.
He dipped his hand into
the holy water when she came, and held it out to her, though he had not thought
of doing this for the others. She touched his fingers with the tips of her own,
making a slight inclination as she did so; and after a deep genuflection before
the Blessed Sacrament, passed on to the side. He was not sure if she had known
him. He knew she had not looked into his eyes, for he would have felt it.
He was angered against
other young women who passed him, because of their flowers and ribbons, when
she wore none. He himself did not care, but he feared she might, and watched
her narrowly to see if she did.
But it was plain that
Lalie did not care. Her face, as she seated herself, settled into the same
restful lines it had worn yesterday, when she sat in Père Antoine's big chair.
It seemed good to her to be there. Sometimes she looked up at the little colored
panes through which the Easter sun was streaming; then at the flaming candles,
like stars; or at the embowered figures of Joseph and Mary, flanking the
central tabernacle which shrouded the risen Christ. Yet she liked just as well
to watch the young girls in their spring freshness, or to sensuously inhale the
mingled odor of flowers and incense that filled the temple.
Lalie was among the last
to quit the church. When she walked down the clean pathway that led from it to
the road, she looked with pleased curiosity towards the groups of men and
maidens who were gayly matching their Easter-eggs under the shade of the
China-berry trees.
Azenor was among them,
and when he saw her coming solitary down the path, he approached her and, with
a smile, extended his hat, whose crown was quite lined with the pretty colored
eggs.
"You mus' of forgot
to bring aiggs," he said. "Take some o' mine."
"Non, merci,"
she replied, flushing and drawing back.
But he urged them anew
upon her. Much pleased, then, she bent her pretty head over the hat, and was
evidently puzzled to make a selection among so many that were beautiful.
He picked out one for
her,—a pink one, dotted with white clover-leaves.
"Yere," he
said, handing it to her, "I think this is the prettied'; an' it look'
strong too. I'm sho' it will break all of the res'." And he playfully held
out another, half-hidden in his fist, for her to try its strength upon. But she
refused to. She would not risk the ruin of her pretty egg. Then she walked
away, without once having noticed that the girls, whom Azenor had left, were
looking curiously at her.
When he rejoined them,
he was hardly prepared for their greeting; it startled him.
"How come you talk
to that girl? She's real canaille, her," was what one of them said to him.
"Who say' so? Who
say she's canaille? If it's a man, I 'll smash 'is head!" he exclaimed,
livid. They all laughed merrily at this.
"An' if it's a
lady, Azenor? W'at you goin' to do 'bout it?" asked another, quizzingly.
"T ain' no lady. No
lady would say that 'bout a po' girl, w'at she don't even know."
He turned away, and
emptying all his eggs into the hat of a little urchin who stood near, walked
out of the churchyard. He did not stop to exchange another word with any one;
neither with the men who stood all endimanchés before the
stores, nor the women who were mounting upon horses and into vehicles, or
walking in groups to their homes.
He took a short cut
across the cotton-field that extended back of the town, and walking rapidly,
soon reached his home. It was a pleasant house of few rooms and many windows,
with fresh air blowing through from every side; his workshop was beside it. A
broad strip of greensward, studded here and there with trees, sloped down to
the road.
Azenor entered the
kitchen, where an amiable old black woman was chopping onion and sage at a
table.
"Tranquiline,"
he said abruptly, "they's a young girl goin' to pass yere afta a w'ile.
She's got a blue dress an' w'ite josie on, an' a veil on her head. W'en you see
her, I want you to go to the road an' make her res' there on the bench, an' ask
her if she don't want a cup o' coffee. I saw her go to communion, me; so she
did n't eat any break-fas'. Eve'ybody else f'om out o' town, that went to
communion, got invited somew'ere another. It's enough to make a person sick to
see such meanness."
"An' you want me
ter go down to de gate, jis' so, an' ax 'er pineblank ef she wants some
coffee?" asked the bewildered Tranquiline.
"I don't care if
you ask her poin' blank o' not; but you do like I say." Tranquiline was
leaning over the gate when Lalie came along.
"Howdy,"
offered the woman.
"Howdy," the
girl returned.
"Did you see a
yalla calf wid black spots a t'arm' down de lane, missy?"
"Non; not yalla,
an' not with black spot'. Mais I see one li'le w'ite calf tie
by a rope, yonda 'roun' the ben'."
"Dat warn't hit.
Dis heah one was yalla. I hope he done flung hisse'f down de bank an' broke his
nake. Sarve 'im right! But whar you come f'om, chile? You look plum wo' out.
Set down dah on dat bench, an' le' me fotch you a cup o' coffee."
Azenor had already in
his eagerness arranged a tray, upon which was a smoking cup of café au
lait. He had buttered and jellied generous slices of bread, and was
searching wildly for something when Tranquiline reëntered.
"W'at become o'
that half of chicken-pie, Tranquiline, that was yere in the garde
manger yesterday?"
"W'at chicken-pie?
W'at garde manger?" blustered the woman.
"Like we got mo'
'en one garde manger in the house, Tranquiline!"
"You jis' like ole
Ma'ame Azenor use' to be, you is! You 'spec' chicken-pie gwine las' etarnal?
W'en some'pin done sp'ilt, I flings it' way. Dat's me—dat's Tranquiline!"
So Azenor resigned
himself,—what else could he do?—and sent the tray, incomplete, as he fancied
it, out to Lalie.
He trembled at thought
of what he did; he, whose nerves were usually as steady as some piece of steel
mechanism.
Would it anger her if
she suspected? Would it please her if she knew? Would she say this or that to
Tranquiline? And would Tranquiline tell him truly what she said—how she looked?
As it was Sunday, Azenor
did not work that afternoon. Instead, he took a book out under the trees, as he
often did, and sat reading it, from the first sound of the Vesper bell, that
came faintly across the fields, till the Angelus. All that time! He turned many
a page, yet in the end did not know what he had read. With his pencil he had
traced "Lalie" upon every margin, and was saying it softly to
himself.
Another Sunday Azenor
saw Lalie at mass—and again. Once he walked with her and showed her the short
cut across the cotton-field. She was very glad that day, and told him she was
going to work—her grandmother said she might. She was going to hoe, up in the
fields with Monsieur Le Blôt's hands. He entreated her not to; and when she
asked his reason, he could not tell her, but turned and tore shyly and savagely
at the elder-blossoms that grew along the fence.
Then they stopped where
she was going to cross the fence from the field into the lane. He wanted to
tell her that was his house which they could see not far away; but he did not
dare to, since he had fed her there on the morning she was hungry.
"An' you say yo'
gran'ma's goin' to let you work? She keeps you f'om workin', donc?"
He wanted to question her about her grandmother, and could think of no other
way to begin.
"Po' ole
grand'mère!" she answered. "I don' b'lieve she know mos' time w'at
she's doin'. Sometime she say' I aint no betta an' one nigga, an' she fo'ce me
to work. Then she say she know I'm goin' be one canaille like maman, an' she
make me set down still, like she would want to kill me if I would move. Her,
she on'y want' to be out in the wood', day an' night, day an' night. She ain'
got her right head, po' grand'mère. I know she ain't."
Lalie had spoken low and
in jerks, as if every word gave her pain. Azenor could feel her distress as
plainly as he saw it. He wanted to say something to her—to do something for
her. But her mere presence paralyzed him into inactivity—except his pulses,
that beat like hammers when he was with her. Such a poor, shabby little thing
as she was, too!
"I'm goin' to wait
yere nex' Sunday fo' you, Lalie," he said, when the fence was between
them. And he thought he had said something very daring.
But the next Sunday she
did not come. She was neither at the appointed place of meeting in the lane,
nor was she at mass. Her absence—so unexpected—affected Azenor like a calamity.
Late in the afternoon, when he could stand the trouble and bewilderment of it
no longer, he went and leaned over Père Antoine's fence. The priest was picking
the slugs from his roses on the other side.
"That young girl
from the Bon-Dieu," said Azenor—"she was not at mass to-day. I
suppose her grandmother has forgotten your warning."
"No," answered
the priest. "The child is ill, I hear. Butrand tells me she has been ill
for several days from overwork in the fields. I shall go out to-morrow to see
about her. I would go to-day, if I could."
"The child is
ill," was all Azenor heard or understood of Père Antoine's words. He
turned and walked resolutely away, like one who determines suddenly upon action
after meaningless hesitation.
He walked towards his
home and past it, as if it were a spot that did not concern him. He went on
down the lane and into the wood where he had seen Lalie disappear that day.
Here all was shadow, for
the sun had dipped too low in the west to send a single ray through the dense
foliage of the forest.
Now that he found
himself on the way to Lalie's home, he strove to understand why he had not gone
there before. He often visited other girls in the village and neighborhood,—why
not have gone to her, as well? The answer lay too deep in his heart for him to
be more than half-conscious of it. Fear had kept him,—dread to see her desolate
life face to face. He did not know how he could bear it.
But now he was going to
her at last. She was ill. He would stand upon that dismantled porch that he
could just remember. Doubtless Ma'ame Zidore would come out to know his will,
and he would tell her that Père Antoine had sent to inquire how Mamzelle Lalie
was. No! Why drag in Père Antoine? He would simply stand boldly and say,
"Ma'ame Zidore, I learn that Lalie is ill. I have come to know if it is
true, and to see her, if I may."
When Azenor reached the
cabin where Lalie dwelt, all sign of day had vanished. Dusk had fallen swiftly
after the sunset. The moss that hung heavy from great live-oak branches was
making fantastic silhouettes against the eastern sky that the big, round moon
was beginning to light. Off in the swamp beyond the bayou, hundreds of dismal
voices were droning a lullaby. Upon the hovel itself, a stillness like death
rested.
Oftener than once Azenor
tapped upon the door, which was closed as well as it could be, without
obtaining a reply. He finally approached one of the small unglazed windows, in
which coarse mosquito-netting had been fastened, and looked into the room.
By the moonlight
slanting in he could see Lalie stretched upon a bed; but of Ma'ame Zidore there
was no sign. "Lalie!" he called softly. "Lalie!"
The girl slightly moved
her head upon the pillow. Then he boldly opened the door and entered.
Upon a wretched bed,
over which was spread a cover of patched calico, Lalie lay, her frail body only
half concealed by the single garment that was upon it. One hand was plunged
beneath her pillow; the other, which was free, he touched. It was as hot as
flame; so was her head. He knelt sobbing upon the floor beside her, and called
her his love and his soul. He begged her to speak a word to him,—to look at
him. But she only muttered disjointedly that the cotton was all turning to
ashes in the fields, and the blades of the corn were in flames.
If he was choked with
love and grief to see her so, he was moved by anger as well; rage against
himself, against Père Antoine, against the people upon the plantation and in
the village, who had so abandoned a helpless creature to misery and maybe
death. Because she had been silent—had not lifted her voice in complaint—they
believed she suffered no more than she could bear.
But surely the people
could not be utterly without heart. There must be one somewhere with the spirit
of Christ. Père Antoine would tell him of such a one, and he would carry Lalie
to her,—out of this atmosphere of death. He was in haste to be gone with her. He
fancied every moment of delay was a fresh danger threatening her life.
He folded the rude
bed-cover over Lalie's naked limbs, and lifted her in his arms. She made no
resistance. She seemed only loath to withdraw her hand from beneath the pillow.
When she did, he saw that she held lightly but firmly clasped in her encircling
fingers the pretty Easter-egg he had given her! He uttered a low cry of
exultation as the full significance of this came over him. If she had hung for
hours upon his neck telling him that she loved him, he could not have known it
more surely than by this sign. Azenor felt as if some mysterious bond had all
at once drawn them heart to heart and made them one.
No need now to go from
door to door begging admittance for her. She was his. She belonged to him. He
knew now where her place was, whose roof must shelter her, and whose arms
protect her.
So Azenor, with his
loved one in his arms, walked through the forest, sure-footed as a panther.
Once, as he walked, he could hear in the distance the weird chant which Ma'ame
Zidore was crooning—to the moon, maybe—as she gathered her wood.
Once, where the water
was trickling cool through rocks, he stopped to lave Lalie's hot cheeks and
hands and forehead. He had not once touched his lips to her. But now, when a
sudden great fear came upon him because she did not know him, instinctively he
pressed his lips upon hers that were parched and burning. He held them there
till hers were soft and pliant from the healthy moisture of his own.
Then she knew him. She
did not tell him so, but her stiffened fingers relaxed their tense hold upon
the Easter bauble. It fell to the ground as she twined her arm around his neck;
and he understood.
"Stay close by her,
Tranquiline," said Azenor, when he had laid Lalie upon his own couch at
home. "I'm goin' for the doctor en' for Père Antoine. Not because she is
goin' to die," he added hastily, seeing the awe that crept into the
woman's face at mention of the priest. "She is goin' to live! Do you think
I would let my wife die, Tranquiline?"
She was a half-breed
Indian girl, with hardly a rag to her back. To the ladies of the Band of United
Endeavor who questioned her, she said her name was Loka, and she did not know
where she belonged, unless it was on Bayou Choctaw.
She had appeared one day
at the side door of Frobissaint's "oyster saloon" in Natchitoches,
asking for food. Frobissaint, a practical philanthropist, engaged her on the
spot as tumbler-washer.
She was not successful
at that; she broke too many tumblers. But, as Frobissaint charged her with the
broken glasses, he did not mind, until she began to break them over the heads
of his customers. Then he seized her by the wrist and dragged her before the
Band of United Endeavor, then in session around the corner. This was
considerate on Frobissaint's part, for he could have dragged her just as well
to the police station.
Loka was not beautiful,
as she stood in her red calico rags before the scrutinizing band. Her coarse,
black, unkempt hair framed a broad, swarthy face without a redeeming feature,
except eyes that were not bad; slow in their movements, but frank eyes enough.
She was big—boned and clumsy.
She did not know how old
she was. The minister's wife reckoned she might be sixteen. The judge's wife
thought that it made no difference. The doctor's wife suggested that the girl
have a bath and change before she be handled, even in discussion. The motion
was not seconded. Loka's ultimate disposal was an urgent and difficult
consideration.
Some one mentioned a
reformatory. Every one else objected.
Madame Laballière, the
planter's wife, knew a respectable family of 'Cadians living some miles below,
who, she thought, would give the girl a home, with benefit to all concerned.
The 'Cadian woman was a deserving one, with a large family of small children,
who had all her own work to do. The husband cropped in a modest way. Loka would
not only be taught to work at the Padues', but would receive a good moral
training beside.
That settled it. Every
one agreed with the planter's wife that it was a chance in a thousand;-and Loka
was sent to sit on the steps outside, while the band proceeded to the business
next in order.
Loka was afraid of
treading upon the little Padues when she first got amongst them,—there were so
many of them,—and her feet were like leaden weights, encased in the strong
brogans with which the band had equipped her.
Madame Padue, a small,
black-eyed, aggressive woman, questioned her in a sharp, direct fashion
peculiar to herself.
"How come you don't
talk French, you?" Loka shrugged her shoulders.
"I kin talk English
good 's anybody; an' lit' bit Choctaw, too," she offered, apologetically.
"Ma foi, you
kin fo'git yo' Choctaw. Soona the betta for me. Now if you wil-lin', an' ent
too lazy an' sassy, we 'll git 'long somehow. Vrai sauvage ça,"
she muttered under her breath, as she turned to initiate Loka into some of her
new duties.
She herself was a
worker. A good deal more fussy one than her easy-going husband and children
thought necessary or agreeable. Loka's slow ways and heavy motions aggravated
her. It was in vain Monsieur Padue expostulated:—
"She's on'y a
chile, rememba, Tontine."
"She's vrai
sauvage, that's w'at. It's got to be work out of her," was Tontine's
only reply to such remonstrance.
The girl was indeed so
deliberate about her tasks that she had to be urged constantly to accomplish
the amount of labor that Tontine required of her. Moreover, she carried to her
work a stolid indifference that was exasperating. Whether at the wash-tub,
scrubbing the floors, weeding the garden, or learning her lessons and catechism
with the children on Sundays, it was the same.
It was only when
intrusted with the care of little Bibine, the baby, that Loka crept somewhat
out of her apathy. She grew very fond of him. No wonder; such a baby as he was!
So good, so fat, and complaisant! He had such, a way of clasping Loka's broad
face between his pudgy fists and savagely biting her chin with his hard,
toothless gums! Such a way of bouncing in her arms as if he were mounted upon
springs! At his antics the girl would laugh a wholesome, ringing laugh that was
good to hear.
She was left alone to
watch and nurse him one day. An accommodating neighbor who had become the
possessor of a fine new spring wagon passed by just after the noon-hour meal,
and offered to take the whole family on a jaunt to town. The offer was all the
more tempting as Tontine had some long-delayed shopping to do; and the
opportunity to equip the children with shoes and summer hats could not be
slighted. So away they all went. All but Bibine, who was left swinging in his
branle with only Loka for company.
This branle consisted of
a strong circular piece of cotton cloth, securely but slackly fastened to a
large, stout hoop suspended by three light cords to a hook in a rafter of the
gallery. The baby who has not swung in a branle does not know the quintessence
of baby luxury. In each of the four rooms of the house was a hook from which to
hang this swing.
Often it was taken out
under the trees. But to-day it swung in the shade of the open gallery; and Loka
sat beside it, giving it now and then a slight impetus that sent it circling in
slow, sleep-inspiring undulations.
Bibine kicked and cooed
as long as he was able. But Loka was humming a monotonous lullaby; the branle
was swaying to and fro, the warm air fanning him deliciously; and Bibine was
soon fast asleep.
Seeing this, Loka
quietly let down the mosquito net, to protect the child's slumber from the
intrusion of the many insects that were swarming in the summer air.
Singularly enough, there
was no work for her to do; and Tontine, in her hurried departure, had failed to
provide for the emergency. The washing and ironing were over; the floors had
been scrubbed, and the rooms righted; the yard swept; the chickens fed; vegetables
picked and washed. There was absolutely nothing to do, and Loka gave herself up
to the dreams of idleness.
As she sat comfortably
back in the roomy rocker, she let her eyes sweep lazily across the country.
Away off to the right peeped up, from amid densely clustered trees, the pointed
roofs and long pipe of the steam-gin of Laballière's. No other habitation was
visible except a few low, flat dwellings far over the river, that could hardly
be seen.
The immense plantation
took up all the land in sight. The few acres that Baptiste Padue cultivated
were his own, that Laballière, out of friendly consideration, had sold to him.
Baptiste's fine crop of cotton and corn was "laid by" just now,
waiting for rain; and Baptiste had gone with the rest of the family to town.
Beyond the river and the field and everywhere about were dense woods.
Loka's gaze, that had
been slowly traveling along the edge of the horizon, finally fastened upon the
woods, and stayed there. Into her eyes came the absent look of one whose thought
is projected into the future or the past, leaving the present blank. She was
seeing a vision. It had come with a whiff that the strong south breeze had
blown to her from the woods.
She was seeing old
Marot, the squaw who drank whiskey and plaited baskets and beat her. There was
something, after all, in being beaten, if only to scream out and fight back, as
at that time in Natchitoches, when she broke a glass on the head of a man who
laughed at her and pulled her hair, and called her "fool names."
Old Marot wanted her to
steal and cheat, to beg and lie, when they went out with the baskets to sell.
Loka did not want to. She did not like to. That was why she had run away—and
because she was beaten. But—but ah! the scent of the sassafras leaves hanging
to dry in the shade! The pungent, camomile! The sound of the bayou tumbling
over that old slimy log! Only to lie there for hours and watch the glistening
lizards glide in and out was worth a beating.
She knew the birds must
be singing in chorus out there in the woods where the gray moss was hanging,
and the trumpet-vine trailing from the trees, spangled with blossoms. In spirit
she heard the songsters.
She wondered if Choctaw
Joe and Sambite played dice every night by the camp-fire as they used to do;
and if they still fought and slashed each other when wild with drink. How good
it felt to walk with moccasined feet over the springy turf, under the trees!
What fun to trap the squirrels, to skin the otter; to take those swift flights
on the pony that Choctaw Joe had stolen from the Texans!
Loka sat motionless;
only her breast heaved tumultuously. Her heart was aching with savage
homesickness. She could not feel just then that the sin and pain of that life
were anything beside the joy of its freedom.
Loka was sick for the
woods. She felt she must die if she could not get back to them, and to her
vagabond life. Was there anything to hinder her? She stooped and unlaced the
brogans that were chafing her feet, removed them and her stockings, and threw
the things away from her. She stood up all a-quiver, panting, ready for flight.
But there was a sound
that stopped her. It was little Bibine, cooing, sputtering, battling hands and
feet with the mosquito net that he had dragged over his face. The girl uttered
a sob as she reached down for the baby she had grown to love so, and clasped
him in her arms. She could not go and leave Bibine behind.
Tontine began to grumble
at once when she discovered that Loka was not at hand to receive them on their
return.
"Bon!"
she exclaimed. "Now w'ere is that Loka? Ah, that girl, she aggravates me
too much. Firs' thing she knows I'm goin' sen' her straight back to them ban'
of lady w'ere she come frum."
"Loka!" she
called, in short, sharp tones, as she traversed the house and peered into each
room. "Lo—ka!" She cried loudly enough to be heard half a mile away
when she got out upon the back gallery. Again and again she called.
Baptiste was exchanging
the discomfort of his Sunday coat for the accustomed ease of shirt sleeves.
"Mais don't
git so excite, Tontine," he implored. "I'm sho she's yonda to the
crib shellin' co'n, or somew'ere like that."
"Run, François,
you, an' see to the crib," the mother commanded. "Bibine mus' be
starve! Run to the hen-house an' look, Juliette. Maybe she's fall asleep in
some corna. That 'll learn me 'notha time to go trus' une pareille
sauvage with my baby, va!"
When it was discovered
that Loka was nowhere in the immediate vicinity, Tontine was furious.
"Pas possible she's
walk to Laballière, with Bibine!" she exclaimed.
"I'll saddle the
hoss an' go see, Tontine," interposed Baptiste, who was beginning to share
his wife's uneasiness.
"Go, go,
Baptiste," she urged. "An' you, boys, run yonda down the road to ole
Aunt Judy's cabin an' see."
It was found that Loka
had not been seen at Laballière's, nor at Aunt Judy's cabin; that she had not
taken the boat, that was still fastened to its moorings down the bank. Then
Tontine's excitement left her. She turned pale and sat quietly down in her
room, with an unnatural calm that frightened the children.
Some of them began to
cry. Baptiste walked restlessly about, anxiously scanning the country in all
directions. A wretched hour dragged by. The sun had set, leaving hardly an
afterglow, and in a little while the twilight that falls so swiftly would be
there.
Baptiste was preparing
to mount his horse, to start out again on the round he had already been over.
Tontine sat in the same state of intense abstraction when Francois, who had
perched himself among the lofty branches of a chinaberry-tree, called out:
"Ent that Loka 'way yon'a, jis' come out de wood? climbin' de fence down
by de melon patch?"
It was difficult to
distinguish in the gathering dusk if the figure were that of man or beast. But
the family was not left long in suspense. Baptiste sped his horse away in the
direction indicated by Francis, and in a little while he was galloping back
with Bibine in his arms; as fretful, sleepy and hungry a baby as ever was.
Loka came trudging on
behind Baptiste. He did not wait for explanations; he was too eager to place
the child in the arms of its mother. The suspense over, Tontine began to cry;
that followed naturally, of course. Through her tears she managed to address
Loka, who stood all tattered and disheveled in the doorway: "W'ere you
been? Tell me that."
"Bibine an'
me," answered Loka, slowly and awkwardly, "we was lonesome—we been
take lit' 'broad in de wood."
"You did n' know no
betta 'an to take 'way Bibine like that? W'at Ma'ame Laballière mean, anyhow,
to sen' me such a objec' like you, I want to know?"
"You go'n' sen' me
'way?" asked Loka, passing her hand in a hopeless fashion over her frowzy
hair.
"Par exemple! straight
you march back to that ban' w'ere you come from. To give me such a fright like
that! pas possible."
"Go slow, Tontine;
go slow," interposed Baptiste.
"Don' sen' me 'way
frum Bibine," entreated the girl, with a note in her voice like a lament.
"To-day," she
went on, in her dragging manner, "I want to run 'way bad, an' take to de
wood; an' go yonda back to Bayou Choctaw to steal an' lie agin. It's on'y
Bibine w'at hole me back. I could n' lef' 'im. I could n' do dat. An' we jis'
go take lit' 'broad in de wood, das all, him an' me. Don' sen' me 'way like
dat!"
Baptiste led the girl
gently away to the far end of the gallery, and spoke soothingly to her. He told
her to be good and brave, and he would right the trouble for her. He left her
standing there and went back to his wife.
"Tontine," he
began, with unusual energy, "you got to listen to the truth—once fo'
all." He had evidently determined to profit by his wife's lachrymose and
wilted condition to assert his authority.
"I want to say
who's masta in this house—it's me," he went on. Tontine did not protest;
only clasped the baby a little closer, which encouraged him to proceed.
"You been grind
that girl too much. She ent a bad girl—I been watch her close, 'count of the
chil'ren; she ent bad. All she want, it's li'le mo' rope. You can't drive a ox
with the same gearin' you drive a mule. You got to learn that, Tontine."
He approached his wife's
chair and stood beside her.
"That girl, she
done tole us how she was temp' to-day to turn canaille—like we all
temp' sometime'. W'at was it save her? That li'le chile w'at you hole in yo'
arm. An' now you want to take her guarjun angel 'way f'om her? Non,
non, ma femme," he said, resting his hand gently upon his wife's head.
"We got to rememba she ent like you an' me, po' thing; she's one Injun,
her."
When Boulôt and
Boulotte, the little piny-wood twins, had reached the dignified age of twelve,
it was decided in family council that the time had come for them to put their
little naked feet into shoes. They were two brown-skinned, black-eyed 'Cadian
roly-polies, who lived with father and mother and a troop of brothers and
sisters halfway up the hill, in a neat log cabin that had a substantial mud
chimney at one end. They could well afford shoes now, for they had saved many a
picayune through their industry of selling wild grapes, blackberries, and
"socoes" to ladies in the village who "put up" such things.
Boulôt and Boulotte were
to buy the shoes themselves, and they selected a Saturday afternoon for the
important transaction, for that is the great shopping time in Natchitoches
Parish. So upon a bright Saturday afternoon Boulôt and Boulotte, hand in hand,
with their quarters, their dimes, and their picayunes tied carefully in a
Sunday handkerchief, descended the hill, and disappeared from the gaze of the
eager group that had assembled to see them go.
Long before it was time
for their return, this same small band, with ten year old Seraphine at their
head, holding a tiny Seraphin in her arms, had stationed themselves in a row
before the cabin at a convenient point from which to make quick and careful
observation.
Even before the two
could be caught sight of, their chattering voices were heard down by the
spring, where they had doubtless stopped to drink. The voices grew more and
more audible. Then, through the branches of the young pines, Boulotte's blue
sun-bonnet appeared, and Boulôt's straw hat. Finally the twins, hand in hand,
stepped into the clearing in full view.
Consternation seized the
band.
"You bof
crazy donc, Boulôt an' Boulotte," screamed Seraphine.
"You go buy shoes, an' come home barefeet like you was go!"
Boulôt flushed crimson.
He silently hung his head, and looked sheepishly down at his bare feet, then at
the fine stout brogans that he carried in his hand. He had not thought of it.
Boulotte also carried
shoes, but of the glossiest, with the highest of heels and brightest of
buttons. But she was not one to be disconcerted or to look sheepish; far from
it.
"You 'spec' Boulôt
an' me we got money fur was'e—us?" she retorted, with withering
condescension. "You think we go buy shoes fur ruin it in de dus'? Comment!"
And they all walked into
the house crest-fallen; all but Boulotte, who was mistress of the situation,
and Seraphin, who did not care one way or the other.
"An' now, young
man, w'at you want to remember is this—an' take it fer yo' motto: 'No
monkey-shines with Uncle Sam.' You undastan'? You aware now o' the penalties
attached to monkey-shinin' with Uncle Sam. I reckon that's 'bout all I got to
say; so you be on han' promp' to-morrow mornin' at seven o'clock, to take
charge o' the United States mail-bag."
This formed the close of
a very pompous address delivered by the postmaster of Cloutier ville to young
Armand Verchette, who had been appointed to carry the mails from the village to
the railway station three miles away.
Armand—or Chouchoute, as
every one chose to call him, following the habit of the Creoles in giving
nicknames—had heard the man a little impatiently.
Not so the negro boy who
accompanied him. The child had listened with the deepest respect and awe to
every word of the rambling admonition.
"How much you gwine
git, Marse Chouchoute?" he asked, as they walked down the village street
together, the black boy a little behind. He was very black, and slightly
deformed; a small boy, scarcely reaching to the shoulder of his companion,
whose cast-off garments he wore. But Chouchoute was tall for his sixteen years,
and carried himself well.
"W'y, I'm goin' to
git thirty dolla' a month, Wash; w'at you say to that? Betta 'an hoein' cotton,
ain't it?" He laughed with a triumphant ring in his voice.
But Wash did not laugh;
he was too much impressed by the importance of this new function, too much
bewildered by the vision of sudden wealth which thirty dollars a month meant to
his understanding.
He felt, too, deeply
conscious of the great weight of responsibility which this new office brought
with it. The imposing salary had confirmed the impression left by the
postmaster's words.
"You gwine
git all dat money? Sakes! W'at you reckon Ma'ame Verchette say? I know she
gwine mos' take a fit w'en she heah dat."
But Chouchoute's mother
did not "mos' take a fit" when she heard of her son's good fortune.
The white and wasted hand which she rested upon the boy's black curls trembled
a little, it is true, and tears of emotion came into her tired eyes. This step
seemed to her the beginning of better things for her fatherless boy.
They lived quite at the
end of this little French village, which was simply two long rows of very old
frame houses, facing each other closely across a dusty roadway.
Their home was a
cottage, so small and so humble that it just escaped the reproach of being a
cabin.
Every one was kind to
Madame Verchette. Neighbors ran in of mornings to help her with her work—she
could do so little for herself. And often the good priest, Père Antoine, came
to sit with her and talk innocent gossip.
To say that Wash was
fond of Madame Verchette and her son is to be poor in language to express
devotion. He worshiped her as if she were already an angel in Paradise.
Chouchoute was a
delightful young fellow; no one could help loving him. His heart was as warm
and cheery as his own southern sunbeams. If he was born with an unlucky trick
of forgetfulness—or better, thoughtlessness—no one ever felt much like blaming
him for it, so much did it seem a part of his happy, careless nature. And why
was that faithful watch-dog, Wash, always at Marse Chouchoute's heels, if it
were not to be hands and ears and eyes to him, more than half the time?
One beautiful spring
night, Chouchoute, on his way to the station, was riding along the road that
skirted the river. The clumsy mail-bag that lay before him across the pony was
almost empty; for the Cloutierville mail was a meagre and unimportant one at
best.
But he did not know
this. He was not thinking of the mail, in fact; he was only feeling that life
was very agreeable this delicious spring night.
There were cabins at
intervals upon the road—most of them darkened, for the hour was late. As he
approached one of these, which was more pretentious than the others, he heard
the sound of a fiddle, and saw lights through the openings of the house.
It was so far from the
road that when he stopped his horse and peered through the darkness he could
not recognize the dancers who passed before the open doors and windows. But he
knew this was Gros-Léon's ball, which he had heard the boys talking about all
the week.
Why should he not go and
stand in the doorway an instant and exchange a word with the dancers?
Chouchoute dismounted,
fastened his horse to the fence-post, and proceeded towards the house.
The room, crowded with
people young and old, was long and low, with rough beams across the ceiling,
blackened by smoke and time. Upon the high mantelpiece a single coal-oil lamp
burned, and none too brightly.
In a far corner, upon a
platform of boards laid across two flour barrels, sat Uncle Ben, playing upon a
squeaky fiddle, and shouting the "figures."
"Ah! v'là Chouchoute!"
some one called.
"Eh!
Chouchoute!"
"Jus' in time,
Chouchoute; yere's Miss Léontine waitin' fer a partna."
"S'lute yo'
partnas!" Uncle Ben was thundering forth; and Chouchoute, with one hand
gracefully behind him, made a profound bow to Miss Léontine, as he offered her
the other.
Now Chouchoute was noted
far and wide for his skill as a dancer. The moment he stood upon the floor, a
fresh spirit seemed to enter into all present. It was with renewed vigor that
Uncle Ben intoned his "Balancy all! Fus' fo' fo'ard an' back!"
The spectators drew
close about the couples to watch Chouchoute's wonderful performance; his pointing
of toes; his pigeonwings in which his feet seemed hardly to touch the floor.
"It take Chouchoute
to show 'em de step, va!" proclaimed Gros-Léon, with a fat
satisfaction, to the audience at large.
"Look 'im; look 'im
yonda! Ole Ben got to work hard' 'an dat, if he want to keep up wid Chouchoute,
I tell you!".
So it was; encouragement
and adulation on all sides, till, from the praise that was showered on him,
Chouchoute's head was soon as light as his feet.
At the windows appeared
the dusky faces of negroes, their bright eyes gleaming as they viewed the scene
within and mingled their loud guffaws with the medley of sound that was already
deafening.
The time was speeding.
The air was heavy in the room, but no one seemed to mind this. Uncle Ben was
calling the figures now with a rhythmic sing-song:—
"Right an' lef' all
'roun'! Swing co'nas!"
Chouchoute turned with a
smile to Miss Félicie on his left, his hand extended, when what should break
upon his ear but the long, harrowing wail of a locomotive!
Before the sound ceased
he had vanished from the room. Miss Félicie stood as he left her, with hand
uplifted, rooted to the spot with astonishment.
It was the train
whistling for his station, and he a mile and more away! He knew he was too
late, and that he could not make the distance; but the sound had been a rude
reminder that he was not at his post of duty.
However, he would do
what he could now. He ran swiftly to the outer road, and to the spot where he
had left his pony.
The horse was gone, and
with it the United States mail-bag!
For an instant
Chouchoute stood half-stunned with terror. Then, in one quick flash, came to
his mind a vision of possibilities that sickened him. Disgrace overtaking him
in this position of trust; poverty his portion again; and his dear mother
forced to share both with him.
He turned desperately to
some negroes who had followed him, seeing his wild rush from the house:—
"Who saw my hoss?
W'at you all did with my hoss, say?"
"Who you reckon
tech yo' hoss, boy?" grumbled Gustave, a sullen-looking mulatto. "You
did n'have no call to lef' 'im in de road, fus' place."
"'Pear to me like I
heahed a hoss a-lopin' down de road jis' now; did n' you, Uncle Jake?"
ventured a second.
"Neva heahed
nuttin'—nuttin' 't all, 'cep' dat big-mouf Ben yon da makin' mo' fuss 'an a
t'unda-sto'm."
"Boys!" cried
Chouchoute, excitedly, "bring me a hoss, quick, one of you. I'm boun' to
have one! I'm boun' to! I 'll give two dolla' to the firs' man brings me a
hoss."
Near at hand, in the
"lot" that adjoined Uncle Jake's cabin, was his little creole pony,
nibbling the cool, wet grass that he found, along the edges and in the corners
of the fence.
The negro led the pony
forth. With no further word, and with one bound, Chouchoute was upon the
animal's back. He wanted neither saddle nor bridle, for there were few horses
in the neighborhood that had not been trained to be guided by the simple
motions of a rider's body.
Once mounted, he threw
himself forward with a certain violent impulse, leaning till his cheek touched
the animal's mane.
He uttered a sharp
"Hei!" and at once, as if possessed by sudden frenzy, the horse
dashed forward, leaving the bewildered black men in a cloud of dust.
What a mad ride it was!
On one side was the river bank, steep in places and crumbling away; on the
other, an unbroken line of fencing; now in straight lines of neat planking, now
treacherous barbed wire, sometimes the zigzag rail.
The night was black,
with only such faint light as the stars were shedding. No sound was to be heard
save the quick thud of the horse's hoofs upon the hard dirt road, the animal's
heavy breathing, and the boy's feverish "hei-hei!" when he fancied
the speed slackened.
Occasionally a marauding
dog started from the obscurity to bark and give useless chase.
"To the road, to
the road, Bon-à-rien!" panted Chouchoute, for the horse in his wild race
had approached so closely to the river's edge that the bank crumbled beneath
his flying feet. It was only by a desperate lunge and bound that he saved
himself and rider from plunging into the water below.
Chouchoute hardly knew
what he was pursuing so madly. It was rather something that drove him; fear,
hope, desperation.
He was rushing to the
station, because it seemed to him, naturally, the first thing to do. There was
the faint hope that his own horse had broken rein and gone there of his own
accord; but such hope was almost lost in a wretched conviction that had seized
him the instant he saw "Gustave the thief" among the men gathered at
Gros-Léon's. "Hei! hei, Bon-à-rien!"
The lights of the
railway station were gleaming ahead, and Chouchoute's hot ride was almost at an
end.
With sudden and strange
perversity of purpose, Chouchoute, as he drew closer upon the station,
slackened his horse's speed. A low fence was in his way. Not long before, he
would have cleared it at a bound, for Bon-à-rien could do such things. Now he
cantered easily to the end of it, to go through the gate which was there.
His courage was growing
faint, and his heart sinking within him as he drew nearer and nearer.
He dismounted, and
holding the pony by the mane, approached with some trepidation the young
station-master, who was taking note of some freight that had been deposited
near the tracks.
"Mr. Hudson,"
faltered Chouchoute, "did you see my pony 'roun' yere anywhere? an'—an'
the mail-sack?"
"Your pony's safe
in the woods, Chou'te. The mail-bag's on its way to New Orleans"—
"Thank God!"
breathed the boy.
"But that poor
little fool darkey of yours has about done it for himself, I guess."
"Wash? Oh, Mr.
Hudson! w'at's—w'at's happen' to Wash?"
"He's inside there,
on my mattress. He's hurt, and he's hurt bad; that's what's the matter. You see
the ten forty-five had come in, and she did n't make much of a stop; she was
just pushing out, when bless me if that little chap of yours didn't come
tearing along on Spunky as if Old Harry was behind him.
"You know how No.
22 can pull at the start; and there was that little imp keeping abreast of her
'most under the thing's wheels.
"I shouted at him.
I could n't make out what he was up to, when blamed if he did n't pitch the
mail-bag clean into the car! Buffalo Bill could n't have done it neater.
"Then Spunky, she
shied; and Wash he bounced against the side of that car and back, like a rubber
ball, and laid in the ditch till we carried him inside.
"I've wired down
the road for Doctor Campbell to come up on 14 and do what he can for him."
Hudson had related these
events to the distracted boy while they made their way toward the house.
Inside, upon a low
pallet, lay the little negro, breathing heavily, his black face pinched and
ashen with approaching death. He had wanted no one to touch him further than to
lay him upon the bed.
The few men and colored
women gathered in the room were looking upon him with pity mingled with
curiosity.
When he saw Chouchoute
he closed his eyes, and a shiver passed through his small frame. Those about
him thought he was dead. Chouchoute knelt, choking, at his side and held his
hand.
"O Wash, Wash! W'at
you did that for? W'at made you, Wash?"
"Marse Chouchoute,"
the boy whispered, so low that no one could hear him but his friend, "I
was gwine 'long de big road, pas' Marse Gros-Léon's, an' I seed Spunky tied dah
wid de mail. Dar warn't a minute—I 'clar', Marse Chouchoute, dar warn't a
minute—to fotch you. W'at makes my head tu'n 'roun' dat away?"
"Neva mine, Wash;
keep still; don't you try to talk," entreated Chouchoute.
"You ain't mad,
Marse Chouchoute?"
The lad could only
answer with a hand pressure.
"Dar warn't a
minute, so I gits top o' Spunky—I neva seed nuttin' d'ar de road like dat. I
come 'long side—de train—an' fling de sack. I seed 'im kotch it, and I don'
know nuttin' mo' 'cep' mis'ry, tell I see you—a-comin' frough de do'. Mebby
Ma'ame Armand know some'pin," he murmured faintly, "w'at gwine make my—head
quit tu'nin' 'round dat away. I boun' to git well, 'ca'se who—gwine—watch
Marse—Chouchoute?"
Every one who came up
from Avoyelles had the same story to tell of Mentine. Cher Maître! but
she was changed. And there were babies, more than she could well manage; as
good as four already. Jules was not kind except to himself. They seldom went to
church, and never anywhere upon a visit. They lived as poorly as pine-woods
people. Doudouce had heard the story often, the last time no later than that
morning.
"Ho-a!" he
shouted to his mule plumb in the middle of the cotton row. He had staggered
along behind the plow since early morning, and of a sudden he felt he had had
enough of it. He mounted the mule and rode away to the stable, leaving the plow
with its polished blade thrust deep in the red Cane River soil. His head felt
like a windmill with the recollections and sudden intentions that had crowded
it and were whirling through his brain since he had heard the last story about
Mentine.
He knew well enough
Mentine would have married him seven years ago had not Jules Trodon come up
from Avoyelles and captivated her with his handsome eyes and pleasant speech.
Doudouce was resigned then, for he held Mentine's happiness above his own. But
now she was suffering in a hopeless, common, exasperating way for the small
comforts of life. People had told him so. And somehow, to-day, he could not
stand the knowledge passively. He felt he must see those things they spoke of
with his own eyes. He must strive to help her and her children if it were
possible.
Doudouce could not sleep
that night. He lay with wakeful eyes watching the moonlight creep across the
bare floor of his room; listening to sounds that seemed unfamiliar and weird
down among the rushes along the bayou. But towards morning he saw Mentine as he
had seen her last in her white wedding gown and veil. She looked at him with
appealing eyes and held out her arms for protection,—for, rescue, it seemed to
him. That dream determined him. The following day Doudouce started for
Avoyelles.
Jules Trodon's home lay
a mile or two from Marksville. It consisted of three rooms strung in a row and
opening upon a narrow gallery. The whole wore an aspect of poverty and
dilapidation that summer day, towards noon, when Doudouce approached it. His
presence outside the gate aroused the frantic barking of dogs that dashed down
the steps as if to attack him. Two little brown barefooted children, a boy and
girl, stood upon the gallery staring stupidly at him. "Call off you'
dogs," he requested; but they only continued to stare.
"Down, Pluto! down,
Achille!" cried the shrill voice of a woman who emerged from the house,
holding upon her arm a delicate baby of a year or two. There was only an
instant of unrecognition.
"Mais Doudouce,
that ent you, comment! Well, if any one would tole me this
mornin'! Git a chair, 'Tit Jules. That's Mista Doudouce, f'om 'way yonda
Natchitoches w'ere yo' maman use' to live. Mais, you ent change';
you' lookin' well, Doudouce."
He shook hands in a
slow, undemonstrative way, and seated himself clumsily upon the hide-bottomed
chair, laying his broad-rimmed felt hat upon the floor beside him. He was very
uncomfortable in the cloth Sunday coat which he wore.
"I had business
that call' me to Marksville," he began, "an' I say to myse'f, 'Tiens,
you can't pass by without tell' 'em all howdy.'"
"Par exemple! w'at
Jules would said to that! Mais, you' lookin' well; you ent change',
Doudouce."
"An' you' lookin'
well, Mentine, Jis' the same Mentine." He regretted that he lacked talent
to make the lie bolder.
She moved a little
uneasily, and felt upon her shoulder for a pin with which to fasten the front
of her old gown where it lacked a button. She had kept the baby in her lap.
Doudouce was wondering miserably if he would have known her outside her home.
He would have known her sweet, cheerful brown eyes, that were not changed; but
her figure, that had looked so trim in the wedding gown, was sadly misshapen.
She was brown, with skin like parchment, and piteously thin. There were lines,
some deep as if old age had cut them, about the eyes and mouth.
"An' how you lef'
'em all, yonda?" she asked, in a high voice that had grown shrill from
screaming at children and dogs.
"They all well.
It's mighty li'le sickness in the country this yea'. But they been lookin' fo'
you up yonda, straight along, Mentine."
"Don't talk,
Doudouce, it's no chance; with that po' we' out piece o' lan' w'at Jules got.
He say, anotha yea' like that, he's goin' sell out, him."
The children were
clutching her on either side, their persistent gaze always fastened upon
Doudouce. He tried without avail to make friends with them. Then Jules came
home from the field, riding the mule with which he had worked, and which he
fastened outside the gate.
"Yere's Doudouce
f'om Natchitoches, Jules," called out Mentine, "he stop' to tell us
howdy, en passant." The husband mounted to the gallery and the
two men shook hands; Doudouce listlessly, as he had done with Mentine; Jules
with some bluster and show of cordiality.
"Well, you' a lucky
man, you," he exclaimed with his swagger air, "able to broad like
that, encore! You could n't do that if you had half a dozen
mouth' to feed, allez!"
"Non, j'te
garantis!" agreed Mentine, with a loud laugh. Doudouce winced, as he had
done the instant before at Jules's heartless implication. This husband of
Mentine surely had not changed during the seven years, except to grow broader,
stronger, handsomer. But Doudouce did not tell him so.
After the mid-day dinner
of boiled salt pork, corn bread and molasses, there was nothing for Doudouce
but to take his leave when Jules did.
At the gate, the little
boy was discovered in dangerous proximity to the mule's heels, and was properly
screamed at and rebuked.
"I reckon he likes
hosses," Doudouce remarked. "He take' afta you, Mentine. I got a
li'le pony yonda home," he said, addressing the child, "w'at ent ne
use to me. I'm goin' sen' 'im down to you. He's a good, tough li'le mustang.
You jis can let 'im eat grass an' feed 'im a ban'ful 'o co'n, once a w'ile. An'
he's gentle, yes. You an' yo' ma can ride 'im to church, Sundays. Hein! you
want?"
"W'at you say,
Jules?" demanded the father. "W'at you say?" echoed Mentine, who
was balancing the baby across the gate.
"'Tit sauvage,
va!"
Doudouce shook hands all
around, even with the baby, and walked off in the opposite direction to Jules,
who had mounted the mule. He was bewildered. He stumbled over the rough ground
because of tears that were blinding him, and that he had held in check for the
past hour.
He had loved Mentine
long ago, when she was young and attractive, and he found that he loved her
still. He had tried to put all disturbing thought of her away, on that
wedding-day, and he supposed he had succeeded. But he loved her now as he never
had. Because she was no longer beautiful, he loved her. Because the delicate
bloom of her existence had been rudely brushed away; because she was in a
manner fallen; because she was Mentine, he loved her; fiercely, as a mother
loves an afflicted child. He would have liked to thrust that man aside, and
gather up her and her children, and hold them and keep them as long as life
lasted.
After a moment or two
Doudouce looked back at Mentine, standing at the gate with her baby. But her
face was turned away from him. She was gazing after her husband, who went in
the direction of the field.
It was one afternoon in
April, not long ago, only the other day, and the shadows had already begun to
lengthen.
Bertrand Delmandé, a
fine, bright-looking boy of fourteen years,—fifteen, perhaps,—was mounted, and
riding along a pleasant country road, upon a little Creole pony, such as boys
in Louisiana usually ride when they have nothing better at hand. He had hunted,
and carried his gun before him.
It is unpleasant to
state that Bertrand was not so depressed as he should have been, in view of
recent events that had come about. Within the past week he had been recalled
from the college of Grand Coteau to his home, the Bon-Accueil plantation.
He had found his father
and his grandmother depressed over money matters, awaiting certain legal
developments that might result in his permanent withdrawal from school. That
very day, directly after the early dinner, the two had driven to town, on this
very business, to be absent till the late afternoon. Bertrand, then, had
saddled Picayune and gone for a long jaunt, such as his heart delighted in.
He was returning now,
and had approached the beginning of the great tangled Cherokee hedge that
marked the boundary line of Bon-Accueil, and that twinkled with multiple white
roses.
The pony started
suddenly and violently at something there in the turn of the road, and just
under the hedge. It looked like a bundle of rags at first. But it was a tramp,
seated upon a broad, flat stone.
Bertrand had no maudlin
consideration for tramps as a species; he had only that morning driven from the
place one who was making himself unpleasant at the kitchen window.
But this tramp was old
and feeble. His beard was long, and as white as new-ginned cotton, and when
Bertrand saw him he was engaged in stanching a wound in his bare heel with a
fistful of matted grass.
"What's wrong, old
man?" asked the boy, kindly.
The tramp looked up at
him with a bewildered glance, but did not answer.
"Well," thought
Bertrand, "since it's decided that I'm to be a physician some day, I can't
begin to practice too early."
He dismounted, and
examined the injured foot. It had an ugly gash. Bertrand acted mostly from
impulse. Fortunately his impulses were not bad ones. So, nimbly, and as quickly
as he could manage it', he had the old man astride Picayune, whilst he himself
was leading the pony down the narrow lane.
The dark green hedge
towered like a high and solid wall on one side. On the other was a broad, open
field, where here and there appeared the flash and gleam of uplifted, polished
hoes, that negroes were plying between the even rows of cotton and tender corn.
"This is the State
of Louisiana," uttered the tramp, quaveringly.
"Yes, this is
Louisiana," returned Bertrand cheerily.
"Yes, I know it is.
I've been in all of them since Gettysburg. Sometimes it was too hot, and
sometimes it was too cold; and with that bullet in my head—you don't remember?
No, you don't remember Gettysburg."
"Well, no, not
vividly," laughed Bertrand.
"Is it a hospital?
It isn't a factory, is it?" the man questioned.
"Where we 're
going? Why, no, it's the Delmandé plantation—Bon-Accueil. Here we are. Wait, I
'll open the gate."
This singular group
entered the yard from the rear, and not far from the house. A big black woman,
who sat just without a cabin door, picking a pile of rusty-looking moss, called
out at sight of them:—
"W'at's dat you's
bringin' in dis yard, boy? top dat hoss?"
She received no reply.
Bertrand, indeed, took no notice of her inquiry.
"Fu' a boy w'at
goes to school like you does—whar's yo'sense?" she went on, with a fine
show of indignation; then, muttering to herself, "Ma'ame Bertrand an'
Marse St. Ange ain't gwine stan' dat, I knows dey ain't. Dah! ef he ain't done
sot 'im on de gall'ry, plumb down in his pa's rockin'-cheer!"
Which the boy had done;
seated the tramp in a pleasant corner of the veranda, while he went in search
of bandages for his wound.
The servants showed high
disapproval, the housemaid following Bertrand into his grandmother's room,
whither he had carried his investigations.
"W'at you tearin'
yo' gra'ma's closit to' pieces dat away, boy?" she complained in her high
soprano.
"I'm looking for
bandages."
"Den w'y you don't
ax fu' ban'ges, an' lef yo' gra'ma's closit 'lone? You want to listen to me;
you gwine git shed o' dat tramp settin' dah naxt to de dinin'-room! W'en de
silva be missin', 'tain' you w'at gwine git blame, it's me."
"The silver?
Nonsense, 'Cindy; the man's wounded, and can't you see he's out of his
head?"
"No mo' outen his
head 'an I is. 'T ain' me w'at want to tres' [trust] 'im wid de sto'-room key,
ef he is outen his head," she concluded with a disdainful shrug.
But Bertrand's protégé
proved so unapproachable in his long-worn rags, that the boy concluded to leave
him unmolested till his father's return, and then ask permission to turn the
forlorn creature into the bath-house, and array him afterward in clean, fresh
garments.
So there the old tramp
sat in the veranda corner, stolidly content, when St. Ange Delmandé and his
mother returned from town.
St. Ange was a dark,
slender man of middle age, with a sensitive face, and a plentiful sprinkle of
gray in his thick black hair; his mother, a portly woman, and an active one for
her sixty-five years.
They were evidently in a
despondent mood. Perhaps it was for the cheer of her sweet presence that they
had brought with them from town a little girl, the child of Madame Delmandé's
only daughter, who was married, and lived there.
Madame Delmandé and her
son were astonished to find so uninviting an intruder in possession. But a few
earnest words from Bertrand reassured them, and partly reconciled them to the
man's presence; and it was with wholly indifferent though not unkindly glances
that they passed him by when they entered. On any large plantation there are
always nooks and corners where, for a night or more, even such a man as this
tramp may be tolerated and given shelter.
When Bertrand went to
bed that night, he lay long awake thinking of the man, and of what he had heard
from his lips in the hushed starlight. The boy had heard of the awfulness of
Gettysburg, till it was like something he could feel and quiver at.
On that field of battle
this man had received a new and tragic birth. For all his existence that went
before was a blank to him. There, in the black desolation of war, he was born
again, without friends or kindred; without even a name he could know was his
own. Then he had gone forth a wanderer; living more than half the time in
hospitals; toiling when he could, starving when he had to.
Strangely enough, he had
addressed Bertrand as "St. Ange," not once, but every time he had
spoken to him. The boy wondered at this. Was it because he had heard Madame
Delmandé address her son by that name, and fancied it?
So this nameless
wanderer had drifted far down to the plantation of Bon-Accueil, and at last had
found a human hand stretched out to him in kindness.
When the family
assembled at breakfast on the following morning, the tramp was already settled
in the chair, and in the corner which Bertrand's indulgence had made familiar
to him.
If he had turned partly
around, he would have faced the flower garden, with its graveled walks and trim
parterres, where a tangle of color and perfume were holding high revelry this
April morning; but he liked better to gaze into the back yard, where there was
always movement: men and women coming and going, bearing implements of work;
little negroes in scanty garments, darting here and there, and kicking up the
dust in their exuberance.
Madame Delmandé could
just catch a glimpse of him through the long window that opened to the floor,
and near which he sat.
Mr. Delmandé had spoken
to the man pleasantly; but he and his mother were wholly absorbed by their
trouble, and talked constantly of that, while Bertrand went back and forth
ministering to the old man's wants. The boy knew that the servants would have
done the office with ill grace, and he chose to be cup-bearer himself to the
unfortunate creature for whose presence he alone was responsible.
Once, when Bertrand went
out to him with a second cup of coffee, steaming and fragrant, the old man
whispered:—
"What are they
saying in there?" pointing over his shoulder to the dining-room.
"Oh, money troubles
that will force us to economize for a while," answered the boy. "What
father and mé-mère feel worst about is that I shall have to
leave college now."
"No, no! St. Ange
must go to school. The war's over, the war's over! St. Ange and Florentine must
go to school."
"But if there's no
money," the boy insisted, smiling like one who humors the vagaries of a
child.
"Money!
money!" murmured the tramp. "The war's over—money! money!"
His sleepy gaze had
swept across the yard into the thick of the orchard beyond, and rested there.
Suddenly he pushed aside
the light table that had been set before him, and rose, clutching Bertrand's
arm.
"St. Ange, you must
go to school!" he whispered. "The war's over," looking furtively
around. "Come. Don't let them hear you. Don't let the negroes see us. Get
a spade—the little spade that Buck Williams was digging his cistern with."
Still clutching the boy,
he dragged him down the steps as he said this, and traversed the yard with
long, limping strides, himself leading the way.
From under a shed where
such things were to be found, Bertrand selected a spade, since the tramp's whim
demanded that he should, and together they entered the orchard.
The grass was thick and
tufted here, and wet with the morning dew. In long lines, forming pleasant
avenues between, were peach-trees growing, and pear and apple and plum. Close
against the fence was the pome-granate hedge, with its waxen blossoms,
brick-red. Far down in the centre of the orchard stood a huge pecan-tree, twice
the size of any other that was there, seeming to rule like an old-time king.
Here Bertrand and his
guide stopped. The tramp had not once hesitated in his movements since grasping
the arm of his young companion on the veranda. Now he went and leaned his back
against the pecan-tree, where there was a deep knot, and looking steadily
before him he took ten paces forward. Turning sharply to the right, he made
five additional paces. Then pointing his finger downward, and looking at
Bertrand, he commanded:—
"There, dig. I
would do it myself, but for my wounded foot. For I've turned many a spade of
earth since Gettysburg. Dig, St. Ange, dig! The war's over; you must go to
school."
Is there a boy of
fifteen under the sun who would not have dug, even knowing he was following the
insane dictates of a demented man? Bertrand entered with all the zest of his
years and his spirit into the curious adventure; and he dug and dug, throwing
great spadefuls of the rich, fragrant earth from side to side.
The tramp, with body
bent, and fingers like claws clasping his bony knees, stood watching with eager
eyes, that never unfastened their steady gaze from the boy's rhythmic motions.
"That's it!"
he muttered at intervals. "Dig, dig! The war's over. You must go to
school, St. Ange."
Deep down in the earth,
too deep for any ordinary turning of the soil with spade or plow to have
reached it, was a box. It was of tin, apparently, something larger than a cigar
box, and bound round and round with twine, rotted now and eaten away in places.
The tramp showed no
surprise at seeing it there; he simply knelt upon the ground and lifted it from
its long resting place.
Bertrand had let the
spade fall from his hands, and was quivering with the awe of the thing he saw.
Who could this wizard be that had come to him in the guise of a tramp, that walked
in cabalistic paces upon his own father's ground, and pointed his finger like a
divining-rod to the spot where boxes—may be treasures—lay? It was like a page
from a wonder-book.
And walking behind this
white-haired old man, who was again leading the way, something of childish
superstition crept back into Bertrand's heart. It was the same feeling with
which he had often sat, long ago, in the weird firelight of some negro's cabin,
listening to tales of witches who came in the night to work uncanny spells at
their will.
Madame Delmandé had
never abandoned the custom of washing her own silver and dainty china. She sat,
when the breakfast was over, with a pail of warm suds before her that 'Cindy
had brought to her, with an abundance of soft linen cloths. Her little
granddaughter stood beside her playing, as babies will, with the bright spoons
and forks, and ranging them in rows on the polished mahogany. St. Ange was at
the window making entries in a note-book, and frowning gloomily as he did so.
The group in the
dining-room were so em-ployed when the old tramp came staggering in, Bertrand
close behind him.
He went and stood at the
foot of the table, opposite to where Madame Delmandé sat, and let fall the box
upon it.
The thing in falling
shattered, and from its bursting sides gold came, clicking, spinning, gliding,
some of it like oil; rolling along the table and off it to the floor, but
heaped up, the bulk of it, before the tramp.
"Here's
money!" he called out, plunging his old hand in the thick of it. "Who
says St. Ange shall not go to school? The war's over—here's money! St. Ange, my
boy," turning to Bertrand and speaking with quick authority, "tell
Buck Williams to hitch Black Bess to the buggy, and go bring Judge Parkerson
here."
Judge Parkerson, indeed,
who had been dead for twenty years and more!
"Tell him
that—that"—and the hand that was not in the gold went up to the withered
forehead, "that—Bertrand Delmandé needs him!"
Madame Delmandé, at
sight of the man with his box and his gold, had given a sharp cry, such as
might follow the plunge of a knife. She lay now in her son's arms, panting
hoarsely.
"Your father, St.
Ange,—come back from the dead—your father!"
"Be calm,
mother!" the man implored. "You had such sure proof of his death in
that terrible battle, this may not be he."
"I know him! I know
your father, my son!" and disengaging herself from the arms that held her,
she dragged herself as a wounded serpent might to where the old man stood.
His hand was still in
the gold, and on his face was yet the flush which had come there when he
shouted out the name Bertrand Delmandé.
"Husband," she
gasped, "do you know me—your wife?"
The little girl was
playing gleefully with the yellow coin.
Bertrand stood,
pulseless almost, like a young Actæon cut in marble.
When the old man had
looked long into the woman's imploring face, he made a courtly-bow.
"Madame," he
said, "an old soldier, wounded on the field of Gettysburg, craves for
himself and his two little children your kind hospitality."
I
When the war began,
there stood on Côte Joyeuse an imposing mansion of red brick, shaped like the
Pantheon. A grove of majestic live-oaks surrounded it.
Thirty years later, only
the thick walls were standing, with the dull red brick showing here and there
through a matted growth of clinging vines. The huge round pillars were intact;
so to some extent was the stone flagging of hall and portico. There had been no
home so stately along the whole stretch of Côte Joyeuse. Every one knew that,
as they knew it had cost Philippe Valmet sixty thousand dollars to build, away
back in 1840. No one was in danger of forgetting that fact, so long as his
daughter Pélagie survived. She was a queenly, white-haired woman of fifty.
"Ma'ame Pélagie," they called her, though she was unmarried, as was
her sister Pauline, a child in Ma'ame Pélagie's eyes; a child of thirty-five.
The two lived alone in a three-roomed cabin, almost within the shadow of the
ruin. They lived for a dream, for Ma'ame Pélagie's dream, which was to rebuild
the old home.
It would be pitiful to
tell how their days were spent to accomplish this end; how the dollars had been
saved for thirty years and the picayunes hoarded; and yet, not half enough
gathered! But Ma'ame Pélagie felt sure of twenty years of life before her, and
counted upon as many more for her sister. And what could not come to pass in
twenty—in forty—years?
Often, of pleasant
afternoons, the two would drink their black coffee, seated upon the
stone-flagged portico whose canopy was the blue sky of Louisiana. They loved to
sit there in the silence, with only each other and the sheeny, prying lizards
for company, talking of the old times and planning for the new; while light
breezes stirred the tattered vines high up among the columns, where owls nested.
"We can never hope
to have all just as it was, Pauline," Ma'ame Pélagie would say;
"perhaps the marble pillars of the salon will have to be replaced by
wooden ones, and the crystal candelabra left out. Should you be willing,
Pauline?"
"Oh, yes, Sesœur, I
shall be willing." It was always, "Yes, Sesœur," or "No,
Sesœur," "Just as you please, Sesœur," with poor little
Mam'selle Pauline. For what did she remember of that old life and that old
splendor? Only a faint gleam here and there; the half-consciousness of a young,
uneventful existence; and then a great crash. That meant the nearness of war;
the revolt of slaves; confusion ending in fire and flame through which she was
borne safely in the strong arms of Pélagie, and carried to the log cabin which
was still their home. Their brother, Léandre, had known more of it all than
Pauline, and not so much as Pélagie. He had left the management of the big
plantation with all its memories and traditions to his older sister, and had
gone away to dwell in cities. That was many years ago. Now, Léandre's business
called him frequently and upon long journeys from home, and his motherless
daughter was coming to stay with her aunts at Côte Joyeuse.
They talked about it,
sipping their coffee on the ruined portico. Mam'selle Pauline was terribly
excited; the flush that throbbed into her pale, nervous face showed it; and she
locked her thin fingers in and out incessantly.
"But what shall we
do with La Petite, Sesœur? Where shall we put her? How shall we amuse her? Ah,
Seigneur!"
"She will sleep
upon a cot in the room next to ours," responded Ma'ame Pélagie, "and
live as we do. She knows how we live, and why we live; her father has told her.
She knows we have money and could squander it if we chose. Do not fret,
Pauline; let us hope La Petite is a true Valmet."
Then Ma'ame Pélagie rose
with stately deliberation and went to saddle? her horse, for she had yet to
make her last daily round through the fields; and Mam'selle Pauline threaded
her way slowly among the tangled grasses toward the cabin.
The coming of La Petite,
bringing with her as she did the pungent atmosphere of an outside and dimly
known world, was a shock to these two, lining their dream-life. The girl was
quite as tall as her aunt Pélagie, with dark eyes that reflected joy as a still
pool reflects the light of stars; and her rounded cheek was tinged like the
pink crèpe myrtle. Mam'selle Pauline kissed her and trembled. Ma'ame Pélagie
looked into her eyes with a searching gaze, which seemed to seek a likeness of
the past in the living present.
And they made room between them for this young life.
II
La Petite had determined
upon trying to fit herself to the strange, narrow existence which she knew
awaited her at Côte Joyeuse. It went well enough at first. Sometimes she followed
Ma'ame Pélagie into the fields to note how the cotton was opening, ripe and
white; or to count the ears of corn upon the hardy stalks. But oftener she was
with her aunt Pauline, assisting in household offices, chattering of her brief
past, or walking with the older woman arm-in-arm under the trailing moss of the
giant oaks.
Mam'selle Pauline's
steps grew very buoy-ant that summer, and her eyes were sometimes as bright as
a bird's, unless La Petite were away from her side, when they would lose all
other light but one of uneasy expectancy. The girl seemed to love her well in
return, and called her endearingly Tan'-tante. But as the time went by, La
Petite became very quiet,—not listless, but thoughtful, and slow in her
movements. Then her cheeks began to pale, till they were tinged like the creamy
plumes of the white crèpe myrtle that grew in the ruin.
One day when she sat
within its shadow, between her aunts, holding a hand of each, she said:
"Tante Pélagie, I must tell you something, you and Tan'tante." She
spoke low, but clearly and firmly. "I love you both,—please remember that
I love you both. But I must go away from you. I can't live any longer here at
Côte Joyeuse."
A spasm passed through
Mam'selle Pauline's delicate frame. La Petite could feel the twitch of it in
the wiry fingers that were intertwined with her own. Ma'ame Pélagie remained
unchanged and motionless. No human eye could penetrate so deep as to see the
satisfaction which her soul felt. She said: "What do you mean, Petite?
Your father has sent you to us, and I am sure it is his wish that you
remain."
"My father loves
me, tante Pélagie, and such will not be his wish when he knows. Oh!" she
continued with a restless movement, "it is as though a weight were
pressing me backward here. I must live another life; the life I lived before. I
want to know things that are happening from day to day over the world, and hear
them talked about. I want my music, my books, my companions. If I had known no
other life but this one of privation, I suppose it would be different. If I had
to live this life, I should make the best of it. But I do not have to; and you
know, tante Pélagie, you do not need to. It seems to me," she added in a
whisper, "that it is a sin against myself. Ah, Tan'tante!—what is the
matter with Tan'tante?"
It was nothing; only a
slight feeling of faintness, that would soon pass. She entreated them to take
no notice; but they brought her some water and fanned her with a palmetto leaf.
But that night, in the
stillness of the room, Mam'selle Pauline sobbed and would not be comforted.
Ma'ame Pélagie took her in her arms.
"Pauline, my little
sister Pauline," she entreated, "I never have seen you like this
before. Do you no longer love me? Have we not been happy together, you and
I?"
"Oh, yes, Sesœur."
"Is it because La
Petite is going away?"
"Yes, Sesœur."
"Then she is dearer
to you than I!" spoke Ma'ame Pélagie with sharp resentment. "Than I,
who held you and warmed you in my arms the day you were born; than I, your
mother, father, sister, everything that could cherish you. Pauline, don't tell
me that."
Mam'selle Pauline tried
to talk through her sobs.
"I can't explain it
to you, Sesœur. I don't understand it myself. I love you as I have always loved
you; next to God. But if La Petite goes away I shall die. I can't
understand,—help me, Sesœur. She seems —she seems like a saviour; like one who
had come and taken me by the hand and was leading me somewhere—somewhere I want
to go."
Ma'ame Pélagie had been
sitting beside the bed in her peignoir and slippers. She held the hand of her
sister who lay there, and smoothed down the woman's soft brown hair. She said
not a! word, and the silence was broken only by Ma'mselle Pauline's continued
sobs. Once Ma'ame Pélagie arose to drink of orange-flower water, which she gave
to her sister, as she would have offered it to a nervous, fretful child. Almost
an hour passed before Ma'ame Pélagie spoke again. Then she said:—
"Pauline, you must
cease that sobbing, now, and sleep. You will make yourself ill. La Petite will
not go away. Do you hear me? Do you understand? She will stay, I promise
you."
Mam'selle Pauline could
not clearly comprehend, but she had great faith in the word of her sister, and
soothed by the promise and the touch of Ma'ame Pélagie's strong, gentle hand,
she fell asleep.
III
Ma'ame Pélagie, when she
saw that her sister slept, arose noiselessly and stepped outside upon the
low-roofed narrow gallery. She did not linger there, but with a step that was
hurried and agitated, she crossed the distance that divided her cabin from the
ruin.
The night was not a dark
one, for the sky was clear and the moon resplendent. But light or dark would
have made no difference to Ma'ame Pélagie. It was not the first time she had
stolen away to the ruin at night-time, when the whole plantation slept; but she
never before had been there with a heart so nearly broken. She was going there
for the last time to dream her dreams; to see the visions that hitherto had
crowded her days and nights, and to bid them farewell.
There was the first of
them, awaiting her upon the very portal; a robust old white-haired man, chiding
her for returning home so late. There are guests to be entertained. Does she
not know it? Guests from the city and from the near plantations. Yes, she knows
it is late. She had been abroad with Félix, and they did not notice how the
time was speeding. Félix is there; he will explain it all. He is there beside
her, but she does not want to hear what he will tell her father.
Ma'ame Pélagie had sunk
upon the bench where she and her sister so often came to sit. Turning, she
gazed in through the gaping chasm of the window at her side. The interior of
the ruin is ablaze. Not with the moonlight, for that is faint beside the other
one—the sparkle from the crystal candelabra, which negroes, moving noiselessly
and respectfully about, are lighting, one after the other. How the gleam of
them reflects and glances from the polished marble pillars!
The room holds a number
of guests. There is old Monsieur Lucien Santien, leaning against one of the
pillars, and laughing at something which Monsieur Lafirme is telling him, till
his fat shoulders shake. His son Jules is with him—Jules, who wants to marry
her. She laughs. She wonders if Félix has told her father yet. There is young
Jerome Lafirme playing at checkers upon the sofa with Léandre. Little Pauline
stands annoying them and disturbing the game. Léandre reproves her. She begins
to cry, and old black Clémentine, her nurse, who is not far off, limps across
the room to pick her up and carry her away. How sensitive the little one is!
But she trots about and takes care of herself better than she did a year or two
ago, when she fell upon the stone hall floor and raised a great
"bo-bo" on her forehead. Pélagie was hurt and angry enough about it;
and she ordered rugs and buffalo robes to be brought and laid thick upon the
tiles, till the little one's steps were surer.
"Il ne faut pas
faire mal à Pauline."
She was saying it
aloud—"faire mal à Pauline."
But she gazes beyond the
salon, back into the big dining hall, where the white crèpe myrtle grows. Ha!
how low that bat has circled. It has struck Ma'ame Pélagie full on the breast.
She does not know it. She is beyond there in the dining hall, where her father
sits with a group of friends over their wine. As usual they are talking
politics. How tiresome! She has heard them say "la guerre" oftener
than once. La guerre. Bah! She and Félix have something pleasanter to talk
about, out under the oaks, or back in the shadow of the oleanders.
But they were right! The
sound of a cannon, shot at Sumter, has rolled across the' Southern States, and
its echo is heard along the whole stretch of Côte Joyeuse.
Yet Pélagie does not
believe it. Not till La Ricaneuse stands before her with bare, black arms
akimbo, uttering a volley of vile abuse and of brazen impudence. Pélagie wants
to kill her. But yet she will not believe. Not till Félix comes to her in the
chamber above the dining hall—there where that trumpet vine hangs—comes to say
good-by to her. The hurt which the big brass buttons of his new gray uniform
pressed into the tender flesh of her bosom has never left it. She sits upon the
sofa, and he beside her, both speechless with pain. That room would not have
been altered. Even the sofa would have been there in the same spot, and Ma'ame
Pélagie had meant all along, for thirty years, all along, to lie there upon it
some day when the time came to die.
But there is no time to
weep, with the enemy at the door. The door has been no barrier. They are
clattering through the halls now, drinking the wines, shattering the crystal
and glass, slashing the portraits.
One of them stands
before her and tells her to leave the house. She slaps his face. How the stigma
stands out red as blood upon his blanched cheek!
Now there is a roar of
fire and the flames are bearing down upon her motionless figure. She wants to
show them how a daughter of Louisiana can perish before her conquerors. But
little Pauline clings to her knees in an agony of terror. Little Pauline must
be saved.
"Il ne faut pas
faire mal à Pauline."
Again she is saying it
aloud—"faire mal à Pauline."
The night was nearly
spent; Ma'ame Pélagie had glided from the bench upon which she had rested, and
for hours lay prone upon the stone flagging, motionless. When she dragged
herself to her feet it was to walk like one in a dream. About the great, solemn
pillars, one after the other, she reached her arms, and pressed her cheek and
her lips upon the senseless brick.
"Adieu,
adieu!" whispered Ma'ame Pélagie.
There was no longer the
moon to guide her steps across the familiar pathway to the cabin. The brightest
light in the sky was Venus, that swung low in the east. The bats had ceased to
beat their wings about the ruin. Even the mocking-bird that had warbled for
hours in the old mulberry-tree had sung himself asleep. That darkest hour
before the day was mantling the earth. Ma'ame Pélagie hurried through the wet,
clinging grass, beating aside the heavy moss that swept across her face,
walking on toward the cabin—toward Pauline. Not once did she look back upon the
ruin that brooded like a huge monster—a black spot in the darkness that
enveloped it.
IV
Little more than a year
later the transformation which the old Valmet place had undergone was the talk
and wonder of Côte Joyeuse. One would have looked in vain for the ruin; it was
no longer there; neither was the log cabin. But out in the open, where the sun
shone upon it, and the breezes blew about it, was a shapely structure fashioned
from woods that the forests of the State had furnished. It rested upon a solid
foundation of brick.
Upon a corner of the
pleasant gallery sat Léandre smoking his afternoon cigar, and chatting with
neighbors who had called. This was to be his pied à terre now;
the home where his sisters and his daughter dwelt. The laughter of young people
was heard out under the trees, and within the house where La Petite was playing
upon the piano. With the enthusiasm of a young artist she drew from the keys
strains that seemed marvelously beautiful to Mam'selle Pauline, who stood
enraptured near her. Mam'selle Pauline had been touched by the re-creation of
Valmet. Her cheek was as full and almost as flushed as La Petite's. The years
were falling away from her.
Ma'ame Pélagie had been
conversing with her brother and his friends. Then she turned and walked away;
stopping to listen awhile to the music which La Petite was making. But it was
only for a moment. She went on around the curve of the veranda, where she found
herself alone. She stayed there, erect, holding to the banister rail and
looking out calmly in the distance across the fields.
She was dressed in
black, with the white kerchief she always wore folded across her bosom. Her
thick, glossy hair rose like a silver diadem from her brow. In her deep, dark
eyes smouldered the light of fires that would never flame. She had grown very
old. Years instead of months seemed to have passed over her since the night she
bade farewell to her visions.
Poor Ma'ame Pélagie! How
could it be different! While the outward pressure of a young and joyous
existence had forced her footsteps into the light, her soul had stayed in the
shadow of the ruin.
Bobinôt, that big,
brown, good-natured Bobinôt, had no intention of going to the ball, even though
he knew Calixta would be there. For what came of those balls but heartache, and
a sickening disinclination for work the whole week through, till Saturday night
came again and his tortures began afresh? Why could he not love Ozéina, who
would marry him to-morrow; or Fronie, or any one of a dozen others, rather than
that little Spanish vixen? Calixta's slender foot had never touched Cuban soil;
but her mother's had, and the Spanish was in her blood all the same. For that
reason the prairie people forgave her much that they would not have overlooked
in their own daughters or sisters.
Her eyes,—Bobinôt
thought of her eyes, and weakened,—the bluest, the drowsiest, most tantalizing
that ever looked into a man's; he thought of her flaxen hair that kinked worse
than a mulatto's close to her head; that broad, smiling mouth and tip-tilted
nose, that full figure; that voice like a rich contralto song, with cadences in
it that must have been taught by Satan, for there was no one else to teach her
tricks on that 'Cadian prairie. Bobinôt thought of them all as he plowed his
rows of cane.
There had even been a
breath of scandal whispered about her a year ago, when she went to
Assumption,—but why talk of it? No one did now. "C'est Espagnol, ça,"
most of them said with lenient shoulder-shrugs. "Bon chien tient de
race," the old men mumbled over their pipes, stirred by recollections.
Nothing was made of it, except that Fronie threw it up to Calixta when the two
quarreled and fought on the church steps after mass one Sunday, about a lover.
Calixta swore roundly in fine 'Cadian French and with true Spanish spirit, and
slapped Fronie's face. Fronie had slapped her back; "Tiens, bocotte,
va!" "Espèce de lionèse; prends ça, et ça!" till the curé
himself was obliged to hasten and make peace between them. Bobinôt thought of
it all, and would not go to the ball.
But in the afternoon,
over at Friedheimer's store, where he was buying a trace-chain, he heard some
one say that Alcée Laballière would be there. Then wild horses could not have
kept him away. He knew how it would be—or rather he did not know how it would
be—if the handsome young planter came over to the ball as he sometimes did. If
Alcée happened to be in a serious mood, he might only go to the card-room and
play a round or two; or he might stand out on the galleries talking crops and
politics with the old people. But there was po telling. A drink or two could
put the devil in his head,—that was what Bobinôt said to himself, as he wiped
the sweat from his brow with his red bandanna; a gleam from Calixta's eyes, a
flash of her ankle, a twirl of her skirts could do the same. Yes, Bobinôt would
go to the ball.
That was the year Alcée
Laballière put nine hundred acres in rice. It was putting a good deal of money
into the ground, but the returns promised to be glorious. Old Madame
Laballière, sailing about the spacious galleries in her white volante,
figured it all out in her head. Clarisse, her god-daughter, helped her a
little, and together they built more air-castles than enough. Alcée worked like
a mule that time; and if he did not kill himself, it was because his
constitution was an iron one. It was an every-day affair for him to come in
from the field well-nigh exhausted, and wet to the waist. He did not mind if
there were visitors; he left them to his mother and Clarisse. There were often
guests: young men and women who came up from the city, which was but a few
hours away, to visit his beautiful kinswoman. She was worth going a good deal
farther than that to see. Dainty as a lily; hardy as a sunflower; slim, tall,
graceful, like one of the reeds that grew in the marsh. Cold and kind and cruel
by turn, and everything that was aggravating to Alcée.
He would have liked to
sweep the place of those visitors, often. Of the men, above all, with their
ways and their manners; their swaying of fans like women, and dandling about
hammocks. He could have pitched them over the levee into the river, if it
hadn't meant murder. That was Alcée. But he must have been crazy the day he
came in from the rice-field, and, toil-stained as he was, clasped Clarisse by
the arms and panted a volley of hot, blistering love-words into her face. No
man had ever spoken love to her like that.
"Monsieur!"
she exclaimed, looking him full in the eyes, without a quiver. Alcée's hands dropped
and his glance wavered before the chill of her calm, clear eyes.
"Par exemple!"
she muttered disdainfully, as she turned from him, deftly adjusting the careful
toilet that he had so brutally disarranged.
That happened a day or
two before the cyclone came that cut into the rice like fine steel. It was an
awful thing, coming so swiftly, without a moment's warning in which to light a
holy candle or set a piece of blessed palm burning. Old madame wept openly and
said her beads, just as her son Didier, the New Orleans one, would have done.
If such a thing had happened to Alphonse, the Laballière planting cotton up in
Natchitoches, he would have raved and stormed like a second cyclone, and made
his surroundings unbearable for a day or two. But Alcée took the misfortune
differently. He looked ill and gray after it, and said nothing. His
speechlessness was frightful. Clarisse's heart melted with tenderness; but when
she offered her soft, purring words of condolence, he accepted them with mute
indifference. Then she and her nénaine wept afresh in each other's arms.
A night or two later,
when Clarisse went to her window to kneel there in the moonlight and say her
prayers before retiring, she saw that Bruce, Alcée's negro servant, had led his
master's saddle-horse noiselessly along the edge of the sward that bordered the
gravel-path, and stood holding him near by. Presently, she heard Alcée quit his
room, which was beneath her own, and traverse the lower portico. As he emerged
from the shadow and crossed the strip of moonlight, she perceived that he
carried a pair of well-filled saddle-bags which he at once flung across the
animal's back. He then lost no time in mounting, and after a brief exchange of
words with Bruce, went cantering away, taking no precaution to avoid the noisy
gravel as the negro had done.
Clarisse had never
Suspected that it might be Alcée's custom to sally forth from the plantation
secretly, and at such an hour; for it was nearly midnight. And had it not been
for the telltale saddle-bags, she would only have crept to bed, to wonder, to
fret and dream unpleasant dreams. But her impatience and anxiety would not be
held in check. Hastily unbolting the shutters of her door that opened upon the
gallery, she stepped outside and called softly to the old negro.
"Gre't Peter! Miss
Clarisse. I was n' sho it was a ghos' o' w'at, stan'in' up dah, plumb in de
night, data way."
He mounted halfway up
the long, broad flight of stairs. She was standing at the top.
"Bruce, w'ere has
Monsieur Alcée gone?" she asked.
"W'y, he gone 'bout
he business, I reckin," replied Bruce, striving to be non-committal at the
outset.
"W'ere has Monsieur
Alcée gone?" she reiterated, stamping her bare foot. "I won't stan'
any nonsense or any lies; mine, Bruce."
"I don' ric'lie ez
I eva tole you lie yit, Miss Clarisse. Mista Alcée, he all broke
up, sho."
"W'ere—has—he gone?
Ah, Sainte Vierge! faut de la patience! butor, va!"
"W'en I was in he
room, a-breshin' off he clo'es to-day," the darkey began, settling himself
against the stair-rail, "he look dat speechless an' down, I say, 'You
'pear tu me like some pussun w'at gwine have a spell o' sickness, Mista Alcée.'
He say, 'You reckin?' 'I dat he git up, go look hisse'f stiddy in de glass. Den
he go to de chimbly an' jerk up de quinine bottle an po' a gre't hoss-dose on
to be ban'. An' he swalla dat mess in a wink, an' wash hit down wid a big dram
o' w'iskey w'at he keep in he room, aginst he come all soppin' wet outen de
fiel'.
"He 'lows, 'No, I
ain' gwine be sick, Bruce.' Den he square off. He say, 'I kin mak out to stan'
up an' gi' an' take wid any man I knows, lessen hit's John L. Sulvun. But w'en
God A'mighty an' a 'oman jines fo'ces agin me, dat's one too many fur me.' I
tell 'im, 'Jis so,' whils' I'se makin' out to bresh a spot off w'at ain' dah,
on he coat colla. I tell 'im, 'You wants li'le res', suh.' He say, 'No, I wants
li'le fling; dat w'at I wants; an I gwine git it. Pitch me a fis'ful o' clo'es
in dem 'ar saddle-bags.' Dat w'at he say. Don't you bodda, missy. He jis' gone
a-caperin' yonda to de Cajun ball. Uh—uh—de skeeters is fair' a-swarmin' like
bees roun' yo' foots!"
The mosquitoes were
indeed attacking Clarisse's white feet savagely. She had unconsciously been
alternately rubbing one foot over the other during the darkey's recital.
"The 'Cadian
ball," she repeated contemptously. "Humph! Par exemple! Nice
conduc' for a Laballière. An' he needs a saddle-bag, fill' with clothes, to go
to the 'Cadian ball!"
"Oh, Miss Clarisse;
you go on to bed, chile; git yo' soun' sleep. He 'low he come back in couple
weeks o' so. I kiarn be repeatin' lot o' truck w'at young mans say, out heah
face o' a young gal."
Clarisse said no more,
but turned and abruptly reëntered the house.
"You done talk too
much wid yo' mouf a'ready, you ole fool nigga, you," muttered Bruce to
himself as he walked away.
Alcée reached the ball
very late, of course—too late for the chicken gumbo which had been served at
midnight.
The big, low-ceiled
room—they called it a hall—was packed with men and women dancing to the music
of three fiddles. There were broad galleries all around it. There was a room at
one side where sober-faced men were playing cards. Another, in which babies
were sleeping, was called le parc aux petits. Any one who is white
may go to a 'Cadian ball, but he must pay for his lemonade, his coffee and
chicken gumbo. And he must behave himself like a 'Cadian. Grosbœuf was giving
this ball. He had been giving them since he was a young man, and he was a
middle-aged one, now. In that time he could recall but one disturbance, and
that was caused by American railroaders, who were not in touch with their
surroundings and had no business there. "Ces maudits gens du
raiderode," Grosbœuf called them.
Alcée Laballière's
presence at the ball caused a flutter even among the men, who could not but
admire his "nerve" after such misfortune befalling him. To be sure,
they knew the Laballières were rich—that there were resources East, and more
again in the city. But they felt it took a brave homme to stand a blow like
that philosophically. One old gentleman, who was in the habit of reading a
Paris newspaper and knew things, chuckled gleefully to, everybody that Alcée's
conduct was altogether chic, mais chic. That he had more panache than
Boulanger. Well, perhaps he had.
But what he did not show
outwardly was that he was in a mood for ugly things to-night. Poor Bobinôt
alone felt it vaguely. He discerned a gleam of it in Alcée's handsome eyes, as
the young planter stood in the doorway, looking with rather feverish glance
upon the assembly, while he laughed and talked with a 'Cadian farmer who was
beside him.
Bobinôt himself was
dull-looking and clumsy. Most of the men were. But the young women were very
beautiful. The eyes that glanced into Alcée's as they passed him were big, dark,
soft as those of the young heifers standing out in the cool prairie grass.
But the belle was
Calixta. Her white dress was not nearly so handsome or well made as Fronie's
(she and Fronie had quite forgotten the battle on the church steps, and were
friends again), nor were her slippers so stylish as those of Ozéina; and she
fanned herself with a handkerchief, since she had broken her red fan at the
last ball, and her aunts and uncles were not willing to give her another. But
all the men agreed she was at her best to-night. Such animation! and abandon!
such flashes of wit!
"He, Bobinôt! Mais w'at's
the matta? W'at you standin' planté là like ole Ma'ame Tina's
cow in the bog, you?"
That was good. That was
an excellent thrust at Bobinôt, who had forgotten the figure of the dance with
his mind bent on other things, and it started a clamor of laughter at his
expense. He joined good-naturedly. It was better to receive even such notice as
that from Calixta than none at all. But Madame Suzonne, sitting in a corner, whispered
to her neighbor that if Ozéina were to conduct herself in a like manner, she
should immediately be taken out to the mule-cart and driven home. The women did
not always approve of Calixta.
Now and then were short
lulls in the dance, when couples flocked out upon the galleries for a brief
respite and fresh air. The moon had gone down pale in the west, and in the east
was yet no promise of day. After such an interval, when the dancers again
assembled to resume the interrupted quadrille, Calixta was not among them.
She was sitting upon a
bench out in the shadow, with Alcée beside her. They were acting like fools. He
had attempted to take a little gold ring from her finger; just for the fun of
it, for there was nothing he could have done with the ring but replace it
again. But she clinched her hand tight. He pretended that it was a very
difficult matter to open it. Then he kept the hand in his. They seemed to
forget about it. He played with her ear-ring, a thin crescent of gold hanging
from her small brown ear. He caught a wisp of the kinky hair that had escaped
its fastening, and rubbed the ends of it against his shaven cheek.
"You know, last
year in Assumption, Calixta?" They belonged to the younger generation, so
preferred to speak English.
"Don't come say
Assumption to me, M'sieur Alcée. I done yeard Assumption till I'm plumb
sick."
"Yes, I know. The
idiots! Because you were in Assumption, and I happened to go to Assumption,
they must have it that we went together. But it was nice—hein,
Calixta?—in Assumption?"
They saw Bobinôt emerge
from the hall and stand a moment outside the lighted doorway, peering uneasily
and searchingly into the darkness. He did not see them, and went slowly back.
"There is Bobinôt
looking for you. You are going to set poor Bobinôt crazy. You 'll marry him
some day; hein, Calixta?"
"I don't say no,
me," she replied, striving to withdraw her hand, which he held more,
firmly for the attempt.
"But come, Calixta;
you know you said you would go back to Assumption, just to spite them."
"No, I neva said
that, me. You mus' dreamt that."
"Oh, I thought you
did. You know I'm going down to the city."
"W'en?"
"To-night."
"Betta make has'e,
then; it's mos' day."
"Well, to-morrow'll
do."
"W'at you goin' do,
yonda?"
"I don't know.
Drown myself in the lake, maybe; unless you go down there to visit your
uncle."
Calixta's senses were
reeling; and they well-nigh left her when she felt Alcée's lips brush her ear
like the touch of a rose.
"Mista Alcée! Is
dat Mista Alcée?" the thick voice of a negro was asking; he stood on the
ground, holding to the banister-rails near which the couple sat.
"W'at do you want
now?" cried Alcée impatiently. "Can't I have a moment of peace?"
"I ben huntin' you
high an' low, suh," answered the man. "Dey—dey some one in de road,
onda de mulbare-tree, want see you a minute."
"I would n't go out
to the road to see the Angel Gabriel. And if you come back here with any more
talk, I 'll have to break your neck." The negro turned mumbling away.
Alcée and Calixta
laughed softly about it. Her boisterousness was all gone. They talked low, and
laughed softly, as lovers do.
"Alcée! Alcée
Laballière!"
It was not the negro's
voice this time; but one that went through Alcée's body like an electric shock,
bringing him to his feet.
Clarisse was standing
there in her riding-habit, where the negro had stood. For an instant confusion
reigned in Alcée's thoughts, as with one who awakes suddenly from a dream. But
he felt that something of serious import had brought his cousin to the ball in
the dead of night.
"W'at does this
mean, Clarisse?" he asked.
"It means something
has happen' at home. You mus' come."
"Happened to
maman?" he questioned, in alarm.
"No; nénaine is
well, and asleep. It is something else. Not to frighten you. But you mus' come.
Come with me, Alcée."
There was no need for
the imploring note. He would have followed the voice anywhere.
She had now recognized
the girl sitting back on the bench.
"Ah, c'est vous,
Calixta? Comment ça va, mon enfant?"
"Tcha va b'en; et
vous, mam'zélle?"
Alcée swung himself over
the low rail and started to follow Clarisse, without a word, without a glance
back at the girl. He had forgotten he was leaving her there. But Clarisse
whispered something to him, and he turned back to say "Good-night,
Calixta," and offer his hand to press through the railing. She pretended
not to see it.
"How come that? You
settin' yere by yo'se'f, Calixta?" It was Bobinôt who had found her there
alone. The dancers had not yet come out. She looked ghastly in the faint, gray
light struggling out of the east.
"Yes, that's me. Go
yonda in the parc aux petits an' ask Aunt Olisse fu' my hat.
She knows w'ere 't is. I want to go home, me."
"How you
came?"
"I come afoot, with
the Cateaus. But I'm goin' now. I ent goin' wait fu' 'em. I'm plumb we' out,
me."
"Kin I go with you,
Calixta?"
"I don' care."
They went together
across the open prairie and along the edge of the fields, stumbling in the
uncertain light. He told her to lift her dress that was getting wet and
bedraggled; for she was pulling at the weeds and grasses with her hands.
"I don' care; it's
got to go in the tub, anyway. You been say in' all along you want to marry me,
Bobinôt. Well, if you want, yet, I don' care, me."
The glow of a sudden and
overwhelming happiness shone out in the brown, rugged face of the young
Acadian. He could not speak, for very joy. It choked him.
"Oh well, if you
don' want," snapped Calixta, flippantly, pretending to be piqued at his
silence.
"Bon Dieu! You
know that makes me crazy, w'at you sayin'. You mean that, Calixta? You ent
goin' turn roun' agin?"
"I neva tole you
that much yet, Bobinôt. I mean that. Tiens," and
she held out her hand in the business-like manner of a man who clinches a
bargain with a hand-clasp. Bobinôt grew bold with happiness and asked Calixta
to kiss him. She turned her face, that was almost ugly after the night's
dissipation, and looked steadily into his.
"I don' want to
kiss you, Bobinôt," she said, turning away again, "not to-day. Some
other time. Bonté divine! ent you satisfy, yet!"
"Oh, I'm satisfy,
Calixta," he said.
Riding through a patch
of wood, Clarisse's saddle became ungirted, and she and Alcée dismounted to
readjust it.
For the twentieth time
he asked her what had happened at home.
"But, Clarisse,
w'at is it? Is it a misfortune?"
"Ah Dieu sait! It's
only something that happen' to me."
"To you!"
"I saw you go away
las' night, Alcée, with those saddle-bags," she said, haltingly, striving
to arrange something about the saddle, "an' I made Bruce tell me. He said
you had gone to the ball, an' wouldn' be home for weeks an' weeks. I thought,
Alcée—maybe you were going to—to Assumption. I got wild. An' then I knew if you
did n't come back, now, to-night, I could n't stan'
it,—again."
She had her face hidden
in her arm that she was resting against the saddle when she said that.
He began to wonder if
this meant love. But she had to tell him so, before he believed it. And when
she told him, he thought the face of the Universe was changed—just like
Bobinôt. Was it last week the cyclone had well-nigh ruined him? The cyclone
seemed a huge joke, now. It was he, then, who, an hour ago was kissing little
Calixta's ear and whispering nonsense into it. Calixta was like a myth, now.
The one, only, great reality in the world was Clarisse standing before him,
telling him that she loved him.
In the distance they
heard the rapid discharge of pistol-shots; but it did not disturb them. They
knew it was only the negro musicians who had gone into the yard to fire their
pistols into the air, as the custom is, and to announce "le bal est
fini."
The summer night was hot
and still; not a ripple of air swept over the marais. Yonder, across Bayou St.
John, lights twinkled here and there in the darkness, and in the dark sky above
a few stars were blinking. A lugger that had come out of the lake was moving
with slow, lazy motion down the bayou. A man in the boat was singing a song.
The notes of the song
came faintly to the ears of old Manna Loulou, herself as black as the night,
who had gone out upon the gallery to open the shutters wide.
Something in the refrain
reminded the woman of an old, half-forgotten Creole romance, and she began to
sing it low to herself while she threw the shutters open:—
"Lisett' to kité la
plaine,
Mo perdi bonhair à moué;
Ziés à moué semblé fontaine,
Dépi mo pa miré toué."
And then this old song,
a lover's lament for the loss of his mistress, floating into her memory,
brought with it the story she would tell to Madame, who lay in her sumptuous
mahogany bed, waiting to be fanned and put to sleep to the sound of one of
Manna Loulou's stories. The old negress had already bathed her mistress's
pretty white feet and kissed them lovingly, one, then the other. She had
brushed her mistress's beautiful hair, that was as soft and shining as satin,
and was the color of Madame's wedding-ring. Now, when she reëntered the room,
she moved softly toward the bed, and seating herself there began gently to fan
Madame Delisle.
Manna Loulou was not
always ready with her story, for Madame would hear none but those which were
true. But to-night the story was all there in Manna Loulou's head—the story of
la belle Zoraïde—and she told it to her mistress in the soft Creole patois,
whose music and charm no English words can convey.
La belle Zoraïde had
eyes that were so dusky, so beautiful, that any man who gazed too long into
their depths was sure to lose his head, and even his heart sometimes. Her soft,
smooth skin was the color of café-au-lait.
As for her elegant
manners, her svelte and graceful figure, they were the envy of
half the ladies who visited her mistress, Madame Delarivière.
"No wonder Zoraïde
was as charming and as dainty as the finest lady of la rue Royale: from a
toddling thing she had been brought up at her mistress's side; her fingers had
never done rougher work than sewing a fine muslin seam; and she even had her
own little black servant to wait upon her. Madame, who was her godmother as
well as her mistress, would often say to her:—
"'Remember,
Zoraïde, when you are ready to marry, it must be in a way to do honor to your
bringing up. It will be at the Cathedral. Your wedding gown, your corbeille,
all will be of the best; I shall see to that myself. You know, M'sieur Ambroise
is ready whenever you say the word; and his master is willing to do as much for
him as I shall do for you. It is a union that will please me in every way.'
M'sieur Ambroise was
then the body servant of Doctor Langlé. La belle Zoraïde detested the little
mulatto, with his shining whiskers like a white man's, and his small eyes, that
were cruel and false as a snake's. She would cast down her own mischievous
eyes, and say:—
"'Ah, nénaine, I am
so happy, so contented here at your side just as I am. I don't want to marry
now; next year, perhaps, or the next.' And Madame would smile indulgently and
remind Zoraïde that a woman's charms are not everlasting.
"But the truth of
the matter was, Zoraïde had seen le beau Mézor dance the Bamboula in Congo
Square. That was a sight to hold one rooted to the ground. Mézor was as straight
as a cypress-tree and as proud looking as a king. His body, bare to the waist,
was like a column of ebony and it glistened like oil.
"Poor Zoraïde's
heart grew sick in her bosom with love for le beau Mézor from the moment she
saw the fierce gleam of his eye, lighted by the inspiring strains of the
Bamboula, and beheld the stately movements of his splendid body swaying and
quivering through the figures of the dance.
"But when she knew
him later, and he came near her to speak with her, all the fierceness was gone
out of his eyes, and she saw only kindness in them and heard only gentleness in
his voice; for love had taken possession of him also, and Zoraïde was more
distracted than ever. When Mézor was not dancing Bamboula in Congo Square, he
was hoeing sugar-cane, barefooted and half naked, in his master's field outside
of the city. Doctor Langlé was his master as well as M'sieur Ambroise's.
"One day, when
Zoraïde kneeled before her mistress, drawing on Madame's silken stockings, that
were of the finest, she said: "'Nénaine, you have spoken to me often of
marrying. Now, at last, I have chosen a husband, but it is not M'sieur
Ambroise; it is le beau Mézor that I want and no other.' And Zoraïde hid her
face in her hands when she had said that, for she guessed, rightly enough, that
her mistress would be very angry. And, indeed, Madame Delarivière was at first
speechless with rage. When she finally spoke it was only to gasp out,
exasperated:—
"'That negro! that
negro! Bon Dieu Seigneur, but this is too much!'
"'Am I white,
nénaine?' pleaded Zoraïde.
"'You white! Malheureuse! You
deserve to have the lash laid upon you like any other slave; you have proven
yourself no better than the worst.'
"'I am not white,'
persisted Zoraïde, respectfully and gently. 'Doctor Langlé gives me his slave
to marry, but he would not give me his son. Then, since I am not white, let me
have from out of my own race the one whom my heart has chosen.'
"However, you may
well believe that Madame would not hear to that. Zoraïde was forbidden to speak
to Mézor, and Mézor was cautioned against seeing Zoraïde again. But you know
how the negroes are, Ma'zélle Titite," added Manna Loulou, smiling a
little sadly. "There is no mistress, no master, no king nor priest who can
hinder them from loving when they will. And these two found ways and means.
"When months had
passed by, Zoraïde, who had grown unlike herself,—sober and preoccupied,—said
again to her mistress:—
"'Nénaine, you
would not let me have Mézor for my husband; but I have disobeyed you, I have
sinned. Kill me if you wish, nénaine: forgive me if you will; but when I heard
le beau Mézor say to me, "Zoraïde, mo l'aime toi," I could have died,
but I could not have helped loving him.'
"This time Madame
Delarivière was so actually pained, so wounded at hearing Zoraïde's confession,
that there was no place left in her heart for anger. She could utter only
confused reproaches. But she was a woman of action rather than of words, and
she acted promptly. Her first step was to induce Doctor Langlé to sell Mézor.
Doctor Langlé, who was a widower, had long wanted to marry Madame Delarivière,
and he would willingly have walked on all fours at noon through the Place
d'Armes if she wanted him to. Naturally he lost no time in disposing of le beau
Mézor, who was sold away into Georgia, or the Carolinas, or one of those
distant countries far away, where he would no longer hear his Creole tongue
spoken, nor dance Calinda, nor hold la belle Zoraïde in his arms.
"The poor thing was
heartbroken when Mézor was sent away from her, but she took comfort and hope in
the thought of her baby that she would soon be able to clasp to her breast.
"La belle Zoraïde's
sorrows had now begun in earnest. Not only sorrows but sufferings, and with the
anguish of maternity came the shadow of death. But there is no agony that a
mother will not forget when she holds her first-born to her heart, and presses
her lips upon the baby flesh that is her own, yet far more precious than her
own.
"So, instinctively,
when Zoraïde came out of the awful shadow she gazed questioningly about her and
felt with her trembling hands upon either side of her. 'Où li, mo piti a moin?
where is my little one?' she asked imploringly. Madame who was there and the
nurse who was there both told her in turn, 'To piti à toi, li mouri' ('Your
little one is dead'), which was a wicked falsehood that must have caused the
angels in heaven to weep. For the baby was living and well and strong. It had
at once been removed from its mother's side, to be sent away to Madame's plantation,
far up the coast. Zoraïde could only moan in reply, 'Li mouri, li mouri,' and
she turned her face to the wall.
"Madame had hoped,
in thus depriving Zoraïde of her child, to have her young waiting-maid again at
her side free, happy, and beautiful as of old. But there was a more powerful
will than Madame's at work—the will of the good God, who had already designed
that Zoraïde should grieve with a sorrow that was never more to be lifted in
this world. La belle Zoraïde was no more. In her stead was a sad-eyed woman who
mourned night and day for her baby. 'Li mouri, li mouri,' she would sigh over
and over again to those about her, and to herself when others grew weary of her
complaint.
"Yet, in spite of
all, M'sieur Ambroise was still in the notion to marry her. A sad wife or a
merry one was all the same to him so long as that wife was Zoraïde. And she
seemed to consent, or rather submit, to the approaching marriage as though
nothing mattered any longer in this world.
"One day, a black
servant entered a little noisily the room in which Zoraïde sat sewing. With a
look of strange and vacuous happiness upon her face, Zoraïde arose hastily.
'Hush, hush,' she whispered, lifting a warning finger, 'my little one is
asleep; you must not awaken her.'
"Upon the bed was a
senseless bundle of rags shaped like an infant in swaddling clothes. Over this
dummy the woman had drawn the mosquito bar, and she was sitting contentedly
beside it. In short, from that day Zoraïde was demented. Night nor day did she
lose sight of the doll that lay in her bed or in her arms.
"And now was Madame
stung with sorrow and remorse at seeing this terrible affliction that had
befallen her dear Zoraïde. Consulting with Doctor Langlé, they decided to bring
back to the mother the real baby of flesh and blood that was now toddling
about, and kicking its heels in the dust yonder upon the plantation.
"It was Madame
herself who led the pretty, tiny little "griffe" girl to her mother.
Zoraïde was sitting upon a stone bench in the courtyard, listening to the soft
splashing of the fountain, and watching the fitful shadows of the palm leaves
upon the broad, white flagging.
"'Here,' said
Madame, approaching, 'here, my poor dear Zoraïde, is your own little child.
Keep her; she is yours. No one will ever take her from you again.'
"Zoraïde looked
with sullen suspicion upon her mistress and the child before her. Reaching out
a hand she thrust the little one mistrustfully away from her. With the other
hand she clasped the rag bundle fiercely to her breast; for she suspected a
plot to deprive her of it.
"Nor could she ever
be induced to let her own child approach her; and finally the little one was
sent back to the plantation, where she was never to know the love of mother or
father.
"And now this is
the end of Zoraïde's story. She was never known again as la belle Zoraïde, but
ever after as Zoraïde la folle, whom no one ever wanted to marry—not even
M'sieur Ambroise. She lived to be an old woman, whom some people pitied and
others laughed at—always clasping her bundle of rags—her 'piti.'
"Are you asleep,
Ma'zélle Titite?"
"No, I am not
asleep; I was thinking. Ah, the poor little one, Man Loulou, the poor little
one! better had she died!"
But this is the way
Madame Delisle and Manna Loulou really talked to each other:—
"Vou pré droumi,
Ma'zélle Titite?"
"Non, pa pré
droumi; mo yapré zongler. Ah, la pauv' piti, Man Loulou. La pauv' piti! Mieux
li mouri!"
It was no wonder Mr.
Sublet, who was staying at the Hallet plantation, wanted to make a picture of
Evariste. The 'Cadian was rather a picturesque subject in his way, and a
tempting one to an artist looking for bits of "local color" along the
Têche.
Mr. Sublet had seen the
man on the back gallery just as he came out of the swamp, trying to sell a wild
turkey to the house-keeper. He spoke to him at once, and in the course of
conversation engaged him to return to the house the following morning and have
his picture drawn. He handed Evariste a couple of silver dollars to show that
his intentions were fair, and that he expected the 'Cadian to keep faith with
him.
"He tell' me he
want' put my picture in one fine 'Mag'zine,'" said Evariste to his
daughter, Martinette, when the two were talking the matter over in the
afternoon.
"W'at fo' you
reckon he want' do dat?" They sat within the low, homely cabin of two
rooms, that was not quite so comfortable as Mr. Hallet's negro quarters.
Martinette pursed her
red lips that had little sensitive curves to them, and her black eyes took on a
reflective expression.
"Mebbe he yeard
'bout that big fish w'at you ketch las' winta in Carancro lake. You know it was
all wrote about in the 'Suga Bowl.'" Her father set aside the suggestion
with a deprecatory wave of the hand.
"Well, anyway, you
got to fix yo'se'f up," declared Martinette, dismissing further
speculation; "put on yo' otha pant'loon' an' yo' good coat; an' you betta
ax Mr. Léonce to cut yo' hair, an' yo' w'sker' a li'le bit."
"It's w'at I
say," chimed in Evariste. "I tell dat gent'man I'm goin' make myse'f
fine. He say', 'No, no,' like he ent please'. He want' me like I come out de
swamp. So much betta if my pant'loon' an' coat is tore, he-say, an' color' like
de mud." They could not understand these eccentric wishes on the part of
the strange gentleman, and made no effort to do so.
An hour later
Martinette, who was quite puffed up over the affair, trotted across to Aunt
Dicey's cabin to communicate the news to her. The negress was ironing; her
irons stood in a long row before the fire of logs that burned on the hearth.
Martinette seated herself in the chimney corner and held her feet up to the
blaze; it was damp and a little chilly out of doors. The girl's shoes were
considerably worn and her garments were a little too thin and scant for the
winter season. Her father had given her the two dollars he had received from
the artist, and Martinette was on her way to the store to invest them as
judiciously as she knew how.
"You know, Aunt
Dicey," she began a little complacently after listening awhile to Aunt
Dicey's unqualified abuse of her own son, Wilkins, who was dining-room boy at
Mr. Hallet's, "you know that stranger gentleman up to Mr. Hallet's? he
want' to make my popa's picture; an' he say' he goin' put it in one fine
Mag'zine yonda." Aunt Dicey spat upon her iron to test its heat. Then she
began to snicker. She kept on laughing inwardly, making her whole fat body
shake, and saying nothing.
"W'at you laughin'
'bout, Aunt Dice?" inquired Martinette mistrustfully.
"I is n' laughin',
chile!"
"Yas, you'
laughin'."
"Oh, don't pay no
'tention to me. I jis studyin' how simple you an' yo' pa is. You is bof de
simplest somebody I eva come 'crost."
"You got to say
plumb out w'at you mean, Aunt Dice," insisted the girl doggedly,
suspicious and alert now.
"Well, dat w'y I say
you is simple," proclaimed the woman, slamming down her iron on an
inverted, battered pie pan, "jis like you says, dey gwine put yo' pa's
picture yonda in de picture paper. An' you know w'at readin' dey gwine sot down
on'neaf dat picture?" Martinette was intensely attentive. "Dey gwine
sot down on'neaf: 'Dis heah is one dem low-down 'Cajuns o' Bayeh Têche!"'
The blood flowed from
Martinette's face, leaving it deathly pale; in another instant it came beating
back in a quick flood, and her eyes smarted with pain as if the tears that
filled them had been fiery hot.
"I knows dem kine
o' folks," continued Aunt Dicey, resuming her interrupted ironing.
"Dat stranger he got a li'le boy w'at ain't none too big to spank. Dat
li'le imp he come a hoppin' in heah yistiddy wid a kine o' box on'neaf his arm.
He say' 'Good mo'nin', madam. Will you be so kine an' stan' jis like you is dah
at yo' i'onin', an' lef me take yo' picture?' I 'lowed I gwine make a picture
outen him wid dis heah flat-i'on, ef he don' d'ar hisse'f quick. An' he say he
baig my pardon fo' his intrudement. All dat kine o' talk to a ole nigga 'oman!
Dat plainly sho' he don' know his place."
"W'at you want 'im
to say, Aunt Dice?" asked Martinette, with an effort to conceal her
distress.
"I wants 'im to come
in heah an' say: 'Howdy, Aunt Dicey! will you be so kine and go put on yo' noo
calker dress an' yo' bonnit w'at you w'ars to meetin', an' stan' 'side f'om dat
i'onin'-boa'd w'ilse I gwine take yo' photygraph.' Dat de way fo' a boy to talk
w'at had good raisin'."
Martinette had arisen,
and began to take slow leave of the woman. She turned at the cabin door to
observe tentatively: "I reckon it's Wilkins tells you how the folks they
talk, yonda up to Mr. Hallet's."
She did not go to the
store as she had intended, but walked with a dragging step back to her home.
The silver dollars clicked in her pocket as she walked. She felt like flinging
them across the field; they seemed to her somehow the price of shame.
The sun had sunk, and
twilight was settling like a silver beam upon the bayou and enveloping the
fields in a gray mist. Evariste, slim and slouchy, was waiting for his daughter
in the cabin door. He had lighted a fire of sticks and branches, and placed the
kettle before it to boil. He met the girl with his slow, serious, questioning
eyes, astonished to see her empty-handed.
"How come you didn'
bring nuttin' f'om de sto', Martinette?"
She entered and flung
her gingham sun-bonnet upon a chair. "No, I didn' go yonda;" and with
sudden exasperation: "You got to go take back that money; you mus' n' git
no picture took."
"But,
Martinette," her father mildly interposed, "I promise' 'im; an' he's
goin' give me some mo' money w'en he finish."
"If he give you a
ba'el o' money, you mus' n' git no picture took. You know w'at he want to put
un'neath that picture, fo' ev'body to read?" She could not tell him the
whole hideous truth as she had heard it distorted from Aunt Dicey's lips; she
would not hurt him that much. "He's goin' to write: 'This is one 'Cajun o'
the Bayou Têche.'" Evariste winced.
"How you
know?" he asked.
"I yeard so. I know
it's true."
The water in the kettle
was boiling. He went and poured a small quantity upon the coffee which he had
set there to drip. Then he said to her: "I reckon you jus' as well go care
dat two dolla' back, tomo' mo'nin'; me, I'll go yonda ketch a mess o' fish in
Carancro lake."
Mr. Hallet and a few
masculine companions were assembled at a rather late breakfast the following
morning. The dining-room was a big, bare one, enlivened by a cheerful fire of
logs that blazed in the wide chimney on massive andirons. There were guns,
fishing tackle, and other implements of sport lying about. A couple of fine
dogs strayed unceremoniously in and out behind Wilkins, the negro boy who
waited upon the table. The chair beside Mr. Sublet, usually occupied by his
little son, was vacant, as the child had gone for an early morning outing and
had not yet returned.
When breakfast was about
half over, Mr. Hallet noticed Martinette standing outside upon the gallery. The
dining-room door had stood open more than half the time.
"Isn't that
Martinette out there, Wilkins" inquired the jovial-faced young planter.
"Dat's who,
suh," returned Wilkins. "She ben standin' dah sence mos' sun-up; look
like she studyin' to take root to de gall'ry."
"What in the name
of goodness does she want? Ask her what she wants. Tell her to come in to the
fire."
Martinette walked into
the room with much hesitancy. Her small, brown face could hardly be seen in the
depths of the gingham sun-bonnet. Her blue cottonade skirt scarcely, reached
the thin ankles that it should have covered.
"Bonjou'," she
murmured, with a little comprehensive nod that took in the entire company. Her
eyes searched the table for the "stranger gentleman," and she knew
him at once, because his hair was parted in the middle and he wore a pointed
beard. She went and laid the two silver dollars beside his plate and motioned
to retire without a word of explanation.
"Hold on,
Martinette!" called out the planter, "what's all this pantomime
business? Speak out, little one."
"My popa don't want
any picture took," she offered, a little timorously. On her way to the
door she had looked back to say this. In that fleeting glance she detected a
smile of intelligence pass from one to the other of the group. She turned
quickly, facing them all, and spoke out, excitement making her voice bold and
shrill: "My popa ent one low-down 'Cajun. He ent goin' to stan' to have
that kine o' writin' put down un'neath his picture!"
She almost ran from the
room, half blinded by the emotion that had helped her to make so daring a
speech.
Descending the gallery
steps she ran full against her father who was ascending, bearing in his arms
the little boy, Archie Sublet. The child was most grotesquely attired in
garments far too large for his diminutive person—the rough jeans clothing of
some negro boy. Evariste himself had evidently been taking a bath without the
preliminary ceremony of removing his clothes, that were now half dried upon his
person by the wind and sun.
"Yere you' li'le
boy," he announced, stumbling into the room. "You ought not lef dat
li'le chile go by hisse'f comme ça in de pirogue." Mr.
Sublet darted from his chair; the others following suit almost as hastily. In
an instant, quivering with apprehension, he had his little son in his arms. The
child was quite unharmed, only somewhat pale and nervous, as the consequence of
a recent very serious ducking.
Evariste related in his
uncertain, broken English how he had been fishing for an hour or more in
Carancro lake, when he noticed the boy paddling over the deep, black water in a
shell-like pirogue. Nearing a clump of cypress-trees that rose from the lake,
the pirogue became entangled in the heavy moss that hung from the tree limbs
and trailed upon the water. The next thing he knew, the boat had overturned, he
heard the child scream, and saw him disappear beneath the still, black surface
of the lake.
"W'en I done swim
to de sho' wid 'im," continued Evariste, "I hurry yonda to Jake
Baptiste's cabin, an' we rub 'im an' warm 'im up, an' dress 'im up dry like you
see. He all right now, M'sieur; but you mus'n lef 'im go no mo' by hisse'f in
one pirogue."
Martinette had followed
into the room behind her father. She was feeling and tapping his wet garments
solicitously, and begging him in French to come home. Mr. Hallet at once
ordered hot coffee and a warm breakfast for the two; and they sat down at the
corner of the table, making no manner of objection in their perfect simplicity.
It was with visible reluctance and ill-disguised contempt that Wilkins served
them.
When Mr. Sublet had
arranged his son comfortably, with tender care, upon the sofa, and had
satisfied himself that the child was quite uninjured, he attempted to find
words with which to thank Evariste for this service which no treasure of words
or gold could pay for. These warm and heartfelt expressions seemed to Evariste
to exaggerate the importance of his action, and they intimidated him. He
attempted shyly to hide his face as well as he could in the depths of his bowl
of coffee.
"You will let me
make your picture now, I hope, Evariste," begged Mr. Sublet, laying his
hand upon the 'Cadian's shoulder. "I want to place it among things I hold
most dear, and shall call it 'A hero of Bayou Têche.'" This assurance
seemed to distress Evariste greatly.
"No, no," he
protested, "it's nuttin' hero' to take a li'le boy out de water. I jus' as
easy do dat like I stoop down an' pick up a li'le chile w'at fall down in de
road. I ent goin' to 'low dat, me. I don't git no picture took, va!"
Mr. Hallet, who now
discerned his friend's eagerness in the matter, came to his aid.
"I tell you,
Evariste, let Mr. Sublet draw your picture, and you yourself may call it
whatever you want. I'm sure he 'll let you."
"Most willingly,"
agreed the artist.
Evariste glanced up at
him with shy and child-like pleasure. "It's a bargain?" he asked.
"A bargain,"
affirmed Mr. Sublet.
"Popa,"
whispered Martinette, "you betta come-home an' put on yo' otha pant'loon'
an' yo' good coat."
"And now, what
shall we call the much talked-of picture?" cheerily inquired the planter,
standing with his back to the blaze.
Evariste in a
business-like manner began carefully to trace on the tablecloth imaginary
characters with an imaginary pen; he could not have written the real characters
with a real pen—he did not know how.
"You will put
on'neat' de picture," he said, deliberately, "'Dis is one picture of
Mista Evariste Anatole Bonamour, a gent'man of de Bayou Têche.'"
The days and the nights
were very lonely for Madame Delisle. Gustave, her husband, was away yonder in
Virginia somewhere, with Beauregard, and she was here in the old house on Bayou
St. John, alone with her slaves.
Madame was very
beautiful. So beautiful, that she found much diversion in sitting for hours
before the mirror, contemplating her own loveliness; admiring the brilliancy of
her golden hair, the sweet languor of her blue eyes, the graceful contours of
her figure, and the peach-like bloom of her flesh. She was very young. So young
that she romped with the dogs, teased the parrot, and could not fall asleep at
night unless old black Manna-Loulou sat beside her bed and told her stories.
In short, she was a
child, not able to realize the significance of the tragedy whose unfolding kept
the civilized world in suspense. It was only the immediate effect of the awful
drama that moved her: the gloom that, spreading on all sides, penetrated her
own existence and deprived it of joyousness.
Sépincourt found her
looking very lonely and disconsolate one day when he stopped to talk with her.
She was pale, and her blue eyes were dim with unwept tears. He was a Frenchman
who lived near by. He shrugged his shoulders over this strife between brothers,
this quarrel which was none of his; and he resented it chiefly upon the ground
that it made life uncomfortable; yet he was young enough to have had quicker
and hotter blood in his veins.
When he left Madame
Delisle that day, her eyes were no longer dim, and a something of the dreariness
that weighted her had been lifted away. That mysterious, that treacherous bond
called sympathy, had revealed them to each other.
He came to her very
often that summer, clad always in cool, white duck, with a flower in his
buttonhole. His pleasant brown eyes sought hers with warm, friendly glances
that comforted her as a caress might comfort a disconsolate child. She took to
watching for his slim figure, a little bent, walking lazily up the avenue
between the double line of magnolias.
They would sit sometimes
during whole afternoons in the vine-sheltered corner of the gallery, sipping
the black coffee that Manna-Loulou brought to them at intervals; and talking,
talking incessantly during the first days when they were unconsciously
unfolding themselves to each other. Then a time came—it came very quickly—when
they seemed to have nothing more to say to one another.
He brought her news of
the war; and they talked about it listlessly, between long intervals of
silence, of which neither took account. An occasional letter came by
round-about ways from Gustave—guarded arid saddening in its tone. They would
read it and sigh over it together.
Once they stood before
his portrait that hung in the drawing-room and that looked out at them with
kind, indulgent eyes. Madame wiped the picture with her gossamer handkerchief
and impulsively pressed a tender kiss upon the painted canvas. For months past
the living image of her husband had been receding further and further into a
mist which she could penetrate with no faculty or power that she possessed.
One day at sunset, when
she and Sépincourt stood silently side by side, looking across the marais,
aflame with the western light, he said to her: "M'amie, let us go
away from this country that is so triste. Let us go to Paris, you
and me."
She thought that he was
jesting, and she laughed nervously. "Yes, Paris would surely be gayer than
Bayou St. John," she answered. But he was not jesting. She saw it at once
in the glance that penetrated her own; in the quiver of his sensitive lip and
the quick beating of a swollen vein in his brown throat.
"Paris, or
anywhere—with you—ah, bon Dieu!" he whispered, seizing her
hands. But she withdrew from him, frightened, and hurried away into the house,
leaving him alone.
That night, for the first
time, Madame did not want to hear Manna-Loulou's stories, and she blew out the
wax candle that till now had burned nightly, in her sleeping-room, under its
tall, crystal globe. She had suddenly become a woman capable of love or
sacrifice. She would not hear Manna-Loulou's stories. She wanted to be alone,
to tremble and to weep.
In the morning her eyes
were dry, but she would not see Sépincourt when he came. Then he wrote her a
letter.
"I have offended
you and I would rather die!" it ran. "Do not banish me from your
presence that is life to me. Let me lie at your feet, if only for a moment, in
which to hear you say that you forgive me."
Men have written just
such letters before, but Madame did not know it. To her it was a voice from the
unknown, like music, awaking in her a delicious tumult that seized and held
possession of her whole being.
When they met, he had
but to look into her face to know that he need not lie at her feet craving
forgiveness. She was waiting for him beneath the spreading branches of a
live-oak that guarded the gate of her home like a sentinel.
For a brief moment he
held her hands, which trembled. Then he folded her in his arms and kissed her
many times. "You will go with me, m'amie? I love you—oh, I
love you! Will you not go with me, m'amie?"
"Anywhere,
anywhere," she told him in a fainting voice that he could scarcely hear.
But she did not go with
him. Chance willed it otherwise. That night a courier brought her a message
from Beauregard, telling her that Gustave, her husband, was dead.
When the new year was
still young, Sépincourt decided that, all things considered, he might, without
any appearance of indecent haste, speak again of his love to Madame Delisle.
That love was quite as acute as ever; perhaps a little sharper, from the long
period of silence and waiting to which he had subjected it. He found her, as he
had expected, clad in deepest mourning. She greeted him precisely as she had
welcomed the curé, when the kind old priest had brought to her the consolations
of religion—clasping his two hands warmly, and calling him "cher
ami." Her whole attitude and bearing brought to Sépincourt the poignant,
the bewildering conviction that he held no place in her thoughts.
They sat in the
drawing-room before the portrait of Gustave, which was draped with his scarf.
Above the picture hung his sword, and beneath it was an embankment of flowers.
Sépincourt felt an almost irresistible impulse to bend his knee before this
altar, upon which he saw foreshadowed the immolation of his hopes.
There was a soft air
blowing gently over the marais. It came to them through the open
window, laden with a hundred subtle sounds and scents of the springtime. It
seemed to remind Madame of something far, far away, for she gazed dreamily out
into the blue firmament. It fretted Sépincourt with impulses to speech and
action which he found it impossible to control.
"You must know what
has brought me," he began impulsively, drawing his chair nearer to hers.
"Through all these months I have never ceased to love you and to long for
you. Night and day the sound of your dear voice has been with me; your
eyes"—She held out her hand deprecatingly. He took it and held it. She let
it lie unresponsive in his.
"You cannot have
forgotten that you loved me not long ago," he went on eagerly, "that
you were ready to follow me anywhere,—anywhere; do you remember? I have come
now to ask you to fulfill that promise; to ask you toy be my wife, my
companion, the dear treasure of my life."
She heard his warm and
pleading tones as though listening to a strange language, imperfectly
understood.
She withdrew her hand
from his, and leaned her brow thoughtfully upon it.
"Can you not
feel—can you not understand, mon ami," she said calmly,
"that now such a thing—such a thought, is impossible to me?"
"Impossible?"
"Yes, impossible.
Can you not see that now my heart, my soul, my thought—my very life, must
belong to another? It could not be different."
"Would you have me
believe that you can wed your young existence to the dead?" he exclaimed
with something like horror. Her glance was sunk deep in the embankment of
flowers before her.
"My husband has
never been so living to me as he is now," she replied with a faint smile
of commiseration for Sépincourt's fatuity. "Every object that surrounds me
speaks to me of him. I look yonder across the marais, and I see him
coming toward me, tired and toil-stained from the hunt. I see him again sitting
in this chair or in that one. I hear his familiar voice, his footsteps upon the
galleries. We walk once more together beneath the magnolias; and at night in
dreams I feel that he is there, there, near me. How could it be different! Ah!
I have memories, memories to crowd and fill my life, if I live a hundred
years!"
Sépincourt was wondering
why she did not take the sword down from her altar and thrust it through his
body here and there. The effect would have been infinitely more agreeable than
her words, penetrating his soul like fire. He arose confused, enraged with
pain.
"Then,
Madame," he stammered, "there is nothing left for me but to take my
leave. I bid you adieu."
"Do not be
offended, mon ami," she said kindly, holding out her hand.
"You are going to Paris, I suppose?"
"What does it
matter," he exclaimed desperately, "where I go?"
"Oh, I only wanted
to wish you bon voyage" she assured him amiably.
Many days after that
Sépincourt spent in the fruitless mental effort of trying to comprehend that
psychological enigma, a woman's heart.
Madame still lives on Bayou St. John. She is rather an old lady now, a very pretty old lady, against whose long years of widowhood there has never been a breath of reproach. The memory of Gustave still fills and satisfies her days. She has never failed, once a year, to have a solemn high mass said for the repose of his soul.
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